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Family Bible of John Augustus Sherman

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Created: 5 Feb 2015
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This Bible was donated to the Johnson Couny Museum in Tecumseh Johnson County NE by Kenneth Feaster grandson of Martha Ellen Sherman 1870-1930 of Todd Creek Johnson County NE. She was daughter of John Augustus Sherman 1833-1910 and granddaughter of Augustus Sherman 1812-1864 I saw the Bible in 1963 at the museum, The information that Carrie Wright Sherman had copied when they left Nebraska for Oregon matched the information recorded in the Bible. entered 5 Feb 2015.

Family Bible of Matthew Mims & Mary Caroline Carter Morgan

PageID: 26001297
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Created: 17 Jul 2019
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This family bible was owned by Matthew Mims & Mary Caroline Carter Morgan of Bryan County, GA. In it are recorded the births of themselves and their children, their marriage and their childrens' marriages, and the deaths of a wide range of family members. There are also pages of the births of John William & Samantha Jane Morgan Butler's children that have been inserted in the bible. It is titled "The Holy Bible; Containing the Old and New Testaments; Translated out of the Original Tongues; and with the Former Translations Diligently Compared and Revised," and was published by Thomas Mason and George Lane, for the Methodist Episcopal Church, at the Conference Office, 200 Mulberry Street, New York, NY, and printed by James Collard, Printer, in 1837.Family Bible of Matthew Mims & Mary Caroline Carter Morgan, ''The Holy Bible: Containing the Old and New Testaments'', Unknown edition (New York: Thomas Mason & George Lane, for the Methodist Episcopal Church, at the Conference Office, 200 Mulberry Street, James Collord, Printer, 1837), Title Page, images of bible provided by the owner, Glenda Davis Williams, 15 Jan 2019. The bible was passed down in the family to Fanning "Fannin" Asbury Morgan, to his daughter Samantha Jane Morgan Butler, to her daughter Nina Lolita Butler Lewis, to her daughter Armour Lewis Davis, and to her daughter Glenda Davis Williams, who is the present owner.Sworn statement made by Glenda D. Williams on 25 Sep 2000 before Sarah O. Duraway, Notary Public of DeKalb County, GA. == Sources ==

Family Bible of Mourning Carter Walker

PageID: 7423117
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As copied from: http://www.jenforum.org/walker/messages/24216.html - January 2014 by Mark McKinney ================================================= Inside front cover: This is the Bible of Mourning Sarah Carter. My Family Heritage William CARTER b. ca. 1425 England ---------------------- William CARTER b. ca 1450 in England d. Kempston,Bedfordshire, England ----------------------- Thomas CARTER b. 1475 Kempston, Bedfordshire, England d. Kempston, ---------------------- William CARTER b. 1510 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England d: 1569 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England m. Elizabeth CRANFIELD b: 1530 Kempston, Bedfordshire, England d. 1570 Kempston, Bedfordshire, England *daughter of William CRANFIELD ------------------------- William CARTER b. 1559 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. d. November 1, 1605, Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. m. Mary ANSCELL b: 1556 Barford, Bedfordshire, England d. March 1, 1619 Oakes Farm, Kempston Parish, Bedfordshire, England ------------------------ William Ancell CARTER b. October 28, 1591 Kempston, Bedfordshire, England d. 1634 Kempston, Bedfordshire, England m. July 2, 1618 Rampton, Bedfordshire, England m. Jane MYLES b: September 14, 1598 Rampton, Bedfordshire, England ----------------------- Captain Thomas CARTER Sr. b. October 26, 1630 Bedfordshire, England, Great Britain d. October 22, 1700 Lancaster County, Va. m. April 4, 1670, Lancaster, VA Virginia Katherine DALE b: 1652 Prestwould, Leicestershire, England, Great Britain d. May 10, 1703 Lancaster County, Va. ----------------------------- James CARTER b. December 25, 1684 "Barford", Lancaster, Virginia d. October 24, 1743 Overwharton Par, Stafford, Virginia m-1 October 3, 1715, Lancaster, Virginia Hannah NEALE b: ca. 1684 m-2 August 12, 1724,Lancaster, VA Mary BRENT b: 1697 Lancaster Co., Va d. October 24, 1743, Stafford, Virginia (My great grandmother was Mary Brent) ---------------------- Captain George CARTER b. March 25, 1733, Stafford Co, Va d.1810 Cocke Co. Tennessee Military Service: CaptainRevolutionary War Burial: Union Baptist Church, Cocke Co. Tenn m-1 1758 Wythe Co, VA MARY JACKSON (my grandmother) m-2 April 10, 1804 Mary CALFE b. ca. 1730 -------------------------------- Charles CARTER b. 1760 Lunenburg Co, or Spotsylvania Co, Va. m. October 1786 Goochland Co. Va. m. Elizabeth Allen KENDRICK written in different handwriting was the following: Charles CARTER d. April 10m 1834 Kentucky ===================================================== My Family MourningSarah Carter SIBLINGS: Frances CARTER b: ABT. 1789 Sarah Elizabeth CARTER b: ABT. 1789 in Va William C. CARTER b: 11 APR 1792 in Virginia George CARTER b: ABT. 1793 in Virginia Susannah CARTER b: ABT. 1796 in Virginia Charlotte CARTER b: 1 FEB 1798 in Wythe Co. Va Sabrinia CARTER b: ABT. 1801 Calvin CARTER b: ABT. 1803 in Wythe County, Virginia Robert CARTER b: ABT. 1803 Larkin CARTER b: ABT. 1806 in Pulaski County, Virginia -------------------------------------------------- Mourning Sarah CARTER b. 1800 Wythe, Virginia *Added in another handwriting and initialed SJW (most likely Sarah Jane (Powell) Walker d. 1858 Pettis County, Missouri buried: Georgetown Cemetery, Pettis County, Missouri ================================= BAPTISM: (written in in large printing) JAMES THOMAS and MOURNING SARAH CARTER Baptized Aug. 13th, 1839 in Fayette Co., Ky. with Maternal Uncle Rev. Allen Kendrick officiating. ======================================= In the plain pages with ivy trim there is a place labeled CHILDREN: Children of JAMES THOMAS and MOURNING SARAH WALKER: POLLY LOCKETT WALKER————born July 29th, 1818 AUSTIN KENDRICK WALKER————Sept 24th, 1819 CHARLES W. CARTER WALKER————March 24th, 1821 ELBERT WALKER————March 2nd 1823 ELIZABETH CARTER. WALKER————Jan. 21st, 1825 FRANCIS JACKSON CARTER WALKER 1826 JAMES WILLIAM WALKER————Jan. 21st, 1829 CYRUS WALKER————Jan. 10th, 1831 WIATT J. WALKER————Jan. 31st, 1833 ELIZA WALKER————Feb. 12th, 1835 A child stillborn (not on record)————1837 CAROLINE CLEMENTINE. K. WALKER March 9th, 1839 ALLEN KENDRICK WALKER————Feb. 6th, 1841 5th Daughter still-born————Jan. 18th 1843 9th Son————Sept. 27th, 1844 ====================================== MARRIAGES: *JAS T. WALKER m. MOURNING SARAH CARTER in Pulaski Co., Ky October 23rd, 1817 *ELBERT WALKER to NANCY SHACKLEFORD in Fayette Co., Ky Dec. 4th 1845 POLLY LOCKETT WALKER to D. H. McAninch in Casey Co.,, Ky May 28th 1837 AUSTIN KENDRICK WALKER to PERNETHA J. WALKER in Pettis Co., Mo. ELIZA WALKER to DAVID POWELL in Pettis Co., Mo. 1852 (Son of Zadock "Dock" and Elizabeth POWELL) JAMES WILLIAM WALKER to SARAH JANE POWELL in Pettis County, Mo. August 3rd, 1858 CHARLES W. C. WALKER to MARTHA V. THOMSON in Johnson Co., Mo. July 10th, 1860 FRANCIS JACKSON CARTER WALKER to SALLIE M. DAVIS in Saline Co., Mo. 1866 ALLEN KENDRICK WALKER to JULIA CAREY in Saline Co., Mo. ==================================================== DEATHS WIATT J. WALKER died April 12th 1837 CAROLINE CLEMENTINE KENDRICK WALKER died April 14th 1843 ELIZABETH C. WALKER died May 3rd 1843 9th son (not named) died Oct. 1st 1844 CYRUS WALKER died Nov. 8th, 1848 POLLY LOCKET WALKER McANINCH died Aug 18th 1850 AUSTIN KENDRICK WALKER died 1864 ALLEN KENDRICK WALKER died Feb 22nd 1880 CHARLES W. WALKER died April 28th 1880 MARTHA E.WALKER McANINCH died Oct 10th 1842 DANIEL HARRISON McANINCH died July 17th, 1852 MARTHA VIENNA WALKER died Mar 8, 1904 The following were added in another person's handwriting. JAMES THOMAS WALKER died June 5th 1858 MOURNING SARAH WALKER died June 30th 1858 In aonther handwriting the following were added: James William Walker d. 1902 Sarah Jane Powell Walker d. 1913 Note: My brother David's family. (Written by Sarah Jane Powell Walker) David and Elizsa Walker Powell m. December 14, 1852 Pettis County, Missouri. Children: James A. Powell b. March 1, 1855 in Pettis Co., MO. (added) died. October 9, 1858, Dresden Cemetery, P{ettis Co. MO Laura Powell Betty Powell Albert Powell Charles Powell ===================================================== Walker-James William -born October 21, 1870, Georgetown, Pettis County, MO m.Sarah Jane Powell-born December 16, 1860, Georgetown near Sedalia, Pettis County, MO CHILDREN: Walker-Frank Thomas-born 1859, Georgetown, Pettis County, M Walker-Henry Allen-born December 16, 1860, Sedalia, MO Walker-Sarah Emma (Sally) born 1865, Georgetown, Pettis County, MO WALKER- Mary L born February 19, 1669 Pettis County, Missouri WALKER - Lizzie Ida born August 28, 1868 WALKER Druscilla b. October 21, 1870 d. 11-1-1970 Note: This family record and Bible is given to Ellen Watkins Walker as a legacy to the Carter and Walker families of old Virginia. ======================================== The following is written by Nelle Pearl (Ellen) Watkins Walker. Children of Henry Allen Walker and Ellen Watkins Walker. BIRTHS: Agnes Elizabeth Walker b. 1897 Kirkwood, Tehama Co., CA Allen William Walker b. 1901 Kirkwood, Tehama Co., CA Katherine Mary Walker b. 1903 Kirkwood, Tehama Co., CA Marian Irene Walker b. 1905 Kirkwood, Tehama Co., CA Robert Lee Walker b. 1907 Kirkwood, Tehama Co., CA Unnamewd Walker b. 1909 Kirkwood, Tehama Co., CA ============================================== MARRIAGES: Agnes E. Walker m. 1919 Henry William Day Jr. in Chico, CA Allen Walker m. Josephine Calarco Katherine Mary Walker m. James Vincent D'Angelo Marian Irene Walker m. Dale Samuel Guyton Robert Lee Walker m. Helen Greenalgh These entries were written by Nelle Pearl (Ellen) Watkins Walker. ADDITIONAL DEATHS: Walker-Henry Allen-born December 16, 1860, Sedalia, MO Walker-Sarah Jane Powell-born December 16, 1860, Georgetown near Seladia, Pettis County, MO Walker-James William Jr.-born October 21, 1870, Georgetown, Pettis County, MO Walker-Frank Thomas-born 1859, Georgetown, Pettis County, MO Walker-Sarah Emma (Sally) born 1865, Georgetown, Pettis County, MO Walker-Francis Jackson Carter-Dr.-born December 5, 1826, Pettis County, MO Walker-James Allen-born July 12, 1868, Marshall, MO Walker-James William-born January 21, 1829, Pettis County, MO Walker-Charles L-born 1870, Pettis County, MO Walker-Margaret (Maggie) McMahon-born 1872, Hemdon, MO Walker-Katherine McMahon-born 1876, Hemdon, MO *Family Bible Walker-Nellie Boatright-born 1875 Hemdon, MO Bible in possession of Agnes Elizabeth Walker Day.

Family Bible of Rebecca (Simmons) Bridges aka Vandine

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Created: 5 Jun 2023
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This family Bible, which was presented to Rebecca Vandine by her son Frederick in 1864, contains family records of this family spanning multiple generations. It was most recently (2023) held by Stacey Sweet, who photographed it's pages, and authorized their reproduction. It has has since been passed on to members of the Vandine descendancy.

Family Bible of Sally (Burcham) Stoneman and her daughters

PageID: 26962977
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Created: 21 Oct 2019
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Sally (Burcham) Stoneman and her daughters owned a Bible with recorded births, deaths, and marriages. A note in the front of the Bible reads, "Joshua Stoneman gives this book to his wife Sally Stoneman and her daughters...this 18 day of the 3rd month 1836." Another page in the Bible reads, "Charlotte Stoneman, her Bible a Present from her mother Sally Stoneman." Below that note is written "Emily Stoneman," and "Emily Burcham." It's likely the Bible was used by both sisters at different times. It records events for the family of Joshua and Sally Stoneman, and the family of their daughter, Emily Stoneman with her husband Samuel Burcham. Early entries recording the marriage of Joshua and Sally and the lives of their children are in one person's handwriting. They may have been recorded by Sally in the late 1830s. Most entries - including the ones that occurred after Sally's death - are in another person's handwriting and many appear to have been written at the same time, likely between 1860 and 1864. These were likely written by Emily (Stoneman) Burcham. A typewritten note at the front of digital images says that the Bible was purchased by Ed Dighton at the sale of F. Burcham. A handwritten note adds that it was sent to Alice Marrietta (Stonesfield) Herzberg in 1996. According to the handwritten note, Alice was the great-great-granddaughter of Emily (Stoneman) Burcham. {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-1.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-2.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-3.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-4.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-5.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-6.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-7.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-8.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-9.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-10.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-11.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-12.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-13.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Image|file=Family_Bible_of_Sally_Burcham_Stoneman_and_her_daughters-14.jpg |align=l |size=m }} {{Clear}} ==Sources== Sally (Burcham) Stoneman Family Bible Records, 1772-1872, The Holy Bible (Philadelphia, Bible Association of Friends in America), 1831); digital images, Ed Griffith, posting to the Stoneman Family Reunion Facebook group, 10 September 2016 (https://www.facebook.com/groups/102342936486105 : accessed 10 September 2016).

Family Bible of Seth Marsh Jr (1790-1851) and Ruth (Rice) Marsh (1796-1851)

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This entry reconstructs the genealogical information in the family bible of [[Marsh-7284|Seth Marsh Jr.]] and [[Rice-12952|Ruth (Rice) Marsh]] from transcriptions made by [[Kane-2208|Nancy Kane Sandoe]] onto index cards. The present location of the actual volume is unknown, if it still exists. It is assumed that Nancy had access to the volume at some point. Nancy has passed away. On the index cards the references to the family bible are always quoted, so we assume that the transcription is verbatim and we have made an effort to preserve the original syntax. The index cards do not state explicitly that the bible was Seth and Ruth Marsh's, but the events described concern his parents, themselves, and their offspring, so this is a reasonable assumption. === ''Marriages'' === * ''Seth Marsh Sr and Jurusha Gould was married in Western, Hampshire County, Massachusetts in Feb 7th 1788'' * ''Seth Marsh, Jr., and Ruth Rice was married Oct. 24 1813 in Smithfield, Madison Co, State of New York'' * ''Norman F. Marsh and Elizabeth Illing was Married the 11th of January 1845 in Ann Arbor, Washtenaw Co, State of Michigan'' * ''Otis W. Marsh and Harriet Eliza Holliday was Married October the 3rd 1848 in Washington City, District of Columbia'' === ''Births'' === * ''Jurusha Gould was born in Holliston, State of Massachusetts, July 3, AD 1766'' * ''Seth Marsh Senior was born in Sturbridge, State of Massachusetts Oct 18 1766'' * ''Seth Marsh Jr. was Born May 24, 1790 in Western, Mass.'' * ''Ruth Rice was Born July 27, 1796 in Bennington, Vt.'' * ''Malinda Marsh was Born Feb 17, 1815 in Smithfield, NY.'' * ''Olivia(?) Marsh was Born June 14, 1817 in Pembroke, NY'' * ''Eleanor Marsh was Born August 2, 1819 in Pembroke NY'' * ''Norman F Marsh was Born Oct. 11, 1822 in Pembroke, NY'' * ''Otis Marsh was Born April 20 1825 in Pembroke, NY'' * ''Maria S. Marsh was Born April 20, 1830 in Pembroke, NY'' * ''Erasmus T Marsh was Born August 20, 1835 in Pembroke, NY'' === ''Deaths'' === * ''Erasmus T Marsh died Feb 25, 1838, two years, six months & five days old'' * ''Mother Jerusha Marsh Died Sept 12th, 1844 in her Seventy ninth year'' * ''Ruth Marsh Died May 21, 1851 in her 56th year of her age.'' * ''Seth Marsh, June 13, 1851 aged 61 years'' * ''Ellen (Louisa?) Tisdale, wife of B. G. Tisdale, died January 7th, 1853, aged 34 years.''

Family Bible of Walter Mitchell of Enniskillen

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== About the Family Bible == According to a [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/89187479/bible-passed-from-walter-mitchell-of/ 1956 Cincinnati Enquirer], a family Bible was owned by [[Mitchell-35360|Walter Mitchell (abt.1747-abt.1820)]] and brought to the United States by his son, [[Mitchell-35232|John Mitchell (1776-1849)]].[https://www.newspapers.com/clip/89187479/bible-passed-from-walter-mitchell-of/ Bible passed from Walter Mitchell of Enniskillen, Ireland to John to Robert of Cincinnati]. Cincinnati Enquirer, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. November 9, 1956, p. 22. Accessed at Newspapers.com on November 19, 2021. John then gave the Bible to his son, Robert Mitchell. Currently, the only known appearance of the Bible was during an "Ecclesiastical Art Exhibit" held at the Episocopal Diocesan House at 412 Sycamore St. in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States from November 15 to 17, 1956. It was displayed along with a Book of Common Prayer of the Church of Ireland. As of the writing of the article, the Bible was owned by a William Mitchell. == Searching for the Current Owner == We do not definitively know the relationship between William Mitchell and the other members of the family above. However, the Mrs. Mark Mitchell mentioned in the article was the daughter-in-law of Richard Hannaford Mitchell, son of the Robert Mitchell mentioned above. Thus, she is the sister-in-law of William Ledyard Mitchell.1900 US Federal Census. Mill Creek Township, Hamilton County, Ohio. Roll 1282, Page: 18. Enumeration District 0310. This William Mitchell is suspected to be the mentioned in the article. For clarity and quick reference, the lineage of Mark and his brother William Ledyard Mitchell is: Mark & William L > Richard H > Robert > [[Mitchell-35232|John]] > [[Mitchell-35360|Walter Mitchell (abt.1747-abt.1820)]] A search is currently underway for the current owner of the family Bible, assuming it still exists. Anyone with information is invited to contact the manager of this profile. === Clues and Questions === * The "Ecclesiastical Art Exhibit" mentioned above occurred in what is now [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Saint+Pauls+Chapel/@39.1011053,-84.5079618,3a,15y,47.28h,86.04t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sov0mv-WWBV9Rw8aRbyjUSw!2e0!7i16384!8i8192!4m13!1m7!3m6!1s0x8841b15b9859e859:0x9f8ddae074c88dd!2s412+Sycamore+St,+Cincinnati,+OH+45202!3b1!8m2!3d39.1011846!4d-84.5076762!3m4!1s0x8841b15b97c9f123:0xee13cf2746ede0b8!8m2!3d39.1011752!4d-84.5078155 St. Paul's Chapel of the Diocese of Southern Ohio of the Episcopal Church]. Is there anyone there that might provide additional information on the possible location of the Bible? === Contacting Descendants === The following table lists publicly available trees and other resources to aid in contacting descendants of [[Mitchell-35360|Walter Mitchell (abt.1747-abt.1820)]] to inquire about the whereabouts of the family bible. Please contact the manager of this profile to assist with this effort. {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" | Link || Lineage || Date Added || Status |- | [https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/172815473 Ancestry tree 172815473]|| John J < Walter < [[Mitchell-35232|John Mitchell]] || 17 Jan 2023 || Not contacted |- | [https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/180778725/ Ancestry tree 180778725]|| Lillie < Robert < [[Mitchell-35232|John Mitchell]]|| 17 Jan 2023 || Not contacted |- | [https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/100380632/ Ancestry tree 100380632] || Mary F A > Richard H < Robert < [[Mitchell-35232|John Mitchell]]|| 17 Jan 2023 || Not contacted |- | ----- || ----- || ----- || ----- |} ---- == Sources ==

Family Bible-1

PageID: 23236752
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Created: 2 Nov 2018
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Family Bible containing birth, marriage and death dates for family members. May have belonged to [[Glover-3989|Julia (Glover) Aten]]

Family book from Heinz Brües

PageID: 45543032
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Created: 14 Jan 2024
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For now this is a placeholder for Heinz family book. So we can already use it as a reference. I hope we will have a copy of the book itself here. == Templates == ;A reference to this page ... :[[Space:Family_book_from_Heinz_Brües|Heinz's book]] ;A reference to the Gedcom import :* Profile created by [[Roy-7517 | Christian Roy]] through a Gedcom import from https://www.ancestry.ca/family-tree/tree/190851238/family?cfpid=342482224738&fpid=342482224739&usePUBJs=true on Jan 13, 2024 :via GedCompare report https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:UploadGedcom&action=process&gu_id=235000

Family Burials

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Created: 30 Sep 2017
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==Hebron Cemetary, Spencer, West Virginia== [https://www.mapquest.com/us/wv/hebron-283371957]Map, [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=2148465] Find A Grave Page *[[Hershman-75|Warren C Hershman]] / [[Mace-1386|Elva Mace Hershman]] (husband/wife) *[[Hersman-16|Fred Hersman]] / [[Hardman-1171|Gatha Hardman Hersman]] (husband/wife) *[[Hersman-17|Mark Hersman Jr]] / [[Morrison-8664|Margeret Morrison Hersman]] (husband/wife) *[[Hersman-23|Alexander M Hersman]] *[[Hersman-39|Mary Hersman Greenlee]] ==Sunset Memory Gardens, Parkersburg, West Virginia== [https://www.mapquest.com/us/west-virginia/sunset-memorial-funeral-home-and-memory-gardens-270956447] Map , [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=80052] Find A Grave Page *[[Hersman-37|Smith C. Hersman]] *[[Hersman-13|Woodrow Hersman]] / [[McKown-127|Dormal McKown Hersman]] (husband/wife) ==Gandeeville Cemetery, Gandeeville, West Virginia== *[[Hersman-29|Andrew Hersman]] / [[Cobb-5955|Minerva Cobb Hersman]] (husband/wife) ==Hunt Cemetery, Roane Co, West Virginia== *[[Hersman-28|Jacob Hersman]] / [[Cobb-5954|Dollie Cobb Hersman]] (husband/wife) ==Beaver Run Cemetery, Burlington, West Virginia== [http://www.wvgenweb.org/mineral/beaverrun.html], WV GenWeb *[[Hirschmann-20|Matthias Ulrich Hirschmann]] *[[Hirschmann-80|Christopher Hershman]] ==Christian I Cemetery, Locust Valley, Maryland== [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GScid=2432698&GRid=83129904&] Find A Grave Page *[[Harshman-162|Christian Hershman]] / [[Grossnickle-99|Catherine Grossnickle Hershman]] (husband/wife) ==Dunkard Cemetery, Roanoke Co, Virginia== *[[Frey-949|Eva Frey Hirschmann]] ==Research Notes== This is a project in progress.

'Family Business' a History of Grosvenor Chater 1690-1977, by Michael Chater

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The 'foreword' of this book reads as follows: 'Friends of Grosvenor Chater who are kind enough to read this short history of an old firm may wonder why it has been produced at this time, since the present year, so notable for another reason*, is not a numerical landmark for the Company. 1977 is, however, a significant year for Grosvenor Chater. After much planning and property negotiation, the Company, for so long a London-based firm, has been relocated so as better to perform its function of paper distribution. In the course of these upheavals we have been able to unearth from safes, ledgers and scrap-books, the material for a story which seems worth telling, however incomplete and scrappy it may be. Nearly three centuries and twelve reigns have passed since the Company was first founded, and 1977, which marks the beginning of a new era, is perhaps a suitable moment to look back and see how we got here.' * perhaps referring to Queen Elizabeth's Silver Jubilee. The book was first published in Great Britain, 1977 by Grosvenor Chater & Company Limited at Brick Knoll Park, Ashley Road, St Albans, Hertfordshire, England. Copyright 1977 Michael Chater. Designed by Maxwell Martyn. Printed and bound in Great Britain by W. & J. Mackay Limited, Chatham, Kent, England on paper made at Abbey Mills in North Wales. Jacket designed and printed by the John Roberts Press, Clerkenwell, London E.C.1.https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Family_business/0nbCzQEACAAJ?hl=en This 'open space page' serves as a place to connect the people mentioned in the book. A WikiTree profile is created, once a reliable accurate source has been identified, and the profile, under a 'See also:' heading, will link back to this 'open space page'. '''The following table was updated on the 5th June 2023.''' {| border="1" class="sortable" !Surname!!Maiden name!!First names!!Connection!!Page number(s)!!WikiTree-ID, date of birth, or note |- |Arnold||||Harry Eveleigh||buyer in the 1950's, company director 1962 until his death in 1965||48, 60||[[Arnold-22992|Harry Eveleigh Arnold (1914-1965)]] |- |Balston||||William||paper maker, company name 'Balston & Hollingworth' in Maidstone, Kent. See Hollingworth note below this table.||35||[[Balston-68|William Balston (1769-1849)]] |- |Barnard||Chater||Caroline||daughter of Eliezer Chater||19||[[Chater-15|Caroline (Chater) Barnard (1797-1876)]] |- |Barnard||||Edward||Caroline Chater's husband||19||[[Barnard-1103|Edward Barnard (1796-1867)]] |- |Barnard||Rutt||Ellen||daughter of Thomas Prentice Rutt||19||[[Rutt-133|Ellen (Rutt) Barnard (1835-1908)]] |- |Barnard||||Walter||Ellen Rutt's husband||19||[[Barnard-3926|Walter Barnard (1833-1922)]] |- |Barrett||||Samuel||engineer turner and fitter at Glory Mill near High Wycombe in 1881||33||[[Barrett-15057|Samuel Barrett (abt.1844-)]] |- |Birch||||Mr. Lucas||confectioner shortly to become Ring & Brymer, neighbouring tenant of William Grosvenor's business in 1822||21||see Birch note below this table |- |Black||||John||managed the 'Town' sales in the 1960's||48||[[Black-24406|John Black (1883-)]] |- |Bradshaw||||Christopher||catalogue designer in 1953||47|| |- |Breton||||Jules Adolphe Aimé Louis||manager of the Grosvenor Chater office in Paris in 1889||39||[[Breton-170|Jules Adolphe Aimé Louis Breton (1827-1906)]] |- |Campbell||||Ian Douglas||11th Duke of Argyll||39||[[Campbell-11662|Ian Douglas Campbell (1903-1973)]] |- |Campbell||Clews||Louise Morris||Duchess of Argyll||39||[[Clews-72|Louise Morris (Clews) Timpson (1905-1970)]] |- |Chambers||||Mrs.||converted James Eden's pin-mill on the Dee estuary (see below) into a paper-mill about 1783||26|| |- |Chater||||Alfred Dougan||son of Leathley Chater, Chater family tree||7, 15, 16, 18, 28, 46, 54, 60||[[Chater-200|Alfred Dougan Chater (1890-1974)]] |- |Chater||||Arthur Grosvenor||son of George Chater (junior), Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-136|Arthur Grosvenor Chater (1866-1951)]] |- |Chater||||Eliezer||son of James Chater (junior), apprenticed to Richard Welles in 1779, Chater family tree||7, 14, 15, 18, 19||[[Chater-93|Eliezer Chater (abt.1764-1835)]] |- |Chater||||George||son of Eliezer Chater, Chater family tree||18, 32, 38, 39||[[Chater-98|George Chater (1808-1892)]] |- |Chater||||George (junior)||son of George Chater, Chater family tree||7, 18, 32, 37, 38, 39, 54||[[Chater-134|George Chater (1839-1915)]] |- |Chater||||Henry||son of Joseph Chater, Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-112|Henry Chater (1827-abt.1887)]] |- |Chater||||James||Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-138|James Chater (abt.1694-abt.1762)]] |- |Chater||||James (junior)||son of James Chater, Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-99|James Chater (abt.1732-1800)]] |- |Chater||||Joseph||son of James Chater (junior), Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-110|Joseph Chater (abt.1767-1838)]] |- |Chater||||Joseph (junior)||son of Joseph Chater, Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-111|Joseph Chater (1797-1875)]] |- |Chater||||Leathley||son of Henry Chater, Chater family tree||15, 18, 54||[[Chater-198|Leathley Chater (1858-1931)]] |- |Chater||||Lionel George||son of George Chater (junior), Chater family tee||7, 15, 18, 29, 40, 44, 54, 60||[[Chater-137|Lionel George Chater (1869-1964)]] |- |Chater||||Michael Dougan||author, son of Alfred Dougan Chater, Chater family tree||cover page, title page, 9, 16, 18, 58, 60||[[Chater-254|Michael Dougan Chater (1917-1994)]] |- |Chater||||Simon D.||son of Michael Dougan Chater, Chater family tree||18||[[Chater-255|Simon D. Chater]] |- |Chater||||Vernor||(Colonel), son of George Chater, Chater family tree||18, 39, 56||[[Chater-135|Vernor Chater (1842-1928)]] |- |Cooper||||George||elected as a director in 1971||60|| |- |Donaldson||||Graham||advertisement designer in the 1970's||8|| |- |Downing||||Wilfred Leslie||head of Accounts Department post-war||49||[[Downing-5210|Wilfred Leslie Downing (1911-1968)]] |- |Eden||||James||a pin-mill was built for him, a pin maker, in 1764 near to the Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary, according to Thomas Pennant (see below)||26|| |- |Fox||||Edward||silk mercer, died in 1882||32||possibly this silk manufacturer (Fox-24216) |- |Gardner||||Peter||Assistant M.D. of Wiggins Teape||9||see Gardner note below this table |- |Glasgow||||Reginald||managed 'Town' and 'Country' sales in the 1970's, elected director in 1977||48, 62|| |- |Grosvenor||||Robert||Wholesale Stationer in Leadenhall Street, London, Grosvenor family tree||13, 17||[[Grosvenor-459|Robert Grosvenor (abt.1677-abt.1752)]] |- |Grosvenor||||Robert (junior)||son of Robert Grosvenor, Grosvenor family tree||17||[[Grosvenor-458|Robert Grosvenor (abt.1706-1763)]] |- |Grosvenor||||Septimus||great, great grandson of the original Robert Grosvenor, son of William Limbury Grosvenor (junior), Grosvenor family tree||15, 17||[[Grosvenor-455|Septimus Grosvenor (1820-1896)]] |- |Grosvenor||||William Henry||son of William Limbury Grosvenor (junior), Grosvenor family tree||17||[[Grosvenor-451|William Henry Grosvenor (abt.1808-1885)]] |- |Grosvenor||||William Limbury||son of Robert Grosvenor (junior), Grosvenor family tree||14, 17||[[Grosvenor-449|William Limbery Grosvenor (abt.1745-abt.1832)]] |- |Grosvenor||||William Limbury (junior)||son of William Limbury Grosvenor, Grosvenor family tree||13, 14, 17||[[Grosvenor-450|William Limbery Grosvenor (1778-1861)]] |- |Hall||||Richard||head of Finishing Department at Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary sometime in the 1930's-1960's||30||[[Hall-68233|Richard Hall (1908-)]] |- |Hanover||Hanover||Alexandrina Victoria||Queen Victoria||39||[[Hanover-230|Alexandrina Victoria Hanover (1819-1901)]] |- |Harmsworth||||Alfred Charles William||Lord Northcliffe, 1893 journalist||38||[[Harmsworth-19|Alfred Charles William Harmsworth (1865-1922)]] |- |Harmsworth||||Harold Sidney||Lod Rothermere, 1893 journalist||38||[[Harmsworth-21|Harold Sidney Harmsworth Bt. (1868-1940)]] |- |Hart||||Tom||managing director of Benham's of Colchester, printers in the 1960's||47|| |- |Henniker-Major||||Richard Arthur Otway||(Hon.) elected as a non-executive director in 1971||60||[[Henniker-Major-31|Richard Arthur Otway Henniker-Major (1917-2003)]] |- |Hill||||William||paper-mill owner in 1821, in Greenfield, near Abbey Paper Mill||26|| |- |Hollingworth||||Finch||paper maker, company name 'Balston & Hollingworth' in Maidstone, Kent. See Hollingworth note below this table.||35||[[Hollingworth-523|Finch Hollingworth (1761-1838)]] |- |Hollingworth||||Thomas Robert||paper maker, company name 'Balston & Hollingworth' in Maidstone, Kent. See Hollingworth note below this table.||35||[[Hollingworth-526|Thomas Robert Hollingworth (abt.1764-1826)]] |- |Jamieson||||William Tough||manager of the 'cutting room' in Old Street, London in the 1940's and North Wales||45||[[Jamieson-4409|William Tough Jamieson (1887-)]] |- |Johnston||||Jim||member of staff, casualty in the 1914-1918 war||41|| |- |Jones||||G. Stanley||chief engineer at Abbey Mill on the Dee estuary 1945-1975||8, 30||[[Jones-136069|George Stanley Jones (1905-1988)]] |- |Judson||||?||partner in Messrs Hugill & Co. (auditors) in 1937||49|| |- |Kelman||||John||foreman||8||[[Kelman-301|John Kelman (1917-1985)]] |- |Kemp||||Henry Steven||paper maker at Glory Mill near High Wycombe in 1881||33||[[Kemp-11416|Henry Steven Kemp (abt.1817-1882)]] |- |Logan||||William D.||appointed as secretary and elected as a director in 1973||62||[[Logan-8160|Wiiliam D. Logan (1906-)]] |- |Marshall||||Richard||bookseller, company name 'Simpkin Marshall'||36||[[Marshall-28393|Richard Marshall (abt.1790-)]] |- |Meads||||Alfred||paper maker at Glory Mill near High Wycombe in 1881||33||[[Meads-1402|Alfred Meads (1828-1902)]] |- |Moore||||James||paper maker at Glory Mill near High Wycombe in 1881||33||[[Moore-82177|James Moore (abt.1829-1903)]] |- |Moran||||James||Editor of Printing World||9|| |- |Morison||||Stanley||typographer, author and journalist||28||[[Morison-749|Stanley Arthur Morison (1889-1967)]] |- |Mortimer||||Wilfred||partner in Messrs Hugill & Co. (auditors) in 1937||49|| |- |Mostyn||||Piers (Sir)||freeholder of the land in Greenfield near Holywell, Flintshire, Wales in 1854||26||[[Mostyn-409|Thomas Pyers Mostyn (1828-)]] |- |Oldham||||Reginald D'Oyley||Guard Bridge paper maker's representative||43||[[Oldham-2870|Reginald D'Oyley Oldham (1895-1971)]] |- |Oswick||||George Ernest||Reed & Smith representative||43||[[Oswick-8|George Ernest Oswick (1882-1968)]] |- |Pennant||||Thomas||a writer, in 1796 referring to the Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary||25||[[Pennant-31|Thomas Pennant Esq. (abt.1730-)]] |- |Petrie||Robertson||Charlotte Barclay||John Petrie's wife||7||[[Robertson-27989|Charlotte Barclay (Robertson) Petrie (abt.1851-1933)]] |- |Petrie||||John||3rd manager of Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary, from 1897 until his death in 1931. ||7, 29, 57||[[Petrie-2265|John Petrie (abt.1855-abt.1931)]] |- |Pinnigar||||Fred||managed the 'Town' sales in the 1970's, buyer||48|| |- |Pitt||||Thomas||Hollingworth representative, in 1921 represenative for Robert Yates Ltd.||43||[[Pitt-2936|Thomas Pitt (1859-1954)]] |- |Pym||||William Bowles||paper maker at Glory Mill near High Wycombe in 1881 see William Bowles Pym (paper maker) in 1881 census||33||[[Pym-271|William Bowles Pym (1821-1906)]] |- |Reed||||Albert Ralph (Sir)||controller of the Paper Board set up by the government in 1939||46||[[Reed-33225|Albert Ralph Reed F.C.G.I. (1884-1958)]] |- |Roberts||||Brunt||chief engineer at Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary, sometime in the 1930's-1960's||30|| |- |Roberts||||Raymond||catalogue designer in 1956 working for Benham's of Colchester, printers||47|| |- |Rutt ||||Alfred||son of Thomas Prentice Rutt, Rutt family tree||19||[[Rutt-160|Alfred Rutt (1848-1885)]] |- |Rutt ||||Alfred Hugh||son of Harold Alfred Rutt, Rutt family tree, 4th manager of Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary from 1931 until 1967||7, 19, 29, 55, 56, 57, 60||[[Rutt-327|Alfred Hugh Rutt (1902-abt.1984)]] |- |Rutt ||||Anthony Duncan||son of Duncan Harold Rutt, Rutt family tree, joined the firm in 1951, resigned from the Board in 1975||19, 49, 60, 62||[[Rutt-364|Anthony Duncan Rutt]] |- |Rutt ||||Charles||nephew of William Grosvenor, apprentice to Richard Welles in 1786, Rutt family tree||14, 19||[[Rutt-153|Charles Rutt (abt.1772-abt.1862)]] |- |Rutt ||||Derek Alan||son of Duncan Harold Rutt, Rutt family tree, joined the firm in 1955, assistant manager of Abbey Mill in 1973||8, 19, 49, 60, 63||[[Rutt-365|Derek Alan Rutt]] |- |Rutt ||||Duncan Harold||son of Harold Alfred Rutt, Rutt family tree||16, 19, 48, 56, 62||[[Rutt-328|Duncan Harold Rutt (1907-1995)]] |- |Rutt ||||Harold Alfred||son of Alfred Rutt, Secretary, Rutt family tree||15, 16, 19, 44, 54, 58||[[Rutt-259|Harold Alfred Rutt (1872-1941)]] |- |Rutt ||||Malcolm Prentice||son of Alfred Hugh Rutt, Rutt family tree, 5th manager of Abbey Paper Mill from 1967 until 2003||8, 19, 29, 58, 59, 61||[[Rutt-366|Malcolm Prentice Rutt]] |- |Rutt ||||Thomas||son of Thomas Prentice Rutt, Rutt family tree||15, 19, 33, 54||[[Rutt-155|Thomas Rutt (1832-1920)]] |- |Rutt ||||Thomas Prentice||son of Charles Rutt, Rutt family tree||19, 32||[[Rutt-152|Thomas Prentice Rutt (1805-1880)]] |- |Saville||||John George Charles||Lord Mexborough, owner of No.11 Cornhill, London estate in the 1800's||21||[[Saville-330|John Charles George Saville (1810-1899)]] |- |Savory||||Thomas Harrison||trade representative||43||[[Savory-532|Thomas Harrison Savory (1878-1959)]] |- |Simon||||Oliver Joseh||printer and publisher||28||[[Simon-2597|Oliver Joseph Simon (1895-1956)]] |- |Simpkin||||William||bookseller, company name 'Simpkin Marshall'||36||[[Simpkin-412|William Simpkin (abt.1772-1854)]] |- |Spicer||||John Edmund Philip (Capt.)||provided a mortgage to Glory Mill near High Wycombe when the Company needed working capital. See Spicer note below this table.||32||[[Spicer-1015|John Edmund Philip Spicer (1850-1928)]] |- |Stevens||||Charles||paper-mill owner in 1824, in Greenfield, near Abbey Paper Mill||26|| |- |Stevens||||Roger||catalogue designer in 1956 working for Benham's of Colchester, printers||47|| |- |Stone||||Alan Reynolds||artist, engraver, typographer||41||[[Stone-27044|Alan Reynolds Stone (1909-1979)]] |- |Unsworth||||Richard||paper-mill owner in Greenfield, near Abbey Paper Mill in 1824||26||[[Unsworth-628|Richard Unsworth (1786-)]] |- |Wallace||||Mr.||1st manager of the Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary from 1854||29|| |- |Warren||||Mr.||2nd manager of the Abbey Paper Mill on the Dee estuary until 1897||29|| |- |Welles||||Richard||Stationer at 11 Cornhill, London, 18th century||7, 14|| |- |Wright||||Albert||guillotine operator at St Albans, Hertfordshire, (from 1977)||8, 62|| |} '''References from the above table:''' Birch note: https://search.lma.gov.uk/scripts/mwimain.dll/144/LMA_OPAC/web_detail/REFD+LMA~2F4594?SESSIONSEARCH Gardner note: Awarded the C.B.E. in the 1976 New Year Honours List. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976_New_Year_Honours Hollingworth note: https://vintagepaper.co/blogs/news/turkey-mill Spicer note: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Brief_History_of_the_Spicer_Family_and_their_involvement_in_Papermaking_along_the_Wye ==Sources==

Family businesses

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Family_businesses.jpg
McFarlane and Smith businesses that cousins, sinlings, parents or inlaws worked together in or connected to each other's business needs. {{Image|file=Family_businesses.jpg |caption=diagram of intertwined family business. }} List so far: Yalumba london house general goods saddlery in strathalbyn Mcfarlane bros limited J&m mcfarlane stores Adelaide Steamship Company New Era fruit growing and cannery. / yalumba preserving works (or were they seperate?) Hardy Plant Nursery other nursery Pinnaroo country news The Esperance Times ---- '''Yalumba''' 1849-present [[Smith-104186|Samuel Smith (1812-1889)]], [[Osborne-4264|Mary (Osborne) Smith (1819-1872)]], [[Smith-282487|Sidney Smith (1837-1908)]], [[Smith-282427|Miriam (Smith) McFarlane (1848-1942)]], [[Smith-282610|Fredrick Caley Smith (1866-1913)]] [[Smith-282612|Walter Grundy Smith (abt.1867-1938)]] [[Caley-507|Eleanor Jane (caley) Smith (1837-1925)]] [[Smith-283518|Percival Sidney Smith (1866-1954)]] [[Smith-284162|Sidney Osborne Smith (1869-1950)]] winery. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalumba samuel smith founded it. sidney smith helped plant the first crops. fred and walter took over the business. '''Strathalbyn, London House.''' 1881-1883 [[McFarlane-3220|John Muir McFarlane (1852-1887)]] Robin Hood Hotel and London House on High Street, Strathalbyn, South Australia, ca. 1970 London House is a two storey shop, single storey residence built by Thomas Stephens in 1867 as a general store, the coaching firm of Cobb and Company later built stables at the rear for coach horses used in the daily run to Adelaide. John Muir McFarlane later owned this store and installed the first telephone in Strathalbyn in 1883 connected with his other store Victoria House. https://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/5215625 John McFarlane 1881- 1883 as General Store & Iron Mongery at London house. The first phone in Strathalbyn was connected from there to Victoria House which he bought from Alfred Catt 1874. Victoria House built by Alfred Catt 1867 as a General Store. He moved early 1874 with the ‘exodus’ and opened a General Store at Gladstone. Sold to J.M. McFarlane of London House. '''Saddler.Strathalbyn''' [[McFarlane-3219|Colin Dawson McFarlane (1851-1933)]] , [[McFarlane-3214|Colin Dawson McFarlane (1810-1890)]] Colin sr founded it, passed it onto colin jr. '''McFarlane stores''' [[McFarlane-3211|David Muir McFarlane (1846-1920)]], [[McFarlane-3220|John Muir McFarlane (1852-1887)]], [[McFarlane-3226|Percy Muir McFarlane CBE, MID (1880-1946)]], [[McFarlane-3227|John Clyde McFarlane (1883-1943)]], [[McFarlane-3222|Robert Muir McFarlane (1857-1940)]] Mcfarlane limited In January 1879, the business partnership running stores in Angaston and Strathalbyn, john Muir with his brother David Muir McF ended. '''McFarlane bros. Cowell'''. [[McFarlane-3227|John Clyde McFarlane (1883-1943)]], [[McFarlane-3226|Percy Muir McFarlane CBE, MID (1880-1946)]] [[McFarlane-3222|Robert Muir McFarlane (1857-1940)]] The business of McFarlane Bros., at Cowell, Port Lincoln, Tumby Bay and Elliston. John his brother Percy Muir mcf . The business, now known as McFarlane's Ltd. at Cowell (also acted as agent for the Adelaide Steamship Company [[Goodhart-113|William Woide (goodhart) Goodhart (1862-1947)]] was manager) John took over the management of McFarlane Bros, business at Cowell. When it was created into a limited company he became a share holder and occupied the managerial' chair .until his demise. Robert lived and worked in Angaston, Millicent, Laura and then joined his brother David at Port Lincoln as assistant. 3 years later he became partner. Robert managed the Elliston branch until david retired in 1896, supervised both branches until 1906.he sold Elliston branch and in 1906 opened a branch at Tumby Bay and in 1897 in Cowell. 1911 NOTICE is hereby given that the PARTNERSHIP heretofore subsisting between DAVID MUIR MCFARLANE, of Malvern, in the State of South Australia, Storekeeper, and ROBERT MUIR MCFARLANE, of Port Lincoln, in the said State, Storekeeper, carrying on business as Storekeepers at Cowell, in the said State, and at Tumby Bay- in the said State, under the style or want of MCFARLANE BROS., has been DISSOLVED BY MUTUAL CONSENT, as from the first day of November 1911. The firmness of the said Arm at Cowell will in future be carried on by the said David Muir McFarlane alone, under the style or firm of Mcfarlane Bros. The business of the said firm at Tumby Bay will in future be carried on by the said Robert Muir McFarlane alone, under the style or firm of McFarlane Bros. Dated this first day of November, 1911. ' Witness to the signature of the said David Muir McFarlane, at Adelaide-U. W. Varley, Solicitor, Adelaide. I'd m. Mcfarlane. ' Witness to the signature of the said Robert Muir McFarlane, at Port Lincoln C. N. McKen- j the. Solicitor. Port Lincoln. I  http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article207959813 Robert as a young man joined his late brother, Mr. D. M. McFarlane, as general storekeeper at Elliston, Port Lincoln. and Cowell between 50 and 60 years ago. Mr. D. M. McFarlane went to Adelaide some years after, and Mr. R. M. McFarlane moved to Port Lincoln, leaving a manager at Elliston. 44 years ago. They later started a, business at Tumby Bay. The firm later split up. The Elliston branch was sold to Mr. F. Owen, their Port Lincoln branch to Messrs. Stockham bros while mr D.M. McFarlane took over the Cowell business and Mr. R. M. McFarlane the Tumby Bay store. Eventually the Tumby ' (Bay store was sold to Hopping Bros., who had acquired the Port Lincoln branch from Stockham Bros., and Mr. R. M. McFarlane retired and lived in Adelaide until his death. The McFarlane business was a large one. They supplied their customers all over the peninsula with not only groceries, drapery, boots, but were the source of supply for all farm requirements, and so they carried a very wide stock of hardware and even farm implements. They were also agents for the Adelaide Steamship Company until that firm opened a branch in Port Lincoln. '''New Era fruit growing company''' [[McFarlane-3211|David Muir McFarlane (1846-1920)]], [[Smith-282610|Fredrick Caley Smith (1866-1913)]] [[Smith-282612|Walter Grundy Smith (abt.1867-1938)]] [[McFarlane-3212|Sidney Colin McFarlane (1876-1906)]] David Muir director. Sidney colin worker. Fruit growing, some shipped to yalumba. 1900 NEW ERA FRUITGROWING COMPANY, LIMITED. The New Era Fruitgrowing Company at Morgan, SA flourished from about 1900 to 1926 David was involved initially in travelling the districts where Yalumba [Wines] traded and this would have included Morgan and Renmark. (his son) Sidney Colin McFarlane (1876-1906)’s cousins Fredrick Caley Smith (1866-1913), Walter and Burney Smith of Yalumba were attached to the new settlements established in Renmark and Mildura. Fruit was being sourced from Renmark for processing at Yalumba before 1900. Sidney C. McF. initially worked for his father David M. McF. on leaving school and this may have allowed him to be known in the Riverland. The original New Era enterprise on the Murray River failed and was taken over by Samuel Smith’s family, running the property successfully from 1900 to 1926. David M. McFarlane was a director of the New Era Fruit Growing Company near Morgan and he also had interests in the provision of stores. Sidney’s mother, Miriam, used to travel from Morgan to Swan hill by river boat.[MacFarlane's Lantern No. 121 - March 2012] Former store of New Era Village Settlement, The communal settlement, established 25 Apr 1894, was abandoned 2 years later. The New Era Fruit Growing Company managed the property 1900-1926, now the Cadell irrigation area.  1902 one of the directors of the New Era Fruit Growing Company. Cadell. “the New Era Fruit-growing Company . . . has been formed to take over 1,387 acres of land, held under perpetual lease from the S.A. Government at a rental of £69 7/ per annum, and known as the New Era Village Settlement. It is the intention of the company to at once start planting from 50 to 100 acres this season with sultana vines and other early fruits, and each year to extend the area, while attention will be paid to many other sources of income, such as early tomatoes, planting some hundreds of acres with lucern and other fodders to fatten store cattle and sheep, breed pigs, and other animals.” [Advertiser 18 Jun 1902] '''Pinnaroo country news''' [[McFarlane-3221|William Muir McFarlane (1855-1925)]] newspaper '''The Esperance Times''' [[Davis-100382|Charles Jeffrey Davis (abt.1873-1907)]] was the editor of the newspaper. "The Esperance times DAVIS & CAFFIN. was WILLIAM YORKE McFARLANE. Witness to Signature—E. do Grave Sells, CHARLES JEFFREY DAVIS. Witness to Signature—W. H. F. Smith, WILLIAM ALFRED CAFFIN." [[McFarlane-3221|William Muir McFarlane (1855-1925)]] is William York Mcf? '''Hardy Plant Nursery''' [[Smith-282610|Fredrick Caley Smith (1866-1913)]] fred studies diseases of plants / vines that would have helped yalumba and also new era, His eldest son is Mr. F. C. Smith, proprietor of the Hardy Plant Nursery, Aldgate. Another son, Mr W. G. Smith, was among the early settlers at Mildura, where for some time he conducted a nursery, in conjunction with Mr. J. Newell. Another son, Mr. S. O. Smith, visited Renmark a good many years ago and purchased a quantity of pears and peaches for the Yalumba Fruit Preserving Works, of which he was manager. '''yalumba preserving works''' Sidney.Osborne Smith [[Smith-284162|Sidney Osborne Smith\]] '''Adelaide Steamship Company-''' [[Goodhart-113|William Woide (goodhart) Goodhart (1862-1947)]] via [[McFarlane-3223|Mary Davidson (McFarlane) Goodhart (1857-1925)]] [[Adamson-3967|Colin Morris Adamson (1905-1986)]] Mr William Woide Goodhart, manager of the Adelaide Steamship Company's local branch, and Miss Mary Davidson McFarlane married. Goodhart joined the Adelaide Steam- ship Co. Ltd. in 1882, and during his 45 years' service, ending with his retirement in June, 1927, he was branch manager for the company in many Australian ports from Esperance, WA, to Townsville. He was best known in South Australia as branch manager at Port Augusta, Port Pirie and Port Lincoln. After leaving school, [[Adamson-3967|Colin Morris Adamson (1905-1986)]] worked as a clerk at the Adelaide Steamship Co Ltd head office in Currie Street (1922-1924), [[Goodhart-113|William Woide (goodhart) Goodhart (1862-1947)]] put advertising for Adelaide Steamship Co advertised in The Esperance Times that [[Davis-100382|Charles Jeffrey Davis]] ran. SOURCES History of Adelaide and vicinity : with a general sketch of the province of South Australia and biographies of representative men / edited by J.J. Pascoe

Family by Generation

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''' To Do List ''' ''' William Rice No. 68 Has big problems!!!! ''' ''' Profiles Complete but never Finished ''' '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | 1 ||L21B-GY3||'''[[Rice-9840|Joseph Rice]]'''||2||[[Space:Rice Family Siblings|A]]||5||6||, |- | 2 ||L5BQ-G6R||'''[[Maton-35|Phyllis Mary Maton]]'''||1||#||7||8||, |- | 3 ||L5BG-NZ3||'''[[Manuell-10|Ronald Garfield Manuell]]'''||4||B||9||10||, |- | 4 ||L5BG-JZG||'''[[Carter-20433|Margaret Rosemary Carter]]'''||3||#||11||12||, |} '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | 5 ||L21B-2V3||'''[[Rice-9841|John William Rice]]'''||1||6||[[Space:Rice Family Siblings|AA]]||14||15||, |- | 6 ||L21Y-2XY||'''[[Dymond-221|Agnes Dymond]]'''||1||5||[[Space:Rice Family Siblings|AAB]]||16||17|| |- | 7 || L5BQ-LFB||'''[[Maton-36|Wilfred Francis Maton]]'''||2||8||E||18||19||, |- | 8 ||KVRL-RY2||'''[[Springett-83|Olive Mary Springett]]'''||2||7||F||20||21||, |- | 9 ||L5B5-KZF||'''[[Manuell-12|Thomas Henry Manuell]]'''||3||10||G||22||23||, |- | 10 ||L5BG-K99||'''[[Wills-2652|Chrissie Wills]]'''||3||9 & 11||#||24||25||, |- | 11 ||LR9H-VJC||'''[[Potter-6962|Richard G Potter]]'''||#||10||K||26||27||, |- | 12 ||L5BR-H9G||'''[[Carter-20508|Leslie Carter]]'''||4||13||H||28||29||Africa? |- | 13 ||L5BR-Z5P||'''[[Stephens-7439|Launa May Stephens]]'''||4||12||J||30||31||Africa? |} '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Great Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | ||||'''=Rice Family=''' |- | 14 ||L21B-PSC||'''[[Rice-9842|Francis Rice]]'''||5||15||[[Space:Rice Family Siblings|AB]]||32||33||, |- | 15 ||L21B-PQ9||[[Prewer-29|Rachel Maria Prewer]]||5||14||.||34||35||Working On |- | 16 ||LL7F-HXG||[[Dymond-200|George Dymond]]||6||17||,||36||37||, |- | 17 ||LTRQ-YNB||[[Dooley-1028|Mary Dooley]]||6||16||,||38||39||, |- | ||||'''=Maton Family=''' |- | 18 ||9VHG-T1G||[[Maton-37|Francis Lodge Maton]]||7||19||,||40||41||, |- | 19 ||LZPS-98S||[[Saunders-6262|Jessie Saunders]]||7||18||,||42||43||, |- | 20 ||KVRL-RYG||[[Springett-84|George Springett]]||8||21||,||44||45||, |- | 21 ||KVRL-RYP||[[Baker-28352|Charlotte Baker]]||8||20||,||46||47||, |- | ||||'''=Manuell Family=''' |- | 22 ||LRM8-SVG||[[Manuell-15|Frederick John Manuell]]||9||23||,||48||49||, |- | 23 ||LRM8-S23||[[Bastian-532|Mabel Annie Bastian]]||9||22||||50||51||, |- | 24 ||LD5G-ND8||[[Wills-2727|John Thomas Wills]]||10||25||,||52||53||, |- | 25 ||LD5G-N9T||[[Richards-9775|Lucy Richards]]||10||24||,||54||55||, |- | 26 ||LR9H-VJC||[[Potter-8273|Richard James Potter]]||11||27||,||56||57||, |- | 27 ||LT1Z-JRC||[[Hicks-10836|Emma Jane Hicks]]||11||26||,||58||59||, |- | ||||'''=Carter Family=''' |- | 28 ||9J8V-63P||[[Carter-21454|Thomas Henry Carter]]||12||29||,||60||61||, |- | 29 ||9C1Q-N3X||[[Goldsworthy-639|Laura Goldsworthy]]||12||28||,||62||63|| |- | 30 ||L5BB-STH ​ ||[[Stephens-7443|William Stephens]]||13||31||,||64||65||, |- | 31 ||L5BB-SZQ||[[Webb-1680|Martha Webb]]||13||30||,||66||67||, |} '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Great Great Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | ||||'''=Rice Family=''' |- | 32 ||L285-RXT||[[Rice-9843|John Rice]]||14||33||.||68||69||, |- | 33 ||KLFQ-DMK||[[Hellier-154|Hannah Maria Hellier]]||14||32||.||70||71||, |- | 34 ||L514-S2M||[[Prewer-28|William Prewer]]||15||35||.||72||73||, |- | 35 ||LV6Z-K2T||[[Drewe-109|Emily Louisa Drewe]]||15||34||,||74||75||, |- | 36 ||LHCS-2N7||[[Dymond-196|George Dymond]]||16||37||,||76||77||, |- | 37 ||M77J-XNX||[[Fewings-91|Maria Fewings]]||16||36||,||78||79||, |- | 38 ||LTRW-WJ7||[[Dooley-1291|Darby Dooley]]||17||39||,||80||81||Ireland ? |- | 39 ||LTRW-HWQ||[[White-52023|Mary White]]||17||38||,||82||83||Ireland ? |- | ||||'''=Maton Family=''' |- | 40 ||K2YX-3HF||[[Maton-41|William Maton]]||18||41||,||84||85||, |- | 41 ||K2YX-3ZX||[[Willis-6549|Sophia Willis]]||18||40||,||86||87||, |- | 42 ||LZPS-9L1||[[Saunders-7541|William Saunders]]||19||43||,||88||89||, |- | 43 ||LZPS-9LX||[[Langdon-1710|Maria Langdon]]||19||42||,||90||91||, |- | 44 ||LCC5-PZV||[[Springett-102|Samuel Springett]]||20||45||,||92||93||, |- | 45 ||MSQJ-ZBR||[[Butler-15702|Mary Butler]]||20||44||,||94||95||, |- | 46 ||MMW7-87N||[[Baker-34512|George Baker]]||21||47||,||96||97||, |- | 47 ||MMW7-8HV||[[Randall-4932|Jane Eliza Randall]]||21||46||,||98||99||, |- | ||||'''=Manuell Family=''' |- | 48 ||LR9M-6BN||[[Manuell-29|Thomas Henry Manuell]]||22||49||,||100||101||, |- | 49 ||LR9M-H4T||[[Manley-1917|Caroline Manley]]||22||48||,||102||103||, |- | 50 ||LR9Q-9Q5||[[Bastian-585|Thomas Henry Bastian]]||23||51||||104||105||, |- | 51 ||LR93-B8R||[[Harvey-11139|Charlotte Ann Harvey]]||23||50||||106||107||, |- | 52 ||LRMS-FQ8||[[Wills-3781|John Wills]]||24||53||,||108||109||, |- | 53 ||LRMS-VF9||[[Harris-37447|Mary Hanna Harris]]||24||52||,||110||111||End |- | 54 ||LD57-245||[[Richards-9777|James Henry Richards]]||25||55||,||112||113||, |- | 55 ||LD57-L84||[[Roberts-23152|Grace Roberts]]||25||54||,||114||115||, |- | 56 ||L426-T3T||[[Potter-8280|Frederick Potter]]||26||57||,||116||117|| |- | 57 ||L426-TQM||[[Rowe-8419|Eliza Rowe]]||26||56||,||118||119|| |- | 58 ||L4NX-NDX||[[Hicks-10855|Thomas Henry Hicks]]||27||59||,||120||121||, |- | 59 ||K2P1-4FH||[[Adams-42792|Emma Jane Adams]]||27||58||,||122||123||, |- | ||||'''=Carter Family=''' |- | 60 ||KN9L-N5B||[[Carter-24834|Henry Carter]]||28||61||,||124||125||, |- | 61 ||KNMM-75W||[[Laity-215|Ann Thomas Laity]]||28||60||,||126||127||, |- | 62 ||KCY9-Q9H||[[Goldsworthy-628|Henry Goldsworthy]]||29||63||,||128||129||, |- | 63 ||KH7D-DKW||[[Rickard-153|Sophia Rickard]]||29||62||,||130||131||, |- | 64 ||L51T-HJY||[[Stephens-9318|Thomas Stephens]]||30||65||,||132||133||, |- | 65 ||L51T-CS8||[[Robins-1556|Hannah Robins]]||30||64||,||134||135||, |- | 66 ||L511-YSF ​ ||[[Webb-1679|William G Webb]]||31||67||,||136||137||, |- | 67 ||M4SB-PSH||[[Penberthy-175|Emily Penberthy]]||31||66||,||,||,||'''Note A''' |} '''Note A:''' For Penberthy Family Tree see Free Profile My Penberthy Family Tree [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:My_Penberthy_Family_Tree] '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Great Great Great Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | ||||'''=Rice Family=''' |- | 68 ||LRMQ-QCK||[[Rice-9838|William Rice]]||32||69||.||140||141||, |- | 69 ||LRMQ-WJ7||[[Hutchins-2339|Anna Hutchins]]||32||68||.||142||143||, |- | 70 ||,||[[??]]||33||71||.||144||145||End |- | 71 ||,||[[??]]||33||70||.||146||147||End |- | 72 ||,||[[??]]||34||73||.||148||149||End |- | 73 ||L514-7KH||[[Prowes-4|Ann Prowes]]||34||72||.||150||151||, |- | 74 ||M6DV-X86||[[Drewe-108|David Drewe]]||35||75||,||152||153||, |- | 75 ||M6DV-X8R||[[Baker-27576|Matilda Baker]]||35||74||,||154||155||, |- | 76 ||LHCS-KX4||[[Dymond-247|Robert Dymond]]||36||77||,||156||157||, |- | 77 ||LBB1-441||[[Hammet-18|Mary Hammet]]||36||76||,||158||159||, |- | 78 ||2Z3J-8J8||[[Fewings-93|John Fewings]]||37||79||,||160||161||, |- | 79 ||2Z3J-8NP||[[Parsons-6777|Elizabeth Parsons]]||37||78||,||,162||163||, |- | 80 ||,||[[??]]||38||81||,||164||165||End |- | 81 ||,||[[??]]||38||80||.||166||167||End |- | 82 ||,||[[??]]||39||83||.||168||169||End |- | 83 ||,||[[??]]||39||82||.||170||171||End |- | ||||'''=Maton Family=''' |- | 84 ||LK3H-KW8||[[Maton-52|William Maton]]||40||85||,||172||173||, |- | 85 ||MK5C-87C||[[Moyle-723|Deborah Moyle]]||40||84||,||174||175||, |- | 86 ||MV59-55K||[[Willis-7747|Richard Willis]]||41||87||,||176||177||, |- | 87 ||27GH-PZQ||[[Hale-7131|Harriet Hale]]||41||86||,||178||179||, |- | 88 ||LC86-1DY||[[Saunders-7555|Thomas Saunders]]||42||89||,||180||181||, |- | 89 ||LZPS-SWL||[[Jolliffe-383|Ann Jolliffe]]||42||88||,||182||183||, |- | 90 ||,||[[??]]||43||91||,||184||185||End |- | 91 ||,||[[??]]||43||90||.||186||187||End |- | 92 ||LCC5-PB4||[[Springett-103|Stephen Springett]]||44||93||,||188||189||, |- | 93 ||LCC5-PLP||[[Amey-207|Louisa Amey]]||44||92||,||190||191||, |- | 94 ||LCC5-5CN||[[Butler-15728|John Butler]]||45||95||,||192||193||, |- | 95 ||LCC5-5ZG||[[Unknown-430652|Mary Butler]]||45||94||,||194||195||, |- | 96 || LTWZ-LS5||[[Baker-34566|Jesse Baker]]||46||97||,||196||197||, |- | 97 ||KLKN-Z5T||[[Sayers-832|Mary Sayers]]||46||96||,||198||199||, |- | 98 || LRWP-98N||[[Randall-4937|John Randall]]||47||99||,||200||201||, |- | 99 ||K4NY-ZXF||[[House-4778|Mary Ann House]]||47||98||,||202||203||, |- | ||||'''=Manuell Family=''' |- | 100 ||LR93-R3S||[[Manuell-30|Philip Manuell]]||48||101||,||204||205||, |- | 101 ||KG8B-JMB||[[Gray-20294|Ann Maria Gray]]||48||100||,||206||207||, |- | 102 ||K69B-ZLT||[[Manley-1939|James Manley]]||49||103||,||208||209||, |- | 103 ||K64J-J75||[[Eslick-196|Caroline Eslick]]||49||102||,||210||211||, |- | 104 ||LR96-451||[[Bastian-586|James Bastian]]||50||105||||212||213||, |- | 105 ||LR96-4RF||[[Gilbert-9646|Matilda Jane Gilbert]]||50||104||||214||215||, |- | 106 ||LR96-CQ5||[[Harvey-11155|Thomas Harvey]]||51||107||||216||217||, |- | 107 ||MWHN-HDK||[[Whitford-583|Charlotte Whitford]]||51||106||||218||219||, |- | 108 ||||[[??]]||52||109||,||220||221||End |- | 109 ||||[[??]]||52||108||,||222||223||End |- | 110 ||||[[??]]||53||111||,||224||225||End |- | 111 ||||[[??]]||53||110||,||226||227||End |- | 112 ||LD57-V5T||[[Richards-11483|John Richards]]||54||113||,||228||229||, |- | 113 ||LD57-VB7||[[Bowden-2570|Grace Bowden]]||54||112||,||230||231||, |- | 114 ||9C1Q-N65||[[Roberts-27232|Henry Roberts]]||55||115||,||232||233||, |- | 115 ||9C1Q-N6R||[[Tripcony-8|Martha Tripcony]]||55||114||,||234||235||, |- | 116 ||,||[[??]]||56||117||,||236||237||End |- | 117 ||,||[[??]]||56||116||,||238||239||End |- | 118 ||,||[[??]]||57||119||,||240||241||End |- | 119 ||,||[[??]]||57||118||,||242||243||End |- | 120 ||L4NX-NDN||[[Hicks-10871|Richard Hicks]]||58||121||,||244||245||, |- | 121 ||4NX-NDJ||[[Truran-56|Jane Truran]]||58||120||,||246||247||, |- | 122 ||,||[[??]]||59||123||,||248||249||End |- | 123 ||,||[[??]]||59||122||,||250||251||End |- | ||||'''=Carter Family=''' |- | 124 ||K242-4BT||[[Carter-24869|Thomas Carter]]||60||125||,||252||253||, |- | 125 ||K24C-PBN||[[Ellis-15211|Jennifer Ellis]]||60||124||,||254||255||, |- | 126 ||LQR5-9DQ||[[Laity-593|Thomas Laity]]||61||127||,||256||257||, |- | 127 ||LWYZ-218||[[Osborn-4501|Rebecca Osborn]]||61||126||,||258||259||, |- | 128 ||,||[[??]]||62||129||,||260||261||End |- | 129 ||,||[[??]]||62||128||,||262||263||End |- | 130 ||,||[[??]]||63||131||,||264||265||End |- | 131 ||,||[[??]]||63||130||,||266||267||End |- | 132 ||M42P-382||[[Stephens-9347|John Stephens]]||64||133||,||268||269||, |- | 133 ||M42P-3DM||[[Uren-651|Jane Uren]]||64||132||,||270||271||, |- | 134 ||LRL1-3DW||[[Robins-1557|William Robins]]||65||135||,||272||273||, |- | 135 ||L51T-GB9||[[Richards-11489|Mary Ann Richards]]||64||134||,||274||275||, |- | 136 ||KCGP-X5K||[[Webb-13628|John Webb]]||66||137||,||276||277||, |- | 137 ||KH8Y-595||[[Herring-2183|Ann Herring]]||66||136||,||278||279||, |} '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Great Great Great Great Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | ||||'''=Rice Family=''' |- | 140 || LR73-D2D||[[Rice-9839|John Rice]]||68||141||.||284||285||, |- | 141 ||2ZS4-JLT||[[Howard-13655|Ann Howard]]||68||140||.||286||287||, |- | 142 ||MRRW-D6W||[[Hutchins-2749|Thomas Hutchins]]||69||143||.||288||289||, |- | 143 ||MRRW-D6V||[[Unknown-430986|Ann Unknown]]||69||142||.||290||291||, |- | 144 ||,||[[??]]||70||145||.||292||293||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||.||,||,||End |- | 151 ||,||[[??]]||73||150||.||306||307||End |- | 152 ||L514-BCQ||[[Drewe-107|John Drewe]]||74||153||,||308||309||, |- | 153 ||L51H-9RM||[[Adams-29832|Mary Adams]]||74||152||,||310||311||, |- | 154 ||,||[[??]]||75||155||,||312||313||End |- | 155 ||,||[[??]]||75||154||,||314||315||End |- | 156 ||LHCS-K3J||[[Dymond-304|James Dymond]]||76||157||,||316||317||, |- | 157 ||LHCS-KQZ||[[Hake-267|Mary Hake]]||76||156||,||318||319||, |- | 158 ||,||[[??]]||77||159||,||320||321||End |- | 159 ||,||[[??]]||77||158||,||322||323||End |- | 160 ||9WT1-72W||[[Fewings-114|John Fewings]]||78||161||,||324||325||, |- | 161 ||2Z3J-8J8||[[Southwood-96|Sarah Southwood]]||78||160||,||326||327||, |- | 162 ||,||[[??]]||79||163||,||328||329||End |- | ||||'''=Maton Family=''' |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 181 ||,||[[??]]||88||180||,||366||367||End |- | 182 ||LW6H-KKN||[[Jolliffe-384|Robert Jolliffe]]||89||183||,||368||369||, |- | 183 ||LCW2-JC1||[[Heale-134|Mary Heale]]||89||182||,||370||371||, |- | 184 ||,||[[??]]||90||185||,||372||373||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 187 ||,||[[??]]||91||186||.||378||379||End |- | 188 ||M693-Y9X||[[Springett-104|James Springett]]||92||189||,||380||381||, |- | 189 ||M693-Y9B||[[Unknown-431442|Sarah]]||92||188||,||382||383||, |- | 190 ||MD1B-T4B||[[Amey-208|John Amey]]||93||191||,||384||385||, |- | 191 ||MD1B-TH4||[[Unknown-431446|Ann]]||93||190||,||386||387||, |- | 192 ||,||[[??]]||94||193||,||388||389||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 195 ||,||[[??]]||95||194||,||394||395||End |- | 196 ||LTW8-3QS||[[Baker-34636|John Baker]]||96||197||,||396||397||, |- | 197 || LTWZ-B4C||[[Unknown-431447|Hannah]]||96||196||,||398||399||, |- | 198 ||,||[[??]]||97||199||,||400||401||End |- | 199 ||,||[[??]]||97||198||,||402||403||End |- | 200 ||LRZD-19Q||[[Randal-142|Richard Randal]]||98||201||,||404||405||, |- | 201 ||ML9V-HFR||[[Unknown-431449|Sarah]]||98||200||,||406||407||, |- | 202 ||,||[[??]]||99||203||,||408||409||End |- | 203 ||,||[[??]]||99||202||,||410||411||End |- | ||||'''=Manuell Family=''' |- | 204 ||LR97-G6Q||[[Manuel-3862|William Manuel]]||100||205||,||412||413||, |- | 205 ||M7GQ-1HW||[[Woolcock-207|Drusilla Woolcock]]||100||204||,||414||415||, |- | 206 ||KG8B-JM1||[[Gray-20350|John Gray]]||101||207||,||416||417||, |- | 207 ||KPQY-GYW||[[Carbis-58|Maria Carbis]]||101||206||,||418||419||, |- | 208 ||LCT9-YHH||[[Manley-1941|John Manley]]||102||209||,||420||421||, |- | 209 ||L4QT-99J ​ ||[[Manuel-3863|Eleanor Manuel]]||102||208||,||422||423||, |- | 210 ||KG8B-43R||[[Eslick-197|William Eslick]]||103||211||,||424||425||, |- | 211 ||KG8B-43Y ​ ||[[Unknown-431553|Johanna]]||103||210||,||426||427||, |- | 212 ||,||[[??]]||104||213||||428||429||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||||,||,||End |- | 217 ||,||[[??]]||106||216||||438||439||End |- | 218 ||LHBY-HGN||[[Whitford-584|John Whitford]]||107||219||||440||441||, |- | 219 ||K6QX-WZS||[[Penberthy-107|Elizabeth Penberthy]]||107||218||||442||443||'''Note A''' |- | 220 ||||[[??]]||108||221||,||444||445||End |- | - ||||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 231 ||,||[[??]]||113||230||,||466||467||End |- | 232 ||MDJ1-X5Y||[[Roberts-27283|Richard Roberts]]||114||233||,||468||469||, |- | 233 ||K4VM-PNK||[[Seccomb-15|Grace Seccomb]]||114||232||,||470||471||, |- | 234 ||LCXP-6F7||[[Tripcony-9|Anthony Tripcony]]||115||235||,||472||473||, |- | 235 ||MMZ4-3L4||[[Roberts-27284|Mary Roberts]]||115||234||,||474||475||, |- | 236 ||,||[[??]]||116||237||,||476||477||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 251 ||,||[[??]]||123||250||,||506||507||End |- | ||||'''=Carter Family=''' |- | 252 ||KZVC-1NK||[[Carter-24919|Thomas Carter]]||124||253||,||508||509||, |- | 253 ||LHCQ-BM7||[[Richards-11508|Margaret Richards]]||124||252||,||510||511||, |- | 254 ||M431-9K6||[[Ellis-15237|Robert Ellis]]||125||255||,||512||513||, |- | 255 ||M431-92G||[[Unknown-431695|Clara]]||125||254||,||514||515||, |- | 256 ||LWGF-RQJ||[[Laity-217|George Laity]]||126||257||,||516||517||, |- | 257 ||LWGR-KBJ||[[Laity-218|Grace Laity]]||126||256||,||518||519||, |- | 258 ||M43T-FVH||[[Osborn-4507|Joseph Osborn]]||127||259||,||520||521||, |- | 259 ||M43T-FK9||[[Unknown-431702|Jane]]||127||258||,||522||523||, |- | 260 ||,||[[??]]||128||261||,||524||525||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 267 ||,||[[??]]||131||266||,||538||539||End |- | 268 ||MWX6-36F||[[Stephens-9383|John Stephens]]||132||269||,||540||541||, |- | 269 ||MWX6-3XH||[[Edwards-20819|Martha Edwards]]||132||268||,||542||543||, |- | 270 ||MWV4-HCT||[[Uren-319|Sampson Uren]]||133||271||,||544||545||, |- | 271 ||MWV4-HZZ||[[Moyle-594|Mary Moyle]]||133||270||,||546||547||, |- | 272 ||,||[[??]]||134||273||,||548||549||End |- | 273 ||,||[[??]]||134||272||,||550||551||End |- | 274 ||M42T-4J1||[[Richards-11511|James Richards]]||135||275||,||552||553||, |- | 275 || LHP4-FH1||[[Polkinghorne-253|Grace Polkinghorne]]||135||274||,||554||555||, |- | 276 ||,||[[??]]||136||277||,||556||557||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 279 ||,||[[??]]||137||278||,||562||563||End |} '''Note A:''' For Penberthy Family Tree see Free Profile My Penberthy Family Tree [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:My_Penberthy_Family_Tree] '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Five X Great Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | ||||'''=Rice Family=''' |- | 284 || MD3W-573||[[Rice-9982|James Rice]]||140||285||.||572||573||, |- | 285 ||MD3W-9M5||[[Unknown-431822|Sarah]]||140||284||.||574||575||, |- | 286 ||MDXF-HRQ||[[Howard-13660|George Howard]]||141||287||.||576||577||, |- | 287 ||MDXF-HRF||[[Unknown-431825|Mary]]||141||286||.||578||579||, |- | 288 ||,||[[??]]||142||289||.||580||581||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||.||,||,||End |- | 315 ||,||[[??]]||155||314||,||634||635||End |- | 316 ||M84Q-Y33||[[Dymond-305|Joseph Dymond]]||156||317||,||636||637||, |- | 317 ||M847-FSK||[[Pidgeon-358|Sarah Pidgeon]]||156||316||,||638||639||, |- | 318 ||,||[[??]]||157||319||,||640||641||End |- | ||||'''=Maton Family=''' |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 367 ||,||[[??]]||181||366||,||736||737||End |- | 368 ||L4QZ-WKP||[[Jolliffe-385|Thomas Jolliffe]]||182||369||,||742||743||, |- | 369 ||L4QZ-WG2||[[Wills-3208|Elizabeth Wills]]||182||368||,||744||745||, |- | 370 ||,||[[??]]||183||371||,||746||747||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 411 ||,||[[??]]||203||410||,||826||827||End |- | ||||'''=Manuell Family=''' |- | 412 ||LWXT-FTM||[[Manuel-3866|Phillip Manuel]]||204||413||,||828||829||, |- | 413 ||9X3W-NCP||[[Landeira-1|Elizabeth Landeira ]]||204||412||,||830||831||, |- | 414 ||M7GQ-1CQ||[[Woolcock-208|John Woolcock]]||205||415||,||832||833||, |- | 415 ||M7GQ-1CR||[[Unknown-432009|Mary]]||205||414||,||834||835||, |- | 416 ||,||[[??]]||206||417||||836||837||End |- | 417 ||,||[[??]]||206||416||||838||839||End |- | 418 ||KHTS-WXJ||[[Carbis-59|Thomas Carbis]]||207||419||,||840||841||, |- | 419 ||KPQY-NBX||[[Pascoe-1157|Grace Pascoe]]||207||418||,||842||843||, |- | 420 ||,||[[??]]||208||421||||844||845||End |- | 421 ||,||[[??]]||208||420||||846||847||End |- | 422 ||LHHS-TS2||[[Manuel-3821|Richard Manuel]]||209||423||,||848||849||, |- | 423 ||LHXR-TGS||[[Hambley-62|Elizabeth Hambley]]||209||422||,||850||851||, |- | 424 ||,||[[??]]||210||425||,||852||853||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 485 ||,||[[??]]||231||484||,||974||975||End |- | 486 ||K23K-XTS||[[Roberts-27335|William Roberts]]||232||487||,||976||977||, |- | 487 ||KJCB-1DR||[[Gay-3447|Dinah Gay]]||232||486||,||978||979||, |- | 488 ||,||[[??]]||233||489||,||980||981||End |- | 489 ||,||[[??]]||233||488||,||982||983||End |- | 490 ||LH16-M4V||[[Tripcony-10|Anthony Tripcony]]||234||491||,||984||985||, |- | 491 ||K26R-CPC||[[Champion-1603|Margaret Champion]]||234||490||,||986||987||, |- | 492 ||,||[[??]]||235||493||,||988||989||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 507 ||,||[[??]]||251||506||,||1018||1019||End |- | ||||'''=Carter Family=''' |- | 508 ||LWB1-927||[[Carter-24974|Robert Carter]]||252||509||,||1020||1021||, |- | 509 ||LWB1-92W||[[Champion-1604|Jenifred Champion]]||252||508||,||1022||1023||, |- | 510 ||,||[[??]]||253||511||,||1024||1025||End |- | ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 539 ||,||[[??]]||267||538||,||1082||1083||End |- | 540 || MWX6-SZC||[[Stephens-9400|John Stephens]]||268||541||,||1084||1085||, |- | 541 ||MWX6-S8M||[[Unknown-432727|Catherine]]||268||540||,||1086||1087||, |- | 542 ||,||[[??]]||269||543||,||1088||1089||End |- | ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 545 ||,||[[??]]||270||545||,||1094||1095||End |- | 546 ||MWJW-XJ7||[[Uren-320|Sampson Uren]]||270||547||,||1096||1097||, |- | 547 ||MWJW-XVB||[[Dunstone-337|Mary Dunstone]]||270||546||,||1098||1099||, |- | 548 ||,||[[??]]||271||549||,||,||,||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 553 ||,||[[??]]||274||552||,||,||,||End |- | 554 ||KLT1-5SH||[[Polkinghorne-254|Edward Polkinghorne]]||275||555||,||1112||1113||, |- | 555 ||KLT1||[[Pearce-5107|Grace Pearce]]||275||554||,||1114||1115||, |- | 556 ||,||[[??]]||276||557||,||,||,||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 571 ||,||[[??]]||278||570||,||,||,||End |} '''Bold''' is completed, but also see Notes ''''''Six X Great Grand Parents''':-''' {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Child'''||'''Married'''||'''Sibling'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''To Do''' |- | ||||'''=Rice Family=''' |- | 572 || M88X-T4F||[[Rice-12365|Walter Rice]]||284||573||.||1148||1149||, |- | 573 ||M88X-T41||[[Unknown-432902|Mary]]||284||572||.||1150||1151||, |- | 574 ||,||[[??]]||285||575||.||1152||1153||, |- | 575 ||,||[[??]]||285||574||.||1154||1155||, |- | 576 ||MDX6-K52||[[Howard-17207|George Howard]]||286||577||.||1156||1157||, |- | 577 ||MDX6||[[Unknown-432952|Margaret]]||286||576||.||1158||1159||, |- | 578 ||,||[[??]]||287||579||.||1160||1161||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||.||,||,||End |- | 637 ||,||[[??]]||316||636||,||1276||1277||End |- | 638 ||M84Q-RRP||[[Pidgeon-359|James Pidgeon]]||317||639||,||1278||1279||, |- | 639 ||L83M-F6H||[[Drummet-10|Betty Drummet]]||317||638||,||1280||1281||, |- | 640 ||,||[[??]]||318||641||,||1282||1283||End |- | ||||'''=Maton Family=''' |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 737 ||,||[[??]]||367||736||,||1478||1479||End |- | 738 ||M687-ZN7||[[Jollieff-1|John Jollieff]]||368||739||,||1480||1481||, |- | 739 ||M687-ZNV||[[Remor-2|Amay Remor]]||368||738||,||1482||1483|, |- | 740 ||MQY5-2KC||[[Wills-3225|Humphry Wills]]||369||741||,||1484||1485||, |- | 741 ||MQY5-2KB||[[Unknown-432960|Margret]]||369||740||,||1486||1487||, |- | 742 ||,||[[??]]||370||743||,||1488||1489||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 827 ||,||[[??]]||411||826||,||1658||1659||End |- | ||||'''=Manuell Family=''' |- | 828 ||2WMB-N41||[[Manuel-3874|Jacob Manuel]]||412||829||,||1660||1661||, |- | 829 ||LWXT-FRX||[[Jacob-2059|Elizabeth Jacob]]||412||828||,||1662||1663||, |- | 830 ||,||[[??]]||413||831||.||1664||1665||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||.||,||,||End |- | 847 ||,||[[??]]||421||846||,||1698||1699||End |- | 848 ||LHHS-TMB||[[Manuel-3822|Richard Manuel]]||422||849||,||1700||1701||, |- | 849 ||LHHS-T9Q ​ ||[[Unknown-424569|Martha]]||422||848||,||1702||1703||, |- | 850 ||L4QT-WQV||[[Hambley-58|Thomas Hambley]]||423||851||,||1704||1705||, |- | 851 ||LHT9-P69||[[Jeffery-1572|Elianour Jeffery]]||423||850||,||1706||1707||, |- | 852 ||,||[[??]]||425||853||,||1708||1709||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 975 ||,||[[??]]||485||974||,||1954||1955||End |- | 976 ||LCVX-X2V||[[Roberts-27423|Micheal Roberts]]||486||977||,||1956||1957||, |- | 977 ||LZCR-SBJ||[[Tresize-25|Mary Tresize]]||486||976||,||1958||1959||, |- | 978 ||MW9Z-N31||[[Gay-3449|Abraham Gay]]||487||979||,||1960||1961||, |- | 979 ||M42D-1HB||[[Eddy-3173|Dinah Eddy]]||487||978||,||1962||1963||, |- | 980 ||,||[[??]]||488||981||,||1964||1965||End |- | 983 ||,||[[??]]||489||982||,||1970||1971||End |- | 984 ||LHF5-J4R||[[Tripcony-11|Anthony Tripcony]]||490||985||,||1972||1973||, |- | 985 ||LHGX-V4T||[[Unknown-433572|Elizabeth]]||490||984||,||1974||1975||, |- | 986 ||K26R-ZVB||[[Champion-1606|George Champion]]||491||987||,||1976||1977||, |- | 987 ||LH1D-BSD||[[George-7222|Jane George]]||491||986||,||1978||1979||, |- | 988 ||,||[[??]]||492||989||,||1980||1981||End |- | - ||,||[[??]]||,||,||,||,||,||End |- | 1019||,||[[??]]||507||1018||,||2042||2043||End |- | ||||'''=Carter Family=''' |- | 1020||,||[[??]]||508||1021||,||2044||2045||End |- | 1147||,||[[??]]||571||1146||,||2298||2299||End |} Siblings must have at least '''One''' source '''Siblings''':- {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''Our Ref'''||'''F,S Ref'''||'''Name'''||'''Father'''||'''Mother'''||'''Married'''||'''Children'''||'''To Do''' |- | A1 ||L21B-GJY ||​ '''[[Rice-9813|Florence May Rice]]'''||5||6||Yes||?||, |- | A2 ||L21B-G27||'''[[Rice-9810|Annie Rice]]'''||5||6||No||,||, |- | A3 ||LT2W-P91||'''[[Rice-9816|Agnes Rice]]'''||5||6||Yes||Yes||, |- | A4 ||LT2W-RGV ​ ||'''[[Rice-9815|John Henry Rice]]'''||5||6||Yes||?||, |- | A5 ||L21B-GP2 ​ ||'''[[Rice-9814|Frederick Rice]]'''||5||6||Yes||Yes||, |- | B1 ||LRMD-MGH ​ ||'''[[Manuell-13|Thomas Trevor Manuell]]'''||9||10||Yes||Yes|| |- | B2 ||LRMD-MLW||'''[[Manuell-14|Nancy Mable Manuell]]'''||9||10||Yes||?|| |- | B3 ||LR9H-V3M||'''[[Manuell-28|David Manuell]]'''||#||10||?||?|| |- | B4 ||No||[[Mandell-62|Carol Mandell]]||9||#||||||Note B1 |- | B5 ||No||[[Mandell-61|Joan Mandell]]||9||#||||||Note B1 |- | C1 ||L5B4-M3S||'''[[Rice-9824|Louisa Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C2 ||L5BW-1SZ||'''[[Rice-9823|Annie Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C3 ||L5B4-SRD||'''[[Rice-9817|Joeseph H Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C4 ||L5B4-SYW||'''[[Rice-9821|Emily Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C5 ||L5BC-Y4T||'''[[Rice-9822|Francis Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C6 || L5BC-YHX||'''[[Rice-9825|Ellen Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C7 ||L5BC-YCS||'''[[Rice-9827|Bertha Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C8 ||L5BC-T52||'''[[Rice-9826|Albert Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C9 ||L5BC-RPQ||'''[[Rice-9820| Fanny Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C10 || L5BC-TCS||'''[[Rice-9811|Edith Rice]]'''||14||15||||||Check Email sent by Lorna |- | C11 ||L5BC-Y1K||'''[[Rice-9818|Frederick Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | C12 ||L5BC-Y1T||'''[[Rice-9819|Bessie Rice]]'''||14||15|||||| |- | D1 ||||'''[[Dymond-208|Ida Mary Dymond]]'''||16||17|||||| |- | D2 ||||'''[[Dymond-248|George Dymond]]'''||16||17|||||| |- | D3 ||||'''[[Dymond-259|Robert Dymond]]'''||16||17|||||| |- | D4 ||||'''[[Dymond-260|William Henry Dymond]]'''||16||17|||||| |- | D5 ||||'''[[Dymond-261|John Thomas Dymond]]'''||16||17|||||| |- | E1 ||||[[Maton-38|Elsie Louisa Maton]]||,||,||||||Unsourced |- | E2 ||||[[Maton-39|Amelia Emily Maton]]||,||,||||||Unsourced |- | E3 ||||[[Maton-40|Dora Maton]]||,||,||||||Unsourced |- | F1 ||||'''[[Springett-85|Frank Springett]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | F2 ||||'''[[Springett-86|Harry Springett]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | F3 ||||[[Springett-87|Doris Springett]]||,||,||||||Unsourced |- | G1 ||||'''[[Manuell-16| Doris Ivy Manuell]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | G2 ||||'''[[Manuell-17| Frederick John Manuell]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | G3 ||||'''[[Manuell-18| Enid M Manuell]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | G4 ||||'''[[Manuell-19| John Verdun Manuell]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | H1 ||||[[Carter-21455|Mary Carter]]||,||,||||||Unsourced |- | H2 ||||'''[[Carter-21457|Thomas Henry Carter]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | H3 ||||'''[[Carter-21458|Clarice Irene Carter]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | H4 ||||'''[[Carter-21459|Madeline Carter]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | J1 ||||'''[[Stephens-7440|Lewis Norman Stephens]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | J2 ||||'''[[Stephens-7904|Willie Stephens]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | J3 ||||'''[[Stephens-7442|Percy Stephens]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | J4 ||||'''[[Stephens-7441|Olive Irene Stephens]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | J5 ||||'''[[Stephens-7438|Harold Stephens]]'''||,||,|||||| |- | J6 ||||[[Stephens-7903|Pearl Stephens]]||,||,||||||Unsourced |- | K1 ||L1W8-XD4||'''[[Potter-8466|Frederick Potter]]'''||26||27||?||?|| |- | K2 ||L1NB-KWZ||'''[[Potter-8467|Kathleen Potter]]'''||26||27||?||?|| |- | K3 ||L1W8-LWZ||'''[[Potter-8468|Edwin J Potter]]'''||26||27||?||?|| |} ''' Notes''' B1. Can not find any Canadian Records ''' Sources ''' * First-hand information. Entered by Geoffrey Rice at registration.

Family Cabin at Samish Island, Washington

PageID: 27779444
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 19 views
Created: 12 Jan 2020
Saved: 12 Jan 2020
Touched: 12 Jan 2020
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 6
Family_Cabin_at_Samish_Island_Washington-4.jpg
Family_Cabin_at_Samish_Island_Washington.jpg
Family_Cabin_at_Samish_Island_Washington-2.jpg
Family_Cabin_at_Samish_Island_Washington-1.jpg
Family_Cabin_at_Samish_Island_Washington-5.jpg
Family_Cabin_at_Samish_Island_Washington-3.jpg
Photos of Kirby-Dobson-Stevens cabin at Samish Island, 9478 Marshall Road

Family Castles

PageID: 13479744
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 224 views
Created: 24 Mar 2016
Saved: 28 Jan 2020
Touched: 28 Jan 2020
Managers: 1
Watch List: 3
Project:
Images: 6
Family_Castles-4.jpg
Family_Castles-2.jpg
Family_Castles-1.jpg
Family_Castles.jpg
Family_Castles-5.jpg
Family_Castles-3.jpg
The goal of this project is to profile castles that I have found while researching my family tree. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Schon-264|Troy Schon]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Pictures, pictures, pictures. -Builders -Notable nobles. -Military engagements. -History of ownership. * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12512936 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Cats

PageID: 32445656
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 47 views
Created: 17 Feb 2021
Saved: 19 Feb 2021
Touched: 19 Feb 2021
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 14
Family_Cats-10.jpg
Family_Cats-12.jpg
Family_Cats-5.jpg
Family_Cats-3.jpg
Family_Cats-9.jpg
Family_Cats-13.jpg
Family_Cats-2.jpg
Family_Cats-11.jpg
Family_Cats-1.jpg
Family_Cats.jpg
Family_Cats-6.jpg
Family_Cats-7.jpg
Family_Cats-4.jpg
Family_Cats-8.jpg
This page will contain photos and comments about the cats in the Larner family of 47 Lincoln Street Norwich and the Hills family of 6 Coppice Avenue, Hellesdon, Norwich.

Family connection

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Gaunce-88

Family connections around Black Springs and Oberon New South Wales

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Grady-654.jpg
The goal of this project is to map the interrelated family connections around Black Springs and Oberon New South Wales. As this area was isolated up until the 1880s the families of the area have multiple connections. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gorman-1067|Elsie Gorman]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * add known connections * list early settlers *list their farms *good source http://www.jimfleming.id.au/up/index.htm https://www.blackspringscommunityassociation.com.au/copy-of-about-us *Grady descendants are buried at black springs cemetery, Oberon cemetery https://austcemindex.com/?cemid=183&photographer=1 Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=11380506 send me a private message]. Thanks! ''Early families'' *Behan married Gorman (Shooters hill) Grady *Dargin married Gorman Whalan (Charles 1792 line) *Donnelly, married Grady Hanrahan McGuirk **James Donnelly married Margaret Hanrahan in the Black Springs area on 17 Jun 1854 and they had three children: *Grady daughters are founding mothers of the Casey/Kessey, Foran and Rawson families, Mary (c1807 - 1880 Rawson), Ellen (c1812 - 1894 Foran), Judith (c1816 - 1883 Casey/Kessey), later generations married Gorman Truscotts Flat, Gorman Shooters Hill *Phillips, daughters are founding mothers of the Gorman and Nightingale families, later generations married into the Crozier, Lee, Hogan and Foran families *Gorman Grady marriages **[[Gorman-1668|Alice (Gorman) Ryan]] married Maurice Alfred Grady B:4 Oct 1908 Lithgow, New South Wales, D:1983, son of William James Grady BIRTH 16 SEPTEMBER 1855 DEATH 13 JULY 1927 GRADY WILLIAM J15097/1927 WILLIAM MARGARET OBERON • Oberon Alice's parents **[[Gorman-1077|John 1852]] and [[Grady-653|Rosanna (Grady) Gorman (1856 - 1935)]] **[[Gorman-1072|William Gorman (16 Nov 1850 - 01 Apr 1882)]] married [[Grady-65|Margaret (Grady) Joyce (1856 - 1935)]] John and William are brothers, Margaret and Rosanna aunt and niece There is a good list of local names at[ https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/12861544?searchTerm=Fosters%20Valley%20south%20of%20Bathurst The Sydney Herald (NSW : 1831 - 1842) Fri 29 May 1840 Page 1 A LIST OF OUTRAGES COMMITTED IN THE DISTRICT OF BATHURST.] ''Farms'' *[[Gorman-1073|James Gorman]] Truscotts Flat, *[[Gorman-1535|James Gorman]] Shooters Hill *Rawsons [[Rawson-618|Samuel]] and Mary Grady Brisbane Valley where the family cemetery is *[[Donnelly-1255|James Donnelly]] and Anne lived at Brisbane Valley in the Fish River district near Oberon, NSW. Their land is in Mozart and now forms part of the property Lochlene. *[[ | ]] *[[ | ]] *[[ | ]] *[[Grady-654 | James Grady]] near the source of Fish River Creek and acquired numerous other blocks until 1859 when his estate was considerable/ Charley's Hill Black Springs Later went to John (1839-1925) and his wife Mary (McGuirk 1838-1925) and probably their son James (1861-1921)? *John Kessey married Patrick and Catherine’s Hogan daughter Mary Anne Kessey (KESSEY MARY A10401/1907 PATRICK CATHERINE OBERON) and settled Wattle Park. *JAMES Stevenson obtained Swatchfield in 1857. *William Robinson and Jane Robinson, nee Stilwell, settled at Melville Park in 1859. *Daniel Stapleton married Mary Walsh at St Mary’s Cathedral in 1853 and settled at Isabella. ==Sources== *[https://www.ancestry.com.au/family-tree/tree/65555523/family/familyview?cfpid=36143421630 Black springs Ancestry tree] *''Bathurst Pioneers'' http://sites.rootsweb.com/~nswbfhg/BathurstPioneers.pdf *[http://www.jimfleming.id.au/up/index.htm Jim Flemming] * [ http://oakycamp.com/_pdfs/History_of_Oberon_Shire_2004.pdf History of Oberon Shire] *https://www.blackspringscommunityassociation.com.au/copy-of-about-us *Avoca, the faith of the pioneers / G.M. Cashman. T *the Gradys are mentioned in this [https://www.oberonreview.com.au/story/6388323/black-springs-looks-back-avoca-church-a-monument-to-faith/ article on Avoca church]

Family Connections With The Wisconsin School For The Deaf, Delavan Wisconsin

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Profile Manager writes: (1) Even as a young child, we all knew that "Grandma Stewart" had taught at the Wisconsin School for the Deaf (WSD). Later, we found out that her father, E. W. Walker, had been the Superintendent of WSD. (2) The 1902 photo adds to this story. Grandma, aged 13, and her whole family apparently had a "long weekend" at Delavan Lake. Profile manager believes this is a photo of the Walker family and WSD teachers. The cabin owners, the Fiskes, are also shown in the photo.

Family data sheets collected by Claude Wayne and Ernest Secrest

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Secrest, Claude Wayne and Ernest Lyle - Handwritten Pages - Family data sheets collected by Claude Wayne and Ernest Secrest, statement by Secrest, Claude Wayne (now deceased); Secrest, Claude Wayne data typed by Leona Thurman dated Sept. 1972. The information on the Secrest, Waldron family table was collected and arranged, to the best of my ability by Claude Wayne Secrest, 1716 N. Quebec Street, Arlington, Va. 22207. This information we collected over a period of ten years, so if you are under ten years old, your name is probably not listed. There are probably some errors, as most sources are word of mouth. I wish to thank the following people who helped make this possible: Mrs. Ellen B. McManaway (Deceased), Mrs. Annie B. Beard (Age 98), Mrs. Russell Jones, Mrs. Earl Waldron, Mrs. Huldah Wheeler, Mrs. Naomi Robertson, Mrs. Ethel Secrest, Mrs. Dorothy Creasy, Mrs. Marion Cormany, Mr. Ernest L.Secrest, Mr. Ira Quarles, Mrs. Elsie Oliver, Mr. Alfred St. Clair, Mrs. Dennis Bowyer, Mrs. Eva Jones, Mrs. Mary Watson, Mrs. Thelma Bean, Mrs. Leona Thurman (copy in possession of [[Secrest-288|BJS]])

Family dispute

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'''Summary of Pound-Breach case.'''[https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000172/18330413/007/0002 Leicester Chronicle - Saturday 13 April 1833] Britishnewspaperarchive, British Library & Findmypast (accessed 26 August 2022) [[Wale-291|Thomas Roadley Wale]] was brought to court for threatening a Pinder (one who rounds up loose animals and puts them in the pound), William Riley of Shepshed. Riley deposed that [[Smith-284013|Mr Smith]], farmer, told him to take 4 beasts from a field in Oakley Knob to the pound. The defendant (Wale) came and breaking a bar off the gate held it up saying that he (Riley) shouldn't take the cattle. He did not strike him nor use any ill language. He was afraid of the bar and allowed him to take the beasts. William Clarkson who had been present said that the defendant had said he would dash the pinder's brains out, and cross examined said that he had seen Wale's cattle in the field once or twice before. Mr Smith was called. He had married [[Wale-303|Mary Ann Wale]] and had been engaged in a law-suit with her sister, [[Wale-302|Miss Wale]]. Miss Wale had never possessed Oakley Knob nor was the defendant ever joint occupier of it. He had had possession of it for 14 years and reaped the produce, he also accused Wale of cutting the hay by night as "his deeds were evil and he feared the light". The prosecution tried to ascertain if Smith was the sole owner of the land, but he dismissed the question saying his sister in law had already managed to get from him considerable property, and wished to deprive him of what little he had left. The Humphrey (defence) said that Mr Wale, the defendants uncle had two daughters, one of whom was married to Mr Smith, and the other, unmarried was owner of an undivided moiety of the field. An action had been taken in 1831 to compel him to admit the sister-in-law to joint-possession of the property, but the judgement went against him by default. The defendant (T.R. Wale) rented this moiety from Miss Wale and it was perfectly legal for him to rescue the cattle before they were impounded. The defendant's father [[Wale-27|Edward Wale]] deposed that he was the uncle of Miss Wale, and that from her he rented a moiety of Oakley Knob. The chairman observed that the Title of the Property should not be taken into account, as even if he was joint-tenant that did not justify taking the law into his own hands. Verdict, guilty, To be fined one shilling and discharged. == Sources ==

Family Distribution in the North East Lowlands

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Page 03
=== '''Family Distribution in the North East Lowlands 1309----1809''' === :Map 2 shows the distribution of family members over the period 1309 to 1809 :with a time line of original spellings of our surname. :It will be noted that the distribution holds to a clearly defined area; :Aberdeen is the most northerly distribution point :down to Dundee which is the most southerly. :A line taken from Kirriemuir to Strachan :would give you a corridor running north, :which would not be more than fifteen miles wide, :before your toes would be splashing in the north sea. :The major concentration of families would, then be, :contained in a block, thirty miles long by fifteen wide. :Aberdeen town I would have expected to have thrown up a lot more than it has : John Drimmy 1325 "Sheriff of Aberdeen" is notable. :1652 Old Machar "Drumbe", :then nothing till the 1761 marriage of Alexander Drimmie, :he is having children there until 1771 :John Dreime, tailor, in Aberdeen, noted 1767. :Maryculter has no births or marriage events of interest for us, :its claim to inclusion rests with the 1649 will of Alexander Drimie :in which he requests that his body be : "honestly buried in the kirk yaird of Mary Coulter". :The will gives us no other clue as to where he actually lived :except that debts owing to him were by people in the area of Mary Coulter; :Monqueith, Elsick, Whytsyd, are all still place names there. :The main contender for the heartland of Drimmie occupation during this period :comprises the Howe of the Mearns; Fettercairn, Aberluthnot (Marykirk), :Edzell, St Cyrus and Laurencekirk, with Montrose not quite within the Howe :but part of the heartland none the less. === Wills and Testaments === :This is quite a tight knit grouping all within a small area :1594 the testament of Katherine Drymie in Balmanock, Aberluthnot; :naming her son James Drymmie and niece Geillis Drymmie; :also mentioning her brother John Drymmie in Arnehall, Fettercairn. :1594, the next testament, is of Katherine's husband David Falconer :in Balmanot, Aberluthnot; naming George Drymmie in Nether Balmakellie :and Agnes Drymmie niece to Katherine. :1600 testament of Bessie Drymie in Balmakewan, Aberluthnot : naming William Drymie her husband; :George Drymmie brother of William and Agnes Drymmie her servant. :1605 Jonet Jamie's testament tells us she is in Inshe, Fettercairn; : (Inshe is part of Arnhall) naming her husband James Drymmie; : with William, John and Elspet Drymmie children of James. :1618 testament of Christian Drymmie in Boginwid, Fettercairn :we learn of her husband David Drymmie, Margaret Drymmie daughter :and Maret Drymmie daughter to David's first wife. :1619 the testament of Jonat Jamy in the Inche Fettercairn, : Jon Drymmie husband, Jon Drymmie son (minor); :William, Jonatt, Issobell Drymmie children to first wife Catherine Grub; :Jonatt Drymmie in the Inche, James Drymmie in the Inche. :1620 testament of Alexander Drymmie Stracathrow. :1621 testament of Grizzell Stewart in Inche Fettercairn; :James Drymmie husband, Alexander Drymmie son (minor); :Jon Drymie in the Inche, Charles Drymmie in the Inche. :1612 and the Old Parish Records start to throw names at us :birth and marriage events being recorded firstly Brechin 1612. :Without detailing them all here; : Edzell, Fettercairn, Marykirk, Laurencekirk, :Fordoun, St Cyrus and Montrose parishes; :all recording Drimmie family events and establishing this small area :as the hot bed of Drimmie regeneration for a full 200 years. :Not forgetting of course, the many mentions in the OPR's :as we move south into Angus for Brechin, Dun, Aberlemno, Rescobie, : St Vigeans, Arbroath, Kirriemuir, Forfar, Monikie and Dundee. :Some of the Angus events can be linked to the hotbed area of the Howe :but are totally overshadowed by it in this period. :So, from our solo 1309 John Drimy in Forfar, :to the fair number who by 1809 have been noted, across Angus and Kincardine, :we can say that, without a doubt, :we have five hundred years of continuous, North East Lowland, domicile. === '''Links To The History Of Drimmie or Drummie''' === [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:CE_759_Earliest_Known_Holder_of_Surname NEXT Page 4 Earliest Known Holder of Surname] [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Early_Scots_In_The_Howe_of_The_Mearns GO BACK TO Page 2 Early Scots In The Howe of The Mearns] [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Drimmie_Or_Drummie_Index_to_PAGES Drimmie Or Drummie History Index to PAGES] [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Drimmie_Name_Study Return to NAME STUDY HOME PAGE]

Family Dna Results

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== DNA PROJECT TEST RESULTS == :Jefferson Woodall :Admin :August 4, 2017 @ 11:10pm :(updated March 14, 2020): This first Woodall family group had a paper trail to the earliest US Woodall we have in our database and hereinafter will refer to as John of Genitoe Creek (died 1750). We believe we have figured out why the descendants of the sons of John of Genitoe Creek whose Will probated in 1750 do not have matching DNA results. It seems that one or both of the two sons of John Woodall, John & William were adopted. There were many orphaned children in early Colonial Virginia. One of these sons may have been a child from a previous marriage of John's wife, or could have been a child belonging to John's sister and her husband, or been born out of wedlock or been born from a non-parental event. More records will be posted in the near future on this recent discovery.There's other evidence besides the DNA testing such as through land records and Wills that help us understand this. Land Deeds through the years show both sons John and William selling their land to their neighbors, the widow Jane Watkins and Joseph Watkins. In 1769 this William was deeded land on Tuckahoe Creek, near the family land he and brother John had inherited from father John Woodall. 1750- John Woodall (of Genitoe Creek) Will names 2 sons, a William and a John. The Valentine Papers document the land on Genito creek that the 2 sons of John have in 1747. Will of John Woodall gives 150 acres of land to John and 150 acres to William, land on which they lived bounded by a straight line between them. (Source: deed book #6 1748-1755, pgs 130-131) 1757- A dividing line on Genitoe Creek between a William Woodall, Senior and John Woodall, Senior. (Source: deed book # 7) 1758- Douglas Register records marriage of William Woodhall the Widower (of Tuckahoe Creek) to a Marianne Hancock followed by Christening of some of their children Susannah 1761 , Sarah 1763, Benjamin 1765,Susannah 1768. (Source: Douglas Register) 1762- Wm Woodell (of Genitoe Creek) Grantor-deed to Widow Jane Watkins. (Source: Deed Book 6, page 360.) 1765- [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Woodall-398 Charles Woodhall ](son of William the widower of Genitoe Creek then Tuckahoe Creek) & Eliz Black record of Marriage followed by Christening of some of their children, William 1768, John 1773, ________ 1775, male Name smudged). (Source Douglas register ) 1766- Wm. Woodall- (of Genitoe Creek) Grantor- Deed to Joseph Watkins (Source Watkins, 2) 1769- John Pleasants and son, of Henrico Co., deed to William Woodall (of Genitoe Creek) of Goochland County, Virginia 62 acres in Goochland County (on Tuckahoe Creek) adjacent to the land of Strangeman Hutchins, William Harding, and John Whitlow. March 13, 1769. (Source D.B. 9, p. 196 e.p.v. Papers Page 985 Valentine Papers. 1797- 29 Feb. Will of estate of [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Woodall-396 William Woodall (of Genitoe Creek then Tuckahoe Creek]; in this he names children: Mary Childress, [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Woodall-398 Charles Woodall], John Woodall, Shadrach Woodall, wife Marian Woodall, children: Sarah Woodall, Susanna Woodall, Benjamin Woodall. (Source Goochland County Virginia Will Book 17, 1796-1800, p. 104) -------------------------A Summary on the 25 Various Woodall Family Groups------ FAMILY GROUP 1- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Family Group 1 descends from patriarch William Woodall who is 1st documented in Goochland County, Virginia in 1758 (Douglas Register). William purchased land in Tuckahoe Creek, Goochland County in 1769. William’s 1796 Will names his wife Marion and his 7 children; Charles Woodall, John Woodall, Shadrach Woodall, Mary Childress, Benjamin Woodall, Susanna Woodall and Sarah Woodall. William signed his Will with only the letter “W”. FAMILY GROUP 2- Haplogroup I-M253 Haplogroup I-M253 is a Ychromosome haplogroup which occurs at greatest frequency in Fenno-Scandia. The mutations identified with Haplogroup I-M253(Y-DNA) are M253, M307, P30, and P40. These are known as single nucleotidepolymorphisms (SNPs). It is a subclade of Haplogroup I. Before a reclassification in 2008, the group was known as Haplogroup I1a The group displays a very clear frequency gradient, with a peak of approximately 40 percent among the populations of western Finland and more than 50 percent in the province of Satakunta, one living in Sweden as a whole, with a peak of 52 percent in Vastra Gotaland County.and around 38 percent in central Sweden. A member of this family group who is a direct descendant of Lieutenant General Sir John (Dane) Woodall KCMG KBE CB MC (1897–1985) the General Officer Commanding Northern Ireland District. I have personally seen his family crest and it is quite similar to Barber Surgeon John Woodall of London. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Woodall_(British_Army_officer) The elderly Barber- Surgeon John Woodall stated in his 24 April 1640 Court Case "DUCK VS. WOODALL" that he came from "VUEDALL" One member who recently joined the Woodall DNA Project and also belongs to this group traces his family back to the UDALL & early VUEDALLS in England- the same group of people Barber Surgeon traces his lineage back to. I feel pretty confident that Family Group 2 is distantly related to but not direct descendants of Barber-Surgeon Woodall. FAMILY GROUP 3 Haplogroup Q1a3a1 Family 3 now consists of nine testees. All have a paper trail to John Woodall of Gennytoe Creek, Goochland County, and we were very surprised to see the prediction of a Haplogroup of Q3 also known as Q1a3a1 which is native American, or in other words, American Indian. This haplogroup is strictly associated with the indigenous peoples of the Americas and is defined by the genetic marker M3, which occurred on the Q lineage roughly 10-15 thousand years ago as the migration from Siberia into the Americas was in progress. The common ancestor of the men in Family Group 3 is a William Wagner Woodall who was born 5 June 1818 and was 100% Cherokee Indian. William could have obtained the Woodall surname by adoption or changed his name to Woodall. William was a farmer and later married a Mamie Elizabeth Smith. Together they had 10 children. In 1870 he purchased 100 acres of land in Harris County, Georgia. He died in 1906 in Alabama. FAMILY GROUP 4 Haplogroup R1a1 with mutation seen as M512 . The modern distribution of R1a1 has two widely separated areas of high frequency, one in South Asia, and the other in Eastern Europe. The demographic reasons for this are the subject of on-going discussion and attention among population geneticists and genetic genealogists. Haplogroup R1a1. Possible place of origin, Eurasia.R-M448. Defining mutations, M17, M198, M512, M514, M515, L168, L449 Results indicate that family group 4 goes back to the name of Odell with one group member going back to a William Odell,his son William Odell born June 17, 1656 in Marston Mortaine, Bedfordshire ,England. The Odell name originated in Bedfordshire. Quote from a reference book, ___THE WOODALLS OF TALBOT Abner and Salie Baugh Woodall PIONEERS OF TALBOT COUNTY, GEORGIA Ancestry, Family and Descendants___ by Margaret Woodall Browne and Jane Nicholson Grider, copyright 1993. "The name is ENGLISH in origin, but with a French-Norman background. William the Conqueror, in 1066, created the barony and made his brother-in-law, Walter de Flandrensis, Baron du Wuhulle. A feudal castle (now in ruins) lived in for years by the Barons of Wahulle, was located on the Ouse River in Bedfordshire." (source Hubbard O'Dell Ferrell. Origin of the name Odell, a manuscript page 1.) Origin of name from Old English wudu for wood, plus hull for hill or hall gives wudgull or wudhall. The name means living on a wooded hill or a dweller at the hall by the wood. Many, but not all group members can trace their family back to a John Woodall who first had land in Henrico County Virginia in 1719 (later boundary changes made it Goochland County). This John had his will recorded in 1747 and he died shortly before 9 March 1750, as his will probated on that date. In his Will he gives 150 acres of land to each of his 2 sons: John, William with his daughter Sarah Prior as Executrix of his will. He is illiterate and signs his name with just the letter "W" with a seal around the "W". His wife name is unknown and she is obviously dead at the time his Will was written in 1747. Test results show descendants of his son John and William do not match meaning one or both of his two sons were orphans and or adopted by John (his wife may have had children from a previous marriage or one or more children could have became orphans from friends or family of John and his wife. Other members of this family group can trace their line back to early colonial Maryland and Rhode Island. Family 4 now consists of forty-three testees, six of whom bear the name Odell. When one looks at the Oldest Ancestors page for this family, one will notice most of this family descends from John, the son of John Woodall of Gennytoe Creek, Goochland County. FAMILY GROUP 5 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. The test results tend to confirm the paper trail that they all three descend from James Duncan Woodall. James Duncan was the son of Mastin Woodall's sister Diana Woodall and that James Duncan's father was Seamore Duncan. The fact that Seamore Duncan was the father is confirmed by court records and DNA results that match the Duncan family. We have Duncan testees that match this Woodall family. FAMILY GROUP 6 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. This family is headed by John Wooddall, Sr. who we believe came to America from Scotland via Ireland in the early part of 1766. Many Protestant immigrants came to America during this time period to take advantage of an Act by the South Carolina Assembly of monies for passage to America and land grants upon arrival. A son, William Wooddall, is shown in Janie Revill's book "Protestant Immigrants to South Carolina 1763-1773" as being granted 400 acres at Long Canes, SC in Oct. 1766 after being in "Country" for a few months. The amount of land granted to him indicates he brought other family members with him. There are other SC records of land transactions by this family in 1700's. John Wooddall's will probated in SC in 1806 named his second wife and all of his children. There is a Biblical record of John Wooddall, Sr. and William Wooddall. The spelling of Woodall as "Wooddall" remained within some family members for many years. FAMILY GROUP 7 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Members of this family are in the US and in England. FAMILY GROUP 8 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 9 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 9 consists of one individual. His oldest known ancestor is Andrew Woodall born about 1820 in Georgia. FAMILY GROUP 10 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 10 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. consists of one individual whose paper trail goes back to a John Woodell 1761 in Virginia, Kit 45418. Kit 45418' s ancestor William Woodell, b. c. 1795 was dead by 29 May of 1849. William's widow, Maulsey (Maines) Woodell, petitioned the Robeson County Court for her rights to dower. Charles P. and Rhoda (Woodell) Creech were two of the heirs of William Woodell, b. c. 1795. A guardianship entry in the Columbus Co., NC Court Minutes named William's minor children, including Elias P. Woodell, Richard Woodell, Rebecca Woodell, and David Woodell. FAMILY GROUP 11 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 12 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 13 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Family 13 - has 2 individuals in this family group one spells his name Woodle and the other spells his name as Woodel. FAMILY GROUP 14 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 15 Haplogroup I-M253 Haplogroup I-M253 is a Y chromosome haplogroup which occurs at greatest frequency in Fenno-Scandia. The mutations identified with Haplogroup I-M253 (Y-DNA) are M253, M307, P30, and P40. These are known as single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). It is a subclade of Haplogroup I. Before a reclassification in 2008, the group was known as Haplogroup I1a. The group displays a very clear frequency gradient, with a peak of approximately 40 percent among the populations of western Finland and more than 50 percent in the province of Satakunta, and around 38 percent in Sweden as a whole, with a peak of 52 percent in Västra Götaland County in central Sweden. Their Lineage is this: William>Charles>Jehu>Mary Ann Woodall (who had son a with a man with the last name Ketchum) > James Leondogist Woodall b. 1839 (fought in Civil War) FAMILY GROUP 16 Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 - found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 17 Haplogroup R-DF41- primarily found in Ireland, Scotland, Isle of Man & Wales with some results in Western England & Southern France. FAMILY GROUP 18 Haplogroup E-V38 Subgroup E-M2- is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup. It is often found in African males and their descendants and is heritably passed in lineage from father to son. Geneticists study these variants in populations to find the evolutionary lineage to a common male human ancestor. It can also be referred to in phylogenetic nomenclature by names such as E1b1a(although the exact definition of phylogenetic names can vary over time).E-V38 has two basal branches, E-M329 (formerly E1b1c) and E-M2 (formerly E1b1a), the former is almost exclusively found in Ethiopia. The E-M2 branches are the predominant lineage in Western Africa, Central Africa, Southern Africa, and the southern parts of Eastern Africa. E-M2 has several subclades, however many members are included in either E-L485 or E-U175. FAMILY GROUP 19 Haplogroup R1a1, also referred to as haplogroup R-M17 or R-M198, is a Y-DNA haplogroup defining one of the most common human male lines found in modern Eurasia. It is defined by the SNP mutation M17, and is particularly common in a large region extending from South Asia and Southern Siberia to Central Europe and Scandinavia (Underhill 2009). The R1a1 is the most common subclade within the family of the Y-DNA Haplogroup R1a, which share in common the M420 SNP mutation, and before the discovery of M420, R1a1 was itself referred to as R1a. The modern distribution of R1a1 has two widely separated areas of high frequency, one in South Asia, and the other in Eastern Europe. The demographic reasons for this are the subject of on-going discussion and attention among population geneticists and genetic genealogists. Archaeologists recognize a complex of inter-related and relatively mobile cultures living on the Eurasian steppe, part of which protrudes into Europe as far west as Ukraine. These cultures from the late Neolithic and into the Iron Age, with specific traits such as Kurgan burials and horse domestication, have been associated with the dispersal of Indo-European languages across Eurasia. Nearly all samples from Bronze and Iron Age graves in the Krasnoyarsk area in south Siberia belonged to R1a1 and appeared to represent an eastward migration from Europe. In central Europe, Corded Ware period human remains at Eulau from which Y-DNA was extracted appear to be R-M17(xM458) (which they found most similar to the modern German R-M17* haplotype. FAMILY GROUP 20- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 21- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. Family Group 21- oldest living known Woodall is James Woodall b. 1815. His census lists he was born in Pennsylvania but he grew up in Virginia. John married Elizabeth Martin in now West Virginia in 1838. They moved to Ohio in the 1850s and that is where the next seven generations live(d). Ancestry Tree DNA indicates they are possibly related to Polly Lentz from Johnston, NC where many Woodalls resided. They also found a possible DNA link to Woodalls from Maryland. FAMILY GROUP 22- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. The man in this Woodall family group is of Scottish descent. FAMILY GROUP 23- Haplogroup R-M269 also known as R1b1a2 found primarily in western Europe and also primarily in southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia. FAMILY GROUP 24- Haplogroup J-M172 also known as J2 is common in modern populations in Western Asia, Central Asia, South Asia, Europe and North Africa. It is thought that J-M172 may have originated between the Caucasus Mountains, Mesopotamia and the Levant. It is likely that J2 men had settled over most of Anatolia, the South Caucasus and Iran by the end of the Last Glaciation 12,000 years ago. Researchers claimed to have uncovered the earliest known migration of J2, from Sumeria to Canaan and that in today's populations, Eu 9 (the post-mutation form of M172) is strongest in the Caucasus, Asia Minor and the Levant, whilst Eu 10 becomes stronger and replaces the frequency of Eu 9 as one moves south into the Arabian Peninsula, so that people from the Caucasus met with Arabs near and between Mesopotamia (formerly Sumeria) and the Negev Desert, as "Arabisation" spread from Arabia to the Levant and Turkey, as well as many peoples (e.g. Jews, Armenians, Lebanese) having returned from diasporas. FAMILY GROUP 25- Haplogroup E-M35, which accounts for approximately 18% to 20% of Ashkenazi and 8.6% to 30% of Sephardi Y-chromosomes, appears to be one of the major founding lineages of the Jewish population. All major sub-branches of E-M35 are thought to have originated in North Africa, the Horn of Africa, or nearby areas of the Near East. Some branches of E-M35 are assumed to have left Africa thousands of years ago, whereas others may have arrived from the Near East. E-M215 and E-M35 are quite common among Afroasiatic speakers. The linguistic group and carriers of E-M35 lineage have a high probability to have arisen and dispersed together from the Afroasiatic Urheimat. Amongst populations with an Afro-Asiatic speaking history, a significant proportion of Jewish male lineages are E-M35. Approximately 35% to 43% of Jewish men are in the paternal line known as haplogroup J and its sub-haplogroups. This haplogroup is particularly present in the Middle East and Southern Europe. 15% to 30% are in haplogroup E1b1b (or E-M35) and its sub-haplogroups which is common in the Middle East, North Africa, and Southern Europe.

Family documents

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:Charles Jaffe :Birth Certificate :Martha Naomi Ledbetter :Birth Certificate :Marriage Certificate :Divorce Papers :Death Certificate :Lloyd Ledbetter :Birth certificate :Marriage certificate :Death Certificate :Naomi Kerlin ::Death Certificate :"Indiana, Death Certificates, 1899-2011," database with images, ''Ancestry'' (https://www.ancestry.com : accessed 10 Jul 2019), Certificate > 1959 > 03, image 236 of 2509; entry for Naomi Bell Kerlin, State #005234, 1 Feb 1959; citing Indiana Archives and Records Administration, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, ''Death 1959 February,'' vol. 11 (Lake - Marion), roll: 03. image 234, FHL Film #005234. Image available via ''Ancestry Share'' [https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/28794381?h=5d1b1e]. ::Birth place and date ::Maiden name ::Death place and date :"Indiana Marriages, 1811-2007," database with images, ''FamilySearch'' (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-XCH9-99W : 14 Jul 2021), entry for Cicero M. Ledbetter and Naoma Kerlin, 7 Mar 1894, Henry County, Indiana, United States, image 653 of 823; citing Clerk of the Circuit Court, Henry County, Indiana, Marriage Record , Vol 9, p. 127. ::Name of Husband ::Date of Marriage

Family farm

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This was the farm of Robert S Godwin and Sallie (Sarah Phillips) Godwin. It has been in my family since the 1800;s I sorry to say our family is in the verge of losing it due the greed of other people. The property has valuable minerals and a greedy business wants the land just for that, Meanwhile they don't care there's an old farm house that was built by the blood sweat tears of my family after the Civil War, The house as of now is used by my cousins as a hunting camp or a get away from the city life. My family is middle class blue collar hard working people that have always worked for what they have and what they want in life, Its hard to fight their lawyers anymore. So this Family Farm will become a memory for us and a story for my future family members, to tell.

Family Fun Day

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Family Fun Day!

Family Genome

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The goal of this project is to map our family tree. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Middlebrooks-290|Anthony Middlebrooks]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * genealogy * Norse ancestors * first Americans * how we came to the America's Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=33992288 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Graves/Forgotten Graves

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Family_Graves_Forgotten_Graves.jpg
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Family Graves/Forgotten graves

Family gravestone

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Family_gravestone.jpg
Gravestone for Gertrude Emily Aylett, George Ernest Aylett, George Aylett Emily (Minns) Aylett

Family Group 3 William W Woodall

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__NOTOC__ {{Space:Wodell_Name_Study_Info|menu}} ======
{{Purple|** * **}}
======
'''Family Group 3 William W Woodall (1818-1906) '''
'''Wodel Woodall
Combined
Name and DNa Study
== {{Blue|Family Group 3}}== ==
{{Green|[[Woodall-696|William W Woodall (1818-1906)]]}} and [[Smith-280944|Elizabeth (Smith) Woodall (1816-1909)]]
==
{| border="6" class="wiki" | {{Image |file=Woodall-167-2.jpg |align=c |size=400 |label=Genitoe Creek |link=https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Woodall-167 |caption=John Woodall
Genitoe Creek
Orginially uploaded
''by'' [[Daniels-3035|Connie (Daniels) Graves]]}} |}
===[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Children_and_Other_Family_Members_Listing Children and Family ]=== ===[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Inter-Family_Connections_2 Inter-Family Connections]=== ===[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Native_Ancestry_and_the_Woodalls Native American Lineage]=== ===[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_3_FTDNA_Project_Test_Results DNA Project Test Results]=== ===[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#RootsWeb_Oldest_Ancestors_Kits_for_William_W._Woodall Oldest Ancestor Kits]===
{| border="6" class="wiki" | ==
Children and Other Family Members Listing
== : William Wagner Woodall would have been 12 years old in 1830, and in 1834 when the Trail of Tears began, he would have been 16. The Widow Rachel Smith and her children were in the 1830 Dekalb Census. William could/would have met Mamie Eliz, and helped them out with farming and such. They moved to Meriwhether, Ga around 1837, when the Trail of Tears was about over. He married Rachel Mamie "Elizabeth" Smith shortly thereafter, 1837 in Meriwhether Co. , and at that time there were no other Woodalls in the vincinity. :Spouse of William Wagner Woodall [[Smith-280944|Elizabeth (Smith) Woodall (1816-1909)]] :Children from the marriage: #[[Woodall-1369|Daniel Anderson Woodall (1838-1895)]] married [[Phillips-32470|Mary Catherine (Phillips) Woodall (1844-1925)]] #[[Woodall-1921|William Andrew Woodall (1842-)]] married [[White-75356|Henrietta White (1844-1894)]] #[[Woodall-1918|Rachel Caroline (Woodall) White (1845-1923)]] married [[White-68885|Jacob Marion White (1840-1914)]] #[[Woodall-1919|James Henry Woodall (1849-1923)]] married [[Chapman-24112|Henrietta (Chapman) Woodall (1851-1931)]] #[[Woodall-1920|Charles Pickney Woodall (1856-1891)]] married [[Grant-20685|Rachael (Grant) Woodall (1859-1922)]] : Did James Woodall {{Blue|Family Group 4B}} [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_4_John_Woodall_m._Judith_Sampson#.2A.2A_.2A_.2A.2A_2 John that married Judith Sampson] Hide/Adopt William Wagner Wooddall at the start of the Trail of Tears? #[[Woodall-408|James Woodall (1765-1844)]] #[[Watson-14071|Rebecca (Watson) Woodall (1783-abt.1818)]] :(Not verified yet) :William W Wooddall somehow got to Anderson Co., SC, and Rev. Morgan Wooddall took him in. Morgan Woodall is the son of John Woodall and Judith Pruitt. John is the son of {{Blue| Family Group 6 }} [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Woodall_Group_6 John Woodall] that married Isbella Unknown and Judith Holmes. At least two sons of this {{Blue| Family Group 6 }} John Woodall married full-blooded Cherokee women. Thomas married Nanny Tadpole and George married Ellen Moore. These men, women and children would be Morgan Woodall's uncles and aunts. I have not research Morgan's mother or (from notes of Steven Woodall) #[[Woodall-1493|Morgan Woodall (1805-)]]
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_Group_3{{Orange|Return to the Top }}]
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{| border="6" class="wiki" | ==
Inter-Family Connections== ===Between {{Blue|Family Group 3}} William Wagner Woodall and {{Blue|Family Group 4 }} John Woodall and Lincy Harvey
=== :{{Blue|Family Group 3}} [[Woodall-1369|Daniel Anderson Woodall (1838-1895)]] son of William Wagner Woodall married [[Phillips-32470|Mary Catherine (Phillips) Woodall (1844-1925)]] the 4C3R of {{Blue|Family Group 4A}} [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Woodall-1150 Eleanor Patricia Woodall] :[https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1Name=Phillips-32470&person2Name=Woodall-1150 Click here to see the 4C3R relationship] :[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Inter-Family_Connections#.2A.2A_.2A_.2A.2A Click here for more examples of connections]
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_Group_3 Return to the Top ]
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{| border="6" class="wiki" | ==
Native Ancestry and the Woodalls
== William was a Q-M3 Native American, this means that his actual father was Native American. Thus the Family 3 designation. William would have been 13 at the start of the removal, the 1831–1850 "Trail of Tears". He is listed as the son of [[Woodall-408|James Woodall (1765-1844)]] and his wife [[Watson-14071|Rebecca (Watson) Woodall (1783-abt.1818)]], they married 13 May 1801 in Georgia. James is the son of John Woodall (married Dorothy Pledge) who is the son of [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_4_John_Woodall_m._Judith_Sampson#.2A.2A_.2A_.2A.2A_2 Family 4B John Woodall and his wife Judith Sampson] . William W Woodall's birthdate is listed as 5 Jun 1818 on his Tombstone, (reads William M. Woodall [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/60902121/william-wagner-woodall?_gl=1*1emjh4a*_ga*MTIzOTk0MzUyNy4xNjM0MjU4ODEz*_ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1NTM0MjAzNi4xMzAuMS4xNjU1MzQyOTc5LjA. ''another mystery)''] {{orange|and William is born 2 months after his adopted brother [[Woodall-1156|James M. Woodall (1818-1896)]] born 11 Apr 1818 on his tombstone}}. With William having such a precise birthdate, and place of birth so close to his adopted brother, it seems the Woodall's could have known William's father's family. Further investigation may open the way for answers. '' Also of note: Rebecca Watson, James's wife, passed away in the year 1818, the year both James Jr and William were born.'' ====
{{Red|Researcher's Note}}
==== # At this time and between these 2 Families, I am going to make a few writer statements. Progenitor John Woodall, who married Judith Sampson, had a son, John Woodall, who married Dorothy Pledge. This is about where the Poindexter Indian Claims are (give lee-way, I haven't finished studying) and it is his son James Woodall that took in William W. Woodall, the Native American boy, at the time of the Trail of Tears. In William W Woodall's write up, knowing the precise birthdate and location and two months after his adopted brother's birthdate (both written on their Tombstones). This could lead some people to the belief that James Woodall was associated somehow with William W. Woodall's Native American father. This again is at the time of the Poindexter Indian investigations. I will make more sense on this later.
{{Red|UPDATE: Excerpt from the notes of Steve Woodall}} Notes for William Wagner Woodall *: WIlliam was a farmer. He could not write. During the Civil War William had a hole shot through the brim of his hat. This was according to Avie Woodall Hudson. In the United States Federal Census of 1880 William Wagner stated that his father was from South Carolina. In the same census of 1900 hestates that his father was from Georgia. Because the Indians were attempting to blend in with the white population it is possible that South Carolina was given as his fathers birth place so as to not let on that he was Indian. 7-7-2005 - The Death Certificate of James Henry Woodall's says tha this father was born in North Carolina. The family Bible is silent onthis issue. Family stories as passed down from William Wagner's son James Henry . Many show William’s father to be a James Woodall. This has been disproven by DNA. I believe that James Woodall hid William and his family during the Trail of Tears and we took the name Woodall from him. He (William Wagner) also supposedly had a brother named James. Again this is unproven.William is buried at Chana Creek Primitive Baptist Church, Eclectic, Alabama Elizabeth is buried in Rose Hill Cemetary, Elmore County,Alabama. They moved to Alabama sometime between 1873 and 1875. He was a farmer and could not write. There were ten children three of whom were living in 1900. During the Civil War William (Billie) had a hole shot through the brim of his hat, according to Avie Woodall Hudson. In 1850 he was a farmer. He moved to Alabama in 1882. William Woodall purchased 100 acres of land from James A Smith on Mar.21, 1870 Propery Description: Harris County, 2nd Dist., Lot 83, 100 acres. Purchase price was $500.00 Recorded in Book I page 283, Aug. 31, 1874 - Hamilton,Ga. Harris County In 2005 it was proven from DNA test done on Ronald Grady Woodall,Reggie Woodall and Gordon Woodall (all decended from William Wagner Woodall) that William Wagner was in fact 100% Native Indian. In 2006 William Allen Woodall, who decended from William Andrew Jackson Woodall took the DNA test. As expected his DNA matched the others.Also, in 2006 Ronald Steven Woodall took the DNA test and his matched as well. In May of 2006 after joining the Echota Cherokee Tribe of Alabama, Steve's company Reliant Business Products achieved Minority Status from the Houston Minority Business Council. In the 1880 census William stated that his father was from South Carolina. In the 1900 census he stated that they were from Georgia. These fact indicate that William was 100% Cherokee Indian. Some members of the Cherokee Nation escaped the infamous Trail of Tears by hiding out in the mountainous backwoods and lowlands of the Southeast. Others fled from the march after it began and others simply walked away and came home after reaching Indian Territory. They kept to themselves, did not speak the language and did not teach it totheir children for fear the child might speak it in the presence of someone who would learn the secret of their ancestry. If this happened, they could immediately be taken into custody and sent to Indian Territory in the west. Everything they owned could be given away by the State. As much as possible these people assimilated into the white populace and claimed to be Black Dutch or some other type of European to explain their slightly darker color. Since nearly all work was doneoutdoors, most people had a tan anyway. However, most of us remember stories of our family members who always wore large straw hats and long sleeves in the summer because they did not want to become any darker than they already were.
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_Group_3{{Orange|Return to the Top }}]
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{| border="6" class="wiki" | ==
Family 3 FTDNA Project Test Results
== :[https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/woodall/dna-resultsHaplogroup] Q1a3a1 Family 3 now consists of nine testees. '''''All have a paper trail to John Woodall of Gennytoe Creek, Goochland County''''', and we were very surprised to see the prediction of a Haplogroup of Q3 also known as Q1a3a1 which is native American, or in other words, American Indian. This haplogroup is strictly associated with the indigenous peoples of the Americas and is defined by the genetic marker M3, which occurred on the Q lineage roughly 10-15 thousand years ago as the migration from Siberia into the Americas was in progress. The common ancestor of the men in Family Group 3 is a William Wagner Woodall who was born 5 June 1818 and was 100% Cherokee Indian. William could have obtained the Woodall surname by adoption or changed his name to Woodall. William was a farmer and later married a Mamie Elizabeth Smith. Together they had 10 children. In 1870 he purchased 100 acres of land in Harris County, Georgia. He died in 1906 in Alabama. :[https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~marshalldna/genealogy/My%20Webs/Woodall/Oldest%20Ancestors.htm] Haplogroup Q3 is the only lineage strictly associated with native American populations. This haplogroup is defined by the presence of the M3 mutation (also known as SY103). This mutation occurred on the Q lineage 8-12 thousand years ago as the migration into the Americas was underway. There is some debate as to on which side of the Bering Strait this mutation occurred, but it definitely happened in the ancestors of the Native American peoples.
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_Group_3{{Orange|Return to the Top }}]
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{| border="6" class="wiki" | ==
RootsWeb Oldest Ancestors Kits for William W. Woodall
==
=== Kit Number{{Purple|27213 and 57797}}=== # Generation - William Wagner Woodall, born 5 June 1818 in SC, married Mamie Elizabeth Smith in about 1837 in Meriwether Co., GA and died on 27 Jul 1906 in Tallassee, Elmore, AL. # Generation - James Henry Woodall, born 21 October 1847, married Henrietta Martha Jane Chapman on 12 January 1865 and died 15 December 1923 in Tallassee, AL. Henrietta was born 30 April 1851 in Meriwether Co., GA and died 7 April 1931 in Tallassee, AL. # Generation - Charles Pinckney Woodall, Sr., born 2 November 1867 in Talbot Co., GA, married Mary Elizabeth Stinchcomb on 10 January 1894, and died 20 October 1939 in Tallassee, AL. Mary died in Tallassee, AL. # Generation - Henry Grady Woodall, born 15 August 1904, married Lulline McNair on 30 June 1923, and died 7 September 1968 in Montgomery, AL. Lulline was born 7 February 1904 and died 23 February 1993. === Kit Number {{Purple|62387}}=== # Generation - William Wagner Woodall, born 5 June 1818 in SC, married Mamie Elizabeth Smith in about 1837 in Meriwether Co., GA and died on 27 Jul 1906 in Tallassee, Elmore, AL. # Generation - William Andrew Jackson Woodall, born 31 Jan 1843 in Flint Hill, Talbot County, Ga, married Henrietta White and died 23 Jan 1923 in Tallassee, Elmore county, Alabama. # Generation - Byron Hardy Woodall, born 10 October 1881 in Coosa County, Alabama, married Mary Elizabeth Johnson and died 2 July 1949 in Alabama. # Generation - William Alexander Woodall, born 22 Feb 1907 in Elmore County, Alabama, married Mattie Lou Parker and died 13 sep 1944 in Tallaposa County, Alabama. ===Kit Number {{Purple|33237}}=== # Generation - William Wagner Woodall, born 5 June 1818 in SC, married Mamie Elizabeth Smith in about 1837 in Meriwether Co., GA and died on 27 Jul 1906 in Tallassee, Elmore, AL. # Generation - Daniel Anderson Woodall, born 29 March 1838 in Meriwether Co., GA, married Mary Catherine Phillips on 23 March 1860 in Talbot Co., GA and died 4 August 1895 in Equality, Coosa Co., AL. Mary Catherine was born in December 1844 in Warm Springs, GA. # Generation - John Quincey Woodall, born 7 October 1871 in Warm Springs, GA, married Martha Alzie B. Brown on 1 March 1893 in Elmore Co., AL who was born 10 July 1877. # Generation - Jessie Clarence Woodall, born 18 March 1899, married Nellie W. Wiggins on 31 October 1926 and died on 14 April 1992. Nellie died 30 April 1992. === Kit Number {{Purple|33472}}=== # Generation - William Wagner Woodall, born 5 June 1818 in SC, married Mamie Elizabeth Smith in about 1837 in Meriwether Co., GA and died on 27 Jul 1906 in Tallassee, Elmore, AL. # Generation - Charles Pinckney Woodall, born 1856, married Rachel Emaline Grant on 27 December 1884 and died in 1890 in AL. Rachel was born 216 August 1859 and died 18 December 1922 in AL. # Generation - James Amzi Woodall, born 30 September 1886 in Dyke, AL, married Carrie Zimmerman Kidd on 30 June 1920 and died on 30 June 1948 in Montgomery AL. ===Kit Numbers {{Purple|38916}}=== # Generation - William Wagner Woodall, born 5 June 1818 in SC, married Mamie Elizabeth Smith in about 1837 in Meriwether Co., GA and died on 27 Jul 1906 in Tallassee, Elmore, AL. # Generation - James Henry Woodall, born 21 October 1847, married Henrietta Martha Jane Chapman on 12 January 1865 and died 15 December 1923 in Tallassee, AL. Henrietta was born 30 April 1851 in Meriwether Co., GA and died 7 April 1931 in Tallassee, AL. # Generation - Jacob Marion Woodall, born 9 August 1878, Dyke, AL, married Jessoe Gunter, and died 3 January 1928 in Tallassee, AL. # Generation - Harold Rex Woodall, born 8 May 1911, Tallassee, AL, married 15 August 1904, married Nora Gertrude Wadsworth, and died 5 Jul 1968 in AL.
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_Group_3{{Orange|Return to the Top }}]
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Other Information
== *At some point, [[Woodall-408|James Woodall (1765-1844)]] grandson of [[Woodall-167|John Woodall Jr. (abt.1710-aft.1788)]] and Judith Sampson Woodall through John and Dorothy Pledge [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Working_Board#Progenator__John_Woodall_Jr._.28abt.1710-aft.1788.29 Family 4 ] is associated with William as his father. More information coming. *[https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/60902121/william-wagner-woodall?_gl=1*hongxo*_ga*MTIzOTk0MzUyNy4xNjM0MjU4ODEz*_ga_4QT8FMEX30*MTY1NTMzNzU4NS4xMjkuMS4xNjU1MzM4NTM1LjA. William Wagner Woodall's Tombstone on Find-A-Grave reads "William M. Woodall". It is distinctive!] * Trail of Tears years were 1831 to 1850, when William would have been 13 to 32, [[Woodall-408|James Woodall (1765-1844)]] his adoptive parent arrive in Georgia by 1801 when he married his wife in Marion, Georgia. *Another curious fact is that William's brother [[Woodall-1156|James M. Woodall (1818-1896)]] is born 11 Apr 1818 in Georgia , while [[Woodall-696|William W Woodall (1818-1906)]] is born 5 Jun 1818 in McIntosh County, Georgia.
[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_3_William_W_Woodall#Family_Group_3{{Orange|Return to the Top }}]
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Family Group Sheets

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==FAMILY GROUP SHEETS== Chances are you will want to know more about your family than just a few names. The more you know about each generation, including brothers, sisters, and in-laws; the easier it will be to find the members of earlier generations. The number, spacing, and naming of children can tell quite a bit about the lives, lifestyle, and values of ancestors. The succession of birthplaces of children and death dates of close family members can help locate the family in particular time periods. To record this information, keep a record of each family, as it existed in each generation. This is compiled on the Family Group Sheet. ===Obtaining Family Group Sheet Forms === Stock up on this particular form. Libraries often sell stacks of Family Group Sheets at low cost, perhaps the cost of copying them. Family Group Sheets are available from the same sources as Pedigree Charts--other libraries, genealogy books, genealogy societies or one can type their own and print it out. Some computer programs will now print one out at the push of a button. You should plan on needing at least 100 if researching a large family, as one sheet must be filled out for each generation as it existed in time. Most people will be recorded as children on one sheet and as parents on another, as they lived in two different families at different times in their life. Mulitple marriages also require a separate sheet for each marriage, and unmarried people are recorded on a separate sheet with any children they have. It is biological relationships being traced, not necessarily marriages. ===Filling Out Family Group Sheets=== The top line is for the husband or father; and several spaces are given to record the date and place of his birth, christening, marriage, death, and sometimes burial. Also included are spaces for the names of both of his parents. ===Entering the Wife's Information:=== Following this, the information is requested for his wife ,or whoever is mother of his children. Each Family Group Sheet should record only one marriage. There are spaces to indicate if either party was married to anyone else during his or her lifetime. This serves as a reference guide to other Family Group Sheets which should detail other marriages and the children of those marriages. Remember, once again-women are always recorded with their maiden mane, and surnames are recorded in ALL CAPITALS. You will want to use a pencil until all data can be verified through documentation. ===Adding Children to Family Group Sheets:=== Under all of the husband wife information, space is provided to record information on all natural children of that particular marriage or union. Occasionally, you may come across adopted children- this should be noted as such, because genealogy is really a search for genetic lineage, and the adopted child has one or both parents different from the family into which he or she has been adopted. If an adopted child's natural parents are known, a separate Family Group Sheet should be made to indicate who they are, and it should be noted on that separate Family Group Sheet the name of the family that the child was adopted by, and the date of adoption or date the went to live with new family. ===Entering The Children of A Marriage=== The children of a marriage should be listed in order of birth if known. Once again, the surname should appear in all CAPITAL LETTERS. A space is given to indicate male or female; and their are a few lines to show date and place of: Birth, Marriage, Spouse's Name, and Death of each child. ===Extras on Family Group Sheets=== Since Family Group Sheets are the basic record forms for your family, you may want to add other information to help identify this family. Others details you may wish to include are: *the family address *occupation of the husband and others *relationship to yourself or other close family member Place addresses and occupations at the top, and relationships in the bottom margin. The back is a good place for comments and notes as well, but remember to copy them when making copies of the front side to pass along to others. ===Don't Forget to Cite Sources of Your Information=== The most important extra information is the source itself of what is recorded. This is very important so that the information recorded is traceable to its origin. The more accurate the original source, the more accurate will be the information recorded; so it is a good idea to know where the data came from. == WIKITREE FAMILY GROUP SHEETS == '''If you use wikitree.com, you can go to the Family Tree and Tools tab of any profile and see the pedigree chart and family group sheets of the person profiled, provided they are deceased. Wikitree has links from their pedigree charts and family group sheets to the actual profiles, so you can see how the profiles you are entering are related to their family members. Another great reason to use wikitree. These pedigree charts and family group sheets are also available for download and sharing on social media and email.''' == Return to:== * TOP OF PAGE - https://www..wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_Sheets * Genealogy Basics - https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Genealogy_Basics_Tutorial_Page * Using Pedigree Charts - https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Understanding_Pedigree_Charts * Family Group Sheets - https://www..wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Group_Sheets * Collecting Family Documents at Home - https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Documents_at_Home === Acknowledgements === This page written and designed by Sharon Troy Centanne

Family Grouping from Lynds Jones Bible

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The genealogical information in this document was extracted from the Bible of Lynds Jones by his great grand daughter Jennie (Beebe) Cady, and is an element of the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Beebe_Genealogy_File_of_George_Beebe ''Genealogy File of George Beebe.''] ==Lynds Jones Family== Data extraction from the Bible of Lynds Jones, in the handwriting of [[Beebe-7242|Jennie (Beebe) Cady]]: Bible was property of [[Jones-99014|Lynds Jones]], son of Abijah (4), son of Jabez (3), son of Thomas (2), son of Thomas (1) . Thomas (1) came to New London, Conn., was there in 1675 and married there in 1677. Lynds Jones (B1789 - D1872) married Catherine Ecker (B1793 - D1872) -- May 1812. * Children of Lynds Jones & Catherine Ecker Jones :: Abijah B Mar 3, 1813. D Oct 1863 (at Macon, Ga.) :: Catherine Jones, B May 25, 1814 D May 22, 1822 :: Henry Jones, B1816. D1865 :: Elizabeth Jones, B1818 Drowned 1821 :: Margaret Jones, B1820. D1907 (Married John Bigby who died at Albany Apr. 11, 1890) :: Elizabeth Jones (2), B1822 D1858 Married Thos. N. Beebe :: George Warren Jones, B1824, D1848 :: David Vaughn Jones, B1825 drown 1880 :: Elmira Jones, B1828 - D1903. Married Orlando Merriherr Alden? :: Harriet Jones, B1850 - D1862. :: Caroline B. 1825 {{Image|file=Family_Grouping_from_Lynds_Jones_Bible.png |align=l |size=xl |caption=Lynds Jones Bible, family group, page 1. }} [[Jones-144874|Elizabeth Jones]] Married to [[Beebe-7238|Tho. N. Beebe]] :: One son Frank Beebe Aug 4, 1854. [[Beebe-7239|Frank Beebe]] B Aug 4, 1854 D. July 10, 1920 married to Laura M. Smith (Nov 4, 1858 - Nov 20 1906) Mar 20, 1878. * Children of Frank Beebe & Laura M. (Smith) Beebe :: Jennie Elizabeth, B. Apr. 29, 1879. :: George Warren, B. Feb 22, 1882 George Warren Beebe m. Lula C. Brown Sept 17, 1906 :: Thomas John Beebe, (son of George Warren Beebe and Lula C. (Brown) Beebe) B. Apr. 6,1908. {{Image|file=Family_Grouping_from_Lynds_Jones_Bible-1.png |align=l |size=xl |caption=Lynds Jones Bible, family group, page 2. }}

Family Groups

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This is a list of family societies that provide updated information on a particular name group or descendants of a particular person. These are sometimes available as on line trees. Also, Cyndi's List maintains a pretty comprehensive list of family trees: http://www.cyndislist.com/surnames/ After looking at Cyndi's List, it might take some work keeping the list useful. Please add sites that have as broad a reach as possible, listing group sites as opposed to personal tree sites. Also comments about the site that help us understand what to find there. Also note: Family genealogies and websites may not cite their references. Like any secondary source, further research is needed to find primary sources. This is not an official list but a collection of sources people have found useful. Please add your group to this list, in alphabetical order. A: John Alden: Alden kin has a membership that relies on proving you are a descendant. Since John Alden was a Mayflower passenger there is a lot of vetted information available. Their tree is publicly available http://alden.org/aldengenealogy/database/pafg320.htm#18345 D: Cornelius Davies II: The Davis Family of Stafford, Connecticut by Mark Davis. This is a large tree that supports a yearly reunion. It is maintained. One of the branches duplicates information in the Pomeroy tree. It can be used to compare and supplement. http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=mollard&id=I00083 G: Graves family - early Graves families: http://www.gravesfa.org/index.php H: The Edward Howell Family association http://edwardhowellfamily.org/ P: Eltweed Pomeroy: - American Pomeroy Historic Genealogical Association his family tree is the result of research on the Pomeroy family on North America and documents the descendants of Eltweed Pomeroy (1585-1673) who emigrated from Beaminster, County Dorset, England to Massachusetts in 1630. Information found in “The History and Genealogy of the Pomeroy Family”, A.A. Pomeroy, 1912 and 1922, is included. They are attempting to issue an update to the original books and will help people find their place. They have a Facebook page. They also collect information on other Pomeroys in America. http://sites.rootsmagic.com/PomeroyEltweed/index.php R: Edmund Rice (1638) Association http://www.edmund-rice.org S: George Soule (Mayflower): Soule Kindred has a database with limited public availability. This is a membership group but they do not require proof, only interest. They have events that you might be interested in. Membership does allow you to see more in the database. Again, since this is Mayflower, the first 5 generations or so coincide with Mayflower books. https://soulekindred.org/family-tree/ W: The Whitlock Family association : http://www.whitlockfamilyassociation.com/

Family Histories of Moffat, McNeelan, Crangle, Pierson, Angel, and Lichtenwalter

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Compiled and written by Charles and Norma Moffat 14 Diamante Place, Hot Springs Village, AR 71909, USA Anundsen Publishing Co, Decorah, Iowa, USA June 1990 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 90-61389 Pages 29A-29G Descendants of Christopher Moffat (1799-1870) and Mary Anderson (1799-1847) Note: this branch was added at the last moment as the book was set, indexed, and ready for printing. The seven pages were inserted as 29A through 29G. This book builds on the material in "A Moffat Lineage in the USA" written in 1953 by James D. Moffat, Jr. Book filed with Church of Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints, in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. Charles Moffat interviewed several members of the descendants of Christopher Moffat during the late 1980s for their material.

Family Histories of Moffat, McNeelan, Crangle, Pierson, Angel, Lichtenwalter

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* Family Histories of Moffat et al * Compiled and written by Charles and Norma Moffat ** 14 Diamante Place, Hot Springs Village, AR 71909, USA * Anundsen Publishing Co, Decorah, Iowa, USA June 1990 * Library of Congress Catalog Card Number9 90-61389 * Copies may be ordered at the following website. [https://www.ancestorstuff.com/moffat-family-histories-of-moffat-crangle-pierson-angel-lichtenwalter-mcneelan-by-charles-no.html#:~:text=MOFFAT%20Family%20histories%20of%20Moffat%2C%20Crangle%2C%20Pierson%2C%20Angel%2C,backlog%2C%204-8%20weeks%20may%20be%20required%20for%20delivery. the book] The following list of sources was OCR copied from my copy of the book. There are 12 more lists of sources to be OCR and entered here. * Moffat Lineage in the U.S.A. J.D. Moffat l953 * A Short History of the Family of Moffat Robert M. Moffat 1908 * Memorials of Hutton and Corrie Parishes Gilchrist 1960 * Archives, First Presbyterian Church of Wheeling * Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia, PA * LDS Genealogical Library, Salt take City, Utah * Centennial, First Presbyterian Clurch, 5t. Clairsville, 0H 1898 * History of the Washington Presbytery Committee 1889 * Belmont Co., OH, Courthouse and Library, St. Clairsville OH * Ohio County Courthouse, Wheeling, WV * Mt- Wood Cemetery, Wheeling WV * History of the Tipper Ohio Valley Vol. 11 p. 671 * History of Belmont and Jefferson Counties, Ohio Caldwell 1881 * History of 2nd Presbyterian Church, Wheeling WV 1898 * Washington PA Reporter and Observer * U. S. Censuses * Wheeling WV Register, Wheeling WV Intelligencer * Thomas Chalmers, a Biographical Study Dodds 1870 * Moffat Genealogies and Descent from Rev. John Moffat of Ulster Co. NY * History of the Pan Handle, West Virglnia p 212 * Gazetteers, Scotland * Sandy Hill Presbyterian Church History Committee 1971 * National Cyclopedia of American Biography 1931 * Proceeding at the Centennial Celebration of the Organization of the First Presbyterian Church of Washington, PA 1893 * Washington and Jefferson College Archives * History of Washington Co. PA Vol III Forrest 1926 * Centennial History of Belmont Co., OH McKelvey 1901 * Washington County Courthouse, Washington, PA * Citizens Library, Washington PA * The Life and Contributions of James David Moffat S. A. Talman 1957 * Historical Sketch of the First Presbyterian Church in St. Clairsville, OH Alexander 1869 * Wash. and Jeff. College: In Pursuit of the Uncommon Man L. Caton Jr. 1972 * Who Was Who in America 1897-1942 Vol 1 1943 * The Chronicle of A Century 1848-1948 Second Pres. Church, Wheeling WV 1948 * James D. Moffat fiscal ledger 1876-1916 * Wheeling Register, Memorial Address Rev. J. B. Graham 1876 * Wheeling Intelligencer, Sermon Rev. Fisher 1876 * Mrs. John Moffat, De1ray Beach, FL * Westerkirk Parish Church Records, Scot. (LDS Church, Salt Lake City) 1816-22 * Presbyterians, Their History and Beliefs Lingle, Kuykendall 1944-1978 * 20th Century History of the City of Washington and Washington County McFarland 1910 * The Scotch-Irish Families of America * Minutes of the New Lisbon Presbytery, Pres. Histor. Soc., Phila. 1839-1852 * Hist. of W-J College, 1865-1902 Centen. Ce1ebr. of W-J 1902 * Inauguration of Rev. James D. Moffat, D.D. W-J College 1882 * History of lst Presbyterian Church of Lisbon, 0H Committee 1982

FAMILY HISTORY

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*FAMILY NAME HISTORY & ORIGIN* The Araneta family dates back from the early times when aristocracy was still prevalent. The family traces their ancestral roots back to ancient times in Vasconia, (Basque) and from there, are scattered all over the world. According to the scholar, "Baron de Cobos" of Belchite, Aragon, "in its surnames dictionary" one branch of this family established their household in Gipuzkoa, one of the three provinces of Euskal Herria, the name given to the home of the Basque people, which today form the Communidad Autónoma del "Pais Vasco" or "Euskadi" in Basque, and the Chartered Community of Navarra (Nafarroa). The family dwelled mostly near the mountains, which are surrounded by valleys, hence the name Araneta, the etymology of which is derived from the Basque term "aran" meaning valley, and the locative suffix "eta", which denotes a "place of". Thus, the initial bearer of the surname Araneta would have been someone who dwelled in a valley. From the diverse unity which characterizes Spain, comes the distinguished Araneta family surname. Historians have studied the available records and it revealed that the original family ancestral seat originated first in Vasconia, where it had its primitive origin. The Vascones were, most likely, the ancestors of the present-day Basques to whom they left their name. One of the earliest records bearing the name Araneta is that of Martin de Araneta, who came from an aristocratic family of Basque origin. His name was recorded in a Castilian document dated 1227.''' Martin de Araneta was a Knight during the era of the Reconquest. He served and escorted Ferdinand III, King of Castile and Leon, in the conquest of Cordova, Murcia, Jaen, and Seville, from the Moors in 1217. He was granted innumerable amounts of lands when Ferdinand divided the conquered territories between his knights, the Church, and the Nobility, whom he enfeoffed with great latifundias. According to Alberto and Arturo Garcia Garaffa, Basque writers and historians, the Aranetas had ancestral houses in the valleys of Gainza and Andoain in Gipuzkoa. A notable member of this household, Juan Francisco de Araneta, was ennobled in Gainza, circa 1683. The Spanish Crown, in granting the family a decree of the coat-of-arms, recognized the nobility of the Araneta family. It is found in the compilation of La Solar de las tierras de la" Vasca y Navarres" (Vol. 10 page 91 Enciclopedia Heraldica y Genealógica Hispano – Americano by Alberto and Arturo Garcia Carraffa). References: National Historical Archive & Research Center. Enciclopedia Heráldica y Genealógica Hispano-Americano (por Alberto y Arturo Garcia Garaffa).

Family History and Roots

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The goal of this project is to know where and who we are? Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Tasso-6|Rita Tasso]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Records of my great parents or any idea where they died? on both sides of my grandparents * Military records unknown for my mothers father * How to search for my italian roots and I can seem to find any thing with africian Ethiopian, Asmara birth, death records Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=31774731 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family History Center Notes

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Marriage record for Lloyd Ledbetter and Pearl Tranbarger (Tramborger): [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFXF-TJQ "Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," database, ''FamilySearch''], Cyrus Tramborger in entry for Lloyd Ledbetter and Pearl Tramborger, 12 May 1922; citing reference 12; FHL microfilm 2,108,463. Marriage record for Cyrus (Cyres) Tranbarger and Sarah C Montgomery (Monterey) * [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFNS-PX6 "Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," database, ''FamilySearch''], (Cyres H. Tranbarger and Sarah Monterey, 07 May 1898; citing reference pg 85 rn 390; FHL microfilm 413,541. * [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFZP-FYB "Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," database, ''FamilySearch''], Cyrus H. Tranbarger and Sarah C. Montgomery, 07 May 1898; citing reference p 390; FHL microfilm 499,380. * [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFJ9-2JP "Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," database, ''FamilySearch''], Cyres H. Tranbarger and Sarah Monterey, 07 May 1898; citing reference ; FHL microfilm 413,541. Marriage record for Gabriel Tranbarger and Martha Nelson Marriage record for Moses Linkenhoker and Blanche Ledbetter * [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFW7-SKX "Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," database, ''FamilySearch''], Moses Linkenhoker and Blanche Ledbetter, 14 Apr 1917.

Family History from Aunt Nell - Inell Morrell

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Thanks to Veronica Sehrt for sharing this family history. Transcribed from original. ---- '''From "Aunt Nell" - Inell Morrell''' Daisy Magnolia Knight was born February 13, 1890 in Bullock County, Alabama, the second child of William Harvey Knight and Stephannah Harrell Knight. She had 3 brothers and 3 sisters. Hubert Walder, James Edward, William Scott, Lula Melinda, Lily Bell and Eula Pennie. The family was considered "well-to-do" [not in need]. Her father owned and operated a turpentine facility and her mother managed the home and a commisary type store. This store continued for a period of about 20 years. The leading material sold was calico at .06 a yd. She carried a line of fine imported fabrics and laces along with the staple groceries. This store was located in Holms County, Florida about 4 or 5 miles above Bonifay. She attended the local school in this community. As a gifted student, her teacher suggested that she be sent away to college. Her father was appalled! He felt education was wasted on girls! Her schools days ended at an early age. She often recalled that her father was a stern and forbidding man. Once in the long hot summer she decided to have her hair cut according to the very latest fashion. This was unthinkable to Grandpa. So the oldest brother, Hubert, with scissors helped to trim and shape the long dark curls. She felt stylishly chic with the smart new hair do! Then Grandpa came home from the turpentine stills, took one look at his beautiful daughter, grabbed the scissors and razer and shaved her head. My mother would never forget the hurt and humiliation and the necessity of wearing a bonnet continually for a time that seemed forever, while her hair grew long again. Mama's mother was often ill. She worried about the welfar of the very young children. When papa, George W. Morell, Jr., came to visit his cousins, the Mike Morrell family, that lived nearby, and met mama, he was immediately infatuated with this young slender girl with the striking black curls and clear blue eyes. This pleased grandma. She encouraged an early wedding. Mama was a very young teenager, caught up in the romantic plans of a home wedding and a gorgeous new trousseau. Grandma sowed late into the night on the floor length gowns of fine dotted swiss, batiste, voiles and organdy, with trimmings of imported French laces. Fittings for the tiny waistline and floor length skirts made in highest fasion were all so exciting. She was marrying a handsome, sophisticated older man! All the stuff young dreams are made of. The wedding on December 18, 1904 was a very big affair. Everyone from far and near attended. The big lovely old home bustled with all the preparations for the happy occasion. Papa lived down "near the bay" in Floriday (near panama City) and had a partnership in a market in Dothan, Alabama, socializing in fish and seafood. His partner stayed in the shop while papa traveled back and forth to Panama City supplying the fresh sea foods and dried salt mullet fo rthe market. After the wedding the young couple set out for the first home. It was to be a homestead down on the bay. The house was a lean-to shack with dirt floors, miles an dmiles from anyone. Papa continued his work and traveling to and from the market leaving his new youn bridge to prove up this homestaed. The lively trousseau was utterly useless in this wilderness. There was no reason to dress up in the elegant clothes when you wouldn't see anyone for months on end. The work was sheery drudgery, back-breaking, hot and humid. The land had to be cleared and crops planted. Furniture consisted of bare necessities in this horrid little shack. But the living area was abrightened up with the little round table made from a hoop cheese container mounted on a pedestal end wearing those elegant skirts that she had no occasion to wear herself. Meantime at the market the partner was confiscating all the profits for himself an dleaving nothing to pay fo rthe fresh supplies. Papa was forced to sell out his interest and spend more time working the homestead. Their first baby, a daughter was born on February 15, 1907. She was given the name Maxie Floraetta by her paternal grandmother, Adella Sheffield Morrell. Mama always thought this was the most beautiful child in the whole world. Grandma Knight's health was rapidly deteriorating. In June 1907 they took their baby for a visit back to see her. Grandma was now in her early forties and her youngest child, Eula, was abarely 2 years of age. The brain tumor was closing in on her. She died shortly after they arrived for their visit, on June 25, 1907. Pennieual, a son, was born March 14, 1909. A positively handsome child, plump, rosy-cheeked, loveable baby who seemed to never have any illnesses and never a bad-tempered day. Another trip was made to visit her family in December 1909. The baby, Pennieual was now 9 months old. He took sick and died there on December 12, 1909, a few days after their arrival. Pennieual was buried in the cemetary of Betheny Missionary Baptist Church, (Grandpa Knight had helped to build this church) about 10 miles South of Slocomb, Alabama. (Later a baby, Clotie Kngith, wasa buried beside him. This was a child of Grandpa Knight and wife, "Miss Dawnie", and the only other child born to Grandpa). Sometimes mama spoke wistfully of this baby. Even after all the sadness that followed, she still recalled that Pennieual was a baby still beast feeding, when he died, and notheirng could ever compare with this heartbreak and desolation. Exel, the second son, was born November 15, 1910. The years passed, they had proved up the homestead on the bay, sold it, moved to another on the sand hills of Holmes Valley, another shack, this time with floors, except for the kitchen that had a dirt floor. They talked and planned of selling this one and buying a dream place that they both would like. Grandpa Knight was busy courting a new wife to help with the five young children. He eventually maried a total of 6 wives, and most of them, after the honeymoon was over, turned into cruel and wicked stepmothers. Then the children would be brought to mama and papa to be cared for. Mama would sometimes reminisce about her brothers, Jim and Scott, often coming back home to her after each interval with the new stepmother, and always carrying a 22 rifle and a change of clothes. Papa's older brother, Uncle Tom Morrell, sold his homestead in the valley and found this property right on the Choctawhatchee River, where Holmes Creek flows into the river on its way to the Choctawatchee Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. He convinced papa that this was the right place to settle and raise his family. With transportation then being chiefly water-borne and these 2 streams, it was ideal. Pap was convinced and bought acreage joining Uncle Tom. He neglected to discuss this with mama before closing the deal. I don't believe mama ever forgave him for buying this land. Flora was born here Setpember 24, 1913 and Maxie had given her the name "Flora Etta" for her favorite character in her school reader. when Flora was 5 days old Maxie died on September 29, 1913 at 6 years of age. The thord son, Ellis was born March 25, 1916. Papa named this son. On February 6, 1918 Aggie Orie was born, she was named by mama's sister, Lula, who was living with them at that time. Exel died February 11, 1920. Three months later Inell, named by mama, was born on May 9, 1920. Inabelle, named by papa, was born May 26, 1922. They had begun clearing land along the river for farming, accumulating cattle, hogs and chickens. There were miles of open range laid for grazing. The big island, where the creek and river joined was a fertile feeding ground for the hogs, only the spring floods necessitated their boating the hundreds of hogs off the island at intervals. Each resident had a mark forhis animals. I can still remember papa's "crop split and under-bit in one ear, under square in the other". This has always been abolutely meangingless to me, but I rembmer it almost as a chant. The high banks of the Choctawhatchee were safe from flooding. The land was conidered the best for farming, and gardens raised on this soil were thought to have a better flavor than any other in the world. Again papa built a store, stocked it with general merchandise and later the post office was housed in the same building. Mama was appointed postmater at Miller's Ferry, Florida on May 14, 1923. This was located in the Shell Landing Community, somtimes referred to as the "Morrell Settlement". To provide refrigeration he bought an "Icy Ball". This was the first ice-making contraption of its kind in the vicinity. It consissted of 2 large ball shaped cylinders with a space between. Each morning a then new fangled gas burner was lighted, one cylinder was placed over it, the other cylinder placed in a tall aluminum barrel filled with water. Once child was delegated to sit with the thing for what seemed endless hours to be sure to hear the whistle that signaled the re-charging of the ice making process for another 24 hours. Then the heated unit was hung outside the box and the cold unit inside. It had a small ice cube tray for ice. Grandpa and Grandma Morrell still lived in the valley. On a trip by horse and buggy to visit Shell Landing, the horse was frightened by something and bolted, athrowing Grandma from teh buggy and breaking her leg. She died soon after, on October 30, 1923 (she was born March 17, 1845). Grandpa sold his home-place, and came to live with this children, mostly with Mama and Papa. He was born, George Washington Morrell, on October 4, 1844 and ided on NOvember 3, 1924. They continued to stock the store in a complete line of merchandise and to build up the huge herds of cattle, hogs and now he was the first to buy pure breed poultry, the "Rhode Island Reds" for eating and "White Leghorns" for eggs. They were beginning to prosper. Now he was among the first to own a car, a black shiny "26 model Ford" for the family car and an older truck for errands. The older truck was a 23 Ford bought at the Sheriff's auction. It was called a "rum runner" and had (3 in 1) in the rear which made it faster. Vernall, named by Flora, was born September 8, 1925. Papa often took this young child with him, even on his long trips to town on business. Aggie was also taken along to help with her while he attended to his errands. Groceries and supplies including gas and oil for the service station came down the river by steam boat from "Louis-Bear Co" in Pensacola. The Army Engineers maintained a "Snag boat" for removing trees and debris from the river and creek to keep them navigable. A form of barter was also used for those without cash. Chickens, eggs and gophers (land turtles) were accepted in exchange for groceries, and then crated and shipped by return steam boat to Pensacola. I still vaguely remember them discussing having bought the same gophers several times over from the rather shiftless but needy family who apparently came back nights and sneaked their gophers out of the special pens and resold them the following day for more food. papa eventually painted a white stripe on the turltles sold so that they could not be "exchanged". Then papa's health began to fail. Doctors, hospitals constantly. In 1928 his health deteriorated rapidly. Months on end were spent in the hospitals in Dothan, Alabama. Thiws was supposed to be the best and most modern facilities. Then the year 1929, Idell, named by pap, was born on January 18, 1929. The depression was on, yet hospital and doctor bills increased. His kidneys ceased to function along with the other ailments, necessitating the doctro removing the water from his system twice weekly. An enlarged spleen was removed. Many blodd transfucsions were necessary. Ellis, now 13 years of age, was driving the many miles requried to take him to the hospitals and the visits to the doctor when he was home. The rear-end of the 26 Ford was continually having to be replaced. Mama was coping with a new baby, a critically ill husband, 6 other children, a store, postoffice, farm, cows, hogs and chickens. Sometimes there would be a live-in cook, other times "day-help would fill in. As the year progressed into winter they realized Papa couldn't live. Doctors now told him that he wouldn't survive through the end of the year. He head always made a happy and beautiful Christmas for his family. This had to be no different. He lay in bed and planned the picnic type feaste on teh front lawn with all the neighbors and relatives included, for our Christmas. Hams, chickens and cakes were baked, there must be fresh mullet and oysters from the bay. Someone was sent on the truck for all the seafood. Santa Claus must come and fill his childrens' stockings as he always had. Somehow this was all accomplished, tho, I can remember vaguely that mama had exhausted all available funds and a mortage was given on the "Carnley Field". Santa was generous to each child. Life was ebbing. At 9 years of age, I could feel him slipping away. We loved him. Inabelle, at 7 years, hovered over him asking constatnly if he wanted anything. Older people gently ushered her out of the room. I remember swarming crowds of peopole who remained thru the night. He died on CHristmas night 1929. The funeral for papa was bleak, his casket was built by neighbors under the oak tree by the store. (This was customary in these days to build the casket, and flowers were provided from those blooming in yeards). The material piled outside for that new house he had dreamed of now provided the necessary lumber. White sateen from the store and black for covering the outside and brass hinges and handles made a handsome box for burial. no flowers were blooming that time of year, so there were no bouquets. I can remember a light rain as we crossed the ferry at Miller's Ferry on our way to the cemetary at New Hope Methodist Church (a church he and his relatives had helped to build). His sister, Aunt Lela, told us the rain was a special blessing. I felt a consolation, that our God was blessing papa! Mama faced insurmountable difficulties. Somehow she managed. Her sole interest became the welfare of her children and to keep them together, raise them respectiable and give tem all the education possible. She kept her store and office open at everyone's convenience. If one of the older children would tend the business then she worked in teh garden. We even arose, dressed and checked the post office for mail, sold groceries or gas at midnight hours. This was supposed to be accomodation (It really was exploitation). Our lives were truly bound to the store and office. Mama never tolerated rudeness by her children, even a much deserved retort was forbidden. The customer was always right. No gossip could be repeated, no discrimination, . First come, first served, black and white. No needy person was ever denied credit for groceries even though she knew they'd never pay. She felt compassion for all and continued to share all she could as long as she lived. January 1939 death took another of mama's children. Vernall, now 13 1/2 years old went back to school as usual, spent the night with her cousin, Tommie Lee Dunn, came home on Friday with a headache.

Family History log of the Conway Family

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Part of the following record is copied by me from an old diary written by my uncle James Conway (1855-1892) who was lost at sea. the other part is my own compiling. James Conway (1891-1968) Also added to by another family member, possibly his daughter, Margaret Conway.

Family History of Abraham Zumkehr (1812-1894)

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Excerpt: "This 'Zumkehr Family History Book' was prepared and distributed at the Zumkehr Family Reunion in June 1993. A big "Thanks" to those who had a part in gathering information. Cynthia Moser (b. 1954) + Marie (McGary) Moser (b. 1915) for background history, several of the reminiscences and many of the pictures. [[Slusser-150 |Kathryn (Slusser) Ferrell]] (b. 1920) + [[Slusser-153 |Grace (Slusser) Tyson]] (b.1932) - For sending letters to gather data from the [[Zumkehr-6 |Frederick Zumkehr]] (1870-1957) family and the [[Zumkehr-28 |Abraham Zumkehr]] (1878-1958) family. My apologies for any errors or omissions." - Gale (Tyson) Sommers (b.1956) Historian.... Louisville, Ohio.

Family History of Ortrun Engehausen

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Pages from a family research booklet completed by Ortrun Engehausen (Engehausen-2) circa 1930 in Bremen, Germany. Some select translations are imbedded below these images but any experts in German script are more than welcome to edit them. {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen.png|caption=Title Page }} {{Image|file=engehausen-2.png|Caption='''Ortrun Engehausen''' }} '''1. Self''' #Maiden Name: Engehausen #All First Names: Ortrun Margarete Louise #Birth: 13 Mar 1924 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-3.png |caption='''Father: Wilhelm Eduard Albert Engehausen''' }} '''2. The Father''' #Surname: Engehausen #All First Names: Wilhelm Eduard Albert #Occupation: Senior Engineer Religion: Prodestant #Date and Place of Birth: 30 Mar 1880, in Bremen #Baptism: 11 May 1880 #Confirmation: 26 Mar 1938 #Marriage Date and Place: 23 May 1923 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-4.png |caption='''Mother: Dorothea Sophia Kohlhammer''' }} '''3. The Mother''' #Maiden Name: Kohlhammer #All First Names: Dorothea Sophia #Religion: Prodestant #Date and Place of Birth: 5 Sep 1887 in Heidelberg #Baptism 30 Oct 1887 #Confirmation: 1902 #Marriage Date: 23 May 1923 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-5.png |caption='''Paternal Grandfather: Heinrich Rudolf Engehausen''' }} '''4. Paternal Grandfather''' #Surname: Engehausen #All First Names: Heinrich Rudolph #Birth: 19 Jul 1840 #Death: 8 Mar 1919 in Bremen {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-6.png |caption='''Paternal Grandmother: Sophia Luise Grote''' }} '''5. Paternal Grandmother''' #Maiden Name Grote #All First Names: Sophia Louise #Birth: 17 Sep 1841 # Death: 10 Jan 1921 Bremen {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-7.png |caption='''Maternal Grandfather: Jacob Wilhelm Kohlhammer''' }} '''6. Maternal Grandfather''' #Surname: Kohlhammer #All First Names: Jacob Wilhelm #Birth: 16 Nov 1851 #Death 11 Aug 1911 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-8.png |caption='''Maternal Grandmother: Sophie Frederike Riegler''' }} '''7. Maternal Grandmother''' #Maiden Name: Riegler #All First Names: Sophia Friederike #Birth: 20 Mar 1858 #Death 6 Dec 1877 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-9.png |caption='''Paternal Great Grandparents''' }} '''8. Husband''' # Surname: Engehausen #All First Names: Johann Friedrich #Birth: 4 Oct 1794 #Death: 19 Feb 1835 '''9. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Fischer #All First names: Maria Margarete #Birth: 27 Apr 1798 #Death: 6 Nov 1872 in Bremen '''10. Husband''' #All First Names: Friedrich Wilhelm #Birth: 11 Jun 1803 #Death: 22 Feb 1885 '''11. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Weber #All First Names: Charlotte Magdalene Elizabeth #Birth: 26 Feb 1807 #Death: 28 Apr 1890 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-10.png |caption='''Maternal Great Grandparents''' }} '''12. Husband''' #Surname: Kohlhammer #All First Names: Heinrich Wilhelm #Birth: 1 Aug 1829 #Death: 23 Aug 1886 '''13. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Kuenzier #All First Names: Johanna Catharine Sophia #Birth: 13 Nov 1826 #Death: 11 Sep 1862 '''14. Husband''' #Surname: Riegler #All First Names: George Michael #Birth: 28 Jun 1821 #Death: 30 Apr 1866 '''15. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Biringer #All First Names: Maria Dorothea #Birth: 22 Dec 1829 #Death: 4 Dec 1899 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-11.png |caption='''Generations Page 16''' }} '''16. Husband''' #Surname: Engehausen #All First Names: #Birth: 27 Apr 1746 #Death: 12 Feb 1810 '''17. Wife''' #Maiden Name: #All First Names: #Birth: 28 Jun 1766 #Death: 5 Mar 1844 '''18. Husband''' #Surname: Fischer #All First Names: Johann Rudolf #Birth: 23 Apr 1765 #Death: 23 Apr 1842 '''19. Wife''' #Maiden Name: #All First Names: #Birth: 9 Nov 1775 #Death: 26 Feb 1833 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-12.png |caption='''Generations Page 17''' }} '''20. Husband''' #Surname: Grote #All First Names: Fredrich Wilhelm #Birth: 1770 #Death 1 Jun 1822 '''21. Wife''' #Maiden Name: #All First Names: #Birth: 13 Dec 1769 #Death: 31 Mar 1827 '''22. Husband''' #Suname: Weber #All First Names: #Birth: 15 Feb 1774 #Death: 2 May 1803 '''23. Wife''' #Maiden Name: #All First Names: #Birth: 17 Apr 1772 #Death: 21 Feb 1843 {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-13.png |caption='''Generations Page 18''' }} '''24. Husband''' #Surname: Kohlhammer #All First Names: Johann George #Birth: 10 Apr 1801 in Heidelberg #Death: 13 Aug 1863 in Heidelberg '''25. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Kuck #All First Names: Katherina Elizabeth #Birth: 1 Sep 1803 #Death: 15 Apr 1867 '''26. Husband''' #Surname: Kuenzier #All First Names: Jacob #Birth: 14 Jan 1798 in Heidelberg #Death: 2 July 1870 in Heidelberg '''27. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Leeser #All First Names: Anna Maria #Birth: 23 Nov 1807 in Heidelberg #Death: 23 Nov 1859 in Heidelberg {{Image|file=Family History of Ortrun Engehausen-14.png |caption='''Generations Page 19''' }} '''28. Husband''' #Surname: Riegler #All First Names: George Johann Jacob #Birth: 2 Sep 1789 in Heidelberg #Death: 16 Mar 1834 in Heidelberg '''29. Wife''' #Maiden Name: Keller #All First Names: Susanna Pilippina #Birth: 12 Dec 1802 In Heidelberg #Death: 5 Sep 1835 in Heidelberg '''30. Husband''' #Surname: Biringer #All First Names: Peter #Birth: 8 Jul 1785 #Death: 3 May 1855 '''31. Wife'''. #Maiden Name: Zueckschwert #All First Names: Maria Elizabeth #Birth: 17 Jul 1788 #Death: 28 Jun 1835

Family History of Rhoda Braden Wright

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Stories and Information about the life and family of Rhoda Braden Wright. Recorded on audio tapes by RBW at various times between 1971 and 1974. (Partially transcribed by granddaughter Janice Wright Hughes)

Family History of the Lunsfords

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FAMILY HISTORY OF THE LUNSFORDS written by Joseph McLane Lunsford (transcribed Mar 2004 by Mark Lunsford) From a record of the family, owned by John Newton Lunsford. Elijah Lunsford was born in Scotland, came to America in 1750. He was the father of Jonathan Lunsford, who was born in North Carolina, Wilkes County, in 1788. Jonathan moved to Ruch County, Indiana, then moved his family to Hamilton County, Indiana. (dates doubtful) This Jonathan Lunsford, above mentioned, was born June 10, 1788. He was married February 14, 1808 to Miss Elisabeth DeBord (born Nov. 29, 1788) The children of this union were: Tillitha (born Nov. 13, 1808); Melissa (born Jan 24, 1812); Reuben, (born Aug. 22, 1815); James Martin (born May 3, 1825); Elijah Lunsford, Born Aug. 17, 1829). All five children were born in Wilkes County, North Carolina. Reuben, Tillitha, and Mellissa were all married in North Carolina. Tillitha married a man named David Wadkins, (children's names unknown), but dwelling in Swayne County, N. Car. Mellissa married William Cass, whose children are Matilda, Nancy, John, Elisabeth, Mary Lucinda, and William Riley Cass., seven in all. REUBEN Lunsford married Miss Elisabeth Fletcher, and their children's names are: James, Finley, William, Samuel, John, Elias, and Mary J. Lunsford. Martin Lunsford was married twice--first to Miss Barbara Fletcher, who lived but a short time, no children being born to them. Martin next married Miss Jane Faucett. Their children were Thomas J., John Newton, Annie, and Ellie Lunsford. ELIJAH LUNSFORD, the 5th and youngest of the children of Jonathan and Elisabeth (DeBord) Lunsford, born August 17, 1829, in Wilkes County North Caroline, where he lived until about the age of three, when the family moved to Ruch County Indiana, where they lived for nearly a year then again moved to Hamilton County, on a little stream called Flat Rock, a tributary of Fall Creek, about a half mile from which Jonathan Lunsford entered forty acres of government land--where he made himself a home and reared his younger sons to manhood. When ELIJAH LUNSFORD was nineteen years of age, he was five feet ten inches in height, well built and weighing about one hundred sixty-file pounds. He was very fair complexioned, with light blue eyes, wavy hair, cheerful, good-tempered, and very fond of manly sports. At eighteen he was a Lieutenant in Captain Woods Company of Militia. He was very active, leading all of his companions in the sports and games of the day. He was a favorite of the fair sex, was said to be the handsomest young man in the neighborhood. He was reported to be a general favorite of everyone, loved by all, and hated by none. Among his schoolmates and companions, was one Sarah Pilkington, near his own age, she being born July 5, 1831, in Wayne County, Indiana. Her father was Wiley Pilkington, a Baptist Minister, whose native birthplace was North Carolina., but sometime during the '20's he had moved to Wayne County, Indiana, where the younger Pilkingtons and Lunsfords attended the same district school. The result of this was an attachment which sprang up between Sarah Pilkington and Elijah Lunsford ripening into true love, and finally in their marriage which occurred November 26, 1848. The officiating minister was the Rev. Thomas Martin. The wedding took place at the home of the bride's parents in Hamilton County, Indiana. To this union was born, first, a son, August 1, 1849. This child was stillborn. Second, a son, Joseph McLane, born June 10, 1850. Third, a son, John Martin, born June 13, 1852. Fourth, a daugher Louisa Jane, born November 6, 1853. John Martin died of typhus fever, September 18, 1852. Sarah, the wife of Elijah Lunsford, died Dec. 1.... Jonathan Lunsford died December 5, 1865, aged 77 years, 5 months, 25 days, and was buried in Staats Cemetery near Fortville, Indiana. Sarah, Elijah, and his second wife, Keziah, are buried in the same cemetery, which is about one mile north of Fortville, on a fine eminence sloping to the southeast, near the stream of Fall Creek. About 3 years after the death of Sarah, Elijah married Keziah Torrence, a lady of fine form and exquisite beauty, on Nov. 1, 1856. Rev. Jacob Beathy officiated at the home of James Martin Lunsford. Miss Keziah Torrence was the daughter of David and Eva Torrence, and was born in Hamilton County, Indiana, Dec. 28, 1838. To this union 4 children were born:- Bennet F. (born July 19, 1857 - died Mar. 14, 1866) an infant son (born and died in 1858) David E. (born Nov. 28, 1860) Arminta May (born May 1, 1862--died Sept. 6, 1863). Keziah died March 3, 1866, aged 27 years, 2 months, 6 days, her death resulting from spotted fever. Keziah and the three deceased children are buried in the old Staats cemetery, above noted; and Elijah is buried between the graves of Sarah, his first wife, and Keziah, his second wife. MILITARY RECORD OF ELIJAH LUNSFORD Volunteered for service and was enlisted with a company of 100 men under the command of Capt. Huston Eastly. Helms and Alfout, being Lieutenants. Went into Camp Deal at Indianapolis Aug. 6, 1862. This company was organized as part of the 12th Indiana Volunteer Infantry, Col. Link, commanding. They were almost immediately sent into Kentucky against the confederate General Kirby Smith., who was making an attempt to invade the North through Kentucky. On Aug. 30, 1862, at Richmond, Kentucky, a stubborn battle was fought against overwhelming odds. Elijah's regiment was completely routed, as they were only recruits-against superior numbers of trained and seasoned troops. About two-thirds of the Union forces, Elijah among them were captured, but on Sept. 1, were paroled and sent home to await exchange. Elijah was at home until Sept. 18, when the regiment was again ordered into service at Camp Morton. They drilled until Nov. 22, 1862, then were sent against Gen. Joseph Johnson, and after ward Hood, through Tennessee and Georgia--later participating in several battles and skirmishes, always doing his duty cheerfully and honorably. Elijah was made a Corporal in March 1863. At Atlanta, on July 22, 1864, he was captured and sent to Andersonville prison. After 59 days, during which he almost starved to death, he was exchanged Sept 19, 1864, and was sent, a physical wreck, to the field hospital at Marietta, Georgia, and was transferred to the General Hospital at Madison, Indiana on Oct. 4,1864, where he remained until May 26, 1865, when he was honorably discharged and sent home. His first pension was $4.00 per month, later increased to $8.00 and just before his death, to $12.00 per month. ELIJAH was married for the 3d time, April 6, 1867, 11:00 P.M. at the age of 38, his bride being Julia Ann Bolander, 19, daughter of Daniel and Catherine Bolander of Hancock County, Indiana, solemnized by Wm. H. Foley, Justice of the Peace of Fortville. Seven children were born to this union. 1. Catherine (born April 30, 1868) 2. Jonathan, (born Oct. 3, 1869) 3. Lahannah M. (born Sept. 17, 1871) 4. Daniel B. (born Dec. 7, 1873) 5. George W. (born Jan. 13, 1876) 6. Rachel A. (born Jan. 19, 1878) 7. Mary M. (born April 11, 1880) Elijah died in 1884. This record is taken almost entirely from a record written by Elijah's son, Joseph McLane Lunsford, and his record was made from one written by his father.

Family History Scrapbook

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Lorraine Mickelson created this detailed family scrapbook, including genealogies, pictures, stories, memorabilia, and articles she found when researching. She blessed Tim and Gwen Rochon with it in March, 2002.

Family History written by Catherine Potter (1762-1839)

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Family History of [[Potter-12248|Catherine Potter]] written for her son [[Bulmer-1060|Rev William Henry Bulmer]], transcribed from the original by [[Bulmer-1059|Rev Edward Bulmer]] and presently in the possession of the [[ Bulmer-1043|Bulmer family]]. Images can be supplied on request. The diary has not been published and is not currently in the public domain in any format. The letters contain considerable genealogical information about families such as the Regis, Bulmers, Potters, Dawsons, Ogles, Dundas's, Charltons, Buckhams, Delavals, Carrs amongst others as well as insight into life at Windsor in the time of George III. Spelling was perhaps not Catherine's strongest point and her spelling and punctuation errors are included here to preserve a sense of it's originality. * Copyright © Rachel Bulmer [Bulmer-1043] 2022. All rights reserved. ---- :'''Feb 13, 1810''' :My dear William Henry, :As I promised to begin my little narative in my last letter, I just now inform you that your grandfather Potter was descended from an ancient and honorable family in Cumberland. He was brought up and educated

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:by his grandfather, who was a Clergyman at Kendle in Westmorland. After he had finished his schooling at one of the publick seminarys, he was sent to Queen's College Oxford, to finish his studys and took a degree of Bachelor of Arts and was ordained. :His father, who was a Clergyman, had the Living of Cramlington and Horton in the County of Northumberland, and, having eight sons and one daughter to provide for, made your grandfather accept a curacy in the County of Kent. He was appointed Chaplain to the [[Finch-1862|Marchioness of Rockingham]]: he there became acquainted with your grandmother, who was the daughter of the [[Regis-39|Rev'd Dr Regis D.D]], who was Rector of Adisham in Kent, Chaplain to his Majestys George I and George II and was appointed Canon of Windsor by his Majesty's express command. {{Image|file=Finch-1862.jpg |caption=Mary, Marchioness of Rockingham }} :Your grandfather's interest and intimacy with [[Deleval-4|Lord Delaval]]Lord Delval's father Francis succeeded the old Duke as MP for Northumberland procured him, at the death of the old [[Seymour-206|Duke of Somerset]]Wikipedia contributors, "Algernon Seymour, '''7th Duke of Somerset'''," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Algernon_Seymour,_7th_Duke_of_Somerset&oldid=1092277535 (accessed June 20, 2022)., the presentation of the Living of North Shields and was Vicar of Tynemouth thirty-two years. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-1.png |caption=John Potter's chaplaincy at Seaton Delaval }} {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-6.jpg |caption=Sir John Hussey Delaval }} :As soon as your grandfather got this preferment Dr Regis no longer opposed his marriage with his eldest daughter, [[Regis-131|Catherine]], who was universally admired for

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:her great accomplishments and learning. She was a proficient in her own language, also in French and Italian and what is very uncommon for a female, she understood the Latin tongue equally as well. During her life she kept up a correspondence with the first literary characters and her engaging manners politeness and affability made her company courted by the first people in this country. She was the delight of the young, who reaped both profit and instruction by her company and always joined in their inocent gaiety as her disposition was naturally cheerfull and had none of that austerity that gennerly accompanys great genious and an unremitting attention to all religious Duties. In fine she was one of the best of wives and mothers. :I was her eleventh child, named after herself to oblige your grandfather who adored her for her virtues and great abilities. :Her eldest son [[Potter-13167|John]] who was in the East India Service unfortunately lost his life in returning with three officers in a boat to the Northumberland East Indiaman off St Helena where they had been on a party of pleasure.Wikipedia contributors, '''"East Indiaman Northumberland (1805 EIC ship)"''' Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northumberland_(1805_EIC_ship)&oldid=998851419 (accessed June 19, 2022) {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839.png |caption=East Indiaman 'Northumberland' }} :Their eldest daughter, [[Potter-13182|Sarah]], died at sixteen years of age - a great affliction to your

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:grandfather and grandmother. She was quite angelick in her disposition, learned and accomplished that she far surpassed all the girls of her age, spoke the French and Italian languages fluently and was so religious and devout that she was the wonder and admiration of all who beheld her excellency. She was by many thought handsome having fine blue eyes, long eyelashes, delicate complection aubern hair and the most interesting countenance. If it had pleased God to have spared her life, it would have been a great advantage to the younger branch of the family, as her sudden death had such an effect on your grandmother that she never was able from ill health to pay the same attention to the rest of her children. She was spared the affliction of witnessing the death of her second daughter Harriet, who was equally good and amiable as her sister. She married in the year 1782 [[Charlton-2526|Mr Charlton]] and left one son, who is at present a Captain in the 61st regiment of Foot, and an honor to his country, also two daughters, Sarah and Jane. {{Image|file=Charlton-2528.jpg |caption=Col. Edward Charlton K.H. }} :[[Potter-13184|James George Potter]] was their fourth son and was brought up in the medical line. He was a remarkable handsome man, with great abilities and his company too much sought after by the gay and dissipated, which led him into

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extravagance and dissipation, which hurt his constitution and shortened his life. He was some years in the navy and then went as surgeon to a Regiment in Lord Moria's army and was there during the campaign in Holland. He then entirely lost his health and retired with a pention and lived at Morpeth some years after he then came to Newcastle to be near Mr Ingham and after lingering many months he died in the 44th year of his age. :Their fifth son, [[Potter-13181|Edward]], was unfortunately drowned. He was at the particular request of his godfather, Mr Alderman Barker of Newcastle, bound for his Freeledge, as it was his intention to provide for him, having a great concern in shipping, but it please God to order otherwise. :[[Potter-13185|William Anthony Potter]] was their youngest and last of their children. He served seven years apprenticeship to a Mr Mewburn, one of the infirmary surgeons and a Freeman of Newcastle. He first began business with his brother at North Shields, but, on their separation, he followed his profession at Newcastle in Northumberland Street, the house your grandmother retired to after the death of your grandfather which happened in the year 1789 in the seventy fourth year of his age. His loss was so severely felt by your grandmother

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that she only survived his death four years and departed at the same age, being just 74, and had the comfort of being attended in her last moments by her affectionate son and an old and faithful servant who had lived in the family many years and whose singular attachment and hope will be rewarded by the surviving part of the family. :Now having drawn my narrative nearly to a close I must at some leisure time give you some account of the life of your own mother and conclude this long epistle with my sincere prayers to the Almighty that you my dear child may always walk in the fear of God and that He may give you Grace that you may become a blessing and an honor to your family, which is the most fervent wish of your ever affectionate mother, C. Bulmer ---- : February 25, 1810 :My dear Boy, :Before I begin my own little history, I must give you some further account of your grandmother's family. She was the eldest of four (five?) sisters. Sarah married to Wm Dawson Esq: Harriet to Wentworth Ogle Esq: Ann married to Samuel Cheetham Esq and Elizabeth married to the Rev. Mr Prior one of the

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masters of Eton School. The five sisters were coheiresses, there not being a male heir. They would have had large fortunes if their Father, Dr Regis had not ventured thirty thousand pounds in the South Sea Scheme, which by its failure was the ruin of so many families who ventured their all in hopes of reaping great advantage, but you will read the account in the history of England, how much the people of England were deceived in that Scheme. :Dr Regis was again tempted to put five thousand pound in the hands of the Yorkshire Building Company who failed, so that a small dividend which was paid twenty years after to the surviving part of the family was all that was ever received from that adventure. {{Image|file=Regis-39.jpg |caption=Balthazar Regis D.D }} :The history of Dr Regis' family you will read in a manuscript translated from the French by your grandmother Potter. It was written by Dr Regis' two aunts and addressed to himself, after their wonderful escape out of France during the dreadfull persecution of the Protestants. I most earnestly recommend to you, my dear child, that you will seriously peruse these memoirs as it will show you the errors of Popery, how much your ancestors suffered on account of adhering to the religion.

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My dear Wm Henry, :As you may have some curiosity to know something of the younger part of your mother's life, I shall begin with my birth which was on the 14th of January 1762 at Wallsend, a beautiful village situated between Newcastle and North Shields in the County of Northumberland; being, as the neighbours all said, a nice little red-cheeked girl, happy tempered and tractable made me a favorite among the gentlemen's familys in the village, who had me alternately every day at their houses, where every toy and plaything were provided for me, and having a good voice and an early taste for singing I was much cosseted perticularly at my godfathers James Muncaster's Esq:, also at Mr Water's whose sister Miss Waters afterwards married [[Dundas-686|Colonel Dundas]]'''Marriage Allegation for William Dundas and Isabella Waters witnessed by Emmanuel Potter''' England, Durham Diocese, ... & Allegations, 1692-1900: "England, Durham Diocese, ... & Allegations, 1692-1900"
Catalog: [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/2764938 England, Durham, Durham Diocese, Mandate for Wetherell appointment; and marriage licence bonds and allegations] Marriage licence bonds and allegations, DDR/EJ/MLA/1/1776, January-December 1776
Image path: England, Durham Diocese, Marriage Bonds & Allegations, 1692-1900 > 1776 > DDR EJ MLA 1 1776 > image 98 of 949
{{FamilySearch Image|S3HY-6PHS-TK5}} (accessed 20 June 2022)
, brother to the present [[Dundas-266|Lord Melville]]. The other families were [[Blackett-222|Mr Alderman Blackett]], father-in-law to [[Collingwood-132|Lord Collingwood]] and Mr Alderman Atkinson, brother-in-law to Mr Muncaster. :Among the villagers I was as much a favorite, being free from pride and always treating them with the greatest civility. The regret they shewed when I married and left the village I shall ever remember with pleasure and gratitude - they crowded round the parsonage house, pouring forth blessings and good wishes for health and happiness. Happy happy days were those, so beloved and respected by all ranks of people. :But to proceed. I was early sent to Newcastle for education, but having attracted the notice and won the affection of my [[Regis-132|Aunt Dawson]] when on a visit to my dear Father and Mother, she requested I might be sent to her to have the advantage of a South Country education. :At the age of 10 years I went to London with some relations who had been on a visit to the family and were to return by sea. I performed my voyage without fear or sickness and arrived safe in high spirits, but met with a great disappointment. As I had formed such high notions that the streets were paved with marble and precious stones, that palaces where the king resided were like the inchanted castles I had read of in the fairy tales, I expressed so much disappointment and disapprobation that I afforded great amusement to my friends. :I was also much provoked to be looked at as a curiosity (like the wild beasts in the tower). My healthfull appearance, fresh colour and my north country dialect and burr, tho' much refined by the polite company I had associated with so much, still created great merriment

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among the south country people, who, I thought were very rude and unpolite to quizz a stranger so much. :My first visit when I arrived in London was made to a brother of my father's who lived at Epsom in Surrey. I was there treated with every kindness and spent a happy month with my uncle and cousins. I was then conducted to Richmond in Surrey by my uncle Potter but no words can paint what I suffered on parting with him to be a resident at the great mansion of my Uncle and Aunt Dawson. Its grandure struck me with awe, the great iron gates were thrown open when our humble gig entered the sweep leading to the house and the butler introduced me into the drawing room to my aunt and cousins so different to those I had just left who had treated me as their companions and in the way that was most gratefull to my feelings. Here I was to be disciplined and made a fine lady, a part which I always disliked to assume. In two days after my arrival at Richmond, just as I was recovering my spirits I received a great shock, when my Aunt told me she was going to spend a month at Southampton on the account of her daughter's health; that I was to be left in [the] charge of her housekeeper

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until her return, when I was to be placed at one of the first boarding schools in Richmond, and in the meantime every arrangement was to be made and my necessary equipment for entering me at Miss Moor's boarding school. When the coach and four appeared at the door my heart sank within me, but when my Aunt and cousin took an affectionate leave of me and departed, I gave way to such an excess of grief that the housekeeper was quite distressed and alarmed that she was for sending after my Aunt post haste. In a day or two I dried up my tears, I found I must submit to my fate; but how often did I regret leaving my fond parents whose tenderness and indulgence would never have left me at a strange place under the care of a servant. I was for some days quite melancholy, ranged about the large house and wandered about the grounds and garden which were beautifull loaded with the finest fruit of all kinds. The grapes hung in clusters from every window. : Yet all this did not comfort me: I was separated from all friends and relations and had no one but the servants to converse with, but for all I was so unhappy, I was so quiet and tractable that I won their kindness and they endeavoured to make me comfortable. To my great joy my Aunt returned at the appointed time and when she heard

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I had fret so much, she regretted she had not taken me with her, but her daughter's bad health occupied all the thoughts. She was just 21 years of age and a most elegant and accomplished woman: she survived a very few years after this period to the great affliction of her parents. They had lost a beautifull girl at sixteen a short time before and only saved one son out of eight children by sending him abroad to reside for some years. On his return to England he married the daughter of Anthony Aufrère Esq of Hoveton Hall in Norfolk. She was his second cousin. At the death of his father he came into possession of a large fortune and lives in a most splendid manner at his house in Manchester Square, London. He has two country seats, one at Windsor and another on the Forrest (?) where he has purchased an estate. His two eldest daughters, Sophia and Harriet, have been presented at court. He has several sons and daughters who were much attached to me when children, as we were so much together. They were all handsome. :I have made a long digression from my story and must now begin with my career at school. When I arrived in ___ in my Aunt's coach and four all the young ladies got to the windows to see me alight. This gave me great consequence in their

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eyes if very little in my own, as I always set little value on show and finery. My Aunt left me in charge to the governess, who was a stately maiden lady near forty, very rigid in her discipline and no way engaging in her manners. She was requested by my aunt not to allow me to mix with the day scholars: this prohibition was very painfull to me, as I was afraid of getting the name of being proud with only associating with the boarders. So when I could escape the eye of my governess and the French teacher I used to converse with them as often as I could, so that I pleased both parties and soon became a general favorite, was always attentive to my tasks, having four to learn every night, French and English, and was never known to miss a word. :I was also very attentive to work of all kind, dancing et cetera after finishing my education I left school and returned to my aunt who wished me to live with her entirely as a daughter, as she had been deprived of her ownly one by Death; but the great desire I had to see my parents, brothers and sisters made me reject this kind offer and I wrote privately to my mother to send for me home, as I was tired of being a fine lady. :When the summons came for my return home, my Aunt

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was much offended: I was sent to London and at the request of Mrs Backhouse, an old and particular friend of my mothers, that I might pay a visit to her until the 'Edward' (Captain Norton) was ready to sail. Never shall I forget the pleasing sensations I experienced when I once more viewed Tynemouth Castle and saw my brother James come alongside of the ship to conduct me to Wallsend. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839.jpg |caption=Tynemouth Castle late 1700s }} :He could not understand my language, nor me his, and we did nothing but laugh at each other. My impatience was so great to see my dear parents that no intreaties from Doctor Watson, who my brother was serving his apprenticeship to as a surgeon, could persuade me to stay alnight, but set off at a late hour to walk the four miles to Wallsend. I cannot express the transports of joy I felt at again beholding my father's house. My brother concealed himself when I knocked at the door: the man enquired my name. I told him I was an old acquaintance and desired to be admitted. He rather reluctantly obeyed as it was so late an hour but as it was midsummer it was not dark. How my heart beat with delight as the parlour door opened and I was received with open arms by my dear parents. After a moment's hesitation they recollected my voice tho' I was grown and improved so much and had not the look of a

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country girl, but a fine boarding school Miss. I understood my father and mother, but not one word hardly of the rest of the family. It was like some foreign language. :After the first few weeks my great joy subsided, and my time was taken up with visiting all my former acquaintance. They were agreeably surprised to find me the same in my disposition and that I had not been spoiled by my residence in the south. :After my return home we had a visit from Colonel and Mrs Dundas (late[ly] Miss Waters and my godmother). They prevailed upon my parents to allow me to accompany my sister Louisa Jane (now Mrs Buckham) to the Hermitage, a beautiful country-seat near Hexham, to spend some months with them. At the time fixed Col. Dundas came in his carriage to fetch me, and I felt the greatest delight at my having to be introduced into publick by people of such consequence, being connected with some of the genteelest families in the country. :They had rather too large an establishment for their fortune, but as Colonel Dundas was only half-brother to Lord Melville and the youngest son of Lady Arniston of Arniston in Scotland, his fortune was not equal to his rank, and it was thought he was not well used by his

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brother Lord Melville who had it in his power at that time, being first Lord of the Treasury, to have given him a sinecure place. :Col. Dundas had two daughters by a former wife. The eldest married a gentleman in Scotland and the younger who was my favorite, to a Capt. Cameron whose regiment went to the East Indies. :I shall ever remember with gratitude the happy three months I spent at this hospitable mansion; the remembrance of it is pleasing to me at this day. I was given in charge to Colonel Dundas by my mother as I was very young, just sixteen I had formed a very serious engagement with an officer in his Majesty's Navy. She was afraid that I might be tempted by going into the world to change my mind and act a dishonorable part by a worthy man who had given the most disinterested proof of his affection and which continued unimpaired through a series of years. My parents would not consent to our marriage untill it suited him to leave the navy which did not happen for several years. Otherwise he would have given up his halfpay and the widows pention. :Col. Dundas knowing how I was situated kept a watchful eye over me, opened every suspicious letter that came for me and would never let any gentleman sit by me or have any private conversation with me

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but I received some proposals which he had power to reject. Our time was spent in the most agreeable manner. Mrs Dundas was a great invalid, but her husband made it his study to entertain my sister and myself. He took us to see everything that was curious in the neighborhood, but had like to meet with a very serious accident in going a bye-road to see the papermills. The carriage broke down, but we all escaped unhurt. They always had dinner company and frequently private balls and attended the Hexham Assemblies. At that time we became acquainted with Mr Charlton's family. Wife Grace Charlton at that time was a dashing bell used to be invited to all the parties at the Hermitage now occupied by Mr Hunter, who has resided there many years. There came repeated orders from Wallsend for our return home before Col. and Mrs Dundas would agree to part with us. At last the day was fixed when with sorrowful countenance we bid adieu to the Hermitage, where we had spent so many happy days. The Col. went with us in his carriage as far as Harlow Hill and his servant led his horse. As we were to proceed to Newcastle in the chaise. I lost all command over myself when I parted with my good friend who had made us so happy. I never dried up my tears

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untill I entered Newcastle where we met with one of our Hermitage acquaintances a Mr Robert Spearman of Durham at Mr Mewburn's. He insisted on our going to the play to raise our spirits and he joined a party made up for us. This little amusement came in good time and we returned home the next day in tolerable spirits. I shall make a remark which may be of service to you, my dear Wm Henry, as you pass through life, never to suffer pleasure to so far intoxicate you as to wean your affections from home. Young people ought to be grateful to their friends for civility and kindness shown them, but not, as in my case, though only momently, to have given way to grief on returning to my happy home. The little restraints it is necessary for young people to be kept under at home ought to be considered as absolutely necessary for their good, untill they have got age and prudence to guide them. There is no friend like a good parent to give them advice and to direct their conduct: and, that you, my dear child, may continue that affection you have so early shown to your parents, let no temptation or persuasion lead you from your duty to God, obedience and submission to the will of your father and mother.

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:It is impossible for me to relate the many little incidents that happened in our pleasant village situated between two towns Newcastle and South Shields. We were able to partake of the amusements of both places. In the year 1781 I was introduced at the Newcastle assemblys by Mrs Hargrave the lady of Wm Hargrave Esq of Shawen. He was high Sheriff for the County of Northumberland.Wikipedia contributors, '''"Shawdon Hall,"''' Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shawdon_Hall&oldid=1083676775 (accessed June 21, 2022) That year my sister Louisa and I had a general invitation to Mr Errington's. He married a lady of large fortune who was particularly attached to us, and whenever we had to attend any of the publick diversions, we were sure of a home house as they had a large mansion in Westgate Street, kept a carriage and lived in high stile. :Your godfather, Mr CollingwoodWikipedia contributors, '''Edward Collingwood (1734–1806), a barrister and coal mine owner of Chirton''' "Dissington Hall," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dissington_Hall&oldid=1083047770 (accessed June 21, 2022) of Chirton, always staid their during the publick weeks, therefore we had the advantage of always being beau'd by a man of consequence to all the amusements. He was reckoned the most polite and handsome man in the country: he always professed the greatest friendship for me and treated me with every mark of respect and civility as long as he lived. It was expected by many people, tho' not by me, as he was your godfather, that he would have remembered you with a legacy at his death, as he came across the water, which he had a great terror of, stood for you and was much displeased you were not

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named 'Edward' after him. He possessed every accomplishment, but was not liberal, which made him not lamented by his neighbours and the poor at Chirton. He left an emense fortune to his niece, Mrs Stanhope, wife of [[Stanhope-639|Walter Spencer Stanhope Esq.]] of Cannon Hall, Yorkshire, M.P. and his estates at Chirton to Lord Collingwood. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-1.jpg |caption=Chirton Hall, Northumberland }} :We also attended the Dockwray Square Assemblys, and by that means got acquainted with several of the military and naval characters. [[Pellew-11|Sir Edward Pellew]] and his officers, Admiral Brunton[https://heritage.stockton.gov.uk/articles/people/vice-admiral-nathan-brunton/ '''Admiral Nathan Brunton'''] Stockton Heritage ''heritage.stockton.gov.uk (accessed June 2022), all the officers of the Queen of Hazard sloop of war, as my brother James was intimate with them, he used to bring them to Wallsend and introduce them to my father who showed them every civility on his son's account. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-3.jpg |caption=Sir Edward Pellew, Viscount Exmouth }} :It was then I became acquainted with Mr Young in the year 1781, who I afterwards married. (He was a great favorite with his Captain the Hon. Augustus Ann Poulteny, who took him to the West Indies in the Sylph as his surgeon, and afterwards in the Montague). On his being ordered to England he recommended him to [[Rodney-96|Sir George Rodney]] who appointed him as his surgeon on board the 'Formidable'.Wikipedia contributors, "George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_Brydges_Rodney,_1st_Baron_Rodney&oldid=1093224663 (accessed June 21, 2022) On his coming to England he left him with [[Pigot-102|Admiral Piggot]] who was his friend as long

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as he lived. He requested to have him as his surgeon when appointed to the 'Royal Sovereign' on the breaking out of the Spanish Armament, so that before the conclusion of the American War when [[Blane-75|Doctor Blane]] was sent home to England with Admiral Drake, Mr Young was appointed phisician to the fleet - a station, if the war had continued - worth seven hundred a year. :Col. and Mrs Dundas again prevailed on my mother to let me go and stay with them at Newbiggin, a sea-bathing place nine miles from Bedlington, where I had been living for some time with my brother James, who was settled as a surgeon there, and I was to keep his house, but his turn for gaiety and company determined me to leave him that he might give up house keeping. Therefore I was at liberty to accept my friends' kind invitation - I spent seven months in the same happy way I had done before with them at the Hermitage. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-4.jpg |caption=Bedlington, home of James in his 'partying' days }} :After the bathing season was over I returned with them to Morpeth as they rented a very handsome house belonging to a Major Munrow. They had a visit from the Colonel's brothers Lord Melvil and the Lord President of Scotland in their way to London to attend Parliament. :What made Morpeth more interesting to me

'''page 21 folio 300'''

was my dear sister Charlton living then. At that time she had been on a visit to Mrs Dundas, where she met Mr Charlton who had a house at Morpeth - so strangely do things come about. :Indeed I met with many opportunities of marrying during the time I was with them, but my early engagement made me reject every offer, also those of my own neighbourhood. I was a general favourite as I made it my constant study to please every body, never to attend to myself and I was always fully rewarded by the continual approbation of pleasant looks of my friends and acquaintance. : Col. and Mrs Dundas left Morpeth to my sorrow and went to Doncaster to live as the two young ladies had to go to the boarding school at Hatfield and they wished to be near them. I had many pressing invitations to go and see them there, but the distance was too great. I shall copy out the Colonel's first letter to me after he got to Doncaster, as the original will be fairly worn out before you may read it. :I received much kind attention from our neighbours Mr and Mrs Muncaster, who took a perticular interest in me being his goddaughter. I went with them to several publick places and they were very liberal in accommodating me

'''page 22 folio 302'''

or any of the family with the use of their carriage indeed we could not have been more agreeable situated among so many genteel families. :We generally went once a year to visit Lord and [[Robinson-15158|Lady Delaval], but after her Ladyship's death, we were not allowed to be much with the family as their conduct was so much censured by the gay life they led and the improper company they kept. {{Image|file=Robinson-15158-1.jpg |caption=Lady Delaval (1730-1783) }} :We were for many years happy in the acquaintance of Mr Hall's family at Willington, but after the young people married and after they disgraced themselves so much as to end all further connection. The eldest daughter, who was very handsome and amiable married a Mr Pringle and died leaving a small family. The second married [[Wallis-2171|Ogle Wallis Esq]]. and was soon separated from him by mutual consent. The youngest, who was beautifull married John Parslow Esq. of the third regiment of Dragoons and was afterwards divorced for eloping with an [[Sykes-1759|officer, son of the late Sir Frances Sykes]].[https://lawcat.berkeley.edu/record/382748?ln=en Trial of Frances Sykes for adultery] ''lawcat.berkeley.edu/record/382748'' (accessed June 2022) :I married and left Wallsend in the year 1788. We arrived in London and had a most comfortable apartment in Berkley Street, Portman Square, consisting of an elegant drawing room, bedroom, dressing room, the

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use of the kitchen. The hurry of travelling through me into a serious fit of illness and the anxiety of Mr Young's being ordered to go to sea immediately with the Duke of Clarence as his surgeon, but he gave up the appointment and the prince took his old surgeon again, who had disobliged him made him write to the Navy Board to send one of the best surgeons on the list, and on Admiral Pigot's recommendation Mr Young was pitched upon much against his own inclination, as the Prince never made himself pleasant to his officers, and no one would have sailed with him if they could have avoided it. :When I was able to see company I had a visit from my [[Aufrere-11|Uncle Aufrère]] and his son-in-law [[Anderson-4430|Lord Yarborough]] and [[Aufrere-12|Mrs [Sophia] Aufrère]], my cousins Dr and Mrs Duval '''Will''': "England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384-1858"
The National Archives; Kew, Surrey, England; Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Series PROB 11; Class: PROB 11; Piece: 1475
{{Ancestry Sharing|29107758|1a3017}} - {{Ancestry Record|5111|112248}} (accessed 21 June 2022)
Will of The Reverend Philip Duval of St Marylebone, Middlesex, England, granted probate on 30 Mar 1808. Died Abt 1808.
, and Doctor and Mrs Goodall, now Canon of Windsor, Provost of Eton.Wikipedia contributors, "Joseph Goodall," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph_Goodall&oldid=991395037 (accessed June 21, 2022) {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-5.jpg |caption=Joseph Goodall, Canon of Windsor }} :We had repeated invitations to dinner from all these great people, but I never could enjoy myself among those who thought themselves so much above me, and tho' they were very civil, yet were not like near relations, so formal stiff and ceremonious, except my cousin Dawson and his Lady who were very attentive, often sending their carriage for us, so did Dr DuvalPhilip Duval was chaplain to the Duke of Gloucester who was

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very desirous I should see the [[Hannover-48|Duke of Gloucester]] at his house, sent Mrs Duval for me but I not being dressed when she came, I lost the sight, as the Duke of Gloucester's carriage drove from the door just as theirs came up to the gates. :We had an invitation from my Uncle and Aunt Aufrère at Chelsea. He bought [[Jenkinson-128|Lord Liverpool's]]2nd Earl Liverpool, Prime Minister 1812–27 beautifull house and gardens which it is impossible to describe or me to do justice to. He gave a most splendid entertainment in compliment to my cousin Dawson, who, like myself, were just married. The Brides' healths were drunk in champagne and burgundy, Lord Yarborough's children were then introduced to their new relations and the day passed very pleasantly walking in the beautiful gardens and had coffee in one of the summer houses. :As my health continued so bad, my aunt wrote to request Mr Young would give his consent to my going a tour with her through Wales. This was at first refused, but on my aunt's repeating her request and urging it so much, Mr Young with the hopes the jaunt might restore my health, gave his consent, tho' he was much hurt, after so long an engagement to be separated so soon after our marriage. My sister Louisa had

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been wrote for to go this expedition, but my Aunt's recollecting she could travill in a carriage without being ill, it was given up, but she came to London and went to our apartments in Berkley Street and spent a few weeks with Mr Young. She then paid a visit to our old friend Mrs Backhouse and there she met with the Rev'd William Buckham who she married and had one son and a daughter. : I had a very unpleasant journey to Bath, as I was obliged to travill all night. My Aunt Dawson gave me a kind reception and I was charmed with that favorite and beautifull city. My uncles's house was the last but one at the top of Milsom Street, opposite to Marshall's great library.Circulating Library and Reading Room in Bath, England There were about 600 circulating libraries across England by the end of the 18th century. Most towns were lucky to have one. But Bath had ten to serve the growing influx of leisure visitors. The most elaborate was on Milson Street. James Marshall and Samuel Pratt opened their reading room in 1787. It catered to the elite and famous including royalty, nobles, knights plus military and religious leaders. As tourism declined in Bath, however, so did the circulating libraries. By 1820, many of the original establishments were gone. It is the best and most chearful street in Bath. The company pass that way in general to the Pump room and to the upper and lower assembly rooms. :We set out for Wales soon after my arrival at Bath, my uncle, aunt, myself and her female servant, the lap dog and the parrot in a handsome new coach and four horses. We went short stages, by that means had the opportunity of seeing all the principal towns and viewing everything that was curious. We went by Gloucester, Hereford Ross and Brecknockshire to Carmarthen, the

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principal town in South Wales. {{Image|file=Regis-132.png |caption=Sarah Dawson née Regis }} :It is impossible for me to convey to you, my dear Wm Henry, any idea of the beauty of the country the height of the hills and mountains even the historians fall short in their descriptions of the rich scenery and the fertility of the soil the goodness of the roads and the abundance of fine fruit, such as apples and pears in every field and hedge, also full of nutts. Our coachman with his whip as we rode under the branches of the trees used to bring down such a load of apples and pears, and the footman would get off his horse and fill his baskets. I was surprised to hear many of the poor people's children speaking such good English. I often conversed with them: they told me they went to school as they have many English schools in Wales they have no provincial accent therefore. I never was more gratified then to hear them talk. :The Welsh language is very difficult. I made many attempts to learn a few words but could make nothing of it. I was much pleased with a custom I observed the inhabitants had of every Saturday night going with flowers and plants and strewing the graves of every relative with flowers. On the Sunday going to church

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it has a most pleasing and beautifull effect. :The women look very sallow and unhealthy and swaddle their children up in a kind of blanket fastened about them that they may have their hands at liberty to work, makes the children poor rickety things and they can seldom walk alone untill they are two or three years old. The working men are also poor looking creatures imploy themselves in fishing carrying their boats on their backs untill they get to the water. :As we rode out we often saw the women sitting in the hedges taking snuff which they are dyed with and seem quite indolent. They are also furious in temper: We got ourselves much abused one day by disputing the price of a cake at the pastry cook's. She said she knew the English very well. In short was so furious and behaved so rude we could never go to the shop again, which was a great loss as the Pastry Jellys and custards were excellent and could not be had so good at any other shop. They were also very unwilling to trust us withh a book at the library and not untill we left a deposit. The wine merchant would not even trust us with the bottles of corks without paying beforehand. As we came with such a

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number of servants and a coach and four, they could not suppose we were sharpers, or could decamp without being noticed: but the characteristick of the nation is avarice and jealousy and dislike to the English who may have taken some unfair advantage of them. :After we had been a month at Carmarthen finding we behaved well paid our debts &c the inhabitance began to call and have a wish to be sociable with us but it was then to late, for we had been so disgusted with them that we removed our quarters to Abergaveny where we found a great change for the better, the people so well bred and polite to what they were at Carmarthen. We had the best part of a gentleman's house who had run through a large fortune. He was very polite and civil, supplied us with plenty of game, let us have the use of this library - the books valuable and well selected, which afforded us great amusement. The house was well situated and elegantly furnished. He let us have a large drawing-room, parlour and as many chambers and dressing rooms as were required, all fit up in the most fashionable and costly manner and he had as good apartments for himself and large garden. He kept a footman, a boy and several female servants. :We spent two months at his agreeable place and was visited by many of the first familys which

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attached us so much to Abergaveny. It is a publick place where people come from all parts to drink goat's whey for their health; fruit in abundance, when you go into the market they give you so much for a penny that I used to give them great part back again, not knowing how to carry it home. It made the town, which was not large, beautifull, seeing the hills rising over the tops of the houses and the cattle grazing and the people ascending to the cottages on the hillside: so different we found everything to what we did at Carmarthen. :A friend had taken the best house they could procure at Carmarthen which belonged to a gentleman in the same predicament as our other landlord, but the house was dirty and badly furnished, the floors black oak, no carpets and the lady of the house such a fury I rather suspected she made too free with the bottle. It is said Mrs Coalman fell down in a fit of passion on the footman asking her for a carpet for his mistress who never had been without one and a pair of silver candlesticks. She had no notion of letting lodgers have the use of her valuables. She told us she was the daughter of a Dr in Divinity and married to a gentleman. I was much surprised at her behaviour. She fortunately for us left the house and

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went to pay a visit to a Lady Ailmore who had disgraced her title by marrying some low man when the present Lord Ailmore was a boy of seven years of age. :The Carmarthen people were much irritated against us, the streets being narrow we pulled down their porches which projected out, as the coach passed by: they then came out and set upon us like a pack of hounds, but the coachman used to whip his horses to get out of hearing of their abuse. We also had some difficulty at the turn pikes as they often refused tickets and as we went every day an airing a few miles, they opposed our coming back without paying. It was impossible for strangers to be pleased with the behaviour of the town's people in South Wales. :The Welsh mutton is as small as our lamb but fine flavoured and they have a fish called suin that far exceeds our salmon trout and their cheese was excellent and the best perry and cider I ever tasted. The Welsh harp playing in almost every house in the evening was delightfull. Griffith Williams Esq. used to come to church with eight livery servants dressed in green and gold made such a figure in a country church.

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:We left Wales at the end of three months and returned by Monmouthshire and came through the forrest of Dean eight miles in dreadful roads only one house for to get refreshments for man or beast. We stopp at this small publick house to dine, but before we had proceeded two miles the main spring of the carriage broke from the badness of the road: We got a terrible fright, as no help could be had but our own three men who set to work and took of the cording from some of the trunks and tyed it up which made it secure, and we arrived at Bath very safe, tho' I was seized with a rheumatick fever which confined me to my bed room for some weeks. :The air of Wales was so very sharp that it brought on a rheumatick disorder that has never entirely left me in my face and head. :I continued nine months with my Aunt Dawson, who did not seem the least inclined to part with me until Mr Young lost all patience having twice come upon leave from his captain - the present Admiral ThornboroughWikipedia contributors, "Edward Thornbrough," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Edward_Thornbrough&oldid=1022751572 (accessed June 21, 2022) and staid a month with the hopes that I would return with him to Portsmouth, but my Aunt always opposed my leaving her wishing me to live entirely with her while Mr Young continued in the 'Hebe' frigate on that station. But this he would

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{{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-3.png |caption=The frigate 'Hebe' in 1795 }} :not agree to and took a house and furnished it at the town of Portsea; and after many conflicts between duty and the fear of losing the freindship of my Aunt I risked the latter and determined on going to my house at Portsea. I there found everything very comfortable and pleasant. I was soon visited by Admiral and Mrs Roddam, Robinson Shears (Vol 17)
{{Ancestry Sharing|29109291|a2b24f}} - Ancestry {{Ancestry Image|1981|31205_Vol17-00097}} (accessed 21 June 2022)
'''Robert Roddam'''
Sir Thomas and Lady Briggs, who was a relation by marriage, and many other familys of military and naval officers of the greatest respectability. :Nothing could exceed the attention of the Port Admiral's Lady, Mrs Roddam,probably Alithea Calder '''Mrs Roddam''' Marriage: "Westminster, London, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1935"
St George, Hanover Square > 1768-1777
{{Ancestry Sharing|29109360|9d617d}} - Ancestry {{Ancestry Image|61867|61865_314054001181_17950-00472}} (accessed 21 June 2022)
Robert Roddam
and indeed of all my kind friends who made it their study to make the place agreeable to me, I scarcely ever spent a day alone, always some kind friend calling to take me to their houses and loaded me with their favours; being invited to so many publick dinners at the Port Admiral's and the Lieut' Governor's, I had the opportunity of seeing some of our most distinguished characters both military and naval also some of our princes when they visited the different Arsenals at Portsmouth and were generally entertained at the Port Admiral's or by Sir Charles Saxton,Wikipedia contributors, "Sir Charles Saxton, 1st Baronet," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sir_Charles_Saxton,_1st_Baronet&oldid=1013651444 (accessed June 21, 2022) commissioner of the Dockyard. :After five years and a half passed in the greatest happiness, a melancholy change took place which I must pass over. On the breaking out of the French, Mr Young was appointed to the

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Thalia frigate, Capt Grindall. The ship being new and just painted brought on a bilious fever which cost him his life. I left Portsmouth in June 1793 and went to Mrs Backhouse in London. I was confined three months by illness brought on by excess of grief. My Aunt Dawson requested I should live with her. Therefore my house was given up to my ever revered friend Mr and Mrs Glegg, a surgeon in the navy, who performed all the offices of the kindest relation to me, when I had not one of my that would come to me in my distress to settlle my affairs and dispose of my furniture. All this was done for me by those two valuable friends, who I had accidently got acquainted with by my residence at Portsea. :As one trouble seldom comes alone, my grief was increased by the sudden death of my dear mother three months after Mr Young's dicease. I left London in Sept 1793 and arrived at Bath in bad spirits and my health much impaired. I was two years before I could enjoy any society but that of my Aunt: but time and the constant variety that Bath affords rendered me a little more chearfull and indeed I made every exertion on my Aunt's account. :In the summer we went to Bristol, had a lodging near the terrace at Clifton to be near the

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Pumproom. I was much pleased with the romantic views. We rode out every fine morning for three hours: therefore got well acquainted with the beauties of the country. We sometimes went and breakfasted at Kingswood where we had a view of the passage to Wales. :After leaving Clifton we went to London. I spent some time at Kensington where I had the opportunity of walking every day in those beautiful gardens and seeing all the beauty and fassion of the Metropolis. :We proceeded to Windsor, as we had the offer of Col. Rook's house in Windsor Castle, he having some place at Court and being my Uncle Dawson's nephew made it more pleasant. His family being at some watering place we had the whole house to ourselves. Being opposite to the Queen's house, I had the opportunity of seeing all the Royal Family almost every hour in the day and in the evening on the Terrace, where I had the honor of walking with the Bishop of SalisburyBest known for outing Lauder's accusations of plagiarism against John Milton (Paradise Lost) as fraudulent. In April 1765, he married, 2ndly, Eliz. daughter of Henry Brudenell Rooke.[Wikipedia contributors, "William Douglas (priest)," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William_Douglas_(priest)&oldid=997707495 (accessed June 22, 2022)] and his lady. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-8.jpg |caption=John Douglas, Bishop of Salisbury }} :His Majesty and the Queen conversed with Mrs Douglas when I had hold of her arm, which was very gratifying to me, as it gave me an opportunity of getting a nearer view of their persons than seeing them pass. I took particular notice of the Queen's dress. She had an

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old fashioned striped lutestring silk A silk fabric much used in the 18th century. In the reign of William and Mary, an Act was passed for the encouragement of the making of alamode and lutestring silks in England gown with a lining of the same down the side of the peticoat, a yellow white silk cloak with blond lace, a white chip hatt with a white rose in front and his Majesty's picture set with diamonds, a most excellent likeness. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-10.jpg |caption=Charlotte, wife of George III }} :The King talked so long to Mrs Douglas that the Queen at last gave him a gentle pull to get him away, as the Bow Street runners was watching with the eyes of an Argus for fear of any ill disposed person coming near him. His Majesty took notice of a young man who stood near us - asked him what was the matter with his eye: he also spoke to the young man's sister and asked her how long she staid at Windsor &c. I every day during our stay went to see the troops reviewed in the Park or upon Windfield Plain as we used to take an airing every day. It was a beautifull sight to see His Majesty enter the field with his five sons. :When the line was formed and the King appeared down dropt the colours, a ceremony only used to Majesty. During the salute the King on his charger with his hatt off was a grand and solemn appearance. He rode all the length of the line and came up galloping on the other side behind the soldiers and then joined his sons and the rest of the Royal Family

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who were in open carriages. I always contrived to get as near as possible to hear them converse, which I often did in Windsor great Park and often went so close to their horses' heels that I had nearly got my brains dashed out as the horses never stood still capering and plunging. :When a girl, going to school at Richmond, in Surrey, the King had to check the reins of his horse, or it would have gone over me, for I was crossing the road, never heard the horses coming untill they were upon me. As soon as I saw it was the King I stept on one side and made a curtsy, which pleased his Majesty: he nodded and smiled at me, as well as his attendants: the Princesses also bowed and smiled at me. One day when I met them in there landeau I made a stop not knowing whether I was to proceed or go on they saw my perplexity and kindly relieved it my noticing me. The King always bowed to my Aunt Dawson on the Terrace, as there was something majestick in her look. His Majesty had remembered her from the time she was presented at Court and the strong likeness she bore to her father who was his grandfather's Chaplain. :I never spent my time more pleasantly than at Windsor. I went frequently to Eton to visit my cousins Dr and Mrs Goodall.

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My Aunt was induced to dine one day at Eton to meet a large party, which she was not fond of: however I injoyed it much to see all the grandees of Eton Colledge. I also had a perticuler invitation to dine and then to join a party of pleasure in a boat to see all the Eton Scholars row in boats all dressed in fancy dresses, satin mantles with silver fringe, the boy at the steerage with a plume of austrich'd feathers in his hat and pink satten mantles eight boats and all different dressed. There was a cold colation prepared for them in the field. As soon as they landed they houza'd, through a cloak over them and sat down at the table and seemed to injoy everything; four bands of music playing all the time they were at dinner. We landed from our boat Mrs Goodall, Mr Thackery another lady myself two gentlemen who would row and soon run us aground :My cousin fainted and we were all in danger of being overset: but luckily we were rescued from this perilous situation and soon got upon Tera Firma. We then walked round the tables and injoyed seeing them so happy. There came a message from his Majesty requesting they would repare to their boats, as the Royal Family were upon a stand opposite the water in order to have a view of them They rowed

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three times past the stand laying on their orrs and cheered nine times. They seemed much pleased and greeted them with a compliment which they returned with bursts of applause. Fireworks finished their evenings amusement. I did not wish to stay to see the conclusion, but Mrs Goodall would not release me untill all was over. :The second time we came to Windsor we lodged in one of the Poor Knights' houses and continued six weeks and then proceeded to Cheltenham. The waters are reckoned very salubrous and of much service to invalids, but, after they affected the King so much, people were afraid of drinking them. I did not admire the place much. Except the walk to the Pump Room there was nothing worth seeing. The inhabitance were not pleasent and at the library they were rude and disobliging. :I was very glad when my Aunt ordered us to pack up and go to Oxford, a place I much admired. I had the greatest pleasure in viewing the colleges, particulerly Queen's as my father was so many years there. It brought to my recollection how often I had heard him describe the beauties of his attachment to that place. My Aunt once had a lodging at Kettle Hall, a place well known by the students. :From Oxford we went to London and from

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thence to Bath, the place I delighted the most in, where I met with so many of my friends from all parts of the world. :I used frequently to go to the Rooms, both upper and lower Assembly Rooms, as I never was at a loss for a party at Bath and was sure to get partners, tho' hundreds of ladies used to be without, wishing so much for to dance. At the Master of the Ceremony's Ball there was seldom less than thirteen hundred people. I had the honor of dancing and turning hands with the Statholder and several of the nobility at the time the [[Wurttemberg-22|Prince of Wertingberg]] was at Bath, a short time before he married our Princess Royal. He stood at the head of the room to see the Country dances, as he was to corpulent to attempt dancing" indeed the statholder had better let it alone, as I never saw such a vulger coarse man among such smart people. He moved so heavy as if he was asleep. {{Image|file=Family_History_written_by_Catherine_Potter_1762-1839-11.jpg |caption=The Bridal night of Prince Wurttemberg and the Princess Royal }} :The Duke and Dutchess of York were at Bath at that time and was much admired for her affability and goodness. She patronised a concert for the benefit of the Sunday schools and attended herself, when she was so ill that the [[Hannover-40|Duke]] had to apply the smelling bottle most all the time. As I saw opposite I saw all his attention to her. I used to meet her at

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eight o'clock in the morning going to the Pump Room in her pattins, holding up her cloathes to drink the water. She amused Doctor Randolph one day at dinner with tellling him of a pert speech she had heard made by a Miss who her father was finding fault with for having neglected to keep her cloathes out of the dirt. "La' Papa" she said "it is quite the fashion, for the Dutchess of York has often a dragle tale". :The Dutchess was in a private room in the library and heard this fine remark. She told Dr Randolph the Miss was quite mistaken for no one took more pain to prevent it by holding her cloathes well up when she walked. She unfortunately set herself on fire when at Bath. She had locked herself into her bedroom, it was supposed to say her prayers and kneeling to near her lamp her dress took fire. Her screams brought the Duke from the dinner room, who immediately broke open the door and soon extinguished the flame, tho' not untill she was much burnt in one arm, which she wore in a sling for long, but used to walk about just the same as ever, often unattended. :The Duke was very attentive to her at that time. He would carry her muff, or, if any of her ribbons gave way, put them in his pocket. :In the year 1798 we spent the summer at South-

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hampton. A family from Bath who we were very intimate with was there at the same time. A Mr and Miss Dobbs, who was much admired for her amiable disposition and devoting the greatest part of her time for the benefit of the poor. :She had a school of her own, which she regularly attended, walking to Church with them every Sunday. She also gave her assistance to the 'Repository' established at Bath: Miss Hanah Moor being patroness, but Miss Dobbs took all the trouble upon herself and gave the greatest satisfaction. Few young people possessed of beauty and a large fortune would have undertaken so troublesome an office and given up their time and pleasure for the good of the poor. She was a ____and valuable young lady and I was much attached to her. :We went with the Honorable Mrs FitzWilliams in my Aunt's carriage to the Assembly, as strangers must be introduced to the Master of the Ceremonies by a subscriber and then they are provided with partners for all the evening. I never spent a pleasanter night, as I danced every dance. My last partner was an officer, a Captain Small, a very genteel and well behaved man, paid me great attention during my stay at Southampton, engaged me for the next

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assembly and purposed a number of parties of pleasure with his friends, which I declined, not wishing to form any intimacy with redcoats. :Southampton is a pretty, clean town. The walks and rides were very pleasant and the inhabitance very polite and agreeable. :The following summer my Aunt gave me a treat by going a jaunt to East Kent. We took up our quarters at the old city of Canterbury. I spent all my mornings in rambling to see all the curiositys of this ancient city, the cathedral, all the publick walks &c. There was four regiments quartered in the town. Each had a most excellent band which played morning and evening on the Abbey green, where the company promenade. We had every attention paid us by the first people in the town and neighbourhood owing to our being relatives of the late Dr Regis. At his death, his successor was the late Doctor Lynch who modernised the parsonage house, pulled down a large hall that would have held all the people of the village of Adisham. He exchanged with the Rev. Mr Palmer took the prebendary of Canterbury which is only five hundred a year and gave up the living which is now one thousand per annum.

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I was invited by an old friend of my mother's to spend some time with her and her son Mr Dilnot who was a gentleman farmer. They had a house at Patricksburne, quite a curiosity for neatness and elegance. They purposed taking me a short tour round the seacoast and as they had friends and acquaintance at every stage, we were well intertained and met with no difficulties. We made a stop at Deal, Dover, Sandgate, Hithe and several other places the names of which I have forgot. We took a view of every place that was worth looking at, went a shopping at the different towns and on our return home we spent a day and a night with a daughter of Mrs Dilnot's who married a son of Admiral Harvey's and who had a beautifull country seat, most extensive grounds and the most delightfull gardens with hott houses and all kinds of fruit in abundance. We were most hospitably entertained. We finished our tour with a visit to the parsonage at Adisham. I was much gratified at being in the house where my mother was brought up, she was born in London, but spent most of her young days untill she married. :We met with a great disappointment when we arrived, as Mr Palmer had just set of

'''page 44 folio 346'''

for Margate, but we took possession of the house and went into every room, some of which were well worth seeing, the drawing room, the dining room and the studdy, which I admired the most as it looked so comfortable and a very large library. I left my card stuck in the glass that Mr Palmer might get a surprise when he returned to to do duty the following Sunday. The moment he saw my card he mounted his horse and came post haste to Canterbury to pay his respects and to give us an invitation to dinner, which we declined as we were preparing to leave the place in a few days. He pretended to lament this as a sad misfortune that we should have been three month in the neighbourhood and never heard of our being in Kent. As he was a man of the world and not a very liberal character, we gave him very little credit either for the sorrow or disappointment he expressed, but as a single man he was afraid I would give a bad report of him among his acquaintance at Bath as he gennerally spent his winters there and was much at Mrs Dawson's. He was always very very polite in noticing me in publick and when we met at the rooms, asking me to dance. He was a very handsome man, under thirty years of age and a genneral admirer of the ladies but was so

'''page 45 folio 348'''

penurious that without he could have met with a large fortune and all things suitable, he would not marry. :I was much pleased with our excursion into Kent. Mr Wm Dawson took a country house two miles from Canterbury called Harble Down. We kept up a daily intercourse with him and his family. I had great pleasure in going frequently to fetch my little cousins to spend a day with their grandmama. They desired I would not ask their governess, Madam Mountalimbert, a French Countess, as they did not wish to have the least restraint upon their pleasure, and would kneel all round me in the carriage begging I would tell them some marvelous stories. Two girls were then eight and nine of age and the boys younger, fine handsome children. :In the year 1799 we went to Malvern Wells, took possession of the parsonage house, excepting two rooms, which the clergyman kept for himself, who had formerly been a very gay man and wishing to retrench he dismissed all his servants except one man who was his cook slutkitchen maid or 'drudge' and butler. When his wife died, he laid down his carriage and lived like a hermit, and let his house and garden for four guineas a

'''page 46 folio 350'''

week. I was much amused with the exentricity of his character. He would sometimes come and sit with (us?) after dinner, but always brought in his own tankerd of ale, as no one could persuade him to take wine or anything but ale of his own brueing. :The hills at Malvern reminded me of some of the Welsh mountains. Tho' not near so high, they looked green and pretty, fine springs of water and beautifull walks through a wood to the publick wells, where the company drink the waters. There is a large Pump room, a good Assembly room and some neat lodging houses. The people who attend at the wells inform you of the wonderfull cures done by the waters. :I left my Aunt Dawson and went to Worcester. I had to wait a day or two for a coach to Leeds to make a long promised visit to a Mr Paley's family. I had several times plan'd this journey, but my Aunt always opposed my leaving her, as if she had a presentiment of her losing me entirely if once out of her sight, which proved to be the case in the sequel. :I took a view of the town of Worcester, the Cathedral, the China manufactory and in the evening I went to see the wax-work figures of the royal family of France as well as England then exhibiting.

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The following day I got forward to Gloucester and there took up a young lady going to Newcastle. I was much pleased with her and she found me a useful fellow traveller as I prevented her being imposed upon and assisting her to take care of her luggage. As she had never travelled before, she was quite at a loss. There was a gentleman in the coach who we discovered to be the son of Lord Hardwick going to Birmingham on military business. He was very attentive and polite, appeared much interested for Miss Byne; particularly when I left her to secure our places in the Sheffield coach for the next day. On my return to the Inn, I found my fellow traveller in tears, supposing that as I had disappeared, I had left her to manage for herself. She was overjoyed at my return and I told her how I had managed to prevent our disappointment in getting forward. Had I mentioned my intention before the passengers in the coach, they would have got before me and we thrown out of places and stopt on the road for some days. The waiter at the Inn at Worcester had given me this caution. The gentleman, our fellow traveller, lamented my disappearance on Miss Byne's account as he found she was entirely at a loss how to proceed without me. He was directing her to a better Inn when I appeared and explained

'''page 48 folio 354'''

the reason of my sudden flight. He appeared rejoiced that all had ended well, wished us a good journey. :As we had to stay a day and a night at Birmingham, after securing our room, we locked up our trunks and went to see the town which is very large. The church and squares were worth seeing, but we were struck with nothing else. We retired to our room as we had to set forward to Sheffield at four o'clock in the morning. :Miss Byne then gave me a little history of herself. She was niece to Mrs Carr of Dunston Hillsee profile of [[Carr-11162|John Carr]] in the county of Northumberland who was so unnatural as her brother had married some low person she could not brooke his children by this woman should inherit the estate: therefore as soon as her brother died, she had the boy and the girl concealed and given out that they were dead. When the boy was old enough, he was bound to the sea without having been learned to read or even to say his prayers. The girl was boarded at a hutt on Gateshead Fell, where she was kept in profound ignorance who she was and was neither learned to head work or do anything At the age of fourteen she had everything to learn. Doctor Poyntz of Durham hearing there was two children concealed he made it his business to find them out, and discovered the boy in some ship quite a profligate, ignorant of his own name, and having

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had no education, was quite like a young savage. Search was then made for the girl who was found in the situation described. What was my astonishment when I found in my fellow traveller this ill-treated young lady, who appeared to have been brought up from her childhood with every advantage. She was gracefull in her person, remarkably handsome, a tall fine figure and appeared sensible and interesting. She accounted for improvements in having been put to Miss Smith's boarding school and her great desire to make up for so much lost time. She had applied herself to the different branches of education that in three years she had learnt as much as some would in ten. :The reversion of her brother's estate was sold when he came of age for twenty thousand pounds. He married a lady, a very charming woman at sixteen many years older than he was. She put him to school at Boldon to the Rev. Mr Robinson, and took a great deal of pains with him, but his mind being so long in an uncultivated state, he still continued his thoughtless way, had no idea of economy, had a taste for dissipation. After his wife died, left him two children he took his sister from school to keep his house in Savile Row, Newcastle and to see to the children, but he soon consoled himself by

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marrying a Roman Catholick lady who had five thousand pounds. He then left Newcastle, took his sister and his children into the South, kept his carriage and dashed as long as the cash would hold out. His wife and him quarel'd and were obliged to separate. the children placed at a boarding school at Taunton near Bath and Miss Byne sent back to Miss Smith School. :At the time I met with her I was much affected at the relation of her story, which cost her many tears before she could get through with it: but she said that the interest I had taken and my care of her demanded her confidence and gratitude. We got to Sheffield at a late hour and was much importuned by a gentleman to take a chaise and go immediately forwards to Leeds; but I considered it a great risk for two females to trust themselves with a stranger to travell alnight and positively declined going. Miss Byne was much hurt and even shed tears at the disappointment, but when I pointed out my reasons she was more thankfull than ever that she had met with a friend who knew the world and a little more of mankind than she did, as she owned she was such a novice in these matters that if she had been quite alone and the gentleman

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had proposed there going in a chaise at night quite dark, she never would have hesitated but accepted his offer. :We arrived safe at Leeds at eleven o'clock at night, where I found Mr Paley's man waiting for me. I just step'd into the coach office to secure a place for Miss Byne to Newcastle, but all was taken for two days. She was then in the greatest distress to have to wait at the Inn by herself two days. I gave her all the comfort I could and told her I was sure the moment I mentioned her situation to my friends, they would not suffer her to remain long there, which was the case; for they sent back the man, as soon as I mentioned the circumstance. :She declined coming that night, as she had bespoke her bed. Miss Paley arose early in the morning and brought her to their house, where she was made welcome untill a place was procured and she arrived safe at Newcastle without any further adventure. I sent her heavy luggage by the waggon. She wrote me a pretty letter of thanks, also to my friends for their polite attention to her. :When I arrived at Newcastle two months after, I called upon her and she visited me

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at my brother's. :The civility and kindness I met with at Leeds, I shall never forget: every pains was taken to intertain me. After seeing the woollen manufactory, the cotton wills and everything that was curious, Mr and Mrs Paley took me to York races. We spent a week there. I was much delighted with the Cathedral. I also went to the Assembly Rooms, which are so much admired, but I thought the pillars made the building look heavy. I must own I give the Upper Rooms at Bath the preference. :From there we went to Harrowgate. I was much pleased with all I saw their. We dined at the publick table, saw all the company drink the waters: the smell was dreadfull as we approached the waters. I should like to have continued their much longer. I liked Harrowgate very much. :On our return to Leeds I found Mr and Mrs Dawson had arrived. I was much delighted. I prolonged my stay and on their departure for London, I came forward to Newcastle to pay a visit to my brother, Wm Potter and my dear sister Charlton. :I spent a month at Hexham with her, and on my return to my brother I found a letter

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from Mr Collingwood of Chirton requesting me to spend a few days with him, and he would send his carriage for me on any day I would fix. Tho' I only intended to stay a few days, he kept me a fortnight, taking me to see all my old acquaintance and inviting all my perticuler friends to dinner with me at his house. He took me to Whitley to see Mrs Hudson, all my acquaintance in Dockwray Square, Tynemouth. :In short, nothing could exceed his polite attention. His old servants were quite amazed to see him have his carriage out all weather sent to Newcastle for reinforcements of cloathes. :I had great difficulty to get away at the end of the fortnight, and as the season was getting late for my journey to Bath, I was obliged to be positive and determined. I had my poor brother James to see at Morpeth and I was under a solemn promise to Mr Marshall of South Shields that I would not leave the North untill I had made him a visit of a few days, which ended in my spending another fortnight at Shields, as he and Mrs Marshall were so very kind and hospitable I had some difficulty

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in leaving them. :It was when on my visit to them I got acquainted with [[Bulmer-1061|Mr R. Bulmer]], who with the rest of his family were so perticulerly kind that I formed an attachment which I expect will only end with my life. :It was November before I began my journey to Bath. The weather and roads were so bad that the coach stuck fast on the hill at Grantham. Another pair of horses was put to the coach and the six could not move it. A farmer, passing by and seeing our situation, put his five horses too, which made Elisa myself and another lady jump out of the coach and stuck fast in the clay untill some men came and assisted us in getting out. :My assistant proved to be a Maniack who had escaped from his keepers and was attracted by the curious appearance of us all. He behaved so rational that I should never have discovered anything was the matter with him.

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:'''A letter to Catherine Potter from Mr William Dundas dated Hatfield 7th Nov 1783.''' :Dear Catherine :I have taken up the pen merely to tell you that we are not all dead and to acknowledge the receipt of your letter to Mrs Dundas, which she has long talked of doing herself, but you know she was never fond of writing and I think she grows less so if possible. My wife complains of her legs. Rheumatick I suppose. She imputes this to the want of sea-bathing. She mustered up both strength and spirits to go through a very busy and fatiguing walk at Doncaster, where we went to the Mayor's Feast, a great deal of company, but a great scramble for seats at least among the gentlemen. What it was amongst the ladies I know not, as they were seated before we went upstairs. The custom is very stupid and disagreeable; for, altho' the ladies and gentlemen dine in the same room, they have no intercourse, unless the eyes speak and that is not very practicable, as the ladies are stuck up at a table by themselves and the gentlemen at another. After dinner the ladies and I believe, many gentlemen, having drunk wine and pocketed as many dry sweetmeats as they can lay their hands on, retire. The ladies go pay their visits and the gentlemen, some to the bottle and others to dress etc etc. At eight o'clock all meet again to tea, where those that chose it

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:have an opportunity of showing all the wit they were necessitated to deprive the ladies of at Dinner by their backward situations. The whole concludes with a ball. There is the same business goes forward the next day, but not the same company. A great many 'Misses', among the rest, your two young friends. We have not seen them since, to know how they liked it. So much for the feast. :I did not expect this 7th day of November '83 to have been scribbling to a giddy spinster, whatever I might have been doing to grave Mrs Young. You mention in your letter that the gentleman had been some weeks at Wallsend. In my opinion he must be a very cool sentimental lover indeed, to have been so long absent - return - be four weeks under the same roof with his beloved - all matters of consent etc settled, and goes away as he came. :I beg my compliments to Mrs Potter: tell her I thought she had known the world better: a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. If it was necessary for him to continue in the navy for a while he might have brought you this far and left you with us. We would have been glad at your company. My wife complains of company

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when I go out, the children being at school. :You had been misinformed, I fancy, about Capt. Dundas being at Tynemouth this winter. :Have you seen my nephew who commands the Reg't. now at Newcastle. He is a handsome young man that ought, as I said before, to have been nothing to your 'ere this, but as matters stand, you must have a little flirtation at times. Has my friend, Louisa Jane got any gentle swain to give her a palpitation at present? If not, I will write to my nephew. You remember Captn Spencer of the Dragoons at Hexham? He was at Doncaster last week and enquired after you. :I dare say I have tried you with so much nonsense, if you have patience to read so far: I will therefore have pity on you and conclude with Mrs Dundas best respects to Mr and Mrs Potter, Louisa and yourself. :Remember us all to other friends at Wallsend and Hexham when you write, and to Mr and Mrs Waters. They would tell you that they had been sometime in this part of the world. They were two nights with us. ::I am, dear Kitty ::Your sincere friend and well wisher ::Wm Dundas. :''copied from the original M.Ss by Edward Bulmer 6 Park Street York April 1912.'' * Copyright © Rachel Bulmer [Bulmer-1043] 2022. All rights reserved. ---- == Footnotes ==

Family Home in Asheville, North Crolina

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Family Home of Thomas Ashe Wakefield Sr.

Family Home in Littlemoor

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A family home that has been passed down Original owners were my grandparents Clarence Henry Toon and Edna Toon, Nee Desmond it was then passed down to my uncle Peter Toon until his death in October 2001 Now my cousin Emma Ford owns it with her children Katie and Jack Bowditch

Family home of Elwin Tench

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121 Temperance St, Waterford., Norfolk, Ontario, Canada as of Jun 1921 Library and Archives Canada. Sixth Census of Canada, 1921. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2013. Series RG31. Statistics Canada Fonds. Reference Number: RG 31; Folder Number: 74; Census Place: 74, Norfolk, Ontario; Page Number: 9 Viewed at [[https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1195220:8991|Ancestry.com]]. 1921 Census of Canada [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2013. Household members listed: ''Elwin Tench 61 Head, Ola Tench 28 Wife, Arluff Tench 1 Son'' House Number: 121 Temperance St, Waterford., Norfolk, Ontario, Canada Enumeration District: 106 Sub-District: Waterford (Village) Sub-District Number: 54 Line Number: 23 Family Number: 133 ==References==

Family in law

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Whitlock-1303|Samantha Whitlock]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=21004947 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FAMILY INFORMATION

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I'M LOOKING FOR ANY INFORMATION REGARDING THE ABOVE SURNAMES & ANCESTORS

Family Information as written by Katharine M. McClinton

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'''FAMILY INFORMATION as written by KATHARINE M. McCLINTON in1987 (edited by Julie Mortensen)''' My grandmother, Julia Ann Rule Perry (see her sampler which Cathy now has) crossed the plains in a covered wagon from St. Louis, Missouri. She was married to a Mr. Lane (see letter Julie has) who died on the way. She then married Richard Perry, who at one time was captain of a ship on the Chesapeake Bay. He was of the family of Matthew Calbraith Perry who opened up Japan to American commerce in 1854. Matthew’s brother was Oliver Hazard Perry of Lake Erie fame (Don’t give up the ship). My grandmother and grandfather (Richard Perry) lived in San Felipe near Gilroy, California. My mother, Leila Salisbury Perry Morrison, was born there. She had two sisters: Frances Laura Luella Perry Luce (Aunt Pan) and Katharine Amanda Perry. Aunt Pan had a son, Raymond Luce, who was the father of Erma Luce Zachrisson. Aunt Pan’s husband was Allen Luce, who was a graduate of Santa Clara College. His father (portrait in Julie’s dining room) was the first senator from Mississippi. Katharine (Aunt Kathy) was a graduate of San Jose State Normal, San Jose, California. She taught school until Stanford University opened in 1891 when she attended it for several years. She then taught school in Monterey, California. Lloyd Osborne, a step-son of Robert Louis Stevenson was one of her pupils. (He is mentioned in “Child’s Garden of Verses.”) My mother, Leila Perry Morrison (La), studied art in a private class in San Francisco taught by Evelyn Almond Withrow. In the class were Clara Huntington (Huntington Museum & Gallery, San Marion, CA) and Eda Moody. All the students except La were wealthy. Miss Withrow and her sister Eve lived in San Diego for about a year. They came there because of La and I did their grocery shopping. Miss Withrow gave me my little antique duck pin which she had worn when she crossed the Atlantic 20 times. I was also named in her will to inherit antique furniture, laces, etc. but when she saw my painting, Cactus and Indian Pottery, which was exhibited in a large important San Francisco show (now in Palm Springs house) she cut me out of the will. My mother, Leila Perry, married my father, Robert Morrison, in February 1898. He was from Campsie Glenn near Glasgow, Scotland. He was sent to Glasgow to study law with an uncle but ran away and came to America. He entered the country at Castle Garden, which was the immigrant station from 1855 to 1889 before Ellis Island. He came to Winters, Yolo County, California and opened a hardware store. He also owned fruit ranches and rental property and became President of The Citizens National Bank of Winters (later sold to Bank of Italy, no Bank of America). I was born on January 23, 1899 in San Francisco. When I was less than a year old my father and mother went to Europe for two months and left me with Aunt Pan. I had three half-sisters (all went to University of California): Margaret Morrison Wilson, Esther Morrison Davisson (Malcolm’s mother), and Josephine Morrison Anderson Gwinn (daughter Elizabeth married Lind and had two sons, one was Stephen Lind). As a child I played with Hellen Wills Moody in Winters. Her Aunt Helen Anderson married Richard Kahle’s counsin, Ed Renke. I attended Stanford University and graduated in the class of 1921. There I met Richard F. Kahle (Julie’s father), who was a law student, and we became engaged. (He had been in World War I and after the war stayed in France for a few months attending Grenoble University and travelling in France on their tennis team.) However, I wasn’t anxious to be married and went to New York, where I got an M.A. from Columbia University and a Teacher’s Certificate from Teacher’s College at Columbia. Then I came back to California and took a job in the decorating department of W.J. Sloane, living with Aunt Katharine until I was married in September 1923 and moved to San Diego. In San Diego I was on the Board of the San Diego Museum of Art (also lectured there); took classes and lectured for the University of California Extension; taught a class in Design at San Diego State College one semester; wrote a series of articles on San Diego houses for the San Diego Union; wrote an art column on the San Diego Sun (a Scripps newspaper) for several years; was on the Board of the Philharmonic Society; was a member of the University Club, the Wednesday Club and also the Women’s Board of the 1935 Exposition (which was how I met Pop, who was with the Ford exhibit at the Exposition). Julianna (Julie) was born in July of 1929, after I came back from Europe. I took a trip to Mexico with Margot Rocle and left Julie with La while I got my divorce. After the divorce I took Julie on a trip to Mexico. I married Harold L. McClinton (Pop) in the Chapel at the Exposition in Balboa Park on October 20, 1935. We lived in Detroit for a year, moved to New York City (952 Fifth Avenue), then Bronxville (140 Park Avenue and 40 Avon Road) and then back to 952 Park Avenue in New York and finally bought the house at 361 New Rochelle Road at the entrance to Siwanoy Country Club. We were also members of the Field Club in Bronxville. I wrote books under the name of Kahle in California then changed to Katharine Morrison McClinton on moving to New York. I also worked at McCall’s magazine for about one year. I have had a very interesting life. In San Diego, through my painting and art interests, I met important musicians such as: Jose Iturbi (Jean Dalrymple), Mary Martin, Enzio Pinza, Lily Pons, Andre Kastelanetz, Helen Hayes, Fritz Reiner, Oscar Levant, Gian-Carlo Minotti, Joshua Heifitz, Jimmy Durante, Peggy Lee and many more. We entertained them and went to their houses and I had boxes for their concerts. Also Pop had them all on the Ford Sunday Evening Hour (on radio) and the Bell Telephone Hour, which he produced (on television). After Pop retired we went on his jobs with Executive Services Corps to Istanbul, Turkey; Bogota, Columbia; and Nigeria. We stayed three months in each place and took tours of Europe on the way home. My mother (La) being an artist, was interested in the Arts and Crafts Movement which was developing in Europe and the United States at the time our house in Winters was being built (NOTE: the house burned down after the family left Winters. There are some pictures of it in the box of family photos in the attic). The house had built-in window seats; the dining room had William Morris wallpaper above the wood paneling; there was a long row of windows and a door which led to the large screened-in sun porch with wisteria vines growing over it. The living room ceiling was paneled with redwood. There was a fireplace, built-in bookcases and a window seat. A French door opened onto the front porch. In the hall there were window seats that opened for storage, a triangle window and shelf for plants. The grandfather clock from Scotland (smaller one which Kay has) was at the foot of the stairs. At the side of the stairs was a long shelf for Indian baskets. The living room had a Morris chair made by Gustav Stickley which was a collector’s item. La subscribed to the Craftsman Magazine and the house was planned and furnished from ideas in the magazine. The magazines are now collectors items. I had some but threw them out before leaving California. We also had International Studio, the important art magazine of the time. I was raised on these magazines, no Ladies Home Journals. I gave them to the Bronxville Library many years ago, unfortunately, I wish I had kept them. I have a few paintings of La’s She gave a large painting of chrysanthemums to the San Diego Floral Society. She also gave sketches of old historic houses in Monterey to the Custom House Museum in Monterey. The large still life painting show on the easel in the photo of the studio was stolen, together with several others, from the basement of the apartment on 63d Street.

Family Journal of Vera Nellie (Adams) Harris

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[[Adams-54495|Vera (Adams) Harris]] chronicled the history of the Adams Family line back to 1787, including a detailed biography of her father Percy Henry Adams. The journal was largely based on conversations with her parents and visits with her grandparents. She also provide some history of families that married into the the Adams family, including the Sandom's and Lamberts and that of her husband, the Harris family, also based on direct conversations. She included numerous photographs and certificates of Births, Marriages and Deaths, and sometimes baptisms. Currently in possession of [[Harris-48789|Peter Harris]].

Family Kokot in USA

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The goal of this project is to find connections of family Kokot in USA and family Kokot in Croatia. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Kokot-7|Rafael Kokot]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. My grand grandfather was working in gold mines in USA. And he maybe had some children there. This is my explanation of surname Kokot in USA, because it is actually Croatian surname. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15224350 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Lore

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'''Family Lore''' Beware, not for the faint of heart! My grandfather was closest to his sister Daisy Lowe Curry and her family. We are descended from Elizabeth Jane (Jinnie) Curry on Green Turtle Cay, whose grandmother Martha Albury was the source of our distant royal connections, via Bermuda. My grandfather Victor Lowe seemed to forget he even was a Lowe sometimes. My father seemed to think Grandma had him by immaculate conception. LOL. He wanted to be a Cates, like her family. He seemed to think Grandpa was just a strange man who got lost and stumbled into their house. LOL. There's obviously some slight taint associated with our family name Lowe, because of the pirate ancestry, that cannot be swept under the rug entirely. My uncle said that the best way to find my Lowe relatives is to drive into the trashiest trailer parks in Florida and yell "Free beer!" Isn't he terrible? LOL. Lowe family members encompass a broad range from totally brilliant to dead stupid, with most of us somewhere in between, including me. But I'm proud to be a Lowe. My mother says the surname Lowe does not elevate her children's status nearly as much as we add to the reputation of the Lowe family name, with good looks, advanced degrees, creativity, etc. LOL. Of course, most mothers are biased toward their children, but my mother is truthful to a fault, so maybe she is right that we do add new blood to the Lowes, improving the breed, so to speak. I admit that common sense was never our strong suit, in this family, but I think horse sense is very overrated, don't you? Unless you are a horse. LOL. All things considered, I'm thrilled with the results of my research into my roots. I never liked the modern term "roots" in referring to our family tree, but I must keep up-to-date with my vocabulary. LOL. I never understood Hillary Clinton when she said it takes a "village" to raise a child. That sounds so "third world". LOL. I used to think the ancient McArthur tradition of descent from Mary Magdalene, disciple of Jesus and an unknown father (but we can guess), was the greatest ancestry possible for a good Christian boy, like me, baptized in the Episcopal Church. It's nice to have relatives in high places! Read the Da Vinci Code. But now that I discovered my Y-DNA haplogroup suggests that I'm a male line descendant of Aaron, brother of Moses, that's even better, don't you think? Or maybe I could be both! I do not yet understand how to reconcile DNA evidence with Biblical teachings. But I don't want to let my DNA results go to my head, making me too uppity. I might be getting TOO proud, above my assigned station in life, as a bank geek. High rank on the family tree of mankind involves many duties as well as honors. I don't want that kind of responsibility. LOL. I'm also proud that I'm related to many people named Roberts, many of whom are very important in their professions. But let's not forget that they had pirate ancestors, too. LOL. Pirating was a profession like any other. If you got a royal license or government contract, it made it respectable, IMHO. All those Spanish treasure ships full of gold passed close by, so it would have been hard to resist such an opportunity. These Spaniards were "Papists", so the local vicar would pardon privateers ahead of time for any excesses committed during their patriotic work for King and Country. Even when I was a boy in grade school, teachers taught us that privateers were the good guys, but at some point, history was revised to ignore historical realities.

Family melting pot

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This is a One Name Study to collect together in one place everything about one surname and the variants of that name. The hope is that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect. Please contact the project leader, add categories to your profiles, add your questions to the bulletin board, add details of your name research, etc.

Family Member Churches - England

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Churches where a family member was Christened or Married Under construction ==Christenings== ==Marriages== * [http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/ipsmarg.html St Margarets Church Website and Photos] Ipswich, Suffolk, England * [http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/wetheringsett.html All Saints Church Website and Photos] Wetheringsett Suffolk, England * [http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/euston.htm St. Genevieve's Church, Euston, Suffolk, England]

Family Member Churches - Ontario Canada

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Churches where a family member was Christened, Married and or attended. ==Halton Regional Municipality== * [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=2143708&CScn=palermo&CScntry=10& Palermo Cemetery Also known as: Palermo United Church Cemetery] Dundas St and Bronte Rd, Palermo, Halton Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada. - [http://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Bannister_Books Family members] ==Hamilton Municipality== *[http://www.dundasbaptistchurch.com/ Dundas Baptist Church] 201 Governors Rd. Dundas, ON L9H 3J7] Since 1834, the people of Dundas Baptist Church have remained dedicated to ministry in Dundas. In 2001 the church moved to its current building.- [http://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Bannister_Books-49 Family members] ==Middlesex County== *[https://krassoc.wordpress.com/2014/12/09/north-street-methodist-church-london-middlesex-county/ North Street Methodist Church] situated on the south-west corner of Clarence and North (now known as Queens Ave) Streets, London, Ontario, Canada was built in 1854. It was destroyed by fire in 1895 - [http://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Bannister_Books-45 Family members] * [http://www.wesleyknox.com/ Wesley-Knox United Church] 91 Askin Street in Old South London, Ontario, Canada - [http://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Bannister_Books-44 Family members]

Family Memorabilia belonging to Yolanda Folcz Pelles

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This is a collection of loose photos and other material that was saved by [[folcz-1|Yolanda Folcz]] Pelles during her lifetime. Most of the photos are identified - if not by name, by relationship, so further identification may be possible. The collection's current custodian is [[pelles-4|Audrey Seale|2019]] Many of these photos are pre-1900 and taken in Hungary, the rest mostly in New York City. Several are unique, including the family birth record, not known to exist elsewhere. [[seale-237|RHSeale|2019]].

Family Memories

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The goal of this project is to ...place all documentation that PROVES the life of [[Greer-40 | Ezekiel Sr]] Our Ancestor. and place "notes" "thoughts" 'family lore'' HERE. Right now this project just has 2 members, #me. I am [[Taylor-25258|Carole Taylor]]. # James McGuire Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * adding the internet LINKS to our '''Sources''' * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10102058 send me a private message]. Thanks! == Thoughts & Memories == :When Ezekiel SR married his 2nd cousin Jemima Saunders, daughter of Philemon Saunders and Jemima Greer, who was the daughter of Joseph GREER brother to Benjamin Greer and also William JR. That UNION brought together a triple blood line...below 3 brothers were intermarried. :The 3-SONS described above are the sons of John GREER/ Sarah DAY-GREER #-[[Greer-564 | William SR]]. B:1710 mar. Mary Ann FITCH #-[[Greer-871 | Benjamin]] B:1725-27 mar. Rachel LOWE # [[Greer-779 | Joseph]] B: 1725-27 mar. Ann LOWE :His son, Ezekiel, Jr., was 1 yr. old when his father died, depending on which site you are reading. some say he was 5 when his dad died. :[[Taylor-25258|Taylor-25258]] 23:06, 28 April 2020 (UTC) === '''Sources''' === #After Ezekiel's death (he died intestate), Jemima served as the Administrator of his ''estate'' until she remarried Benjamin Harris in 1833. The Harris' continued managing the estate until it was finally settled in 1839. The land and slaves formerly owned by Ezekiel were all sold at auction and the proceeds divided among his legatees. McGuire-3146 #[[Greer-613 | John Greer]] marriage to [[Day-1511 | Sarah Day]] SOURCE: in St. John's Episcopal Church, Baltimore Co., MD. on 04 Mar 1704 #Their '''CHILDREN''' SOURCE: William Greer, born Abt. 1712 in St. John's Parish, Baltimore/Harford Co., MD; married (1) Sarah Freeland; married (2) Mary Ann Fitch Abt. 1730; died 1786 in Washington Co., VA?. How can this William Greer be a source for Ezekiel's children???

Family moved from Warracknabeal, Vic

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The McVicker/Murphy family moved from Warracknabeal, Victoria to Moombooldool, NSW.

Family mysteries

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Anna Louise Fischer was born July 5, 1775 to Jacab Fischer and Elsabe Dorthea Levtruchten. Where was she born? Where did they live? Christian Friedrich Bernhardt was born to Anna Louise and Friedrich Bernhard in Schleswig April 25, 1795 and baptized there four days later. Did they have any other children? Friedrich Bernhard was a grenadier in Prussia. When was he born? To whom? In which unit did he serve? When did he die?

Family Mysteries

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Things that we need to verify.

Family Mysteries - Kate Arnold

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Here are the profiles [[James-3756|Kate Arnold]] is currently working on. Can you help? {| class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="3" !|Name !|Birth !|Notes |- | [[Arnold-2382|Arnold, Victor Charles]] || 1909-03-10 || to-do |- | [[Deimel-12|Deimel, Ignatz ]] || 1815-00-00 || to-do |- What happened to him? | [[Keating-135|Keating, Mary ]] || 1833-00-00 || to-do |- Who was she and how did she get to Tasmania? | [[Muldoon-22|Muldoon, Francis ]] || 1826-00-00 || to-do |- What happened to his sister Kathleen and who were his Irish ancestors? |}

Family mysteries page

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Alexander Ross married Elizabeth Duff 14/07/1787

Family Nikić from Srnice Donje

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The goal of this project is to find all Nikić from Srnice Donje in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Nikić-3|Sveto Nikić]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help: -Start building full family tree -Find more about our ancestors -Try to locate our origins Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=19456924 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family notes by Lucila Herrmann

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This is the notes made by [[Herrmann-1517]].

Family Notes by Margaret Estano Pineo

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'''Estano notes from Margaret Estano Pineo''' Undated, handwritten. To her brother, William Hutchins Estano. This is a transcript by John Estano DeRoche – Jan. 2018. I’m working from a photocopy, some pages of which are quite faint. Blank underlines represent words or characters I could not decipher; square brackets are my insertions; round parentheses are Margaret’s own. I stayed reasonably faithful to her punctuation, but she was not writing a formal document for the public, so I took liberties where, for example, she neglected a period. Margaret was born in Halifax in 1863 (Oct 23), & moved with her parents to Amherst NS (around 1880/81 but possibly in the 1870s) & then with them again to Moncton NB (between the censuses of 1881 & 1891). She married railwayman David Pineo in Moncton in Oct. 1903. She was about to turn 40 years old; he was 55 & a widower. David died in 1926. Her home was a haven for my father when he was stationed in the RCAF near Moncton during World War II. She died at age 88 in 1951 (Oct 25). ---- Will – You have asked for information in regard to father’s brothers & sisters. [“Father” was Louis Estano, born 1830, died 1917: [[Estano-3|Estano-3]] .] Now I fear my knowledge in that respect is not very great, but can remember father had four brothers and four sisters. The brothers were – Robert, Joseph, James & Andrew. Robert was a cabinet maker. He made the mahogany table, now in your possession, as a wedding gift to mother & father and also gave them the steel engraving entitled “Age & Inf____y”. He married & had quite a family, two daughters & several sons. The daughters were – Emma (Mrs Curran) and Ellie (Mrs Joseph Edwards). Joseph married a widow. She was a very fine looking woman and well liked by all who knew her. She was a protestant. They had no family, but a niece, Addie Wilson was brought up by them & afterward she _____ married William Crowe. The latter built a fine house on the corner of Robie & Williams Sts. where they lived until Mr Crowe’s death. Then later Mrs Addie Crowe built a small home adjoining the other on Robie St., where she still lives. (Will Crowe was a half brother to Fred.) Ellie (Robert’s daughter) spent much of her time in her uncle Joseph’s home. She & Addie Wilson were just like sisters. When she & Mr Edwards married they built their home on Williams St. just around the corner from the Crowes’. You will remember that Ellie came to spend Thanksgiving with us (& brought a niece, Miss Edwards from Truro) at the time Dave & I were married [1903]. Ellie turned protestant while living in uncle Joseph’s home. After the death of uncle Joseph’s wife, he (uncle Joseph) made his home with Ellie until he died. No doubt he had become protestant – he was buried by a protestant minister. Ellie & her husband are both dead. Uncle James we know very little about. You will remember however hearing father say he went West when a young man & was supposed to have made considerable money. He sent necklaces and [or could be “neck chains with” – illegible] crosses of gold to each of his sisters, one cross being set with pearls. The latter was in my possession for years but has been passed on to the third[?] Margaret Estano (Maude Morley) and eventually will go to Maude’s daughter [Doris Morley]. I think it was supposed to have belonged to our aunt Margaret Estano. Uncle James also sent gifts to his brothers. In later life he became careless about writing & finally all trace of him was lost. Andrew the youngest brother never married. He died in Halifax many years ago. Father’s four sisters were – Ellen, Rosalie, Francis [sic] & Margaret. Francis died when a young girl. I remember the other three. Aunt Ellen had a broken back. She fell from a swing when a child. Aunt Rosie looked like father. She was nearsighted & always wore gold hoop earrings. She was well named, her cheeks were so rosey [sic]. Think I remember aunt Margaret best for[?] she visited our home perhaps more frequently. She was tall & had an abundance of dark hair with rather a sallow complexion. [The next page of the photocopy is especially faint.] She never married. She resembled our __ther [father?]. I have[?] heard mother[?] say that grandfather[?] Estano was a very handsome man. None of the sisters ever married. If I remember correctly their home was on Proctors Lane, think they owned their home. I know they owned property just up around the corner on Luckman St. We[?] do not know whatever became of it. I remember that aunt Rosie was very fond of house plants & always had lovely roses blooming in the window. It is strange, but – yet[?] – I do not seem to have any recollection of their deaths. I think however they must have died before we left Halifax [around 1880]. Think I previously mentioned that Fred Crowe was a half-brother of Will Crowe. Do not remember grandmother Estano’s maiden name, but have heard she & her sister came out to Canada from Ireland when they were young girls. [End of faint photocopy.] Grandmother Hutchins maiden name was Margaret Hinkle. She had four sisters & one brother, Charles Hinkle. The sisters – Aunty Ann Jones (Mrs Daniel Jones) Aunt Betsy Philp (Mrs ---------- [sic] Philp) Aunt Mary Ann Hinkle Aunt Kitty Hinkle Uncles Jones & Aunty Ann lived in Dartmouth. Uncle Jones came from Wales, he was in the army. They had no family. He fell overboard once when crossing in the Ferry in attempting to jump in the boat after it had left the wharf, but was rescued. When we were small children it was always a treat to be allowed to go & visit them – perhaps you remember Aunty Ann gave you the small chair in your Bathroom. She had two. The other was given to Norman Hutchins. Aunt Betsy Philp – I do not know her husbands Christian name. Mother always called him uncle Philp. They lived in a large house on the corner of Creighton & Cunard Sts. They had two sons John & Robert & three daughters Elizabeth (Mrs Edward Barnstead) Margaret & Sarah (unmarried). Grandmother Hutchins other two sisters, Mary Ann & Kitty never married. They both lived to be over ninety years. Aunt Mary Ann was tall & rather reserved in manner, while Aunt Kitty was very handsome, she had pretty dark eyes a lovely complexion & dimples in each cheek. I remember as children we dearly loved to have her come & spend the day with us. Aunt Kitty was a great society girl & was a frequent visitor of Government House. At one time she was engaged to be married to an officer in the British army. She never married. Letter will follow soon. [no signature]

Family Notes of Edythe Nelson Wallen

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Notes regarding the children of [[Nelson-21206|Samuel Nelson]] and [[Wade-6649|Mary (Wade) Nelson]] were found amongst other papers in the desk of Samuel's granddaughter, [[Nelson-20866|Edythe (Nelson) Wallen]. Based on the handwriting these were written later in her life, but still provided some information that we did not have. There may be other pages that have not yet been found and/or other documents of enealogical interest

Family notices in the American Welsh-language press

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There was a flourishing Welsh-language immigrant community in many parts of the United States in the late 19th to early 20th century, centered especially on New York state, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. There were a number of periodicals set up to service this community, including many religiously-focused publications. There are many obituaries of Welsh Americans to be found in the pages of these publications, but they have not been comprehensively indexed, and the language barrier makes it difficult for non Welsh speakers to get involved. Many of the most prominent periodicals have been digitized by the National Library of Wales, either in its [https://journals.library.wales/ Welsh Journals] site or its [https://newspapers.library.wales/ Welsh Newspapers Online] site. The key publications for genealogical information are: * [https://journals.library.wales/browse/2415365 Y Cenhadwr Americanaidd] (''The American Missionary''), issues available from 1840 to 1901 * [https://journals.library.wales/browse/2628237 Y Cyfaill o’r Hen Wlad yn America] (''The Friend from the Old Country in America''), issues available from 1838 to 1910 * [https://newspapers.library.wales/browse/3534647 Y Drych] (''The Mirror''), issues available from 1875 to 1919 * [https://journals.library.wales/browse/2356402 Y Wawr] (''The Dawn''), issues available from 1876 to 1896 ==Citations already added to Wikitree== {| border="1" ! Publication || Date || Page+link || Type || Name || Date of event || Age at death |- | Y Drych || 1878-07-11 || [https://newspapers.library.wales/view/3535857/3535863/72 p6] || Death || [[Parry-1621|Morris, Elizabeth]] || 1878-06-29 || 55y 5m 29d |- | Y Drych || 1893-04-06 || [https://newspapers.library.wales/view/3541341/3541345/73/ p4] || Death || [[Rees-1039|Rees, Joseph]] || 1893-03-24 || ~70y |- | Y Drych || 1897-07-29 || [https://newspapers.library.wales/view/3543312/3543316/72/ p4] || Death || [[Rowlands-574|Rowlands, Daniel T.]] || 1897-07-21 || — |- | Y Drych || 1914-07-30 || [https://newspapers.library.wales/view/3775673/3775677/30 p4] || Death || [[Hughes-3925|Hughes, Hugh G.]] || 1917-07-21 || 67y |}

Family of Alexander Crooks and Anna Rose Graham

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== Introduction == This page is for records relating to the marriage and family of [[Crooks-1760|H Alexander Crooks (1870-1943)]] and [[Graham-22951|Anna Rose (Graham) Crooks (bef.1878-1960)]]. == Records == === Marriage === [https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details-civil/200f862309996 1897 GR 2309996 SR Magherafelt], Irish civil registration: * Marriage solemnized at Clagan in the Parish of Lissan in the County Londonderry. * August 31st 1897. * [[Crooks-1760 | Alexander Crooks]], Full age, Bachelor, Commercial (?), resident of Clagan. Son of James Crooks, Farmer. * [[Graham-22951 | Anna Rose Graham]], Full age, Spinster, resident of Clagan, dau of Robert Graham, Teacher. * Witness: [[Crooks-1759 | Archer Crooks]]. * Witness: Nora Graham. === 1901 census === [http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Down/Ormeau/Ormeau_Road/1211997/ Census Years/1901/Down/Ormeau/Ormeau Road/Residents of a house] Residents of a house 176 in Ormeau Road (Ormeau, Down) {| border="1" class="sortable" !Surname!!Forename!!Age!!Sex!!Relation to head!!Religion!!Birthplace!!Occupation!!Literacy!!Irish Language!!Marital Status!!Specified Illnesses |- |Graham||Robert||18||Male||Brother in Law||Presbyterian||County Derry||Warehouseman||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |Crooks||Dorathea Kathleen||||Female||Daughter||Presbyterian||Belfast||-||Cannot read||-||Not Married||- |- |Crooks||Alexander||30||Male||Head of Family||Presbyterian||County Derry||Commercial Traveller||Read and write||-||Married||- |- |Orr||Mary Josephine||21||Female||Servant||Episcoplian||Co Derry||Domestic Servant||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |McClintock||William||40||Male||Uncle||Presbyterian||Co Donegal||Electrical Engineer||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |Crooks||Anna Rose||27||Female||Wife||Presbyterian||County Donegal||-||Read and write||-||Married||- |} === 1911 census === [http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Down/Ormeau/Hampton_Park/214221/ Census Years/1911/Down/Ormeau/Hampton Park/Residents of a house] Residents of a house 2 in Hampton Park (Ormeau, Down) {| border="1" class="sortable" !Surname!!Forename!!Age!!Sex!!Relation to head!!Religion!!Birthplace!!Occupation!!Literacy!!Irish Language!!Marital Status!!Specified Illnesses!!Years Married!!Children Born!!Children Living |- |Crooks||Alexander||40||Male||Head of Family||Christian Scientist||County Derry||Commercial Traveller Drapery||Read and write||-||Married||-||13||3||3 |- |Crooks||Anne Rose||30||Female||Wife||Christian Scientist||County Donegal||-||Read and write||-||Married||-||13||3||3 |- |Crooks||Mary Winefred||12||Female||Daughter||Christian Scientist||Belfast||Scholar||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Crooks||Dorathy Kathleen||10||Female||Daughter||Christian Scientist||Belfast||Scholar||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Crooks||Constance Anna||6||Female||Daughter||Christian Scientist||Belfast||Scholar||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Wilson||Sarah||20||Female||Servant||Episcopal Church||Co Derry||General Servant||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |} === Burials === Both buried at Claggan Presbyterian, plot "Bradwen-Jones 1". [[Space:Claggan_Presbyterian_cemetery_inscriptions]] == Analysis == === Birthplace of children === The three children are listed as "Belfast" birthplace, while the census location is "Ormeau, County Down". This location is in the south Belfast urban area and is most likely where the children were born. === Anna Rose's age === Anna Rose is given as: * "full age" in the 1891 marriage. * age 27 in the 1901 census * Anne Rose, age 30 in the 1911 census This is not very helpful in terms of finding a birth record. === Miscellaneous === Alexander is the person known as '''H A Crooks''' of Belfast -- this is known from the funeral clipping of his father. However we have not found any explanation of what the H stands for.

Family of Charles Holliday Cowden (b. 1820 Ill. d. 1914 Ark.)

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[[Cowden-427|Charles Holliday Cowden (1820-1914)]] was the father of 10 children, and had many descendants. This page is a space to gather photos and articles about his siblings, children and grandchildren. * [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Family_of_Charles_Holliday_Cowden_(b._1820_Ill._d._1914_Ark.)|WikiTree Profiles that use this source]] == Biography == Charles was born in 1820 in Greene County, Illinois, the son of [[Cowden-647|George Alexander Cowden (1801-1855)]] and [[Holliday-2073|Jane McAllister (Holliday) Cowden (1801-1885)]]. His known siblings were: * [[Cowden-695|James William Cowden (1824-1896)]] * Frederick R Cowden (1826-1848) * Lucy Ann Cowden (1830-) * [[Cowden-510|Sarah Elizabeth (Cowden) Harlan (1833-1905)]] * [[Cowden-503|Jane McAllister (Cowden) Tiernan (1836-1926)]] * Frances Eliza (Cowden) Goldsmith (1840-1920) * [[Cowden-648|Mary (Cowden) Jamieson (1842-1936)]] * Keturah Maria (Cowden) Johnson (1848-1923) In 1848, Charles married [[Elliott-10228|Rosabelle Elliott]], and they had the following children: * [[Cowden-587|Frederick Eugene Cowden]] (1849-1924) * [[Cowden-421|Richard Shrader "Dick" Cowden]] (1856-1925) * [[Cowden-588|Amzia Alexander Cowden]] (1857-1929) * [[Cowden-590|Ada Bella Cowden]] (1859-1924) Sometime between 1860 and 1869, Rosabelle died, as Charles married [[Preble-541|Julia A E Preble]] in 1869. Charles and julia had the following children: * [[Cowden-592|Capitola Cowden]] (1870-1902) * [[Cowden-599|Victor Hiram Cowden]] (1873-1947) * [[Cowden-600|Clarence Charles Doc Cowden]] (1875-1917) In 1878, Julia died, and Charles married [[Jordan-14357|Mary Eliza Jordan]], the widow of Alexander Gilbert and mother to two children. Charles and Mary had the following children: * [[Cowden-602|Maude May Gertrude Cowden]] (1881-?) * [[Cowden-604|Georgia A Cowden, who was adopted and given the name of Effie Robinson]] (1883-1966) * [[Cowden-603|Claude Herman Cowden]] (1885-1943) In 1887, Mary died within days after childbirth. Charles placed an ad in the newspaper seeking someone to adopt the newborn baby boy. However, the baby appears to have died. Morris and Sarah Robinson adopted 4 year old Georgia instead and gave her the name of Effie Robinson. In 1892, Charles married a Mary Fuller in Oklahoma, but no further record can be found of her. In the 1890's, Charles homesteaded 6 miles south of Seger and 7 miles east of Cloud Chief in Washita County, Oklahoma. The townsite became known as Cowden, Oklahoma. By 1900, Charles was living with his son Amzia in El Reno, Oklahoma. He also lived in Elk City, Oklahoma. The town of Cowden eventually became a ghost town, probably in the 1950's. While visiting his son in Arkansas, Charles passed away in 1914. ==Finding the ghost town of Cowden== There is a nice memorial area next to the one remaining building from the Cowden School. I assume this is in the general area of what was Cowden, Oklahoma, which would now be considered a ghost town. I went there searching for evidence of Charles Holliday Cowden's contribution to the naming of the town. None of the Cowden family names are listed anywhere on the monument. I did find a patent for his land in 1904, and based on the little I know about homestead laws, that means he would have acquired it in 1899. He appears to have only lived in that area for 5 years. By 1910, he was living with a son in El Reno, Oklahoma. I came across a book in the Cordell library written by Juanita (Simpson) Jones, "Heartbreak and Happiness" in 1971. She was born in that area in 1905. In her book, she lists many of the early settlers of the area - many who continued to live there when she wrote the book. The only mention of a Cowden name is on page 204, "Cowden, a little country village, is located in the eastern part of Washita County, seven miles east of Cloud Chief. It was named for the town site owner, Charles H. Cowden. January 23, 1901, a post office was established in the H. C. Bell, Low Price Store with Henry C. Bell appointed as postmaster." Considering that Charles Holliday Cowden was elderly by the time he arrived in Oklahoma, having acquired land, wives and children along the way, my personal opinion was that his stay in Cowden, Oklahoma was just one of his speculative ventures. None of his family members stayed in the area. However, after reading Juanita Simpson Jones' book, obviously many other pioneers stayed put and continue to ranch and farm in the area. While living in Cowden, my husband's grandmother Pearl Cowden (one of Charles Holliday Cowden's grand-daughters) married his grandfather Robert Davis. Many members of Robert Davis's family had come to Oklahoma about the same time as the Cowdens, from Mississippi. Robert died in 1910, and his widow went to El Reno, where other Cowden family members were living. Of Robert's family, only his brother, Lee Davis and his wife Tessie Stockton, stayed in the area. Lee and Tessie Davis are mentioned frequently in histories I found in the library about Washita County.

Family of Elizabeth Rachel le Gresley

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== Introduction == This profile pertains to the following records * [[Le_Gresley-124|Elizabeth Rachel (Le Gresley) Syvret (abt.1833-1908)]] * 1871 census - St. Peter, Jersey"England and Wales Census, 1871", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VFTP-SRH : 16 November 2020), Francis De La Cour in entry for Elizabeth Syvret, 1871. * 1861 census - St. Helier, Jersey"England and Wales Census, 1861," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M75Q-NM4 : 18 August 2020), Elizabeth De La Cour in household of Philip De La Cour, Saint Helier, Jersey; from "1861 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO RG 9, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. * 1874 migration to New Zealand on the ''Apelles'' sailed 26 Jan 1874."New Zealand, Archives New Zealand, Passenger Lists, 1839-1973," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FSB9-625 : 8 July 2019), Clara Syvret, 6 May 1874; citing ship , Archives New Zealand, Wellington; FHL microfilm 004412061."New Zealand, Archives New Zealand, Passenger Lists, 1839-1973," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FSB2-332 : 8 July 2019), Francis De La Cour, 5 May 1874; citing ship , Archives New Zealand, Wellington; FHL microfilm 004411948. === Passenger list === * Elizabeth Syvret (34, Jersey, dairy woman) * Elizabeth De la Cour (18, Servant) * Philip De la Cour (11) * Hannah De la Cour (10) * Francis De la Cour (9) * John De la Cour (8) * Clara Syvret (5) * John Syvret (2) * Amanda Syvret (9mo) The family on the passenger list is certainly the same one as on the census , the similarities are too great. === Children of Philip/John de la Cour and Elizabeth Rachel Le Gresley === A Jerripedia search for children born to de la Cour / Le Gresley in the time frame has four results: {| border="1" class="sortable" !Place!!Birth!!Baptism!!Child Name!!Family Name!!Relationship!!Father!!Mother |- |St. Peter||23 Dec 1855||27 Jan 1856||Elizabeth||de La Cour||Daughter||John||Elizabeth Rachel Le Gresley |- |St. Helier||24 Oct 1858||21 Nov 1858||Melvina Susanne||de La Cour||Daughter||John||Elizabeth Rachel Le Gresley |- |St. Helier||19 Apr 1861||02 Jun 1861||Philip John||De La Cour||Son||Philip||Elizabeth Le Gresley |- |St. Peter||23 Nov 1862||21 Dec 1862||Anna Rachel||de La Cour||Daughter||Philippe||Elizabeth Le Gresley |} This appears to be the record for child John {| border="1" class="sortable" !Place||Birth!!Baptism!!Child Name!!Family Name!!Relationship!!Father!!Mother |- |St. Peter||14 May 1864||14 Aug 1864||Francis||Le Gresley||Son||unknown||Elizabeth Le Gresley |} * [https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/61218/images/45219_1831109388_0589-00168 Manual scan] for Francis Le Gresley, born May 14 1864, mother Elizabeth Le Gresley, father not recorded I think we can conclude from this: * "Philippe" and "John" on the birth table above and the marriage record below are the same person. * Elizabeth had separated from John before 1864, hence naming Francis with her name instead of his. * She later married a Syvret, who was the father of Clara. * "Hannah" on the 1861 census is Melvina, and she died or otherwise emigrated before 1871. * "Hannah" on the passenger log is Anna Rachel. Problems: * We don't know who the father of Francis is. * No birth record found for John or Clara -- although the Jerripedia indexing is incomplete. === The father === Matching birth record from JerripediaBMD to the 1861 census age and birthplace: {| border="1" class="sortable" !Place!!Birth!!Baptism!!Child Name!!Family Name!!Relationship!!Father!!Mother |- |St. Brelade||19 Jul 1830||30 Jul 1830||Philippe||de La Cour||Son||Nicolas||Anne Elizabeth Salmon |} === Likely parents' marriage === {{Ancestry Image|6121945219_1831109388_0445-00019}} John de la Cour (23), carpenter / Elizabeth Rachel Le Gresley (19), St. Helier, 2 Mar 1851. I feel this is likely as the date is roughly right, and the full name Elizabeth Rachel that appears on some of the birth records. === Second marriage === There are three children named Syvret appearing on the 1874 passenger log. However no birth records have been found for them. Nor has any compatible marriage record been found for Syvret / Le Gresley or Syvret / de la Cour. [https://catalogue.jerseyheritage.org/collection/Details/archive/110145642 Arecord in the Jersey Heritage archive] cites "Jean Syvret, wife of Elizabeth Rachel Le Gresley". See Jean's profile for speculation about his identity. But it seems like a strong possibility that they did not in fact marry -- and perhaps Jean Syvret is also the father of the last two "de la Cour" children. == Sources ==

Family of Frederick Hammond Hilton and Mary (Hilton) Hilton ca 1861

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This photograph of the family of [[Hilton-2432|Frederick Hammond Hilton]] and his wife [[Hilton-2433|Mary (Hilton) Hilton]] was likely taken about 1865 in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia judging from the presence and appearance of the children, their birthdates and dates of their deaths. Pictured (names derived from existing family records based on the presumed ages of the children) are: (right to left) William Hilton (1842-1866), Marion Hilton (1845-1936) baby Adelia Hilton (1859-1930, later Rogers) on the lap of [[Hilton-2432|Frederick Hammond Hilton]] (1818-1907), Emily Hilton (1847-1945, later Timerman), [[Hilton-2431|Frederick Tompkins Hilton]] (1852-1935), [[Hilton-2433|Mary (Hilton) Hilton]] (1821-1901), and Arthur Hilton (1849-1865).

Family of Gilbert Ogden and Sarah Ayres

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Research Notes for Family of Gilbert Ogden & Sarah Ayres 22 July 2015 - Louis Ogden The key to putting Samuel Ogden into a family group may rest with a fellow named Amos Ayres Ogden. I’ve had reason to believe that the internet world has incorrectly matched Amos Ayres Ogden with a set of parents, but until now, I’ve had no good indication of where he may properly fit. Now I think the new info I have on the Gilbert Ogden of Roxbury Township in the 1790’s, coupled with the fact that Samuel and David Vanhouten seem to have joined up together in the War of 1812, result in a very plausible family grouping. Amos Ayres Ogden is generally indicated to be the son of Anna Jayne and David Ogden of Lower Smithfield Twp. PA, and later Tompkins Co., NY. As far as I can tell this is based on two things: 1) an Amos Ogden is named as one of the executors for the will of Aaron Van Houten (Anna’s second husband) in Tompkins Co. in 1835, and 2) apparently one of the children of Amos Ayres Ogden was named David Jayne Ogden (although I’ve seen no proof of the middle name). However, the other facts are: 1. Anna Jayne and David Ogden most likely had sons Amos and Gilbert. In 1835 Amos and Gilbert were named as executors for the estate of Aaron Van Houten, the second husband of Anna Jayne. It is also noted that Daniel and Amos Beach were witnesses to Van Houten’s will. Amos Beach (and probably Daniel Beach) was a grandson of Anna Jayne (her daughter Elizabeth Ogden m. Isaac Beach). This Amos Ogden and Gilbert Ogden are documented among the earliest settlers (1809) in, Enfield Township, Tioga (now Tompkins) County, New York. In 1800, David Ogden appears to be still very much alive and can be found in Ulysses Twp (age 26-44) with sons of the right age to be Amos and Gilbert. In 1810, I believe Amos and Gilbert are mixed in with the Van Houten boys. They are on their own and enumerated next to each other in 1820 (Hector Twp), 1830 (Enfield Twp) & 1840 (Seneca Co, OH). They had moved on together to Seneca County, Ohio, in the mid-1830’s after Van Houten died. Both these brothers are documented as having died in the mid-1840 in Seneca County. Whenever one of them is found, the other is always nearby. 2. As for Amos Ayres Ogden, he moved to Menard County, Illinois about 1832. (Note this is three years before Van Houten’s will was recorded). He moved there in the company of several relatives, including his in-laws (Matthew Lounsberry and wife, Mary Wagon). The Lounsberry’s are documented to have lived in Pony Hollow, near the town of Cayuta, Tioga (now Chemung) County, NY. This is the exact area that the family of Rev. David Jayne and that of Capt. Gabriel Ogden settled before 1800. This David Jayne is the brother of Capt. Timothy Jayne (the father of Anna Jayne). This “Capt.” Gabriel Ogden is almost certainly the son of Gabriel Ogden (s/o David of Roxbury). This location near Cayuta is about 20 miles as the crow flies from where the Van Houten’s settled—a substantial distance in those days and significant enough to identify separate families. However, I am confident that Amos Ayres is NOT the son of either of these Gabriel’s. 3. Another Gilbert Ogden appeared in Cayuta Twp. in 1820 (45+). Also appearing here in 1820, along with Gilbert Ogden, is another Amos Ogden (26-45) and Nicholas Cranmer (26-45). I believe this Amos is Amos Ayres Ogden and that Nicholas Cranmer married his sister, Mary Ogden. I believe both Amos Ayres Ogden and Mary Ogden are children of Gilbert Ogden. (I also believe that Samuel Ogden is another possible son). Gilbert Ogden first appears in NY in the 1800 Census near David Ogden/Anna Jayne in Ulysses Twp. (26-44) and again in 1810 in Ulysses (45+). In 1810, Nicholas Cranmer is immediately adjacent to Gilbert in Ulysses and he apparently moved on to Cayuta (as did Gilbert) by 1820. The Cranmer family genealogy is very specific in saying that Nicholas married a Mary Ogden, that he moved from Tompkins Co. to “back to” Tioga Co. around 1820, and that he died of a snake-bite in 1825. This family story and the movement of Gilbert Ogden match. It makes sense that the now aged Gilbert would move 20 miles to be near his married children, especially since his brother/cousin David was long dead. (Remember that Cayuta Twp and Ulysses Twp are more than 20 miles apart, and separated by several townships—far enough away that this was indeed a change of location.) Gilbert Ogden had sons and daughters in the various censuses that are the right age to have included Amos Ayres and Mary (and Samuel). Amos is out on his own in 1820 (Cayuta 26-45) and 1830 (Newfield 30-40). Note that Newfield is in Tompkins Co., but shares the county line with Tioga County. Pony Hollow is almost exactly on the county line. In 1840 Amos Ayres Ogden is found in the census of Menard Co., IL (40-50). He also died in the 1840’s compounding the confusion with the other Amos. In Roxbury Twp., Morris County, NJ, on the tax lists for years 1783 to 1797, there is a Gilbert Ogden. He is shown as a singleman in 1783 and married thereafter. He never has more than about 50 acres, and in many years he has none. But he is there every year. After 1797, he is not present anymore. He could very well have moved on to NY with his cousin/brother David Ogden and Anna Jayne--there are other recognizable families in this immediate area that migrated to Tompkins/Seneca Counties from western Morris County at this same time, including members of the Ayres and Abel families. In Hackettstown, Sussex (now Warren) Co., NJ, about five miles from where David of Roxbury lived, there is a fellow named Ezekiel Ayres who died in 1796. Ezekiel had a daughter Sarah, born 09 Mar 1757, who married a fellow named Ogden. This is proven by the division of Ezekiel Ayres’ estate in 1796, in which eight of his children are named, including daughter Sarah Ogden. This Ayres family is also substantiated by a family bible record which is reproduced in ‘Early Germans” and “Pioneers of NW NJ.” The middle name “Ayres” had to come from somewhere. I am guessing that Gilbert Ogden married Sarah Ayres and moved on to NY shortly after her father died and divided up the estate. And finally, if Amos Ayres Ogden did name his son born in 1831 “David Jayne” Ogden, it is just as likely that he did so to honor the patriarch of the extended family in Cayuta Township, Rev David Jayne. Or perhaps David Jayne Jr., also a preacher and the guy who married Margaret Ogden (probable d/o Gabriel). Or their preacher, or a neighbor, etc. There are a dozen reasons that the middle name “Jayne” could have been chosen given the close family relationships, the timing, and the location. So I believe there were three related Ogden families (cousins/brothers) who moved into what is now Tioga/Tompkins Cos., NY prior to 1800. They are: 1) David Ogden and Anna Jayne who moved to Ulysses Twp directly from Lower Smithfield, Northampton Co, PA. 2) Gabriel Ogden and unknown wife who moved to Spenser (later Cayuta) Twp, either directly from Smithfield, or first stopping in current day Bradford Co., PA. (by the way, he is a son of Gabriel of the Bible in Bradford who is definitely NOT the Gabriel who married Mary Shotwell). 3) Gilbert Ogden and Sarah Ayres who moved first to Ulysses Twp from Morris County, NJ, and then before 1820 moved on to Cayuta Twp. And I believe that Samuel Ogden, still a minor, is with his father in NY in 1800 Census. He soon returned to NJ (perhaps to marry Anna Auble in 1803), remained in NJ near the old home place and Anna Auble’s folks until some time after Anna died, then drifted around NJ until the war came and gave him a nitch in life. That he probably joined up with David Vanhouten indicates to me that David probably returned to NJ with Samuel. Anyway, it seems to make sense to me, and it is the first time I’ve been able to match up all these Ogden families.

Family of Grace Ogot

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'''THE FAMILY OF [[Akinyi-2|GRACE OGOT]]''' In 2014, Grace Ogot's brother, Ambassador Bob Jalang'o, posted a family tree to the website Geni.com. This tree consisted almost exclusively of names only (no dates, places or biographical information), and appeared to only include immediate relatives and those he might have firsthand knowledge of. Due to the lack of detail, I have opted to post the information as a Free Space document, rather than create individual profiles at this time. *Great-Great Grandfather identified only as Nyango *Great-Grandfather identified only as Ochung' **Ochung had two brothers, Joka-Yadfe and Ng'enge *Paternal Grandfather was Onyuna Madara Ochung' **He had a brother, Michura Ochung' who had three sons: ***#Isador Migite Mirhura married Mama Marsella Migire and had three children, including Peter Ogenga Migire. ***#Jethro Onyuna marrried Mama Grace Onyuna and had two sons, Agustino Odhiambo Onyuna and Alexander Otoyo Onyuna. ***#Ombaye Michura had two children *Grandfather Onyuna married Mama Nyanduga. They were the parents of [[Nyanduga-1|Japuonj Joseph Nyanduga]]. *Joseph and his wife, [[Ogori-1|Rachel Nyanduga]], had eight children: *#[[Akinyi-2|Grace Ogot]] *#Rose Orondo married James Onondo and had six children, including George Loye. *#Sophia *#George Orondo married Joyce *#Samson Auvili Jaramonda married Florence Awili and had five children, including Samson Jr., Lucy Awili Kariuki, Daniela Abour, Patrick Awili, and Wilson Awili. Samson Jr. married Catherine Apondi Jandara *#George Andrew Onyuna had one child *#Tabitha Okello *#Ambassador Bob Jalang'o married Jeannette Monaco. They had six children, including Lucy Ilbenyosi. Lucy was married to Kene Ilbenyosi [Kene was the son of Justin Ilbenyosi and grandson of Francis and Lydia Ilbenyosi.

Family of James John Burns and Julie Burns (nee DeMunnik)

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The goal of this project is to provide a record of antecedents and descendants of James John Burns and Julie Burns (nee DeMunnik) ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Burns-14128|Paul Burns]]. All help welcome to enter data and searching for new information. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, Family of James John Burns and Julie Burns (nee DeMunnik), or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=28342810 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family of JGH & AEC

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Origineel, bijgesneden, schoongemaakt, met tekstvakken en getranscribeerde namen. Nodig zijn transcripties in Nederlands (digitaal) voor zeven woorden in tekstvakken. Original, Cropped, Cleaned, with Text Boxes, and transcribed names. Needed are transcriptions into Dutch (digital) for seven words in text boxes. There may also be useful text in the sentence or two leading up to the listing of the children's names, including the mother's name Annetgen Engelsdr. First credit to Frans for spotting this material and translating into English. Second credit to Niel for his take on the transcription. "Hard!!!" he said. '''ATTEMPTED TRANSCRIPTION''' Gerrit Jansz, Jan Jansz Bouth, mitsgaeders [struck through] Jan Jansz van Sijp, mitsgaeders van Engel Jansz, wive van Cornelisz [struck through] Harmen Cornelisz van der Ven als gekoren voogd van Marritgen Jansdr, Engel Dammasz van Griecken wijve hebbende Machteld Jansdr., ende Cornelis Maertens Bols als getrouwt sijnde van Geertgen Jansdr '''(EXPANDED) TRANSLATION''' (After Jan's death,) Annetgen's children were: Gerrit Jansz van Sijp, Jan Jansz Bouth, Jan Jansz van Sijp, Engel Jansz van Sijp; (and three daughters each by that time married:) Harmen Cornelisz van der Ven married to Marritgen Jansdr, Engel Dammasz van Griecken married to Machtelt Jansdr, Cornelis Maertens Bols married to Geertgen Jansdr

Family of Johann Daniel Bowman

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== Introduction == This space is used to provide evidence of the last name of the wife, Mary, of [[Bowman-1790|Johann Daniel Bowman]]. === Children of Johann and Mary Bowman === All of the children of [[Bowman-1790|Johann Daniel Bowman]] and his wife Mary were born in Lincoln County, North Carolina between 1771 and 1787. Some children are mentioned in Rev. Crouse's History of Friendship Church[[#Crouse]] and some are mentioned in his will[[#Will]]. {| class="wikitabe sortable" border="2" |+ style="text- align: center" | Children of [[Bowman-1790|Johann Daniel Bowman]](1740-1811) and His Wife Mary, Lincoln County, North Carolina |- |Name || Order/page from Crouse || Birth Year || Death Year || POD ||Cemetery||Spouce|| Sources || Will |+ | [[Bowman-1877|John]] || S 1/59 || 1776 || 1859 ||Caldwell, NC||Unknown||Rebecca Bolch||S1||N |+ | [[Bowman-1875|Henry]] || S 2/61 || 1784 || 1849 ||Catawba, NC|| Old St. Paul's||Anna Elizabeth Bolch|| Henry: [[#FGHenry]], [[#Crouse]], [[#Will]]||Y |+ | [[Bowman-5113|David]] || S 3/69 || 1778 || 1852 ||Alexander, NC||Friendship||Elizabeth Simmons||David: [[#FGDavid]], [[#Crouse]], [[#Will]]||Y |+ | [[Bowman-1878|Samuel D.]] || S 4/76 || 1781 || 1865 ||Alexander, NC||Friendship||Susanna Deal||Samuel: [[#FGSamuel]], [[#Crouse]]||N |+ | [[Bowman-1842|Daniel, Jr.]] || S 6/94 || 1772 || 1832 ||Alexander, NC||Friendship||Mary Magdalena Simmons||Daniel, Jr.: [[#Crouse]], [[#FGDaniel]], [[#Arends2]]||N |+ | [[Bowman-1887|George]] || S 5/93 || 1787 || 1874 ||Morgan, IN||Stierwalt||Mary Catherine Isenhour||George: [[#FGGeorge]], [[#Crouse]], [[#Will]]||Y |+ | [[Bowman-1789|Barbara Hermann]] || D 1/110 || 1774 || 1853 ||Catawba, NC||Unknown||Peter Herman|| Barbara: [[#Arends2]], [[#Crouse]], [[#Will]] ||Y |+ | [[Bowman-1886|Mary Deal]] || D 2/114 || 1778 || 1850 ||Catawba, NC|| Old St. Paul's||George Deal||Mary Deal: [[#Probate]], [[#FGMary]]||Y |+ | [[Bowman-5112|Catharine Lutes]] || D ? || 1772 || 1855 ||Jackson, IN||Houston Cemetery||John Lutes||Catherine Lutes: [[#FGCatherine]], [[#Arends2]], [[#Will]]||Y |} === What was Mary's Last Name? === Who was the wife of Johann Daniel Bowman? We know from his Will and Rev Crouse's 1905 History that her name was Mary. There are no known marriage records, death certificates for family members, or other information that would give a last name of his wife. We are left with using indirect circumstantial evidence. The following table summarizes the known information. {| style="text- align: center" border="2" |+ |Name |[[Bolch-48|Elizabeth "Mary" Bolch]] |Sources |[[Mouser-40|Anne Maria "Mary" Mouser]] |Sources |+ |parents |Johann Adam Bolch, Anna Christina Schwarzwal |Elizabeth "Mary" Bolch: [[#Bolch]] |Hans Michael Mauser/Mouser/Moser, Agatha Gomminger | |+ |Birth |1757 | |1746 | |+ |age in 1772 when first child was born |15 | |26 | |+ |pob |Colonial North Carolina | |Baden Wurlichen, Germany | |} The following research is from Carolyn Whitaker[[#FGMouser]]: :''I know that Mary has been listed over the years as a Bolick/Bolch and daughter of Johann Adam Bolick Sr, but I have proven she is not a Bolick. Johann Adam left his will and specifically left land to his daughter Elizabeth. Her name was not Mary Elizabeth, it was just Elizabeth. I found deeds that prove she married Jacob Garling/Garland and she and Jacob are selling the same land she received in Johann Adam Bolick's will. Elizabeth also had a bastard child in the time frame the Bowman's were having children so Mary couldn't possibly be a Bolick. A. L. CROUSE did his 1906 book on the Bowman's he ASSUMED she was a Bolick and how he missed these deeds I don't know. Also the will of Daniel Bowman names his wife "MARY" not Elizabeth.[[#Crouse]]'' :''According to the information I have David Bowman (son of Daniel and Mary Bowman) and Elizabeth Simmons had a daughter Catherine MOSER BOWMAN who married Daniel Little, which would give a good indication Mary Bowman, wife of Johann Daniel Bowman, is a Moser/Mouser.'' An answer from Robin Lee from Jacky :''Daniel George Bowman, age 18, immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1738, with brother Jacob Bowman. He migrated to North Carolina, ca. 1745, and settled in Catawba County, North Carolina. He and his wife, Mary Bolch, had nine children. He died in 1814. His youngest son, George Bowman, was born in North Carolina in 1787. He married Mary Catherine Eisenhauer, daughter of George Martin Eisenhauer. They had eleven children. The family migrated to Indiana between 1830 and 1833 and settled first in Monroe County, later moving to a farm in Morgan County, Indiana. He died in 1874 and is buried in Stierwalt Cemetery, Morgan County, Indiana. Descendants lived in Indiana and elsewhere.'' == Sources == * Source: The will of Daniel Baumann is among the loose wills in the North Carolina Archives in Raleigh. It was probated in Lincoln County in the April Session of The Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions in the year 1812, signed 14 April 1811 * Source: ''Historical Sketches of Alexander County, N.C.'', Book was published in 1905 and authored by Rev. A.L. Crouse, Subtitles is Friendship Lutheran, Hopewell Reformed , and Charity Baptist Churches and of the Bowman & Fry Families. Copies are located in Friendship Library and with descendants. * Source: [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=32781918 Find a Grave for Daniel Bowman], managed by Susan Bowman, accessed on July 6, 2015, "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/QVKW-JWD6 : 13 December 2015), Daniel Bowman, ; Burial, Taylorsville, Alexander, North Carolina, United States of America, Friendship Lutheran Church Cemetery; citing record ID 32781918, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com. * Source: Icenhour, Gary L, ''I Have Called you Friends--The Story of Friendship, 2008 * Source: "North Carolina Estate Files, 1663-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VH6X-52F : 20 November 2015), Daniel Bowman, 1817; citing Lincoln, North Carolina, United States, State Archives, Raleigh; FHL microfilm 2,297,090. Inventory of the Estate of Daniel Bowman, Executor George Deal. * Source: Find a Grave for [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=50430619 Catherine Bowman Lutes], accessed Jan 16, 2017, "Find A Grave Index," database, ([https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/QVKK-P2QC FamilySearch]: 11 July 2016), Catherine Bowman Lutes, 1855; Burial, Houston, Jackson, Indiana, United States of America, Houston Cemetery; citing record ID 50430619, * Source: Find a Grave for [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=62727567 Mary "Polly" Bowman], accessed Feb 12, 2017 * Source: Find a Grave for [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=44725161 Henry Bowman], accessed Feb 10, 2027 * Source: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/QVKW-JWDD : 13 December 2015), David Bowman, 1852; Burial, Taylorsville, Alexander, North Carolina, United States of America, Friendship Lutheran Church Cemetery; citing record ID 37591001, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com. * Source: Find a Grave for [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=24185608 George Bowman], accessed Dec 4, 2016, Stierwalt Cemetery, Paragon, Morgan, Indiana * Source: Find a Grave for [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=32782112 Samuel D. Bowman], accessed Feb 8, 2017. * Source: ''The Bolich Families in America with Genealogies'', [https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE972808 Link], Bolich, Mary Margaret (Mary Margaret Shimer), 1895- (Main Author), Allentown, Pennsylvania : Schlechter's, 1939 * Source: ''Diary of Pastor Arends (1740-1847)'', Adapted from a story added by carlaray56 on 14 Sep 2008, Letter from Ralph E. Winkler to Carl F. Lamar, 11-22-1987[https://familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/6559468 Letter] * Source: ''Diary of Johann Gottfried Arends 1740-1807'', as quoted on Find a Grave for Daniel Bowman, Jr., (He was a Lutheran pastor sent to NC ca. 1773 along with the help of King George III). In this diary he included a list of pastoral records. One being the name and date of some people's First Communion. Among those listed at "Saut Fork"- which was probably his name for Old St. Paul's -– on May 13, 1791– were Johan Daniel Baumann's oldest children: Catherina Baumann, Daniel Baumann, and Barbara Baumann

Family of Matthew Sowden-525

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== Matthew Sowden-525 == This page has been created to detail the extended family of [[Sowden-525 | Matthew Sowden]]. Parents, siblings, siblings spouses and children, as well as grandparents, aunts uncles and cousins. Each person needing created is noted with at least one source for that person. There are '''32''' profiles to be created on this Space Page. There are also links to other Space Pages throughout, which have further Profiles needed. == Extended Family == === Henry Sowden, Father (Profile Already Created) === [[Sowden-585|Henry Sowden (abt.1830-1903)]] was the son of Francis Sowden and Mary Adams. He married [[Warren-22880|Sarah (Warren) Sowden (1836-bef.1906)]]. ==== Children of Henry Sowden & Sarah Warren ==== Children of [[Sowden-585|Henry Sowden (abt.1830-1903)]] and [[Warren-22880|Sarah (Warren) Sowden (1836-bef.1906)]] were:
===== John, child of Henry & Sarah (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-589|John Sowden (bef.1859-)]] ===== Ann, child of Henry & Sarah (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-590|Ann Sowden (bef.1862-)]] ===== William, child of Henry & Sarah (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-591|William Sowden (bef.1864-)]] ===== Mary, child of Henry & Sarah (Profiles Now Created) ===== For details on creating Mary Jane and her descendants please see the Free Space Page of '''[[Space:Mary_Jane_Sowden_(1866_-_1905)|Mary Jane Sowden (1866 - 1905)]]''' (There are '''39''' Profiles to be created from this page including Mary Jane's) ===== Rebecca, child of Henry & Sarah (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-592|Rebecca Sowden (1868-bef.1951)]] ===== Samuel, child of Henry & Sarah (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-593|Samuel Sowden (1871-bef.1945)]] * Married: [[Hendy-3099|Eleanor Alice (Hendy) Sowden (bef.1885-bef.1920)]] the daughter of [[Hendy-3100|William Henry Hendy (bef.1858-bef.1902)]] * Children: *# [[Sowden-594|Henry Sowden (bef.1909-bef.1937)]] ===== Jessie, child of Henry & Sarah (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-603|Jessie (Sowden) Harmer (abt.1873-1957)]] ===== Matthew, child of Henry & Sarah (Profile Already Created) ===== [[Sowden-525|Matthew Warren Sowden (1876 - 1935)]] ===== Rosina, child of Henry & Sarah (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-605|Rosina (Sowden) Bray (1879-bef.1955)]] ===== Robert, child of Henry & Sarah (Profiles now Created) ===== [[Sowden-617|Robert Francis Sowden (1882-bef.1956)]] === Francis Sowden, Paternal Grandfather (Profiles Now Created) === [[Sowden-595|Francis Sowden (abt.1797-abt.1878)]] the son of [[Souden-35|Henry (Souden) Sowden (bef.1763-bef.1846)]] and [[Hicks-19561|Rebecca (Hicks) Sowden (bef.1764-bef.1847)]]. Francis married Mary Adams. ==== Siblings of Francis Sowden ==== ===== John Sowden, brother of Francis Sowden (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-596|John Sowden (abt.1789-)]] ===== Henry Sowden, brother of Francis Sowden (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-597|Henry Sowden (abt.1789-)]] ===== Matthew Sowden, brother of Francis Sowden (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-608|Matthew Sowden (1804-)]] ===== Joseph Sowden, brother of Francis Sowden (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-598|Joseph Sowden (abt.1808-)]] ===== Samuel Sowden, brother of Francis Sowden (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-626|Samuel Sowden (abt.1808-)]] ==== Children of Francis Sowden & Mary Adams ==== ===== Samuel, child of Francis & Mary (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-599|Samuel Sowden (abt.1826-1906)]] * Married: [[Gorrell-562|Grace Gorrell (bef.1820-bef.1908)]] the daughter of [[Gorrell-563|James Gorrell (abt.1797-bef.1856)]] and Mary Unknown ===== Henry, child of Francis & Mary ===== Henry Sowden - See Section 2.1 Henry Sowden, Father above. ===== John, child of Francis & Mary (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-600|John Sowden (abt.1833-)]] ===== William, child of Francis & Mary (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-601|William Sowden (abt.1835-)]] ===== Matthew, child of Francis & Mary ===== [[Sowden-631|Matthew Sowden (abt.1837-abt.1912)]] ===== Rebecca, child of Francis & Mary (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-607|Rebecca (Sowden) Cann (bef.1840-bef.1927)]] ===== Francis, child of Francis & Mary (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Sowden-602|Francis Sowden (bef.1842-bef.1862)]] === Mary Adams, Paternal Grandmother (Profile Now Created) === [[Adams-64301|Mary (Adams) Sowden (abt.1802-abt.1874)]] the wife of [[Sowden-595|Francis Sowden (abt.1797-abt.1878)]]. === Sarah Warren, Mother (Profile Already Created) === [[Warren-22880|Sarah (Warren) Sowden (1836-bef.1906)]] is the daughter of Robert Werrin and Mary Ann Knight. She is the husband of [[Sowden-585|Henry Sowden (abt.1830-1903)]]. === Robert Warrin, Maternal Grandfather (Profiles Now Created) === [[Warrin-72|Robert (Warrin) Warren (abt.1807-bef.1884)]] the son of [[Werren-75|Robert Werren (abt.1780-)]] and [[Baker-63552|Ann Baker (abt.1780-)]] ==== Siblings of Robert (Warrin) Warren ==== Robert's siblings, the children of Robert Werren and Ann Baker were: ===== James Warren, sibling of Robert (Warrin) Warren (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Warren-22959|James Warren (abt.1805-)]] ===== Sarah Warring, sibling of Robert (Warrin) Warren (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Warring-162|Sarah (Warring) Warren (abt.1809-)]] ===== John Warren, sibling of Robert (Warrin) Warren (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Warren-22960|John Warren (abt.1810-)]] ==== Children of Robert (Warrin) Warren and Mary Ann Knight ==== The children of Robert (Warrin) Warren and Mary Ann Knight were: ===== {{Red | Elizabeth Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann}} ===== For details on creating the profiles of Elizabeth and her descendants please see the '''{{red|Free Space Page}}''' of '''[[Space:Elizabeth_Warren_(1831_-_1903)|Elizabeth Warren (1831 - 1903)]]'''. (There are '''88''' Profiles that need to be created from this page including Elizabeth's.) ===== Jane Warren, child of Robert & Mary Ann (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Warren-22961|Jane Warren (1833-)]] ===== Sarah Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann ===== See Section 2.4 Sarah Warren, Mother above. ===== Robert Henry Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Warren-23236|Robert Henry Warren (abt.1839-abt.1895)]] ===== {{Red | William Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann}} ===== For details on creating the profiles for William Warren and his descendants please see the '''{{red|Free Space Page}}''' of '''[[Space:William_Warren_(1842_-_1911)|William Warren (1842 - 1911)]]'''. (There are '''132''' Profiles that need to be created from this Page including William's.) ===== Ann Baker (Werrin) Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Werrin-4|Ann Baker (Werrin) Warren (bef.1844-bef.1866)]] ===== Marian Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann (Profiles Now Created) ===== [[Werren-77|Mariam (Werren) Martin (bef.1847-bef.1907)]] ===== John James Warren, child of Robert and Mary Ann (Profile Now Created) ===== [[Warren-22963|John James Warren (abt.1849-)]] === Mary Ann Knight, Maternal Grandmother (Profiles Now Created) === [[Knight-26033|Mary Ann (Knight) Warren (abt.1806-bef.1877)]] the daughter of [[Knight-26034|Henry Knight (abt.1780-)]] and [[Rowe-13789|Elizabeth Rowe (abt.1780-)]]. == Sources ==

Family of Rev Gabriel Cornwall (c1541-c1606)

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The goal of this project is to ... Research and document the family of Rev Gabriel Cornwall and with particular regard the families connections to Ireland in the 16th and 17th centuries. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=28443583 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family of Robert Caldwell and Margaret Dunlop

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== Records == === Marriage === There is only one marriage record for these two names. Although it is in a different county to where the children were born, I have selected it as his place of residence was the same county, and it is in the year before their first recorded child. (I checked all civil reg entries for Caldwell). * [https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details-civil/7367d22314116 : Robert Caldwell, Margaret Dunlop, 26 Feb 1885, GR 2314116, SR Irvinestown] * 26 Feb 1885 * Marriage solemnized at Tubrid Church in the Parish of Drumkeeran in the County Fermanagh. * [[Caldwell-8844|Robert Caldwell (abt.1859-1941)]], full age, Bachelor, Farmer, of Termonomongan; father: John Caldwell, Farmer. * [[Dunlop-2281|Margaret (Dunlop) Caldwell (abt.1853-1934)]], full age, Spinster, of Doora(?); father: George Dunlop, Farmer. === Children's birth records === I checked all Irish Civil Registration entries for Castlederg 1872-1900. There were six children, all born at Carrickaholten, County Tyrone; the last being Charles in 1897. === 1901 Census === * {{Ancestry Record|1901Scotland|1249810}} Robert Caldwell in the 1901 Scotland Census. ED 15, Sched 85, Line 9, Roll CSSCT1901_173. * Address: 21 John Knox St, Old Kilpatrick, Clydebank, Dumbartonshire, Scotland. * Robert Caldwell, 38, head, born Ireland, Coal Carter. * Margaret Caldwell, 44, wife, born Ireland. * Robert J Caldwell, 13, son, born Ireland, scholar. * George D Caldwell, 12, son, born Ireland, scholar. * Bella M Caldwell, 10, daug, born Ireland, scholar. * Annie Caldwell, 6, daug, born Ireland, scholar. * Charles Caldwell, 3, son, born Ireland. === 1901 Census - Elizabeth === * {{Ancestry Record|1901Scotland|1396422}} Eliza J Caldwell, ED 2, Sched 18a, Line 16, Roll CSSCT1901_192. * Address: Erskine Ferry, Greenock Rd, Renfrewshire. * Eliza J Caldwell, Servant, age 15, born Ireland. This looks like a fairly good match considering she is not with the family in the other census. === 1911 census === The following record on Scotlandspeople: "501/ 38/ 19 Old or West Kilpatrick, Dunbarton" seems to have (without buying the full record): * Robert, 47 * Margaret, 49 * Robert, 23 * George, 21 * Annie, 16 * Charles, 13 === Passenger log 1 === * "Mamari", sailed London, arrived New Zealand 30 Dec 1913."New Zealand, Archives New Zealand, Passenger Lists, 1839-1973," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V1MT-NLB : 8 July 2019), Robt Caldwell, 30 Dec 1913; citing ship , Archives New Zealand, Wellington; FHL microfilm 004415987. * Mrs M. Caldwell (housewife, 49) * Robt Caldwell (farming, 25) * Geo Caldwell (farming, 23) * Annie Caldwell (Domestic, 17) * Chas Caldwell (Scholar, 15) All ex. Scotland. === Passenger log 2 === * "Athenic" sailed London 1 Jan 1913. "New Zealand, Archives New Zealand, Passenger Lists, 1839-1973," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KLB7-2SX : 4 July 2019), Robt Caldwell, 1 Jan 1913; citing ship , Archives New Zealand, Wellington; FHL microfilm 004466326. * Robt. Caldwell, farm worker, 47, Scotland. == Analysis == === Bella in 1911 === There is no Isabel or Bella in the 1911 census. None of the 1901-1911 death records in Scotlandspeople match on age . There is Isabella Mason, Old Kilpatrick 1910 but age says 3; and Isabella McDona, age 0, 1901. === Missing census entries === No 1901 census entry found for Margaret. Too hard to explore them on the 1911 census just using the search results. === Missing passengers === Elizabeth Jane and Margaret do not appear on either passenger list that we can see. There is ''Athenic'' 25 Jan 1911 with Bella Caldwell and Maggie Caldwell, unaccompanied females. They are listed as Daughter of a family Tully although several other "daughters" with different surnames too -- perhaps mischaracterized servants?"New Zealand, Archives New Zealand, Passenger Lists, 1839-1973," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KLYB-8SQ : 3 July 2019), Maggie Caldwell, 25 Jan 1911; citing ship , Archives New Zealand, Wellington; FHL microfilm 004466248. Another option is [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-X969-13S Tainui 1910] featuring Maggie Caldwell, dairy maid, unaccompained single woman from Scotland. == Sources ==

Family of Samuel Augustus Floyd

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According to a life sketch on his [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LBWR-NJL FamilySearch profile], [[Floyd-7173|Samuel Augustus Floyd]] co-habitated with and had children with a Mulatto woman who may have once been enslaved. This space is to gather and organize evidence. == Life Sketch == by @lfmartens2769983 on FamilySearch Samuel Augustus Floyd is listed in Camden Co. Georgia census with live-in mulatto female and six mulatto children with the last name of Floyd. He was an invalid; sold Bellevue Place to a former slave, Pompey Floyd,in 1877 for $100. Parcel lines started at Schooner Landing. It included a spring, one hundred acres of high ground, and marsh land between Floyd's Creek and Todd's Creek. In Camden Co. GA's deed book page 161, 589 and 590 He is buried in St. Marys, Camden Co. Georgia. In 1870 census for Camden Co. GA he was listed as:head of household:invalid; value of his real estate diminished to $375; a female servant in household, living with him; she was a mulatto. She was a seamtress. After his mother died in 1859 he inherited the Bellevue homesite and St. Mary's. After the civil war he continued to live in Camden Co GA, dividing his time between Bellevue and St. Mary's. He was said to be "peculiar" by family members. At that time miscegenation was aginst the law in Georgia.. She did not get much work as a seamtress so in 1872 she left St. Mary's for Tocci on the St. James river in Florida. == Timeline == * He was born on 09 Jan 1814 in Camden County, Georgia, the son of [[Floyd-1076|Gen. John Floyd]] (1769-1839) and [[Hazzard-101|Isabella Maria (Hazzard) Floyd]] (1773-1859). * He never married.Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 12 * His father "bequeathed" 14 enslaved people to him in his will.Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 11 * He drew the lot for Little Cumberland Island (a property that once belonged to his father) after his father's death.Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 12 * He was recorded as the head of household of Bellevue Plantation in 1850 and his mother was living with him. They were the only two people in the household. His occupation was recorded as Musician (he played the violin).Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 14 '''1850 Census''': "United States Census, 1850"
citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.).
{{FamilySearch Record|MZYN-XG7}} (accessed 25 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|S3HT-XC3Q-VLP}} Image number 00338
Samuel Floyd (36) in Camden, Georgia, United States. Born in Georgia.
"JOURNAL OF HENRY HAMILTON FLOYD OF CAMDEN COUNTY", March 1852 entry. * He had 44 enslaved people in 1850. '''1850 Census (Slave Schedule)''': "United States Census (Slave Schedule), 1850"
citing Affiliate Publication Number: M432; Line: 1; FHL microfilm: 442897; Record number: 35515;
{{FamilySearch Record|HR7D-5WZM}} (accessed 25 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|S3HT-XX8W-S46}} Image number 00434
Saml Floyd in Camden, Georgia, United States.
* He sold Little Cumberland Island to George W. Stockwell in 1858 for $400.Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 14-15 * He inherited Bellevue after his mother's death in 1859.Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 15 * He was still living at Bellevue when the 1860 US Census was enumerated. He was the only person recorded for his household. His occupation was Farmer. '''1860 Census''': "United States Census, 1860"
citing Page: 2; Affiliate Publication Number: M653; Affiliate Film Number: 113; FHL microfilm: 803113; Record number: 5730;
{{FamilySearch Record|MZMH-X6L}} (accessed 25 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|33SQ-GYBG-Q2L}} Image number 00154
Sam A Floyd (42) in Baileys District, Camden, Georgia, United States. Born in Camden Co. Ga..
* No 1860 US Slave Census record was found for him. * Bellevue Plantation was mostly destroyed between 1861 and 1864 (Civil War-related).Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 16 * He was recorded living with a Mulatto woman named Polly Green and four Mulatto children with the Floyd surname when the 1870 US Census was enumerated. There were two other Mulatto young people in their 20s and one Black woman in her 50s (a servant) also living with him (all three also have the Floyd surname). Samuel's occupation was "invalid". '''1870 Census''': "United States Census, 1870"
citing Page: 8; Affiliate Publication Number: M593; Line: 13; FHL microfilm: 000545638; Record number: 21924;
{{FamilySearch Record|MCS2-5VM}} (accessed 25 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|S3HT-62YS-2HX}} Image number 00553
Samuel A Floyd (55) head of household in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States. Born in Georgia.
* He sold Bellevue Plantation and the surrounding property (collectively known as Bellevue Place) to a former slave named [[Floyd-7202|Pompey Floyd]] (he had already been living on the property) for $100 in 1877.Mathews, "Floyd Property" pg. 17 * He died on 16 Feb 1878 in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia.{{FindAGrave|111413751}} == Notes == * Polly Green's occupation was recorded as "seamstress" in 1870. In 1880 she was living in Saint Marys, Camden County, Georgia and was going by the name "Mary Floyd". She was also recorded as "Black" and "Married" even though there are no other males in the household besides her sons. Her occupation in 1880 was "Keeping House". None of her children are actually recorded as her children. The relationship fields were left blank. '''1870 Census for Polly Green''': "United States Census, 1870"
citing Page: 8; Affiliate Publication Number: M593; Line: 14; FHL microfilm: 000545638; Record number: 21924;
{{FamilySearch Record|MCS2-5V9}} (accessed 26 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|S3HT-62YS-2HX}} Image number 00553
Polly Green (48) in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States. Born in Georgia.
'''1880 Census for Mary Floyd''': "United States Census, 1880"
citing enumeration district , sheet , NARA microfilm publication T9 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), FHL microfilm .
{{FamilySearch Record|M8LD-FPV}} (accessed 26 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|33SQ-GYY5-HLZ}} Image number 00070
Mary Floyd (50), married, Keeping House, head of household in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States. Born in Georgia, United States.
* John Leonard Floyd was christened on 24 May 1896 in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia and his parents were recorded as Samuel Floyd and Polly Green. '''John Leonard Floyd's Christening''': "Georgia Births and Christenings, 1754-1960"
citing FHL microfilm: 177498; Record number: 28;
{{FamilySearch Record|HN1Q-DKW2}} (accessed 26 November 2022)
John Leonard Floyd christened on 24 May 1896 (born 7 Apr 1852), son of Samuel Floyd & Polly Green, in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States.
* Samuel and Polly (as Mary) are recorded in their daughter Mary Floyd's marriage record. '''Marriage of Mary Floyd and Thomas Eastmoore''': "New York, New York City Marriage Records, 1829-1938"
citing FHL microfilm: 1571005; Record number: 908;
{{FamilySearch Record|243W-BTX}} (accessed 27 November 2022)
Mary Floyde (20) marriage to Thomas Eastmoore (31) on 16 Jul 1887 in Manhattan, New York County, New York, United States.
* Henry Hamilton Floyd's parents are recorded as Samuel A Floyd and Pauline Green in a Social Security Record. They're Samuel Floyd and Polly Green in a Georgia death record. He appears in the household with Samuel and Polly in 1870. His birth year is the same in all three records. '''Social Security for Henry Hamilton Floyd''': "U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007"
Social Security Applications and Claims, 1936-2007
{{Ancestry Record|60901|12215115}} (accessed 26 November 2022)
Name: Henry Hamilton Floyd Sr; Gender: Male; Race: Black; Birth Date: 9 Mar 1865; Birth Place: Cedar Hill C, Georgia; Father: Samuel A Floyd; Mother: Pauline Greene; Notes: Jan 1938: Name listed as HENRY HAMILTON FLOYD SR.
'''Death Record for Henry H Floyd''': "Georgia Deaths, 1928-1943"
citing St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States, Georgia State Archives, Morrow.
{{FamilySearch Record|QJX9-ZKB1}} (accessed 26 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|939F-9MS2-SM}} Image number 00239
Henry H Floyd death 15 Aug 1938 (age 73) in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States.
'''1870 Census for Henry H Floyd''': "United States Census, 1870"
citing Page: 8; Affiliate Publication Number: M593; Line: 20; FHL microfilm: 000545638; Record number: 21924;
{{FamilySearch Record|MCS2-5V4}} (accessed 26 November 2022)
{{FamilySearch Image|S3HT-62YS-2HX}} Image number 00553
Henry H Floyd (5) in St. Marys, Camden, Georgia, United States. Born in Georgia.
== References == === Possible === * Marguerite Marreé Evans Mathews. "THE FLOYDS of CAMDEN COUNTY, GEORGIA." 1999. Archive.org. 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20081012180845/http://home.att.net/~mmevans/floydpage.htm. * "JOURNAL OF HENRY HAMILTON FLOYD OF CAMDEN COUNTY, GEORGIA FEBRUARY 1852 - MAY 1853." 2008. Archive.org. 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20080905210540/http://www.camdencounty.org/ebooks/diary_introduction.html. === Credible === * Mathews, Marguerite Marre Evans. 2006. "Floyd Property : Ownership & Descriptive Landmarks : Bellevue & Fairfield Plantations, Floyd’s Neck, Cabin Bluff, Hermitage, Brookfield, Shellbine, Black Point, St. Mary’s, Little Cumberland Island in Camden County, Georgia." [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/102942-floyd-property-ownership-descriptive-landmarks-bellevue-fairfield-plantations-floyd-s-neck-cabin-bluff-hermitage-brookfield-shellbine-black-point-st-mary-s-little-cumberland-island-in-camden-county-georgia FamilySearch]. * "Marmaduke Hamilton and Dolores Boisfeuillet Floyd Papers." 2012. Usg.edu. 2022. http://ghs.galileo.usg.edu/ghs/view?docId=ead/MS%201308-ead.xml;query=;brand=default.

Family of Thomas Newdigate-12

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== Observations on the Pedigree of Newdegate == '''Surrey archaeological collections''' https://archive.org/details/surreyarchaeolo06surr/page/228/mode/2up- From the year 1677 until 1806 the Warwickshire family enjoyed the dignity of a Baronet, and consequently its genealogy will be found in the larger baronetages, but certainly stated with great inaccuracy in regard to the earlier generations; and although Mr Bray has give [sic] a pedigree in his “History of Surrey.” [1] it is by no means satisfactory. Our county historian, however, is not a party to the much more censurable because fictitious account, which will be found prefacing the genealogy of the Newdigates in the current edition of Burke’s “History of the Landed Gentry.” The passages to which I allude are these:- ‘This family possessed, from time immemorial to the beginning of the reign of Charles I., the manor and lands of Newdegate, co. Surrey; and, from many ancient records, it appears that the name was written variously, Niwudegate, Niwodegate, Newedigate, Niudegate, Neudegate, originally perhaps from Saxony, and of the city of Nieuweide, upon the Rhine. The inter marriages of the famuly before that of Malmains are set forth in an illuminated pedigree, first taken by Henry Lillie, Rouge Croix, 1610; by Sir William Dugdale, Garter King of Arms, 1684; and lastly by Gregory King, Lancaster Herald, 1691, with the arms emblazoned thus; Newdegate and Warren, Newdegate and Pugeys, Newdegate and Mountfitchet, Newdegate and Roan, Newdegate and Sudeley, Newdegate and Ashburnham, Newdegate and Wintershull, Newdegate and Clare, Newdegate and Chenduit, Newdegate and Malmains, from which a regular descent commences for twenty-two generations.’ I view these passages of the last edition of the “History of the Landed Gentry” with the greater regret, because I find they are introduced therein for the first time, not having appeared in previous editions; whilst, generally speaking, there has been a judicious retrenchment of many offensive redundancies which formerly impaired the value of Sir Bernard Burke’s very laborious and useful compilation. The errors and absurdities now prefixed to the pedigree of Newdegate are manifold. [1] Vol. ii. p. 173. https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_History_and_Antiquities_of_the_Count/Yms-AQAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1 See Also – '''Visitations of Surrey''' taken 1530, 1572, and 1623. (1899): Bannerman ed.; pages 26-27. https://archive.org/details/visitationscoun01banngoog/page/n40/mode/2up?view=theater “Preface :- The present Volume consists of a literal transcript of a Manuscript in the British Museum numbered 1561 in the Harleian Collection. In vol. ii., p.126 of the Catalogue of the Harleian MSS. In the British Museum, printed in 1808, it is thus described:- 1561
An Heraldical Book in fol. Written and Tricked by Mr Richard Mundy, wherein are contained,
a. An Alphabetical Table of Surnames, referring to the Armes and Descents which follow.
b. Armes of the Gentry residing within the County of Surrey; hastily tricked within printed Escocheons [See appendix, p.227.]
c. Pedigrees registered at the Visitation of the County of Surrey AD 1530 by Thomas Benolt, Clarenceux, which have also the Fees paid then by the Gentry, thereunto annexed.
d. This is continued by,
The Descents registered AD 1572 at the Visitation of this County of Surrey by Robert Cook, Clarenceux; whereunto are added the Subscriptions of those who gave the Information. Both these are also continued by,
e. The Visitation of the same County, made in anno 1623 by Samuel Thompsonn al’s Windsore Herald and Augustine Vincent, Rouge-Croix, Marshalls and Deputies to William Camden, Clarenceux
Here are likewise added,
f. Divers Enlargements and Continuations by Mr Munday, Mr Robert Dale and others
g. '''Many additional Descents, not registered at the preceding Visitations; entered by Mr Munday.'''
There is a Crosslet Cross at the beginning of the Pedigree for Newdigate.
An explanation of the symbol on page xi reads - “Note that all the Rest of the descents thus marked with (crosslet cross symbol) at the beginning are descents of this same County and are in none of the three Visitations but some of them that are (crosslet cross symbol) are descents which were entered in the last Visitation”. See also – '''Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem''' - Edward III; Vol. 9; page 319 https://archive.org/details/cu31924011387879/page/318/mode/2up The IPM’s for Nicholas Malemayns or de Malemayns And The Genealogist - '''Chancery Proceedings''' https://archive.org/details/genealogist04lond1887/page/76/mode/2up?q=malemayne : The Chancery Proceedings would appear to contradict the information of Nicholas Malemayns family from the IPM’s. == Was Thomas the son of Walter and Isabel Newdigate? == When Thomas Newdigate-12 made his Will on 4th April 1559 he made mention of "sister Anne Skynner and children of sister Pope deceased". * my 'sister Anne Skynner' was the wife of "John Skynner my brother-in-law". According to the Visitation of Surrey and the pedigree of Skinner https://archive.org/details/visitationsofcou43beno/page/58/mode/2up?q=skynner 'John Skinner of Dowdes in the parish of Rigate' married 'Anne the d.o THOMAS Newdigate' * my 'sister Pope deceased' was Elizabeth Pope nee Newdigate the wife of Edmund Pope of Hendall, Buxted in Sussex and the 'd.o THOMAS Newdigate' https://archive.org/details/visitationsofcou5354beno/page/n115/mode/2up?q=pope. As Thomas acknowledges both Anne and Elizabeth as his sisters, and both these sisters are shown as being the daughter of THOMAS Newdigate, it is reasonable to suppose that Thomas Newdigate-12 is also the son of THOMAS Newdigate and not a Walter. Query - why would the note on Newdigate-12 read " Probably incorrectly listed in the Visitations of Sussex as the father (rather than brother) of Elizabeth Newdigate the wife of Edmund Pope of Hendall.[16]". There is no source attached to explain why this conclusion is drawn, and I would suggest that the above shows that Elizabeth Pope nee Newdigate was probably CORRECTLY listed as the daughter of THOMAS Newdigate. === Did Walter Newdigate actually exist?? === I would suggest that none of the listed ‘sources’ actually constitute a primary source for Walter Newdigate-9 * [1] Visitation of Surrey –Newdigate pedigree p.26 https://archive.org/details/visitationsofcou43beno/page/26/mode/2up [Harl. 1561, fos. 25b and 26]; there is no mention of Wivelsfield; Walter is shown as the son of Tho. Newdigate of Newdigate in Surrey and his wife Allice. It should also be noted that there is no named wife for Walter. * [2] Maclean, Sir John. Memoir of the Family of Poyntz. Exeter: privately printed for the subscribers by William Pollard & Co, 1886. ** p.156 (cited) shows the pedigree of ‘Poyntz of Reigate, Surrey and Mells, Somerset’ and states “Elizabeth, da and coh. of Thomas Newdigate of Wivelsfield Sussex (son of Walter Newdigate by Isabella, dau of Sir Thomas Hampden of Baddesley, co. Herts.) There are no sources attached to support this statement. ** p 117 states that Anne Newdigate (the wife of John Skynner of Reigate) was the daughter of Walter Newdigate. ** This is again stated on page 133 the pedigree of ‘Skynner of Reigate’. Again no sources are attached to support these statements. ** These three statements implying Thomas Newdigate of Wivelsfield and Anne Newdigate the wife of John Skynner of Reigate are ** a. Brother and sister ** b. The son and daughter of Walter Newdigate ** The ‘Skinner’ pedigree in the Visitation of Surrey however, https://archive.org/details/visitationscoun01banngoog/page/n72/mode/2up?view=theater&q=skynner records John Skynner of Reigate married Anne the daughter of Thomas Newdigate
* [3] Magna Carta Ancestry – cites ** a. Memoir of the Family of Poynts 1886 privately printed (see 2 above) ** b. Visitation of Surrey 1530; 1572 and 1623 (see 1 above) ** c. Bodine. Anc. of Dorothea Poyntz, 1995 ** d. ESRO Cat. Refs AMS 4128 1550; AMS 4129 1549; AMS 5789/59 1557 – All of these refer to THOMAS Newdegate of Wivelsfield not Walter. * [4] HoP John Skinner – information is for “Anne, da. of Thomas or Walter Newdigate” possibly citing the visitation of Surrey * [5] 'Ancestors of John Harper and Christine Robinson' (self published family history) 2018 – the information presented here is an amalgamation of several different Skinner families and is confusing an Essex Skinner family with the Surrey (Reigate) family of Skinner. Regarding the relevance to the Newdigate family – the publication states “Ann Elizabeth Nowdigate, daughter of Walter Newdigate and Isabella Hampden was born in 1511 in CLAVERING ESSEX ENGLAND. She died on 28 June 1582 in Albury Surrey England. There are NO sources offered for this information. * [6] Visitation of Sussex ; Pope pedigree [Harl. 1562, fos 76a and 77] – this is a reference to Edmond Pope who married “Elizabeth dau of Thomas Newdigate” – there are no places named and no mention of “Walter Newdigate” * Visitation of Buckinghamshire in 1634, Hampden pedigree – this is a reference to “Tho. Newdigate 2nd husband” – again there are no places named and no mention of “Walter Newdigate”. * Duplicate “Memoir of the Family of Poyntz” source (see 2 above) * Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz – unable to view page 12; the only reference available is a snippet view of page 15 – “38. Walter Newdigate (FP 156; VSU 26)” which I take to mean “Family Poyntz page 156” – see 2 above; and Visitation of Surrey page 26” – see 1 above - '''Mr R Bodine has confirmed that the information for Walter in the publication was based on secondary sources, and as this publication is cited by Mr D Richardson, the conclusion must be that Mr Richardson did not find any primary sources'''. The National Archives references are also available on the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO) catalogue – there are six transactions recorded between 1527-1557 for a “Thomas Newdegate of Wivelsfield, gent” plus one record for a “Thomas Newdegate of Lindfield, gent” in 1535, but the ESRO catalogue has no record of a “Walter N*gate” of Sussex let alone Wivelsfield and British History Online has only one mention of a “Mr Newdigate” in Wivelsfield and that is in the 1559-1563 period. A search for "Walter" "Wivelsfield" "1400-1600" on the collections of * National Archives * East Sussex Record Office (ESRO) The Keep * West Sussex Record Office * Surrey History Centre * London Metropolitan Archives produces NO results for Walter Newdigate (or variant spellings). == Was Thomas the husband of Katherine Ferrers nee Hampden? == '''According to the Will of Thomas Newdigate-12, which he made on 4th April 1559, the answer is NO.''' === What is known of Thomas Newdigate === From the Will that Thomas made, on 4th April 1559, it is possible to say that # he had four living children at that date - Thomas, Elizabeth, Barbara and Dorothy - who were all under the age of 21. The earliest date that his first child could have been born would be 5th April 1538. # he had a sister, Anne, who was married to John Skynner and the mother of Thomas's nephew, John Skynner # he had a sister, now deceased, who was married to a Mr Pope and had children with him. (his sister's name was Elizabeth and the Mr Pope was Edmund Pope of Buxted in Sussex) # his 'now wife Jane' and the 7 children from her 2 previous marriages; 5 with Mr aChamber and 2 with Mr John Parker (Jane was formerly Parker formerly de la Chambre nee Farnefolde) # he had a 'kinsman' John Newdegate # he had an aunt in Buckinghamshire, Alice Saunder, who had the 'keeping of my ii daughters'. Her identity has three possibilities - ## the spinster sister of Thomas's Saunder mother ## the sister of Thomas's mother (maiden name unknown) who married a Mr Saunder ## the sister of Thomas's father who married a Mr Saunder # he had two Vavysor brothers-in-law, George and Thomas, who were his 'late wife's brothers (the conclusion to be drawn from this is that Thomas Newdigate's late wife, and by extension the mother of his children, was a Miss Vavysor). In his Will, Thomas names the following people - * daughters Elizabeth, Barbara, and Dorothy, to receive £100 each when 21 * nephew John Skynner * my sister Anne Skinner * Thomas my son at 21 * '''Jane''' my wife * the children of sister Pope deceased * John Newdegate my kinsman * Alice Saunder my aunt in Buckinghamshire * George and Thomas Vavysor my late wife's brothers * wife's daughter Dorothy Achamber * Anne (AChamber) her sister * John Achamber * Tristram his brother * Edward Parker one of my wife's sons by Mr. John Parker * Thomas Parker his brother * Eve Achamber my wife's daughter. === The Vavasour/Vavysor brothers-in-law to Thomas === * Thomas - https://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/london-physicians/1550-1640/vavasour-thomas * Alice daughter of Edward Vavasor of Overston Northamptonshire - https://archive.org/details/visitationsnort00vincgoog/page/n196/mode/2up - notice that Alice's son Maurice married Margaret the daughter of Ambrose Sanders... NB there is also a Henry Vavasour admitted to Middle Temple 1554 here https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_TZAA4_YOnsAx937aNm-sp_RkHj9XtaO/view at about the same time as John Skynner son and heir of John Skynner of Reigate and Richard Elyott son and heir of Richard Elyott of Reigate gent. Also an Edward son of John https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_TZAA4_YOnsAx937aNm-sp_RkHj9XtaO/view See also Vavasour pedigree here - https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/509079/?offset=49811#page=52&viewer=picture&o=search&n=0&q=%22peter%20vavasour%22 page one and https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/509079/?offset=49811#page=53&viewer=picture&o=search&n=0&q=%22peter%20vavasour%22 page two == Sources == * https://archive.org/details/surreyarchaeolo06surr/page/226/mode/2up

Family of W J Bradwen-Jones and Matilda Courtney Nesbitt

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== Records == === Marriage === [https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details-civil/7512d32576361 WIlliam Jones, Matilda Nesbitt, 28 Nov 1891, GR 2576361, SR Belfast] at Irish Civil Registration. * Marriage solemnized at the Carlisle (?) Church in the City of Belfast in the County of Antrim. * 28th November 1891. * William James Bradwen Jones, Age full, Bachelor, Master Mariner, residence: London Road, Holyhead. Son of William Bradwen Jones, Gentleman * Matilda Courtney Newsbitt, full age, Spinster, residence: 11 (?), Belfast. Daughter of Thomas Hunter Nesbitt, mechanical engineer. * Witnesses: Henry James Varian; May June Swart Nisbit (sp?) === 1901 census === [http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Antrim/Clifton/Kinnaird_Terrace/961944/ Census Years/1901/Antrim/Clifton/Kinnaird Terrace/Residents of a house] Residents of a house 7 in Kinnaird Terrace (Clifton, Antrim) tab2wiki Tools Git Talk Powered by Wikimedia Toolforge Copy the following into the wiki - done! {| border="1" class="sortable" !Surname!!Forename!!Age!!Sex!!Relation to head!!Religion!!Birthplace!!Occupation!!Literacy!!Irish Language!!Marital Status!!Specified Illnesses |- |Bradwen-Jones||William James||46||Male||Brother in Law||Episcopalian||Holyhead, North Wales||Master Mariner||Read and write||-||Married||- |- |Hafford||Edith Mary||23||Female||Governess||Episcopalian||Londonderry||Governess||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |Nesbitt||David||50||Male||Head of Family||Methodist||Mallusk, Belfast||Secretary Machine Works||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||Thomas Nesbitt||1||Male||Nephew||Episcopalian||Belfast||-||-||-||Not Married||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||William Wynne||7||Male||Nephew||Episcopalian||Dublin||Scholars||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||Anna Matilda Courtney||6||Female||Niece||Episcopalian||Belfast||Scholars||Read and write||-||Not Married||- |- |Fulton||Mary||54||Female||Servant||Episcopalian||Clones||Domestic (General Servant)||Read and write||-||Widow||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||Matilda Courtney||40||Female||Sister||Episcopalian||Mallusk, Belfast||-||Read and write||-||Married||- |} === 1911 census === [http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Antrim/Clifton__Belfast_Urban_No__2/Salisbury_Avenue/134731/ Census Years/1911/Antrim/Clifton, Belfast Urban No. 2/Salisbury Avenue/Residents of a house] Residents of a house 18 in Salisbury Avenue (Clifton, Belfast Urban No. 2, Antrim) {| border="1" class="sortable" !Surname!!Forename!!Age!!Sex!!Relation to head!!Religion!!Birthplace!!Occupation!!Literacy!!Irish Language!!Marital Status!!Specified Illnesses!!Years Married!!Children Born!!Children Living |- |Nesbitt||David||60||Male||Head of Family||Methodist||County Antrim||Proctor of Nesbitt Bros Ltd||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||Matilda Courtney||50||Female||Sister||Church of Ireland||County Antrim||-||Read and write||-||Widow||-||-||-||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||William Wynne||17||Male||Nephew||Church of Ireland||Dublin||Apprentice Engineer||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||Anna Matilda Courtney||16||Female||Niece||Church of Ireland||Belfast||Scholar||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Bradwen-Jones||Thomas Nesbitt||11||Male||Nephew||Church of Ireland||Belfast||Scholar||Read and write||-||Single||-||-||-||- |- |Varian||Jane Augusta||60||Female||Visitor||Church of Ireland||Holyhead||-||Read and write||-||Widow||-||-||-||- |- |Fulton||Mary||67||Female||Servant||Church of Ireland||Co Galway||General Servant||Read and write||-||Widow||-||-||-||- |}

Family of William, Joshua, and Elizabeth Jane Wilson

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I believe the parents of these children are Isaac James and Louisa Wilson. Here is my reasoning and research findings. == The Players == === First Generation === *[[Wilson-27385|Isaac James Wilson]] *Louisa Wilson (maiden name unknown for now) === Second Generation === *[[Wilson-27384|William Wilson]] (married [[Faulkner-1699|Nancy M Faulkner]]) *[[Wilson-4426|Joshua Sampson Wilson]] (married [[Walker-17398|Hester E. Walker]]) *[[Wilson-27386|Elizabeth J Wilson]] (married [[Foster-9549|Solomon Joseph Foster]]) === Third Generation (not complete) === ==== Children of William Wilson and Nancy M Faulkner ==== *[[Wilson-28358|William S Wilson]] (married [[Daniel-3108|Louise Daniel]]) *[[Wilson-28316|George Hamilton Wilson]] (married [[Travis-1719|Minnie J Travis]] and [[Parsons-4750|Ella Mae Parsons Casteel]] *[[Wilson-28355|Herman Luther Wilson]] (married [[Nelson-8655|Mollie Nelson]]) *[[Wilson-28354|Henry L Wilson]] ==== Children of Joshua Sampson Wilson and Hester E. Walker (complete) ==== *[[Wilson-4427|Preston Wilson]] (married Jessie Travis) *[[Wilson-4425|Mary Ann Louise Wilson]] (married [[Coleman-800|Floyd Arthur Coleman]]) *[[Wilson-4428|Pernato Wilson]] *[[Wilson-4429|Jerusha Wilson]] (married [[Lawson-3128|Spence V Lawson]]) ==== Children of Elizabeth J Wilson and Solomon Joseph Foster ==== * [[Foster-9547|Charlie Franklin Foster]] * [[Foster-9546|Thomas William Foster]] * [[Foster-9545|Nancy Foster]]

Family of William Wheatley and Harriet Piper New Zealand 1910 - 2010

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Wheatley Family History book created by [[Wheatley-2118|Maureen Wheatley]] and [[Wheatley-2119|Ken Wheatley]]. Contains interviews with family members, family photos, and detailed family tree of the descendants of [[Wheatley-1304|William Wheatley]] and [[Piper-2150|Harriet Piper]] as at the time of writing in 2012. ==Citing this source:== To cite this source on any page, copy the following text:
* [[Space:Family_of_William_Wheatley_and_Harriet_Piper_New_Zealand_1910_-_2010|Family of William Wheatley and Harriet Piper New Zealand 1910-2010]]

Family Pet

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Toby was the black and white cat owned by [[George-1468|Joseph Brinley George]] and [[Evans-4331|May Evans]].

Family Photos

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These are family photos hands down toRichard Saylor

Family Photos Kimbel-162

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An extra place to post photos that I wish to share.

Family Photos-2

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My family photos.

Family Pics of Dever Langholf Sr

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Family_Pics_of_Dever_Langholf_Sr.jpg
== Pictures of the Family of Dever Langholf Sr == * [[Langholf-10|Dever Langholf Sr]] * [[Jackson-4561|Fran Jackson]] * [[Langholf-13|Dever Langholf Jr]] * [[Langholf-7|Jeff Langholf]] * [[Langholf-12|Doug Langholf]]

Family Pictures

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Misc. family Photos

Family postcards

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Scans of postcards connected to Ada Waite Overend Fletcher.

Family Property Deeds In Lapeer County, Michigan

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Deed# K-312 8 March 1854 - John and Henrietta Hilliker of Metamora, Warranty Deed To Thomas P. Richmond of Conesus, Livingston, New York Deed# O-134 1857 - Richmond, Thos. P., Homestead Deed# P-414 Recorded: 26 Oct 1857, Made: 9 June 1857 Jacob C. Lamb, Warranty Deed To Thomas P. Richmond Deed# S-53 19 Dec 1860 James S. Johnston and Mary Warranty Deed To James More, All of Lapeer Deed# S-414 Made: 2 June 1860 Thomas P. Richmond Warranty Deed To James More Thomas P. Richmond and wife, Laura, of Lapeer and James More of same place... Deed# S-499 18 Jan 1862 Israel Bissel and Belinda, To James More of Metamora Deed# T-17 Recorded: 20 Sept 1861 James and Cynthia More of Lapeer Co. To Harriet J. and Joseph Seeley of Dryden NE ¼ of NE ¼ of Section 8 T6NR11E except ½ acre and ten rods....heretofore contracted to School District #4 in Dryden in SE corner of above described premises Deed# W-36 Lewis Thorn, Stanford, Dutchess Co., NY, QC, James More Recorded: 17 February 1865 Deed W-363 Recorded: 29 January 1866 Thomas Dirstine of Metamora QC ToJames More of the same place [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS9B-S663?i=204&cat=113327] Mortgage Deed 33-481 M: 18 April 1883 R: 7 May 1883 Ward B. and Charles A. More To Charles Ferguson, Mortgage Deed# 42-8 22 Nov 1872 Administrator's Deed James More To Jacob C. Lam William Barber, administrator to the estate of James More, 5 Jany 1872, Probate Deed# 42-232 10 June 1886 Guardian Deed Kezziah More by Guardian John F. More To Ward B. More I, John F. More, Guardian of the estate of Kezziah More, a minor child of Marian A. More, dec'd......Prob. 8 Jany 1886 Deed# 44-121 8 November 1873 John F. More and Marian, wife, of Lapeer To Cynthia Marshall, of Thornville ... and also all of our interest in the personal estate of James More, deceased, late of said county Deed# 46-499 14 March 1891 Cynthia Moore To Frank Arnold Cynthia Moore, formerly Cynthia Marshall, of Metamora, Lapeer... Deed# 49-594 5 April 1882 Cynthia More (formerly Cynthia Marshall) And Ward B. More The Interest of John F. More, heir at law of James More, deceased….Re: mortgage and/or QC deed 8 Oct 1873 Deed# 51-468 R: 5 Feby 1877 M: 29 Aug 1874 Sylvester P. Marshall and Synthia, his wife, of Lapeer, And Elizabeth Bryce of Maple Valley, Sanilac Co., MI Deed #59-13 28 April 1879 J.F. and L. Moore and [Cynthia] Marshall To T.. and M. Hilliker Deed# 72-230 30 January 1886 Carrie More, widow of the late Charles A. More, deceased, Lapeer, TO James L. More of Metamora Deed# 74-526 Recorded: 9 Feb 1888; Made: 14 Dec 1887 ESTATE OF JAMES MORE, Agreement To Cynthia More Deed# 78-27 Recorded: 3 Jany 1888 Made: 13 Dec 1877 James Levi More and Rosa, wife, of the first part, heirs of James More, deceased To Ward B. More of Dryden Witnesses: John Barden and Addie More Deed# 78-55 9 Feby 1888 Made: 13 Dec 1887 Ward B. More and Jennie, his wife, of Dryden TonJames Levi More of Metamora [Heirs of James More, deceased] Deed# 78-97 Recorded: 7 April 1888 Made: 12 March 1888 Ward B. More To James L. More Between Ward B. More & Jennie L. More, his wife, of Las Vegas Territory of New Mexico, County of San Miguel, of the first part, to James L. More of Metamora, Lapeer County, Michigan, of the second part... Twp. of Attica - NE 1/4 of NE 1/4 of Section 20 in Twn 7 North of Range 11 East Signed: S. B. Maydwell & C.S. Maydwell Territory of New Mexico County of San Miguel Deed# 78-515 24 May 1890 Jennie More To Cynthia More Deed# 79-476 28 May 1885 James L. More and wife To Wm B Sutton and Elisha Havers? Attica Twp Deed# 80-167 M: 17 May 1889 Ward B. More of Metamora, Quit Claim To Jennie More, his wife Deed# 82-600 29 Jany 1890 James Levi More, Metamora To Francis M. West Deed# 84-147 M: 6 Jany 1890 Cynthia More of Dryden To Jennie More, Metamora Deed# 88-183 3 Jan 1894 James L. More and Rosa B. More of Metamora, Quit Claim To Addie M. Powers of Battle Creek Deed# 96-311 23 Aug 1897 Jennie More, Metamora To Isaac Newton Deed# 96-336 18 Sept 1897 Mary A. Powers of Flint, Genesee Co., To Melvin Hill, Dryden Village of Dryden: east 15 feet of Lot 7, Block 10, Section 11, Twn 6 N R 11 E Witnesses: Jared Van Vleet and James Van Vleet (Notary in Genesee Co) Deed# 104-427 Made: 4 May 1903 Cynthia Moore of Dryden To Addie M. Powers, of Dryden

FAMILY RECORD BY JOSEPH EUSEBE LABRIE, SR. version January 24, 1901

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''This family history was written by Joseph E. LaBrie Sr. Mar 15, 1893 and translated by A.F. Labrie in 1901 was published in "Francois Marcelle LaBrie & Marie Constance Lemieux, Their Ancestors and Heirs" in 1998 by Mary Gentle. It is now out of print.'' --Translated by A. F. LaBrie, June 1912. Given to Grace LaBrie, Redfield, SD "My ancestors had the name and signed -Migneault dit (or said) LaBrie. I was born at Cape St. Ignace, August 20, 1822. My father, [[Labrie-204|Francois Marcelle Migneault dit Labrie]] was born at Cape St. Ignace, June 1,1781. Died April 7, 1844. My grandfather, [[Mignealt-39|Francois Migneault dit Labrie]] was born at St. Anne in May 1745, died November 1, 1882 aged 77 years and 6 months. He had two wives, the first named [[Bernier-647|Marie-Claire Bernier]] (granddaughter of Grandma St. Aubin.) Two children were born from this marriage: Joseph and Claire. Of the second marriage to [[Durand-386|Julie Durand]], were born two children: Francois Marcelle (my father) and Marie Anne who died at age 4 months. He was married a second time to [[Methot-161|Marie Rose Methotte]], daughter of Soupirant Methotte and Rose Dion, to whom were born 15 children, Damase, Liza, Flavie, Boniface, Jean-Baptiste, Joseph Eusebe, Alix, Thonile, Edward, Pierre, Ferdinand, Genevieve, Adelle, Drasime, and Emelie. My mother died September 7, 1836 at "Pointe a la mule" and was buried at St. Valentine on September 9, 1836.Today, March 15, 1893, six of my brothers and sisters are alive: Liza, aged 78; Flavie, Joseph Eusebe 71; Thonile, 67; Drasime, 59. I was 8 years old when my father sold the old home at Cape Ignace and moved to Pierre de la river du Sud. In 1836 he sold his property at St. Pierre and moved to George Henriville, in the Duseau road, where I resided from November 7 1836 to August 30 1847. My father died April 7, 1844 and is buried in the cemetery of the parish of George Henriville, April 9,1844. On May 8, 1844, I married Marie-Louise Brosseau, daughter of Antoine Brosseau and Louise Moreau, of the parish of St. George Henriville. She was born in said parish of St. George Henriville, Aug 20, 1825. Of this marriage were born 15 children. I sold the land I owned in Duseau Road in June 1847 and emigrated to the United States, August 30, 1847 and on September 7, 1847 I landed at Chicago, with my wife and two children and two of my brothers Marcelle and Drasime and three of sisters, Flavie, Genevieve and Adelle. I located near Aurora, Kane County, Illinois. On October 25, 1851 I left Aurora and emigrated to Bourbonais in Will County on the left bank of the Kankakee River where Kankakee City now is located. Our daughter, Louise was born there soon after on October 27,1851. On June 7, 1852, my wife's father died , mile and a half north of the village of Bourbonais and a few days after his death I went to reside with my wife's mother where we lived two years. On August 16. 1853 my wife came to Manteno, where I had gone in March 1853. We lived at Manteno 26 years. On January 20, 1879 I left Manteno to go to the Pacific Coast, where I lived till March 1, 1882. I arrived in Sumner, Spink County, Dakota Territory March 24, 1882 where part of my family was located and the family of my brother Marcelle. The two families and their families formed the "Labrie tribe". My wife, Lucille and Anatole were at Joe's and we lived there all summer. I filed on a tree claim and a homestead and made improvements required by law, including a house on the homestead. November 18, 1882 we moved to Frankfort where we passed the winter and remained at Frankfort until fall. I bought two yoke of oxen and a plow and we broke 115 acres, in the fall plowed them back (backset). We lived on the homestead five years and on July 15, Armand and Lucille left to go to reside at at George, Illinois. On November 27, my wife and I moved to Doland where we passed the winter. On February 28, 1890, Lucille died and was buried at St. George. On March 31, 1880 we moved to Sumner in our house, on our homestead and resided there to November 1895. My wife began to have rheumatism and on September 14, 1895 we sold the horses and cattle and household goods and moved to Doland for the winter and on the 18th of June we left Dakota to reside with Armand. We visited our relatives and friends in Kankakee County and on September 29, 1895 we moved to Momence, in the priest house where we lived 4 years. On September 4, 1900, my wife died at 5:00 a.m. and was buried at Manteno. Her death was rheumatism caused by kidney disease. Her sickness lasted 5 years. On May 7, 1894 we celebrated our golden wedding. Our married life lasted 54 years and 4 months. I continue to live at Momence with Armand." '' Note: Joseph Eusabe LaBrie Sr. died at Momence, Illinois at the priest house November 29, 1902 and was buried at Manteno, Illinois.''

Family Record of Chester Clark and Saviah Matteson

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== Description == This is a transcript of a handwritten image posted on Ancestry.com by "JOHNNA" on 1 Feb 2016. It is located at URL https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/46559432/photox/9ddd35f7-5776-4dd5-8ed2-0d0aa6074fda The Ancestry metadata identify it as a Family Bible entry. It does not appear to be a family bible maintained by the people it documents. Rather, it appears to be a family member's compilation of research or received/remembered information about family. == Text == Record of the family of Chister and Saviah Clark Parents :[[Clark-39479|Chister Clark]] was born Feb 1st 1784 :and died July 17th 1846 aged 62 years 5 m + 16 d :[[Matteson-470|Saviah Matteson]]The name Matteson is inserted with a carat. Clark was born Oct 3d 1791 :Died March 14th 1870 in the 79th year of her age Children :Emily Maria was born Oct 13th 1809 :Died Sept 14th 1893 - Aged 83 years 11 m + 1 day : Lucy Catharine was born May 24th 1811 : Lucy C Clark Massey died Oct 1st 1834 : Parmelia Jane was born April 30th 1814 :Died Feb 10 1882 : [[Clark-42575|Albert Burr Clark]] was born Feb 23d 1817 : Died Feb 10 1882 :Elvira Jane was born Feb 23d 1820 :Elvira J Clark Cleveland died Oct 25 1847 : An Infant Daughter Aug 12th 1822 :Died Aug 25 1822 == Notes == * [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Family_Record_of_Chester_Clark_and_Saviah_Matteson|WikiTree pages that link here]]

Family Reflections: Mary Eleanore Orr: Seafaring Men

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From the profile [[Orr-601 | Mary Eleanor Orr]] My father was descended from a race of seafaring men. The Orr family came from that part of Scotland through which flows the river of that name, but Father's ancestors were living as early as 1688 near "Derry," as he always called it (not "Londonderry," which he said was the name given it by the English) in the northern part of Ireland. Father's great grandfather James Orr, for whom he was named, and the first of the family to settle in Ireland, was a Captain in the British Navy. His son Hugh Orr followed his father's footsteps. When his only son John Orr was born, the father planned that he too should serve in the British Navy. With this end in view, when John Orr was a boy of fourteen years, his father took him on a long cruise. The boy was charmed with the life on board ship, and wanted to enter the Navy as soon as possible. But Captain Orr said no, that his son must go back to school. In three or four years he would be ready to enter the service, and then Captain Hugh Orr would be glad to have his son join the Navy. The boy obeyed. But in the next two or three years, events in Ireland took a turn for the worse. Captain Hugh Orr returned from another long cruise and learned from the teachers that his boy had done well at school and was well prepared to take his examinations for the Navy. To his father's great surprise and regret, young John Orr told his father that, though he loved the sea as much as ever, he had given up all thought of entering the Navy. The thinking young men had written and talked to some effect. Though of a Scotch and Protestant family, John Orr told his father that he still wanted to go to sea, that he loved a ship better than he would love a castle, and the sea better than the land, but if he joined the British Navy, he might be called upon "to fight against Ireland." Captain Hugh Orr was much grieved at what he considered a foolish notion of his son's, but perhaps he felt that his son knew what would come. At all events, John Orr was continued at school, and it was not long after this that Captain Hugh Orr died. Left to his own action and feeling that he must follow the sea, John Orr became, at first, Mate and then Captain of a small vessel trading between Belfast and Liverpool. But this did not content him, and he also made visits to London. He shipped with a Liverpool Captain who was going to Calcutta. He returned in safety, made another voyage to India, and after some years became Mate then Captain in the British East India Service. Meanwhile, Captain John Orr had married and had three daughters. His wife complained bitterly of his long periods of absence from home, but could not convince him that he should give up the life at sea. They had three children, all girls: Eliza (Mrs. Collins), Alice (Mrs. Hill) and Mary. Finally a son James Orr was born. Captain Orr was delighted that the new baby was a son. He was just about to take another trip to the Far East, but promised his wife that it was to be his last voyage. Capt. Orr said that, as he had agreed to make the voyage to Calcutta, he could not well break the engagement, but that after that trip, he would "stay at home with his son." Just after reaching Calcutta he sent (by a ship leaving for England) a letter to his wife, saying that the trip had been an unusually quick and pleasant one. The merchandise brought out and in which he had a share had been sold to great advantage, he was busy getting a return cargo, and hoped soon to start on his homeward voyage. He wrote that he was anxious now to be at home and to stay there, "with his son!" But he did not come home, and no other letter ever came to the wife in Ireland. Inquiries sent by the family to Calcutta and to the Liverpool owners showed that a return cargo had been secured, and that on a certain date the ship had left India, but the ship was never heard from afterwards. Just after the ship had left Calcutta, there had been very severe storms in the Indian Ocean, and the belief was that all on board must have perished. Aunt Hill used to say that she believed that her father was "lost in a storm in the Irish Sea as his ship was nearing Liverpool." Aunt Hill's idea might have evolved from the date of her mother's letter from India; it would be a long time before they could possibly expect him to reach England, and when they thought he was near Liverpool, he most probably had been lost months before. Our father was then a young baby. He grew to boyhood cared for by mother and sisters, but never knowing a father's love. '''Voyage to America''' One of Father's mother's sisters (Mary) had married in Ireland, but had lost her husband, and married again. The second marriage was to Mr. Robert Ritchie, a very excellent young Scotchman. Very early in the eighteen hundreds, Father's Uncle and Aunt Mary Ritchie came to Virginia. They were delighted with the place, the people and the climate, and wanted relatives on both sides to come over. Mrs. Ritchie wrote especially wanting her mother (who was then about sixty) to come. Alice Orr, Father's sister, was the first of Aunt Mary Ritchie's relatives to accept the invitation. She was about sixteen when she arrived in Petersburg, and had left school. But Aunt Richie said that she was too young for that, and promptly sent her off to Farmington to a noted boarding school in Connecticut (Miss Porter's). There a young Mr. Hill fell very much in love with her, followed her to Virginia when school was over, courted and married her. He died young, leaving her a widow with two sons and two daughters. Then Aunt Ritchie wrote begging her mother to come and visit her. Our father was the special pet of his maternal grandmother (who had been a Miss Allen). When Father was about fourteen, his grandmother said that she would come, "if her little grandson could come with her." Boy-like (with his inherited love for the sea), he was very anxious to take the trip, and his mother consented. Aunt Ritchie wrote that they must come in the spring, that the spring voyages were pleasantest, and they must stay at least until the next spring. The captain of the ship in which Father and his grandmother came to America was Captain Samuel Hunter. They had been in Virginia for about six months only when the grandmother was taken ill and died. Just about that time the trouble with England (which led to the War of 1812) began. Father was about 16. Aunt Ritchie, who had no children and who was devoted to her young nephew, could not bear the idea of his returning in such troublous times, especially as England had commenced to impress men and even boys on any ship which her naval men chose to search, and would then force them to serve on British Men of War. So Father's departure from Virginia was for a time delayed. At this time the War of 1812 was in progress. The British landed at Norfolk on Chesapeake Bay and were reported as being on the march for Petersburg and Richmond. All British subjects in Petersburg were taken westward under guard and carried as far as Farmville. Father protested vehemently that his sympathies were not with the British, but entirely with America, that he did not consider himself a British subject, that his father before him would not join the Navy, because he felt more love for Ireland than for Great Britain, etc. They carried him to Farmville all the same, with other British subjects. After reaching Farmville, he was given a calmer and less hurried interview, when the authorities decided that he was "all right" and let him return to Petersburg. Though not of military age, he at once joined a company for home defense. He was in camp on "The heights" (about where Shore Street now is). Then, as the enemy had been forced to retreat, his company was marched out of service. The first news received from Father's mother, soon after that war ended, was that after waiting fifteen years, she and her friends all believed Captain Orr to have perished at sea, and that she had married again! Father was horrified and indignant. He had never given up the hope that his father might have been saved and might some day return. H seemed to have the idea that his father might have been captured by pirates (the "Algerians" were extremely troublesome at that time) or that he might have been cast on a desert island, and might possibly be rescued. Father then said that he never would go back to Ireland, a decision which greatly delighted Aunt Richie. '''Young James Orr''' Father was only sixteen, or very little over. He always wrote a very clear, good hand, and he soon made himself an excellent bookkeeper. So successful was he that, before he was eighteen years of age, a "dashing" young man of considerable fortune from Brunswick County, who desired to establish himself in the wholesale grocery and commission business in Petersburg, asked Father to go into partnership with him. It was considered a great chance for so young a man, as Mr. Wilson was rich and had rich friends whose business he could command. So the partnership of Wilson and Orr was formed. The business seemed to prosper; but after about a year or so, Father found that his partner was an inveterate card player, that he played for high stakes, and had lost much money in the past year. Feeling that under such conditions no business undertaking could succeed, Father proposed to withdraw from the concern. Not wishing to wound the feelings of Mr. Wilson, Father put it as well as he could on his own youth and inexperience. He said that he felt that he ought to have been a clerk longer before undertaking the responsibilities of so large a concern, and that he thought it would be better to dissolve the partnership. Mr. Wilson, always a gentleman in manners and courtesy, listened patiently. He tried to persuade Father to remain, but finding him firm in his purpose to withdraw, expressed his regret. Seemingly generous and considerate, Mr. Wilson said that he would take a trip to New York to pay debts owed by the firm there, and that as soon as he returned, the partnership would be dissolved. He begged Father to wait until his return from New York before formally dissolving the partnership. To this Father consented. Mr. Wilson left, taking with him five thousand dollars of the firm's money to pay debts owed by the firm and considerably more for the purchase of new supplies. He had also enough money of his own to pay all expenses of the trip, which in those days was made by boat from Norfolk. There was a regular line of packets sailing from Norfolk to New York, but their sailing dates were dependent upon cargoes and weather. There was a few days delay, and then the dreadful tidings came that the firm's senior partner had, in a night or two of gambling, lost all of his own money, all of the firm's money, and had then gone to his room in the hotel in Norfolk and shot himself! This was a very serious matter for the young and innocent partner, but in all his life afterward, I do not believe that he had an unkind feeling toward Mr. Wilson. He only regretted his partner's inordinate love of cards, which cost Father years of labor and self-denial to recover from. Father wrote at once to the New York creditors, telling them the condition of affairs, and called a meeting of the creditors in Petersburg and its vicinity. To them all, he stated his inability to pay their claims but that, if given time, he would do his best to pay every just debt of the firm. The creditors were glad to agree to this proposition and the business was closed up. Father then accepted a clerkship, lived economically, and soon began to pay off the liabilities of Wilson and Orr. Father worked first for Mr. Robert Leslie (the uncle of Mr. Robert L. Watson and of Mr. McGill) then for the firm of Dunlop and Orgain, which firm had a factory on Washington Street near Adams Street, in the rear of the residence now owned by Mr. Seward. The wing on the north side of that house was Father's office downstairs, and his bedroom was over it. That part of the house is very much as it was when I was a child, all improvements having been made on the southern and eastern sides. When Mr. Dunlop died, the debts due to the creditors of Wilson and Orr were nearly all paid. The small sums unpaid were due to a few Petersburg people who gladly gave Father consent to agree with Mr. Orgain's wishes and go into business with him. The partnership of Orgain and Orr was then formed, and prospered, so that after a few years, every penny of the debts of Wilson and Orr had been paid in full. '''Hannons & Peters''' Mother said once that Great Grandmother had told her that the Friends (as she always called the Quakers) were more particular in regard to the ancestry on the maternal side. This great grandmother was Hannah Flower, and she lived to be eighty-six years old, passing from earth in December, 1850. I was then ten years old. I knew the maiden name of every grandmother once, back to the wife of William Clayton, but have forgotten it now. I remember only my mother, Eleonore Dorothea Peters, her mother, Anna Edwards Hannon, and her mother Hannah Flower. Hannah Flower's ancestors were the Claytons and the Flowers. William Clayton, who was a member of the "Council of Five" selected by William Penn to govern the colony, was the second son of the Clayton Family. In Burke's Peerage his name is given, followed by the words, in parenthesis, "No Record," thus confirming what Great Grandmother said, that he was disinherited by his father on account of his "religious opinions" when he joined his friend William Penn's Colony of Quakers, and came to Philadelphia. William Clayton settled near Marcus Hook, and Morton has now an old Deed of Land near Marcus Hook. The Flowers, like the Claytons, came from England with the Colony planted in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and in the northern county of Delaware, by William Penn. Great Grandmother Hannah Flower was the daughter of Thomas Flower. In Great Grandmother's time, her brother took ship for England to get a large amount of money belonging to the Flower Family in the Bank of England. The ship went down and Mr. Flower and a sailor managed to pick up a small row boat as they were washed off. They drifted so long that they had given up all hope and each said afterwards that if one had died the other would have eaten the deceased one. Finally they were picked up, the only ones saved, but Great Grandmother's brother never got over the terrible experience, and said that all the money in the Bank of England could not tempt him to go to sea again! Great Grandmother was married in or about 1779, in Philadelphia, at the time of the Revolutionary War and came to live in Petersburg. I am even uncertain about the first name of my great grandfather Hannon, though it may be still legible on his tombstone near the old Blandford Church. Great Grandmother's husband was from Cecil County, Maryland, and was a partner of a Mr. Ellicott, whose mills were at Ellicott City, Maryland. Great Grandmother's eldest daughter, Mrs. Sarah Flowers Gwynne Simmons, nee Hannon, had two children, a little boy and a little girl who died when she was quite young. I remember having several very beautiful pieces of pearl jewelry, which were given me by her Mother, our Great Aunt Mrs. Simmons. But I lost them all! Aunt Simmons' only son died in Mississippi and his mother soon followed him, between 1842 and 1844. Mother's Uncle Richard Hannon, who was a very good man in many ways, and an honest-minded and courteous gentleman, was however careless in business matters. His mother, my great grandmother, who lived until I was ten years old, and whom I well remember, was an heiress, and I have heard older members of the family say it was a frequent question in the family: "Where is Richard?" "Gone to Philadelphia." "What! To sell another brick house?" Well, before all the brick houses were sold, the handsome young man had married into one of the very old families of Virginia, an heiress with considerable property, and in course of time, that was gone, too. As I love romance, I must tell about some of the visits to Philadelphia. There was a Mrs. Burn, a widow with a very lovely daughter Henrietta. Henrietta was young, an only child, and her mother a widow. There was no objection to the engagement, but Mrs. Burn said, "Of course, Richard, you will come on to Philadelphia to live." But Uncle Hannon would not agree. Mrs. Burn carried her point and nothing that the young man could say would cause the mother to relent. The girl obeyed. Uncle Hannon came home and became engaged to Miss Eliza Wilkinson, a very good woman and an heiress, but by no means a beauty. Soon afterwards, Uncle Hannon went again to Philadelphia and went to see the Burns Family. He told Henrietta of his engagement, and just before he said good-bye, asked her to sing some of the old songs he used to love to hear. She played well and had a lovely voice. She agreed, and a little later her mother came in, and (as Uncle Hannon told Mother) "found us both in tears." The mother then relented! She said, "I was wrong, Richard. I wanted to keep my daughter, but I would have broken two hearts. I will oppose the marriage no more!" A terrible moment, was it not! In January 1810, Uncle Hannon married Miss Wilkinson. In the eighteen fifties, Uncle Hannon (who had been for some years a widower) went to see "the kinfolks" in Philadelphia. He knew that Henrietta had married but, as he told Mother after his return, "I visited a good many of the relatives, then decided to see Henrietta but did not know if she was a wife or a widow. I found her Mrs. Odenheimer, with two grown-up sons, and Mr. O. very much alive." My Grandfather Frederick David Philip Peters was an educated man, a graduate of Heidelburg University, and a man of means when the two Peters family brothers came to Baltimore (where they had relatives). Henry Frederick Diedrich Peters was Mother's "Uncle Henry." They may have come on a visit only, but the brothers came down to Richmond on a visit, and my grandfather met the beautiful Miss Anna Edwards Hannon of Petersburg. My Great Uncle Henry met some North Carolinians in Richmond, who persuaded him to go to Halifax County, North Carolina, which he did and opened a large store. His business prospered wonderfully, and he bought cotton lands, so that about the early 1820s he was called a very wealthy man. As far back as 1830, or even earlier, he had a large sugar plantation on the Swannee River in Florida. It was thought that that portion of the state was too far from the peninsula and the everglades to be subject to Indian raids, so in what was then called Levy County large sugar houses were built and (as I well remember hearing) machinery costing $40,000 was installed. Mr. Peters' partner, a young Scotchman who had been Mr. Peters' clerk in North Carolina, after some years reported the death of Mother's Uncle Henry. Mr. Peters (a bachelor) had no heirs except the children of his (by then deceased) brother, Mr. Frederick D.P. Peters of Petersburg, Virginia. Uncle Hannon, who had taken charge of the children of his brother-in-law, wrote asking for a settlement of their uncle's estate. Mr. Watson's answer was that, "By the laws of Florida, he was not required" to do anything towards settling the estate until the youngest heir was twenty-one. My uncle, on arriving at that age about 1845 or 1846, came to Florida and saw this partner at his winter home at Picolata, on the St. John's. He was received very cordially, and handsomely entertained, but told that his host was a bankrupt (and living on the bounty of his wife!), but that there was a large claim against the government, as the plantation was destroyed in a raid by the Seminole Indians. The clerk said that Mr. Peters' heirs would get a large share of the claim, and also that with such claims, "the older the better." '''Petersburg 1850's''' When Mr. Orgain took Father as a partner in the firm of Orgain and Orr, this business had their factory back of the lot where Mrs. Seward now lives, at the corner of Washington and Adams Streets. Mr. Orgain was the father of William Allen Orgain, afterwards known as Wm. Allen of Claremont on the James. When Mrs. Orgain's uncle, Mr. William Allen of Claremont on the James, died, his will gave almost the whole of his immense estate to Mrs. Orgain's son, William Allen Orgain, on condition that when he attained his twenty-first year he should be legally named William Allen. But he also said that if Mrs. Orgain ever had another son (whose name should be John Allen) he should share in the estate. But there was no other Orgain son. Soon after this, Mr. Orgain left Petersburg, to take charge of his son's large James River properties, giving up to Father his business interests in the city, and Father continued the manufacture of tobacco in his own name. All the Wilson debts had been paid. Soon afterwards Father had a factory on Jefferson Street. Then he built the large factory at the corner of Jefferson and Washington Streets, which was at the time said to be the largest and best equipped tobacco factory in the state. About this time, Uncle Hannon (who had charge of Mr. Peters' estate, his deceased sister having been Mrs. Peters) moved to the frame house (now three houses) across Adams Street on Washington, and Mother spent part of her time at Mr. Hannon's home. I remember Mother's having said that she paid several visits to Claremont when a girl, going with Mrs. Brydon. On one of these visits, but not the funeral occasion, Mother spoke of a dinner party, which they were very anxious to attend, at one of the Brandons' but it could be reached from Claremont only by a very long drive, or easily by crossing a creek, but a very high wind prevented that and it was too late then for the ride. I do not remember whether Anna Orgain, the eldest child and a friend of Mother's, or her father died first. I have often heard Mother say that the first time she had ever known Father, except to formally bow to him, was when Mrs. Brydon asked her to go to Clarement with her to a funeral. It was a long ride there and back to Petersburg, and in the carriage were Mr. and Mrs. Brydon, Mr. Orr and Miss Peters. Vary soon after that trip, Father commenced visiting at Mr. Hannon's across the street. After Mr. Orgain's death, Father moved to a factory on Jefferson St., running from Washington St. to Rose Alley. The business was so prosperous that I heard Cousin Lizzie McCavendish say that the year before Father was married he cleared ten thousand dollars in his factory, a much larger sum than it would seem now! Anna Eleonore Dorothea Peters, born January 17, 1817, married James Orr, of Petersburg, Virginia, on November 25th, 1838. After Father and Mother were married, and on their return from a trip to Boston and New York, they lived on Market Street and I, the eldest living child, was born in the house which is now the property of the YWCA. There are now four houses on what was the yard and garden when we lived there! While the gate was on Market street, the front door was one the south side of the dwelling. While we lived there it was for sale, and Mother liked the house and neighbors, but it was quite a distance from Father's office. We moved from there to West Hill, which then extended from a little above Lombard (then called Back) St. to the West Hill Warehouse near Franklin St., and from Adams almost to Sycamore, the western line being just back of the courthouse. For several years we lived in the dear old West Hill House, long before East Tabb Street had been cut through from our red gate to Adams Street. It was an ideal home for little children, being really like a country home in the midst of town. Jim and Clayton were both born while we lived at West Hill. I wonder if many people in Petersburg now can remember that part of Sycamore Street before East Tabb and (a few years before, I think it was) Tabb from Union to Market Street were cut through. As I remember those days, in the early forties, the Mechanics Hall stood at the northwest corner of Sycamore and Tabb Streets. On Sycamore, about opposite the Hall, Mr. James P. Smith had a very large store (I think there were two stores turned into one) and he sold china and glass. High up over the door was an immense wooden pitcher, but it was painted to look like china and for a long time we thought it was china. He was sometimes called "Pitcher Smith" by his intimates to distinguish him from another James P. Smith, both of them fine gentlemen. Across Tabb Street at Sycamore, there was a wide, old brick pavement, the buildings setting a few feet back on the street and as I remember, it was almost always (unless when it rained) covered with bales of cotton or bags of coffee and of wheat, with a line of country wagons loading or unloading. It was McIlwaine and Dunn's, then McIlwaine and Brownley's store, afterwards McIlwaine and Martin's. Just above was Powell's, afterwards Friend's Hotel. Some distance above there were two brick houses, occupied as dwellings, with Miller's Confectionary Store with residence above. Then, fronting Franklin Street, was our beautiful St Paul's Church, burned, by catching fire from a store on the southward! Its lovely yard and exquisitely cared for shrubbery have never been equaled by any Petersburg church property. I was not more than five years old when we left West Hill but I remember distinctly our life there. I remember very well my first real grief. Jim was between two and three years old. I was 20 months older and devoted to my little brother. One of my little playmates told me that the Doctor was coming that day to cut something in Jim's throat. She had heard the nurse tell one of the other servants. Then I remember that I had heard them talking about "tonsils." We were playing out in the yard, when we saw dear old Dr. Robinson on his white horse coming in the "Red Gate." I would always run to meet him, but this time I ran away from him. In the broad hall of the old West Hill house, there was a table with leaves that came down almost to the floor, and it was draped in a blue and white cover. I hid under this table and put my fingers in my ears. No one knew where I was but they thought I was off from the house and knew nothing about what was going on! I learned that day the meaning of the word agony, and its memory has never left me! Father then bought the Franklin-Jefferson-Washington Streets lot and in 1844, he built the residence at Jefferson, Franklin and Washington Streets, and separated from the next lot by a wide alley. On the next lot near the alley was a very old and abandoned building. The Franklin Street home had been finished, and two or three of the servants had been sent up to wash the windows and scrub the floors, as the carpets had come down from New York and were to be laid the next day. It was a cold winter night, and it was thought that "tramps" (though I hardly think that word was in use then but "beggars") had sought refuge in the old factory and had made too hot a fire. The old, old wooden building caught on fire, disastrously for us. The wind was from the west and our new house was burned. So instead of leaving West Hill, we remained there for some time, perhaps a year longer. The black Italian marble mantlepiece, the windows, shutters, and some of the grates downstairs were saved and as soon as the bricks were cold, the workmen had begun to duplicate the residence. Fortunately there was insurance, but not enough to cover the loss. Father at once duplicated the building, which stands in excellent condition to this day. The timber in the house had been all selected white pine brought from Albany, New York and a duplicate of the first order was now sent to the same firm. The fine condition of the buildings at this day will show the value of the timber, as well as the care which the present owners have taken of the property. On the southeast corner of the lot was a lovely old garden, planned and laid out by Mr. Walker and modeled after the layout of some of the old-time James River gardens. I only k now that the brightest and happiest days of my happy childhood were spent in that lovely garden. The garden gate, on the southern side of Washington Street was directly opposite the lawn gate of hour house (which home fronted on Franklin Street.) From the corner of Jefferson Street and Washington, and just inside of the northern boundary fence, there were five big trees, three of them big tall oaks but of different species, then a black walnut and a tulip poplar. Near the northwestern end of the lot, but about ten or twelve feet further south was a big pecan tree. It bore nuts but in my day, not many. I remember how diligently we used to search for them and how few we found. On the eastern (Jefferson Street) side of the garden, there was a row of the finest fig bushes. Uncle Davey, the gardener, would have considered it almost a crime to throw away a piece of matting, even if it was a small piece and very old. He saved every scrap of old matting to put around the wheat straw in which he encased his fig bushes every winter. When he took the covering off late in the spring, on the bare branches we would find tiny little green figs that was our June crop not a very large one, but very welcome, as fruits were not so plentiful in June as they were later on. The real crop of figs ripened in September, and as we in those days never sold any of our garden produce, well you may imagine that Jim and I were popular with our little neighbors! And I am sure that if patience and kindliness and forebearance are virtues, then dear old Uncle Davey was fit to be a prince. Uncle Davey had been one of the assistant gardeners at Claremont, and when Father bought the lovely old Walker Garden, Uncle Davy felt as if he had "come into his own again." It was while we were living at Franklin Street that a very charming cousin of Father's came from Londonderry and visited us. He was Cousin John Allen Osborne. His mother was a sister of the Allens. His father, Mr. Osborne, when a young man had come to America, stayed some time, then decided that he liked Scotland better, so returned, went into business, and prospered as a shipping merchant. But when his eldest son (JAO) had graduated at the Glasgow University, his father wanted him to come to America, go leisurely over the country to see what location he liked best, then he hoped he would consent to establish a branch of his father's large business in New York, Baltimore, Charleston, or new Orleans, whichever place he preferred. But Cousin John had found a sweetheart in Glasgow, and he finally studied medicine and settled there.

Family Residences

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Family_Residences.jpg
Some places where my Roberts family lived

Family Reunion

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This will be our 1st family reunion to enjoy each others company, share memories, and more. It would be very memoriable if everyone can attend this event if possible, and we would very much love to see you there!!!

FAMILY REUNION

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COLLECTING FAMILY RELATIVES FOR OUR FAMILY REUNION THIS YEAR

Family Reunion 2011

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Prices are as follows: ...$100 per adult (13 & up) $50 per child (6-12) FREE for children 5 and under Prices include: July 2nd - Family Fun Day at the beach! July 3rd - Formal, catered event at a rented party space July 4th - BBQ at a national park Details of catered event on 7/3/11- Included: alcoholic & non-alcoholic drinks, passed hors d'oeurves, abundant buffet dinner, Haitian cake and other desserts, tables/chairs/centerpieces, waitstaff and bartender, security, and maintenance. This also includes a DJ and the space rental.

Family Reunion-1

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gehris-11|Roy Gehris]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13962776 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Reunion-2

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“HANKINSON - Family Reunion Was Held On Wednesday August 22 - On Wednesday, Aug, 22 a pleasant reunion occurred at the residence of Mr. Simeon L. Hankinson on Welsh Hills, of his brothers and sisters. His parents emigrated from New Jersey to Ohio many years ago, first settling in Perry county, later in Licking county, about one mile northeast of the Welsh Hills Baptist church. To these parents were born nine sons and two daughters. All are still living and in reasonable health, except one daughter. Of these there were present at the reunion eight of the sons, [[Hankinson-279|Samuel]], [[Hankinson-587|William]], [[Hankinson-290|George]], [[Hankinson-292|Joseph]], [[Hankinson-294|David]], [[Hankinson-277|Simeon]], [[Hankinson-306|Joshua]] and [[Hankinson-316|Titus]], and the one living sister [[Hankinson-278|Margaret Ann]]. [[Hankinson-310|John]], now living at Junction City, Perry county, being absent on account of an invalid wife. It is doubted if many families can show a more successful career from the results of continued earnest farm work than this one, and posibly not one in the county or state, at present a more remarkable soldiers’ record. Each of the four older brothers, in fact all who were old enough to bear arms at that time enlisted in the civil war. Each remained to the close of the war, each in various engagements, and none were wounded, and today thirty-five years later, each is enjoying life with his family. Besides the brothers and sister there were present at this reunion 27 grandchildren and two great grandchildren and others closely related by marriage and prospective marriages. The day was spent in recalling incidents of the past, in games of various nature, in a bountiful dinner, and before separating in securing photographs of family groups. It was a day that will be long and pleasantly recalled by all who were present.” “Newark Daily Advocate” (Newark, Ohio) 30 Aug 1900 Page 7

Family Reunions

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'''"Family means no one gets left behind or forgotten."''' - ''David Ogden Stiers'' This page is for announcing upcoming family reunions, whether they are for anybody (like the Global Family Reunion), for people with a particular surname, or for people descended from a particular person or couple. If you know how to edit tables, then go ahead and edit this page to add a new event. There is a "sample" reunion to follow. Copy the line with "Stake of the Grub Address" in it, plus the line below it with "|-", and then paste them below, and edit the new line with the information for the event you're adding. If you don't know how to edit tables (and don't want to learn), please add a comment with enough information that somebody else can add the event for you. {| border="3" class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="5" ! Event Date(s) (YYYY-MM-DD) !! Name of Event !! Event Place !! Who Can Come !! For More Information |- || 2010-04-01 || Sample Family Reunion || Sampleville, New York, United States of America || Descendants of [[WikiTree-74|Rex]] and [[Example-21|Maddie Sample]] || [[Space:Sample_Family_Reunion|Sample Family Reunion]] |- || 2027-04-01 2027-04-04 ||Stake of the Grub Address || Grand Hotel and Conference Centre, Spuzzum, British Columbia, Canada || Descendants of [[WikiTree-74|Ferdinand]] and [[Example-21|Fern Grubstake]] || [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Space:No,_this_is_not_a_real_web_site www.stakeofthegrub.org] |- |} == Resources == === On WikiTree === * [[Space:Family_Reunion_E-Cards|Electronic Postcards for Reunions]] * [https://www.wikitree.com/articles/family-reunion-ideas.html Family Reunion Ideas] * [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Showpage&f=family_reunion Form to create a free family reunion page on WikiTree] === On the Web === * [http://family-reunion.com family-reunion.com] * Powell, Kimberly, [https://www.thoughtco.com/fun-family-history-activities-reuinions-1421885 "Fun Family History Activities for Family Reunions."] ''Thought Co.'' 2019-05-26. * Snyder, Mary, [https://www.familytreemagazine.com/premium/10-steps-to-family-reunion-success/ "10 Steps for Organizing a Family Reunion with Success."] ''Family Tree Magazine.''

Family Reunions Tutorial Page

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==FAMILY REUNIONS== ===Finding Reunions=== Family reunions are not always a regular event. It depends on each family, and how well they are organized. Some families always have family reunions every year, others just hold them occasionally. The size of these gatherings varies from including just the children of one set of parents up to invitiing all the people descended from a distant ancestor. To find out if a family holds reunions, write to the most prominent family members. Usually the older generations know if a reunion has ever been held, and if any more are planned. You can also search the Internet for family reunions. Try several search engines for the surname of the family. Placing the word reunion in the search may help narrow down the number of replies. Reaching as many folks of the same last name may be a good way to find the proper contacts as well. Try a surname search in WhitePages.com and on facebook.com. Not all families advertise their family reunions on the web, but more and more will do so in the future. Many family organizations have webpages. ===Organizing Reunions=== Another approach is to set up a reunion for the family oneself: *Invite all the family members one has contacted and ask them to bring as many family members as possible. *Ask them also to bring a favorite family food item for pot luck and the problem of providing food will be solved. *Set the date for a time when many family members should be available, perhaps a long weekend or a week in August when school is out. *Set the location at or near the family homestead, if possible, or at a location that is convenient to the majority of the family. Sometimes families have picnics in the hometown of their ancestors; but sometimes they arrange to meet at at theme park, or vacation retreat instead. *Advertise the reunion on the web if anyone with the family name is invited. Set up a family group on facebook and advertise and event. You can even get RSVPs that way. == Return to: == * TOP OF PAGE - https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Reunions_Tutorial_Page == Acknowledgements == This page written and designed by Sharon Centanne

Family Revolutionary War Veterans

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Additional_Family_Rev._War_Vets0001.PDF
Additional_Family_Rev._War_Vets.PDF
Additional_Family_Rev_War_Vets_4.PDF
Family_Rev._War_Vet.PDF
Trumbull-surrenderofCornwallis.jpg
D.A.R. Certificates for Family Revolutionary War Veterans: William Whittaker, William Morris, Sr., William Morris, Jr., Michael See [[Whittaker-28|William Whittaker]] was the son of [[Whittaker-30|Samuel Whittaker]] and [[Davis-175|Tabitha Davis]]. He was born July 28, 1750 in Concord, Massachusetts. He married [[Howe-18|Lydia Howe]] on August 31, 1774 in Princeton, Massachusetts. He served in Captain Boaz Moore's Company of Col. Ephraim Doolittle's Regiment as a drummer. They were called out on the first alarm of April 19, 1775 to Concord. He died in Princeton July 22, 1830. [[See-3|Michael See]] was the son of [[See-8|Frederick Michael See]] and [[Vanderpool-2|Catherine Vanderpool]]. He was born 1751 in South Branch, Augusta County, Virginia. He married [[Morris-34|Elizabeth Morris]] in 1776. He participated at the Battle of Point Pleasant. He died on May 23, 1792 in Mason County, Virginia. [[Morris-43|William Morris, Sr.]] was born January 1, 1722 in Liverpool, England. He married [[Stipps-1|Elizabeth Stipps]] on January 1, 1746 in Orange County, Virginia. He provided supplies for the American Revolutionary War. He died December 1, 1792 in Kanawha County, Virginia. [[Morris-27|Major William Morris, Jr.]] was the son of [[Morris-43|William Morris, Sr.]] and [[Stipps-1|Elizabeth Stipps]]. He was born December 17, 1746 in Orange County, Virginia. He married [[Carroll-39|Catherine Carroll]] on May 10, 1768 in Orange County, Virginia. He was wounded in the Battle of Point Pleasant. He died during December 1802 in Charleston, Kanawha County, Virginia.

Family Roots

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Szenger-1|Julie Szenger]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=14331003 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Scrapbook for Miscellania

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Family_Scrapbook_for_Miscellania-2.jpg
Family_Scrapbook_for_Miscellania-1.jpg
Family_Scrapbook_for_Miscellania.jpg
Images and other details for profiles

Family Search

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I am looking for Sterling relatives from northern Ireland and/or England. Some Sterling names include John, Jonathan, Duncan and Donald. Thanks

Family Search Matching

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Shows connections between profiles on WT and FS so either can be updated with info from the other

Family Search Records

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Prosto: : Birth Indexes ::[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99WG-XJ3F?i=28&cc=2043841 1866] ::[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WG-XJMY?i=53&cc=2043841 1867] ::[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99WG-XNGP?i=82&cc=2043841 1868]

Family Search will links,various counties

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John Williams, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk 1556
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSND-MSZF-3?cat=278818

Mary Nudd Ormsby St Margaret, Norfolk 1662 NCC will
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C39Z-RS2V?cat=278818

Johane Benjamin, Chaunton, Sussex 1619 Arch of Lewes
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6MZ9-DK1?cat=685691

Edmond Harrison 1522 Stodie Norfolk
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSN6-QX8C?i=183&cat=504379

Christopher Wollnough frossinfield suffolk 1618
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSND-MSZF-3?cat=278818

Bartholmew Rondall (kendall) great yarmouth 1643 arch of Norwich
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSBY-9S25-Q?i=99&cat=278818

John Kendall, Norfolk 1577-79 Con Court
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSN6-3SDH-W?cat=504379

Robert PLeasance Brinton, Norfolk 1613
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C398-J9YW-B?cat=504379

Chrisopher Kendall Brinton, Norfolk
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C398-8S4T-X?i=64&cat=504379

Thomas Kendall Norfolk1618
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C398-X3V3-W?i=66&cat=504379

Robert Kendall Arch of Norwich Brinton 1566
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSN8-BWP3?cat=278818

Apprenticeship registers for Great Yarmouth, also looks like some marriage licenses
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DTMX-RX?cat=543536

Family Secret

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1919---Mae_Musselman.JPG
Shading a few years off of one’s age is a lady’s privilege, one that countless women have done for generations. Even government records may not be given the correct birth date if the lady so desired and a birth certificate was not required. Generally not done was to delete a year or so from a younger brother. Well, the family of '''Mae Musselman Walters''', her husband and two daughters, always took as the truth when she stated she was born in July 1899 and her brother, Henry, in October 1900. Her parents and other relatives had died early in her life, so there was no one to contradict her claim of a certain birth year. The younger brother, Henry, lived several states away so he wasn’t around to tell any different version. He passed away suddenly in August 1954, supposedly at the age of 53. His sister, Mae, then died unexpectedly in February 1955 and all believed she was 55 years old at the time of her death. Nearly fifty years later while a relative was doing some family history research using copies of original hand written church records a '''family secret''' was uncovered. The data was from copies of the original birth and baptism records of the Trinity Reformed Church of Manchester, Maryland. Written by the minister of the Church, it clearly stated that Mae Musselman was born July 10, 1898 and baptism on December 4, 1898 at the Church. On the records for the next year was written her brother, Henry, with his birth October 18, 1899 and baptism on March 11, 1900. Checking census records for 1900, 1910 and 1920 found the ages marked for Mae and Henry to be correct with the birth years located in the church records. With the 1930 census, possibly even earlier, Mae started trimming a year off her birth. However, she had to do the same for Henry’s birth year since it was known they were not twins. Only one of Mae’s daughters survived when this information was learned and she was astonished that her mother had never revealed her accurate birth year. True, it was only a year’s difference but it must have been important enough to Mae to keep this confidential.

Family Sketches

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'''Family Sketches''' compiled by [[Randolph-2374|Julianna R. Wood]] *a compilation of material on the Wood family, the Allen family, the Richardson family, the Growdon family, and the Randolph family '''External links:''' * [https://archive.org/details/FamilySketchesJuliannaRWood Internet Archive] * [https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/005785033 Hathi Trust] '''Citation Example:''' :::Wood, Julianna R., ''[[Space:Family Sketches|Family Sketches]]'' (Philadelphia, 1870) '''Footnote Example:''' ::: [[#WoodJR|Family Sketches]], page 160 ---- [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Family Sketches|WikiTree Profiles that use this source]]

Family sources for Swetenham-16

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ADDERLEY :Landed families of Britain and Ireland (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) : * [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2013/05/40-adderley-families-and-adderleys-of.html (40)] The Adderley families and the Adderleys of Blake Hall * [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2013/05/41-adderley-of-hams-hall-and-fillongley.html (41)] Adderley of Hams Hall and Fillongley Hall, Barons Norton * [https://landedfamil05/42-adderley-of-weddington-hall.html (42)] Adderley of Weddington Hall * [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2013/05/43-adderley-later-broughton-adderley-of.html (43)] Adderley (later Broughton-Adderley) of Coton Hall, Barlaston Hall and Tunstall Hall ALINGTON :Landed families of Britain and Ireland (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2013/11/88-alington-of-swinhope-house.html (88)] Alington of Swinhope House ANSON :Landed families of Britain and Ireland: (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2014/12/149-anson-of-shugborough-hall-ranton.html (149)] Anson of Shugborough Hall, Ranton Abbey and Orgreave Hall, Earls of Lichfield ANTROBUS :Antrobus pedigrees : the story of a Cheshire family by Sir Reginald L. Antrobus. KCMG, CB, MA 1929, London, Mitchell, Hughes and Clarke (Internet Archive) [https://archive.org/details/antrobuspedigree00antr Full text] :Landed families of Britain and Ireland: (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2015/01/153-antrobus-of-amesbury-abbey-lower.html (153)] Antrobus of Amesbury Abbey, Lower Cheam House and Eaton Hall, baronets ARNOLD :Ancestry - King Bradshaw - *Nigel King - his grandmother Kathleen Gladys Arnold [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/person/tree/3950471/person/-1669895280/facts Tree] :Ancestry - Irene Arnold’s story by Jacqueline Cornwall - her mother Irene Joan Martin Arnold [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/person/tree/155588617/person/372058153226/facts Tree]. Well-documented ancestry back to James Arnold 1625–1673 of Milton Abbas. ARCHER : Landed families of Britain and Ireland: [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2020/01/403-barnston-of-churton-hall-and-crewe.html(166)] Archer of Umberslade and Hale, Barons Archer (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) ASSHETON : Landed families of Britain and Ireland: (216) Assheton of Downham Hall, Whalley Abbey, Great Lever and Middleton Hall, baronets and Barons Clitheroe [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2016/05/216-assheton-of-downham-hall-whalley.html part 1] [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2016/05/216-assheton-of-downham-hall-whalley_12.html part 2] (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) : BAGOT :Landed families of Britain and Ireland: (312) Bagot of Blithfield Hall and Pool Park, Barons Bagot - [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2017/12/312-bagot-of-blithfield-hall-and-pool.html part 1 overview and house] [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2017/12/312-bagot-of-blithfield-hall-and-pool_13.html part 2 family history] excellent source. (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) : BARNSTON (TREVOR-BARNSTON) :Landed families of Britain and Ireland: [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2020/01/403-barnston-of-churton-hall-and-crewe.html (403)] Barnston of Churton Hall and Crewe Hill detailed study of the Barnston family and the houses associated with it. (compiled by Nicholas Kingsley) : BOLLING :The Bolling family by T. T. Empsall, article in The Bradford antiquary. The journal of the Bradford historical and antiquarian society c.1 v.2 1895. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/chi.12007613?urlappend=%3Bseq=138 Page 163] BOUTFLOWER :Douglas Samuel Boutflower, The Boutflower book: the complete story of a family of the middle class connected with the north of England (1303-1930) [https://archive.org/details/boutflowerbookco00bout complete] (Internet Archive) (accessed 29 Nov 2022) CHETWYND : Chetwynd-Stapylton, H. Edward. (1892). The Chetwynds of Ingestre: being a history of that family from a very early date. London: Longmans, Green and Co. [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiug.30112057337880 complete] (HathiTrust) (accessed 2 Dec 2022) COMBERBACH : George William Marshall, ''Collections for a Genealogical Account of the Family of Comberbach'' 1866 (Google Books) see p. 19 Comberbach of Nantwich [https://books.google.lu/books?id=ZVYBAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA19 Pedigree] pp. 25-26 Roger Comberbach, Recorder of Chester [https://books.google.lu/books?id=ZVYBAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA25 Recorder] DAVENPORT :Ormerod, George, ''The history of the county Palatine and city of Chester''. 2nd ed. (1882) Helsby. London: G. Routledge. Davenport of Bramhall vol III [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo.31924088434059&view=1up&seq=879 p. 827] Image 879 (HathiTrust) DELVES (DELVES-BROUGHTON) :Ormerod, George, ''The history of the county Palatine and city of Chester''. 2nd ed. (1882) Helsby. London: G. Routledge. Delves of Broughton and Doddington vol III [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/coo.31924088434059?urlappend=%3Bseq=562 p. 522] image 562 EGERTON FLOYER :Floyer of Floyers Hayes [http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~floyer/genealogy/index.htm Web page] ::ANNALS OF THE FAMILY OF FLOYER by the Rev. J. KESTELL FLOTER, M.A., F.S.A., Minor Canon of Worcester Cathedral. (Communicated by the Rev. W. Harpley, M.A.) (Read at Honiton, August, 1898.) Reprinted from the ''Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature, and Art''. 1898. XXX, [http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~floyer/genealogy/Annals.pdf pp. 505-524] ::Pedigree of Floyer of West Stafford and formerly of Upway, co. Dorset [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/407704/?offset=0#page=535&viewer=picture&o=&n=0&q= p. 513] Image 535 of 904 (FamilySearch) HYDE of Hyde and Norbury :Ormerod, George, ''The history of the county Palatine and city of Chester''. 2nd ed. (1882) Helsby. London: G. Routledge. [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo.31924088434059&seq=858 p. 810] image 858 (HathiTrust) [https://books.google.lu/books?id=yIY1AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA810 Google Books] :Earwaker, J. P. 1880. ''East Cheshire: past and present''. London: Printed for the author, vol. II [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/yale.39002088543229?urlappend=%3Bseq=75 p. 75] (HathiTrust) KYNNERSLEY :Henry Kynnersley [https://www.genealogics.org/descendtext.php?personID=I00235778&tree=LEO&displayoption=notable&generations=8 Notable descendants] (Genealogics by Leo van de Pas continued by Ian Fettes & Leslie Mahler) LEGH of Lyme :[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo.31924088434059&seq=718 Pedigree] LISTER :Denny, Henry Lyttelton Lyster, Edinburgh: Printed for the author by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co., 1913. Memorials of an ancient house : a history of the family of Lister or Lyster [https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/19781/ book] LOWTHER :Stirnet [https://www.stirnet.com/genie/data/british/ll/lowther1.php Lowther-1] :Foster, J., et al. Pedigrees recorded at the heralds’ visitations of the counties of Cumberland and Westmorland 1615 & 1666 [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesrecorde00sainrich/page/84 Lowther of Lowther] (Internet Archive) MORPHY :Beatriz García-Álvarez de la Villa. 2019. El Conde de Morphy (1836-1899) en la Corte de los Borbones. Historia de una familia irlandesa en España (ss. XVIII-XIX). Estudios Irlandeses 14: [https://www.estudiosirlandeses.org/2019/03/el-conde-de-morphy-1836-1899-en-la-corte-de-los-borbones-historia-de-una-familia-irlandesa-en-espana-ss-xviii-xix/ 51-69]. : Genealogia de D. Juan Murphy, Escudero residente en la Ciudad de Malaga Año de 1788. Archives of the Orden de Alcántara. Probably copies of original documents prepared for his elevation to the hidalguia in 1788. [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSLH-CQ25-G link] : Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent, Caballeros de la Orden de Alcántara que efectuaron sus pruebas de ingreso durante el siglo xix. JUAN MURPHY Y PORRO, ELLIOT Y REYNADO [https://books.google.lu/books?id=2ujb4TWzpcEC&lpg=PA63&pg=PA131 p. 131] MORRELL MUSGRAVE :Stirnet [https://www.stirnet.com/genie/data/british/mm4fz/musgrave2.php Musgrave-2] :Foster, J., et al. ''Pedigrees recorded at the heralds’ visitations of the counties of Cumberland and Westmorland 1615 & 1666''. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesrecorde00sainrich/page/91 Musgrave of Hayton] (Internet Archive) :Notes on the ancient family of Musgrave, Westmorland, and its various branches in Cumberland, Yorkshire, Northumberland, Somerset, etc. [https://en.geneanet.org/archives/ouvrages?action=detail&book_type=livre&livre_id=6555184&page=260&name=MUSGRAVE&with_variantes=0&tk=6fa1120300b94e86 Compilation] Percy Musgrave (Geneanet) https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/454745/?offset=&return=1#page=1&viewer=picture&o=&n=0&q= (FamilySearch) OGLE : A history of Northumberland vol.12 1926, issued under the direction of the Northumberland county history committee. Ogle of Kirkley, p. 501 Image 601 [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015086651836?urlappend=%3Bseq=603 at p. 503] (HathiTrust) (accessed 29 Nov 2022) PATTISON PLOWDEN :Walter F C Chicheley Plowden, ''Records of the Chicheley Plowdens A. D. 1590-1913'' with four alphabetical indices, four pedigree sheets, and a portrait of Edmund, the great Elizabethan lawyer [https://archive.org/details/recordsofchichel00plow Full text ] READE :Aleyn Lyell Reade, ''The Reades of Blackwood Hill''. 1906. privately printed for the author: Spottiswoode and Co. 411 pages with 18 plates and 29 large tabular pedigrees. The Reades of Congleton are in pedigrees XX and XXIII see pages 352-353, 358-359 [http://www.staffordshirecountystudies.uk/The%20Reades%20of%20Blackwood%20Hill,A.pdf Complete] (Staffordshire County Studies) SWETENHAM :Earwaker, J. P. 1880. Somerford Booths Township in ''East Cheshire: past and present''. London: Printed for the author, vol. 2 pp. 644 - 649. [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=yale.39002088543229&view=1up&seq=714 Chapter] Swetenham of Somerford Booths [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=yale.39002088543229&view=1up&seq=716 Pedigree] (HathiTrust) Arms: Argent on a bend vert three spades of the first, shod sable. points downward Crest : granted Feb. 9, 1568-9. A porcupine's head Azure, erased Gules, goutteé Argent, collared, chained, tusked and penned Or, langued Gules. Motto: Ex sudore vultus : Ormerod, G., Helsby, T., Leycester, P., Webb, W., Smith, W., King, D. (1882). The history of the county Palatine and city of Chester 2nd ed. rev. and enl. London: G. Routledge.''Swetenham of Somerford Booths'' vol 3 p. 560 [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/coo.31924088434059?urlappend=%3Bseq=600 pedigree] image 600 of 992 (HathiTrust) Arms: Argent on a bend vert three spades of the first [shod sable] Crest: On a wreath a hedgehog's head erased Azure, guttèe Argent, chained and collared Or. Granted by Gilbert Dethick° 1568, allowed by Dugdale 1664. Dethick's grant gives "a porcupine's head Az. erasid Goules goutte d'Arg. collard chaynid tusk'd and penn'd Goulde." The Arms sometimes give demi-spades; these, however, according to the Heralds, belong to Swettenham of Swettenham. But see note p. 73, ante. Motto: Ex sudore vultus SWETTENHAM now Warren-Swettenham : Ormerod, G., Helsby, T., Leycester, P., Webb, W., Smith, W., King, D. (1882). The history of the county Palatine and city of Chester 2nd ed. rev. and enl. London: G. Routledge.''Swettenham of Swettenham'' vol 3 p. 74 [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/coo.31924088434059?urlappend=%3Bseq=92 pedigree] image 94 of 992 (HathiTrust) . Arms Argent on a bend sable three spades of the first Motto Ex sudore vultus. THACKERAY :Jane Townley Pryme, Memorials of the Thackeray family [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433081849162 book] (HathiTrust Digital Library) TREVOR see BARNSTON (TREVOR-BARNSTON) ''above'' WANDESFORD :McCall H. B., Story of the family of Wandesforde of Kirklington & Castlecomer 1904 [https://archive.org/details/storyoffamilyofw00mcca Compilation] (Internet Archive) WETTENHALL :Pedigree of Wettenhall of Water House, Staffordshire and Ireland p. 107 (image 169 / 338) in Sleigh, John, b. 1826. ''A History of the Ancient Parish of Leek, In Staffordshire Including Horton, Cheddleton, and Ipstones''. 2nd ed. London: Bemrose & Sons, 1883. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uiug.30112113412156?urlappend=%3Bseq=169 pedigree] (HathiTrust)

Family Stories about the Olmsteads

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Here is the family history as I remember it and info I’ve found just poking around on the Internet: Charles T. Olmstead was a veteran of the Blackhawk war. He was a private in Fortunatus Berry's Company stationed at Fort Gratiot. He is listed in the Wisconsin Historical Society's website. Wisconsin Muster Rolls of the Black Hawk War 1832. When the Civil War broke out, Charles T. joined a greybeard regiment (not THE Greybeard Regiment out of Iowa) that was not officially recognized by the government. The greybeards would just show up with the soldiers and would participate in battles. Sometimes their names show up in dead/wounded lists and sometimes not. Since there was no official info or uniform, identifying a dead body was nearly impossible. Charles T took his son, Charles (later nicknamed Shiloh which I’ll use to avoid confusion), with him as a drummer boy. Later, but not much later, Shiloh came to Webster City. He was suffering from shock and couldn’t deal with people very well. He built himself a shack by the river that ran next to Webster City. He stayed there fishing and trapping. He also took charity clothes and things to meet his needs. Every spring the river flooded. Shiloh would refuse to leave his shack and eventually the men had to go out in a boat to rescue him. He would not leave without serious persuasion. During one of these flood times Shiloh ended up marrying a woman (I don't know her name) who owned a dress shop. Each Spring he would live with her until the water receded. In this fashion they had three children, the youngest of which was my grandfather, Robert. Each year Shiloh would venture into town on Veteran’s Day with his ragged drum. The townspeople would refuse to let him in the parade because he was so shoddy. So he’d follow far behind the parade playing his drum. People tried to ignore him. Much later on, he was accepted as a town eccentric and was allowed in the parade. He lived in his shack until he passed away. The Kendall Young Library in Webster City has a lot of information about Shiloh, but not online. Robert was taken out of school early to serve as a nursemaid to his grandfather (Charles T) who had gone blind. He resented it terribly. After the old man passed, Robert sickened and went to a doctor who told him that he had a blood disease and was going to die. In anger and resentment, Robert took his inheritance (the family had gone into the funeral parlor business) and went to Kansas City. There he intended to end his days in the brothels and bars. Later, with his money running out, Robert went to another doctor who said there was nothing wrong with him and he wasn’t going to die. Robert moved to Omaha where he started working in construction. He was dating a woman who owned a boarding house. Later, when the woman’s daughter came to Omaha, he married the daughter, Bernice. By now he had started a construction company and was doing very well. He and Bernice had three daughters, the youngest of which was my mother. Around 1930-32 in the midst of the depression, Robert (known as The Hawk) lost his business and everything he owned. Time goes by, the girls grow up. Eldyne Olmstead Fuglei married Noel Robert Fuglei – have 6 children Carolyn Olmstead Smith married Edward Leo Smith – one child, Eddie. Mary C. Olmstead married Paul W. Spencer - three children. I am the youngest. When I was young we attended Kountze Memorial Church in Omaha. They had a pegboard where 3x5 cards were posted bearing the names and addresses of 'shut-ins' - folks who couldn't get around easily by themselves and would appreciate a card or note on holidays. I saw a card with the name Nellie Olmstead and, knowing that my mother's maiden name was Olmstead, I took that card whenever it popped up and sent Christmas cards, Easter cards, etc. A couple of years went by and Nellie passed away. Her family found my cards in a box in her closet, and contacted me to let me know the funeral arrangements. My folks were interested, so we attended the family gathering afterward, and met a whole side of the family they had no idea existed. My mom learned about Shiloh Olmstead and our interest began then.

Family Stumps Me

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The family Stump

Family Ties of Lea Family to Russell County VA

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This family information was added to the profile of [[Lea-59|William Leigh]], apparently on 8 Jun 2010, apparently by [[Myers-1700|Mandy Myers]]. The information has been moved to this free-space page to preserve it as a potential resource for the Lea family. Note the last name at birth for William Leigh is apparently ''Leigh'', not ''Lea''. ---- '''Family ties of the Lea to Russell County, Virginia.''' :: Descendants of COL WILLIAM LEA :: :: Generation No. 1 :: 1. COL WILLIAM1 LEA was born 1654 in CHARLES CITY CO,VA, and died July14, 1703 in KING AND QUEEN CO,VA. He married Mary Green. :: Child of COL LEA and Mary Green is: :: + 2 i. William IV2 Lea. :: :: :: Generation No. 2 :: 2. William IV2 Lea (COL WILLIAM1) He married Frances Major. :: Child of William Lea and Frances Major is: :: + 3 i. Sarah3 Lea, born 1715 in Nc; died 1783. :: :: :: Generation No. 3 :: 3. Sarah3 Lea (William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) was born 1715 in Nc, and died 1783. She married William Sargent. He was born 1715 in Nc, and died 1783 in NC. :: Children of Sarah Lea and William Sargent are: :: + 4 i. Stephen Bryant4 Sargent, born 1747 in Caswell co NC; died April04, 1815 in Russell Co., VA. :: + 5 ii. Mary Sargent. :: :: :: Generation No. 4 :: 4. Stephen Bryant4 Sargent (Sarah3 Lea, William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) was born 1747 in Caswell co NC, and died April 04, 1815 in Russell Co., VA.He married Margaret Gold, daughter of Ephraim Gold and Rebecca. She was born 1742 in Caswell co NC, and died 1815. :: Children of Stephen Sargent and Margaret Gold are: :: 6 i. Elizabth5 Sargent, born in Nc; died Bef. 1814. She marriedJonathan Rees Skeen; born 1765 in Nc. :: 7 ii. Rebecca Sargent. :: 8 iii. Ephraim Sargent, born 1761 in Nc; died 1844. He marriedElizabeth Hodge July 25, 1792 in Caswell co NC; born 1771 in Caswell coNC. :: + 9 iv. Sarah Sargent, born 1762 in Orange co NC; died 1849 in RussellCo., VA. :: + 10 v. Mary Sargent, born February 24, 1766 in Orange co NC; diedNovember 02, 1846 in Russell Co., VA. :: 11 vi. Rachel Sargent, born 1765. She married Lawremce VanhookSeptember 17, 1785 in Caswell co NC; born Abt. 1760 in NJ; died 1807 inRussell Co., VA. :: 12 vii. Elijah Sargent, born 1777 in Caswell co NC. He marriedElizabeth Horton. :: 13 viii. William Sargent, born 1777 in Nc. He married Lucy Horton. :: 14 ix. Stephen Jr Sargent, born 1789 in Caswell co NC; died 1864. Hemarried Amy Payne Ware. :: 15 x. Margaret Sargent. She married John McFarland. :: :: :: 5. Mary4 Sargent (Sarah3 Lea, William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) She married Joseph Gold. :: Child of Mary Sargent and Joseph Gold is: :: 16 i. Sarah5 Gold, died 1834 in Russell Co., VA. She married William Lee November 03, 1790 in Caswell co NC; died 1810 in Russell Co., VA. :: :: :: Generation No. 5 :: 9. Sarah5 Sargent (Stephen Bryant4, Sarah3 Lea, William IV2, COLWILLIAM1) was born 1762 in Orange co NC, and died 1849 in Russell Co.,VA. She married Peter Skeen, son of Jonathan Skeen and Susannah Reese. He was born 1756 in Pa, and died March 10, 1826 in Russell Co., VA. :: Children of Sarah Sargent and Peter Skeen are: :: + 17 i. Sarah Nancy6 Skeen, born 1796 in Laurens, Sc; died January 08,1878 in wise County, va. :: + 18 ii. Jonathan Skeen, born 1793 in Sc. :: + 19 iii. Stephen Sargent Skeene, born 1788 in Sc. :: :: :: 10. Mary5 Sargent (Stephen Bryant4, Sarah3 Lea, William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) was born February 24, 1766 in Orange co NC, and died November02, 1846 in Russell Co., VA. She married Abraham Fuller. He was born December 27, 1763, and died November 15, 1836 in Russell Co., VA. :: Child of Mary Sargent and Abraham Fuller is: :: 20 i. Abraham6 Fuller, born 1808. :: :: :: Generation No. 6 :: 17. Sarah Nancy6 Skeen (Sarah5 Sargent, Stephen Bryant4, Sarah3 Lea,William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) was born 1796 in Laurens, Sc, and died January08, 1878 in wise County, va. She married Meredith Evans September 02,1815 in Russell ,va, son of Littleberry Evans and Frances. He was born November 30, 1789 in Pittsylvania Co, Va, and died April 25, 1880 in Wise County, va. :: :: Children of Sarah Skeen and Meredith Evans are: :: 21 i. Warrington Bowen7 Evans, born July 26, 1817 in Russell County Va;died October 19, 1900 in Lawerence Co, Ky. He married Virginia Dobyns1835 in Russell ,va; born September 16, 1820 in Russell County Va; diedDecember 01, 1901 in Ky. :: 22 ii. Mary Polly Evans, born 1819 in Russell County Va. She marriedIredle Philips 1836 in va; born 1817 in NC. :: 23 iii. Elizabeth Elisa Evans, born September 10, 1820 in Russell CountyVa; died June 09, 1903. She married Samuel Minton; born 1822 inWashington Co. Va. :: 24 iv. Catherine Evans, born 1822; died December 03, 1889 in wiseCounty, va. :: 25 v. Sarah Evans, born 1823 in Russell County Va; died in BarnettsCreek, KY. She married John Q Adams 1850 in Russell ,va; born 1823 inWashington Co. Va. :: 26 vi. Margaret Evans, born 1824 in Russell County Va. She marriedJrJames Chafin; born in Russell County Va. :: 27 vii. Nancy Evans, born 1825 in Russell County Va. She married HenrySkeen December 20, 1852 in Russell ,va. :: 28 viii. Millie Evans, born 1828 in Russell County Va. :: 29 ix. Melissa Evans, born 1830 in Russell County Va. She married JamesC Wheeler; born 1828 in Russell County Va. :: 30 x. Thomas Lewis Evans, born February 01, 1831 in Russell County Va;died August 10, 1905 in wise County, va. He married Elizabeth CarolineCarrico March 22, 1854 in Wise Co. Va; born 1838 in Grayson Co. Va; died1898 in wise County, va. :: 31 xi. Wilson Evans, born April 02, 1832 in Russell County Va; diedFebruary 22, 1901 in wise County, va. He married Elizabeth J. :: :: :: 18. Jonathan6 Skeen (Sarah5 Sargent, Stephen Bryant4, Sarah3 Lea,William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) was born 1793 in Sc. He married FrancesHarding, daughter of Jonathan Harding and Susannah Skeen. She was born1796. :: Children of Jonathan Skeen and Frances Harding are: :: 32 i. Sally7 Skeen, born 1823. :: 33 ii. Ephraim Skeene, born 1829. :: 34 iii. Melissa Skeen, born 1830. :: 35 iv. Elizabeth Skeen, born 1834. :: 36 v. James Skeen, born 1848. :: :: :: 19. Stephen Sargent6 Skeene (Sarah5 Sargent, Stephen Bryant4, Sarah3 Lea, William IV2, COL WILLIAM1) was born 1788 in Sc. He married Susannah Kiser, daughter of Joseph Kiser and Susannah Stacey. She was born 1797 in Russell County Va. :: Children of Stephen Skeene and Susannah Kiser are: :: 37 i. Archer7 Skeene, born 1818. :: 38 ii. Henry Skeene, born 1819 in Russell Co., VA. He married Matilda;born 1827 in Scott Co VA. :: 39 iii. Margart Skeene, born 1823. :: 40 iv. Susan Skeene, born 1830 in Russell County Va. She marriedHenderson H Dotson; born 1830 in Russell County Va. :: 41 v. Elisabeth Skeene, born 1833 in Russell County Va. She marriedWilliam G Gilliam; born 1829 in Scott Co Va. :: 42 vi. Nancy Skeen, born 1834 in Russell County Va. She married IraGilliam; born 1830. :: 43 vii. William Skeene, born 1834 in Russell County Va. :: 44 viii. Richard S Skeene, born 1836 in Russell County Va. :: 45 ix. George Skeene, born 1838 in Russell County Va. :: 46 x. Sarah J. Skeene, born 1840 in Russell County Va. ::

Family Tree

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am Ashish Hamirani Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=27001619 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Tree by: Jacklyn Kathy Williams

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The goal of this project is to ... Transfer my Grandmothers Gedcom information in order to better define the family lineages she has researched while sharing it’s details for those who might need it. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Carr-9901|Shannon Carr]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Birth Certificate for Jacklyn Kathy Williams b. 04 February 1946 * Marriage Certificate for Katherine Georgia Boothby (Sellers) b. 1918 d. 1984 * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=21095177 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Tree created by Per Petrén

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A family tree created by Per Petrén, there is also a book dedicated to his mother Käthe Lindner. The book have additional pictures and trees from the Lindner, Hoffmann and Schmaltz families. As well as some pictures of the Törnberg family (Käthes sister Ilse Lindners husband and children)

Family Tree Magazine

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Featured_Exhibitors
WikiTree_Symposium_Exhibitors_Hall
Images: 1
Family_Tree_Magazine.jpg
Hello, genealogists! Here at ''Family Tree Magazine,'' we're passionate about helping you discover and celebrate your family history. Our magazine is published bi-monthly for a total of six issues per year. It covers everything from how to research specific ethnicities, to how to use different record types, to DNA research and much more. Over at [https://store.familytreemagazine.com/family-tree-magazine/courses/ Family Tree University] we offer a variety of online courses and webinars that help you gain new genealogical skills. We also offer a [https://familytreemagazine.com/genealogy-podcast/ free monthly podcast] hosted by Lisa Louise Cooke, as well as a variety of handy digital products in our online store. Thank you for visiting our online booth, and we hope you enjoy the symposium! – The Family Tree Editors

Family tree of Gulbrand Gulbrandsen

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Pictue of a photocopy of the family tree of Gulbrand Gulbrandsen (1847 - 1929). https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gulbrandsen-336

Family tree of maureen burton formerly McReynolds nee hart born 1916

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The goal of this project is t create a picture of my grandmothers early life and create an understanding of her life and family particular interest in shorts in Belfast circa 1930,s when her husband Samuel mc Reynolds worked there then he worked as an electrician on board the princess Victoria ferry which was destroyed at sea 31 Jan 1953 And also of the Belfast she grew up in and her family and an insight into their lives We know her parents got married in Saint Matthews r c church in belfasts short strand as did her mothers sister anastasia Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Webster_Carson_Penrose-1|Heather Webster Carson Penrose]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. Connecting this tree with help of others valerieKerr has been amazing * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15635431 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Tree of Nicholas Cady

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The goal of this project is to document the family tree of Nicholas Cady [[Cady-6]]. Nicholas came to the United States with William Knapp in 1630 as an apprentice. After his apprenticeship was completed, he married the daughter of his master, Judith Knapp about 1650 at Watertown/Groton, Connecticut. The majoirty of Cady's in America can be traced back to him. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Cady-483|Jennifer Cady]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * The Ancestral trail from England remains thin. *Orrin Peer Allen's great work. Descendants of Nicholas Cady of Watertown, Mass. 1645-1910. Palmer, Mass. 1910 ( An Open Library.org book) traces the primarily male descendants so there are a number of female descentants missing. * The Cady Surname project is also based on the male carriers of the surname http://www.worldfamilies.net/surnames/cady/ so female members of the famility tree are lacking. * Many records of the Cady descendants were lost in the Civil war, especially in the South. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=7584265 send me a private message]. Thanks! Jennifer Cady (Jennifer is the great, great, great, great, great, great, great grand daughter of Nicholas )

Family Tree of William and Sarah Clarkson

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Descendants of William Clarkson and Sarah Ann Nicholson who sailed for New Zealand on the "Bolton", arriving in Wellington in 1840. Ten years later they moved south to Lyttelton and most of the immediate descendants settled in Canterbury, notably Christchurch and Timaru. The 1990 family tree was produced for a family reunion held in Lyttelton that year. Out of print, but copies can be made on request by [[Goulstone-18|Kathy Viney]].

Family Tree Parker

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Kidwell-430|Stephanie Briggs]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15529712 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Tree Project

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Karais-1|Oscar Karais]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=8390669 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Tree Sources

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=== '''Florence & Joseph Deel''' === Some information regarding Florence & Joseph Deel, who were my great-grandparents, were obtained from this link which is Union Associations of Old Regular Baptists of Jesus Christ, extracted from obituaries: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~chloe2001/obits/orb1958.html [[GEORGE JOSEPH DEEL]] Born 11/11/1910 Died 4/23/1958 Parents MILES HARVEY & MARY DEEL Married FLORENCE COLEMAN 11 Children === '''Samuel Yates & Sarah Deel''' === Obituary for Samuel Yates who was my 5th great grandfather. ''Me>Sheilah Deel>William Kermit Deel>George Joseph Deel>Miles Harvey Deel>Polly Yates>Whitten Yates>Samuel Yates'' http://vagenweb.org/wise/orbcwise2.html [[Samuel Yates]], born 6/10/1842, died 2/16/1918, married Sarah Deel ca 1865; they had 2 daughters and 5 sons, five still living. Sarah Deel Yates preceded him in death. He joined the ORB Church ca 1888 and lived a member until the divide when he went off with the hard shell side and remained with them until he became dissatisfied then he came back by acknowledgement in the presence of the church. Thereafter he was a member of the Russell Prater Church. Written by Elder D. C. Church and J. M. Gibson '''Sarah A Deel''' http://vagenweb.org/wise/orbcwise2.html Sarah A. Deel, the daughter of James H. Deel, Sr.and Vicey Deel, was born 3/29/1857, died 4/25/1916. She married James H. Deel, 9/13/1879; they had 1 daughter. She joined the ORB Church April 13, 1916 at a church service in her home, held there because she was too ill to attend regular services. She was carried to the river on a frame and baptized by Elder D. C. Church. She was survived by her husband, her daughter, 2 brothers and 3 sisters.

Family Tree To-Do List

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== Ancestry DNA Circles == [[Space:Ancestry_DNA_Circles|Ancestry DNA Circles]] == Armenian Ancestry == [[Space:Armenian_Ancestry|Armenian Address Mapping]] [[Space:Successful_DNA_Triangulation|Family and Friends]] == Ethnicity Breakdown == [[Space:My_Origins|Ethnicity Breakdown]] == Mayflower Ancestors == [[Space:Famous_Ancestors|Mayflower Ancestors]] == US Presidents == [[Space:US_Presidents|US Presidents]]

Family tree wilkinson mathews

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Wilkinson-5563|Rebecca Friedel]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * I need help with some background to both sides of the family. * I'm asking you to help with last names, years, cities, states, great grandparents names *if you have any questions please just ask me Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13500183 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family Tree-1

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Wike-218|Jason Wike]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=20893686 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family trees

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Grandmas collection of family trees

Family Veterans

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A page for my family's veterans. If counting only Ancestors and Uncles my family has served since the Revolutionary War fighting in 12 wars and 65 Campaigns for these great United States, though if you count cousins and other distant relatives this number goes up to 12 wars and 87 Campaigns. Still only counting ancestors and uncles in those 12 wars and 65 campaigns my family has fought many battles: The Chosin Reservoir in Korea, Guam, Peleliu, Leyte, Aachen, The Bulge, and Okinawa during the Second World War, Saint-Mihiel and The Meuse Argonne in the First World War, and more than 60+ battles in the US Civil War. I'm still actively researching more of the earlier wars so expect this list to get longer, as of now I am still in the Civil War Era {{Image|file=Family_Veterans.png|caption=Navy Presidential Unit Citation}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-1.png|caption=Army Presidential Unit Citation}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-2.png|caption=Philippine Presidential Unit Citation}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-3.png|caption=Korean Presidential Unit Citation}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-4.png|caption=Revolutionary War Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-5.png|caption=War of 1812 Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-6.png|caption=US Civil War Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-7.png|caption=Indian Wars Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-9.png|caption=WWI Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-10.png|caption=American Defense Service}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-11.png|caption=American Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-12.png|caption=Asiatic Pacific Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-13.png|caption=EAME Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-14.png|caption=WWII Victory Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-16.png|caption=Korean War Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-17.png|caption=Vietnam War Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-25.png|caption=Philippine Liberation Streamer}} Additional Campaign Streamers if you count Family Cousins: {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-18.png|caption=Army Valorous Unit Citation}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-19.png|caption=Army Superior Unit Award}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-20.png|caption=Mexican American War Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-21.png|caption=Southwest Asia Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-22.png|caption=Afghanistan Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-23.png|caption=Iraq Campaign Streamer}} {{Image|file=Family_Veterans-24.png|caption=Global War on Terrorism Streamer}} ===Persian Gulf War Cousins Removed=== [[Braddock-4838|David Michael Braddock (1959-2006)]] 2nd Cousin x2 Removed Flanders Side. US Army MAJ he saw combat with the Green Berets earning the Combat Infantryman's Badge for service in the Defense of Saudi Arabia and Liberation/Defense of Kuwait Campaigns ===Vietnam War Uncles=== [[Babb-1968|Richard Babb]] Granduncle Babb Side. US Army drove high ranking officials and officers around in Vietnam and was stationed near Saigon. [[Flanders-2156|Joseph Flanders]] Granduncle Flanders Side. US Army CPT 1969-1972 US Army Reserve LTC 1972-1996. Vietnam August 1971-March 1972. Initially HHC 2/5 Cavalry Regiment 1st Cavalry Division after Christmas '71 transferred HHC 2/11 Armored Cavalry Regiment. Air Medal, Two Bronze Campaign Stars for Consolidation I and II Campaigns, and The Combat Infantryman's Badge ===Vietnam War Era Uncles=== [[Perry-22777|Tinley Bolin Perry (1917-2002)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Perry Side. US Air Force MSG 1960-1966. Served as a Procurement Supervisor stateside during the Vietnam War. Records added [[Cooper-34434|Thomas Russell Cooper (1931-2010)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Babb Side. US Air Force. More research needed [[Thompson-72398|Voyed James Thompson (1902-1983)]] Great Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Army MSG. More research needed ===Vietnam War 1st Cousins Removed=== [[Braddy-407|James Frederick Braddy (1934-2007)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Perry Side. US Army MSG. More research needed [[Braddy-408|Claude Eugene Braddy (1936-2014)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Perry Side. US Air Force MSG 1967-1974. Earned the Vietnam Service Medal. Records added ===Vietnam War Era Cousins Removed=== [[Braddock-4831|William Lawson Braddock (1922-2013)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Flanders Side. US Army MSG. More research needed [[Bloodworth-844|James Russell Bloodworth (1927-1969)]] 2nd Cousin x2 Removed Babb Side. US Army SGM. More research needed, he died during the Vietnam era due to illness while still active duty ===Korean War Ancestors=== [[Perry-22771|Lewis Frank Perry Jr (1929-2012)]] Great Grandfather Perry Side. US Navy EM2 1948-1952. Served on the USS Fechteler (DD-870) in Occupational Tour in the far east and in 1 Campaign in the Korean War. Records added ===Korean War Uncles=== [[Thompson-72386|Curtis Lonzy Thompson (1931-1996)]] Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Army CPL 1947-1951. Served Occupation Duty in Japan before fighting in 5 campaigns with the 3rd Infantry Division: UN Offensive, CCF Intervention, First UN Counteroffensive, CCF Spring Offensive, and UN Summer-Fall Offensive. Wounded on Nov 30 1950 during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir and again on Apr 28 1951. The Purple Heart Medal w/Oak Leaf Cluster and The Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Bloodworth-720|James Ulysses Bloodworth (1930-1983)]] Great Granduncle Babb Side. US Army PFC 1951-1953. Korean Service Medal. Records Destroyed in Archives fire [[Perry-22777|Tinley Bolin Perry (1917-2002)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Perry Side. US Air Force MSG 1950-1956. Arrived home from Korea on June 10th, 1953, Korean Service Medal. Records Added ===Korean War Era Uncles=== [[Perry-22775|Mickey Perry]] Great Granduncle Perry Side. US Army 1951-1953. He served at Fort Sill, Oklahoma in administration with the 187th Field Artillery Observation Battalion. Unknown record availability status, info came from him personally and he is still alive [[Cooper-34434|Thomas Russell Cooper (1931-2010)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Babb Side. US Air Force. More research needed [[Thompson-72398|Voyed James Thompson (1902-1983)]] Great Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Army MSG. More research needed ===Korean War Cousins Removed=== [[Braddy-407|James Frederick Braddy (1934-2007)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Perry Side. US Army MSG. More research needed [[Hughes-26447|Olin Devoy Hughes (1931-1972)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Thompson Side. US Army CPL 1951-1953. He served with the 32nd Engineer Group. Records destroyed in Archives fire [[Spann-853|Joseph Edward Spann (1928-2021)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Thompson Side. US Army. More research needed [[Spann-854|Wyatt Stephen Spann (1930-2019)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Thompson Side. US Navy. More research needed [[Bentley-6431|Harold Harville Bentley (1928-1989)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Air Force A1C 1950-1954. He was a General Equipment Operator and served 11 months and 8 days overseas most likely the majority of it in Korea, earning the Korean Service Medal. Records Added [[Braddock-4831|William Lawson Braddock (1922-2013)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Flanders Side. US Army MSG 1946-1951. A WWII Veteran of the European Theater he served as a Platoon Sergeant with F Company 38th Infantry Regiment of the 2nd Infantry Division and was wounded in heavy fighting in both North and South Korea. During an assault in North Korea William earned the Silver Star Medal for Bravery. For his service some of his awards include the Silver Star, Purple Heart with oak leaf cluster, The Combat Infantryman's Badge, and The Presidential Unit Citation. Silver Star Citation added [[Bloodworth-844|James Russell Bloodworth (1927-1969)]] 2nd Cousin x2 Removed Babb Side. US Army. More research needed [[Harmon-9713|James Leonard Harmon (1928-2015)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Thompson Side. US Army CPL 1950-1952. He served 10 months and 21 days overseas in the Occupation of Japan and in Korea, where he fought in 1 Campaign. Records added ===Korean War Era 1st Cousins Removed=== [[Bentley-6434|Charles Lindberg Bentley Sr (1927-2018)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army SP3 1953-1955. He served with the HQ of the HQ Battery of the 101st Airborne Division's Artillery. Records added ===World War Two Ancestors=== [[Thompson-72384|Earlish Jackson Thompson (1926-1981)]] Great Grandfather Thompson Side. US Navy S2C 1944-1946. Served in the Caribbean on the USS Charger (CVE-30) in the American Theater and in post war operations in the Atlantic on the USS Midway (CV-41), earning the American Campaign Medal. Records Added [[Babb-1966|William Lawrence Babb (1920-1982)]] Great Grandfather Babb Side. US Army Air Force TSGT 1942-1945. Served as a Motor Transport NCO overseas in the European Theater for 2 years 3 months and 17 days in the Air Offensive Europe, Normandy, Northern France, and Rhineland Campaigns and earned two awards of the Presidential Unit Citation. Served in Post-War Occupation of Germany. Records added [[Flanders-2155|Elton Norris Flanders (1925-1990)]] Great Grandfather Flanders Side. US Navy Reserve S1C 1945-1946. Served in the Pacific during Post War Operations on the USS Fuller (APA-7) and then in Charleston Harbor on the USS Havre (PCE C 877) and earned the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal. Records Added ===World War Two Uncles=== [[Babb-1972|George Franklin Babb Sr (1926-1998)]] Great Granduncle Babb Side. US Navy S2C 1944-1946. Served on the USS LST 242 in Post War Activities in the Pacific and on the USS LST 892 and the USS LST 923, earning the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal. Records Added [[Bloodworth-716|John Edward Bloodworth (1914-1999)]] Great Granduncle Babb Side. US Army TEC4 1941-1945. He served 30 months overseas in the European Theater with the 1st Armored Division in the Tunisia, Naples-Foggia, Rome Arno, Anzio, North Apennines, and Po Valley Campaigns. Records Added [[Bloodworth-717|William Franklin Bloodworth Jr (1917-1948)]] Great Granduncle Babb Side. US Army TEC4 1942-1945. He served as a Cook in Battery A of the 737th Coastal Artillery (Anti-Aircraft) overseas in the Pacific Theater for 7 months and 10 days in the Bismarck Archipelago Campaign. Records Added [[Perry-22777|Tinley Bolin Perry (1917-2002)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Perry Side. US Army Air Force WOJG 1943-1946. He served as a Administrative Officer at Warner Robbins Air Force and served 1 year 11 months and 27 days overseas in England, earning the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal. Records Added [[Smith-322492|Joe W Smith (1920-2018)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Perry Side. US Army TEC5 1943-1946. He served as a Supply Clerk with the HQ and Service Company 1302nd Engineers and served 2 years and 23 days overseas in Europe, earning the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal. Records on FamilySearch [[Alford-3812|Delmer Clifford Alford (1920-2008)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Babb Side. US Navy GM3 1942-1945. He was a Gunner's Mate aboard the USS Antaeus (A 521), USS Spry (PG 64), USS PC 493, and most importantly the USS Missouri (BB-63) on which he served at the Battle of Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and in 3rd Fleet Operations against Japan. He served in 4 Pacific Campaigns: Anti-Submarine Ops, Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and 3rd Fleet Operations against Japan and earned the Combat Action Ribbon. Records Added [[McCook-387|Thomas Hershel McCook (1924-2009)]] Husband of Great Grandaunt Babb Side. US Navy Reserve SF3 1944-1946. He served as a Navy Seabee with the 8th Naval Construction Brigade and then the 146th US Naval Construction Battalion where it is likely he served at the Battle of Okinawa. Records Added [[Braddy-292|Palmer Braddy (1912-1945)]] Great Great Granduncle Perry Side. US Army SSG 1942-1945. Was a Squad Leader in the 120th Infantry Regiment of the 30th Infantry Division in tough fighting in France and was wounded on Aug 8 1944, receiving the Purple Heart and Combat Infantryman's Badge. He served in the Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, and Ardennes Campaigns. During the Bloody Battle of Aachen they earned the Presidential Unit Citation for their actions. He was killed in action during the Battle of the Bulge, posthumously earning a second award of the Purple Heart. Records Added [[Braddy-294|Cary Braddy (1918-1945)]] Great Great Granduncle Perry Side. US Army 2LT 1940-1945. Served as a Company First Sergeant in the Georgia National Guard and was later commissioned and served as a Platoon Leader in 1st Platoon, Company K, 3rd Battalion, 305th Infantry Regiment of the 77th Infantry Division. He fought in the Battles of Guam, Leyte, Ormoc Bay, and Le Shima where he was killed in action. Served in the Western Pacific, Leyte, and Ryukus Campaigns. He posthumously earned the Silver Star Medal for bravery for his actions on Le Shima as well as the Purple Heart. Also received the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Braddy-296|Luthell Otha Braddy (1923-2017)]] Great Great Granduncle Perry Side. US Army CPL 1943-1946. He served overseas in Europe with the 3rd Infantry Regiment of the 106th Infantry Division in the Central Europe Campaign where they processed German POWs. Records Added [[Cochran-7534|Louie Vester Cochran (1908-1998)]] Great Great Granduncle Perry Side. US Army PFC 1943-1944. Served in the HQ and Service Company of the 258th Engineer Combat Battalion before being transferred to and discharged from Kennedy General Hospital in Memphis, TN. This was most likely due to injury, illness, or something else that rendered him unfit for duty. Earned the American Campaign Medal. Records Added [[Thompson-72398|Voyed James Thompson (1902-1983)]] Great Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Army MSG. More research needed [[Spann-671|Overstreet Spann (1919-1988)]] Great Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Marine Corps PLTSGT 1941-1945. He served with the Police Detachment at Marine Recruit Depot Parris Island, SC for the first few years of the war until being assigned to a replacement battalion for service in the Pacific. As a SGT with B Company 3rd Armored Amphibian Tractor Battalion (Provisional) 1st Marine Division he fought in the Battles of Peleliu and Okinawa, earning two awards of the Presidential Unit Citation and the Combat Action Ribbon. Records Added [[Stacks-221|Gabe Partin Stacks (1919-1975)]] Great Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Army PVT 1945-1946. He was injured while serving with C Company of the 410th Engineer Construction Battalion Engineer School, being discharged from the detachment of patients at Ft Belvoir, Virginia. Earned the WWII Victory Medal. Records Added [[Stanley-14944|Jetter Birdine Stanley (1916-2000)]] Husband of Great Great Grandaunt Thompson Side. US Army TEC4 1941-1945. He served in Battery A of the 905th Field Artillery Battalion 80th Infantry Division as a Auto Mechanic serving overseas in Europe for 1 year 3 months and 26 days in Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe Campaigns and also served in the occupation of Germany. Records are on FamilySearch attached to his profile ===World War Two Cousins Removed=== [[Lord-7924|Nathan Perry Lord (1919-2005)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Perry Side. US Army PFC 1944-1946. Served overseas in Europe for 1 year 2 months and 16 days as a Light Machine Gunner with G Company 141st Infantry Regiment of the 36th ID in the Rhineland and Central Europe Campaigns, fought in the Battle of the Bulge, and served in the occupation of Germany. He earned the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Perry-22782|Zeddie Harold Perry Jr (1917-2003)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Perry Side. US Army CPT 1941-. Zeddie completed OCS and was commissioned a infantry officer and served in Northern France and Rhineland Campaigns as a Captain in the 80th Infantry Division and was wounded fighting in France, earning the Purple Heart and Combat Infantryman's Badge. Check Newspapers for wound info [[Summerlin-424|Brooks Summerlin (1924-1997)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Thompson Side. US Army SGT 1944-1946. Although unknown where he served or with what unit he earned the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Babb-2307|Lawrence Ben Babb (1913-1975)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Navy Reserve WT2 1942-1945. He served on the USS Philadelphia in 4 Campaigns in the EAME Theater, and also served in the Pacific. Among awards received are The Combat Action Ribbon and Navy Unit Commendation. Records Added [[Babb-2308|Charles Jerome Babb (1918-1971)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Navy Reserve BM1 1942-1945. He served on the USS LCS (L) 36 in 1 campaign in the Pacific. Records Added [[Babb-1984|Alonzo Louis Babb Jr (abt.1921-1944)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army Air Force 2LT 1941-1944. He completed training as a bombardier and served in that capacity on a B-24 of the 579th Bomb Squadron 392nd Bomb Group of the 8th Air Force in Europe and served in the Air Offensive Europe Campaign during which on their 11th combat mission, flying over Germany they were shot down by a German fighter and all killed. Posthumously received The Purple Heart. NA Records [[Babb-1987|Thomas Babb (1918-1971)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Navy BM2 1943-1945. He served on the USS Oahu in the Pacific Theater earning the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal. Records Added [[Babb-1988|Sam Babb (1920-1981)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Navy MM1 1942-1944. He served on the USS LCI (L) 29 in the Pacific in the Eastern New Guinea and Bismarck Archipelago Campaigns and then was on the USS LCI (L) 675 which saw combat during the invasion of Southern France. He earned the Combat Action Ribbon and both the EAME and Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medals. Records Added [[Babb-2310|Homer Hamilton Babb (1917-1988)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army CPT 1942-1945. After completing OCS he served as a Admin officer in the Transportation Corps with the HQ of the Communication Zone ETO, earning the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal (EAME). Records Added [[Bentley-6430|Earl Columbus Bentley (1926-2003)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army PFC 1945. He served with the Third Engineer Combat Battalion in the Occupation of Japan. Records Added [[Bentley-6433|George Respress Wayne Bentley Jr (1924-2011)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army Air Force TEC5 1943-1946. He served with the 1915th Engineer Aviation Battalion Battalion on Okinawa. Records Added [[Bloodworth-838|Charles W Bloodworth (1916-1999)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army PFC 1942-1945. Unfortunately it is unknown what theater he served but he earned the Purple Heart and The Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Bowdoin-268|Weyman Ertel Bowdoin (1912-1978)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army TSGT 1942-1945. He served as a Laundry Foreman with the 579th Quartermaster Laundry Company overseas in Europe for 1 year 11 months and 20 days where he served in the Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe Campaigns, as well as the Occupation of Germany. Records are on Family Search check his profile for Service Record [[Whitaker-8098|James Buford Whitaker (1919-2003)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army Air Force SGT 1942-1945. He served as a Airplane Mechanic in the European Theater for 2 years 9 months and 8 days overseas in the Air Offensive Europe, Tunisia, Sicily, Rome-Arno, Naples-Foggia, and Southern France Campaigns and although his wartime unit is unknown he received The Presidential Unit Citation. Records are on Family Search check his profile for Service Record [[Whitaker-8099|Charlie Bell Whitaker (1921-2001)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Babb Side. US Army PFC 1944-1945. He fought as a Rifleman overseas in Europe for 9 months and 27 with L Company 7th Infantry Regiment of the 3rd Infantry Division in the Rhineland and Central Europe Campaigns during which he was wounded. His awards include the Purple Heart, The Combat Infantryman's Badge, and The Presidential Unit Citation. Records Added [[Braddock-4831|William Lawson Braddock (1922-2013)]] 1st Cousin x3 Removed Flanders Side. US Army SSG 1940-1945. He served in 2 Campaigns in Europe and in the Occupation of Germany. Later fought in Korea and served in Vietnam Era. Records Added [[Bloodworth-841|John Henry Bloodworth (1921-1996)]] 2nd Cousin x2 Removed Babb Side. US Army TEC5 1942-1946. He served with the 71st Infantry Division overseas in Europe during the Rhineland and Central Europe Campaigns, for which he earned the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Wood-53970|Woodson Wood (1922-1968)]] 2nd Cousin x2 Removed Babb Side. US Army TEC5 1942-1945. He served with the HHC of the 2nd Engineer Special Brigade as a Truck Driver in the Pacific serving overseas for 2 years 9 months and 7 days, during which he participated in the New Guinea, Southern Philippines, and Luzon Campaigns. Service Record on Family Search check his profile to view it [[Braddy-409|George Hill Braddy (1918-1988)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army 1942-?. More research needed [[Braddy-302|Harvey Shepherd Braddy (1921-1943)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army PVT 1942-1943. He served as a Infantryman with the 39th Infantry Regiment of the 9th Infantry Division and saw combat in Tunisia and Sicily, and during the Battle of Troina in Sicily he became the first of my relatives to give his life to our country in WWII. His awards include the Bronze Star Medal, The Purple Heart Medal, and The Combat Infantryman's Badge. NA records [[Braddy-303|Cary Bazil Braddy (1924-2015)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army TEC5 1943-1946. He served in E Company 18th Engineers Construction Regiment as a Light Truck Driver and for 1 year 4 months and 17 days he was stationed in Alaska, earning the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal. Records Added [[Richards-22699|A B Richards (1919-1991)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Thompson Side. US Army SSG 1940-1945. He served as a Supply NCO with HHC 1st Battalion 41st Armored Infantry of the 2nd Armored Division and he fought in combat overseas in Europe serving over there for 2 years 6 months and 8 days during which he participated in the Sicily, Normandy, Northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland, and Central Europe Campaigns, for which he earned the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records are on Family Search check his profile to view them [[Ursrey-9|Theodore Frederick Ursrey (1923-1998)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Thompson Side. US Army 1943-?. He served in G Company of the 139th Airborne Engineer Battalion of the 17th Airborne Division and served in the Combat Glider landing during Operation Varsity seeing action in the Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe Campaigns. He also served in the Occupation of Germany. Records Added [[Lofton-900|George Albert Lofton (1923-2000)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Thompson Side. US Army PFC 1943-1946. He fought in Europe with the 82nd Airborne Division, earning the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added [[Johns-8023|James Cecil Johns (1920-1960)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Babb Side. US Army PVT 1940-1945. He was wounded overseas in Europe (May have been serving with the 41st Infantry Regiment) and earned the Purple Heart and Combat Infantryman's Badge. Proof of wounding and pre-war unit on Newspapers [[Braddy-411|James Bishop Braddy (1916-2001)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army PFC 1941-1945. He served in the HQ Company 148th Infantry Regiment of the 37th Infantry Division as a Messenger, delivering messages and orders from foxhole to foxhole under enemy fire in the Pacific where he served overseas for 2 years 11 months and 25 days during which he participated in the Solomon Islands (During which he made the paper) and Leyte Campaigns. For his service he earned The Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records are on Family Search where you can view them [[Etheridge-3017|Perry Thomas Etheridge (1921-1987)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army SGT 1942-1945. He served in E Company 117th Infantry Regiment of the 30th Infantry Division as a Light Mortar NCO and fought in Europe serving overseas for 1 year 7 months and 7 days during which he participated in the Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe Campaigns and in the Occupation of Germany. His awards include The Purple Heart Medal with oak leaf cluster, The Combat Infantryman's Badge, and The Presidential Unit Citation. Records Added [[Dominy-200|Perry Frederick Dominy (1922-2014)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army SGT 1943-1945. He served as a Gunner with C Company of the 90th Chemical Mortar Battalion and saw combat in Germany and Belgium during the Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe Campaigns. Records Added [[Dominy-201|Olin Owen Dominy (1926-1981)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Perry Side. US Army PFC 1944-1946. Although unknown which theater he saw combat as a Infantryman, earning the Combat Infantryman's Badge. Records Added ===World War One Ancestors=== [[Perry-22772|Lewis Frank Perry Sr (1888-1954)]] Great Great Grandfather Perry Side. US Army SGT 1917-1919. He was stationed in Pennsylvania where he served as a Airplane Mechanic [[Babb-1969|Clifton Thomas Babb (abt.1889-1969)]] Great Great Grandfather Babb Side. US Army CPL 1916-1919. He originally served in the Georgia National Guard with the 2nd Georgia Regiment at the Mexican Border during the 1916-1917 Mexican Border Expedition until its federalization upon the outbreak of the First World War, becoming E Company 121st Infantry Regiment of the 31st Division. He arrived in France on Oct 4 1918 and on Nov 8 1918 he was assigned as a replacement with the 328th Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Division where he served in the final days of the Meuse Argonne Offensive ===World War One Uncles=== [[Bentley-6429|William Columbus Bentley (1893-1971)]] Great Great Granduncle Babb Side. US Army PFC 1917-1919. He served in Battery C of the 13th Field Artillery Regiment of the 4th Division serving in the Aisne-Marne, St Mihiel, Meuse Argonne, Champagne 1918, and Lorraine 1918 Campaigns [[Flanders-2413|Johnnie Linear Flanders (1895-1963)]] Great Great Granduncle Flanders Side. US Army PVT 1917-1919. He served in B Company of the 13th Machine Gun Battalion 5th Division in the Battle of St Mihiel and the Meuse Argonne Offensive [[Jackson-59221|Ernest Wesley Jackson (1896-1965)]] Husband of Great Great Grandaunt Babb Side. US Army PVT 1918-1919. While fighting in France he apparently had his feet frozen and was gassed , which would qualify him for the Purple Heart [[Wicker-1379|Charlie Tillman Wicker (1895-1971)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Perry Side. US Army PVT 1918-1919. He served in K Company 51st Infantry Regiment of the 6th Division in the Meuse Argonne Offensive [[Hughes-26552|John Morgan Hughes (1888-1960)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Thompson Side. US Army PVT 1918-1919. He served in B Company 308th Infantry Regiment of the 77th Division in the Meuse Argonne Offensive and in the Oise-Aisne Campaign ===World War One Cousins Removed=== [[Spann-679|Clarence G Spann (1895-1957)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Thompson Side. US Army PVT 1918-1919. He saw combat in the Battle of St Mihiel and in the Meuse Argonne Offensive with M Company of the 168th Infantry Regiment 42nd Division [[Mathews-7255|George Mathews (1894-1958)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Thompson Side. US Army PVT 1918-1919. He served in K Company 34th Infantry Regiment of the 7th Division in the Lorraine 1918 Campaign [[Franklin-16707|Grover Cleveland Franklin (1884-1949)]] 1st Cousin x4 Removed Babb Side. US Army 1LT 1918-1919. He served in the Medical Corps ===Mexican Border Expedition Ancestors=== [[Babb-1969|Clifton Thomas Babb (abt.1889-1969)]] Great Great Grandfather Babb Side. US Army CPL 1916-1919. He served in the Georgia National Guard with E Company (aka The Baldwin Blues) of the 2nd Georgia Regiment at the Mexican Border during the 1916-1917 Mexican Border Expedition at Camp Cotton Ft Bliss, Texas during which he served as a Cook and was left behind in hospital in March 1917 though returned home in April where he was shortly deployed to another war, this being the First World War ===Spanish American War Uncles=== [[Franklin-16716|Preston Brooks Franklin (1860-1933)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Babb Side. US Volunteers PVT 1898. He served stateside with Battery A of the Georgia Light Artillery, earning the Spanish War Service Medal ===American Civil War Ancestors=== [[Bloodworth-721|Miles Morgan Bloodworth Jr (1838-1911)]] 3rd Great Grandfather Babb Side. CSA 3rd SGT 1861-1865. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many of the biggest battles of the war and was wounded at the Battle of Spotsylvania and surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse [[Perry-22810|Eason Perry (1825-abt.1862)]] 4th Great Grandfather Perry Side. CSA PVT he died of dysentery in camp shortly after enlisting into the Army [[Lock-3975|Joseph Enoch Lock (1845-1925)]] 4th Great Grandfather Perry Side. CSA PVT 1863-1865. He served in E Company of the 6th Alabama Cavalry seeing heavy action in the South, especially during the Atlanta Campaign [[Creamer-975|James Daniel Creamer (1840-1913)]] 4th Great Grandfather Thompson Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in E Company of the 37th Alabama Regiment in many major battles in the Western Theater [[Spann-675|John Edward Spann (1823-1891)]] 4th Great Grandfather Thompson Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in B Company of the 6th Alabama Regiment fighting in some of the biggest battles of the war and he surrendered at Appomattox [[Partin-431|Hugh Gilmore Partin (1848-1915)]] 4th Great Grandfather Thompson Side. CSA PVT 1864-1865. He served in B Company of the 61st Georgia Regiment where he fought in the major battles of the Eastern Theater in the final year of the war and surrendered at Appomattox [[Babb-1989|William A Babb (abt.1819-1878)]] 4th Great Grandfather Babb Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in B Company of the 3rd Georgia Reserves and fought in the Atlanta Campaign and in the Battle of Tulifinny [[Franklin-14527|Avery Bland Franklin (abt.1832-1864)]] 4th Great Grandfather Babb Side. CSA PVT 1863-1864. He served in A Company of the 22nd South Carolina Regiment and fought at the Siege of Jackson before being captured and sent to Point Lookout POW Camp where he died of conditions there [[Chambers-10879|George Thomas Chambers (1840-1910)]] 4th Great Grandfather Babb Side, CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in H Company of the 57th Georgia Regiment and saw heavy action in the Western Theater [[Whitaker-6776|Nathaniel Pace Whitaker (1816-1864)]] 4th Great Grandfather Babb Side. CSA PVT 1862-1864. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment seeing action in many major battles in the Eastern Theater until he was mortally wounded at the Battle of the Crater [[Fountain-350|Augustus Jones Fountain (1837-1863)]] 4th Great Grandfather Babb Side. CSA PVT 1862-1863. He served in I Company of the 57th Georgia Regiment and was captured during the Siege of Vicksburg but was exchanged back to Confederate forces but by that time he had contracted Pneumonia and died shortly after [[Flanders-2172|William Thomas Flanders (1842-1910)]] 4th Great Grandfather Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1861-1864. He served in F Company of the 14th Georgia Regiment in many tough and brutal battles in the Eastern Theater until he was captured at the Battle of the Wilderness [[Herndon-2861|Henley J Herndon (1840-1899)]] 4th Great Grandfather Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in A Company of the 49th Georgia Regiment in many major battles of the Eastern Theater and surrendered at Appomattox [[Combs-1438|John William Combs (1842-1923)]] 4th Great Grandfather Flanders Side. US PVT 1861-1865. He served in D Company of the 3rd West Virginia Cavalry Regiment, my only ancestor who fought for the Union during the Civil War! He fought in many battles and witnessed the Confederate surrender at Appomattox [[Underwood-8049|George Carter Underwood (1831-1894)]] 4th Great Grandfather Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in the 1st Battalion of Georgia Sharpshooters and saw extensive service in the Western Theater of the war [[Browning-7274|Silas Browning (1819-1888)]] 4th Great Grandfather Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in F Company of the 2nd Georgia Regiment which saw heavy action throughout the war and is one of the few units that was at both Gettysburg and Chickamauga, the two bloodiest battles of the war. He and his unit surrendered at Appomattox ===American Civil War Uncles=== [[Bloodworth-724|John David Bloodworth (1838-1865)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA CPL 1861-1865. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many of the biggest battles of the war until being captured at the Second Battle of Deep Bottom and was sent to the awful Point Lookout POW Camp where he died, just 10 days before the Surrender at Appomattox [[Bloodworth-723|James Hancock Bloodworth (1841-1924)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA PVT 1861-1865. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many of the biggest battles of the war and surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse [[Bloodworth-725|Augustus Rabun Bloodworth (1847-1913)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA PVT 1864-1865. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many major battles of the war [[Whitaker-6777|William Richard Whitaker (1846-1930)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many of the biggest battles of the war and surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse [[Cannon-6624|Hardy William Cannon (abt.1834-1863)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA PVT 1861-1863. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many major battles of the war until being mortally wounded at the Battle of Manassas Gap, he is buried in Arlington National Cemetery [[Cannon-6628|Benjamin F Cannon (1837-1862)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA PVT 1861-1862. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment and fought in the Battle of South Mills and during a skirmish with the 16th MA he was killed in action [[Cannon-6625|Edward B Cannon (abt.1840-1863)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA CPL 1861-1863. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many major battles until being killed on the 2nd day of the Battle of Gettysburg [[Cannon-6626|William Franklin Cannon (1841-1903)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA 1SG 1861-1864. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment in many major battles, eventually rising to the rank of Company First Sergeant. He was wounded on the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg and while rescuing a wounded comrade on May 14th, 1864 at the Battle of Spotsylvania he lost his arm [[Cannon-6627|Franklin Allen Cannon (1842-abt.1915)]] 3rd Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA PVT 1862. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment and fought at King's School House and during the Battle of Malvern Hill he was crippled [[Spann-861|Henry Andrew Spann (1826-1864)]] 4th Great Granduncle Thompson Side. CSA PVT 1863-1864. He served in C Company of the 11th Florida Regiment and fought during the Siege of Petersburg before deserting to Union forces and was captured being sent to Carroll Prison in Virginia. There he contracted and died of diarrhea and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery [[Spann-862|Raford Marion Spann (1839-1916)]] 4th Great Granduncle Thompson Side. CSA PVT. He served in B Company of the 6th Alabama Regiment but sent most of the war in hospitals due to typhoid fever but one battle that he is confirmed to be at is the Battle of Berryville, where he was wounded [[Spann-863|George Franklin Spann (1844-1905)]] 4th Great Granduncle Thompson Side. CSA PVT 1863-1865. He served in B Company of the 6th Alabama Regiment where he fought in some of the biggest battles of the war and surrendered at Appomattox [[Perdue-893|David Blackshear Hamilton Perdue (1846-1943)]] 4th Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA PVT 1861-1865. He initially served in E Company of the 7th Georgia until serving as a substitute in G Company of the 62nd Georgia before transferring to his final unit of G Company of the 8th Georgia Regiment. He fought in a couple of battles and surrendered at Appomattox [[Perdue-2964|John Addison Wilborn Perdue (1841-1862)]] 4th Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA SGT 1862. He served in D Company of the 4th Arkansas Regiment and was wounded in the heel at the Battle of Pea Ridge. At the Battle of Richmond, Kentucky he was wounded int he lungs and died of his wounds the next day [[Douglass-5099|William Henry Douglass (1829-1919)]] 4th Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA PVT 1861-1865. He served in C Company of the 27th Georgia Regiment until it was redesignated as the 31st Georgia Regiment and fought in many major battles, being wounded at the Battle of Gettysburg and he surrendered at Appomattox [[Douglass-5100|John Allen Douglass (1838-1918)]] 4th Great Granduncle Perry Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in I Company of the 46th Alabama Regiment in many major battles of the western theater [[Fountain-349|John Henry Fountain (1837-1863)]] 4th Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA PVT 1861-1863. He served in I Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment and saw action in many major battles before being captured at the Battle of Gettysburg and was sent to the awful Point Lookout POW Camp where he died of conditions there, just like his brother Augustus who was also there and died 5 days after his brother John [[Chambers-13746|Henry Chambers (1838-1863)]] 4th Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA PVT 1862-1863. He served in H Company of the 57th Georgia Regiment and was killed in action at the Battle of Champion Hill, their first combat [[Chambers-13747|John Chambers (1846-1863)]] 4th Great Granduncle Babb Side. CSA PVT 1862-1863. He served in H Company of the 57th Georgia Regiment and was killed in action at the Battle of Champion Hill, their first combat [[Herndon-2902|Charles Herndon (1843-1862)]] 4th Great Granduncle Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1861-1862. He served in F Company of the 3rd Georgia Regiment and was mortally wounded at the Battle of Malvern Hill, but agonizingly he did not die until 28 days later on July 29th, 1862 [[Combs-1435|Francis Ignatius Combs (1835-1924)]] 4th Great Granduncle Flanders Side. US CPL 1861-1865. One of my few relatives who fought for the Union he served in E Company of the 3rd West Virginia Cavalry in many battles in the war and witnessed the Confederate Surrender at Appomattox [[Combs-1439|Henry Harrison Combs (1844-1933)]] 4th Great Granduncle Flanders Side. US PVT 1862-1865. He fought for the Union serving in E Company of the 15th West Virginia Regiment fighting in several battles and witnessed the Confederate Surrender at Appomattox [[Combs-1440|Armstead Combs (1846-1921)]] 4th Great Granduncle Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. Despite his 3 brothers fighting for the Union Armstead opted to fight for the Confederacy serving with McNeil's Rangers throughout the whole war. Luckily by my own research I have determined the Combs Brothers never fought each other [[Browning-7339|Radford Jordan Browning (1829-1904)]] 4th Great Granduncle Flanders Side. CSA PVT 1862-1865. He served in H Company of the 20th Georgia Regiment in many major battles including both Gettysburg and Chickamauga. He surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse

Family Vets

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The goal of this project is to ... Catalog members of my family that served in the military Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Hutchins-3466|Dennis Hutchins]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Identifying those who have served * confirming service records *giving their profiles the appropriate tags Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=26188800 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Family-2

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Fizzard-18|Janice Fizzard]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=29101431 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FamilyBible1

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=== Notes from the Silberstein Family Bible === ::''' Transcription of ''Duplicate Transcript From Silberstein Bible in order of Entry'' ::::::::::::::::Page 1 Dec. 27, 1896 Letter from Milton (Wertheimer) :Grandma, Mama, Papa all expressing regret of the death of Grandpa. From your loving son and grandson. June 9, 1897 Letter from Lillian (Silberstein) to Grandma :Thanking her for the parasol. Kiss Gracie and Miltie for me. From your Grandchild Jan. 8, 1862 Blesen, Germany Birth Certificate in German :On March 13, 1831 to the Jewish Cantor and Vice Rabbi Simon Silberstein and his wife Rosa Silberstein, a son named Joel Julius Silberstein. June 11, 1853 Potsdam, Germany A diploma from the Royal Government: Dept. of Churches and schools. :On the basis of an examination given by Superintendent Liesegang at Perleberg to Jewish Cantor Julius Silberstein of this City, age 22, born in Blesen which he passed on June 3rd is granted permission to be a teacher of the Jewish religion. As noted in the bible by Albert Lyman Silberstein :The grandchildren of Hattie Silberstein and Ike Wertheimer are: ::Laurie Wertheimer - daughter of Lennie and Merland(?) Wertheimer born Nov. 3, 1909. ::Margaret Wertheimer - daughter of Lennie and Merland(?) Wertheimer born Jan. 20, 1916. ::Emanuel Gump Wertheimer - son of Milton and Rosalind Wertheimer born June 21, 1912. ::Milton Gordon Wertheimer - son of Milton + Rosalind born June 28, 1915. ::Maurice Schuman, grandson of Morris and Clare Schuman born April 2, 1914. He is the son of Milton and Dorothy Schuman ::Jane Schuman born Sept 1, 1917 ::::::::::(Over) ---- ::::::::::::::::Page 2
Deaths
:Sylvie Silberstein - son of Albert + Jennie April 14,1892. Buried in Silberstein Plot at Mt. Hope Cemetery :Alex Schumann - son of Morris + Clara (née Silberstein) :Morris Schumann - Husband of Clara :Julius Silberstein - Husband of Lena - Father of Hattie Wertheimer - Jennie Levy - Alex and Albert Silberstein -Clara Schumann (Peiser and Bergmann) Dec 26, 1896 :Regina Bach - née Strauss - Mother of Jennie - Wife of Albert L. Silberstein Aug 5, 1902 :Hannah Roth née Bach - Siter of Jennie Silberstein age 45 years Jan.26, 1903 :Nathan Bach - Father of Jennie age 82 years 4 mos. April 27, 1903 :Julius Bach - brother of Jennie age 57 years ? :Harry Bach - Brother of Jannie age 47 Years ? :Jennie Levy - née Silberstein - sister of albert Silberstein age 49 years Dec. 31, 1910 :Lena (Silberstein) Wolff - Mother of Hattie Wertheimer, Jennie Levy, Alex Silberstein, Albert L. Silberstein, Clara Bergman - Age 87 years Dec. 17, 1922 :At her death she was Great Grandmother of :Maxine Levy - Granddaughter of Jennie :Morton Levy - Grandson of Jennie :Fred Levy - Grandson of Jennie :Milton Schuman - Grandson of Clara :Jane Schuman - Granddaughter of Clara :Eva Jaffe - Granddaughter of Clara :Louise Wertheimer - Granddaughter of Hattie :Margaret Wertheimer - Granddaughter of Hattie :Emanuel Wertheimer - Grandson of Hattie :Milton Wertheimer, Jr. - Grandson of Hattie :Warren Tisch - Grandson of Alex :Lenore Tisch - Granddaughter of Alex :Sylvan Broadman - of Albert Silberstein :Earle Jacobs, Jr. - of Albert Silberstein :Edna Jacobs - of Albert Silberstein :Richard Broadman - of Albert Silberstein :Robert Harman(Lichtenstein) - of Albert Silberstein :Jane Lichtenstein - of Albert Silberstein ::::::::::Continue ---- ::::::::::::::::Page 3
Continued - Lean Silberstein Wolf's Great Grandchildren
:Albert Zabin - of Albert Silverstein :Dorothy Zabin - of Albert Silverstein :Alfred Griffon (Silberstein) - of Albert Silverstein
Birthdays
{|class="wikitable" style="margin: auto; text-align:center" border="3" | Month || Date|| Name||Year|| || Month || Date|| Name||Year |- |January|| 18 ||Sidney Levy||1885|| ||July||3||Harold||1886 |- | ||31||Clara||1870|| || ||4||Eva Silberstein||1892 |- | March|| 13 ||Julius||1831|| ||- ||14|| Lennie Wertheimer||1880 |- |April ||12||Jennie Levy||1861|| || ||29||Esther||1866 |- | || 11 ||Florence Silberstein||1890|| || ||30||Ike Werthaimer||1857 |- |May ||1||Jennie Silberstein||1867|| ||Aug ||10||Alfred Levy||1901 |- | || 27 ||Albert Silberstein||1866|| ||Oct||10|| Alex||1863 |- |June ||2||Viola Juliette||1898|| || ||21||Gracie||1893 |- | ||3 ||Milton Schuman||1832|| ||Nov||5|| Hedwig||1859 |- | ||14||Lennie Wertheimer||1880|| || ||20||Edna||1893 |- | ||24 ||Henry Levy||1852|| ||Dec ||13||Lena||1835 |- | ||28||Lily Silberstein||1888|| || ||18||Bertran||1892 |- | || ||Sylvia|| || || ||29||Milton Wertheimer||1883 |- |Oct ||17||Anthony Lee Griffon||1941|| || || || || |} :June 26, 1882 Letter from Simon (in German) to his brother-in-law (Julius SIlberstein) and sister (Lena Markendorf) from Leipzig (Germany). Excusing himself for not writing sooner. Our father is not feeling well. His family has increased by the birth of a boy. His eldest son George feels much better. They have suffered a loss in the death of his father-in-law. Regarding the Breslau matter our father gives you the address and does not know if the Schule has any means. Lesent of Jennie Silberstein broken engagement. How is Hedwig (Hattie Wertheimer) and her family? Don't believe that Schment has any means because Denas engagement is also broken off. From my beloved Roschen, George, and his brother as well as from your brother and brother-in-law. ---- ::::::::::::::::Page 4 Letter signed by Julius Silberstein (in German) :For Eternal Memory for our children and descendants. ::Last letter sent to us by our beloved father - Markus Markendorff, Died - Aug 24, 1882 at Leipzig, Saxony on his birthday - age 86 years old - May he rest in peace. Entered by his son-in-law Julius Silberstein Entry in German and Hebrew :'''Simon Silberstein''' Died June 17, 1880, in the morning at the age of 93 years and 11 months - May he rest in peace - entered by his son, Julius Silberstein :'''Rosalie Silberstein''' née Jaffe Died July 21, 1881 Married 71 years Buried in their family plot in Frankfort. July 24, 1881 Mother of Julius. :'''Heimann Silberstein''' Eldest son of Rosalie, Born Nov 18, 1812, Died Nov 23 1871 Buried in Frankfort. :'''Minna Obersky''' (née Silberstein) Died Nov 28, 1891 in Berlin age 66 years and 8 days. :'''Henriette Wolf''' (née Silberstein) Died Dec 3, 1891 in Berlin, in the Jewish Home for the aged, Age 86 years ---- ::::::::::::::::Page 5 Entry in Bible in German :Our Mother ::Blume Markendorff (née Wolf), died on the first evening of the (?) 1877 in Leipzig; entred by her son-in-law, Julius Silberstein Entry in the bible in English ::For my children to known the names and addresses of my brothers and sisters according to their age and their children as far as I know it myself. # Frau Henriette Wolff, inmate of the Hebrew Home for the aged at Berlin, her sons ## Wilhelm Wolf in Berlin having large family. ## Heiman Silberstein in Berlin, Married, Has family. # Heiman Silberstein died Nov 23, 187(?) at Frankfort, his wife Röschen née Frier and large family living in Frankfort. Of his children I know ## Adolf Silberstein in Frankfort with family ## Siegfried Silberstein in Berlin with family ## Julius Silberstein and brother Cölln on the Rhein ## Herman Silberstein in Berlin ## Martha née Silberstein - in Frankfort with family. The rest of the children I do not know. # Meyer Silberstein living with his second son Isidor in Bärwalde, his oldest son vereisphysicus (?) Dr. Louis Silberstein MD in Chemistry, Saxony with family # Marcus Silberstein in Schwiebus, his sons ## Adolf Silberstein in Schwiebus with family ## Theodor Silberstein in Frankfort with family ## Louis Silberstein in Berlin with family ## Herman Silberstein in USA from Frankfort (1/3/189(?)) # Benjamin Silberstein in Cüstrin, his children ## Rosalie Isenbury with family in Cüstrin ## Adolf Silberstein in Cüstrin ## A second son whose name I have forgotten. #Frau Cäcilie Tinner in Berlin with two sons and several daughters. # Salomicen Silberstein with two daughters Hattie and Jennie in San Francisco # Samuel Silberstein in Berlin, Rosenthaler Str. 25 # Frau Minna Oberski 4 sons - 1 daughter in Landsberg an der Warthe # Levin Silberstein with large family of his children I know by name only ## Joseph ## Rudolph (Rechts Anwalt) Lawyer ## Jennie ## Anna # Moritz Silberstein in Berlin - Prenzlauer Strasse 32a - his children ## Ida, the only daughter while the boys names I have forgotten ---- ::::::::::::::::Page 6 The following are in a s=mall portfolio with Bible # Marriage certificate of Albert L. Silberstein to Jennie Bach Dec 18, 1887 # Duplicate copy of naturalization papers of Julius Silberstein Feb 25, 1916 # Letter from Dept of State - Feb. 3, 1916 to Albert Silberstein regarding naturalization of Julius Silberstein # Letter in German, translation attached, by Heinrich Silberstein to celebrate inviting family to come to Berlin to Celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the wedding day of Simon and Rosalie Silberstein (née Jaffe) signed by Adolf Silberstein, Theodor Obersky, Ludwig Silberstein, Heinrich Silberstein, William Silberstein, Heinr. Silberstein # Letter dated Sept. 6, 1893 from Baltimore, from Julius (father of Albert Silberstein) asking Albert to hire Morris as a salesman who presently works for Claubery (Cutlery) and desires to change. Note Julius signature has an address of 21 29 WIlkins Ave # Flowers from a floral piece of Lina (Silberstein|Wolff) who dies Dec 17, 1922, in perfect condition #Invitation of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Bach to attend the marriage of their daughter Jennie to Albert L. Silberstein Dec 18, 1887 at 335 East 77th St. # Preserved flowers Albert to Jennie SIlberstein 1886 # Preserved flowers from Grandpa Bash before he died 1905 # Family Tree from Leonard Wertheimer # Notice of Retirement of Albert Silberstein on Dec 21, 1927 and the taking over of the business by his son Alfred. # Notice of the birth of Anthony Lee Griffon.

Familybook Kuchling-Valtink

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---- === Buchumschlag: Familien=Stammbuch === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Familien=Stammbuch"'' }} ---- === Titelseite: Familien=Stammbuch === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-1.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Familien-Stammbuch"'' }} :'''mentioned Person & related Profiles:''' *'''Head of the family:''' [[Kuchling-3|Gustav Kuchling]] ---- === Seite 2-3: Inhalts-Verzeichnis & Vorwort === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-2.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Inhalts-Verzeichnis und Vorwort"'' }} ---- === Seite 4-5: Heiratsschein === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-3.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Heiratsschein"'' }} :'''mentioned Person & related Profiles:''' *'''Husband:''' [[Kuchling-3|Friedrich Wilhelm Gustav Kuchling]] *'''Wife:''' [[Valtink-1|Ernestine Marie Emma Valtink]] *'''Husband's father:''' [[Kuchling-4|Ferdinand Kuchling]] *'''Husband's mother:''' [[Lehmann-1833|Mathilde (Lehmann) Kuchling]] *'''Wife's father:''' [[Valtink-0|Gottlieb Valtink]] *'''Wife's mother:''' [[Walter-0|Ernestine geb. Walter verw. Drescher]] ---- === Seite 6-7: Geburtsscheine === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-4.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Geburtsschein"'' }} :'''mentioned Person & related Profiles:''' *'''First child:''' [[Kuchling-2|Margarete Charlotte Käthe Kuchling]] ---- === Seite 14-15: Todesscheine === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-5.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Todesscheine"'' }} :'''mentioned Person & related Profiles:''' *'''Husband:''' [[Kuchling-3|Friedrich Wilhelm Gustav Kuchling]] *'''Wife:''' [[Valtink-1|Emma Kuchling geborene Valtink]] ---- === Seite 30-31: Familienchronik - Die Eltern === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-6.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Familienchronik - Die Eltern"'' }} :'''mentioned Person & related Profiles:''' *'''Husband's father:''' [[Kuchling-4|Ferdinand Kuchling]] *'''Husband's mother:''' [[Lehmann-1833|Mathilde (Lehmann) Kuchling]] *'''Wife's father:''' [[Valtink-0|Gottlieb Valtink]] *'''Wife's mother:''' [[Walter-0|Ernestine geb. Walter verw. Drescher]] ---- === Seite 32-33: Familienchronik - Die Großeltern === {{Image|file=Familybook_Kuchling-Valtink-7.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=''"Familienchronik - Die Großeltern"'' }} :'''mentioned Person & related Profiles:''' *'''Husband's grandmother, maternal side:''' [[Kammann-43|Elisabeth Lehmann geb. Kammann]] ----

FamilyBox

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FamilyBox.png
For information that may duplicate existing biographies, but that may add extra insight.
=== Gordon === '''From Janelle Whitbread. 9/03/2023 out of mum's family tree box.''' *[[Gordon-11341|Margaret Gordon]] (Kirgan - Guidoux - Campbell). What an interesting life our Margaret had! She was born on 26th August 1832 in Newton Stewart, Wigtown, Scotland to Wallace Gordon and Margaret Vernon. Oral history has it that she was married three times to James Kirgan, firstly eloping to Gretna Green because of parental opposition, secondly in a Roman Catholic Church to appease the Kirgans, and thirdly in a Presbyterian Church or Church of Scotland, because that was what she preferred. There are no records for Gretna Green so that cannot be proven and the only registration I found was the Church of Scotland one at County Barony, Lanark on 29th June 1851. As James Kirgan's occupation was Coach painter, he obviously moved around a lot and his seven children were all born in different places: *1853 James married Catherine Quinton in Sydney *21.3.1857 Andrew at Ayr - married Phoebe Cato in Sydney *21.3.1859 Isabella Kerr At Ayr - married James Stockbridge in Sydney *16.7.1861 Agnes at Lanark - Married J. Niblit in Sydney *3.8.1863 Elizabeth at Kelton - married William Horn in Sydney *21.11.1866 Robert Gordon at Argyle married Mary McPhee in Sydney *15.9.1868 Sarah Frances at Sydney - married James N. Stewart in Sydney Margaret arrived in Sydney on Davenport in July 1868. What a nightmare trip that must have been - three months to get here with six children and pregnant with the seventh. The weather was unfavorable as well - how did Margaret cope with the seasickness? I am sure our indomitable Maggie would not have succumbed to such weakness. There were school lessons each day on the ship and the teacher/s report said all the Kirgans were satisfactory. Margaret's mother, Margaret Gordon (nee Vernon had already made the voyage on the S.S. Wanata on 3rd September 1864 bringing with her two of her sons, Samuel and Robert to join three of her children already here. The first to arrive had been her daughter Jessie who had migrated with her husband Duncan McFarlane, and Margaret's sons, John and Wallace who had arrived on ''Northern Light'' on 9th May 1858. Unhappily John Gordon lost his life on 28th March 1865 when a massive explosion occurred at Balmain while he was working as an engineer. He left a widow, Mary Ann (Temperley), and two sons, Edward, born 1862 and Wallace born 1863. It is understood that they returned to Durham after the tragedy. When Sarah was three years old, Margaret married a man from Switzerland named Jean Francois Guidoux, on 21st July 1871. Jean wrote to his family back home and told them he had met this lovely widow with seven children and they were going to be married and he would renounce his claim to his inheritance. Jean and Margaret had three children: John (1872 - 1932, Jessie Jeanette (1875) Married Mr. Lippiat, and Samuel Louis (1878 -). They owned Market Gardens at Rosedale, which was the old name for Croydon Park, and were also Fruit and Vegetable Merchants. The home they lived in was owned by Jessie Gordon. Jean died in 1881 and in 1883 Margaret remarried. On her Marriage Certificate, she is described as a Firewood Merchant and her new husband, Thomas Herbert Campbell as a Bricklayer. Both resided at Rosedale at the time of the marriage. Thomas Campbell also pre-deceased Margaret and she moved to Urunga and settled at Fernmount where she had a Fruit shop and operated a punt across the Bellinger River. She died in Bellingen on 3rd September 1906 and is buried at Nambucca Heads close to her brother, Robert Gordon. When her daughter, Sarah was born, she took another baby, reputed to have been the illegitimate grandson of her midwife, and reared him as Sarah's twin - his name was Joseph. When he was approaching adulthood, one of his ''sisters'' told him he was not related to them and he moved out. '''Feel free to delete when you are finished with the information .'''

Family-history-updating-by-knowledge-known

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Justice-2319|Michael David Justice]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=20568984 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FamilyName Van Belzen

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{{Image|file=FSP_Joop_van_Belzen1-2.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=Gezicht op Arnemuiden }} * Zie ook: [[Space:Joop_van_Belzen| Het geslacht van Belzen]], Nederlands == The Surname: van Belsen / van Belzen / van Bilsen == '''Author: Lieven van van Belzen.'''
The first person with the name '''van Belsen''' I found in the Middelburg city accounts, '''Pieter Jansz''', the city surgeon. [http://tijdschriftenbankzeeland.nl/issue/arc/1881-01-01/edition/0/page/312 Stadsrekeningen van Middelburg, 1500-1549, ''Pieter JJansz''' alias '''Pieter van Belsen'''], Tijdschriften Zeeland, Archief | 1 januari 1881 | pagina 312 This was for additional fee "during the course of the black Plague" from 22 March to 22 June 1531, a pound Vlaamsch a month and enjoyed such a grant until 22 December 1532. He had, under the name of Peter Belsen, as usual fee of 5 pounds a year, in 1532. Whether there is any connection between the above Peter and the man with whom our family tree begins in the city of Arnemuiden will always remain a question mark. Following is the transcribed text of our founding father [[Meeuwsz-2 | Daniel Meeuwsz]] in the marriage certificates of Arnemuiden in 1602. {{Image|file=Joop_van_Belzen-1.jpg |align=m |size=l |caption='''Bann Daniel Meeuwsz en Tanneken Heyndrickx ''' }} ''' Transcription''':
''Den lesten Augusti Anno 1602 is ondertrout Daniel Meeusen gheselle van Geertruytenberch met Tanneken Heyndrickx van Opghem in Vlaenderen bij Maldeghem. Getuyghen van den bruydegoms syde Wouter Adriaens ende met '''Margriete van Bilsen, moeder van de bruydegom''' dewelcke verclaerden in dit houwelick tevreden te syn ende van den bruyts zyde Heyndrick Joosten de schoenmaecker ende Ariaengen Callebouts vader en moeder van den bruyt die verclaerden in dit houwelick te vreden te syn.'' '''Translation:'''
''The last of August Anno 1602 is intended marriage Daniel Meeusen, from Geertuytenberg, with Tanneken Heyndrickx from Opghem in Vlaenderen near Maldeghem (Belgium). Witness of the groom: Wouter Adriaens and '''Margriete van Bilsen, mother of the groom''' who stated this marriage to be satisfied and witness of the bridal side Heyndrick Joosten the shoemaker and Ariaengen Callebouts father and mother of the Bride who stated this marriage to be satisfied''. here also follows the act of the burgher book from 1605: ''Daniel Meeusen van den Thole, veerthien ofte vijfthien iaeren hier gewoont hebbende. '' with in the margin: ''Enden Sol Op recken VIS'' This would mean that he paid six shillings (redeemed) and lived already around 1588 in Arnemuiden. Daniel's mother was Margriete '''van Bilsen''' and his eldest son Bartholomeus, so in the patronymic system the father of Daniel was Bartholo (meus). In the court archives Arnemuiden called one Bartholomew Danielsz counter Dirrick Pieters Pronck, skipper on "The Moriaen" act on 04.04.1578. However, this brings us no further. Daniel had two sisters, namely Janneken (she was a witness at the baptism of his daughter Trineken on 11.08.1604) and Trineken. His sister Trineken marry as young daughter of Rees in Gelderlant 18 / 2-11 / 4-1612 Cornelis Adriaens (Guest) Arnemuiden. Their father Bartholomeus might have been skipper or soldier? Geertruidenberg and Rees are both on the river and both garrison town (has been). In the earliest books of Arnemuiden such as baptismal and marriage records, burgher book, tax cohieren homes leads Margriete van Bilsen and (her husband) Meeus not against (either as owner or as tenant), nor to the communicants. Research in Tholen, Hasselt (Bilsen-Belgium), Den Bosch and Rees (in Kleve Germany) has so far yielded nothing (not even through patronymen). Daniel Meeusen and Tanneken Heyndricks got two daughters ( Trineken and Josintgen), and four sons Barthlo (meus), Adriaen, Cornelis and Daniel. All four sons were married in Arnemuiden and their children began to use the name '''van Belsen'''. About 5000 names in this family tree processes from throughout the Netherlands, even in the United States. {{Image|file=Joop_van_Belzen-3.jpg |align=m |size=l |caption=Arnemuiden 1791 }} === 1819-1910 Legendary figure=== Lieven Tak van Belzen and Jerina Geldhof had 12 children, seven of them died shortly after birth. In a stormy night, he had his eldest, 20 years old son [[Van_Belzen-47 | Jacob]] let go, after which drowned when they were with the rest of the crew on the side of Lieven's fishingboat, after it had capsized. They were rescued and the boat was shattered and sailing charge brought to Hellevoetsluis. The children of Lieven were named after their mother nickname, Wullem of Riene, Kees van Rine, Joos van Riene and Mientje of Riene. '' {{Image|file=Van_Belsen-5-8.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=Hoogaarsen }} His two brothers Lieven, Joos and Jacob, drowned. Joos drowned in the stormy night of November 3, 1863 in the sea nearby Flushing (the rest of the crew was rescued by Charles Lievens van de Gruiter). Jacob drowned in the stormy night of 3 on December 4, 1863 aboard "The Young Jacob" (bazaanschuit Lieven de Ridder), the Dutch coast, killing all the crew (7 fishermen). The tragedy is that Jacob one month earlier was rescued aboard his brother Joos. '' {{Image|file=Van_Belzen-3-5.jpg |align= |size=l |caption=Schoolfoto met zes van de kinderen van Lieven en Cornelia. }} ===1918 Fatal accident=== On February 15, 1918 got the Arm-16, while she was fishing in the Oostgat, a mine in its nets. The mine was carefully detached and embedded. Pilotboat no. 14 with skipper Vader arranged for making mines harmless, it went off, the Arm 16 took in tow and went looking for the mine. They discovered the height of Westkapelle. At the moment the naval officer who was aboard the no.14, switched to the arm 16, the pilot boat ran on a mine. The consequences were terrible: skipper Vader and five other crewmembers were slain. Also fishermen skipper '' 'Lieven van Belzen' '' his son (17) Cornelis van Belzen and sailor Hendrik Marijs (25) found death. Furthermore, there were still several wounded. Quote from the book "A century and sheds on the Scheldt" * The steam pilot vessel "14" is in the run of the Oostgat on a mine, where eight people on board are killed. Simultaneously explodes (by the same mine) also 'fishing vessel' Arnemuiden 16 '', killing three fishermen. ===Acknowledgments === * Bron: L.L. von Münching: 'De verliezen van de Nederlandse koopvaardij in WO I'. {{Image|file=Granny_s_pictures-11.png |align=m |size=l }}

FamilyPhotos

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For the extended Gordon, Campbell, Guidoux, Gam, Ping, etc family's photographs. == Gordon == We all come from [[Gordon-11338|Wallace Gordon]] and [[Vernon-2056|Margaret Vernon]]. [[Image:FamilyPhotos-1.png|350px|Minnie Gordon and James Hellings Press wedding notice.]]
Minnie Gordon (granddaughter of Margaret Vernon and Wallace Gordon) and James Hellings Press wedding notice. {{Image|file=FamilyPhotos-5.jpg |align=l |size=300 |caption='''Isabella Mills née Hilson
Grave Marker''' |label=The engraving on the stone reads: "In loving memory of Isabella the beloved wife of James Mills born Airdrie, Scotland died 20th November 1902 at West Wallsend aged 64 years. Safe in the arms of Jesus, Safe on His gentle breast, There by His love serenaded, Sweetly my soul shall rest. }} Note - it was originally believed that this Isabella Mills was Isabella daughter of Margaret Vernon and Wallace Gordon, but further research has shown it was a different Isabella. Continuing research looks for the elusive Isabella Gordon, who supposedly married a James Mills in Scotland. (No such marriage has yet been discovered, but neither has a death for Isabella Gordon.) {{clear}} === Kirgan === Am hoping for one of Maggie Gordon Vernon Murphy née Stewart who was 105 years old when she died. (Leonne is waiting for it to arrive via snail mail.) ==== Guidoux ==== {{Image|file=Guidoux-9-1.jpg |align=l |size=200 |caption='''Jessie Janet Guidoux
and Alf Lippiatt
marriage certificate.''' |label=Marriage certificate for Jessie Guidoux and first husband Alfred Lippiatt, clearly showing the clumsy alteration of the date — believed to have been done to cover up that Jessie's daughter Florence had been born three years prior to them marrying. Whether done by either of the couple, or a later generation is unknown. }} {{Image|file=Guidoux-9.jpg |align=l |size=200 |caption='''Jessie Janet Lippiatt née Guidoux
and William Gladstone Phillips
on their wedding day.''' }} {{clear}} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Lippiatt-135.jpg |align=l |caption='''Daphne Vining Lippiatt.''' }} [[Image:ADWP-453.png|250px|Alf Lippiatt death notice (reproduction).]]
[https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/ADWP-453 Alf Lippiatt death notice (reproduction).] {{clear}} {{clear}} {{Image|file=FamilyPhotos-6.png |align=l |size=250 |caption=Heather Reynolds and Bob Grady
on Wedding Day }} {{clear}} [[Image:Campbell-37919.jpg|175px|Grace Mercer Cheshire]] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Campbell-37919 Grace Mercer Cheshire] {{Image|file=Cheshire-371.jpg |align=l |caption='''Maud Guidoux and daughters
Violet (21), Maude (44) and Grace (23)'''
Photo taken the day Violet Guidoux
was married to Adam John Gam.
28th Oct. 1928. }} {{clear}} Cropped version of the above: {{Image|file=FamilyPhotos-2.png |size=175 |align=l |caption='''Maud Guidoux and daughters
Violet (21), Maude (44) and Grace (23)'''
Photo taken the day Violet Guidoux
was married to Adam John Gam.
28th Oct. 1928.}}{{clear}} {{Image|file=Guidoux-5.jpg |align=l |caption='''Sawmill Burned''' }} {{Image|file=FamilyPhotos-3.png |align=l |size=250 |caption='''Sawmill Burned.''' |label=SAWMILL BURNED. BOWRAVILLE, Thursday. Between 3 and 4 o'clock this morning Mr. Guidoux's sawmill was completely destroyed by fire. When the outbreak was discovered the fire had such a firm hold on the mill that it was impossible to suppress it. The whole mill building and contents, including machinery and an amount of timber, were gutted. The premises and timber were uninsured, but the machinery was covered to the extent of £900. Mr. Guidoux is a loser to the extent of £1600. The mill will be re- erected at once. }} {{clear}} ===== North and McNess ===== [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/79/North-3158.pdf Birth Certificate for Jessie North] {{clear}} {{Image|file=North-3158.jpg |align=l |size=200 |caption='''Jessie North — Gus McNess
Marriage Certificate''' }} {{Image|file=McNess-20.jpg |align=l |size=200 |caption='''Jessie North and Gus McNess on
their wedding day.''' }} {{clear}} ==== Mercer ==== {{Image|file=Mercer-4270.jpg |align=l |size=200 |caption='''Jane Mercer Cheshire.''' }}{{clear}} ==== Gam ==== [[Image:ADWP-409.png|150px|Adam John (Jack) and Violet Jarnett, in happier times.]] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/ADWP-409 Adam John (Jack) and Violet Jarnett, in happier times.] [[Image:ADWP-455.png|150px|Sympathy to Jacob Gam, loss of brother (reproduction).]] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/ADWP-455 Sympathy to Jacob Gam, loss of brother (reproduction).] [[Image:ADWP-456.png|140px|Ivy Muriel Coneybeer death notice (reproduction).]] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/ADWP-456 Ivy Muriel Coneybeer death notice (reproduction).] ==== Usher ==== {{Image|file=Usher-953-2.jpg |size=300 |align=l |caption='''Norm Usher: RAAF Pay Book'''}}{{clear}} . {{clear}}{{clear}} ==== Campbell ==== . {{clear}} ==== Ping ==== [[Image:FamilyPhotos.jpg|125px|Aubrey Moore Ping (about 1960)]] {{Image|file=FamilyPhotos-5.png |align=l |size=150 |caption='''Dawn O'Connor Ping
Grave marker.''' |label=The inscription reads : Treasured Memories of Dawn Cecilia Ping 30-9-1931 :: 21-2-2008 Beloved wife of Aubrey Rest In Peace }} {{clear}} === Williamson === The first "Williamson" of this line in Australia was [[Williamson-10295|William Robert Williamson]]. His father, Ole, began life as [[Waldemarsson-2|Waldemarsson]], changing his patronymic in 1880 on his departure from Sweden, where he is listed as Ole Williamsen (with an e). By the time he married the half-Scottish, part-Irish Kitty Gordon in Queensland in 1899, he was spelling it "Williamson" (with an o). :[[Image:ADWP-298.png|140px|Gordon and Ethel Williamson wedding notice]] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/ADWP-298 Gordon and Ethel Williamson wedding notice photograph.] :[[Image:1050_1086_1088_1086_1090_1082_1086_1074_-1.png|140px|Nick Korotcoff]] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/1050_1086_1088_1086_1090_1082_1086_1074_-1.png Nick Korotcoff (Aunty Ethel's father.)] ==== Irwin ==== . === Paul === This lot all came from [[Paul-5414|John Paul]] and [[Hughes-16131|Tempest Margaret Hughes]]. : '''Britons, And New Australians''' {{Image|file=ADWP-942.png |align=l |size=350 |caption='''Mr. C. T. Paul, Commonwealth Employment Officer
shows new Australians a map of Queensland. (1949)''' |label=Mr. C. T. Paul, Commonwealth Employment Officer, shows new Australians a map of Queensland. (1949) }} : '''COMMONWEALTH Employment Officer''', Mr C. T. Paul, brought along a map of Queensland when he met the British immigrants (left) who arrived this week. They're bound for the "Sunshine State" and were eager for information.'''Greeting the newcomers''' — "Britons, And New Australians" The Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954) 9 November 1949: 13. Web. 5 Jan 2021 .{{clear}} {{Image|file=FamilyPhotos-10.jpg |align=l |size=350 |caption='''"Yeddo" (renamed to Ruth Fairfax House) in Ingham''' |label=Judge Paul imported a Japanese House and had it re-erected in New Farm where he lived in the late 19th century, early 20th century. After his death it, and all the contents, was sold. Eventually renamed as the "Ruth Fairfax House" by the Queensland Country Women's Association, (it has its own Wikipedia page!), "Yeddo", as the Judge had named his domicile, was pulled down piece by piece and transported from Brisbane to Ingham, where it was re-erected on Lynch Street. In December 2003 it was added to the Queensland Heritage Register. The house has undergone (may still be undergoing (2023)) extensive repairs, including bringing in Japanese experts to assist in retaining its authenticity. }} . {{clear}}{{clear}}

FamilySearch Family Tree on

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The [https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-40001/familysearch-family-tree/ FamilySearch Family Tree] is composed of lineage-linked trees submitted by approx. 22 million users. These trees, originally submitted as GEDCOM files, have been collected by FamilySearch for several decades and include submissions to Ancestral File, Pedigree Resource File, and more recent user submissions. These have all been merged into one massive common pedigree tree which is represented in this collection.

FamilyTreeMaker Notes

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==William Marsh add'l notes from familytreemaker.com== ===bill_piety added this on 27 Aug 2012=== Notes for WILLIAM MARSH: From the research of Gordon Marsh (to be verified). In the History of the First Church, Stonington, Connecticut, there was found the following records. Elizabeth, wife of William Marsh, was admitted to the church August 24, 1690. William Marsh was admitted to the church May 14, 1693. Children born and baptized at Stonington: Mary, born 5/16/1683 (Town Records) and baptized 9/7/1690 William baptized 9/7/1690 Thomas baptized 9/7/1690 James baptized 9/7/1690 Elizabeth baptized June 19, 1692 Ann baptized June 24, 1694 There is considerable confusion concerning our William Marsh. Some have tried to identify the above William Marsh with the William Marsh, aged 26 who sailed in 1635 aboard the ship "Mathew" from London, Goodlad, Master. Our William Marsh of Plainfield died 1724 and could hardly have been 113 years of age at his death which we would have been had he been aged 26 in 1635. If it is correct that William was eighteen years of age when he came to America, as some say, that he came at the restoration of King Charles II in 1660, then he was born about 1642, the year that his father, Capt. James Marsh, was executed. William should have been 82 years of age when he died, as his death took place at Plainfield, Connecticut in 1724. It has been reported that the family, that William belonged to, at the time of his immigration, were citizens of a village or borough four miles out of the city of London, England, which is now incorporated in that great city. The Marshes owned mills around there and were engaged in the mercantile business. The brother, Capt. James Marsh, was killed at the battle of Edgehill in 1642, while serving with the King's forces. One writer states that Capt. James Marsh was executed on order of King Charles I right after the Battle of Edgehill for being in sympathy with Oliver Cromwell while serving with the King's forces. After the restoration of King Charles II, an Aunt of William Marsh, fearing for his safety called him home from college, had him, and two of his cousins emigrate to America where they would be beyond the immediate wrath of King Charles II. Another write states that Captain James Marsh (William Marsh's brother) was taken prisoner at the battle of Edgehill and put to death on orders of Cromwell. Marsh Family Bible: This very old Bible was the property of Daniel Benjamin Marsh who was ordained at Poughkeepsie, New York, June 30th, 1790. Some of the data was inscribed in the "record section," the tabulated form was on separate sheets made into a book form and was pasted in he bible. (Copied by Minnie L.C. Colman, 1934; Syracuse, New York) The record in an old Bible that was published in 1792 and was owned by Mr. Cady Marsh, Jamesville, Onandaga Co., NY. Note: This write understands that this Bible is now in the possession of the Boston Historical Society. "James Marsh of Kent in England was a Captain against Cromwell - When Cromwell got the victory, the said Marsh was beheaded at Hedgehall. His two sisters being concerned for their brother William who was at College, sent for him and two nephews, son to a half-sister to William, and they set sail for America and landed at Salem. William went to Boston and was a commissary in the old Indian War of 1676 was wounded in he Narraganset fight. He was removed to Stonington and was under the care of Dr. Noyce and was healed of his wounds. He then married Elizabeth Yeomans and soon removed to Plainfield where he lived and died leaving the following heir: James, William, Elizabeth,a nd Mathias." Writer's biography of William Marsh: William was born about 1642, County Kent, England, died 1724 at Plainfield, Connecticut. He was wounded during the King Phillips War int he Narraganset Swamp fight in 1675, and was removed to Stonington, Connecticut where he was treated by Dr. Noyce and nursed back to health by Elizabeth Yeomans, who he later married on October 18, 1681/2. She was the daughter of Edward and Mary (Button) Yeomans, (1630-1662) and was born 1659 at Haverhill, Mass. She was admitted to the First Church, Stonington, Connecticut, August 24, 1690. William was admitted May 14, 1693, he surveyed with his wife's brother, Edward Yeomans, the town of Plainfield, Connecticut. He removed with his wife and family, no doubt, about 1694, to Plainfield, conn. as the last church record at Stonington is dated June 2, 1694.

Famiy: Clovis of Merovingians by Gregory of Tours

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From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Merovingians (covering his birth family): http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MEROVINGIANS.htm#ClotaireIdied561A CHLODOVECH [Clovis], son of CHILDERICH I King of the Franks & his wife Basina --- ([464/67]-Paris [27 Nov] 511, bur Paris, basilique des Saints-Apôtres [later église de Sainte-Geneviève]). Gregory of Tours names Clovis as son of Childerich & Basina[37]. The Liber Historiæ Francorum names "Childerico" as father of "Chlodovecho rege"[38]. He succeeded his father in [481/82] as CLOVIS I King of the Franks. He defeated Syagrius, ruler at Soissons, in 486. The Liber Historiæ Francorum records that "Chlodovechus" expanded his kingdom "usque Sequanam" and afterwards "usque Ligere fluvio"[39]. He remained a pagan after his marriage to a Catholic wife, but converted to Christianity in [496] allegedly having vowed to do so if successful in a battle against the Alamans[40]. He allied with Godegisel against Gondebaud King of Burgundy in [500][41]. He defeated and killed Alaric II King of the Visigoths at the campus Vogladensis[42], probably Voulan, near Poitiers, athough this is popularly known as the battle of Vouillé[43], in 507. Gregory of Tours records that Clovis took control of the territory of the Sigebert King of the Franks of the Rhine, after persuading Sigeric's son Chloderic to kill his father and then killing Chloderic, as well as the territory of Chararic King of the Salian Franks[44]. Gregory of Tours records the death of King Clovis in Paris "five years after the battle of Vouillé" and his burial in the church of the Holy Apostles, which he and Queen Clotilde had built[45]. [m firstly] ---, daughter of --- [of the Franks of the Rhine]. •According to Gregory of Tours, the mother of Theoderich was one of King Clovis's concubines not his first wife[46]. Settipani[47] suggests that his mother was a Frank from the Rhine region, based on the inheritance of Austrasia by Theoderich and the roots "Theode-" and "-rich" in his name, possibly transmitted through his mother from Theodemer and Richomer who were both 4th century Frankish kings. m [secondly] (492) CHROTECHILDIS [Clotilde/Rotilde[48 of Burgundy, daughter of CHILPERICH King of Burgundy & his wife --- ([480]-Tours, monastery of Saint-Martin 544 or 548, bur Paris, basilique des Saints-Apôtres [later église de Sainte-Geneviève]). Gregory of Tours names "Clotilde" as the younger daughter of Chilperich, recording that she and her sister were driven into exile by their paternal uncle King Gundobad, but that the latter accepted a request for her hand in marriage from Clovis King of the Franks[49]. Fredegar states that she was driven into exile to Geneva by her uncle, after he allegedly murdered her father, and that King Clovis requested her hand in marriage as a means of controlling Gundobad's power[50]. A charter dated 2 Oct [499], classified as spurious in the collection, of "Clodoveus rex Francorum" names "uxoris meæ Chrochildis…patris Chilperici regis Burgundiorum"[51]. Gregory of Tours records Clotilde's lack of success in converting her husband to Christianity until the fifteenth year of his reign, when he and his people were baptised by St Rémy Bishop of Reims[52]. Gregory of Tours records that Queen Clotilde became a nun at the church of St Martin at Tours after her husband died, and in a later passage records her death in Tours and burial in Paris next to her husband in the church which she had built[53]. She was canonised by the Catholic church, feast day 3 Jun[54]. King Clovis & his first [wife/concubine] had one child: 1. THEODERICH ([485]-end 533, bur Metz). •Gregory of Tours names Theoderich as son of King Clovis by one of his mistresses, born before his marriage to Clotilde[55]. "Theodorico, Chlomiro, Hildeberto, Hlodario" are named (in order) as sons of "Chlodoveus" in the Regum Merowingorum Genealogia[56]. •In 508, he led his father's campaign against the Visigoths, allied with the Burgundians[57], and temporarily occupied Aquitaine. •He succeeded his father in 511 as THEODERICH I King of the Franks, based at Reims, his territory covering the right bank of the Rhine, the Moselle valley and Champagne, the lands which were later to become the kingdom of Austrasia. •He helped Hermanfrid King of the Thuringians defeat the latter's brother Baderic, after being promised half his kingdom, a promise which was not kept[58]. Gregory of Tours records that King Theoderich and his half-brother King Clotaire invaded Thuringia in 531, deposed King Hermanfred (who was later killed) and annexed the kingdom[59]. The Liber Historiæ Francorum records that "Theudericus et Theudobertus filius eius et Chlotharius rex" invaded Thuringia and attacked "Ermenfredum regem Toringorum", a marginal addition recording that "Teodericus filius Clodovei ex concubina" threw "Ermenfridum regem" from a wall and killed his two sons[60]. •Adam of Bremen names "Hadugato" as the duke of the Saxons to whom "Theodericus rex Francorum" sent legates[61], undated but recorded immediately after the Thuringian invasion of 531. •Gregory of Tours records the death of Theoderich in the twenty third year of his reign[62]. •m firstly ---. •The assumed birth date range of King Theoderich's son, Theodebert, indicates that the king's known wife, the daughter of the Burgundian king, could not have been Theodebert´s mother, considering her own estimated birth date. The king must therefore have been married earlier, or at least have had an earlier concubine, although no information has been found about this first partner in any of the primary sources consulted. •Europäische Stammtafeln states that the king´s first wife was named "Suavegotta (died by 566)"[63]. Presumably this is based on Flodoard's history of Reims, quoted below under the king´s second wife. If this is correct, the king must have repudiated his first wife before marrying the Burgundian king´s daughter. However, no indication has been found in any source about such a repudiation. •It is more natural to assume that, if Suavegotha was indeed the name of one of Theoderich´s wives (which in itself cannot be proved conclusively as discussed further below), she was his second wife. •m secondly ([507/16]) [SUAVEGOTHA] of Burgundy, daughter of SIGISMUND King of Burgundy & his first wife Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths (495 or later-[after 549]). •Gregory of Tours records that Theoderich King of the Franks married the daughter of Sigismund but does not name her[64]. Gregory does not name the mother of King Theoderich´s wife, but chronologically it is more probable that she was born from King Sigismund's first marriage, which is also suggested by the root "-gotha" in her first name. •Her name is suggested by Flodoard´s history of the church of Reims, dated to the mid-10th century. This source records that "Suavegotta regina" bequeathed one third of "ville Virisiaci" by testament to the church of Reims during the bishopric of Bishop Mapinius, subject to the life interest of "Teudichildi prefate regine filie", adding that the latter later confirmed the donation during the bishopric of Bishop Egidius[65]. •The identification of "Suavegotha regina" as King Theoderbert´s wife depends on the identification of "Teudchildi" as his daughter which, as explained in more detail below, is uncertain. •The link cannot therefore definitively be made between "Suavegotha" and the daughter of Sigismund King of Burgundy. Nevertheless, the chronology for such a link is favourable, as the editor of the Monumenta Germaniæ Scriptores edition of Flodoard dates Mapinius's bishopric to "ca 549-573" and Egidius´s to "ca 573-590"[66]. •King Theoderich & his first wife had one child, Theodebert (499/504 - 547), King of the Franks at Reims (533 - 547) husband of Doeteria de Cabrieres, Wisgardis of the Lombards, and "another woman". •King Theoderich & his second wife had one child, Theodechildes/Techilde (516/520 - 570-595), wife of Hermengisel, King of Warnes (d. before 547), and her stepson Radegis of Warnes (repudiated shortly after) King Clovis & his second wife had [six] children: 2. INGOMER (b and d 493). •Gregory of Tours names Ingomer as eldest son of King Clovis and his wife Clotilde, recording that his mother insisted on having him baptised against the wishes of her husband, who considered his early death as a sign of dissatisfaction on the part of the pagan gods[100]. 3. CHLODOMER ([494/95]-killed in battle Vézeronce 21 Jun 524). •Gregory of Tours names Chlodomer as second son of King Clovis and his wife Clotilde[101]. "Theodorico, Chlomiro, Hildeberto, Hlodario" are named (in order) as sons of "Chlodoveus" in the Regum Merowingorum Genealogia[102]. •He succeeded his father in 511 as CHLODOMER King of the Franks, at Orléans, his territory covering the Loire valley from Orléans to Tour, Chartres, Sens and Auxerre. Gregory of Tours records that Chlodomer's mother incited him to attack Burgundy to revenge the death of her parents. •He defeated and captured Sigismund King of Burgundy in his first invasion, but was defeated and killed by Sigismund's brother Gondemar during a second invasion[103]. The Liber Historiæ Francorum records that "Chlodomiris" led an army into Burgundy against "Godmarum", a marginal additional recording that "Gladmirus filius Clodovei regis Francorum" was killed during the course of the attack[104]. •m ([514] or 521) as her first husband, GUNTHEUCA [Gondioque], daughter of --- [King of Burgundy]. Gregory of Tours names Guntheuc as widow of King Chlodomer and records her second marriage with his brother Clotaire, but does not give her origin[105]. The Liber Historiæ Francorum records that "Chlotharius" married "uxorem fratris sui…Gundeucam"[106]. Settipani suggests, for onomastic reasons only, that she may have belonged to the Burgundian royal family which, if correct, means that she must have been the daughter of either King Gondebaud or his brother Godogisel[107]. However, Gregory makes no mention of this in his lengthy description of King Chlodomer's campaigns in Burgundy, an omission which is surprising if his wife was related to his opponents. •She married secondly ([524]) as his first wife, Clotaire I [Chlothachar/Lothar] King of the Franks. •King Chlodomer & his wife had three children: Theodebald (521 - 531), Gunthar (523 - 531), St. Chlodovald/Cloud (524 - 560). 4. CHILDEBERT ([497]-23 Dec 558, bur Paris, Saint-Germain des Prés). •Gregory of Tours names Childebert as son of King Clovis and his wife Clotilde, listed after Chlodomer and before Clotaire[119]. "Theodorico, Chlomiro, Hildeberto, Hlodario" are named (in order) as sons of "Chlodoveus" in the Regum Merowingorum Genealogia[120]. •He succeeded his father in 511 as CHILDEBERT I King of the Franks, at Paris, his territory covering the Seine and Somme valleys, as well as the northern coast of France as far as Brittany, Nantes and Angers. •Gregory of Tours records that King Childebert attacked and defeated Amalric King of the Visigoths[121], which marked the end of the Visigothic presence in France and the start of the transfer of their power-base to Spain. •He and his brother Clotaire launched a third attack on Burgundy, besieged Autun and occupied the whole kingdom, deposing King Gondemar II[122]. •Gregory of Tours records that the childless King Childebert adopted his nephew Theodebert as his heir after the death of the latter's father[123]. •He founded the monastery in Paris which, from the end 11th century, was called Saint-Germain des Prés. •Gregory of Tours records the death of King Childebert in Paris and his burial in the church of St Vincent[124]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records the death in 558 of "Childebertus rex Francorum"[125]. •m ULTROGOTHA, daughter of --- (-after 561, bur Paris, Saint-Germain des Prés). Gregory of Tours names Ultrogotha as the wife of King Childebert, specifying that she was sent into exile with her two daughters by King Clotaire after her husband died[126]. •Childebert I & his wife had two children: Chrodesindis (d. after 566/567) and Chrodoberga (d. after 566/567) --- 5. CHLOTHACHAR [Clotaire/Lothar] ([501/02]-Soissons [30 Nov/31 Dec] 561, bur Soissons, basilique Saint-Médard). Gregory of Tours names Clotaire as son of King Clovis and his wife Clotilde, listed after Childebert[131]. He succeeded his father in 511 as CLOTAIRE I King of the Franks, at Soissons. 6. [THEODECHILDIS ([492/501]-576). •A charter dated 2 Oct [499], classified as spurious in the collection, of "Clodoveus rex Francorum" purports to be written when "filia mea…Theodechildis" was becoming a nun[132]. As noted above, the editor of the Monumenta Germaniæ Scriptores series assumes that this charter refers to the daughter of King Theoderich[133]. Another charter, classified as spurious, in the name of "Theodechildis filia Chlodoveo" purports to record a donation to the monastery of St Peter at Sens dated Sep 569[134]. •She founded the monastery of Mauriac in Auvergne[135]. •m ---, king.] 7. CHROTHIELDIS [Clotilde] ([502/11]-531, bur Paris, basilique des Saints-Apôtres [later église de Sainte-Geneviève]). •Gregory of Tours refers to the marriage of the (unnamed) sister of the four brothers Theoderich, Chlodomer, Childebert and Clotaire with Amalric King of the Visigoths, arranged after the death of their father, specifying that she was sent to Spain "with a great dowry of expensive jewellery"[136]. Procopius records that “rex…Visigotthorum Amalaricus” married "Regis Theodeberti sororem"[137]. •Gregory names her Clotilde in a later passage in which he records that she was maltreated by her husband, and brought back to France by her brother King Childebert who attacked and defeated King Amalric, but died on the journey and was buried in Paris beside her father[138]. •m (511) AMALRIC King of the Visigoths, son of ALARIC II King of the Visigoths & his wife Theodegotha of the Ostrogoths (502-murdered 531). 8. [daughter . •The Gesta Episcoporum Mettensis names "Agiulfus" as sixth bishop of Metz, stating that "patre ex nobili senatorum familia orto, ex Chlodovei regis Francorum filia procreatus", and that "nepos ipsius…Arnoaldus" succeeded him as bishop[139]. This is the only reference so far identified to this supposed daughter of King Clovis, whose existence should presumably therefore be treated with caution. The reference to her supposed grandson Arnold suggests some confusion with the sources which allege the existence of Bilichildis, possible daughter of King Clotaire I (see below). •m ---.] [Two possible children:] Agiulf, 26th Bishop of Metz, the mother of Arnold, 27th Bishop of Metz. References: •[37] Gregory of Tours II.12, p. 129. •[38] Liber Historiæ Francorum 6, MGH Auct. Ant. II, p. 246. •[39] Liber Historiæ Francorum 14, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 260. •[40] Wood (1994), p. 48, suggests that Clovis's conversion may have taken place in 508. •[41] Gregory of Tours II.32, pp. 145-6, and the Chronicle of Marius of Avenches, cited in Wood (1994), pp. 41 and 43. •[42] Gregory of Tours II.37, pp. 153-4. •[43] Wood (1994), p. 46. •[44] Gregory of Tours II.40 and 41, pp. 155-6. •[45] Gregory of Tours II.43, p. 158. •[46] Gregory of Tours II.28, p. 141. •[47] Settipani (1993), p. 56. •[48] Settipani (1993), p. 57, footnote 68, points out that "Rotilde" is the correct form. •[49] Gregory of Tours II.28, p. 141. •[50] Fredegar, III 17-20, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 99. •[51] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Spuria I, no. 2, p. 114. •[52] Gregory of Tours II.30 and 31, pp. 143-4. •[53] Gregory of Tours II.43 and IV.1, pp. 158 and 197. •[54] Attwater, D. (1970) The Penguin Dictionary of Saints (Penguin Books), p. 89. •[55] Gregory of Tours II.28, p. 141. •[56] Regum Merowingorum Genealogia (Cod S. Galli, 732), Regum Francorum Genealogiæ, MGH SS II, p. 307. •[57] Chronicle of 511, 689 and 690, cited in Wood (1994), p. 48. •[58] Gregory of Tours III.4, p. 164. •[59] Gregory of Tours III.7 and 8, pp. 167-9. •[60] Liber Historiæ Francorum 22, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 277. •[61] Adami, Gesta Hammenburgensis Ecclesiæ Pontificum I.4, MGH SS VII, p. 285. •[62] Gregory of Tours III.23, p. 184. •[63] ES I.1 1. •[64] Gregory of Tours III.5, p. 166. •[65] Flodoardus Remensis Historia Remensis Ecclesiæ, II, 1, MGH SS XXXVI, p. 132. •[66] MGH SS XXXVI, p. 132, footnotes 3 and 9. •[100] Gregory of Tours II.29, p. 142. •[101] Gregory of Tours II.29, p. 142. •[102] Regum Merowingorum Genealogia (Cod S. Galli, 732), Regum Francorum Genealogiæ, MGH SS II, p. 307. •[103] Gregory of Tours III.6, pp. 166-7. •[104] Liber Historiæ Francorum 21, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 276. •[105] Gregory of Tours III.6, pp. 166-7. •[106] Liber Historiæ Francorum 21, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 277. •[107] Settipani (1993), p. 66. •[119] Gregory of Tours III.1, p. 162. •[120] Regum Merowingorum Genealogia (Cod S. Galli, 732), Regum Francorum Genealogiæ, MGH SS II, p. 307. •[121] Gregory of Tours III.10, p. 170. •[122] Gregory of Tours III.11, p. 171. •[123] Gregory of Tours III.24, p. 184. •[124] Gregory of Tours IV.20, p. 215. •[125] Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica 558, MGH Auct. ant. XI, p. 237. •[126] Gregory of Tours IV.20, p. 215. •[131] Gregory of Tours III.1, p. 162. •[132] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Spuria I, no. 2, p. 114. •[133] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Spuria I, p. 114, footnote 1. •[134] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Spuria I, no. 16, p. 132. •[135] Settipani (1993), pp. 58-9, citing the sources for her affiliation and highlighting her possible co-identity with Theodechildis daughter of King Theoderich. •[136] Gregory of Tours III.1, p. 162. •[137] Procopius, Vol. II, De Bello Gothico I.13, p. 69. •[138] Gregory of Tours III.10, p. 170. •[139] Pauli Gesta Episcoporum Mettensis , MGH SS 2, p. 264. ------------------------- From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Merovingians (covering his married life) http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MEROVINGIANS.htm#ClotaireIdied561B CLOTAIRE 511-561, CHARIBERT 561-567, GONTRAN 561-592 CHLOTHACHAR [Clotaire/Lothar], son of CHLODOVECH King of the Franks & his second wife Chrotechildis of Burgundy ([501/02]-Soissons [30 Nov/31 Dec] 561, bur Soissons, basilique Saint-Médard). "Theodorico, Chlomiro, Hildeberto, Hlodario" are named (in order) as sons of "Chlodoveus" in the Regum Merowingorum Genealogia[145]. He succeeded his father in 511 as CLOTAIRE I King of the Franks, at Soissons, his territory covering Soissons, Laon, Noyon, Arras, Cambrai, Tournai and the lower Meuse, the lands which were later to become the kingdom of Neustria. Gregory of Tours records that King Clotaire and his half-brother King Theoderich invaded Thuringia in 531, deposed King Hermanfred and annexed the kingdom, specifying that Clotaire brought his second wife back as part of his booty[146]. He and his brother King Childebert launched a third attack on Burgundy, besieged Autun and occupied the whole kingdom, deposing King Gondemar II[147] in 534. He invaded Spain, with his brother King Childebert, and besieged Zaragoza but was forced to withdraw[148]. He inherited the territories of his great-nephew King Theodebert in 555 and those of his brother King Childebert in 558, when he became sole king of the Franks. Gregory of Tours records his death, in the 51st year of his reign on the first anniversary of the killing of his son Chramn, at Soissons from a fever caught while hunting in the forest of Cuise and his burial at Soissons Saint Medard[149]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records the death in 561 of "Chlothachrius rex"[150]. m firstly ([524]) as her second husband, his sister-in-law, GUNTHEUCA [Gondioque], widow of CHLODOMER King of the Franks, daughter of --- [King of Burgundy]. Gregory of Tours names Guntheuc as widow of King Chlodomer and records her second marriage with his brother Clotaire, but does not give her origin[151]. Settipani suggests, for onomastic reasons only, that she may have belonged to the Burgundian royal family which, if correct, means that she must have been the daughter of either King Gondebaud or his brother Godogisel[152]. However, Gregory makes no mention of this in his lengthy description of King Chlodomer's campaigns in Burgundy, an omission which is surprising if his wife was related to his opponents. m secondly (531, repudiated) RADEGUND of Thuringia, daughter of BERTHECHAR [Bertaire] King of the Thuringians & his wife --- (Erfurt 518-Poitiers 13 Aug 587, bur Poitiers, basilique Sainte-Marie-hors-les-Murs). Gregory of Tours names Radegund as the orphaned daughter of Berthar[153]. The Vitæ Sanctæ Radegundis names "Radegundis natione barbare de regione Thoringa" and her "avo rege Bessino, patruo Hermenfredo, patre rege Bertechario"[154]. In a later passage, Gregory records that, after the Frankish invasion of Thuringia, Radegund formed part of the booty taken home by Clotaire I King of the Franks, who later married her[155]. The testament of Radegundis dated to [584/87] survives[156]. Gregory of Tours records the death of St Radegund on 13 Aug[157]. She was canonised, her feast day is 13 Aug[158]. [m] thirdly ([532]) INGUNDIS [Ingonde], daughter of ---. Gregory of Tours names Ingund as the wife of King Clotaire and mother of six of his children[159]. She was King Clotaire's concubine from [517][160]. [m] fourthly ARNEGUNDIS [Aregonde], sister of his third wife Ingonde, daughter of ---. Gregory of Tours specifies that King Clotaire's wife Aregonde was the sister of his wife Ingonde, making clear that the marriage was polygamous as he records that Clotaire reported his "marriage" to Aregonde to his wife Ingonde[161]. She is named "Chæregundem" in the Liber Historiæ Francorum[162]. [m] [fifthly] (555, repudiated) [as her second husband], WALDRADA, widow of THEODEBALD King of the Franks, daughter of WACCHO King of the Lombards & his second wife Ostrogotha of the Gepides. According to Gregory of Tours, King Clotaire "began to have intercourse" with the widow of King Theodebald, before "the bishops complained and he handed her over to Garivald Duke of Bavaria"[163], which does not imply that Clotaire married Waldrada. Herimannus names "Wanderadam" wife of "Theodpaldus rex Francorum" when recording her second marriage to "Lotharius rex patris eius Theodeberti patruus"[164]. She married thirdly (after 555) Garibald Duke in Bavaria. Mistress (1): CHUNSINA, daughter of ---. Gregory of Tours names Chunsina as the mistress of King Clotaire, mother of Chramn[165]. She is named "Gunsinam" in the Liber Historiæ Francorum[166]. Mistress (2): ---. The name of King Clotaire's second mistress is not known. King Clotaire & his third [wife] had [seven] children: 1. GUNTHAR ([517]-after 532). •Gregory of Tours names (in order) Gunthar, Childerich, Charibert, Guntram, Sigibert and a daughter Clothsind as the children of King Clotaire and his wife Ingonde, specifying that Gunthar died in his father's lifetime[167]. •It is assumed that the first three children at least were born illegitimate. •Gregory of Tours reports that he served as an officer in his father's army, but died young[168]. 2. CHILDERICH (-before 561). 3. CHARIBERT ([520]-Paris end 567, bur [Paris, Saint-Germain des Prés]). wife Ingonde[170].. •He succeeded his father in 561 as CHARIBERT King of the Franks, his territories covering those previously held by his uncle King Childebert, with Paris as his capital[171]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "filii ipsius Charibertus, Guntegramnus, Hilpericus et Sigibertus" divided the kingdom between them on the death of their father in 561[172]. •Herimannus names "Hariberti rex libidini deditus" when recording his marriages[173]. •After his death, his kingdom was divided among his brothers. •m firstly (repudiated) INGOLBERGA [Ingelberge], daughter of --- ([520]-Tours 589). Gregory of Tours names Ingoberg as the wife of King Charibert, but records that he dismissed her and took Merofled in her place[174]. Herimannus records the repudiation by "Hariberti" of his wife "Ingoberga"[175]. She retired to Tours after her repudiation. Gregory of Tours records the death of Queen Ingoberg, widow of Charibert, in the fourteenth year of King Childebert's reign, saying he thought that she was in her 70th year[176], although this age seems exaggerated considering the likely birth date of her daughter. •[m] secondly (after 561) MEROFLEDIS, daughter of ---, a wool-worker. Gregory of Tours records that King Charibert fell in love with the two daughters of a wool-worker, Marcovefa and Merofled, and that after Queen Ingoberg humiliated their father by making him prepare wool for the royal household he dismissed the Queen and replaced her by Merofled[177]. •[m] thirdly (after 561) THEODECHILDIS, daughter of ---. Gregory of Tours names Theudechild, daughter of the shepherd who looked after King Charibert's flocks, as another of the king's women and that after Charibert died she offered her hand in marriage to King Gontran, who seized most of her goods and packed her off to a nunnery at Arles from which she unsuccessfully tried to escape[178]. •[m] fourthly his sister-in-law, MARCOVEFA, sister of MEROFLEDIS, daughter of --- (-before end 567). Gregory of Tours records the marriage of King Charibert and Marcovefa, sister of Merofled, for which they were excommunicated by "Saint Germanus the Bishop", as well as Marcovefa's death soon after before her husband[179]. •King Charibert & his first wife had one child, Berta (560-601/616) wife of Aethelberht, (550-616) King of Kent. •King Charibert & his [second] [wife] had one child, Berthefledis (561-589) •King Charibert & his third wife had one son (died as an infant). •King Charibert & his --- wife had [one child], Chrotieldis (Clotilde, 561-590) of Leubovera Convent 4. GUNTCHRAMN [Gontran] ([532/34]-28 Mar 592, bur basilique Saint-Marcel, near Chalon-sur-Saône). •Gregory of Tours names (in order) Gunthar, Childerich, Charibert, Guntram, Sigibert and a daughter Clothsind as the children of King Clotaire and his wife Ingonde[189]. •He succeeded his father in 561 as GONTRAN King of the Franks, his territories covering those previously held by his uncle King Chlodomer, with Orléans as his capital[190]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "filii ipsius Charibertus, Guntegramnus, Hilpericus et Sigibertus" divided the kingdom between them on the death of their father in 561[191]. •He adopted his nephew King Childebert II as his successor in 577, the arrangement being renewed under the treaty of Andelot dated 28 Nov 587[192]. •Fredegar records the death of King Guntram "anno 33 regni…V Kal Apr" and his burial "in ecclesia sancti Marcelli" in the monastery which he had built[193]. •m firstly ([556]) MARCATRUDIS, daughter of MAGNACHAR Duke of the Transjuranian Franks & his wife --- (-after [556]). Gregory of Tours names Marcatrude, daughter of Magnachar, as the wife of King Gontran, specifying that she poisoned her stepson Gundobald but died soon after her own son[194]. •m secondly (566) AUSTRECHILDIS [Bobilla], daughter of --- ([548]-Sep 580). Gregory of Tours names Austrechild "also called Bobilla" as the second wife of King Gontran[195]. She was a servant in the household of his first wife's father. Gregory of Tours records the death of Queen Austrechild, specifying that "this wicked woman" requested as a dying wish that the two doctors who had unsuccessfully treated her should have their throats cut[196]. An epitaph to “Austrigildis Reginæ” refers to her as “Regum genetrix et Regia conjunx”[197]. The record of the Council of Valence dated 22 Jun 585 names “Guntramni Regis…bonæ memoriæ iugalis sua Austrechildis regina vel filiæ eorum Deo sacratæ puellæ…bonæ memoriæ Clodeberga vel Clodehildis”[198]. •Mistress (1): (before [549]) VENERANDA, daughter of ---. Gregory of Tours names Veneranda, servant of one of his subjects, as the mistress of King Gontran before his first marriage[199]. •King Gontran & his first wife had one son, died early. •King Gontran & his second wife had four children: Chlothachar (Clotaire, 567-577), Chlodomer (d. 577), Chlodoberga (d. 585), and Chrothieldis (d. 585) •King Gontran had one child by Mistress (1), Gundobald (549-556) 5. SIGEBERT ([535]-murdered Vitry [Nov/Dec] 575, bur Soissons, basilique Saint-Médard). •Gregory of Tours names (in order) Gunthar, Childerich, Charibert, Guntram, Sigibert and a daughter Clothsind as the children of King Clotaire and his wife Ingonde[211]. •He succeeded his father in 561 as SIGEBERT I King of the Franks, at Reims, later at Metz. 6. CHLODESINDIS (-before 567[212]). •The Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "Flutsuinda…filia Flothario regis Francorum" as the first wife of Albuin[214]. The Historia Langobardorum names "Ludusenda…filia Flothari regis" as the first wife of Alboin[215]. Paulus Diaconus names "Chlotharius rex Francorum, Chlotsuindam ei suam filiam" as wife of Alboin[216]. •m ([556/60]) as his first wife, ALBOIN King of the Lombards, son of AUDOIN King of the Lombards & his wife --- (-murdered 28 Jun 572). He was crowned King of the Lombards in Italy at Milan in [570]. 7. [BILICHILDIS . •The Liber Historiæ Francorum records that "Chlotharius…rex" had seven children by "Ingunde", the same six as are named in Gregory of Tours with a marginal note adding "Blitchildim" as the seventh child and specifying that she married "Ansbertus nobilissimus" and by him was mother of "Arnoldum"[217]. An alternative origin for Bilichildis is provided by the Chronico Marcianensi de Sancta Rictrude which names “Dagobertum Regem et Blithildem sororem eius” as children of “Lotharius…[et] Beretrudam” (chronologically impossible if she was the grandmother of Arnoul Bishop of Metz), but commenting that “others say” that Bilichildis was the daughter of “primi Lotharii avi istius”, adding that Bilichildis married “Ansberto Duci nobili in Germania”[218]. •The Carmen de Exordio Gentis Francorum names "Hlotharius [rex]…filia…Blithild" and records her marriage to "Ansbertus"[219]. The recorded names of the alleged children of Bilichildis do not have a Merovingian ring about them. It is uncertain whether Bilichildis existed at all or whether she and her family were invented for the purposes of compiling a Merovingian descent for the Carolingian dynasty, an enterprise undertaken in Metz from the late 8th century onwards. Her absence from the list of the children of King Clotaire given by Gregory of Tours certainly suggests that she was a spurious later invention, although Gregory's treatment of the families of the early Merovingians was not exhaustive, as can be seen from the examples of Berthoara, daughter of King Theodebald I, and [Theodechildis] sister of the same king (see above), whom Gregory does not mention at all. Settipani demonstrates convincingly that there are sufficient indications in other primary sources that parts, if not all, these reconstructions may be based on historical fact[220]. Sifting the fact from the fiction is inevitably speculative. •m ANSBERT, son of ---. A 9th century genealogy names "Ansbertus…ex genere senatorum", his brothers "Deotarium, Firminum, Gamardum, Aigulfum episcopum et Ragnifridum" and their supposed descendants, Ansbert's marriage to "filiam Hlotarii regis Francorum…Blithildem" and their children as shown below[221].] King Clotaire & his fourth wife had one child: 8. CHILPERICH (before 535-murdered Chelles [27 Sep/9 Oct] 584, bur Paris, Saint-Germain-des-Prés). •Gregory of Tours names Chilperich as the son of King Clotaire and his wife Aregund[222]. •He succeeded his father in 561 as CHILPERICH I King of the Franks, at Soissons. King Clotaire had one child by Mistress (1): 9. CHRAMN (-murdered [30 Nov/31 Dec] 560). •Gregory of Tours names Chramn as the son of King Clotaire and his concubine Chunsina[223]. Gregory records that Chramn was hated by the townsfolk of Clermont-Ferrand, where he lived, for his dissolute way of life, and in a later passage specifies that he moved on to Poitiers where he conspired against his father[224]. Gregory also says that Chramn allied himself with his uncle King Childebert in Paris, later rebelling once more against his father before fleeing to Brittany, where he and his wife and daughters went into hiding with "Chanao Count of the Bretons" but were captured and murdered[225]. •The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "Cramnus filius Chlothacharii regis" sought a hiding place from "Childeberto patruo suo" in 555[226]. •Paulus Diaconus records that "duce Francorum Chramnichis" laid waste to Trentino after defeating a Lombard invasion of France but was defeated by "Euin Tridentum dux" at "Salurnis"[227]. •Gregory of Tours records his father, King Clotaire, died on the first anniversary of the killing of his son Chramn[228]. •m CHALDA, daughter of WILLICHAR & his wife --- (-murdered 560). Gregory of Tours records that the wife of Chramn was the daughter of Willichar, but does not name her[229]. The Liber Historiæ Francorum names "Willecharii filiam…Chaldam" as the wife of Chramn, adding in a later passage that "Willecharius…socer eius" fled with the family to "basilicam sancti Martini"[230]. Gregory of Tours says that Chramn fled to Brittany, where he and his wife and daughters went into hiding with "Chanao Count of the Bretons" but were captured and murdered[231]. •Chramn & his wife had [two or more] daughters, murdered in 560. King Clotaire had one possible child by Mistress (2): 10. [GUNDOBALD "Ballomer" (-murdered Mar 585). •Gregory of Tours records that Gundobald claimed to be the son of King Clotaire, who disowned him, that he was brought up by King Childebert and later supported by King Charibert. •He was received in Italy by General Narses, married and had sons there before moving to Constantinople. •He was invited back to Gaul, landed at Marseille and was welcomed by Bishop Theodore[233]. He was declared king at Brives-la-Gaillarde in Dec 584, but was betrayed and captured at Comminges by Gontran King of Burgundy, who murdered him[234].] •m (in Italy) ---. The name of Gundobald´s wife is not known. Gregory of Tours records that the two sons of Chramn were born in Italy, and they were taken to Byzantium by their father after the death of their mother[235]. Gundobald & his wife had two sons, taken to Byzantium. References: •[144] Gregory of Tours III.1, p. 162. •[145] Regum Merowingorum Genealogia (Cod S. Galli, 732), Regum Francorum Genealogiæ, MGH SS II, p. 307. •[146] Gregory of Tours III.7, pp. 167-8. •[147] Gregory of Tours III.11, p. 171. •[148] Gregory of Tours III.29, pp. 186-7. •[149] Gregory of Tours IV.21, p. 217. •[150] Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica 561, MGH Auct. ant. XI, p. 237. •[151] Gregory of Tours III.6, pp. 166-7. •[152] Settipani (1993), p. 66. •[153] Gregory of Tours III.4, p. 164. •[154] Vita Sanctæ Radegundis Liber I, 2, MGH SS rer. Merov. II, p. 365. •[155] Gregory of Tours III.7, p. 168. •[156] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Regum Francorum, no. 7, p. 8. •[157] Gregory of Tours IX.2, p. 481. •[158] Attwater, p. 295. •[159] Gregory of Tours IV.3, pp. 197-8. •[160] Settipani, p. 70. •[161] Gregory of Tours IV.3, pp. 197-8. •[162] Liber Historiæ Francorum 27, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 286. •[163] Gregory of Tours IV.9, p. 203. •[164] Herimanni Augiensis Chronicon 553, MHG SS V, p. 88. •[165] Gregory of Tours IV.3, p. 197. •[166] Liber Historiæ Francorum 27, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 286. •[167] Gregory of Tours IV.3, pp. 197-8. •[168] Gregory, III 21, and IV 25. •[169] Gregory of Tours IV.3, pp. 197-8. •[170] Gregory of Tours IV.3, p. 197. •[171] Gregory of Tours IV.22, p. 217. •[172] Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica 561, MGH Auct. ant. XI, p. 237. •[173] Herimanni Augiensis Chronicon 563, MHG SS V, p. 88. •[174] Gregory of Tours IV.26, p. 219. •[175] Herimanni Augiensis Chronicon 563, MHG SS V, p. 88. •[176] Gregory of Tours IX.26, p. 513. •[177] Gregory of Tours IV.26, p. 219. •[178] Gregory of Tours IV.26, pp. 219-21. •[179] Gregory of Tours IV.26, p. 220. •[189] Gregory of Tours IV.3, p. 197. •[190] Gregory of Tours IV.22, p. 217. •[191] Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica 561, MGH Auct. ant. XI, p. 237. •[192] Gregory of Tours V.17 and IX.20, pp. 274-5 and 503-7. •[193] Fredegar, IV, 14, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 127. •[194] Gregory of Tours IV.25, pp. 218-19. •[195] Gregory of Tours IV.25, p. 219. •[196] Gregory of Tours V.26, pp. 298-9. •[197] RHGF II, p. 536. •[198] MGH Conc. I, p. 162. •[199] Gregory of Tours IV.25, p. 218. •[211] Gregory of Tours IV.3, p. 197. •[212] The date of her husband's second marriage. •[213] Gregory of Tours IV.3, pp. 197-8. •[214] Origo Gentis Langobardorum 5, MGH SS rer Lang I, p. 4. •[215] Historia Langobardorum Codicis Gothani 5, MGH SS rer Lang I, p. 9. •[216] Pauli Historia Langobardorum I.27, MGH SS rer Lang I, p. 68. •[217] Liber Historiæ Francorum 27, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 285. •[218] Ex Chronico Marcianensi de Sancta Rictrude, RHGF 3, p. 522. •[219] Carmen de Exordio Gentis Francorum, MGH Poetæ Latini ævi Carolini II, pp. 142-3. •[220] Settipani, C. 'L'apport de l'onomastique dans l'étude des genealogies carolingiennes', Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. and Settipani, C. (eds.) (2000) Onomastique et Parenté dans l'Occident medieval (Prosopographica et Genealogica, Vol. 3), pp. 185-229. •[221] Genealogiæ Karolorum I, MGH SS XIII, p. 245. •[222] Gregory of Tours IV.3, p. 197. •[223] Gregory of Tours IV.3, p. 197. •[224] Gregory of Tours IV.13 and IV.16, pp. 207-8 and 211-12. •[225] Gregory of Tours IV 17 and 20, pp. 213 and 215-16. •[226] Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica 555, MGH Auct. ant. XI, p. 236. •[227] Pauli Historia Langobardorum III.9, MGH SS rer Lang I, p. 97. •[228] Gregory of Tours IV.21, p. 217. •[229] Gregory of Tours IV.17, p. 213. •[230] Liber Historiæ Francorum 28, MGH SS rer Merov II, pp. 286 and 287. •[231] Gregory of Tours IV 17 and 20, pp. 213 and 215-16. •[233] Gregory of Tours VI.24, p. 352. •[234] Gregory of Tours VII.10, p. 394 and VII.34-38, pp. 418-23. Wood (1994), pp. 93-100, discusses the significance of Gundobald's rebellion in the context of contemporary politics. •[235] Gregory of Tours VII.36, p. 419. --------------------------

Famous/Notable Relatives of Robert Ward

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This is a list of Famous/Notable people throughout history and how they are related to [[Ward-22928|Robert Ward]] === North America === '''US Presidents''' - 9 have no known relation (Missing: James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, James K. Polk, Andrew Johnson, William McKinley, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, Donald Trump) *1. [[Washington-11|George Washington]] (8th Cousin 9x removed) [[Spencer-20871|William Spencer]] is our Common Ancestor *2. [[Adams-10|John Adams]] (3rd Cousin 9x removed) [[Adams-277|Henry Adams]] is our Common Ancestor *3. [[Jefferson-1|Thomas Jefferson]] (9th Cousin 8x removed) [[Roper-332|John Roper]] is our Common Ancestor *4. [[Madison-1|James Madison]] (6th Cousin 9x removed) [[Morgan-901|Sir Thomas Morgan MP]] is our Common Ancestor *5. [[Monroe-17|James Monroe]] (Unknown) *6. [[Adams-12|John Quincy Adams]] (4th Cousin 8x removed) [[Adams-277|Henry Adams]] is our Common Ancestor *7. [[Jackson-1115|Andrew Jackson]] (Unknown) *8. [[Van_Buren-1|Martin Van Buren]] (3rd Cousin 8x removed) [[Tysz-1|Jan Goes]] is our Common Ancestor *9. [[Harrison-912|William Henry Harrison]] (7th Cousin 8x removed) [[Higginson-213|Robert Higginson]] is our Common Ancestor *10. [[Tyler-150|John Tyler]] (13th Cousin 8x removed) [[Warren-50|Sir Laurence Warren]] is our Common Ancestor *11. [[Polk-56|James K. Polk]] (Unknown) *12. [[Taylor-223|Zachary Taylor]] (5th Cousin 8x removed) [[Brewster-4|William Brewster]] is our Common Ancestor *13. [[Fillmore-3|Millard Fillmore]] (5th Cousin 7x removed) [[Olmstead-32|Nicholas Olmstead]] is our Common Ancestor *14. [[Pierce-177|Franklin Pierce]] (5th Cousin 8x removed) [[Merrill-83|Nathaniel Merrill Jr.]] is our Common Ancestor *15. [[Buchanan-787|James Buchanan]] (10th Cousin 9x removed) [[Beaufort-20|Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor *16. [[Lincoln-103|Abraham Lincoln]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Holmes-142|Obadiah Holmes]] is our Common Ancestor *17. [[Johnson-10479|Andrew Johnson]] (Unknown) *18. [[Grant-468|Ulysses S. Grant]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Huntington-69|Christopher Huntington]] is our Common Ancestor *19. [[Hayes-229|Rutherford B. Hayes]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Eggleston-20|Bigod Eggleston]] is our Common Ancestor *20. [[Garfield-39|James A. Garfield]] (7th Cousin 5x removed) [[Ingraham-26|Richard Ingram]] is our Common Ancestor *21. [[Arthur-49|Chester A. Arthur]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Chase-7|Aquila Chase]] is our Common Ancestor *22. [[Cleveland-110|Grover Cleveland]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Hyde-63|Samuel Hyde]] is our Common Ancestor *23. [[Harrison-913|Benjamin Harrison]] (9th Cousin 6x removed) [[Higginson-213|Robert Higginson]] is our Common Ancestor *24. [[Cleveland-110|Grover Cleveland]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Hyde-63|Samuel Hyde]] is our Common Ancestor *25. [[McKinley-184|William McKinley]] (Unknown) *26. [[Roosevelt-18|Theodore Roosevelt]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Winne-19|Pieter Winne]] is our Common Ancestor *27. [[Taft-21|William Howard Taft]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Bishop-184|James Bishop]] is our Common Ancestor *28. [[Wilson-7591|Woodrow Wilson]] (13th Cousin 6x removed) [[Beaufort-20|Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor *29. [[Harding-4|Warren G. Harding]] (8th Cousin 4x removed) [[Snow-4|Nicholas Snow]] is our Common Ancestor *30. [[Coolidge-13|Calvin Coolidge]] (6th Cousin 4x removed) [[Horton-130|Thomas Horton]] is our Common Ancestor *31. [[Hoover-328|Herbert Hoover]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Smith-1807|Joseph Smith]] is our Common Ancestor *32. [[Roosevelt-1|Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] (6th Cousin 5x removed) [[Sheldon-80|Isaac Sheldon]] is our Common Ancestor *33. [[Truman-3|Harry S. Truman]] (10th Cousin 3x removed) [[Mitchell-1313|Matthew Mitchell]] is our Common Ancestor *34. [[Eisenhower-1|Dwight D. Eisenhower]] (Unknown) *35. [[Kennedy-96|John F. Kennedy]] (Unknown) *36. [[Johnson-8927|Lyndon B. Johnson]] (10th Cousin 4x removed) [[Tucker-731|George Tucker]] is our Common Ancestor *37. [[Nixon-22|Richard Nixon]] (9th Cousin 3x removed) [[Newhall-15|Thomas Newhall]] is our Common Ancestor *38. [[King-1042|Gerald Ford]] (8th Cousin 2x removed) [[Lord-99|Richard Lord]] is our Common Ancestor *39. [[Carter-1086|Jimmy Carter]] (13th Cousin 1x removed) [[Smith-3508|Sir John Smith]] is our Common Ancestor *40. [[Reagan-1|Ronald Reagan]] (Unknown) *41. [[Bush-7|George H. W. Bush]] (9th Cousin 2x removed) [[Robinson-8449|William Robinson]] is our Common Ancestor *42. [[Blythe-6|Bill Clinton]] (16th Cousin 3x removed) [[Woodward-92|Richard Woodward]] is our Common Ancestor *43. [[Bush-4|George W. Bush]] (10th Cousin 1x removed) [[Robinson-8449|William Robinson]] is our Common Ancestor *44. [[Obama-2|Barack Obama]] (12th Cousin 1x removed) [[Reynolds-282|George Reynolds]] is our Common Ancestor *45. [[Trump-66|Donald Trump]] (15th Cousin 3x removed) [[Erskine-108|Sir John Erskine]] *46. [[Biden-2|Joe Biden]] (Unknown) '''US Vice Presidents''' - 9 have no known relation (Missing: George Clinton, Andrew Johnson, Henry Wilson, Thomas A. Hendricks, Thomas R. Marshall, Spiro Agnew, Walter Mondale, Joe Biden, Mike Pence) *1. [[Adams-10|John Adams]] (3rd Cousin 9x removed) [[Adams-277|Henry Adams]] is our Common Ancestor *2. [[Jefferson-1|Thomas Jefferson]] (9th Cousin 8x removed) [[Roper-332|John Roper]] is our Common Ancestor *3. [[Burr-115|Aaron Burr]] (4th Cousin 9x removed) [[Sherman-210|Edmund Sherman]] is our Common Ancestor *4. [[Clinton-693|George Clinton]] (Unknown) *5. [[Gerry-17|Elbridge Gerry]] (5th Cousin 9x removed) [[Ripley-62|William Ripley]] is our Common Ancestor *6. [[Tompkins-364|Daniel D. Tompkins]] (7th Cousin 7x removed) [[White-255|Robert White]] is our Common Ancestor *7. [[Calhoun-124|John C. Calhoun]] (13th Cousin 6x removed) [[Graham-913|Sir William Graham]] is our Common Ancestor *8. [[Van_Buren-1|Martin Van Buren]] (3rd Cousin 8x removed) [[Tysz-1|Jan Goes]] is our Common Ancestor *9. [[Johnson-5003|Richard Mentor Johnson]] (8th Cousin 6x removed) [[Smith-3508|Sir John Smith]] is our Common Ancestor *10. [[Tyler-150|John Tyler]] (13th Cousin 8x removed) [[Warren-50|Sir Laurence Warren]] is our Common Ancestor *11. [[Dallas-90|George M. Dallas]] (10th Cousin 6x removed) [[Erskine-258|John Erskine]] is our Common Ancestor *12. [[Fillmore-3|Millard Fillmore]] (5th Cousin 7x removed) [[Olmstead-32|Nicholas Olmstead]] is our Common Ancestor *13. [[King-11966|William R. King]] (11th Cousin 6x removed) [[Dingley-170|Elizabeth Dingley]] is our Common Ancestor *14. [[Breckinridge-33|John C. Breckinridge]] (11th Cousin 6x removed) [[Hamilton-1680|Alexander Hamilton]] is our Common Ancestor *15. [[Hamlin-528|Hannibal Hamlin]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) [[Sherman-210|Edmund Sherman]] is our Common Ancestor *16. [[Johnson-10479|Andrew Johnson]] (Unknown) *17. [[Colfax-20|Schuyler Colfax]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Griswold-33|Edward Griswold]] is our Common Ancestor *18. [[Colbath-19|Henry Wilson]] (Unknown) *19. [[Wheeler-6894|William A. Wheeler]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Cheesbrough-473|Samuel Chesebrough]] is our Common Ancestor *20. [[Arthur-49|Chester A. Arthur]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Chase-7|Aquila Chase]] is our Common Ancestor *21. [[Hendricks-692|Thomas A. Hendricks]] (Unknown) *22. [[Morton-3303|Levi P. Morton]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Sheldon-80|Isaac Sheldon]] is our Common Ancestor *23. [[Stevenson-1184|Adlai Stevenson I]] (16th cousin 7x removed) [[Stewart-1170|Sir John Stewart]] is our Common Ancestor *24. [[Hobart-517|Garret Hobart]] (9th Cousin 3x removed) [[Eliot-153|Bennett Eliot]] is our Common Ancestor *25. [[Roosevelt-18|Theodore Roosevelt]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Winne-19|Pieter Winne]] is our Common Ancestor *26. [[Fairbanks-440|Charles W. Fairbanks]] (8th Cousin 5x removed) [[Tidd-6|John Tidd]] is our Common Ancestor *27. [[Sherman-3002|James Schoolcraft Sherman]] (8th Cousin 5x removed) [[Winslow-4|Edward Winslow]] is our Common Ancestor *28. [[Marshall-6316|Thomas R. Marshall]] (Unknown) *29. [[Coolidge-13|Calvin Coolidge]] (6th Cousin 4x removed) [[Horton-130|Thomas Horton]] is our Common Ancestor *30. [[Dawes-291|Charles G. Dawes]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Crippen-39|Thomas Crippen]] is our Common Ancestor *31. [[Curtis-1647|Charles Curtis]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Booth-64|Richard Booth]] is our Common Ancestor *32. [[Garner-1851|John N. Garner III]] (9th Cousin 4x removed) [[Robinson-209|Henry Robinson]] is our Common Ancestor *33. [[Wallace-5730|Henry A. Wallace]] (10th Cousin 3x removed) [[Lothrop-3|John Lothrop]] is our Common Ancestor *34. [[Truman-3|Harry S. Truman]] (10th Cousin 3x removed) [[Mitchell-1313|Matthew Mitchell]] is our Common Ancestor *35. [[Barkley-428|Alben W. Barkley]] (13th Cousin 5x removed) [[Pennington-29|John Pennington]] is our Common Ancestor *36. [[Nixon-22|Richard Nixon]] (9th Cousin 3x removed) [[Newhall-15|Thomas Newhall]] is our Common Ancestor *37. [[Johnson-8927|Lyndon B. Johnson]] (10th Cousin 4x removed) [[Tucker-731|George Tucker]] is our Common Ancestor *38. [[Humphrey-2148|Hubert Humphrey]] (9th Cousin 3x removed) [[Eliot-153|Bennett Eliot]] is our Common Ancestor *39. [[Agnew-659|Spiro Agnew]] (Unknown) *40. [[King-1042|Gerald Ford]] (8th Cousin 2x removed) [[Lord-99|Richard Lord]] is our Common Ancestor *41. [[Rockefeller-101|Nelson Rockefeller]] (9th Cousin 2x removed) [[Lincoln-1878|Thomas Lincoln]] is our Common Ancestor *42. [[Mondale-1|Walter Mondale]] (Unknown) *43. [[Bush-7|George H. W. Bush]] (9th Cousin 2x removed) [[Robinson-8449|William Robinson]] is our Common Ancestor *44. [[Quayle-22|Dan Quayle]] (11th Cousin 1x removed) [[Lawrence-239|Thomas Lawrence]] is our Common Ancestor *45. [[Gore-330|Al Gore]] (18th Cousin 1x removed) [[Blount-211|Humphrey Blount]] is our Common Ancestor *46. [[Cheney-4|Dick Cheney]] (10th Cousin 3x removed) [[Hopkins-373|Stephen Hopkins]] is our Common Ancestor *47. [[Biden-2|Joe Biden]] (Unknown) *48. [[Pence-403|Mike Pence]] (Unknown) *49. [[Harris-37912|Kamala Harris]] (Unknown) '''US First Ladies''' - 17 have no known relation (Missing: Martha Dandridge, Dolley Payne, Louisa Johnson, Emily Donelson, Sarah Yorke, Sarah Childress, Abigail Powers, Eliza McCardle, Caroline Scott, Ida Saxton, Jacqueline Bouvier, Thelma Ryan, Elizabeth Bloomer, Rosalynn Smith, Hillary Rodham, Michelle Robinson, Melania Knavs) *1. [[Dandridge-1|Martha Dandridge]] (Unknown) *2. [[Smith-69|Abigail Smith]] (5th Cousin 8x removed) [[Myles-10|Katherine Myles]] is our Common Ancestor *3. [[Jefferson-18|Martha Jefferson]] (10th cousin 7x removed) [[Roper-332|John Roper]] is our Common Ancestor *4. [[Payne-1949|Dolley Payne]] (Unknown) *5. [[kortright-85|Elizabeth Kortright]] (3rd Cousin 8x removed) [[Ten Eyck-85|Conraedt ten Eyck]] is our Common Ancestor *6. [[Johnson-24|Louisa Johnson]] (Unknown) *7a. [[Donelson-8|Emily Donelson]] (Unknown) *7b. [[Yorke-209|Sarah Yorke]] (Unknown) *8. [[Singleton-498|Angelica Singleton]] (12th Cousin 7x removed) [[Sandes-19|Sir William Sandys]] is our Common Ancestor *9a. [[Symmes-6|Anna Symmes]] (11th Cousin 9x removed) [[Fiske-24|Symon Fiske]] is our Common Ancestor *9b. [[Irwin-1505|Jane Irwin]] (11th Cousin 5x removed) [[Scrymgeour-4|James Scrymgeour]] is our Common Ancestor *10a. [[Christian-1141|Letitia Christian]] (11th Cousin 7x removed) [[Hastings-125|Sir William Hastings KG]] is our Common Ancestor *10b. [[Cooper-6677|Priscilla Cooper]] (6th Cousin 5x removed) [[Winne-19|Pieter Winne]] is our Common Ancestor *10c. [[Gardiner-131|Julia Gardiner]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) [[Dayton-32|Ralph Dayton]] is our Common Ancestor *11. [[Childress-76|Sarah Childress]] (Unknown) *12. [[Smith-2210|Peggy Smith]] (14th Cousin 6x removed) [[Tempest-23|Sir Richard Tempest]] is our Common Ancestor *13. [[Powers-987|Abigail Powers]] (Unknown) *14. [[Appleton-55|Jane Appleton]] (5th Cousin 7x removed) [[Baker-4004|John Baker II]] is our Common Ancestor *15. [[Lane-4097|Harriet Lane]] (11th Cousin 8x removed) [[Beaufort-20|Joan Beaufort, Queen of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor *16. [[Todd-282|Mary Ann Todd]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Peck-217|William Peck]] is our Common Ancestor *17. [[McCardle-11|Eliza McCardle]] (Unknown) *18. [[Dent-25|Julia Dent]] (9th Cousin 7x removed) [[Osborne-2620|Richard Osborne III]] is our Common Ancestor *19. [[Webb-540|Lucy Webb]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) [[UNKNOWN-30448|Elizabeth Rose]] is our Common Ancestor *20. [[Rudolph-37|Lucretia Rudolph]] (5th Cousin 7x removed) [[Fitch-11|James Fitch]] is our Common Ancestor *21. [[Arthur-55|Mary Arthur]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Chase-7|Aquila Chase]] is our Common Ancestor *22a. [[Cleveland-460|Rose Cleveland]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Hyde-63|Samuel Hyde]] is our Common Ancestor *22b. [[Folsom-35|Frances Folsom]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Chase-7|Aquila Chase]] is our Common Ancestor *23a. [[Scott-1819|Caroline Scott]] (Unknown) *23b. [[Harrison-1042|Mary Harrison]] (10th Cousin 5x removed) [[Higginson-213|Robert Higginson]] is our Common Ancestor *24. [[Folsom-35|Frances Folsom]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Chase-7|Aquila Chase]] is our Common Ancestor *25. [[Saxton-163|Ida Saxton]] (Unknown) *26. [[Carow-1|Edith Carow]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Allyn-36|Robert Allyn]] is our Common Ancestor *27. [[Herron-616|Helen Herron]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Platt-30|Josiah Platt]] is our Common Ancestor *28a. [[Axson-4|Ellen Axson]] (7th Cousin 5x removed) [[Lawrence-239|Thomas Lawrence]] is our Common Ancestor *28b. [[Wilson-10912|Margaret Wilson]] (8th Cousin 4x removed) [[Lawrence-239|Thomas Lawrence]] is our Common Ancestor *28c. [[Bolling-340|Edith Bolling]] (10th Cousin 6x removed) [[Higginson-208|Thomas Higginson]] is our Common Ancestor *29. [[Kling-450|Florence Kling]] (7th Cousin 5x removed) [[Moore-816|Isaac Moore]] is our Common Ancestor *30. [[Goodhue-12|Grace Goodhue]] (8th Cousin 4x removed) [[Lamson-170|William Lamson]] is our Common Ancestor *31. [[Henry-441|Louella Henry]] (9th Cousin 3x removed) [[Cogswell-72|John Cogswell]] is our Common Ancestor *32. [[Roosevelt-10|Eleanor Roosevelt]] (8th Cousin 3x removed) [[Winne-19|Pieter Winne]] is our Common Ancestor *33. [[Wallace-17|Elizabeth Wallace]] (8th Cousin 3x removed) [[Sheldon-80|Isaac Sheldon]] is our Common Ancestor *34. [[Doud-104|Mamie Doud]] (8th Cousin 3x removed) [[Cheesbrough-473|Samuel Chesebrough]] is our Common Ancestor *35. [[Bouvier-19|Jacqueline Bouvier]] (Unknown) *36. [[Taylor-2955|Claudia Taylor]] (13th Cousin 5x removed) [[Metcalfe-9|James Metcalfe]] is our Common Ancestor *37. [[Ryan-192|Thelma Ryan]] (Unknown) *38. [[Bloomer-19|Elizabeth Bloomer]] (Unknown) *39. [[Smith-6987|Rosalynn Smith]] (Unknown) *40. [[Robbins-4|Nancy Robbins]] (9th Cousin 2x removed) [[Sheldon-80|Isaac Sheldon]] is our Common Ancestor *41. [[Pierce-4|Barbara Pierce]] (9th Cousin 3x removed) [[Reed-481|William Reed]] is our Common Ancestor *42. [[Rodham-1|Hillary Rodham]] (Unknown) *43. [[Welch-9|Laura Welch]] (10th Cousin 2x removed) [[Holmes-142|Obadiah Holmes]] is our Common Ancestor *44. [[Robinson-70|Michelle Robinson]] (Unknown) *45. [[Knavs-1|Melania Knavs]] (Unknown) *46. [[Jacobs-1929|Jill Jacobs]] (Unknown) '''New York Governors''' (My home state) *1. [[Clinton-693|George Clinton]] (8th Cousin 10x removed) [[Morgan-851|John Morgan]] is our Common Ancestor *2. [[Jay-1|John Jay]] (Unknown) *3. [[Lewis-12823|Morgan Lewis]] (Unknown) *4. [[Tompkins-364|Daniel D. Tompkins]] (7th Cousin 7x removed) [[White-255|Robert White]] is our Common Ancestor *5. [[Tayler-87|John Tayler]] (Unknown) *6. [[Clinton-145|DeWitt Clinton]] (3rd Cousin 9x removed) [[De Witt-43|Tjerck Claessen De Witt]] is our Common Ancestor *7. [[Yates-1155|Joseph C. Yates]] (4th Cousin 7x removed) [[Winne-19|Pieter Winne]] is our Common Ancestor *8. [[Pitcher-701|Nathaniel Pitcher]] (Unknown) *9. [[Van_Buren-1|Martin Van Buren]] (3rd Cousin 8x removed) [[Tysz-1|Jan Goes]] is our Common Ancestor *10. [[Throop-1021|Enos T. Throop]] (Unknown) *11. [[Marcy-166|William L. Marcy]] (Unknown) *12. [[Seward-271|William Seward]] (12th Cousin 10x removed) [[Macdonald-273|Donald Macdonald]] is our Common Ancestor *13. [[Bouck-44|William C. Bouck]] (Unknown) *14. [[Wright-15151|Silas Wright]] (4th Cousin 8x removed) [[Stebbins-19|John Stebbins Sr.]] is our Common Ancestor *15. [[Young-14404|John Young]] (Unknown) *16. [[Fish-2396|Hamilton Fish]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) [[Seubering-1|Roeloff Lucassen Seubering]] is our Common Ancestor *17. [[Hunt-7695|Washington Hunt]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) [[Hart-69|Stephen Hart]] is our Common Ancestor *18. [[Seymour-1853|Horatio Seymour]] (3rd Cousin 8x removed) [[Seymour-601|John Seymour]] is our Common Ancestor *19. [[Clark-21785|Myron H. Clark]] (7th Cousin 7x removed) [[Stanley-341|Robert Stanley]] is our Common Ancestor *20. [[King-11658|John King]] (6th Cousin 8x removed) [[Alcock-553|John Alcock]] is our Common Ancestor *21. [[Morgan-9210|Edwin D. Morgan]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Hyde-63|Samuel Hyde]] is our Common Ancestor *22. [[Fenton-1251|Reuben Fenton]] (Unknown) *23. [[Hoffman-3820|John T. Hoffman]] (Unknown) *24. [[Dix-405|John Adams Dix]] (5th Cousin 7x removed) [[Fuller-122|Thomas Fuller]] is our Common Ancestor *25. [[Tilden-376|Samuel J. Tilden]] (4th Cousin 9x removed) [[Little-230|Thomas Little]] is our Common Ancestor *26. [[Robinson-13060|Lucius Robinson]] (5th Cousins 7x removed) [[Cary-78|John Cary]] is our Common Ancestor *27. [[Cornell-1170|Alonzo B. Cornell]] (6th Cousin 8x removed) [[Eames-2|Anthony Eames]] is our Common Ancestor *28. [[Cleveland-110|Grover Cleveland]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Hyde-63|Samuel Hyde]] is our Common Ancestor *29. [[Hill-14190|David B. Hill]] (Unknown) *30. [[Flower-517|Roswell P. Flower]] (3rd Cousin 8x removed) [[Seymour-601|John Seymour]] is our Common Ancestor *31. [[Morton-3303|Levi P. Morton]] (5th Cousin 6x removed) [[Sheldon-80|Isaac Sheldon Sr.]] is our Common Ancestor *32. [[Black-5812|Frank S. Black]] (9th Cousin 5x removed) [[Reynolds-618|Christopher Reynolds]] is our Common Ancestor *33. [[Roosevelt-18|Theodore Roosevelt]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) *34. [[Odell-980|Benjamin Barker Odell Jr.]] (Unknown) *35. [[Higgins-3290|Frank W. Higgins]] (Unknown) *36. [[Hughes-7043|Charles Evans Hughes]] (8th Cousin 3x removed) [[Moore-1416|John Moore]] is our Common Ancestor *37. [[White-22026|Horace White]] (5th Cousin 5x removed) [[White-6628|Joseph White]] is our Common Ancestor *38. [[Dix-486|John Alden Dix]] (Unknown) *39. [[Sulzer-81|William Sulzer]] (Unknown) *40. [[Glynn-245|Martin H. Glynn]] (Unknown) *41. [[Whitman-2267|Charles S. Whitman]] (Unknown) *42. [[Smith-80150|Al Smith]] (Unknown) *43. [[Miller-26889|Nathan L. Miller]] (Unknown) *44. [[Roosevelt-1|Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] (6th Cousin 5x removed) [[Sheldon-80|Isaac Sheldon]] is our Common Ancestor *45. [[Lehman-730|Herbert H. Lehman]] (Unknown) *46. [[Poletti-10|Charles Poletti]] (Unknown) *47. [[Dewey-355|Thomas E. Dewey]] (6th Cousin 4x removed) [[Waterman-81|Thomas Waterman Jr.]] is our Common Ancestor *48. [[Harriman-365|W. Averell Harriman]] (8th Cousin 4x removed) [[Beardsley-17|William Beardsley]] is our Common Ancestor *49. [[Rockefeller-101|Nelson Rockefeller]] (9th Cousin 2x removed) [[Lincoln-1878|Thomas Lincoln]] is our Common Ancestor *50. [[Wilson-25410|Malcolm Wilson]] (Unknown) *51. [[Carey-1791|Hugh Carey]] (Unknown) *52. [[Cuomo-10|Mario Cuomo]] (Unknown) *53. George Pataki (Unknown) *54. Eliot Spitzer (Unknown) *55. David Paterson (Unknown) *56. Andrew Cuomo (Unknown) '''US Military Figures''' * [[MacArthur-4|Douglas MacArthur]] (8th Cousin 2x removed) [[Andrews-81|Mary Andrews]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Sherman-393|William Tecumseh Sherman]] (4th Cousin 7x removed) [[Weed-137|John Weed]] is our Common Ancestor '''Mayflower Passengers''' * [[Alden-63|John Alden]] (Unknown) * [[Allerton-3|Isaac Allerton Sr.]] (Unknown) * [[Allerton-75|John Allerton]] (Unknown) * [[Allerton-6|Mary Cushman]] (Unknown) * [[Allerton-8|Remember Maverick]] (Unknown) * [[Barker-462|Elizabeth Winslow]] (Unknown) * [[Billington-2|Francis Billington]] (Unknown) * [[Billington-12|John Billington]] (Unknown) * [[Billington-3|John Billington]] (Unknown) * [[Bradford-24|William Bradford]] (12th Great Grandfather) * [[Brewster-81|Love Brewster]] (11th Great Grand Uncle) * [[Brewster-4|William Brewster]] (12th Great Grandfather) * [[Brewster-140|Wrestling Brewster]] (11th Great Grand Uncle) * [[Britteridge-1|Richard Britteridge]] (Unknown) * [[Browne-66|Peter Browne]] (Unknown) * [[Butten-1|William Butten]] (Unknown) *WIP '''Native American Ancestors''' * [[Wyandanch-2|Chief Grand Sachem Wyandanch]] (12th Great Grandfather) '''Canadian Prime Ministers''' *1. [[Macdonald-1567|John Alexander Macdonald]] (Unknown) *2. [[Mackenzie-4|Alexander Mackenzie]] (Unknown) *3. [[Abbott-3145|John Abbott]] (Unknown) *4. [[Thompson-12832|Sir John Thompson]] (Unknown) *5. [[Bowell-21|Mackenzie Bowell]] (Unknown) *6. [[Tupper-249|Sir Charles Tupper]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) *7. [[Laurier-128|Wilfrid Laurier]] (21st Cousin 5x removed) *8. [[Borden-377|Sir Robert Laird Borden]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) *9. [[Meighen-3|Arthur Meighen]] (Unknown) *10. [[King-8198|William Lyon Mackenzie King]] (Unknown) *11. [[Bennett-5964|R. B. Bennett]] (6th Cousin 5x removed) *12. [[St-Laurent-168|Louis St. Laurent]] (23rd Cousin 3x removed) *13. [[Diefenbaker-1|John Diefenbaker]] (Unknown) *14. [[Pearson-1837|Lester B. Pearson]] (6th Cousin 4x removed) *15. [[Trudeau-148|Pierre Trudeau]] (23rd Cousin 3x removed) *16. [[Clark-16585|Joe Clark]] (Unknown) *17. [[Turner-9000|John Turner]] (Unknown) *18. [[Mulroney-3|Brian Mulroney]] (Unknown) *19. [[Campbell-9538|Kim Campbell]] (Unknown) *20. [[Chrétien-77|Jean Chrétien]] (Unknown) *21. [[Martin-12714|Paul Martin]] (Unknown) *22. [[Harper-2149|Stephen Harper]] (Unknown) *23. [[Trudeau-195|Justin Trudeau]] (24th Cousin 2x removed) === Europe === '''Scottish Monarchs''' * [[Dunkeld-77|Malcolm III]] (1st Cousin 28x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-58|Donald III]] (1st Cousin 28x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-47|Duncan II]] (2nd Cousin 27x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-58|Donald III]] (1st Cousin 28x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-76|Edmund I]] (2nd Cousin 27x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-78|Edgar I]] (2nd Cousin 27x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-32|Alexander I]] (2nd Cousin 27x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-68|David I]] (2nd Cousin 27x removed) [[Dunkeld-9|Crinan Dunkeld, of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-41|Malcolm IV]] (1st Cousin 28x removed) [[Huntingdon-28|Maud Huntingdon, Queen of Scotland]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Dunkeld-2|William I]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Dunkeld-4|Alexander II]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Dunkeld-60|Alexander III]] (2nd Cousin 25x removed) [[Beaumont-594|Sir Richard de Beaumont]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Eriksdatter-10|Margaret, Maid of Norway]] (1st Cousin 24x removed) [[Håkonsson-40|Magnus VI, King of Norway]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Balliol-8|John II]] (22nd Great Grand Uncle) [[Balliol-7|Sir John Balliol]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bruce-129|Robert I, the Bruce]] (24th Great Grandfather) * [[Bruce-510|David II]] (23rd Great Grand Uncle) [[Bruce-129|Robert I, the Bruce]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-1001|Robert II]] (22nd Great Grandfather) * [[Stewart-972|Robert III]] (21st Great Grandfather) * [[Stewart-419|James I]] (1st Cousin 20x removed) [[Drummond-50|Sir John Drummond]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-1166|James II]] (2nd Cousin 19x removed) [[Drummond-50|Sir John Drummond]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-2316|James III]] (3rd Cousin 18x removed) [[Drummond-50|Sir John Drummond]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-588|James IV]] (4th Cousin 17x removed) [[Drummond-50|Sir John Drummond]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-2313|James V]] (2nd Cousin 17x removed) [[Woodville-12|Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of England]] is our Common Ancestor *WIP '''English/British Monarchs''' * [[Normandie-32|William I, the Conqueror]] (29th Great Grandfather) * [[Normandie-87|William II]] (27th Great Grand Uncle) [[Normandie-32|William I, the Conqueror]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Normandie-45|Henry I]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Blois-94|Stephen I]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Plantagenet-1627|Henry II]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[Plantagenet-248|Richard I, Lionheart]] (25th Great Grand Uncle) [[Plantagenet-1627|Henry II]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Plantagenet-143|John]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[Plantagenet-167|Henry III]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Plantagenet-2|Edward I, Longshanks]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[Plantagenet-378|Edward II]] (24th Great Grandfather) * [[Plantagenet-70|Edward III]] (23rd Great Grandfather) * [[plantagenet-864|Richard II]] (1st Cousin 23x removed) [[Plantagenet-70|Edward III]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Lancaster-434|Henry IV]] (20th Great Grand Uncle) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Lancaster-269|Henry V]] (1st Cousin 21x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Lancaster-401|Henry VI]] (2nd Cousin 20x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[York-1159|Edward IV]] (17 Great Grand Uncle) [[York-1210|Richard, 3rd Duke of York]] is our Common Ancestor * [[York-1215|Edward V]] (17th Great Grand Uncle) [[Woodville-12|Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of England]] is our Common Ancestor * [[York-1245|Richard III]] (17 Great Grand Uncle) [[York-1210|Richard, 3rd Duke of York]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Tudor-18|Henry VII]] (2nd Cousin 19x removed) [[Stourton-5|Edith Stourton]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Tudor-4|Henry VIII]] (1st Cousin 18x removed) [[Woodville-12|Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of England]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Tudor-3|Edward VI]] (3rd Cousin 16x removed) [[Cheney-143|Elizabeth Cheney]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Grey-215|Jane Grey *]] (1st Cousin 16x removed) [[Grey-163|Sir Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Tudor-2|Mary I]] (2nd Cousin 17x removed) [[Woodville-12|Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of England]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Tudor-1|Elizabeth I]] (2nd Cousin 16x removed) [[Howard-2|Sir Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stuart-2|James VI & I]] (3rd Cousin 15x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stuart-1|Charles I]] (4th Cousin 14x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stuart-4|Charles II]] (5th Cousin 13x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stuart-19|James VII & II]] (5th Cousin 13x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Oranje-Nassau-20|William III of Orange]] & [[Stuart-21|Mary II]] (Both are 6th Cousins 12x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stuart-27|Anne]] (6th Cousin 12x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hannover-19|George I]] (7th Cousin 13x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hannover-18|George II]] (8th Cousin 12x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hannover-17|George III]] (10th Cousin 10x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hannover-16|George IV]] (11th Cousin 9x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hannover-15|William IV]] (11th Cousin 9x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hannover-14|Victoria]] (12th Cousin 8x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Saxe-Coburg-Gotha-5|Edward VII]] (13th Cousin 7x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Saxe-Coburg-Gotha-6|George V]] (14th Cousin 6x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Sachsen-Coburg_und_Gotha-5|Edward VIII]] (15th Cousin 5x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Sachsen-Coburg_und_Gotha-4|George VI]] (15th Cousin 5x removed) [[Stewart-1338|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox (1422-1495)]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Windsor-1|Elizabeth II]] (11th Cousin 4x removed) [[Stanhope-8|Sir John Stanhope (1559-1611)]] is our Common Ancestor '''Other Notable British Royals''' (WIP) * [[Sachsen-Coburg_und_Gotha-3|Prince Albert]] (15th Cousin 7x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg-1|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]] (14th Cousin 4x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Windsor-21|Charles, Prince of Wales]] (12th Cousin 3x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Spencer-40|Diana, Princess of Wales]] (10th Cousin 2x removed) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall (11th Cousin 2x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Windsor-75|Prince William, Duke of Cambridge]] (11th Cousin 1x removed) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Middleton-358|Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge]] (14th Cousin 4x removed) [[Devereux-12|Elizabeth Devereux]] is our Common Ancestor * Prince George of Cambridge (12th Cousin) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * Princess Charlotte of Cambridge (12th Cousin) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * Prince Louis of Cambridge (12th Cousin) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Windsor-74|Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex]] (11th Cousin 1x removed) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Markle-488|Meghan, Duchess of Sussex]] (10th Cousin 3x removed) [[Merrill-83|Nathaniel Merrill Jr.]] is our Common Ancestor * Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor (11th Cousin 2x removed) [[Merrill-83|Nathaniel Merrill Jr.]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Windsor-130|Prince Andrew, Duke of York]] (12th Cousin 3x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Ferguson-1828|Sarah, Duchess of York]] (11th Cousin 2x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * Princess Beatrice of York (12th Cousin 1x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * Princess Eugenie of York (12th Cousin 1x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor '''British/UK Prime Ministers''' *1. [[Walpole-7| Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford MP, KB, KG ]] (7th Cousin 9x removed) *2. [[Compton-1453|Spencer Compton, 1st Earl of Wilmington]] (5th Cousin 12x removed) *3. [[Pelham-60|Henry Pelham]] (6th Cousin 9x removed) *4. [[Pelham-Holles-1|Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle]] (6th Cousin 9x removed) *5. [[Cavendish-20|William Cavendish, 4th Duke of Devonshire]] (7th Cousin 8x removed) *6. [[Stuart-1038|John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute]] (7th Cousin 7x removed) *7. [[Grenville-12|George Grenville MP]] (8th Cousin 8x removed) *8. [[Watson-Wentworth-3|Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham]] (9th Cousin 7x removed) *9. [[Pitt-473|William Pitt 'The Elder', 1st Earl of Chatham]] (5th Cousin 11x removed) *10. [[Fitzroy-88|Augustus Henry Fitzroy, 3rd Duke of Grafton]] (8th Cousin 7x removed) *11. [[North-1238|Lord Frederick North, 2nd Earl of Guilford]] (5th Cousin 9x removed) *12. [[FitzMaurice-126|William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne]] (14th Cousin 7x removed) *13. [[Bentinck-24|William Bentinck Duke of Portland]] (8th Cousin 7x removed) *14. [[Pitt-428|William Pitt 'The Younger']] (9th Cousin 7x removed) *15. [[Addington-475|Henry Addington PC , Viscount Sidmouth]] (Unknown) *16. [[Grenville-115|William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville]] (8th Cousin 7x removed) *17. [[Perceval-3|Spencer Perceval]] (10th Cousin 6x removed) *18. [[Jenkinson-128|Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool]] (12th Cousin 8x removed) *19. [[Canning-199|George Canning MP]] (10th Cousin 7x removed) *20. [[Robinson-13125|Frederick Robinson, Viscount Goderich]] (9th Cousin 6x removed) *21. [[Wellesley-4|Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, KG GCB GCH PC FRS]] (13th Cousin 5x removed) *22. [[Grey-482|Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey]] (12th Cousin 7x removed) *23. [[Lamb-3303|William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne]] (12th Cousin 5x removed) *24. [[Peel-305|Sir Robert Peel 2nd Baronet]] (Unknown) *25. [[Russell-8283|Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell]] (7th Cousin 7x removed) *26. [[Smith-Stanley-4|Edward Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby]] (10th Cousin 5x removed) *27. [[Gordon-5577|George Hamilton Gordon Earl of Aberdeen]] (9th Cousin 6x removed) *28. [[Temple-854|Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston]] (15th Cousin 8x removed) *29. [[Disraeli-2|Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield]] (Unknown) *30. [[Gladstone-68|William Ewart Gladstone]] (8th Cousin 7x removed) *31. [[Gascoyne-Cecil-7|Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury]] (11th Cousin 5x removed) *32. [[Primrose-80|Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Roseberry]] (9th Cousin 5x removed) *33. [[Balfour-413|Arthur James Balfour]] (10th Cousin 5x removed) *34. [[Campbell-Bannerman-1|Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman]] (11th Cousin 4x removed) *35. [[Asquith-1|Herbert Henry Asquith, 1st Earl of Oxford]] (Unknown) *36. [[George-2843|David Lloyd George]] (Unknown) *37. [[Law-1967|Andrew Bonar Law]] (Unknown) *38. [[Baldwin-1807|Stanley Baldwin KG PC FRS]] (Unknown) *39. [[MacDonald-8532|James Ramsay MacDonald]] (Unknown) *40. [[Chamberlain-2279|Neville Chamberlain]] (16th Cousin 3x removed) *41. [[Churchill-4|Winston Churchill]] (7th Cousin 5x removed) *42. [[Attlee-6|Clement Attlee]] (Unknown) *43. [[Eden-195|Sir Anthony Eden]] (12th Cousin 4x removed) *44. [[MacMillan-361|Harold MacMillan]] (Unknown) *45. [[Douglas-Home-1|Sir Alec Douglas-Home]] (11th Cousin 3x removed) *46. [[Wilson-19813|Harold Wilson]] (Unknown) *47. [[Heath-2876|Sir Edward Heath]] (Unknown) *48. [[Callaghan-437|Lord James Callaghan]] (Unknown) *49. [[Roberts-11366|Baroness Margaret Thatcher]] (Unknown) *50. [[Major-1613|Sir John Major]] (Unknown) *51. [[Blair-1361|Tony Blair]] (13th Cousin 3x removed) *52. [[Brown-35200|Gordon Brown]] (Unknown) *53. [[Cameron-1947|David Cameron]] (14th Cousin) *54. [[Brasier-156|Theresa May]] (Unknown) *55. [[Johnson-66533|Boris Johnson]] (18th Cousin 1x removed) '''Lord Protectors of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, & Ireland''' * [[Cromwell-39|Oliver Cromwell]] (3rd Cousin 15x removed) * [[Cromwell-36|Richard Cromwell]] (4th Cousin 14x removed) '''Dukes of Atholl''' * [[Murray-790|Sir John Murray, 1st Duke of Atholl]] (5th Cousin 12x removed) [[De_Vere-317|John de Vere, 15th Earl of Oxford]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-3802|James Murray, 2nd Duke of Atholl]] (6th Cousin 11x removed) [[De_Vere-317|John de Vere, 15th Earl of Oxford]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-3807|Sir John Murray, 3rd Duke of Atholl]] (7th Cousin 10x removed) [[De_Vere-317|John de Vere, 15th Earl of Oxford]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-561|Sir John Murray, 4th Duke of Atholl]] (8th Cousin 9x removed) [[De_Vere-317|John de Vere, 15th Earl of Oxford]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-8845|Sir John Murray, 5th Duke of Atholl]] (9th Cousin 8x removed) [[De_Vere-317|John de Vere, 15th Earl of Oxford]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-10439|George Murray, 6th Duke of Atholl]] (9th Cousin 6x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-10440|Sir John Stewart-Murray, 7th Duke of Atholl]] (10th Cousin 5x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-Murray-1|Sir John Stewart-Murray, 8th Duke of Atholl]] (11th Cousin 4x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-Murray-2|Sir James Stewart-Murray, 9th Duke of Atholl]] (11th Cousin 4x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-12244|Iain Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl]] (11th Cousin 2x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-12261|John Murray, 11th Duke of Atholl]] (12th Cousin 3x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Murray-12262|Bruce Murray, 12th Duke of Atholl]] (13th Cousin 2x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor '''Earls of Atholl''' * [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] (17th Great Grandfather) * [[Stewart-1604|John Stewart, 2nd Earl of Atholl]] (16th Great Grand Uncle) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-1685|Sir John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Atholl]] (1st Cousin 17x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-1518|John Stewart, 4th Earl of Atholl]] (2nd Cousin 16x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-8683|John Stewart, 5th earl of Atholl]] (3rd Cousin 15x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * Here, the Earldom reverted to the crown via "non-entry". It would resurface in May of 1596 when John Stewart, 6th Lord Innermeath married the last Earl's widow, Marie Ruthven. from here, the count starts from 1 again. * [[Stewart-15366|John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] (4th Cousin 15x removed) [[Keith-313|Sir William Keith]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Stewart-15569|James Stewart, 2nd Earl of Atholl]] (3rd Cousin 13x removed) [[Erskine-258|John Erskine]] is our Common Ancestor '''Earls of Arundel''' * [[Aubigny-41|William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Aubigny-6|William d'Aubigny, 2nd Earl of Arundel]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Aubigny-7|William d'Aubigny, 3rd Earl of Arundel]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Aubigny-118|William d'Aubigny, 4th Earl of Arundel]] (1st Cousin 27x removed) [[Aubigny-6|William d'Aubigny, 2nd Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Aubigny-82|Hugh d'Aubigny, 5th Earl of Arundel]] (1st Cousin 27x removed) [[Aubigny-6|William d'Aubigny, 2nd Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[FitzAlan-640|John FitzAlan, 6th Earl of Arundel]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-589|John FitzAlan, 7th Earl of Arundel]] (25th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-606|Richard FitzAlan, 8th Earl of Arundel]] (24th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-586|Edmund FitzAlan, 9th Earl of Arundel]] (23rd Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-29|Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel]] (22nd Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-197|Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel]] (21st Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-671|Thomas FitzAlan, 12th Earl of Arundel]] (20th Great Grand Uncle) [[FitzAlan-197|Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[FitzAlan-625|John FitzAlan, 13th Earl of Arundel]] (19th Great Grandfather) * [[Arundel-156|John FitzAlan, 14th Earl of Arundel]] (18th Great Grand Uncle) [[FitzAlan-625|John FitzAlan, 13th Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[FitzAlan-678|Humphrey FitzAlan, 15th Earl of Arundel]] (1st Cousin 19x removed) [[FitzAlan-625|John FitzAlan, 13th Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[FitzAlan-614|William FitzAlan, 16th Earl of Arundel]] (18th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-631|Thomas FitzAlan, 17th Earl of Arundel]] (17th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-129|William FitzAlan, 18th Earl of Arundel]] (16th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzAlan-652|Henry FitzAlan, 19th Earl of Arundel]] (15th Great Grandfather) * [[Howard-2204|Philip Howard, 20th Earl of Arundel]] (13th Great Grandfather) * [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] (12th Great Grandfather) * [[Howard-1688|Henry Howard, 22nd Earl of Arundel]] (11th Great Grand Uncle) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Howard-2470|Thomas Howard, 23rd Earl of Arundel]] (1st Cousin 12x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Howard-2471|Henry Howard, 24th Earl of Arundel]] (1st Cousin 12x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Howard-6696|Henry Howard, 25th Earl of Arundel]] (2nd Cousin 11x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Howard-8309|Thomas Howard, 26th Earl of Arundel]] (3rd Cousin 10x removed) [[Howard-1694|Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel]] is our Common Ancestor * WIP '''Earls of Shrewsbury''' * [[Talbot-36|John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury]] (19th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-6|John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury]] (18th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-321|John Talbot, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury]] (17th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-320|George Talbot, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (16th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-376|Francis Talbot, 5th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (15th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-100|George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (14th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-383|Gilbert Talbot, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (13th Great Grandfather) * [[Talbot-1078|Edward Talbot, 8th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (13th Great Grand Uncle) [[Talbot-100|George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Talbot-2049|George Talbot, 9th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (4th Cousin 15x removed) [[Talbot-6|John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Talbot-2051|John Talbot, 10th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (5th Cousin 14x removed) * [[Talbot-3142|Francis Talbot, 11th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (6th Cousin 13x removed) * [[Talbot-3143|Charles Talbot, 12th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (7th Cousin 12x removed) * [[Talbot-2063|Gilbert Talbot, 13th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (6th Cousin 13x removed) * [[Talbot-3116|George Talbot, 14th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (8th Cousin 11x removed) * [[Talbot-2209|Charles Talbot, 15th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (9th Cousin 10x removed) * [[Talbot-2207|John Talbot, 16th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (9th Cousin 7x removed) * [[Chetwynd-Talbot-1|Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 17th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (8th Cousin 7x removed) * [[Chetwynd-Talbot-3|Henry Chetwynd-Talbot, 18th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (9th Cousin 6x removed) * [[Chetwynd-Talbot-4|Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 19th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (10th Cousin 5x removed) * [[Chetwynd-Talbot-5|Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 20th Earl of Shrewsbury]] (11th Cousin 4x removed) * [[Chetwynd-Talbot-7|John Chetwynd-Talbot, 21st Earl of Shrewsbury]] (10th Cousin 4x removed) * Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 22nd Earl of Shrewsbury]] (11th Cousin 3x removed) '''Magna Carta Surety Barons''' * [[Albini-39|William d'Aubigny]] (2nd Cousin 27x removed) [[Senlis-82|Simon de Senlis]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bigod-1|Hugh le Bigod]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Bigod-2|Roger le Bigod]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Bohun-7|Henry de Bohun]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Clare-673|Gilbert de Clare]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Clare-651|Richard de Clare]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Clavering-13|John FitzRobert]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[FitzWalter-101|Robert FitzWalter]] (25th Great Grandfather) * [[Huntingfield-11|William de Huntingfield]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Lacy-284|John de Lacy]] (3rd Cousin 25x removed) [[FitzJohn-105|Eustace FitzJohn]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Lanvallei-3|William de Lanvallei]] (Unknown) * [[Malet-18|William Malet]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Mowbray-151|William de Mowbray]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[Quincy-226|Saer de Quincy]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Ros-149|Robert de Ros]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[Say-76|Geoffrey de Say]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[De Vere-309|Robert de Vere]] (28th Great Grandfather) '''Kings of the Franks/France''' * [[Pippinid-18|Pepin III the Short]] (44th Great Grandfather) * [[Carolingian-77|Charlemagne]] (43rd Great Grandfather) *WIP '''Napoleonic Emperors of France''' * [[Bonaparte-1|Napoleon I]] (17th Cousin 12x removed) [[Este-38|Azzolino VI of Este]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bonaparte-32|Napoleon II *]] (12th Cousin 6x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bonaparte-4|Napoleon III]] (18th Cousin 11x removed) [[Este-38|Azzolino VI of Este]] is our Common Ancestor '''Kings of Prussia''' * [[VonHohenzollern-2|Frederick I]] (10th Cousin 12x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-11|Frederick Wilhelm I]] (7th Cousin 11x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-7|Frederick II the Great]] (8th Cousin 10x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-61|Frederick Wilhelm II]] (9th Cousin 9x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-59|Frederick Wilhelm III]] (10th Cousin 8x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-63|Frederick Wilhelm IV]] (11th Cousin 7x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor *''For Continuation, see 'Emperors/Kaisers of Germany' below'' '''Emperors/Kaisers of Germany''' * [[Hohenzollern-36|Wilhelm I]] (11th Cousin 7x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-19|Frederick III]] (12th Cousin 6x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Hohenzollern-3|Wilhelm II]] (13th Cousin 5x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor '''Kings of Italy''' Pre-Unification *WIP * [[Habsburg-5|Frederick III HRE]] (10th Cousin 16x removed) [[Holland-87|Dirk VI, Count of Holland]] * [[Habsburg-105|Charles V HRE]] (5th Cousin 17x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bonaparte-1|Napoleon I]] (17th Cousin 12x removed) [[Este-38|Azzolino VI of Este]] is our Common Ancestor Post-Unification * [[Savoia-23|Victor Emmanuel II]] (12th Cousin 6x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Savoia-24|Umberto I]] (13th Cousin 5x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Savoia-26|Victor Emmanuel III]] (14th Cousin 4x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Savoia-27|Umberto II]] (15th Cousin 3x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor '''Portuguese Monarchs''' * [[Portugal-79|Afonso I]] (28th Great Grandfather) * [[Portugal-78|Sancho I]] (27th Great Grandfather) * [[Portugal-77|Afonso II]] (26th Great Grandfather) * [[Of_Portugal-19|Sancho II]] (25th Great Grand Uncle) [[Portugal-77|Afonso II]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Portugal-76|Afonso III]] (25th Great Grandfather) * [[Portugal-75|Denis]] (24th Great Grandfather) * [[Bourgogne-266|Afonso IV]] (23rd Great Grandfather) * [[Burgundy-244|Peter I]] (22nd Great Grand Uncle) [[Bourgogne-266|Afonso IV]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Of_Portugal-37|Ferdinand I]] (22nd Great Grand Uncle) [[Bourgogne-266|Afonso IV]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Avis-167|John I]] (1st Cousin 23x removed) [[Bourgogne-266|Afonso IV]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Of_Portugal-34|Edward]] (1st Cousin 21x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[De_Portugal-40|Afonso V]] (2nd Cousin 20x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Of_Portugal-46|John II]] (3rd Cousin 19x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Aviz-11|Manuel I]] (3rd Cousin 19x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Aviz-27|John III]] (4th Cousin 18x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Aviz-30|Sebastian]] (5th Cousin 17x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Aviz-29|Henry]] (4th Cousin 18x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Portugal-86|Antonio *]] (5th Cousin 17x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Habsburg-1|Philip I]] (6th Cousin 16x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Habsburg-48|Philip II]] (7th Cousin 15x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Habsburg-57|Philip III]] (8th Cousin 14x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-4|John IV]] (8th Cousin 14x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-42|Afonso VI]] (9th Cousin 13x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-36|Peter II]] (9th Cousin 13x removed) [[Plantagenet-104|Blanche, Duchess of Lancaster]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-37|John V]] (10th Cousin 12x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-20|Joseph I]] (11th Cousin 11x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bragança-11|Peter III]] (11th Cousin 11x removed) [[Pole-5|Sir Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bragança-12|Maria I]] (11th Cousin 10x removed) [[Luxembourg-23|Pierre I, Count of Luxembourg]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-29|John VI]] (12th Cousin 9x removed) [[Luxembourg-23|Pierre I, Count of Luxembourg]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Bragança-8|Peter IV]] (12th Cousin 6x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Braganza-38|Maria II]] (13th Cousin 5x removed) [[Stewart-1555|Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl]] is our Common Ancestor *WIP === Australia === '''Australian Prime Ministers''' *1. [[Barton-2646|Sir Edmund Barton]] (Unknown) *2. [[Deakin-124|Alfred Deakin]] (Unknown) *3. [[Tanck-6|Chris Watson]] (Unknown) *4. [[Reid-3542|George Reid]] (Unknown) *5. [[Fisher-5597|Andrew Fisher]] (Unknown) *6. [[Cooke-2440|Joseph Cooke]] (Unknown) *7. [[Hughes-5069|Billy Hughes]] (Unknown) *8. [[Bruce-2280|Stanley Bruce]] (Unknown) *9. [[Scullin-50|James Scullin]] (Unknown) *10. [[Lyons-1422|Joseph Lyons]] (Unknown) *11. [[Page-4009|Sir Earle Page]] (Unknown) *12. [[Menzies-170|Robert Menzies]] (Unknown) *13. [[Fadden-14|Arthur Fadden]] (Unknown) *14. [[Curtin-122|John Curtin]] (Unknown) *15. [[Forde-102|Frank Forde]] (Unknown) *16. [[Chifley-1|Ben Chifley]] (Unknown) *17. [[Holt-2480|Harold Holt]] (Unknown) *18. [[McEwen-239|John McEwen]] (Unknown) *19. [[Gorton-492|John Gorton]] (Unknown) *20. [[McMahon-898|William McMahon]] (Unknown) *21. [[Whitlam-8|Gough Whitlam]] (Unknown) *22. [[Fraser-1802|Malcolm Fraser]] (16th Cousin 2x removed) [[Scrymgeour-6|John Scrymgeour]] is our Common Ancestor *23. [[Hawke-468|Bob Hawke]] (Unknown) *24. [[Keating-217|Paul Keating]] (Unknown) *25. [[Howard-6626|John Howard]] (Unknown) *26. [[Rudd-78|Kevin Rudd]] (Unknown) *27. [[Gillard-237|Julia Gillard]] (Unknown) *28. [[Abbott-3502|Tony Abbott]] (Unknown) *29. [[Turnbull-1138|Malcolm Turnbull]] (Unknown) *30. Scott Morrison (Unknown) === Other Notable Relatives === '''Figures in Scouting''' * [[Powell-8455|Sir Robert Baden-Powell]] (5th Cousin 7x removed) [[Alberts-585|Eva Alberts]] is our Common Ancestor '''Authors, Poets, & Playwrights''' * [[Lewis-13750|C. S. Lewis]] (11th Cousin 4x removed) [[Howard-1215|Sir Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Poe-521|Edgar Allan Poe]] (6th Cousin 7x removed) [[Wathen-11|George Wathen]] is our Common Ancestor '''Actors/Actresses''' * [[Fisher-6309|Carrie Fisher]] (12th Cousin 2x removed) [[Reynolds-618|Christopher Reynolds]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Perry-9536|Luke Perry]] (11th Cousin 2x removed) [[Belcher-57|Gregory Belcher]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Vanderbilt-134|Gloria Vanderbilt]] (7th Cousin 5x removed) [[Pomeroy-73|Medad Pomeroy]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Von Sydow-166|Max von Sydow]] (13th Cousin 4x removed) [[Elphinstone-19|Alexander Elphinstone]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Walker-11476|Paul Walker]] (11th Cousin 2x removed) [[Lothrop-3|John Lothrop]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Weed-1111|Bob Baker]] (4th Cousin 4x removed) [[Weed-1121|John Weed]] is our Common Ancestor '''Businesspeople/Entrepreneurs''' * [[Carnegie-148|Andrew Carnegie]] (11th Cousin 5x removed) [[Erskine-258|John Erskine]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Gates-1183|Bill Gates]] (8th Cousin 4x removed) [[Gager-3|John Gager]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Morgan-61|J. P. Morgan]] (5th Cousin 5x removed) [[Lord-99|Richard Lord]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Musk-15|Elon Musk]] (23rd Cousin 5x removed) [[Dreux-34|Robert I de Dreux]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Rockefeller-1|John D. Rockefeller]] (7th Cousin 4x removed) [[Lincoln-1878|Thomas Lincoln]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Vanderbilt-1|Cornelius Vanderbilt]] (5th Cousin 8x removed) [[Rapalje-19|Joris Rapalje]] is our Common Ancestor '''Civil Rights Activists''' * [[DuBois-2|W.E.B. Du Bois]] (6th Cousin 5x removed) [[Mattysen-2|Mattys Mattyssen]] is our Common Ancestor '''Musicians''' * [[Hendrix-634|Jimi Hendrix]] (13th Cousin 4x removed) [[Roper-332|John Roper]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Presley-155|Elvis Presley]] (10th Cousin 3x removed) [[Luycaszen-1|Andries Luycaszen]] is our Common Ancestor '''Religious Figures''' * WIP '''Scientists/Inventors''' * [[Darwin-15|Charles Darwin]] (9th Cousin 8x removed) [[Bucknall-5|Elizabeth Bucknall]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Edison-1|Thomas Edison]] (6th Cousin 6x removed) [[Treat-65|Robert Treat]] is our Common Ancestor * [[Newton-17|Sir Isaac Newton]] (7th Cousin 13x removed) [[Hastings-56|John Hastings]] is our Common Ancestor

Famous Ancestors

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== Mayflower Ancestors == *[[Samson-27|Henry Samson]] ninth great grandfather *[[Alden-63| John Alden]] tenth great grandfather *[[Mullins-7|Priscilla (Mullins) Alden]] tenth great grandmother *[[Standish-112|Myles Standish]] tenth great grandfather *[[Hopkins-5|Constance (Hopkins) Snow]] 11th great grandmother *[[Hopkins-6|Giles Hopkins]] 11th great grandfather *[[Hopkins-373|Stephen Hopkins]] 12th great grandfather *[[Unknown-199693|Mary (Unknown) Brewster]] 12th great grandmother *[[Brewster-4|William Brewster]] 12th great grandfather

Famous Family In the Tree

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Relationship Finder results

Famous Folks

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Photos of famous people.

Famous Fox Members

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Below is a list of famous members of the Fox Family on WikiTree! *

Famous people information

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Information on Notables to create profiles for *William Horlick Srhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Horlick ==Sources==

Famous People listed in The Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia, 1911

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'''Famous People listed in The Project Gutenberg Encyclopedia, 1911''' is the complete list of people who were renowned throughout history, as they appeared in the oldest and most prominent encyclopedia. The work is hundreds of years old, having first originated in three volumes with the First Edition in 1768-1771. This list was extracted from the 11th Edition, published in twenty-nine volumes in 1910-1911, and which is now entirely in the public domain. Hence, it has been archived in full at Project Gutenberg. The original name of the well-known publisher is omitted in order to avoid any possible future trademark infringements or confusion in the minds of the public, so that the work and its derivatives will always be public domain. The purpose of this listing is to provide well-researched public domain source material for every historical person who by 1911 warranted an encyclopedic biography. This list should help to identify a WikiTree profile for each famous historical person who should have one, if they can also be supported by a lineage. If you find an existing WikiTree profile, or if you can create one which matches an entry here, please leave that person's WikiTree ID link in the Comments, so that it can be hyperlinked in this listing. For the full biographies, go to the source files listed below. Keep in mind that this work is over a hundred years old, and thus reflects the attitudes of its time. Also, note that any persons born B.C.E. are intentionally excluded from this list, because their lineages are mythological or lost to history, and thus not to be encouraged for WikiTree purposes. == Source Files == * Source: [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/200 Project Gutenberg Aa - All] * Source: [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13600 Project Gutenberg And - Ani] == List == === Aa - All === # AAGESEN, ANDREW (1826-1879), Danish jurist # AALI, MEHEMET, Pasha (1815-1871), Turkish statesman # AARSSENS, or AARSSEN, FRANCIS VAN (1572-1641), statesman of the United Provinces # AASEN, IVAR (1813-1896), Norwegian philologist and lexicographer # ABANCOURT, CHARLES XAVIER JOSEPH DE FRANQUE VILLE D', (1758-1792), French statesman # ABANO, PIETRO D, (1250-1316), or PETRUS DE APONO or APONENSIS, Italian physician # ABATI, or DELL' ABBATO, NICCOLO (1512—1571), a celebrated fresco-painter of Modena # ABAUZIT, FIRMIN (1679-1767), a learned Frenchman # 'ABAYE, the name of a Babylonian 'amora (q.v.), born in the 3rd century. He died in 339 # 'ABBA 'ARIKA, the name of thc Babylonian 'amora (q.v.) of the 3rd century # ABBADIE, ANTOINE THOMSON D', (1810-1897), brother notable for travels in Abyssinia # ABBADIE, ARNAUD MICHEL D', (1815-1893), brother notable for travels in Abyssinia # ABBADIE, JAKOB (1654?-1727), Swiss Protestant divine # 'ABBAHU, the name of a Palestinian 'amora (q.v.) who flourished c. 279-320 # ABBA MARI (in full, Abba Mari ben Moses benJoseph), French rabbi, was born at Lunel # ABBAS I. (1813-1854), pasha of Egypt, was a son of Tusun Pasha # ABBAS II. (1874— ), khedive of Egypt. Abbas Hilmi Pasha, gr-gr-grandson of Mehemet Ali # ABBAS I. (e. 1557-1628 or 1629), shah of Persia, called the Great # ABBAS MIRZA (c. 1783-1833), prince of Persia, was a younger son of the shah # ABBEY, EDWIN AUSTIN (1852- ), American painter # ABBON OF FLEURY, or ABBO FLORIACENSIS (c. 945-1004), a learned Frenchman # ABBOT, EZRA (1819—1884), American biblical scholar # ABBOT, GEORGE (1562-1633), English divine, archbishop of Canterbury # ABBOT, GEORGE (1603-1648), English writer, known as "The Puritan" # ABBOT, ROBERT (1588?-1662?), English Puritan divine # ABBOT, WILLIAM (1798—1843), English actor # ABBOTT, EDWIN ARROTT (1838- ), English schoolmaster and theologian # ABBOTT, EMMA (1849-1891), American singer # ABBOTT, JACOB (1803-1879), American writer of books for the young # ABBOTT, JOHN STEVENS CABOT (1805-1877), American writer # ABBOTT, LYMAN (1835- ), American divine and author # ABDALLATIF, or ABD-UL-LATIF (1162-1231), a celebrated physician and traveller # ABD-AR-RAHMAN I. (756-788) was the founder of the branch of the family which ruled for nearly three centuries in Mahommedan Spain. # ABD-AR-RAHMAN II. (822-852) was one of the weaker of the Spanish Omayyads # ABD-AR-RAHMAN III. (912-961) was the greatest and the most successful of the princes of his dynasty # ABD-EL-AZIZ IV. (1880- ), sultan of Morocco, son of Sultan Mulai el Hasan III. # ABD-EL-KADER (c. 1807-1883), amir of Mascara, the great opponent of the conquest of Algeria by France # ABD-UL-AZIZ (1830-1876), sultan of Turkey, son of Sultan Mahmud II. # ABD-UL-HAMID I.,(1725-1789), sultan of Turkey, son of Ahmed III # ABD-UL-HAMID II. (1842- ), sultan of Turkey, son of Sultan Abd-ul-Mejid # ABD-UL-MEJID (1823-.1861), sultan of Turkey, was born on the 23rd of April 1823, and succeeded his father Mahmud II # ABDUR RAHMAN KHAN, amir of Afghanistan (c. 1844-1901), was the son of Afzul Khan # A BECKETT, GILBERT ARBOTT (1811-1856), English writer # A BECKETT, GILBERT ARTHUR (1837-1891) His eldest son, was born at Hammersmith on the 7th of April 1837 # A BECKETT, ARTHUR WILLIAM (1844—1909), A younger son, a well-known journalist and man of letters # ABEKEN, HEINRICH (1809-1872), German theologian and Prussian official # ABEL, SIR FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, BART. (1827-1902), English chemist # ABEL, KARL FRIEDRICH (1725-1787), German musician # ABEL, NIELS HENRIK (1802-1829), Norwegian mathematician # ABEL (better ABELL), THOMAS (d. 1540), an English priest who was martyred during the reign of Henry VIII # ABELARD, PETER (1079-1142), scholastic philosopher # ABELIN, JOHANN PHILIPP, an early 16th-century German chronicler, was born, probably, at Strasburg, and died there between the years 1634 and 1637 # ABENDANA, JACOB (1630-i695), the name of two Jewish theologians. (1) rabbi (Hakham) of the Spanish Jews in London from 1680. # ABENDANA, ISAAC (c. 1650-1710) Jewish theologian. (2) , Jacob's brother, taught Hebrew at Cambridge and afterwards at Oxford. # ABENEZRA (IBN EZRA), or, to give him his full name, ABRAHAM BEN MEIR IBN Ezra (1092 or 1093-1167), one of the most distinguished Jewish men of letters and writers of the Middle Ages # ABERCORN, JAMES HAMILTON, 1ST EARL OF (c. 1575-1618), was the eldest son of Claud Hamilton, Lord Paisley # ABERCROMRIE, JOHN (1780-1844), Scottish physician, was the son of the Rev. George Abercrombie of Aberdeen # ABERCROMBY, DAVID, a 17th-century Scottish physician who was sufficiently noteworthy a generation after the probable date of his death to have his Nova Medicinae Praxis reprinted at Paris in 1740 # ABERCROMBY, PATRICK (1656-c.1716), Scottish physician and antiquarian, was the third son of Alexander Abercromby of Fetterneir in Aberdeenshire, and brother of Francis Abercromby, who was created Lord Glasford by James II # ABERCROMBY, SIR RALPH (1734-1801), British lieutenant-general # ABERDARE, HENRY AUSTIN BRUCE, 1ST BARON (1815-1895), English statesman # ABERDEEN, GEORGE GORDON, 1ST EARL OF (1637-1720), lord chancellor of Scotland # ABERDEEN, GEORGE HAMILTON GORDON, 4TH EARL OF (1784-1860), English statesman # ABERIGH-MACKAY, GEORGE ROBERT (1848-1881), Anglo-Indian writer # ABERNETHY, JOHN (1680-1740), Irish Presbyterian divine # ABERNETHY, JOHN (1764-1831), English surgeon # ABICH, OTTO WILHELM HERMANN VON (1806-1886), German mineralogist and geologist # ABILDGAARD, NIKOLAJ ABRAHAM (1744-1809), called "the Father of Danish Painting," # ABINGER, JAMES SCARLETT, 1ST BARON (1769-1844), English judge # ABINGTON, FRANCES (1737-1815), English actress # ABOUT, EDMOND FRANCOIS VALENTIN (1828-1885), French novelist, publicist and journalist # ABRABANEL, ISAAC, called also ABRAVANEL, ABARBANEL (1437-1508), Jewish statesman, philosopher, theologian and commentator # ABRAHAM A SANCTA CLARA (1644-1709), Austrian divine # ABRAHAM IBN DAUD (c. 1110-1180), Jewish historiographer and philosopher of Toledo # ABSALON (c. 1128-1201), Danish archbishop and statesman # ABT, FRANZ (1819-1885), German composer # ABU-BEKR (573-634), the name ("Father of the virgin") of the first of the Mahommedan caliphs # ABU HANIFA AN-NU`MAN IBN THABIT, Mahommedan canon lawyer, was born at Kufa in A.H. 80 (A.D. 699) of non-Arab and probably Persian parentage # ABU-L-`ALA UL-MA.ARRI [Abu-l-`Alaa Ahmad ibn `Abdallah ibn Sulaiman] (973-1057), Arabian poet and letter-writer # ABU-L-`ATAHIYA [Abu Ishaq Isma`il ibn Qasim al-`Anazi] (748-828), Arabian poet # ABULPARAJ [Abu-l-Faraj,Ah ibn ul-Husain ul-Isbahani] (897—967), Arabian scholar # ABUL PAZL, wazir and historiographer of the great Mogul emperor, Akbar, was born in the year A.D. 1551 # ABULFEDA [Abud-Fida' Isma'Il ibn'Ah,Imad-ud-Dni] (1273-1331), Arabian historian and geographer # ABU-L-QASIM [Khalaf ibn'Abbas uz-Zahrawi], Arabian physician and surgeon, generally known in Europe as ABULCASIS, flourished in the tenth century at Cordova as physician to the caliph 'Abdur-Rahman III. (912—961). # ABU NUWAS [Abu,Ah Hal-asan ibn Hani'al-Hakami] (c. 756-810), known as Abu Nuwas, Arabian poet # ABU TAMMAM [Habib ibn Aus] (807-846), Arabian poet, was, like Buhturi, of the tribe of Tai # ABU UBAIDA [Ma,mar ibn ul-Muthanna] (728-825), Arabian scholar, was born a slave of Jewish Persian parents in Basra # ACCIAJUOLI, DONATO (1428-1478), Italian scholar # ACCOLTI, BENEDETTO (1415-1466), Italian jurist and historian # ACCOLTI, BERNARDO (1465—1536), Italian poet # ACCOLTI, PIETRO (1455—1532), brother of the preceding, known as the cardinal of Ancona # ACCORAMBONI, VITTORIA (1557—1585), an Italian lady famous for her great beauty and accomplishments and for her tragic history # ACCORSO (ACCURSIUS), MARIANOELO (c. 1490-1544), Italian critic # ACCURSIUS Ital. ACCORSO), FRANCISCUS (1182-1260), Italian jurist # ACHAEMENES (HAKHAMANI), the eponymous ancestor of the royal house of Persia, the Achaemenidae, "a clan fretre of the Pasargadae" (Herod. i. 125), the leading Persian tribe # ACHARD, FRANZ CARL (1753—1821), Prussian chemist # ACHARIUS, ERIK (1757-1819), Swedish botanist # ACHENBACH, ANDREAS (1815— ), German landscape painter # ACHENBACH, OSWALD (1827—1905), His brother, was born at Dusseldorf and received his art education from Andreas # ACHENWALL, GOTTFRIED (1719-1772), German statisticiao # ACHILLINI, ALESSANDRO (1463-1512), Italian philosopher # ACHILLINI, GIOVANNI FILOTEO (1466—1533), His brother, was the author of Il Viridario and other writings, verse and prose, # ACHILLINI, CLAUDIO (1574—1640), Allesandro's grand-nephew, was a lawyer who achieved some notoriety as a versifier of the school of the Secentisti # ACIDALIUS, VALENS (1567-1595), German scholar and critic # ACKERMAN, FRANCIS (c. 1335—1387), Flemish soldier and diplomatist # ACKERMANN, JOHANN CHRISTIAN GOTTLIEB (1756-1801), German physician # ACKERMANN, LOUISE VICTORINE CHOQUET (1813-1890), French poet # ACKERMANN, RUDOLPH (1764-1834), Anglo-German inventor and publisher # ACLAND, CHRISTIAN HENRIETTA CAROLINE (1750-1815), usually called Lady Harriet Acland # ACLAND, SIR HENRY WENTWORTH, BART. (1815-1900), English physician and man of learning # ACOMINATUS (AKOMINATOS), MICHAEL (c. 1140-1220), Byzantine writer and ecclesiastic # ACOMINATUS, NICETAS (Niketas), sometimes called CHONIATES, His younger brother, who accompanied him to Constantinople, took up politics as a career # ACONCIO, GIACOMO (1492-1566?), pioneer of religious toleration # ACOSTA, JOSE DE (1539?—1600), Spanish author # ACOSTA, URIEL (d. 1647), a Portuguese Jew of noble family # ACROPOLITA (AKROPOLITES), GEORGE (1217-1282), Byzantine historian and statesman # ACTON (JOHN EMERICH EDWARD DALBERG ACTON), IST BARON (1834-1902), English historian, only son of Sir Richard Acton, 7th baronet # ACTON, SIR JOHN FRANCIS EDWARD, BART. (1736—1811). prime minister of Naples under Ferdinand IV # ACUNA, CHRISTOVAL DE (1597—c.1676), Spanish missionary and explorer # ADAIR, JOHN (d. 1722), Scottish surveyor and map-maker of the 17th century # ADALBERON, or ASCELIN (d. 1030 or 1031), French bishop and poet # ADALBERT, or ADELBERT (c. 1000-1072), German archbishop, the most famous ecclesiastic of the 11th century # ADALBERT (originally VOYTECH), (c. 950-997), known as the apostle of the Prussians, the son of a Bohemian prince # ADAM OF BREMEN, historian and geographer, was probably born in Upper Saxony (at Meissen, according to one tradition) before 1045 # ADAM (or ADAN) DE LE HALE (died c. 1288), French trouvere # ADAM, ALEXANDER (1741-1809), Scottish writer on Roman antiquities # ADAM, SIR FREDERICK (1781—1853), British general, was the son of the Rt. Hon. W. Adam of Blair-Adam, lord-lieutenant of Kinross-shire # ADAM, JULIETTE (1836— ), Freneh writer, known also by her maiden name of Juliette Lamber # ADAM, LAMBERT SIGISBERT (1700-1759), French sculptor, known as Adam l'aine # ADAM, NICOLAS SEBASTIEN (1705-1778), known as Adam le jeune, His brother, also a sculptor, worked under equal encouragement # ADAM, FRANCOIS GASPARD BALTHASAR (1710-1761), A third brother, became the first sculptor of Frederick the Great and the head of the atelier of sculpture founded by that monarch # ADAM, MELCHIOR (d. 1622), German divine and biographer # ADAM, PAUL (1862- ), French novelist # ADAM, ROBERT (1728—1792), British architect, the second son of William Adam of Maryburgh # ADAM, WILLIAM (1751—1839), British lawyer and politician, eldest son of John Adam of Blair-Adam, Kinross-shire # ADAMNAN, or ADOMNAN (c. 624-704), Irish saint and historian # ADAMS, ANDREW LEITH (1827-1882), Scottish naturalist and palaeontologist, the second son of Francis Adams of Banchory, Aberdeen # ADAMS, CHARLES FRANCIS (1807-1886), American diplomatist, son of John Quincy Adams # ADAMS, HENRY (1838— ), American historian, son of Charles Francis Adams # ADAMS, JOHN QUINCY (1833-1894), His elder brother, a graduate of Harvard (1853), practised law, and was a Democratic member for several terms of the Massachusetts general court # ADAMS, BROOKS (1848— ), Another brother, graduated at Harvard in 1870, and until 1881 practised law # ADAMS, HENRY CARTER (1852— ), American economist # ADAMS, HERBERT (1858- ), American sculptor # ADAMS, HERBERT BAXTER (1850-1901), American historian and educationalist # ADAMS, JOHN (1735-1826), second president of the United States of America # ADAMS, JOHN COUCH (1819—1892), British astronomer # ADAMS, JOHN QUINCY (1767-1848), eldest son of President John Adams, sixth president of the United States # ADAMS, SAMUEL (1722—1803), American statesman # ADAMS, THOMAS (d. c. 1655), English divine, was, in 1612, "a preacher of the gospel at Willington," in Bedfordshire # ADAMS, WILLIAM (d. 1620), English navigator # ADAM SCOTUS (d. 1180), theological writer, sometimes called Adam Anglicus or Anglo-Scotus # ADAMSON, PATRICK (1537—1592), Scottish divine, archbishop of St Andrews # ADAMSON, ROBERT (1852-1902), Scottish philosopher # ADANSON, MICHEL (1727-1806), French naturalist, of Scottish descent # ADDAMS, JANE (1860- ), American sociologist # ADDISON, JOSEPH (1672-1719), English essayist, poet and man of letters, eldest son of Lancelot Addison, later dean of Lichfield # ADELAER, or ADELER (Norwegian for "eagle"), the surname of honour given on his ennoblement to Kurt Sivertsen (1622-1675), the famous Norwegian-Danish naval commander # ADELAIDE (Ger. Adelheid) (931—999), queen of Italy and empress, was the daughter of Rudolph II. of Burgundy and of Bertha, daughter of Duke Burchard of Swabia # ADELARD (or AETHELARD) of Bath (12th century), English scholastic philosopher, and one of the greatest savants of medieval England # ADELUNG, JOHANN CHRISTOPH (1732-1806), German grammarian and philologist # ADENES (ADENEZ or ADANS), surnamed LE ROI, French trouvere, was born in Brabant about 1240. He owed his education to the kindness of Henry III., duke of Brabant, and he remained in favour at court for some time after the death (1261) of his patron # ADHEMAR DE CHABANNES (c. 988-c. 1030), medieval historian # ADHEMAR (ADEMAR, AIMAR, AELARZ) DE MONTEIL (d. 1098), one of the principal personages of the first crusade, was bishop of Puy en Velay from before 1087 # ADLER, FELIX (1851- ), American educationalist # ADO (d. 874), archbishop of Vienne in Lotharingia, belonged to a famous Frankish house, and spent much of his middle life in Italy # ADOLPH OF NASSAU (c. 1255-.1298), German king, son of Walram, count of Nassau # ADOLPHUS, JOHN LEYCESTER (1795-1862), English lawyer and author, was the son of John Adolphus (1768—1845), a well-known London barrister who wrote a History of England to 1783 (1802), a History of France from 1790 (1803) and other works # ADOLPHUS FREDERICK (1710-1771), king of Sweden # ADRIAN, or HADRIAN (Lat. Hadrianus), the name of six popes. ADRIAN I., pope from 772 to 705, was the son of Theodore, a Roman nobleman # ADRIAN II., pope from 867 to 872, was a member of a noble Roman family, and became pope in 867, at an advanced age # ADRIAN III., pope, was born at Rome. He succeeded Martin II. in 884, and died in 885, on a journey to Worms # ADRIAN IV. (Nicholas Breakspear), pope from 1154 to 1159, the only Englishman who has occupied the papal chair, was born before A.D. 1100 # ADRIAN V. (Ottobuono de' Fieschi), pope in 1276, was a Genoese who was created cardinal deacon by his uncle Innocent IV # ADRIAN VI. (Adrian Dedel, not Boyens, probably not Rodenburgh, 1459-1523), pope from 1522 to 1523 # ADRIAN, SAINT, one of the praetorian guards of the emperor Galerius Maximian, who, becoming a convert to Christianity, was martyred at Nicomedia on the 4th of March 303 # ADRIANI, GIOVANNI BATTISTA (1513-1579), Italian historian, was born of a patrician family of Florence, and was secretary to the republic of Florence # ADYE, SIR JOHN MILLER (1819-1900), British general, son of Major James P. Adye # AEDESIUS (d. A.D. 355), Neoplatonist philosopher, was born of a noble Cappadocian family # AEGINETA, PAULUS, a celebrated surgeon of the island of Aegina, whence he derived his name. According to Le Clerc's calculation, he lived in the 4th century of the Christian era; but Abulfaragius (Barhebraeus) places him with more probability in the 7th # AEFRIC, called the "Grammarian" (c. 955-1020?), English abbot and author # AELIAN (AELIANUS TACTICUS), Greek military writer of the 2nd century A.D., resident at Rome # AELIAN (CLAUDIUS AELIANUS), Roman author and teacher of rhetoric, born at Praeneste, flourished under Septimius Severus and probably outlived Elagabalus (d. 222). # AELRED, AILRED, ETHELRED (1100-1166), English theologian, historical writer and abbot of Rievaulx # AEMILIUS, PAULUS (PAOLO EMILIO ) (d. 1529), Italian historian # AENEAS TACTICUS (4th century B.C.), one of the earliest Greek writers on the art of war # AEPINUS, FRANZ ULRICH THEODOR (1724-1802), German natural philosopher # AERTSZEN (or AARTSEN), PIETER (1507-1573), called "Long Peter" on account of his height, Dutch historical painter # AETHELBALD, king of Mercia, succeeded Ceolred A.D. 716 # AETHELBALD, king of Wessex, was the son of AEthelwulf, with whom he led the West Saxons to victory against the Danes at Aclea, 851 # AETHELBERHT, king of Kent, son of Eormenric, probably came to the throne in A.D. 560 # AETHELBERHT, king of the West Saxons, succeeded to the sub-kingdom of Kent during the lifetime of his father AEthelwulf, and retained it until the death of his elder brother AEthelbald in 860, when he became sole king of Wessex and Kent # AETHELFLAED (ETHELFLEDA), the "Lady of the Mercians," the eldest child of Alfred the Great, was educated with her brother Edward at her father's court. As soon as she was of marriageable age (probably about A.D. 886), she was married to AEthelred, earl of Mercia # AETHELFRITH, king of Northumbria, is said to have come to the throne in A.D. 593, being the son of AEthelric (probably reigned 568-572). # AETHELNOTH (d. 1038), archbishop of Canterbury, known also as EGELNODUS or EDNODUS, was a son of the ealdorman AEthelmaer, and a member of the royal family of Wessex # AETHELRED, king of Mercia, succeeded his brother Wulfhere in A.D. 675 # AETHELRED I., king of Wessex and Kent (866-871), was the fourth son of AEthelwulf of Wessex, and should, by his father's will, have succeeded to Wessex on the death of his eldest brother AEthelbald # AETHELRED II. (or ETHELRED) (c. 968—1016), king of the English (surnamed THE UNREADY, i.e. without rede or counsel), son of King Edgar by his second wife AElfthryth, was born in 968 or 969 and succeeded to the throne on the murder of his step-brother Edward (the Martyr) in 979 # AETHELSTAN (c. 894-940), Saxon king, was the son (probably illegitimate) of Edward the elder # AETHELWEARD (ETHELWARD.) Anglo-Saxon historian, was the great-grandson of AEthelred, the brother of Alfred and ealdorman or earl of the western provinces (i.e. probably of the whole of Wessex). He first signs as dux or ealdorman in 973, and continues to sign until 998, about which time his death must have taken place # AETHELWULF, king of the West Saxons, succeeded his father Ecgberht in A.D. 839 # AETIUS (fl. 350), surnamed "the Atheist," founder of an extreme sect of Arians # AETIUS, a Greek physician, born at Amida in Mesopotamia, flourished at the beginning of the 6th century A.D. # AETIUS (d. 454), a Roman general of the closing period of the Western empire, born at Dorostolus in Moesia, late in the 4th century. He was the son of Gaudentius, who, although possibly of barbarian family, rose in the service of the Western empire to be master of the horse, and later count of Africa # AFER, DOMITIUS, a Roman orator and advocate, born at Nemausus (Nimes) in Gallia Narbonensis, flourished in the reigns of Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero. He died A.D. 60, according to Jerome, of over-eating # AFFRE, DENIS AUGUSTE (1793—1848), archbishop of Paris # AFRANIUS, LUCIUS, Roman general, lived in the times of the Sertorian (79-72), third Mithradatic (74-61) and Civil Wars # AFRANIUS, LUCIUS, Roman comic poet, flourished about 94 B.C. # AFRICANUS, SEXTUS JULIUS, a Christian traveller and historian of the 3rd century # AFZELIUS, ADAM (1750-1837), Swedish botanist # AFZELIUS, JOHAN (1753-1837), His brother, known as ARVIDSON, was professor of chemistry at Upsala # AFZELIUS, PER (1760-1843), another brother, who became professor of medicine at Upsala in 1801, was distinguished as a medical teacher and practitioner # AFZELIUS, ARVID AUGUST (1785-1871), Swedish pastor, poet, historian and mythologist # AGA KHAN I., HIS HIGHNESS THE (1800-1881), the title accorded by general consent to HASAN ALI SHAH (born in Persia, 1800), when, in early life, he first settled in Bombay under the protection of the British government # AGA KHAN II, his eldest son, succeeded # AGA KHAN III. (Sultan Mahommed Shah), only son of the foregoing, succeeded him on his death in 1885, and became the head of the family and its devotees # AGAPETUS I., pope from 535 to 536 # AGAPETUS II., pope from 946 to 955, at the time when Alberic, son of Marozia, was governing the independent republic of Rome under the title of "prince and senator of the Romans." # AGAPETUS, a deacon of the church of St Sophia at Constantinople. He presented to the emperor Justinian, on his accession in 527, a work entitled Scheda regia sive de officio regis # AGARDE, ARTHUR (1540-1615), English antiquary # AGAS, RADULPH, or RALPH (c. 1540-1621), English land surveyor # AGASSIZ, ALEXANDER EMANUEL (1835-1910), American man of science, son of J. L. R. Agassiz # AGASSIZ, JEAN LOUIS RODOLPHE (1807-1873), Swiss naturalist and geologist, was the son of the Protestant pastor of the parish of Motier # AGATHANGELUS, AGATHANGE or AKATHANKELOS, Armenian historian, lived during the 4th century # AGATHIAS (c. A.D. 536-582), of Myrina in Aeolis, Greek poet and historian # AGATHO, pope from 678 to 681 # AGATHODAEMON, of Alexandria, map designer, probably lived in the 2nd century A.D. # AGNES, SAINT, a virgin martyr of the Catholic Church. The legend of St Agnes is that she was a Roman maid, by birth a Christian, who suffered martyrdom when but thirteen during the reign of the emperor Diocletian, on the 21st of January 304 # AGNES OF MERAN (d. 1201), queen of France, was the daughter of Bertold IV., duke of Meran in Tirol # AGNESI, MARIA GAETANA (1718-1799), Italian mathematician, linguist and philosopher # AGNESI, MARIA TERESA (1724-1780), Her sister, a well-known Italian pianist and composer # AGNEW, DAVID HAYES (1818-1892), American surgeon # AGOBARD (c. 779-840), Carolingian prelate and reformer # AGOSTINI, LEONARDO, Italian antiquary of the 17th century # AGOSTINO, or AGOSTINI [AUGUSTINUS], PAOLO (1593-1629), Italian musician # AGOSTINO and AGNOLO (or ANGELO) DA SIENA, Italian architects and sculptors in the first half of the 14th century # AGOULT, MARIE CATHERINE SOPHIE DE FLAVIGNY, COMTESSE D' (1805-1876), French author, whose nom de plume was "Daniel Stern," # AGREDA, MARIA FERNANDEZ CORONEL, ABBESS OF, known in religion as Sor (Sister) Maria de Jesus (1602-1665), was the daughter of Don Francisco Coronel and of his wife Catalina de Arana # AGRICOLA, CHRISTOPH LUDWIG (1667-1719), German landscape painter # AGRICOLA (the Latinized form of the name BAUER), GEORG (1490-1555), German scholar and man of science, known as "the father of mineralogy," # AGRICOLA, GNAEUS JULIUS (A.D. 37-93), Roman statesman and general, father-in-law of the historian Tacitus, # AGRICOLA, JOHANN FRIEDRICH (1720-1774), German musician # AGRICOLA (originally SCHNEIDER, then SCHNITTER), JOHANNES (1494-1566), German Protestant reformer # AGRICOLA, MARTIN (c. 1500-1556), German musician # AGRICOLA, JOHANN FRIEDRICH (1720-1774), court composer and director of the royal chapel to Frederick the Great # AGRICOLA, Alexander, died 1506, one of four other Agricolas who are known as composers between the end of the 15th century and the middle of the 17th. # AGRICOLA, Johann, flor. 1600, one of four other Agricolas who are known as composers between the end of the 15th century and the middle of the 17th. # AGRICOLA, Wolfgang Christoph, flor. 1630, one of four other Agricolas who are known as composers between the end of the 15th century and the middle of the 17th. # AGRICOLA, George Ludwig, 1643-1676, one of four other Agricolas who are known as composers between the end of the 15th century and the middle of the 17th. # AGRICOLA, RODOLPHUS (properly ROELOF HUYSMANN) (1443-1485), Dutch scholar # AGRIPPA, HEROD, I. (c. 10 B.C.-A.D. 44), king of Judea, the son of Aristobulus and Berenice, and grandson of Herod the Great, # AGRIPPA, HEROD, II. (27-100), son of the preceding, and like him originally Marcus Julius Agrippa # AGRIPPA, MARCUS VIPSANIUS (63-12 P.C.), Roman statesman and general, son-in-law and minister of the emperor Augustus, was of humble origin # AGRIPPA VON NETTESHEIM, HENRY CORNELIUS (1486-1535) German writer, soldier, physician, and by common reputation a magician, belonged to a family many members of which had been in the service of the house of Habsburg # AGRIPPINA, the "elder," daughter of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa by his third wife Julia, was the grand-daughter of Augustus and the wife of Germanicus. She accompanied her husband to Germany, when the legions on the Rhine revolted after the death of Augustus (A.D. 14). # AGRIPPINA, the "younger" (A.D. 16-59), daughter of Germanicus and Agrippina the elder, sister of Caligula and mother of Nero # AGUADO, ALEXANDRE MARIE, marquis de Las Marismas del Guadalquivir, viscount de Monte Ricco (1784-1842), Spanish banker # AGUESSEAU, HENRI FRANCOIS D' (1668-1751), chancellor of France # MARQUIS D'AGUESSEAU, HENRI CARDIN JEAN BAPTISTE, (1746-1826), His grandson, was advocate-general in the parlement of Paris and deputy in the Estates-General # AGUILAR, GRACE (1816-1847), English writer, the daughter of a Jewish merchant in London # AGUILERA, VENTURA RUIZ (1820-1881), Spanish poet # AGUILLON (AGUILONIUS), FRANCOIS D, (1566-1617), Flemish mathematician # AHMAD IBN HANBAL (780-855), the founder, involuntarily and after his death, of the Hanbalite school of canon law # AHMAD SHAH (1724-1773), founder of the Durani dynasty in Afghanistan, was the son of Sammaun-Khan, hereditary chief of the Abdali tribe # AHMED I. (1589-1617), sultan of Turkey, was the son of Mahommed III., whom he succeeded in 1603 # AHMED II. (1643-1695), sultan of Turkey, son of Sultan Ibrahim, succeeded his brother Suleiman II. in 1691 # AHMED III. (1637-1736), sultan of Turkey, son of Mahommed IV., succeeded to the throne in 1703 on the abdication of his brother Mustafa II # AHMED TEWFIK, PASHA (1845- ), Turkish diplomatist, was the son of Ismail Hakki Pasha # AHMED VEFIK, PASHA (1819-1891), Turkish statesman and man of letters # AHRENS, FRANZ HEINRICH LUDOLF (1809-1881), German philologist # AICARD, JEAN FRANCOIS VICTOR (1848- ), French poet and dramatist # AICHINGER, GREGOR (c. 1565-1628), one of the greatest German composers of the Golden Age # AICKIN, FRANCIS (d. 1805), Irish actor # AICHIN, James (d. 1803), His younger brother, played leading parts in both comedy and tragedy at the Edinburgh theatre # AIDAN (d. 606), king of the Scottish kingdom of Dalriada, was the son of Gabran, king of Dalriada, and became king after the death of his kinsman King Conall # AIDAN, or AEDAN, first bishop of Lindisfarne, a monk of Hii (Iona), was sent by the abbot Senegi to Northumbria, at the request of King Oswald, A.D. 634-635 # AIGUILLON, EMMANUEL ARMAND DE WIGNEROD DU PLESSIS DE RICHELIEU, DUC D' (1720-1782), French statesman, nephew of the marechal de Richelieu # AIGUILLON, MARIE MADELEINE DE WIGNEROD DU PONT DE COURLAY, DUCHESSE D' (1604-1675), daughter of Cardinal Richelieu's sister. In 1620 she married a nephew of the constable de Luynes, Antoine de Beauvoir du Roure, sieur de Combalet # AIKIN, ARTHUR (1773-1854), English chemist and mineralogist # AIKIN, JOHN (1747-1822), English doctor and writer # AIKIN, LUCY (1781-1864), His daughter, had some repute as a historical writer # AIKMAN, WILLIAM (1682-1731), British portrait-painter # AILLY, PIERRE D, (1350-1420), French theologian # AIMARD, GUSTAVE, the pen-name of OLIVIER GLOUX (1818-1883), French novelist # AIMOIN (c. 960-c. 1010), French chronicler # AINGER, ALFRED (1837-1904), English divine and man of letters # AINMULLER, MAXIMILIAN EMMANUEL (1807-1870), German artist and glass-painter # AINSWORTH, HENRY (1571-1622), English Nonconformist divine and scholar # AINSWORTH, ROBERT (1660-1743), English schoolmaster and author # AINSWORTH, WILLIAM HARRISON (1805-1882), English novelist, son of Thomas Ainsworth, solicitor # AIRAY, HENRY (1560?-1616), English Puritan divine # AIRD, THOMAS (1802-1876), Scottish poet # AIREY, RICHARD AIREY, BARON (1803-1881), British general, was the son of Lieutenant-General Sir George Airey (1761-1833) # AIRY, SIR GEORGE BIDDELL (1801-1892), British Astronomer Royal # AISLABIR, JOHN (1670-1742), English politician # AISSE [a corruption of HAIDEE], MADEMOISELLE (c. 1694-1733), French letter-writer, was the daughter of a Circassian chief # AITON, WILLIAM (1731-1793), Scottish botanist # AITZEMA, LIEUWE (LEO) VAN (1600-1669), Dutch historian and statesman # AIYAR, SIR SHESHADRI (1845-1901), native statesman of Mysore, India, was the son of a Brahman of Palghat in the district of Malabar # AIYAR, SIR TIRUVARUR MUTUSWAMY (1832-1895), native Indian judge of the high court of Madras # AKBAR, AKHBAR or AKBER, JELLALADIN MAHOMMED (1542-1605), one of the greatest and wisest of the Mogul emperors # AKENSIDE, MARK (1721-1770), English poet and physician # AKERMAN, JOHN YONGE (1806-1873), English antiquarian # AKHTAL [GHIYYTH IBN HYRITH} (c. 640-710), one of the most famous Arabian poets of the Omayyad period, belonged to the tribe of Taghlib in Mesopotamia, and was, like his fellow-tribesmen, a Christian # ALABASTER, or ARBLASTIER, WILLIAM (1567—1640), English Latin poet and scholar # ALACOQUE, or AL COQ, MARGUERITE MARIE (1647—1690), French nun and mystic # ALAIN DE LILLE [Alanus de Insulis] (c. 1128-1202), French theologian and poet # ALAMANNI, or ALEMANNI, LUIGI (1405-1556), Italian statesman and poet # ALAMOS DE BARRIENTOS, BALTASAR (1555-1640), Spanish scholar # ALANCON, HERNANDO DE, Spanish navigator of the 16th century, is known only in connexion with the expedition to the coast of California, of which he was leader. He set sail on the 9th of May 1540 and on his return to New Spain in 1541 constructed an excellent map of California # ALARCON, JUAN RUIZ DE (1518?-1639), Spanish dramatist # ALARCON, PEDRO ANTONIO DE (1833-1891), Spanish writer # ALARD, JEAN DELPHIN (1815-1888), French violinist and teacher # ALARIC (Ala-reiks, "All-ruler"), (c. 370-410), Gothic conqueror, the first Teutonic leader who stood as a conqueror in the city of Rome # ALARIC II. (d. 507), eighth king of the Goths in Spain, succeeded his father Euric or Evaric in 485 # ALAVA, DON MIGUEL RICARDO DE (1770-1841), Spanish general and statesman # ALBANI, or ALBANO, FRANCESCO (1578-1660), Italian painter # ALBANI, the stage name of MARIE, LOUISE EMMA CECILE LAJEUNESSE (1847- ), Canadian singer # ROBERT STEWART, duke of Albany (c. 1345-1420), regent of Scotland, was a son of King Robert II. by his mistress, Elizabeth Mure, and was legitimatized when his parents were married about 1349. In 1361 he married Margaret, countess of Menteith, and after his widowed sister-in-law, Isabel, countess of Fife, had recognized him as her heir, he was known as the earl of Fife and Menteith # ALEXANDER STEWART, duke of Albany (c. 1454-1485), was the second son of James II., king of Scotland, by his wife, Mary, daughter of Arnold, duke of Gelderland. Created duke of Albany before 1458 # JOHN STEWART, duke of Albany (c. 1481-1536), regent Of Scotland # LEOPOLD GEORGE DUNCAN ALBERT, duke of Albany, eighth child and youngest son of Queen Victoria, was born on the 7th of April 1853 # ALBANY, LOUISE MAXIMILIENNE CAROLINE, COUNTESS OF (1752-1824), eldest daughter of Prince Gustavus Adolphus of Stolberg-Gedern # ALBATEGNIUS (c. 850—929), an Arab prince and astronomer, correctly designated Mahommed ben Gebir al Batani, his surname being derived from his native town, Batan in Mesopotamia # ARNOLD JOOST VAN KEPPEL, 1st earl of Albemarle, and lord of Voorst in Gelderland (c. 1670-1718), son of Oswald van Keppel and his wife Anna Geertruid van Lintello # GEORGE THOMAS KEPPEL, 6th earl of Albemarle, (1799—1891), British general, second son of the fourth earl # ALBERONI, GIULIO (1664-1752), Spanish—Italian cardinal and statesman # ALBERT (1522-1557), prince of Bayreuth, surnamed THE WARLIKE, and also ALCIBIADES, was a son of Casimir, prince of Bayreuth, and a member of the Franconian branch of the Hohenzollern family # ALBERT I. (c. 1100-1170), margrave of Brandenburg, surnamed THE BEAR, was the only son of Otto the Rich, count of Ballenstedt, and Eilika, daughter of Magnus Billung, duke of Saxony # ALBERT III. (1414—1486), elector of Brandenburg, surnamed ACHILLES because of his knightly qualities, was the third son of Frederick I. of Hohenzollern, elector of Brandenburg # ALBERT (FRANCIS CHARLES AUGUSTUS ALBERT EMMANUEL) (1819-1861), prince-consort of England # ALBERT I. (c. 1250-1308), German king, and duke of Austria, eldest son of King Rudolph I., the founder of the greatness of the house of Habsburg, was invested with the duchies of Austria and Styria, together with his brother Rudolph, in 1282 # ALBERT II. (1397-1439), German king, king of Bohemia and Hungary, and (as Albert V.) duke of Austria # ALBERT (1490-1545), elector and archbishop of Mainz, and archbishop of Magdeburg, was the younger son of John Cicero, elector of Brandenburg # ALBERT (1490-1568), Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, and first duke of Prussia, was the third son of Frederick of Hohenzollern, prince of Ansbach and Bayreuth, and Sophia, daughter of Casimir IV., king of Poland # ALBERT III. ( 1443-1500), duke of Saxony, surnamed ANIMOSUS or THE COURAGEOUS, younger son of Frederick II., the Mild, elector and duke of Saxony # ALBERT, FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, king of Saxony (1828-1902), was the eldest son of Prince John, who succeeded to the throne in 1854 # ALBERT, surnamed THE DEGENERATE (c. 1240-1314), landgrave of Thuringia, was the eldest son of Henry III., the Illustrious, margrave of Meissen. He married Margaret, daughter of the emperor Frederick II., in 1254 # ALBERT (FRIEDRICH RUDOLF ALBRECHT), ARCHDUKE (1817-1895), Austrian field-marshal, was the eldest son of the archduke Charles (Karl Friedrich) # ALBERT, MADAME (c. 1805-1846), French actress, whose maiden name was Theresc Vernet, was born of a family of players # ALBERT OF AIX (fl. c. A.D. 1100), historian of the first crusade # ALBERTI, DOMENICO (c. 1710-1740), Italian musician # ALRERTI, LEONE BATTISTA (1404-1472), Italian painter, poet, philosopher, musician and architect # ALBERTINEILI, MARIOTTO (1474-1515), Italian painter # ALBERTUS MAGNUS (ALBERT OF COLOGNE.? 1206-1280), count of Bollstadt, scholastic philosopher # ALBERUS, ERASMUS (c. 1500-1553), German humanist, reformer and poet # ALBERY, JAMES (1838—1889), English dramatist # ALBINONI, TOMASSO (c. 1674—c. 1745), Italian musician # ALBINUS (originally WEISS), RERNHARD SIEGFRIED (1697-1770), German anatomist # 'ALBO, JOSEPH, a Spanish Jewish theologian of the 15th century # ALBOIN (d. 572 or 573), king of the Lombards, and conqueror of Italy, succeeded his father Audoin about 565 # ALBONI, MARIETTA (1823-1894), Italian opera-singer # ALBORNOZ, GIL ALVAREZ DE, Spanish cardinal, was born at Cuenca early in the 14th Century. He was the son of Gil Alvarez de Albornoz and of Dona Teresa de Luna, sister of Kimeno de Luna, archbishop of Toledo # ALBRECHTSBERGER, JOHANN GEORG (1736-1809), Austrian musician # ALBRIGHT, JACOB (1759-1808), American clergyman # ALBUMAZAR, more properly ABU-MAASCHAR (805-885), Arab astronomer # ALBUQUERQUE, ALPHONSO D, (in Old Port. AFFONSO D'ALBOQUERQUE) (1453-1515), surnamed THE GREAT, and THE PORTUGUESE MARS. Through his father, Gonzalvo, who held an important position at court, he was connected by illegitimate descent with the royal family of Portugal # ALCESTER, FREDERICK BEAUCHAMP PAGET SEYMOUR, BARON (1821-1895), British admiral, son of Colonel Sir Horace Beauchamp Seymour and cousin of Francis George Hugh Seymour, 5th marquess of Hertford # ALCIONIO, PIETRO, or PETRUS ALCYONIUS (c. 1487-1527), Italian classical scholar # ALCIPHRON, Greek rhetorician, was probably a contemporary of Lucian (2nd century A.D..) # ALCOCK, JOHN (c. 1430-1500), English divine # ALCOCK, SIR RUTHERFORD (1809-1897), British consul and diplomatist, was the son of Dr Thomas Alcock, who practised at Ealing, near London, and himself followed the medical profession # ALCOFORADO, MARIANNA (1640-1723), Portuguese authoress # ALCOTT, AMOS BRONSON (1799-1888), American educationalist and writer # ALCOTT, LOUISA MAY (1832-1888), American author, was the daughter of Amos Bronson Alcott # ALCUIN (ALCHUINE), a celebrated ecclesiastic and man of learning in the 8th century, who liked to be called by the Latin name of ALBINUS, and at the Academy of the palace took the surname of FLACCUS, was born at Eboracum (York) in 735. He was related to Willibrord, the first bishop of Utrecht, whose biography he afterwards wrote # ALDEGREVER, or ALDEGRAF, HEINRICH (1502-1558), German painter and engraver # ALDEN, JOHN (1599?-1687), one of the "Pilgrims" who in 1620 emigrated to America on the "Mayflower" and founded the Plymouth Colony # ALDHELM (c. 640-709), bishop of Sherborne, English scholar # ALDINI, GIOVANNI (1762—1834), Italian physicist # ALDRED, or EALDRED (d. 1069), English ecclesiastic, became abbot of Tavistock about 1027 # ALDRICH, HENRY (1647-1710), English theologian and philosopher # ALDRICH, NELSON WILMARTH (1841- ), American politician # ALDRICH, THOMAS BAILEY (1836-1907), American author # ALDRINGER (ALTRINGER, ALDRINGEN), JOHANN, COUNT VON (1588-1634), Austrian soldier # ALDROVANDI, ULISSI (1522-1605), Italian naturalist, was, born of noble parentage at Bologna # ALEANDRO, GIROLAMO (HIERONYMUS ALEANDER) (1480- 1542), Italian cardinal # ALEARDI, ALEARDO, COUNT (1812-1878), Italian poet # ALECSANDRI, or ALEXANDRI, VASILE (1821-1890), Rumanian lyric poet # ALEMAN, LOUIS (c. 1390-1450), French cardinal, was born of a noble family at the castle of Arbent near Bugey # ALEMAN, MATEO (1547-1609?), Spanish novelist and man of letters # ALEMBERT, DEAN LE ROND D' (1717-1783), French mathematician and philosopher # ALENCON, COUNTS AND DUKES OF. The first line of the counts of Alencon was founded by Yves, lord of Bellesme, who in the middle of the 10th century possessed and fortified the town of Alencon # ALENIO, GIULIO (1582-1649), Italian Jesuit missionary # ALES (ALESIUS), ALEXANDER (1500-1565), Scottish divine of the school of Augsburg, whose family name was ALANE # ALESSANDRI, ALESSANDRO (ALEXANDER AB ALEXANDRO) (1461-1523), Italian jurist # ALESSI, GALEAZZO (1512-1572), Italian architect # ALEXANDER (ALEXANDER OF BATTENBERG) (1857-1893), first prince of Bulgaria, was the second son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and the Rhine by his morganatic marriage with Julia, countess von Hauke # ALEXANDER (1461-1506), king of Poland and grand- duke of Lithuania, fourth son of Casimir IV., king of Poland, was elected grand-duke of Lithuania on the death of his father in 1492, and king of Poland on the death of his brother John Albert in 1501 # ALEXANDER I. was bishop of Rome from about 106 to 115 # ALEXANDER II. (Anselmo Baggio), pope from 1061 to 1073 # ALEXANDER III. (Orlando Bandinelli), pope from 1159 to 1181, was a Siennese, and as a teacher of canon law in Bologna composed the Stroma or the Summa Magistri Rolandi, one of the earliest commentaries on the Decretum Gratiani # ALEXANDER IV. (Rinaldo), pope from 1254 to 1261, was, like Innocent III. and Gregory IX., a member of the family of the counts of Segni. His uncle Gregory IX. made him cardinal deacon in 1227 and cardinal bishop of Ostia in 1231. On the death of Innocent IV. he was elected pope at Naples # ALEXANDER V. (Peter Philarges), pope 1409-1410, was born in Crete of unknown parents and entered the order of St Francis # ALEXANDER VI. (Rodrigo Borgia) (1431-1503), pope from 1492 to his death, is the most memorable of the corrupt and secular popes of the Renaissance # ALEXANDER VII. (Fabio Chigi), pope from 1655 to 1667 # ALEXANDER VIII. (Pietro Ottoboni), pope from 1689 to 1691, was born of a noble Venetian family # ALEXANDER I. (ALEKSANDER PAVLOVICH) (1777-1825), emperor of Russia, son of the grand-duke Paul Petrovich, afterwards Paul I., and Maria Fedorovna, daughter of Frederick Eugene of Wurttemberg # ALEXANDER II. (1818-1881), emperor of Russia, eldest son of Nicholas I # ALEXANDER I. (c. 1078-1124), king of Scotland, was the fourth son of Malcolm Canmore by his wife (St) Margaret, grand-niece of Edward the Confessor. On the death of his brother Edgar in 1107 he succeeded to the Scottish crown # ALEXANDER II. (1198-1249), king of Scotland, son of William the Lion and Ermengarde of Beaumont, succeeded to the kingdom on the death of his father in 1214 # ALEXANDER III. (1241-1285), king of Scotland, son of Alexander II. by his second wife Mary de Coucy, was born in 1241. At the age of eight years the death of his father called him to the throne # ALEXANDER (ALEXANDER OBRENOVICH) (1876-1903), king of Servia # ALEXANDER, son of Numenius, Greek rhetorician, flourished in the first half of the second century A.D. # ALEXANDER, ARCHIBALD (1772-1851), American Presbyterian divine # ALEXANDER, FRANCIS (1800-1881), American portrait- painter # ALEXANDER, GEORGE (1858- ), English actor, whose family name was Samson # ALEXANDER, SIR JAMES EDWARD (1803-1885), British soldier and traveller # ALEXANDER, JOHN WHITE (1856- ), American painter # ALEXANDER, JOSEPH ADDISON (1809-1860), American biblical scholar, the third son of Archibald Alexander # ALEXANDER, JAMES WADDEL (1804-1859), His brother, was a famous Presbyterian preacher # ALEXANDER, WILLIAM (1824- ), Protestant archbishop of Armagh and primate of all Ireland # ALEXANDER, WILLIAM LINDSAY (1808-1884), Scottish divine # ALEXANDER NEVSKY, SAINT (1220-1263), grand-duke of Vladimir, was the second son of the grand-duke Yaroslav # ALEXANDER OF APHRODISIAS, pupil of Aristocles of Messene, the most celebrated of the Greek commentators on the writings of Aristotle, and styled, by way of pre-eminence, o exegetes ("the expositor"), was a native of Aphrodisias in Caria. He came to Athens towards the end of the 2nd century A.D., became head of the Lyceum and lectured on peripatetic philosophy # ALEXANDER OF HALES (ALEXANDER HALENSIS), surnamed DOCTOR IRREFRAGABILIS, THEOLOGORUM MONARCHA and FONS VITAE, a celebrated English theologian of the 13th century # ALEXANDER OP TRALLES (ALEXANDER TRALLIANUS), Greek physician, born at Tralles in Lydia, lived probably about the middle of the 6th century and practised medicine with success at Rome # ALEXANDER SEVERUS (MARCUS AURELIUS SEVERUS ALEXAXDER) (208-235), Roman emperor from A.D. 222 to 235, was born at Arca Caesarea in Palestine. His father, Gessius Marcianus, held office more than once as an imperial procurator; his mother, Julia Mamaea, was the daughter of Julia Maesa and the aunt of Heliogabalus. His original name was Bassianus, but he changed it in 221 when his grandmother, Maesa, persuaded the emperor Heliogabalus to adopt his cousin as successor and create him Caesar # ALEXANDER THE PAPHLAGONIAN, a celebrated impostor and worker of false oracles, was born at Abonouteichos (see INEBOLI) in Paphlagonia in the early part of the 2nd century A.D. # ALEXANDRE, NOEL (NATALIS ALEXANDER) (1639-1724), French theologian and ecclesiastical historian # ALEXIS, WILLIBALD, the pseudonym of GEORG WILHELM HEINRICH HARING (1798—1871), German historical novelist. # ALEXIUS I. (1048-1118), emperor of the East, was the third son of John Comnenus, nephew of Isaac Comnenus, emperor 1057-1059. His father declined the throne on the abdication of Isaac, who was accordingly succeeded by four emperors of other families between that date and 1081. # ALEXIUS II. (COMNENUS) (1167-1183), emperor of the East, was the son of Manuel Comnenus and Maria, daughter of Kaymund, prince of Antioch # ALEXIUS III. (ANGELUS), emperor of the East, was the second son of Andronicus Angelus, nephew of Alexius I. In 1195, while his brother Isaac II. was away hunting in Thrace, he was proclaimed emperor by the troops # ALEXIUS V., eastern Roman emperor, was proclaimed emperor on the 5th of February 1204, during the siege of Constantinople by the Latins (Fourth Crusade). His name was Alexius Ducas Murtzuphlos, and he was a connexion of the imperial house of the Angell. His elevation was the result of a revolution in the city against Isaac II. and Alexius IV. # ALEXIUS MIKHAILOVICH (1624-1676), tsar of Muscovy, the son of Tsar Michael Romanov and Eudoxia Stryeshnevaya # ALEXIUS PETROVICH (1600-1718), Russian tsarevich, the sole surviving son of Peter I. and Eudoxia Lopukhina # ALFANI, DOMENICO, italian painter, was born at Perugia towards the close of the 15th century. He was a contemporary of Raphael, with whom he studied in the school of Perugino # ALFIERI, VITTORIO, COUNT (1749-1803), Italian dramatist # ALFORD, HENRY (1810-1871), English divine and scholar # ALFRED, or AELFRED, known as THE GREAT (848-? 900), king of England, was the fourth son of King AEthelwulf and his first wife (Osburh). # ALFRED ERNEST ALBERT, duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and duke of Edinburgh (1844-1900), second son and fourth child of Queen Victoria # ALGARDI, ALESSANDRO (1602-1654), Italian sculptor # ALGAROTTI, FRANCESCO, COUNT (1712-1764), Italian philosopher and writer on art, # ALGER OF LIEGE (d c. 1131), known also as ALGER OF CLUNY and ALGERUS MAGISTER, a learned French priest who lived in the first half of the 12th century. # ALGER, RUSSELL ALEXANDER (1836—1907), American soldier and politician # ALI, in full, 'ALI BEN ABU TALIB (c. 600-661), the fourth of the caliphs or successors of Mahomet, was born at Mecca. His father, Abu Talib, was an uncle of the prophet, and Ali himself was adopted by Mahomet and educated under his care # ALI, known as ALI BEY (1766-1818), the assumed name of DOMINGO BADIA Y LEBLICH, a Spanish traveller # ALI, known as ALI PASHA (1741-1822),Turkish pasha of Iannina, surnamed Arslan, "the Lion", was one of the Toske tribe, and his ancestors had for some time held the hereditary office of bey of Tepeleni # ALICE MAUD MARY, GRAND-DUCHESS OF HESSE-DARMSTADT (1843-1878), second daughter and third child of Queen Victoria # ALIN, OSCAR JOSEF (1846—1900), Swedish historian and politician # ALISON, ARCHIBALD (1757-1839), Scottish author, son of Patrick Alison, provost of Edinburgh # Alison, Dr Wilham Pulteney (1790-1859), His elder son, was a distinguished Edinburgh medical professor. # ALISON, SIR ARCHIBALD, Bart. (1792-1867), the historian, was the younger son. Sir Archibald Alison married in 1825 Elizabeth Glencairn, daughter of Colonel Tytler, by whom he had three children, Archibald, Frederick and Eliza Frances Catherine. Both sons became distinguished officers. # ALISON, SIR ARCHIBALD, Bart. (1826-1907), the elder of the sons of Archibald II. # ALKAN, CHARLES HENRI VALENTIN MORHANGE (1813-1888), French musical composer, was born and died in Paris. Alkan was his nom de guerre # ALLACCI, LEONE [LEO ALLATIUS] (1586-1669), Greek scholar and theologian # ALLAMANDA, named after J. N. S. Allamand (1713-1787), of Leiden, a genus of shrubby, evergreen climbers, belonging to the natural order Apocynaceae, and a native of tropical America # ALLAN, DAVID (1744-1796), Scottish historical painter # ALLAN, SIR HUGH (1810-1882), Canadian financier, the son of Captain Alexander Allan, a shipmaster # ALLAN, SIR WILLIAM (1782-1850), Scottish painter # ALHAN-DESPREAUX, LOUISE ROSALIE (1810-1856), French actress # ALLEGRI, GREGORIO, Italian priest and musical composer, probably of the Correggio family, was born at Rome either in 1560 or in 1585. He studied music under G. Maria Nanini, the intimate friend of Palestrina # ALLEINE, JOSEPH (1634-1668), English Nonconformist divine # ALLEINE, RICHARD (1611-1681), English Puritan divine, was born at Ditcheat, Somerset, where his father was rector. He was a younger brother of William Alleine, the saintly vicar of Blandford. # ALLEN, ETHAN (1739—1789), American soldier # ALLEN, IRA (1751—1814), Ethan's youngest brother, also removed to the New Hampshire Grants, where he became one of the most influential political leaders # ALLEN, GRANT [CHARLES GRANT BLAIRFINDIE], (1848—1899), English author, son of a clergyman of Irish descent # ALLEN, JAMES LANE (1850- ), American novelist # ALLEN, JOHN (1476—1534), English divine # ALLEN, or ALLEYN, THOMAS (1542-1632), English mathematician # ALLEN, WILLIAM (1532-1594), English cardinal # ALLEN, WILLIAM FRANCIS (1830-1889), American classical scholar # ALLESTREE, or ALLESTRY, RICHARD (1619.-1681), royalist divine and provost of Eton College, son of Robert Allestree, and a descendant of an ancient Derbyshire family # ALLEYN, EDWARD (1566-1626), English actor and founder of Dulwich College # ALLIBONE, SAMUEL AUSTIN (1816-1889), American author and bibliographer # ALLIES, THOMAS WILLIAM (1813-1903), English historical writer # ALLINGHAM, WILLIAM (1824-1889), Irish man of letters and poet # ALLISON, WILLIAM BOYD (1829-1908), American legislator # ALLIX, PIERRE (1641-1717), French Protestant divine # ALLMAN, GEORGE JAMES (1812-!898), British biologist # ALLON, HENRY (1818-1892), English Nonconformist divine # ALLORI, ALESSANDRO (1535—1607), Italian painter of the Florentine school, was brought up and trained in art by his uncle, Angelo Bronzino (q.v.) whose name he sometimes assumed in his pictures :: Note that the end of the encyclopeda file appears to have been left incomplete, as the final entry in the encyclopedia ends abruptly in mid-sentence. So there are perhaps dozens of persons missing from the list at this point, where the encyclopedia skips any entries starting with "Am" until the encyclopedia resumes in the next volume, quite a ways into entries starting with "An." === And - Ani ===

Famous People my Belskey Family are Related to

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'''Notable People''', including: John McCain's Excel Speadsheet [https://onedrive.live.com/view.aspx?resid=DE00E9C339B2FB5D!156&ithint=file%2cxlsx&app=Excel&authkey=!AEL2Zk67KvFK7eU title=John McCain] :* '''Presidents''' of the United States of America March 2017 I share common ancestors. With'''Bold text''' 37 out of 45US Presidents.'''Bold text''' :* Brave '''Explorers''' :* Innovative '''Inventors''' :* Movie '''Stars''' :* Famous '''Authors :* Born '''Rich''' UPDATES We are related to Barak Obama thru my maternal and paternal lines but both share common ancestors with Baracks maternal line. August 2017 Jim Morrison, John Wayne Marilyn Monroe. all 3 have other Birth names. same with George Orwel Related to John McCain, common ancestor Adam Mott same with Norma Jean Baker, Marilyn Monroe: common ancestor is Adam Mott NEWEST My maternal grandparents, John Larrabee Calkins and his wife, Lorna Gerrie Cadman, were related to each other, 17th cousins 3X removed. 167 common ancestors were found between John Larrabee Calkins and Lorna Gerrie Cadman within 30 generations. BUT My parents are NOT related to each other within 30 generations. April 2017...still sick from cell tower Newest Alec Baldwin Marilyn Monroe, The former US Pres George Bush+ Brigam Young John Smith Anderson Cooper (Vanderbuilt's son ) Henry Howland, he fell overboard Mayflower 8 yrs old. Survived. This is an ongoing personal project updated periodically by '''Corinne Lynne Belskey Kuhlmann''' I pretty much know that '''Wikitree.com''' and '''Familysearch.org''' (''Church of Latter Day Saints'') LDS, are reliable sources. Most of it is backed up with legal paperwork such as '''Birth, Marriage, Death, Military''' and '''Books, Newspaers''', etc. I will be adding tree charts visually showing the chain of relatives all the way to our common ancestor and also the path from the common ancestor to the famous person. '''How Im Related''' * I will try to show branchs to and from the common ancestor * I mainly use the partnership of '''Familysearch.org''' and ''Relative Finder''', an online application, * the Connections and '''Relative Finder''' on '''Wikitree.com'' * Currently not working on my family history. I am busy with a personal matter: Cell Tower Faux Pine Tree SBA Communications (tower owner) T-Mobile, and Verizon (transmitter & receivers), the land owners (my landlords), the City of Oakley, CA, and the FCC (Federal Communications Commission). Many people have died and the number is rising. Visit my Google Plus Oakley Cell Tower page [https://plus.google.com/u/1/collection/Q6W5jB CLICK HERE TO VIEW] '''JULY 2016''' - Some funky things have been happening since I've been cleaning up my ancestors on Familysearch.org, '''I am now related to Walt Disney thru my ☆Father☆(paternal) and also my ☆Mother☆ (maternal).''' [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cb/Notables_in_the_Belskey_Family-19.jpg Click Here to view both (maternal & paternal) common ancestor charts] for Walt Disney and Corinne Belskey. '''WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?''' :I either screwed up profiles on the Familysearch.org tree... OR :My parents may be related :I'll leave it at that. == NEW ADDITIONS == * Artemus Millet, The Temple Builder, High Priest, Pioneer and personal friend of Brigham Young. In fact, he married a sister of Brigham Young, (Athough, she left him a year later.) He's my Fourth Great Grandfather, I am his Direct Descendant. *LIZZIE BORDON ::Lizzie Bordon took an ax; ::Gave her mother fourty whacks. ::When she saw what she had done; ::She gave her father fourty-one. Note: Lizzie died June 2, 1929; I was born on June 2, 1966.... CREEPY *George Washington 1st President of the United States of America * Mitt Romney, Politician, also Church of LDS ---- ==US PRESIDENTS== * 2nd) John Adams (1797-1801) :8th cousin 7 x removed :common ancestor Thomas Pigott :⇨MFFMFMFFMFFFMFMF / FFMFFMMMF * 3rd) Thomas Jefferson (1801-1817) :12th cousin 1 x removed :common ancestor Elizabeth Markham :⇨MMFFMFMMMMMMMM / MMMFMFMMFMMMM * 4th) James Madison (1809-1817) :5th cousin 7 x removed :common ancestor Francis Bernard :⇨MMFFMFMMMFFMF / MMMMFF * 6th) John Quincy Adams (1825-1829) :9th cousin 6 x removed :common ancestor Richard Charlton :⇨MFFMFFMFFMMMFMMF / FMMFMMMMFF * 7th) Andrew Jackson (1829-1837) :7th cousin 7 x removed :common ancestor Dorothy Elizabeth Reed :⇨MFFFFFFMFFFFFMM / FFFMFMMM * 9th) William Henry Harrison (1841) :5th cousin 7 x removed :common ancestor Richard Harrison :⇨FMFMFMFMMFFMF / FFFFFF * 10th) John Tyler (1841-1845) :6th cousin 7 x removed :common ancestor Dorothy Williams :⇨MFFMFMMFMFFMMM / FFFFFMM * 11th) James K. Polk (1845-1849) :12th cousin 1 x removed :common ancestor Richard Neville :⇨MFFFFMMMFFFMMF / FFFMMFFFMFMMF * 12th) Zachary Taylor (1849-1850) :9th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor Richard Neville :⇨MFFFFMMMFFFMMF / MFFFFMFMMF * 13th) Millard Fillmore (1850-1853) :8th cousin 5 x removed :common ancestor unknown :⇨MMFFMFFFMMFFFF / FFMMMMMMF * 16th) Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865) :7th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor Mary love Wentworth :⇨MFFFFFFMFMFM / MFFFFMMM * 17th) Andrew Johnson (1865-1869) :8th cousin 7 x removed :common ancestor John Clarke :⇨MMFMMMMFMFMMMFFF / FFMFMMMFF * 18th) Ulysses S. Grant (1869-1877) :7th cousin 6 x removed :common ancestor Magdalene Elsick :⇨MFFFFMFMFMMMFM / FFMMMMFM * 19th) Rutherford B. Hayes (1877-1881) :5th cousin 6 x removed :common ancestor John Winston :⇨FMFMFMFFMFMF / FFMMMF * 20th) James A. Garfield (1881) :4th cousin 5 x removed :common ancestor Elisabeth West :⇨MMFMMMMFFM / MMFMM * 21st) Chester A. Arthur (1881-1885) :7th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor Stevens :⇨MFFFFFMMMFFF / MMFFFFFFF * 22nd) Grover Cleveland (1885-1889) :7th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor John Martin :⇨MFFMFFMMFFMF / FFFMFMMF * 23rd) Benjamin Harrison (1889-1893) :7th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor Elizabeth Bernard :⇨MMFFMFMMMFFM / FFFFFFFM * 25th) William McKinley (1897-1901) :10th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor John Browne :⇨MFFFFMFMFMMMFFF / MFFMFFFFFFF * 26th) Theodore Roosevelt (1901-1909) :9th cousin four times removed :common ancestor Richard Dickinson :⇨MFFFFMMFMFFFFF / FMMFMMFFFF * 27th) William H. Taft (1909-1913) :7th cousin 3 x removed :common ancestor Catherine Killiam :⇨FMFMFFFFMMM / MMFMFFFM * 29th) Warren G. Harding (1921-1923) :8th cousin 3 x removed :common ancestor William Dickinson :⇨MFFFFMMFMFFF / MFFFFFFFF * 30th) Calvin Coolidge (1923-1929) :6 cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor Jonas Eaton :⇨MFFMFMFFMFF / FMMFFFF * 31st) Herbert Hoover (1929-1933) :9th cousin four times removed :common ancestor Agnes Dolman :⇨MMFFMFFMFFFMMM / MFMMFFFMFM * 32nd) Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1945) :6th cousin 4 x removed :common ancestor Hannah Glover :⇨MFFMFMMFMFM / MMFFMMM * 33rd) Harry S. Truman (1945-1953) :7th cousin 2 x removed :common ancestry Mary Grace James :⇨MMFMFMFMFM / MMFFFFFM * 36th) Lyndon B. Johnson (1963-1969) :12th cousin 1 x removed :common ancestor Lady Agnes Fisher :⇨MMFFMFMMMFMFMM / FFMFMMFFMFMMM * 37th) Richard M. Nixon (1969-1974) :11th cousin 1 x removed :common ancestor William Glover :⇨MFFMFMMFMFMFF / MMFMFMMFMMMF * 38th) Gerald R. Ford (1974-1977) :9th cousin 3 x removed :common ancestor Robert Seymour :⇨MMFMMMMFMMMMF / MFMMFFFFFF * 40th) Ronald Reagan (1981-1989) :14th cousin [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Notables_in_the_Belskey_Family-20 Click Here to view] common ancestors of Ronald Reagan and his wife, Jane Wyman :common ancestor Alexander Elphinstone, 2nd Lord Elphinstone :⇨MFFFFFFMMMFFMMF / MFMFMFMFMFFFFFF * 44th) Barack Obama (2009-) :11th cousin 1 x removed [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Notables_in_the_Belskey_Family-6 CLICK HERE TO VIEW] :common ancestor Ann French :⇨FFFFFMFMFMMFM / MMFFMMFMFMMM ⇨my PATH/their PATH to / from Common Ancestor ---- ==Science and Technology== *Philo Taylor Farnsworth 7th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Science and Technology View *Orville Wright 7th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Science and Technology View *Wilbur Wright 7th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Science and Technology View *Eli , Jr. Whitney 6th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Science and Technology View *Samuel Finley Breese Morse 8th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Science and Technology View *Thomas Alva Edison 10th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Science and Technology Vie ---- ==Movie Stars== *Humphrey De Forest Bogart 7th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Movie Stars View *Lucille Desiree Ball 8th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Movie Stars View *Henry Jaynes Fonda 9th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Movie Stars View *Oliver Norvell Hardy 9th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Movie Stars View *James Maitland Stewart 10th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Movie Starsw ---- ==Explorers== *David Stern Crockett 5th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Military Explorers View *Oliver Cromwell, 3rd Cousin 12 times removed ▼ Military Explorers View *Samuel William Houston 8th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Military Explorers View *William Clark 8th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Military Explorers View *Winston Leonard SPENCER-CHURCHILL 9th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Military Explorers *Horatio Nelson 9th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Military Explorers ---- ==Mayflower Passengers== *George Soule 10th Great Grandfather ▼ Mayflower View *John Howland 11th Great Uncle ▼ Mayflower View *Stephen Hopkins 11th Great Uncle ▼ Mayflower View *William Brewster 11th Great Uncle ▼ Mayflower View *Thomas Rogers 1st Cousin 12 times removed ▼ Mayflower View *William Bradford 3rd Cousin 10 times removed ▼ Mayflower View *Edward Winslow 2nd Cousin 13 times removed ▼ Mayflower View *William White 3rd Cousin 12 times removed ▼ Mayflower View *Richard More 5th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Mayflower View *Henry Sampson 10th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Mayflower View ---- ==Salem Witch Trials== *Deliverance Hazelton 4th Cousin 10 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *John Hale 3rd Cousin 12 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Mary Walcott 5th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Nathaniel Saltonstall 4th Cousin 10 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Rebecca Blake 4th Cousin 10 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Thomas Danforth 5th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Mary Perkins 6th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Susannah Sheldon 5th Cousin 10 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Waitstill Winthrop 5th Cousin 10 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *John Alden 6th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Edward Bishop 8th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials View *Elizabeth Hutchinson 11th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Salem Witch Trials ---- ==Poets and Authors== *Henry David Thoreau 6th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *Samuel Langhorne Clemens 8th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *Ernest Miller Hemingway 8th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *William Cuthbert Faulkner 10th Cousin ▼ Authors/Poets View *Louis Dearborn L'Amour 10th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *Robert Lee Frost 10th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *F. Scott Fitzgerald 11th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *Thomas Stearns Eliot 12th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets View *Herman Melville 13th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Authors/Poets ---- ==Business Leaders== *John Pierpont Morgan 6th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Business Leaders View *Howard Robard Hughes 7th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Business Leaders View *Cornelius Vanderbilt 7th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Business Leaders View *John Davison Rockefeller 7th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Business Leaders View *Colonel Sanders 11th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Business Leaders View *Lawrence Horne Miller 11th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Business Leaders ---- ==Famous Americans== *David Stern Crockett 5th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Susan Brownell Anthony 5th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Emily Elizabeth Dickinson 6th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Philo Taylor Farnsworth 7th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Elvis Aaron Presley 8th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Humphrey De Forest Bogart 7th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Marion Robert Morrison 8th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Truman Osborn Angell 6th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Jacob Vernon Hamblin 7th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Samuel Langhorne Clemens 8th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Buster Joseph Francis Keaton 9th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Charles Augustus Lindbergh 10th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Jesse Woodson James 9th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *John Davison Rockefeller 7th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Nathaniel ( Hathorne) Hawthorne 8th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *[[Disney-1|Walter Elias Disney]]▼[https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cb/Notables_in_the_Belskey_Family-19.jpg View Maternal & Paternal Charts] ::9th Cousin 1 times removed (Maternal) Margaret Hulins) ::7th Cousin 6 times removed (Paternal) Thomas Greene ::[[Special:Relationship|Wikitree Relationships Finder]] ::Corinne and Walt are 16th cousins twice removed ::The first common ancestor for Corinne (Belskey) Kuhlmann and Walt Disney is Thomas Heath. ::'''78 common ancestors''' were found within 25 generations *Amelia Mary EARHART 11th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Harry Lillis (Bing) Crosby 11th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Thomas Alva Edison 10th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *William Harrison 'Jack' Dempsey 13th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Famous Americans View *Robert LeRoy Parker 13th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ Famous Americans ---- ==European Royalty== *Elizabeth Tudor 2nd Cousin 13 times removed ▼ European Royalty View *Mary Tudor 2nd Cousin 13 times removed ▼ European Royalty View *James II of England, 13th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ European Royalty View *Anna Stuart, 14th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ European Royalty ---- ==Declaration of Independence Signers== *Thomas Stone 7th Great Grandfather ▼ Declaration Signers View *Carter Braxton 3rd Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Stephen Hopkins 3rd Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Oliver Wolcott 3rd Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Richard Henry Lee 4th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *William Whipple Jr. 3rd Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *John Hancock 5th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Benjamin W. Harrison 7th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Richard Stockton 6th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *William Floyd 7th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Joseph Hewes 6th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Francis Lightfoot Lee 8th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *George Wythe 8th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Josiah Bartlett 6th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Samuel Huntington 6th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Jeremiah Clark 7th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Robert Treat Paine 7th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *William Williams 7th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *(Pres.) John Adams 8th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Charles Carroll 8th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Benjamin Rush 9th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Thomas Lynch Jr. 9th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Thomas Nelson 10th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *George Walton 10th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Thomas Jefferson 12th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *William Ellery 11th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View *Philip Livingston 11th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Declaration Signers View ---- ==U.S. Constitution Signers== *Jonathan Dayton 4th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *William Blount 5th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *William Samuel Johnson 5th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Abraham Baldwin 5th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *James Madison 5th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Rufus King 6th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *(Hon) Nathaniel Gorham 5th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Nicholas Gilman 5th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Jared Ingersoll, Jr. 5th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *John Langdon 6th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *David Brearley 8th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Richard Dobbs Spaight 8th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Roger Sherman 6th Cousin 9 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Daniel Carroll 8th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers View *Gouverneur Morris 11th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ Constitution Signers ---- ==WIVES of US Presidents== *Helen or Nellie Herron 5th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Lucretia N. Rudolph 5th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Grace Anna Goodhue 6th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Mary Geneva Doud 7th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Elizabeth Virginia 'Bess' Wallace 8th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives *Frances Cornelia Folsom 7th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Julia Gardiner 6th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Eliza Kortright 5th Cousin 8 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Jane Means Appleton 6th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Mary Scott Lord 7th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Abigail Powers 6th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Alice Hathaway Lee 7th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Anna Tuthill Symmes 6th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Ellen Louise Axson 8th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Lou Henry 9th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Rachael Donelson 8th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Dolley Payne 7th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Caroline Carmichael 9th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Elizabeth Ann Bloomer 10th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Jane Wyman 9th Cousin 4 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Anna Eleanor Roosevelt 10th Cousin 3 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Edith Bolling 9th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Letita Christian 8th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Mackall Smith 9th Cousin 5 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Martha Dandridge 8th Cousin 7 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Ellen Lewis Herndon 9th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Julia Boggs Dent 9th Cousin 6 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Claudia Alta Taylor 13th Cousin 2 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives View *Mariea Wayles 14th Cousin 1 times removed ▼ U.S. Presidents' Wives

Famous Relatives

PageID: 27494613
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 234 views
Created: 16 Dec 2019
Saved: 17 Dec 2019
Touched: 29 Dec 2019
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 0
{{Example Profile | id = Burroughs-971 | name = '''George Burroughs''' (1st cousin 12x removed) | image = Witch_Trials-6.jpg | project = Witch Trials | project image = Witch_Trials.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Arnold-410 | name = '''Benedict Arnold''' (2nd cousin 8x removed) | image = Arnold-1028.jpg | project = Spies and Traitors | project image = Terry_s_Photos-267.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Edwards-914 | name = '''Jonathan Edwards''' (2nd cousin 10x removed) | image = Edwards-914-1.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Proctor-736 | name = '''John Proctor''' (2nd cousin 13x removed) | image = Proctor-736.jpg | project = Witch Trials | project image = Witch_Trials.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Tudor-4 | name = '''Henry VIII''' (2nd cousin 18x removed) | image = Tudor-280.jpg | project = British Royals and Aristocrats | project image = European_Aristocracy-8.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Webster-1379 | name = '''Noah Webster''' (3rd cousin 8x removed) | image = Webster-1379.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Adams-10 | name = '''John Adams''' (3rd cousin 10x removed) | image = John_Adams_1798_Gilbert_Stuart.jpg | project = US Presidents | project image = US_Images-23.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Muttabib-1 | name = '''Muhammad''' (3rd cousin 45x removed) | image = Al_Mustafa_Hashemites-1.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Hale-394 | name = '''Nathan Hale''' (4th cousin 8x removed) | image = Hale-394-1.jpg | project = Spies and Traitors | project image = Terry_s_Photos-267.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Brown-4000 | name = '''John Brown''' (5th cousin 7x removed) | image = Brown-4000-2.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Longfellow-7 | name = '''Henry Wadsworth Longfellow''' (5th cousin 7x removed) | image = Longfellow-7.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Smith-545 | name = '''Joseph Smith''' (6th cousin 6x removed) | image = Smith-2522.jpg | project = Latter Day Saints | project image = Terry_s_Photos-174.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Hickok-8 | name = '''Wild Bill Hickok''' (6th cousin 6x removed) | image = Hickok-111.jpg | project = Westward Ho | project image = Photos-238.gif }} {{Example Profile | id = Barnum-192 | name = '''P. T. Barnum''' (6th cousin 6x removed) | image = Barnum-192-9.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Franklin-1 | name = '''Benjamin Franklin''' (6th cousin 9x removed) | image = Ben-Franklin.gif | project = Activists and Reformers | project image = Terry_s_Photos-258.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Clemens-1 | name = '''Mark Twain''' (7th cousin 6x removed) | image = 1871-Samuel_Clemens.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Lincoln-103 | name = '''Abraham Lincoln''' (7th cousin 7x removed) | image = Lincoln_1865.jpg | project = US Presidents | project image = US_Images-23.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Obama-2 | name = '''Barack Obama''' (8th cousin 1x removed) | image = Photos_of_United_States_Presidents.png | project = US Presidents | project image = US_Images-23.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Presley-155 | name = '''Elvis Presley''' (8th cousin 2x removed) | image = Presley-155.png | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Temple-886 | name = '''Shirley Temple''' (8th cousin 3x removed) | image = Temple-886.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Disney-1 | name = '''Walt Disney''' (8th cousin 3x removed) | image = Disney-1.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Churchill-4 | name = '''Winston Churchill''' (8th cousin 4x removed) | image = Winston_churchill.jpg | project = England | project image = WikiTree-57.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Washington-11 | name = '''George Washington''' (9th cousin 9x removed) | image = George_Washington.jpg | project = US Presidents | project image = US_Images-23.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Wilberforce-2 | name = '''William Wilberforce''' (10th cousin 9x removed) | image = Wilberforce-2.jpg | project = England | project image = WikiTree-57.png }} {{Example Profile | id = King-4303 | name = '''Martin Luther King Jr.''' (11th cousin 4x removed) | image = King-4303-6.png | project = Activists and Reformers | project image = Terry_s_Photos-258.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Darwin-15 | name = '''Charles Darwin''' (11th cousin 6x removed) | image = Darwin-15.png | project = England | project image = WikiTree-57.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Jackson-2554 | name = '''Stonewall Jackson''' (12th cousin 5x removed) | image = Jackson-8948.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Habsburg-Lothringen-1 | name = '''Marie Antoinette''' (14th cousin 4x removed) | image = Von_Osterreich_Habsburg-Lothringen_Archduchess_of_Austria_-1.jpg | project = European Royals and Aristocrats | project image = European_Aristocracy-8.jpg }} {{Example Profile | id = Lewis-13750 | name = '''C. S. Lewis''' (14th cousin 5x removed) | image = Lewis-13750.jpg | project = Notables | project image = WikiTree_Image_Library-37.png }} {{Example Profile | id = Hannover-14 | name = '''Queen Victoria''' (16th cousin 2x removed) | image = Hanover-24.jpg | project = British Royals and Aristocrats | project image = European_Aristocracy-8.jpg }}



























































































































































































































































































































































































































Famous Smiths

PageID: 20277860
Inbound links: 1
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 531 views
Created: 4 Feb 2018
Saved: 5 Feb 2018
Touched: 5 Feb 2018
Managers: 1
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Project:
Images: 0
__NOTOC__ == Famous Smiths == ..NO One has claimed these ‘famous’ Smiths (listed by birth year), *James Smith (c1719 N. IRE - 1806 PA) Signer, Declaration of Independence (s/o-IMM John ''one of several bros who came from IRE c1729 to Chester&York Co.PA'', *William Smith (1727 Scotland - 1803 PA) President U of PA (s/o- IMM James (____-____) & Elizabeth (Duncan) Smith), *Abigail Smith (1744 MA -1818 MA) Wife of President John Adams (1735-1826), ~~ and Mother of President John Quincy Adams (1767-1848) (d/o- William & Elizabeth (Quincy) Smith) IMM Thomas & Sarah (Boylston) Smith, *Samuel Smith (1752 MD -1839 MD) Congressman & Mayor of Balt MD. Robert Smith (1757 MD -1842 MD) Cabinet member for Pres. George Washington. (both s/o- John & Mary(Buchanan) Smith) John s/o- IMM Samuel (c1690 IRE-1784 MD), *Jeremiah Smith (1759 NH - 1842 NH) Gov. of New Hampshire 1809-10 see Governor Smith Mansion in Wiscasset ME (s/o- William (1723-1808 NH) & Elizabeth (Morrison) Smith) IMM Robert d.1766 NH, *Samuel Emerson Smith (1788 NH -1860 ME) Gov. of Maine 1831-34, (s/o- Manasseh (1749 MA-1823 ME) &Hannah (Emerson)Smith IMM Robert d.1766 NH, *Junius Smith (1780 CT -1853 NY) Lawyer, promoted the 1st Ocean Liners (s/o- David & Ruth (Hitchcock) Smith) IMM Richard d.1682 CT m. Bathsheba Rogers, *Gerrit Smith (1797 NY -1874 NYC) Reformer, Abolitionist, Philanthropist, (s/o- Peter & Elizabeth (Livingston) Smith) IMM Lambert d.post 1750 NY, *William Smith (1817 ENG-1912 NY) founder 'William Smith & Hobart Colleges', (s/o- Unknown & Anne Smith) William was the Immigrant, *William Wallace Smith (1830 -1913), & his brother, Andrew Smith (1836 -1894) 'Smith Brothers Cough Drops', (both sons of - IMM James Smith c.1800 Scotland -d.1866 NY, *Henry A. Smith (1830 OH -1915 WA) Physician, Early settler of Seattle WA, (s/o- Rev. Nicholas Copleton Smith) ''....of German Ancestry'', *Henry Smith (1838 MD - 1916) US Rep. from Wisconsin, (s/o- IMM Henry & Catherine (____) Smith from Germany, *Theobald Smith (1859 NY - 1934 TX) Animal Pathologist, (s/o- IMM Philip Smith (b.Germany) & Theresa (Kexel) Smith), *Charles Manley Smith (1868 VT -1937 VT) Gov. of Vermont 1935-37 (s/o- Hiram A. & Sarah (Manley) Smith) poss. IMM Richard 1690 IRE-1763 NJ, *Henry Perkins Smith III (1911 NY - 1995 Wash.DC) US Rep. from New York, (s/o- Henry P. & Ida Hale Hubble Smith) IMM John 'ye Smith' d.1704 Milford CT, *3 Brothers, **Paul J.'Napoleon' Smith (1906 MI-1980 CA) Animation Composer for Disney, **Frank A. Smith (1911 MI - 1975 CA) Cartoonist, Animator, Frank was father of Actor Charles Martin Smith b.1953 CA, **Hank Smith (1913 MI -Unknown__) TV Cartoonist, (all sons of- IMM William H. Smith (b.1872 ENG - d.____ MI?), *IMM Howard Smith 'Trevor Howard' (1913 ENG -1968 CA) Movie Actor, (s/o- Arthur John Howard-Smith, Lloyds of London, Ceylon office, & Mabel Gray Wallace b. Canada, Nurse), *'Buffalo Bob' Smith (1917 Buff. NY -1998) Actor, 'Howdy Doody Show', *'Robert Schmidt' (s/o- IMM Emil H. & Emma(Kuehn)Schmidt, b.Germ) NYT Obit, ..I don't know the IMMIGRANT clan of these Smiths ... NO One has claimed them, *James Smith (___-___) & wife Persis Founded 'Smith Academy' St Lewis, MO, (s/o-Unknown, *William Stephens Smith (1755 NYC -1816 Chenango Co.NY) Revo. Soldier, (s/o- John & Margaret (Stephens) Smith), (William m. Abigail Adams, d/o-Pres. John Adams, sister of Pres.John Quincy Adams), *Henry Smith (1788 KY- 1851 CA) 1st American-born Governor of TX, (s/o- James & Magdalene (Woods) Smith), *Erastus 'deaf' Smith (1787 NY - 1838 TX) Explorer, Scout, (s/o- Chiliab & Mary (____) Smith) possibly GROUP 7, *Caleb Blood Smith (1808 MA-1864 OH) Sec. of Interior for Pres. Lincoln, (s/o- John Smith 'who moved from Boston MA to OH c.1814'), *Samuel Francis Smith (1808 MA-1895) Clergyman, wrote words for ''America'', (s/o- Samuel & Mary (Bryant) Smith), *Thomas Buckingham Smith (1810 CT-1871 NY) Pioneer of FL Everglades, (s/o-Josiah d.1835 MEX & Hannah (Smith) Smith) NEHGR Vol 6, *John Lawrence Smith (1818 SC-1883 KY) Award winning Chemist & Prof., (s/o-Unknown___, *Hamilton Lanphere Smith (1819 CT - 1903) Teacher, Scientist, (s/o- Anson & Amy (Beckwith) Smith), *Charles Henry Smith (1827 ME -____) Union General, Maine State Senator, (s/o- Aaron & Sally (Giles) Smith), *James L. 'Whispering' Smith (1838 MD - 1914 CO) Hired Gunman, (poss. s/o- James & Lydia (Perry) Smith ), *Francis Hopkinson Smith (1838 MD -1915) Engineer, Artist & Author, (s/o- Francis & Susan (Teacle) Smith), *Charles Emory Smith (1842 CT-1908 PA) Diplomat & Postmaster General, (s/o- Emory B. & Arvilla (Toplif, Royce) Smith), *John Walter Smith (1845 MD -1925 MD) Gov. of Maryland 1900-04, (s/o- John Walter & Charlotte (Whittington) Smith), *Francis Marion Smith (1846 WI - 1931 CA) ''20 Mule Team Borax'', (s/o- Henry G. & Charlotte (Paul) Smith, Henry G. was s/o- Abraham Smith), *Hoke Smith (1855 NC -1931 GA) Sec.of Interior for Pres.Grover Cleveland, (s/o- Hosea (b.in NH) & Mary Brent (Hoke) Smith), *Henry Cassorte Smith (c1856 NY - 1911 MI) US Rep. from Michigan, (s/o- Walter/Wanton G. & Maria (Mitchell) Smith) 'MI Bios' p.301 Lenawee Co., *Lucius Anton (1858 IA-__) & Clement (1866 IA-__)Smith ''Great Smith Auto Co.'' KS, (s/o- Lucius VanRensellaer & Elizabeth (Leeson) Smith), *Elmer Boyd Smith (1860 N.Bruns CAN - 1943) Author, Illustrator, (s/o-Wm. B (b.1833 CAN & Mary b. CAN) see 1880 MA Boston, *Jessie Willcox Smith (1863 Phila. PA - 1935 PA) Artist, Illustrator, (d/o-Charles Smith (b.1819 NY) & Katherine Dewitt Willcox) see-EKA Roswell (1787-1869), *‘Lillian Smith’ 'Princess Wenona' (1871 CA?-1930 OK) World-class Sharpshooter, (her real name was probably Maud Fontannielo – she’s not a Smith !!), *Alfred Emanuel Smith (1873 NYC - 1944) Governor of NY, (s/o- Alfred E. & Catherine (Mullvihill) Smith), *Robert Sidney Smith (1877 IL -1935) Cartoonist, Chicago Tribune 'The Gumps', (s/o- Thomas H. & Francis (Shaffer) Smith), *Robert Holbrook Smith,Dr (1879 VT-1950 OH) co-founder 'Alcoholics Anonymous', (s/o- Walter Perrin & Susan (Holbrook) Smith), *Holland 'Howling Mad' Smith (1882 AL-1967 CA) USMC 'Father of amphibious warfare', (s/o- John Victor & Cornelia E. (McTyerie) Smith), *Moe W. Smith (c1887 NY - 1960/61 NY) Federal Agent during Prohibition, (s/o-Unknown__, *Edward Elmer Smith (1890 WI - 1965 OR) Food Chemist & Sci-Fi author, (s/o- Frederick J. & Caroline (Mills) Smith), *James Thorne Smith (1892 MD - 1934 FL) Author, ''Topper'' books series,(s/o- James Thorne USN & Louise (Rundle) Smith), *Pete Smith /Schmidt (1892 -1979 ) WWII Docu-dramas for MGM, (s/o-Unknown__, *Gladys Louise Smith 'Mary Pickford' (1892 Toronto CAN -1979 CA) Actress, (d/o- John Charles Smith & Charlotte Hennesey), John's father Unknown_ was a Methodist Minister from ENG, *General Walter Bedell Smith (1895 IN - 1961), Ike's Chief of Staff, Ambasador to USSR, Director of CIA, (s/o- William D. (b.1854 OH & Ida F. (b.1861 IN) see 1900 IN Marion Co., *Gerald Lyman Kenneth Smith (1898 WI-1976 AR) Religious & Political Extremist, (s/o- Lyman Z. & Sarah Smith), *Cyrus Rowlett Smith (1899 TX - 1990 TX) CEO American Airlines for 40 yrs, (s/o- Roy E. (b.TX) & Marion Smith), *Cecil Louis Troughton Smith aka- C.S. Forester (1899 Cairo –1966 CA), Author ‘African Queen’, ‘Horatio Hornblower’ series, etc, *Thomas Smith (____ - ____) of Avalon Rubber Co. Barberton OH...in late 1920’s started Sun Rubber Co. Akron OH, for WWII made Mickey Mouse Gas mask, 1st black doll, etc., *Richard B. Smith (1901 PA - 1935) wrote song ''Winter Wonderland'', (s/o-Unknown___, *David Smith (1906 IN - 1963) American Sculptor, (s/o- Harvey Martin Smith & Golda Stoler), *Henry Nash Smith (1906 TX -1986) American social & literature scientist, (s/o- Lloyd B.(1878 TX) & Elizabeth B. Smith), *Kent Frank Smith (1907 NYC - 1985 CA) Movie & TV actor, (s/o-Unknown__, *Willard Smith (1910 MI - 2000 FL) Admiral, 1st Aviator in US Coast Guard, (s/o-Unknown__, *Howard Kingsbury Smith (1914 LA - 2002) WWII journalist, ABC News anchor, (s/o- Howard K. & Minnie (Gates) Smith), *Howard K's son, Harry Smith (b.1951 IL –Unknown) CBS TV Newscaster, *Harold John 'Hal' Smith (1916 MI - 1994 CA) Actor & Cartoon voices, (s/o-Unknown, *William French Smith (1917 NH - 1990) US Attorney General, (s/o-Unknown, *William Eugene Smith (1918 KS - 1978 AZ) Photojournalist, (s/o- William H. & Nettie Smith), *Oliver Smith (1918 WI -1994 NY) Award winning Broadway set designner, (s/o-Unknown_, *Charles Smith (1920 MI - 1988 CA) Movie Actor, (s/o-Unknown_, *Roger Bonham Smith (1921/25 OH - 2007) CEO of General Motors, (s/o- Emmet Quimby & Bess (Obetz) Smith), *Richard Emerson 'Dick' Smith (1922 NY- 2014 CA) Oscar Winning Make-up Artist, (s/o- Richard Roy & Carol (Brown) Smith), *Stephen Edward Smith (1927 NY-1990 NY) brother-in law of Pres. John F. Kennedy, (s/o- John J. & Julia (Cleary) Smith), *Thomas William ‘Tucker’ Smith (1936 PA -1988 CA), dancer in Hollywood films ‘West Side Story’ & more, *Michael Smith (1945 NC -1986 FL) Astronaut, killed in 'Challenger' explosion, (s/o- Unknown_, *Troy N____ Smith (____-____), founder of SONIC drive-ins, late 1940’s Shawnee OK, *SMITH ____ & Miller____ ‘Smitty Toys’ cast iron toys. 1945 Santa Monica CA, (sold to Fred Thompson in AZ in 1979), ..these Smiths are, or may be LIVING, *Rosalynn Eleanor Smith (1927 GA - ____) wife of US President Jimmy Carter, (d/o- Wilburn & Aletha (Murray) Smith) >EKA James & Ruth (Lynch) Smith of VA, *Roger LaVerne Smith (1932 CA -____) Actor, husband of actress Ann Margaret, *William Smith (1933 MO - ____) Movie Actor, *David R. Smith (1940 CA - ____) Walt Disney Archivist, *Steve Smith Jr. (1945 CAN - ____) The Red-Green Show on PBS, *Richard Norton Smith (____, Hist.Prof. George Mason U VA & PBS news commentator, *Gregg Smith (____, author 'History of Beer', appeared on Food Network TV, *Dr. Bob Smith (____, Geologist, U of Utah, Science Channel TV, *Kevin Smith (____, Editor 'Motor Trend' Magazine (in 2004), *Robert Smith (____, NPR Radio commentator, == Famous Smiths by Known yDNA Group (SmithConnections Northeastern) == Jan 2018, 'Famous' SMITHS in our Northeast Smiths yDNA Groups, (there are more from female lines in each Clan. I list SMITH surnames only), GROUP 1 Imm Lt. Samuel Smith d.1680 MA, *Worthington Smith (1795 MA-1856 VT) Cong. Minister, Pres.U of VT, (s/o- Seth & Lydia (Smith) Smith), *Sophia Smith (1796 MA - 1870 MA) Founder of Smith College, (d/o- Joseph & Lois (White) Smith), *Jedediah Strong Smith (1798 NY-1831 Cimmaron KS) Western Explorer, (s/o- Jedediah & Sally (Strong) Smith), *Soloman Franklin Smith (1801 NY-1869 MO) Actor, Theatrical manager, (s/o- Levi & Hannah (Holland) Smith), *Christopher Columbus Smith (1860 MI-1939 MI) Founder 'Chris Craft' Boat Co. (s/o- James & Harriet (Hazard) Smith) GROUP 2 Imm Andrew Smith d.1717 MA, *Lula Carson Smith aka-Carson McCullers (1917 GA -1967 NY) Author, (d/o- Unknown__Smith, GROUP 3 Imm Francis Smith d.1679 MA, *Seba Smith (1792 ME -1868 NY) aka-'Major Jack Downing' Political satirist, (s/o- Seba & Aphia (Stevens) Smith) *Henry Boynton Smith (1815 ME -1877 NYC) Clergyman, Theologian, Author, (s/o- Henry & Arixene (Southgate) Smith), *Jay Hungerford Smith (1855 NY-1932 NY) Manufacturer of fruit syrups, etc., (s/o- William Priest & Sarah (Porter, Hungerford) Smith) GROUP 4 IMM Henry Smith d.1687 CT, *Clay Jamison Smith (1914 KS -2002 KS) Baseball player -Cleveland & Detroit, (s/o- Clay Calvin & Christina (Wilson) Smith) GROUP 5 Imm John Smith d.1669 MA & his Sons John & Richard, *John Gregory Smith (1818 VT -1891 VT) Governor of VT, (s/o- John & Maria (Curtis) Smith) via Son John, *Jesse Merrick Smith (1848 OH-1926 NY) Pres.Amer.Soc.Mechanical Engineers, (s/o- Henry & Lucinda (Salisbury) Smith) via Son John, *Edward Curtis Smith (1855 VT -1925 VT) Governor of VT, (s/o- John Gregory (above) & Ann (Brainerd) Smith) via Son John, *Clyde Harold Smith (1876 ME -1940 DC) Senator from Maine 1937-40, (s/o- *Willard & Angie (Bartlett) Smith) via Son John, - husband of Senator from ME, Margaret (Chase) Smith (1897-1995), *Nathaniel (1762-1822) & Nathan (1770-1835) Smith Lawyers & Politicians in CT, (Both sons of - Richard & Annis (Hurd) Smith) via Son Richard, *Truman Smith (1791 CT-1884) nephew of Nat & Nathan Senator from CT, (s/o- Phineas & Deborah (Judson) Smith) via Son Richard, *Carleton Sprague Smith (1905 NY-1994 CT) Musicologist & specialist in Hispanic cultures, (s/o- Clarence B. & Catherine (Cook) Smith) via Son Richard, *Glendon Francis Smith (1922 IN-2008 AZ) Probe Inventor for DBS for Parkinson’s Disease, (s/o- Joseph Howard & Margaret Lucille (Holaday) Smith) GROUP 7 Imm Rev. Henry Smith d.1648 CT, *Israel Smith (1759 CT - 1810 VT) US Senator, Governor of VT, (s/o- Daniel & Anna (Kent) Smith), *John Cotton Smith (1765 CT - 1845) Diplomat & Governor of CT, (s/o- Rev. Cotton Mather & Temperance (Worthington, Gale) Smith), *Horace Smith (1808 Cheshire MA -1893 MA) 'Smith & Wesson Gun Co.', (s/o- Silas & Pheobe (Rogers) Smith), *Henry Preserved Smith (1847 OH-1927 NY), Clergyman, Theological author, (s/o- Preserved & Lucy (Mayo) Smith) GROUP 9 Imm Rev. John Smith d.post 1688 MA, *Morgan Lewis Smith (1821 NY -1874 NJ) Union Brig.General, Civil War, *Giles Alexander Smith (1829 NY -1876 IL) Union General, Civil War, (Both sons of - Cyrus & Laura (Wales) Smith) GROUP 10 Imm William Smith d.1654 MA, *Henry Welles Smith (aka-Henry Fowle Durant)(1822 NH-1881 MA) Founder Wellesley College, (s/o- William & Harriet (Fowle) Smith), *Mary Addeline SMITH Williams (1838 KS -1879 KS) 1st Woman to climb Pikes Peak, (d/o- Stephen & Angelina (Cummings) Smith) GROUP 12 Imm Thomas Smith d.1724 CT, *Eli Smith (1801 CT -1857 Beirut Lebanon) Missionary, Linguist, translator, (s/o- Eli & Polly (Whitney) Smith), *James Smith (1831 Nova Scotia - 1898 MA) Banker, US Rep. from MA, (s/o- William & Catherine (Murray) Smith) Imm. John Smith b.1729 Scotland GROUP 15 Imm William Smith d.c 1668 Long Island NY, *Rev. Daniel Smith (1767-1846 CT) Grad Yale 1791 noteworthy Theologians & Ministers, *.and his son, Rev. Thomas Mather Smith (1796 -post 1828), *..and his son, Rev. John Cotton Smith (1826 MA - 1882 NY), *...and his son, Rev. Roland Cotton Smith (1860 ME -1934 Wash, DC) GROUP 18 Imm Christopher Smith d.1676 RI, *Augustus William Smith (1802-1866) Pres. Wesleyan University CT 1852-1857, (s/o- Seth & Deliverence (Nichols) Smith), *Augustus Ledyard Smith (1901-1985) noteworthy American archaeologist in Guatemala (s/o- Franklin & Mary (Eliot) Smith) *Ethan Smith (1762 MA - 1849 NY) Clergyman, Author (s/o- Elijah & Sybil (Worthington) Smith) *Elihu Hubbard Smith (1771 CT-1798 NYC) Physician d. in yellow fever epidemic, (s/o- Reuben & Abigail (Hubbard) Smith), *Joseph Lee Smith (1776 CT-1846 FL) Jurist, father of Ephraim Kirby & Edmund *Kirby Smith., (Grandfather of Joseph Lee Smith - all noteworthy military men), (s/o- Elnathan & Chloe (Lee) Smith), *Ashbel Smith (1805 CT -1886 TX) 'Father of Texas Medicine', (s/o- Moses & Pheobe (Adams) Smith), *Erasmus Peshine Smith (1814 NYC -1882 NY) Jurist, International Lawyer, (s/o- Erasmus Darwin & Eliza (Peshine) Smith, *Edmund Kirby Smith (1824 FL -1893) Confederate General -Civil War, (s/o- Joseph Lee & Frances (Kirby) Smith), *Edmund's statue is the ONLY Smith in the US Capitol Bldg. Washington, DC, *Charles Alvord Smith (1828 OH-1905 IA) Union soldier, wrote book on Andersonville Prison, (s/o- Sylvester & Lucretia Catlin (Woodworth) Smith) GROUP 21 Imm James Smith d.1676 MA, *Steven Carlton Smith (1949 –2011 NV) Award winning True-Crime Author, (s/o- Jack Baylis Smith 1920-2008) both did yDNA GROUP 26 Imms James d.1753 NH & Lt Thomas Smith d.1768 NH, *John Butler Smith (1838 NH - 1914 NH) Governor of NH, (s/o- Ammi & Lydia (Butler) Smith) GROUP 33 Imm Robert Smith d.1706 NH, *Francis Ormand Jonathan Smith (1807 NH -1876 ME) US Rep from ME, (s/o- Jonathan & Elizabeth (Bean) Smith), *Frederick Smith (1819 NH-1899 Berm.) Gov. NH, founder US Veterans Administration, (s/o- Stephen & Dorothy (Rowe) Smith), *George Edward Smith (1849 NH -1919 MA) Railroad Attorney, Pres. MA Senate, *Clarence Cheney Smith (1865 NH -1943 MA) Justice, MA Land Court for over 20 years, (Both s/o- David Hibbard & Esther (Sanborn, Perkins) Smith), *Winford Henry Smith (1877 ME - 1961 MD) Director Johns Hopkins Hosp. Balt.MD, & Chief of Hospitals for US Armed Forces in WW I, (s/o- George Pray & Anna (Chapman) Smith) GROUP 37 Imm Rev. Nehemiah Smith d.1686 CT, *James Youngs Smith (1809 -1878) Governor of RI, (s/o- Amos D. & Priscilla (Mitchell) Smith) GROUP 39 Imm John Smith d.1684 Milford CT, *Lyman Cornelius Smith (1850 CT -1910 NY) 'Smith-Corona Typewriters', (s/o- Lewis S. & Eliza Ann (Hurlbut) Smith) GROUP 40 Imm John 'the miller' Smith d.1648 RI, *Henry Smith (1766 RI - 1818 RI) Governor of RI, (s/o- Job & Ruth (Harris) Smith) GROUP 47 Imm Henry Smith d.1649 Rehoboth MA, *Dr Nathan Smith (1762 MA -1829 MA) Founder of Yale Medical College, -and his son, Dr Nathan Ryno Smith (1797 NH-1877 MD) Surgeon & Professor, (Dr Nathan b.1762 was s/o- John & Elizabeth (Ide, Hills) Smith) GROUP 49 Imm Carl Schmidt/Smith d.1783 PA, *George Williams Smith, MD. (1916 - 1964), Neurosurgeon, who developed first power driven Cranial Perforator, (s/o- Milton Bressler & Eula Frances (Williams) Smith) GROUP 52 Imm William Smith d.1743 PA, *Samuel Rodman Smith (1841 DE-1912 FL) Civil War Medal of Honor fr DE, Mayor-Miami FL, (s/o- Albert W. & Elizabeth (Wollaston) Smith), *Richard Allen Smith (____TX - living Texas House of Representatives, (s/o- Arthur Madison Smith) GROUP 53 Imm Robert Smith d.1693 Boxford MA, *Joseph Smith (1805 VT -1844 IL) (s/o- Joseph & Lucy (Mack) Smith), Prophet & 1st President, Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints GROUP 55 Imm John Smith d.1672 Ipswich MA, *Asa Dodge Smith (1804 NH -1877 NH) Clergyman, Pres. Dartmouth College, (s/o- Rogers & Sally (Dodge) Smith) GROUP 65 Immigrant Unknown, *Walter Wellesley 'Red' Smith (1905 WI -1982 CT) Sportswriter, commentator, (s/o-Wallace Smith b.1878 NY) Red's son,Terrance Smith (b.___- living? TV Journalist

Famous Swartwouts, et al - Part of the Swartwout Name STudy

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The page will include links to profiles of famous Swartwouts, Swarthouts, Swartouts, Swartwoods, Blackwoods, and Swartwoudts. These profiles will be submitted to the Notables Project for consideration. [[Space:Swartwout_Name_Study|The Swartwout Name Study.]] *[[Swarthout-127|Gladys Swarthout]] *[[Swarthout-441|Glendon Swarthout]]

Fan Chart

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Bromeling-1|Loreen Silvarahawk]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=7360941 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fan Chart (Paternal Ancestry) / Walker - Stewart Family Genealogy

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'''''Ancestral Fan Chart compiled by Jean (Potter) Stewart and daughter Margaret Stewart Straus, Madison, Wisconsin, in 2003.''''' The goal of this project is to convert the marginal notes from the Walker - Stewart Fan Chart from hand-lettered material into text. My copy of the Fan Chart is inside the blue three-ring binder, ''Stewart-Walker Genealogy''. Note: J. Stewart has two copies of this binder This is a one-person project at this time (August 2019). Longer term, it might be worth finding out which, if any of the names mentioned are already in WT; linking them would add to the value. (Thinking out loud, I wonder if it would make more sense to re-order the notes by ordinal number of generation... For now, I want to enter them in all in the printed sequence; I will consider re-ordering them later. Also, now that the basic entry is complete, I wonder WHY I started at the bottom?) (Note: IMHO, seeing the full chart is relatively important to getting the full grasp of the genealogical connections.) I have also spelled out, or otherwise expanded, some abbreviations, where appropriate) Transcription performed by: [[Stewart-18822|J. A. Stewart]] == Research Notes == (a) These marginal notes are not numbered, and most of the references, if any, are only to the 6th (for example) Generation. I have begun at the bottom left of the Chart and transcribed them. 1. 8th Generation -- Benjamin Pierce was a relative of Franklin Pierce, our 14th President. They shared great-great-grandparents, Steven Pierce and Tabitha Parker. 2. 5th Generation -- Samuel Stewart (Steuart) "left Scotland on the River Clyde" in 1802 (age 3) with his parents and brother Arthur (1788 - 1863) and perhaps other children. They settled in Ballieborough, Ireland. In 1842, Samuel came to America with his wife, Margaret. They landed in Southport, which is now Kenosha, Kenosha County, Wisconsin, then went on to farm in Richmond, Wisconsin (on the west side of Highway 89). 3. 5th Generation -- Eliza Ann O'Neill was married previously to Hans Russell, was widowed (?) born 1824 - died 14 Oct 1862, Westfield, Wisconsin. 4. 6th Generation -- John Tompkins came from [the] north of England to Plymouth, Massachusetts, 1630. Ancestor of Arnold Bloomer Tompkins. 5. 8th Generation -- Samson Walker, Revolutionary War soldier 6. 6th Generation -- Jessie Warren Walker Jr., came down Erie Canal with rocking chair and bed. He was a pioneer settler in Black Earth, Dane County, Wisconsin. 7. 8th Generation -- Jonas Hazeltine was a Revolutionary War soldier. He was buried in the Meeting House Cemetery with his wife in Rockingham, Vermont. 8. 8th Generation -- [Included in error?] 9. 8th Generation -- Benjamin Pierce was an aide-de-camp to General Washington. (See Lovejoy Genealogy, page 69) "More below." 10. 9th Generation -- Eunice Gilson probably has Mayflower ancestors. 11. 9th Generation -- Captain Jonathan Burton ("continued above"), was in the 4th Company [need to expand this?]. Had nine children. Picture, and the Winter Hill Diary (near Boston -- Wimter 1775 - 76), and more information in History of Milton, [Strafford County,] New Hampshire (more above). 12.9th Generation -- Colonel Phillip Putnam (DAR #46700). Revolutionary War soldier. He was captain of a company mustered 26 Sep 1776 in New York and was at the Battle of White Plains, appointed a Colonel of Militia, (continued above). 13. 9th Generation -- Lieutenant William Pierce was a Revolutionary War soldier. Served in Captain Nathan Ballard's Company, at the time of the alarm in June, 1777, also expedition to Rhode Island, 1778. 14. 10th Generation -- Jacob Putnam had a saw mill and was a farmer. He lived in Wilton, Strafford County, New Hampshire, in 1739. 15. 13th Generation -- Captain Nathaniel Putnam is the link through John Putnam, his father, in the book, The Putnam Lineage, by Eben Putnam, 1907, The Salem Press Company, Salem, Massachusetts. More above. 16. 8th Generation -- Hannah Putnam's line is traced back to Charles Martel who ruled the Franks from 719 to 741 A. D. (His grandson was Charlemagne, King of France from 768 to 814 A. D. 17. Also see ''Americans of Royal Descent'', by C. H. Browning, and ''History of Wilton, New Hampshire''. 18. (Continued) -- Colonel Phillip Putnam [was?] one of the three largest taxpayers in Wilton {New Hampshire] for some years, and a Selectman for three years. 19. 9th Generation -- (Continued) Jonathan Burton. Captain and Major. In 1769(?) before he came to Wilton, New Hampshire. He served at Louisberg, Winterhill, and was Lieutenant in the Ticonderoga Campaign, 1775. Was a captain of the militia in New Hampshire. In 1786, was appointed Brigade Major by Governor Bartlett. A Justice of the Peace for fifteen years and a Selectman of Wilton for fiftenn years. 20. 13th Generation -- John Burton, freeman of Salem, Massachusetts, 1638. His farm joined that of Governor Endicott. According to the records of the court he ws one of the persecuted Quakers of his time. In 1658 he attempted to escape with others to Rhode Island that he might enjoy his opinions undisturbed. While on his way, he was arrested at Dedham, brought back, and put in the stocks for his very bold speech to the dignitaries of the court at Salem. 21. 14th Generation -- Boniface Burton, made a freeman in Lynn, Massachusetts. 1635, a farmer,and ancestor of nearly all the Burtons in this country. In Lewis' History of Lynn, Massachusetts, is more information. 22. In Weston, Vermont, there are living Walker relatives. The Walker homestead was built by Isaac Walker about 150 years ago in Andover, Vermont. The house is two or three miles north of Weston, Vermont. The house was in good condition when we (Warren, Jean, Marilyn, David, Douglas, and Carol Stewart) saw it in July, 1959. A Davis couple from Connecticut bought the house recently. A little north, almost directly across the street from the homestead is the Andover Cemetery. Jesse Walker, Senior, and Samson Walker and their wives are buried there; also many other Walkers. 23. Miles Standish is in the Walker line according to Janey Gehri Theobald (See information to the right). 24. 12th Generation -- Robert Hazeltine. Some of the early Hazeltines are buried on Copps Hill, in Boston, Massachusetts. 25. 13th Generation -- Thomas Putnam was the grandfather of General Israel Putnam, of Revolutionary War fame (fought in the Battle of Bunker Hill). 26. Putnam information, Generations 9 through 14 see: History of the Town of Wilton, New Hampshire; also Lyndeborough History, Boston Public Library, and New England Genealogical Society. 27. 10th Generation -- William Gutterson. His father married Abigail Buckmaster. Abigail's mother was Sarah Webb. William Shakespeare's grandparents were the same as our line! 28. 10th Generation -- Samuel Belden. His father was John Belden who married Lydia Standish on 24 April 1657. Lydia's father was Thomas Standish, possibly son of Miles Standish and Rose. Probably only related, not descended.

Fan Chart app

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The WikiTree Fan Chart app can be used to create a customized display showing the direct ancestors of any individual listed on WikiTree. User-specified settings control the display form of personal metadata (names, dates, places), inclusion of thumbnail photos, and how colours are used to highlight characteristics such as gender, generation, grandparents' lines, DNA inheritance paths, DNA confirmations, and birth/death locations. The Fan Chart lets you examine a person's vital statistics, jump to any person's profile, or jump to a new Fan Chart for any person in the tree. '''History''': The Fan Chart app was originally programmed by [[Clarke-11007|Greg Clarke]] and created as a standalone appYou may be interested in the [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gYv-HVFHpoLf7qxQ4EHIl4iVnsus-N5lMz6mH2TBBlo Original Google Doc help document] , which still functions. (The most recent update for the standalone app was a tweak in January, 2023.) The standalone Fan Chart app is in end-of-life maintenance mode. That is, there will be no further development of new features in the standalone Fan Chart app. New features will be developed exclusively in the Fan Chart as a WikiTree Tree App. (The only feature not being added to the Tree App is the ability to add checkboxes to each ancestor wedge, which could be used for tracking purposes, if you want this option, use the [https://apps.wikitree.com/apps/clarke11007/fan.php standalone app].) Since Hacktoberfest, 2022, a Tree App version of the app is available from any WikiTree profile, which makes it easier to access, and which has now all (but one) of the same features as the original standalone version, plus a number of new features not available on the older one. '''Future''': The focus for this Free Space help page is the WikiTree Tree App version of the Fan Chart, which will continue to receive updates, bug fixes, and new features in the future. The most recent version of the Fan Chart as a WikiTree Tree App was updated in August 2023 by Greg Clarke. New features — within the last six months — are marked by NEW ! If you have any questions, suggestions, or bug reports about the app, please send [[Clarke-11007#PM-19066309-0|Greg]] a message on WikiTree. ==How-To Guide== This quick how-to guide will show you how to use the various features of the app. We recommend that you enable the WikiTree Browser Extension (WBE) feature — Image Zoom. Some of the images presented in this document are purposely smaller than full size so that we can present them side-by-side or as a group, rather than scrolling through a long series of full-size screenshots.. With WBE's Image Zoom enabled, you can just click in the bottom right corner of any screenshot and you'll get an enlarged version of the same image. If you haven't been using it already, this is a good time to get started — [[Space:WikiTree_Browser_Extension|WikiTree Browser Extension]]. === Starting the Fan Chart app === To use the Fan Chart app, there are three actions you need to take # Select '''Tree Apps''' from the horizontal tabs on any WikiTree person profile # Select '''Fan Chart''' from the pulldown menu # Customize the display to suit your purpose * On any WikiTree person profile, click on the '''Tree Apps''' tab. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-18.png |align=l |size=large |label=Click on '''Tree Apps''' tab and then select '''Fan Chart'''. |caption=Profile of Maurice Richard-1571. }} {{Clear}} * The WikiTree ID of the profile is carried over. * Choose '''Fan Chart'''. It will automatically load up, without you having to enter anything. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-19.png |align=l |size=large |label=Please wait while the Fan Chart is loading. |caption=Please wait while the Fan Chart is loading. }} {{Clear}} * Initially, you will see a message asking you please wait— typically only a few seconds. * Then the chart is displayed and you can adjust the size and settings to suit your purpose. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-80.png |align=l |size=large |label=Adjust the size and settings to suit your purpose. |caption=Fan Chart for Maurice Richard. }} {{Clear}} === The Fan Chart === The Fan Chart places the Primary Person in the very middle of the Fan. Then, the person's father is listed to the left, and the person's mother is listed to the right, in a ring or arc around the Primary Person. The next ring holds the names of the grandparents, then the great-grandparents, and so forth. Each ring holding the next generation as the chart radiates outwards from the Primary Person. '''Printing your Fan Chart'''
You can print your Fan Chart at any time by using your system '''File'''->'''Print...''' menu. We have found that the Fan Charts fit the page best in landscape mode. (The Print dialog box for each of the browsers in the different operating systems varies, so we aren't going to show you all the different versions.) Once you have selected your options, you may choose to send your Fan Chart to a local printer, or you may elect to '''Save as PDF'''. '''Shareable Image — Coming Soon'''
We hope to offer you a button to save a shareable image of your Fan Chart. Watch this page for future developments. === Profile Detail Popup === Click on any ancestor to reveal their details in a pop-up — birth and death dates and places; a link to their WikiTree profile; and, a quick link to their Fan Chart, the Descendants app (NEW), and the Bio Check app (NEW). {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-44.png |align=l |size=large |label=Click on any person to see Profile Detail Popup. |caption=Fan Chart — Profile Detail Popup }} {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-101.png |align=r |size=m |label=Click person's name to open profile in new tab. Click Fan Chart icon to open profile with Fan Chart. |caption=Fan Chart — Profile Detail Card }} * Click the person's name to open their profile in a new tab. * Click the Fan Chart icon to open that profile in Fan Chart. * Click the Descendants icon to open that profile in the Descendants tree app. (NEW) * Click the Bio Check link to open that profile in the Bio Check app. (NEW) {{Clear}} === Button Bar panel icons === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-89.png |align=l |size=large |label=Fan Chart — Button Bar |caption=Fan Chart — Button Bar }} {{Clear}} '''Customize Display''' In the icon bar, you will find three options: {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-25.png |align=l |size=large |label=Chart Format Buttons. Choose your preference |caption=Chart Format Buttons }} At the left-hand side of the Button Bar are the three chart format icons. Select any one of them to chose whether you want a full-circle, a circle with a missing wedge, or a semi-circle format. {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-81.png |align=l |size=large |label=Fan Chart (semi-circle): Maurice Richard-1571. |caption=Fan Chart (semi-circle): Maurice Richard-1571. }} {{Clear}} '''Note''': You can use your Image Zoom feature to enlarge the following screenshot images. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-82.png |align=l |size=m |label=Fan Chart (circle): Maurice Richard-1571. |caption=Fan Chart (circle): Maurice Richard-1571. }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-83.png |align=r |size=m |label=Fan Chart (wedge): Maurice Richard-1571. |caption=Fan Chart (wedge): Maurice Richard-1571. }} {{Clear}} '''Legend''' {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-26.png |align=l |size=large |label=Chart Legend Button. |caption=Chart Legend Button. }} If you have chosen either the Colour by Place name or Colour by Country options, the Legend for the places appears in a pop-up box. This Legend button will alternatively hide or show that pop-up box. {{Clear}} '''Generations Displayed''' {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-27.png |align=l |size=large |label=Generations Displayed |caption=Generations Displayed }} At the centre of the Button Bar, the number of generation being displayed is indicated, and you may choose to increase or decrease that number by selecting '''+''' or '''–'''. (Minimum=3, Maximum=11). You may detect a slight pause as the app retrieves additional ancestors from WikiTree, especially at more distant generations {{Clear}} '''Zoom to Fit Button''' — '''New'''
{{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-90.png |align=l |size=large |label=Zoom to Fit Button. |caption=Zoom to Fit Button. }} Cycles through 3 settings — one of which is a custom zoom that remembers the last zoom factor the user used by pinch to zoom gestures. {{Clear}} '''Info Button''' {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-92.png |align=l |size=large |label=Info Button. |caption=Info Button. }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-84.png |align=r |size=l |label=About the Fan Chart tree app |caption=About the Fan Chart tree app }} Click on the (i) icon to open the Info box. {{Clear}} '''Help Button''' {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-91.png |align=l |size=large |label=Help Button. |caption=Help Button. }} Click on the (?) icon to open the [[Space:Fan Chart app|Fan Chart app]] space page. '''New''' — click on the (?) icon on any Settings tab to access the Fan Chart app space page in a new browser tab, at the specific section that describes that Settings tab. {{Clear}} '''Settings Button''' {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-93.png |align=l |size=large |label=Chart Settings Button. |caption=Chart Settings Button. }} Click on the gear-shaped Settings icon to open the Settings dialog. {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-71.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog |caption=Settings Dialog }} == Settings options == The Fan Settings (gear icon) provides you with content options... what to include on the Fan Chart and how to format it. In the Settings menu, you will find options to customize the look and content of your Fan Chart. There are eight tabs: * [[#General|General]] * [[#Names|Names]] * [[#Dates|Dates]] * [[#Places|Places]] * [[#Photos|Photos]] * [[#Colours|Colours]] * [[#Highlights|Highlights]] * Reset/Save/Load Settings {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-223.png |align=r |size=m |caption=Reset/Save/Load Settings }} '''Reset/Save/Load Settings''' * You can reset to the default settings at any time. * You can save your current settings * You can load a previously saved settings. {{Clear}} === General === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-71.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog |caption=Settings — General }} '''Font for Names:''' — Select your preference
'''Font for Info:''' — Select your preference
'''Extras:''' * Show WikiTree ID (e.g. Jones-123 ) NEW ! * Show Ahnentafel # (unique ancestor numbering system) NEW ! '''Colourize Repeats''' will use a unique colouring style for ancestors that repeat in the Fan Chart so they can be easily identified when they appear multiple times. '''Add Badges''' will present a dialog that allows you to select from a list of badgeable categories or stickers associated with the people in the tree. For example, you might want to badge all people who lived in a certain place, are buried in the same graveyard, or have a common heritage. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-72.png |align=l |size=large |label=Adding Badges to Fan Chart |caption=Adding Badges to Fan Chart }} In the example above, the Badges dialog is shown with 5 badges selected, and the Fan Chart demonstrates where those badges were placed on Maurice Richard or his ancestors. For demonstration purposes, we have chosen to use Custom Labels (MCNAU) to represent the categories and stickers chosen: * M — Montreal * C — Canadiens * N — Notables * A — Acadians * U — Unsourced '''New''': In addition to categories and stickers, you will also be able to choose from a set of profile metadata status indicators: * DNA Confirmed * Created by me * Managed by me * Bio Check: style issues * BioCheck: no sources {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-98.png |align=l |size=large |caption=New Badge Options. }} {{Clear}} '''Colourize Repeats example''' In the following example, Paul Pellerin and Fèlicité Ferron are repeat ancestors of Jocelyne Bourassa. You can see them at the top of the chart on her father's side, and again on the mother's side, a generation earlier. They are coloured distinctively to draw attention to the fact that they are repeat ancestors. (Paul is coloured light tan, Fèlicité is light green.) Notice that their ancestors are also coloured distinctively. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-57.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colourized Repeats. |caption=Colourized Repeats. }} {{Clear}} === Names === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-30.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog — Names tab |caption=Settings Dialog — Names tab }} These options determine how names are displayed in the tree. By default, the First Name at Birth (FNAB) and Last Name at Birth are selected; you can opt to display the Preferred Name and the Current Last name (CLN) instead. There are numerous other options to fine tune the display of names to suit the application. * hide/show Prefix, (e.g. Sir, or Lord, or Dr. ) NEW ! * use the First Name at Birth, or the Preferred Name NEW ! * hide/show Nickname, (e.g. "Lucky") NEW ! * hide/show Middle Name, NEW ! * use the Last Name at Birth, or the Current/Married Name * option to use UPPER CASE for last names NEW ! * hide/show Suffix, (e.g. Sr., Jr., III ) NEW ! {{Clear}} Normally, using the First Name at Birth and the Last Name at Birth is all we need. But there are times when you want to create a display version of a chart. These options let you tune the tree presentation. Following are two examples. Although he was commonly known as Maurice Richard, his First Name at Birth was Joseph. Here, for the first time, you can see a chart with his Usual Name selected as the display name. In the second example, we offer the full name of Gordon Meredith Lightfoot Jr CC OOnt, by selecting to show his Middle Name and his Suffixes. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-64.png |align=l |size=l |label=Usual Name: Maurice Richard |caption=Usual Name: Maurice Richard }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-65.png |align=r |size=l |label=Full Name - Gordon Meredith Lightfoot Jr CC OOnt |caption=Full Name - Gordon Meredith Lightfoot Jr CC OOnt }} {{Clear}} === Dates === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-31.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog — Dates tab |caption=Settings Dialog — Dates tab }} These options determine how dates are displayed in the tree. * hide/show Lifespan dates, (e.g. 1746-1812) * hide/show Exact Dates, (e.g. b. 1746-01-31 / d. 1812-12-25 ) NEW ! ::Only 1 of Lifespan or Exact Dates can be active - or neither option, not both. {{Clear}} In the examples for '''Names''' tab (above), you can also see the effect of the Marriage Date options. * The Fan Chart for Maurice Richard displays the default Marriage Date position and format. * The Fan Chart for Gordon Lightfoot displays the raised Marriage Date position and blended colour format. === Places === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-32.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog — Places tab |caption=Settings Dialog — Places tab }} These options apply to the Places displayed for birth, marriages, & deaths. * No Locations — do not display locations * Show Locations for life events — display locations as specified below Location details: * Show Birth Location — display data if it is present in profile * Show Death Location — display data if it is present in profile Birth/Death Location Format: — what level of information is right for your application * Full Location as entered — verbose * Country only — close enough for many applications * Region, Country — * Town, Country — * Region only — a State, Province, Territory * Town, Region — * Town only — {{Clear}} === Photos === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-33.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog — Photos tab |caption=Settings Dialog — Photos tab }} These options determine if photos are displayed or not. * Show the Central Person Photo — a thumbnail of the main person's profile image * Show Photos of Ancestors — for all ancestors, show thumbnail, if a profile image is available * Use Silhouette when no photo available — male or female silhouette representations * Limit Photos to first N generations [5] — otherwise they get a bit small and use resources {{Clear}} === Colours === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-34.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog — Colours tab |caption=Settings Dialog — Colours tab }} The '''Colours''' tab offers a set of options to manage the colours used in the entire chart according to different organizational structures (by generation, family clusters, or places), and to select from among several the colour palettes with which to colour the Fan Chart. '''Colourize Repeat Ancestors''' — '''New'''
When selected, background colouring for repeat ancestors will also be applied, in addition to whatever colour scheme you may select from the options in this tab. If you de-select this option, then the background colouring for repeat ancestor will not be applied. (This setting is mirrored on the General tab.) ==== Organizational structures ==== * '''Gender''' — male / female colour pattern ::Simple organization scheme. Effective for genealogical presentation and research purposes. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-16.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Gender. Gordon Lightfoot. |caption=Colour by Gender. Gordon Lightfoot. }} {{Clear}} * '''Generation''' - each ring is coloured uniquely ::Simple organization scheme. Effective for genealogical presentation and research purposes. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-42.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Generation. Maurice Richard. |caption=Colour by Generation. Maurice Richard.. }} {{Clear}} * '''Grandparent''' - each grandparent (and their ancestors) are coloured uniquely ::Simple organization scheme. Effective for genealogical presentation and research purposes. * '''Great-grandparent''' — ditto * '''Great-great-grandparent''' — ditto 8 generations of Jocelyne Bourassa; colour set at 2nd great-grandparents; "Rainbow colours" palette. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-79.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by 2nd Great-grandparents. Jocelyne Bourassa. |caption=Colour by 2nd Great-grandparents. Jocelyne Bourassa. }} {{Clear}} * '''Great-great-great grandparent''' — ditto {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-43.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by 3rd Great-grandparents. Maurice Richard. |caption=Colour by 3rd Great-grandparents. Maurice Richard. }} {{Clear}} Note that in the above Fan Chart, the Colourize Repeats option is on, so those repeat ancestors use that unique colouring effect to highlight their name, while the great-great-great-grandparent colouring is in the background of the cell. You can turn off Colourize Repeats in the General tab if it is too distracting with some colour combinations. * '''Bio Check status''' — '''New''' — Colours the fan chart to indicate the Bio Check status of each profile in the Fan Chart. See the Legend. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-94.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Bio Check Status. |caption=Colour by Bio Check Status. }} {{Clear}} * '''Parental status''' — '''New''' — Colours the fan chart to indicate the Parental status of each ancestor in the Fan Chart. Note that the parental status is set accordingly in the child's profile. ** In the example below, for example, the status of David Robb (Confirmed by DNA) and the status of Martha Pringle (Confident) are both set in the profile of their daughter Sophia Robb. ** Both Ann Richardson and William Biggar have "status unknown" because in the profile of their daughter, Mary Ann Biggar, none of the parental status radio buttons have been selected. (Find those in the top right, when in Edit Profile mode). {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-100.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Parental Status. |caption=Colour by Parental Status. }} {{Clear}} * '''Family Stats''' — colour the Fan Chart based on either: ** the age (at death) of the ancestors in it ** the number of spouses {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-67.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Age at Death. Fay Wray. |caption=Colour by Age at Death. Fay Wray. }} {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-75.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Number of Spouses. Fay Wray. |caption=Colour by Number of Spouses. Fay Wray. }} {{Clear}} * '''Location''' — offers a submenu with ten options to narrow down which location {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-21.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Birth Country. Maurice Richard. |caption=Colour by Birth Country. Maurice Richard. }} {{Clear}} ::Location colouring is a more complex organizational scheme and it relies on good data among the ancestor pool. Location colouring is effective for many genealogical presentation and research purposes. Location colouring helps reveal inconsistencies in the entry of placename, especially town names and country names. — You may have thought that your ancestor was German, but the proper WikiTree name of his birth country in 1729 was "Heiliges Römisches Reich". ::Fan Chart determines Location based on the birth and/or death locations entered in each of the WikiTree profiles in the lines of ascent. For our purposes, a Place Name is the first piece of text, before the first comma in a location; whereas, a Country Name is the final piece of text, after the final comma in a location. :::E.g. "Nédelec, Timiskaming, Québec, Canada" would be parsed as: ::::Place name = "Nédelec"; Country = "Canada" :::'''EXAMPLE''' ::When colouring by Place name, you have the option to colour and display the places based on ::* Country - places within the same country will be assigned a unique shade of the country's distinct colour, the places will form a gradient ::* Region, Country - every region within a country will be assigned a unique distinct colour NEW ! ::* Region - every region will be assigned a unique distinct colour NEW ! ::* Town, Region, Country - every town will be assigned a unique distinct colour NEW ! ::* Town - every town will be assigned a unique distinct colour NEW ! {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-22.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Birth Country. Gordon Lightfoot. |caption=Colour by Birth Country. Gordon Lightfoot. }} {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-39.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Birth Country. Terry Fox |caption=Colour by Birth Country. Terry Fox. }} {{Clear}} In the following Fan Chart, we see how the colour coding changes when we use Region. Different parts of Canada take on different colours. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-40.png |align=l |size=large |label=Colour by Birth Region. Terry Fox |caption=Colour by Birth Region. Terry Fox. }} {{Clear}} :Besides the visual difference in colouring, there is a difference in how the colours are applied to historical places. E.g. consider three ancestors with the following birth places: ::B. 1912 in Coteau-du-Lac, Timiskaming, Québec, Canada ::B. 1854 in Coteau-du-Lac, Bas-Canada ::B. 1748 in Coteau-du-Lac, Canada, Nouvelle-France :::'''EXAMPLE''' :When the Places are coloured by Country Shading, the three ancestors will be coloured using 3 difference country colours :::'''EXAMPLE''' :When the Places are coloured uniquely, all versions of Coteau-du-Lac will be coloured the same, even though the country name has changed over time. ==== Colour Palettes ==== There are 11 different colour palettes from which to choose. Many of the examples in this document have used the Pastel Colours palette, which is the default. Following is an example of the Psychedelic palette. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-47.png |align=l |size=large |label=Fan Chart — Psychedelic Palette. |caption=Fan Chart — Psychedelic Palette. }} {{Clear}} === Highlights === {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-35.png |align=r |size=m |label=Settings Dialog — Highlights tab |caption=Settings Dialog — Highlights tab }} The Highlights tab presents a set of options that you can use to highlight your yDNA, mtDNA, xDNA inheritance paths, or to highlight those profiles with DNA confirmations. ====DNA Inheritance Paths==== As you can see in the accompanying screenshots, the yDNA and mtDNA inheritance paths are quite simple and easy to follow. The yDNA path descends from a father to his son(s), whereas the mtDNA path descends from mother to her son(s) and/or daughter(s). Women neither receive nor pass yDNA; whereas men receive mtDNA but do not pass it. {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-73.png |align=l |size=m |label=Fan Chart with yDNA inheritance highlighted |caption=Fan Chart with yDNA inheritance highlighted }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-74.png |align=r |size=m |label=Fan Chart with mtDNA inheritance highlighted |caption=Fan Chart with mtDNA inheritance highlighted }} {{Clear}} The xDNA inheritance path is quite a bit more complicated — "the number of possible ancestors on the X chromosome inheritance line at a given ancestral generation follows the Fibonacci sequence."Hutchison, Luke (September 2004). "Growing the Family Tree: The Power of DNA in Reconstructing Family Relationships" [http://fhtw.byu.edu/static/conf/2005/hutchison-growing-fhtw2005.pdf (PDF)]. Proceedings of the First Symposium on Bioinformatics and Biotechnology (BIOT-04). Retrieved 2016-09-03.. (See accompanying image. "X chromosome ancestral line Fibonacci sequence" By Algorithmicist - Own work, [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 CC BY-SA 4.0], (Accessed 24 Jul 2023) https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=51104619 ) Men receive only one X chromosome, from their mother. In the accompanying Fan Chart, ancestors who could contribute to a male’s one X chromosome are highlighted. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-76.png |align=l |size=m |label=Ancestors who could contribute to a male’s one X chromosome are highlighted. |caption=Fan Chart with xDNA inheritance highlighted }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-46.png |align=r |size=m |label=X chromosome ancestral line Fibonacci sequence [CC BY-SA 4.0] |caption=X chromosome ancestral line Fibonacci sequence }} {{Clear}} Women receive and carry two X chromosomes; A woman inherits a copy of her father’s single (haploid) X chromosome, but the X chromosome she inherits from her mother is subject to recombination (technically, “crossing over”) during meiosis. If it recombines, the inherited chromosome will be a variable mix of the mother’s father and mother…so a combo of the maternal grandparents. In the accompanying Fan Chart, ancestors who could contribute to a female’s two X chromosomes are highlighted. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-78.png |align=c |size=large |label=Ancestors who could contribute to a female’s two X chromosomes are highlighted. |caption=Ancestors who could contribute to a female’s two X chromosomes are highlighted. }} {{Clear}} '''DNA Ancestors and DNA Descendants Links''' By now you have noticed the icon set attached to DNA inheritance indicators for '''Y''', '''mt''', and '''X'''. They are each flanked by the familiar WikiTree ''Ancestors and Descendants'' icons that you see elsewhere on WikiTree. We have adopted those same icons on the Fan Chart to represent links to that person's '''DNA Ancestors''' and '''DNA Descendants''', respectively. (Please excuse these crude representations.) {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-85.png |align=l |size=s |label=yDNA inheritance marker with yDNA Ancestors and yDNA Descendants links. |caption=yDNA }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-86.png |align=l |size=s |label=mtDNA inheritance marker with mtDNA Ancestors and mtDNA Descendants links. |caption=mtDNA }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-87.png |align=l |size=s |label=xDNA inheritance marker with xDNA Ancestors and xDNA Descendants links. |caption=xDNA }}{{Clear}} '''But wait, there's more...''' [https://apps.wikitree.com/apps/clarke11007/Xfriends.php XFriends app] — X-Chromosome Friend Finder ====DNA Confirmations==== If you have confirmed your DNA inheritance using the WikiTree profile options, then you can also highlight those confirmed DNA ancestors. For this example, we turn to the profile of [[Roberts-7085|Peter Roberts-7085]], a resident WikiTree DNA expert who was one of the motivating forces behind the DNA highlighting features of the Fan Chart. Peter has graciously granted permission to display a Fan Chart of his family to highlight DNA Confirmations among his ancestors. {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-50.png |align=r |size=large |label=Fan Chart with DNA Confirmations highlighted. |caption=Fan Chart with DNA Confirmations highlighted. }} {{Clear}} '''Notes''': * If the central person does not have a DNA Confirmation with their parents, but a sibling does, the parents will not be highlighted because there is no direct DNA confirmation. However, if either of those parents has a DNA Confirmation to one/both of their parents, then those grandparents will be highlighted, even though the source of the DNA confirmation did not start with the central person. * If there is a private profile along any given line of ascent, then the parents of that private profile will not be highlighted, because the Fan Chart app is not able to read the private profile to determine whether there is a DNA Confirmation. :'''Note''': DNA confirmations are a formal mechanism at WikiTree. For either parent, it is possible to indicate that there is both genealogical certainty and genetic certainty for that line of descent. A requirement for flipping that switch is that the profile must contain a formal declaration that states who took which tests, how those peoples' DNA comparisons prove a genealogical line of descent, and the identity of their Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA). The formalism of the DNA Confirmation statement is so difficult to get right that Greg Clarke built a [https://apps.wikitree.com/apps/clarke11007/DNAconf.php DNA Confirmation app] to write them for you, if you give it some data to get started. (See also [[:Help:DNA_Confirmation]]) {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-51.png |align=c |size=large |label=DNA Confirmations Dialog. |caption=DNA Confirmations Dialog. }} {{Clear}} '''But wait, there's more''' * [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1613057/new-app-x-family-tree X Family Tree] is a newer (July 2023) WikiTree Tree app that is now available from any person profile. ==== Alive on this Day ==== {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-62.png |align=r |size=m |label=Highlights — Alive on this Day |caption=Highlights — Alive on this Day }} Select any date in history to highlight everyone in the chart who was alive on that date. In the accompanying example, we have entered the birth date of Gordon Lightfoot to see which of his ancestors are known to have been alive then. We can see that his parents and his maternal grandparents were alive. {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-63.png |align=l |size=large |label=Highlight people — Alive on 17 Nov 1938 (Gordon Lightfoot's birth day) |caption=Highlight people — Alive on 17 Nov 1938 (Gordon Lightfoot's birth day) }} {{Clear}} : : ====Bio Check status==== '''New''' — Select Bio Check 'style issues' or 'no sources' to highlight everyone in the chart whose profile has that status. : : ====Biography Text ==== {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-60.png |align=r |size=m |label=Highlights — Biography Text |caption=Highlights — Biography Text }} Enter any text string to highlight everyone in the chart who has that text string in their profile. In this example, we use the text string "mtDNA Haplogroup" to highlight ancestors of [[Richard-1571|Maurice Richard]] whose Biography text includes those words. We see [[David-1795|Marie David (abt.1752-1822)]], daughter of [[Olivier-995|Françoise Olivier (abt.1726-aft.1785)]] on one line (mtDNA Haplogroup C1c), and we see [[Boudot-16|Marie (Boudot) Chicoine (abt.1715-1805)]] on two lines (mtDNA Haplogroup D1). {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-61.png |align=l |size=large |label=Highlighted by Biography Text — "mtDNA Haplogroup" |caption=Highlighted by Biography Text — "mtDNA Haplogroup" }} {{Clear}} : : ====Category or Sticker==== {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-58.png |align=r |size=m |label=Highlights. Category or Sticker. |caption=Highlights. Category or Sticker. }} Select from a list of categories and stickers found among you and your ancestors to highlight everyone in the chart who has that category or sticker in their profile. The pulldown list will contain a list of categories and stickers found in the profiles that are visible on the tree. To identify [[Bourassa-781|Jocelyne Bourassa]]'s native ancestor, we use Fan Chart's "Highlight by Category or Sticker" feature, and select "First Peoples Canada Sticker". You can see a single yellow rectangle in the accompanying chart example, identifying her ancestor as [[Ouestnorouest-1|Anne Ouestnorouest (abt.1644-aft.1687)]]. {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-59.png |align=l |size=large |label=Highlighted - First Peoples Canada Sticker |caption=Highlighted Sticker - First Peoples Canada Sticker }} {{Clear}} : : == Our Subjects == We have decided on a Canadian theme for the example profiles we use in this page: * Maurice Richard-1571 [[Richard-1571|Maurice "The Rocket" Richard]], the subject of these examples, is a Notable. Wikipedia. Maurice Richard. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_Richard He was a forward for the Montreal Canadiens hockey club. He led the Montreal Canadiens to a Stanley Cup championship in the 1955–56 season — the start of a still unprecedented 5 consecutive Stanley Cup victories by one team. "Richard was a cultural icon among Quebec's francophone population; his legend is a primary motif in Roch Carrier's short story ''The Hockey Sweater'', an emblematic work of Canadian culture."Wikipedia. "The Hockey Sweater (Le chandail de hockey in the original French) is a short story by Canadian author Roch Carrier and translated to English by Sheila Fischman." (Accessed 23 Jul 2023) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hockey_SweaterCBC. "The Hockey Sweater" (Accessed 23 Jul 2023) http://www.cbc.ca/archives/categories/sports/hockey/the-spirit-of-hockey/the-hockey-sweater.html He was a sports champion and cultural hero among many Canadians. Maurice Richard is a cousin to Fan Chart creator [[Clarke-11007|Greg Clarke]], many times over — they share 66 MRCAs, or 33 ancestor couples. Greg's French-Canadian mother's lines are connected back through centuries of Canadian history and into the old regime of Nouvelle-France, in the territories of Quebec and Acadia, early in the 1600s. {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-23.png |align=l |size=large |label=Profile of Maurice Richard-1571 showing connections to Greg Clarke. |caption=Profile of Maurice Richard-1571 showing connections to Greg Clarke. }} {{Clear}} We are also highlighting the profiles of four other notable Canadians in our examples: * [[Lightfoot-1332|Gordon Lightfoot-1332]]Wikipedia. Gordon Lightfoot. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Lightfoot — iconic lyricist and troubador * [[Fox-4591|Terry Fox-4591]]Wikipedia. Terry Fox. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Fox — athlete, humanitarian, and cancer research activist * [[Wray-688|Fay Wray]] Wikipedia. Fay Wray. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fay_Wray — actress, star of "King Kong", "scream queen" * [[Bourassa-781|Jocelyne Bourassa]]Wikipedia. Jocelyne Bourassa — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jocelyne_Bourassa — professional golfer, Rookie of the Year on the LPGA Tour in 1972 {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-16.png |align=l |size=m |label=Fan Chart: Gordon Lightfoot-1332. |caption=Fan Chart: Gordon Lightfoot-1332. }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-41.png |align=r |size=m |label=Fan Chart: Terry Fox-4591. |caption=Fan Chart: Terry Fox-4591. }} {{Clear}} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-48.png |align=l |size=m |label=Fan Chart: Fay Wray-688 |caption=Fan Chart: Fay Wray-688. }} {{Image|file=Clarke-11007_G2G_pictures-52.png |align=r |size=m |label=Fan Chart: Jocelyne Bourassa-781. |caption=Fan Chart: Jocelyne Bourassa-781. }} {{Clear}} == Sources == == Browsers and Bugs== We have tested the Fan Chart in: * '''Google Chrome''': Version 115.0.5790.114 (Official Build) (x86_64) * '''Firefox''': 115.0.3 (64-bit) * '''Safari''': Version 16.6 (17615.3.12.11.3, 17615) : : == New == * '''Zoom to Fit''' button cycles through 3 settings - one of which is a custom zoom that remembers the last zoom factor the user used by pinch to zoom gestures * Colourize Repeat Ancestors on Colour tab, as well as on General tab * Bio Check link on profile popup * Bio Check status options ** Highlight - elect to highlight Bio Check status ** Colour - select background colour based on Bio Check status ** Badges - apply badges based on Bio Check status * New Badge options ** BioCheck 'has sources' ** Bio Check 'has no sources' ** DNA Confirmed ** Created by me ** Managed by me == Acknowledgements == [[Maloney-2332|Murray Maloney]] reproduced the documentation for Fan Chart between episodes of Saturday Roundup on 22 and 28 July 2023, re-organizing, adding screenshots, and writing descriptive prose. Working in coordination with Greg, he tested the app behaviour, and helped with debugging. He subsequently re-captured screenshots to address feature changes and additions brought about by the previous week's software testing and design discussions in preparation for Friday Night Bingo.

FAN Club for John Bishop

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[[Bishop-7040|John B Bishop (1808-1896)]] Joseph Rese, age 29 (1840), Girard, MI (witness to marriage). Might be Rose. John Rose from Germany came to Girard in 1836-1837 Mary Gorbull, age 29 (1840), Girard, MI (witness to marriage). Possibly Mary Ann Rose, born 1811 in England, married James Rose, resided in Girard. (Robert Gorball also came to Girard in 1836-1837; James Gorball, from Wayne Co, NY) [[Corbus-61|Joseph C Corbus (1794-1876)]], J. P., 1840, Girard, MI (presided of above marriage and also Sophia's. Born in Detroit. [[Mann-16584|Jacob W. Mann (1789-1846)]], Girard, MI (bought land from him in 1842). born Schoharie, NY [[Watts-15311|William E Watts (1818-1895)]] (son in law), 1841, Branch, MI Aura Smith, witness to above marriage, 1841 Moses Thompkins, 1841, witness to above marriage Neighbors in 1840 [[Gage-3456|Elias Gage (abt.1805-1875)]] - came in 1836-1837, born NY Russell Porter Sanford Sherman J. O. Dennis [[Lewis-62780|Archibald Lewis (1807-abt.1865)]] came in 1836-1837 [[Olney-1773|Thomas Olney (1784-1861)]], born Saratoga, NY. [[Burch-6049|Jacob O Burch (1797-1876)]], born VT [[Rowley-6529|Robert Rowley (1792-1849)]] - from Schoharie, NY. [[Tompkins-5127|James B Tompkins (1804-1879)]]. Son of [[Tompkins-998|Cornelius Tompkins (1776-1863)]], born in Duanesbury, Dutchess, NY. Came from Schoharie, NY. [[Bishop-7040|John B Bishop (1808-1896)]] [[Tompkins-5126|Moses Tompkins (1814-1879)]], also son of Cornelius J. H. Clements Orry Smith Stillman Herrington A. P. Rose Abram Vanblarcom - probably from the William VanBlarcom family from Andes, Delaware, NY Jon Vanblarcom Morgan Johnson Abner Batteau Jacob Figgles D.F. Bidwell Moses Johnson Samuel White Job Jerdon John More Levi Wingston Lyman Fox Baccus Fox Abram Tompkins Albert Eldred 1850 [[Olney-1829|Clinton Olney (1805-1880)]], [[Larrabee-1854|Olive (Larrabee) Olney (1806-1882)]], Abertis Olneym Mary J. Olney, Olney, O. Frank Olnet, Eunice P. Olney, Clinton E. Olney William Whitney, Rosannah Whitney, Elkanah Whitney, Jerome Whitney George Stroy, Chloe Stroy, Phebe Atroy, George Stroy, Lucius Stroy, Sally Allen [[Rowley-6558|Leonard Humphrey Rowley (1819-1882)]], Sally Rowley, David Man John, Harriet, Sarah, Ellen, Theron Wickam [[Goodrich-9014|Jonathan Foster Goodrich (1803-1887)]], Maria Goodrich, Noah Goodrich, Levi Goodrich, George Goodrich, Frederick Goodrich John Park, Jane Park, Patience Rowley Roswell Rowley, Stephen Rowley *** Christian Estlow was from Monroe County, NY per the Branch Co history

Fancis Carew's (Carew-172) will transcription workings

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Transcription of [[Carew-172|Francis Carew's]] Will. The original is in https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=5111&h=953441&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=bcb73&_phstart=successSource NOTES: 1. This transcription is more or less complete, but is still a work in progress. Readers are welcome to add improvements 2. The only punctuation I have amended is to add paragraph breaks in order to improve understanding the meaning 3. One glossary point. A "Bombe" is a decorated table with drawers or a chest of drawers often with a marble top. '''The Text''' '''In the Name of God, Amen''' The Remembraunce of the shortnes and frayltie of man's lyfe and howe greate multitudes of people of all sorte of all ages and at all tymes both dailie and howrelye doe departe out of this transitorye worlde. And the consideration also of what troubles what suites and charges in lawe and what greate unkindnes dothe daylye happen even amongeste the neereste in bloode eyther as touchinge the not makinge or the meerteyne and insufficiente manner of makinge of mens willes or the disposinge of there estates and goodes after theire deathes, Theise and some other thinges have speciallye mooved me Sir Frauncys Carew of Bedington in the Countye of Surrie knighte not onlye to praye unto Almightie god for the contynewaunce of his good graces and directions towardes mee, and thereby to give hym my most humble prayers and thankes for my creation redemption and preservation from the tyme of my byrthe hitherunto but also at this presente whilste I am in healthe and of perfecte remembrance (praysed be god for yt) advisedlye and consideratlye to dispose and sett in order those temporall blessinges and worldelye goodes whiche yt hathe pleased god farr above my desertes to bestowe uppon me muche comfortinge my selfe therein that when yt shalbe godes most holy will and pleasure eyther by age sycknes or otherwyse to call me out of this mortall lyfe to his greate mercy, my mynde and sences shall not as then bee any wayes trobled or drawne awaye wth the Cares or busynes of disposinge or ordringe the same. And therefore in the name of god and by his holye assistaunce I doe make and ordeigne this my last will and testamente in manner and fourme followinge And firste and Cheifelye before all I recommende and bequeath my soule unto Allmighetie god my Creator and to his deere sonne Jesus Christ my redeemer moste humblye beseechinge him to take mercye of that wch that he wth his most preecyouse bloode hath so deerelye boughte and payde for and to the holye ghoste allso my comforter assuredlye comfortinge my selfe that upon my earneste and hartie repentaunce ment and onelye trustinge to be saved by the greate merittes mercyes and sweete promises of his deare sonne Christe towardes all those that doe trewlye and unfeygnedlye repente I shall be one of that happie nomber in the later daye to whome that blessed and sweete salutacyon of entraunce into the. kingdome of heaven shalbe so joyefullye pronounced wch Allmighetie god of his infinite and aboundaunte greate mercye hath given lyfe unto me. And in the meane time, I leave my bodye to the earthe, and to be buryed in the usuall place or Chappell at Bedington where my graundefather was buryed and as neere unto the place as with conveniencye and fyttnes of the place maye best serve for that purpose. And I doe charge my Executor that there maye bee a Toombe erected and for the accomplishinge thereof my will and mynde ys that there shall be one hundrede poundes or more bestowed thereupon with such decente and conveniente expenses otherwyse for my buryall as to the discretion of my sayde Executor and overseers shalbe thoughte meete and necessarye And because I have heretofor made choyse of my Nephewe Sir Nicholas Throckmorton and have adopted hym as my nexte heire into the name of Carew and beleevinge and comfortinge my selfe in him that he will contynewe the servaunte of god and the uphoulder of my name and livinge wch I have bestowed upon him wth my franke and kinde good will, for wch purpose I have longe synce made assuraunce unto my dearelye beloved freindes Sir George Moore knighte Sir Oliphe Leighe knighte Edmonde Kedermister esquier of all my landed tenementes and hereditamentes those onelye excepted wch I reserved power in the saide conveigheaunce to make Revocation in my lyfe tyme and to geve to some such of my kynrede as I shoulde be disposed to bestowe the same sythence[?] wch conveygheaunce made and by vertue of the power then reserved, For that I have evermore founde greate good will and kindenes and most dutyfull and lovinge respectes showed toward, me by my Nephewe Sir Frauncys Darcye knighte in whose companye and conversacyon I have taken comforte and greate pleasure, In regarde whereof I have I saye confirmed and assured unto hym by a later conveygheaunce my Mannor at Walton with all singuler thappurtenaunces thereunto belonging under suche covenauntes articles and agreementes as in the same Deede yt dothe and maye more largelye appeare: And I doe remytte and and forgive all suche dettes as are dewe unto me by bond bill or otherwyse by my sayde Nephew Sir Frauncys Darcye before the date of this my laste will and testament. I doe require therefore and charge my sayde Nephewe Sir Nicholas Throckmorton that he will not any waye be discontented therewith but by all wayes and meanes ratifie and allowe this my guyste given to Sir Frauncys my Nephewe and his neere kynseman and the rather because I have most I kindelye and in bountyful manner bestowed the resydewe of my landes and beste parte of my goodes upon him, And for the better confirmation of my love and kindness towardes my sayde Nephewe Sir Nicholas and for that he hath allwayes carryed himselfe dutyfull and respectivelye torwardes mee, hopinge and assuredlye beleevinge that he will not onlye serve and thanke god for this good blessinge, but will allso have aspecyall care and be trulye mindefull to see this my will in all thinges perfectelye perfourmed, I doe therefore ordeigne constitute and make him the saide Sir Nicholas Throckmorton my sole and only Executor, Revoakinge and disaunllinge any will by me heretofore made and I doe declare and anouche this to be my true and onelye last will and testament. And I doe appointe and make my lovinge Freindes Sir George Moore and Sir Oliphe Leighe knightes and John Hawarde esquier to be the Supervysors of this my sayde last will and testamente desyring them most instantelye to be aydors and assistauntes and faithefullye to advise and counsell my sayde Executor by all wayes and meanes as maye stande with a good conseyence bothe for the true and perfrecte performaunce of this my last will and testamente, as allso for the better husbandinge and governinge of his estate, that there by he maye be the more able and readye to doe service and good to his cuntrye, and that by his good behavioure and course of lyfe yt mayethe better appeare to the worlde hereafter that I was not deceaved in my choyce by preferringe and advauncinge him to my landed and lvyinges before others of my kynrede, And I give to eyther of my sayde Supervysprs or Overseers for their paynes to be taken herein the some of Fiftene poundes a peece. And because that some others wch are my heyres generall maye be charged after my deceasse with sums of lyverye paymente of primer seisin or other charges to the kinges ma[jes]tie and yet shall not have any of my sayde landes in respecte of my former conveigheaunce as aforesaide, Therefore I will and charge my Executor that he disburse and paye all manner of charges that my saide heires generall maye be bona fide charged withall. Soe that they be no wayes or meanes maye be encombred for the same. And to the intente that the saide Sir Nicholas Throckmorton beynge my sayde adopted heire and my sole executor named as aforesayde maye be the better able to keepe and mainteigne hymselfe in my chiefe house at Bedington, I doe therefore geve and bequeathe unto hym all and singular my plate jewells householde stuffe and furniture of householde and all my stocke of cattell and horses whatsoever. Savinge allwayes and excepting all suche of the sayde plate jewelles householde stuffe cattells and other thinges which hereafter either by this my will or by any codecell or wrytinge to be added or annexed to the same I shall thereby or therein geve and bequeathe perticulerly to any other of my lovinge Freindes kinrede or servauntes. Item I doe will and appoynte that Robert Rogers my auncyente servaunte and keeper shall contynue his place and keepershippe of Bedington parke duringe his naturall lyfe with all suche usuall Fees and profettes as he hathe had in my lyfetime. And so leavinge and savinge to myselfe a full power and disposition to add suche other bequeastes and legacyes as I shall thinke fitte and to be inserted in a codecell or codecells to be added and made parcell of this my last will and testamente wch I meant and intende shalbe as perfectelye and absolutelye my last will and testament as this, and to be as trulye and carefullye performed accordingelye I doe hereunto and in wytnes hereof sett to and subscrybe my hande and seale this seconde daye of Auguste Anno Domini one thousande sixe hundrede and Tenne and in the yeares of the raigne of gracyouse soveraigne Lord James by the grace of god kinge of Englande and Scotlaund Fraunce and Irelaunde defendor of the faith etc That ys to saye of Englande Fraunce and Irelaunde the eighte and of Scotlaunde fowre and Fortythe. Hereby testifyinge and pronouncing this to stande and bee for my last will and testament as allso suche Codecells or scedules as hereafter I shalbe disposed to make and adde heretunto in the presence of such witnees as are endorsed one the backe side hereof after the same was by me sealed up Francys Carew Sealed and subscribed the daye and yeare wthin wrytten in the presence of John Hawarde, Frauncys Butler, Nicholas Hillar, John Boothe. '''A Codecell''' or scedule made by me Sir Francis Carew of Bedington in the County of Surrey Knight I do ordeigne and make as parcell of my last will and testament accordinge to the power and clause wch I saved and reserved unto my self in my sayde last will and testament annexed hereunto. And I doe request and straightleye charge my executor named in my last will to cause the same to be formlye added and annexed to my saide last will and to be the same in all things trulye and carefully performed and discharged according to my Faythful truste reposed in him. '''In primis''' I doe give and bequeath to the poorest in the parish of Bedington the some of one hundred pounds the same to be disposed and employed and the proffite thereof arising to be for their best behooffe and relliefe in suche sorte as by the discretion of my Executor and overseers shall be thoughte most meete and convenient . Item I doe likewise give unto the poor of the parish of Croydon the some of twenty pounds. Item I doe give to the poore of all the severall parishes of Walton super montem (''Walton-on-the-Hill''), Banstede, Eblisham, Sutton, Carsalton, and Mitcham the some of fyve poundes to every severall parish. Item I doe give unto [[Saunders-4831|my Nephew Sir Nicholas Saunders Knight]] the some of three hundred poundes and I doe remitte forgeve and pardon hym all suche some and somes of monye wch he doth owe unto me bee yt by statute recognizance bonde bill or otherwise howsoever dewe before the date of my last will and testament to my self or to my Executor within named by force of any leasse heretofor made or otherwyse. Item I doe give unto theldeste sonne of [[Carew-171|my Syster Elizabethe Hall]] that shall be lyvinge at the hour of my deathe one hundred poundes Item I doe gyve to John Hall the youngeste sonne of my said sister Hall twentye poundes Item I doe give to my Neice the [[Throckmorton-1|Ladye Raleigh]] one French Bowle of Christal. Item I doe gyve to my Nephew [[Darcy-560|Arthur Darcye]] and to my Nephew Henrie Saunder to each of them twentye pounds Item I doe gyve to my Nephew Whitneye (''His sister Isabel's daughter Anne's husband'') one Deep Frenche Bowle playne guylte on Cover Item I do give to my good neighbour and Friend Sir Thomas Muschrampe Knight one deepe french bowle guylte with a cover fashioned with Dropps. Item I do give to my lovinge neighboure Mr William Quarles my bigger cuppe of christall sett with stones and to his bedfellow my greate Salt sellar with christall pillers and my fowre (four) marble candlesticks. Item I do give to Mrs Sutton a guylte French Bowle without a cover. Item I give to Elizabeth Beeche the some of fyve poundes. Item I Give to Mr Frauncys Butler a frenche boulle with a cover freezed and smooth in squares and Forty poundes in monye. Item I give and bequeath to Thomazin Woorde Fiftye poundes in monye the same with the profitte arising of and for the same to be payde unto her when she shall accomplishe the age of one and twentye yeares or at the date of her marriage whch of them shall first happen. Item I give to Frauncys Mershe and Nicholas Hiller iointelye (jointly) together all my Apparell furnyshed in all sortes as I wore it and to either of them tenne poundes a piece in monye besydes theyr wages wch shall be due at the hoore of my death Item I give to John Bathe my servaunt tenne poundes besides his wages rightly due at the hour of my deathe Item I give to John Dorninge my cook besides his wages wch were rightly due at my death Fyve Poundes. And I do moreover give unto the saide John a lease and terme of one and twentye years in the house and lande wch he nowe holdethe of me by lease, the same years to begynne after the expiration of the lease wch he nowe enjoyes payinge the same Rente and not more than is nowe reserved and at the like fealties as the same ys nowe reserved and payeable upon his lease wch he nowe holdethe of me. Item I give to the good D? Johnson my servaunt tenne poundes besides his wages wch shall be dewe at my decease Item I gyve to my der servaunt Bridgette Webbe fyve poundes Item I gyve to Richarde Owen, Bartholomewe Tegg, Thomas Webb, Robert Lycnest, William Grimsdicke, Danyell Badcocke, John Defoe, Richarde Lyenes, Thomas Evans, William Caroseen and Averye Lambert, my servaunts having longeste dwelte with mee (yf they shall be dwelling wth me at the hour of my deathe) to each of them Fyve poundes a piece in monye besides there wages wch shall dewe at my decease. Item I give to the rest of my householde men servaunts who shall dwellinge wth mee at the hour of my death one whole yeare's wages besides there wages wch shal be due at the time of my death. Item I give to all my mayde servaunts wch shal be dwellinge wth mee at the hour of my death Forty shillings a piece besides there wages wch shal be due when I dye. Item my will and mynde is, and I straightelye charge my Executor that he shall permytte and suffer all my sayde servauntes to remayne one whole monthe in my house at Bedington after my deceasse giving them meate drinke and lodginge that they maye in that meane season dispose of them selves as they shall thinke good. Item I do give to mye loving good Friend Sir Edmund Bowyer Knight a Flatte guylte Bowle wth a cover and a Beare upon the toppe of the cover. Provided alwayes and my intente and meaninge is that yf any of my Nephews or heires generall (other than the sayde Sir Nicholas Throckmorton and Sir Frauncis Bowyer) shall at any tyme hereafter clayme or challenge any of my landes or testamentes or attempte and goe about to alter or hinder any estate or states hereof or of any parte thereof by me heretofore made and established That then all such legacies and bequeastes as I gave by this my presente will or codecell thereunto annexed to them or any of them given or bequeathed clayminge Challenging attempting or going about as aforesaid shall utterly frustrate and void to all intente and purposes any thing therein Conteygned to the contrary thereof in any wyse not wth standinge And further my will and meaninge ys touchinge twelve hundred poundes to be payde to mee my heires and assigns by John Huntleye the fyste daye of Maye wch shallbe in the year of O(ur) Lorde one thousande sixe hundrede and eighteene for redemption of Kinnersley, Wallington place and other landes that the same shall be to the onlye use and behoof of my sayde Nephew and Executor Sir Nicholas Throckmorton and further yf the same be not payde accordinge to the condieson and promi so lymitted bye certegne Indentures then my will and mynde is that all the landes and other fyne appurtenameres mentyoned in the sayde Indentures and all the estate thereof together with all rights and title thereunto shall be to the onely use and behoffe of the sayde sir Nicholas Throckmorton and his heyres forever. Frauncys Carew sealed published and delyvered as his last will and testament in the presence of John Shararde, Francis Butler, Nicholas Syllar, John Boothe. Memorandum that the Fourthe daye of August Anno Domini 1610. Sir Frauncys Carew of Bedington in the Countie of Surrye Knyght did raise and appointe that this Predule or Codecell to be annexed unto his sayde last will and testamente and did ordeyne constitute and appointe that yt shoulde remayne and be as parte and parcell of his sayde will charginge his Executor named within his will that he shall faithefullye and trulye perforeme the same. And the saide Sir Frauncis Carew did delyver as well the saide will as this codecell annexed to be his (?) onelye and last will and testamente in the presence of John Shararde, Francis Butler, Nicholas Syllar, John Boothe. '''A Codecell''' or scedule made by me Sir Frauncis Carew of Bedington in the Countie of Surrye Knighte. Wheras (?) I doe ordeyne and make as parte and parcell of my last will and testamente according to the power and clause wch I saved and reserved unto myselfe in my sayde last will and testament annexed hereto. And I doe require and straightlye charge my executor named in my sayde will to raise the same to be trulye added and annexed to my sayde last will and to see the same in all thynges truely and carefully performed and discharged accordinge to my Faithfull Truste reposed in him. In primis whereas by the Form a Codecell to this my presente will all so annexed I did give to Mr John Slad one deepe French bombe guylte with a cover all freezed and Fortye poundes in monye. Nowe for dyverse good considerations mee at this tyme specially movinge. I have caused the sayde guyfte and legacy to be crossed out of my sayde will and I doe hereby revoake and frustrate the same. And I doe nowe gyve and bequeath to my lovinge friend John Saywarde aforementioned in my sayde will in regarde of manye travelles and some busynesses wch he hathe done and daylye doethe for mee the sayde French Bowle and fortye poundes in mony over and above and besydes the legacye of Fiftye poundes wch I have given hym in my sayde will. And I doe alsoe give hym one sylver bazen and ewer and one sylver beere tankarde wth a cover wch I myselfe ordinaryilye use in my now lodginge chamber. Item further allso by my former codecell I did gyve to John Boyd some tymes my servaunt now deceased the some of Fyve poundes and to Nicholas Bromley some tymes also my servaunteand now departed one of my sayde servyce the some of Fyve poundesalso I doe now revoake the same guyftes to the sayde John Boyd and Nicholas Bromley and my will and meaninge is that the same shall remayne to my sayde Executor towardes the performance of this my last will and testamente and the sayde codecells hereto annexed. Item I doe further give and bequeath unto Stephen Mondaye sometymes my servaunt the some of Fyve poundes Memorandum that the nynthe daye of Maye Anno Domini one thousand sixe hundrede and eleaven the sayde Sir Frauncys Carew did raise and appointe this Schedule or Ccodecell allso to be annexed unto his sayde laste will and testamente and did ordegne constitute and appointe that yt shoulde remayne and be as parte and parcell oh his sayde will charginge his Executor wth this his will Faithfullye and trulye to perform the same. And the sayde Sir Frauncis Carew did seale subscrybe and defyne aswell the sayde will as these scedules annexed to be his one and onelye and last will and testamente in the presence of John Shararde, Frauncys Duller, Nicholas Lyller, Frauncys Marsh. Memorandum alsoe that the Fyveteenth daye of Maye Anno Domini 1611 the sayde Sir Frauncys Carew did give and bequeath to Nicholas Scoame sometymes his servaunt Fyve poundes in monye and to Dannyell Meade clerke for speciall servyce and pleasure done to him in this his Sickenes the some of tenne poundes in monye and to the Appothecarye Mr John Shaywarde the some or tenne poundes in monye and to his servaunt William Grimserke his Farrier (?) one baye hackinge nagge And appointed the same by waye of codecell to be annexed to his sayde last will and testamente as parte and parcell of his sayde will requyringe his Executor to performe the same in the presence of John Shararde, Mrs Quarles, Mr Litton and his wyfe, Mrs Short, Frauncys Butler, Nicholas Lyller, Frauncys Marsh, John Bashforde, Birhardes Owen John Beste and others.

Fanizz

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fanizz tranquila,great,etc.

Fanning females

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Exploring the ancestry of the women who married into our branch of the Fanning family. The male branch is well-researched (W F Brooks' "History of the Fanning Family" from 1905) so the goal here is to use modern research techniques to uncover the mysteries of the female branch.

Fanny Merryman Mystery

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'''Newspaper Article Transcription - Reporting Death''' FRANCES "FANNY" MERRYMAN UNKNOWN LADY'S IDENTIFY FOUND FANNY MERRYMAN RECOGNIZED BY FORMER KEARNEY MAN BROTHER LEFT FOR KANSAS Unknown Woman Thought to Have Committed Suicide in Kansas City Identified as Miss Merryman -- No Reason Ascribed -- Burial There Miss Frances A. Merryman, 43 years of age May 2, last, is the identity of the unknown woman registered at the Kupper hotel in Kansas City Saturday night who was found dead Sunday afternoon indications pointing to suicide, the identity having been established at 10 a. m. Thursday by Clint Ross and his business partner, Carson Ross, stockman of that city who formerly resided in Kearney. Suspicions first centered on the deceased as possibly being the unknown one who had so carefully concealed all possible traces of identity before going to the hotel when a telegram ____________ ____________ of the whereabouts of Miss Sylvia D. McKinney the woman who was at first suspicioned as being the unknown. The message was undelivered and a subsequent message to Mrs. Perry Merryman stated that she had not yet arrived in Moline, although on her way having left Kearney Sept. 11, _____________ the Ray E. Turner shoe store it was learned that Miss Merryman had also purchased a pair of the particular shoes that held the ___________ clue to the identify. When Last Seen After having spent the summer in Moline with her sister-in-law, Miss Merryman returned to Kearney about two weeks ago ostensibly to visit her aged mother. She visited in the city a week and left for Moline on the date mentioned, purchasing a ticket only to Omaha from Kearney. On the morning of September 12, N. P. McDonald saw her in the dining room of _______ Paddock hotel, and after breakfast met her again at the Union station depot, she was waiting for a Missouri Pacific train at the time he boarded his train for Kearney. Details of the finding were those recited in the Hub Wednesday evening with the added information secured Thursday . The Kansas City papers give the following story: The suit case found in her room contained a card case given as an advertisement by Glenn & ______ of Lincoln, Neb., also a mirror advertising ___ paper printed in Lincoln. Also among the effects found in the room was a traveler's accident insurance policy, No. 756,612, for $2,500, bearing _____ date and issued by the North American Insurance company. There were also found a handkerchief, bearing the initial "M' embroidered in one corner, a hypodermic syringe, two thermometers such as nurses and physicians use to take temperatures by inserting ________________, and a manicure set bearing the initials ______________ night train to the scene of the tragedy. According to his plans burial will take place in Kansas City in accord with an expressed wish that she be buried when death overtook her in some distant and unknown locality. Born in Illinois Miss Frances A. Merryman was born on a farm near Swedona, Ill., the second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David A. [sic] Merryman. Her mother, Mrs. Mary Mitchell Merryman, nearly 85 years of age, is in the city at the home of Mrs. F. A. Cool; the only sister of the deceased. Two brothers living are Nelson Merryman, Axtel, Perry Merryman, Moline, Ill., now in Russia, George Merryman, whose residence is unknown, and Charles Merryman of Oklahoma City. Mrs. Flora Valentine, of Kearney, is a half sister being a daughter of Mrs. Merryman by her first marriage while Freeman Merryman, now in California is a half brother, being the only son of her father by his first marriage. Was Highly Respected Having remained at home where she cared for her mother Miss Merryman was highly respected, usually cheerful, sympathetic and kind always, she had practiced nursing more or less the last twelve years although she had never completed her training. She was prominent in Eastern Star and Masonic circles in which she took much interest having been worthy matron two terms. Hosts of friends mourn her loss many of whom refuse to believe that suicide was intended but that death resulted from an overdose of an opiate taken to relieve some temporary illness. Newspaper clipping, about 1913 (unknown date and paper) Submitted by Phyllis Cloyd

FannyFernsFernLeaves

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Stuff that doesn't need to be on the sidebar of [[Willis-11936|Sara "Fanny Fern" Willis]]'s profile and in the biography text causing doubled-vision. Digitally colourised version of Coffin's title page: {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-2.png |align=c |size=250 |caption='''Title page for "Fern Leaves".''' |label=Colourised version of Fred Coffin's title page for the book "Fern Leaves", with multitudes of ferns, a "rough log" frame, and the words "Fern Leaves from Fanny’s Portfolio. Second Series." in stylised font. }} === Fern Leaves ===     '''Images from "Fanny Fern's" book "Fern Leaves From Fanny’s Portfolio", created as Original Designs by Fred. M. Coffin.''' {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-6.png |align=c |size=250 |caption='''''Fern Leaves'' title page.''' |label=Fred Coffin's title page for the book "Fern Leaves", with multitudes of ferns, a "rough log" frame, and the words "Fern Leaves from Fanny’s Portfolio. Second Series." in stylised font. (Squared down from a rectangle.) }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves.jpg |align=l |size=175 |caption='''The Little Brown House.''' |label=A small house sits nestled in the woods, beneath a number of over-hanging trees, and behind a rustic split-log fence. }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-3.png |align=r |size=175 |caption='''The Blue Stocking.''' |label=A woman — stated as Mrs. Adolphus Smith (clearly the "blue stocking") — sits at a table, writing something on a writing desk with a quill pen. A man stands over her on one side (“''Wife! will you leave off scribbling?''” ("''Don’t be disagreeable, Smith, I’m just getting inspired''")), and a woman is standing to the other side. }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-1.jpg |size=175 |caption='''Mr Stubbs and Friends.''' |label=A man and his cronies sit around a table drinking . . something. }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-2.jpg |align=l |size=175 |caption='''The Aged Minister.''' |label=A man - the aged Minister - sits with his head in his hand, apparently in some emotional distress; a writing desk atop the table, with a quill pen in an inkwell to the side. }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-5.jpg |align=r |size=175 |caption='''Simon Skinflint.''' |label=An overfed, quite corpulent, man sits in a chair berating the girl-woman who is asking for "just a small" raise in her pay, and giving her a firm negative. }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-4.jpg |size=175 |caption='''Our Street.''' |label=A group of children, and a couple of adults, is gathered in the street at the corner of a brick building. One adult, a man, appears to have a hurdy-gurdy, and one of the boys has a hoop. }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-3.jpg |size=175 |caption='''May-Day Moving.''' |label=As Brown comes up the stairs with his rocking-chair, Smith, at the head of his men, descends, with a bureau, from the second floor. It must have been quite the thing passing each other on those stairs! }} {{clear}} === Little Ferns ===     '''Images from "Fanny Fern's" book "Little Ferns For Fanny's Little Friends", created as Original Designs by Fred. M. Coffin.''' {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-6.jpg |align=l |size=175 |caption='''Little Nelly''' |label=A little girl sits on a footstool between an armchair and a fireplace. There is a table in the background with papers and a quill pen in an inkwell upon it. Where is Little Nelly? She is not in the garden. Nelly is not down by the river. She is not talking with Papa. }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-8.jpg |align=r |size=175 |caption='''Hatty's Mistake.''' |label=Hatty thought learning was a waste of time and effort, "I am glad it is Saturday; I don't see the use of going to school, and I wish I never had to look into a book again" — until she talked with Bridget, who could neither read, nor write. "Oh, Mamma!—Bridget and I have been talking, and Bridget—(great big Bridget!)—don't know how to read and write! and she has nobody to love but Pat—and Pat is in Ireland; and when he writes her a letter she can't read it, and she can't answer him, because she don't know how to write; and she hasn't seen Pat since—since he was as little as a butter firkin—and she is so unhappy—and, Mamma, mayn't I have an A-B-C book, and teach Bridget how to read and how to write?" }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-7.jpg |size=175 |caption='''Only a Penny''' |label=Clara was afraid to steal, (not because God saw her—for she didn't know anything about Him,) but for fear of policemen and prisons—so she wandered about, hour after hour, saying pitifully to the careless crowd, "Only a penny—please give me a penny to buy a loaf of bread!" }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-9.jpg |align=l |size=175 |caption='''Uncle Jolly''' |label=A jolly old gentleman sits in a chair, explaining to the little girls he'd met earlier that he really wasn't a stranger after all. (Looking back: Uncle Jolly couldn't stand it any longer;—he rushed into the toy shop, bought an armful of play-things helter-skelter, and ran after the two little girls. "Here, Susy! here, Katy!" said he, "here are some New Year's presents from Uncle Jolly." "Who is Uncle Jolly?" "Well, he's uncle to all the poor little children who have no kind papa.") }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-11.jpg |align=r |size=175 |caption='''Letty''' |label=A boy and a girl are standing beside a table with tea things upon it. Suddenly the wicked boy gave Letty's arm a knock, and sent the tray of dishes out of her hand upon the floor. }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-10.jpg |size=175 |caption='''Crazy Tim.''' |label=A strange-looking man with straggly hair is standing on a street, holding the string of a small wooden horse on wheels, and surrounded by boys who appear to be mocking, or taunting him. Tim wasn't always the crazy figure now seen. He became this way after finding his beloved daughter, Kitty, had been run down by a train when she had stopped to pick up her spilt huckleberries. Ever since that day Uncle Tim goes up and down through the road pulling the little wooden horse that Kitty used to play with, in the hope that he will find her. }} {{clear}} === Other Book Covers === {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-5.png |align=l |size=175 |caption='''''Caper Sauce'' book cover.''' |label=Geometrical design with stylised leaves, and the words "Caper Sauce" and "Fanny Fern". (Squared down from a rectangle.) }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-12.jpg |align=r |size=175 |caption='''''Ruth Hall'' book cover.''' |label=Blue cover with an embossed design, and the words "Fanny Fern". (Squared down from a rectangle.) }} {{Image|file=FannyFernsFernLeaves-7.png |size=175 |caption='''''Ginger Snaps'' title page.''' |label=GINGER-SNAPS. BY FANNY FERN, AUTHOR OF "Fern Leaves,"—"Folly as it Flies," &c. NEW YORK: Carleton, Publisher, Madison Square. LONDON: S. LOW, SON & CO. MDCCCLXX. (Squared down from a rectangle.) }} {{clear}} === An Excerpt === From [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/45172/45172-h/45172-h.htm '''FRESH LEAVES'''.] : '''THE “FAVORITE” CHILD.''' :     Why will parents use that expression? What right have you to have a favorite child? The All-Father maketh his sun to shine alike upon the daisy and the rose. Where would you be, were His care measured by your merits or deserts? Is your child none the less your child, that nature has denied him a fluent tongue, or forgotten her cunning, when, in careless mood, she fashioned his limbs? Because beauty beams not from the eye, is there no intelligence there? Because the rosy flush mantles not the pale cheek, does the blood never tingle at your coldness or neglect? Because the passive arms are not wound about your neck, has the soul no passionate yearnings for parental love? O, how often does God, more merciful than you, passing by the Josephs of your household, stoop in his pity and touch those quivering lips with a live coal from off the altar? How often does this neglected one, burst from out the chrysalis in which your criminal coldness has enveloped him, and soaring far above your wildest parental imaginings, compel from your ambition, what he could not gain from your love? :     How often does he replenish with liberal hand the coffers which the “favorite child,” in the selfishness which you fostered, has drained of their last fraction. “He that is first shall be last, and the last shall be first.” Let parents write this on their heart tablets. Let them remember it when they repulse the little clinging arms, or turn a deaf ear to the childish tale of sorrow. O, gather up those clinging tendrils of affection with gentlest touch; trample them not with the foot of haste or insensibility rudely in the dust. ::: “And they, in the darkest of days, shall be ::: Greenness, and beauty, and strength to thee.” From [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/41542/41542-h/41542-h.htm '''Rose Clark'''.] : "Weeping! dear Gertrude," exclaimed John, as he entered his sister's studio, and seated himself by her side. : Gertrude laid her head upon his shoulder without replying. : "You do not often see me thus," she said, after a pause. "To-day is the anniversary of my husband's death, and as I sat at the window and saw the autumn wind showering down the bright leaves, I thought of that mournful October day, when, turning despairingly away from his dying moans, I walked to the window of his sick room, and saw the leaves eddying past as they do now. I could almost see again before me that pallid face, almost hear those fleeting, spasmodic breaths, and all the old agony woke up again within me. And yet," said Gertrude, smiling through her tears, "such blissful memories of his love came with it! Oh! surely, John, love like this perishes not with its object—dies not in this world? : "And my little Arthur, too, John—you have never seen my treasures. You have never looked upon the faces which made earth such a paradise for me;" and touching a spring in a rosewood box near her, Gertrude drew from it the pictures of her husband and child, and as John scanned their features in silence, she leaned upon his shoulder, and the bright teardrops fell like rain upon them. === Bluestocking - an explanation === What was, or is, a "Bluestocking"? : A "bluestocking" was (and is) an educated, intellectual woman, although until the late 18th century, the term had referred to learned people of both sexes. It has developed negative implications and is now often used in a derogatory manner, as a "put down" to a woman who appears to be more intelligent than her male colleagues. The French equivalent bas bleu had a similar connotation. The term appears to have its origins in the [https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bluestocking-British-literary-society Blue Stocking society], a group of women who wished for more intellectual discussions than the more "normal" (for their day) social evenings spent playing card games. {{clear}}

FANs -- Halifax County, NC to Tennessee

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People with origins in Halifax County, North Carolina maintained their ties of family and friendship after moving to Tennessee in the years after the Revolutionary War. This is a place to record those connections, especially ties of affinity (not just blood), which are harder to identify without in-depth study. See my blogpost examining the records of Samuel Spears, here: http://voicesfromadistantpast.blogspot.com/2014/12/samuel-spears-was-from-halifax-county-nc.html I was focused on identifying the father of Lazarus Spears, but in doing so, unraveled ties of kinship and friendship among several other groups of people in Tennessee. *[[Haynes-1012|Christopher Haynes]] came to Hawkins County around 1796-97. *[[Haynes-444|Lucy Haynes Amis]] sister of Christopher, came to Hawkins County around the time of her marriage to Thomas Amis in 1788. *[[Haynes-1007|Ann Haynes Gordon]] sister of Christopher, married John Gordon, and they settled in Smith County, Tennessee. *[[Spears-69|Samuel Spears]] lived in same district as the Haynes family in Halifax County; came to Hawkins County sometime between 1790 and 1808. *[[Hale-10281|Ogburn Hale]] lived in Hawkins County and with wife Loviny had previously associated with Haynes and Spears families in Halifax County. *Jacob Cress, another Halifax-Hawkins associate of the Haynes and Spears families

Faries, Pixies and Elves

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------ [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Childhood_Legends https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/91/Terrys_page-68.jpg] *'''[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=exg5aFp4_Nw Youtube] - Fairy sighting caught on camera''' *'''[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Sv5Tndr2aUU Youtube] - The Folklorist - The Cottingley Fairies''' *'''[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PGbg1ypH3NU Youtube] - Mystrey's explained The Cottingley Fairies''' {{Image|file=Images.gif |align=r |size=80 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-164.jpg |align=l |size=190 |caption= }}


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Fairies, Pixies and Elves
'''If you want your children to be intelligent read them Fairytales''' '''[[Einstein-1|Albert Einstein]]''' '''Every time a child says "I don't believe in Fairies" there is a Fairy somewhere that falls down dead''' '''[[Barrie-91|J.M Barrie]] - Peter Pan''' '''Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame''' '''[[Yeats-69|William Butler Yeats]]''' '''Beware of the half truth you may of gotten hold of the wrong half''' '''Fairies don't beleive in you either''' '''Author unknown''' {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-169.jpg |align=c |size=420 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-161.jpg |align=c |size=320 |caption= }}
Fairies
{{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-162.jpg |align=l |size=140 |caption= }} In folklore Fairies are mythical creatures, they are have the powers of magic and enchantment. People have believed in fairies from earliest times but fairies don't like to be seen by people and can disappear really quickly. '''Fairy Facts''' {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-163.jpg |align=r |size=240 |caption= }} *Fairies are all different sizes *Fairies love fresh flowers and laughter *They love music, bells and jingles! *Fairies love to dance!! *Tangles in your hair are the work of fairies *The disappearance of small objects can be a clue they have been visiting *They can make themselves visible or invisible and can change their shapes and sizes but May Day, Midsummer’s Eve, and Halloween are good times to see them *Children, mainly young girls are most likely to see Fairies *They live to be several hundred years old *They like honey, milk, and nectar {{Image|file=Photos-212.gif |align=c |size=530 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-26.gif |align=l |size=240 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-27.gif |align=r |size=220 |caption= }} {{clear}}
Cottingley Fairies
{{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-156.jpg |align=l |size=160 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-157.jpg |align=r |size=140 |caption= }} In 1917 two cousins 16 year old Elsie Wright and 9 year old Frances Griffiths who lived at Cottingley, England took a photograph of a fairy,Elsie and Francis often played together beside the stream at the bottom of the garden, they told their mothers they only played there to see the fairies. No one believe them so Elsie borrowed her fathers camera.When they came back and Elsie's father developed the photo it showed Frances behind a bush and four fairies appeared to be dancing on it.Between 1917 and 1920 Elsie and Francis took a series 5 photographs of the fairies.The first photographs became public in 1919, and the photos went worldwide.In 1983, Elsie and Francis admitted in an article published in the magazine that the photographs had been faked, although both said that they really had seen fairies. {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-158.jpg |align=l |size=140 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-159.jpg |align=r |size=140 |caption= }} The fifth photo Frances insisted was real In an interview given in the early 1980s Frances said: ''It was a wet Saturday afternoon and we were just mooching about with our cameras and Elsie had nothing prepared. I saw these fairies building up in the grasses and just aimed the camera and took a photograph'' {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-160.jpg |align=c |size=380 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Photos-208.gif |align=c |size=380 |caption= }} {{clear}}
Were the Fairies Live
{{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-167.jpg |align=l |size=245 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-168.jpg |align=r |size=260 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-171.jpg |align=l |size=210 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-170.jpg |align=r |size=200 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Photos-208.gif |align=c |size=380 |caption= }} {{clear}}
Pixies
Pixies are mythical creatures of folklore, found in in the high moorland areas around Devon and Cornwall, their origin is thought to be Celtic.Pixies are kind and warmhearted, mischievous, short and childlike,they are fond of dancing and gather outdoors in huge numbers to dance or sometimes wrestle.In stories the are described with pointed ears, and often wearing a green outfit and pointed hat {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-174.jpg |align=l |size=250 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-172.jpg |align=r |size=220 |caption= }}{{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-173.jpg |align=c |size=500 |caption= }}{{clear}}
Elves
Elves are from Norse mythology they are a very old race,Elves are magical and live in in forests high in the trees or great fortresses.They live in harmony with the nature and animals, they use their magic for protection and healing among other things. There are many types of different Elves, Wood Elves, High Elves, Aquatic Elves, Light Elves, Dark Elves, Sun Elves, Moon Elves, Forest Elves, Warrior Elves. Elves are about the same height as humans, they are more slender and graceful, they have long, pointed ears and wide, almond shaped eyes most Elves have fair skin and long hair. Elves age very slowly and live for 100's of years, in many myths the King of Elves is said to be Oberon. {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-175.jpg |align=l |size=250 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-180.jpg |align=r |size=210 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-177.jpg |align=l |size=270 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-176.jpg |align=r |size=240 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-178.jpg |align=c |size=440 |caption= }}{{clear}}
Were the Elves Live
{{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-182.jpg |align=r |size=290 |caption= }} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-27.png |align=l |size=210 |caption= }} {{clear}} {{Image|file=Terry_s_Images-181.jpg |align=c |size=460 |caption= }} {{clear}} ------- '''Sources''' *[http://sparklefairy.com/blog/2011/01/28/fairy-facts/ sparklefairy.com] - Fairy Facts *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottingley_Fairies Wikipedia] - Cottingley Fairies *[http://mythology.wikia.com/wiki/Elfom Elves] - Elves

Farington pedigrees

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{{Image|file=Farrington-213.png |caption=Farington of Little Farington in Vis. of Lancs., 1567 }} {{Image|file=Farrington-239.png |caption=Farington (Vis. of Lancs., 1613) }} {{Image|file=Farington-25.png |caption=Farrington of Worden (Vis. of Lancs, 1664/5) }}

Farinha-3 Sources

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Free space to hold Sources images

Farm

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Farm name of Slangfontein

Farm Vehicles

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Farm_Vehicles-1.jpg
Farm_Vehicles.jpg
Farm vehicles through the years

Farmer

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Maddox-2565|Doloris Maddox]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Some went to Illinois. * Others went to Texas and Oklahoma * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=22921060 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Farming & Home Life

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It is noted in The Settlement of Huron County by James Scott that the population of Ashfield Township in 1840 was 266; in 1850 it was 682 and by 1861, it had grown to 2,617. When I was born in 1899, Ashfield had been almost completely cleared of forest and almost every 100 acres was occupied and contained a home and barn. Mixed farming was the order of the day. The power on the farm came from horses. There were no tractors. There were portable gasoline engines on some farms that were used for chopping grain, cutting straw, sawing wood and similar jobs. Threshing was done with steam engines. They first were drawn by horses from place to place but most were what was known as tractor engines and were self-propelled. About the time of WWI (1914), gasoline tractors made their appearance in Ashfield. Bob Nelson had the first in our locality. He used it for threshing. It was a two-cylinder John Deere and used fuel oil for fuel. It was a real efficient machine and was used for many years. Prior to steam, horse power was used and consisted of two or more long poles attached to a centre gear. The horses were hitched on the outer ends of the poles and driven round and round. The gears were connected to a drive shaft which propelled the machine to which it was attached. I only recollect seeing one of these in operation at James Johnstone’s place, across the road from where we lived. It was used to cut straw for cattle feed and bedding. Horses were also used for cultivating the land, plowing, sowing and cutting the grain with binders. Before the binders came into use, a swather was used and the grain had to be picked out of the swaths and tied by hand. I have seen these machines but never saw them at work. Before them, the pioneers used cradles and these had to be used by hand. They had a blade like a scythe attached to a cradle which when swung through the grain, gathered the grain which was spread in rows and later gathered up and bound into sheaves that were tied again by hand. The bands were made by taking two wisps of grain and twisting the ends together. Then they were swung around the sheaf, bound tightly, twisted again, the ends tucked under the band and your sheaf was complete. This made quite the tidy sheaf. These were later stooked, the same as grain cut with a binder. Threshing was a co-operative job between neighbours. Each helped the other in the early days. Ploughing was done with horses (or oxen in pioneer days) and a walking plough. With this method, one to one and a half acres a day could be ploughed, depending on the hardness of the soil and your team of horses. Two furrowed gang ploughs were used, then the riding plough with one or two furrow and horses. Ploughing was usually done in fall. Come spring, the land was worked with discs and harrows and a seed drill was used to sow the grain. Before the turn of the century, the hay was cut with a scythe. The horse drawn mower was used. The hay was raked and coiled with pitch forks. These had to be built so the rain could be shed. A neighbour, Jack Bowler, had only log barns, one for storage, a cow barn, horse stable and four pig pens and hen pens. He always needed help and we needed help to fill the silo so we exchanged help. The first homes of the settlers were made of logs. Later, wood frame, brick and stone were used. There weren’t many log houses left at the start of the 1900s but there were a few. These were quite comfortable. The ceilings were quite low, both downstairs and upstairs. They were heated by the wood cook stove and box stove. No indoor plumbing was available in those days and the outdoor privy was standard equipment. These were a favourite target for Halloween pranks, especially against someone who was not too popular with the youngsters. Log homes were substantially built by notching logs at the corners. They were about the same thickness for the full length of the house and chinked with slabs of mortar. Some were boarded on the outside and others were not. Many happy families were raised in these homes and many good times were had dancing, playing cards, etc when the only means of entertainment was what was created within the home or local community. Equipment and utensils in country homes changed very little until the introduction of Hydro into rural areas. Even when we were married in 1924, we had a wood cook stove. Later we burned coal. The women did all their own baking, including bread. Housewives vied with each other as to who was the best cook in the neighbourhood. This was always recognized by threshing gangs (15 to 20 men) in the fall of the year when they went from place to place helping each other get the threshing done. The ladies helped one another too and always a few small children came with their mothers. The farmer’s wife in those days had a busy life. Besides cooking and raising a family, she made her own butter from ripened cream (from the farm’s milk supply) in a dasher or revolving churn. Of course, this again was hard labour, both running the churn and mixing the butter. The buttermilk was used for baking and drinking. This we also did after we were married. The family wash was also done by hand. The wash tub and scrub board were the first equipment available. The tub was set on two chairs if you didn’t own a tub stand. The wash water was heated in a boiler on the wood stove and then poured into the tub. Mostly the well was outdoors and the water had to be hand pumped into pails and carried indoors. The clothes were immersed and scrubbed by hand on the wash board. The soap used was also homemade. I can’t tell you the process but it was made from fats and lye outdoors in a sap kettle over an open fire and was very efficient as a cleaner. The job of scrubbing clothes on a washboard was a strenuous one, both on the back and knuckles of the hands. Later on, the washing machine relieved some of the drudgery of wash day but it still had to be hand operated and the water heated on the stove until Hydro came along to do this work mechanically (there were also hot water attachments on wood stoves to a hot water tank after Hydro came and installed water pumps). In my younger days there was one room in the house known as the parlor. Today we call it the living room. The thing that made it different then was that it was scarcely used except when company came. Since money and good furniture were hard to come by, we youngsters seldom were allowed in the parlor. It contained a couch or settee and special rocking chairs. Since there was no central heating, a wood stove or coal heater was part of the furnishings. These stoves quite often had a mica front and with a fire burning inside, presented a pleasant glow in the room, often making it look warmer than it really was. A coal oil lamp hung in the centre of the ceiling. These were quite colourful in design and gave good light around the room. In most homes, an organ or piano was part of the parlor furniture. In those days, neighbours did a great deal of visiting amongst themselves and the organ got a great deal of use to create entertainment during these visits and at house parties and dances which occurred frequently. Card parties were also quite common. Visits and parties were the only means of entertainment in the country in winter time when the only transportation was by horse drawn cutters and sleighs. Another special room in the house was the spare bedroom. Here a bed was kept for visitors when they came from a distance and it was too far to make the return voyage in one day. This bed had a feather tick made from goose or duck feathers. Over it were flannelette sheets, a wool blanket and the fancy homemade quilts that neighbours had come in to make. Also featured were the embroidered pillow cases trimmed with crocheted lace of 3-inch width. These beds which looked and were real comfortable, were also sometimes in rooms that were not too well heated. Very often the hostess would place bricks warmed in the oven and covered with a woolen cloth in the bed awhile before bedtime to have the bed warm when the visitor was ready to retire. If the bed and room had not been used for some time, they were cold, damp and clammy. To this I can vouch because on several occasions while on R.O.P. inspection work, I had this very experience. There being no running water available, the old fashioned toilet set was always on the washstand in the spare bedroom. To say the least, your morning wash was quite invigorating with the cold water that had been placed in the pitcher the night before. I wonder if those who complain about conditions today ever stop to think about the hardships that existed in the first quarter of the 20th Century in the country. Conditions changed very little in the farm home until after Hydro came along the side roads and concessions of the townships after the First World War (1914-18). During the Second World War (1939-45), Hydro came to Curries Corners, Ashfield Township. Hydro was just about to come in when we left Ashfield. Three subscribers were required in a mile before a line would be built and not everyone thought at that time they could afford or needed it, therefore it was slow coming. We had bought a Delco System (second hand) and had electric lights in the kitchen before we left the farm. It was while in Ashfield that we heard the first radio. Pete had got a set with ear phones. We used to go to his place and listen to the “Grand Old Opera” from Nashville. I also remember the first telephone line being built along our road in Ashfield. It was known as the Dungannon Rural Telephone Co. The fellows building the line were staying at Jas. Johnstone’s across the road from us. They put in the Row Grant, ours and Johnstones line first. The first call we put in was to Grants and I remember trying to figure out just how the thing worked. Another job done by the farm housewife was the making of homemade bread. I do not profess to be a baker but the procedure went something like this: The flour (often made from home grown wheat taken to the local flour mill and ground into flour) was put into a bake dish, warmed and mixed with yeast that had been gotten ready from yeast cakes. This mixture was put in a large bread pan (about the size of a small tub), wrapped up in quilts and allowed to rise overnight. Early in the morning, the housewife would get up and mix this again and later put it in the smaller bread pans where it was allowed to rise again and then put in the oven to bake. This was quite a chore but when baked was most delicious, especially when fresh and spread with good homemade butter. One of the great changes in my lifetime has been the means of transportation. The days of the oxen had passed in Ontario when I was a boy but I have seen them used in Nova Scotia, France and Thailand. Even before the oxen in Ontario, the first pioneers did much of their traveling on foot from place to place for supplies. Canoes were used on rivers and lakes. I sometimes wonder how many people would do this today. After the oxen, came the horses which were the means of local transportation when I was a boy. The single buggy, the democrat, the phaeton and the wagon were the vehicles pulled by the horses. As the country opened up, the steam railways were built to connect the different towns. These carried on until after the Second World War. The diesel engine replaced the steam (coal burning) engine as the means of power to pull the trains. Today the steam locomotive is only a museum piece in Canada. As cars and buses became common and comfortable, the passenger travel on trains became less and less profitable and convenient and except for the odd cross-country passenger train, this means of travel has disappeared and the local railway stations have nearly all been torn down. At one time, there used to be two passenger trains each way every day except Sundays. Now there are none. After the First World War, trucks started to be used as a means of transporting products of all kinds. The gravel roads gave way to pavement on our main highways. Trucks turned from gasoline to diesel, became larger and larger and today are almost the size of railway freight cars. Good roads and good cars have made the difference. It is wonderful to know we have lived in a period of time when we have seen and experienced all these changes. Today (1970) many of our young people have become militant against what they call the establishment. They are protesting against everything and everyone. They want to change things to suit themselves but do not say just what these things are. I suppose this same restless feeling was the reason our pioneer forefathers left the old lands in Great Britain and Europe to come to Canada. In the old country, under the feudal system, the landlords owned everything and the tenants who did all the work had no hope of ever having their own home and land so when the opportunity arose for them to come to a new country to own something for themselves, they were willing to work hard and make sacrifices to gain it. Young people today may find that they too will have to make some sacrifices if they hope to achieve their wishes. If they would only read about and understand the hardships the pioneers – their forefathers – endured, they would be much more appreciative of what they have today.

Farming Organizations & Agricultural Education

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Farm Meetings and Organizations The first farm meetings I went to were for the Farmers Institute. These were held one day each year at Kintail. They brought in speakers about various farm topics of interest. I remember Bill Bailey and Joe Mallough from over near Dungannon were two of the leaders in this organization. Later, the United Farmers of Ontario was organized around Curries Corners and the club hall was built on the corner of our farm (now falling down in 1970). In summers each year, train excursions went from all over Ontario to the Ontario Agricultural College (O.A.C.) at Guelph. These were for one day’s duration. We left early morning and came back in the evening. We were given lunch at the College. This was in June and terrific crowds attended to see the experimental plots and livestock and buildings and grounds as well as having a day’s holiday and train ride at a reduced rate. In January 1917, I went to O.A.C. to take a short course in poultry. It lasted one month. I roomed with Percy Switzer, Arthur Wilson and Norman McCully of St. Mary’s who was a life long companion. We were given an incubator and hatched chicks and took lectures. This gave me the groundwork for my later lifetime work in poultry. Ontario Agricultural College 1919-22 In the fall of 1919 I decided to go to O.A.C. at Guelph. This was after the First World War and an inducement was offered to returned soldiers. Two hundred and sixty-five of us students were enrolled in the freshman class of year ’23. In November, I contracted pneumonia and after five days in hospital, came home. The three months I had attended gave me some idea of the work and what was required of me if I was to succeed. Your entrance was the only qualification. In the fall of 1920 I returned to O.A.C. and had to enter the Associate Class. I entered a speaking contest and was awarded first prize. I was also secretary of the Literary Society and this gave me good training. I joined the Poultry Club and won high marks in two years. I went to Chalmers United Church Sundays and to social functions at the College. There are things that happen in life that we never forget. One of these was when I got my room at College and had my trunk delivered. I opened it up and on top of everything else was a copy of the Holy Bible that Mother had put in for me to read. This was a reminder to me of the faith my parents had in Christianity and the hope that I would have the same. These years in College (1919-22) were a wonderful experience and training for me even though I returned to the farm. They helped in the farm work directly and also in understanding better what you would read in books and farm magazines regarding research and experimental work. It also helped in getting work with the Department of Agriculture in poultry judging at school and fall fairs. By the way, for several years, I judged at 21 school fairs in Huron County, first with Steve Stothers and then with Geo Patterson and Geo McCague. The greatest benefit, however, was learning to live and work with people in your business and social life. It also helped when I applied for a job with the Dominion Department of Agriculture for the position of Record of Performance (R.O.P.) Dairy Inspector. The training for the job was really just a review of what I had learned in the Dairy Department at O.A.C. Having to live with farm families at work was also made easier by the fact that we learn to live with people in our years at College.

Farnham, Viginia Draper Descendants Tour Guide -1

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https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/34/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-452.jpg =The Draper Tour Guide: Tour de Farnham= https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/34/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-452.jpg ==='''Dedicated To:''' ''' ''Those Who Lived That Gave Us Life!'' ''' === {{Image|file=Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-734.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption=Scan At Family Reunions (Expect Slow Loading) }} *'''Our Draper Family''' are descendants of Thomas and Sarah Draper, from North Farnham Parish, Colonial America in the 1700's, where we hit the proverbial "Brick Wall". This project considers Draper burials in the United States and Canada. *'''Your Draper Family''' are included. This project may help all "Draper" discover our families. *'''Our Draper family and Your Draper family,''' resting together in many cemeteries, need sorting out, like "separating the Sheep and the Goats" (Interperate that which ever way you wish!) * '''Over 4,660 burial listings as of December 23, 2023'''. The journey of life ends somewhere. Now all of us can see where. *'''Definitions / Terms Used''' **'''Pedigree''' The recorded ancestry of a person or family. **'''Taphophile''' A person who is interested in cemeteries, funerals and gravestones. **'''Brick Wall''' refers to end of a person's pedigree. We can't trace ancestors any further back in time. **'''NOT Family''' (for lack of a better term), alerts OUR family that these are YOUR family. This will be changed to '''NoDoTeD''' (which isn't so rude sounding) and will mean Not Descendant of Thomas Draper ** '''NoDoTeD''' ('''No'''t '''D'''escendant '''o'''f '''T'''homas ('''e''') '''D'''raper) An acronym that will be used to describe "Your Draper Family Member" **'''CENOTAPH''' A monument to someone buried elsewhere. We use the term to label how a person is connected to that burial, but not physically located there. They may be listed again in their final resting place. **'''Additional research information''' is listed: ***Find A Grave ID: listed as '''Memorial ID 167945910''' (example) uses all numbers *** Family Search ID: listed as '''MBFC-H4W''' (example) uses letters and numbers ***WikiTree profile: [[Draper-4171|'''Underscored Draper Name''']], (example) re-directs you to that person's WikiTree profile page. (that example re-directs to my WT page; just FYI) *'''The advantages''' of this project: ** Books about the Draper families in America become outdated. **This project is updated weekly. **When you are out and about in a cemetery, you can Google '"Draper Tour Guide: Tour de Farnham"' on your Smart Phone, scroll down to the State, County, City and cemetery to see all those related to our family, including the daughters who married, and in some cases, their spouses and children. *'''Format''' **We are working to group family members together in the Cemeteries. **Cenotaphs of the "Family Head" and "Spouse(s)" are sometimes inserted as the starting point. '''Format example in cemeteries:''' **Family Head, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Different Cemetery, City, State; wives: ***1st Wife of Family Head, her children: ****1st Child, spouse: *****Spouse, their children: ******Child '''CENOTAPH''' ( grandchild, buried: Different Cemetery, City, State) ******2nd Child ****2nd Child, spouse: *****Spouse ***2nd Wife of Family Head, her children: ****Child, spouse: *****Spouse, their children: ******Child (grandchild) Infant Age 1 ******2nd Child (grandchild) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Different Cemetery, City, State; spouse: *******Spouse, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Different Cemetery, City, State; ********Great Grandchild, (living: see Memorial ID 123456789) ***3rd Wife of Family Head '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Different Cemetery, City, State; *Person (brick wall, unknown, can't find connection) Infant *Person (brick wall, unknown, can't find connection) Note: could be child of Family Head *Person (brick wall, unknown, can't find connection) Note: could be mother of Family Head === Your Departure Begins After Some Brief Comments, History and Acknowledgements === '''Are you a Taphophile?''' (an avid grave hunter) If you have information that your feel should be added or see errors needing corrected, please '''send me a private message through the WikiTree system.''' Profile manager: David Draper '''[send private message]''' located at the top of the page. This project has become very complicated as to adding information, maps and cemetery pictures. I will be happy to add the information for you. (see instructions) ====The History of the Draper Name==== The Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006, says: *English and Irish: occupational name for a maker and seller of woolen cloth, Anglo-Norman French draper (Old French drapier, an agent derivative of drap ‘cloth’). The surname was introduced to Ulster in the 17th century. Draperstown in County Londonderry was named for the London Company of Drapers, which was allocated the land in the early 17th century. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-631.jpg *'''Our Draper family''' could have come from Ireland or England, or even somewhere else. Our Draper family "brick walls" in 1690 Virginia. *'''Your Draper family''' may trace further back in time, example: **Midgley, Calderdale, West Yorkshire, England (red dot at the right on the map) ***[[Draper-629|Richard John Draper]] lived in the 1530's in that area. His descendants came to America and are "Your Family". **Draperstown, Country Londonerry, Northern Ireland (red dot at the the left on the map) ***[[Draper-900|Mary Draper Ingles]] descended from Irish Draper family in Donegal, Ireland on the Atlantic Coast, visible on the map to the left of the red dot in Northern Ireland. Mary's family are probably your family, as we can not find connections to our family . *A "Draper" worked in the cloth trades, and they were named by their trade: Draper *Drapers belonged to several religious faiths. They didn't, couldn't or wouldn't associate with one another. (Catholic, Protestant, Quaker, Puritan, Mormon and Baptist and Presbyterian). During the American Civil War, our family became divided, as many families did, over the issues of the day. ==== The Paradise We Came From: A Brief History of Our Draper Beginings in Virginia ==== '''RICHMOND COUNTY''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/47/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-1.png [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Richmond+County,+VA/@37.9615292,-76.7947155,11z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x89b74c7017968811:0xd37409ebe59a8f18!8m2!3d37.9175609!4d-76.7105632 Map_of_Richmond_County] '''THE BRICK WALL''' we can't break down: '''Somewhere on this map [[Draper-169|Thomas & Sarah Draper]] lived, loved, laughed, cried and died in this beautiful area of Colonial America!''' Many pictures of the area are included in the Google Maps link. *'''Unincorporated Communities:''' * Ampthill Heights, * Broad Rock Manor, *Brookbury, *Burtons Corner, *Cedar Farms, *Cherokee Hills, *Cherry Gardens, *Chesterfield Court, *China Hill, *Chippenham Village, *Cobham Park, *Dorchester, *Downings, *Emmerton, *Ethel, *Fairplay, *Farmers Fork, *'''FARNHAM''' *Fawnbrook, *Fernleigh, *Foneswood, *Forest Hill Farms, *Germans Corner, *Havelock, *Haynesville, *Hobby Hill Farms, *Indian Field, *Ivondale, *Kennard, *Kragmont, *Lara, *Luttrellville, *Lyells, *Manchester, *Moon Corner, * Moores Mill, * Mulch, *Naylors, * Naylors Beach, *Newland, "Oak Row, *Oakley Landing, *Oquomock, *Pinehurts, *Piney Grove, *Piney Knolls, *Pittaway Farms, *Rainswood *Ramey Fork, *Rich Neck, *Rio Vista, *Robley, *Scotts Corner, *Sexton Hill, *Sharps, *Simons Corner, *Simonson, *Singerly, *Southampton, *Tallent Town, *Tidewater, *Totusthey, *Twin Valley Farms, * Village, *Walkers Corner, *Walmsley Village, *Washington Park, *Wellford, *Westlake Hills, *Willow Oaks, *Worthington Farms '''[https://familypedia.fandom.com/wiki/Farnham,_Virginia Familypedia]''' '''[[Draper-169|Thomas Draper]]''' our forefather, appears out a dense fog of uncertainty arriving, by birth or by travel to modern day [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Richmond+County,+VA/@37.9615292,-76.7947155,11z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x89b74c7017968811:0xd37409ebe59a8f18!8m2!3d37.9175609!4d-76.7105632 Richmond County, Virginia]. He lived from the late 1680's to 1735. *'''BIRTH PLACE''' Unknown *'''PARENTS''' Unknown *'''SIBLINGS''' Unknown *'''SPOUSE:''' Sarah ''Toone?'' Draper (her parents are uncertain) *'''PROPERTY / FARM / HOME:''' Undiscovered: believed to be near Farnham, Virginia *'''CHILDREN:''' Discovered and Documented *'''BURIAL:''' Unknown (probably on private property with no marker) * '''[[Draper-169|Thomas Draper]]''' lived in what is now modern day Richmond County, Virginia, USA. Long ago the area was called North Farnham Parish, Rappahannock County, a British colony, which was established 1683. **'''[[Tune-56|Sarah Draper]]''' also appears out of the fog of uncertainty, but could be the daughter of '''[[Tune-207|James Toone]]''', who, in his will, January 27 1718, gave land to Sarah and her 3 year old first born son '''[[Draper-1294|William Draper]]'''. However, a court matter on November 1718 involves both Thomas Draper and James Toone: John Buxton’s action of debt against Thomas Draper and James Toone, Thomas’ father-in-law, for 3,600 pounds of tobacco due by bill was dismissed, because Buxton did not prosecute. James Toone died earlier that year. There are no other documents that can prove Sarah's father is James Toone. '''[https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/10/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-7.jpg '''The Will of James Toone]''' ***'''Children''' listed below in the "Thank You" section ====A VERY BIG "THANK YOU!" to our Draper Family Members and Friends==== '''Bill Draper''' has done exhaustive research into our Draper family and has the best primary sources for the family of Thomas Draper and his wife Sarah. His work conveys the facts we know and separates the myths that have become ingrained as facts we think are correct. Visit Bill's web site to learn more and be sure to thank him for his enormous contributions! Link below: [http://billdraper.net/html/virginia_drapers.html '''Bill Draper's Web Site Page: ''MY GENERATIONS'' Early History of Virgina Drapers"] *'''We also want to thank those who have worked endlessly documenting Draper memorials on Find A Grave: **'''Frank Draper''' (FAG ID: 19418732) **'''Tim Draper''' ** '''John Draper''' (FAG ID: 48647082) , ** '''Henry Draper''' (FAG ID 46855149), ** '''Jeffery Draper''' (FAG ID: 47776567) and ** '''Jim Sears''' AKA Tombstoned (FAG ID 50912194) **'''[[Draper-3739|Ray Draper]]''', who is not of our family, but has helped us sort out his "Quaker Draper" ancestors from North Carolina who are intermingled with our families in several states. **'''Our Family Cousins''' who are '''WikiTree members''', working together, acting as a collective group have documented our family for the world to see. Please find their names below, under each child of Thomas & Sarah from which they descend. **'''Undiscovered Cousins''', WikiTree members, who have also helped sort out our family. If you see this, Thank YOU! Please contact me. (see instructions) **'''Chris Draper''', son of Dave Draper, who has contributed the logo design, branding of the Tour Guide, and the [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-13.jpg "Wanted Dead or Alive" poster] (see Iowa) '''The Children of [[Draper-169|Thomas Draper]]''' with living Draper Family, WikiTree members and genealogists, from whom they descend: *[[Draper-293|Elizabeth ''Draper'' Gibson]](1711 - 1739) *[[Draper-5367|Judith ''Draper'' Chipman]] 1713–1781 '''husband: [[Chipman-66|Perez Chipman]]'s family came to America on the Mayflower''' *[[Draper-1294|William Draper]] (1715 - abt. 1765) *[[Draper-722|Mary Ann ''Draper'' Palmer]] 1718–1761 **[[Roux-1276|Freda McCloud]] *[[Draper-1292| Joseph Draper]] (1719 - 1720) *[[Draper-1293|Joshua Draper]] (1721 - 1792) *[[Draper-1287|James Draper]] (1724 - 1780) '''wife: [[Hanks-1007|Sarah Hanks Draper]] is the 1st cousin of [[Lincoln-103|Abraham Lincoln]] 3 times removed''' ** '''[[Thompson-25916|Johnette Routh]]''' *[[Draper-1290|Katherine Draper]] (1728 - 1763) *[[Draper-165|Solomon Draper Sr.]] (1731 - 1807) **'''[[Draper-4171|Dave Draper]]''' (Your Host: FAG ID: 50995047) **'''[[Draper-4269|Jill E ''Draper'' Seeley]]''' **'''[[Draper-3807|Daniel Draper]]''' ** '''[[Fisher-10551|Jenny Lawless]]''' **''' [[Hankins-342|Johnny Hankins]]''' **''' [[Taylor-23770|James Taylor Jr.]]''' **'''[[Draper-5852|James Draper Jr.]] **'''[[Taylor-94694|Charley Taylor]]''' *[[Draper-40|Thomas Draper Jr.]] (1733 - abt. 1812) **'''[[Draper-6480|Kelll Draper]]''' **'''[[Draper-3273|James Draper]]''' **'''[[Smith-237935|Dudley Smith III]]''' **'''[[Draper-850|Vernon Draper]]''' ** '''[[Draper-801|Jerry Draper]]''' ** '''[[Draper-4131|Dennis Draper]]''' **'''[[Zumbaum-1|Gina (Zumbaum) Wrather]]''' **'''[[Rich-5260|Carol Stiles]]''' **'''[[Tisdale-1140|Kathy Fryer]] If you are a WikiTree member who descends from Thomas & Sarah Draper, and your name is not above, please contact me: davedraperbloomington@gmail.com '''There are others we need to thank'''. Those are the the ones who went before us. They are gone now but certainly not forgotten. We acknowledge them at the very bottom of the page. See Acknowledgments in the main menu or contents, or click here: [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Space:Farnham%2C_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1&public=1#ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS] === YOUR TOUR BEGINS IN FARNHAM, RICHMOND COUNTY VIRGINIA === '''Farnham''' ZIP Code 22460 Named after Farnham, Surry, England Your host, [[Draper-4171|Dave Draper]], 6th great grandson of [[Draper-169|Thomas and Sarah Toone? Draper]], visited Farnham, Virginia, on the 23rd of December, 2021. It was sunny, 50 degrees and no wind. The area is a rural setting in a forest of tall pine trees with fluffy green needles on flat fertile land, with many large meadows in-between. Many of the meadows were cornfields, some were just grass with a house set back from the road. We Googled Farnham Parish and it took us to the historic [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farnham_Church Farnham_Episcopal_Church], built in 1730, which includes a small cemetery, like many area rural churches. There were no Draper graves. This is the problem: North Farnham Parish is not the Farnham Episcopal Church, and Google Maps is also confused as North Farnham Parish no longer exists. We next widened out our search, driving through forests and meadows. On our drive we found the mansion called Indian Banks established 1699, which was built on top of an Indian village, originally owned by Thomas Glasscock in 1662. We did not find any Draper property locations or Draper burials. That is a secret still hidden in the wind, as it carries the love, laughter and tears of our forefathers who lived in this beautiful paradise. As new research is forthcoming, I feel for a certain that I didn't visit the exact area where Thomas and Sarah lived, but I did see the sites he saw and loved!-- added by [[Draper-4171|Dave Draper]] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-1.jpg *'''North Farnham Episcopal Church''', address: 231 N Farnham Church Rd, Farnham, VA ZIP Code 22460. This was the center of worship for residents of North Farnham Parish in 1730, in which Thomas and Sarah would have known about or even attended services. * '''Note''' Many churches have cemeteries on property as this church does. There are no Draper burials here. But this church has been through a lot of turmoil over the years, and there could be burials, unmarked and forgotten over time. Thomas and Sarah Draper are probably resting eternally on property they owned. *'''From Wikipedia:''' Farnham Church is a historic Episcopal church located at Farnham, Richmond County, Virginia. It was built in 1737,''' (Stone on church reads 1730)''' and is a one-story, cruciform shaped brick Colonial era church building. It measures 63 feet, 8 inches, feet by 58 feet, 2 inches, and is topped by a gable roof. Two years into the War of 1812, bullet holes were left in the walls during a conflict between the Virginia militia and the British fleet, led by Admiral George Cockburn. This event was called the Skirmish at Farnham Church. During the Civil War the church was used by Union soldiers as a stable. The church was last renovated in 1921 in the Georgian Revival style. (Dave Draper has pictures of the bullet holes in the building) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/10/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-12.jpg *'''Sign Markers''' along the road noting historic sites. The problem is there is no way to pull off the road to view them. You would have to stop your vehicle on the road to view them or take a picture. The road is heavily traveled, you would be killed instantly trying to stop! This marker was in a safe location to view. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/61/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-2.jpg *'''Farnham Post Office''' ZIP Code 22460 193 Cedar Grove Road https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-4.jpg *'''Indian Banks Mansion''' built 1699. Private property, no tours, located at 2494 Simonson Rd, Farnham, Virginia. https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/2494-Simonson-Rd-Farnham-VA-22460/108038231_zpid/ *'''Farnham's Notable Residents:''' '''[[Coates-4322|Jim Coates]]''', Major League Baseball pitcher, '''[[Griffin-6967|Cyrus Griffin]]''', last President of the Continental Congress (1788) '''[[Hammond-8924|Samuel Hammond]]''', Revolutionary War soldier and officer, Territorial Governor, and statesman '''[[Hanks-230|Joseph Hanks]]''', Abraham Lincoln's great grandfather. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/44/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-641.jpg James Alton Coates (August 4, 1932 – November 15, 2019) was an American professional baseball pitcher. A right-hander, Coates pitched in Major League Baseball for the New York Yankees (1956, 1959–62), Washington Senators (1963), Cincinnati Reds (1963) and Los Angeles/California Angels (1965–67). He was born in Farnham, Virginia. Wikipedia '''Emmerton''' ZIP Code 22572 located 5 miles north of Farnham, Virginia, Burial location of [[Coates-4325|Richard Henry Coates Jr]], Grandfather of '''[[Coates-4322|Jim Coates]]''' Major League Baseball Pitcher, Jerusalem Baptist Church Cemetery 8800 Historyland Highway, '''Warsaw''' ZIP Code 22572 County Seat of Richmond County. There are places paces to gas up the car, and grab something to eat! 10 minutes from Farnham on the History Land Highway Exp, or take the senic route 607 North to 661, turn west (left) 16 minutes. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-3.jpg *Tom Rhodes Tree Carving Trail, 5 Stars, 211 Wallace St, Warsaw, VA 22572 Local artist has carved 60+ beautiful cartoon and wildlife characters into the tree trunks. Hard to find, no sign, but trust your GPS when it says "You have arrived!" *Richmond County Museum, 5874 Richmond Rd, Warsaw, VA 22572 5 Stars, 1 review! Hours: 11:00 to 3:00 *Clarksville Cemetery, 445 Menokin Rd, Warsaw, VA 22572, Phone: (804) 333-3041 .*Various places to eat include Subway, McDonalds, Dairy Queen *Gas Stations: Citgo, Shell, BP and Exxon and others '''Tidewater''' unincorporated community ZIP Code 22572 Consider it a scenic drive from Farnham and back. Expect loss of internet service along the way. '''Tidewater Region''' Tidewater also refers to an entire region along the East Coast *Prominent Virginians General '''George Washington''', Confederate General '''Robert E. Lee''' and Gloucester's native son, '''Doctor Walter Reed''' are Tidewater born. *The Revolutionary War ended in 1781 on the shores of the York River, and the first ironclad ships battled in Hampton Roads during the War Between the States. ===Quick Search: Scroll Up To: '''CONTENTS''' Then Scroll Down to State & County Desired=== The following states are '''not listed in alphabetical order.''' They are listed as the family moved westward, from New England, then to the South, Midwest, South West, Northwest and West Coast of the USA. To quickly find a state, scroll up to the top of the page and look for a state in the table of '''CONTENTS''' menu. ==Virginia 433 Burial Listings== ==='''AUGUSTA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/93/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-187.jpg '''Staunton''' ZIP Code 24401 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/61/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-175.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/231589/thornrose-cemetery Thornrose Cemetery]''' Location: 1041 West Beverley St Staunton, Virginia, 24401 *[[Draper-4740|Alonzo T. Draper]] 8 Feb 1878 – 28 Feb 1937 wife: **[[Conner-5662|Sallie Conner Draper]] 22 Jul 1890 – 3 Apr 1986 ***[[Draper-4923|Audley Alonzo Draper]] 14 Jun 1908 – 4 Dec 1922, Age 14 *[[Draper-4924|Dennis Brooks Draper]] 24 May 1912 – 8 Nov 1997 wife: **[[Culbertson-1246|Alice Betty (Culbertson) Draper]] (1913 - 1984) '''CENOTAPH''' cremated, duaghter: ***[[Draper-4927|Sarah Alice “Sally” Draper]] 26 Nov 1940 – 21 Mar 2020 *Elijah Lee Draper 27 Mar 1902 – 17 Sep 1967 (descends from Thomas Draper (1783-18??) Northampton, NC) brick wall, research needed, wife: **Dolly Swisher Draper 15 Sep 1898 – 27 Jul 1984 *Mary Lee Draper 22 Dec 1913 – 12 Sep 1999 ==='''AMELIA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-188.jpg *[[Draper-1287|James Draper]] (1724 - 1780) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wife **[[Hanks-1007|Sarah (Hanks) Draper]] (1719 - 1780) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***'''NOTE''' Sarah Hanks is a grand aunt of Abraham Lincoln *William Thomas Draper (1755 – 1786) • GHY3-FX4 **Mary Draper (1765 – 1804) • GHYQ-QGN '''CENOTAPH''' death in Mecklenburg County, Virginia ***Peter Thomas Draper 12 February 1785 – 23 December 1871 Memorial ID 81959095 FS: GHY3-ZNK '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1993178/old-liberty-cemetery Old Liberty Cemetery] Cass County, Texas ****Rebecca ''Granad'' Draper1789–1869 FS ID GHYS-YM5 '''CENOTAPH''' died Barbour County, Alabama *****Peter Draper (1808–1897) FS ID L8SB-LT5 '''CENOTAPH''' death in Cass, Texas ******Manda Lavicie Reed (1816–1880) '''CENOTAPH''' death Atlanta, Cass, Texas, USA ==='''BEDFORD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-189.jpg '''Bedford''' ZIP Code 24523 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-19.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/216486/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-2997|Pvt Frank Price Draper Sr.]] 2 Mar 1896 – 15 Jan 1975, wife: **[[Smith-188115|Mary Lena Virginia Smith Draper]] 4 Mar 1897 – 4 Mar 1980, sons: ***[[Draper-2991|Frank Price Draper Jr.]] 16 Sep 1918 – 6 Jun 1944 Killed in Action, Omaha Beach D -Day ***[[Draper-4446|Warren Gamiel Eugene Draper Sr.]] 28 Dec 1920 – 19 May 2007 ****[[Lipford-91|Fleda Elizabeth Lipford Draper]] 10 Apr 1922 – 2 May 2017 ***[[Draper-5343|David Samuel Lewis Draper]] 9 Nov 1922 – 18 Jan 2008 wife: ****[[Aldrich-3269|Kathryn Effie Aldrich Draper]] 6 Sep 1922 – 2 Aug 1994 ***[[Draper-5438|Dorcas Verona ''Draper'' Lipford]] 1924–2010, husband: ****[[Lipford-94|William Edward Lipford]] 1924–1975 *William Jackson Draper 11 Apr 1923 – 24 Oct 2001 wife: **Corine Ruby Hensley Draper 2 Jul 1934 – 20 Dec 2012 son ***Billy Ray Draper 30 Jun 1957 – 19 Jan 2019 wife: ****Cora McGhee Draper *Claudell Jackson Draper 5 Oct 1954 – 16 Sep 1979 '''Goodview''' ZIP Code24095 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2723443/draper-family-cemetery Draper Family Cemetery]''' AKA Benjamin Henry Draper Cemetery Note" Bedford County Cemetery survey lists Cemetery #357. No gravestone or marker found in this family plot in Oct 2021. *Benjamin Henry Draper 10 Mar 1845 – 13 Nov 1910 Memorial ID 221768307 wife: **Mary Louise ''Meador'' Draper12 Sep 1836 – 25 Aug 1920 Memorial ID 221769025 children: ***Mary Adelaide ''Draper'' Meador 1871–1927 Memorial ID 221771530 ***Ada Daisy ''Draper'' McGuire 1873–1971 Memorial ID 193116063 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51319/mountain-view-cemetery Mountain View Cemetery] Vinton, Virginia ***Grace Wilson ''Draper'' Chattin 1874–1959 Memorial ID 198179475 ***John Claude Draper 1876–1953 Memorial ID 101115008 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50174/evergreen-burial-park Evergreen Burial Park] Roanoke, Virginia ***Olivia Virginia ''Draper'' Chattin 1881–1965 Memorial ID 221768455 '''Montvale''' ZIP Code 24122 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/45/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-334.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1997079/montvale-presbyterian-church-cemetery Montvale Presbyterian Church Cemetery]''' Montvale, Bedford County , Virginia, USA *George Nelson Draper 17 Mar 1842 – 22 Apr 1899, Memorial ID: 42250402 wife: **Elizabeth F ''Chilton'' Draper 28 Jul 1842 – 18 Jan 1912, Memorial ID: 42250403 children: ***Luther Harrison Draper 6 Oct 1862 – 20 Dec 1892 Memorial ID: 42250401 ***Eugenia ''Draper'' Brugh 1872–1904, Memorial ID husband: 42250404 ****James Walter Brugh 1871–1949 Memorial ID: 20312624 ***William Walter Draper 1874–1949 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 100725275 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50186/fair-view-cemetery Fair View Cemetery] ****Lura J Whorley Draper 1870–1904 '''CENTOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 28549438 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51319/mountain-view-cemetery Mountain View Cemetery] ***Hattie ''Draper'' Cothran 1880–1950 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 177165574 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50267/forest-lawn-cemetery Forest Lawn Cemetery] husband: ****John Lewis Cothran 1872–1951 Memorial ID: 177165559 *James Clyde Draper 22 Jan 1902 – 17 Feb 1961 Memorial ID 42250372 **Daisy Lillian Callahan Draper 5 May 1912 – 20 Nov 2001 Memorial ID 88725492 ***James Luther Draper 1934-1999 Memorial ID 235320429 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49500/blue-ridge-memorial-gardens Blue Ridge Memorial Gardens] Roanoke, Virginia *Herbert Lee Draper 17 Apr 1898 – 29 Apr 1968 *John Lee “Jack” Draper 15 Mar 1841 – 25 Jul 1938 *Lizzie Bowyer Draper 25 Apr 1892 – 20 Aug 1957 *Luther Harrison Draper 6 Oct 1862 – 20 Dec 1892 *Sarah Elizabeth Pierce Draper Sep 1866 – 7 Feb 1917 *William MarK Draper 15 Oct 1957 – 1 Jul 2001 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-18.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/256961/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery]''' Located: Longwood Road Bedford, Bedford County, Virginia *[[Draper-4447|Thomas D. Draper]] Mar 1852 – 20 Jun 1927 wives: **[[Atkinson-11415|Elizabeth Alcora “Bettie” Atkinson Draper]] 14 Oct 1861 – 17 Jul 1917 **[[Witt-3746|Lillie Flora Witt Draper]] 15 May 1884 – 22 Nov 1963, Lillie's daughter: ***[[Draper-4448|Florence (Draper) Carter]] (1925 - 1977), and her husband ****[[Carter-38545|Alvin Lewis Carter]] (1913 - 1992) *[[Draper-4452|Joseph Edward Draper]] 30 Apr 1899 – 2 Aug 1972 (son of Thomas above) **Wife??? have not found her *[[Draper-4450|Ida Jane “Janie” Draper]] 18 Jun 1887 – 5 Apr 1910 age 23, (daughter of Thomas above) *Willie Jackson Draper Jr.31 May 1952 – 31 May 1952 infant son of ?? ==='''ESSEX COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/92/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-692.jpg '''Tappahannock''' ZIP Code 22560 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-423.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/786076/first-baptist-church-cemetery First Baptist Church Cemetery]''' Located: Tappahannock, Virginia *James L. Draper 1942 – 1985 Memorial ID 156949302 *Jacqueline Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 156949309 ==='''FRANKLIN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-190.jpg '''Gladehill''' ZIP Code 24092 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/32/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-181.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51623/perdue-cemetery Perdue Cemetery]''' Location: Twilight Lane, Gladehill, Franklin County, Virginia, USA *[[Draper-5018|John Marcellos Draper]] 24 Jul 1851 – 17 Mar 1907 wife: **[[Hunt-24759|Loujinnie Frances ''Bishop'' (Hunt) (Draper) Bishop]] (1872 - 1958)''' CENOTAPH''' burial: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50186/fair-view-cemetery Fair View Cemetery], Roanoke, VA ***Vidda M Draper 26 Jan 1901 – 1 Apr 1904 infant daughter '''Rocky Mount''' ZIP Code 24151 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-26.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51335/mountain-view-memorial-park Mountain_View_Memorial_Park]''' *[[Draper-5020|Charles Wesley Draper]] (1849-1939) wife **[[Cheshire-579|Nannie Elizabeth Cheshire Draper]] (1849 – 1925) *[[Draper-5025|Frank Leslie Draper]] (1887-1890) age 3 *[[Fisher-26429|Martha Jane Fisher Draper]] (1878 -1959) husband: **William John Draper ???? Her son is : [[Draper-5030|Elga Draper]] buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50284/franklin-memorial-park Franklin Memorial Park] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/53/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-17.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50284/franklin-memorial-park Franklin_Memorial_Park]''' *[[Draper-5032|Jack Douglas Draper]] (1933-2018) *[[Draper-5030|Elga Draper]] and wife: ** [[Guthrie-4993|Laura M.'' Guthrie'' Draper]] ***'''CENOTAPH''' [[Draper-5031|Russell Wayne Draper]] (1937 - 2004) unknown burial location. Russell is the son of [[Draper-5030|Elga Draper]] and the grandson of [[Fisher-26429|Martha Jane Fisher Draper]] (1878 -1959) ==='''FLOYD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-191.jpg '''Floyd''' ZIP Code 24091 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-25.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/366066/zion-lutheran-church-cemetery Zion_Lutheran_Church_Cemetery]''' Located: 635 Needmore Lane NE *[[Draper-4047|John Harrison Draper]] 27 Jun 1822 – 1891 wife: ** [[Scott-43257|Latitia Amanda'' Scott'' Draper]] is buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Martinsville *[[Draper-5053|John Tazewell Draper]] 2 Feb 1868 – 28 Nov 1935 (son of John & Latitia above) wife: **[[Hogan-6124|Mildred Hogan Draper]] 29 Sep 1868 – 10 Oct 1948 *[[Draper-5054|Wilmer Callie Draper]] 4 Sep 1892 – 15 Jul 1945 wife: **[[Lindsey-6240|Helen Frances ''Lindsey'' (Draper) Epperly]] ==='''GILES COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/64/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-192.jpg '''Pembroke''' ZIP Code 24136 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ed/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-174.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1996555/lybrook-cemetery Lybrook Cemetery]''' Location: Pembroke, Giles County, Virginia, USA *[[Draper-1936|Jesse Hurd Draper]] 18 Sep 1839 – 6 Feb 1904 wife: **[[Napier-2116|Elizabeth J. “Bettie” Napier Draper]] 10 Dec 1847 – 24 Apr 1919 ***[[Draper-1566|William Harvey “Harry” Draper]] 19 Jun 1873 – 31 Jan 1898 ==='''HENRY COUNTY'''=== Named after [[Henry-30|Patrick Henry]]. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-194.jpg '''Rural Area''' '''Axton''' ZIP Code 24054 is an unincorporated community in Henry County, Virginia, United States. Axton is located on U.S. Route 58 9.2 miles east-southeast of Martinsville. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/27/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-34.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2375212/mcdonald-cemetery McDonald Cemetery'''], located on Route # 614 East of Axton, VA. is a very small rural cemetery, probably on private property, and exactly how far from Axton is unknown. *[[Draper-5016|Henry Clay Draper]] (1861 - 1935) and wife: **[[Chattin-148|Lucy Fannie (Chattin) Draper]] (1876 - 1954) '''Rural Countryside - North of Martinsville''' Map Drawing by [[Thomasson-878|Robert Kermon Thomasson]] provided by John Draper (FIND A GRAVE ID 48647082) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-9.jpg '''Draper Cemetery''' Located on Rt 609 exact location is said to be down a dirt lane west of Rt.609 and Appleleaf Drive, however in satellite view, we see no gravestones. [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Co+Rd+665,+Virginia/@36.7922253,-79.9022775,167m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x88529c84b9766023:0x46edddd7f916d656!8m2!3d36.7851975!4d-79.884437 Satelitte_View_Map] This looks like private property. See also: [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/181463305/elkanah-lewis-draper Find_A_Grave_Burial_Diagrams_and_Satellite_Screen_Shot_in_Elkaniah_Draper] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/09/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-10.jpg *[[Draper-1923|Thomas Jefferson]] “Tom Jeff” Draper Sr. 1808 – 1885 & wife **[[Davis-39687|Nancy Dent Davis Draper]] 1808 – 24 1889 *[[Draper-1207|Charles Lewis Draper]] (1869 - 1945) wife **[[Byrd-1753|Elizabeth Frances Byrd Draper]] 1872–1950 *[[Draper-5002|Elkaniah Lewis “Caney” Draper]]16 Jan 1909 – 14 Jun 1976 *[[Draper-1495|Thomas Jefferson Draper Jr.]] 1837 – 1924 **[[Thomason-807|Adelphia Anne (Thomason) Draper]] (abt. 1841 - 1910) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/78928/lawrence-cemetery Lawrence Cemetery] Scott Depot, Putnam County , West Virginia *[[Draper-1939|James Madison Draper]] 16 Jul 1846 – 29 Sep 1923 This may be the "Madison" in the chart that wanted to be "buried by his mother" *[[Draper-1217|John Harrison Draper]] (1842 - 1915) & 2nd wife **[[Bird-3566|Mary Emma (Bird) Draper]] (1869 - 1943) **[[Cheshire-577|Martha "Pat" Draper]] (1st wife) buried in Clarke Cemetery, Henry County, Virginia, USA '''Draper Burials at Rt 609 and Rt 669'''. North of Junction Rt 609 and Rt 669, and to the west of Rt 609 are two Burials, husband and wife, William and Lucy Draper. See map above. *[[Draper-1212|William D. Draper]] 1785 – 4 Jul 1863 and wife: **[[Meredith-1110|Lucy Meredith Draper]] 1788 – ???? Find A Grave has the wrong location listed for these graves. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''CENOTAPH''' listing until we can find their real burial place: *[[Draper-173|John Harrison Draper]]1789-1866, and 1st wife: **[[Clark-3252|Ruth “Polly” Clark Draper]] 1793 – 1831 ***[[Draper-173|John Harrison Draper]] and [[Clark-3252|Ruth “Polly” Clark Draper]] are the parents of [[Draper-4254|Ira Dillingham Draper]] who is buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101489/starr-cemetery Starr_Cemetery] **There were 8 family members named John Harrison Draper. However, this [[Draper-173|John Harrison Draper]] and his wife [[Clark-3252|Ruth “Polly” Clark Draper]] are probably buried in Indiana. Find A grave has them listed here, so a cenotaph is placed here, with caution noted that there are no grave sites, headstones or proof with primary sources. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Both Drapers below, not profiled on WikiTree nor are not listed on the above map, Yet FAG says they are buried in this cemetery. '''CENOTAPH''' listing until we can find their real burial place: *William Harrison Draper 1874 – 1905 not profiled on WikiTree, not on above diagram **Lucy Draper Draper Birth and death dates unknown. not profiled on WikiTree -------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''William Draper Sr. Burial Ground''' The bottomland below the burying ground ridge became known as '''Granny Draper Bottom''' ”[https://www.google.com/maps/@36.7711624,-79.9519184,813m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] Directions: At the intersection of Rt 606 Oak Level Rd and Sun Valley Drive, turn west on Sun Valley Drive. Continue West, the road takes a sharp bend and heads Northeast. Continue about 600 feet, the cemetery is on the west side of the road. *[[Draper-177|William Draper Sr.]] (28 Mar 1760 - 5 Feb 1818) **[[Estes-291|Francis E. Draper]] (1757 - 19 Jan 1853) '''William Draper Jr. Burial Ground''' [https://www.google.com/maps/@36.7700936,-79.9166562,627m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] Directions: Rt 609 Daniels Creek Rd. south of Cahhill Drive 600 feet, turn west on road or farm lane which goes North West. Private property, cemetery is hidden by trees. The owner of the property might know were to look. '''CENOTAPH''' listing until we can find out more about them: *William Draper Jr. (no birth or death dates given) **Lucy M. Draper (no birth or death dates given) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/70/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-98.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2402504/clarke-cemetery Clarke Cemetery'''] Mt Olivet Road (Rt. 777) Henry County, Virginia, 24112 USA * [[Cheshire-577|Martha Jane ''Cheshire'' "Pat" Draper]] (1843 - 1900) 1st wife of [[Draper-1217|John Harrison Draper]] (1842 - 1915) buried in Draper Cemetery '''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martinsville,_Virginia Martinsville]''' ZIP Codes: 24112, 24113, 24114, 24115. WikiPedia says: Martinsville was founded by American Revolutionary War General, Native American agent and explorer [[Martin-3583|Joseph Martin]], born in Albemarle County. He developed his plantation "Scuffle Hill" on the banks of the Smith River near the present-day southern city limits. General Martin and revolutionary patriot [[Henry-30|Patrick Henry]], who lived briefly in Henry County and for whom the county is named, were good friends. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-420.jpg *'''Martinsville Speedway''' (NASCAR) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martinsville_Speedway#/media/File:Backstretch_at_Martinsville_Speedway.jpg Article_and_Pictures] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-11.jpg *'''Draper Barber Shop''' (first located on Walnut St., then where WHEE Radio was located, then, in front of the old Shackleford Hostpital on Church St. and then In the Patrick Henry Mall. Ed Draper started the business in 1916, and was 74 in 1981 in the newspaper article. This information is from the1981 newspaper article. Let us know if they are still there! Added by [[Draper-4171|Dave Draper]] *'''Sheriff Steve Draper''' Top Cop! 27 years of service! January 30, 2021, 11:09 AM news story [https://www.wsls.com/news/local/2021/01/30/with-27-years-of-service-martinsville-sheriff-is-virginias-longest-serving-sheriff/ Virginia_Today] story and short video. *'''DuPont''' in 1941 built a large manufacturing plant for producing textile nylon filament, a vital war material. During the Cold War, the city was identified as a target for strategic bombing by the Soviet Union. see: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martinsville,_Virginia WikiPedia] and [https://www.epa.gov/hwcorrectiveaction/hazardous-waste-cleanup-dupont-martinsville-va Hazarous_Waste_Cleanup_Satelite_View_Map] and story. *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_Museum_of_Natural_History'''Virginia Museum of Natural History'''] 21 Starling Ave, Martinsville, VA 24112 '''Figsboro ( North of Martinsville)''' ZIP Code 24112 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-35.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2139029/camp-branch-primitive-church-cemetery Camp Branch Primitive Church Cemetery]''' Rural Cemetery located east of Figsboro Rd at the intersection of Figsboro Rd 890 and Dyer Store Road 657 on the Camp Branch Church property. [https://www.google.com/maps/@36.7910978,-79.8465681,304m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satelite_View_Map] *[[Draper-5073|James Henry “Jim” Draper]] 15 Mar 1874 – 13 Dec 1925 **[[McBride-5923|Lucy Ann McBride Draper]] 11 Nov 1871 – 9 Mar 1964 *[[Thomasson-878|Robert Kermon Thomasson]] (1936 - 2021) (cremated) '''CENOTAPH''' (Kermon was a Draper / Thomasson Family Historian & Genealogist) A Cenotaph marker for Kemon has been placed in this cemetery as Kemon wanted to be with his grandparents who are buried here. His parents are buried in Roselawn (See Roselawn Cemetery below, as he is also listed there with his parents to avoid confusion) *[[Draper-5068|Mike Truman Draper]] 24 Feb 1887 – 5 Jul 1967 1st & 2nd wives **[[Gregory-11945|Alma H. Gregory Draper]] 1889 – 10 Jan 1929 **[[Holland-14609|Stella Holland Draper]] 3 Jul 1889 – 6 Jul 1974 *[[Draper-5086|Wendall A. Draper]] 1914 – 29 Dec 1928 son of [[Draper-5068|Mike & Alma Draper]] above https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-36.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2303395/hairfield-family-cemetery '''Hairfield_Family_Cemetery'''] Located north of Figsboro Rd and College Dr. (See FAG map) *Louise Draper1922 – 23 May 1925 *Dorothy Draper1926 – 1926 *[[Hairfield-17|Hettie V Hairfield Draper]] 1884 –1926 husband: **[[Draper-5012|Jesse Ben Draper]] (1883-1926) '''CENOTAPH''' re-married, burried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood_Cemetery] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-16.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2376945/nunn-cemetery Nunn Family Cemetery]''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2370765/nunn-family-cemetery/map Find_A_Grave_Map_with_2_Pictures] Located: Figsboro, Henry County , Virginia, USA *[[Thomasson-897|Martha "Mary Jane" ''Thomasson'' Draper]]1856–1891 (Wife of [[Draper-4965|Hugh N. Draper]]) (Hugh N. Draper is buried in Pleasantville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, North Carolina (See North Carolina) *[[Draper-1922|Peter Davis Draper]] (1834 - 1924), wives: **[[Ramsey-5218|Norah Ann ''Ramsey'' Draper]] 1863-1899 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **[[Nunn-1030|Mary Lucinda ''Nunn'' Draper]] 1840-1899]] '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Stone-24396|Lucy Jane ''Stone'' Nunn]] (1864 - 1911) (granddaughter of [[Draper-4048|Martin Samuel Draper]] (1796 - 1878), Husband: **[[Nunn-3020|Joseph Henry Nunn]] 1853-1910 '''Note:''' [[Stone-24396|Lucy Jane ''Stone'' Nunn]] and 8 of her 11 children die in a fire that consumed their home. Her children are buried here also, some mass buried in a 24 ft long grave. ***Georgia, age 24; ***William Martin, age 22; ***Henry Mortimer, age 17; ***Elizabeth Myrtle, age 15; ***Joseph Dillard, age 12; ***Stafford Wesley, age 10; ***Lucille, age 7; ***Helen, age 5. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-358.jpg Fire company men pose with their pride and joy, a new 1910 Fire Truck. Disclaimer: not the fire company involved in the fire that claimed the life of Lucy Nunn and eight of her children. (see note above this photo) This picture is placed here to give one a feel for the time period in which this tragic event occured. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/84/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-335.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2291120/prillaman-cemetery Prillaman Cemetery]''' Located near the intersection of Dyer Store Rd and Ravenscroft Rd. (south and east a few yards) Use map view in FAG *[[Draper-1943|Elkanah Brammer Draper]] 20 May 1827 – 10 Nov 1902 and wife: **[[Eggleton-546|Mary Polly Ann Eggleton Draper]] 10 May 1832 – 27 Dec 1902, children: ***[[Draper-5079|Keziah J.'' Draper'' Prunty]] 1858–1934, husband: ****[[Robert A. Prunty]] 9 Jan 1849 – 18 Feb 1930 ***[[Draper-1357|Eliza Sue'' Draper'' Prillaman]] 1865–1949, husband: ****[[Prillaman-70|Peter Allen Prillaman]] 30 Oct 1856 – 3 Oct 1922, children: *****Mary Prillaman Smith 30 Mar 1904 – 24 May 2001, husband: ******Noel Alexander Smith 17 Jun 1913 – 11 Nov 1995 *****Robert A. Prillaman 28 Mar 1895 – 11 Oct 1918 ***[[Draper-5052|Michael E. Draper]] (1856 - 1946) and wife: ****[[Minter-1019|Martha J. “Mattie” Minter Draper]] (1861 – 1908) and daughter: *****[[Draper-5060|Mallie E. Draper]] 28 Dec 1881 – 20 Oct 1886 Age 4 ***[[Draper-5080|Lucy Frances ''Draper'' McMillion]] 1860–1946 and husband: ****[[McMillion-245|Robert Fulton McMillion]] 3 Apr 1860 – 9 Dec 1936 *****Joseph Brammer McMillion 1885–1957 Memorial ID 140968862 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Martinsville, VA ******Eliza May ''Stultz'' McMillion 1886–1947 Memorial ID 62622555 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Martinsville, VA *****James W. McMillion 1892–1966 Memorial ID 29264618 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80984/gardens-of-faith-cemetery Gardens Of Faith Cemetery] Rosedale, Maryland, wives: ******Edith Louise Mantell Wood 1892–1970 Memorial ID 22661838 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80984/gardens-of-faith-cemetery Gardens Of Faith Cemetery] Rosedale, Maryland ******Hattie Preston Robertson McMillion 1916–1986 Memorial ID 35176257 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80984/gardens-of-faith-cemetery Gardens Of Faith Cemetery] Rosedale, Maryland *Note: Michael & Eliza are the parents of [[Eggleton-546|Mary Polly Ann Eggleton Draper]] *[[Eggleton-547|Michael Eggleton]] 28 Mar 1799 – May 1868 **[[Robertson-23130|Eliza F. Robertson Eggleton]] Jan 1808 – Jul 1889 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a0/Prillaman-70.jpg [[Draper-1357|Eliza Sue'' Draper'' Prillaman]] poses with her husband Peter, and her children: If the oldest girl in the picture is Theodora Prillaman (Minter) Watkins 1888–1970 (on left), this picture might have be taken about 1900, (research needed) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-652.jpg Theodora Prillaman (Minter) Watkins (1888 - 1970) is the granddaughter of [[Draper-1943|Elkanah Brammer Draper]]. She is resting in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2226220/mayo-christian-church-cemetery Mayo Christian Church Cemetery] Spencer, Virginia https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8c/Draper-1943-2.jpg [https://www.google.com/maps/@36.7432714,-79.9454156,2895m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satelite_View_Map] of the same area in the hand drawn map above. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/10/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-20.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood_Cemetery]''' 107 Cemetery St (276) 732-9706 [https://www.google.com/maps/@36.6870381,-79.8793525,362m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] Founded in 1883 by the City of Martinsville, Oakwood Cemetery is located in uptown Martinsville, Virginia on a beautiful 23 acre tract. In 1887 the cemetery was deeded to the newly created Martinsville Cemetery Association. Famous Graves: *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Robert_Brown_(Virginia_politician) John _Robert_Brown -Wikipedia] (1842–1927) US Congressman. Elected as a Republican *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_G._Burch Thomas_Granville_Burch _Wikipedia] (1869–1951) U.S. Congressman, U.S. Senator. *[[Draper-4964|William Peyton Draper]] 1884–1959 and wife: **[[Southhard-6|Rosie Southard Draper]] 24 Mar 1886 – 13 Jun 1965 *[[Draper-4729|William Robert Draper]] 6 Jul 1860 – 27 May 1938 and wife: **[[Coleman-15767|Elizabeth "Bettie" Mary Draper]] 18 Feb 1860 – 18 Dec 1931 ***[[Draper-5012|Jesse Ben Draper]] 30 Jan 1883 – 9 May 1943 and wife: **** [[Hairfield-17|Hettie V Hairfield Draper]] (1884 –1926) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2303395/hairfield-family-cemetery/map Hairfield_Family_Cemetery] (see Figsboro) ****[[Atkins-7117|Martha Susan “Suzie” Atkins Draper]] 16 May 1888 – 23 Apr 1950; 2nd wife of Jessie Ben Draper, ***[[Draper-5092|George William Draper Sr.]] 19 Jan 1885 – 31 Jan 1950 and wife: ****[[McBride-5934|Mary Elizabeth ''McBride'' Draper]] 3 Nov 1883 – 5 Mar 1963 ***[[Draper-5093|John Dyer Draper]] 13 Feb 1887 – 23 Jul 1958 1st wife ****[[Hensely-4|Lucy Kate ''Hensley'' Draper]] 21 May 1891 – 21 Sep 1941 ****[[Davis-96539|Lucy ''Davis'' (Goode) Draper]] 2 Apr 1892 – 10 Aug 1972 2nd wife ***[[Draper-5010|Archer Thomas Draper]] 19 Dec 1897 – 18 Oct 1939 and wife: ****[[Draper-5011|Sallie E Austin Draper]] 10 Nov 1901 – 17 Mar 1923 ***[[Draper-4728|Edgar Harrison “Edd” Draper]]15 Dec 1902 – 9 Jul 1983 and wife: ****[[Hensley-4725|Fannie ''Hensley'' Draper]] 9 Mar 1906 – 10 Jul 1998, child: *****[[Draper-5013|Edgar Gerard Draper]] 22 Aug 1929 – 11 Sep 2004 and wife: ****** Patricia ''Lester'' Draper not profiled on WikiTree or Find A Grave (unknown burial location) *****[[Draper-5014|Francis ''Draper'' Walston]] (1934-1980), husband: ****** John L. Waslton, Jr.'''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Scott-43257|Latitia Amanda ''Scott'' Draper]] (1832-1900) wife of ** [[Draper-4047|John Harrison Draper]](1822-1891) '''CENOTAPH''' (John is buried in Zion Lutheran Church Cemetery Floyd, Floyd County, Virginia, USA *[[Draper-5015|Claybrook Draper]] 29 Apr 1907 – 15 Apr 1987 and wife: **[[Board-664|Mary Josephine ''Board'' Draper]] 27 Aug 1912 – 4 Oct 1996 *[[Draper-1933|Stephen "Teebie" Thomas Draper]] 8 Nov 1860 – 13 Jan 1935 and wife: **[[Draper-5019|Lucy Mallie "Molly" ''Draper'' Draper]] 22 Jul 1862 - 25 Nov 1938 *[[Draper-2119|George William Draper Jr.]] 27 Oct 1914 – 19 Nov 1974 and wife: **[[Craig-5928|Virginia May ''Craig'' Draper]] 11 Oct 1916 – 12 Dec 1970 *[[Draper-5094|Fletcher Bedford Draper]] 3 Jan 1909 – Dec 1960 1st wife: **[[Whisonant-41|Violet Mildred ''Whisonant'' (Draper) Franklin]] (1909 - 1994) her 2nd husband, [[Franklin-14699|John William Franklin]] buried in Roselawn Cemetery **[[Cassells-116|Mary Grace Cassells Draper]] (1909 - 1998) buried with family in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/103820/west-thompson-cemetery West Thompson Cemetery] Connecticut, USA *[[Draper-5029|Benjamin Daniel Draper]] 3 Nov 1909 – 10 Feb 1978 wife: **[[Strait-704|Edna Strait Draper]] 11 Nov 1911 – 2 Jul 1978 sons ***[[Draper-5334|Vernon Daniel Draper]] 22 Jan 1930 – 24 Feb 1930 Age 1 month ***[[Draper-5333|John Thomas “Tommie” Draper]] 2 Jul 1931 – 22 Feb 1941 Age 10 *[[Draper-5339|Howard Cecil Draper]] 14 Jun 1927 – 5 Jan 2012 **[[O'Dell-4141|Dorothy Gay O'Dell Draper]] 17 Nov 1927 – 8 Apr 2021 *[[Draper-5095|William Penn Draper]] 16 May 1917 – 9 Dec 1973, Unknown connection to the Draper Family, and remains unconnected on WikiTree *[[Draper-5344|Wertie Horton Draper]] 20 Mar 1897 – 15 Nov 1962 wife: **[[Wells-26734|Myrtle Lee Wells Draper]] 3 Nov 1902 – 27 Jan 2004 *[[Draper-5345|Ralph Dudley Draper]] about 1923 – 10 Jun 2016 wife **Marjorie Draper (still living?) *[[Draper-5368|Roy James Draper]] 14 Feb 1909 – 3 Mar 1937 committed sucide, wife: **[[Johnson-123433|Sadie ''Johnson'' (Draper) Hankins]] 1 Oct 1910 – 8 Nov 1986 remarried 2nd husband: ***[[Hankins-2160|Richard Wade Hankins]] 1929-1969 *[[Draper-5371|John William “Bill” Draper]] 10 Sep 1910 – 13 Jul 1956 wife: **[[Harris-54056|Lottie Mae ''Harris'' (Draper) Bryant]] 16 Aug 1913- 10 Aug 2003 daughter: ***[[Draper-5373|Betty Jean ''Draper'' Shires]] 29 Apr 1942-6 Jan 2021 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51943/roselawn-burial-park Roselawn Burial Park] *Benjamin Wilson Draper 2 Jul 1919 – 17 Feb 1940 *Earnestine Draper 1922 – 20 Sep 1924 infant *Infant Draper Birth and death dates unknown. *Thelma Draper Birth and death dates unknown. '''Peoples Cemetery''' No reviews · Cemetery 911 2nd St. The cemetery referred to as People’s Cemetery is actually three cemeteries, sitting side by side. They are the actual People’s Cemetery, A & H (or Anglin and Hairston) Cemetery, and Watkins Cemetery. People’s Cemetery was established on June 14, 1918 for African-American residents of Martinsville and Henry County. Nov 4, 2017 — Martinsville Sheriff Steve Draper talks about the work that went into cleaning up People's Cemetery at the end of 2nd Street in Martinsville. *Darryl Stevenson Draper 13 Jul 1961 – 4 Oct 1973 African-American *John L. Draper1883 – 30 Jul 1926 African-American *John Lindsey Draper Jr.29 Oct 1916 – 17 Jun 1984 African-American Slaves often took the surname of their owners. These African-American Drapers are listed here just in case they may descend from our Draper Family who owned slaves. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/eb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-21.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51943/roselawn-burial-park Roselawn Chapel Funeral Home & Burial Park]''' 103 Clearview Dr. [https://www.google.com/maps/@36.7072663,-79.8731826,947m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Thomasson-225|Posie Thomasson]] 1909-1979 and wife: **[[Draper-1496|Nancy Ruth (Draper) Thomasson]] (1909 - 1995) ***[[Thomasson-878|Robert Kermon Thomasson]] (1936 - 2021) (cremated) '''CENOTAPH''' (Kermon was a Draper / Thomasson Family Historian & Genealogist) A Cenotaph marker for Kemon has been placed at '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2139029/camp-branch-primitive-church-cemetery Camp Branch Primitive Church Cemetery]''' (See Figsboro) *[[Draper-5026|Frank Leslie Draper Sr.]] 25 Oct 1902 – 26 Aug 1989 and wife: **[[Parcell-202|Gladys Edith Parcell Draper]] 28 Nov 1907 – 14 May 1995ds?) *[[Draper-5378|David Garland “Sonny” Draper]] 27 Mar 1936 – 19 Feb 2022 (son of Frank Draper above) ** Nancy Lawrence Draper (still living as of 7/4/22) *[[Draper-4717|Charles Eugene Draper]] 1884-1959 wife: **[[Jamison-1980|Nannie Kate Jamison Draper]] 6 Dec 1896 - 17 Jun 1989 *[[Draper-4719|Charles Burton Draper]] 1917 - 1978, wife: Unknown *[[Draper-5373|Betty Jean ''Draper'' Shires]] 29 Apr 1942-6 Jan 2021 Parents: [[Draper-5371|John]] & [[Harris-54056|Lottie Mae Draper]] buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] *[[Draper-4718|Pauline ''Draper'' Clark]] 1915-1999 husband: **[[Clarke-19933|Joseph Clarke]] 1918–1990 *[[Draper-4720|Homer Eugene Draper]] 1919 - 2006 wife: **[[Ross-26857|JJean Cannaday Ross Draper]] 4 Jul 1931 – 10 Oct 2020 *[[Draper-4721|Amos David Draper]] 1926-2004) wife: **[[Quesinberry-189|Bertha Mae Quesinberry Draper]] 8 Sep 1931 – 13 Feb 2005, son: ***[[Draper-5384|Gary Wayne Draper]] 8 Oct 1960 – 16 Sep 2011 *[[Draper-4722|Nancy'' Draper'' Hughes]] 1931 - 2017 husband: **[[Hughes-25941|George Hughes]] 1928 - 1976 *[[Draper-4976| James Madison Draper]] 1912 - 1982 wife: **[[Draper-4975|Edna Temple Draper]] 1915 - 2011 and son: ***[[Draper-4978|Ronnie Lee Draper]] 1935-1985 wife: ****Verdie Marie Draper (name on grave marker no death date) *[[Draper-5075|Jesse Clay Draper]]25 Feb 1911 – 14 Jun 1977 and wife: **[[Wingfield-1233|Louise ''Wingfield'' Draper]] 1914 – 18 Mar 1968 *[[Draper-5087|Milton Henry Draper]] 7 Dec 1919 – 10 Dec 2003 wife: **[[Nunn-2918|Mamie Wilmoth ''Nunn'' Draper]] 21 Dec 1918 – 16 Nov 2006 ***[[Draper-5472|Henry Alvin Draper]] 23 Jun 1952 – 24 Dec 2015 *[[Draper-5085|Thomas M Draper]] 16 Sep 1912 – 8 Jun 1993 and wife: **[[Hairfield-24|Lillian ''Hairfield'' Draper]] 22 May 1917 – 13 Apr 2016 Son: ***[[Draper-5385|Thomas Bernard Draper]] 29 Mar 1937 – 23 May 2021 wife **** Ann Davis Draper (still living as of this entry) *[[Draper-5338|Frank Madison Draper]] 28 Jan 1900 – 17 Jan 1975 and wife: **[[Stultz-750|Gladys Stultz Draper]] 12 Jun 1903 – 17 Aug 1989, son: ***[[Draper-5471|Robert Lee Draper]] 7 Nov 1921 – 11 Jun 1997; ****[[Alexander-22211|Katherine Theodora Alexander Draper]] 13 Aug 1921 – 20 Dec 1977, ****Norma Jean Asby (unknown B & D) 2nd wife, '''CENOTAPH''' information unknown: Daughter-in-law: *****[[Joyce-4681|Judy Marlene Joyce Draper]] 3 Jul 1949 – 10 Mar 2022, husband: ******Robert Lee "Bobby" Draper JR., still living as of this entry ***[[Draper-5089|Frank Madison Draper Jr. ]] 1 Nov 1924 – 23 Dec 1997 and wife: ****[[Linderson-4|Carol ''Linderson'' Draper]] 26 Jun 1927 – 29 Nov 2005 *[[Draper-5088|Annie Marie ''Draper'' Patterson]] and husband: **[[Patterson-22261|Herman B. Patterson]] (1919–1989) *[[Draper-5096|Willie Thomas Draper]] 21 Sep 1907 – Sep 1952 and wife: **[[Ireson-105|Zelma Lee ''Ireson'' Draper]] 3 Jun 1912 – 20 Jul 1972, children ***[[Draper-5523|Lila Faye ''Draper'' Saul]] 1936–2008, '''CENOTAPH''' and husband: [[Saul-1067|Arthur Landon Saul]] 1933–2019 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50174/evergreen-burial-park Evergreen Burial Park] ***[[Draper-5524|Nana Luella Draper Morris]] 1946–2021''' CENOTAPH''' buried with husband: [[Morris-36411|Garry Wayne Morris]] 1950–2018 in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1989871/westminster-gardens Westninster Gardens] Greensboro, NC *[[Draper-5335|Thomas Daniel Draper]] 24 Feb 1872 – 12 Jun 1954 and wife: **[[McBride-6079|Martha Susan “Susie” ''McBride'' Draper]] 7 Apr 1874 – 12 Dec 1953 *[[Draper-5381|Hugh Dyer Draper]] 2 Dec 1928 – 22 May 2008 and wife: **[[Lucas-12496|Mary Lucas Draper]] 14 Jun 1929 – 8 Aug 2012 FAG Memorial 95093551 *[[Draper-5361|James Cleophus Draper Sr]]. 20 Aug 1893 – 6 Feb 1975 and wife: **[[Draper-5361|Lucy Ethel Campbell Draper]] 19 Jun 1901 – 22 Oct 1962 *[[Draper-5382|James Cleophus Draper Jr.]] 12 Nov 1923 – 28 Nov 1994 wife: *Barbara Lee Byrd Draper (possibly still living as of 7/5/2022) ***[[Draper-5383|William Robert “Weed” Draper]] 27 Dec 1960 – 23 Jul 2011 *[[Draper-5369|Rev James Harold Draper]] 17 Apr 1935 – 7 Jun 2021 wife: **Elinor Shively Draper (still living as of this entry) *[[Draper-5370|Jesse W. Draper]] 17 Oct 1906 – 24 Jun 1982 wife: **[[Branscome-75|Hazel Vivian Branscome Draper]] 15 Aug 1910 – 3 Aug 2001 ***Clyde Allen Draper 19 May 1948 – 20 May 1948 infant, Age: 1 day ***[[Draper-5337|David Wilson Draper]] 6 May 1949 – 10 Sep 2007 and wife: ****[[Damron-675|Gloria Susan ''Damron'' Draper]] 22 Dec 1956 – 1 Apr 2013 *[[Draper-5376|Robert Henry Draper]] 18 Feb 1896 – 25 Jan 1959 **[[Stultz-756|Mildred Stultz Draper]] 1900–1986 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Draper-4001|James Eddy Draper]] 16 Dec 1938 – 16 Apr 2007 wife: **[[Key-4368|JoAnn ''Key'' (Draper) Doss]] (1939 - 2009) son: ***[[Draper-4002|Steven Wayne Draper]] (1958 - 2016) '''CENOTAPH''' Cremated *[[Draper-5380|Vaughan Minter Draper]] 8 Nov 1894 – 21 Apr 1981 *[[Draper-5386|John Jefferson Draper]] (1912 - 1989) **[[Cox-38430|Lorraine Cox Draper]] 31 Aug 1918 – 31 Dec 2004 *Harry Wooten Draper 21 Jan 1905 – 6 May 1999 wife, **Gladys McMillian Draper 3 Apr 1913 – 24 Oct 1989 son: ***John Harrison Draper 20 Dec 1938 – 24 May 1998 wife: ****Ruth Irene “Saunders” Draper 22 Jan 1935 – 22 Jan 2006 ***Elmer Ray Draper 3 Feb 1935 – 3 Oct 1977 and wife: ****Nell Bennett Draper 22 Dec 1929 – 7 Sep 2019 ***Roger Allen Draper 27 Feb 1953 – 20 Jan 1992 *Jesse S Draper 18 Apr 1896 – 30 Aug 1977 **Sally Lou Davis Draper 9 Oct 1889 – 19 Nov 1964, daughter: ***Helen Jane Draper 2 Oct 1926 – 21 Nov 2015 ***Spottsyl Davis “S D” Draper 1 May 1921 – 24 Feb 1981 son of Jesse, wife: ****Lois Young Draper30 Jan 1934 – 7 May 1995 ***Thomas Gilmore Draper 28 Nov 1930 – 29 Mar 2017 ****Nancy Elizabeth Dodson Draper 19 Jul 1933 – 28 Dec 2012 *'''NOTE''' Mary Adkins is a granddaughter of Elkanah Brammer Draper *Mary Lesly Draper Adkins 1884–1942 Memorial ID 83403056 husband: **Grover Cleveland Adkins 1885–1960 Memorial ID 83402947 ***Dover Cleveland Adkins 1913–2002 ***Mildred Lee Adkins Thomasson 1916–2009 ***Edna Adkins Oakley 1923–201 *John Harrison Draper 8 Oct 1893 – 3 May 1963 *Lester V Draper 6 Jun 1916 – 5 Oct 1997 *Lucy Ethel Campbell Draper 19 Jun 1901 – 22 Oct 1962 *Lynville Mitchell Draper 24 Apr 1927 – 29 May 2009 *Mary Elizabeth “Libby” Cook Draper 4 May 1923 – 28 Nov 1973 *Robert H Draper Jr. 19 Feb 1929 – 21 Jun 1991 *Samuel Byrd “Sammy” Draper 28 May 1957 – 28 Dec 1999 *Sarah Jo Craig Draper 9 May 1966 – 21 Mar 2008 *Sarah Victoria Lester Draper 21 Feb 1896 – 16 Dec 1981 *Thelma S Draper 16 Aug 1911 – 6 Nov 1991 *William Thomas Draper 16 Nov 1907 – 6 Jul 1991 *Betty Ann Ashby Draper 31 Mar 1937 – 25 Apr 1998 '''Children''' *Carrol Sue Draper 5 Jun 1954 – 6 Jun 1954 *Carmen Delane Draper 25 Nov 1961 – 25 Nov 1961 *Lisa Renae Draper 14 Feb 1964 – 14 Jun 1964 *Hugh Timmy Draper 21 Sep 1956 – 9 Feb 1966 *Benjamin J Draper 22 May 1976 – 25 May 1976 *Daren Allen Draper 26 Oct 1982 – 7 Dec 1982 '''Reed Creek Village''' *[[Draper-5017|John William Draper]] 21 Jul 1812 – unknown '''Draper Family Cemetery''' located on Rt. 606, Reed Creek Rd located near Martinsville *Elizabeth Ada Draper 19 Mar 1893 – 11 Jul 1971 *Erie Virginia Draper 24 Sep 1890 – 19 Nov 1970 *John William Draper1853 – 9 Dec 1934 *Martha Elizabeth Thomasson Draper19 Aug 1858 – 4 Oct 1946 *Solomon Tony Draper 30 Sep 1879 – 25 Oct 1965 *Willie Johnson Draper 16 Oct 1912 – 27 Dec 1932 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/30/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-37.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2303311/stone-gregory-cemetery Stone-Gregory_Cemetery]''' Located: Reed Creek Village, Henry County, Virginia, USA *[[Draper-4048 |Martin Draper]] 4 Mar 1796 – 4 Jan 1878 and wife: **[[Williams-97411|Mary G (Williams) Draper]] (abt. 1799 - abt. 1824) '''CENOTAPH''' '''Bassett''' ZIP Code 24055 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/db/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-6.jpg *'''Bassett Historical Center''' . 3964 Fairystone Park Highway . Bassett, VA 24055 *'''Draper Flowers and Gifts''' 6746 Virginia Ave Bassett VA 24055. They descend from Thomas and Sarah also. Stop in and buy some flowers! https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1.png ==='''JAMES CITY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/64/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-193.jpg '''Jamestown Settlement''' ZIP Code 23185 ''Just 84 miles from Farnham'' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/62/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-171.jpg '''No Draper burials found in the Jamestown area.''' But worth the visit! The Jamestown Settlement is a living history museum operated by the Commonwealth of Virginia, created in 1957 as Jamestown Festival Park for the 350th anniversary celebration. Today it includes a recreation of the original James Fort (c. 1607 to 1614), a Powhatan Native American town, indoor and outdoor displays, and replicas of the original settlers' ships: the '''Susan Constant''', '''Godspeed''', and '''Discovery'''. The museum complex is located adjacent to Historic Jamestown, on Jamestown Island, which is run in partnership by the National Park Service and the Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation. Admission Costs: see Travel Advisor web site: https://www.tripadvisor.com/FAQ_Answers-g58313-d559162-t2305502-Do_i_have_to_pay.html '''Williamsburg''' ZIP Code 23185 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dd/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-185.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49739/cedar-grove-cemetery Cedar Grove Cemetery]''' Location 809 S Henry Street *[[Draper-1937|Pvt William Meredith Draper]] 7 Jul 1832 – 5 May 1862 Confederate Soldier in the 24th infantry ==='''KING AND QUEEN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/33/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-421.jpg '''Stevensville''' ZIP Code 23161 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/32/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-422.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2316272/wayland-baptist-church-cemetery? Wayland Baptist Church Cemetery]''' Located: Stevensville, Virginia '''NOTE''' Find A Grave and Family Search has no information on any of these Draper. At this time there is no way to organize them into Family Head (father), Spouse or Children. They have been grouped by birth dates. *Charlie R. Draper 1880 – 1965 Memorial ID 159088550 *Lavinia Draper1888 – 1967 Memorial ID 159088561 (possible spouse of above) Possible children of above: *Charlie Ross Draper 25 Feb 1907 – 16 Aug 1981 Memorial ID 159088584 *Pearl Harris Draper 6 Apr 1909 – 20 May 1980 Memorial ID 159088573 (possible wife(s) of above *Iola Draper unknown – 1916 Memorial ID 159089042 Possible children of above: *James W. Draper 20 Jul 1933 – 15 Jun 1984 Memorial ID 159088592 *Charles R. Draper 1 Jan 1935 – 4 May 2000 Memorial ID 159088537 *Bernard W. Draper 1 Mar 1941 – 4 May 1999 Memorial ID 159088524 *Alfred Draper 1948 – 2013 Memorial ID 159088521 *Patrick Sampson Draper 1948 – 28 Jul 2009 Memorial ID 40047359 ==='''LUNENBURG COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Research_Notes_Experimenting_with_Code.jpg *[[Draper-722|Mary Ann (Draper) Palmer]] (1718 - 1761) '''CENOTAPH''' husband: **[[Palmer-827|Parmenas Palmer]] (abt. 1709 - abt. 1761) '''CENOTAPH''' ***Mary Ann Draper Palmer is the daughter of [[Draper-169|Thomas]] and [[Tune-56|Sarah Toone? Draper]] She and Parmenas are said to have died in Lunenberg Co. ==='''PULASKI COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-196.jpg '''Draper''' ZIP Code 24324 Founded by John Draper https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-410.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2137475/draper-valley-presbyterian-church-cemetery Draper Valley Presbyterian Church Cemetery]''' *Frank Edmond Draper 1919–1991 FAG Memorial ID: 169586900 wife: **Wife (add), their son: ***Donald Gene Draper (1942–2008) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/72055/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery] Orlando, Orange County , Florida *Draper Mercantile Store and Museum (not owned by Draper family, but a great place to see. '''Draper Mountain''' '''Radford''' ZIP Codes 24141, 24142, 24143 *[[Draper-900|Mary Draper Ingles]] Grave (not related family, but very interesting, might as well visit) The book "Follow The River" recounts her capture by Indians and escape. [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7317240/mary-ingles '''Find_A _Grave'''] Memorial *Draper's Meadow on Virginia Tech Campus (see profile ) *Draper's Meadow Sign (see profile) *Mary Draper Ingles's home when she returned from captivity (add address) ==='''RICHMOND COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/48/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-424.jpg Today, there are no Draper burials listed in Richmond County, Virginia by Find A Grave *[[Draper-169|Thomas Draper Sr.]] (abt. 1680 - 1735) wife: **[[Tune-56|Sarah (Tune) Toone or Tune]] (abt. 1685 - aft. 1746) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***10 Children ==='''ROANOKE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/ff/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-195.jpg '''Roanoke City''' ZIP Code 24015 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-341.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49500/blue-ridge-memorial-gardens Blue Ridge Memorial Gardens] *Larry Draper 1 Oct 1919 – 1 Jul 1973 *Charlie Draper 25 Feb 1913 – 29 Apr 1989 Memorial ID 162442126 **Frances B. Draper 17 Jul 1919 – 3 Jun 1994 Memorial ID 162442196 *James H. Draper 1944 – unknown **Sharon F. Draper 1947 – unknown *James Clyde Draper 1902–1961 Memorial ID 42250372 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1997079/montvale-presbyterian-church-cemetery Montvale Presbyterian Church Cemetery] Montvale, Virginia, son: ** Daisy Lillian Callahan Draper 1912–2001'''CENOTAPH'' buried with husband (above) son: ***James Luther Draper 7 Nov 1934 – 6 Jan 1999 Memorial ID 235320429 *James Russell “Jim” Draper 1921 – 15 Mar 1988 **Frances ''Snider'' Draper 27 Apr 1926 – 19 Dec 2007 Memorial ID 163281845 ***Wanda ''Draper'' Manning 1949–2015 Memorial ID 148241870 ***Carolyn Ann Draper Eddins 1947–2020 Memorial ID 207143317 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/72437/pensacola-memorial-gardens Pensacola Memorial Gardens] Pensacola, FL *[[Draper-5055|John Wesley Draper]] 8 Feb 1902 – 22 Feb 1968 wife: **[[Wright-54504|Carter Lois ''Wright'' Draper]] 4 Feb 1903 – 25 Mar 1984 ***Gene Padgett Draper 1 Mar 1930 – 23 Sep 1992 ***[[Draper-5032|Jack Douglas Draper]] (1933 - 2018) CENOTAPH buried [[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50284/franklin-memorial-park Franklin Memorial Park] Rocky Mount, Virginia ***[[Draper-5058|Glenn Wright Draper]] 1928–2019 Memorial ID 200136545 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109392/chattanooga-national-cemetery Chattanooga National Cemetery] Chattanooga, TN *William T. Draper 4 Oct 1918 – Dec 1982 Memorial ID 163898556 wife" **Dorothy Lillian ''Blankenship'' Draper 30 Jul 1918 – 12 Jan 2005 ***Beverly Lee Draper 14 Mar 1940 – 20 Jun 1997 Memorial ID 168678457 wife: ****Linda Darlene Draper 23 Apr 1952 – 5 Dec 2016 Memorial ID 168860705 ***Edward Michael Draper 12 Jan 1946 – 20 Feb 2002 Memorial ID 143208099 ***Gary William Draper Sr. 9 Sep 1947 – 25 Apr 2006 Memorial ID 14095090 ***Lewis Winston Draper Sr. 24 Jan 1943 – 2 Dec 2004 Memorial ID 10123274 wife ****Doloris ''Fox'' (Draper) Sayers 1948–2012 Memorial ID 93125439 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2456254/church-of-god-cemetery Church of God Cemetery] Amelia Court House, Virginia *****Lewis Winston Draper Jr. 1968–2019 Memorial ID 201984878 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51319/mountain-view-cemetery Mountian View Cemetery] Vinton, Virginia https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-183.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50174/evergreen-burial-park Evergreen Burial Park] AKA Evergreen Cemetery, Location: 1307 Summit Avenue, SW in the Raleigh Court area Roanoke, Roanoke City, Virginia, 24015 USA *[[Draper-5360|Janie Wilmoth (Draper) Pannell]](1905 - 1987) husband: **[[Pannell-713|Norman Samuel Pannell]] (1901 - 1971) *[[Draper-4046|William Lee Draper 1863]] – 1 Mar 1937 **[[Wingfield-1125|Mary Elizabeth “Betty” Wingfield Draper]] 1868 – 28 Apr 1946, children: ***Edna Scott Draper 20 May 1900 – 20 Dec 1958 ***Sarah Helen Draper 27 Feb 1897 – 13 Apr 1994 *[[Draper-5476|Everett Bramlet Draper]] 13 Apr 1892 – 26 Jan 1985, wife: **[[Craig-14064|Lovie Grace Craig Draper]] 26 Oct 1892 – 8 Apr 1956 ***Norman Edmund Draper 15 Apr 1928 – 4 Jul 1928 infant age 2 months ***Everitt B. Draper 1915–1915 infant: age 2 months '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2363944/pleasant-grove-united-methodist-church-cemetery Pleasant Grove Methodist Church Cemetery] ***Beatrice Madeline Draper Lester 1916–1979 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51943/roselawn-burial-park Roselawn Burial Park] ***Eunice ''Draper'' Dickerson 1918–2004 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/728583/sherwood-burial-park Sherwood Burial Park] *[[Draper-5477|Hass Hairfield Draper]] 13 Jan 1896 – 23 Jun 1958 **[[Holland-15171|Ethel P Holland Draper]] 8 Oct 1895 – 21 May 1973 *[[Draper-5523|Lila Faye (Draper) Saul]] (1936 - 2008) husband: **[[Saul-1067|Arthur Landon Saul]] (1933 - 2019) *John Claude Draper 19 Apr 1876 – 23 Feb 1953 FAG Memorial ID: 101115008 **Texie White Draper 6 Nov 1878 – 16 Dec 1974 FAG Memorial ID: 101115015 *Tazewell Edwin Draper 6 Sep 1890 – 16 Mar 1948 FAG Memorial ID86665097 **Nell Thompson Draper 12 Apr 1879 – 30 Nov 1970 *Shirley Randolph Draper 3 Apr 1915 – 13 Nov 2000 FAG Memorial ID 92002656 **Gladys May Slaughter Draper 1 Nov 1916 – 29 Nov 1996 *Neil Roy Draper 15 Jun 1890 – 28 Feb 1962 FAG Memorial ID 85005947 **Daisy B Draper 28 Sep 1897 – 30 Jun 1983 child: ***Carolyn Draper Francis 1925–2003 husband ****John R Francis 1919–1981 *Charlotte Rice Draper 16 Apr 1915 – 6 Dec 1992 *David Beckwith Draper 18 Jun 1923 – 16 Sep 1982 FAG Memorial ID: 97793703 *Edna Scott Draper 20 May 1900 – 20 Dec 1958 *Jean Painter Draper 3 Mar 1922 – 28 May 1989 *Lenore Lewis Draper 6 Dec 1914 – 24 Sep 1963 *Mildred Valentine Draper 19 Nov 1919 – 3 Jun 1928 *Sarah Helen Draper 27 Feb 1897 – 13 Apr 1994 *Walter Linwood Draper 17 Jul 1908 – 28 Sep 1986 FAG Memorial ID 94235666 *William Bernard Draper Jr. 2 May 1935 – 27 Jun 2002 FAG Memorial ID 84516518 **Lewis "Tootsie" (Lewis Frye Avis Draper) Moir Memorial ID 84516510 sons: ***Robert Draper (Roanoke) ***John C. (Roanoke) ***William Bernard Draper Sr. 22 Feb 1907 – 11 Aug 1987 FAG Memorial ID: 84516482 daughter: *****Ann Hunter Draper 17 Jan 1961 – 3 Feb 1986 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-182.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50186/fair-view-cemetery Fair View Cemetery]''' AKA Fairview Cemetery Location: 3300 Melrose Avenue NW, Roanoke City, Virginia, 24017-5900 *[[Draper-5359|Draper-5359]]Asa Hunter Draper 21 Dec 1899 – 16 Dec 1983 **[[Oliver-15522|Doris Leigh Oliver Draper]] 12 Jul 1901 – 18 Oct 1994 *William Walter Draper 4 Mar 1874 – 11 Apr 1949 Memorial ID: 100725275 **Lura J Whorley Draper 1870–1904 '''CENTOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 28549438 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51319/mountain-view-cemetery Mountain View Cemetery] *Emma F Draper 1912 – 2004 *Infant Daughter Draper 17 Feb 1937 – 17 Feb 1937 '''Vinton''' ZIP Code 24179 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/01/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-340.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51319/mountain-view-cemetery Mountain View Cemetery]''' *Dora Avis Williams ''Draper'' Lawhorn 2 Aug 1897 – 7 Dec 1989 **Ernest Roy Lawhorn 1894–1952 *Lewis Winston Draper Jr. 17 Feb 1968 – 5 Aug 2019 Memorial ID: 201984878 wife **Ruth Howell, remarried still living *John Amos Draper Sr. 3 Feb 1895 – 3 Jan 1969 wife **Georgia Mildred Freese Draper 15 Oct 1899 – 4 Dec 1984 *Josie Lynelle Draper Memorial ID3 Mar 2006 – 16 Apr 2021 *Lura J ''Whorley'' Draper 22 Jun 1870 – 4 Jul 1904 husband **William Walter Draper 1874–1949 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/50186/fair-view-cemetery Fair View Cemetery] child: ***Annie Juneta Draper 1909–1914 Age 5, Death Record lists parents as W W Draper and Mena Griggs. Died accidentally from a wood fire. ==West Virginia 22 Burial Listings== ==='''CABELL COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-711.jpg '''Huntington''' ZIP Code 25705 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/03/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-425.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80346/woodmere-memorial-park Woodmere Memorial Park] Huntington, West Virginia *Garland E Draper 1 Oct 1900 – 20 Feb 1995 Memorial ID 44631822 **Elma Evadeen Erwin Draper 30 Jul 1905 – 10 Jan 1971 Memorial ID 44631821 *Dr Sylvester A Draper 1874 – 1948 Memorial ID 54782487 **Wife unknown ***Lois Louise Draper 1918 – 1922 Memorial ID 54782471 *Mina E Draper 1878 – 1974 Memorial ID 45698551 *Peter D Draper 1874 – 1964 Memorial ID 45698541 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/28/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-712.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/79969/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery] Huntington West Virginia *[[Draper-5918|George Harvey Draper]] 16 Oct 1890 – 7 Dec 1981 Memorial ID 59078146 '''CENOTAPH''' He gave his body to science, hoping it would benefit others. **[[Allen-61954|Emma Lorna ''Allen'' Draper Bender]] (1897 - 1993) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/79968/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery] Charleston, West Virginia ==='''PUTNAM COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-197.jpg '''Scotts Depot''' ZIP Codes 25660 & 25669 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/76/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-49.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/78928/lawrence-cemetery Lawrence Cemetery]''' *[[Thomason-807|Adelphia Ann Thomasson Draper]] 1841 – 5 Apr 1910 husband: **[[Draper-1495|Thomas Draper]] buried in Virginia at Draper Cemetery Located on Rt 609 ***[[Draper-5734|William S Draper]] 8 Jun 1863 – 21 Feb 1908 *[[Draper-5921|Joseph Owen Draper]] 1867-1940 Memorial ID 55335991 **[[Turley-1904|Blanche ''Turley'' Draper]] 1875 – 1933 **[[Swindler-155|Cora Mittie Swindler McClain Draper]] 1877–1975 Memorial ID 79955213 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/204683/mount-vernon-cemetery Mount Vernon Cemetery] Hurricane, West Virginia '''Hurricane''' ZIP Code 25526 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-14.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/204683/mount-vernon-cemetery Mount Vernon Cemetery]''' Located: Hurricane, Putnam County, West Virginia, USA *[[Draper-5170|John Harrison Draper]] (1851 - 1939) and wife: **[[Burgess-13189|Margaret Adelia'' Burgess'' Draper]] (1860 - 1947) *Emma Ethel Draper24 Feb 1884 – 29 Jun 1908 *Grace Moore Draper24 Sep 1909 – 5 Feb 2003 *Robert Otis Draper29 Jun 1929 – 13 Aug 1930 *[[Draper-5921|Joseph Owen Draper]] 1867-1940 Memorial ID 55335991 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/78928/lawrence-cemetery Lawrence Cemetery] wife: **[[Swindler-155|Cora Mittie ''Swindler'' (McClain) Draper]] 20 Oct 1877 – 16 Sep 1975 ==New Jersey 5 Burial Listings== ==='''BURLINGTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/92/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-347.jpg '''Arneytown''' ZIP Code 08562 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/ba/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-348.jpg '''Brigadier General William C. Doyle Memorial Cemetery''' AKA Doyle Veterans Cemetery, Located: 350 Province Line Rd, Wrightstown, NJ *[[Draper-5494|Herbert G. Draper]] (1920 - 1986) wife: **[[Unknown-612891|Dolores (Unknown) Draper]] (1914 - 1994) Note: Herbert was the son of [[Draper-5490|Marvin Draper]] (1897 - 1964) Wayne City, IL ==='''MERCER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-527.jpg '''Hamilton''' ZIP Codes 08501 - 08561 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/27/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-526.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2207835/holy-cross-cemetery Holy Cross Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5710|Frank Edgar Draper]] 1918 – 1 Dec 1991 wives: **J. Ann Kaitzin Draper26 Feb 1911 – 12 Aug 1963 Memorial ID 144757573 **Olga Caroline “Ollie” Obuchowski Tomko - Draper 1923-1994 Memorial ID144754874 '''CENOTAPH'''buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/641090/saint-marys-cemetery St. Marys Cemetery] Trenton, New Jersey, ==New York 1 Burial Listings== [[Draper-1294|William Draper (1715 - abt. 1765) '''CENOTAPH''' son of [[Draper-169|Thomas Draper Sr. (1690-1735) '''NOTE''' William Draper is said to have died in Parish, Oswego County, New York. We will list all the Draper burials in this area and surrounding counties. == North Carolina 85 Burial Listings == === '''CABARRUS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-198.jpg '''Mounty Pleasant''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-83.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2438485/mount-pleasant-pentecostal-holiness-church-cemeter Mount Pleasant Pentecostal Holiness Church Cemetery]''' located : 2680 Mount Pleasant Rd S *Mary Elizabeth Draper 8 Nov 1926 – 2 Jan 1990 (Need Research about her) ==='''GUILFORD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ab/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-324.jpg '''Greensboro''' ZIP Codes 27406 - 27438 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-323.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2129143/centre-friends-meeting-cemetery Centre Friends Meeting Cemetery] Located: Greensboro, Guilford County, NC *[[Draper-5413|Daniel S. Draper]] 8 Aug 1898 – 19 Sep 1982, wife: **[[Unknown-610252|Esther M. ''Unknown'' Draper]] 5 Apr 1900 – 7 Feb 1983 children: ***[[Draper-5414|Mary Annette Draper Huntley]] 17 Mar 1931 - 28 Aug 2013, her husband: ****Franklin Wayne Huntley ( no memorial on FAG yet & 3 sons by previous marriage ***Infant Daughter 28 Jun 1941 – 28 Jun 1941 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-326.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/47864/lakeview-memorial-park Lakeview Memorial Park]''' Located: Greensboro, Guilford County, NC *[[Snider-4348|Anne'' Snider'' (Draper) Dove]] (1932 - 2014) 1st husband: **[[Draper-5422|John W. Draper]] (1928 - 1999) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/186330/fairview-baptist-church-cemetery '''Fairview_Baptist_Church_Cemetery'''] *John Peter Draper Jr. 14 Mar 1921 – 26 Apr 1992, wife: **Mildred “Mickey” Reed Draper 2 Jan 1922 – 3 Oct 2006 *Joe Wayne Draper 19 Jul 1964 – 23 Dec 1964 Infant https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-378.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1989871/westminster-gardens Westminster Gardens] Greensboro, Guilford County , North Carolina, USA *[[Draper-5524|Nana Luella ''Draper'' Morris]] 1946–2021 daughter of [[Draper-5096|William T. Draper]] husband: **[[Morris-36411|Garry Wayne Morris 1950–2018]] her son, his step son ***[[Agee-1571|Glenn Thomas Agee]] 1964–1988 Age 24 *James Leon Draper 13 Oct 1892-23 Jul 1958 Father unknown [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49269/arlington-national-cemetery Arlington National Cemetery] wife: **Unknown at this time ***Robert Alan Draper Sr. 26 Apr 1918 – 1 Dec 2010 Memorial ID 62532149 wife: ****Irene Elizabeth Kowinski Draper 8 Jul 1920 – 7 May 2005 Memorial ID 144736062 ==='''MACON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-306.jpg '''Franklin''' ZIP Code 28734 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-307.jpg '''Addington Cemetery''' Location & Address: 59 Church Hill Lane, Franklin, NC; Directions: To reach the Addington Cemetery, turn into the Prentiss Church of God and park on the small gravel parking area about 50 yards in. The Addington Cemetery is 30 yards up the hill to the left. Note: Addington Community Cemetery and Addington Family Cemetery may be the same or may be different. Google Search and FAG seems confused also. *[[Draper-5387|Lewis Arnold Draper]] 4 Jan 1936 – 15 Mar 2021 wife: **Erna Draper still living as of this entry, sons: ***David 1962 still living as of this entry ***Dan 1964 still living as of this entry ****'''Note:''' Lewis Arnold Draper is the son of [[Draper-5386|John Jefferson Draper]] buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51943/roselawn-burial-park Roseland Burial Park] Martinsville, Henry County, Virginia === '''PERSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/08/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-199.jpg *[[Draper-165|Solomon Draper Sr.]] (1731 - 1807) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wife: **[[Harrison-2373|Elizabeth (Harrison) Draper]] (1740 - aft. 1814) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, ***Both the above listed as dying in Person County '''Concord''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-50.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1304582/concord-methodist-church-cemetery? Concord Methodist Church Cemetery]''' * John A. Draper 15 Oct 1864 1 Sep 1951 (aged 86) *Lavina Draper13 May 1836 – 23 May 1906 *Lucy Draper1 Feb 1822 – 12 Feb 1894 *Nancy Draper11 Apr 1824 – 20 Mar 1923 '''Olive Hill''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/73/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-52.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2310304/john-draper-clayton-cemetery John Draper Clayton Cemetery]''' Location: Olive Hill Community on private property. Condition: This is a large cemetery, now abandoned. The last known burial was that of Elizabeth Clayton Long in 1928. Only three stones have inscriptions. Another stone appears to have orignialy enclosed a photograph. There are up to fifty graves marked by field stones. *[[Draper-466|PVT Soloman Draper]] 1756 – 1827 & wife: ** [[Taylor-9508|Joyce Taylor Draper]] 1773 – unknown ==='''ROCKINGHAM COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ac/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-200.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/af/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-661.jpg [[Draper-4965|Hugh N. Draper]] and 1st wife [[Thomasson-897|Martha "Mary Jane" ''Thomasson'' Draper]], resting below in '[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2242995/pleasantville-primitive-baptist-church-cemetery Pleasantville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery] and Martha in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2370765/nunn-family-cemetery Nunn Family Cemetery] '''Pleasantville''' ZIP Code 27866 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-15.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2242995/pleasantville-primitive-baptist-church-cemetery Pleasantville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery]''' [https://www.google.com/maps/dir/40.4738187,-89.0209676/Pleasantville+Primitive+Baptist+Church,+Madison,+NC+27025/@36.3772313,-79.8505078,257m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m10!4m9!1m1!4e1!1m5!1m1!1s0x8852ef3dc0eaea7d:0x87de9a7e733fc7c5!2m2!1d-79.8504251!2d36.3775978!3e0 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-4965|Hugh N. Draper]] (18 Mar 1858 – 17 Sep 1941) wife: ** [[Thomasson-897|Martha "Mary Jane" ''Thomasson'' Draper]] 1856–1891,'''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2370765/nunn-family-cemetery Nunn Family Cemetery] ***Marry E. Draper (1877-????) Family Search 9VXG-QJN '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-4964|William Payton Draper]] (1884 - 1959) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Martinsville, Virginia, USA wife: ****[[Southhard-6|Rosa Lee Nora (Southhard) Draper]] (1886 - 1965) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/51497/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Martinsville, Virginia, USA daughter: *****[[Draper-4963|Mary Lee Draper Richardson]] (1910–1998) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1986927/yanceyville-presbyterian-church-cemetery Yanceyville Presbyterian Church Cemetery] Yanceyvillee, NC ***[[Draper-5841|Elkanah Edmond “Cannie” Draper]] (29 May 1886 – 14 Jun 1964) wives: ****[[Purgason-26|Maggie Mae Purgason Draper]] (10 Feb 1899 – 3 Aug 1992) children: *****[[Draper-5840|James Edmond Draper]] (1 Nov 1920 – 6 Sep 1998) wife: ******[[Baynes-775|Novelia Irene Baynes Draper]] (11 Feb 1923 – 25 Feb 2008) *****[[Draper-5845|Robert Paul Draper]] (26 Apr 1927 – 18 Dec 1928) *****[[Draper-5846|Roy Lee Draper]] 6 Jun 1929 – 5 Mar 1990 Memorial ID 110231847 wife: ******[[Plummer-4618|Thelma P. Draper]] 26 Sep (1920 – 27 Mar 1992) ***James Millard Draper (1888–1970) ID LCXT-B89 '''CENOTAPH''' research needed wife: ****Edith O'Keefe Easter (1889–1983) '''CENOTAPH''' research needed, children: ****Jewel Adelene ''Draper'' Pennington 1922–2006 '''CENOTAPH''' research needed, husband: *****Dayton Luther Pennington (1911–1984) '''CENOTAPH''' research needed ******Baby Girl Pennington (1943–1943) • G7V1-2L3​​ '''CENOTAPH''' research needed ******Carolyn Sue Pennington 1945–2007 • G7V1-DJ1 '''CENOTAPH''' research needed ***[[Draper-5847|Mintora Draper]] (1891 - 1891) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ****2nd Wife of Elkanah: [[Comer-2264|Mattie Sue Comer Draper]] (19 Aug 1893 – 24 Feb 1916) *Sarah E “Sallie” Holcomb 1854 – 26 Feb 1937 Memorial ID 135547133 '''Reidsville''' ZIP Code 27320 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-53.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/186330/fairview-baptist-church-cemetery '''Fairview_Baptist_Church_Cemetery'''] Located near the intersection of Fairview Church Rd. and Cross Key Rd.[https://www.google.com/maps/@36.2917434,-79.7269599,182m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-5077|William Simpson Draper]] 7 Nov 1869 – 24 May 1929, wives: **[[Griffin-18278|Mary Etta Griffin Draper]] 23 Jan 1871 – 26 Jun 1914, 1st wife **[[Wheeler-24366|Beulah D. ''Wheeler'' (Draper) Moore]] (1892 - 1967) 2nd wife These children are from Mary Griffin Draper & William Simpson Draper ***[[Draper-5411|Bettie Wilmoth (Draper) Murray]] (1892 - 1972), husband: ****[[Murray-24903|Jesse Hodges Murray]] (1887 - 1959) ***[[Draper-5412|Robert H. Draper]] 8 Jun 1895 – 11 Feb 1918 Age 22 ***[[Wheeler-24366|Beulah D. ''Wheeler'' (Draper) Moore]] (1892 - 1967) husband: ****[[Moore-74224|Eddie Isaac Moore]] (1882 - 1970), children: *****Catherine Draper 26 Dec 1919 – 26 Dec 1919 infant ***[[Draper-5416|Henry A. Draper]] 11 Nov 1903 – 7 Feb 1980, wife: ****[[Unknown-610290|Jessie W. Draper]] 23 Sep 1915 – 21 Mar 1976 Maiden name unknown ***[[Draper-5421|Jesse Norman Draper]] 17 Dec 1905 – 10 Dec 1982 ****[[Rogers-39269|Doris Rogers Draper]] 23 Apr 1906 – 3 Aug 1999 *****[[Draper-5422|John W. “Nick” Draper]] 21 Nov 1928 – 3 Feb 1999 ******[[Snider-4348|Anne Snider (Draper Dove)]] 1932–2014 '''CENOTAPH''' remarried buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/47864/lakeview-memorial-park Lakeview Memorial Park] ******[[Unknown-610488|Lydia Z. Draper]] 22 Dec 1919 – 22 Mar 2006 These children are from Beulah & William Simpson Draper *[[Draper-5417|William Harvey “Bill” Draper]] 23 Sep 1929 – 13 Oct 2010, wife: **[[Dabbs-450|Carrie Lea Dabbs Draper]] 14 Jun 1930 – 19 Aug 2011, children: ***[[Draper-5418|Brenda Gayle Draper]] 5 Jun 1953 – 16 Nov 2000 ***[[Draper-5419|William Harvey “Billy” Draper Jr.]] 25 Apr 1955 – 4 Apr 2017, wife ****Diane Davis Draper (living as of this entry), daughter: *****[[Draper-5420|Jamie Lynn Draper]] 31 Mar 1979 – 27 Oct 1995 Age 16 ***Linda Dianne Draper 1958 – 1958 infant *****See FAG Memorial ID 178103648 Obituary for above info *[[Moore-74224|Eddie Isaac Moore]] (1882 - 1970) Beulah Draper remarried Eddie Moore **Roy Moore child of Eddie and Beulah ''Wheeler'' (Draper) Moore *[[Draper-5473|Fletcher Taylor Draper]] 28 Nov 1907 – 24 Apr 1999, wife: **[[Norwood-2472|Essie Gertrude Norwood Draper]] 29 Jan 1917 – 16 Aug 1974 *Mary Elizabeth Draper 9 Aug 1923 – 22 Nov 1923 *Maude Emma Draper 30 Oct 1921 – 14 Feb 1922 ==Georgia 16 Burial Listings== ==='''CATOOSA COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/58/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-727.jpg '''Lakeview ZIP''' Code 30742 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-728.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/34891/lakewood-memory-gardens-south Lakewood Memory Gardens] *James Ward Draper 1830-1895 '''CENOTAPH''' buried Chestnut Mound, Tennessee sonj: **James Patrick Draper '''CENOTAPH''' buried Chestnut Mound, Tennessee son: ***Ward Tubb Draper 25 Jul 1900 – May 1987 ****Clara Margaret Cowan Draper 25 Mar 1903 – 27 May 1978 sons: *****James Hampton Draper 1921–2003 '''CENOTAPH''' buried Hickson, TN *****Billie Louise Draper Nutley 1924–1998 husband: ******Larren E Nutley 1918–1980 (m. 1945) *****Baby Boy Draper 1925–1925 '''CENOTAPH''' buried Chattanooga, TN ==='''FULTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-709.jpg '''Sandy Springs''' ZIP Codes 3009 - 30327 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/89/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-710.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/32584/arlington-memorial-park Arlington Memorial Park] AKA Arlington Cemetery, Located: Sandy Springs, Fulton County, GA *William Linn “Bill” Draper Sr. 20 Jul 1930 – 8 Feb 2000 Memorial ID 143706132 **Gwendolyn Ardis “Gwen” Martin Draper 28 Feb 1933 – 26 Feb 2013 Memorial ID105916239 *Damian Andre Draper 20 Dec 1988 – 10 Nov 2017 Memorial ID 185776081 ==='''MADISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-499.jpg '''Between Comer and Bowman Georgia''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/70/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-501.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1973342/vineyards-creek-baptist-church-cemetery Vineyards Creek Baptist Church Cemetery]''' Rural cemetery at the intersection of Cherokee and Collins-Brooks Rd *Agatha W Bruce Draper 19 Dec 1871 – 15 Sep 1967 Memorial ID 94968639 *Delphine Draper1920 – 1921 Memorial ID 149349326 *George Wesley Draper2 Jul 1876 – 12 Jun 1964 Memorial ID 149349598 *John William Draper27 Nov 1870 – 17 Sep 1958 Memorial ID 94968784 *Lester H Draper 24 Sep 1891 – 12 Dec 1893 Memorial ID 149349310 *Mary Louellen Draper25 Nov 1906 – 13 Jun 1907 Memorial ID 149349585 *Nancy B. Draper26 Dec 1853 – 22 Sep 1900 Memorial ID 149350533 *Vara Patterson Draper27 Jul 1885 – 7 Feb 1967 Memorial ID 149349625 *W J Draper9 Jun 1847 – 31 Jan 1925 Memorial ID 149350548 '''Hull''' ZIP Code 30646 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/09/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-500.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/209160/hull-baptist-cemetery Hull Baptist Cemetery]''' Hull, Georgia *James Thomas Draper29 Aug 1920 – 8 Feb 1997 Memorial ID 95466510 **Sue J Draper 30 Sep 1914 – 6 Feb 1989 Memorial ID 95466587 ==='''WARREN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-502.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg *[[Draper-5255|James Draper]] (1760 - 1843) wife '''CENOTAPH''' **[[Hudson-15839|Obedience Hudson]] (1756–1845) '''CENOTAPH''' ***Burial Location unknown ==South Carolina 6 Burial Listings== ==='''ANDERSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-202.jpg '''Anderson''' ZIP Code 29624 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-90.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/71380/silver-brook-cemetery Silver Brook Cemetery] AKA Old Silver Brook Cemetery Location: 1405 White Street Anderson, Anderson County, South Carolina, USA *[[Draper-38|Alexander Great Draper]] 26 Dec 1846 – 8 Feb 1937 **[[Apple-784|Mary Jane Apple Draper]] 5 Aug 1849 – 8 Apr 1942 ==='''BERKELEY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/83/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-203.jpg '''Moncks Corner''' ZIP Code 29461 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-81.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2259487/moncks-corner-baptist-church-cemetery Moncks Corner Baptist Church Cemetery]''' Located on E. Main St. west of Old Highway 52 (see map in FAG) *[[Draper-40|Thomas Draper]] 1725 – 1811 and wife: **[[Coleman-153|Lucy Coleman Draper]] 1722 – 1805 ***'''NOTE''' New information revealed in December of 2022 claims that [[Draper-40|Thomas & Lucy Draper]] were buried near Jonesville, Union County, South Carolina on a farm or little family cemetery that was "erased" by the construction of State Road S-44-73 / Jerusalem Rd. which intersects with Rt 18. The cemetery was near in convergence of the Pacolet River and Mill Creek about 200 miles North West of this location. '''Please visit Union County, NC''' '''NOTE''' This is from the research of [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/183273662/suzanne-watt Suzanne Wheeler Watt], who was a descendant of [[Draper-40|Thomas|Thomas and Lucy Coleman Draper]] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-673.jpg ==='''UNION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-674.jpg *[[Draper-40|Thomas Draper]] 1725 – Jan 1812 and wife: **[[Coleman-153|Lucy Coleman Draper]] 1722 – 1803 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/66/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-675.jpg ==Alabama 105 Burial Listings== ==='''CALHOUN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/11/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-204.jpg '''Golden Springs''' ZIP Code 36207 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/26811/union-grove-cemetery Union Grove Cemetery]''' Location: Golden Springs, Calhoun County, Alabama *[[Draper-745|Joshua Draper]] 1784 – 1837''' CENOTAPH''' '''Note: this may be wrong''' (see United Methodist Cemetery below) '''Wellington''' ZIP Code 36279 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-142.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/916863/union-united-methodist-church-cemetery Union United Methodist Church Cemetery]''' Location: Union Church Rd Wellington, Calhoun County, Alabama *[[Draper-745|Joshua Draper]] 1784 – 1837 wife **[[Lane-18193|Nancy (Lane) Draper]] (1784 - 1847); children: ***Sarah “Sallie” ''Draper'' Lipscomb (1806–1875) husband: ****Smith Lipscomb (1803-1884) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-1475|Lucinda Draper Kirby]] (1808–1883) husband: ****[[Kirby-2358|James Kirby]] 1791–1879 (m. 1830) daughter: *****Mildred Caroline Kirby (1839–1865) Age 25 ***[[Draper-2898|Vianna ''Draper'' Littlejohn]] (1810–1877) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/24055/littlejohn-cemetery Littlejohn Cemetery]; husband: ****[[Littlejohn-804|Charles Littlejohn II]] (1803 - 1868) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/24055/littlejohn-cemetery Littlejohn Cemetery] ***Elizabeth Draper Wilkins (1812–1894) FAG ID: 28474169 husband: ****Aaron Davis Wilkins (1812–1879) (m. 1836) FAG ID: 1494848 ***[[Draper-1994|Isaac L. Draper]] (1813–1858) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108521/thomason-cemetery Thomanson Cemetery] Illinois ***[[Draper-5302|Joshua Draper Jr.]] 26 Jan 1824 – 19 Sep 1888, wives: ****[[Clark-73492|Annie E. Clark Draper]] 6 Nov 1846 – 9 Nov 1933 Ist wife, son: *****[[Draper-5321|Daniel Clark Draper]] 26 Aug 1879 – 29 Feb 1880 6 mo. old ****[[Kelly-26608|Emmeline Amanda Kelly Draper]] 29 Apr 1832 – 28 Jun 1876 2nd wife, son: *****Thomas D. Draper 1852–???? '''CENOTAPH''' (listed in Family Search) ***Millie Goudelock Draper Linder (1826–1906) FAG ID: 29667711 husband: ****Dr. Pleasant Phillips Linder (1827–1898) FAG ID: 14081213 **[[Bullard-2687|Temperance Jane (Bullard) Draper]] (1793 - 1857) '''CENOTAPH''' burial not discovered '''Oxford''' ZIP Code 36201 - 36260 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/63/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-403.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/25256/oxford-memorial-gardens-cemetery Oxford Memorial Gardens] *Baard Foster Draper 1881 – 1918 Memorial ID 170901561 *[[Draper-3112|PVT Daniel Davis Draper]] 14 Dec 1817 – 3 Apr 1883 Memorial ID 205536057 **[[Wood-47209|Caroline Matilda Wood Draper]] 8 Jan 1822 – 17 Jul 1913 Memorial ID 205536309 ***CPT Joshua Draper 26 Aug 1845 – 20 Aug 1916 Memorial ID 187346723 ****Donnie C. Nicholos Details unknown '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *John H Draper 14 Nov 1868 – 19 Nov 1934 Memorial ID 132662692 wife: **Susan Shuford Draper Mar 1873 – 12 Dec 1954 Memorial ID 132663017 *John Richard Draper 23 Jul 1921 – Apr 2005 Memorial ID 157002141 wife **Wanda Sexton Draper 2 Aug 1924 – 29 Aug 2002 Memorial ID 170890068 *Robert Allen Draper 1877 – 1900 Memorial ID 170911674 *Thomas Milton Draper 20 Sep 1849 – 17 Oct 1930 Memorial ID 101034985 wife: **Tallulah Maud Allen Draper 1 Jan 1856 – 1 Sep 1937 Memorial ID 142787070 ***Rosa Elliott Draper Arnold 1884–1968 ****Wallace Arnold '''CENOTAPH''' burial undiscovered *Vernon L Draper 11 Aug 1897 – 8 Sep 1965 Memorial ID 13341001 wife: **Hazel B Draper 14 Aug 1897 – 16 Nov 1972 Memorial ID 13340998 *William Gray Draper 18 Jul 1920 – 13 Sep 1980 Memorial ID 170890119 ==='''JEFFERSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/70/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-205.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg *[[Draper-2082|George Harvey Draper]] (1836 - 1918) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial Unknown **[[Owen-12355|Mary Ann ''Owen'' Draper]] (1838 - aft. 1875) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial Unknown **[[Huey-400|Nancy Melissa ''Huey'' Draper]] (1839 - 1911) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial Unknown '''Adamsville''' ZIP Code 35005 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-108.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/24420/midway-united-methodist-cemetery Midway United Methodist Cemetery]''' located: 3904 Oakwood Drive Adamsville, Jefferson County, Alabama, USA *[[Draper-5253|Joshua H Draper]] 26 Nov 1871 – 5 Feb 1945 wife: **[[Shackelford-1267|Dicie Elva Shackelford Draper]] 10 May 1878 – 11 Feb 1943 '''Bessemer''' ZIP Cose 35021 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/51/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-111.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/23414/highland-memorial-gardens Highland Memorial Gardens]]''' *Albert C Draper1906 – 1968 *Deanna “Dee” Prater Draper4 May 1945 – 11 May 1991 *George Robert “Bob” Draper11 Mar 1945 – 28 Mar 2011 *Maggie L Draper 1908 – 2002 '''Birmingham''' ZIP Code 35220 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-112.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/22674/elmwood-cemetery Elmwood Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5260|Robert Walter Draper]] Sep 1866 – 2 Jun 1948 wife: **[[Hoskins-3318|Carrie Eva Hoskins Draper]] Feb 1873 – 22 Sep 1956 *Clare Hill Draper 1928–2018 Memorial ID 196316376 '''CENOTAPH''' cremated, wife: **Eulalie Jenkins Draper 19 Dec 1930 – 21 Nov 2015 *Robert Walter Draper 1866–1948 Memorial ID 108051131, wife: **Carrie Eva Hoskins Draper 1873–1956 Memorial ID 108051721, children: ***Owen H. Draper 9 Nov 1897 – 8 Oct 1942 2 wives: ****Lena Elizabeth Neighbors Draper 1899 – 1932 Memorial ID 176593939 ****Effie Mae Curry Draper 1907–1990 Memorial ID 245007974 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/26764/tuscaloosa-memorial-park Tuscaloosa Memorial Park] Tuscaloosa, Alabama *****Owen Hunter Draper 1936–2012 Memorial ID 108100141 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/26764/tuscaloosa-memorial-park Tuscaloosa Memorial Park] Tuscaloosa, Alabama ***Gladys ''Draper'' Golden (1896-1964) Memorial ID 12299203 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1825881/harkeys-chapel Harkeys Chapel] Wattsville, Alabama ***Paul Lamar Draper 6 May 1900 – 22 Oct 1965 Memorial ID ***Lucian W. Draper 1902 – 1970 Memorial ID 176593778, wife: ****Agnes Williams Draper 1904 – 20 Jun 1958 Memorial ID 176593732 ***Hugh Hoskins Draper 1909 – 30 Dec 1967 *Belva DuCote Draper1896 – 1982 *Daniel E. Draper13 Jun 1897 – 1 Feb 1964 *Frances A. Draper30 Sep 1903 – 9 Sep 2000 *Kathleen Draper 19 Jan 1918 – 21 Nov 1957 *Leonard C. Draper 6 Feb 1896 – 7 Nov 1980 *Lou Vada Draper 6 Aug 1877 – 5 Mar 1936 *Mary C. Draper 1 Sep 1923 – 2 Aug 2011 *Sarah Gladys Cook Draper 23 Nov 1896 – 3 Feb 1988 *W. E. Draper 25 Jan 1874 – 7 Apr 1941 *William Loyt Draper 1894 – 1973 *Woodrow W. Draper 24 Aug 1912 – 5 Aug 2003 '''Lipscomb''' ZIP Code 35020 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-113.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/26794/union-baptist-cemetery Union Baptist Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-3370|John B Draper]] 8 Nov 1798 – 30 Sep 1868 **[[Ayers-1204|Mahuldah J. ''Ayers'' Draper]] 28 Jul 1804 – 21 Jan 1865 ==='''LARMAR COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/6d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-206.jpg '''Vernon''' 35592 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-109.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/26927/walnut-grove-cemetery Walnut Grove Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-1141|Isaiah Draper]] 20 May 1838 – 1 Sep 1876 **[[Cole-27824|Lucanda Cole Draper]] 28 May 1848 – 9 Apr 1919 *[[Draper-1140|Joshua Draper]] 20 Feb 1847 – 27 Nov 1866 *[[Draper-1142|Melinda Draper]] 19 Dec 1845 – 20 Nov 1887 *Rev John Draper 17 May 1811 – 29 Feb 1892 **Amanda McGee Draper 10 Mar 1813 – 3 Jun 1884 *John Draper 30 Oct 1866 – 9 Apr 1943 Wife: **Achsah E “Axie” Draper Cash 20 Sep 1877 – 31 May 1904 (this may be wrong) *Axey Draper 7 Jun 1831 – 15 *Clifton Isaiah Draper 4 Nov 1897 – 10 Feb 1974 *Crafton Draper 7 Oct 1916 – 3 Feb 2007 *Gustie “Guss” Draper 14 Feb 1915 – 8 May 2002 *Infant Son Draper 6 Feb 1878 – 6 Feb 1878 *Isaiah Draper 1 Feb 1868 – 23 Jan 1890 *Marvin Draper 1910 – 1935 *Myrtle Fowler Draper 17 Feb 1904 – 25 May 1973 *Nancy Ann Sprouse Draper 25 Sep 1869 – 15 Oct 1934 *William Oscar Draper 19 Apr 1873 – 23 Mar 1939 '''Fernbank''' ZIP Code 35576 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ed/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-110.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2131029/ebenezer-methodist-church-cemetery Ebenezer Methodist Church Cemetery]''' *Sarah M. ''Draper'' Seay 27 Feb 1910 – 5 Jun husband: **Dr Jeptha Theodus Seay (he re-married after Sarah's death) *George Russell Draper 13 Mar 1870 – 23 Nov 1939 *George Stevens Draper 10 Jan 1908 – 10 May 1917 *L. C. Draper 20 Nov 1910 – 11 Aug 1937 *Martha Mildred “Marthy” Wilson Draper 2 Feb 1874 – 24 Aug 1939 *Robert N. Draper 30 Jul 1859 – 13 Aug 1899 *Br William Monroe Draper 24 Nov 1896 – 9 Nov 1941 ==='''MADISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-207.jpg '''Huntsville''' ZIP Code 35801 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/10/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-155.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/24196/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Location 203 Maple Hill Dr. Huntsville, Madison County, Alabama, 35801 USA *[[Landrum-853|Mildred Allene Landrum Draper]] 8 Apr 1916 – 14 Aug 2008 husband: **[[Draper-5291|Roy Gillette Draper]] (1929 - 2011) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108354/spring-hill-cemetery-and-mausoleum Spring Hill Cemetery] Danville, Illinois *William Wish Draper1911 – 10 May 1958 *Betty Draper 11 Mar 1945 – 2 Mar 1951 ==Florida 8 Burial Listings== ===ORANGE COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-478.jpg '''Winter Park''' ZIP Code 32792 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-479.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/72033/glen-haven-memorial-park-and-mausoleum Glen Haven Memorial Park and Mausoleum]''' *Daniel Draper Sr. 17 Aug 1913 – 6 May 1970 Memorial ID 123371301 (born in Boston) wife: **Judith '''Waterhouse''' Draper 22 May 1917 – 22 Nov 2001 Memorial ID 123371854 *George Draper 1915 – 1979 Memorial ID 100128949 wife: **Elizabeth Draper 1920 – 2010 Memorial ID 100128954 *Lewis L. Draper17 Oct 1907 – 9 Dec 1992 Memorial ID 170158646 wife **Pauline Coleman '''Rayman''' (Everly) Draper 26 Apr 1917 – 13 Dec 1997 Memorial ID 170158647 *Thomas Jefferson Draper Jr. 27 Apr 1915 – 2 Nov 2003 Memorial ID 97952846 wife: **Anne Elizabeth Ford Draper 2 May 1917 – 4 May 1994 Memorial ID 97952953 ==Mississippi 29 Burial Listings== ==='''MADISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-208.jpg '''Cameron''' ZIP Code 39146 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/90/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-114.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2223862/good-hope-cemetery Good Hope Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-3630|William Green Draper]] 5 Mar 1822 – 17 Jul 1883 wife: **[[Humphreys-3441|Mary Jane ''Humphreys'' Draper]] 15 Sep 1829 – 10 Dec 1894 ==='''PANOLA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-565.jpg '''Batesville''' ZIP Code 38606 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2176905/west-camp-cemetery West Camp Cemetery] Panola Co. MS Located west of Batesville, MS *Linzy Draper 7 Jun 1898 – 21 Mar 1967 Memorial ID 160013342 *David Columbus Draper 13 Feb 1938 – 4 Dec 1999 Memorial ID 160052151 **Bennie Alma Morgan Draper 10 Feb 1940 – 31 May 2012 Memorial ID 160052152 *Deacon C Draper 28 Jan 1902 – 7 Sep 1974 Memorial ID 160009485 **Elizabeth D. Draper 23 Nov. 1912 to 12 Feb 1992 '''Sardis''' ZIP Code 38666 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-566.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/61102/mount-gillian-cemetery? Mount Gilliam Cemetery]''' Rural cemetery located near Batesville, Mississippi *Clinton Draper 3 Mar 1885 – 30 Dec 1975 Memorial ID 159803662 **Pinkie Draper 7 Jan 1880 – 11 Jan 1970 Memorial ID 159803946 use this one **Pinkie Draper 7 Jan 1880 – 11 Jan 1970 Memorial ID 159832696 missing information ***Haywood Draper 1 Nov 1907 – 19 Dec 1982 Memorial ID 159803635 ****'''NOTE''' Duplicated memorial ID for Pinkie (the IDs are different) *Leland Draper 8 Aug 1920 – 18 Nov 1978 Memorial ID 159879384 **Lucille Adams Draper '''CENOTAPH''' details unknown ***Donald Draper 30 Dec 1959 – 1 Aug 1978 Memorial ID 159879403 Age 18 *Bobbie Jean DraperMemorial ID1944 – 1985 Memorial ID 159879442 *Delilah Galmore Draper 30 Jun 1905 – 25 Nov 1972 Memorial ID 159879348 *James H Draper 20 Mar 1985 – 20 Mar 1985 Memorial ID 159879467 *Jessie Earl Draper unknown – 22 Apr 2015 Memorial ID 145630933 *Jim Draper unknown – 1961 Memorial ID 159803239 *Jim Henry Draper 1868 – 9 Oct 1951 Memorial ID 159803282 *John Henry Draper 1903 – Oct 1979 Memorial ID 159879425 *Josephine Draper 1862 – 14 Apr 1941 Memorial ID 159803310 *Leola Knox Draper 14 Mar 1906 – 13 Sep 1969 Memorial ID 159879434 *Lillie B Hawkin Draper 31 Dec 1907 – 11 Oct 1981 Memorial ID 159879459 *Nathaniel Draper 12 Feb 1918 – 11 Jan 1983 Memorial ID 159879414 *Virgia Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 159803340 *Virgia Sledge Draper 16 May 1890 – 17 Sep 1967 Memorial ID 159803385 ==='''WARREN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-209.jpg '''Vicksburg''' ZIP Code 39180 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-168.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/63403/vicksburg-national-cemetery Vicksburg National Cemetery]''' Location: Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi, USA *[[Draper-5323|Samuel P. Draper]] 26 Sep 1839 – 26 Jun 1863 Age 23, died from diseases from Civil War, two days after mustered out. Parents buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105586/enfield-cemetery Enfield Cemetery] Illinois == Louisiana 6 Burial Listings == ==='''RAPIDES PARISH'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-211.jpg '''Pineville''' ZIP Codes: 71359, 71360, 71361 '''Alexandria National Cemetery''' [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Alexandria+National+Cemetery/@31.3221733,-92.4328125,273m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x86254b651b836527:0xf17d12371f094271!8m2!3d31.321783!4d-92.4324493 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-4988|William F. Draper]] (1833 - 1864) died in the Civil War at the Battle of Wilson's Farm [https://www.waymarking.com/gallery/image.aspx?f=1&guid=2b0866c0-d2fb-41d1-b577-484b4b7de46d Historical_Marker] Mansfield, LA **[https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=110587 Cemetery_Sign] ==='''UNION PARISH'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/00/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-210.jpg '''Lcockhart''' ZIP Code 71277 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-115.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/67150/canaan-cemetery Canaan Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5262|Howard Draper]] 25 Nov 1903 – 21 Dec 1979 **[[White-73493|Rowena White Draper]] 21 May 1912 – 10 Feb 1993 *[[Draper-5263|James Ellis Draper]] 14 Apr 1936 – 15 Jan 2016 *[[Draper-5264|Berry Wayne Draper]] 17 Dec 1937 – 25 Mar 2013 **[[Littlepage-332|Barbara Jean Littlepage Draper]] 8 Aug 1939 – 2 Mar 2007 == Arkansas 156 Burial Listings == ==='''ASHLEY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-548.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/68/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-553.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2154557/lick-prairie-cemetery? Lick Prairie Cemetery]''' Ashley County, Arkansas, USA *Sarah Frances Coleman Draper 10 Apr 1847 – 11 Feb 1928 Memorial ID 43230195 **John H. Draper 1846–1903 Memorial ID 65277669 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2406384/reaves-family-cemetery Reaves Family Cemetery] Warren, Bradley County, Arkansas, USA ***William Robert “Bob” Draper 15 Oct 1868 – 21 Dec 1937 Memorial ID 43230233 '''Crossett''' ZIP Code71635 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-552.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/54330/hickory-grove-cemetery? Hickory Grove Cemetery]''' Crossett, Ashley County, Arkansas, USA *Mary Q Draper 1875 – 1963 Memorial ID 155762319 details unknown https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-551.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55689/pinewood-memorial-park Pinewood Memorial Park]''' Crossett, Ashley County, Arkansas, USA *John Henry Draper 5 Oct 1904 – 9 Mar 1986 Memorial ID 188508629 wives: **Audrey M. Draper 1903–1932 memorial ID 112782154 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56293/simms-cemetery Simms Cemetery] North Crossett, Arkansas **Mary Willie McKimmey Draper 13 May 1920 – 10 May 2004 Memorial ID 15488631 her sons: ***Gary M Draper 25 Jun 1942 – 17 Oct 2017 Memorial ID 184394462 ***Vernon R. Draper 14 Jul 1944 – 30 Mar 2005 Memorial ID 101097430 *Lela Ethel ''Bailey'' Draper 17 Jun 1908 – 10 May 1983 Memorial ID 6708109 husband: **David F. Draper 1903–1979 Memorial ID 6355604 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1190557/macedonia-cemetery Macedonia Cemetery] Dalark, Arkansas '''North Crossett''' ZIP Code71635 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-550.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56293/simms-cemetery? Simms Cemetery]''' North Crossett, Ashley County, Arkansas, USA *Audrey M. Draper 23 Sep 1903 – 2 Feb 1932 Memorial ID 112782154 **John Henry Draper 1904–1986 Memorial ID 188508629 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55689/pinewood-memorial-park Pinewood Memorial Park] Crossett, Arkansas '''Hamburg''' ZIP Code 71646 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-554.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55822/promise-land-cemetery? Promise Land Cemetery]''' Hamburg, Ashley County, Arkansas, USA *Rell Winston Draper 10 Sep 1970 – 9 Jun 1997 Memorial ID 16536067 Age 26 details unknown ==='''BENTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/88/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-213.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-339.jpg ''' Siloam Springs''' ZIP Code 72761 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/ff/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-92.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56930/yell-cemetery Yell Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5208|Thomas Michael Draper]] 1857 – 1931 **[[Sanderson-5145|Beuna Francis “Fannie” Sanderson Draper]] 1865 – 12 Apr 1951 ***Infant Son Draper 2 Oct 1887 – 6 Oct 1887 *[[Draper-5207|Lonnie Oscar Draper]] 2 Feb 1881 – 31 Oct 1949 **[[Bruner-1756|Reumira M. “Ruey” Bruner Draper]] 20 Jun 1883 – 11 Apr 1977 ***Baby Draper 5 Oct 1905 – 5 Oct 1905 ***[[Draper-5474|Penelopy E. Draper]] 21 Jul 1907 – 2 Apr 1922 *[[Draper-5209|Sterman Edward Draper]] 14 Dec 1913 – 11 Jun 1981 wife: **[[Philpott-1699|Edna Belle Philpott Draper]] 4 Jul 1919 – 25 Sep 2003 *[[Draper-5210|Kenneth James “Ken” Draper]]19 Aug 1942 – 31 Jan 2021 wife: **[[Johnson-121593|Patricia Ann Johnson Draper]] 30 Mar 1953 – 4 Mar 2015 *Harman Arlin Draper 26 Dec 1912 – 30 Oct 1989 **Rena Maxine Bruner Draper 21 Sep 1917 – 20 Dec 2002 ==='''BRADLEY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-546.jpg '''Warren''' ZIP Code 71671 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-547.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55464/oakland-cemetery Oakland Cemetery]''' Warren, Arkansas *Dr James Thomas Draper 26 Aug 1913 – 22 Mar 1966 Memorial ID 124721038 **Lois Keeling Draper 10 Jan 1912 – 28 Oct 1997 Memorial ID 106271642 ==='''CLAY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/37/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-214.jpg '''Rector''' ZIP Code 72461 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/44/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-54.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1858245/woodland-heights-cemetery Woodland Heights Cemetery]''' Located : N Woodland Heights Dr. and W Allen Dr *[[Draper-4816|Eunice Belinda (Draper) Easton]] (1871 - 1945), husband: ** [[Easton-2478|& Husband James]] ***'''NOTE''' [[Draper-4817|David Fletcher Draper]] (1828 - 1874) buried in Illinois *Eunice and James's Children buried here: *Clarence James Easton 1895–1967 see [[Draper-4816|Eunice Belinda (Draper) Easton]] *Carrie Edith Easton Baxley 1898–1969 see [[Draper-4816|Eunice Belinda (Draper) Easton]] *Gilbert Earnest Easton 1900–1980 see [[Draper-4816|Eunice Belinda (Draper) Easton]] *Thelma Elvealyn Easton 1915–1969see [[Draper-4816|Eunice Belinda (Draper) Easton]] ==='''DALLAS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-555.jpg '''Dalark''' ZIP Code 71763 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/41/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-556.jpg '''[https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/41/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-556.jpg Macedonia Cemetery]''' Dalark Arkansas *Bart D. Draper 3 May 1883 – 11 Sep 1949 Memorial ID 5793519 **Lular C. Draper 22 Mar 1885 – 7 Nov 1966 Memorial ID 5793523 '''Note''' David could be the son of Bart Draper above, research needed. *David F. Draper 25 Feb 1903 – 27 Dec 1979 Memorial ID 6355604 **Lela Ethel Bailey Draper 1908–1983 Memorial ID 6708109'''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55689/pinewood-memorial-park Pinewood Memorial Park] Crossett, Ashley Co., Arkansas *Marvin A. Draper 16 Sep 1910 – 9 Oct 1965 Memorial ID 5793527 ==='''GRANT COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-544.jpg '''Leola''' ZIP Code 72084 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/85/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-545.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56492/taylor-cemetery Taylor Cemetery]''' Leola, Arkansas *William Elliott Draper 30 Dec 1874 – 27 Sep 1920 Memorial ID 7094724 **Lillian Poff Draper 6 Feb 1873 – 19 Jan 1914 Memorial ID 7094718 ***Lillian May ''Draper'' Dial1 Dec 1903 – 1 Nov 1931 Memorial ID 111866681 ****Frank James Dial 1897 - 1970 Memorial ID 7094695 ***Lucile Marguerite ''Draper'' Cohen 1905–1957 Memorial ID 73404660 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1963499/congregation-emanuel-cemetery Congregation Emanuel Cemetery] Denver, Colorado ***James Thomas Draper 1913–1966 Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55464/oakland-cemetery Oakland Cemetery] Warren, Arkansas ==='''HEMPSTEAD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ed/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-730.jpg *Lee Draper 1900 – 1966 [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/53609/cummings-cemetery? Cummings Cemetery] wife: **Katie Dazalee Dixon Draper1904 – 5 Apr 1960 [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/53609/cummings-cemetery? Cummings Cemetery] *Alma Lee Draper1 Jan 1944 – 25 Sep 2015 [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2498447/harmony-cemetery? Harmon Cemetery] *Verdia Lee “Madea” Cheatham Draper 10 Dec 1940 – 3 Jan 2015 Hope [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/54875/macedonia-cemetery? Macedonia Cemetery] *Odie Draper 16 Nov 1904 – 7 Jun 1975 Perrytown [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2148498/scott's-memorial-garden-cemetery? **Carra Draper 7 Sep 1910 – 1 Jun 1996 Perrytown [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2148498/scott's-memorial-garden-cemetery? Scotts Memorial Gardens] *Hansie Draper 2 May 1892 – 10 Dec 1954 Doyle [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2497597/saint-paul-cemetery-ii? Saint Paul Cemetery] **Fannie ''Sewell'' Draper Feb 1893 – 1967 Doyle [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2497597/saint-paul-cemetery-ii? Saint Paul Cemetery] *Evelyn Draper1937 – 28 Apr 1938 [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56125/saint-peter-cemetery? St. Peter Cemetery] *Monroe Draper1886 – 24 Aug 1940 Ozan [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56125/saint-peter-cemetery? St. Peter Cemetery] *Thomas Jefferson “Tom” Draper 22 Nov 1891 – Mar 1964 Ozan [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56125/saint-peter-cemetery? St. Peter Cemetery] *Tom Draper1892 – 1964 Ozan [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56125/saint-peter-cemetery? St. Peter Cemetery] *York Draper Sep 1863 – unknown [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56125/saint-peter-cemetery? St. Peter Cemetery] ==='''HOT SPRINGS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/41/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-534.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/29/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-540.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/463204/big-creek-cemetery? Big Creek Cemetery]''' Rural cemetery located east of Harp in Hot Spring County, Arkansas, USA, exact location needs added with directions. *Kelly David Draper Memorial ID19 Apr 1970 – 3 Jul 1987 Age 17 Memorial ID 5431730 '''Donaldson''' ZIP Code 71941 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/54/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-537.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/339614/pleasant-hill-haven-of-rest-cemetery Pleasant Hill Haven of Rest Cemetery]''' Donaldson, Arkansas *Brenda Jean Draper 1954 – 1954 Memorial ID 5246182 *Carl Edward Draper 9 May 1909 – 1 Jul 1993 Memorial ID 5247707 *Carl Edward “Sonny” Draper Jr. 2 Mar 1945 – 9 May 2022 Memorial ID 239673094 *Charlie Draper 1 Mar 1892 – 26 Mar 1925 Memorial ID 5246193 *Clyde Draper 8 Sep 1943 – 26 Apr 2010 Memorial ID 51707227 *David F. Draper 23 Jan 1942 – 26 Dec 2009 Memorial ID 45855545 *Deborah Anne Roark Draper 7 Jul 1954 – 12 Dec 1993 Memorial ID 5247721 *Della Mae Holmes Draper 8 Mar 1924 – 27 Dec 1993 Memorial ID 5248117 *Doil Draper 2 Nov 1912 – 20 Jun 1916 Memorial ID 5246186 *Dorothy Marie Walton Draper 26 Mar 1929 – 20 Jun 2003 Memorial ID 7606421 *George Franklin Draper Memorial ID1877 – 1943 Memorial ID 5246169 **Suzanna Genivie “Susie” Wetherington 1880 – 18 Mar 1958 Memorial ID 5246165 *Henry Harrison Draper Sr. 22 Jan 1919 – 25 Mar 2003 Memorial ID 7301186 *James Granville Draper 6 Aug 1922 – 3 Jun 1976 Memorial ID 5247746 *Jo Ann “O'Mom” Baril Draper 12 May 1946 – 16 Aug 2009 Memorial ID 40784716 *John Draper 13 Feb 1938 – 17 Jun 2013 Memorial ID 112476819 *Joseph Alexander “Joe” Draper 5 Mar 1917 – 16 Jun 1977 Memorial ID 5247734 *Juda Elizabeth Wallace Draper 16 Mar 1886 – 29 Apr 1971 Memorial ID 5247743 *Katherine Ruth Hopper Draper 21 Feb 1922 – 12 Dec 1994 Memorial ID 5248115 *Leo Draper 12 Jul 1922 – 31 Dec 1963 Memorial ID 5248132 *Margaret Bettis Draper 23 Mar 1854 – 29 Jan 1927 Memorial ID 5246159 *Murray Franklin Draper 23 Jun 1850 – 21 Apr 1929 Memorial ID 5246161 *Murry Lance Draper Memorial ID15 May 1926 – 18 Nov 2004 Memorial ID 9982939 *Nova Jean Foster Draper 13 Nov 1920 – 24 May 2004 Memorial ID 8835054 *Paul Franklin Draper Sr. 2 Sep 1914 – 18 Jan 1992 Memorial ID 5247710 *Pearl Wallace Draper 28 Dec 1895 – 27 Jul 1987 Memorial ID 5246190 *Pearl Ables Draper 15 Feb 1918 – 8 Oct 1994 Memorial ID 5247704 *Wallace Conway Draper 12 Apr 1924 – 15 Apr 2000 Memorial ID 6051311 *William Henry Draper 24 Jan 1888 – 25 Mar 1971 Memorial ID 5247744 *William W. “Bill” Draper 10 Jul 1913 – 26 May 1983 Memorial ID 5248120 '''Gifford''' ZIP Code 72104 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-541.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/263437/francois-cemetery Francois Cemetery]''' Gifford, Arkansas *Jewell Arlie Draper 27 Jul 1926 – 21 Aug 1995 Memorial ID 59506026 wife: **Doris L Roberts Draper Lugo 1931–2010 Memorial ID 18119565 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2145946/pleasant-home-cemetery Pleasant Home Cemetery] Pike County, Arkansas, son: *** Jewell Arlie 'Jay' Draper 1953–2008 Memorial ID 58853768 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2145946/pleasant-home-cemetery Pleasant Home Cemetery] Pike County, Arkansas *Letha Jennie Carver Draper 11 Dec 1887 – 27 Mar 1987 Memorial ID 5456303 '''Harp''' ZIP Code 72104 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/72/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-538.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/253527/harp-cemetery Harp Cemetery]''' Harp, Arkansas *Dianna “Dale” Sparks Draper 11 Apr 1947 – 7 Jun 2008 Memorial ID 27420556 **Wendell G, Draper (uncertain: living at time of this entry) '''CENOTAPH''' '''Malvern''' ZIP Code 72104 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-535.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/258682/oak-ridge-cemetery Oak Ridge Cemetery]''' Malvern, Arkansas *Benjamin Franklin Draper 19 Nov 1846 – 27 Aug 1929 Memorial ID 28171083 *Dewey Bob Draper 23 Sep 1948 – 26 Oct 1948 Memorial ID 5199688 *Doyle Lindell Draper 17 Oct 1939 – 4 Aug 2007 Memorial ID 20942223 *Earl Ervin “Red” Draper 16 Mar 1909 – 12 Jun 1989 Memorial ID 5222409 *Rebecca Bray Draper7 Apr 1940 – unknown Memorial ID 35125178 *Ruby Irene Davis Draper 13 May 1923 – 13 Nov 1984 Memorial ID 5222405 *Sarah Belinda Armstrong Draper 7 Oct 1851 – 20 Oct 1905 Memorial ID 28171123 *Vannie L. Draper 25 Nov 1871 – 17 Oct 1917 Memorial ID 5196758 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/73/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-539.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55979/rockport-cemetery? Rockport Cemetery]''' Malvern, Arkansas *Ruby Michaelle Draper Jul 1971 – 12 Nov 1971 Memorial ID 5181196 **Earl Ervin Draper 1909–1989 Memorial ID 5222409 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/258682/oak-ridge-cemetery Oak ridge Cemetery] Malvern, Arkansas ***George D. “Pop” Draper 11 Feb 1943 – 6 Jun 2010 Memorial ID 53419193 ****Gudbjorg Hjaltason “Bert” Draper 10 Nov 1944 – 10 May 1996 Memorial ID 5185899 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/ff/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-536.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/258298/shadowlawn-cemetery Shadowlawn Cemetery]''' Malvern, Arkansas *Bobby J. Draper 3 Nov 1928 – 26 Nov 1980 Memorial ID 5455645 *Claudie G. Draper 6 Jun 1924 – 17 Jun 1991 Memorial ID 5455679 *Clifford Amos Draper 11 Feb 1915 – 25 Jan 2000 Memorial ID 5461198 *Floyd George Draper 23 Jul 1901 – 5 May 1976 Memorial ID 5228034 **Lillie W. Draper 18 Mar 1907 – 12 Oct 1988 Memorial ID 5228042 *Gerald C. Draper 12 Aug 1945 – unknown Memorial ID 34377330 *Jewell Caple Draper 3 Nov 1919 – 15 Sep 2005 Memorial ID 11772507 *Larry J. Draper 27 Aug 1951 – 11 Feb 1987 Memorial ID 5455655 *Lillie W. Draper 18 Mar 1907 – 12 Oct 1988 Memorial ID 5228042 *Ruby Jean Porterfield Draper 9 Apr 1924 – 25 Jul 1995 Memorial ID 5235453 ==='''HOWARD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-724.jpg '''Mineral Springs''' ZIP Code 71851 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/08/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-725.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/53245/buck-range-cemetery? '''Buck Range Cemetery'''] *James Draper 1766 – 6 Jun 1836 wife: **Margret ''Osborne'' Draper 1768 – 1844 ***Jefferson Draper 17 Jun 1802 – 2 Dec 1865 ****Susan H. ''McGraugh'' Draper 1803–1867 *****David J. Draper 1 Mar 1841 – 2 Sep 1864 wife ******Susan Virginia Cowling (Draper) Cowling 1843-1876 (she later married her cousin) ***Phillip Draper 1810–1891 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in Fellowship Cemetery in Dubberly, Webster Parish, Louisiana, USA; wife: ****Sara K Rochester Draper 1810-1894 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in Fellowship Cemetery in Dubberly, Webster Parish, Louisiana, USA '''Tollette''' ZIP Code 71851 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-726.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/53583/crofton-cemetery '''Crofton Cemetery'''] *Henry Draper unknown – 15 Apr 1913 **Esther May Green 1869–1918 (m. 1886) she remarried Henry Green (????-1908) *Mildred Mae Draper 11 Feb 1935 – 9 Jul 1996 *Rebecca Draper unknown – 11 Jul 1961 *Alabama Newton Draper6 May 1895 – 6 Sep 1917 *Albert Draper 1880 – 1954 ==='''MONROE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-217.jpg '''Claredon ZIP''' Code 72029 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/35/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-163.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56212/shady-grove-cemetery Shady Grove Cemetery]''' Location: Clarendon, Monroe County, Arkansas, USA *[[Draper-3164|Pinkney Draper]] (1824 - 1849) wife: **[[Lawrence-13528|Mary Tobitha (Lawrence) ''Draper'' Roland]] (1825 - 1898) '''CENOTAPH''' remarried, buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1120798/cotton-gin-cemetery Cotton Gin Cemetery] Texas ***[[Draper-5528|William P Draper]] 1845-unknown, '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown FAG Mem. ID 169524057 ==='''PIKE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/47/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-216.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg *[[Draper-4890|Coleman Draper]] (abt. 1798 - abt. 1860) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wife: **[[Jones-26476|Aninias (Jones) Draper]] (1805 - 1860) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Draper-5247|Andrew J. Draper]] (1824 - 1865) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wife: **[[Petty-3827|Carolyn Ellen (Petty) Draper]] (1825 - 1870) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown '''Daisy''' ZIP Code 71950 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/62/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-105.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1965980/mount-joy-cemetery Mount Joy Cemetery]''' Location Morning View Road Daisy, Pike County, Arkansas, USA *[[Draper-854|Elisha Lafayette “Boss” Draper]] 20 Jan 1873 – 24 Dec 1946 wife: **[[Friend-517|Emma Elvira “Nellie” ''Friend'' Draper]] Dec 1876 – 2 Aug 1950 Family: ***Willis Marvin Draper 2 Jul 1919 – 16 Apr 1952 Age 32 ***[[Draper-6024|Harles Draper]]19 Sep 1908 – 9 May 1979 wife: ****[[Miller-106644|Floy V ''Miller'' (Draper) Nelson]] 1914–2000 (m. 1933) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98247/crown-hill-cemetery Crown Hill Cemetery] Oklahoma MEMORIAL ID 10987742 ****Nettie M. Draper 1947–1952 Age 4-5 ****Geneva Draper 1942 – 1952 ***[[Draper-853|Elberg William “Ebb” Draper]] 31 May 1906 – 8 Jan 1996 wife: ****[[Mack-900|Artha Lee “Artha” Mack Draper]]7 Feb 1905 – 8 Mar 1982, son: *****[[Draper-6017|Harold Draper]] 7 Aug 1930 – 1 Nov 1933 Age 3 *****[[Draper-6016|Betty Jo ''Draper'' Fant]] 1932–2011 husband: ******[[Fant-329|Carlos Eugene Fant]] 1928–2018 *****[[Draper-6021|Billy Glen Draper]] 22 Nov 1940 – 22 May 2020 wife: ******[[Funderburk-1124|Belinda Carol ''Funderburk'' Draper]]13 Oct 1944 – (living?) *****[[Draper-6023|Patricia ''Draper'' Funderburk]] 1943–2022 husband: ******Leroy Funderburk 1939–2016 *****[[Draper-6022|E. Don Draper]] 18 Mar 1945 – 16 May 2008 wife: ****** Joan Gayle (living) *****[[Draper-6020|Melba Faye ''Draper'' Kennedy]] 1938–2021 husband: ******[[Kennedy-26602|Lewis Kennedy]] 1930–2020 *****[[Draper-6019|Lemma Sue ''Draper'' (O'neal) Massey]] 1936–2020 husbands: ******[[[[O'Neal-3254|James Lavon O'Neal (1927-1989)]]|James Lavon O'Neal]] 1927–1989 (m. 1950) ******[[Massey-7016|David Ford Massey]] 1926–2012 (m. after 1992) buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/284885/sweet-home-cemetery Sweet Home Cemetery] Amity, Arkansas *Carl Draper 8 Aug 1936 – 11 Dec 1994 *Carol Draper 1950 – 1952 *Fary Grace “Fairy” Draper 27 Jan 1923 – Oct 1923 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/83/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-543.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55231/mount-tabor-cemetery? Mount Tabor Cemetery]''' Murfreesboro, Pike County, Arkansas, USA *Arvon Draper 9 Dec 1923 – 8 Feb 2011 Memorial ID 59408157 *Barry B. Draper 25 Sep 1948 – 5 Mar 1993 Memorial ID 16268989 *Eldon Draper 18 Sep 1950 – 2010 Memorial ID 43572399 *Leopha “Shug” Maglothin Draper 23 Oct 1935 – 17 Feb 2011 Memorial ID 65897840 *Ruby Faye Kirkpatrick Draper 31 May 1922 – 2 Aug 1992 Memorial ID 16268966 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-542.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2145946/pleasant-home-cemetery? Pleasant Home Cemetery]''' Pike County, Arkansas Rural cemetery located between Mount Moriah and Pike City. *Jewell Arlie “Jay” Draper Jr. 7 Sep 1953 – 14 Feb 2008 Memorial ID 58853768 ==='''POLK COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/34/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-394.jpg '''Mena''' ZIP Code 71953 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-3.png '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55688/pinecrest-memorial-park Pinecrest Memorial Park]''' AKA Odd Fellows Cemetery Located: Mena, Polk County , AR *[[Draper-5542|Doyle Draper]] 1930–1999 was married 4 times; wives: **1st MARRIAGE 1948 to Peggy Jean Story (1932–2019) FS ID: LRZ5-6KZ ***[[Draper-5543|Linda Sue Draper]] 1949–1949 age 2 days '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/322488/coleman-city-cemetery Coleman City Cemetery] Coleman TX **2nd MARRIAGE 20 April 1950 to Wilma Evelyn ''Merchant'' Draper (1934–1980) '''CENOTAPH''' FS ID: LYKM-4F1 **3rd MARRIAGE 23 March 1892 to Martha Louise Shaddix (Davis) Draper '''CENOTAPH''' (1929–2011) FS ID: LV5P-HX8 **4TH MARRIAGE 11 February 1984 to Wanda J. Davis[8] (1936–2002) '''CENOTAPH''' FS ID: LYKM-HKX ==='''WASHINGTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-218.jpg '''Springdale''' ZIP Code 72764 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/91/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-55.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/261242/friendship-cemetery Friendship_Cemetery]''' Located: on South Friendship Road ,Springdale, Washington County, Arkansas, USA *[[Draper-5146|William Franklin Draper]] (1824 - 1896) **[[Goode_Draper-1|Mary Polly ''Goode'' Draper]] (1824 - 1916) == Tennessee 638 Burial Listings== ==='''COCKE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-219.jpg '''Bat Harbor''' ZIP Code 37821 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-177.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13857/inman-cemetery-%231 Inman Cemetery #1]''' Location: Bat Harbor Road Bat Harbor, Cocke County, Tennessee, USA *William B Draper 8 Jun 1858 – 21 Nov 1925 wife **Mary Elizabeth Robinson Draper (1869–1936) '''CENOTAPH''' buried with her children in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1028612/rylie-cemetery Rylie Cemetery] Rylie Texas *Joseph B Draper 10 May 1862 – 10 Jun 1945, wife: **Alice Penland Draper 28 Sep 1866 – 21 Jan 1916 children: ***Jessie Draper 23 Apr 1894 – Jul 1894 3 month old infant ***Solomon William Draper 24 Dec 1909 – 24 Dec 1909 new born infant Listed below could be the children of Joseph & Alice Draper, or William & Mary Draper (above) *Pvt Ashley J Draper 16 Apr 1888 – 18 Apr 1965 age 77 *Chesley Allen Draper 28 Oct 1892 – 31 May 1920 age 27 *David Ervin Draper 7 Oct 1886 – 25 Mar 1914 age 27 *Lucille Draper 24 Jul 1897 – Jan 1899 Age 1 infant *Margaret Ann Draper 4 Jan 1899 – 4 Jan 1899 infant new born ==='''DAVIDSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/28/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-220.jpg '''Goodlettsville''' ZIP Codes 37070 - 37072 (directly North of Nashville, Tennessee) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Jones-131753.jpg '''Louis Marshall Jones AKA Grampa Jones is buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/14947/lutons-united-methodist-church-cemetery Lutons Methodist Church Cemetery] ''' (no picture and no Draper burials) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-408.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/193635/forest-lawn-memorial-gardens Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens]''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/56/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-670.jpg *[[Sullivan-20528|Rollin Sullivan]] 1919–2012 '''Famous Grave:''' Country Singer & Comedian; wives: **[[McAdams-1305|Ruth McAdams Sullivan]] 1922–1959 Killed in head on collision car accident **[[Busby-2433|Geneva Busby Sullivan]] 1935–2011 *Ramsey Hughes; pilot of airplane that killed Patsy Cline * Lloyd "Cowboy: Copas also died with Patsy Cline *Hawkshaw Hawkins also died with Patsy Cline *Jack Anglin, a musician, who died in a car crash on the way to Patsy Cline's funeral *Lefty Frizzell *Beecher Kirby, Roy Acuff's side kick, Brother Oswald *Smiley and Kitty Wilson *Don Helms member of Hank Williams Drifting Cowboys Band *[[Draper-5718|Adam Rufus Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' Father of Thomas and Baxter **[[Ray-12602|Margaret Louise “Maggie” Ray Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' ***[[Draper-5714|Thomas “Tom” Draper]] 2 Jan 1887 – 16 Feb 1977 wife: ****[[Huffines-168|Carrie Benedict ''Huffines'' Draper]] 23 Feb 1885 – 3 May 1965 *****[[Draper-5716|Margaret ''Draper'' Wheeler]] (1918 - 2006) husband: ******[[Wheeler-25049|Fred Thomas Wheeler]] 1910–1993 ***[[Draper-5780|Baxter Draper]] 31 Jan 1888 – 8 May 1969 Memorial ID 29672905 wife: ****[[Wood-48423|Bee Bee Wood Draper]] 31 May 1892 – 17 Feb 1970 Memorial ID 29672645 ***Victor Draper 1893-1900 Age 6 Memorial ID Memorial ID 27394240 ***[[Draper-5786|Della ''Draper'' Hardcastle]] 1891-1980 husband ****[[Hardcastle-1174|Chester Hardastle]] 1889-1918 *****Glen Hooper Hardcastle 1912–1994 Memorial ID 91855027 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1972272/hendersonville-memory-gardens] Hendersonville Memory Gardens] Hendersonville, TN *****Ines L Hardcastle Richardson 1913–2000 Memorial ID 162164714 '''CENOTAPH''' buired: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/181183/smith-county-memorial-gardens Smith County Memorial Gardens] Carthage, TN *Bernice Gilford Draper 29 May 1907 – 14 Jun 1974 Memorial ID 182237788 **Janie Frances Ferguson Draper 1914 – Nov 1997 Memorial ID 182236839 *H Leo Draper 22 Jan 1924 – 25 Mar 1998 Memorial ID 153804859 wife: **Velma Lois Oliver Draper 1930–1958 Memorial ID ID 153804859 '''CENOTAPH''' BURIED: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/74144/greenlawn-and-shady-rest-cemetery Greemlawn Cemetery] Franklin, Kentucky *Harold Milton Draper 29 Mar 1940 – 12 Jul 2007 Memorial ID 147084650 *Louis James Draper 11 Oct 1926 – 22 Jun 2012 Memorial ID 92503844 wife: **Joyce Ann House Draper 6 Feb 1934 – 11 Aug 2017 Memorial ID 182273947 *[[Draper-5713|Ronald Ray Draper]] 4 Oct 1936 – 26 May 2016 Memorial ID 163495279 wife: **Jonni R. Draper living as of this entry '''Nashville''' ZIP Codes 37216-1305 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-102.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/18848/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery]''' AKA Spring Hill Funeral Home and Cemetery Located: 5110 Gallatin Road Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee *[[Draper-5241|Truman Lee Draper]] (1921 - 1982) wife: **[[Willis-13622|Alzora Elizabeth (Willis) Draper]] (1919 - 2016) *Mark Amon Draper 27 Sep 1904 – 13 Oct 1977 Memorial ID 101776318 **Birdie Williams Draper 7 Oct 1902 – 22 Nov 1984 Memorial ID 101776333 *[[Draper-3893|Davidson Nichols “David” Draper]] 22 Apr 1859 – 31 Mar 1932 Memorial ID 25002245 **[[Graves-10295|Ina H. Graves Draper]] 14 Jan 1861 – 25 Mar 1936 Memorial ID 25002265 *Donald Ray Draper 30 May 1937 – 10 Feb 1964 Memorial ID 182237549 **Mary Lou Draper '''CENOTAPH''' (Newspaper obituary) see memorial above) ***Deborah Lynn ''Draper'' (Maiden Name) (Newspaper obituary) see memorial above) *[[Draper-5697|Thomas Jordan “TJ” Draper]] 3 Feb 1882 – 12 Jan 1954 Memorial ID 144665678 wives: **[[Harris-56050|Mattie Harris Draper]] 9 Sep 1882 – 26 Mar 1925 Memorial ID 144667142 ***Dymple Harris Hughes 1901–1946 Memorial ID 132368649 '''Note''' uncertain who Dymple's birth father is. **[[McMahan-1444|Mary Etta “Mema” McMahan Draper]] 1892 – 14 Jun 1984 Memorial ID 144749747 ***[[Draper-5709|Thomas Jordan Draper Jr.]] 24 Apr 1914 – 6 Jan 1930 Memorial ID 144696645 ***[[Draper-5708|William Marshall Draper]] 1927–1983 Memorial ID 19418732 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/528167/van-horn-cemetery Van Horn Cemetery] Van Horn, Culberson Co. Texas ***Elma May Draper 10 Feb 1921 – 25 Feb 1921 Memorial ID 144696963 ***John Samuel Draper 2 Jan 1922 – 20 Jun 1940 Memorial ID 144667015 ***Infant Draper 26 Mar 1925 – 26 Mar 1925 Memorial ID 144702696 *[[Draper-5354|Ty Cobb Draper]] 29 Apr 1914 – Oct 1984 Memorial ID 189380472 wives: **[[Greene-10595|Eugenia Greene Draper]] 7 Jan 1916 – 22 Sep 1975 Memorial ID 204993170 ***Ronald Ray Draper 1936–2016 ID163495279 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/193635/forest-lawn-memorial-gardens Forrest Lawn] Goodlettsville, TN (Ty Cobb Draper's sister Margaret also buried in Forrest Lawn) **[[Maloney-3398|Patricia Evelyn “Pat” Morrell Draper]] 14 Apr 1923 – 22 May 1983 Memorial ID 189380438 (WikiTree may have wrong information on her) *Fraser Williams Draper 30 Jun 1895 – 16 Jul 1964 Memorial ID 240615038 **Virginia Willette Farmer Draper Jul 1899 – 12 Mar 1967 Memorial ID 240642343 *Fryar Elmer Draper Oct 1879 – 12 Jun 1918 Memorial ID 187091119 wife **Gladys May ''Fox'' (Draper) Parrish 1893–1979 Memorial ID 196698946 ***Gladys Re-married: Dr Henry Burton Parrish 1880 - 1934 *Guy Wilford Draper 11 Nov 1893 – 10 Jan 1954 Memorial ID 240405217 **Maggie Garner Keith Draper Sep 1895 – 21 Nov 1972 Memorial ID 240405369 ***Mary Elizabeth '''Draper''' Binkley 1921–1981 Memorial ID 185366572 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/14448/lakewood-memory-gardens-east Lakewood Memory Gardens] Chattanooga TN ***Guy W. Draper 13 Oct 1924 – 13 Oct 1924 Memorial ID 37390989 infant *Loyd Vernon Draper 11 Apr 1933 – 24 Apr 1987 Memorial ID 201432326 **Carolyn Anne ''Burgess'' (Draper) Hargrove 1944–2009 ***Stephen Wilson “Steve” Draper 13 Oct 1961 – 29 Jul 1979 Memorial ID 201467983 Killed in Automobile accident age 17 *Bonnie Ray Bodine Draper 1918–1979 Memorial ID: 242180384 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/219110/woodlawn-memorial-park-and-mausoleum Woodland Memorial Park] Nashville TN **Marilyn Louise Vantrease Draper 6 Jan 1932 – 4 Feb 2007 Memorial ID 224722473 *Marshall Draper 22 Feb 1850 – 14 Apr 1938 Memorial ID 161497362 wives: **Marida J. (unknown details) '''CENOTAPH''' see obituary in above memorial **Sim Phipps Draper 20 Mar 1868 – 27 Jul 1939 Memorial ID 157420635 *William H. Draper Jun 1820 – 29 Aug 1902 Memorial ID 31649365 **Mary Catherine Patton Draper 1826 – 19 Sep 1916 Memorial ID 88123470 ***Mary Maude Draper Reed 1860–1930 Memorial ID 120540588 husband: ****Pleasant Samuel Reed 1855–1935 Memorial ID: 178371927 *Oscar Vasco Draper 1886–1945 (m. 1912) Memorial ID 235988230 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1233/northview-cemetery] Northview Cemetery] Dearborn, Michigan **Ola Bell Davidson Draper 25 Aug 1895 – 28 Jun 1920 Memorial ID 240857223 *Beverage Houston Draper 10 Dec 1913 – 18 May 2005 Memorial ID 11062992 **Sarah Louise Alexander Draper 3 Apr 1914 – 28 Sep 2010 Memorial ID 59494741 *Walton Draper 3 Jun 1874 – 10 Jun 1961 Memorial ID 67903280 **Alba Alice Matheney Draper 23 Sep 1878 – 9 Sep 1955 Memorial ID 67903135 ***Walton Young “Booty” Draper Sr. 3 Jun 1905 – 28 Mar 2001 Memorial ID 67889118 ****Kathleen Dorothy Buntin Draper 23 May 1905 – 28 Nov 1988 Memorial ID 67889403 *****Mary Margaret Draper Warner 1927–2003 Memorial ID 161162801 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10082/calvary-cemetery Calvary Cemetery] Nashville, TN *****Walton Young “Buddy” Draper Jr. 29 Jan 1934 – 27 Jan 2021 Memorial ID 221807712 ******Spouse unknown, has 4 living children ***Joseph Marchbanks Draper (1910–1991 wife: ****Myrtle A Canada Draper 21 Aug 1910 – 10 Jun 1973 Memorial ID 239322808 *Don Draper 10 Jun 1884 – 3 Jan 1953 Memorial ID 132755382 *Paul Goodbar Draper 2 Dec 1902 – 10 Sep 1990 Memorial ID 190281245 *Leone Wills Draper 5 Aug 1904 – 3 Dec 1989 Memorial ID 190281170 *J Victor Draper 1904 – 1923 Memorial ID 22219363 *Lily Mae Jenkins Draper 21 May 1911 – 17 Feb 1951 Memorial ID 198461947 *Frances Elizabeth Knight Draper 16 Jan 1938 – 8 Oct 2019 Memorial ID 203720003 *Dorothy L Draper 23 Mar 1943 – 4 Apr 2005 Memorial ID 10752160 *Michael Draper 1956 – 8 Feb 1995 Memorial ID 182235923 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-580.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/219110/woodlawn-memorial-park-and-mausoleum Woodlawn Memorial Park]''' *[[Draper-5793|Hardie Haywood Draper]] 27 Dec 1900 – 13 Dec 1952 Memorial ID 200642013 *Bonnie Ray “Bodene” Draper 21 May 1918 – 3 Mar 1979 Memorial ID 242180384 *Catherine Denese Draper15 Jan 1984 – 16 Jan 1984 Memorial ID 100552544 *Willard Tenney Draper 15 Jan 1910 – 15 Sep 1984 Memorial ID 77178797 **Georgia Crockett Roberts Draper 27 Nov 1904 – Aug 1999 Memorial ID 77178890 *Jack Witherspoon Draper 31 Mar 1913 – 14 Jul 1994 Memorial ID 241347374 **Margaret Anne Gentry Draper 11 Mar 1913 – 18 Jul 1998 Memorial ID 241346996 *John Edward Draper 7 Jun 1906 – 20 Oct 1996 Memorial ID 242492423 **Clio ''Wilson'' (Draper) Seagraves 1914–1997 Memorial ID 227388075 their son: ***Bobby C Draper 1934–2015 Memorial ID 149824846'''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/225404/middle-tennessee-state-veterans-cemetery Middle Tennessee State Veterans Cemetery] Nashville, TN ****William Seagraves 1913–1999 2nd Husband of Clio Memorial ID 227387202 buried with Clio *Kenneth Lyndon Draper 20 Aug 1960 – 21 Jun 2017 Memorial ID 180640933 *Robert Bruce Draper 28 Jul 1927 – 5 Apr 2018 Memorial ID 188583459 wife: Jane *Sara Beth Cooper Draper 20 Apr 1957 – 3 Jul 2017 Memorial ID 208075701 Husband unknown, has living children '''Old Hickory''' ZIP Code 37138 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/64/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-665.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Hernitage Memorial Gardens]''' Located: Old Hickory, Davidson County, Tennessee, USA *Boss Draper 9 Mar 1903 – 21 Feb 1992 Memorial ID 155861042 *Sgt Charles E Draper 30 Aug 1932 – 20 Jul 2008 Memorial ID 151946485 *Clester Estelle Minchey Draper 17 Jun 1909 – 13 Apr 1985 Memorial ID 155861500 *Daniel Mang Draper 14 Feb 1918 – 18 Feb 2002 Memorial ID 107108494 *Edward Stanley Draper 26 Sep 1940 – 8 Jul 2006 Memorial ID 107108921 *Gary H. Draper 7 Jul 1947 – 18 Nov 1998 Memorial ID 156770960 *James Cecil Draper 19 Nov 1945 – 24 Jul 1983 Memorial ID 107108791 *Kermit Draper 26 May 1905 – 25 Dec 1991 Memorial ID 156771292 *Lillian May West Draper 6 May 1908 – 22 Aug 2000 Memorial ID 201431555 *Loyd Hudson Draper 1 Aug 1906 – 6 Jan 1981 Memorial ID 201430564 *Michael Eugene “Mike” Draper 2 Aug 1942 – 2 Jan 2019 Memorial ID 195838619 *Mildred Cole Draper 29 May 1921 – 2 Aug 2002 Memorial ID 107108592 *Viola E. Armstrong Draper 1913 – 5 Jan 2008 Memorial ID 23886664 ==='''GIBSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/53/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-221.jpg '''Dyer''' ZIP Code 38330 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fd/McGaughy-82.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11579/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery]''' AKA Dyer Cemetery, Location: Dyer, Gibson County, Tennessee *[[Draper-3593|Philip W Draper]] 8 Dec 1806 – 18 Aug 1888 wife: **[[Pate-2978|Elizabeth Pate Draper]] 1809 – 10 Oct 1887 *[[Draper-5322|Stephen P. Draper]] 8 Mar 1842 – 18 Feb 1915 wife: **[[Baird-6960|Tennessee Elizabeth “Tennie” Baird Draper]] 19 Apr 1850 – 12 Sep 1882 *John Wilbur Draper (unknown – 2 Apr 2006), wife **Sarah Louise Taylor Draper (unknown – 3 Jan 2003) *Charles W Draper 2 Nov 1922 – 14 Mar 1983 *George West Draper 27 Sep 1944 – 21 Oct 2018 *Lelia P Draper Jan 1881 – 10 Aug 1881 *Myrtle West Draper 1888 – 1982 *Ruby M Draper 13 Jan 1911 – unknown *Russell L Draper 22 Nov 1906 – 30 Jan 1972 *Tollie Cleveland Draper 10 Feb 1885 – 16 Jan 1962 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-332.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/20684/yorkville-cemetery Yorkville Cemetery]''' Located: Yorkville, Gibson County, TN *P L Draper 1873 – 1943 wife: **Addie Thomas Draper 1873 – 1934 *Jack Draper 11 Aug 1844 – 9 Feb 1934, wife: **Frances Draper 10 Aug 1852 – 1 May 1936, her son: ***Thomas Jefferson “Tom” Draper 14 Nov 1883 – 10 Apr 1936, wife: ****Junia George Draper 1886 - 1968 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/12057/forest-hill-cemetery-midtown Forrest Hill Cemetery Midtown], Memphis TN *Charlotte Ann Draper 8 Dec 1947 – 2 Sep 2000 *G W Draper 1849 – 1934 *Jay Lynn Draper 6 Oct 1964 – 29 Dec 2001 brother Jimmy Lee Draper below *Jimmy Lee Draper 13 Sep 1963 – 30 Jun 2012 brother Jay Lynn Draper above *Mary E Turner Draper 1853 – 1930 ==='''GILES COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-568.jpg '''Pulaski''' ZIP Code 38478 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-567.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15092/maplewood-cemetery Maplewood Cemetery''' *James Shields Draper 30 Jun 1886 – 19 Aug 1926 Memorial ID 46410009 Age 40 **Sallie Herbert Draper1885 – 1984 Memorial ID 46409998 Age 99 ==='''HAMILTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/af/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-222.jpg '''Chattanooga''' ZIP Code 37409 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/db/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-656.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109392/chattanooga-national-cemetery Chattanooga National Cemetery]''' *Alexander Draper unknown – 6 Jun 1864 Memorial ID 2979127 *Betty Ann Draper29 Jan 1933 – 4 Nov 2020 Memorial ID 218035702 *Maj Derrick Glen Draper 29 Oct 1976 – 20 May 2013 Memorial ID 111237079 *Dorothy G. Draper 29 Jan 1920 – 16 Mar 2013 Memorial ID 185668676 *Earl Draper16 Jul 1894 – 5 Mar 1959 Memorial ID 2979128 *Dr Glenn Wright Draper Sr. 18 Jul 1928 – 15 Jun 2019 Memorial ID 200136545 *Huland Draper 6 Mar 1916 – 20 Aug 1991 Memorial ID 2979129 *Jack Merrill Draper 28 Feb 1930 – 13 Mar 2011Memorial ID 66954353 *Leona Hobbs Draper22 Nov 1901 – 20 Jun 1959 Memorial ID 69429284 *Merritt Draper unknown – 29 Aug 1865 Memorial ID 2979130 *Pvt Milton W. Draper 1846 – 6 Mar 1865Memorial ID 69429243 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-141.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/12061/forest-hills-cemetery Forest Hills Cemetery]''' Location: 4016 Tennessee Ave, Chattanooga TN *[[Draper-3337|William Wallace Draper]] 10 Sep 1860 – 20 Sep 1927 wife **[[Settle-949|Emily Martin (Settle) Draper]] 1862 - 1907 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-3585|Mary Tecumseh Draper]] 22 Feb 1890 – 2 Dec 1963 ***[[Draper-3586|Lucy Kavanaugh Draper]] 6 Jun 1895 – 5 Nov 1973 ***[[Draper-3343|James Travis Draper]] 20 Dec 1892 – 11 Jun 1977 ***[[Draper-3584|George Glen Draper]] 22 Sep 1884 – 21 Oct 1922 wife ****[[Gailbreath-13|Mary Lucille ''Gailbreath'' Draper]] 1891 - 1960 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown -remarried? *****[[Draper-5281|William Glen “Billy” Draper]] 10 Apr 1922 – 22 Mar 1924, Age 1 *Lloyd Draper unknown – 1998 *Mattie B Morrison Draper 20 Nov 1893 – Mar 1984 *Purlean Draper unknown – 1986 '''Hixson''' ZIP Code 37343 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-729.jpg ['''https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/12876/hamilton-memorial-gardens Hamilton Memorial Gardens]''' *[[Draper-5668|Ward Tub Draper]] 1900-1897 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/34891/lakewood-memory-gardens-south Lakewood Memorial Gardens] Lakeview,Georgia (see Catoosa Co. Georgia) Son: **[[Draper-6482|James Hampton Draper]] 25 Jun 1921 – 9 Nov 2003 Memorial ID 42012425 ***Eleanor Virginia McClure Draper 4 May 1924 – 26 Jul 2022 Memorial ID 244324382 ****[[Draper-6481|Dr Larry W. Draper]] 21 Aug 1944 – 21 Aug 2019 Memorial ID 202370696 *****Sandra Harper Draper 27 Oct 1946 – 18 Dec 2020 Memorial ID 219969565 ===''' JACKSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/04/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-223.jpg '''County Cemeteries''' various ZIP Codes Some cemeteries have no pictures available https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/96/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-593.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2360386/quarles-cemetery Quarles Cemetery]''' Jackson Co, TN Located: Civil District 13. south side of Jennings Creek, Hwy 56 toward North Springs, left on Hwy 85 cross Jennings Creek. Second road on left, cemetery is in a field on left *[[Draper-1491|Travis Draper]] (1778 - 1857) '''CENOTAPH''' re-buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Memorial Cemetery] wife: **[[White-24639|Margaret (White) Draper]] (1780 - 1850) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Memorial Cemetery] ***James William “Jimmie” Draper 15 Feb 1808 – 1878 Unmarked Grave Memorial ID 174105462 ****Ellen Lock Draper 1826 – unknown Memorial ID 174105493 *****John Simpson “Johnie” Draper 20 Apr 1835 – 21 Jun 1911 Unmarked Grave Memorial ID 174105573 ******Mary Josephine “Josie” Griffith Draper 11 Dec 1841 – 17 Oct 1915 Unmarked Grave Memorial ID 174105691 *******Lula Pearle Draper 21 Dec 1880 – 20 Sep 1884 Memorial ID 174108064 ***[[Draper-4854|David Harvey Draper Sr.]] (1821 - 1907) '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Memorial Cemetery] ****[[Lee-38537|Melvina Jane (Lee) Draper]] (1824 - 1918) '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Memorial Cemetery] *****[[Draper-4857|Virginia Jennie ''Draper'' Hix]] (1848 - 1928) husband: ******[[Hix-906|Bailey Peyton Hix]] (1842 - 1923) *******William Hardy Hix 1869–1897 • LZXM-7VZ *******Druey B. Hix 1871-1961 Memorial ID 8005272 '''CENOTAPH''' buried https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/14992/macedonia-cemetery Macedonia Cemetery Moss, Clay County, TN Wife: ********Daisey Benson ''Jones'' Hix Memorial ID 8005270 '''CENOTAPH''' buried with husband *******Laura Bea ''Hix'' Forkum 1873-1952 Memorial ID 77645241 '''CENOTAPH''' buried https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/18848/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery] husband: ********James Travis Forkum 1866-1923 '''CENOTAPH''' buried with wife *******Evaline “Eva” Hix Forkum 1877-1909 Memorial ID 54384803 ********Cicero C. Forkum 1876-1954 Memorial ID 96686502 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Cemetery] *******Daisy Ella Hix Forkum 1881-1977 Memorial ID 181370849 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Cemetery] Daisey was also married to Cicero C. Forkum 1876-1954 above *******Sidney Clay Hix 1883-1888 age 4 Memorial ID 54384867 *******Infant Daughter Memorial ID 174108629 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2630476/thomas-draper-jr-cemetery Thomas Draper Jr. Cemetery]''' Located: From Gainesboro go toward Granville on Hwy 53. Turn first right on Hwy 262 going all the way to Gladdice. At Gladdice turn right on Salt Lick Creek going toward Bagdad Church of Christ. After passing Cotton Hollow Lane on your right, then turn next left on Holland Cemetery Lane and then right on Huffines Lane. The cemetery will be on your left about 30 feet out of the road at the far end of the garden spot of the house at the end of the lane *[[Draper-3914|John Milton Draper]] 1 Jul 1808 – 22 Jul 1871 wife: **[[Johnson-122072|Susanah ''Johnson'' Draper]] 1828 – 15 April 1898 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5702/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] *Brice Mathias Draper 16 Mar 1806 – 16 Sep 1845 *Edward Bradley Draper 18 Mar 1804 – 2 Mar 1888 *Lawson Henry Draper 4 Dec 1801 – 2 Sep 1877 *[[Draper-895|Major Thomas Henry Draper Jr.]] 15 Sep 1768 – 20 Aug 1840 wife **[[Lyle-335|Salley Lyle Draper]] 17 Oct 1766 – 22 Sep 1844 '''Flynns Lick''' ZIP Code 38562 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2630532/jarratt-fitzgerald-cemetery Jarratt Fitzgerald Cemetery]''' Location: Flynns Lick, Jackson County, Tennessee, USA Directions: From Gainesboro take Hwy 53 toward Granville. Turn right on Fort Blount Ferry Road and first right after crossing bridge over Flynn's Creek on Ray Hix Lane. Beside the barn in the pasture at Ray and Margaret Hix's home is a cemetery. Not much is left of it now, but it shows signs of huge slabs of stone which made up box graves and huge mummy shaped stones which were stacked one on top of the other and two child size coffin mummy shaped grave stones. ( Copied 10 Apr 1999.) *[[Draper-3904|James E. “Squire Jimmy” Draper]] 8 May 1790 – 1 Feb 1873 **[[Fitzgerald-9761|Jane Moore Fitzgerald Draper]] 30 Jan 1798 – 9 Sep 1868 *Sarah Bullard Draper 1823 – 6 Oct 1876 *Tabitha Breckenridge Draper7 Sep 1856 – 1859 '''Gainesboro''' ZIP Code 38562 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-23.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10552 Clark_Memorial_Cemetery'''] 871 Jennings Creek Highway (Hwy 56) *[[Draper-5723|Willie Albert Draper]] 21 May 1892 – 25 Dec 1945 **[[Wade-12999|Bonnie Hester “Granny” Wade Draper]] 20 Mar 1899 – 27 Mar 1989 Bonnie's first son: ***George Donald Dudney Draper 31 Mar 1919 – 19 Aug 1954 Memorial ID 113081505 (William's step son) wife: ****Lois Madge Moss Draper 26 Oct 1918 – 29 Nov 1994 ***Dorothy Margaret ''Draper'' Heinrich Memorial ID 129041469 husband: ****Lewis Arnold Heinrich 1920–2006 Memorial ID 106453095 ***Virginia Wade ''Draper'' Speck 28 Dec 1926 - 28 Oct 1977 Memorial ID167673989 husbands: ****Russell Paul George 1928–1998 FS: GMLH-JCZ ****Robert G Bobbie Speck 1928–1994 FS: GDL8-3JL ***Sonny B Draper 1929–1931 Age 2 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Cemetery] Gainsboro, TN *Seldon Brockett Draper 30 Mar 1890 – 16 Dec 1926 Memorial ID 35174370 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2298803/west-cemetery West Cemetery] Hayden TN wife: **Minnie Byrd ''Allen'' Draper 1 Jan 1892 – ???? Memorial ID 35174380 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2298803/west-cemetery West Cemetery] Hayden TN, children: ***Selton Joice Draper 9 Jul 1918 – 22 Feb 1991 Memorial ID 182154182 ****Janie Lovell Parrish Draper 25 Apr 1923 – 9 Oct 1999 Memorial ID 182154291 ***Alma ''Draper'' Newberry 1916–1990 Memorial ID 64272856 ****Preston Newberry 1912–1985 Memorial ID 165350054 ***Mildred M ''Draper'' Clark 1919–2011 Memorial ID 35298348 ****Roggie W Clark 1921–1985 Memorial ID 25944122 *Minnie A. Draper 1 Jan 1889 – 14 Nov 1975 *Roma Mona Draper12 Oct 1912 – 29 Apr 2001 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/74/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-354.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11080/cubb-creek-cemetery Cub Creek Cemetery]''' located: A rural cemetery said to be on 101 W Cub Rd. Gainesboro, Jackson, Tennessee, which could be behind a church. *[[Draper-5788|William Benton Draper]] 1 Dec 1884 – 21 Sep 1954 Memorial ID 59545560 family, wife: **[[Wilson-99358|Lular Elizabeth Wilson Draper]] 4 Jul 1884 – 25 Jun 1971 Memorial ID 59545569 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-331.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1686884/gainesboro-cemetery Gainesboro Cemetery]''' Located: Gainesboro, Jackson County *Anna Eliza Goodall Draper 14 Aug 1838 – 19 Apr 1921 *Emily Martin Settle Draper 14 Jan 1862 – 18 Oct 1907 *Infant Draper 4 Feb 1910 – 4 Feb 1910 *[[Draper-5796|James William Draper]] 20 Mar 1858 – 30 Mar 1915 wife: **Bernetta Susan ''Graves'' (Draper) ( Draper) (Montgomery) Richmond Memorial ID 149615796 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/18848/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery] Nashville, TN., She was married four times. The first marriage was in 1879 to James Radford Draper 8 Mar 1859 - 8 Apr 1888 (Age 29), the second marriage was on January 18, 1891 to [[Draper-5796|James William Draper]]. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2630585/jennings-creek-cemetery Jennings Creek Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-2383|Thomas Lyle “Blind Tom” Draper]] 4 May 1793 – 8 Oct 1865 wife: **[[Huddleston-2134|Elizabeth “Bettie” Huddleston Draper]] 14 Jan 1805 – 1870 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-22.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Memorial Cemetery]''' Located: Jennings Creek Highway (Hwy 56) *[[Draper-1491|Travis Draper]] 16 Sep 1778 – 25 Sep 1857 wife: **[[White-24639|Margaret White Draper]] 1798 – unknown, son: ***[[Draper-362|Joshua Draper]] 1805–1852 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/184890/sacramento-city-cemetery Sacramento City Cemetery] Located: 1000 Broadway, Sacramento, California ****[[Lyles-91|Christianna C Lyles Draper]] 1802–1876 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8399/tehama-cemetery Tehama Cemetery] Tehama, CA, children: *****[[Draper-5795|Eunice Draper Wheeler]] 1815–1864 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2173291/hampton-cemetery Hamton Cemetery] Sullivan, IL *****[[Draper-1177|Ridley Draper]] 1825–1873 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2263457/kuykendall-cemetery Kuykendall Cemetery] Putnam Co., TN *****Aletha Mumford Draper Anderson 1827–1901 *****Aralina L Draper Danner 1830–1899 *****Travis Duval Draper 1830–1907 *****Sarah B Draper Farris 1832–1886 *****Susan Sweezy Draper McCampbell 1843–1892 *[[Draper-5275|William “Billy” Draper]] 6 Feb 1816 – 8 May 1897 Wife: **[[Ray-12064|Amelia (Ray) Draper]](1817 - 1882) '''CENOTAPH''' buried on private property *[[Draper-4854|David Harvey Draper Sr.]] 5 May 1821 – 19 May 1907 wife **[[Lee-38537|Melvina Jane Lee Draper]] 19 Nov 1824 – 2 Apr 1918 ***[[Draper-4862|Alvin Draper]] 2 Apr 1866 – 10 May 1919, Invalid, never married ***[[Draper-4861|Sidney Stanton Draper]] 9 Jun 1864 – 12 Jul 1897 wife ****[[Brooks-22724|Minnie Grace ''Brooks'' Draper]] 1871-1940 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/181669/ridgewood-cemetery Ridgeway Cemetery] *****Cora Grace Draper 20 May 1882 – 28 Jul 1890 Age 8 *****Clio Nellie Draper Richmond 1886–1944 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 18109985 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1969640/asbury-cemetery Asbury Cemetery] Asbury, Tn *****Micca Ora Draper Stone 1890–1966 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 64233582 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/181669/ridgewood-cemetery Ridgewood Cemetery] Cartage TN *****Willie Albert Draper Sr. 1892–1945 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 167674886 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10552/clark-memorial-cemetery Clark Memorial Cemetery] Gainesboro, TN wife: ******[[Wade-12999|Bonnie Hester (Wade) Draper]] (1899 - 1989) '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10552/clark-memorial-cemetery Clark Memorial Cemetery] Gainesboro, TN her children: *******[[Draper-5804|William Albert Draper Jr.]] 1 Apr 1922 – 7 Feb 1947, killed in automobile accident, Age 25, his wife: ********[[Heady-436|Peggy L. (Heady) Turney]] (1929 - 1965) re-married, died 13 days after giving birth to twins (with John Turney). Both twins died 1 day after birth. Peggy is buried in a different plot with her children: Mary and Hiram Turney ***[[Draper-4857|Virginia “Jennie” Draper Hix]] 1848-1928 Memorial ID 142052616 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2360386/quarles-cemetery Quarles Cemetery] Jackson Co. TN ****Daisy Ella ''Hix'' Forkum 1881-1977 Memorial ID 181370849 husband: *****Cicero C. Forkum 1876-1954 (who was also married to Daisy's sister) Memorial ID 96686502 *[[Draper-5468|Thomas Jefferson Draper Jr.]] 12 Mar 1860 – 6 Oct 1939 **[[Johnson-124583|Mary Mack Johnson Draper]] 19 Jan 1865 – 27 May 1949 ***Annette Draper 17 Dec 1901 – 5 May 1992 Memorial ID 18254453 ***Clio Draper Darwin 1884–1973 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 86255951 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1492576/cookeville-city-cemetery Cookeville Cemetery] Cookeville, TN *Ara May Huffines Draper 14 May 1901 – 5 Aug 1986 *Bertha Mai Denton Draper 1892 – 3 Aug 1989 *Blanche Moline Draper 28 Jul 1907 – 19 Nov 1990 *Cathy Elaine Jones Draper 1 Jan 1941 – 3 Mar 2020 *Donal L Draper 21 Sep 1920 – 20 Feb 1979 *Edna Gaines Draper25 Aug 1900 – 11 Nov 1991 *Edward Ward Draper13 Apr 1908 – 17 Nov 1944 *Ethel May Proctor Draper 19 Sep 1906 – 14 Jan 1976 *Harold Ward Draper 14 Oct 1924 – 6 Feb 1996 *Harve Bennett Draper 25 Aug 1883 – 16 Jul 1944 *Helen Ruth Maxwell Draper 21 Sep 1929 – 22 Dec 2020 *Herbert Ridley Draper 14 Jan 1897 – 22 May 1952 *Infant Daughter Draper 19 Dec 1929 – 19 Dec 1929 *Infant Son Draper 19 Jan 1953 – 19 Jan 1953 *James Mack Draper30 Mar 1887 – 28 Apr 1971 wives: **Lola Pearl Darwin Draper 6 Aug 1889 – 22 Oct 1938 children: ***Robert Marshall Draper7 Mar 1920 – 22 Jul 1934 Age 14, Memorial ID 182545554 ***Margaret Elizabeth Draper Naff 1917–1966 Memorial ID 182544952 husband: ****Willis Crawford Naff 1914–1964 m. 1931 Memorial ID 182544837 ***Jane Ann Draper Quarles 1932–2006 Memorial ID 102411172 ****James Richard Quarles 1928–2000 Memorial ID 102411148 **Nola Quarles Draper 25 Feb 1902 Memorial ID 182545993 – 1 Sep 1990 *James Pelham Draper 21 Dec 1877 – 4 Sep 1963 **Retta Frances Cherry Draper 13 Jun 1881 – 23 Sep 1971 *James William Draper 9 Oct 1892 – 23 Jun 1939 *Jane Williford Draper1959 – 15 Mar 2022 *Joseph Jones “Joe” Draper 18 Nov 1893 – 20 Mar 1973 *Lallah Mai Quarles Draper 12 Dec 1893 – 15 Apr 1969 *Livie Clay Draper 1 May 1899 – 14 Aug 1967 *Mary Lou Draper 12 Apr 1851 – 9 May 1936 *Mary S. Draper 4 Dec 1870 – 16 Aug 1955 *Robert Lee Draper 7 Jan 1870 – 18 Feb 1935 *S Rosalie Draper Jan 1885 – 3 Jul 1896 *Sarah E Draper23 Jul 1852 – 12 Nov 1874 *Sonny B Draper 18 Jul 1929 – 7 Oct 1931 *Sophronia “Frona” Jones Draper 14 Jul 1868 – 16 Jun 1938 *[[Draper-5802|Travis David Draper]] 6 Nov 1874 – 30 Nov 1953 wife: **Mattie Keeling Draper 14 Feb 1880 – 23 Aug 1949 children: ***Bertha ''Draper'' Butler 16 Jan 1902-30 Jul 1982 Memorial ID 136996855 ***Jessie Lewis Draper 29 Feb 1916– 15 Apr 1990 Memorial ID 60839396 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1966089/crest-lawn-cemetery Crest Lawn Cemetery] Cookeville TN *Walter Bransford Draper 23 Feb 1905 – 31 May 1988 *William “Billy” Draper 6 Feb 1816 – 8 May 1897 *William Matthew “Will” Draper 9 Jan 1865 – 2 Mar 1944 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-713.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2606661/pyron-cemetery Pyron Cemetery]''' Located: From Gainesboro, go toward Granville and turn at the first right on Gladdice Hwy. After crossing the Cumberland River Bridge, turn at third right on Bullard’s Creek Rd. Turn right on New Bethel and cross a small iron bridge and bear left after the old school house (Community Center) and drive up to the cemetery which is behind a house trailer *“Doctor” Draper 19 Nov 1862 – 18 Feb 1864 Memorial ID 174331595 *Fanny Green Huffines Draper 10 Sep 1856 – 1 Jan 1920 Memorial ID 174331528 *Margaret White Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 174331488 *Travis Draper 16 Sep 1778 – 25 Sep 1857 Memorial ID 174331470 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/44/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-118.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2300638/t.j.-forkum-cemetery T.J. Forkum Cemetery]]''' *[[Draper-4860|David Harvey Draper Jr.]] 30 Jan 1859 – 9 Oct 1918 wife: **[[Long-25554|Nancy W “Nannie” Long Draper]] Jul 1858 – 20 Jul 1920 *[[Draper-4856|Nancy Adaville ''Draper'' Ray]] (1846 - 1882) husband: **[[Ray-11541| James Chisum Ray]] (1845 - 1917) ***''NOTE'' David Harvey Draper JR (above) and Nancy ''Draper'' Ray are siblings. *[[Draper-5286|John Maston Draper]] 20 Feb 1851 – 5 Mar 1953 wife **[[Jones-120196|Sarah Angeline Jones Draper]] 27 Jul 1853 – 2 Nov 1927 *Ace DraperBirth and death dates unknown. *C L Draper Birth and death dates unknown. *Daisy B. Mosley Draper 20 Sep 1881 – 10 May 1951 *Henry Travis Draper 9 Jul 1880 – 22 Apr 1958 '''Gladdice''' ZIP Code 38562 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/38/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-592.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2239197/captain-james-young-cemetery Captain James Young Cemetery]''' AKA Young Cemetery Gladdice, TN The Young Cemetery is located near the Jackson- Smith County line at the intersection with Dean Hill Road and Gladdic Road. It is located about 1/10 miles in woods behind the old log home of the James Young family. The old log house fell in the last couple of years in a wind storm. There is a beautiful two story stone springhouse still on the premises. The cemetery is enclosed by large hand hewned stones. The cemetery is not maintained and several of the stones are down in this impressive old cemetery. About 150 feet from this cemetery is the Clark Cemetery. '''NOTE''' [[Draper-3275|Elizabeth ''Draper'' Young]] is the great grand daughter of Thomas and Sarah Draper (late 1680's to 1735 North Farnham Parish (Modern day Richmond County Virginia. Her father, grand father and great grand father were all named Thomas Draper. She had 9 children, of which three are buried here with two son-in-laws. *[[Draper-3275|Elizabeth Draper Young]] 27 Jul 1788 – 21 Nov 1871 **[[Young-38165|CPT James Young]] 8 Sep 1788 – 21 Aug 1860 ***Sampson William Young 15 Oct 1818 – 19 Oct 1819 Age 1 ***Eliza Caroline ''Young Coker'' 1812–1853 Memorial ID 22809163 husband: ****Charles Jefferson Coker 1812-1876 Memorial ID 36239144 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2255639/dyersburg-city-cemetery Dyersburg City Cemetery] Dyersburg, TN '''TWO Draper also buried in this cemetery''' ***Alethea Evalina '''Young''' Slaughter 1826–1878 Memorial ID 22809343 husband: ****Samuel G Slaughter 1820–1903 Memorial ID 5747552 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1492576/cookeville-city-cemetery Cookeville Cemetery] Cookeville TN '''16 Draper also buried in this cemetery''' Samuel re-married. '''Note''' These are Elizabeth ''Draper'' Young's other children: '''CENOTAPHS''' *[[Young-38166|William Martin Young]] 1807–1862 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/9255/bethlehem-cemetery Bethleham Cemetery] White Co. TN *Nancy Henrietta ''Young'' Young 1808–1866 Memorial ID 130156331 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2439056/young-cemetery Young Cemetery] Gibbs Crossroads, Macon Co. TN *Thomas R. Young 1818–1889 Memorial ID bureid: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/363440/round-rock-cemetery Round Rock Cemetery] Round Rock, Texas *[[Young-38121|Oliver Franklin Young]] 1825–1901 had 3 wives (see WikiTree profile) buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/16664/old-sparta-cemetery Old Sparta Cemetery] Sparta, TN *James Howard Young 1828–1895 Memorial ID 11533418 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2151012/martin-royster-bridgewater-cemetery Martin Royster Bridgewater Cemetery] Dixon Springs, TN This cemetery is in very bad shape. *[[Young-54551|Dr. Byrd Sidney Young]] 1831–1893 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640472/santa-rosa-odd-fellows-cemetery Santa Rosa Odd Fellows Cemetery] Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, California '''3 Draper burials also in this cemetery''' wife: **Caroline Bell Young 1886–1968 Memorial ID 69982689 (not profiled on WikiTree) daughter: ***Neva Young Hood 1862–1937 Memorial ID 40387732 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8312/santa-rosa-rural-cemetery Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery] Santa Rosa, CA '''Haydenburg''' ZIP Code 38588 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/59/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-531.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2298803/west-cemetery West Cemetery] Haydenburg TN *Seldon Brockett Draper 30 Mar 1890 – 16 Dec 1926 Memorial ID 35174370 wife: **Minnie Byrd Allen Draper 1 Jan 1892 – unknown Memorial ID 35174380 ***Infant Draper 1 Nov 1923 – 1 Nov 1923 Memorial ID 35103685 ***Alma Draper Newberry 1916–1990 Memorial ID 64272856 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10552/clark-memorial-cemetery Clark Memorial Cemetery], Gainsboro, TN ***Selton Joice Draper 1918–1991 Memorial ID 182154182 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10552/clark-memorial-cemetery Clark Memorial Cemetery], Gainsboro, TN ***Mildred M Draper Clark 1919–2011 Memorial ID 35298348 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10552/clark-memorial-cemetery Clark Memorial Cemetery], Gainsboro, TN '''Milltown''' ZIP Code 37091 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/34/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-355.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1823428/carver-mccue-cemetery Carver - McCue Cemetery]''' Located: Carver-McCue Cemetery is a rural cemetery exact directions unclear at this time (research needed) *[[Draper-4457|Milton Haywood Draper]] 29 Oct 1853 – 8 Oct 1936 wife: **[[Carver-4951|Carrie C Carver Draper]] 23 Apr 1858 – 18 Aug 1894 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/78/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-82.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11469/draper-cemetery Draper Cemetery]''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-528.jpg Fisher and Mallie Draper pose with their first two children Ova Mae and Robert Fisher Draper. They will go on to have 5 more children. Estimated date 1911. Mallie's family is also buried here. (Search the Dixon names in this cemetery.) *[[Draper-5202|Fisher Doctor Draper]] 21 May 1885 – 31 Dec 1975 **[[Dixon-16093|Mallie Abilene Dixon Draper]] 12 Jul 1887 – 26 May 1975 ***[[Draper-5201|Robert Dave Draper]] 12 Jul 1909 – 11 Mar 2006 wife: ****[[Richardson-32959|Georgia Velma Richardson Draper]] 20 Aug 1911 – 6 Jan 2008 ***Dow Henry Draper 21 Aug 1920 – 12 Dec 2002 ****Zelema May Huffines Draper 4 Jul 1931 – 25 Aug 1978 ***Bonnie ''Draper'' Taylor 1922–2016 ****Eldon C. “T.” Draper 26 Nov 1925 – 21 Sep 1994 *****Ruie May Carver Draper 24 Apr 1936 – 12 Jul 2016 *[[Draper-4855|John Scantland Draper]] 6 Sep 1843 – 18 Sep 1926 **[[Huffines-144|Almeda Frances Huffines Draper]] 20 Dec 1844 – 23 Aug 1929 ***[[Draper-5718|Adam Rufus Draper]] 28 Oct 1861 – 22 Apr 1950 ****[[Ray-12602|Margaret Louise “Maggie” ''Ray'' Draper]] 14 Oct 1869 – 1 Jul 1939 *****[[Draper-5786|Della ''Draper'' Hardcastle]] 1891–1980 Memorial ID27395391 husband: ******[[Hardcastle-1174|Chester Hardcastle]] (1889 - 1918) Killed in action in France *******Glen Hooper Hardcastle (1912-1994) Memorial ID 91855027 '''CENOTAPH'''buried in Hendersonville, TN *******Ines L Hardcastle Richardson Memorial ID 162164714 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in Carthage, TN *****Lassie ''Draper'' Richardson 1892–1978 *****Victor Draper 14 Dec 1893 – 30 Oct 1900 *****Sarah Sudie “Sue” Draper 12 Nov 1895 – 21 Nov 1929 *****Ruby Draper 25 Mar 1900 – 15 Dec 1903 age 3 *****Dow Draper 20 Aug 1904 – 7 Feb 1988 ******Wife?? their son: *******William Richard Draper 14 Jul 1934 – 13 Nov 1977 *****Ruby Draper 25 Mar 1900 – 15 Dec 1903 ***[[Draper-5719|Cora Draper]] Mar 1873 – 15 Nov 1958, never married ***Atha David “Att” Draper 11 Feb 1865 – 24 Nov 1940 ****Elma Lemons Draper 1 Mar 1878 – 19 Jan 1954 *Walter Price Draper 4 Jan 1880 – 7 Apr 1973 **Alethia Amanda “Lethia” Richardson Draper 8 Dec 1878 – 9 Jan 1963 *Betty Lou Taylor Draper 10 Feb 1939 – unknown *[[Draper-5200|Billy Joe Draper]] 7 Sep 1937 – 7 Aug 2020 **Stella Louise Bailey Draper CENOTAPH (unknown details) *Paul Clay Draper 1 Dec 1886 – 25 Feb 1965 **Cleo Woodside Draper 21 Sep 1888 – 17 Nov 1936 ***Lena May ''Draper'' Huffines 1909–1987 *Wanda Faye Draper 19 Jan 1966 – 22 Jan 1966 age 3 days '''North Springs''' ZIP Code 38588 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ac/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-587.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2281051/graves-%26-teele-graveyard Graves & Teele Graveyard]''' North Springs, TN Location: Cemetery is located in the North Springs Community of Jackson County, West of Ward Fork. From Gainesboro, take Hwy 56 toward North Springs and Willette. Turn left on Ward Fork and then right at the first house with mailbox 130. When you drive to the house, the cemetery will be directly behind it in a pasture. Cemetery is enclosed with a double rock wall on 3 sides. A few graves are outside the enclosure in the pasture. *[[Draper-5797|James Radford Draper]] 8 Mar 1859 – 8 Apr 1888 Memorial ID 30960953 wife" **Bernetta Susan ''Graves'' (Draper) ( Draper) (Montgomery) Richmond Memorial ID 149615796 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/18848/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery] Nashville, TN., She was married four times. The first marriage was in 1879 to James Radford Draper 8 Mar 1859 - 8 Apr 1888 (Age 29), the second marriage was on January 18, 1891 to [[Draper-5796|James William Draper]]. ***Infant Son Draper 3 Feb 1881 – 10 Feb 1881 Memorial ID 145188889 ==='''MACON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-224.jpg '''Haysville''' ZIP Code 37083 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ea/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-143.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/677507/haysville-cemetery Haysville Cemetery]''' Location: Scottsville Road at Haysville Circle, Haysville, Macon County, TN *[[Draper-5285|William Bedford Draper]] 9 Nov 1876 – 8 Jan 1968 wife: **[[Jeankins-1|Sarah Alice McClellan Jeankins Draper]] 1876 - 1955 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/17808/roark-cemetery Roark Cemetery] ***[[Draper-5452|Lura Ethel (Draper) Gammon]] (1896 - 1971) husband: ****Lelie Simpson Gammon 1895–1968 '''CENOTAPH''' remarried, buried in Fairview Cemetery, Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky, USA ***[[Draper-5284|Charlie White Draper]] 9 Oct 1906 – 5 Aug 1961 wife: ****[[Mathis-3434|Altie Macon Mathis Draper]] 19 Feb 1906 – 12 Jan 2004, sons: *****[[Draper-5450|Johnnie Evans Draper]] 1 Sep 1929 – 5 Apr 2013 *****[[Draper-5283|Bobby Ray Draper Sr.]] 1935 – 6 Jan 2019 wife living *[[Draper-5282|Bobby Ray “POPPY” Draper Jr.]] 1959 – 2 Dec 2014 wife unknown *Ambus Draper2 Nov 1879 – 25 Jul 1906 *Cicero R. Draper28 Jan 1877 – 31 Aug 1910 *Hardy Crier Draper 5 Jun 1869 – 5 Jun 1953 *John H. Draper 9 Apr 1852 – 2 Apr 1913 *Lena Draper1881 – 1953 *Mardula Ann Johnson Draper27 Oct 1866 – 2 Sep 1950 *Martha Emmaline “Emma” Meador Draper30 Jun 1889 – 2 Feb 1923 *Martha J. Jones Draper13 Sep 1850 – 27 Mar 1912 *Mary Clemons Draper7 Mar 1904 – 15 Jan 1963 *Mittie Ellen Johnson Draper6 Sep 1877 – 30 Nov 1951 *Robert B. Draper14 Mar 1882 – 17 Dec 1919 *Selley M. Draper2 Feb 1889 – 17 Oct 1913 *Wade Dozier Draper27 Apr 1884 – 2 Aug 1952 *William Harvey Draper 24 Oct 1874 – 22 Jul 1939 '''Lafayette''' ZIP Code 37083 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/90/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-121.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/187621/macon-county-memorial-gardens Macon County Memorial Gardens]''' *[[Draper-5453|Doy Draper]] 16 Jun 1914 – 3 Aug 1985, wife: **[[Unknown-612092|Velma Draper]] 19 Dec 1912 – 20 Jul 2000 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/78/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-330.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/163153/anderson-and-son-memorial-park Anderson and Son Memorial Park]''' *[[Draper-5464|Carlie W Draper]] 9 Oct 1906 – Nov 1985 **[[Dickens-1988|Daisy Hester Dickens Draper]] 12 Jun 1909 – Jan 1984 *[[Draper-5465|Dewey E “Red” Draper]] 11 Jun 1927 – 22 Dec 1987 **[[Bohanan-195|Mazell Bohanan Draper]] 2 Feb 1927 – 3 Sep 2020 ***[[Draper-5466|Michael Ray Draper]] 24 Dec 1949 – 21 May 2020 *Wade Draper Jr. 28 Apr 1926 – 6 Jul 2007 *Sarah Stevens Haley Draper 31 Dec 1916 – 11 Apr 1994 *Carol A Draper 1937 – unknown https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-144.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/17808/roark-cemetery Roark Cemetery]''' Location: Lafayette, Macon County, Tennessee, USA *[[Draper-5439|Curtis Hilman Draper]] 8 Nov 1908 – 26 Jul 1978, wife: **[[Sewell-4047|Meredith Curley Sewell Draper]] 22 Jan 1918 – 17 Mar 1990 *[[Jeankins-1|Sarah Alice McClellan Jenkins Draper]] 28 Dec 1876 – 21 Jan 1955, husband: **[[Draper-5285|William Bedford Draper]] 1876 - 1968 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/677507/haysville-cemetery Haysville Cemetery] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-119.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2186773/walton-cemetery Walton Cemetery]''' Not to be confused with T.J. Walton Cemetery. This Cemetery has no address listed other than it is in Macon County *James Henry Draper 17 Mar 1868 – 17 Mar 1946 *[[Draper-5447|Johnny Arthur Draper]] 28 Mar 1943 – 3 Oct 2016, wife **Betty Jean Stubblefield Draper Deceased '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, son: ***[[Draper-5449|Jimmy Lane Draper]] 19 May 1968 – 13 Nov 2012 '''Red Boiling Springs''' ZIP Code 37150 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-558.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/264510/smith-chapel-cemetery Smith Chapel Cemetery]''' Red Boiling Springs, TN *[[Draper-31|James Ward Draper]] 1830–1895 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2386277/draper-cemetery Draper Cemetery] Chestnut Mound, TN, **[[Kavanaugh-346|Lucy Ann ''Kavanaugh'' Draper]] (1831 - 1906) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2386277/draper-cemetery Draper Cemetery] Chestnut Mound, TN, daughter ***[[Draper-3624|Fannie Woods ''Draper'' White]] 6 Nov 1864 - 18 Feb 1938 Memorial ID 75985535 husband: ****[[White-76983|James Braxton White]] 1850–1927 Memorial ID 75985586 children: *****Mollie Gray White West 1896–1979 Memorial ID 150151637 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Lucy Drucilla White 1900–1988 Memorial ID 150151393 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Rhoda Victoria White Carter 1902–1981 Memorial ID 164048476 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Luther Gross White 1905–1956 Memorial ID 84823525 '''CENOTAPH''' ==='''PUTNAM COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-225.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/08/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-664.jpg Daniel Mangrum Draper and his new bride, Virginia Alice ''Winchester'' Draper (1876 - 1895). Married in1893 at age 17. In November, 1894 she gave birth to a daughter, Myrtle Draper, and in December, 1895, Virginia died – at age nineteen. She is buried in this wedding dress, next to her parents in the Winchester family plot, in the Evans-Winchester Family Cemetery (below) Daniel will marry two more times, and have many more children. '''Buffalo Valley''' ZIP Code 38548 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/33/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-663.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/310470/evans-winchester-family-cemetery Evans-Winchester Family Cemetery]''' Buffalo Valley, Putnam County, TN The 3rd large gravestone from the left (the closet one in the picture)) is Virginia's resting place. Recent pictures of the cemetery show no Gravestones. *Virginia Alice Winchester Draper 18176 - 1895 Memorial ID 39456150 **Daniel Mangrum Draper 1869–1938 (m. 1893) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/656298/leeville-cemetery Leeville Cemetery] Leeville, Wilson County, TN '''Cookeville''' ZIP Codes 38501- 38506 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-530.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1492576/cookeville-city-cemetery Cookeville City Cemetery]''' *William Gilbert Draper 13 Aug 1891 – 6 Sep 1963 Memorial ID 57158776 wife: **Carrie Mable Byrne Draper 20 Nov 1892 – 17 Nov 1966 Memorial ID 57158745 children: ***Newton Byrne Draper 13 Jan 1915 – 27 May 1974 Memorial ID 57158925 wife: ****Alene Louis Brown Draper 16 Nov 1915 – 31 Jan 2004 Memorial ID 57158894 children: *****Dr David Gilbert Draper 11 Nov 1950 – 10 Apr 2022 Memorial ID 238703522 wife: ******Leslie Sullins Draper living at time of posting *****Ann Brown Draper 27 Jan 1947 – 29 Jan 1947 Age 2 Days Memorial ID 57158963 ***Mary Draper 1916 – 1916 Memorial ID 57158850 Age under 1 year ***Dorothea Anne Draper Witherspoon 1917–2003 Memorial ID 28556012 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/219110/woodlawn-memorial-park-and-mausoleum Woodlawn Memorial Park] Nashville, TN *William Kennedy Draper13 Jan 1878 – 22 Apr 1964 Memorial ID 56995794 **Myrtle Brockette DraperMemorial ID14 Oct 1873 – 26 Dec 1964 Memorial ID 56995807 ***Charles Brockette Draper 25 Aug 1910 – 21 Mar 1999 Memorial ID 56995771 wife: ****Wilene Pointer Draper 22 Jul 1911 – 16 Feb 2001 Memorial ID 56995788 Daughter: *****Betty Draper Weaver 1936–2018 Memorial ID 194717137 husband: ******Claude Felix Weaver 1926–2008 Memorial ID 56995755 ***Louise Draper Darwin 1905–1957 Memorial ID 86256003 husband: ****Lee Sadler Darwin 1902–1934 Memorial ID 86255997 ***Harry Lee Draper 1907–1989 Memorial ID 227823030 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8456/woodlawn-cemetery Woodlawn Cemetery] Santa Monica, CA wife: ****Julia Talbot Bird Draper 1908–1971 Memorial ID 227839077 ***Ward Cornwell Draper 22 Oct 1912 – 11 Dec 1965 Memorial ID 50969133 wife: ****Cora Ethel Coulson Draper 27 Jun 1916 – 26 Feb 2006 Memorial ID 57006100 *****Tibitha Ann Draper6 Feb 1941 – unknown Memorial ID 63681359 ****Susan Brockette Draper 1 Apr 1946 – 17 Nov 1964 Age 18 Memorial ID 57006140 ****Cynthea Louise Draper 23 Dec 1948 – unknown Memorial ID 63681438 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/87/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-588.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1966089/crest-lawn-cemetery Crest Lawn Cemetery]''' Cookeville, TN *Jessie Lewis Draper 29 Feb 1916 – 15 Apr 1990 Memorial ID 60839396 **Grace Marie Barlow Close 1916–2002 Memorial ID94224160 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/30348/mount-olivet-cemetery Mount Olivet Cemetery] Kearney, Missouri https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-84.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2263457/kuykendall-cemetery Kuykendall Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-1177|Ridley Draper]] 30 Dec 1825 – 10 Jun 1873 **[[Kuykendall-594|Rebecca Kuykendall Draper]] 13 Jan 1828 – 19 May 1905 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-581.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/18747/smyrna-cemetery Smyrna Cemetery]''' Cookeville, TN *Dr Atha Edward Draper 14 Mar 1888 – 11 Jun 1917 Memorial ID 64944453 wife: **Mary E Meadows Draper 1889–1976 (m. 1907) Memorial ID 118520871 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10994/crestview-memory-gardens Crestview Memorial Gardens] Gallatin, Tn *Harvey Allison Draper 9 Jun 1882 – 31 May 1969 Memorial ID 64944460 wife: **Della Maude Swift Draper 19 Jun 1885 – 8 Jul 1964 Memorial ID 64944454 ***Infant Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 64944463 *Eldon P. Draper 10 Dec 1885 – 4 Oct 1921 Memorial ID 59515031 **Zora Cherry Draper 29 Jan 1892 – 26 Apr 1971 Memorial ID 64944481 *Howard Young Draper 8 Sep 1886 – 18 Apr 1974 Memorial ID 64944462 **Adelia Lynn Draper 14 Oct 1889 – 26 Dec 1990 Memorial ID 64944452 ***Robert Lynn Draper 21 Jun 1918 – 5 Jun 2015 Memorial ID 147557371 ****Hallie Christine Boatman Draper Memorial ID13 Jul 1927 – 9 May 2021 Memorial ID 226691077 *James Travis Draper 17 Nov 1852 – 25 Oct 1945 Memorial ID 64944465 **Margarett Edith Pate Draper 28 Dec 1854 – 2 Aug 1916 Memorial ID 64944470 Son: ***Dr. Ridley Herman Draper 1882–1946 Memorial ID 44587346 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/72576/san-lorenzo-cemetery San Lorenzo Cemetery] St. Augustine, FL *Stephen Ammonette Draper 15 Jul 1879 – 2 Feb 1940 Memorial ID 64944476 **Lula Eastes Draper 6 Dec 1884 – unknown Memorial ID 64944467 child: ***Loisn Eastis Draper 8 Jul 1908-5 April 1918 Age 9 Memorial ID 197774710 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Bradford County Florida unknow details *Oliver Newton “Newt” Draper 1 Nov 1857 – 8 Jan 1933 Memorial ID 64944474 **Mary Olive Cummins Draper 25 Apr 1857 – 8 Dec 1949 Memorial ID 64944472 ==='''ROBERTSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/aa/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-226.jpg '''Ashburn''' ZIP Code 37172 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/89/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-167.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2575280/draper-fuqua-family-cemetery Draper-Fuqua Family Cemetery]''' Location: Ashburn, Robertson County, TN *[[Draper-35|Thomas Luther “Tom” Draper]] 11 Mar 1837 – 1 Jul 1893 wife: **[[Apple-840|Mary Jane Apple Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' remarried [[Draper-34|William Draper]] buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/656298/leeville-cemetery Leeville Cemetery] **[[Pate-2583|Martha Virginia (Pate) Woodard]] (1839 - 1924) 2nd wife unmarked grave '''Springfield''' ZIP Code 37172 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/88/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-89.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11740/elmwood-cemetery Elmwood Cemetery]''' Location: Springfield, Robertson County, Tennessee, USA *[[Draper-33|John Cook Draper]] 7 Apr 1832 – 6 Apr 1907 **[[Cowen-1196|Theresa Josephus Cowen Draper]] 2 Oct 1838 – 12 Jun 1926 *[[Draper-5257|Horace Alexander Draper]] 29 Jan 1866 – 7 Nov 1925 **[[Woodard-3657|Eunice Ruth Woodard Draper]] 12 Sep 1874 – 10 Mar 1946 *[[Draper-5256|Harry Hubert Draper]] 22 Aug 1906 – 25 Aug 1993 *Betty J. Draper 9 Feb 1934 – 2 Nov 1994 *Burton Ferrell Draper 16 Aug 1861 – 12 Mar 1934 *Elizabeth “Betty” Draper 13 May 1935 – 12 Jun 2021 *James Luther Draper 6 Nov 1866 – 29 Nov 1932 *John B. Draper 8 Nov 1863 – 13 Dec 1930 *Joseph C. Draper 1857 – unknown *Katherine H. Draper 1891 – 1921 *Leon Ferrell Draper 1889 – 1889 *Mary H. Ogburn Draper 1863 – 17 Feb 1900 *Mattie Douglas Holman Draper4 Sep 1866 – 29 Nov 1908 *Nancy Jane “Nannie” Elrod Draper 1862 – 1927 *Robert Polk Draper 8 Jun 1904 – 10 Dec 1970 *Sallie Munford Hart Draper23 Jul 1871 – 10 Oct 1952 *Sam Ogburn Draper 1893 – 1894 *William Alford Draper 27 Dec 1862 – 6 Apr 1922 ==='''SHELBY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/70/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-227.jpg '''Memphis''' ZIP Code 38106 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/84/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-140.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10080/calvary-cemetery? Calvary Cemetery]''' Location 1663 US-51 Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, 38106 USA *[[Draper-3331|Robert Garland Draper]] 15 Apr 1887 – 22 May 1977 **[[Glankler-1|Katherine Veronica ''Glankler'' Draper]] 2 Sep 1891 – 26 Oct 1942 *[[Draper-3340|Robert F Draper 21]] (1924 - 1967) *[[Draper-3341|George Edward Draper]] 3 Jun 1932 – 5 May 1974 *A Y Draper26 Apr 1909 – 13 Mar 1982 *Edith Colbert Draper1926 – 1978 *Eula Taylor Draper26 Feb 1922 – 13 Feb 2014 *Lewie Draper8 Feb 1914 – 9 Jan 1982 *Willie Mae Draper3 Jun 1908 – 24 Sep 2000 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/80/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-333.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/12057/forest-hill-cemetery-midtown Forest Hill Cemetery Midtown]''' *Bert B Draper 5 Nov 1892 – 22 Oct 1976 *Brice Marchbanks DraperMemorial ID23 Feb 1862 – 19 Dec 1933 *Junia George Draper 1 Jun 1886 – 12 Jan 1968 *Marie T DraperMemorial ID23 Sep 1894 – 6 Jun 1978 *Mary Raines Draper 10 Jun 1874 – 16 Jan 1964 *Mary Goodbar Draper 1897 – 13 Oct 1992 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-517.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15595/memorial-park-cemetery Memorial Park Cemetery]''' *Jack Springstead Draper 8 Oct 1918 – 2 Nov 1995 Memorial ID 140230073 wife: **Thelma May Anderson Draper10 May 1924 – 15 Dec 2019 Memorial ID 206861086 son: ***David Edwin Draper 19 Aug 1952 – 10 Jan 1971 Memorial ID 140230090 *James Wallace Draper 18 Feb 1929 – 27 Jun 2001 Memorial ID 14846504 wife: **Sara Martha Carroll 22 MAY 1930-29 MAY 2014 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *Ralph Eugene Draper 1929 – 2004 Memorial ID 158824778 wife: **Juanita Lee Wright Draper 27 Jan 1927 – 11 Mar 2008 Memorial ID 158824809 *Luther Coleman Draper 10 May 1887 – 19 Aug 1959 Memorial ID 185133236 **Lila Allen Sanford Draper 12 Apr 1889 – 10 Aug 1974 Memorial ID 185133222 *Mary Lucille Gailbreath Draper7 Jul 1891 – 16 Sep 1960 Memorial ID 109665939 husband: **George Glen Draper1884–1922 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 180277334 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/12061/forest-hills-cemetery Forrest Hills Cemetery] Chattanooga, TN *Anne Gilliland Draper1908 – 1975 Memorial ID 193734496 *Brice M Draper 1908 – 1991 Memorial ID 193734497 *Claire C Draper 6 Dec 1922 – 26 Nov 2011 Memorial ID 161741942 *Grace W Draper 1911 – 1999 Memorial ID 193734495 *Laurence S Draper2 Aug 1912 – 19 Jul 1979 Memorial ID 185133004 *Nellie D. Draper11 Jan 1911 – 3 Sep 1985 Memorial ID 185132790 *O'Landa Draper 29 Sep 1963 – 21 Jul 1998 Memorial ID 11074520 *Rachel K Draper 28 Oct 1897 – 12 Feb 1990 Memorial ID 140230059 ==='''SMITH COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-228.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-138.jpg *[[Draper-39|Phillip Draper]] (1771 - 1856) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial unknown, 3 wives: **[[Curtis-229|Peggy Margaret (Curtis) Draper]] (abt. 1775 - abt. 1805) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial unknown **[[Davidson-13983|Elizabeth Davidson]] (abt. 1775 - abt. 1850) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial unknown **[[Pate-2530|Sarah (Pate) Draper]] (abt. 1769) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial unknown '''Carthage''' ZIP Code 37030 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/eb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-139.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/181669/ridgewood-cemetery Ridgewood Cemetery]''' AKA City Cemetery *[[Brooks-22724|Minnie Grace ''Brooks'' Draper]] 1 Mar 1871 – 10 Jan 1940 husband **[[Draper-4861|Sidney Stanton Draper]] 9 Jun 1864 – 12 Jul 1897 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11470/draper-memorial-cemetery Rob Draper Memorial Cemetery] *James H. “Jim” Draper 16 Apr 1913 – 20 Jan 1998 *Marie Comstock Draper 29 Sep 1938 – 14 Jul 2020 *William Albert “Willie” Draper 21 May 1892 – 25 Dec 1945 *Wilma Young Draper 12 Feb 1919 – 28 Jul 1995 '''Chestnut Mound''' ZIP Code 38560 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-518.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11336/dickens-cemetery Dickens Cemetery]''' *Mary K ''Draper'' Cowan 1905–2001 Memorial ID 71371973 husband: **Walter Hensley Cowan 1901–1976 Memorial ID 71371950 son: ***Solon Kerr Cowen 13 Sep 1930 - 17 Mar 1951 age 20 Memorial ID 71371927 ****Note: Mary Draper is the daughter of James Patrick Draper buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2386277/draper-cemetery Draper Cemetery] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/90/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-88.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2386277/draper-cemetery Draper Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-31|James Ward Draper]] 28 Feb 1830 – 1 Mar 1895 and wife: **[[Kavanaugh-346|Mrs Lucy Ann ''Kavanaugh'' Draper]] 10 Apr 1831 – 20 Jan 1906 *[[Draper-3626|James Patrick Draper]] 7 Dec 1867 – 3 Sep 1917 wife: **[[Askew-1741|Rilda S. ''Askew'' Draper]] 1 Feb 1875 – 16 Feb 1963 *[[Draper-3623|Mourning S Draper]] 11 Dec 1860 – 8 Oct 1898 *Lucy Seuriremis Draper 25 Nov 1903 – 22 Dec 1903 *Patrick Travis Draper 18 Apr 1908 – 29 May 1909 (age 1) *Srilda Jane West Draper 19 Apr 1842 – 23 May 1927 *[[Draper-5667|Winfield Wallace Draper]] 20 Jan 1902 – 23 Mar 1973 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-172.jpg Draper family members attending the funeral of [[Draper-31|James Ward Draper]] pose for picture March of 1895. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/db/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-87.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2269424/old-church-cemetery Old Church Cemetery]''' Location: Chestnut Mound, Smith County, Tennessee, USA *[[Draper-32|Davidson J. Draper]] 13 May 1805 – 11 Apr 1866 wife: **[[Glover-6563|Mary Williamson (Glover) Draper]] (1806 - 1887) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ==='''SUMNER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/96/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-229.jpg '''Dixon Springs''' ZIP Code 37057 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-117.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/169815/dixon-springs-cemetery Dixon Springs Cemetery]''' *Cassie Duke Draper 11 Sep 1896 – 26 Nov 1991 *George Mack Draper Sr. 20 May 1923 – 3 Jul 2017 *Jerome Mack Draper 12 Nov 1887 – 15 Dec 1950 *Wilma Jo Riley Draper 12 Dec 1933 – 10 Mar 2011 '''Gallatin''' ZIP Code 37066 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/64/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-132.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/10994/crestview-memory-gardens Crestview Memory Gardens]''' *[[Draper-5273|Seth Thomas Draper]] 18 May 1889 – 12 Dec 1981 **[[Richardson-33679|Nina M Richardson Draper]] 3 Sep 1892 – 26 Mar 1977 ***[[Draper-5495|Onie Moline Draper Woodard]] 1925–2007 . husband ****[[Woodard-3731|Hubert Ray Woodard]] 1924–1993 *DR A Edwin Draper 1917 – 1972 *Acil A Draper9 May 1913 – 5 Apr 1998 *Billie Frances Carter Draper 10 Mar 1930 – 17 Oct 1996 *[[Draper-5664|Breathitt Gray Draper]] 1 Apr 1911 – 27 Jan 1992 **[[Wilson-98662|Bertha Ethelean (Wilson) Woodard]](1916 - 2003) *Cora Zelma Wilson Draper 18 Mar 1913 – 10 Mar 1997 *David Lee Draper26 Dec 1949 – Jun 2021 *Georgia E Draper19 Nov 1917 – 21 Mar 2005 *Gloria Link Bunch Draper 28 Feb 1933 – 21 Aug 2005 *Inez Russell Draper 19 Mar 1923 – 24 Jun 2011 *Jake Draper 10 Dec 1897 – 6 Jul 1965 *John Duncan Draper 1941 – 1990 *John Jacobs Aster Draper 7 Aug 1913 – 24 Mar 1992 *Josephine Bohannon Draper 1917 – 2008 *Mary E Meadows Draper 1 Sep 1889 – Apr 1976 *Nina M Richardson Draper 3 Sep 1892 – 26 Mar 1977 *Kendall Draper 10 Sep 1969 – 11 Sep 1969 Twin *Kevin Draper 10 Sep 1969 – 11 Sep 1969 Twin '''Hendersonville''' ZIP Code 37075 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/30/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-353.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1972272/hendersonville-memory-gardens Hendersonville Memory Gardens] AKA Woodlawn East Cemetery Located: 353 E Main St, Hendersonville *[[Draper-5787|Preston Milton Draper]] 16 Feb 1912 – 23 Jul 1983 Memorial ID 205706160 Family, wife **Cannie L. Maynor Draper 5 Mar 1919 – 3 Jun 1982 Memorial ID 205706071 ***'''Note''' Family: Preston descends from Thomas and Lucy Draper ==='''UNION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/18/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-230.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/60/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-47.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2225686/oaks-cemetery Oaks_Cemetery]''' AKA Levi Evans Cemetery Location: [https://www.google.com/maps/@36.281651,-83.8380219,1550m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satelite View] positioned so the cemetery is in the exact middle of the screen. Zoom Out for area view. *[[Draper-1486|Solomon Draper]] 1809 -a.1844 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Nashville, Tennessee, in unknown church cemetery **[[Rogers-12948|Ruth ''Rogers'' (Draper) Miller]] 1816-1889 son: ***[[Draper-3813|John Robert Draper]] (abt. 1838 - 1901) and wife: ****[[Norman-8218|Hannah Anna ''Norman'' (Draper) Pangle]] (1842 - 1911) re-married and buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/41195/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery] Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio, USA *****[[Draper-4961|Lewis Shelby Draper]] 1861–1921 '''CENOTAPH''' son of Robert and Hannah, burial unknown ***Lucinda Draper Hitch 1835–1913 Memorial ID 178978714 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/18848/spring-hill-cemetery Spring Hill Cemetery] Nashville, TN ***Amelia Millicent ''Draper'' (Callison) Hickman 1836–1913 Memorial ID 181638565 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95933/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery] Baxter, Iowa ***Martha Jane Draper Turner 1840–1914 Memorial ID 42704655 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/16618/old-hill-cemetery Old Hill Cemetery] Union Co. TN ***Mary Frances Draper Sargeant 1843–1911 Memorial ID 229923916 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/32369/woodlawn-cemetery Woodlawn Cemetery] Campbell, Missouri ***Sarah E Draper Benney 1845–1915 Memorial ID 121850767 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/24167/magnolia-cemetery Magnolia Cemetery] Mobile, Alabama ==='''WILSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-231.jpg '''Leeville''' ZIP Code 37090 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/ca/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-166.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/656298/leeville-cemetery Leeville Cemetery]''' LOCATION: at corner of Hickory Ridge and Martha-Leeville Road, Leeville, Wilson County, Tn *[[Draper-34|William Draper]] Sep 1834 – 16 Jun 1901 **[[Apple-840|Mary Jane ''Apple'' Draper]] 24 Aug 1849 – 13 Jul 1932 ***Daniel Mangrum “Mang” Draper Oct 1869 – 21 Feb 1938 Memorial ID 103275091 3 wives: ****1st wife Virginia Alice Winchester Draper 1876–1895 Memorial ID 39456150 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in her wedding dress, age 19, [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/310470/evans-winchester-family-cemetery Evans Winchester Family Cemetery] Buffalo Valley, TN daughter: *****Winnie Myrtle ''Draper'' Holland 1894–1982 Memorial ID 103275147 ******Thomas Isaac Holland 1881–1953 Memorial ID 103275146 children: *******George Winchester Holland 1925–1998 wife: ********Kathleen ''Dedman'' Holland 1933–2015 Memorial Id 141566190 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Heritage Memorial Gardens] Old Hickory, TN *******Mildred ''Holland'' Young 1928–2012 Memorial ID 97484618 husband ********James Robert Young 1911–1976 ****2nd wife Mary Frances "Mollie" ''Bates'' Draper (1878 - 1908 Memorial ID 89959259 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/313686/bates-family-cemetery Bates Family Cemetery] Wilson County TN *****Edna Lee ''Draper'' Robinson 1897–1988 Memorial ID 108436299 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN husband: ******Hugh Lawson Robinson 1896–1989 Memorial ID 108436685 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN *****Mary Lucile Draper 15 May 1899 – 8 Jul 1928 Memorial ID 103275090 *****Thomas Daniel Draper Jun 1906 – 27 Feb 1970 Memorial ID 103275083 ******Ruby Gladys ''Scudder'' Draper Sep 1911 – 28 Jan 1961 Memorial ID 103275084 *******Thomas Ray Draper 23 Jan 1943 – 9 Sep 2019 Memorial ID 202878000 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet, TN ****3rd wife Mattie ''McDole'' Draper Oct 1889 – 20 Oct 1919 Memorial ID 103275089 *****Mildred K Draper (Step Daughter) Oct 1912 – 15 Oct 1915 *****Virginia Ruth ''Draper'' Smith 1915–1973 Memorial ID 128052204 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet, TN husband: ******Roy Dennison Smith 1914–1997 Memorial ID 128051791 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet *****Meredith Eugene Draper 1916–1945 Memorial ID106746242 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet, TN wife: ******Jane Frances ''Holt'' (Draper) Franklin 1919–1999 Memorial ID 55129383 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet, TN son: *******Daniel Stuart Draper 1943–1946 Memorial ID 106746196 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet, TN *****Daniel Mang Draper 1918–2002 Memorial ID 107108494 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Heritage Memorial Gardens] Old Hickory, TN ******Mildred Cole Draper 1921–2002 Memorial ID 107108592 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Heritage Memorial Gardens] Old Hickory, TN 3 sons: *******Edward Stanley Draper 1940–2006 Memorial ID 107108921 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Heritage Memorial Gardens] Old Hickory, TN *******Michael Eugene Draper 1942–2019 Memorial ID 195838619 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Heritage Memorial Gardens] Old Hickory, TN *******James Cecil Draper 1945–1983 Memorial ID 107108791 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13284/hermitage-memorial-gardens Heritage Memorial Gardens] Old Hickory, TN *****John McDowell Draper 1919–2000 Memorial ID 106750287 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/48722/sharon-memorial-park Sharon Memorial Park] Charlotte, NC wife: ******Barbara J. Sanders Draper 934–1991 Memoiral ID 132194846 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN ***John Alvie Draper 1874–1968 Memorial ID 107015137 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN wife: ****Nora Ella ''Davis'' Draper 1881–1952 Memorial ID 107015321 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN *****Rachel Mai Draper Howell 1905–1994 MEMORIAL ID 121433636 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens] Mount Juliet, TN *****Mary Aline Draper Macon 1907–1989 MEMORIAL ID 140401708 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN ***Estell Draper 1879–1957 MEMORIAL ID 106750899 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN wife: ****Lena Eatherly Draper 1883–1955 Memorial ID 106751026 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15592/wilson-county-memorial-park Wilson County Memorial Park] Labanon, TN daughter: *****Sadie Estelle Draper Dec 1906 – 22 Oct 1911 Memorial ID 103275087 ***Edgar Wheeler Draper 1883–1961 Memorial ID 103275082 ****Annie E Frakes Draper Dec 1886 – 7 Mar 1963 Memorial ID 103275081 daughter: *****Willie Mai ''Draper'' Pulley 1907–1988 Memorial ID 71527372 husband: ******Howard Leon Pulley 1902–1970 Memorial ID 71527277 ***Ruby Gray ''Draper'' Bates 1885–1976 Memorial ID 89958485 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/313686/bates-family-cemetery Bates Family Cemetery] Wilson County TN ****Bethel Bates 1882–1961 Memorial ID 89958433 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/313686/bates-family-cemetery Bates Family Cemetery] Wilson County TN '''Mount Juliet''' ZIP Code 37122 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fe/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-662.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/15946/mount-juliet-memorial-gardens Mount Juliet Memorial Gardens]''' Mount Juliet, Wilson County, TN *Meredith Eugene Draper 23 Aug 1916 – 15 Feb 1945 Memorial ID 106746242 **Jane Frances ''Holt'' (Draper) Franklin 1919–1999 ***Daniel Stuart Draper 15 Aug 1943 – 14 May 1946 Memorial ID 106746196 *Thomas Daniel Draper Jun 1906 – 27 Feb 1970 Memorial ID 103275083 '''CENOTAPH''' **Ruby Gladys ''Scudder'' Draper Sep 1911 – 28 Jan 1961 Memorial ID 103275084 '''CENOTAPH''' the above are buried n Leeville Cemetery (above) ***Thomas Ray Draper 23 Jan 1943 – 9 Sep 2019 Memorial ID 202878000 wife: ****Brenda Joyce Draper still living *Daniel Mangrum Draper 1869–1938 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Leesville Cemetery above **3rd wife Mattie ''McDole'' Draper Oct 1889 – 20 Oct 1919 Memorial ID 103275089 '''CCENOTAPH''' buried: Leesville Cemetery above ***Virginia Ruth ''Draper'' Smith 1915–1973 Memorial ID 128052204 husband: ****Roy Dennison Smith 1914–1997 Memorial ID 128051791 ==Kentucky 58 Burial Listings== ==='''CALDWELL COUNTY'''=== *[[Draper-5583|Thomas Draper]] (1762 - 1825) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **[[Smith-283919|Elizabeth (Smith) Draper]] (1765 - 1830) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-232.jpg '''Princeton''' ZIP Code 42445 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/78/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-150.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/75496/perry-cemetery Perry Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5299|Milton A. Draper]] 22 Jul 1837 – 11 Jul 1906 **[[Perry-24145|Elizabeth F. (Perry) Draper]] (1849 - 1873) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-5298|Chairity Ann ''Draper'' Lacy]] (1868 - 1886) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, died in childbirth, she was the only daughter of Milton Draper, her son: **** Thomas Grundy Lacey 1885–1951 Family Search ID: LCXH-QM8 wife *****Willie Pleasant ''Conway'' (Lacey) Sells 1883 - 1969 Memorial ID buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/73373/cedar-hill-cemetery Cedar Hill Cemetery] Princeton Kentucky https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-151.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76231/tandy-cemetery? Tandy Cemetery]''' Located South of Princeton on private property *[[Draper-5590|Robert Allen Draper]] 12 Jun 1845 – 20 Apr 1913 *[[Tandy-698|Sarah Virginia ''Tandy'' (Boyd) Draper]] 25 Nov 1838 – 9 Sep 1921 ==='''CUMBERLAND COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-233.jpg '''Burkesville''' ZIP Code 42717 [[Draper-173|John Harrison Draper]] (1789 - 1866) moves from Henry County, Virginia and has 5 children between 1811 to 1821 in this area, then moves his family on to Marion, County Indiana, where his 6th child is born in 1826. Forty years later the Civil War Battle of Mill Springs, just 60 miles east, would claim the life of 37 year old [[Draper-2225|Thomas Jefferson Draper]] serving as a Confederate soldier and father of 3 living children, one a new born baby. (see Pulaski County) '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2588621/walker-cemetery Walker_Cemetery]''' *Fannie Draper birth and death dates unknown ==='''JEFFERSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-328.jpg Louisville ZIP Code 40018 - 40299 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/ce/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-327.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2315685/cave-hill-national-cemetery Cave Hill National Cemetery]''' Louisville, Kentucky *[[Draper-5424|Hoyt Evert Draper]] 1910 – 27 May 1929 Age 18-19 son of [[Draper-5285|William Bedford Draper]] buried in '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/677507/haysville-cemetery Haysville Cemetery]''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-120.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2215430/eastview-church-of-christ-cemetery Eastview Church of Christ Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5467|Dewey E. Draper]] 5 Oct 1906 – 27 Aug 1928, Age 21, wife: **Madge P Haycraft Draper 1908–Deceased '''CENOTAPH''' remarried? Burial unknown ===PENDLETON COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-412.jpg '''Catawba''' ZIP Code 41006 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/35/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-414.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1981679/mount-moriah-cemetery?Mount Moriah Cemetery]''' Located: Catawba, Pendleton County , Kentucky, USA *Elmer Draper 3 Jan 1891 – 25 Jul 1961 Memorial ID 237238423 **Florence Brandt details unknown '''CENOTAPH''' Burial unknown ***Goldie Mae Draper 4 Nov 1929 – 8 Apr 1940 Age 10 years Memorial ID 237239155 ****Note: The name Florence Brandt is listed as Goldie's mother, but no other details '''DeMossville''' ZIP Code 41033 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-417.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1982379/pleasant-ridge-baptist-church-cemetery Pleasant Ridge Baptist Church Cemetery]''' DeMossville, Pendleton County , Kentucky *Millard Filmore Draper 1859–1919 Memorial ID 42984735 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1317479/short-creek-cemetery Short Creek Cemetery] Falmouth, Kentucky, wife: **Magdaline Thompson Draper 1867–1916 Memorial ID 99687649 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1317479/short-creek-cemetery Short Creek Cemetery] Falmouth, Kentucky, son: ***Cecil Robert Draper3 Jun 1902 – 10 Aug 1982 Memorial ID 161292893 wife: ****Ruby Catherine Gray Draper25 Oct 1906 – 13 Mar 1930 Memorial ID 161292894 *****Ned Cecil Draper 1927–2008 Memorial ID 40610146 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/641233/evergreen-cemetery Evergreen Cemetery] ******Fostine Chiders Draper 1935–2013 Memorial ID 117304129 '''CENOTAPH''' *Nathan Robert Draper unknown – 4 Feb 1989 Memorial ID 81629841 '''Doughton''' ZIP Code 41097 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/ff/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-413.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2326543/mount-carmel-cemetery? Mount Carmel Cemetery]''' *Granville A. Draper Sr. 28 Mar 1815 – 14 Sep 1888 Memorial ID 118772071 wife: **Margaret Ann Moore Draper 4 May 1817 – 10 Dec 1899 Memorial ID 112009961 Probably Granville Draper Sr.'s son: *Granville A. Draper Jr. 1863 – 1910 Memorial ID 127943229 wife: **Eliza Jane Vice Draper 23 Jun 1864 – 28 Jun 1928 Memorial ID 127943261 ***Minnie Herman Draper 24 Nov 1890 – 19 Dec 1913 Age 23 Memorial ID 237240651 ***Lillie Dulsa Draper 7 May 1893 – 23 Dec 1915 Age 22 Memorial ID 120672273 *Infant Son Draper 26 Dec 1924 – 29 Dec 1924 Memorial ID 223939167 **Father: Earl Draper Mother: Marguerte Dunn *Melvin L Draper 17 May 1949 – 25 Apr 2012 Memorial ID 90046652 ** Judy Kennedy Draper possibly still living '''Falmouth''' ZIP Code 41040 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/51/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-416.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1402880/riverside-cemetery? Riverside Cemetery]''' AKA Beech Grove Cemetery Falmouth, Pendleton County , Kentucky, USA *Granville A. Draper 1863–1910 '''CENOTAPH''' FAG Mem. ID: 127943229 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2326543/mount-carmel-cemetery Mount Carmel Cemetery] Doughton, Pendleton County , Kentucky, his son: **Fred Otis Draper (1885–1936) '''CENOTAPH''' FAG Mem. ID: 172536997 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/74396/hill-crest-cemetery Hill Crest Cemetery] Dry Ridge, Grant County , Kentucky, Fred's wife: ***Maud Ethel Courtney Draper 7 Apr 1894 – 3 Apr 1985 Memorial ID 126515656 ****Carl Guy Draper 1921–1945 '''CENOTAPH''' Killed: WW2 in Philippines, buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1976551/manila-american-cemetery-and-memorial Manila American Cemetery and Memorial] AKA Fort William McKinley Cemetery Manila, Capital District , National Capital Region, Philippines *Bobby Alan Draper 22 Feb 1947 – 6 Sep 2003 Memorial ID 49916623 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/df/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-415.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1317479/short-creek-cemetery? Short Creek Cemetery]''' Located: Falmouth, Pendleton County , Kentucky *J M Draper 13 Nov 1824 – 29 Nov 1874 Memorial ID 124097887 *'''Note''' This may be John M Draper below, as the death dates are the same *John M Draper 1818 – 29 Nov 1874 Memorial ID 99672518 **Anna Stephens unknown details (see notes in husband's memorial '''CENOTAPH''' ***Millard Filmore Draper 12 Nov 1859 – 30 Mar 1919 Memorial ID 42984735 wife: ****Magdaline “Mattie” Thompson Draper 7 Mar 1867 – 19 Jul 1916 Memorial ID 99687649 *****Anna May ''Draper'' Dance 1886–1962 Memorial ID 237238630 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Minnie Bell ''Draper'' McMillan 1888–1969 [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/30396098/minnie-bell-mcmillan Memorial ID 30396098] '''CENOTAPH''' *****Elmer ''Draper'' 1891–1961 Memorial ID 237238423 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Clara Florence ''Draper'' Ashcraft 1894–1957 Memorial ID 46853480 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Flora M. ''Draper'' Straub 1896–1973 Memorial ID30317808 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Agnes P Draper McMillan 1898–1929 Memorial ID8462494 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Homer W. Draper 1901–1982 Memorial ID141557898 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Cecil Robert Draper 1902–1982 Memorial ID 161292893 '''CENOTAPH''' ***Richard B Draper 1844 – 19 Oct 1888 Memorial ID 89774705 ===PULASKI COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ec/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-582.jpg '''Nancy''' ZIP Code 42544 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/46/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-583.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76689/zollicoffer-park-cemetery Zollicoffer Park Cemetery]''' Nancy, Kentucky *[[Draper-2225|Thomas Jefferson Draper]] 1825 – 19 Jan 1862 Confederate soldier killed in the Battle of Mill Springs. **[[Goodall-796|Anna Elizabeth ''Goodall'' Draper]] 1839-1921 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1686884/gainesboro-cemetery Gainsboro Cemetery] Gainsboro, TN https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-585.jpg Battle of Mill Spring, Ky. Jan 19th 1862, also known as the Battle of Fishing Creek in Confederate terminology, and the Battle of Logan's Cross Roads in Union terminology, was fought in Wayne and Pulaski counties, near current Nancy, Kentucky. Considered a Union victory however causing Union losses of 262 men, and Confederate losses of 552 men. (see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Mill_Springs Battle of Mill Springs] ) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e9/Franklin-7469-5.jpg This rare page was found in a family Bible and provided to WikiTree by [[Franklin-4192|Steve Franklin]] in the [[Draper-2225|Thomas Jefferson Daper]] memorial profile. ==='''WHITLEY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/68/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-513.jpg '''Sandy Flat or Sand Flat''' ZIP Code unknown https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-514.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2515990/sandy-flats-cemetery Sandy Flats Cemetery]''' Sand Flat, Whitley County, Kentucky exact location unknown *[[Draper-3811|Clifford R. Draper]] 11 Jul 1928 – 30 May 2003 Memorial ID 118703206 **[[Fuson-350|Ruby Fuson Draper]] 1 Jan 1933 – 5 Sep 2013 Memorial ID 118703266 ***[[Draper-5656|Bobbie Dianne Draper]] 31 Oct 1949 – 25 Feb 1951, Age 1, Memorial ID 118621611 ***[[Draper-5657|Sandra Marie ''Draper'' Petrey]] 27 Aug 1956 – 11 Jan 2013 Memorial ID 157045215 ****Mr. Petrey '''CENOTAPH''' details unknown, burial unknown ***[[Draper-5658|Robert William Draper]] 3 Mar 1958 – 30 Jun 1969 Memorial ID 118621576 Drowned at age 11 years old while swimming in a strip mine pit in the Saxton community. ==Ohio 68 Burial Listings== ==='''BROWN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/54/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-487.jpg '''Decatur''' ZIP Code 45115 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-489.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/41826/liberty-chapel-cemetery? Liberty Chapel Cemetery] *Pvt John Draper 4 Jun 1843 – 3 Jun 1886 Memorial ID 9717607 *Julia Ann Inskeep Draper 8 Feb 1848 – 30 Jul 1897 Memorial ID 9717616 *Lulu M Draper 15 Oct 1875 – unknown Memorial ID 11313848 '''Higginsport''' ZIP Code 45131 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-488.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/43418/shinkle-ridge-cemetery Shinkle Ridge Cemetery]''' *Freddie “Rusty” Draper 6 Jan 1947 – 20 Oct 2019 Memorial ID 204068580 '''Russellvile ''' ZIP Code 45168 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-486.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/44026/west-evans-cemetery West-Evans Cemetery] *Joshua Clinton Draper 1832–1913 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID76739571 buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95587/new-york-cemetery New York Cemetery] Millerton, Iowa wife: **Martha Mercy Reed Draper 13 Aug 1836 – 11 Nov 1862 Memorial ID 110568821 ***Martha Albertine Draper 7 Dec 1858 – 29 Oct 1863 Age 4 Memorial ID 110569542 *William Draper 2 Apr 1805 – 23 Dec 1884 Memorial ID 92750934 **Martha "Patsy" Margaret ''Morris'' Draper 1804–1878 (m. 1826) Memorial ID 92750967 **Nancy Kier Draper 1836–1898 (m. 1879) 2nd wife '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/92961/maple-grove-cemetery Maple Grove Cemetery] Wichita, Kansas *Henry C Draper 1830–1901 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 36729960 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/28797/freeman-holsapple-cemetery Freeman-Holsapple Cemetery] Collins, Missouri **Laura Louisa Ellis Draper 1832–1921 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 36730099 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1984327/ioof-cemetery 100F Odd Fellows Cemetery] Golden City, Missouri ***Infant Draper 1855 – unknown Memorial ID 110569234 ==='''CLINTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-590.jpg '''Blanchester" ZIP Code 45107 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-589.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/41548/blanchester-ioof-cemetery Blanchester IOOF Cemetery]''' Also known as IOOF Cemetery , Odd Fellows Cemetery *[[Corwin-1014|Rose Musetta ''Corwin'' Draper]] 1900-1937 **[[Draper-4520|John Thomas Draper]] (1894 - 1960) '''CEN0TAPH''' buried: unknown (maybe Omaha NE) ***'''NOTE''' Rose Draper is buried with Edward C. Anderson and his two wives in the same plot. '''Sabina" Zip Code 45169 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/80/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-591.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/246054/sabina-cemetery? Sabina Cemetery]''' Sabina, Clinton County, Ohio *Edward Elijah Draper 3 Jun 1861 – 25 Feb 1938 Memorial ID 35879959 wife (m. 1883) **Barbara Elizabeth Draper 16 Sep 1861 – 23 Nov 1943 Plot info: Sec 2 Lot 34 Memorial ID 3587942 probable child: ***Elizabeth Draper unknown – 1891 Plot info: Sec 2 Lot 34 Memorial ID 144853897 ****'''Note''' both Elizabeths are buried in the same plot, probably mother and daughter. ***Mary M. Draper 31 Aug 1887 – 17 Feb 1891 Memorial ID 144853899 ****'''Note''' both Mary and Elizabeth die in 1891, probably sisters ****'''Note''' '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LB7Q-J9Y Family Search'''] ID for Elijah Edward Draper is LB7Q-J9Y ***Davis Erritt Draper 23 Jan 1885 – 15 Jan 1947 Memorial ID 4249068'''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/40732/enon-cemetery Enon Cemetery] Enon, Ohio ***Theis Draper 1919 – DeceasedFamily Search ID GQXP-LL2 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ==='''COSHOCTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/be/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-371.jpg '''Tiverton Township closest town Brinkhaven''' ZIP Code 43006 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-372.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/43751/tiverton-cemetery Tiverton Cemetery] Rural cemetery located 10 miles east of Brinkhaven, Ohio. Directions: From Brinkhaven, Take US-62 E/Millersburg Rd east 4.1 mi Turn right onto OH-206 S for 3.2 miles Destination will be on the left *James Draper Sr. 24 Oct 1805 – 3 Nov 1868 Memorial ID 14147758 **Electa Smith Draper 30 Apr 1817 – 12 Mar 1889 Memorial ID 14147700 ***Lucinda J. Draper Parsons 1831–1882 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95073/hillcrest-cemetery Hilcrest Cemetery] Iowa ***William Draper 1831–1920 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95073/hillcrest-cemetery Hilcrest Cemetery] Iowa ***Isabelle Draper Smith 1834–1866 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95467/methodist-grove-cemetery Methodist Grove Cemetery] Iowa ***Osborn Draper 23 Aug 1837 – 14 Nov 1920 Memorial ID 1414794 ****Elizabeth Hays Draper 1842 – 1922 Memorial ID 14147711 *****Dora Belle Draper Branstool 1870–1930 *****Rosa I Draper Smith 1873–1954 *****Lloyd Draper 18 Jul 1879 – 9 Oct 1906 Memorial ID 14147761 wife ***** Cora E. ''Barnes'' (Parrish) Draper 1882–1958 (m. 1903 ******Infant Draper 19 Apr 1904 – 19 Apr 1904 Memorial ID 14147734 ***Lydia M Draper Workman 1839–1863 ***Caroline Draper Drummond 1847–1914 ***Delilah Draper Hays 1848–1871 ***Margaret E. Draper 8 Apr 1851 – 9 Dec 1860 Age 9 Memorial ID 14147775 ***Almedia Draper 5 Apr 1853 – 9 Dec 1853 Age 8 months Memorial ID 14147689 ***James Draper Jr. 10 Nov 1855 – 16 May 1880 Memorial ID 14147747 ****Elnora Caroline Reese (Draper) (Critchfield) Sap 1859–1928 (m. 1876) *Samuel H. Draper 8 Sep 1808 – 16 Jan 1894 Memorial ID 14147967 **Elizabeth Huey Draper 1828 – 21 Feb 1871 Memorial ID 14147721 ***Margaret Ann Draper Workman 1847–1929 ***Emeretta Draper Lang 1850–1890 Note: Samuel Draper is the brother of James Draper Sr. above *Mary M Draper unknown – May Memorial ID 118174917 === '''KNOX COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/30/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-234.jpg '''Danville''' ZIP Code https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-161.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/43162/saint-luke-cemetery Saint Luke Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-144|Jacob Draper Sr.]] 17 Jul 1770 – 12 Dec 1856 **[[Durbin-66|Mary J. Durbin Draper]] 19 Jul 1789 – 31 Aug 1862 ==='''MONTGOMERY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-509.jpg '''Dayton''' ZIP Codes 45377 - 45490 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/79/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-510.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/40161/calvary-cemetery? Calvary Cemetery]''' AKA Calvary Catholic Cemetery Dayton, Ohio *Alfred C Draper Sr.9 Jan 1894 – 18 Nov 1974 Memorial ID 76247538 *Alfred C Draper Jr. 27 Sep 1929 – 3 Jun 1994 Memorial ID 76247537 wife: **Bernadette Rose Heider 8 Nov 1933 – 31 Mar 2019 Memorial ID 198029617 *Edward Joseph Draper unknown – 15 Apr 1911Memorial ID 76247539 *Helen Draper 9 Jul 1895 – 26 May 1978 Memorial ID 76247540 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/17/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-512.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/40512/dayton-memorial-park-cemetery? Dayton Memorial Park Cemetery] AKA Memorial Park Cemetery Dayton, Ohio *Charles Draper1882 – 1950 Memorial ID 139459832 wife: **Helen C. “Ellen” Draper1883 – 1953 Memorial ID 139459833 *Robert S Draper 1845–1897 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 53146738 **Sarah J Hoover Draper 1856–1929 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 53146914 ***Harry Dean Draper 31 Aug 1877 – 10 Jun 1944 Memorial ID 84669642 wife: ****Unknown (tombstone has a place for her name, but her name is not added) ***Ethel Jane ''Draper'' Hampton 1890–1945 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 53522944 had 3 spouses ****'''NOTE''' Robert and Sarah Draper, and Ethel ''Draper'' Hampton are buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/41965/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Tipp City, Miami County, Ohio *[[Draper-3812|William Lafayette “Bill” Draper]] 25 Dec 1900 – 18 Feb 1977 wives: **[[Nunn-2511|Stella Marie ''Nunn'' (Draper) Tippett]] 1908–1991 (m. 1925) CENOTAPH" buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2515990/sandy-flats-cemetery Sandy Flats Cemetery] Sand Flat, Whitley County, Kentucky ***Dorothy Elizabeth Draper Age 1 1926–1927 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 157451240 buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2436371/middleton-cemetery Middleton Cemetery] Kildav, Kentucky ***[[Draper-3811|Clifford R. Draper]] 1928–2003 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 118703206 buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2515990/sandy-flats-cemetery Sandy Flats Cemetery] Sand Flat, Kentucky **Lillian “Lillie” Pace Draper unknown – 1990 Memorial ID 139459834 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-511.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/44163/woodland-cemetery-and-arboretum Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum]''' *Crystal M Draper unknown – 21 Aug 1916 Memorial ID 83934409 *Mae Etta Draper 6 Oct 1919 – 31 Jul 2002 Memorial ID 8529106 *Nora Draper unknown – 13 Oct 1910 Memorial ID 83934410 == Indiana 412 Burial Listings== Several Draper family Branches settled in central Indiana. Our Draper family were Baptists. John Harrison Draper, ggg grandfather of [[Draper-4171|Dave Draper]] was a Baptist minister. Some Drapers from the south part of Virginia, also settled near our Draper family. They descended from a Quaker family. And some Draper family from the upper east coast America were Mormans that passed through the area. They went on to found Draper, Utah. Because these Draper families were of different religious beliefs, they did not form close associations, if any. ==='''ALLEN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/22/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-462.jpg '''Fort Wayne''' ZIP Codes 46774 to 46845 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/35/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-466.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1616611/highland-park-cemetery Highland Park Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5610|Charles G Draper]] 3 May 1927 – 26 Jan 2008 wife **[[Patterson-23339|Barbara J Patterson Draper]] 25 May 1932 – 4 Jan 2017 *[[Draper-5612|Carl Lee Draper Sr.]] 6 Mar 1932 – 5 Aug 2004 wife: **[[O'Shaughnessey-13|Virginia Rose O'Shaughnessey Draper]] 12 Mar 1931 – 9 Aug 2000 son: ***Carl Lee Draper Jr. 7 May 1960 – 7 Oct 2019 Memorial ID 207162219 *Note: Charles G. Draper and Carl Lee Draper Sr. are brothers, sons of [[Draper-5609|John Preston Draper]] (1892 - 1961) buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86464/prairie-grove-cemetery Prairie Grove Cemetery] Fort Wayne, IN https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-463.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/156498/greenlawn-memorial-park Greenlawn Memorial Park]''' Fort Wayne, IN *Clarence Draper1882 – 1963 Memorial ID 90702965 wife: **Tillie W Draper1886 – 1976 Memorial ID 92806325 ***Howard C Draper 3 Oct 1916 – 23 Apr 2007 Memorial ID 19086913 wife: ****Irene C. ''Niemeyer'' Draper Memorial ID7 Oct 1920 – 13 Dec 2007 Memorial ID 23441611 ***Robert Edward Draper9 Nov 1924 – 9 Mar 2010 Memorial ID 49493068 ****Valma Allene ''Foerman'' Draper 17 Dec 1922 – 8 Sep 1979 Memorial ID 133329892 ***Thelma L.'' Draper'' Bechtol 1924–2020 husband ****Roland Harold Bechtol 1924–2005 *[[Draper-5608|Raymond Walter Draper Sr.]] 1928–2005 (m. 1949) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85700/lindenwood-cemetery Lindenwood Cemetery] 1st wife" **[[Polston-242|Shirley Ann Polston (Draper) Taflinger]] 13 May 1932 – 6 Feb 1980 : remarried: https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-464.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85700/lindenwood-cemetery Lindenwood Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5608|Raymond Walter DraperSr.]] 8 May 1928 – 19 Oct 2005 2nd wife: **[[Clayton-8246|Lila M. Clayton Draper]] 15 Mar 1937 – 18 Sep 2019 **First wife: [[Polston-242|Shirley Ann Polston Draper]]13 May 1932 – 6 Feb 1980 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/156498/greenlawn-memorial-park Greenlawn Memorial Park] Fort Wayne, IN *Ira G. Draper Jr. 1954 – 3 Nov 1977 Memorial ID 16403689 *Minnie Draper13 Nov 1883 – 8 Nov 1981 Memorial ID 105688366 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-465.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86464/prairie-grove-cemetery Prairie Grove Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5609|John Preston “Ted” Draper]] 18 Apr 1892 – 22 Jun 1961 Memorial ID 34011134 **[[Straub-943|Emma V Straub Draper]] 27 Mar 1898 – 30 Aug 1947 Memorial ID 34011129 ***[[Draper-5610|Charles G Draper]] 1927–2008 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1616611/highland-park-cemetery Highland Park Cemetery] Fort Wayne, IN ***Charlene Sue Draper 4 May 1952 – 5 May 1952 Memorial ID 34011117 Twin ***Darlene Sue Draper 4 May 1952 – 5 May 1952 Memorial ID 34011119 Twin ***[[Draper-5608|Raymond Walter Draper]] 1928–2005 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85700/lindenwood-cemetery Lindenwood Cemetery] Fort Wayne, IN ***[[Draper-5611|William Theodore Draper]] 1929–1981 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2129509/hively-cemetery Hively Cemetery] Thorncreek Township, Whitley County, IN ***[[Draper-5612|Carl Lee Draper Sr.]] 1932–2004 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1616611/highland-park-cemetery Highland Park Cemetery] Fort Wayne, IN ***Maxine Florence Weinkle Shaw 1925–2016 , (her dad was Merel Weinkle) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85700/lindenwood-cemetery Lindenwood Cemetery] Fort Wayne, IN ==='''DECATUR COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/66/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-236.jpg *[[Draper-4843|Elizabeth (Draper) Lough]] (1815 - 1848) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unkown, husband: **[[Lough-709|James Hamilton Lough]] (1814 - 1850) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unkown '''Waynesburg''' ZIP Code 47283 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-107.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2324448/asbury-cemetery Ashbury Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-4819|Thomas C Draper]] (1808 - 1891) wife ** [[Foster-29153|Fannie Ann (Foster) Draper]] (1806 - 1882) daughter ***[[Draper-4995|Margaret E. Draper]] (1839 - 1855) age 16-17 ==='''GRANT COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-610.jpg '''Converse''' ZIP Code 46919 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-611.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/158164/converse-cemetery Converse Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5969|Joseph P Draper]] 17 Nov 1876 – 3 Dec 1948 Memorial ID 64492590 **[[Stair-415|Orpha J ''Stair'' Draper]] 15 Feb 1877 – 11 Nov 1966 Memorial ID 64492850 ***[[Draper-5970|Charles Franklin “Charley” Draper]] 15 Sep 1900 – 28 May 1988 Memorial ID 64491259 3 wives: ****Genevieve Opal Newhouse Lowden 1904–1955 (m. 1922) Memorial ID 64494874 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85183/grant-memorial-park Grant Memorial Park] Marion, IN children: *****Wilma Jean ''Draper''' Rennaker 1923–2012 Memorial ID 96338686 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85183/grant-memorial-park Grant Memorial Park] Marion, IN *****Lawrence Draper 25 Jun 1925 – 17 Jan 1994 Memorial ID 64492642 *****Harriett Louise Draper 12 Apr 1927 – 28 Jan 1929 Age 1 Memorial ID 64491505 *****Mary Elizabeth ''Draper'' Meador 1928–1962 ******James Aubrey Meador 1921–1972 Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85183/grant-memorial-park Grant Memorial Park] Marion, IN ****Lottie Eunice ''Silvers'' Draper 31 Aug 1913 – 14 Feb 1972 Memorial ID 64492699 ****Minnie G ''Jackson'' Draper 23 Jul 1905 – 27 Sep 2006 Memorial ID 64492798 *Harvey R Draper 12 Apr 1880 – 12 Jan 1964 Memorial ID 64491682 **Elizabeth Hayes Draper 17 Sep 1882 – 13 Nov 1973 Memorial ID 64491413 ***Earl Samuel Draper 29 Dec 1906 – 24 Jan 1978 Memorial ID 64491370 ***Gladys Draper Thompson 1909–1960 Memorial ID 10741530 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85100/gardens-of-memory Gardens Of Memory Cemetery] Huntington, IN ***Paul Draper 1917–1997 Memorial ID 10592021 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85100/gardens-of-memory Gardens Of Memory Cemetery] Huntington, IN *John Draper 2 Jul 1849 – 27 Sep 1908 Memorial ID 64492492 **Lydia E Wright Draper1859 – 1895 Memorial ID 64492765 ***Addison Earl Draper 1879–1940 Memorial ID 9128486 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1617804/alliance-city-cemetery Alliance City Cemetery] Alliance, OH *Norma Jean Fisher Draper 13 Sep 1929 – 13 Feb 2006 Memorial ID 137489079 *Samuel Draper18 Sep 1819 – 5 Oct 1884 Memorial ID 64492910 **Penelope Howell Draper 25 Jul 1821 – 31 Jul 1863 Memorial ID 64492888 ***Sylvester W Draper7 Jul 1850 – 15 Mar 1916 Memorial ID 64492942 ****Asenath L Ballard Draper1850 – 1892 Memorial ID 64491142 *****Homer Glen Draper 1877–1956 Memorial ID 42700557 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/238163/elkhorn-cemetery Elkhorn Cemetery] Richmond, IN wife: ******Alice ''Hollar'' Draper 1878–1946 Memorial ID 42700523 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/238163/elkhorn-cemetery Elkhorn Cemetery] Richmond, IN *****Charlie E Draper 1883 – 1906 Memorial ID 64491292 *****Don H Draper 1885 – 1908 Memorial ID 64491314 '''Marion''' ZIP Code 46952 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/55/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-612.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-613.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85498/estates-of-serenity Estates of Serenity]''' AKA I.O.O.F. Cemetery , Marion IOOF Cemetery, Mississinewa Friends Cemetery, Located: Marion, IN ('''There are two pictures of this cemetery shown above''') '''NOTE''': Some Odd Fellow history: There are many Draper burials in Independent Order of Odd Fellows (I.O.O.F) cemeteries. This secret fraternity dates to 17th-century England. The first American lodge opened in Baltimore in 1819 as a charitable organization that worked to help families in need and buried their dead. At one time it was the largest fraternal society in the world. The "Odd Fellow" name origins are not known, but back in time it was considered "odd" to help people in dire straits and to hold secrete ceremonies. The Mandate of the Order is to: Visit the sick, Relieve the distressed, Educate the Orphan, and Bury the Dead. Rituals, ceremonies or induction of new members included the use of skulls or skeletons, which somewhat symbolized life death and beyond. Recent discoveries in old I.O.O.F. lodges had real skeletons in coffins in the closet! Some older lodges closed down and left the bodies hidden in the walls, which were discovered by construction workers! The really odd thing about the Odd Fellows is their abandoned ceremonial skeletons have popped up in costume shops and as decorations in bars. One made its way into a serial killer display at a New Orleans art gallery. Another made an appearance in the cult classic horror film “Dawn of the Dead.” Today, there are about 600,000 I.O.O.F. members in less than 30 countries world wide, helping their local communities in various ways like working with food banks to feed hungry people. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-614.jpg Tombstones that have 3 joined rings carved into the stone (which look like three links of chain) were Odd Fellow Members. Sometimes the letters F L T will be seen inside each ring, which stands for '''Friendship - Love - Truth''' and sometimes you will see a hand with a heart in the palm carved into the stone. '''[https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-apr-01-mn-45210-story.html The Odd Fellows Have Skeletons in their Closets--and their Walls and Attics]''' by Maria Glod April 1, 2001 WASHINGTON POST *Joshua Draper 13 Oct 1802 – 7 Jun 1876 Memorial ID 79995934 wife: **Huldah Pearson Draper 1 Mar 1809 – 8 Oct 1888 Memorial ID 43553330 ***Nathan P Draper 1834–1892 Memorial ID 7664589 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1964757/friends-cemetery Friends Cemetery] Le Grand, Iowa, wife: ****Mary Ann ''Addington'' Draper 1842–1911 Memorial ID 7664594 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1964757/friends-cemetery Friends Cemetery] Le Grand, Iowa ***Joshua Draper 1836–1912 Memorial ID 76738324 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/731728/albion-cemetery Albion Cemetery] Albion, Iowa, wife: ****Elizabeth Small Draper 1847–1931 Memorial ID 78862817 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/731728/albion-cemetery Albion Cemetery] Albion, Iowa ***Calvin W. Draper16 Nov 1838 – 10 Feb 1920 Memorial ID 82928126 ***Huldah ''Draper'' Tinkel 1844–1921 Memorial ID 14233641 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1403961/tinkel-cemetery Tinkel Cemetery] Van Buren, Iowa ****Franklin John Draper 20 May 1866 – 28 Feb 1919 Memorial ID 109496371, wife: *****Myrtle D ''Crasher'' (Draper) Ball 1874–1929 Memorial ID 106246186 ******Marie Blanche Draper Wyckoff 1892–1973 Memorial ID 105471994 ******Mervin W Draper 25 Dec 1898 – 16 Aug 1939 Memorial ID 109496591, wife: *******Garnette S Draper 1896–1972 Memorial ID 45819100 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640475/shafter-memorial-park Shafter Memorial Park] Shafter, California ***Josiah “Si” Draper 4 Sep 1848 – 8 Apr 1916 Memorial ID 88482431 ****Pollyann “Pollie” Malott Draper2 Jul 1853 – 25 Jul 1928 Memorial ID 109496650 *****Elnora ''Draper'' Miller 1874–1936 Memorial ID: 88951100, husband: ******John J. Miller 1869–1961 Memorial ID: 88951165 *******Two infant deaths: Infant and Ancil J. Miller listed here. *[[Draper-5964|David Palmer Draper]] 1 Aug 1840 – 25 May 1914 Memorial ID 88728848 **[[Lawson-13156|Elizabeth ''Lawson'' Draper]] 17 Oct 1844 – 12 Feb 1938 Memorial ID 88728766 ***[[Draper-5965|John Franklin Draper]] 29 Jul 1867 – 6 Oct 1936 Memorial ID 109496511 ****[[Coffel-64|Viola May Coffel Draper]] 1874–1930 (m. 1889) Memorial ID 109496745 children: *****[[Draper-5966|Cynthia E. ''Draper'' Hale]] 1890–1983 Memorial ID 12681930 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/158164/converse-cemetery Converse Cemetery] Converse, IN *****[[Draper-5967|Leona P. Draper Mann]] 1897–1961 Memorial ID 102253961 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85045/fountain-park-cemetery Fountain Park Cemetery] Winchester, IN ****[[Cook-46841|Anna Belle Cook Draper]] 1877–1931 (m. 1923) Memorial ID 19410144 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86867/shiloh-cemetery Shiloh Cemetery] Upland, IN ***[[Draper-5968|Ida May Draper Smith]] 1872–1940 Memorial ID 121242998 husband: ****[[Smith-298836|Michael Smith]] 1875–1950 Memorial ID 121243921 children: *****[[Smith-298838|Clarence E Smith]] 1898–1966 Memorial ID 121241069 *****[[Smith-298839|Leonard Wilson Smith]] 1901–1958 Memorial ID 121243498 *Erastus John Draper27 Sep 1872 – 10 Mar 1958 Memorial ID 109496341 **Clara Agnes O'Neil Draper 15 Aug 1875 – 9 Feb 1937 Memorial ID 109496275 *Gerard Draper26 Nov 1834 – 9 Aug 1863 Memorial ID 82928164 **Susannah L ''Nelson'' (Draper) Boxell 1835–1915 (m. 1858) Memorial ID 106053526 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1747300/van-buren-cemetery Van Buren Cemetery] Van Buren, IN *John Franklin Draper 18 Nov 1872 – 2 Apr 1935 Memorial ID 109496461 **Ida Jane Burson Draper 29 Dec 1880 – 13 Mar 1954 Memorial ID 109149492 ***Ralph Cecil Draper 19 Mar 1916 – 3 Nov 1964 Memorial ID 51796564 ***Raymond Clifford Draper 6 Oct 1907 – 7 May 1971 Memorial ID 109496683 ***Verl Allen Draper 27 Sep 1909 – 16 May 1974 Memorial ID 109496713 ***Iona E. ''Draper'' Hemke 1911–2003 Memorial ID 58705433 ***Marjorie Lela ''Draper'' Minniear 1920–2007 Memorial ID 102164563 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87413/willow-grove-cemetery Willow Grove Cemetery] Fountain City, IN *John Draper1 Jul 1801 – 26 Dec 1866 Memorial ID 82928178 *John Elmer Draper 26 Jan 1930 – 6 Nov 1974 Memorial ID 109496435 *Cassandra “Cassie” Selfridge Draper 29 Mar 1851 – 30 Sep 1928 Memorial ID 79995893 *Charlotte Modlin Draper 1838 – unknown Memorial ID 83081785 *Noah Draper28 Sep 1837 – 20 May 1893 Memorial ID 82928184 *Sarah E. Draper25 Oct 1833 – 6 May 1855 Memorial ID82928198 ==='''HUNTINGTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ea/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-237.jpg '''Huntington''' ZIP Code 46750 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/56/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-80.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85100/gardens-of-memory Gardens of Memory]''' AKA: Gardens of Memory Cemetery, Gardens of Memory- Marion Location 11201 S Marion Road 35 (Indiana State Highway 9) Huntington, Huntington County, Indiana (Hitting brick walls on these Draper listings: research needed) *Gladys (Draper) Thompson (1909 - 1960) *Barbara J Pattison Draper 26 Feb 1928 – 8 Sep 2012 *Corwin Alfred “Corky” Draper 15 Aug 1920 – 17 Dec 2014 *Daisy Louise Mullenix Draper 24 Feb 1915 – 8 Jul 1982 *David R. Draper 16 Jun 1970 – 14 Jan 1990 *Donald W. Draper 3 Jan 1912 – 8 May 1966 *Gwendolene Bowers Draper 8 Aug 1916 – 2 May 1990 *Margaret K Weiford Draper30 Dec 1924 – 11 Oct 2020 *Paul Draper 16 Jul 1917 – 9 Apr 1997 *William Ervin “Bill” Draper 23 Oct 1927 – 9 Jan 2016 *Barbara J Pattison Draper 26 Feb 1928 – 8 Sep 2012 *Corwin Alfred “Corky” Draper 15 Aug 1920 – 17 Dec 2014 *Daisy Louise Mullenix Draper 24 Feb 1915 – 8 Jul 1982 *David R. Draper 16 Jun 1970 – 14 Jan 1990 *Donald W. Draper 3 Jan 1912 – 8 May 1966 *Gwendolene Bowers Draper 8 Aug 1916 – 2 May 1990 *Margaret K Weiford Draper 30 Dec 1924 – 11 Oct 2020 *Paul Draper 16 Jul 1917 – 9 Apr 1997 *William Ervin “Bill” Draper 23 Oct 1927 – 9 Jan 2016 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/13/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-460.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/265132/lancaster-cemetery Lancaster Cemetery]''' Lancaster, IN *Jesse B. Draper 1880 – 1940 Memorial ID 28969166 wife: **Ethel Draper 1881 – 1964 Memorial ID 28969149 ***Lucille Helen Draper Ellet 1902–1974 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86385/pilgrims-rest-cemetery Pilgrims Rest Cemetery] ***Dorothy P Draper Goshorn 1905–1988 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/156498/greenlawn-memorial-park Greenlawn Memorial Park] Ft Wayne, IN ***Donald W. Draper 1912–1966 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85100/gardens-of-memory Gardens of Memory] Listed above https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-461.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86385/pilgrims-rest-cemetery Pilgrims Rest Cemetery]''' Huntington, IN *Joseph Alfred Draper 17 Jan 1877 – 11 Nov 1954 Memorial ID 46986107 **Edith C. Dinius Draper23 Apr 1880 – 31 Jan 1966 Memorial ID 117140002 *Jesse B. Draper 1880 – 1940 Memorial ID 28969166 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/265132/lancaster-cemetery Lancaster Cemetery]''' Lancaster, IN **Lucille Helen ''Draper'' Ellet 23 Sep 1902 – 21 Oct 1974 Memorial ID 31642403 husband ***George Ervin Ellet 2 Feb 1900 – 14 Nov 1974 Memorial ID 31642473 ==='''JOHNSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/00/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-406.jpg '''Franklin''' ZIP Code 46131 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/71/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-407.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85213/greenlawn-cemetery? Greenlawn Cemetery]''' *Nancy Vawter Draper 17 Dec 1856 – 13 Jul 1943 Memorial ID 154606957 *Winfield S Draper 19 Mar 1853 – 3 Feb 1913 Memorial ID 155180511 '''Greenwood''' ZIP Code 46143 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-404.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85221/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery]''' Located: Greenwood, Johnson County, IN *Addie G Draper1867 – 1941 Memorial ID 198171509 *Anna G Edmanson Draper Feb 1880 – 1908 Memorial ID 151423786 *Arnel E. Draper 22 Sep 1885 – 30 Jul 1909 Memorial ID 173390707 *Bertha D Draper 1884 – 1980 Memorial ID 199048981 *George W Draper 1857 – 1929 Memorial ID 199108690 *Infant Draper 1872 – 1872 Memorial ID 151567241 *John H Draper 1861 – 1913 Memorial ID 198171540 *John William Draper 10 Dec 1861 – 1940 Memorial ID 116782500 *Loulie “Lula” Finney Draper 25 Jul 1859 – 27 Mar 1921 Memorial ID 151423699 *Mary L “Mollie” Justice Draper Aug 1867 – 20 Jan 1941 Memorial ID 116782467 *Oliver Harbert Draper15 Mar 1828 – 15 Oct 1911 Memorial ID 47633740 *Oscar G Draper 14 May 1872 – 8 Jun 1902 Memorial ID 151423762 *Phebe H. Harbert Draper 26 Sep 1830 – 28 Jan 1915 Memorial ID 47633851 *Shirley Jean Kellams Draper 11 Mar 1935 – 6 Jul 2016 Memorial ID 166664368 *Thomas Jefferson Draper 24 Mar 1859 – 6 Oct 1918 Memorial ID 151423667 '''New Whiteland''' ZIP Code 46184 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/52/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-405.jpg *'''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85135/glade-cemetery? Glade Cemetery]''' *Benjamin J Draper 2 Jul 1818 – 20 Jan 1912 Memorial ID 46086796 *Elizabeth Wheelen Draper 21 Dec 1821 – 16 Aug 1887 Memorial ID 46086797 *Emma E Draper Memorial ID 46086771 *Etna P Draper 1 Feb 1876 – 22 Jul 1876 Memorial ID 46086772 *Infant Female Draper 8 Jan 1887 – 18 Apr 1887 Memorial ID 174885040 *Thomas M. Draper 1844 – 1917 Memorial ID 183622658 ==='''KOSCIUSKO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-625.jpg '''Warsaw''' ZIP Code 46580 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-626.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86213/oakwood-cemetery? Oakwood Cemetery]''' Located: Warsaw, Kosciusko County, IN *Paul E Draper 22 Feb 1914 – 27 Sep 2005 Memorial ID 167063936 **Wilma Pike Draper 9 Jun 1915 – 22 Dec 2014 Memorial ID 140454761 *Samuel Bradford Draper 5 Jul 1863 – 23 Oct 1954 Memorial ID 167555793 **Louise H Kirchner Draper 30 Jan 1885 – 14 Jan 1974 Memorial ID 167555770 ==='''LAKE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/11/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-615.jpg '''Gary''' ZIP Code 46407 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-616.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86566/ridgelawn-cemetery? Ridgelawn Cemetery]''' Located: Gary, Lake County, Indiana, USA *Russell J. Draper 1868–1951 Memorial ID 116035007 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/65316/mount-adnah-cemetery Mount Adnah Cemetery] Fulton, New York **Emily Ena Pearman Draper 1867–1919 Memorial ID 116034712 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/65316/mount-adnah-cemetery Mount Adnah Cemetery] Fulton, New York, children: ***Alfred P. Draper 1891 – 1955 Memorial ID 136041430 ***Floyd Stanley Draper 1893–1980 Memorial ID 136041458 wife: *****Winnie Esther Courtney Draper 1893 – 1976 Memorial ID 136041505 *Clarence A Draper 1883 – 1945 Memorial ID 161741115 wife: **Laura S Draper 1885 – 1975 Memorial ID 161741118 son: ***Clarence A Draper Jr. 1906 – 1983 Memorial ID 161741116 ****Dorothea E. Koepke Draper 14 May 1909 – 11 Aug 2009 Memorial ID 111055720 *Frank Andrew Draper 1914 – 1926 Age 11-12 Memorial ID 161741117 *Leontine P, Draper 1892 – 1986 Memorial ID 136041370 *Porter R. Draper 1927 – 1996 Memorial ID 136041323 Picture of cemetery here '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86191/oak-hill-cemetery Oak Hill Cemetery]''' AKA Gary Oak Hill Cemetery, Located Gary, IN *James Davis Draper1904 – 20 Aug 1995 Memorial ID 133429043 **Katie B Draper 1910 – 6 May 1985 Memorial ID 133428994 *Mertis Draper 5 Dec 1916 – 21 Sep 2003 Memorial ID 87995889 *Sammie Lee Draper 5 Sep 1920 – 12 May 1999 Memorial ID 19609260 **Note, Sammie is also listed as buried in Fern Oaks Cemetery (below) '''Griffith''' ZIP Code 46319 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/78/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-617.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84998/fern-oaks-cemetery? Fern Oaks Cemetery]''' Located: Griffith, IN *William Draper '''CENOTAPH unknown information at this time, **Sula ''Studders'' Draper '''CENOTAPH unknown information at this time, Son: (born in Alabama) ***Fennell “Big Nell” Draper 21 Nov 1917 – 20 Dec 2006 Memorial ID 17140248 wife ****Virgie J. Berry Draper 18 Mar 1922 – 25 Sep 1982 Memorial ID 196040103 *****Don "Duck" Draper a.1948 – 24 Aug 2003 Memorial ID 218892583 *Sammie L Draper 5 Sep 1920 – 12 May 1999 Memorial ID 243071414 **Verdine Draper unknown – 25 Dec 2012 Memorial ID 220530575 ***Note, Sammie is also listed as buried in Oak Hill Cemetery (Above) *Annabelle Gant Draper 7 Dec 1923 – 2 Jul 1971 Memorial ID 19949601 *Collette Draper 26 Dec 1950 – 31 Jan 1951 Memorial ID 242389261 '''Merrillville''' ZIP Code https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/90/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-618.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84532/calumet-park-cemetery? Calumet Park Cemetery] Located: Merrillville, IN *Floyd Stanley Draper 1893–1980 Memorial ID 136041458 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86566/ridgelawn-cemetery] Ridgelawn Cemetery Gary, IN **Winnie Esther Courtney Draper 1893 – 1976 Memorial ID 136041505 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86566/ridgelawn-cemetery] Ridgelawn Cemetery Gary, IN ***John Marshall Draper 29 Jan 1923 – 6 Dec 1968 Memorial ID 190388304 ****Janet Edna ''Adank'' (Draper) Nutt 1924–1996 (m. 1946) *****Cynthia Jo Draper 20 Sep 1949 – 15 Oct 1949 Age 1 month Memorial ID 190388303 *****Jeffrey Alan “Jeff” Draper 16 Mar 1951 – 13 Feb 2020 Memorial ID 207110084 ****** Nancy ''Dunklau'' Draper (Living) ==='''MADISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-238.jpg '''Alexandria''' ZIP Code 46001 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-106.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86335/park-view-cemetery Park View Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5250|Clarice Vernon “Vernon” Draper Sr.]] 24 Apr 1929 – 11 Oct 2005 **[[Elbert-44|Alice Corrine “Alice” Elbert Draper]] 10 Mar 1932 – 26 Mar 2007 *[[Draper-5249|Zoe Irene ''Draper'' Wilson]] 1896–1978 husband: **[[Willston-1|Orville Willston or Willetts Wilson]] 1898–1971 *[[Draper-5248|John Wesley Draper]] 18 Jun 1869 – 23 Sep 1946 '''Not Family''' **[[Fuller-17976|Minnie Fuller Draper]] 19 Jan 1870 – 10 Jan 1942 '''Not Family''' *** descend from Thomas Draper Sr. 1717–1792 Isle of Wight, Virginia, B.C. *Peter Draper 8 Aug 1867 – 2 Aug 1943 '''Not Family''' **Marian Elizabeth Thurston Draper22 Jan 1869 – 25 Sep 1941 '''Not Family''' *** descend from Thomas Draper Sr. 1717–1792 Isle of Wight, Virginia, B.C. ==='''MARION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-239.jpg '''Indianapolis''' Events: *[[Draper-4654|Elizabenh C. Draper]] marriage to [[Means-2416|William Means]] 1830 (brother of Celia and Nancy ) *[[Clark-3252|Ruth Clark Draper]] dies about 1831 (Burial?) (Ira, William and Elizabeth's mother) *[[Draper-173|John Harrison Draper]] 2nd marriage to Catherine Eddlemore about 1832 *[[Draper-4268|William Draper]] marriage to [[Means-2303|Nancy Means]] 1833 * [[Draper-4254|Ira Dillingham Draper]] marriage to [[Means-2299|Celia Means]] 1837 '''Indianapolis''' ZIP Codes 46077 - 46236 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-703.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84781/crown-hill-cemetery? Crown Hill Cemetery] is the 3rd largest cemetery in the United Sates '''FAMOUS GRAVES''' *Erwin George “Cannon Ball” Baker Won the 1st Indianapolis 500 *John Dillinger “Public Enemy No. 1" one of the most feared gangsters of the 20th century *President Benjamin Harrison The 23rd president of the United States *Colonel Eli Lilly Founder of Eli Lilly and Company, largest pharmaceutical corporation *James Whitcomb Riley wrote: Little Orphant Annie” and “The Raggedy Man” *James Baskett Actor who played Uncle Remus in Disney's "Song of the South" *Howard Scott Gams Sudoku puzzle game creator *'''[https://crownhillhf.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/CrownHillNotables_lastname-2022.pdf All Notable People in Crown Hill Cemetery]''' *Mahlon Brown Draper 5 Apr 1848 – 29 Jun 1896 Memorial ID 45883841 **Adella Beatrix “Ada” Jones Draper 10 Jul 1854 – 29 Jan 1934 Memorial ID 45883821 ***Roy B Draper 12 Nov 1880 – 12 Nov 1908 Memorial ID 45883856 *Elijah Draper 1820–1894 Memorial ID 63973616 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84379/bond-cemetery Bond Cemetery] Peru, IN **Emily Jane Arrick Draper 1823–1896 Memorial ID 63973649 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84379/bond-cemetery Bond Cemetery] Peru, IN ***James Benson Draper 1859–1923 Memorial ID 63034945 '''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn I.O.O.F. Cemetery] Amboy, IN ****Mary Rozzella Knight Draper 1862–1944 Memorial ID 63034963 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn I.O.O.F. Cemetery] Amboy, IN *****Furr Price Draper 1883–1950 Memorial ID 63034930 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn I.O.O.F. Cemetery] Amboy, IN ******Dolia E Hadley Draper 1888–1932 (m. 1907) Memorial ID 63034909 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn I.O.O.F. Cemetery] Amboy, IN *******Dorwin Price Draper 1908–1908 Memorial ID 63034921 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn I.O.O.F. Cemetery] Amboy, IN ******Donal Helton Draper8 Sep 1909 – 1 Sep 1978 Memorial ID 45883831 *******Geneva Edith Powell Draper 23 Oct 1909 – 27 Jan 1997 Memorial ID 45883835 ******James Oliver Draper 1911–1915 Memorial ID 63034937 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn I.O.O.F. Cemetery] Amboy, IN ******Kenneth H Draper 1912–1998 Memorial ID 70585958 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87295/washington-park-east-cemetery Washington Park East Cemetery] Indianapolis, IN *William Marion Draper 24 Jan 1866 – May 1937 Memorial ID 45883847 **Fannie E. Martinie Draper 30 Oct 1875 – 12 Dec 1949 Memorial ID 45883833 *Thomas Clifford Draper31 May 1882 – 28 Jun 1921 Memorial ID 45883845 **Louise M. Dawson Draper 4 Nov 1873 – 25 Apr 1945 Memorial ID 45883839 *Nancy Anna Stoops Draper Ringer 3 Jan 1843 – 26 Mar 1918 Memorial ID 46002748 *Thomas Cornelius Draper 1836–1898 (m. 1862) Memorial ID 78920317 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/43543/spring-grove-cemetery Spring Grove Cemetery] Cincinnati, OH *Morris Draper unknown – 1909Memorial ID 45883843 *Randle Draper 1916 – 8 Apr 2016 Memorial ID 161039495 *Nancy Anna Stoops Draper Ringer 3 Jan 1843 – 26 Mar 1918 Memorial ID 46002748 *David Scott Draper 8 Feb 1961 – 13 Apr 1983 Memorial ID 31147345 *Dena Francis Parham Draper 29 Mar 1917 – 3 Jul 1998 Memorial ID 45883829 *Horace Draper unknown – 1893 Memorial ID 45883837 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/11/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-704.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85026/floral-park-cemetery? Floral Park Cemetery] Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, USA *Wallace Tracy Draper 17 Apr 1911 – 15 Jan 1994 Memorial ID 128663448 **Dorothy Alberta Reuter Draper 6 Nov 1911 – 27 May 1999 Memorial ID 128663447 *Nellie May Draper 1882 – 1926 Memorial ID 168819673 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-705.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1594404/holy-cross-and-saint-joseph-cemetery? Holy Cross Cemetery] *Anna Draper unknown – 1925 Memorial ID 128809221 *Anna M Draper 1885 – 1921 Memorial ID 114648346 *Elizabeth E. Aiken Draper 17 Apr 1840 – 25 Nov 1926 Memorial ID 138601083 *Leon Harold Draper 1 Sep 1886 – 1951 Memorial ID 114648507 **Julia Ann McMahon Draper 30 Oct 1885 – 27 Apr 1921 Memorial ID 131217924 ***Richard Francis Draper 1914–2009 Memorial ID 53954217 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80987/gate-of-heaven-cemetery Gate of Heaven Cemetery] Silver Spring, Maryland ****Bertha M Minoux Draper 1912–2002 Memorial ID 149433187 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80987/gate-of-heaven-cemetery Gate of Heaven Cemetery] Silver Spring, Maryland *William Draper 1866 – 1926 Memorial ID 185801535 **Elizabeth E. Aiken Draper 17 Apr 1840 – 25 Nov 1926 Memorial ID 138601083 *Martin Francis Draper Nov 1859 – 1952 Memorial ID 114649042 *Mary Josephine Murphy Draper 2 Jul 1862 – 13 May 1919 Memorial ID 114648649 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-706.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86120/new-crown-cemetery-and-mausoleum? New Crown Cemetery]''' *Cecilyia A. Draper unknown – 24 May 2018 Memorial ID 190352091 *Haywood Draper 20 Jun 1872 – 30 Nov 1950 Memorial ID 161346528 *James Edward Draper 21 Mar 1933 – 26 Jan 1982 Memorial ID 233213263 *Mary Cole Draper 17 Mar 1934 – 9 Mar 2001 Memorial ID 238982200 *Mary Elizabeth Davis Draper 28 Nov 1911 – 15 Dec 1996 Memorial ID 245303146 *Virginia M. Draper unknown – 21 Apr 2018 Memorial ID 189137193 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-707.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85894/memorial-park-cemetery? Memorial Park Cemetery]''' *Jack Edward Draper 24 Apr 1918 – 26 Apr 1918 Memorial ID 96358121 *Nannie Francis Hansel Draper1 Nov 1899 – 5 May 1927 Memorial ID 96405599 **Note: These share a Gravestone *William E Draper 1870 – 1934 Memorial ID 89944467 *Mary Belle Draper 28 Sep 1878 – 1 Feb 1923 Memorial ID 89944554 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/6c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-708.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87295/washington-park-east-cemetery? Washington Park East Cemetery]''' *Furr Price Draper 1883–1950 Memorial ID 63034930 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86329/park-lawn-cemetery Park Lawn Cemetery] Amboy, Indiana **Kenneth H Draper 14 Jun 1912 – 24 Jun 1998 Memorial ID 70585958 ***Florence Jeanette Graham Draper 5 Jun 1913 – 8 Jan 1994 Memorial ID 70585959 ****Thomas Orville Draper 1941–2015 Memorial ID 156138985 *Grace E Draper 1894 – 1975 Memorial ID 74346360 buried with her sister *Dorothy I. Draper Rybolt *Note This might work visa versa as Grace was a Rybolt then married a Draper (research needed) *Margaret Vivian Daniels Draper 17 Aug 1908 – 5 Dec 1951 Memorial ID 62987413 *Paul F Draper 1905 – 1948 Memorial ID 64489055 *Arnold Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 129339310 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/448679/west-ridge-park-cemetery? West Ridge Park Cemetery]''' *Jaymes Draper 13 Jul 1985 – 12 Aug 2004 Memorial ID 128874066 *Martha P. ''Draper'' James 1928 – 3 Feb 2015 Memorial ID142306705 ==='''NOBLE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-623.jpg '''Ligonier''' ZIP Code 46767 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-624.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86199/oak-park-cemetery? Oak Park Cemetery]''' AKA Ligonier Cemetery, Located: Ligonier, IN *Benjamin Franklin Draper 13 Apr 1842 – 15 Feb 1891 Memorial ID 42059215 **Mary Ella ''Angevine'' Draper 1850–1873 Memorial ID 44555557 ***John Wilbur “Jack” Draper 10 Mar 1871 – 30 Sep 1938 Memorial ID 42059219 wife: ****Harriet Blanche “Blanche” Dunning Draper 5 Sep 1873 - 1965 Memorial ID 42059216 **Abbie Prince Bucknam Draper17 Apr 1846 – 5 Dec 1914 (m. 1875) Memorial ID 42059214 ***Charles Thompson Draper 25 Apr 1884 – 5 May 1929 Memorial ID 42059217 ***Frank Lincoln Draper 22 Jul 1876 – 23 Aug 1935 Memorial ID 42059218 ==='''St. JOSEPH COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-619.jpg '''Indian Village''' ZIP Code https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/23/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-621.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87062/stuckey-cemetery? Stuckey Cemetery]''' AKA Tutt Cemetery Located: Indian Village, St. Joseph County, IN *Gideon Draper 1790 – 8 Nov 1866 Memorial ID 91300657 **Mary “Polly” Chandler Draper1787 – 17 Aug 1852 Memorial ID 91300711 ***Hannah ''Draper'' Bulla 1810–1891 Memorial ID 173088426 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640712/city-cemetery City Cemetery] South Bend, IN *Lydia Draper 1825 – 12 May 1885 Memorial ID 91300788 *Betsy Draper 26 Oct 1819 – 28 May 1896 Memorial ID 235678279 *Ebenezer Draper 1823 – 3 Mar 1853 Memorial ID 91300113 '''Oceola''' ZIP Code 46561 46637 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-620.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84610/chapel-hill-memorial-gardens Chapel Hill Memorial Gardens] Located: Osceola, IN *[[Draper-5823|Randal C. Draper]] 8 Sep 1907 – 5 Feb 1994 Memorial ID 90905947 **[[Brothers-1054|Sophia Lorene Brothers Draper]]12 Jun 1909 – 26 Sep 1997 Memorial ID 90905914 ***[[Draper-5822|Eleanor R. Draper Gindelberger]] 1933–2015 Memorial ID 145753161 ****[[Gindelberger-1|Edward B. Gindelberger]] 1931–2017 Memorial ID 185890859 '''South Bend''' ZIP Code 46614 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/16/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1.gif '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86961/southlawn-cemetery? Southlawn Cemetery]''' Located: AKA Palmer Prairie Cemetery, South Bend, IN USA *Rex R Draper 21 Nov 1913 – 29 Dec 1985 Memorial ID 36578570 **Bernice I. McPherson Draper 10 Mar 1916 – 2 Dec 2009 Memorial ID 45084855 ***Reginald F Draper 11 Dec 1946 – 29 Aug 1970 Memorial ID 36578569 *Kris Ann Draper24 Jun 1966 – 18 Nov 1970 Age 4 Memorial ID 36578649 *Patricia Ann ''Pate'' Draper 14 Apr 1938 – 24 Sep 2017 Memorial ID 183791403 ==='''SULLIVAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/86/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-240.jpg '''Jackson Hill''' ZIP Code 77007 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ec/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-160.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/179926/palmers-prairie-cemetery Palmers Prairie Cemetery]''' Jackson Hill, Sullivan County, Indiana, USA *[[Draper-4232|Isaac R Draper]] 1808 – 1872 **[[Bussenburg-1|Elizabeth Bussenberg Draper]] 1801 – 1884 Family Search: LRCK-QD2 ***[[Draper-5518|Samuel H. Draper]] Aug 1840 – 12 Jun 1911 Son of Isaac R Draper, wives: ****[[Miller-99918|Euphemia (Miller) Draper]] 1839 - 1880) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ****[[Dudley-6119|Sarah Elizabeth (Dudley) Draper]] 1847 - 1909 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-5520|Meshack Draper]] 1820-1847 son of Isaac '''CENOTAPH''' Died in Coahuila, Mexico, burial unknown, believed killed in the Mexican-American War, the toll exceeded 13,283 deaths. '''Sullivan''' ZIP Code 47882 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-356.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84599/center-ridge-cemetery Center Ridge Cemetery] Located: 704 W Johnson Street, Sullivan, IN *[[Draper-4497|John Busenberg Draper]] 5 Oct 1822 – 13 Jan 1907 wives: **[[Draper-4460|Elizabeth Voorhees Draper]] 21 Apr 1824 – 21 Apr 1857 (1st wife) **[[Beard-6264|Elizabeth Beard Draper]] 9 Jun 1837 – 9 Sep 1881 (2nd wife) **[[Boone-6263|Elizabeth S Boone Draper]] 16 Oct 1830 – 19 Dec 1887 (3rd wife) ***1st husband was her 1st cousin Christopher Boone, buried here with their 3 children **[[Waddell-3235|Amelda Maude Waddell Draper]] (1856–1929) '''CENOTAPH''' (4th wife) burial in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85504/carlisle-odd-fellows-cemetery Carlisle Odd Fellows Cemetery] Carlisle, IN John Bussenberg Draper's brother: *[[Draper-5519|James (Helwick or Helmick) Draper]] 1 Nov 1873 – 18 Oct 1939 wife: **[[McCammon-580|Hallie L. McCammon Draper]] 10 Jul 1879 – 13 Apr 1962 Memorial ID 18512800 ***No children listed in FAG *Alexander E. “Lex” Draper 7 Aug 1882 – 25 Apr 1966 Memorial ID 48662200 wife: ***Verna Viola Brashier Draper 28 Jun 1891 – 1941 Memorial ID 48662052 daughter ****Elizabeth Jane Draper 18 Nov 1922 – 24 Jul 1924 Memorial ID 48662253 ****Louise Blanche Draper Robbins 1924–2003 Memorial ID 48663917 *William Murphy “Murph” Draper 8 Feb 1861 – 29 Sep 1942 Memorial ID 52944878 wife: **Isabelle Plunkett Draper 2 Mar 1861 – 30 Aug 1902 (m. 1880) Memorial ID 52944877 ***son: Charles Raymond Draper 1894 – 1914 Memorial ID 52944875 *Solomon Draper 8 Apr 1828 – 13 Apr 1904 Memorial ID 52950931 **Amy Ann Oaks Draper 20 Jan 1836 – 5 Oct 1914Memorial ID 52950920 ***Isaac Samuel Draper 1864–1940 Memorial ID 52944876 ***Laura Draper Bedwell 1875–1909 Memorial ID 96217311 husband: ****John Thomas Bedwell 1884–1956 (m. 1909 *Squire M Draper unknown – 18 May 1899 Memorial ID 52950932 **Sarah J Draper unknown – 17 Jun 1899 Memorial ID 52950930 son: ***Charlton Draper unknown – 2 Mar 1879 Memorial ID 52950921 ***Ralph E Draper unknown – 26 Jul 1888 Memorial ID 52950929 ***Guy O Draper unknown – 19 Sep 1883 Memorial ID 52950927 ***Goldy Draper Daughter Nov. 30 1876 – 4 Dec 1876 Memorial ID 52950926 ***Glenn Draper March 19,1878– 21 Jun 1878 Daughter of SM & SJ Age 4 Months and 2 days Memorial ID52950925 *Sarah E. Dudley Peters Draper 27 Nov 1847 – 22 Mar 1909 Memorial ID 40409401 ==='''WABASH COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-605.jpg '''La Fontaine''' ZIP Code 46940 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/67/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-609.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1704350/la-fontaine-ioof-cemetery? La Fontaine 100F Cemetery]''' *Fernando Good Draper 22 Jun 1877 – 24 May 1972 Memorial ID 21976150 **Sarah Bessie ''Stambaugh'' Draper 22 Aug 1892 – 16 Aug 1970 Memorial ID 21976140 '''Roann''' ZIP Code 46974 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-608.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85493/roann-community-cemetery Roann Community Cemetery]''' *Eleanor “Ellie” Van Buskirk Draper 12 Oct 1938 – 21 Mar 2021 Memorial ID 224748479 *Paul Draper Memorial ID21 Mar 1910 – 28 Dec 1987 Memorial ID 95690494 wife **Margaret Alice McElwee Draper 11 Apr 1914 – 19 Oct 2000 Memorial ID 70606657 ***Ruth Irene Draper Early 1933–2019 ***James Lamoine Draper 11 Oct 1934 – 21 Nov 2014 Memorial ID 139153137 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85889/memorial-lawns-cemetery? Memorial Lawns Cemetery] ***Richard Paul Draper 23 Jul 1938 – 2 Jan 2009 Memorial ID 33242412 ****wife not mentioned in Obituary, 3 children living '''Wabash''' ZIP Code 46992 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/72/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-607.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85889/memorial-lawns-cemetery? Memorial Lawns Cemetery]''' *Paul Draper 1910–1987 Memorial ID 95690494 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85493/roann-community-cemetery Roannn Community Cemetery] Roann, IN wife: **Margaret Alice McElwee Draper 1914–2000 (m. 1932) Memorial ID 70606657 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85493/roann-community-cemetery Roannn Community Cemetery] Roann, IN ***James Lamoine Draper 11 Oct 1934 – 21 Nov 2014 Memorial ID 139153137 ****Cheri Anne Crews Draper 14 Jun 1935 – 14 May 2008 Memorial ID 81883523 *Louis Wayne Draper 2 Apr 1928 – 5 Feb 2020 Memorial ID 206841997 wife: **Betty "Joann" Bender in Wabash on February 13, 1951 (living???) *Wayne Draper1928 – unknown Memorial ID 176310819 *Joann Draper 1932 – unknown Memorial ID 176310801 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-606.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85946/mississinewa-memorial-cemetery? Mississinewa Memorial Cemetery]''' AKA Bank Cemetery , Captain Dixon Cemetery , Chester E Troyer Cemetery , Mount Vernon Cemetery , Ogan Cemetery , Pleasant Cemetery , Sugar Grove Cemetery , Vernon Cemetery , Waucoon Cemetery *Calvert Draper 1871 – 1953 Memorial ID 35753783 wife: **Josephine ''Oppy'' Draper 1867 – 1948 Memorial ID 35753869 *Elijah Draper 14 Sep 1838 – 23 Dec 1932 Memorial ID 35753817 wives: **Matilda L Pavey Draper24 Sep 1839 – 24 May 1879 Memorial ID 35753925 ***William Allen Draper 16 May 1860 – 8 Jul 1945 Memorial ID 35753998 ****Sarah Ann Hahn Draper 2 Mar 1856 – 10 Jan 1929 Memorial ID 35753954 ***Orlando Draper 1862 - 1943 Memorial ID 35753945 wife: ****Cora Alice ''Eckelberger'' Draper 1870–1927 daughter: *****Lura M ''Draper'' Morris 1891–1967 Memorial ID 65178294 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/158164/converse-cemetery Converse Cemetery] Converse, IN ******Arthur L Morris 1883–1963 Memorial ID 65178057 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/158164/converse-cemetery Converse Cemetery] ***[[Draper-5809|Viola Ida ''Draper'' Stout]] 1869–1941 Memorial ID 39725290 husband: ****[[Stout-7438|Philip Sheridan Stout]] 1866–1931 Memorial ID 39725269 *****Clifford R Stout 1889–1963 *****Gladys ''Stout'' Resler 1890–1971 ***Rosa A ''Draper'' Hawkins 1871–1954 Memorial ID 38926293 ****Jacob Lincoln Hawkins 1862–1938 Memorial ID 38926177 *****Ralph R. Hawkins 1890 - 1921 Memorial ID 38926282 ******Esther Hawkins 1895–1989 Memorial ID 38926145 ***Fernando Good Draper 1877–1972 Memorial ID 21976150 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1704350/la-fontaine-ioof-cemetery La Fontaine Cemetery] La Fontaine, IN **Sarah H Draper 20 Mar 1845 – 20 Nov 1914 Memorial ID 35753970 (second wife of Elijah Draper *Eli C Draper unknown – 1859 Memorial ID 35753812 **Wife Unknown *Everett M Draper 1917 – 1943 Memorial ID 35753833 wife: **Helen Louise Coburn Draper 12 Mar 1917 – 13 Nov 1994 Memorial ID 35753849 *Frank B Draper 13 Mar 1904 – 14 Feb 1944 Memorial ID 35753842 wife: **Pauline Pulley Draper 1907–1992 Memorial ID 76569306 ***Rose Bernadean Draper Davis 1937–2019 Memorial ID 223407482 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85100/gardens-of-memory Gardens of Memory] Huntington, IN husband ****Robert James Davis 1935–2021 (m. 1958) Memorial ID 223407482 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/85100/gardens-of-memory Gardens of Memory] Huntington, IN *John Draper Memorial ID1813 – 19 Feb 1879 Memorial ID 35753863 **Mary Harbour Draper 19 Dec 1815 – 27 Mar 1910 Memorial ID 93954484 *John L Draper 6 Jul 1939 – 27 Oct 1993 Memorial ID 94673800 **Florence O. Draper (21 April 1931 - maybe still living) '''CENOTAPH''' ***Phyllis Jean ''Draper'' Perry 1930–2011 Memorial ID 78029823 husbands: ****Donald Edward Perry 1929–1984 Memorial ID 34136500 ****She second married Coach Floyd Eby on January 10, 1987 '''CENOTAPH''' ??? *Levi Draper1875 – 1955 Memorial ID 35753879 **Sarah Ellen Knotts Draper 20 Jul 1874 – 7 Apr 1960 Memorial ID 35753964 ***Plezza May Draper Stover 1895–1932 ***Flossie Irene Draper 1909–2008 Memorial ID 70859315 *Lewis Riley Draper23 Oct 1878 – 28 Jul 1941 Memorial ID 35753883 wife: **Lenorah ''Seal'' (Draper) Young 1883–1967 (m. 1905) Memorial ID: 39986956 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98394/fairview-cemetery Fairview Cemetery] Apache, OK *McCage B. Draper 1851 – 1907 Memorial ID 35753905 **Sinderella Behny Draper 1850 – 1937 Memorial ID 35753793 ***Willard Draper 12 Aug 1892 – 27 Oct 1989 Memorial ID 35753990 ****Mary Elizabeth Weller Draper 12 Oct 1900 – 14 Jan 1991Memorial ID 35753917 *****Edna Irene ''Draper'' Abernathy 1924–1992 Memorial ID 251918 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109425/marion-national-cemetery Marion National Cemetery] Marion, IN (she had 3 spouses and children not listed here) *****Anna June Draper Long 1926–2019 Memorial ID 202769023 husband: ******Neil Hart Long 1924–2014 (m. 1944) Memorial ID 127116582 *Thomas F Draper unknown – 1860 Memorial ID 35753980 *Virginia E Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 185210569 *Infant Draper 1897 – 1897 Memorial ID 35753777 *Ethel Marie Draper 1917 – 1918 Age 0-1 Memorial ID 35753824 *Clara Draper unknown – 1875 Memorial ID 35753799 *'''NOTE''' 19 Draper burials in Converse cemetery remove this when Converse Cemetery is added to the data base ==='''WHITLEY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-467.jpg '''Thorncreek Township''' ZIP Code 46725 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-468.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2129509/hively-cemetery Hively Cemetery]''' AKA Saint Matthews Cemetery Thorncreek Township, IN *[[Draper-5611|William Theodore Draper]] 14 Oct 1929 – 13 May 1981 Memorial ID 98866434 wife: **[[Keen-3927|Patricia Lou ''Keen'' (Sabatino) Draper]] 14 Nov 1928 – 13 May 2005 Memorial ID 98866371 ***Son of first marriage: Jonathan B. Sabatino 1959–2020 MEMORIAL ID 211369224 burial unknown ***4 daughters of 1st marriage, assumed living at time of entry: 9/12/2022 == Illinois 604 Burial Listings== ==='''ADAMS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-241.jpg '''Quincy''' ZIP Code 62301, 62305 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/37/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-469.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105902/greenmount-cemetery Greenmount Cemetery] Quincy, IL *[[Draper-5617|John Wesley Draper]] 17 Sep 1899 – 13 Aug 1964 Memorial ID 156718679 '''Not Family''' descends from Alexander Draper (1680–1735) FS ID:LVNP-H1D​​; Sussex, Delaware, British Colonial America *Emma Stollberg Draper1872 – 1957 Memorial ID 156718674 *Mary Draper unknown – 1925 Memorial ID 156718687 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-48.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1620743/sunset-cemetery? Sunset Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-4290|Joseph Merle Draper]] (1928 - 2010) and wife: **[[Eby-1144|Veda ''Eby'' Draper]] (1928 - 2005) ==='''CHAMPAIGN COUNTY'''=== '''Champaign / Urbana''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/84/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-242.jpg Urbana, University of Illinois, and the home of H.A.L. the AI Computer in 2001 A Space Odyssey Movie. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-57.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108933/woodlawn-cemetery Woodlawn Cemetery]''' Urbana, Champaign County, Illinois, USA *Max Beberman 20 Aug 1925 – 24 Jan 1971Scientist. A co-founder "NEW MATH" * Samuel Thompson Busey16 Nov 1835 – 12 Aug 1909 Civil War Union Brevet Brigadier General. *[[Draper-4291|Charles Maynard Draper]] 1934–2017 Draper family historian & genealogist. wife: **[[Everett-5343|Norma Jean Everett Draper]] 1935–2009 (m. 1953) *David Wayne Draper 20 Aug 1973 – 30 Jul 1989 ( not sure if related) died at 15 when struck by a softball. ==='''CLAY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-549.jpg '''Flora''' ZIP Code 62839 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/91/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-474.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105559/elmwood-cemetery Elmwood Cemetery]''' Also known as Flora Cemetery Flora, Illinois *Bessie M. Draper1890 – 1960 Memorial ID 34580695 *Clyde Draper 1887 – 1951 Memorial ID 34580689 *Lawrence O. Draper 23 Oct 1893 – 12 May 1976 Memorial ID 34577660 wife: **Hattie F. Taylor Draper 21 Feb 1902 – 25 Apr 1965 Memorial ID 34577668 *[[Draper-5022|Salonia F. ''Draper'' Filkil]] Jan 1867 – 1951 Memorial ID 26169314 husband: **[[Filkil-2|Elmer Albert Filkil]] 23 Apr 1873 – 11 Sep 1953 Memorial ID 33103454 '''Xenia''' ZIP Code 62899 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/66/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-475.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1983792/odd-fellows-cemetery Odd Fellows Cemetery]''' AKA IOOF Cemetery *[[Draper-5850|Ezra Amos Draper]] 1 Feb 1920 – 21 Mar 1980 '''NoDoTeD''' Memorial ID 28200328 wife **[[Waggoner-3133|Phebe Elizabeth “Betty” Waggoner Draper]] 12 Feb 1916 – 23 Oct 1979 Memorial ID 28200317 ***Donna Mae Draper 6 Aug 1954 – 23 Nov 1954 Memorial ID 204710267 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-476.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108553/toliver-cemetery? Toliver Cemetery]''' AKA Kennedy Cemetery , Tolliver Cemetery *[[Draper-5607|John Farney Draper]] 7 Jul 1805 – 6 Dec 1862 **[[Griffin-19346|Margaret Griffin Draper]] 29 Mar 1806 – 6 Apr 1867 ***Sarah Beth Draper 2 Aug 1849 – 11 Sep 1867 Memorial ID 23144355 ***John Draper's children '''CENOTAPHS''' buried elsewhere: ****William Lewis Draper unknown–1855 ****James M Draper 1826–1873 ****Francis Marion Draper 1833–1904 ****Emily Hall Draper Joynt 1839–1907 ****Zadoc Casey Draper 1840–1885 ==='''COOK COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/36/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-522.jpg '''Chicago''' ZIP Codes 60655 (and many more) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/81/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-521.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/643906/mount-hope-cemetery Mount Hope Cemetery]''' Located Entrance: 115 St & Farirfield, Chicago 60655 *[[Draper-5395|Corp Henry Clinton Draper]] 3 Feb 1845 – 23 May 1903 **[[Strother-1146|Ellen Eugenia Strother Draper]] 18 Oct 1849 – 1 Aug 1941 ***[[Draper-5704|Daniel Clinton Draper]] (1879-1940) wife: ****[[Unknown-621442|Ethel Draper]] 1882 - after 1912 ''' CENOTAPH''' buried: unknown F.S. ID GMGQ-CT4 child: *****Rosalie Draper 1912 - unknown ''' CENOTAPH''' buried: unknown F.S. ID GMGQ-GR5 ***[[Draper-5703|Bertha ''Draper'' Houghton]] 1872 - 1908 Memorial ID162576598 husband: **** [[Houghton-4325|Harry James Houghton]] 1857 - 1942 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2148052/paris-cemetery Paris Cemetery] Ontario, Canada ***[[Draper-5393|Robert Strother Draper]] 1883 – 1914 Memorial ID 174676238 wife: ****[[Clarkson-2734|Ruth C Draper]]1883 – 1950 Memorial ID 174676250 *Claude Henry Draper 3 Apr 1884 – 31 May 1965 Memorial ID 241628350 traces back to his great grand father John F. Short Draper Heyworth IL Memorial ID: 24891783 ==='''FAYETTE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/76/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-243.jpg '''Saint Elmo''' ZIP Code 62458 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/84/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-308.jpg '''Sidener Cemetery''' is a rural cemetery 2 miles South East of Saint Elmo [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Sidener+Cemetery,+2018+County+Rd+1700+N,+St+Elmo,+IL+62458/@38.9836325,-88.8779868,248m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x8874734ceb37daab:0x2e18f96b8a67f627!8m2!3d38.9837659!4d-88.877739 Satellite_View_Map] * [[Draper-4997|Rachel Rebecca (Draper) Chrisman]] (1844 - 1919) and husband: **[[Chrisman-903|Christopher Columbus Chrisman]] (1842 - 1924) '''Vandalia''' ZIP Code 62471 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-525.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108328/south-hill-cemetery South Hill Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5705|James M Draper]] 20 Jan 1826 – 21 Jan 1873 Memorial ID 66807146 **[[Hightower-2133|Matilda C Hightower Draper]] 1 Aug 1828 – 17 Jan 1917 children" ***[[Draper-5706|Rufus N Draper]] 1851–1943 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1187153/coloma-township-cemetery Coloma Cemetery] wife: ****[[Belles-236|Mary Magdalene Belles Draper]] 13 Apr 1853 – 5 Aug 1924 ***Charles N Draper 2 Nov 1867 – 27 Apr 1881 Memorial ID 72516125 ***Infant Son Draper 3 Nov 1867 – 20 Jan 1868 Memorial ID 72516275 ***James Draper 1863 – Feb 1930 Memorial ID 65142496 ****Ellan '''Hoar''' Draper1869–1910 F.S. ID MTCR-B4X children: *****Isabelle M Draper1893 – Oct 1907 Memorial ID 72516200 ***** Nellie Mardell Draper 1896–Deceased L2CB-8NW​​ '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *****Lucy Draper 1899–Deceased L2CB-8V2 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ==='''HAMILTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/02/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-244.jpg '''Aden''' ZIP Code 62895 Unincorporated Community https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/84/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-157.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105794/garrison-cemetery Garrison Cemetery]''' Rural cemetery, Location: On County Rd 2350 N, West of County Rd 1000 E, Aden, Hamilton County, IL *[[Draper-743|William Lane Draper]] 31 Mar 1825 – 26 Sep 1906 wife: **[[Thomason-374|Elizabeth Thomason Draper]] 21 Nov 1819 – 13 Jan 1893 son: ***[[Draper-1995|James Wilson Draper]]1845 – 1936 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/104618/baltimore-cemetery Baltimore Cemetery] *[[Peer-673|Rachel ''Peer'' Draper]] Mar 1849 – 1925 husband: is daughter-in-law of William Lane Draper (above) *Rebecca Witter Draper 16 Feb 1853 – 24 Oct 1882 **Husband unknown ***Daniel B. Draper unknown – 1882 died the same year as his mother *Laura Draper Birth and death dates unknown '''Broughton''' ZIP Code 62817 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-58.jpg '''Big Hill Cemetery''' is a country cemetery between Broughton and Norris City [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Big+Hill+Cemetery,+Norris+City,+IL+62869/@37.9630439,-88.4058016,13.75z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x88711df89c9484c7:0x5ff4a668dbd9dcac!8m2!3d37.9680511!4d-88.3950861/ Satellite_View_MAP] *[[Draper-4817|David Fletcher Draper]] 1828–1874 2nd wife: **[[Baker-54640|Sally Ann ''Baker'' Draper]] (1841 - 1897) 2nd wife **Susannah ''Russel'' Draper (1836 - 1860) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in Enfield, Illinois, Susannah's children: ***[[Draper-4845|Thomas Franklin Draper]] ***[[Draper-4846|Sarah Deborah Jane (Draper) Jennings]] (1856 - 1888) '''Dale''' ZIP Code 62829 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-95.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2174240/albion-cemetery Albion Cemetery]''' Location: Dale, Hamilton County, Illinois, USA *[[McKenzie-10270|Cora Mckenzie Draper]] 14 Mar 1902 – 23 Feb 1929 **[[Draper-5211|William Howard Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' remarried and buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107284/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Alton, IL ***Note: Cora is buried with her McKenzie family, with about 60 burials in Albion Cemetery '''Thurber''' ZIP Code 62859 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-56.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/226064/brush-harbor-cemetery Brush Harbor Cemetery]''' Located: Thurber, Hamilton County, Illinois, USA, This cemetery is not to be confused with nearby Old Brush Harbor Cemetery (aka Ray Cemetery) *[[Draper-5351|Carroll Draper]] 21 Feb 1923 – 30 Dec 2007 wife **[[Abbott-13733|Annabelle Abbott Draper]] 29 Sep 1930 – 29 Jun 1994, their son: ***[[Draper-5352|Amos Leslie Draper]] 11 Feb 1951 – 27 Jul 2020 wife: ****Caroline S. Draper (still living ) ==='''JERSEY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-246.jpg '''Fieldon''' ZIP Code 62052 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/34/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-162.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2323298/belt-salem-cemetery/map Belt Salem Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-3825|William Major Draper]] 28 Jun 1781 – Feb 1841 **[[Albertson-1247|Mary (Albertson) Draper]] (1781-????) '''CENOTAPH''' burial seems to be with her 2nd Husband (Francis Mendenhall 1790 - 18650) in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86490/purviance-cemetery Purviance Cemetery] Warren, Huntington County, Indiana. '''Jerseyville''' ZIP Code 62052 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/185573/oak-grove-cemetery? Oak Grove Cemetery]''' * These Draper family descend from Massachusetts Drapers *Carrie Belle Jennings Draper 18 Jan 1867 – 9 Oct 1928 '''Not Family''' *Ione Riley Draper 28 Jan 1902 – 15 Nov 1987 '''Not Family''' *James Riley Draper 21 Jan 1867 – 15 Jun 1946 '''Not Family''' *Lee Allen Draper Mar 1906 – 26 May 1982 '''Not Family''' *Utha B Draper 30 Dec 1907 – 13 Mar 1976 '''Not Family''' ==='''KNOX COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/26/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-245.jpg '''Abingdon''' ZIP Code 61410 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ec/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-60.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/218808/abingdon-cemetery Abingdon Cemetery]''' Located at West Memorial Drive & N Fearing Ave [https://www.google.com/maps/@40.8111304,-90.406727,483m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-4260|Daniel Lewis Draper]] (1917 - 1999) wife: **[[McGinness-138|Doris Draper]] ***Adethia Faye Draper (1939-1939) * [[Lucas-7513|Marsham Lucas]] (husband of [[Deweese-462|Elizabeth Deweese Lucas]] husband, see Monmouth) (Deweese and Draper Families married into each other) '''Galesburg''' ZIP Code 61401 & 61402 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-66.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107253/oak-lawn-memorial-gardens Oak Lawn Memorial Gardens]''' Old Rugged Cross Section, Galesburg, Illinois Address: US 150 Galesburg, Knox County, Illinois, 61488 USA __ [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Oak+Lawn+Memorial+Gardens/@41.0109216,-90.388439,15.5z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x87e1be4a6527a6a1:0xc4b2b34ad5b7209f!8m2!3d41.0116546!4d-90.3837091 MAP] [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Oak+Lawn+Memorial+Gardens/@41.0132901,-90.3836803,39m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x87e1be4a6527a6a1:0xc4b2b34ad5b7209f!8m2!3d41.0116546!4d-90.3837091 Satelitte_Map_View_zoomed_to_ their_graves] *[[Draper-4172|Thomas Earl Draper]] (1920 - 2003) and wife ** [[McGinness-133|Cassie Maxine ''McGinness'' Draper]] (1919 - 1994) ==='''LASALLE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-349.jpg '''Mendota''' ZIP Code 61342 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/55/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-559.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107648/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery]''' Mendota, IL *James A Draper8 Apr 1822 – 9 Aug 1907 Memorial ID 109652012 **Betsey Ann Mattison Draper1 Oct 1822 – 16 Aug 1902 Memorial ID 109652062 *Martha Elise Wiley Draper 15 Oct 1913 – 28 Jun 1976 Memorial ID 136666614 '''Ottawa''' ZIP Code 61350 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/80/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-350.jpg '''Oakwood Memorial Park''' Located: 2405 Champlain St, Ottawa, IL 61350. *[[Draper-5493|Floyd Elmo Draper]](1917 - 1992) wife: **[[Sandor-165|Ann Margaret (Sandor) Draper]] (1921 - 2007) ***Floyd is Burrel and Olive's uncle (below) *[[Draper-5500|Burrel E. Draper]] 15 Sep 1915 – 4 Apr 2012 wife **[[Sampson-5544|Fern ''Sampson'' Draper]] (1921 - 2010) daughter: ***[[Draper-5501|Darlene A Draper 11 Mar 1942 – 19 Nov 1999]] *[[Draper-5499|Olive R. ''Draper'' Carstens]] 1913 – 2004 husband **[[Carstens-763|Albert H “Slim” Carstens]] 1901 – 1970 Memorial ID 134046800 ***Note: Olive's Father: [[Draper-5497|Chancy Sylvester Draper]] (1886 - 1974) [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/104618/baltimore-cemetery Baltimore Cemetery] Her brother is Burrel (above) ==='''LIVINGSTON COUNTY'''=== '''Pontiac''' ZIP Code 61764 *Jeanne E. Draper 1957-1993 Memorial ID: 150835058 [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/288460/south-side-cemetery South Side Cemetery] ==='''LOGAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-247.jpg '''Williamsville''' ZIP Code 62693 (closest town south of the cemetery) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/97/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-180.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/717820/walnut-hill-cemetery Walnut Hill Cemetery]''' Location: W Logan County Line Road, Logan County, Illinois, 62693 USA *[[Draper-5353|Alberta C ''Draper'' Hankins]]-Hall 1925 – 2006 **[[Hankins-2158|Timothy B Hankins]] 1908 – 1980 ==='''MACOUPIN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/ce/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-382.jpg '''Atwater''' ZIP Code 62572 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-383.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1648297/sulphur-springs-cemetery? Sulphur Springs Cemetery]''' Located: Atwater, Macoupin County , Illinois, USA *Edna Cloud Draper 1880 – 1949 Memorial ID 37009327 *Jennie May Draper 19 Jun 1902 – 10 Jun 1920 Memorial ID 37009339 *John B Draper 1873 – 1946 Memorial ID 37009333 *Mary V Draper 26 Oct 1850 – 2 Feb 1937 Memorial ID 37009322 '''Bunker Hill''' ZIP Code 62014 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ac/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-384.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/692371/bunker-hill-cemetery? Bunker Hill Cemetery]''' Located: . 115 S Washington St, Bunker HIll, IL *Alonzo Harvey Draper 6 Dec 1905 – 16 Dec 1963 Memorial ID 107831957 *Eleanor Rozella Brackman Draper 7 Dec 1929 – 23 Aug 2011 Memorial ID 75458231 *Florence Iva “Icye” Gholson Draper 6 Feb 1897 – 5 May 1986 Memorial ID 107831970 *George Marvin Draper 12 Jan 1933 – 25 Sep 2014 Memorial ID 201473373 *James Murl Draper 21 Aug 1930 – 14 Oct 2004 Memorial ID 71849481 *Julie Ann Draper 23 Jun 1954 – 1954 Memorial ID 154336511 '''Carlinville''' ZIP Code 62626 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-385.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105139/carlinville-city-cemetery? Carlinville City Cemetery]''' Located: 859 Ramey St, Carlinville, Illinois 62626 *Frederick Isaac Draper 29 Dec 1860 – 27 Oct 1925 Memorial ID 137084807 NOT Family (Massachusetts Drapers) Note: This is the same person as Isaac Frederick Draper buried in Mayfield Memorial Park Cemetery below but has a different FAG Memorial ID. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/39/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-386.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106784/mayfield-memorial-park-cemetery? Mayfield Memorial Park Cemetery]''' is a rural cemetery located: RR 4, Carlinville, IL 62626 *Joseph Draper unknown–1900 '''CENOTAPH''' '''NOT Family''' descends from James D. Draper (1746-1782) Spencer, Worcester, Massachusetts [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1275180/jacksonville-east-cemetery Jacskonville East Cemetery] FAG MEM ID: 148750072, wife: **Elizabeth '''McGinnis''' Draper 1829–1916 (m. 1847) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1275180/jacksonville-east-cemetery Jacskonville East Cemetery] FAG MEM ID: 148750071, Children: ***Abraham Draper 6 Sep 1864 – 8 May 1949 Memorial ID 209925134 ***[[Draper-5618|Frederick Isaac “Fred” Draper]] 29 Dec 1860 – 27 Oct 1925 Memorial ID 203019329 ***Cynthia Jane '''Draper''' McGlothlin 1846–1914''' CENOTAPH''' FAg Mem ID: buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1275180/jacksonville-east-cemetery Jacskonville East Cemetery] her husband: ****James McGlothlin 1843–1918 (m. 1865) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1275180/jacksonville-east-cemetery Jacskonville East Cemetery] *Betty Ann Draper 23 Sep 1926 – 16 Nov 1932 Memorial ID 203037076 '''Girard''' ZIP Code 62640 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-387.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2511412/stevenson-cemetery? Stevenson Cemetery]''' AKA Ditson Cemetery, rural cemetery, exact location unknown at this time. *Charles H Draper unknown – 12 Aug 1875 Memorial ID 116669716 '''Palmyra''' ZIP Code 62674 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/47/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-388.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1216559/oak-hill-cemetery Oak Hill Cemetery]''' AKA Oakhill Cemetery, Located: West of Palmyra on Cemetery St. *George Washington Draper 11 Jan 1868 – 6 Mar 1942 Memorial ID 93114999 *James Albert Draper 4 May 1874 – 23 Jun 1934 Memorial ID 93115046 *Lawrence Abraham 12 Jul 1911 – 1977 Memorial ID 13060243 *Lucinda Mae Miller Draper 16 May 1882 – 28 Jun 1953 Memorial ID 93115018 '''Modesto IL''' ZIP Code 62667 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/73/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-389.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/556007/pulliam-cemetery Pulliam Cemetery]''' is a rural cemetery located on Vancil Temple Road North of Modesto, Macoupin County, IL *Pauline Faulkner Draper Unknown – 17 Feb 1890 Memorial ID 13690126 husband: **Fred Draper b. and d. unknown''' CENOTAPH''' burial, details unknown '''Scottville''' ZIP Code 62683 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-390.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1696907/panther-creek-cemetery Panther Creek Cemetery]''' Scottville, Macoupin County , Illinois, USA *Samantha Lee Draper 11 Jun 1881 – 1 Jan 1933 Memorial ID 93528369 === '''MADISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/96/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-302.jpg '''Alton''' ZIP Code 62002, 62018, 62024 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/91/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-569.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640635/alton-cemetery? Alton Cemetery]''' AKA Grandview Cemetery, Alton, Madison County, IL *[[Draper-5778|Jerome B. Draper]] 1828-1890 Memorial ID 57993080 '''CENOTAPH''' '''Probably NOT Family''' from New York; buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96586/walnut-creek-friends-cemetery]Walnut Creek Cemetery, Pleasant Plain, Jefferson Co., Iowa, wife: **[[Cowley-1679|Mary ''Cowley'' Draper]] 1837–after 1876 '''CENOTAPH''' burial Unknown ***[[Draper-5776|Herbert C Draper]] 18 Nov 1862 – 28 Jan 1925 Memorial ID 137084701 ****[[Hornback-320|Clara Jane ''Hornback'' (Draper) (Clark) Wilson]] Memorial ID 132975330 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107284/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Alton, IL *****[[Draper-5775|Russell Jack Draper]] 1896–1968 Memorial ID 132975142 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107284/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Alton, IL, wife: ******[[Mizner-56|Helen Violet Mizner]] 1893–1928 FS ID: L2QP-PP3 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *****Mabel ''Draper'' Youngblood 1898–1976 Memorial ID 190344861 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1968588/rose-lawn-memory-gardens Rose Lawn Memorial Gardens] Bethalto, IL *****Ruth M Draper 1899– 12 Oct 1916 Memorial ID 89725527 Age 17 died in surgery *****James Branson Draper 1903–1973 Memorial ID 150751753 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96323/shaul-cemetery Shaul Cemetery] Ottumwa, Iowa, wife: ******Thelma Pearl ''Venator'' Draper 1911–1992 Memorial ID 150751753 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96323/shaul-cemetery Shaul Cemetery] Ottumwa, Iowa *****Herbert Draper, Jr. 6 March 1908 – 18 Aug 1916 Memorial ID 89725525 drowned Age 9 *****Mary Helen ''Draper'' Manley 1913–1984 Memorial ID 193240515 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1968588/rose-lawn-memory-gardens Rose Lawn Memorial Gardens] Bethalto, IL ***Claude Draper about 1875 – 25 Jun 1936 Memorial ID 89725522 wife??: ****Jennie Draper unknown – 31 Oct 1937 Memorial ID 89725526 *****'''NOTE''' Uncertain if Jennie is the wife of Claude Draper https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-94.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107284/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery]''' Located: 2090 Oakwood Avenue Alton, Madison County, Illinois, 62002 USA '''Famous Memorial:''' *'''Robert Pershing Wadlow''' 1918–1940 World's Tallest Man, 8 feet, 4 inches, 390lbs *[[Draper-5211|William Howard Draper]] 1899 – 1974 wife: **[[Fausz-25|Emma Louise Fausz Draper]] 8 Sep 1905 – 16 Jan 1996 *[[Draper-5480|Carl Eugene Draper]] 12 Mar 1937 – 30 Jan 2020 wife: **No wife or children listed or known (see obituary in profile) *Charles Earl Draper 5 Nov 1942 – 22 Nov 1942 Brother of Carl Draper (above) *Albert Draper 8 Apr 1808 – 14 Aug 1883, Memorial ID 17074793 wife: **Rachel Sparks Draper 15 Apr 1813 – 17 Nov 1896 Memorial ID 17074844 ***William Draper 1843–1848 Age 5 ***Solomon Draper 1845–1909 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 5705926 buried in Nebraska, wife ****Ann Eliza Sessions Draper 1846–1915 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 5705926, Nebraskachild *****Albert H Draper unknown–1877 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 147732518 Nebraska *****George W. Draper 1883–1969 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 131532161 buried Fort Collins, Colorado ***Benjamin Franklin Draper 1846–1929 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 28171083 Arkansas ****Sarah Belinda Armstrong Draper 1851–1905 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 28171123 Arkansas ***Albert Nelson Draper 1855–1929 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID buried in Lynchburg, Virginia wife: ****Amelia Christina Beckmeyer Draper 1867–1946 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 103646653 buried in Lynchburg, Virginia *Alice R. Draper1894 – 1950 *Baby Girl Draper17 May 1929 – 17 May 1929 *Donald Jean Draper 23 Sep 1943 – 23 Sep 1943 *Effie L. Draper1890 – 1969 *Harriett Leane Spangle Draper 21 Sep 1873 – 12 Aug 1948 *Helen V. Draper13 Feb 1936 – 29 Dec 1991 *Irma Rae Draper1938 – 1976 *Herbert C Draper 18 Nov 1862 – 28 Jan 1925 Memorial ID 13708470 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640635/alton-cemetery? Alton Cemetery] **Clara Jane Hornback (Draper) (Clark) Wilson Memorial ID 132975330 her son: ***Jack Draper6 Dec 1896 – 10 Aug 1968 *John B. Draper1879 – 1954 *Milton Hiram Draper20 Dec 1876 – 12 Oct 1962 *Rebecca Draper3 Jun 1904 – 3 Oct 1973 *William E. Draper1875 – 1956 '''Bethalto''' 62010 - 62024 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/09/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-320.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1968588/rose-lawn-memory-gardens Rose Lawn Memory Gardens]''' *[[Draper-5404|Kenneth M. Draper]] (1921 - 2005) **[[Vogel-3026|Mary Nell (Vogel) Draper]] (1922 - 2020) '''South Roxana''' ZIP Code 62087 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/18/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-381.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108744/wanda-cemetery Wanda Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-731|Clifford A. Draper]] 15 Apr 1922 – 22 Apr 2011 Memorial ID 69049070 wife: **[[Warren-4697|Lois Nadine (Warren) Draper]] (1926 - 2013) Memorial ID 104562354 ***[[Draper-737|Larry D. Draper]] 15 Aug 1947 – 19 Jun 1970 Memorial ID 25675135 *[[Draper-734|Willard Darnell Draper]] 24 Jan 1921 – 22 Nov 2016 Memorial ID 173122406 wife: **Helen Serena Page Draper '''CENOTAPH''' (see Obituary of Williard in FAG ***Bonnie Sue Draper 13 Mar 1952 – 19 Mar 1953 Memorial ID 100468782 Note: Clifford and Willard Draper are brothers ==='''MARION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ec/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-351.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-456.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2285222/christian-home-baptist-church-cemetery? Christian Home Baptist Church Cemetery]''' Is a rural cemetery located 10 miles east of Johnsonville, IL Directions: Take State Rd 161 west of Johnsonville and turn north on Klomp Rd. The church is located at the intersection Klomp Rd and Lawrence Rd *[[Draper-5849|Amos Cort Draper]] 1888 – 16 Feb 1963Memorial ID 66089139 '''NoDoTeD''' descends from Perquimans North Carolina Quaker Draper families **[[Jones-128070|Grace Elizabeth Jones Draper]] 7 Aug 1898 – Feb 1985 Memorial ID 66089159 their sons: ***Samuel C Draper 1 Oct 1923 – 26 Jun 2010 Memorial ID 75525756 his wife: ****Inez May Johnston Draper 29 Sep 1932 – 26 Oct 2005 Memorial ID 75525788 ***Charles Lee Draper 21 Aug 1931 – 14 Sep 1941 AGE 10 Memorial ID 66089119 ***[[Draper-5850|Ezra Amos Draper]] 1920–1980 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1983792/odd-fellows-cemetery Odd Fellows Cemetery] Xenia, IL ***Glen Estol Draper 1921–1976 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108299/smithville-cemetery Smithville Cemetery] Hanna City, IL ***Bradford Draper 1933-2022 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108467/sunset-lawn-cemetery Sunset Lawn Cemetery] Harrisburg, IL ***Dixie Fern Draper Lopez 1937–2018 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108299/smithville-cemetery Smithville Cemetery] Hanna City, IL '''Alma''' ZIP Code 62807 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/89/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-458.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/104517/allmon-cemetery? Allmon Cemetery]''' AKA Allman Cemetery or Boring Cemetery is a rural cemetery located about 2 miles west of Alma, Illinois *William M. Draper 1815 – 1878 Memorial ID 94756670 '''NOT Family''' descends from Perquimans, NC Quaker Draper family **Elizabeth Neal Draper 1822 – 1901 Memorial ID 94756828 ***Amanda Elmrosa Draper Lacey 1860–1933 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1520271/chatham-community-cemetery Chatham Community Cemetery] '''Centraila''' ZIP Code 62801 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-459.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105562/elmwood-cemetery? Elmwood Cemetery]''' AKA Centralia Cemetery *Zadoc Casey Draper 1840 – 30 Jan 1885 Memorial ID 86259912 *Frank M Draper 1849 – 27 Mar 1911 Memorial ID 86259905 '''NOT Family''' wife: **Rebecca E Draper 1859 – 8 Oct 1888 Memorial ID86259909 their son: ***Harry Donald Draper 1882–1962 Memorial ID 139788219 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106424/keller-cemetery Keller Cemetery] Lovington, IL *Infant Draper unknown – 1877 Memorial ID 86259908 *Infant Twin Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 86259910 *Infant Twin Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 86259911 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-352.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106163/hillcrest-memorial-park Hillcrest Memorial Park]''' AKA Hillcrest Cemetery Located: 2500 Old 51 Rd, Centralia, IL *[[Tabor-2834|Lena Lillian Tabor Draper]] 30 May 1902 – 24 May 1988 husband: **[[Draper-5490|Marvin Draper]] (1897 - 1964) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/104618/baltimore-cemetery Baltimore Cemetery] Wayne County, IL *Renee Lynn Draper unknown – 25 Jan 1978 Memorial ID: 217620003 '''NOT Family''' descends from Perquimans North Carolina Drapers (Quaker Drapers) '''Salem''' ZIP Code 62881 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/98/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-457.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107398/paradise-cemetery? Paradise Cemetery]''' *Delbert Draper 18 Sep 1928 – 17 Sep 2001 Memorial ID 153634173 '''NOT Family''' descends from Perquimans North Carolina Drapers (Quaker Drapers) wife: **Joyce Draper 23 Nov 1933 – unknown Memorial ID 238733380 ==='''McLEAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/37/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-248.jpg '''Arrowsmith''' ZIP Code 61722 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-721.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105924/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery] Arrowsmith, McLean County, IL *[[Draper-1717|Robert Marshal Draper]] 1 Sep 1880 – 2 Dec 1960 Arrowsmith, IL Memorial ID 23314172 **[[Hudson-2322|Dora May ''Hudson'' (Goddard) Draper]] 6 Nov 1880 – 1 Jun 1947 Arrowsmith, IL Memorial ID 23314144 children ***[[Draper-1721|Merrill Urman Draper]] (1909 - 1956) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57123/south-lawn-memorial-cemetery South Lawn Memorial Cemetery] AKA Tucson Memorial Park South Lawn, Tucson, Arizona ***[[Draper-1719|Rhoda Mae ''Draper'' (Widner) (Jetton) Shupe]] (1913 - 1992) ****[[Widner-80|William Widner JR]] (1904 - 1936) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/792539/masonic-cemetery Masonic Cemetery] Delphi, IN, sons: *****[[Widner-79|William Winston Widner]] (1928 - 1947) Age 19 suicide *****[[Widner-86|Daryle Widner]] 1932 - 1935 Age 3 Memorial ID 45524212 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84788/crown-point-cemetery Crown Point Cemetery] Kokomo, IN **[[Hawkins-6985|Elizabeth Jo “Liza” Hawkins Draper]] 2 Mar 1882 – 12 Feb 1905 Arrowsmith, IL Memorial ID 23215331 ***[[Draper-1718|James Carlos “Jim” Draper]] 16 Aug 1903 – 25 Jun 1983 Arrowsmith, IL Memorial ID 23215383 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ae/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-720.jpg '''Robert and Dora Draper, baby Rhoda in front car seat, Merrill Draper & Ora Imo Goddard in the back seat, James standing, Roy and Carlos sitting on running board. Rhoda was born in 1913 and is the baby Robert Draper is holding. That makes the picture taken about 1913-1914.''' '''Bloomington''' ZIP Code 61701 '''Normal''' ZIP Code 61761 (Twin Cities) * [[Draper-4171|Dave Draper]] host of Draper Tour Guide: Tour de Farnham, currently lives here. 16 descendents of [[Draper-169|Thomas Draper]] (1680ish-1735) plus their spouses live here (21 total) *Draper Family artifacts and history reside in this city with family members. *M.A.S.H. star McLean Stevenson born here,__ [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McLean_Stevenson Wikipedia] *[[Lincoln-103|Abraham Lincoln]] had a Law Office in Bloomington * David Davis Mansion is located here. [[Davis-31936|David Davis]] Supreme Court Justice '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105501/east-lawn-memorial-gardens-cemetery-and-mausoleum East Lawn Memorial Gardens]''' *[[Draper-4498|Ezra M. “Jack” Draper]] 15 Feb 1898 – 2 Mar 1986 wife: **[[Short-8559|Sudie F. Short Draper]] 20 Jun 1906 – 12 Apr 1985 Memorial ID 159011287 ***Susanne Draper Anderson, still living; husband: ****Earl Anderson (1934-2020) Not profiled on Wiki Tree; [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/209068262/earl-bryant-anderson Find A Grave] Memorial ID: 209068262 *Frederick E. Draper 5 Apr 1913 - 2 Feb 1985 Memorial ID: 109566015 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107225/oak-grove-cemetery Oak Grove Cemetery] Grayville, IL **Barbara Louise Sanks Draper 20 Oct 1921 – 29 Aug 2017 Memorial ID 182878424 ***Carla Draper unknown details mentioned in Obituary of Barbara *William Dennis Draper Aug 1911 – 5 Mar 1999 Memorial ID 143797700 **Madelyn F. Shives Draper 11 Apr 1912 – 8 Jan 1982 Memorial ID 143797810 ***William D. “Bill” Draper 6 Sep 1943 – 17 Jan 2004 Memorial ID 93472208 *Bert Draper 2 Feb 1887 – 15 Jul 1960 Memorial ID 146087788 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fa/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-714.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/716527/park-hill-cemetery-and-mausoleum Park Hill Cemetery Park Hill Cemetery]''' *John Carlos Draper 15 Dec 1933 – 4 Dec 1967 Memorial ID 63896951 **Verla Mae Coit Draper 2 May 1905 – 13 Feb 1993 Memorial ID 63896992 *Cheryl Lynn “Cheri” Howard Draper16 Sep 1952 – 28 Nov 2000 Memorial ID 63896924 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105608/evergreen-memorial-cemetery Evergreen Memorial Cemetery]''' *Lela I. Farrington Draper 1901 – 1 Jun 1922 Memorial ID 126755572 '''Ellsworth''' / '''Bentown''' ZIP Code 61737 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/02/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-702.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105728/frankeberger-cemetery Frankeberger Cemetery] Ellsworth, IL *William L. Draper Memorial ID7 Jan 1826 – 21 Jun 1904 Memorial ID 103402271 **Louise Linscott Draper 11 Apr 1833 – 14 Jan 1920 Memorial ID 103402273 ***Bradford Draper 8 Sep 1857 – 20 Jan 1920 Memorial ID 103402280 ***Adaline Draper unknown – 20 Feb 1864 Bentown, IL Memorial ID 36568843 ***Mary Armelia ''Draper'' Torrence 13 May 1855 - 6 Feb 1943 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 153822724 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1405419/drummer-township-cemetery Drummer Township Cemetery] '''Heyworth''' ZIP Code 61745 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/03/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-560.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978739/heyworth-cemetery Heyworth Cemetery] Heyworth, IL *[[Draper-5751|John F. Short Draper]] 1773 – 5 Sep 1850 Memorial ID 24891797, wife: **[[Milford-507|Margaret Milford Draper]] 24 Mar 1781 – 13 Dec 1851 Memorial ID 63821863. Children: ***[[Draper-5752|Nancy Ann ''Draper'' Veteto]] 1806–1859 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2456516/veteto-cemetery Veteto Cemetery] LeRoy, Kansas, husband: ****[[Veteto-14|John Veteto]] 1806–1878 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2456516/veteto-cemetery Veteto Cemetery] LeRoy, Kansas, ***Ruben L. Draper 11 Jan 1813 – 23 Sep 1853 Memorial ID 63821595, wife: ****Rebecca Hougham (Draper) Harrold 1828–1909 remarried. children: *****Infant Son Draper15 Sep 1845 – 15 Sep 1845 Memorial ID 63821648 *****Andrew Draper 1846–1847 Memorial ID 63821564 *****Cary Millford Draper 1849–1920 Memorial ID 52196118 *****Sarah C. Draper 19 Nov 1850 – 21 Aug 1859 Memorial ID 63821543 *****David Draper 25 Oct 1852 – 24 May 1855 Age 2 Mem. ID 63821555 (could be wrong) ***Elizabeth Draper Dale 1817–1870 husband: ****Welcome K Dale 1815–1860 ***[[Draper-1037|Henry Dale Draper]] 1823 – 12 Dec 1854 Memorial ID 24891783, wife: ****[[Hougham-36|Anna ''Hougham'' (Draper) Lutz]] remarried to Unknown Lutz Memorial ID 80956231 *****Rachel L. Draper Miller Memorial ID: 24892090, husband: ******Erastus Miller 1845–1909 Memorial ID: 24892097 *****Jackson M. Draper 29 Aug 1850 – 29 Jul 1931 Memorial ID 68744024 ******Mary R Brower Draper 27 Jan 1854 – 31 Jul 1937 Memorial ID 61671080 *****[[Draper-5750|Hiram Riley Draper]] 26 Oct 1852 – 23 Jun 1926 Memorial ID 69307223 ******[[Moore-77041|Catherine Kate ''Moore'' Draper]] 26 Jan 1863 – 31 Mar 1929 Memorial ID 62932041 children: *******Maude ''Draper'' VanValey 1880 - 1935 Memorial ID 13588693 husbands: ********Floyd Cunningham 1883 –1949 Memorial ID 20893222 ********Dallas Teddy VanValey 1883–1940 Memorial ID 13588702 *******Agnes C. ''Draper'' Roberts1882–1962 Memorial ID 105805350 husband: ********Frank P. Roberts 1880–1957 Memorial ID 105805337 *********Harold F. Roberts 1904–1906 Memorial ID 105805376 Age 2 *********Loren Roberts 1907–1908 Memorial ID 105805363 Age 1 · *******Frank Draper 1887 – 1887 Memorial ID 63712187 shares gravestone with: *******Tressy May Draper1885 – 1886 Memorial ID 63712183 *******Ethel Draper Swearingen 1889 –1960 Memorial ID 13591625 husband: ********Frank Swearingen 1890–1936 Memorial ID 13591635 *********Harold Swearingen 1911–1990 Memorial ID 35917351 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107413/randolph-township-cemetery Randolph Township Cemetery] Heyworth, IL *Savanna ''Williams'' Draper 2 Dec 1882 – 25 Mar 1969 Memorial ID 63742516. husband: **Unknown Draper, burial unknown *NOTE: Savanna is buried with her parents: William & Sarah Williams (1836–1912) Mem. ID: 62765614 '''Randolph''' ZIP Code 61745 *Mabel Pearl Draper 20 Mar 1905 – 7 Nov 1907 Age 2 Memorial ID 33168668 ==='''MONTGOMERY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-249.jpg '''Butler''' ZIP Code 62015 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-136.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1216592/wares-grove-cemetery Wares Grove]''' Cemetery Location: County Road 950 E Butler, Montgomery County, Illinois *Leland M Draper1900 – 1962 FAG Mem. ID: 45694072 wife: **Fern B Draper1899 – 1982 FAG Mem. ID: 45694071 children: ***Allan M Drape Draper13 Apr 1937 – 22 Sep 2007 FAG Mem. ID: 45694069 wife: ****Mary Janice Jan Draper31 Dec 1938 – unknown ***Donald Leland Draper 14 Aug 1929 – 18 Dec 2006 ****Thelma Nadine Cruthis Draper2 Apr 1929 – 7 May 2017 FAG Mem. ID:45694074 *****Living Children see Obituary in FAG Mem. ID:45694074 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-409.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1974056/montgomery-cemetery Montgomery Cemetery] Located North East of Butler, IL near Lake Glenn Shoals *George F. Draper 1897 – 16 Mar 1970 Memorial ID 52641142 **Blanche E. Draper 1897 – unknown Memorial ID 52609807 *George Henry Draper 1865 – 1924 Memorial ID 52641185 **Ida Lee Draper 1869 – 1932 Memorial ID 52641304 *Infant Draper unknown – 29 Jan 1890 Memorial ID 52641359 *Noah Draper 28 Jun 1826 – 6 Jan 1886 Memorial ID 52642224 wife: **Charity Arnold Draper 25 Oct 1832 – 27 Aug 1881 Memorial ID 52609837 children: ***Luther C. Draper23 Nov 1852 – 15 Jul 1923 Memorial ID 52642194 wife: ****Sarah Frances Perkins Draper 1 Feb 1849 – 9 Jul 1919 Memorial ID 52642343 ******Ruth E. Draper unknown – 29 Jul 1877 Memorial ID 52642274 ***Martha “Mattie” ''Draper'' Weller (1870-1946) '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 212896 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2169215/saint-john's-cemetery St, John's Cemetery] Witt IL ***Ora ''Draper'' Lipe 1871–1933 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 70216076 [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2169215/saint-john's-cemetery St, John's Cemetery] Witt IL *Sylvester Draper 3 Aug 1858 – 16 Jun 1918 Memorial ID 52642414 **Emma Mae Higbee Draper 2 Dec 1870 – 6 Jun 1923 Memorial ID 52640985 *William M. Draper 1894 – 7 Mar 1971 Memorial ID 52642558 **Ethel Leora Draper 1894 – 9 Jan 1968 Memorial ID 52641024 ==='''MOULTRIE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-250.jpg '''Sullivan''' ZIP Code 61951 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/17/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-127.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105912/greenhill-cemetery Greenhill Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-3377|Travis Duval “Doolee” Draper]] 1830 – 15 Jul 1907 wives: **[[Wheeler-24122|Mercilla Wheeler Draper]] 1827–1872 1st wife buried in Hampton Cemetery (below) **[[Thomason-2530|Sarah Margaret Thomason Draper]] 8 Feb 1835 – 10 May 1921 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-128.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2173291/hampton-cemetery Hampton Cemetery]''' *[[Wheeler-24122|Mercilla Wheeler Draper]] 1827 –1872 husband [[Draper-3377|Travis Duval “Doolee” Draper]] buried in Greenhill Cemetery (above) ==='''PEORIA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/97/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-666.jpg '''Hanna City''' ZIP Code 61536 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-667.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108299/smithville-cemetery Smithville Cemetery]''' Hanna City, Peoria County, IL *[[Draper-5851|Glen Estol Draper Sr.]] 9 Oct 1921 – 14 Apr 1976 '''NoDoTeD''' Memorial ID 33629391 **Naomi ''Isbell'' (Draper) Polloch 1926-2017 (remarried John Pollock also buried here) ***Ronald L. R. “Ron” Draper 7 Dec 1944 – 11 Mar 2010 Memorial ID 49932745 ****Ellen Carole ''Doubet'' Draper22 May 1944 – 4 Nov 2016 Memorial ID 172697927 ***William Charles Draper10 Sep 1947 – 17 Dec 1947 Memorial ID 33627521 ***David P. Draper 20 Aug 1950 – 13 Apr 2012 Memorial ID 88923472 ****Jackie ''Jackson'' Draper married on June 21, 2003 (living) *Nancy Marie Draper 9 Aug 1973 – 9 Aug 1973 Memorial ID 33628362 *Rose Ella Draper 2 Mar 1941 – 12 Oct 2011 Memorial ID 79127942 ==='''ROCK ISLAND COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-668.jpg '''East Moline''' ZIP Code 61244 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-586.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/785258/greenview-memorial-gardens Greenview Memorial Gardens]''' *Victor H Draper 2 May 1908 – 22 Oct 1998 Memorial ID 198896566 **Mary Bellegante Draper 22 Jan 1918 – 10 Jun 1999 Memorial ID 198896567 ***Billy Eugene Draper 29 Aug 1939 – 5 Mar 1995 Memorial ID 185094415 ***John C. Draper 1941–2013 Memorial ID 22595770 '''CENOTAPH''' cremated ***Barbara J. ''Draper'' Merrill 1942–2013 Memorial ID 105878924 husband: ****Robert E. Merrill 1944–2021 Memorial ID 227009067 ***Juanita Marie Draper Schultz 1943–2015 Memorial ID 237943363 cremated '''Moline''' ZIP Code 61265 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-669.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107707/riverside-cemetery? Riverside Cemetery]''' *George W. Draper 25 May 1853 – 22 May 1909 Memorial ID 194452165 **Wilhelmina Dora ''Jasper'' Draper Memorial ID1856 –1906 Memorial ID 194452124 *Joseph W Draper 1882 – 1928 Memorial ID 32453724 **Rebecca Jane McCombs Draper1882 – 1935 Memorial ID 32453713 ****Edna Mae Draper 1915 – 1930 Memorial ID 32453700 ***Joseph William Draper Jr. Oct 1917 – 4 Feb 1918 Memorial ID 86136779 ***Mary Jane ''Draper'' Swanson 1923–2004 Memorial ID 25744932 husband: ****Richard Wilbert Swanson 1917–1977 Memorial ID 25744926 *****Sharon Lynn ''Swanson'' DeFosse 1944–2005 Memorial ID 118751148 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *****Brian Keith Swanson 1948–1963 Memorial ID 25911628 *Harry F. Draper 1890 – 21 Mar 1967 Memorial ID 103664901 **Florence V. ''Frankenreider'' Draper 1911 – 4 Jul 1975 Memorial ID 103664940 ****Linda Lou Draper18 Jul 1948 – 28 Jun 1952 Memorial ID 103599194 *Helen Bernice Draper 19 Jul 1903 – 17 Mar 1907 Memorial ID 194452236 '''Rock Island''' ZIP Codes 61201 - 61299 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/32/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-557.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109441/rock-island-national-cemetery? Rock Island National Cemetery]''' Located: Rock Island, IL *Robert Bell Draper 3 Jan 1908 – 4 May 1963 Memorial ID 73554930 **Emma Mae Draper 15 Aug 1881 – 10 Dec 1964 Memorial ID 73554677 *Alvin L. Draper 14 Oct 1947 – 15 Jun 2022 Memorial ID 240694802 *Fred Bell Draper 8 Aug 1909 – 3 Apr 1957 Memorial ID 2886780 *Leroy Salsbury Draper 15 Dec 1886 – 31 Jul 1962 Memorial ID 2886781 *Owen Everett Draper 27 Jan 1888 – 1 Feb 1953 Memorial ID 73554819 ==='''SANGAMON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/df/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-251.jpg '''Springfield''' ZIP Codes 62629 to 62769 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107259/oak-ridge-cemetery Oak Ridge Cemetery]''' AKA Oak Ridge Cemetery & Abbey, Located: 1441 Monument St. (or Ave.) [[Lincoln-103|Abraham Lincoln]](1809 – 15 Apr 1865) U.S. President and his family *Thomas Jefferson Draper 1844 – 28 Jul 1917 ('''not family''') FS ID: KPD2-B7M wife: **Nancy Ellen Crump Draper 1849–1882 '''CENOTAPH''' burial undiscovered FS ID: KNHB-4HB *William Prescott Draper 17 Aug 1877 – 16 Mar 1957 ('''not family''') F.S. ID: K8TL-JQ5 wife: **Ellin P Draper '''CENOTAPH''' burial undiscovered *Bethenia J. Draper 1885 – 1945 *Cleta M. Draper 1907 – 5 Sep 1907 *Emma Lou Janes Draper 29 Jan 1944 – 1 Mar 2011 *Infant Son Draper 11 Sep 1917 – 17 Sep 1917 *Mary Elizabeth Corder Draper 1850 – 8 Oct 1924 *Opal Marie Draper 1928 – 1948 *Otis L. Draper 14 Jan 1905 – 19 Dec 1977 *Theodore Delmus Draper Jr. 20 May 1952 – 26 Feb 2014 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/46/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-24.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105017/camp-butler-national-cemetery Camp_Butler_National_Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5187|Robert Edward “Bob” Draper]] 9 Mar 1946 – 23 Sep 2012 **Norma Jean Ramey Draper 23 Sep 1929 – 15 Jul 2001 *[[Draper-5189|Samuel Alfred Draper]] 9 Oct 1894 – 9 Apr 1952 2nd wife: **[[Kain-778|Mary Kathleen ''Kain'' Draper]] 9 Feb 1916 – 7 Jan 1982 *[[Draper-5188|William Draper Sr.]] 21 Oct 1920 – 25 Aug 2009 and wife: **[[Lovell-4073|Betty Jane ''Lovel'' Draper]] 6 Sep 1920 – 2 Dec 2021 *Rev Charles Ludlow Draper (18 Apr 1927 – 27 Jan 2004) wife: **Marjorie Jean Thomas Draper (Feb 11, 1932 – Jun 7, 2022) *Cortes Draper 28 Jul 1875 – 20 Mar 1956 *Frances Louise Draper19 Sep 1920 – 25 Dec 2013 *Harry L. Draper9 Oct 1931 – 19 Nov 2007 *Lawrence Draper 5 May 1914 – 8 Apr 1989 ==='''VERMILION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/98/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-252.jpg '''Catlin ZIP Code''' 61817 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/db/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-152.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107260/oakridge-cemetery Oakridge Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5294|John Wesley Draper]] 18 Aug 1818 – 20 Aug 1894 2nd wife: **[[Abeigale-1|Matilda Abeigale Stansbury Draper]] 13 Aug 1834 – 11 May 1920 ** 1st wife: [[Pate-2975|Catherine Pate Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107414/pate-cemetery Pate Cemetery] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/56/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-153.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107414/pate-cemetery Pate Cemetery]''' *[[Pate-2975|Catherine Pate Draper]] (1821 - 1870) husband: **[[Draper-5294|John Wesley Draper]] (1818 – 1894) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107260/oakridge-cemetery Oakridge Cemetery] ***[[Draper-5311|Mary E. Draper]] 1854 – 29 Nov 1874 *[[Draper-5310|John A. Draper 23]] Jun 1847 – 7 Apr 1918 wife: **Susan Watson (1854-????) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *Winfield Draper 1879 – 13 Jun 1879 infant death son of D.H and S. Draper (can't find the parents '''Danville''' ZIP Codes 61832, 61834 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-154.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108354/spring-hill-cemetery-and-mausoleum Spring Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum]''' AKA Springhill Cemetery Location: 301 E Voorhees St, Danville, IL *[[Draper-5293|Rev George Washington Draper]] 10 Jul 1843 – 15 Nov 1917 wives: **[[Ann_Carpenter-1|Susan Ann Carpenter Draper]] 15 Dec 1843 – 1920 **Addie Ellen Daniels Draper 25 Nov 1864 – 22 Nov 1955 *[[Draper-5291|Roy Gillette Draper]] 10 Dec 1929 – 25 Aug 2011 **[[Landrum-853|Mildred Allene (Landrum) Draper]] (1916 - 2008) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/24196/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Alabama *[[Draper-5946|Lillian E. (Draper) Iven (1928 - 1960) Sister of [[Draper-5291|Roy Gillette Draper]] above *Abraham L. Draper 4 Oct 1852 – 18 Jul 1918 *Angeline J. Probst Draper 1841 – 24 Apr 1936 *Annalee Sheets Draper 1875 – 14 Sep 1896 *Arley Owen Draper 17 Jun 1891 – 12 Apr 1955 *Charles G. Draper unknown – 12 Oct 1854 *Charles L. Draper 4 Jan 1852 – 19 Aug 1908 *Daughter Draper Birth and death dates unknown. *Edwin J. Draper 30 Apr 1838 – 4 Feb 1910 *Faye Vada Brown Draper 1 Aug 1895 – 25 Jan 1974 *Frank Amos Draper 3 Jun 1866 – 8 Nov 1903 *Ida Lucinda Woodward Draper 23 Aug 1908 – 2 Jun 1945 *Lillian E. Draper 1874 – 1907 *Lilly Elsie Henk Draper 1 Jun 1922 – 31 May 2004 *Margaret Jones Draper 1850 – 16 Mar 1923 *Margaret H. Culbertson Draper unknown – Dec 1854 *Marie Ellen Draper unknown – 20 Oct 1915 *Nellie C. Cass Draper16 Jan 1873 – 21 Jun 1893 *Sarah A. Partlow Draper 23 Dec 1840 – 13 Oct 1895 ==='''WARREN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-253.jpg '''Monmouth''' ZIP Code 61462 *Monmouth has been home to a few famous individuals namely the legendary lawman [[Earp-113|Wyatt Earp]] and former president Ronald Reagan. In addition Stephen Douglas once oversaw a hearing in Monmouth dealing with the possible extradition of Mormon Leader Joseph Smith to Missouri to face charges of murder. [[Draper-4290|Joe Draper]]'s wife [[Eby-1144|Vada]] was related to [[Earp-113|Wyatt Earp]]'s family who briefly lived here. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-59.jpg '''Monmouth Cemetery''' Also called Glendale Cemetery, was once a small, privately owned cemetery, but was taken over by city owned Monmouth Cemetery decades ago. Glendale Cemetery was located at the corner of North Sixth Street and Boston Avenue. Today, Glendale Cemetery is simply known as the Glendale Addition to Monmouth Cemetery. [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Monmouth+City+Cemetery/@40.9134666,-90.6413579,265m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x87e10bab0fc5ac37:0x97c71a922d2ce532!8m2!3d40.9132449!4d-90.6411955 Satellite_View_Map] The Deweese Family married into the Draper Family, who are buried in Starr Cemetery, Humboldt, Nebraska. Elizabeth Deweese was buried here in Monmouth with her children or descendants. While not "blood" related, The Deweese family had very close ties to the Draper Family. *[[Deweese-462|Elizabeth Deweese Lucas]] is buried here with her daughter [[Lucas-8991|Mary]]. Elizabeth was the sister of [[Deweese-818|James Madison Deweese]] who was part of the underground railway in Iowa with [[Draper-4254|Ira Dillingham Draper]] who were Wanted Dead or Alive for aiding slaves in Iowa. ==='''WAYNE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-254.jpg '''NOTE''' Many of the Drapers in Southern Illinois trace back to [[Draper-3301|Joshua Draper]] 1770-1855 where we hit the proverbial "Brick Wall". There is good reason to believe they descend from [[Draper-40|Thomas]] and [[Coleman-153|Lucy Coleman Draper]] (1733 - abt. 1812). Family Search and Find A Grave would disagree with this theory. Based on the family history of living descendants of [[Draper-3301|Joshua Draper]] 1770-1885, they should connect to our family. The current son of [[Draper-40|Thomas]] and Lucy Coleman Draper is listed as [[Draper-745|Joshua Draper]] 1784-1857 who lived and died in Alabama with all his children, except for [[Draper-743|William Lane Draper]] who is buried in Tennessee. The burial of [[Draper-743|William Lane Draper]] in Tennessee is part of the confusion in connecting the Southern Illinois Draper families with our family. If we were to replace [[Draper-745|Joshua Draper 1784 -1857]] with [[Draper-3301|Joshua Draper 1770-1855]] as the son of [[Draper-40|Thomas and Lucy Coleman Draper]] this whole branch of the Draper family would connect to our family, (the descendants of [[Draper-169|Thomas and Sarah Toone? Draper]]) We need more information to sort out who [[Draper-3301|Joshua Draper 1770]] and [[Draper-745|Joshua Draper 1784]] were. While these two Joshua Draper are probably part of our family and are most likely cousins, connecting them to our family in the proper way is impossible at this entry dated July 29, 2020. '''Orchardville''' ZIP Code 62899 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-477.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2240141/mount-pleasant-cemetery Mount Pleasant Cemetery]''' AKA Ayers Cemetery Cyntha Ann Guinn Draper 8 May 1830 – 3 Feb 1910 Memorial ID 180388854 *Daniel Amos Draper 26 Aug 1837 – 13 Oct 1919 Memorial ID 180387051 *E. A. Draper 24 Dec 1855 – 30 Mar 1877 Memorial ID 82776108 *[[Draper-5023|Elijah Draper]] 16 Feb 1833 – 26 Jan 1903 Memorial ID 53159258 **[[Guinn-1172|Mary Frances Guinn Draper]] 11 Mar 1836 – 20 Oct 1914 Memorial ID 82775600 *Letica Slade Draper 27 May 1839 – 3 Jan 1909 Memorial ID 180386998 *Morris Draper 5 Aug 1829 – 20 Sep 1869 Memorial ID 53159206 *Nancy E. Draper 10 Feb 1872 – 27 Oct 1872 Memorial ID 180388791 *Nathan Draper1868 – 3 Oct 1869 Memorial ID 180386975 *Otto Draper 28 Mar 1877 – 2 Jul 1877 Memorial ID 82776138 *Sarah Slade Draper 24 Apr 1834 – 26 Nov 1905 Memorial ID 180386936 '''Wayne City''' ZIP Code 62895 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/71/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-176.jpg ...Chase Hardware antique sign at Cracker Barrel, Bloomington, Illinois Fairbanks-Morse was an American Manufacturer, founded 1823, in Saint Johnsbury, Vermont. Originally a weighing scale manufacturer, it later diversified into pumps, engines, windmills, coffee grinders, radios, farm tractors. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-179.jpg Fairbanks-Morse Advertisement of a Wind Mill https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-79.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/104618/baltimore-cemetery Baltimore Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-1997|William Bennett Draper]] 8 Nov 1854 – 11 Aug 1930 wife: **[[Hooper-8823|Josephene Hooper Draper]] 17 Oct 1854 – 6 Nov 1938 *[[Draper-3299|Resire Dero “R.D.” Draper]] 30 May 1856 – 9 Apr 1935 wife: **[[Allen-43059|Mary Arthella Allen Draper]] 20 Sep 1861 – 15 Sep 1911 *[[Draper-3298|Reetha A Draper Simpson]] 6 May 1881 – 29 May 1948 Husband: **[[Simpson-16979|William G. Simpson]] 1870–1932 *[[Draper-1999|George Washington Draper]] 18 Jan 1847 – 4 Mar 1899 wife: **[[Mayberry-1516|Mary E Mayberry Draper]] 1 Jan 1854 – 29 Oct 1896 ***[[Draper-5475|Eva May ''Draper'' Ford]] 1877–1916, husband: ****[[Ford-20358|Albert Amos Ford]] 1868–1957 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/86501/rainsville-cemetery Rainsville IN], children: *****George William Ford 1907–1909 Age 2 infant *****Natalie O Ford 1906–1906 age: 3 months infant **'''Note''' The other 5 (or more) children of Eva & Albert were bound out to other families after Eva died. They are buried all over the Midwest, USA (needs documented) *[[Draper-5358|John Wesley Draper]] 22 May 1852 – 12 Jun 1905 and wives: **[[Witter-777|Rebecca Witter Draper]] 16 Feb 1853 – 24 Oct 1882 **[[Ballard-10144|Malinda Ballard Draper]] 31 Mar 1852 – 5 Apr 1922 *[[Draper-1995|James Wilson Draper]] Oct 1845 – 1936 Wife **[[Peer-673|Rachel Peer Draper]] Mar 1849 – 1925 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105794/garrison-cemetery Garrison Cemetery] her children: ***[[Draper-5350|Lewis Franklin Draper]] 11 Jul 1887 – 21 Jan 1963 Wife: ****[[Hunt-25579|Clara Hunt Draper]] 23 Jul 1889 – 20 Aug 1958 ****Kate Alma Pair 1893–Deceased '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *****James Wilson Draper (1916-deceased) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Draper-5349|William Belzic Draper]] 10 Jan 1875 – 2 Jun 1954 and wife: **[[Harrolle-16|Flora Estella Harrolle Draper]] 19 Aug 1887 – 6 Mar 1939 *[[Draper-5198|Curtis Orville Draper]] 15 Jul 1884 – 19 Aug 1947 wife: **[[Powell-22823|Carolyn Ruth Powell Draper]] 1887 – 1960 *[[Draper-5355|Ephraim Franklin Draper]] 12 Oct 1876 – 25 Mar 1956 wife **No events listed *George W. Draper 1879 – 17 Jun 1881 **infant death *Clarence Ezar Draper 28 Oct 1886 – 23 Dec 1967 FAG: 106922465 Wife: **Catherine Ruchamey Gritton Draper 31 Dec 1892 – 20 Jun 1980 FAG: 106921909 *[[Draper-3298|Reetha A ''Draper'' Simpson]] 1881–1948 husband: (daughter of Resire Draper) **[[Simpson-16979|William G. Simpson]] 1870–1932 *[[Draper-5348|Bert Ellis Draper]] 29 Apr 1893 – 22 Jun 1973 wife: **No events listed *[[Draper-5197|Herbert Orville Draper]] 25 Aug 1919 – 12 Feb 2009 wife: **[[Fenton-3968|Venita June (Fenton) Withrow]] (1934 - 2012) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, died in Ash Flat, Sharp County, Arkansas, *[[Draper-5497|Chancy Sylvester Draper]] 29 Oct 1886 – 19 Apr 1974 wife: **[[Ward-39492|Zelma Alta Ward Draper]] 9 Sep 1890 – 8 Jul 1972 daughter: ***[[Draper-5503|Vera J. (Draper) Hertenstein]] (1918 - 2006) husband: ****[[Hertenstein-73|John Irvin Hertenstein]] (1913 - 1949) ***[[Draper-5504|Erma I (Draper) Barlow]] (1919 - 2018) ****Paris Clifford Richardson (1915-1945) '''CENOTAPH''' killed in Germany, buried there ****Howard Milton Barlow (1912-2003) *Alice Rosetta Perry Draper20 Mar 1883 – 5 Dec 1957 *Arthur A. Draper 19 May 1883 – 28 May 1883 infant death *Fred Draper 18 Jan 1898 – 15 Mar 1971 FAG ID: 134614446; FS ID: M1FM-XWF wife: **Gertrude Hutchcraft Draper27 Dec 1902 – 22 Aug 1981 FAG ID: 134614477; FS ID: KH24-XLD; son: ***Bernard Lee Draper 14 Jul 1925 – 26 May 1934 Age 8 FAG ID: 106935866; FS ID: M1FM-X7L *Noah Draper unknown details '''CENOTAPH''' (see notes in FAG ID: 106921387 wife **Eliza Draper unknown details '''CENOTAPH''' their child: ***Richard A Draper 6 Sep 1854 – 21 Dec 1922 FAG Mem. ID: 106921387 ****Martha Anna Buchanan Draper 18 Aug 1864 – 12 Sep 1912 Children: *****Leonard Draper (1886–1951) FAG Mem. ID: 31634290 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105109/charlottesville-cemetery Charlottesville Cemetery] Bird, Lawrence Co., IL *****Ethel ''Draper'' Yocum (1901-2002) FAG MEM. ID: 60073940 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106740/maplewood-cemetery Maplewood Cemetery] Rantoul, IL *Bertha E Draper 1924 – 1935 *Betty Jean Buchanan Draper 17 Jan 1931 – 31 Jul 2017 *Charles Clinton Draper 19 Jan 1894 – 27 Aug 1959 *Charles Clinton Draper Jr. 28 Dec 1928 – 14 Apr 1990 *Charles Isaac “Charlie” Draper 5 Dec 1850 – 14 Dec 1929 *Clayton Lane Draper 28 Mar 1896 – 9 Aug 1963 *Cly Draper 12 Apr 1884 – 16 Jun 1961 *Clyde Ernest Draper 16 Jun 1917 – 7 Nov 1991 *Cora Lorene Draper 1903 – 1914 *Daniel S Draper 3 Jan 1880 – 25 Mar 1882 *Dellah B. Williams Draper 11 Feb 1888 – 27 Oct 1964 *Effie May Richardson Draper 19 Nov 1884 – 23 Oct 1971 *Etta May Mundy Draper 22 Mar 1882 – 21 Jul 1962 *Eva M Draper 15 Aug 1906 – 18 Nov 1933 *Francis M Draper 6 Oct 1878 – unknown *George A. Draper11 Mar 1892 – 28 Dec 1905 *Gladys Mary Church Draper 2 Mar 1900 – 1979 *Hardy B. Draper 25 Aug 1888 – 27 Jun 1889 *Howard Draper 2 Nov 1920 – Jan 1970 *Howard Wilson Draper 1 May 1916 – 18 Aug 1916 *Infant Daughter Draper unknown – 23 Sep 1885 *Infant Daughter Draper Jul 1880 – Jul 1880 *Infant Son Draper 22 Feb 1896 – 22 Feb 1896 *Ira Russell Draper 1 Jun 1883 – 9 Jun 1942 *James Marcus Draper 1887 – Oct 1918 *Janet S. Trunk Draper 23 Sep 1942 – 3 Dec 2008 *Jeanie Draper28 Jan 1940 – 28 Jan 1940 *Jessie Black Draper 1899 – 1987 *John Wesley Draper 24 May 1913 – 5 Jun 1932 *Joseph Bennett Draper 11 Mar 1861 – 19 Nov 1903 *Lester Draper 6 Nov 1915 – 23 Feb 1917 *Lillie Scott Draper 11 Jan 1897 – 2 Jul 1956 *Louvina Buchanan Draper 13 Dec 1866 – 9 Jun 1959 *Lowell E. Draper23 Oct 1917 – 5 Jan 1997 *Marie Draper 30 Apr 1900 – 25 Jun 1979 *Martha E. Draper 17 Oct 1884 – 7 Nov 1884 *Martha Jane “Jannie” Butler Draper 1857 – 26 Nov 1947 *Marvin Draper 22 Jun 1897 – 1964 *Minnie Leeta Hands Draper 29 Jul 1900 – 19 Jan 1978 *Miriam J. Parker Draper 17 Mar 1920 – 21 Oct 2005 *Nolan Emmerson Draper Jr. 25 Oct 1922 – 27 Oct 1922 *Nolan Emmerson Draper Sr. 23 Aug 1901 – 17 Feb 1993 *Nora Perry Draper 12 Feb 1880 – 1946 *Otha Chalmer Draper 7 May 1881 – 23 Apr 1961 *Owen Bennett Draper 31 Oct 1906 – 3 Feb 1999 *Perry E Draper 18 Jul 1890 – 17 Nov 1987 *Ray Rossie Draper 4 Aug 1888 – 27 May 1927 *Rebecca Draper 24 Aug 1888 – Sep 1969 *Rebecca Ann Ballard Draper 4 Nov 1854 – 24 Mar 1940 *Riley F. Draper 29 Sep 1888 – 21 Jun 1959 *Rosella Rutherford Draper 1 May 1918 – 20 Nov 2010 *Rufus Kenneth Draper 25 Dec 1924 – 9 May 1969 *Ruth A. Draper15 Dec 1920 – 16 Feb 2002 *Sam Draper 3 Jun 1955 – 7 Aug 2002 *Tamer Vermadell Smith Draper 10 Jan 1886 – 19 Oct 1947 *Thelma E Laird Draper 1 Jan 1916 – 31 May 2012 *Thomas Franklin Draper 24 Dec 1858 – 1 Jan 1946 *Turner Byron Draper 20 Dec 1875 – 2 Jun 1963 *William I. “Willie” Draper 3 Aug 1878 – 26 Aug 1880 *William L. Draper1824 – 26 Sep 1902 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-156.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108521/thomason-cemetery Thomason Cemetery]''' Rural cemetery Located on County Rd 610 N west of County Rd 500 East *[[Draper-1994|Isaac L. Draper]] 7 Dec 1813 – 29 Jan 1858 wife **[[Unknown-341569|Lucy A. Thomason Draper]]1817 – After 1840 *Rex Marshal Draper 11 Dec 1900 – 19 Nov 1986 **Chloe M Loge Draper 20 Nov 1907 – 22 Feb 1995 *Eldon Eugene “Gene” Draper 6 Dec 1929 – 23 Oct 2010 **wife ?? add when discovered ***Dee Ann Draper unknown – 13 May 1970 ***Lee Ann Draper unknown – 13 May 1970 *Evers Draper 24 Nov 1885 – 4 Apr 1960 wife: **Mabel Thomason Draper 1889 – 1970 *Joseph Bennett Draper 1861-1903) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/104618/baltimore-cemetery Baltimore Cemetery] Son: **Harry B Draper 18 Jun 1894 – 14 Aug 1948 MEMORIAL ID 95040427 wife: ***Virgie Lee Austin Draper 25 May 1897 – 5 Jun 1965 MEMORIAL ID 97282361 *Anthony Wayne Draper unknown – 1959 *Bertha Augustina Ballard Draper 16 Jan 1882 – 19 Dec 1944 *Carol Renee Draperunknown – 1962 *Chloe M Loge Draper 20 Nov 1907 – 22 Feb 1995 *Florence Virginia Crocker Draper 15 Oct 1857 – 20 Feb 1911 *Francis Marion Draper 6 Oct 1878 – 24 Jun 1961 *Harry Ace Draper Jr. 25 Apr 1924 – 2 Jul 1974 *Infant Son Draper 1930 – 1930 *Jackie Leland Draper 29 Mar 1934 – 12 Mar 1936 *John William Draper 18 Mar 1935 – 11 May 1935 *Lemmen Cecil Draper1884 – 1932 *Loren Marshall Draper 30 Mar 1909 – 25 Sep 1973 *Luisana Draper 1827 – unknown *Lyman Lloyd Draper 30 May 1911 – 29 Sep 1972 *Mabel Thomason Draper 1889 – 1970 *Maurice Draper 1 Oct 1901 – 21 Dec 1991 *Melba Ester Jeannette Hall Draper 23 Sep 1899 – 3 Nov 1988 *Michael Dale Draper 19 Nov 1953 – 3 Mar 1954 *Nona M. Koontz Draper 11 Feb 1907 – 24 Apr 2009 *Norma Lucille Turner Draper 23 Jan 1925 – 29 Oct 1998 *Otto Draper 10 Jul 1892 – Jun 1952 *Peter F. Draper 1834 – 1861 *Predis Loren Draper 22 Sep 1892 – 30 Nov 1958 *Thelma Lucille Simpson Draper 19 Feb 1919 – 15 Feb 1938 *Thurman Otto Draper 10 Jul 1892 – 4 Jun 1952 *Violet Draper 13 Aug 1939 – 10 Jul 2005 *Virgie Lee Austin Draper 25 May 1897 – 5 Jun 1965 *Voris “Sonny” Draper 10 Jun 1932 – 7 Jan 2017 *William Franklin Draper 19 Jan 1888 – 26 Jul 1943 *William Isaac Draper 8 May 1854 – 15 Jun 1900 ==='''WHITE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-255.jpg '''Brownville''' 62821 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-99.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/360529/west-union-cemetery West Union Cemetery]''' Location Brownsville, White County, Illinois, USA *[[Bird-10713|Martha ''Bird'' (Draper) Sanders]] 1838 - 1922 (1st husband [[Draper-4844|Christopher Draper]] buried in Enfield, IL *Sarah Jane Elizabeth ''Draper'' Shipley 31 Jul 1864 – 24 Dec 1908 (Christopher's daughter) '''Enfield''' ZIP Code 62835 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-97.jpg '''William Draper Family Cemetery''' is a rural cemetery, in a farm field, mostly destroyed by farming. [https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Waynesburg,+Indiana///@38.0539101,-88.2799483,106m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m10!4m9!1m5!1m1!1s0x886baa3a261fc991:0x871aa90b5b049768!2m2!1d-85.6694219!2d39.2111627!1m0!1m0!3e0 Satellite_View_Map] From Enfield, take State Highway 45 south to State Route 14. Turn left towards Carmi, then turn right (south) on County Road 500E to County Road 1200N. Turn east on County Road 1200N, and the cemetery is just past the third electric pole on the left. It is located about thirty steps from the road in a field. Most of the cemetery has been destroyed by the current owners who see nothing wrong with plowing over it. Back in the 1860s, the land was owned by William Draper, who was buried there. *[[Draper-4818|William Draper]] 1 May 1784 – 12 Oct 1862 original property owner ***Elizabeth (Draper) Lough (1815 - 1848) '''CENOTAPH''' Daughter of [[Draper-4818|William Draper]] died in Decatur County, IN, her husband: ****[[Lough-709|James Hamilton Lough]] (1814 - 1850) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Draper-4844|Christopher Draper]] 1820 – 1876 wife: **[[Bird-10713|Martha ''Bird'' (Draper) Sanders]] (1838 - 1922) re-mairred, buried In Brownsville, IL *Susannah Russel Draper 12 Sep 1836 – 31 Oct 1860 *Katherine Draper Kinsall Jul 1862 – 31 Jul 1862 *Kathleen Draper Kinsall 31 Jul 1862 – 31 Jul 1862 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-93.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105586/enfield-cemetery Enfield Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-4987|Sara Jane ''Draper'' Gentry]] 1837-1906 (Daughter of [[Draper-4818|William Draper]], above) husband: ** [[Gentry-4255|George Gentry]] 1835-1913, their son and daughters: ***William Cyrus Gentry 1859–1949 wife: Laura Stokes Gentry 1863–1921 ***Frances Aranah Gentry Jordan 1870–1934, husband: Alexander Jordan 1863–1928 ***[[Gentry-4257|Julia Elizabeth ''Gentry'' Kinsall]] (1857 - 1932) husband: [[Kinsall-18|Alvin Hamilton Kinsall]] (1855 - 1932) *[[Draper-5213|Joseph Franklin “Frank” Elijah Draper]] 4 Aug 1871 – 1951 Wife: **[[Welch-11970|Lula Welch Draper]] May 1875 – 14 May 1950 *[[Draper-4820|Joseph Martin Draper]] 13 Nov 1811 – 14 Aug 1895 wife: **[[Patterson-21626|Eliza Ann Patterson Draper]] 30 Nov 1813 – 14 Feb 1866 ***[[Draper-5323|Samuel P. Draper]] 1839 – 1863 Age 23, '''CENOTAPH''', died from diseases from Civil War, two days after mustered out, buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/63403/vicksburg-national-cemetery Vicksburg National Cemetery], Mississippi *[[Draper-5324|Mary Jane (Draper) Gowdy]] (1843 - 1937) (parents Joseph & Eliza above) husband: **[[Gowdy-294|James E. Gowdy]]1839–1916 *[[Draper-5325|Elizabeth E.'' Draper'' Brockett]] (1845 - 1881) (parents Joseph & Eliza above) husband: **[[Brockett-811|Michael S. Brockett ]] (1846 - 1924) *[[Draper-5214|Maurice E. Draper]]1910 – 1956, wife: **[[Wilson-93981|Dana Elmeto (Wilson) Ward]] (1909 - 2013) she re-married *[[Draper-4821|William M. Draper MD]] 20 Feb 1818 – 10 Nov 1880 wives: ** [[Deemer-317|Sarah Ann Deemer Draper]] (27 August 1822- 8 May 1866) '''CENOTAPH''' burial in Enfield unknown **[[Fisher-27162|Catharine Fisher Draper]] (1821–about 1900) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *[[Draper-5326|James Draper]] Sep 1852 – 22 Jan 1940 wife **[[Waldon-394|Lizzie Waldon Draper]] Jan 1859 – 29 Sep 1940 *J. F. Draper Birth and death dates unknown. *Martha Harrell Draper Birth and death dates unknown. '''Carmi''' ZIP Code 62821 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ab/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-411.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/107206/north-maple-ridge-cemetery North Maple Ridge Cemetery]''' Located: Carmi, White County , Illinois, USA *Howard George Draper Jr. 28 Oct 1915 – 12 Jul 1989 Memorial ID 136981122 wife: **Mary Alice Holden Draper 14 Dec 1917 – 7 Oct 2014 Memorial ID 136981008 their daughter: ***Diann Draper Williams (1945–2016) '''CENOTAPH''' Cremated FAG Memorial ID: 156855763 ****Husband and children still living https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/48/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-96.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105785/white-county-memorial-garden White County Memorial Garden]''' AKA Garden of Memories Location: Carmi, White County, Illinois, USA *[[Draper-5215|Larry Draper]] 10 Nov 1941 – 12 Sep 2012 **[[Winter-6930|Patricia “Pat” Winter Draper]] 25 Nov 1946 – 25 Oct 2014 *[[Draper-5481|Gloria L. ''Draper'' Kallenbach]] (1924 - 2013) husband **[[Kallenbach-243|Glenn Robert Kallenbach]] 1925-2017 ***[[Kallenbach-244|Karen Sue Kallenbach Berger 1953–1992]] *Ernest A. Draper 4 Mar 1902 – 1994 **Mildred E. Lough Draper 2 Apr 1903 – 19 May 1999 ==='''WHITESIDE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-523.jpg '''Rock Falls''' ZIP Code 61071 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/07/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-524.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1187153/coloma-township-cemetery Coloma Township Cemetery] AKA IOOF Odd Fellows Cemetery *[[WikiTree contributors, "Rufus N. Draper (1851-1943)," WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, (https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Draper-5706 : accessed 12 October 2022).|Rufus N Draper]] 9 Jan 1851 – 30 Dec 1943 **[[Hightower-2133|Mary Magdalene Belles Draper]] 1853 - 1924 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108328/south-hill-cemetery South Hill Cemetery] Vandalia, IL ==='''WILLIAMSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/db/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-594.jpg '''Creal Springs ZIP Code 62922 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/01/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-595.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/105298/creal-springs-cemetery? Creal Springs Cemetery]''' Creal Springs, IL *Benjamin Franklin “Frank” Draper 28 Nov 1892 – 1968 Memorial ID 63530233 **Mabel ''Rushing'' Draper 17 Apr 1892 – 23 Aug 1981 Memorial ID 63530234 children: ***Anita Ruth Draper 30 Jan 1922 – 25 Sep 1924 Memorial ID 63530232 Age 2 ***B Frank Draper Jr. 3 Mar 1925 – 8 Mar 1925 Memorial ID 63530235 Age 5 days ***Eva Jane ''Draper'' Hammock 1928–2018 Memorial ID 194214663 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106520/lakeview-cemetery Lakeview Cemetery] Johnson city, IL ***Ida Mae Draper 1936 – 1938 Memorial ID 63530236 ==Wisconsin 112 Burial Listings== ===ASHLAND COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-627.jpg '''Bad River''' ZIP Code 54806 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/45/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-628.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88635/bad-river-cemetery Bad River Cemetery] AKA Odanah Cemetery Located: Odanah, WI *George Draper 1843 – 5 Apr 1909 Memorial ID 12094087 **Angeline Draper 1847 – 18 Feb 1914 Memorial ID 93975796 ===CLARK COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/25/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-629.jpg '''Loyal''' ZIP Code 54446 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/aa/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-630.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/161768/loyal-city-cemetery Loyal City Cemetery]''' Located: Loyal, Clark County, Wisconsin, USA *Pvt Horace Draper 17 Jul 1838 – 1922 Memorial ID 17970934 **Lucia Sarah Clement Draper 9 Dec 1831 – 1921 Memorial ID 100465252 ***Fredrick William Draper 22 Jul 1868 – 2 Sep 1962 Memorial ID 100465606 ****Amy Kayhart Draper12 Feb 1878 – 1945 Memorial ID 100465765 *****Bernice Draper 26 May 1895 – Feb 1975 Memorial ID 100465431 ===DOOR COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-632.jpg '''Sturgeon Bay''' ZIP Code 54235 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-633.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87550/bayside-cemetery Bayside Cemetery]''' Sturgeon Bay, Door County, WI *Gilbert A. Draper (a.1825 - b.1865) died in Civil War, Married 23 Dec 1858 in Evans New York '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wife: **Louise A. ''Barnard'' (Draper) Olson 1834 - 1900 Memorial ID 150881980, 2nd husband: ***Hans Jacob Olson 1845–1927 (m. 1871) Memorial ID 178014399 ****'''NOTE''' Louise and Hans Olson had 3 children ***Charles Eugene Draper 20 Oct 1862 – 28 Mar 1882 Memorial ID 127940660 Age 19 died of consumption ***Lillian Draper 3 Sep 1860 – 8 Jan 1884 Memorial ID 150179483 age 23 died of consumption ===MILWAUKEE COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-604.jpg '''Milwaukee''' ZIP Code 53022 - 53218 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-603.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109442/wood-national-cemetery Wood National Cemetery]''' Milwaukee, WI *Alvin Draper 1811 – 26 Apr 1873 Memorial ID 2905921 *George Draper unknown – 8 Sep 1913 Memorial ID 2905922 *Joseph E Draper 27 Oct 1897 – 3 Jun 1967 Memorial ID 2905923 ===OUTAGAMIE COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-634.jpg '''Appleton''' ZIP Code 54915 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-636.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88828/riverside-cemetery? Riverside Cemetery]''' Appleton, County, WI '''NOTE''' The only Draper burial here is Almer Draper 1859-1899, but his pedigree is listed: *John Draper 1755–1826 '''CENOTAPH''' Canada wife '''NOT Family''' **Lydia ''Rogers'' Draper 1751–1815 '''CENOTAPH''' Canada ***Jacob Draper 1791–1867 '''CENOTAPH''' Canada wife: ****Frederica ''Winn'' Draper 1789–1836 '''CENOTAPH''' Canada *****Elisha Draper 1826–1910 '''CENOTAPH''' Canada, wife: ******Thursa ''Humphreys'' Draper 1831–1900 '''CENOTAPH''' *******Almer F. Draper 6 Mar 1859 – 14 Jul 1899 Memorial ID 144211149 wife: ********Katherine ''Lovelace'' 1862–Deceased '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *********Marie Draper 1889–1972 LV6T-M7H​​ '''CENOTAPH''' *********Margaret Draper 1892–Deceased LV6T-M4G '''CENOTAPH''​​' *********Charles Dean Draper 1894–1963 LV6R-1SL​​ wife: '''CENOTAPH''' **********Ellen M. ''Frederickson'' Draper 1901–1976 son: '''CENOTAPH''' ***********Gordon Murray Draper 1938–1958 G3BV-6RY '''CENOTAPH''' *********Almer F Draper 1899–Deceased LV6T-MZ3 wife: '''CENOTAPH''' **********Anna M ''Auer'' Draper 1905–2003 G3YR-21Y '''CENOTAPH''' '''Stephensville''' ZIP Code 54944 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-635.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87848/ellington-union-cemetery? Ellington Union Cemetery]''' Stephensville, Outagamie CO., WI *Nelson B. Draper 13 Dec 1823 – 13 Jan 1880 Memorial ID 153360369 **Sarah A. Spencer Draper1832 – 1898 Memorial ID 153360664 ***Maggie A. Draper 1858 – 1872 Memorial ID 153359778 age 13 ***Florence Ina Draper Grant 1860–1912 Memorial ID 14595798 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38765/fairview-cemetery Fairview Cemetery] Ontario, OR, her husband: ****Adelbert Roscoe Grant 1855–1944 Memorial ID 14595785 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38765/fairview-cemetery Fairview Cemetery] Ontario, OR ***Avery N. Draper 1890 – 1895 Memorial ID 153359395 Age 4 ===RICHLAND COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-596.jpg '''Bosstown''' ZIP Code 53581 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-597.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88443/mill-creek-cemetery Mill Creek Cemetery] Bosstown, Wisconsin *Simon Draper (1827-1866) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **Phoebe ''Breese'' (Draper) Hartley (1831–1926) Memorial ID 22456942 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2131387/timber-ridge-cemetery Timber Ridge Cemetery] Marshfield, MO ***James Draper 1850–1918 Memorial ID 88109219 wife: ****Mary Ann Ewing Draper 30 Jun 1849 – 4 Oct 1923 Memorial ID 88109236 children: *****Glendolah ''Draper'' Dieter 1887–1918 Memorial ID 88109113 ******Infant Son Dieter 1918–1918 *****Vivian Draper 15 May 1883 – 8 Nov 1921 Memorial ID 88109400 *****Frederick E. Draper 22 Jun 1876 – 11 Apr 1943 Memorial ID 88109182 *****Oliver E. “Ollie” Draper15 Jan 1878 – 22 Nov 1911 Memorial ID 88109248 ******Eva Lucinda ''Coleman'' (Draper) Lee 1878–1958 (m. 1903) Memorial ID 120660779 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2129294/saint-marys-catholic-church-cemetery St. Marys Catholic Church Cemetery] Richland Center, WI *******Zelma Lael ''Draper'' (Guist) Turnmire 1904–1977 Memorial ID 87455232 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1972932/readstown-cemetery Readstown Cemetery] Readstown, WI *******James O. Draper 13 May 1909 – 21 Dec 1972 Memorial ID 76953772 wife: ********Arlita B. “Molly” Beaty Draper 6 Jun 1922 – 1 Mar 2009 Memorial ID 34513119 *********Gerald William Draper5 Aug 1943 – 7 Aug 1943 Memorial ID 88109210 **********Frederick E. “Fred” Draper13 May 1949 – 27 Aug 1973 Memorial ID 88109193 *********Thomas Frank Draper 24 Sep 1944 – 23 Jun 2005 Memorial ID 11231737 *'''NOTE''' The following are listed here because of 2 infant sons (below) that are buried in this cemetery. To avoid confusion, the family is listed here also, even though buried elsewhere. *Oliver E Draper 1912–1978 (m. 1935) Memorial ID 64477109 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88398/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Evansville, WI **1st wife: Ariel Elizabeth ''Beatty'' (Draper) Wagner 1916–1984 (m. 1935) Memorial ID 60984973 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery] Richland Center, WI, sons: ***Infant Son Draper 17 Sep 1935 – 17 Sep 1935 Memorial ID 60985252 ***Infant Son Draper17 Sep 1935 – 17 Sep 1935 Memorial ID 60985281 **2nd wife: Buena Mildred ''Gulsrud'' Draper 1919–1988 Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88398/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Evansville, WI ***Dean Ollie Draper 1959–2011 Memorial ID 64475647 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88398/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Evansville, WI wife: ****Wendy J. Trieloff Draper 1952–2017 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88398/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] Evansville, WI *'''NOTE''' The following are listed here because the parents of Oscar and Ray Draper. both age 2. (below) are buried in this cemetery. To avoid confusion, the family is listed here also, even though buried elsewhere. *James Draper 1880–1948 Memorial ID 79304187 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery] Richland Center, WI **Margaret Davis Draper 1881–1962 Memorial ID 79304229 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery] Richland Center, WI ***Oscar Draper 26 Mar 1907 – 9 Feb 1910 Age 2 Memorial ID 88109260 ***Ray V. Draper 2 Jul 1923 – 10 Oct 1924 Memorial ID 88109274 ***'''Note:''' James and Margaret had 11 children, many buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery] Richland Center, WI '''Richland Center''' ZIP Code 53581 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-598.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery]''' Richland Center, WI *Winnie ''Draper'' Hardy 1905–2003 daughter of James & Margaret ''Davis'' Draper husband: **Vernie V. Hardy Memorial ID 45277411 1902–1982 son: ***Melvin LaVerne Hardy 1923 - 1986 Memorial ID 53627955 wife: ****Betty Lucile ''Deets'' Hardy 1925–2016 Memorial ID 166672849 *James “Bun” Draper 1880 – 1948 Memorial ID 79304187 **Margaret Davis Draper 1881 – 2 Mar 1962 Memorial ID 79304229 ***Fay I. Draper 21 Nov 1916 – 16 Jul 1988 Memorial ID 79291061 ****Marlene Adele Hocking Draper 4 Apr 1933 – 5 Nov 2008 Memorial ID 31176699 ***Margaret Ivaline “Peg” Draper Peckham 1918 -2008 Memorial ID 25012603 husband: ****George W Peckham 1915–1974 Memorial ID 27389936 son: *****Ronald G Peckham 1937–2000 Memorial ID 27389912 ***Maude ''Draper'' (Ruse) Buchanan 1908 - 1994 Memorial ID 95651054, husbands: ****Elgin Branson Ruse 1907–1989 (m. 1929) Memorial ID 47222851 · ****Scott Alexander Buchanan 1906–1971 (m. 1974) Memorial ID 95651068 ***James “Junior” Draper Jr. 26 Feb 1920 – 25 Dec 1988 Memorial ID105123556 ****Donna J Buchanan Draper 4 Jan 1924 – 16 Feb 1994 Memorial ID105123512 *Simon Draper (1827-1866) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **Phoebe ''Breese'' (Draper) Hartley (1831–1926) Memorial ID 22456942 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2131387/timber-ridge-cemetery Timber Ridge Cemetery] Marshfield, MO ***Rebecca Jane Draper 22 Jun 1858 – 17 Feb 1880 Age 21, Memorial ID 105123587 ***'''NOTE''' Rebecca Jane Draper's parents, Simon and Phoebe Draper, are also CENOTAPH listed in Mill Creek Cemetery *Oliver E Draper 1912–1978 Memorial ID 64477109 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88398/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery] **Ariel Elizabeth Beatty Wagner 1916–1984 Memorial ID60984973 '''CENOTAPH''' buried[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery] Richland City, WI ***Mary Elizabeth “Mary Beth” Draper 9 Jun 1940 – 18 Aug 2019 Memorial ID 202235892 ===ROCK COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-599.jpg '''Evansville''' ZIP Code 53536 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-600.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88398/maple-hill-cemetery Maple Hill Cemetery]''' Evansville, WI *Dean Ollie Draper 6 Dec 1959 – 19 Jan 2011 Memorial ID 64475647 **Wendy J. Trieloff Draper 26 May 1952 – 28 Sep 2017 Memorial ID 183931079 *Oliver E Draper 7 Oct 1912 – 16 Apr 1978 Memorial ID 64477109 wives: **Ariel Elizabeth Beatty Wagner 1916–1984 (m. 1935) Memorial ID 60984973'''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/963056/richland-center-cemetery Richland Center Cemetery] ***Buena Mildred ''Gulsrud'' Draper 28 Jul 1919 – 7 Jul 1988 Memorial ID 64477119 '''Fulton''' ZIP Code 53534 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ac/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-602.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87991/fulton-cemetery? Fulton Cemetery] Fulton WI *William Alexander Draper 16 Oct 1897 – 5 Jan 1970 Memorial ID 134473063 **Agnes V. Ellefson Draper 2 Apr 1904 – 25 Oct 2001 Memorial ID 134472975 '''Janesville''' ZIP Code 53545 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-601.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88594/oak-hill-cemetery Oak Hill Cemetery]''' Janesville, WI *Melvin Draper 9 Oct 1904 – 14 Nov 1965 Memorial ID 119924365 three wives: **Elsie Irene ''Beckwith'' (Draper) Janney 1905–1993 (m. 1924) ***Alfred Gene Draper 29 May 1927 – 28 Sep 2015 Memorial ID 208477001 ****Coraleen Laurel Myers Draper 28 Mar 1925 – 16 Jul 1998 Memorial ID 208476950 ***Robert Wayne Draper 1929–1932 Age 2 Memorial Id 92019249 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87656/button-cemetery Button Cemetery] Buena Vista, WI **Waymeth Naomi ''Tucker'' (Draper) Vierck 1923–1993 (m. 1944) **Florence ''Kennaugh'' Draper 1 Feb 1912 – 14 Aug 1985 Memorial ID 184014151 *John Harold Draper 24 Jun 1898 – Apr 1981 Memorial ID 93613116 **Frances Spaulding Jackman Draper 18 Jul 1897 – 24 Jun 1994 Memorial ID 93288211 ===WOOD COUNTY=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-637.jpg '''Wisconsin Rapids''' ZIP Code 54494 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-638.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/87678/calvary-cemetery? Calvary Cemetery]''' Located: Wisconsin Rapids, WI *Lawrence B Draper married 1939 in Ohio '''CENOTAPH''' burial: unknown, wife: **Flora Louise Hays Draper 6 Sep 1916 – 12 Jun 1999 Memorial ID 163775465 ***Robert R. Draper 1947–2018 Memorial ID 188049483 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/707125/port-edwards-municipal-cemetery Port Edwards Municipal Cemetery] Port Edwards, WI **** Jane ''Neukirchen'' Draper married on July 20, 1968 ****Russelle Scott Draper 14 Jul 1969 – 14 Jul 1969 Infant Memorial ID 89495095 ****Jessica Lee ''Draper'' Haase 1978–2018 died of Leukemia (husband and son survives) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-639.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/88731/pioneer-cemetery Pioneer Cemetery]''' *David R. Draper November 26, 1947 (living ???) wife: **Diane R. ''Unknown'' Draper married April 26 1969 (living ??? ***Matthew David Draper 20 May 1971 – 6 Jan 2005 Memorial ID 191708412 cremation '''Cenotaph''' listed on ***Stephanie K Draper 14 May 1988 – 11 Jul 2011 Memorial ID 91768187 ****'''NOTE''' The grave stone is set in place with Stephanie and Matthew listed, but the parents, David and Diane Draper are listed on the stone but with no death dates. ==Iowa 188 Burial Listings== The Nebraskan branch of the Draper family begins in Iowa when [[Draper-4254|Ira Dillingham Draper]] becomes a station master using his farm near Vandalia, Iowa to hide runaway slaves on the Underground Railroad. Probably "ratted out" by a trusted friend, the slave owners in Missouri place a bounty on his head and want him killed. In an instant, Ira and his family abandon their farm in Iowa and head for Nebraska following the Underground Railroad backward towards Kansas. The winter of 1864 sets in upon them and they stop running and settle in the modern day Dawson, Nebraska area. The complete story is located in his profile: [[Draper-4254|'''click here''']] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-13.jpg DISCLAIMER: This poster was created in 2022 by Chris Draper. It is not a recreation of any poster we know of that existed or that may have been created by those wanting Ira Dillingham Draper killed in 1864. ==='''HENRY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-481.jpg '''Mt. Pleasant''' ZIP Code 52641 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-482.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/690429/forest-home-cemetery Forest Home Cemetery]''' *Rev Ralph L Draper 29 May 1929 – 9 Dec 2013 Memorial ID 139433488 wife: **Eleanor L. Hyndman Draper 23 Jul 1929 – 5 Nov 2017 Memorial ID 184985266 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/52/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-480.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2277032/hickory-grove-cemetery? Hickory Grove Cemetery]''' Located about 5 miles North of Mt' Pleasant, Iowa Rout 218 and 185th *Levi Stevens Draper 15 Sep 1838 – 15 Nov 1877 Memorial ID 78770900 wife?: **Myrtle Draper unknown – 9 Aug 1876 Memorial ID 78770495 ==='''LINN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-256.jpg '''Cedar Rapids''' ZIP Codes 52227 to 52499 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-130.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/755244/old-city-cemetery Old City Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5272|John Travice Draper]] 16 Sep 1897 – 3 Dec 1933 wife: **[[Bertsch-478|Cecile Agnes “Lillie” Bertsch Draper]] 1900–1930 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2210875/prairie-valley-cemetery Prairie Valle Cemetery] ==='''JASPER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/90/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-258.jpg '''Prairie City''' ZIP Code 50228 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3f/Ingmire-30-1.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1200807/westview-cemetery Westview Cemetery]''' Prairie City, Jasper County, Iowa '''THERE ARE ONLY TWO DRAPER BURIALS LISTED HERE:''' Orin and Jessie Draper. The other listings are to see who and where the entire family migrated. *Ira Ellis Draper 1834-1907 Memorial ID 27315908 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96709/woodland-cemetery Woodlawn Cemetery] Des Moines, Iowa wives: **Harriett Theodocia “Docia” Furnoy Draper 1855-1933 Memorial ID 8506664 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8437/westminster-memorial-park Westminster Memorial Park] Westminster, Orange County, California ***Nancy Maud ''Draper'' Webb 1883-1947 Memorial Id 8506660 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8437/westminster-memorial-park Westminster Memorial Park] Westminster, Orange County, California ****Arza Lyman Web 1884-1919 Memorial ID 8506660 '''CENOTAPH''' cremated; unknown *****Dorothy Eleanor Webb Bond 1906–1971 Memorial ID 38209128 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5192/memorial-oaks-cemetery Memorial Oaks Cemetery] Houston, TX ******William Carroll Bond 1904–1968 Memorial ID 5222841 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8437/westminster-memorial-park Westminster Memorial Park] Westminster, Orange County, California *****Harriett Webb Downs 1908–1994 Memorial ID 164048533 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8251/palo-verde-cemetery Palo Verde Cemetery] Blythe, California; husband ******Edward M Downs 1905–1975 (m. 1928) Memorial ID 36042305 '''CENOTAPH" buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8251/palo-verde-cemetery Palo Verde Cemetery] Blythe, California **Margarete Pope Draper 1848–1876 Memorial ID 87326801 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96565/vandalia-cemetery Vandalia Cemetery] Vandalia, Iowa ***Orrin Willard Draper 1864-1919 Memorial ID 76673544 ****Jessie Viola Porter Draper 1866 – 1934 Memorial ID 76673551 ***Frank Vogel Draper 1871–1949 Memorial ID 183146696 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Park Cemetery] Los Angeles, California ****Lillian G ''Badger'' Draper 1876–1964 Memorial ID 183147063 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Park Cemetery] Los Angeles, California *****Ira Darius Draper 1898–1963 Memorial ID 183146804 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Park Cemetery] Los Angeles, California *****Walter R Draper 1901–1979 Memorial ID 183147309 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Park Cemetery] Los Angeles, California *****Frank Jerry Draper 1903–199 Memorial ID 183147447 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Park Cemetery] Los Angeles, California '''Vandalia''' ZIP Code 50228 Unincorporated rural area https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-67.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96565/vandalia-cemetery Vandalia_Cemetery]''' Rural Cemetery W 137St S 600 feet north of Pinion Ave [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Vandalia,+IA+50228/@41.5461554,-93.320207,169m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x87eec2642d7b4eb9:0xee16d1fcc8d9ee08!8m2!3d41.5394344!4d-93.3060413 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-4268|William Henry Draper]] (1811 - 1897) **[[Means-2303|Nancy (Means) Draper]] (1815 - 1894) *[[Pope-9134|Margarete (Pope) Draper]] (1848 - 1876) husband: **[[Draper-4438|Ira Ellis Draper]] buried in Woodland Cemetery, DesMoines (above) *[[Draper-4267|Fountain Means Draper]] 18 Feb 1836 – 26 Aug 1909 **[[Shawhan-100|Mary Shawhan Draper]] 7 May 1836 – 6 Apr 1912 ***Inez ''Draper'' Quick 1861–1928 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID: 183148938 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Cemetery) Los Angeles CA, married 27 Mar 1884 to ****Jesse A Quick 1862-1935 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Cemetery) Los Angeles CA, ***Emma ''Draper'' Danley 1862–1953 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 174941538 ***George W. Danley 1858–1931'''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 174941555 ***Irene ''Draper'' Dunn 1864–1944 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 76665153 buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1200807/westview-cemetery Westview Cemetery] Husband: ****Ellsworth Dunn 1862–1923 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 76665228 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1200807/westview-cemetery Westview Cemetery] ***[[Draper-4640|Cordelia “Delia” Draper]] 14 May 1867 – 18 Feb 1909 ***Infant Draper 27 Jul 1869 – 29 Aug 1869 ***William Draper Feb 1870 – unknown ***[[Draper-4640|Ottis Draper]] 1870 – 1876 ***[[Draper-4642|Dessa Draper]] 1877 – 1883 *[[Draper-4440|John Jefferson Draper]] 20 Jun 1844 – 4 Aug 1922 **[[Keating-2489|Sarah R Keating Draper]] 1848 – 1897 **[[Deakin-515|Sarah E. ''Deakin'' (Hatfield) (Coleman) (Draper) (Houghton) Johnson]] ***Note: We call her the BLACK WIDOW as she had 5 husbands *Fern Draper unknown – 26 Apr 1903 [[Draper-4254|Ira Dillingham Draper]] farm was somewhere near here and used to hide runaway slaves ==='''MADISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-259.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/14/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-173.jpg A covered bridge in Madison County, Iowa https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/92/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-68.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/94638/ebenezer-cemetery Ebenezer_Cemetery]''' Located: 3134 Pleasantview Trl Walnut Township, Madison County, Iowa, 50222 USA *Clair Elwin Draper2 Aug 1918 – 24 Aug 1997 *James H Draper 24 Mar 1835 – 31 May 1863 *Neva L Priest Draper8 Nov 1912 – 26 Dec 2004 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95787/peru-cemetery Peru_Cemetery]''' Located: 2590 W Emerson St, East Peru, Madison County, Iowa, 50222 USA '''These Draper Are NOT Related...as far as I can discover.''' They descend from the only Puritan Drapers to come to America, who are from Massachusettes. *Cuyler Nelson Draper21 Oct 1895 – 14 Sep 1965 *Ellen Rebecca Kerns Draper29 Jan 1863 – 30 Dec 1909 *Lyman Alva Draper4 Jul 1855 – 24 Feb 1948 *Nancy Larkins Draper19 Mar 1803 – 27 Nov 1871 *Ruby Marie Marchel Draper23 Aug 1897 – 1 Jan 1927 ==='''MARION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-260.jpg '''Pella''' ZIP Code 50219 [[Earp-113|Wyatt Earp]] lived in Pella, Iowa for 14 years moving from the Warren County Illinois area. The Earp family is connected to the Draper family through [[Draper-4290|Joe Draper]]'s wife, [[Eby-1144|Vada Eby Draper]] The Earp, Draper and Deweese families lived close enough to know each other, in the 1850's [[Draper-4306|Ira Alexander Draper]] and [[Earp-113|Wyatt Earp]] were born with in a year of each other. The Earp Family left the area in 1864, the same year the Draper and Deweese families abandoned their farms and escaped into Nebraska from bounty hunters out to kill them for aiding runaway slaves. James Madison Deweese and family moved to Pella, from Indiana along with the Draper and Means family. The Deweese family was caught up in the Underground Railroad with Ira Dillingham Draper. Both families abandon their farms and settle in the modern day Dawson, Nebraska Area to escape death by bounty hunters funded by Missouri slave owners. The Deweese and Draper families marry into each other. ==='''POLK COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-257.jpg '''Des Moines''' ZIP Code (there are 75 ZIP Codes) 50308 Standard https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/06/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-61.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/94460/chapel-hill-gardens Chapel Hill Gardens]''' Located: 4400 Merle Hay Road Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa *Randall Lynn Draper (28 Oct 1948 – Dec 1977) Not sure if family) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/10/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-483.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/94875/glendale-cemetery? Glendale Cemetery]''' *Dorothy JoAnne Miner Draper 13 Sep 1928 – 9 Sep 2006 Memorial ID 102119818 husband: **Charles Edward Draper 1926–1999 (m. 1947) '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 598920 Buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109448/tahoma-national-cemetery Tahoma National Cemetery] Kent, King County, Washington, USA *Edward Robert Draper 15 Apr 1933 – 15 Dec 2005 Memorial ID 158701929 *Ernest E Draper Memorial ID3 Jul 1898 – 31 Jan 1964 Memorial ID 89652782 **Betty R Draper 26 Aug 1926 – 19 Apr 1996 Memorial ID 172990576 ***Ethel Marie '''Draper''' Green 1921–2003 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95263/laurel-hill-cemetery Laurel Hill Cemetery] *Harry F Draper Jr. unknown – Jan 1927 Memorial ID 185175207 **Margaret T DeCou Draper 4 May 1901 – 21 Jul 1963 Memorial ID 77364737 *Harry Francis Draper 10 Mar 1897 – 26 Jan 1959 Memorial ID 77364749 *Infant Boy Draper unknown – Feb 1955 Memorial ID 185788275 *Infant Boy Draper unknown – Feb 1949 Memorial ID 185745672 *Infant Girl Draper unknown – Nov 1954 Memorial ID 185783709 *Infant Girl Draper unknown – Nov 1954 Memorial ID 185783772 *James S Draper 8 Jan 1890 – 22 Jul 1951 Memorial ID 89648275 **Paulina Wilma Pischel Draper 16 Aug 1898 – Jan 1986 Memorial ID184635150 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/75/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-62.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95069/highland-memory-gardens-cemetery Highland_Memory_Gardens_Cemetery]''' Located: One NE 60th Ave. Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa *Arlene Lucille Draper6 Jul 1934 – 12 Sep 2005 *Bertha A Draper30 Jun 1923 – Mar 1994 *Claire L Draper21 Jul 1923 – 5 Jun 1991 *Delbert Billie Draper8 Jan 1920 – 2 Feb 1981 **Roberta McIntyre Draper30 Jan 1926 – 7 Dec 2014 *Glen Draper 29 Apr 1895 – May 1978 wives: **Geneva Geraldine Townsend Draper 1902–1933 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 76737532 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95403/martin-chapel-cemetery Martin Chapel Cemetery] Pacific City, Mills County, Iowa, USA **Verna M Draper Osborn 10 Aug 1923 – 18 Jul 2008 MEMORIAL ID 133283232 *John L Draper2 May 1946 – 19 Mar 1998 **Roberta McIntyre Draper30 Jan 1926 – 7 Dec 2014 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-63.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95263/laurel-hill-cemetery Laurel_Hill_Cemetery]''' Located: Dean Ave and Williams St. *Dwane Laverne Draper1956 – 16 Aug 1956 *Jacquetta “Jackie” Draper21 Dec 1951 – 24 Mar 2002 *James Samuel Draper Sr.1950 – 1978 *Leo William Draper17 Feb 1906 – 14 Oct 1967 *Richard Basil Draper1 Dec 1922 – Apr 1982 *Vesta Maude Draper1906 – Feb 1984 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/70/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-64.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/791695/sunset-memorial-gardens Sunset_Memorial_Gardens]''' Located: 7601 Fleur Drive, Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa *Leonard Dean Draper13 Feb 1929 – 11 Apr 1990 *Linda Ane Jensen Draper 1907 – 1989 *Loyd Newton Draper 1903 – 1991 *Richard Duane Draper 30 Dec 1933 – 19 Aug 2011 *Robert J Draper1912 – 1971 *Valeria M Draper1905 – 1997 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/28/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-65.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96709/woodland-cemetery Woodland_Cemetery]''' Located: Woodland Ave and Martin Luther King Parkway *[[Draper-4438|Ira Ellis Draper]] 4 Jan 1834 – 18 Jan 1907 **[[Pope-9134|Margarete (Pope) Draper]] 1st wife buried in Vandalia Cemetery (Below) **[[Furnoy-2|Harriett Theodocia Furnoy Draper]] (1855–1933) 2nd wife buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8437/westminster-memorial-park Westminster] California *John Draper 31 Mar 1849 – 30 Dec 1903 *Lizzie Draper 1850 – 30 Jan 1893 '''Runnells''' ZIP Code 50237 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/20/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-722.jpg *Roscoe C Draper Jul 1876 – 1960 Memorial ID 51713186 wife: **Mary L Freel Draper Sep 1879 – 1966 Memorial ID 51713169 '''Rising Sun''' *The Barlow Family built this town, married into the Draper family *Cemetery add location ==='''SAC COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-650.jpg '''Odebolt''' ZIP Code 51458 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/73/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-651.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95710/odebolt-cemetery? Odebolt Cemetery]''' *Henry Draper 1810–1877 Memorial ID 32922224 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2197372/clinton-township-cemetery Clinton Township Cemetery] Sac Co., Iowa, '''NOT Family''' (Henry was the son of Timothy Draper & Sarah Ware and was born in Essex Co, New York) wife: **Emily Palmer Draper 1812–1861 Memorial ID 142482452 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95859/pleasant-valley-cemetery Pleasant Valley Cemetery] Pleasant Valley, Iowa, children: ***Oscar Draper 18 Dec 1843 – 18 Nov 1920 Memorial ID 60306920 wife: ****Sarah J. Bittinger Draper 18 Jun 1841 – 25 Dec 1928 Memorial ID 94765760 children: *****Homer John Draper 5 Feb 1874 – 17 Dec 1948 Memorial ID 167743680 wives: ******Clarinda E “Clara” Wilson Draper 5 Sep 1870 – 7 Feb 1901 Memorial ID 167742349 children: *******Infant daughter Draper 24 Aug 1897 – 28 Aug 1897 Memorial ID 167743862 *******Ina Draper Bernhardt 1898 - 1972 Memorial ID 70848059 husband: ********Christian Hans Bernhardt 1891–1956 (m. 1917) Memorial ID 70847990 Children buried here: *********Marjorie Elizabeth Bernhardt Bachman 1917–1996 *********Shirley Eloise Bernhardt 1919–1920 *********Charles Wilson Bernhardt 1929–1986 ******Lelia Carrie Miller Draper 2 Nov 1878 – 11 Jul 1972 Memorial ID 119796729 children: *******Infant daughter Draper 20 Jul 1918 – 21 Jul 1918 Memorial ID 167743716 *******Ella Marguerite ''Claney'' Clapp 1898–1952 Memorial ID 129238267 '''CENOTAPH''' (daughter of Lelia and Albert Claney, 1st marriage 1897, Lelia's 2nd marriage to Homer Draper) *******Neva Elizabeth Blanche ''Draper'' Leonard 1912 - 1969 Memorial ID 35814687 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/52955/baxter-memorial-gardens Baxter Memorial Gardens] Mountain Home, Arkansas *****Asa Leroy Draper 14 Jun 1880 – 15 Jul 1936 Memorial ID 167742337 *****Jessie Rebecca ''Draper'' Hovenden 1869–1958 Memorial ID 137609784 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/820966/lakefield-cemetery Lakefield Cemetery] Lakefield Minnesota] *****Emma Elizabeth ''Draper'' Ady 1871–1958 Memorial ID 106337653 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/263809/vernon-cemetery Venon Cemetery] Elk River, Minnesota ***William Henry Harrison Draper 1840–1909 Memorial ID 5216750 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76945/mount-pleasant-cemetery Mount Pleasant Cemetery] Seattle, Washington ***John P. Draper 1842–1912Memorial ID 135236108 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76890/lake-view-cemetery Lake View Cemetery] Seattle, Washington ***Rhoda A. Draper Smith 1845–1921Memorial ID 7970564 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76707/bayview-cemetery Bayview Cemetery] Bellingham, Washington ***Elizabeth Ann Draper Pelham 1846–1872Memorial ID 5666033 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95780/pelham-cemetery Pelham Cemetery] Clinton Co., Iowa ***Elverdo Draper 1848–1939 Memorial ID 77507554 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/39512/union-cemetery Union Cemetery] Union Co., Oregon (Elverado had 3 wives) ***Leoline Draper 1850–1887Memorial ID 77820220 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/39512/union-cemetery Union Cemetery] Union Co., Oregon ***Sarah Ann Draper Mummey 1854–1905Memorial ID 6207748 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76751/crown-hill-cemetery Crown Hill Cemetery] Seattle, Washington ==='''STORY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/38/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-261.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2194236/peoria-cemetery Peoria_Cemetery]''' '''Not Related To Our Family.''' They descend form Quaker Drapers in North Carolina *Jesse Draper 12 Feb 1791 – 2 Mar 1858 *Sarah Elizabeth Hobaugh Draper 22 May 1832 – 19 Jun 1857 ==='''WARREN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-262.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/81/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-147.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/289863/hartford-cemetery |Hartford Cemetery] Location: Hartford, Warren County, Iowa, USA *[[Draper-4301|John M Draper]] 15 Feb 1821 – 22 Feb 1863 wife: **[[Stranton-2|Rebecca ''Stranton'' (Draper) Fox]] (1826 - 1913) re-married to [[Fox-19988|Daniel Fox]] (1826 - 1900), buried in Park Cemetery Carthage, Jasper County, Missouri, USA. Research Needed: John died by a kick in the head from a mule in St. Louis, MO during the Civil War. How he ends up buried in Warren County Iowa needs to be discovered. His wife Rebecca remarries and is burried in Jasper County, Missouri. Something seems off! *Eliza M Draper 1854 – 2 Nov 1856 needs research ==='''WOODBURY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-365.jpg '''Sloan''' ZIP Code 51055 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-364.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96356/sloan-cemetery Sloan Cemetery] Located: 320th Street, Sloan, Woodbury County , Iowa, USA *[[Draper-4516|Tida Ruth (Draper) Swanson]] (1882 - 1956) daughter of [[Draper-4316|William Ira Draper]] husband: **Nels Alfred Swanson (1886–1980) '''CENOTAPH''' (add burial) sons: ***Robert Draper Swanson 1915–2006 '''CENOTAPH''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/252/chapel-gardens-cemetery Chapel Gardens Cemetery] Elwell, Gratiot County , Michigan, USA ***Bernard F. Swanson 1905–1992 ***Arthur J. Swanson 1917–1988 ==='''WASHINGTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-373.jpg '''Brighton''' ZIP Code 52540 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-374.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95073/hillcrest-cemetery Hillcrest Cemetery] located: 307 N Benton St, Brighton, IA 52540 *Charles E. Draper 2 Dec 1856 – 14 Mar 1857 Memorial ID 8395098 *George W. Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 8395090 *James Edwin Draper 1862 – 1908 Memorial ID 8217995 *Letty Middleton 1 Sep 1833 – 1 Aug 1914 Memorial ID 7968030 *Malvina Draper unknown – 9 Feb 1853 Memorial ID 8395100 *Ruth E. Draper unknown – 23 Mar 1846 Memorial ID 8395101 *Sarah Jane Draper 16 Jul 1858 – 26 Aug 1861 Memorial ID 8395095 *Verle A. Draper unknown – 15 Oct 1965 Memorial ID 8217999 *Viola Sarah Benn Draper4 Apr 1861 – 3 Dec 1931 Memorial ID 8217997 *William Draper1831 – 12 Jul 1920 Memorial ID 7968032 ==='''WAYNE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/97/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-484.jpg '''Millerton''' ZIP Code 50165 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ae/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-485.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95587/new-york-cemetery New York Cemetery]''' Located: Millerton, Wayne County, Iowa, USA *Samuel Healy Draper 12 Jun 1815 – 31 Aug 1891 Memorial ID 75388366 wife: **Abigail Young Draper 3 Apr 1821 – 4 Nov 1907 Memorial ID 75388624 children: ***George Clinton Draper 29 Oct 1850 – 31 Jan 1902 Memorial ID 75388717 1st wife: ****Sarah '''McCoy''' Draper M. 6-23-1868; divorced (unknown 2nd marriage) '''CENOTAPH''' burial undiscovered, 2 children: *****Dr Phineas H. Draper 1 Oct 1868 – 3 Mar 1895 Memorial ID 75388261 *****Frank Draper 1870–1956 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 75390228 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96387/southlawn-cemetery Southlawn Cemetery] Seymour, Iowa ****2nd wife of George Draper: Ida May ''McCullough'' Draper (1864–1936) (m. 1880) '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 50448674 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/935037/olive-lawn-memorial-park Olive Lawn Memorial Park] La Mirada, CA, 9 children with George: *****Charles Alva Draper 884–1956 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 151864743 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/935037/olive-lawn-memorial-park Olive Lawn Memorial Park] La Mirada, CA *****George Willard Draper 1886–1948 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 118217496 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2195601/gull-lake-cemetery Gull Lake] Canada *****Eva J. Draper 18 May 1887 – 28 Dec 1888 Memorial ID 75388681 *****Jestina Mae ''Draper'' Paulsen 1889–1981 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID206006647 buried: died Los Angeles, CA burial: unknown *****Chancellor Sanford Draper 1890–1972 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 108060904 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99414/rosemound-cemetery Rosemound Cemetery] MedFord, OK *****Averis Jay Draper1892–1958 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 50448708 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/935037/olive-lawn-memorial-park Olive Lawn Memorial Park] La Mirada, CA *****Samuel H Draper 1893–1972 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 74444990 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/94525/corydon-cemetery Corydon Cemetery] Corydon, Iowa *****Gladys Abigail ''Draper'' McCullough 1895–1989 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 100238024 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/527969/cambria-cemetery Cambria Cemetery] Cambria, Iowa *****Irene Lucille ''Draper'' Reeves 1899–1985 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 151864724 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/935037/olive-lawn-memorial-park Olive Lawn Memorial Park] La Mirada, CA *John Charles Fremont Draper 24 Sep 1856 – 22 Jan 1930 Memorial ID 75388746 wife **Rilla Nevada Townsend Draper 20 Dec 1867 – 21 Oct 1943 Memorial ID 75388816 ***Frank Jesse Draper 13 Dec 1889 – 23 Nov 1924 Memorial ID 75388706 ***Otel Draper Nov 1891 – 1909 Memorial ID 75388792 ***Vern Draper 1893–1902 Memorial ID 75388829 ***Glen Draper 1895–1978 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 133283158 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95069/highland-memory-gardens-cemetery Highland Memory Gardens] Des Moines, Iowa ***Ruth ''Draper'' Lewis 1901–1988 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 50562699 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/267451/chariton-cemetery Chatiron Cemetery] Chariton, Iowa ***Loyd Newton Draper 1903–1991 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 97768358 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/791695/sunset-memorial-gardens Sunset Memorial Gardens] Des Moines, Iowa ***Wilma Darlene ''Draper'' Clark 1906–1990 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 133283158 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/791695/sunset-memorial-gardens Sunset Memorial Gardens] Des Moines, Iowa ***Victor H Draper 1908–1998 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 198896566 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/785258/greenview-memorial-gardens Greenview Memorial Gardens] East Moline, IL *Phineas Brigham Draper 1843–1907 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 22095798 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1888205/eastside-cemetery Eastside Cemetery] Midvale, Idaho **Eliza Jane Canary Draper 1847–1908 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 22095798 buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1888205/eastside-cemetery Eastside Cemetery] Midvale, Idaho ***Jennette Elizabeth Draper 12 Aug 1870 – 13 Sep 1871 Age 1 Memorial ID 75388757 ****NOTE: Phineas Brigham Draper is the son of Samuel Healy Draper 12 Jun 1815 – 31 Aug 1891 listed above, (Jennette is the granddaughter) *William Draper 1805–1884 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 92750934 buried[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/44026/west-evans-cemetery West-Evans Cemetery] Russellville, Ohio **Joshua Clinton Draper 22 Oct 1832 – 2 Mar 1913 Memorial ID 76739571 ***Mary Morris Draper 11 Mar 1846 – 24 Feb 1922 Memorial ID 186141609 *Vern Draper 1893 – 1902 Memorial ID 75388829 == Nebraska 198 Burial Listings== ==='''CHASE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/60/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-263.jpg '''Imperial''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101003/mount-hope-cemetery Mount_Hope_Cemetery] *19 Draper burials in this cemetery that trace back to Deleware, USA ''' Not Related''' ==='''NEMAHA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/53/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-361.jpg '''Peru''' Zip Code 68421 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/00/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-362.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101020/mount-vernon-cemetery Mount Vernon Cemetery] Peru, Nemaha County , Nebraska, USA *[[Draper-4413|Arta ''Draper'' Parriott]] 30 Aug 1891 – 16 May 1963 (daughter of [[Draper-4316|William Ira Draper]]; husband: **[[Parriott-42|John Leslie Parriott]] 4 Mar 1878 – 6 Feb 1959 ==='''DAWSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-367.jpg '''Cozad''' ZIP Code69130 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-369.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100512/cozad-cemetery Cozad Cemetery]''' Located: 42650 RD 764 Cozad, Dawson County , Nebraska, USA *Elmer E. Draper 1872 – 1945 Memorial ID 107809512 wife: **Josephine Draper 1862 – 1952 Memorial ID 107809543 *Elmer Frederick Draper 17 Feb 1906 – 12 Nov 1975 Memorial ID 107809461 wife: **Ruth Vivian Draper 30 Aug 1908 – 12 Dec 1987 Memorial ID 107809567 '''Lexington''' ZIP Code 68850 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/aa/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-368.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/453289/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery]''' Located 75662 Rd 434, Lexington, Dawson County , Nebraska, USA *Anna Irene Garner Draper 24 Apr 1908 – 6 May 1996 Memorial ID 23351856 *Charles Draper 24 Oct 1900 – 23 Apr 1983 Memorial ID 36707245 *Charley Draper 29 Oct 1877 – 12 Feb 1953 Memorial ID 36708132 *Clara Draper 28 May 1867 – 13 Jun 1918 Memorial ID 36709742 *Walter Draper 26 Nov 1867 – 4 Feb 1923 Memorial ID 36709755 ==='''RICHARDSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-264.jpg '''Dawson (Noraville)''' ZIP Code 68337 Founded by William Fountain Draper and wife Lenora, who the town is named after. Joshua Dawson, the post master at Dawson grist and saw mill, convinced the U.S. Postmaster to keep the name "Dawson" when the post office was moved into the city limits of Noraville. Today, the town called "Dawson" is still legally named Noraville. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/ff/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-370.jpg The Draper family was involved in the Pony Express venture, by government contract to carry mail between Falls City and Pawnee City in 1865. The BICENTENNIAL NEWS had an article that stated [[Draper-4306|Ira Draper]], 15, and [[Draper-4353|John Draper]], 13, carried the mail by pony power and their brother [[Draper-4185|Robert Reece Draper]] was pony wrangler for them." https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-27.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100753/heim-cemetery Heim_Cemetery]''' [https://www.google.com/maps/@40.1377554,-95.8328167,290m/data=!3m1!1e3!5m1!1e1 Satellite_Map_view] *[[Draper-4306|Ira A Draper]] 21 May 1849 – 25 Apr 1943 and wife **[[Libbee-3|Elsie A Draper]] 27 Feb 1862 – 28 Sep 1903 *[[Draper-4329|Robert Merle Draper]] 28 Aug 1886 – 28 Mar 1980 **[[Drake-9930|Mary Elizabeth Drake Draper]] 5 Jan 1890 – 15 Feb 1987 *[[Draper-4316|William Ira Draper]] 2 Jan 1850 – 12 Jan 1937 **[[Talboy-24|Isabell Draper]] 18 Feb 1856 – 20 Apr 1923 son: ***[[Draper-4520|John Thomas Draper]] (1894 - 1960) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wives: ****[[Corwin-1014|Rose Musetta ''Corwin'' Draper]] (1900 - 1937) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/41548/blanchester-ioof-cemetery Blanchester 100F Cemetery] Blanchester, Ohio ****[[Accord-12|Mary Belle ''Accord'' Draper]] (1905 - 1984) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *****no discovered children of [[Draper-4520|John wives: Rose or Mary]] *Bertha Draper 1886 – 1938 *Cinda Draper unknown – 19 Jan 1900 *Clara Draper unknown – 1896 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/45/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-451.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101344/saint-marys-cemetery Saint Marys Cemetery] Located: Dawson, Richardson County, Nebraska, USA *[[Draper-4306|Ira A Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100753/heim-cemetery Heim Cemetery] **[[Libbee-3|Elsie A Draper]] 27 Feb 1862 – 28 Sep 1903 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100753/heim-cemetery Heim Cemetery] their daughter: ***[[Draper-4390|Grace Darling ''Draper'' Schlosser]] 2 Dec 1892 – 17 Apr 1973 husband: ****[[Schlosser-826|William Schlosser]] 1871 – 1916 ***Note: [[Schlosser-826|William Schlosser]] parents (Albert & Matilda) are listed below: William, Grace, Albert and Matilda share a grave stone. It could be that William and his patents died from the same cause of death, "Consumption" or "Spanish Flu" ****Albert Schlosser4 May 1843 – 24 Aug 1914 Memorial ID 113640725 and wife *****Matilda Kraus Schlosser Mar 1842 – 1914 Memorial ID 113640775 '''Humboldt''' ZIP Code 68376 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/37/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-28.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100808/humboldt-cemetery Humboldt Cemetery]''' located: West of Humboldt, NE on 1st Street outside of town. *[[Draper-4431|Thomas Mitchell Draper]] 8 Feb 1859 – 16 Nov 1927 and wife: **[[Mary Smelzel Draper, Viginia Draper Descendants Tour Guide -1|Mary Smelzel Draper]] 25 Mar 1864 – 8 Jul 1947 ***[[Draper-4435|Robert R Draper]] 1894 – 2 Jul 1940 (son of Thomas Mitchell Draper), wife: ****[[Kuper-120|Elsie Louise Kuper Draper]] 4 Sep 1897 – 8 Nov 1956 ****[[Draper-4434|Viola Draper Rist]] (1899 - 1921) dauther of Thomas Mitchel Draper above ******[[Rist-282|Alfred Rist]] (1890 - Aug. 1975) ****[[Draper-4432|Jessie (Draper) Burdock]] (or Burdick) (1888 - 1922) '''CENOTAPH''' daughter of Thomas Mitchel Draper above, burial iunknown *****[[Burdock-43|B A Burdock]] (or Burdick) (abt. 1888 - abt. 1934) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/82/Draper-4254-5.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101489/starr-cemetery Starr Cemetery]''' Rural Humboldt near Dawson (Ira Dillingham Draper's Homestead) [https://www.google.com/maps/@40.1460834,-95.8695865,244m/data=!3m1!1e3!5m1!1e1 Satellite_Map_view] *[[Draper-4254|Ira Dillingham Draper]] 1814-1891 & wife: ** [[Means-2299|Celia ''Means'' Draper]] 1817 - 1886 ***[[Draper-4292|Jasper Newton Draper]] 1841-1867 & Brother: Civil War hero *** [[Draper-4293|Lewis Cass Draper]]1843 - 1866 Civil War hero ***[[Draper-4294|Cecilia Elizabeth Draper Matten]]1847–1897 husband: ****[[Matten-85|David Matten 1836–1897]] *****Infant Daughter Matten Memorial ID 43523356 ***[[Draper-4185|Robert Reece Draper]] 1854-1941 & wife: **** [[Deweese-830|Ellen ''Deweese'' Draper]]1850-1949 *****[[Draper-4332|Carl Wayne Draper]] 6 Apr 1888 – 29 Oct 1896 age 8 *****[[Draper-4173|Fred Draper]] (1889 - 1979) wife: ****** [[Robbins-8945|Virgie ''Robins'' Draper]] (1895 - 1969) *******[[Draper-4258|Alice ''Draper'' McConaha]] (1914 - 2002) '''CENOTAPH''' (actual burial or cremation probably in Louisiana) husband: ******** [[McConaha-34|Marlin McConaha]] (1900-1973) ****[[Draper-4334|Helen Draper]] 18 May 1894 – 17 Feb 1943 *Elmer E Draper1861 – 1862 *Jess Draper1 May 1911 – 1 May 1911 *[[Draper-4358|Newton A Draper]] 26 Oct 1883 – 30 Jan 1968, wife: **[[Ramel-38|Barbara Ann Ramel Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101582/verdon-cemetery Verdon_Cemetery] '''NOTE''' The Draper family married into the Deweese family when [[Draper-4185|Robert Reece Draper]] (1854-1941) married [[Deweese-830|Ellen ''Deweese'' Draper]] (1850-1949) who was the daughter of [[Deweese-818|James Madison Deweese]] (1815 - 1902) The Deweese and Draper families had a long history of traveling and sticking together from Indiana to Iowa to Dawson, Nebraska. Draper and Deweese family members are even buried together in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101489/starr-cemetery Starr Cemetery]. The following are listed to help visitors to Starr Cemetery to understand the connections between the Draper and Deweese family. * [[Deweese-818|James Madison Deweese]] (1815 - 1902) wives & children: **[[Wine-415|Ann (Wine) Deweese]] (1815 - 1858) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96565/vandalia-cemetery Vandalia, Iowa] ***[Deweese-827|Eliza Jane ''Deweese'' Frazier Groom]] 1842–1874 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1200807/westview-cemetery Westview Cemetery] ***[[Deweese-828|Joel W Deweese]] 1843–1907 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101647/wyuka-cemetery Wyuka Cemetery] Lincoln, NE ***Lucinda ''DeWeese'' Lynch 1849–1923 ***[[Deweese-830|Ellen ''Deweese'' Draper]] 1850–1940 listed above ***Jasper C. Deweese 1852–1928 ***Wilson Deweese 1855–1858 ***Homer C Deweese 1858–1937 **[[Adams-37950|Matilda ''Adams'' (Curry) Deweese]] (1830 - 1881) 2nd wife of James Deweese ***James Moses Deweese 1860–1932 ***Ulysses Grant Deweese 1863–1925 ***Lilian May Mary Maggie Deweese 1867–1947 ***Charles Arthur Deweese 1870–1918 ***Georgia Frances Deweese 1872–1956 '''Verdon''' ZIP Code 68457 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-366.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101582/verdon-cemetery Verdon Cemetery]''' *[[Ramel-38|Barbara A ''Ramel'' Draper]] wife of [[Draper-4358|Newton Draper]] (see Humboldt Starr Cemetery) *[[Draper-4519|Orra A ''Draper'' Swisegood]] 1885–1970 daughter of [[Draper-4316|William Ira Draper]] (1850 - 1937), husband: **[[Swisegood-8|LeeRoy Swisegood]] 1882–1927 ==='''LANCASTER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-265.jpg '''Lincoln''' ZIP Code 68510 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-29.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100448/calvary-catholic-cemetery-and-mausoleum Calvary_Catholic_Cemetery]''' Located: 3880 L Street Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, 68510 USA *[[Draper-4355|Charles S Draper]] Jan 1857 – 23 Jan 1929 and wife **[[Ryan-15301|Johanna Ryan Draper]] 6 Jan 1860 – 5 Jun 1935 *[[Draper-4426|Francis Edward Draper]] 1889 – 1946 and wife **[[Doheny-46|Ella A Draper]] 25 Sep 1889 – 16 Mar 1966 *Carmen A. Draper 4 Jul 1941 – 8 Aug 2020 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ed/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-184.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100618/fairview-cemetery Fairview_Cemetery] ''' Located: 84th & Adams, Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, USA *John Louis “Jack” Draper 21 Oct 1925 – 14 Apr 2011''' Not Family''' **Geraldine “Jeri” Draper 10 Mar 1929 – 31 Mar 2021'''Not Family''' John Draper descends from William Draper (1833-1891) born in Chatham, Medway Unitary Authority, Kent, England, died in Schuyler, Colfax County, Nebraska, USA https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/02/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-69.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100904/lincoln-memorial-park Lincoln_Memorial_Park]''' Located: 6800 South 14th Street Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, 68512 USA *[[Draper-5109|Dorothy Draper Morrison]] (1917–2008) Daughter of [[Draper-4387|Joy Sterling Draper]] husband: **Glenn G Morrison (1916–1991) *[[Draper-5117|Vernon Sterling Draper]] 10 Jan 1923 – 30 Jan 2001 Son of [[Draper-4387|Joy Sterling Draper]]. wife: **[[Rezac-94|Evangeline Marie “Angie” Rezac Draper]] 1 Feb 1921 – 1 Feb 2006 *[[Draper-4367|Alta Ruth (Draper) Kernes]] (1910 - 1979) daughter of [[Draper-4358|Newton Draper]] husband: **[[Kermes-7|Walter S (Kermes) Kernes]] (1905 - 1992) daughter: ***LaDonna B Kernes Wynn 1929-2006 buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93127/mount-hope-cemetery Mount Hope Cemetery] Almena, Norton County, Kansas ****Kenneth Earl Wynn 1926-2009 also buried in Mount Hope Cemetery *[[Atkinson-11177|Eugene Iowa Atkinson]] 1857–1943 wife: **[[Draper-4307|Nellie Lucelia (Draper) Gibbs]] 1882-1962 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57521/roselawn-cemetery Roselawn Cemetery] children: ***[[Atkinson-11179|Raymond E. Atkinson]] 1901–1965 wife ****[[Hall-55925|Mildred O. ''Hall'' Atkinson]] 1904–1986 ***[[Atkinson-11184|Feoneta L. ''Atkinson'' Garcia]] 1904–1985 husband: **** [[Garcia-8559|Angel Garcia]] 1904-2010 ***[[Atkinson-11186|Marshall Leland Atkinson]] 1908–1992''' CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49841/columbia-gardens-cemetery Columbia Gardens Cemetery] Arlington Virginia wives: ****[[Krammer-70|Dorothy Augusta Kramer Atkinson]] 1902–1970 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49841/columbia-gardens-cemetery Columbia Gardens Cemetery] Arlington Virginia ****Christine McIntyre Atkinson 1905–1991 (m. 1971) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/49841/columbia-gardens-cemetery Columbia Gardens Cemetery] Arlington Virginia ***[[Atkinson-11188|Mary E Atkinson Greenwall]] 1911–1996 '''CENOTAPH''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57521/roselawn-cemetery Roselawn Cemetery] Ft. Colins, Colorado ***[[Atkinson-11190|Clinton Wilson Atkinson]] 1914–1987 wife ****[[Morrison-16623|Corrine M Atkinson]] 1919–1988 *Charles Robert Draper 2 Nov 1928 – 21 Feb 1987 '''Not Family''' Deleware Draper family **Peggy L Wilson Draper 31 Mar 1927 – 2 Feb 2006 ***Randy C Draper11 Feb 1951 – 19 Mar 2021 ***Kendall R. Draper 9 Nov 1953 – 27 Aug 1975 *Kenneth Eugene Draper 17 Sep 1929 – 4 Oct 2014 wife: '''Not Family''' **Helen Marie Gillispie Draper3 Jul 1932 – 2 Aug 2018 Son ***Charles C Draper7 Jan 1963 – 9 Mar 1985 *John Junior Draper 26 Jan 1934 – 15 Apr 1988 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-640.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101647/wyuka-cemetery? Wyuka Cemetery]''' AKA Evergreen Cemetery, Located Lincoln, NE *Thomas Draper Sr. 27 Nov 1818 – 31 Mar 1901 Memorial ID 69103798 wife: **Elizabeth Draper 1818 – 11 Dec 1886 Memorial ID 192547639 children: ***Susan Ann ''Draper'' Henry 1841 - 1881 Memorial ID 53674576 husband unknown, 3 children ***Thomas W. Draper18 May 1855 – 5 May 1917 Memorial ID 69103797 ****Julia Draper 17 Mar 1861 – 19 Sep 1937 Memorial ID 69103789 *****Thomas M. Draper Jr. 11 Jan 1883 – 14 Mar 1919 Memorial ID 69103796 *****Carrie Draper Memorial ID12 Jul 1886 – 19 Dec 1891 Age 5, Memorial ID 69103779 *****Eddie Draper 9 Jun 1888 – 19 Feb 1889 Age 8 Months, Memorial ID 69103781 *****Charles Earl Draper 30 Sep 1890 – 24 Apr 1956 Memorial ID 69103780 *****Infant Draper 25 Jul 1895 – 29 Jul 1895 Memorial ID 69103787 ***Mark B. Draper 23 Jun 1859 – 4 Jul 1928 Memorial ID 69103790 wife: ****Annie M. Draper 1864–1942 Memorial ID 180891190 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8308/rose-hills-memorial-park Rose Hills Memorial Park] Whittier, CA *George Henry Draper 1871 - 1948 Memorial ID 41927747 '''NOT Family''' '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1115887/ashland-cemetery Ashland Cemetery] Ashland , NE, wife: ** Mary Fern Wolfe Draper 1881–1963 Memorial ID 41927753 '''CENOTAPH''' buried with husband above ***Fred George Draper 6 Oct 1906 – 9 Feb 1977 Memorial ID 69103784 ****Mollie Pfeif Draper 17 Jan 1909 – 2 Sep 1973 Memorial ID 69103791 ***Amy ''Draper'' Sukovaty 1912–1984 Memorial ID 110899665 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2182080/wilber-czech-cemetery Wilber Czech Cemetery] Wilber, NE ***Harlow Wayne Draper 1916–1974 Memorial ID 41927750 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1115887/ashland-cemetery Ashland Cemetery] Ashland , NE ***Avis ''Draper'' Simons1921–1987 Memorial ID 74141372 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2129717/mandan-union-cemetery Mandan Union Cemetery] Mandan, North Dakota *Frederick Bell Draper Sr. 11 Aug 1866 – 12 Mar 1927Memorial ID 69103783 wife: **Nellie Mae ''Rush'' Draper 18 May 1869 – 17 Apr 1919 Memorial ID 69103792 daughter: ***Ona Bell ''Draper'' Hurst 1890–1933 Memorial ID 104876335 Husband unknown at this time *Harrie Draper 2 Apr 1892 – 2 Apr 1895 Memorial ID 69103785 *Fred Draper 19 Jan 1907 – 16 Jul 1907 Memorial ID 69103782 *Infant Draper unknown – 9 Jun 1893 Memorial ID 69103795 *Infant Draper 24 Apr 1911 – 24 Apr 1911 Memorial ID 69103786 *Isabel Draper 11 Dec 1819 – 11 Dec 1886 Memorial ID 69103788 *Phyllis Draper 29 Jun 1927 – 29 Jun 1927 Memorial ID 69103794 *Nelson Draper 30 Apr 1889 – 15 Jun 1958 Memorial ID 69103793 *James Sterling “Jim” Draper 25 Oct 1958 – 19 May 2011 Memorial ID 82238947 **'''NOTE''' James was adopted by Fred and Mollie Draper of Denison, Iowa shortly after his birth, wife and children living *Kenneth Clinton Draper 1 Jul 1908 – 28 Jun 1960 Memorial ID 55824634 **Fern M. ''Collepreist'' (Draper) Trunkenbolz ***Charles Robert Draper 1928 - 1987 Memorial ID 66973264 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100904/lincoln-memorial-park Lincoln Memorial Park] Lincoln, NE ==='''SAUNDERS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-266.jpg '''Ashland''' ZIP Code 68003 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-646.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1115887/ashland-cemetery? Ashland Cemetery]''' Ashland, NE *Evelyn G DraperMemorial ID1896 – 1978 Memorial ID 41927746 *Samuel H. Draper4 Jan 1844 – 30 Sep 1894 Memorial ID 41927755 wife: **Susan Rosetta Carpenter Draper 4 Jan 1844 – 19 Apr 1939 Memorial ID 41927757 ***George Henry Draper10 Feb 1871 – 15 Dec 1948 Memorial ID 41927747 ****Mary Fern Wolfe Draper21 Nov 1881 – 4 Mar 1963 Memorial ID 41927753 *Grover Cleveland Draper23 Apr 1883 – 14 Jan 1953 Memorial ID 41927748 **Ethel Fern Armstrong Draper18 Jun 1891 – 19 Dec 1912 Memorial ID 41927745 ***Grover Ivan Draper20 Sep 1910 – 1 Jan 1983 Memorial ID 41927749 *Harlow Wayne Draper 24 Jan 1916 – 25 Dec 1974 Memorial ID 41927750 **Leota Marella Skiles Draper 24 Nov 1913 – Oct 1978 Memorial ID 41927751 *Samuel Raymond Draper 14 Sep 1880 – 23 Oct 1961 Memorial ID 41927756 **Mary Heuck Draper 1883–1978 (m. 1901) Memorial ID 77445001 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100780/hollst-lawn-cemetery Hollst Lawn Cemetery] Yutan, Ne *William Earl “Willie” Draper9 Oct 1883 – 26 Oct 1961Memorial ID 41927758 **Rosalie Cernik Draper 22 Oct 1898 – 29 Jun 1943 Memorial ID 41927754 ***Leroy Byron Draper 1924 – 12 Aug 1924 Memorial ID 41927752 ***William Edward Draper14 Aug 1919 – 26 Nov 1924 Memorial ID 41927744 *Timothy M Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 213656465 '''Valparaiso''' ZIP Code 68065 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-30.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101579/valparaiso-cemetery Valparaiso_Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-4387|Joy Sterling Draper]] 3 Sep 1890 – 6 Jun 1943 **[[Kemper-1146|Delia Edna Kemper Draper]] 19 Apr 1894 – 1989 *[[Draper-5110|Royal Edward Draper Sr.]] 22 Apr 1914 – 28 Apr 1985 And wife: **Ada Mae Morrison Draper 25 Jan 1918 – 5 Jan 1996 and their son: ***'''CENOTAPH''' Royal Edward Draper Jr, 1937–2012 cremated *[[Draper-4741|Robert Lee Draper]] 20 Jun 1930 – 3 May 1967 **[[Johnson-120456|Betty J. Johnson Draper]] 11 Apr 1931 – 27 Jul 2021 *Priscilla Lynn “Pat” Egr Draper 4 Jul 1942 – 24 Mar 2015 ==='''SCOTTS BLUFF COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/eb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-515.jpg '''Gering''' ZIP Code 69341 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/65/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-516.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101612/west-lawn-cemetery West Lawn Cemetery]''' Gering Nebraska * [[Draper-3813|John Robert Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2225686/oaks-cemetery Oaks Cemetery] Union Co. Tennessee **[[Millhouse-561|Caroline Millhouse Draper]] 28 Jun 1848 – 12 Mar 1919 Memorial ID 70527213 children: ***Mary Catherine Draper Stevens 1867–1927 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 40402135 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2188456/cornelius-methodist-cemetery Cornelius Methodist Cemetery] Cornelius Oregon ***[[Draper-5107|Jacob Franklin Draper]]1873–1950 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 29166000 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84061/lakeview-cemetery Lakeview Cemetery] Cheyenne, Wyoming ***Malinda Draper 1877–1879 Age1 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 147548307 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1984941/ashton-chapel-and-cemetery Ashton Chapel Cemetery] Mingo, Jasper Co Iowa ***Marinda Belle ''Draper'' Perry 1877–1930 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 29168594 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84061/lakeview-cemetery Lakeview Cemetery] Cheyenne, Wyoming ***Joseph Henry Draper 1879–1957 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 29166001 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84061/lakeview-cemetery Lakeview Cemetery] Cheyenne, Wyoming ***John Thomas Draper 1882–1925 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 49399455 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1963313/forest-lawn-cemetery Forest Lawn Cemetery] Morrill, Nebraska ***Blanche Hattie ''Draper'' Beatty 1885–1913 Memorial ID 71373926 buried: ****Wallace D. Beatty '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 112418323 1866–1937 (m. 1901) buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100623/fairview-cemetery Fairview Cemetery] Scottsbluff, Nebraska *John Frank Draper 20 Mar 1856 – 2 Jul 1904 Memorial ID 70527243 *Samuel B. Draper 1871 – 12 Jan 1936 Memorial ID 70527258 **'''Note''' John and Samuel Draper were brothers. There seems to be no relationship with Caroline Millhouse Draper listed above. The fact they are buried in the same cemetery is only a coincidence. == North Dakota 8 Burial Listings== ==='''MORTON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/05/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-649.jpg '''Mandan''' ZIP Code 58554 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/16/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-648.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2129717/mandan-union-cemetery? Mandan Union Cemetery]''' *Volney Draper 29 Dec 1819 – 19 Nov 1901 Memorial ID 74138715 **Elizabeth Sherrill Draper1831 – 1898 Memorial ID 74138713 ***Charles E. Draper 18 Oct 1855 – 8 Jun 1926 Memorial ID 74138712 ****Hattie A. Lounsberry Draper Oct 1866 – 1 Sep 1950 Memorial ID 74138714 ***Allan D. Draper 1850–1909 Memorial ID 99317920 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/65510/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Syracuse, New York ****Bertha F. Stoutenberg Draper 1857–1942 Memorial ID 99760623 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/65510/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Syracuse, New York ***Mary O Draper Rice 1851–1940 Memorial ID 72538026 husband: ****Ezekiel C Rice 1840–1902 Memorial ID 72538011 ==Kansas 83 Burial Listings== ==='''CLAY COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-490.jpg '''Clay Center''' ZIP Code 67432 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/96/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-492.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/92597/greenwood-cemetery? Greenwood Cemetery] *Nellie M Hill Draper 10 May 1904 – 30 Jun 1937 Memorial ID 123951420 '''Walkefield''' ZIP Code 67487 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/87/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-491.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93910/timber-creek-cemetery Timber Creek Cemetery] *Isaac Hancock Draper 15 Nov 1838 – 17 Jan 1892 Memorial ID 12613692 *Lorinda Jackson Draper 24 Jul 1863 – 13 Apr 1899 Memorial ID 61725316 *Mary Loretta Sackett Draper 2 Dec 1838 – 18 Feb 1884 Memorial ID 67309244 ==='''DOUGLAS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/80/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-267.jpg '''Lawrence''' ZIP Code 66045 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-375.jpg From Wikipedia: A drawing of the massacre of 150 residents and burning of Lawrence, Kansas in 1863 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-126.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93216/oak-hill-cemetery Oak Hill Cemetery]''' Located: 1605 Oak Hill Avenue, History: Land for Oak Hill Cemetery was sectioned after the Lawrence Massacre, also known as Quantrill's raid, an attack during the American Civil War (1861–65) by Quantrill's Raiders, a Confederate guerrilla group led by William Quantrill, on the Unionist town of Lawrence, Kansas, killing around 150 unarmed men and boys on the morning of Friday, August 21, 1863. *[[Draper-5270|Theophilus H Draper]] 15 Nov 1866 – 31 May 1934 **Letitia McCollum Draper(1869-????) burial unknown '''CENOTAPH''' 1st wife *** Pearl Estel Smith (Applegate, Parsons) Step Daughter **[[Maynard-4591|Jenie May Maynard Draper]] 1869–1946, cremated '''CENOTAPH''' ***Karl (or Carl) Draper 19 E09–1981 '''CENOTAPH''' adopted son died in Santa Cruz, California *William Draper 5 Aug 1831 – 12 Nov 1919 '''NOT Family''' born in Wyoming Co., New York, wife: **Betsey A. Wood Draper 26 Apr 1836 – 17 Jun 1920, sons: ***George W. Draper 9 Jul 1860 – 6 Jun 1913 ****Margaret Yohn Draper 1861 – 25 Oct 1960 ***Fred Leslie Draper 1862 – 1 Mar 1933 ****Elfrieda Draper 3 Mar 1894 – 4 Jul 1980 *John Draper 11 Oct 1789 – 26 Feb 1874 '''NOT Family''' born in England, 2 wives: **Mary Miller Draper1797–1866 (m. 1851) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1987/wolf-creek-cemetery Michigan] **Mary White Draper 1791–1846 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/412/east-farmington-cemetery Michigan] ***Ann ''Draper'' Reed 1816–1912 born in England, husband: ****Fitch Reed 1814–1897 ***Eleanor D. ''Draper'' Oakes 1829–191, husband: ****Henry A. Oakes 1837–1903 ==='''ELLIS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-363.jpg '''Hays''' ZIP Code 67601 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-336.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93093/mount-allen-cemetery Mount Allen Cemetery] Hays, Kansas *William “Bill” Draper 1 Dec 1927 – 21 Feb 1993 Memorial ID 23264643 **Gloria June ''Richards'' Draper 5 Oct 1931 – 14 Sep 1994 Memorial ID 23264644 ***Robert “Bob” Draper 26 Oct 1956 – 20 Nov 2014 Memorial ID 145039323 *****See Obituary of Robert for living family members ***Michael Dale Draper 1953-1954 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108521/thomason-cemetery Thomason Cemetery] Wayne City, Wayne County, Illinois ==='''LABETTE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/98/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-671.jpg '''Oswego''' ZIP Code 67356 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/6a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-672.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93268/oswego-cemetery Oswego Cemetery]''' Oswego, Labette County, Kansas *Sgt Henry Clay Draper 1840 – 1919 Memorial ID 92773104 **Annie Elizabeth Murdock Draper 1848 – 1919 Memorial ID 92773073 ***John Murdoch Draper 1876–1955 Memorial ID 136634395 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/67978/lake-lawn-park-cemetery-and-mausoleum Lake Lawn] New Orleans, Louisiana ***Anne Eliza Draper 1878–1878 Memorial ID 92773083 ***Julia ''Draper'' Manville 1879–1950 Memorial ID 10518966 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99408/rosedale-cemetery Rosedale Cemetery] Ada, OK ***Adah ''Draper'' Randall 1884–1954 Memorial ID 136636363 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/67978/lake-lawn-park-cemetery-and-mausoleum Lake Lawn] New Orleans, Louisiana *Henry Von Phul Draper 1825 – 1910 Memorial ID 92773117, wife: **Betty Elizabeth Holtzclaw Draper 1836–1925 Memorial ID 143795427 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/31145/riverside-cemetery Riverside Cemetery] Hannibal, MO: Children ***Frances E Draper Sprinkle 1867–1949 Memorial ID 143910059 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/31145/riverside-cemetery Riverside Cemetery] Hannibal, MO ***Charlie A Draper 1869–1902 Memorial ID 143795647 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/31145/riverside-cemetery Riverside Cemetery] Hannibal, MO *Susan Draper 1833 – 1912 Memorial ID 92773211 gravestone includes the name Henry VonPhul 1825-1910 (needs research) *James Brown Draper 21 Nov 1886 – Feb 1971 Memorial ID 35479593 wife: **Edythe Armstrong Draper 25 Jul 1883 – 25 Sep 1964 Memorial ID 35479583 *John B Draper 28 Oct 1842 – 24 Feb 1920 Memorial ID 35479612 wife: **Angie Draper Memorial ID23 Jan 1844 – 28 Mar 1874 Memorial ID 92773033 *Florence Draper 1884 – 1971 Memorial ID 35479589 *Lucy P Draper 13 Dec 1854 – 23 Feb 1913 Memorial ID 35479622 *Mary C Draper 1844 – 1933 Memorial ID 92773151 *Mary Eleanor Draper 1889 – 1940 Memorial ID 35479633 *Mary K Draper Aug 1808 – 12 May 1902 Memorial ID 92773195 *Unknown Draper 19 Mar 1874 – 23 May 1874 Memorial ID 92773058 ==='''MARION COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-677.jpg '''Burns''' ZIP Code 66840 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/14/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-678.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1990785/burns-cemetery? Burns Cemetery]''' Located: Burns, Marion County, KS *Child Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 172914305 '''Peabody''' ZIP Code 66866 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-676.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93427/prairie-lawn-cemetery Prairie Lawn Cemetery]''' Located: Peabody, Marion County, Kansas *Alvin Forest Draper 1880 – 1955 Memorial ID 9193095 *Arma I. Draper 1930 – 1930 Memorial ID 8845155 *Ethel E. Draper 16 Dec 1899 – 18 Jun 1988 Memorial ID 9193142 *Floyd James Draper 1890 – 1955 Memorial ID 9193105 *Irene Baker Draper Memorial ID1894 – 1987 Memorial ID 9180594 *Irvin William Draper 12 May 1894 – 6 Dec 1970 Memorial ID 9180599 *James W. Draper 1853 – 1930 Memorial ID 9193067 *Mable Anna Carson Draper 20 Mar 1888 – Dec 1983 Memorial ID 8845158 *Maria Jane Wright Draper 19 Nov 1859 – 24 Dec 1951 Memorial ID 9193080 *Marian M. Draper 1925 – 1957 Memorial ID 8848437 *Melvin Draper Memorial ID1900 – 1903 Memorial ID 9193088 *Thomas Orlando Draper 1878 – 1938 Memorial ID *Virl Beeton Draper 31 Jan 1898 – 7 Apr 1983 Memorial ID 8838835 ==='''STAFFORD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/76/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-268.jpg '''Stafford''' ZIP Code 67578 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-145.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93291/peace-creek-cemetery Peace Creek Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-173|John Harrison Draper]] (1789 - 1866) '''CENOTAPH''' buried Indiana unknown **[[Eddlemore-1|Catherine (Eddlemore) Draper]] (1802 - 1865) '''CENOTAPH''' buried Indiana unknown ***[[Draper-4504|Asa Paul Draper]] 20 Jan 1840 – 5 Sep 1893 wife: ****[[Smith-260396|Phebe (Smith) Draper]] 1841 - 1874''' CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-4503|James Marion Draper]] 1 Apr 1832 – 10 Jun 1914 wife ****[[Reveal-405|Susan Reveal Draper]] 1842 – 1920 *****[[Draper-5884|Melvi J. ''Draper'' Bridgford]] 1862 - 1890 husband: ******[[Bridgford-122|William Franklin Bridgford]] 1855 - 1925 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93790/silver-lake-cemetery Silver Lake Cemetery] *******O. D. Bridgford Memorial ID 97810006 infant *******G. E. Bridgford Memorial ID 97810073 infant *******[[Bridgford-123|Frank Bridgeford]] 1882–1890 Age 7 Memorial ID 97809908 *****[[Draper-5860|Fay Wavelet (Draper) Clothier]] (1883 - 1963) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7851/belmont-memorial-park Belmont Memorial Park] Fresno, CA ******[[Clothier-509|Milton Henry Clothier]] (1877 - 1918) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7851/belmont-memorial-park Belmont Memorial Park] Fresno, CA *******Claude Ivan Clothier 1900–1977 children: Memorial ID 16886051 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7851/belmont-memorial-park Belmont Memorial Park] Fresno, CA ********Alma Mae Francisco Clothier 1902–1989 (m. 1920) Memorial ID 17945862 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7851/belmont-memorial-park Belmont Memorial Park] Fresno, CA *******Floyd Alfred Clothier 1902–1988 Memorial ID 39554779 '''CENOTAPH''' bured: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7983/fresno-memorial-gardens Fresno Memorial Gardens] Fresno, Ca *******Eva May Clothier Grub 1907–1998 Memorial ID 70431127 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8192/mountain-view-cemetery Mountain View Cemetery] San Bernardino, CA *******Merle Everett Clothier 1909–1995 Memorial ID 16886302 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/311417/golden-sunset-memorial-park Golden Sunset Memorial Park] Kerman, CA *******Glenn Irvin Clothier 1911–1989 Memorial ID 70355942 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7983/fresno-memorial-gardens Fresno Memorial Gardens] Fresno, Ca *******[[Clothier-501|Lois Wanda Clothier Van Buren]] 1914–2019 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7841/arbor-vitae-cemetery Arbor Vitae Cemetery] Madera, CA *******Letha Marie Clothier Cassatt 1918–2008 Memorial ID 34954847 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7983/fresno-memorial-gardens Fresno Memorial Gardens] Fresno, Ca *****[[Draper-5288|Marion Alfred Draper]] 4 Sep 1867 – 10 Feb 1941 wife: ******[[Stewart-49837|Rebecca Ann “Reca” Stewart Draper]] 1874 - 1975 '''CENOTAPH''' re-mairred *****[[Draper-5289|William Almon Draper]] 1873–1960 '''CENOTAPH''' both buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7851/belmont-memorial-park Belmont Memorial Park] == Missouri 114 Burial Listings== ==='''CHARITON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/57/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-269.jpg '''Salisbury''' ZIP Code 65281 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-131.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2210875/prairie-valley-cemetery Prairie Valley Cemetery]''' *[[Bertsch-478|Cecile Agnes “Lillie” Bertsch Draper]] 26 Dec 1900 – 29 Oct 1930 husband: **[[Draper-5272|John Travice Draper]] buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/755244/old-city-cemetery Old City Cemetery] Cedar Rapids, Iowa https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-723.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/31415/salisbury-cemetery '''Salisbury Cemetery'''] *[[Draper-6308|Walter Roosevelt Draper]] 31 Aug 1898 – 21 Nov 1947 Memorial ID50880603 Wife: **Mary Sue Bertsch Draper 6 Apr 1903 – 11 Sep 1947 Memorial ID 50880677 ***Infant Son Draper 8 Jan 1923 – 8 Jan 1923 Memorial ID 50971175 ***Leonard Martin Draper 1924–1991 '''Cenotaph''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/659755/mount-auburn-cemetery Mount Auburn Cemetery] Mount Auburn, Benton County, Iowa, USA Wife: ****Jacqueline Ann Petersen Robinson 1933–2008 '''Cenotaph''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/659755/mount-auburn-cemetery Mount Auburn Cemetery] Mount Auburn, Benton County, Iowa, USA ***Allen Lee Draper 11 Mar 1931 – 20 May 1972 Memorial ID 50879727 Wife: ****Eleanor Ann McNeall Draper 6 Jan 1933 – 3 Dec 2006 Memorial ID 50879618 ***Maurice Edward Draper 1933–1994 '''Cenotaph''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109440/riverside-national-cemetery Riverside National Cemetery California USA] Wife: ****Joan H. Reeves Draper 1925–1993 (m. 1964) '''Cenotaph''' buried https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8308/rose-hills-memorial-park Rose Hills Memorial Park, California USA ==='''JASPER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-454.jpg '''Purcell''' ZIP Code 64857 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-455.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/28811/friends-cemetery Friends Cemetery]''' AKA Purcell Friends Cemetery, Purcell, Jasper County, Missouri, USA *[[Draper-4595|Mary E ''Draper'' Purcell]] 1838 - 1880 age 42, husband; **[[Purcell-3137|James Frederick Purcell]]1856 - 1909 '''CENOTAPH''' re-married; buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/30740/park-cemetery Park Cemetery] Carthage, MO ==='''JOHNSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-270.jpg '''Knob Noster''' ZIP Code 65336 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/21/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-428.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/270130/knob-noster-cemetery Knob Noster Cemetery]''' Located: Knob Noster, Johnson County, Missouri, USA *[[Draper-5594|Henry Thomas Draper]] 4 Oct 1854 – 30 Dec 1928 wife: **Annie M. Bethel Draper 2 Feb 1868 – 1942 Memorial ID 76750560 *William Farnum “Ferm” Draper 3 Jan 1878 – 20 Oct 1967 Memorial ID76750644 wife: **Jessie Delila Peters Draper 1886 – 1976 Memorial ID 76750645 ***Leona F. Draper 1907 – 1926 Memorial ID 76750646 *Baby boy Draper 9 Feb 1938 – 9 Feb 1938 Memorial ID 76750642 *Emery H. Draper 11 Oct 1910 – 25 Apr 1976 Memorial ID 76750643 *George Smith Draper4 Sep 1883 – 16 Dec 1957 Memorial ID 68199543 *Karen Kay King Draper 8 Feb 1948 – 9 Mar 2012 Memorial ID 86715214 '''Warrensburg''' ZIP Code 64093 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/18/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-149.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/29792/lea-cemetery Lea Cemetery]''' Also known as Lee Cemetery, Location: Rural Cemetery east of Warrensburg, MO (see map in FAG) *[[Draper-5300|George Sanford Draper]] 31 Dec 1807 – 24 Sep 1862 wife: **[[Tandy-677|Amelia Tandy Draper]] 31 Oct 1812 – 17 Oct 1894 ***[[Draper-5581|Adelia Jane (Draper) Stewart]] (1832 - 1895) her husband: ****[[Stewart-51122|James Henderson Stewart]] (1829 - aft. 1862) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-5582|William Lafayette Draper]] (1833 - 1864) '''CENOTAPH''' killed in Civil War, buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1971088/allatoona-pass-battlefield Allatoona Pass Battlefield] wife: ****[[Taylor-91352|Josephine Frances (Taylor) Fitch]] (1844 - 1915) '''CENOTAPH''' remarried, buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1966843/miami-cemetery Miami Cemetery, Texas] ***[[Draper-5299|Milton A. Draper]] (1839 - 1906) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/75496/perry-cemetery Perry Cemetery] Princeton, Kentucky: Milton had 3 wives and at least one child with first wife. (see WikiTree profile) ***John Tandy Draper14 Jan 1844 – 24 Sep 1862 murdered with father ***Robert A. Draper (1845 - 1913) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76231/tandy-cemetery Tandy Cemetery] Caldwell Co. , Kentucky, wife: ****[[Tandy-698|Sarah Virginia (Tandy) Draper]] (1838-1921) buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/76231/tandy-cemetery Tandy Cemetery] Caldwell Co. , Kentucky ***[[Draper-5591|James Duncan Draper]] (1847 - 1923) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/30325/mount-hope-cemetery Mount Hope Cemetery] Webb City, Missouri, wife: ****[[Weller-3518|Mary A. (Weller) Draper]] (1863 - 1910) '''CENOTAPH''' buried with husband ***[[Draper-5592|Jesse Lee Draper]] (1850 - 1930) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1424733/los-angeles-odd-fellows-cemetery Odd Fellows Cemetery] Los Angeles, CA ****[[Wadlington-247|David Ann (Wadlington) Draper]] (1852 - 1917) '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93543/rosebank-cemetery Rosebank Cemetery] Mulberry, Kansas ****Martha (unknown Draper 2nd wife, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: unknown ***[[Draper-5593|Mary (Draper) Coffman]] (1852 - 1916) ''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/29769/laurel-oak-cemetery Laurel Oak Cemetery] Windsor, MO ***[[Draper-5594|Henry Thomas Draper]] (1854 - 1928) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/270130/knob-noster-cemetery Knob Noster Cemetery]. Knob Noster, MO ****NOTE: George and his son John were murdered on their farm Sept. 24, 1862 *William T Draper 11 Jan 1810 – 14 Apr 1889 wife: **Caroline M “Carrie” Stewart Draper 24 Dec 1833 – 9 Mar 1929 ***Charles L Draper 20 Sep 1869 – 3 Jul 1897 *Ethelyn Draper unknown – 21 Nov 1909 *Florence E Draper unknown – 1909 buried with: **Infant Son Draper 1909 – 1909 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-426.jpg This picture best describes the murder of [[Draper-5300|George Sanford Draper]] and his son, John, while his family watched the events unfold. We believe the conflict could have been over the issues of freeing slaves between religious abolitionists and slave owners. (see note above picture, and story in the Biography of [[Draper-5300|George Sanford Draper]] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/eb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-429.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/31854/sunset-hill-cemetery Sunset Hill Cemetery] AKA City Cemetery Located: Warrensburg, Missouri *Archibald Henderson “Arch” Draper 14 May 1881 – 12 Jul 1960 Memorial ID 66551605 **Bertha Alice Husband Draper 17 Feb 1884 – 7 Jul 1961 Memorial ID 100196479 ***Howard Lea Draper 26 Mar 1906 – 23 Jul 1982 Memorial ID 100279632 ****Dorothy Kay Draper 1912 – 1983 Memorial ID 100212224 *Mont Clayton Draper Sr. 28 Feb 1878 – 31 Aug 1949 Memorial ID 100280151 **Edith Perkins Draper 9 Jan 1878 – 11 Aug 1942 Memorial ID 100279566 ***Mont Clayton Draper Jr. 19 Jan 1908 – 26 Jan 1978 Memorial ID 100279473 ****Cena Christopher Draper unknown – 14 Oct 1986Memorial ID 100280081 *****Mont Clayton Draper 1935–2021 Memorial ID 224411060 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93476/resthaven-gardens-of-memory Resthaven Gardens] Wichita, Kansas ******Georgia Dorothea ''Robins'' (Northcutt) Draper 1923–2019 Memorial ID 197363761 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93476/resthaven-gardens-of-memory Resthaven Gardens] Wichita, Kansas *Harry Preston Draper 1884 – 1960 Memorial ID 66551610 **Ora Draper 1883 – 1965 Memorial ID 86319735 *Dr Thomas Jefferson Draper 27 Apr 1860 – 6 Jul 1943 Memorial ID 100280119 **Ottie L Draper 1876 – 17 Feb 1933 Memorial ID 100280217 *Lona Draper unknown – 24 Dec 1917 Memorial ID 100280187 *William T Draper1810–1889 Memorial ID 18408909 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/29792/lea-cemetery Lea Cemetery] **Caroline M Stewart Draper1833–1929 Memorial ID 18408935 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/29792/lea-cemetery Lea Cemetery] ***Samuel Robert Draper 31 Dec 1875 – 17 Jun 1950 Memorial ID 52323855 ==='''LINCOLN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-315.jpg *[[Draper-3824|Daniel Draper Sr.]] (1776 - 1856) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **[[Gibbs-9067|Susanne Phillip (Gibbs) Draper]] (1775 - 1832) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***Daniel and Susanne Draper and daughter-in law: [[Clark-74391|Eliza Ann ''Clark'' Draper]] 1811–1838 '''CENOTAPH''' died in Lincoln CO., Missouri, burial unknown. Eliza is said to have died in Auburn, Lincoln Co., MO. Eliza's husband was [[Draper-5397|Philander Draper]] (see Pike County) ==='''LINN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-271.jpg '''Marceline''' ZIP Code 64658 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-129.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/30349/mount-olivet-cemetery Mount Olivet Cemetery]''' AKA Roselawn Cemetery *[[Draper-5271|John D Draper]] Jan 1871 – 1 Sep 1946 **[[Burns-17573|Catherine Burns Draper]] 1872–1909 1st wife '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **[[Broyles-4074|Nancy Evaline ''Broyles'' (Daugherty) Draper]] 1864–1948 2nd wife buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2208033/hays-cemetery Hays Cemetery] Chariton County, Missouri with her 1st husband John Daugherty (no Draper burials listed) ==='''PIKE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/80/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-316.jpg '''Louisiana''' ZIP Code 63353 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bd/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-317.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/31149/riverview-cemetery Riverview Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5396|Daniel Draper Jr.]] 21 Nov 1813 – 13 Oct 1875 wife: **[[Riggs-6155|Julia Anne Riggs Draper]] 26 Dec 1820 – 29 Dec 1891 ***Corp Henry Clinton Draper 1845 - 1903 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 110704052 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/643906/mount-hope-cemetery Mount Hope Cemetery] Chicago IL ( wife, son, and daughter-in-law buried in Mt. Hope Cemetery *[[Draper-5397|Philander Draper]] 26 Aug 1811 – 18 Feb 1883, wives: **[[Clark-74391|Eliza Ann ''Clark'' Draper]] 1811–1838 '''CENOTAPH''' died in Auburn, Lincoln CO., Missouri, burial unknown ***James Draper 3 Jan 1836 –1838 infant son & only child of Eliza Ann Draper **[[Fentem-13|Sarah Fentem Draper]] 10 Mar 1816 – 11 Apr 1895 2nd wife of Philander, her children: ***Emma Draper infant 1852-1852 '''CENOTAPH''' ***Frances Lyon “Fannie” Draper 10 Dec 1857 – 1 Jan 1933 ***Laura Emma Draper 6 Dec 1849 – 23 Sep 1925 ***Edwin Fentem Draper 16 Mar 1848 – 1 Sep 1928 died in Oakland, California, wives: ****Lizzie ''Templeton'' Draper 1851 about 1876 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown (California?) ****Hattie E. ''Shields'' Draper 1851- ???? '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown (California?) ***[[Draper-5398|General Daniel Marshall Draper]] 6 Oct 1839 – 6 May 1915 wife: ****Julia Stewart Draper 14 Apr 1843 – 25 Jan 1931 ***Ann Hassell Draper 21 Jul 1841 – 15 Nov 1920 *Henry Clinton Draper 18 Dec 1802 – 5 Mar 1844 brother of Philander Draper *Frank Draper 1849 – 7 Nov 1925 **Mrs Frank Draper unknown – 9 Nov 1925 *M C Draper unknown – 19 Nov 1880 *Martha Lucy Draper 29 Dec 1841 – 4 Jan 1844 infant *William Draper unknown – 19 Nov 1850 *Bertha Draper 23 Nov 1862 – 11 Oct 1863 *Mrs Catherine Draper 30 Nov 1849 – 31 Oct 1925 ==='''St. LOUIS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-322.jpg '''Lemay''' ZIP Code 63125 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/ba/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-321.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1593798/jefferson-barracks-national-cemetery Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5405|Terry Wayne Draper]] (1948 - 2021) wife: **Deanna "Dee" Brende (living?) nothing known so far about her Other Draper burials in this cemetery may or may not be family; research/help needed: *Adele L Wurdack Draper 9 Aug 1930 – 15 Jul 2013 *Amelia Draper 19 Feb 1910 – 11 Aug 1976 *PFC Andrew Draper 19 Nov 1913 – 31 Aug 2010 *Dale Lee Draper 11 Sep 1935 – 12 Oct 2004 *Douglas G Draper 6 Jun 1929 – 20 Oct 2021 *George W Draper 18 Oct 1891 – 23 Nov 1976 *Hazel Ann Lingo Draper 27 Sep 1898 – 18 Aug 1980 *Henry F Draper 5 Nov 1911 – 3 Mar 1998 *Herbert Cecil Draper 22 Jul 1896 – 19 Jan 1969 *James Draper 18 Jan 1915 – 3 Jun 1999 *James Alfred Draper 16 Mar 1958 – 12 Feb 1999 *Jimmie L Draper 1 Aug 1947 – 5 Sep 1999 *Larry Clark Draper 17 Jul 1955 – 7 Sep 1979 *Laura Dell Draper 15 Mar 1919 – 21 Aug 1995 *Leon J Draper 13 Jun 1890 – 2 Aug 1961 *Matthew Draper 15 Jun 1912 – 1 Mar 1984 *Newton J Draper 6 Jan 1907 – 28 Jan 1969 *Stephen Draper 1839 – 2 May 1864 *William L Draper 5 Jul 1914 – 12 Dec 1977 *Karen Lee Darrough-Draper 26 Aug 1942 – 2 Nov 2015 *Inez Halk-Draper 24 Jun 1927 – 2 Apr 2022 ==Oklahoma 108 Burial Listings== ==='''ATOKA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-272.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/43/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-46.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98250/crystal-cemetery Crystal Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5243|Herbert Lee Draper]] (1912 - 1957) wife remarried: **Norma Faye ''Nelson'' (Draper) Ashley (1930–2012) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2176938/sawyer-cemetery Sawyer Cemetery] '''Atoka''' ZIP Code 74525 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-148.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/157091/green-meadows-cemetery Green_Meadows_Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5566|Hester Leon Draper]] 27 Mar 1941 – 7 Nov 2014 (son of [[Draper-5244|John Wesley Draper]]) **Lou Ella still living as of this entry *[[Draper-5563|Neta Mae ''Draper'' Capps]] 6 Jan 1903 – 24 Aug 1982 Memorial ID 94982423 husband: **[[Capps-1909|Alex Henry McLemore Capps]] 1892–1980 94982357 ****NOTE: Neta is the daughter of [[Draper-5101|William Pinkney "Will" Draper]] 1873–1957 '''Farris''' ZIP Code 74525 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/86/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-71.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98066/butler-cemetery Butler_Cemetery]''' Located West of Ferris on Rt 3 and Pebble Creek Rd [https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Atoka,+Oklahoma+74525/Farris,+Atoka,+OK+74525/@34.2813265,-95.9541939,314m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m19!4m18!1m10!1m1!1s0x87b4b4947f77ffc9:0x11f40f09616a6672!2m2!1d-96.1283252!2d34.3859257!3m4!1m2!1d-95.8638595!2d34.262293!3s0x864b2e6691bbaba5:0xf4a44a1cc34de0b!1m5!1m1!1s0x864b2e65e1840599:0x2b462024aa2a73d!2m2!1d-95.8666472!2d34.2625974!3e0 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-5101|William Pinkney “Will” Draper]] 1873 –1957 (son of [[Draper-3163|James Granville Draper]] (1847 - 1928) '''CENOTAPH''' who is buried in Cotton Gin, Texas; wives: **[[Shanks-1484|Anna Isabell ''Shanks'' Draper]] (1873 - 1937) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3851/goodlett-cemetery Goodlett Cemetery] Wheatland, Texas, married 1892 ***[[Draper-5562|Edna Mae ''Draper'' (Jester) Perkins]] (1898 - 1977) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57004/duncan-valley-cemetery Duncan Valley Cemetery] Duncan, Arizona ***[[Draper-5563|Neta Mae ''Draper'' Capps]] (1903 - 1982) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/157091/green-meadows-cemetery Green Meadows Cemetery] Atoka, OK ***[[Draper-5564|Mary ''Draper'' (Motes) Hobbie]] (1913 - 1981) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99130/oaklawn-cemetery Oaklawn Cemetery],Wynnewood, OK **Margaret M. Draper 14 Jan 1875 – 8 Apr 1949 2nd wife married 1928 **Bertha Tarvin 1872–1960''' CENOTAPH''' 3rd wife married about 1950 burial unknown FS ID: LHV6-L9Q *Betty Mae LeFlore Ivers 1938–2005 FAG ID: 67012477 mother of **Gwendolyn Delphina John Draper 4 Aug 1954 – 8 Aug 2013 FAG ID: 115186873 research needed how connected ==='''BRYAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-687.jpg '''Benington''' ZIP Code 74723 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-689.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2159619/old-bennington-presbyterian-church-cemetery Old Bennington Presbyterian Church Cemetery] *George Lafette “Bud” Draper 6 May 1908 – 4 Dec 1982 Memorial ID 24869425 **Bertha May Cook Corley 1909–1998 Married about 1927 Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98637/highland-cemetery Highland Cemetery] Durant, OK ****Hermon Arnold Draper Sr. 21 Apr 1928 – 1 Mar 2006 Memorial ID 25085502 **Lydia Smith Draper 23 Mar 1905 – 23 Apr 1991 Memorial ID 25085582 ***Lydia Beatrice Nickels Knight 1931–2007 Stepdaughter of George Draper Memorial ID 19732990 *Mary Jane Maddox Draper 27 Feb 1858 – 10 Aug 1921 Memorial ID 109923324 husband **Edward Titus Rogers 1880–1916 (m. 1901) Memorial ID 109923859 ***Rose Etta ''Draper'' Rogers 1884–1964 ****Claudie Matthew Rogers 1901–1970 Memorial ID 143374810 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/824421/center-ridge-cemetery Center Ridge Cemetery] Gurdon, Arkansas ****Albert Roger 1905–1916 Memorial ID 109923794 Age 10 **** Alma Marie Rogers Butler 1909–2004 Memorial ID 60036038 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1343979/bennington-cemetery Bennington Cemetery] '''Caddo''' ZIP Code 74729 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-690.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/239922/gethsemane-cemetery? Gethsemane Cemetery]''' *George A. Draper 15 Jan 1890 – 23 Mar 1965 Memorial ID 61464342 wife: **Flossie Draper 22 Mar 1897 – 27 Nov 1971 Memorial ID 61464421 ***Flora Mae ''Draper'' Wells 1924–2016 Memorial ID 174353473 husband: ****James Allen Wells 1921–1984 Memorial ID 34326640 ***George Albert “Bud” Draper 27 Feb 1937 – 22 Nov 2017 Memorial ID 185483507 wife: **** Linda Draper (Living ) children: *****James Andrew Draper 12 Sep 1974 – 19 Feb 2013 Memorial ID 105668549 *****Deborah Jean "Draper" Morton-Robinson 1969-1999 Memorial ID 113384995 Age 29 ******'''NOTE:''' Deborah is buried with Florence Lorine Morton-Robinson who died in Sept. 1999. This could be her mother-in-law. *'''NOTE:''' Mildred ''Draper'' Sims and Ida Lee ''Draper'' Wingfield are sisters *Mildred A. ''Draper'' Sims 1926–2020 Memorial ID 216142092 **Loyd Dale Sims 1921–2012 (m. 1946) Memorial ID 83309397 *Ida Lee ''Draper'' Wingfield 1929–2012 Memorial ID 101336986 **Benjamin Eugene Wingfield 1929–2004 (m. 1947) Memorial ID 60435324 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-691.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99253/pleasant-hill-cemetery? Pleasant Hill Cemetery]''' *Pvt Ora Blaine Draper 19 Feb 1896 – 21 Feb 1968 Memorial ID 11574358 **Dessie P. Stonebarger Draper 14 Nov 1905 – 4 Jan 2000 Memorial ID 20667542 ***Ora Blaine Draper 1934–2018 Memorial ID 187444754 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98637/highland-cemetery Highland Cemetery] Durant, OK *Lewis James Draper 4 Sep 1854 – 11 Sep 1954 Memorial ID 11574345 **Sarah A. O'Neal Draper 1858–1892 Memorial ID 99624848 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2470745/star-of-the-west Star of the West Cemetery] Pike County, Arkansas, children: ***Mary Elizabeth ''Draper'' Miser 1880–1967 Memorial ID 48411177 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4224/highland-park-cemetery Highland Park Cemetery] Borger, TX ***Rebecca Jane Draper Burge 1882–1973 Memorial ID 65668181 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/160712/childress-cemetery Childress Cemetery] Childress, TX (one Draper burial in this cemetery) ***Jettie Harrison Draper 1894–1963 Memorial ID 103137630 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/103570/park-cemetery Park Cemetery] Bridgeport, Connecticut ***LeeRoy Franklin Draper 1901–1991 Memorial ID 18084370 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5656/oak-grove-memorial-gardens Oak Grove Memorial Gardens] Irving, TX wife: ****Edith Adeline Wilhite Draper 1911–1986 Memorial ID 18084391 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5656/oak-grove-memorial-gardens Oak Grove Memorial Gardens] Irving, TX son: *****Ocie Carlton Draper 1936–2021 Memorial ID 232271832 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978675/cottonwood-west-cemetery Cottonwood West Cemetery] Cottonwood TX (5 Draper related burials in this cemetery) *Lewis Monroe Draper 29 May 1898 – 8 May 1994 Memorial ID 11574368 **Irma Lela Blakney Draper 11 Apr 1908 – 26 Aug, Married 5Oct 1923 1980 Memorial ID 11574374 children: ***Calvin Draper 1924–2011 Memorial ID 74784396 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6340/restland-memorial-park Restland Memorial Park] Dallas, TX ****Dorothy Draper 1929–1997 Memorial ID 73344690 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6340/restland-memorial-park Restland Memorial Park] Dallas, TX ***Mildred A. ''Draper'' Sims 1926–2020 Memorial ID 216142092 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/239922/gethsemane-cemetery Gethsemane Cemetery] Caddo, OK ****Loyd Dale Sims 1921–2012 (m. 1946) Memorial ID 83309397 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/239922/gethsemane-cemetery Gethsemane Cemetery] Caddo, OK ***Ida Lee ''Draper'' Wingfield 1929–2012 Memorial ID 101336986 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/239922/gethsemane-cemetery Gethsemane Cemetery] Caddo, OK, Husband: ****Benjamin Eugene Wingfield 1929–2004 (m. 1947) Memorial ID 60435324 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/239922/gethsemane-cemetery Gethsemane Cemetery] Caddo, OK ***Willis Dean Draper 1933 – unknown Memorial ID 185210147 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4860/little-bethel-memorial-park Little Bethel Memorial Park] Duncanville TX ***Donald Gene Draper 1935–2021 Memorial ID 234639914 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978675/cottonwood-west-cemetery Cottonwood West Cemetery] Cottonwood TX wife: ****Bobbie Fae Harris Draper 1938–2010 Memorial ID 52122185 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978675/cottonwood-west-cemetery Cottonwood West Cemetery] Cottonwood TX *****Karen L. Draper Hamm 1963–2020 Memorial ID 223571505 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/171048/cross-plains-memorial-park Cross Plains Memorial Park] Cross Plains, TX *****Kimberly Rae Draper Champion 1966–2021 Memorial ID 233633634 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978675/cottonwood-west-cemetery Cottonwood West Cemetery] Cottonwood TX *Linda Draper 1949 – 1993 Memorial ID 11605135 *'''NOTE:''' Ora and June Draper could be twins: Could be Children of Pvt. Ora Baine Draper **Ora Blaine “Odie” Draper Jr. 24 Jun 1924 – 25 Jan 1925 Memorial ID 11574364 **June Draper 1924 – 1925 Memorial ID 11574334 *Jettie Lee Draper 10 May 1932 – 24 Feb 1933 Memorial ID 11574340 Infant daughter of Roy Draper (see Obituary) *Unknown Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 11574380 '''Durant''' ZIP Code 74701 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/81/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-688.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98637/highland-cemetery Highland Cemetery] Durant, Bryan Co, OK *Bonnie Marshall Draper 31 Oct 1928 – 4 Sep 2017 Memorial ID 100853153 *DeWayne Lee Draper 10 Sep 1958 – 17 Sep 1963 Memorial ID 75948099 *James Alfred Draper Memorial ID12 Oct 1942 – 27 Sep 2014 Memorial ID 155158024 *Karen Dian Draper Memorial ID18 May 1962 – 25 Dec 1963 Memorial ID 75948144 *Mary Etta Foote Draper 21 Oct 1935 – 2 May 2019 Memorial ID 199079328 *Michael Ray Draper 20 Jun 1960 – 15 Apr 2015 Memorial ID 145270554 *Ora Blaine Draper 23 Apr 1934 – 16 Feb 2018 Memorial ID 187444754 *Raymond Draper 10 Aug 1933 – 28 May 2012 Memorial ID 90987435 ==='''CARTER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/83/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-273.jpg '''Ardmore''' ZIP Code 73401 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-70.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99403/rose-hill-cemetery Rose_Hill_Cemetery]''' Located: 1604 C Street Southeast *[[Draper-4851|Latitia Susan ''Draper'' Frensley]] (1819 - 1893) and husband: **[[Frensley-16|Charles Alfred Frensley]] (abt. 1808) '''CENOTAPH''' ==='''CHOCTAW COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/72/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-274.jpg '''Boswell''' ZIP Code 74727 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-104.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99353/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5244|John Wesley Draper]] 22 Jun 1881 – 22 Apr 1971 **[[Forbes-7352|Zella Laverne Forbes Draper]] 1896 – 1928 ***Alice Loriene Draper 1918–Deceased '''CENOTAPH''' details unknown ***Homer Draper about 1914 – about 1914 '''CENOTAPH''' details unknown ***[[Draper-5572|Julia Annie ''Draper'' Bornmann]] (1915 - 2001) husband: ****Julious Herman Bornmann 1913–1973 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-5571|Jack Walton Draper]] (1922 - 1951) '''CENOTAPH''' spouse / burial unknown ***[[Draper-5243|Herbert Lee Draper]] 1912–1957 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98250/crystal-cemetery Crystal Cemetery] Atoka CO., OK ***[[Draper-5567|Estelle ''Draper'' Schwarze]] 1920–2004 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2588/brookside-memorial-park Brookside Memorial Park], Houston TX; 3 husbands, one child: ****Marlin Dowlin Manshack 1920–1951 (m. 1949) FAG Memorial ID: 51004413 *****Their son: Marlin Dean Manshack (1951–1979) FAG Memorial ID: 85876418 ****Jessie Virgil Crowder (1909–1984) FAG Memorial ID: 192006126 ****Mr. Schwarze unknow details and/or sources, need research **[[Steer-1008|Cora Letha Steer Draper]] 1902–2001 (2nd wife or John Wesley Draper) son: ***[[Draper-5570|Chester Thomas Draper]] 12 Sep 1938 – 8 Dec 2012 ****No wife((s) documented in FAG or FS **[[Crumpton-898|Burzee (Crumpton) Draper]] (1880-????) '''CENOTAPH'' burial unknown ***[[Draper-6470|Ethel Mae (Draper) Mock]] (1905 - 1974) '''CENOTAPH'' burial [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99554/soper-cemetery Soper Cemetery] Soper, OK; husband: ****Jack Mock (1894–1945) '''CENOTAPH'' burial [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99554/soper-cemetery Soper Cemetery] Soper, OK; Ethel and Jack's children: *****James Wesley Mock 1925–1926 • GSQ2-8ZC '''CENOTAPH'' *****Esker Junior Mock 1926–1984 • GSQ2-WTG '''CENOTAPH'' *****Forrest Melvin Mock 1928–2017 • GSQ2-RJ1 '''CENOTAPH'' *****Joyce Laverne Mock 1931–2007 • GSQL-68Z '''CENOTAPH'' *****Arta Lorene Mock 1934–2008 • GSQL-QFQ '''CENOTAPH'' *****Jack Wayland Mock 1938–2010 • GGSP-3SL '''CENOTAPH'' *****Nelda Burzee Mock 1942–1993 • GS6X-RZR '''CENOTAPH'' **Edna Pearl Marshall Burno 1923–2014 another wife of John Wesley Draper *Calvin Hester Draper16 Sep 1894 – 5 Feb 1969 *Carl “J.W.” Draper26 Mar 1922 – 17 Nov 2009 *Edgar Cecil Draper9 Mar 1918 – Jul 1990 *Edgar Cecil Draper Jr. 27 Jun 1959 – 19 Feb 2018 *Emma Lee Draper12 Jan 1897 – 16 Oct 1976 *Gracy Jane Draper13 Feb 1934 – 28 Apr 2001 '''Sawyer''' ZIP Code 74756 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-103.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2176938/sawyer-cemetery Sawyer Cemetery]''' Location: Sawyer, Choctaw County, Oklahoma, USA *Norma Faye '''Nelson''' (Draper) Ashley (1930–2012) 1st husband: [[Draper-5243|Herbert Lee Draper]] *[[Draper-5242|Bobby Gene Draper]] (1954 - 1996) ==='''COAL COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/92/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-380.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/05/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-379.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98190/coalgate-cemetery Coalgate Cemetery] is a rural cemetery located West of Cottonwood, OK ZIP Code 74538 *[[Darnell-242|Minnie Rener ''Darnell'' Draper]] 1901–1990 husband: **[[Draper-732|Charles Herbert Draper]] (1889 - 1981) '''CENOTAPH''' died in Los Angeles, CA burial unknown *C C Draper 7 Aug 1854 – 13 Jan 1906 Memorial ID 105096805 *Mary Draper 2 Jun 1889 – 16 Aug 1935 Memorial ID 76906108 *True Draper 12 May 1883 – 4 Oct 1961 Memorial ID 76906131 ==='''PONTOTOC COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-679.jpg '''Ada''' ZIP Code 74821 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-680.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99408/rosedale-cemetery Rosedale Cemetery]''' *Edyth Louise Dandridge 7 Jun 1926 – 15 Jun 2009 Memorial ID 38475054 *Frankie Drape unknown – 17 Oct 1918 Memorial ID 93240774 *Stanley Carlyle Draper Jr. 15 Apr 1923 – 27 May 2006 Memorial ID 72090364 '''Descendants of Thomas and Lucy Coleman Draper''' *Julia ''Draper'' Manville 1879–1950 Memorial ID 10518966 husband: **Mahlon Francis Manville 1871–1939 Memorial ID 10518973 ***Natalie Draper ''Manville'' Wheeler 1900–1987 Memorial ID 132813250 '''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1675852/marion-cemetery Marion Cemetery] Marion, Marion County, Kansas, her children: ****John Edwin Wheeler 1891–1965 Memorial ID 132813021 '''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1675852/marion-cemetery Marion Cemetery] Marion, Marion County, Kansas, *****Natalie Antoinette Wheeler 1925–1925 Memorial ID 132813293 '''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1675852/marion-cemetery Marion Cemetery] Marion, Marion County, Kansas, *****Edwin Manville Wheeler 1926–2012 Memorial ID 85590639 '''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1675852/marion-cemetery Marion Cemetery] Marion, Marion County, Kansas, *****Suzanne Wheeler Watt 1928–2017 Memorial ID 183273662 Wheeler / Draper Family Historian '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/108103/saints-peter-and-paul-cemetery Saints Peter and Paul Cemetery] Naperville, DuPage County, Illinois, USA *****Mahlon Frederick Wheeler 1931–1994 Memorial ID 97415574 '''CENOTAPH'''buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93868/sunnyside-cemetery Sunnyside Cemetery] Caney, Montgomery County, Kansas, USA ***Terence Holbrook Manville 1905–1932 Age 26 Memorial ID 10518976 ***Katherine E Manville Harris 1910–1971 Memorial ID 8612358 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/67665/greenoaks-memorial-park Greenoaks Memorial Park] Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana ***Mahlon Francis Manville 1919–1961 Memorial ID: 190879950 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5192/memorial-oaks-cemetery Memorial Oaks Cemetery] Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA ==Colorado 74 Burial Listings== ==='''DENVER COUNTY'''=== '''Denver''' ZIP Codes 80014 - 80642 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-319.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57267/fairmount-cemetery Fairmount Cemetery]''' AKA Fairmont Cemetery Denver, Denver County , Colorado, USA *[[Draper-5403|Daniel M Draper]] 7 Jun 1908 – 21 May 1913 Age 4, Parents: **[[Draper-5400|Marshall and Marguerite Draper]] (1875 - 1953) '''CENOTAPH''' Buried in Los Angeles [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57267/fairmount-cemetery Fairmount Cemetery] *Abert Draper 1872 – 1905 *Charles C Draper Memorial ID1860 – 1948 *Delila M “Cora” Warren Jul 1858 – 10 Jan 1938 *Earl Draper1896 – 10 Apr 1917 *Edith Keck Draper Memorial ID1880 – 1954 *Edward S Draper Memorial ID1867 – 1926 *Elijah L Draper Memorial ID1884 – 1937 *Everett D Draper 1875 – 1962 *Gailord Earl Draper 11 Oct 1896 – 20 Sep 1956 *Gayle E. Perkins Draper12 Feb 1900 – Nov 1972 *Gilbert B. Draper Memorial ID14 May 1903 – 2 Oct 1992 *Innice M Draper 1877 – 1964 *Juanita L. Draper Memorial ID1909 – 1996 *Lawrence E Draper 1900 – 1959 *Mary E. Draper 1897 – 1971 *Reuben J Draper 1856 – 1893 *Sydney Sue Sullivant Draper 10 Jan 1939 – Dec 1986 *William B. Draper 1893 – 1958 ==='''LARIMAR COUNTY'''=== '''Fort Collins''' ZIP Codes 80521 - 80553 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-453.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57521/roselawn-cemetery Roselawn Cemetery] Fort Collins, Colorado *[[Draper-4307|Nellie Lucelia (Draper) Gibbs]] (1882 - abt. 1962) husbands: **[[Atkinson-11177|Eugene Iowa Atkinson]] 1857–1943 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100904/lincoln-memorial-park Lincoln Memorial Park] Lincoln, Nebraska **Harvey H. Hall 1871–1947 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/100904/lincoln-memorial-park Lincoln Memorial Park] Lincoln, Nebraska **Jeff W Gibbs 1883–1962 *NOTE: [[Draper-4307|Nellie Lucelia (Draper) Gibbs Nellie's]] children with [[Atkinson-11177|Eugene Iowa Atkinson]] *[[Atkinson-11188|Mary E Atkinson Greenwall]] 1911–1996 husband **[[Greenwall-21|J Herbert Greenwall]] 1907–1979 *Martha Catherine Draper 16 Mar 1937 – 12 Oct 1999 Memorial ID 104668762 *Ola Mae Draper 23 Dec 1918 – 24 Jun 2000 Memorial ID 141848745 ==='''JEFFERSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-275.jpg '''Wheat Ridge''' ZIP Code 80033 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-101.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57234/crown-hill-cemetery Crown Hill Cemetery]''' AKA Olinger Crown Hill Cemetery, Tower of Memories Mausoleum Location: 7777 W. 29th Ave. Wheat Ridge, Jefferson County, Colorado, 80033 USA '''Famous People:''' *[[Bates-14755|Barbara Jane ''Bates'' (Coan) Reed]], actress, stage name Barbara Bates 1925-1969 committed suicide Movies: All About Eve, Quicksand, It's a Great life *[[Coyle-2456|Mary Chase 1906 -1981]] playwright , author, best known for 1944 play: "Harvey" which was made into a movie in 1950, won a Pulitzer Prize *[[Coors-2|Adolph Coors]] 1847 - 1929 brewer of Coors Beer, suicide by jumping from Cavalier Hotel in Virginia *[[Biggs-3010|Richard Biggs]] 1960- 2004 actor in 400 episodes of Days of Our Lives, and Babylon 5 *[[Draper-5184|Frank Randall Draper]] 1911 – 1986 **[[Hickmon-17|Ruth Angeline Hickmon Draper]] 1925 – 1997 *[[Draper-4959|Frank Nathan Draper Sr.]] 25 Oct 1889 – 22 Dec 1963 wife: **[[Benedict-3652|Mabel E.'' Benedict'' Draper]] '''CENOTAPH''' Unknown burial location *John Riley Draper 24 Sep 1837 – 20 Oct 1909 **Sarah Elizabeth Hunt Draper 1843–1931 (m. 1861) Memorial ID 5716858 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood Park Cemetery] Inglewood CA, son: ***Arthur Draper 1870 – 1925 ****Lottie T. Cooper Draper 1875 – 1963 *'''These listed below are descendants of John Riley Draper (above) *Charles Alden Draper 1894–1967 Memorial ID 5701590 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109452/santa-fe-national-cemetery Santa Fe National Cemetery] Santa Fe, NM **Florence Irene Ashcraft Draper 1894–1985 Memorial ID 3866931 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/109452/santa-fe-national-cemetery Santa Fe National Cemetery] Santa Fe, NM ***Charles Ashcraft Draper 1926–1998 Memorial ID 44230439 '''CENOTAPH''' cremated Texas, wife: ****Shirley Louise Garber Draper 1924–1998 (m. 1949) Memorial ID 44252283 '''CENOTAPH''' cremated Texas ***Effie Mariem Draper 27 Jan 1928 – 18 Jan 1944 Age 15 ****'''NOTE:''' Effie is the great granddaughter of '''John Riley Draper(1837-1909) & Sarah Elizabeth Hunt(1843-1931)''' *Clarence F. Draper 4 Aug 1912 – 9 Dec 1989 **Catherine Kreutzer Draper 4 Jul 1917 – 14 Feb 2005*Howard G Draper 1888 – 1978 **Neva Draper 1892 – 1983 *Vern Emil Draper 1891–1943 (m. 1916) Memorial ID 240058770 **Myrtle Irene ''Gunder'' Draper 15 Oct 1897 – 23 Jun 1993 ***Kenneth Earl Draper 1927–2020 Memorial ID 206254406 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2381334/miramar-national-cemetery Miramar National Cemetery] San Diego, CA wife: ****Virginia T Draper 1954–2016 Memorial ID 206254410 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2381334/miramar-national-cemetery Miramar National Cemetery] San Diego, CA *Steven Sewell Draper 1 Jun 1954 – 3 Dec 2020 Memorial ID 219634832 wife: **Billie Sue Franek (Draper???) see obituary. listed as "partner" of Steven S Draper *Sidney D Draper Dec 1864 – 193*Ada T. Draper Nov 1894 – Feb 1981 **Alice Elizabeth “Allie” Draper Jun 1864 – 17 May 1965 *Dorothy Draper 8 May 1928 – 4 Sep 2018 *Douglas Eugene Draper 18 Aug 1959 – 26 Nov 2005 *Gretchen Draper 3 Dec 1975 – 4 Dec 1975 *Nicole Maria Draper 17 Nov 1982 – 13 Sep 1986 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ec/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-622.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57441/mount-olivet-catholic-cemetery? Mount Olivet Catholic Cemetery] Located: Wheat Ridge, Jefferson County, Colorado, USA *Frank DeMont Draper 2 Jun 1891 – 25 Nov 1960 Memorial ID 147262999 **Elizabeth K Draper 29 Nov 1897 – 9 Jan 1987 Memorial ID 147262984 *Harriet M Draper 22 Oct 1875 – 9 Nov 1922 Memorial ID 73554090 *Della M Draper 27 May 1930 – 22 Feb 2009 Memorial ID 124299348 == Wyoming 23 Burial Listings== ==='''CROOK COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-276.jpg '''Sundance''' ZIP Code 82729 [[Draper-4264|William Fountain Draper]] platted the streets, and was appointed as commissioner to make Sundance the county seat of Crook County. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-31.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84086/mount-moriah-cemetery? Mount Moriah Cemetery]''' Location: Rt 43 West (Grave Yard Hill Rd leaving town turns into Etta Drive) [https://www.google.com/maps/@44.4048723,-104.3940965,271m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satillite_View_Map] *[[Draper-4264|William Fountain Draper]] 4 Dec 1836 – 1 Oct 1889, and wife: **[[Hatcher-2948|Lenora J. “Nora” Hatcher Draper]] 12 Sep 1836 – 21 Oct 1929 ***Plot info: Block 1, Lot 17 #1 *[[Barlow-1443|Eugene William Barlow]] (1866 – 11 Oct 1884) Plot info: Block 1, Lot 17 #4 **Eugene was the nephew of [[Draper-4264|William Fountain Draper]] who was killed in horse accident in cowboy activities. ==='''CAMPBELL COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/20/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-277.jpg '''Gillette''' ZIP Code 82717 *Barlow ranches are the oldest ranches in Wyoming, [[Draper-1125|Ruth Clark ''Draper'' Barlow]] married into the Barlow family, Marriage on 11 Mar 1864 to [[Barlow-1440|Steve Barlow]] produces a son who became the biggest rancher in Wyoming spawning other family ranches, still in operation. See [[Barlow-1444|Lewis H. Barlow]] (1868 - 1964) ==='''GOSHEN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/61/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-278.jpg '''Torrington ZIP Code 82240''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/de/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-170.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84122/valley-view-cemetery Vally View Cemetery]''' , AKA Torrington Cemetery Location: Torrington, Goshen County, Wyoming, 82240 USA *[[Draper-4354|Elton Draper]] (1888 - 1918) wife: ==='''LARAMIE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-279.jpg '''Cheyenne''' ZIP Code 82001 -82010 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-32.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/84061/lakeview-cemetery Lakeview Cemetery]''' Located: Cheyenne, Wyoming *[[Draper-3813|John Robert Draper]] 1838-1901 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2225686/oaks-cemetery Oaks Cemetery] Union Co. Tennessee: **[[Millhouse-561|Caroline Millhouse Draper]] 1848 - 1919 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/101612/west-lawn-cemetery West Lawn Cemetery] Gering, Nebraska ***[[Draper-5107|Jacob Franklin Draper]] (1873–1950) wife: ****[[Repp-242|Mary Jane Draper]] 26 Sep 1878 – 25 Aug 1958 Memorial ID 29166002 ***Joseph Henry Draper 30 Sep 1879 – 9 Jul 1957 Memorial ID 29166001 ***Marinda Belle ''Draper'' Perry 1877–1930 Memorial ID 29168594 husband: ****Nelson S Perry 1873–1942 Memorial ID 29168608 son: *****Harold Parker Perry (teacher at University of Nebraska) died of brain tumor, wife: ******Leah Faye Draper '''CENOTAPH''' remarried Ken Keller, then a Myers. Buried in Geneva, Nebraska. *Albert Draper 25 Jul 1879 – 26 Jan 1892 *Arthur Collins “Art” Draper 8 Aug 1907 – 6 Feb 1978 *Mrs C. P. Draper unknown – 30 Jun 1893 *Claude L Draper 1875 – 30 Apr 1958 *George Draper 30 Apr 1905 – 8 Jun 1965 *Isabel Snyder Draper 1875 – 15 Jan 1960 *Thomas Edward Draper 20 Jul 1918 – 17 Jun 1985 *William Draper unknown – 30 Jun 1930 *Catherine T. Murray Hoyt-Draper 17 Nov 1832 – 28 Jun 1893 == Utah 32 Burial Listings == ==='''UTAH COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-507.jpg '''American Fork''' ZIP Code 84003 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/26/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-508.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/77137/american-fork-cemetery? American Fork Cemetery]''' American Fork, Utah *Ray Draper 7 Sep 1897 – 12 Jan 1967 Memorial ID 36983492 '''NOT Family''' descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] **Vietta Darling Draper 22 Sep 1903 – 16 Apr 1976 Memorial ID 59655587 ***Vietta Lorraine ''Draper'' Clark 1925–2015 Memorial ID 168122719 husband: ****Karl B. Clark 1927–1986 Memorial ID 101659329 ***Raola LaRee ''Draper'' Coddington 1927–2017 Memorial ID 180189183 husband ****John Mark Coddington 1925–2001 Memorial ID 72549767 ****Lyle Ray Draper 24 Aug 1929 – 28 May 2013 Memorial ID 138191130 *Melvin Stratton Draper 9 Jun 1919 – 26 Jan 1999 Memorial ID 134548097 '''NOT Family''' Descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] **Afton Louise Prestwich Draper 12 Mar 1916 – 5 Nov 1944 Memorial ID 134548037 ***Barbara Joyce Draper 19 Oct 1942 – 24 Apr 1943 Memorial ID 134551060 ***Kathryn Nadine Draper 4 Sep 1943 – 4 Sep 1943 Memorial ID 134551019 *John Carson Draper 1888–1970 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 89438723 '''NOT Family''' Descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/77343/moroni-city-cemetery Moroni City Cemetery] wife: **Beatrice Dibble Hensley Draper 1899–1950 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/77343/moroni-city-cemetery Moroni City Cemetery] ***Leslie James Draper 2 Nov 1930 – 17 Aug 1982 Memorial ID 127455748 ****Nona Faye Rowe Draper 13 Apr 1947 – 30 May 2014 Memorial ID 127403639 *Jotham Matthew Draper 29 Nov 1997 – 31 Jul 2017 Memorial ID 181953217 *Carson J Draper 16 Aug 1987 – 13 Sep 2003 Memorial ID 7875605 '''Spanish Fork''' ZIP Code 84660 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-506.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/77440/spanish-fork-city-cemetery Spanish Fork City Cemetery]''' Spanish Fork, Utah *Thomas Draper 30 Jun 1821 – 15 Jan 1906 Memorial ID 70154028 '''NOT Family''' born in Isham, Wellingborough Borough, Northamptonshire, England, wife: **Sarah Ward Draper 27 Feb 1830 – 7 May 1900 Memorial ID 12191912 ***Sarah Draper Memorial ID10 May 1860 – 20 Mar 1929 12191911 ***Mary Ann ''Draper'' Aitken 1868–1891 Memorial ID 10911777 husband: ****John Stephen Aitken 1853–1912 Memorial ID 10910515 *Aaron Call Draper Memorial ID7 Jul 1901 – 5 Oct 1947 Memorial ID 9732123 '''NOT Family''' descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] wife: **Ora Adell ''Robertson'' Draper 11 Sep 1900 – 4 Sep 1972 Memorial ID 9732116 ***Don J. Draper 31 Dec 1931 – 26 Jun 2020 Memorial ID 9732113 wife: divorced *David William Draper 28 Apr 1945 – 10 Dec 2021 Memorial ID 234872401 '''NOT Family''' descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] *Frank Lamond Draper 30 Apr 1915 – 2 Apr 1950 Memorial ID 12191903 '''NOT Family''' descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] *Glennes Deloy “Glen” Draper 6 Oct 1914 – 15 Sep 1999 Memorial ID 12191904 '''NOT Family''' descends from [[Draper-16|James “The Puritan” Draper]] wife: **LaVerl ''Rosley'' Draper 6 Feb 1915 – 17 Mar 2004 Memorial ID 12191908 *Robert Aaron Draper 12 Nov 1960 – 12 Nov 1960 Memorial ID 16997321 *Lieut William H. Draper 14 May 1817 – 12 Nov 1894 Memorial ID 16997334 *Dillon Tyler Draper 7 Nov 1993 – 1 Mar 2019 Memorial ID 210021741 ==Montana 40 Burial Listings== === '''DEER LODGE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-644.jpg '''Anaconda''' ZIP Code 59711 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/31/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-645.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/564985/lower-hill-cemetery Lower Hill Cemetery]''' Located: Anaconda, Montana *Willard Shelby Draper 27 Feb 1915 – 23 Jun 1996 Memorial ID 80567089 **Martha K Kramer Draper 1917 – unknown Memorial ID 106886463 ***Delbert Harley “Del” Draper 18 Nov 1937 – 4 Apr 2013 Memorial ID 107982517 wife: ****Linda Faye Wensley Draper 13 May 1941 – 15 Sep 2001 Memorial ID 97510558 divorced, children: *****Debbie ''Draper'' Jurcich (living) *****Dawn ''Draper'' Pickett (living) *****Delbert "Butch" Wesly Draper 16 Nov 1961 – 22 Aug 1978 Memorial ID 97510557 ****Wendella Abrahamsen Draper (m. 1979) unknown details, divorced, *****'''NOTE''' Delbert adopted Wendella's two children: *****Lisa Faye *****Dawnalee === '''JUDITH BASIN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-280.jpg '''Utica''' ZIP Code 59452 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/67/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-91.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/21149/utica-cemetery Utica Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-30|Mary Jane ''Draper'' Gray]] 1856–1922 husband: **[[Gray-305|William Breathitt Gray]] 1888–1976 children: ***Lucy L. Gray unknown–1894 Memorial ID 44835686 Age Unknown ***William Breathitt Gray 1888–1976 Memorial ID 124453071 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/72790/woodlawn-memorial-park Woodlawn Memorial Park] Gotha, Orange County, Florida, USA ***Wallace E Gray 1899–1970 Memorial ID 129753039 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/646/greenwood-cemetery Greenwood Cemetery] Grand Rapids, Kent County, Michigan, USA === '''ROSEBUD COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/59/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-642.jpg '''Forsyth''' ZIP Code 59327 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-643.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/20879/forsyth-cemetery Forsyth Cemetery]''' Located: Forsyth, Montana *Robert Harley Draper 14 Sep 1885 – 16 Mar 1957 Memorial ID 79578139 **Myrtle Ida Callen Draper 1890 – 23 Jan 1961 Memorial ID 98826795 ***Raleigh E Draper 4 Nov 1907 – 23 Jun 1938 Memorial ID 99028849 wife: ****Onata Swart Frates 1907–2003 (m. 1927) Memorial ID 195662322 son: *****Harold Alan Draper 28 Nov 1928 – 31 May 1948 Memorial ID 79578065 ***Eula R ''Draper'' Swart 1913–1942 Memorial ID 98826593 ****Ardis Swart 1906–1961 (m. 1932) Memorial ID 86883362 *****Marion Ruth Swart Simpson 1933–1983 Memorial ID 68580766 husband: ******Arnold Simpson 1923–2001 (m. 1952) Memorial ID 68581017 ***Willard Shelby Draper 1915–1996 Memorial ID 80567089 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/564985/lower-hill-cemetery Lower Hill Cemetery] Anaconda, Montana ****Martha K Kramer Draper 1917 – unknown Memorial ID 106886463 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/564985/lower-hill-cemetery Lower Hill Cemetery] Anaconda, Montana her son: *****Delbert Harley Draper 1937–2013 Memorial ID 107982517 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/564985/lower-hill-cemetery Lower Hill Cemetery] Anaconda, Montana ==='''YELLOWSTONE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/25/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-309.jpg '''Billings''' ZIP Code 59101 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-310.jpg '''Mountainview Cemetery''' *[[Draper-4512|Dr Walter Ernest Draper]] 8 Jul 1880 – 3 Jul 1957 **[[Heim-1023|Lucy Rosina ''Heim'' Draper]] 28 Oct 1879 – Dec 1973 *John Draper 1827 – 11 Jan 1907 '''Not Family''' Born in England **Rebecc Stevenson Draper 1828 – 18 Aug 1906 *Mark Isador Draper 4 Apr 1862 – 13 Sep 1957 '''Not Family''' descends from Maryland Draper families **America E. “Ida” Chunn Draper 1 Mar 1858 – 30 Aug 1944 *Kenneth Franklin Draper 19 Aug 1919 – 23 Apr 1999 **Anna Marie Schroetke Draper 18 Oct 1924 – 9 Dec 2010 *Unknown Draper unknown – 14 Jan 1907 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-311.jpg '''Sunset Memorial Gardens''' *Delmer Silas Draper 14 Feb 1864 – 16 May 1957 *Eunice Marie Blomberg Draper 14 Jan 1916 – 8 Jun 1996 *Margaret May “Maggie” Guthrie 24 Apr 1873 – 13 Apr 1960 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/db/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-312.jpg '''Yellowstone Valley Memorial Park''' *Rev George L Draper 9 Aug 1944 – 14 Aug 2009 == Idaho 89 Burial Listing== ==='''ADA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/37/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-281.jpg '''Boise''' 83701 to 83799 ZIP Codes https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-496.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80436/cloverdale-memorial-park Cloverdale Memorial Park]''' *E. L. Draper 1914 – 1996 Memorial ID 206463710 **Betty Draper Memorial ID1921 – 1995 Memorial ID 206463470 *Edward James Draper Memorial ID1 Mar 1960 – 3 Mar 1960 Memorial ID 54265082 *Ellis Louis Draper 25 Sep 1920 – 19 May 2008 Memorial ID 222162058 wives **Married (1): Mar 16, 1940, MARGARET MAY DRAKE, Boise, Ada Co., Idaho '''CENOTAPH''' **Married (2): Jan 27, 1978, DONNA LOU (POOLEY) McGONAGLE, Clark Co., Idaho '''CENOTAPH''' *William Glenn Draper 24 Sep 1905 – 28 Apr 2004 Memorial ID 28282769 '''NOT Family''' wife: **Evelyn Johnson Draper 5 Oct 1910 – Mar 1994 Memorial ID 28282829 *James Lamarr Draper 17 Sep 1927 – 26 May 1989 Memorial ID 53678769 **Pearl Marie Woods Draper 17 Nov 1924 – 10 Oct 1994 Memorial ID 53679972 *LeVar Taylor Draper Memorial ID1 Jan 1896 – 28 May 1959 Memorial ID 28545669 wife: **Clara Vance Draper 14 May 1898 – 1986 Memorial ID 28545635 *Michael Neal Draper 6 Feb 1959 – 9 Feb 1959 Memorial ID 82291843 *Paul Draper 15 Feb 1901 – 11 Mar 1957 Memorial ID 94075863 wife **Ruth Folks Shaddox 1903–1988 (m. 1919) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/85/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-33.jpg Draper Daughter(s) married into the Stroup Family. [[Draper-169|Thomas Draper (1680ish)]]'s descendants carry Stroup name, among others. '''Morris Hill Cemetery''' 317 N. Latah, Boise, Ada County, Idaho, 83706 [https://www.google.com/maps/@43.6082693,-116.2299108,925m/data=!3m1!1e3 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Stroup-943|Eileen H. (Stroup) Blurton]] (1921 - 2012) Miss Northwest Passage and runner up to Miss Idaho. Obituary on Legacy [https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/idahostatesman/name/eileen-blurton-obituary?id=13008466 Obituary_On_ Legacy] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-529.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80606/pioneer-cemetery? Pioneer Cemetery]''' Boise, Idaho *Elizabeth Kavanaugh “Bessie” ''Draper'' Gray 19 Apr 1871 - 1 Apr 1944 **John Daniel Gray 1842–1925 Memorial ID 43878125 ***'''Note''' Elizabeth is the daughter of [[Draper-31|James Ward Draper]] 1830–1895 '''Meridan''' ZIP Code 83642 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-503.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80561/meridian-cemetery Meridian Cemetery]''' Meridian Idaho *Joseph Calvin Draper 3 Jan 1833 – 6 Apr 1902 Memorial ID 40986827 wife: **Mary Etta ''Adams'' (Holt) (Draper) Rice 1864–1933 (m. 1892) '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 88194071 buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98942/memorial-park-cemetery Memorial Park Cemetery] Enid Oaklahoma ***Lula Jane Draper May 1895 – 6 Sep 1909 Memorial ID 40986829 ***Gladys Jane Draper Hodson 1893–1972 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 62793881 ****Albert Nathan Hodson 1867–1948 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 62793883 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/eb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-505.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1597433/joplin-pioneer-cemetery? Joplin Pioneer Cemetery]''' *Jack Draper 19 Sep 1916 – 27 Mar 1994 Memorial ID 79418032 wife: **Ruth Draper 23 Nov 1914 – 18 Feb 1980 Memorial ID 79417993 *Naomi L Draper 9 Feb 1921 – 4 Oct 1990 Memorial ID 79417965 (could be a 1st or 2nd wife of Jack Draper, research needed) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/13/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-504.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80661/terrace-lawn-memorial-gardens Terrace Lawn Memorial Gardens]''' *Dennis Devon Draper 13 Nov 1932 – 10 Feb 2004 Memorial ID 116332089 **Gilda Mae Coonrod Draper 7 Mar 1933 – 27 Jan 2012 Memorial ID 84153606 ==='''ADAMS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/75/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-495.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/31/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-494.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80681/winkler-cemetery Winkler Cemetery]''' These Draper are '''NOT Family'''. Charles Camp Draper's father is William Draper 1833-1891 from Chatham, Kent, England, death in Schuler, Colfax, Nebraska. *Charles Camp Draper 31 Aug 1859 – 17 Dec 1936 Memorial ID 95120978 wives: **Emma Cornelia Calkins Draper 18 Oct 1869 – 29 Aug 1914 Married 1886, Memorial ID 16165525 ****Burton C. Draper7 Jul 1887 – 5 Dec 1905 Memorial ID 16165 509 **2nd wife Eliza Gifford Draper 1862–1935 Married 1918, Memorial ID 8017632 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80518/odd-fellows-cemetery Odd Fellows Cemetery] Council, Idaho https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/04/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-493.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80518/odd-fellows-cemetery Odd Fellows Cemetery]''' Council, Idaho *John Wesley Draper 1842–1914 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 16227424 buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2150531/hornet-creek-cemetery Hornet Creek Cemetery] Council, Idaho wife: **Mary Elizabeth Harrington Draper 1862–1942 (m. 1878) children: ***Nute William Draper 4 Jun 1884 – 13 Apr 1961Memorial ID 11920465 wife ****Carrie Anne Matteson Draper 18 Jul 1900 – 21 Nov 1993 Memorial ID 11920464 ****Mary Ann ''Draper'' Fitzgerald 1917–1940 *****Add Mary's Spouse ****John William Draper 10 May 1919 – 28 Feb 2005 Memorial ID 11920463 ****Walter James Draper 8 May 1921 – 14 Apr 1959 Memorial ID 21681820 *****Irene Ethel Buchanan Draper 21 Mar 1925 – 8 Jan 1998 Memorial ID 8017618 ****Robert Louis Draper 1923-1994''' CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/39169/mount-jefferson-memorial-park Mount Jefferson Memorial Park] Madras, Oregon ****Douglas Arnold Draper 1925–2010''' CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2291638/hooppole-cemetery Hooppole Cemetery] Hoopple, IL ***James Wesley Draper 15 Jul 1893 – 7 Apr 1929 Memorial ID 11920462 wife: ****Olivia Baxter ''Nielsen'' (Draper) Baker 1897–1987 (m. 1917) Memorial ID 53429248 ***Minnie Mae Draper Filley 1886–1961 Memorial ID 21681866 ****Add Spouse ***Lydia Elizabeth Draper Bokamper 1899–1988 Memorial ID 11920414 ****Add Spouse *Eliza Gifford Draper 6 Jul 1862 – 28 Jan 1935 Memorial ID 8017632 '''Not Family''' **Charles Camp Draper 1859–1936 (m. 1918) '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 95120978 buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80681/winkler-cemetery Winkler Cemetery] Adams Co., Idaho *Betty Lorraine Draper 21 Dec 1928 – 22 Jul 2020 Memorial ID 240033360 *Walter Draper 5 May 1934 – 1979 Memorial ID 8017619 ==='''BANNOCK COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-570.jpg '''Pocatello''' ZIP Code 83201 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-571.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80577/mountain-view-cemetery? Mountain View Cemetery]''' *Cassie Jo Stoddart 1989–2006 Memorial ID 18027350 murdered by Brian Lee Draper and Torey Michael Adamcik '''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Cassie_Jo_Stoddart WikiPedia]''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-572.jpg Full Story of her tragic murder in WikiPedia and on [https://www.sportskeeda.com/pop-culture/dateline-the-last-day-who-killed-cassie-jo-stoddart-now NBC Dateline] Brian Lee Draper moved with his Mormon parents from Salt Lake City, Utah to Pocatello, Idaho and was a junior in high school when he committed this heinous stabbing attack on Cassie Jo Stoddard, with his friend Torey Adamcik. Being horror film fanatics, they decided to make their own movie killing a real person. Later they tried to burn and bury the recording. The video was recovered. *Albert Edward Draper 23 Dec 1840 – 23 Jun 1913 Memorial ID 18726861 '''NOT Family''' Decends from Jonathan Draper 10 Mar 1670 Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Memorial ID 12089238 '''CENOTAPH''' *Babe Draper Birth and death dates unknown.Memorial ID 43061422 *Bert Roe Draper 22 Jul 1883 – 30 May 1953Memorial ID 43061423 *Emmit Draper18 Jan 1889 – 16 Oct 1943 Memorial ID 43061424 *Lynn Allen Draper 21 Sep 1920 – 18 Oct 1986 Memorial ID 43061425 *A E Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 43061421 ==='''MENIDOKA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/eb/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-497.jpg '''Paul''' ZIP Code 83347 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-498.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80598/paul-cemetery Paul Cemetery]''' Paul, Idaho *Dwayne L Draper 6 Sep 1926 – 3 Jan 2011 Memorial ID 63739561 wife: **Betty Lucille Peck Draper Memorial ID9 Mar 1924 – 2 Aug 1985 Memorial ID 70553872 ***Steven Deray Draper 20 Oct 1964 – 20 Oct 1964 Memorial ID 70554058 *Wallace Lavern Draper 18 Dec 1903 – 16 Feb 1970 Memorial ID 74890216 **Loylla Munsee Draper 23 Feb 1907 – 25 Apr 1990 Memorial ID 74890721 ***Gerald Rex Draper 6 Sep 1935 – 12 Oct 2005 Memorial ID 15814235 ****Spouse? ***Lyle Eugene ID23 Mar 1932 – 16 Sep 2021 Memorial ID 232223768 Wife: ****Julie Marva ''Shaw'' Married Draper August 2, 1991 Living *Tony Draper 1959 – 1975 Memorial ID 90458592 **Mary M Sparks Draper 22 Aug 1940 – 15 Jun 2011 Memorial ID 71604665 *Martha Emma Dicks Draper 3 Jun 1926 – 11 May 1948 Memorial ID 91423075 **Spouse? *Donna Mae Draper 13 Oct 1928 – 2 Dec 1928 Memorial ID 11468065 *Jay R. Draper Jr. 13 Jun 1961 – 15 Jun 1961 Memorial ID 38127525 ==='''PAYETTE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-532.jpg '''Payette''' ZIP Code 83661 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ea/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-533.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/80623/riverside-cemetery Riverside Cemetery]''' *Nathan Draper 16 Apr 1829 – 21 Apr 1904 Memorial ID 17719125 **Margret Jane Howe Draper 13 Mar 1835 – 4 Mar 1917 Memorial ID 17719121 ***Charles Frank Draper 1865 – 1964 Memorial ID 17718940 wife: ****Eva Anna Bailey Draper 12 Sep 1870 – 5 Nov 1931 Memorial ID 17718946 *****James Alfred Draper 12 Apr 1887 – 20 Aug 1956 Memorial ID 17718951 ******Wife Unknown *******Jay Ronald Draper 28 Dec 1926 – 27 Feb 1927 Memorial ID 17719134 *****Kantha I. ''Draper'' Ahlstrand 1901–1937 Memorial ID 17080632 husband ******Elmer August Ahlstrand 1891–1952 Memorial ID 17080676 *Anna S. Draper 9 Nov 1872 – 19 Apr 1953 Memorial ID 17718932 (could be Charles's Daughter (above) *Child Draper unknown – 1918 Memorial ID 17719086 *J. Frank Draper unknown – 1921 Memorial ID 17719096 ==Texas 598 Burial Listings== ==='''CASS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/77/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-716.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-717.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1208012/antioch-cemetery? Antioch Cemetery]''' Located: Between Douglassville and Queen City, Cass County, Texas, USA *Jasper Newton “Jap” Draper 29 May 1895 – 29 Jun 1992 Memorial ID 76593903, wife: **Maggie Melissa “Liss” Cocke Draper 16 Aug 1888 – 23 Apr 1976 Memorial ID 76594222 ***Albert Jasper Draper 23 May 1918 – 25 Aug 2013 Memorial ID 176739571 ****Claudy Elsie Guyton Draper 7 Aug 1917 – 16 Jun 2006 Memorial ID 76592542 *Thomas Peter Draper 1785–1871 Memorial ID 81959095 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1993178/old-liberty-cemetery Old Liberty Cemetery] Cass County TX, wife: **Rebecca ''Granade'' Draper married 5 Sep 1807 '''CENOTAPH''' unknown details ***Peter Draper 1 Jun 1808 – 20 Jan 1897 Memorial ID 76594462 ****Manda Lavicie Reed Draper 3 Aug 1815 – 16 Jul 1880 Memorial ID 76594160 *****William M. Draper 1836–1892 Memorial ID 92243699 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/371467/providence-cemetery Providence Cemetery] Mount Vernon, Tx *****Mary Ann ''Draper'' Bullard 1838–1931 Memorial ID 77757665 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1102686/loraine-cemetery Loraine Cemetery] Loraine, TX *****Lucinda R. ''Draper'' Wright 1842–1889 Memorial ID 76598035 *****Elizabeth M. ''Draper'' Harper 1845–1927 Memorial ID 6487709 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/267641/laws-chapel-cemetery Laws Chapel Cemetery] Atlanta, TX *****John Thomas Draper 1850–1880 Memorial ID 81959193 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1993178/old-liberty-cemetery Old Liberty Cemetery] Cass County TX *****Benjamin Franklin Draper17 Oct 1852 – 8 Mar 1925 Memorial ID 76592596 ******Sarah Jane “Sallie” Hill Draper 1851 – 1931 (m. 1879) Memorial ID 76594543 *******Golden Elliot Draper 23 Oct 1880 – 10 Oct 1906 Memorial ID 76592742 *******Frank H. Draper 16 Jan 1882 – 20 Jun 1900 Age 18 Memorial ID 103103280 *******Coriale Draper Hunt 1884–1905 Memorial ID 76595286, husband remarried *******Walter Daniel Draper 28 Mar 1884 – 24 Mar 1965 Memorial ID 104343251, wife: ********Viola Porter Draper 13 Nov 1888 – 3 Sep 1967 Memorial ID 104343229 *********Norman Wesley Draper 28 Oct 1921 – 3 Aug 1997 Memorial ID 136337276 ********** Barbara Jean Patterson Draper 1934–1995 Memorial ID 44143455 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2272599/olive-branch-cemetery Olive Branch Cemetery] Brightstar, Arkansas *********Ruby Lee Draper Lee 1909–1973 Memorial ID 104113740 *********Noel Ray Draper 7 Dec 1914 – 27 Jun 1953 Memorial ID 104343419 **********Spouse? ***********Nancy Lee Draper unknown – 25 Oct 1948 Memorial ID 104343484 *********Raymond Paul Draper 23 Nov 1912 – 11 Dec 1987 Memorial ID 104343182 **********Lottie Mooneyham Draper 1910–2007 Memorial ID 195880635 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/67197/centuries-memorial-park Centuries Memorial Park] Shreveport, Louisiana **********Charles Hibbitts Lee1908–1957 Memorial ID 104113821 *******Teresa L. Draper Hunt 1892–1975 Memorial ID 40506925 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/56892/woodlawn-cemetery Woodlawn Cemetery] Texarkana, Arkansas *******Cranfield D. Draper 1894–1977 Memorial ID 69188997 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/437061/queen-city-cemetery Queen City Cemetery] Queen City, TX *John Stanford Draper 5 May 1841 – 6 Sep 1923 Memorial ID 76593976 **Margaret Ann Reed Draper 12 Nov 1844 – 9 Jan 1915 Memorial ID 76594280 ***John Thomas “Tom” Draper 5 Jan 1863 – 23 Apr 1937 Memorial ID 76594035, wife: ****Florence Isabella ''Burkhalter'' Draper1871 – 1931 (m. 1888) Memorial ID 76594102 *****Troy R. Draper 5 May 1895 – 25 Dec 1907 Memorial ID 76594609 *****Robert Lee Draper 12 Sep 1888 – 23 Feb 1946 Memorial ID 76594504 ******Vera Jane ''Waters'' Draper 5 Aug 1892 – 5 May 1933 Memorial ID 76594666 *******Robert Lee Draper Jr. 7 Jul 1923 – 17 May 2016 Memorial ID 162791884 ''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/437061/queen-city-cemetery Queen City Cemetery] Queen City, TX *****Myrtis Francis Draper 1909 – 1909 Memorial ID 76594366 *******Paul Ray Draper12 Feb 1925 – 23 Jul 1951 Memorial ID 76594407 ********Phenie Beard Turner 1930–2016 Memorial ID 179594588 *********Paul Ray Draper 1951–2021 Memorial ID 228428275 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[indagrave.com/cemetery/338748/elmwood-memorial-park Elmwood Memorial Park] Abilene, TX *******Infant 1 Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 136333911 *******Infant 2 Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 136333899 *******Infant 3 Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 136333925 *******Infant 4 Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 136333917 *****Plennie Viola ''Draper'' Hill 1890–1962 Memorial ID 104356842, husband: ******Charlie Vernon Hill 1892–1973 (m. 1914) Memorial ID 104357190 *******Eddie Jo Hill 1927–1929 Age 1 Memorial ID 104102627 ***Charles Stanford Draper 28 Jan 1869 – 24 Apr 1925 Memorial ID 79689612 ****Martha Jane “Mattie” ''Trimble'' Draper 22 Mar 1874 – 12 Aug 1960 Memorial ID 76594310 *****Milam B. Draper 12 Oct 1909 – 19 Jun 1993 Memorial ID 104395308 ******Katie Elinor ''Waters'' Draper 2 Apr 1915 – 24 Apr 2001 Memorial ID 136342654 *******Milam Benny Draper 21 Feb 1944 – 23 Oct 2021 Memorial ID 233395906 *******Delorias ''Draper'' Milam 1935–2018 Memorial ID 187539344, husband: ********Don Edward Milam 1931–2020 Memorial ID 206303691 *****Rev Claude Singleton Draper 12 Nov 1899 – 31 Dec 1953 Memorial ID 104359809 ******Susie Angeline ''Griffin'' Draper 24 Jun 1908 – 9 Jul 1996 Memorial ID 136342147 *******Ruth Helen ''Draper'' Glendinning 1927–2008 Memorial ID 125110269 husband: ********David Lois Glendinning 1941–1978 Memorial ID 104399584 *******Kathryn Eugene Draper Wright 1932–2010 Memorial ID 136342197, husband: ********Charles Edward Wright 1929–1995 (m. 1981) Memorial ID 27185098 *******William Tillman Draper 29 Aug 1934 – 14 Aug 2007 Memorial ID 27185022 wife: ********Connie ''Black'' Draper (maybe still living) *******David Glen Draper Memorial ID 31 Aug 1940 – 19 Dec 2022 ********Living Spouse *********Jon David Draper 16 Dec 1960 – 15 Apr 2009 Memorial ID 35960361 *********Terry Steven Draper 1963–2021 Memorial ID 232366033 '''CENOTAPH''' **********Sheila Renee Brossett Draper 1969–2014 Memorial ID 133168969 *****Hattie V. ''Draper'' Waters 1894–1972 Memorial ID 76597865 (Obituary included) ******Johnie Daniel Waters 1891–1987 Memorial ID 76597900 *******Navada ''Waters'' Haynes 1919–1994 Memorial ID 104400598 husband: ********Morris Haynes 1912–1996 Memorial ID 104400627 *********Martha Ruth ''Haynes'' Belk 1939–2018 Memorial ID 195360863 *********Tom Haynes 1946–2020 Memorial ID 206743159 (Obituary included) ***Elijah Samuel Draper Memorial ID18 Apr 1869 – 1927 Memorial ID 104409516 ****Margaret Ann Heldt Draper 22 Feb 1878 – 21 Jan 1955 Memorial ID 104409596 *****Mamie Miller 1907–2007 Memorial ID 75221459 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Lola M Draper Atkinson 1916–1994 Memorial ID 23681311 '''CENOTAPH''' ***James Clifton Draper 27 May 1880 – 17 Dec 1957 Memorial ID 76592794 ****Willie Mae Draper4 Apr 1888 – 20 Jan 1920 Memorial ID 15468697 *****Ila Draper Hill 1907–1984 Memorial ID 76595221 *Bonny Draper (maybe still living) **Cora “Billie” Cox Draper 23 Dec 1945 – 15 Nov 2019 Memorial ID 205876135 *Horace Elton “Red” Draper 14 Jan 1912 – 30 May 1981 Memorial ID 93731426 **Pauline Finley Draper 17 Oct 1909 – 20 Sep 2008 Memorial ID 93731554 ***Martha L. Draper Smith 1934–2019 Memorial ID 205516370, husband: ****Robert Galveston Smith 1925–2012 Memorial ID 99562686 *Baby Draper 1916 – 1916 Memorial ID 104116208 '''Queen City''' ZIP Code 75572 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-718.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/437061/queen-city-cemetery? Queen City Cemetery] Queen City, Cass County, Texas *Cranfield D. “Bud” Draper 21 Aug 1894 – 27 Aug 1977 Memorial ID 69188997 **Banna Mable Cocke Draper 8 Dec 1897 – 13 May 1984 Memorial ID 69188988 ***Adron Cecil Draper 10 Jan 1920 – 23 Dec 1936 Memorial ID 69188976 ***Oscar Draper 1923–2005 Memorial ID 183475351 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/95445/memorial-park-cemetery Memorial Park Cemetery] Sioux City, Woodbury Co., Iowa ***Gerald Draper 1925–1990 Memorial ID 8071964 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2874/chapelwood-memorial-gardens-and-mausoleum Chapelwood Memorial Gardens] Wake Village, Bowie County, Texas ***Mona Faye Draper Brown 1928–2007 Memorial ID 124398985 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1208012/antioch-cemetery] Antioch Cemetery, Cass Co, TX *Coy Seifer Draper 6 Aug 1904 – 22 Nov 1989 Memorial ID 87251540 **Vera N. Baker Draper 13 Aug 1905 – 20 Sep 1991 Memorial ID 87251597 ***Bonnie Jean ''Draper'' Bray 1927–1984 Memorial ID 76733986, husband: ****Howard M. Bray 1921–2006 Memorial ID 16166272 ***Rev. Bill Draper (???? - 1983 (obituary) *Herman O. Draper 13 Jan 1915 – 2 Dec 1997 Memorial ID 69798296 **Josephine “Jo” Shelton Draper 8 Jul 1922 – 23 Apr 2001 Memorial ID 106878138 ***Jane Caroline Draper Thomas 1950–2020 Memorial ID 208115009 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/267641/laws-chapel-cemetery Laws Cemetery] ***Nita Kathleen Draper Rice 1956–2013 Memorial ID 10451588 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Unknown *William B. Draper 1 Aug 1888 – 17 Nov 1967 Memorial ID 69189096 **Mary Vivian Eargle Draper 26 Sep 1895 – 18 Feb 1982 Memorial ID 69189076 ***MAJ Jessie Cleveland Draper 17 Mar 1918 – 25 Jul 1944 Memorial ID 69189051 ***SSGT James Woodrow Draper 1 Mar 1921 – 11 Apr 1944 Memorial ID 69189029 ****'''NOTE:''' William and Mary lose both boys in April and July 1944 *Martha Ann Odom Draper 6 May 1937 – 20 Mar 2013 Memorial ID 107053608 **Husband unknown ***Rodney Wayne Draper 30 Mar 1963 – 8 Aug 2000 Memorial ID 117590639 *Robert Lee Draper Jr. 7 Jul 1923 – 17 May 2016 Memorial ID 162791884 **Betty Ruth Julian Draper 1 Feb 1925 – 5 Mar 2005 Memorial ID 69798305 *John Thomas Draper 1863–1937 Memorial ID 76594035 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1208012/antioch-cemetery Antioch Cemetery] **Florence Isabella Burkhalter Draper 1871–1931 Memorial ID 76594102 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1208012/antioch-cemetery Antioch Cemetery] ***Rua Thelma Draper 1 Mar 1911 – 10 Sep 2000 Memorial ID 87251571 *William Edgar Draper 5 Aug 1891 – 21 May 1967 Memorial ID 67938663 **Virtie Baker Draper 26 Feb 1896 – 25 Mar 1943 Memorial ID 67938683 '''Atlanta''' ZIP Code 75551 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-719.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6002/pine-crest-cemetery? Pine Crest Cemetery] Atlanta, Cass County, Texas, USA *William Walter Vinson Draper 28 Jul 1864 – 12 Mar 1952 Memorial ID 168232380 **Annie Elizabeth Eargle Draper 13 Dec 1878 – 20 Nov 1965 Memorial ID 154295817 ***Charlie Clifton Draper 24 Jul 1901 – 2 Apr 1960 Memorial ID 154295903 ****Delta Mae Thomas Draper19 Aug 1901 – 6 Sep 2002 Memorial ID 180450875 ***Willie Myrtle Draper Beck 1900–1979 Memorial ID 137025237 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2874/chapelwood-memorial-gardens-and-mausoleum Chapelwood Memorial Gardens] Wake Village, TX ***Juanita Draper Lummus 1914–1958 Memorial ID 181053730 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/641477/cedarlawn-memorial-park Cedarlawn Memorial Park] Sherman, TX ==='''CHEROKEE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fa/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-577.jpg '''Concord''' ZIP Code 75681 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-576.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1965215/concord-cemetery Concord Cemetery]''' Concord, TX *John Travis “Johnie” Draper 11 Apr 1901 – 7 Apr 1942 Memorial ID 66548442 wife: **Mazie Prudence Martin Draper 18 Aug 1899 – 29 Apr 1980 Memorial ID 66548443 ***Emerson O Draper 8 Dec 1922 – 8 Jun 1945 Memorial ID 66548450 Killed In Action B-1874th Eng. BN, Age 22 ***James C Draper 17 Mar 1921 – 23 Jun 1964 Memorial ID 66548454 ***Garland O. Draper 1926–1985 Memorial ID 147803372 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/318390/hallsville-cemetery Hallsville Cemetery] Hallsville, TX ==='''COLEMAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-282.jpg '''Coleman''' ZIP Code 76834 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-124.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/322488/coleman-city-cemetery Coleman City Cemetery]''' AKA Coleman Cemetery Location: E. 9th Street Coleman, Coleman County, Texas, 76834 USA *[[Draper-5267|Walter George Draper]] 27 Jan 1916 – 30 Sep 1989 **[[Yates-9030|Mary Allen Yates Draper]] 12 Nov 1916 – 1 Nov 1991 *[[Draper-5533|PVT Alvie Warren Draper]] 13 Oct 1920 – 3 Mar 1995 **[[Price-28536|Doris Lozell Price Draper]] 23 Aug 1920 – 19 Dec 1980 '''CENOTAPH''' Memorial ID 143837204 burried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/154584/laurel-oaks-memorial-park Laurel Oaks Memorial Park] Mesquite, Dallas County , Texas, USA *[[Draper-5543|Linda Sue Draper]] 22 Jan 1949 – 24 Jan 1949 Infant daughter of [[Draper-5542|Doyle Draper]] buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/55688/pinecrest-memorial-park Pinecrest Memorial Park] Mena, Polk County, Arkansas, USA NOTE: [[Draper-5267|Walter George Draper]] and [[Draper-5533|Alvie Warren Draper]] are brothers. [[Draper-5543|Linda Sue Draper]] was their niece. '''Gouldbusk''' ZIP Code 76845 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/88/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-125.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/192979/gouldbusk-cemetery Gouldbusk Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5268|Ridley Draper]] 5 Aug 1891 – 28 May 1961 wife: **[[McGehee-1399|Clara Adella McGehee Draper]] 27 Nov 1895 – 18 Jul 1969 son: ***[[Draper-5539|Marvin Draper]] (1914 - 1914) '''CENETOPAH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-5532|PVT William Lital Draper]] 27 Oct 1918 – 11 Nov 1983 ***[[Draper-5540|Mabel Dean ''Draper'' Howard]] (1924 - 1998) '''CENOTAPH''' husband: ****[[Clayton-8203|George Clayton Howard]] (1926 - 2010) '''CENOTAPH''' ****Note: Mabel and George Howard are buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1986164/sentinel-missionary-baptist-church-cemetery Sentinel Missionary Baptist Church Cemetery] Sentinel, Polk County, MO ***[[Draper-5541|Clara Beatrice Draper]] (1929 - 2017) '''CENOTAPH''' husband: ****[[Jones-123256|James Jesse Jones ]](1928 - 2017) '''CENOTAPH''' ****Note: Clara and James Jones are buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99619/sunset-memorial-gardens Sunset Memorial Gardens] Lawton, Comanche County, Oklahoma, USA *Annie B. Draper 20 Apr 1875 – 2 Feb 1919 *Charlie Barton Draper 22 Feb 1875 – 4 Dec 1944 *Jewel Draper15 Jan 1916 – 22 Jan 1916 *Wade R. Draper 28 Jul 1903 – 10 Jan 1921 ==='''CORYELL COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/19/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-283.jpg *[[Draper-823|Michael Draper]] (1794 - 1865) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, wife: **[[Eastus-2|Savina ''Eastus'' Draper]] (1820) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown '''Copperas Cove''' ZIP Code 76522 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-43.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3033/copperas-cove-cemetery Copperas_Cove_Cemetery]''' located at 415 Avenue A *Robert L. Draper28 Apr 1930 – 1 Dec 1989 *Laura Rolfe Draper11 Dec 1932 – 1 Dec 2014 '''Gatesville''' ZIP Code 76528 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-44.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1970734/davidson-cemetery Davidson_Cemetery]''' Located 2030 FMR 1829 *[[Draper-251|Joseph Leonard Draper]] 4 Dec 1839 – 15 Oct 1905 1st wife: **[[Beaty-410|Sarah Beaty Draper]] 6 Jan 1842 – 9 Sep 1895 **2nd wife: [[Lamb-744|Ellen Elizabeth Lamb]] (1862 - 1954) burial unknown *[[Draper-821|John Wesley Draper]] 17 Jul 1865 – 3 Feb 1925 wife: **Minnie L Draper 30 May 1870 – 11 Apr 1954 *[[Draper-822|Joseph Leonard Draper Jr. ]] 14 Mar 1870 – 16 Mar 1889 *Gertie May Draper 11 Aug 1901 – 16 Mar 1902 *Infant Draper 24 Jul – 29 Jul *Jack H. Draper 22 Feb 1897 – 20 Aug 1898 *James Edward “Edd” Draper 17 Sep 1886 – 31 Mar 1943 *John Herschel Draper 25 Nov 1905 – Jun 1983 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/70/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-45.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/488523/gatesville-city-cemetery Gatesville_City_Cemetery]''' 2100 E. Leon *Ivy King Draper 1904 – 1999 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-72.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6333/restland-cemetery Restland_Cemetery]''' *Lela Mae Boyd Young 1919–1952 Memorial ID: 46299483 Granddaughter of [[Draper-3163|James Granville Draper]] (1847 - 1928) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in Cotton Gin, TX **Elwood Buster Young 1915–2001 Memorial ID: 46299484 *Claudine Frances Gooch Draper 4 Jun 1911 – 25 Aug 1975 *Ernest Albertine Draper 6 Aug 1902 – 25 May 1977 *Esteen Otha Draper Jr. 16 Jul 1923 – 18 Nov 1960 *Esteen Otha Draper Sr. 6 Feb 1900 – 16 Feb 1963 *True Davis Draper 3 Jul 1905 – 6 Jun 1991 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-73.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4733/lamb-cemetery Lam_or_Lamb_Cemetery]''' Rural Cemetery Located SE of Gatestville and SW of Waco, Texas. (See map in FAG) *Dan Draper 18 Sep 1909 – 29 Sep 1914 age 5 *Infant Daughters Draper 1915 – 1915 (question: Did the family bury their kids and move on? Spanish flu killed millions in 1914-15, research needed) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fe/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-74.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6048/pleasant-grove-cemetery Pleasant_Grove_Cemetery]''' Located south of Gatesville (see FAG map) *Thomas R Draper 30 Aug 1894 – 14 Nov 1894 age 2.5 months '''Jonesboro''' ZIP Code 76538 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/67/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-76.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7719/wood-cemetery Wood_Cemetery]''' Located on County Road 194 Directions: From Gatesville turn north onto Hwy 36, Travel until you see CR 194 where you will turn left *Lora L Draper 31 Dec 1892 – 9 Oct 1895 '''Mound''' ZIP Code 76558 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/37/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-75.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5363/mound-cemetery Mound_Cemetery]''' *George I. Draper19 Oct 1872 – 29 Dec 1935 *Viola Lamb Draper 23 Feb 1875 – 19 Jul 1952 '''Oglesby''' ZIP Code 76561 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/05/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-77.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6118/post-oak-cemetery Post_Oak_Cemetery]''' *David Nolen Draper 22 Dec 1944 – 15 Feb 1980 *E. Nolen Draper11 Jul 1914 – 6 Sep 1992 *Ethel C. Draper20 Jul 1891 – 14 Aug 1983 *Joe L. Draper18 May 1890 – 11 Jan 1984 *Margaret L. Dixon Draper 26 Dec 1919 – 30 Jul 2015 ==='''DALLAS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-284.jpg '''Dallas''' ZIP Code 75243 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-135.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3970/grove-hill-memorial-park Grove Hill Memorial Park]''' Located: 4118 Samuell Blvd, Dallas, TX *[[Cox-37878|Leathie Lee Cox Draper]]18 Jan 1861 – 18 Apr 1925 husband **[[Draper-5277|James Lafayette Draper]] (1859 - 1923) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2252394/cedarvale-cemetery Cedarvale Cemetery] New Mexico *Beverly Jean Draper14 May 1944 – 15 Jul 2017 *Clinton C Draper 4 Oct 1907 – 15 Jan 1981 *David Wyatt Draper 1899 – 12 Jan 1927 *Elizabeth E Draper 26 Mar 1885 – 23 Sep 1971 *Elizabeth Ella “Lizzie” White Draper26 Mar 1885 – 23 Sep 1971 *Ethel M Morris Draper3 Mar 1895 – 26 May 1967 *Georgia E Draper1903 – 1974 *Gerald Alan Draper18 Aug 1942 – 31 Mar 2016 *Harlan W Draper 22 Nov 1937 – unknown *Hazel Teubner Draper 27 Jan 1923 – 6 Nov 1995 *John Hampton Draper21 Nov 1887 – 21 Jan 1953 *Opal Sylvia Ward Draper 14 Nov 1908 – 23 Dec 2002 *Oscar C Draper1884 – 1952 *William A Draper 23 Feb 1906 – 18 Feb 1985 *William Bell Draper 27 Nov 1878 – 28 Apr 1963 *William Riley Draper 23 May 1930 – 24 May 1981 *Billy Joe Draper-Lane 21 Dec 1930 – 29 Aug 1993 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-133.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6340/restland-memorial-park Restland Memorial Park]''' AKA Garden of Memories, Restland Cemetery Location: 9220 Restland Road, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas *[[Draper-5276|Walter Ervin Draper]]10 Nov 1905 – 31 Aug 1964 wife: **Lillie Mae Mcginty Draper 1924–1989 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown, remarried? *[[Draper-5460|Arthur Lawson Draper]] 11 Nov 1883 – 19 Dec 1937, wife: **[[LaRue-1358|Ethel LaRue Draper]] 24 Feb 1884 – 8 Aug 1952 *Calvin Draper 28 Aug 1924 – 10 Aug 2011 *Dorothy “Dot” Draper29 May 1929 – 2 Mar 1997 *Eliza Hopson Draper 28 Feb 1852 – 22 Feb 1927 *Frank E. Draper 29 Dec 1878 – 29 Mar 1952 *Harmon L. Draper 18 Jun 1900 – 9 Aug 1957 *Kitty A Draper 1912 – 1979 *Marietta Moore Draper 4 Oct 1888 – 28 Feb 1969 *Mary I Draper 14 Jun 1891 – 19 Apr 1976 *Rachel Caroline Draper 16 Aug 1889 – 25 Dec 1968 *Robert M Draper 1903 – 1988 *Ronald Wayne Draper 8 Dec 1959 – 18 Nov 1989 *Ruth Elliott Draper 1905 – 2000 *Virgil T Drape 25 Aug 1891 – 12 Aug 1975 '''Rylie''' ZIP Code 75217 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-178.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1028612/rylie-cemetery Rylie Cemetery]''' Location: Rylie Road, Between Tufts and Ellenwood, Rylie, Dallas County, Texas, USA *Mary Elizabeth “Mollie” Robinson Draper (1869 - 1936) buried with her children, husband: **William B Draper (1858–1925) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/13857/inman-cemetery-%231 Inman Cemetery #1] Bat Harbor TN ***Alice Pearl Draper Moore (1886–1950) husband ****Joseph C Moore (1870–1928) ***Lida J Draper Cory (1890–1960) husband ****Fred L Cory (1888–1970) ***Cora Lee Draper Prewitt (1894–1965) husband ****Charles H Prewitt (1890–1950) ***Annie Bell Stanglin Draper 1896–1980 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98491/colbert-garden-of-memory-cemetery Colbert Garden of Memory] Colbert, Bryan County, Oklahoma, USA, husband: ****Mack Herman Stanglin (1893–1958) ==='''EDWARDS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ae/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-446.jpg '''Rocksprings''' ZIP Code 78880 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-447.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/331966/rocksprings-cemetery? Rocksprings Cemetery]''' Located: Rocksprings, Edwards County, Texas *Edgar Milton Draper18 Mar 1891 – 21 Apr 1931 Memorial ID 15113945 *Edward Bradley Draper 31 Jan 1857 – 4 Dec 1916 Memorial ID 15113954 *George B Draper 7 Nov 1894 – 3 Dec 1948 Memorial ID 15113963 *Georgia “Mrs. Sam” Wallace Draper 17 Oct 1869 – 4 May 1954 Memorial ID 15113970 *James Polk Draper 19 Feb 1851 – 10 Mar 1914 Memorial ID 15113991 *Joseph R. Draper16 Apr 1859 – 21 Apr 1915 Memorial ID 15114004 *Mary A. Draper 25 Mar 1883 – 11 Feb 1961 Memorial ID 15114010 *Mary Elizabeth Wallace Draper 13 Jan 1865 – 13 Aug 1920 Memorial ID 15114019 *Sadie Ella Cassels Draper 23 Mar 1903 – 7 Sep 1969 Memorial ID 15114028 *Sam Milton Draper 2 Dec 1865 – 4 Mar 1922 Memorial ID 15114035 *William Milton Draper 26 Jul 1896 – 23 Oct 1926 Memorial ID 15114042 ==='''FANNIN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-285.jpg '''Ector''' ZIP Code 75439 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/79/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-85.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2331/belmont-cemetery Belmont Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-2394|John Lyles Draper]] 10 Jun 1849 – 28 Dec 1903 **[[Caruth-24|Anna Elizabeth ''Caruth'' Draper]] March 1851 – 1 Nov 1914 ***Preston Draper4 Nov 1901 – 27 Nov 1901 '''Gober''' ZIP Code 75443 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/62/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-165.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1986776/philadelphia-cemetery Philadelphia Cemetery]''' Location Gober, Fannin County, Texas, USA *[[Draper-4403|Elizabeth R Draper Dozier]] 1850 – 1922 husband **[[Dozier-1066|Oscar Fitzgerald Dozier]] (1849 - 1903) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/11579/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] in Dyer, Gibson County, TN ==='''FRANKLIN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-342.jpg '''Mount Vernon''' ZIP Code 75457 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-344.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/446923/glade-springs-cemetery Glade Springs Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5950|Benjamin Franklin Draper]] 24 Dec 1821 – 13 Aug 1884 Memorial ID 10679230 **[[Willis-14992|Jeannie Willis Deceased]] G6TX-9VV '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown **[[Johnson-132444|Mary ''Johnson''? Draper]] 1818-???? '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***[[Draper-5954|William Thomas Draper]] 2 Sep 1844 – 1 May 1916 Memorial ID 79869716 ****[[Willis-14995|Seymoure Elizabeth Magdeline “Babe” Willis Draper]] 19 Aug 1845 – 29 Mar 1928 Memorial ID 79866760 *****[[Draper-5955|Asa Franklin. Draper]] 1867–1940 Memorial ID 21332406 '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX ******[[Dpouglas-1|Ada F. Douglas Draper]] 1875–1940 Memorial ID 21332420 '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX *****Sarah Euphember Samantha Draper Giddens 1868–1952 Memorial ID '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX ******Daniel Collier Giddens 1860–1939 Memorial ID '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX *****Willie ''Draper'' Hester 1876–1930 Memorial ID '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX ******Jarrett C. Hester 1869–1938 Memorial ID 79866568 '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX *****Anna Belle ''Draper'' Lawrence 1880–1960 Memorial ID 24250530 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/190527/winfield-cemetery Winfield Cemetery] Winfield, Titus County, TX ******Roger Lawrence 1877–1959 Memorial ID 24250529 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/190527/winfield-cemetery Winfield Cemetery] Winfield, Titus County, TX *****Maggie R. Draper Gandy 1884–1938 Memorial ID 21332492 '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX ******Stanford B. Gandy 1882–1949 Memorial ID 21332517 '''CENETOPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery] Purley, TX ***[[Draper-5951|Millidge Ville Draper]] Memorial ID19 Nov 1848 – 9 Feb 1939 Memorial ID 106792075 wives: ****[[King-56895|Mary Jessie (King) Draper]] (1862 - aft. 1897) '''CENOTAPH''' burial: unknown ****[[Bennett-37993|Eliza Mary Bennett Draper]] 1861–1892 (m. 1892) Memorial ID 119159260 '''CENOTAPH''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/371467/providence-cemetery Providence Cemetery] Mount Vernon, TX daughter: *****[[Draper-5952|Katie Lue Draper]] 23 May 1896 – 4 Nov 1966 Memorial ID 106791887 *****[[Draper-5953|Beatrice Dezoomer Draper Caudle]] 1897–1971Memorial ID 41442975 ******John Harrison Nix 6 July 1858 – 8 February 1949 KCZR-YC1 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown *******Jessie Lorene Caudle Maples 1917–1979 Memorial ID 93329998 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/162716/mount-vernon-city-cemetery Mount Vernon Cemetery] Mount Vernon City Cemetery Mount Vernon, TX ***[[Draper-1116|Martha Ann Mevelina ''Draper'' Grau]] 1852–1905 Memorial ID 5909415 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/446923/glade-springs-cemetery Glade Springs Cemetery] Mount Vernon, TX ****[[Grau-88|Christopher Frederick Grau]] 1849–1899 (m. 1872) Memorial ID 5909392 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/446923/glade-springs-cemetery Glade Springs Cemetery] Mount Vernon, TX *Mary A. Draper unknown – 4 Aug 1881 Memorial ID 106978328 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/72/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-343.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/371467/providence-cemetery Providence Cemetery]''' Located: County 3070 Mount Vernon, TX *E. M. Draper unknown – 11 Aug 1892 Memorial ID 119159260 *Infant Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 119159523 *Jeney Spurger 23 Jul 1839 – 26 Jun 1920 Memorial ID 79864304 *Lula Draper 1 Dec 1873 – 12 Aug 1877 Memorial ID 116027113 *Narcissa Ivy Riddlespurger Draper 23 Jul 1839 – 26 Jun 1920 Memorial ID 92243698 *William James Draper 17 Feb 1866 – 20 Feb 1942 Memorial ID 100110102 *William M. “Bud” Draper 6 Aug 1836 – 21 Aug 1892 Memorial ID 92243699 '''Purley''' ZIP Code 75494 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/86/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-345.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/166388/purley-baptist-church-cemetery Purley Baptist Church Cemetery]''' Located: SW of Mt. Vernon on Rt 37 to FM 900 RD to the west *Ada F. Douglas Draper 2 Mar 1875 – 13 Mar 1940 Memorial ID 21332420 *Andrew Irven Draper11 Oct 1907 – 13 Nov 1975 Memorial ID 21332372 *Asa F. Draper 25 Jan 1867 – 19 Mar 1940 Memorial ID 21332406 *Ernest Whitfield Draper 13 Jul 1894 – 23 Feb 1960 Memorial ID 21332387 *Melvin E. Draper 21 Dec 1918 – 17 Feb 1991 Memorial ID 5445396 *Sybil Samantha Wall Draper 29 Jun 1898 – 10 Aug 1982 Memorial ID 21332402 *Willie Gay Newsome Draper 11 Apr 1910 – 24 Aug 1992 Memorial ID 21332377 ==='''FREESTONE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/42/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-391.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/63/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-400.jpg [[Tisdale-1359|Alfred Granville Tisdale]] (1914-1978), grandson of [[Draper-3163|James Granville “Jim” Draper]] (1847–1928) and the son of [[Draper-5559|Lee Esther ''Draper'' Tisdale]] (1884–1957) poses in the doorway of a cabin in 1962. Now he is resting in that happy hunting ground: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1993374/cade-cemetery Cade Cemetery] Streetman, Freestone Co., Texas. He would be happy to know his sweet 1958 Chevy Truck, which cost $1,884 new, would be worth $93,800 in 2022! FAG Memorial ID: 139375124 '''Streetman''' ZIP Code 75848 *'''NOTE:''' Streetman falls on the Freestone and Navarro County line. Birdston and Cade Cemeteries are in the same location but apparently in different counties. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-659.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1993374/cade-cemetery Cade Cemetery]''' *[[Tisdale-1359|Alfred Granville Tisdale]] 19 Oct 1914 – 8 Jul 1978 Memorial ID 139375124 **[[Miller-103425|Mary Ann ''Miller'' Tisdale]] 2 Feb 1918 – 15 Nov 2005 Memorial ID 139375170 ***Billie Granville Tisdale 8 Dec 1939 – 5 Feb 1941 Age 1, Memorial ID 33663887 *Larry Carlton Tisdale 22 Feb 1928 – 13 Nov 1995 Memorial ID 139326820 '''Cotton Gin''' ZIP Code 75860 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/87/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-392.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1120798/cotton-gin-cemetery Cotton Gin Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5529|Pinkney Travis Draper]] Feb 1850 – Dec 1886 his wife Mary remarried James Hardie: **[[Mayo-4615|Mary Lou (Mayo) Hardie]] (1859 - 1936) '''CENOTAPH''' She and 2nd husband: ***[[Hardie-1303|James Elbert Hardie]] (1861 - 1933) both buried in '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6861/shanks-cemetery? Shanks Cemetery]''' ***[[Draper-5537|William Oscar Draper]] 9 Jan 1879 – 2 Jul 1952 (son of [[Draper-5529|Pinkney Travis Draper]] wife: ****[[Seely-977|Julia Dorinda Seely Draper]] 29 Aug 1884 – 13 Aug 1967 children: *****[[Draper-5538|Verna Elizebeth ''Draper'' Glanton]] (1904 - 1998) husband: ******[[Glanton-75|Jess Driver Glanton]] (1904 - 1976) ***[[Draper-5546|Annie T Draper]] 3 Oct 1880 – 6 Oct 1882 Infant Daughter *[[Draper-3163|James Granville “Jim” Draper]] 18 Mar 1847 – 10 Jan 1928 wives: **[[Young-47281|Mary Belle (Young) Draper]] (1851 - 1887) '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ***William Pinkney Draper (1873–1957) Memorial ID 93109008 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/98066/butler-cemetery Butler Cemetery] Farris OK ***[[Draper-5556|Ardonia (Draper) Boyd]] (1875 - 1960) (Daughter of Mary Belle) husband: ****[[Boyd-18305|James Robert Rufus Boyd]] (1869 - 1955) children: *****Mary Tabitha Boyd Sheets 1893–1987 '''CENOTAPH''' Buried Grand Prairie, TX *****James Carl Boyd 1895–1974 wife: ******Emma Mae Ford Boyd 1893–1970 *****Ethel Boyd 1899–1904 age 5 *****Lillie Pha ''Boyd'' Lancaster 1900–1979 '''CENOTAPH''' Buried: Bazette, TX *****Clifford Henry Boyd 1905–1973 '''CENOTAPH''' Buried: Humble TX *****David Howard Boyd 1908–1964 '''CENOTAPH''' Buried: Humble TX *****Lela Mae ''Boyd'' Young 1919–1952 '''CENOTAPH''' Buried: Gatesville TX ***[[Draper-5560|Lela Jane Draper]] (1878 - 1886) Age 8-9 '''CENOTAPH''' Burial unknown ***Lula May ''Draper'' Shanks (1882–1969) Memorial ID 93092253 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1809556/evergreen-memorial-park Evergreen Memorial Park] Wharton, TX ***Sylvester V. Draper (1883–1905) Age 21 Memorial ID 25490264 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5702/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] Fort Worth, TX ***[[Draper-5559|Lee Esther ''Draper'' Tisdale]] (1884–1957) Memorial ID 52011923 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2420/birdston-cemetery Birdston Cemetery] Streetman, TX **[[Baldree-21|Martha Yawn “Mattie” Baldree Draper]] 22 Apr 1855 – 14 Nov 1924 ***Note: *[[Draper-3163|James Granville “Jim” Draper]] is the brother of [[Draper-5529|Pinkney Travis Draper]] '''Kirvin''' 75848 ZIP Code https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-393.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6861/shanks-cemetery? Shanks Cemetery]''' *[[Mayo-4615|Mary Lou ''Mayo'' (Draper) Hardie]] (1859 - 1936) husbands: **[[Draper-5529|Pinkney Travis Draper]] 1850 – 1886 '''CENOTAPH''' Buried '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1120798/cotton-gin-cemetery Cotton Gin Cemetery]''' **[[Hardie-1303|James Elbert Hardie]] (1861 - 1933) *[[Draper-5547|Ella Aurelia ''Draper'' Goulding]] (1882 - 1974) Daughter of [[Draper-5529|Pinkney Travis Draper]] husband: **[[Goulding-1056|Charles Thomas Goulding]] (1880 - 1937) ***[[Goulding-1057|Gloria Ruth (Goulding) White]] (1923 - 2010) husband: ****[[White-75559|William Theldon White]] (1925 - 1982) '''CENOTAPH''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5705/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery] *[[Draper-5549|Henry Clitis DRAPER Sr]]. 15 Feb 1912 – 6 Jan 1989 **[[Scarborough-3165|Lovie Evelyn Scarborough Draper]] 7 Jun 1915 – 26 Mar 1987 ***[[Draper-5551|Patrick Marvin Oscar Draper]] 12 Apr 1950 – 8 Jan 1962 Age 11 Memorial ID 14486526 ***[[Draper-5550|Sanoma Dawn Draper]] 4 Jun 1934 – 5 Apr 1937 Age 2 ***[[Draper-5552|Sherwell Dean Draper]] (1936 - 2017) '''CENOTAPH''' Burial Unknown *[[Draper-5561|Annie Pearl Draper]] 24 Nov 1894 – 7 Oct 1905 10 year old daughter of [[Draper-5101|William Pinkney Draper]] (1873 - 1957) *Ralph Edward Draper 5 Jan 1910 – 3 Nov 1912 Memorial ID 14486527 *Birdie Vay SHEARD DRAPER 30 Sep 1939 – 23 Jul 1992 Memorial ID 24087934 ==='''HARDEMAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-402.jpg '''Chillicothe''' ZIP Code 79225 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/71/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-401.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2406/big-valley-cemetery Big Valley Cemetery]''' Located: South of Chillicothe, TX on Big Valley Rd to an area called Medicine Mound *[[Draper-3161|Cyras James Draper]] 30 Oct 1900 – 13 Dec 1975 Wife: **[[Capps-1456|Gertha Cloa “Cloey” Capps Draper]] 21 May 1900 – 18 Jul 1996 Memorial ID 83645895 Son: ***Ernest James Draper 21 Jun 1933 – 3 Dec 1952 Memorial ID 83645786 *Christopher J Draper 19 Dec 1974 – 26 Aug 1999 Memorial ID 82633340 ==='''HARRISON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/94/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-579.jpg '''Hallsvile''' ZIP Code 75650 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-578.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/318390/hallsville-cemetery Hallsville Cemetery]''' Hallsville, TX *Charles S. Draper 6 Oct 1883 – 17 Aug 1922 Memorial ID 100301027 **Minnie Smith Draper 28 Sep 1876 – 22 Oct 1978 Memorial ID 147806497 *Garland O. Draper 8 Oct 1926 – 9 Mar 1985 Memorial ID 147803372 **Artie Virginia Sumners Draper 1925–1985 Memorial ID 176995865 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7732/woodland-park-cemetery Woodland Park Cemetery] Mineral Wells, TX ***Barbara Sue ''Draper'' Webster 1953–2020 Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4447/indian-creek-cemetery Indian Creek Cemetery] Mineral Wells, TX **Betty Jane Draper 1 May 1927 – 3 Jun 2008 Memorial ID 27318039 ==='''HASKELL COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/5f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-694.jpg '''Haskell''' ZIP Code 79521 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/45/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-695.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7675/willow-cemetery Willow Cemetery]''' AKA Haskell Cemetery, Haskell, TX *W F Draper 1855 – 1926 Memorial ID 40984013 **Cora Helen Ballard Draper 16 Mar 1868 – 29 Mar 1941 Memorial ID 40984009 *Frank C Draper 17 Nov 1899 – 18 Nov 1965 Memorial ID 40984011 **Ruth Strickland Doyal 1908–1994 (m. 1930) Memorial ID 78343163 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99738/walters-cemetery Walters Cemetery] AKA IOOF Cemetery, Walters, OK ***Fred Lyn Draper 28 Nov 1931 – 25 Sep 2008 Memorial ID 30194342 ****Frances Louise ''Stone Draper'' 18 Jun 1933 – 5 May 1999 Memorial ID 40984010 *Infant Draper 7 Feb 1887 – 7 Feb 1887 Memorial ID 40984008 *Robert Rector Draper 1906 – 1909 Memorial ID 40984012 ==='''HUTCHINSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-286.jpg '''Fritch''' ZIP Code 79036 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-78.jpg ''' [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7568/westlawn-memorial-park Westlawn_Memorial_Park]''' Rural Cemetery East of Fritch, Texas on Rt 136 Address listed as 314 S Hedgecoke St Borger, Hutchinson County, Texas, 79007 USA [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Fritch,+TX+79036/@35.6308857,-101.5170809,367m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x8706c3c23390cdd5:0xa897b5ddd6ef8268!8m2!3d35.6397655!4d-101.603228 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-5099|R D Draper]] 16 Sep 1926 – 6 Sep 2018 and wife: **[[Francis-8960|Reita Carol Francis Draper]] 10 Nov 1930 – 14 Oct 2006 *J T Draper Jr.15 Jul 1944 – 16 May 1973 *Lee Ella “Penny” Shoemaker Draper10 Apr 1954 – 20 Mar 2016 *Randall Dwight Draper 29 Jan 1958 – 24 Sep 2012 ==='''KNOX COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/03/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-696.jpg '''Goree''' ZIP Code 76363 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/80/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-697.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3859/goree-cemetery? Goree Cemetery]''' Goree, Knox County, TX *Evelyn Draper Roberts 1917–1986 Memorial ID 16643950 **Woodrow Wilson Roberts 1914–1964 (m. 1939) Memorial ID 16643905 '''NOTE:''' These infants are probably connected to the above *Alvin Draper 21 Jul 1942 – 30 Sep 1942 Memorial ID 117931712 *Calvin Draper 21 Jul 1942 – 18 Aug 1942 Memorial ID 117931646 '''Knox City''' ZIP Code 79529 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-699.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4663/knox-city-cemetery? Knox City Cemetery]''' Knox City, Knox County, TX *Sabie Belle DraperBirth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 33380418 '''Munday''' ZIP Code 76371 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/94/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-698.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4534/johnson-memorial-cemetery? Johnson Memorial Cemetery] Munday, Knox County, TX *James Franklin “Frank” Draper 20 Aug 1871 – 2 May 1954 Memorial ID 59810391 **Mary Belle Jonas Draper 15 Dec 1877 – 2 Apr 1963 Memorial ID 59810447 ***Earl Franklin Draper 2 Jun 1896 – 18 Mar 1920 Age 23 Memorial ID 76495325 ***James Benjamin Draper 30 Sep 1900 – 29 Aug 1980 Memorial ID 76500929 ****Elva Kelly Stone 1901–2004 (m. 1922) Memorial ID 79604731 '''CENOTAPH''' remarried; buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1004482/levelland-municipal-cemetery Levelland Municipal Cemetery] Levelland, Hockley Co., TX *****James Wayland Draper 1925–2004 Memorial ID 9740314 '''CENOTAPH''' buried" [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1292756/forest-chapel-cemetery Forest Chapel Cemetery] Forest Chapel, Lamar County, TX ******Annie Florence ''Annett'' Draper 1923–2005 (m. 1967) Memorial ID 9740326 '''CENOTAPH''' buried" [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1292756/forest-chapel-cemetery Forest Chapel Cemetery] Forest Chapel, Lamar County, TX *****Deryl Preston Draper 1926–2008 Memorial ID 172408852 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2332/belvedere-memorial-park Belvedere Memorial Park] San Angelo, Tom Green County, Texas, USA ***Glenver Draper 20 Mar 1910 – 11 Mar 1997 Memorial ID 76502445 ***Floyd Erwin Draper 1897–1975 Memorial ID 80704829 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/99375/riverside-cemetery Riverside Cemetery] Mangum, Greer County, OK wife: ****Helen Marie ''Yoakum'' Barnett 1916–1989 (m. 1935) Memorial ID 33619513 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1961116/sandy-creek-cemetery Sandy Creek Cemetery] Milam County, TX daughter: *****Norma Jean ''Draper'' Deshotel 1937–2009 Memorial ID 178663646 '''CENOTAPH''' cremated ***Iva Mae ''Draper'' Murry 1898–1981 Memorial ID 21712861 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1874891/terry-county-memorial-cemetery Terry County Memorial Cemetery] Brownfield, Terry County, TX husband: ****Ocie H. Murry 1898–1961 Memorial ID'''CENOTAPH''' buried: with wife ***Zela Fay ''Draper'' Hayes 1902–1996 Memorial ID 16529078 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1962280/greenlawn-southwest-mortuary-and-cemetery Greenlawn Southwest Mortuary and Cemetery] Bakersfield, California ***Mary Lucille ''Draper'' Fitzgerald 1904–1997 Memorial ID 76507473 ****Jerome C. Fitzgerald 1896–1975 (m. 1926) Memorial ID 76507866 ***Leslie J. Draper 1906–1984 Memorial ID 13576986 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/517706/o'brien-cemetery O'Brien Cemetery] O'Brien, Haskell County, TX wife: ****Mildred Ethel Sparks Draper 1909–1999 Memorial ID 5496350 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: with husband *****Golda Juanita ''Draper'' Heimerman 1927–2012 Memorial ID 87997802 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/151541/city-of-lubbock-cemetery City of Lubbock Cemetery] Lubbock, Lubbock County, TX ******Reynold Francis Heimerman 1924–1963 Memorial ID 8482932 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: with wife ***Clinton C Draper 1907–1981 Memorial ID 25566345 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3970/grove-hill-memorial-park Grove Hill Memorial Park] Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, USA ****Opal Sylvia ''Ward'' Draper 1908–2002 Memorial ID 25566327 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: with husband *****Gerald Alan Draper 1942–2016 Memorial ID 25566327 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: in parents cemetery ******Beverly Jean Draper 1944–2017 Memorial ID 181496897 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: with husband ***Mildred Irene ''Draper'' Fitzgerald 1912–1997 Memorial ID 76597798 husband: ****Cecil W Fitzgerald 1910–1986 Memorial ID 76598424 ***Priscilla Ozelle ''Draper'' Kilgore 1915–1997 Memorial ID 27325888 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1961097/benjamin-cemetery Benjamin Cemetery] Benjamin, Knox County, TX husband: ****Willard Kilgore 1903–1962 Memorial ID 27324979 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: with wife ***Evelyn ''Draper'' Roberts 1917–1986 Memorial ID 16643950 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3859/goree-cemetery Goree Cemetery] Goree, Knox County, TX husband ****Woodrow Wilson Roberts 1914–1964 (m. 1939) Memorial ID 16643905 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: with wife ==='''LAMAR COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-329.jpg '''Chicota''' ZIP Code75425 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-164.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2570987/littlejohn-cemetery Littlejohn Cemetery]''' Located: Chicota, Lamar County, TX *[[Draper-5458|CPT Robert Wilkins Draper]] 27 Apr 1820 – 8 Jan 1894, 1st wife: **[[Littlejohn-1404|Susan Elliott ''Littlejohn'' Draper]] 26 May 1826 – 15 Nov 1867, son: ****Daniel N. Draper 21 Oct 1865 – 26 Apr 1870 age 4 **Caroline "Carrie" ''Williams'' Draper '''CENOTAPH''' 2nd wife: unknown burial and information *Maggie Linder Draper 19 Apr 1900 – 10 Aug 1900 *Sammie Draper 26 Apr 1888 – 11 Feb 1890 ==='''LLANO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/31/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-287.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/82/Choate-835.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2966/cold-creek-cemetery Cold Creek Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-2138|George Washington Draper]] (1838 - 1884) wife: **[[Choate-835|Clarintha (Choate) Draper]] (1836 - 1944) ***Richard Dawson Draper 1859–1949 Memorial ID 147065218 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4901/lohn-cemetery Lohn Cemetery] ***George Thomas Draper 1868–1937 Mwemorial ID 23738036 ***E. A. Draper 20 Dec 1870 – 29 Mar 1945 Memorial ID 23738024 wife: ****Mary J ''Hudgeons'' Draper 27 Mar 1873 – 25 Jan 1944 ***Katie Tanner ''Draper'' Sessom 1872–1950 ****James Ben Sessom 1869–1953 *****Emmett E Sessom 1892–1971 wife: ******Kathryn M Clark Sessom 1904–1979 *****Eva S. Sessom Arledge 1894–1990 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Wayne Raston Sessom 1897–1974 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Frank Sessom 1900–1989 '''CENOTAPH''' *****Kate Sessom McFarland 1905–1985 '''CENOTAPH''' *G Austin Draper (1893 – 1973) wife: **Florence B Draper1898 – 1970 *Michael Lee Draper (1879 – 1937) Wife: **Lena Callaway Draper 23 Nov 1878 – 13 Apr 1957 *Orville Leroy Draper (26 Sep 1908 – 2 Jan 1995) wife: **Lucy Irene Bode Draper 7 Jan 1910 – 8 Aug 1995 *Charles Melvin Draper 1938 – 1965 *J Miller Draper24 Jul 1876 – 14 Jul 1946 *James Miller Draper Jr.27 Sep 1927 – 3 Dec 2013 *Maude Ashby Draper9 Oct 1888 – 11 Jan 1978 *Melvin Draper1907 – 1909 *Minta Draper22 May 1900 – 2 Sep 1905 *Thomas Leslie Draper 30 Mar 1906 – 24 May 1978 *Willis W Draper 10 Jun 1928 – 2 Jan 1986 *[[Draper-5459|James D Draper]] 15 Sep 1889 – 30 Oct 1889 ***( Son of [[Draper-5233|Richard Dawson Draper-5233]] see McCulloch County below ==='''LYNN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-430.jpg '''Tahhoka''' ZIP Code 79373 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-431.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/240391/tahoka-cemetery Tahoka Cemetery]''' Located: Tahoka, TX *James Marion & Mary Emelia Draper 1836–1914 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/214345/florence-cemetery Florence Cemetery] **[[Draper-283|David Fanning Draper]] 28 Sep 1872 – 5 Jun 1941 Memorial ID 14022144 wife: ***[[Queen-120|Bess Lee ''Queen'' (Draper) Porter]] 1884–1962 '''CENOTAPH''' FAG ID: 115695040 Burial Unknown ****James Elias Draper 1903–1984 '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/161276/rockville-cemetery Rockville Cemetery] Fairfield, California, ****Weldon Allen Draper 1906–1967 '''CENOTAPH''' FAG ID: 129251430, buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38757/evergreen-memorial-park Evergreen Memorial Park] McMinnville, Oregon ****[[Draper-3845|Foy Draper]] 1911–1943''' CENOTAPH''' Missing In Action WW2 Kesserine, Tunisia, Africa *****[[Marsh-12214|Margaret Lucille ''Marsh'' (Draper) (Baker) Stuart]] (1923 - 1976) '''CENOTAPH''' remarried two more times; burial unknown; (no children listed with husbands ****Jack Dalton Draper 1923–2003 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8308/rose-hills-memorial-park Rose Hills Memorial Park] Whittier, California ****[[Draper-5599|Woodrow Wilson Draper]] (1926 - unknown) '''CENOTAPH''' **Isaac Milton “I.M.” Draper 15 Jan 1875 – 5 Dec 1957 Memorial ID 14022506 wife: ***Eunice Mabel McCaskill Draper 18 May 1879 – 11 Nov 1956 Memorial ID 14022509 ****Howard Milton Draper 14 Dec 1900 – 23 Dec 1981 Memorial ID 48126544 wife: *****Ruth Vick Draper 15 Apr 1904 – 4 Aug 1971 Memorial ID 14022516 ******Howard Bland Draper19 Sep 1935 – 27 Mar 1971 Memorial ID 168636170 wife: *******Carolyn Quinn ''Crownover'' (Draper) Underwood 1935–1989 (m. 1954) '''CENOTAPH''' remarried; buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3887/grandview-cemetery Grandview Cemetery] Grandview, TX *Bill Draper 20 Jun 1931 – 28 Feb 2001 Memorial ID 22628358 *Billie Mullen Draper 20 Jun 1931 – 28 Feb 2001 Memorial ID 14021663 *Buel Stewart Draper 17 Jun 1907 – 24 Jan 1994 Memorial ID 14022470 *Margaret Draper 23 Nov 1942 – 27 May 1943 Memorial ID 14021673 *Robert Thomas Draper 9 Oct 1938 – 11 Aug 2016 Memorial ID 168644433 *Vern Headstream Draper 22 Nov 1901 – 16 Feb 1997 Memorial ID 14022468 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-432.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d1/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-434.jpg , Weldon Allen Draper, and his brother, Gold Medalist Winner Foy Draper (below), were both sons of David Fanning Draper. Weldon is buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38757/evergreen-memorial-park Evergreen Memorial Park] McMinnville, Oregon. He is listed above under David Fanning Draper, his father. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-433.jpg Foy Draper, son of David Fanning Draper, Gold Medal winner in Berlin Summer Olympics Germany 1936. He would become missing in action in WW2 in Kassarine, Tunisia, Africa. === '''McCULLOCH COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3e/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-288.jpg '''Lohn''' ZIP Code 76852 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-100.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4901/lohn-cemetery Lohn Cemetery]''' Location Lohn, McCulloch County, Texas, USA *[[Draper-5230|Bowie Hardiman Draper]] (1886 - 1918) **[[Haines-5905|Lottie May ''Haines'' Draper]] 1891–1924 died in Brady, Texas, USA, '''CENOTAPH''' (burial unknown) *[[Draper-5233|Richard Dawson Draper]] 18 Sep 1859 – 24 Feb 1949 Wife: **[[Pratt-13546|Leanner Lassaphine Draper]] 6 Mar 1865 – 1 Mar 1944, children: ***[[Draper-5462|George Cleveland Draper]] 24 Nov 1884 – 15 Oct 1918 ***[[Draper-5463|Grace Draper]] 18 Apr 1901 – 27 Apr 1989 ****Irving Dill 1900 – Deceased '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown Family Search ID: MYJQ-CRM === '''McLENNAN COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/df/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-682.jpg '''Waco''' ZIP Codes 76701-76708 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-683.jpg '''Historic Picture of Oakwood Cemetery''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/63/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-684.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5694/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery]''' *Fannie E Baker Draper 12 Nov 1836 – 29 Dec 1923 Section F Lot 60 Memorial ID 136879088 **'''Note''' Birth in Massachusetts, USA '''Robinson''' ZIP Code 76706 (Robinson is a sister city, just south of Waco) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/68/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-685.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1707309/waco-memorial-park? Waco Memorial Park]''' Robinson, McLennan County, Texas, USA *Barton Carey Draper 29 Sep 1923 – 5 Jun 1978 Memorial ID 119826229 **Joan Cody Woodson 1928–2007 (m. 1948) remarried *Charles M. Draper 1861–1935 Memorial ID 100594982 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/106622/lindsey-cemetery Lindsey Cemetery] McClure, Alexander Co., IL **Lucinda Lingle Draper 1869–1913 Memorial ID 167464909 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2618832/lingle-cemetery Lingle Cemetery] buried: Goreville, Johnson Co., IL ***Daniel Franklin Draper 9 Jul 1896 – 29 Aug 1983 Memorial ID 149275481 wife: ****Winnie Pearl Gilreath Draper 29 Sep 1898 – 17 Jul 1991 ID 149275402 *****Maxwell M Draper 15 May 1923 – 25 Dec 1962 Memorial ID 103325958 ******Betty Marie Sager Draper 22 Jun 1931 – 25 Dec 1962 Memorial ID 103326120 ***Charles M Draper 1892–1974 Memorial ID 145232311 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1959776/jonesboro-cemetery Jonesboro Cemetery] Jonesboro, Union Co., IL ***Sarah Draper Roberts 1894–1942 Memorial ID 121194340 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/190723/walker-hill-cemetery Walker Hill Cemetery] Grand Tower, Jackson Co., IL '''NOTE''' Both Maxwell & Betty Draper were killed in an auto accident on Christmas Day, 1962 9.2 miles o/s College Station on Hwy 6 in Pct 1, Brazos, TX. They had their 4 1/2 to 5 year old daughter with them and she survived. *Melvin L. Draper 19 Oct 1933 – 10 Apr 1988 Memorial ID 200215439 *Esteen Otha Draper 1900–1963 Memorial ID 45838455 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6333/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery] Gatesville, Coryell Co., TX **True Davis Draper 1905–1991 Memorial ID45838454 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6333/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery] Gatesville, Coryell Co., TX ***Esteen Otha Draper 1923–1960 Memorial ID 45838456 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6333/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery] Gatesville, Coryell Co., TX ***Roger Henry Draper 27 Sep 1925 – 11 Aug 1989 Memorial ID 90090458 ****Charlie Dee ''Raibourn'' Draper 12 May 1927 – 17 Aug 2014 Memorial ID 134540686 ***Joyce ''Draper'' Collins 1937–2013 Memorial ID 220193618 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6333/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery] Gatesville, Coryell Co., TX ****Francis Roland Collins 1934–2020 (m. 1960) Memorial ID 220192911 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6333/restland-cemetery Restland Cemetery] Gatesville, Coryell Co., TX *Drew Mac Draper '''CENOTAPH Unknown details **Eva ''Unknown'' Draper 1877–1962 Memorial ID 28129425 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: {https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6480/rosemound-cemetery Rosemound Cemetery] Waco, TX ***William Guy Draper 22 Dec 1897 – 26 Feb 1956 Memorial ID 92269860 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-686.jpg === '''NAVARRO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/88/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-654.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-660.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2420/birdston-cemetery Birdston Cemetery]''' *'''NOTE''' Birdston Cemetery is listed in Navarro County but also in Streetman, Texas which is located in Freestone County, Texas. The county line might run near the city limits of Streetman causing confusion to Find A Grave contributors. *'''NOTE:''' [[Draper-5559|Lee Esther ''Draper'' Tisdale]] (7 Jul 1884 - 3 May 1957) married into the Tisdale family whose descendants came from Scotland and settled in this area of Texas. *[[Tisdale-1358|Andrew Irvin Tisdale]] 12 Jan 1879 – 22 Jan 1958 Memorial ID 52011897 **[[Draper-5559|Lee Esther ''Draper'' Tisdale]] 7 Jul 1884 – 3 May 1957 Memorial ID 52011923 daughter of [[Draper-3163|James Granville Draper]] (1847 - 1928) ***Lottie Mae ''Tisdale'' Peloquen Castleberry 1902–1946 Memorial ID 110497246 ***Noah Aubrey Tisdale 15 Oct 1907 – 6 Sep 1985 Memorial ID 62034864 ****Winnie Ealon Tisdale Tisdale 11 Dec 1909 – 19 Jun 2000 Memorial ID 62034979 *****Everette Layton Tisdale 1 Dec 1929 – 23 Jul 1993 Memorial ID 110934358 *Bessie Tisdale 30 Sep 1916 – 2 Oct 1916 Memorial ID 110316152 *Cecil L Tisdale 6 Aug 1906 – 8 Mar 2000 Memorial ID 110934275 *Charles E Tisdale 14 Feb 1878 – 1 Dec 1914 Memorial ID 103030077 *Charles W Tisdale 15 Jul 1934 – 15 Jun 1936 Memorial ID 70772487 *Edward Neil Tisdale 4 Jun 1913 – 30 Aug 2002 Memorial ID 52011914 *Joe Edwards Tisdale 9 Nov 1910 – 22 Sep 1928 Memorial ID 52012666 *Laura Evans Tisdale 1 Jul 1888 – 14 Nov 1969 Memorial ID 52012160 *Martha Adeline Jones Tisdale15 May 1872 – 24 Aug 1951 Memorial ID 52011943 *Mattie Virginia Gardner Tisdale 20 Aug 1882 – 10 Jun 1957 Memorial ID 52012570 *Noah Aubrey Tisdale 15 Oct 1907 – 6 Sep 1985 Memorial ID 62034864 *Sallie Bryant Tisdale 1 Aug 1885 – 14 Mar 1970 Memorial ID 52013283 *Thomas Wiley Tisdale 11 Aug 1875 – 15 Apr 1950 Memorial ID 52012771 *Tommie W Tisdale 23 Aug 1906 – 21 May 1981 Memorial ID 110934444 *Wanda D Tisdale M22 Aug 1931 – 4 Aug 2017 Memorial ID 227513937 *William Henry Tisdale Jr. 21 Mar 1881 – 25 Aug 192 Memorial ID 52012134 *William Hogan Tisdale 16 Mar 1869 – 7 Dec 1957 Memorial ID 52011932 *William I Tisdale 14 Sep 1937 – 7 Feb 1938 Memorial ID 70772543 *Bessie Bernice Avery Gunn Tisdale 17 Mar 1917 – 2 Oct 2009 Memorial ID 43302936 '''Brushie Prairie''' ZIP Code 76641 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/12/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-655.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/462406/brushie-prairie-cemetery? Brushie Prairie Cemetery]''' Located: Brushie Prairie, Methodist Church, Navarro Co., TX *William Eugene “Bill” Draper10 Sep 1933 – 21 Nov 1989 Memorial ID 22037688 **Carolyn Sue ''Unknown'' (Draper) Neel: living ***Kevin Lee Draper 1957–2020 ('''Note''': born in Mount Vernon Illinois (Obituary) Memorial ID 214397515 '''CENOTAPH''' burial: unknown ****Mary ''Unknown'' Draper, No ID at this time, '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ('''Note''' Obituary of Kevin, below) *****Obituary Notes: Kevin is preceded in death by his loving wife Mary Draper, and father, William Draper. He is survived by mother, Carolyn Sue Neel; son, Adam Blair Draper; daughters: Misty Dawn McRoberts, and Larinda Kay McRoberts: OBITUARY NOTES COPIED FROM BROWN'S MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME, IRVING, TX...Find A Grave: Memorial ID 214397515 *Donna V. Draper14 Jul 1940 – unknown Memorial ID 22037689 (can't connect her) '''Corsicana''' ZIP Code 75109 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8a/Turner-11117-3.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6330/resthaven-memorial-park? Resthaven Memorial Park]''' Corsicana, Navarro Co., TX *Marion LeRoy Draper 18 Aug 1888 – 19 Jul 1967 Memorial ID 54881119 **Callie Spence Draper No Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' burial: unknown (daughter's Memorial ID 5093648 below) ***Callie ''Draper'' Hughey1915–1976 Memorial ID 5093648 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/214657/pilgrim-cemetery Pilgram Cemetery] Elkhart, Anderson Co., TX husband: ****Aurbun Acey Hughey 1901–1983 Memorial ID 72169315 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: East Tawakoni, TX *****Thomas Buford Hughey 1935–1982, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Pilgram Cemetery *****John Stacy Hughey 1938–1976, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Pilgram Cemetery *****Roy Gerald Hughey 1940–2012, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Longview Memorial Gardens, Longview TX *****Phillip Jerome Hughey 1947–1982, '''CENOTAPH''' buried: East Tawakoni, TX ***J T Draper 1925–2005 Memorial ID 11360108 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Chester, Plumas County, California, USA ****Golda Fern King Draper 1924–1998 Memorial ID '''CENOTAPH''' buried: Chester, Plumas County, California, USA ****Ionia Doris ''Arnold'' Draper 1903 - 1992 Memorial ID 113601122 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:Chester, Plumas County, California, USA (Daughter of James Wiley Arnold and Edna Mae McKenny Arnold Wife of John Draper '''Note:''' could be 1st or 2nd wife of JT Draper) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/79/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-657.jpg Marion and Callie ''Spence'' Draper pose for the camera about 1908 in their buggy, possibly at their wedding. This picture is located in Find A Grave Memorial ID [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/54881119/marion-leroy-draper 54881119] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/6b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-658.jpg This Fully restored 1900 Buggy with similar design features was sold at an auction in 2016, selling price unknown. However, other similar Buggys have turned up recently for sale with the asking prices of $2,800 to $3,500. === '''RUSK COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3f/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-573.jpg '''Minden''' ZIP Code''' 75681 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/48/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-575.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978032/maple-grove-cemetery Maple Grove Cemetery]''' *Joe Thomas Draper Memorial ID25 Jul 1918 – 14 Nov 1968 Memorial ID 13086830 **Ola Mae Winnett Draper details unknown at this time ***Dennis Lloyd Draper 4 Sep 1954 – 8 Jul 1972 Memorial ID 13090085 Age 17 *Thomas Henry Draper Memorial ID22 Sep 1887 – 1918 Memorial ID 13195723 **Betty ''Noble'' (Draper) Gray 1891–1935 (m. 1906), daughter: ***Faye Draper Gill 1913–1932 '''Pinehill''' ZIP Code 75654 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/bf/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-574.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1862994/pine-grove-cumberland-presbyterian-cemetery Pine Grove Cumberland Presbyterian Cemetery]''' AKA Pine Grove Cemetery, Pinehill, TX *James M. Draper Sr. 18 Dec 1808 – 1 Jul 1894 Memorial ID 56898288 wives: **Mary ''Wolf'' Draper 7 Jan 1807 – 3 Oct 1873 (m. 1828) Memorial ID 56898227 ***James M. Draper Jr. 23 Dec 1839 – 8 Feb 1930 Memorial ID 55342862 ***Annie B. “Annie” Timmons Draper 1844 – 30 Mar 1884 Memorial ID 55343083 children: ****James Dosier Draper 6 Sep 1870 – 1 Jan 1952 Memorial ID 29684833 *****Lela Bell ''Propes'' Draper 22 Apr 1878 – 2 Nov 1965 Memorial ID 29684946 ****Mary Frances ''Draper'' Siler 1872–1962 Memorial ID 61656485 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3309/goodsprings-duncan-cemetery Good Springs, TX] ****Ethel Beatrice ''Draper'' Harris 1882–1982 Memorial ID 202696943 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/156472/forest-park-cemetery Forrest Park Cemetery] Houston, TX ****Annie B. ''Draper'' Owens 1884–1954 Memorial ID 205215615 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/6486/rosewood-funeral-home-and-cemetery Rosewood Cemetery] Humble, TX ****Thomas Henry Draper 1887–1918 Memorial ID 13195723 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1978032/maple-grove-cemetery Maple Grove Cemetery] Minden, TX **Malinda Jane ''Woolverton'' Draper 1847–1933 (m. 1874) ***Willie Belle ''Draper'' Henry 1877–1966 Memorial ID35250587 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4496/jay-bird-cemetery Jay Bird Cemetery] Reno, TX ***Katie Cubie ''Draper'' Sanders 1880–1966 Memorial ID 90837356 '''CENOTAPH''' buried:[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4496/jay-bird-cemetery Jay Bird Cemetery] Reno, TX *Mattie Draper unknown – 28 Nov 1930 Memorial ID 57012875 *N. A. Draper unknown – 19 Jul 1855 Memorial ID 56899315 ==='''SAN PATRICIO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-289.jpg '''Odem''' ZIP Code78370 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/22/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-158.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3488/evergreen-cemetery Evergreen Cemetery]''' Location: Odem, San Patricio County, Texas, USA *[[Draper-5315|Milton Newton Draper]] 26 Feb 1843 – 31 Oct 1929 wife: **[[Tomlinson-4979|Cornelia Adaline Tomlinson Draper]] 26 Jul 1850 – 8 Jul 1909 *Brison Tomlinson Draper 6 Apr 1889 – 11 Jun 1972 *Verna G. Obenhaus Draper 18 Mar 1900 – 11 May 1982 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/ce/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-159.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1316312/odem-memorial-cemetery Odem Memorial Cemetery]''' Location: Odem, San Patricio County, Texas, USA *LCDR Lilbourne Eugene “Rusty” Draper 7 Dec 1928 – 9 Aug 2013 ==='''TARRANT COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/be/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-290.jpg '''Colleyville''' ZIP Code 76034 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fa/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-399.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2467/bluebonnet-hills-memorial-park Bluebonnet Hills Memorial Park]''' Colleyville, TX *Don W. Draper 9 Apr 1913 – 27 Jul 2010 Memorial ID 55607589 '''NOT Family''' wife: **Amy Juanita Crosby Draper 8 Oct 1917 – 19 Oct 2008 Memorial ID 30734138 ***Note descends from Thomas Draper 1739-1817 Littleton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts *Rev George Leonard Draper 12 May 1941 – 1 Feb 1989 Memorial ID 153250289 '''NOT Family''' **Note Descends from Albert Draper 1808-1883 New York Memorial ID: 17074793 *Calvin Melvin Draper 30 Nov 1915 – 13 Jul 1975 Memorial ID 94036267 **Stella Bell Payte Draper 2 Feb 1917 – 5 Aug 2005 Memorial ID 15167280 ***Richard Wallace Draper 1938 -1993 Memorial ID 33315473 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/172551/springtown-cemetery Springtown Cemetery] *Verdell Ernest Draper 7 Nov 1919 – 25 Jul 2002 Memorial ID 99911044 wife: **Helen Louise Draper 13 Mar 1921 – 6 Oct 2010 Memorial ID 59806144 son: ***Wilburn Verdell Draper 8 Jul 1942 – 16 Jan 2021 Memorial ID 222381948 wife ****Linda R Draper 22 Jul 1958 – 21 Dec 2013 Memorial ID 150247170 '''Forth Worth''' ZIP Codes 76006-76107 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/66/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-137.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/5702/oakwood-cemetery Oakwood Cemetery]''' *[[Johnson-122072|Susan F Draper]] 1826 – 16 Apr 1898 husband: **[[Draper-3914|John Milton Draper]] (1808 - 1871) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2630476/thomas-draper-jr-cemetery Thomas Draper Jr Cemetery] *[[Draper-5554|Sylvester V. “Vester” Draper]] 1883 – 1905 *Son of [[Draper-3163|James Granville Draper]] (1847 - 1928) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1120798/cotton-gin-cemetery Cotton Gin Cemetery] *R. O. Draper1871 – 1906 ==='''TAYLOR COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/35/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-395.jpg '''Abilene''' ZIP Codes 79601 to 79697 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/69/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-397.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2815/abilene-municipal-cemetery? Abilene Municipal Cemetery]''' Located: 1133 Cotonwood St, Abilene TX 79604 *James L Draper unknown – 13 Jul 1912 Memorial ID 155145488 **Plot info: City, 38, 2, 8 (no headstone) *Laura Fidellia Draper 29 Jun 1834 – 7 Dec 1903 Memorial ID 155117788 *Ovie Inez Draper 17 Nov 1913 – 25 Oct 1915 Memorial ID 155145522 *Priscilla F Draper 1860 – 27 Jan 1951 Memorial ID 155145563 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/36/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-398.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2133159/elliott-hamil-garden-of-memories Elliott-Hamil Garden of Memories]''' Located: Abilene, Taylor County, TX *Carey Wayne Draper 5 May 1956 – 28 Feb 2022 Memorial ID 237188190 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/79/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-396.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/338748/elmwood-memorial-park Elmwood Memorial Park]''' Located: 5750 US-277, Abilene, TX 79606 *James Draper 17 Apr 1959 – 17 Apr 1959 Infant Twin Memorial ID 69155034 * John Draper 17 Apr 1959 – 17 Apr 1959 Infant Twin Memorial ID 69155086 *Paul Ray Draper Jr. 21 Dec 1951 – 11 Jun 2021 Memorial ID 228428275 *Stanley Woodroe “Stan” Draper 13 Dec 1947 – 7 Jan 2008 Memorial ID 23886060 ==='''TRAVIS COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ab/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-291.jpg '''Austin''' ZIP Code 78301 to 78799 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b2/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-122.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2187/austin-memorial-park-cemetery Austin Memorial Park Cemetery]''' AKA: Austin Memorial Park Location: 2800 Hancock Drive *[[Draper-5266|John Ballard Draper]] 14 Sep 1897 – 23 May 1985 wife: **[[Green-47977|Gilberta Green Draper]] 27 Feb 1901 – 7 Mar 1989 *[[Draper-5265|Jerry D Draper]] 14 Dec 1930 – 20 Jan 2022 wife: *[[Stringer-2970|Gaynelle Stringer Draper]] 24 Dec 1932 – 28 Jun 2017 *[[Draper-250|Claxton Draper]] 25 Aug 1900 – 23 May 1978 wife: **[[Blessing-599|Faye Blessing Draper]] 25 May 1907 – 23 Jun 1987 *Carol Ann Draper 15 Nov 1932 – 6 May 1999 (Hitting "Brick Wall" on Carol Ann Draper) '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3589/fiskville-cemetery Fiskville Cemetery] *George Washington Draper 11 Feb 1847 – 18 Oct 1927 Memorial ID 140716260 **Joseph George Draper 1923-2008 '''Cenotaph''', burried in Williamson County, Bagdad Cemetery, Memorial ID 24573526 ***Joan Draper 20 Sep 1950 – 22 Sep 1950 Memorial ID 229242241 *Elizabeth Draper Birth and death dates unknown. Memorial ID 171095599 ==='''VAL VERDE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-448.jpg '''Del Rio''' ZIP Code 78840 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/11/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-449.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1960114/masonic-cemetery? Masonic Cemetery]''' Located: Del Rio, TX *[[Draper-5602|John Fields Draper]] (1869 - 1953) *Claude Thomas “Candy Man” Draper 5 Sep 1926 – 11 Oct 1998 Memorial ID 59812441 **Erma Claudine “Boots” Billingsley Draper 19 Apr 1929 – 15 Feb 1992 Memorial ID 59812598 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-450.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7567/westlawn-cemetery? Westlawn Cemetery]''' Located: Del Rio, TX * Gertrude Olive “Bert” Stewart Draper 17 Sep 1885 – 26 Jul 1970 Memorial ID 71598600 *Ivy Rose Draper 24 Jul 1898 – 25 Apr 1979 Memorial ID 121029537 *Sam Murdock Draper 24 Mar 1900 – 30 Jan 1966 Memorial ID 121029628 *Stuart Watson “Dee Dad” Draper 29 Jun 1883 – 19 Jul 1950 Memorial ID 97696185 ==='''WILLIAMSON COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f4/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-441.jpg '''Florence''' ZIP Code 76527 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/05/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-442.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/214345/florence-cemetery Florence Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-3843|James Marion Draper]] 30 Jan 1836 – 8 May 1914 wives: **[[Stewart-46557|Mary Emelia Stewart Draper]] 8 Jan 1842 – 27 Aug 1876 10843021 **[[Lawrence-19056|Sarah Jane Lawrence Livingston Draper]] 30 Aug 1833 – 26 Mar 1883 son: ***Thomas Edward Draper 28 Feb 1869 – 5 Apr 1872 Memorial ID 10843066 '''Georgetown''' ZIP Codes 78626-78665 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-520.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1975548/presbyterian-cemetery Presbyterian Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5701|Sarah Lucinda “Sallie” ''Draper'' Frazier]] 1845-1938 Memorial ID 28764369 husband: **[[Frazier-6890|James M. Frazier]] 1841-1911 ***'''Note:''' Sarah Draper Frazier is the daughter of [[Draper-2383|Thomas Lyle “Blind Tom” Draper]] and [[Huddleston-2134|Elizabeth “Bettie” Huddleston Draper]] '''Leander''' ZIP Codes 78641 - 78646 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/dc/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-443.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2201/bagdad-cemetery? Bagdad Cemetery] Bagdad Cemetery]''' AKA Leander Cemetery Located: Leander, TX *Joseph George Draper 24 Oct 1923 – 13 Jan 2008 Memorial ID 24573526 wife **Dessie Ruth Young Draper 15 Nov 1925 – 17 Apr 2008 Memorial ID 26313868 ***Ira Lee “Big Ira” Draper3 May 1944 – 3 Dec 1998 Memorial ID 16871336 ***Maudie O. ''Draper'' Streeter 1948–2017 Memorial ID: 185327371 ****Daughter Streeter '''CENOTAPH''' child of Maudie Draper Streeter & William Earl Streeter ***JoAnn ''Draper'' Smith '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown See Obituary of Maudie Streeter in FAG 185327371 *Lee Ann Jean Draper Memorial ID23 Jun 1987 – 19 Jan 1988 Memorial ID 5000835 *Nellie Mae Draper2 Oct 1945 – 10 Feb 2002 Memorial ID 17059100 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/98/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-444.jpg Pictured above, left to right, Koby "Grasshopper Draper, Kirsten Renee "Sis" Draper and Kristopher Robby "Kris" Draper, taken about 2014. Koby and Kirsten were killed April 22, 2015 when the car they were riding in was rear-ended about 8:40 p.m. by a pickup truck driven by John Canche Alvarado of Austin. Department of Public Safety Trooper Robbie Barrera said Crystal Draper, 37, was attempting to turn left off US Highway 183 into the Saratoga Springs subdivision when a drunk driver slammed his Ford F-150 pickup into the Nissan Altima she was driving. Koby and Kirsten were killed, Kristopher suffered severe injuries and brain injury and died later, in November of 2021. They are listed below: *Kirsten Renee “Sis” Draper 1 Feb 2005 – 23 Apr 2015 Memorial ID 145468085 *Koby “Grasshopper” Draper 24 Aug 1999 – 22 Apr 2015 Memorial ID 145468007 *Kristopher Robby “Kris” Draper 31 Oct 2001 – 4 Nov 2021 Memorial ID 234099095 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/95/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-445.jpg Entrance to Saratoga Springs Subdivision, April 2015 after the deadly car crash killing Koby and Kirsten Draper [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Saratoga+Springs+Pl,+Texas+78642/@30.7380578,-97.876348,94m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x865ad6af4de4f449:0xddfa6b37373e4ccc!8m2!3d30.7380818!4d-97.8779169 SATELLITE VIEW] of intersection 183 and Saratoga Springs Subdivision '''ORIGINAL DRAPER MUSIC''' (c)2022 Written for this tragic event in September 2022 by Dave Draper, Bloomington, IL https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-472.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a0/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-519.jpg '''Liberty Hill''' ZIP Code 78642 '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/4839/liberty-hill-cemetery Liberty Hill Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5702|Malvina J. Draper Evans]] 1832-1911 husband **[[Evans-42375|Edward Draper Evans]] 1824-1902 Memorial ID 11768189 ***'''Note:''' Malvina is the daughter of [[Draper-2383|Thomas Lyle “Blind Tom” Draper]] and [[Huddleston-2134|Elizabeth “Bettie” Huddleston Draper]] ==New Mexico 11 Burial Listings== ==='''CHAVES COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-292.jpg '''Roswell''' ZIP Code 88201 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/04/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-116.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38461/south-park-cemeterySouth Park Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-804|William F Draper]] 28 Feb 1879 – 17 Sep 1946 **[[Sargent-1291|Effie B. Sargent Draper]]29 Nov 1882 – 10 Jan 1950 *Eulas E Draper 5 Aug 1914 – 19 Feb 1987 wife: **Lucille J. Meyer Draper 12 Dec 1909 – 5 Aug 1993 ***Lloyd H Draper 1938–1947 (age 9) buried in '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38252/mount-calvary-cemetery Mount Calvary Cemetery]''' *[[Draper-5278|James Savillis Draper]] 29 Jul 1970 – 30 Jan 1994 wife: **Edna (Unknown Surname) Draper 1907 - ???? '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ==='''TORRANCE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/ba/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-293.jpg '''Cedarvale''' ZIP Code 87009 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/88/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-134.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2252394/cedarvale-cemetery Cedarvale Cemetery] Location: Cedarvale, Torrance County, New Mexico, USA *[[Draper-5277|James Lafayette Draper]] 26 Jan 1859 – 12 Apr 1923 wife: **[[Cox-37878|Leathie Lee (Cox) Draper]] (1861 - 1925) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/3970/grove-hill-memorial-park Grove Hill Memorial Park] *[[Draper-5278|James S Draper]] 10 Jan 1895 – 31 Jul 1967 wife: **Edna (Unknown Surname) Draper 1907-19?? '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown ==Arizona 14 Burial Listings== ==='''PIMA COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/02/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-561.jpg '''Tucson''' ZIP Code 85708 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/16/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-562.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57010/evergreen-memorial-park Evergreen Memorial Park]''' AKA Evergreen Cemetery Tucson, Arizona *Durward D Draper 12 Mar 1868 – 5 Mar 1946 Memorial ID 41047177 *Homer C. Draper 5 Jan 1925 – 20 Feb 2013 Memorial ID 177244974 wife: **Wynona C. Draper 8 Nov 1922 – 4 Aug 2013 Memorial ID 177244796 *Johnny Draper Memorial ID8 Mar 1950 – 8 Mar 1950 Memorial ID 76420059 **Note: son of Frank Allen Draper of Tucson, AZ *[[Gibson-19917|Cynthia Izella Gibson (Curtis) Reece]] 1897–1966 husbands: **[[Curtis-6088|Wallace Leroy Curtis]] 1892–1963 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57123/south-lawn-memorial-cemetery South Lawn Memorial Cemetery] Tucson, AZ **Robert Hugh Reece 1900–1967 ***'''NOTE''' Cynthia Gibson Reece is a direct descendant of [[Draper-169|Thomas Draper]] 1680ish to 1735 through his daughter [[Draper-293|Elizabeth (Draper) Gibson]] (1711 - 1739) https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-563.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57037/holy-hope-cemetery-and-mausoleum Holy Hope Cemetery]''' *Lincoln Draper 18 Nov 1860 – 26 May 1929 Memorial ID 147162117 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fe/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-564.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57123/south-lawn-memorial-cemetery South Lawn Memorial Cemetery]''' *Bruce Jay Draper 15 Nov 1885 – 12 Feb 1961 Memorial ID 175755633 (African American) **Susie Bolden Draper 1894 – 1963 Memorial ID 196543935 *Glenn E Draper 18 Mar 1927 – 21 Dec 1980 Memorial ID 135545017 **Freda Day Draper 9 Apr 1929 – 10 Oct 1978 Memorial ID 135544964 *Merrill U. Draper 24 May 1909 – 23 May 1956 Memorial ID 59548739 **Fern Vivian Davis Draper Maas 1908–1978 Memorial ID 196333567 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/57108/safford-city-cemetery Safford Cemetery] Safford, Graham Co. AZ == California 215 Burial Listings== ==='''FRESNO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b7/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-294.jpg '''Fresno''' ZIP Code 93706-1311 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-146.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7851/belmont-memorial-park Belmont Memorial Park]''' Location: 201 N Teilman Ave Fresno, Fresno County, CA *[[Draper-4503|James Marion Draper]] (1832 - 1914) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93291/peace-creek-cemetery Peace Creek Cemetery] Stafford, Kansas **[[Reveal-405|Susannah (Reveal) Draper]] (1842 - 1920) ) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93291/peace-creek-cemetery Peace Creek Cemetery] Stafford, Kansas ***[[Draper-5860|Fay Wavelet (Draper) Clothier]] (1883 - 1963) ****[[Clothier-509|Milton Henry Clothier]] (1877 - 1918) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93291/peace-creek-cemetery Peace Creek Cemetery] Stafford, Kansas ***[[Draper-5289|William Almon Draper]] 14 Jan 1873 – 24 Jul 1960 1st and 2nd wife **1st wife: [[Culley-438|Sarah Mertie Culley Draper]] 1878–1941 **[[Stewart-49837|Rebecca Ann “Reca” Stewart Draper]] 8 Feb 1874 – 4 Feb 1955 her first husband was: ***1st husband: [[Draper-5288|Marion Alfred Draper]] 1867–1941 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93291/peace-creek-cemetery Peace Creek Cemetery] *George J Draper 22 Mar 1887 – 17 Nov 1950 FAG: 143681101; FS: L5ZB-W9Y **May Tena Owen Draper 16 Oct 1891 – 29 May 1972 FAG: 143681115; FS: L5VV-WVP *George T Draper1879 – 1953 *Mary M Draper1879 – 1967 *Roy L Draper 12 Oct 1906 – 10 Mar 1967 *Ruby Margaret Green Draper28 Apr 1912 – 25 Apr 1977 ==='''LOS ANGELES COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/89/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-295.jpg *[[Draper-4333|Frank Draper]] (1892 - abt. 1980) '''CENOTAPH''' burial in L.A County unknown, wife **[[Anderson-61859|Florence (Anderson) Draper]] (1886 - 1977) '''CENOTAPH''' burial in L.A County unknown '''Downey''' ZIP Code 91242 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c6/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-41.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/206502/downey-district-cemetery Downey District Cemetery]''' Location: 9073 E. Gardendale Street, Downey, Los Angeles County, California *[[Draper-5166|Samuel M Draper]] 1846 – 1935 and wife: **Nancy L ''Unknown'' Draper 1854 – 1941 *Alice Mary Fivash Draper 1871 – 1945 *Benjamin L Draper 1884 – 1947 *Florence C Draper 1880 – 1976 *William A Draper 1878 – 1970 '''Glendale''' ZIP Code 91205 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/4c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-40.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7974/forest-lawn-memorial-park Forrest_Lawn_Memorial Park]''' Located 1712 S. Glendale Avenue Glendale, Los Angeles County, California, 91205 USA Forrest Lawn Web site: www.forestlawn.com This cemetery has many celebrity graves. There are several policies preventing photography in certain areas. Photography is not allowed in the Great Mausoleum. [https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1j1EkPydVBG5m_hjW4MyuwKXd0-E&ll=34.123635623192094%2C-118.2481913561241&z=16 '''HOLLYWOOD STARS'''] '''See where the Movie Stars are buried!''' *[[Draper-4328|Harry Waldo Draper]] (1883 - 1946) '''Family''' and wife: ** [[Lebus-51|Matilda Lebus]] (1883–1944) *[[Smith-284632|Alwilda Smith Draper]] 27 Jun 1879 – 10 Jun 1967 '''FAMILY''' married to **Benjamin Franklin Drapern1860- 1941 '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8308/rose-hills-memorial-park Rose Hills Memorial Park] *[[Carmichael-3722|Henrietta Elizabeth Carmichael Draper]]1840 – 23 Sep 1934 Husband: **[[Draper-5833|Henry Read Draper]] (1842 - 1904) '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/83131/redwood-falls-cemetery Redwood Falls Cemetery] Redwood Falls, Redwood Co., Minnesota ***[[Draper-5834|Calvin Carmichael Draper]] 21 Aug 1869 – 10 Feb 1959 ***[[Draper-5836|Nancy E ''Draper'' Hingeley]] 22 Feb 1875-23 Feb 1963 Memorial ID 107786444 husband: ****[[Hingeley-3|Myron W. Hingeley]] (1880 - 1956) ***[[Draper-5835|Orville Lawrence Draper]] 10 Apr 1875-20 Mar 1908 Memorial ID 191431501 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/83131/redwood-falls-cemetery Redwood Falls Cemetery] Redwood Falls, Redwood Co., Minnesota Other Draper Burials, not researched to see if related. Drapers from all over the world worked in the motion picture industry. *Ada Elizabeth Storer Draper 17 Sep 1883 – 26 Jun 1961 *Albert McCreery Draper 16 Jul 1881 – 26 Jun 1959 *Alice Fae Stivers Draper Dec 1893 – 12 Mar 1937 *Anne W Draper 5 Oct 1900 – Feb 1968 *Annella Draper 10 Sep 1907 – 16 Jan 1998 *Calvin Carmichael Draper 21 Aug 1869 – 10 Feb 1959 *Carl W Draper 11 Jan 1898 – 10 Feb 1973 *Charles Frances Draper Nov 1853 – 1 Jan 1945 *Charles Herbert Draper 29 Apr 1884 – 21 May 1948 *Clara Elizabeth Little Draper 29 Oct 1866 – 23 Mar 1947 *Douglas Stuart Draper 31 Oct 1912 – 10 Aug 1996 *E Francis Draper 7 Jun 1886 – 24 Mar 1960 *Ellen Draper Birth and death dates unknown. *Elmer Ernest Draper 6 Oct 1903 – 6 May 1980 *Ernestine Gladys Crismon Draper 12 Mar 1905 – 26 Dec 1992 *Erwin C Draper 30 Jul 1883 – 19 Feb 1940 *Ethelyn I Draper 15 Dec 1889 – 11 Aug 1970 *Evalyn Frances Floyd Draper 2 Apr 1880 – 6 Oct 1947 *Frederic A Draper 12 Mar 1877 – 23 Feb 1967 *George Gardiner Draper 7 Apr 1888 – 26 Jul 1947 *Gladys Eleanor Wheeler Draper 29 Apr 1901 – 2 Sep 1940 *Ida J. Draper1 Sep 1912 – 22 Nov 2011 *Jacob Fickling “Jay Bird” Draper 20 Sep 1870 – 14 Mar 1932 *James Draper 20 Jan 1881 – 1 Mar 1953 *John L Draper13 Sep 1905 – 22 Apr 1971 *John Ward Draper 11 Jul 1859 – 20 Jul 1950 *Johnie Draper 3 Jun 1906 – 12 Sep 1941 *Joseph Draper Jr. 13 May 1907 – 28 Oct 2002 *Julia Grace McCreery Draper 11 Jul 1854 – 20 Aug 1943 *Lela C. Hogan Draper 14 May 1886 – 22 Mar 1969 *Loretta Roth Draper14 Jul 1904 – 21 Oct 1984 *Lucille Marie Clothier Draper 6 Jan 1899 – 2 May 1977 *Marjorie Elaine Freese Draper 21 Feb 1914 – 19 Feb 2005 *Martha Ellen Wilson Draper3 Jan – 10 Oct 1970 *Mary Abaline Bumb Draper 27 Feb 1871 – 9 Jul 1954 *Mary Ann Draper 22 Nov 1872 – 16 Sep 1962 *Mary Beatrice Lafler Draper 1 Apr 1889 – 30 Nov 1956 *Mary May Benson Draper 4 May 1884 – 13 Apr 1981 *May Elizabeth Bridges Draper 17 Oct 1890 – 28 Jul 1957 *Milton Earl Draper 16 Aug 1906 – 8 Dec 1945 *Minnie B Livermore Draper 18 Mar 1862 – 16 Jul 1930 *Morris Col Draper 8 Apr 1894 – 26 Dec 1946 *Oscar Eldridge Draper 28 Aug 1880 – 1 Apr 1952 *Robert Draper 13 Aug 1904 – 20 Apr 1970 *Robert Draper 7 Jan 1934 – 25 Dec 1994 *Stanley James Draper unknown – 3 Feb 1961 *Stella Maria Yate Draper 21 Nov 1853 – 20 Jul 1946 *Stuart Draper 6 Jan 1896 – 6 Mar 1990 *William Vernon “Bill” Draper 30 May 1900 – 9 Aug 1988 '''Inglewood''' ZIP Codes 90301 - 90312 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/9b/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-39.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8074/inglewood-park-cemetery Inglewood_Park_Cemetery]''' 720 East Florence Avenue Inglewood, Los Angeles County, California, 90301-1482 [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Sunset+Mission+Mausoleum,+720+E+Florence+Ave,+Inglewood,+CA+90301/@33.9686174,-118.3411014,2996m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x80c2b7a87dd26147:0xeb3898524508dcc9!8m2!3d33.9708891!4d-118.3435467 Satellite_View_Map] [https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1kzaPOF66Gv5fNpgF1QHh_x5dja4&ll=33.96744120260378%2C-118.3409610535431&z=15 '''HOLLYWOOD STAR GRAVES'''] '''See where the Movie Stars are buried!''' '''Famous People Buried with our Draper Family:''' *Carol Adams 1918–2012 Entertainer. Born Lurline Uller apperared in 20 major motion pictures and considered one of the top female tap dances of her time. *Jewel Akens 1933–2013 Singer. He will be best remembered for his 1965 hit "The Birds and the Bees" *Coit Albertson 1880–1953 Theater and motion picture actor *Ethan Allen 1882–1940 Appeared in Western Movies *Curtis Edward Amy 1929–2002 Jazz Musician *[[Draper-4661|Frank Vogel Draper]] 4 Jul 1871 – 13 Nov 1949 wife: **[[Badger-1369|Lillian G Badger Draper]] 14 Nov 1876 – 24 Apr 1964 children: ***[[Draper-4664|Frank Jerry Draper]] 2 May 1903 – 25 Jan 1991 ***[[Draper-4663|Walter R Draper]] 5 Apr 1901 – 31 Jan 1979 wife: ****[[Adamson-3658|Beatrice L. Draper]] 27 Aug 1903 – 17 Feb 1996 ***[[Draper-4662|Ira Darius Draper]] 6 Dec 1898 – 7 Sep 1963 Other Draper Burials (not sure who they are) *Frederick Robert Draper 11 Dec 1883 – Dec 1966 wife: **Marion M. Croucher Draper 21 Apr 1881 – 21 Oct 1968 *Glenn Figg Draper 7 Apr 1901 – 4 Aug 1982 wife: **Emily Marie Heely Draper 18 Feb 1905 – 22 Jul 1989 *Lawrence Lewis Draper 5 Jan 1884 – 17 Mar 1957 wife: **Mary Lettia Gibson Draper 1894 – 7 Aug 1917 *Armon A. Draper 13 Jul 1909 – 25 Jul 1991 *Benjamin Draper 1884 – 1947 *Bertram C. Draper30 Apr 1904 – 7 Aug 2000 *Clara L. Draper7 May 1895 – 12 May 1996 *Dorothy M Sarles Draper 29 Aug 1905 – 14 Apr 1961 *Edith Smith Draper 1886 – 26 Sep 1917 *Lucinda V. Williams Draper 3 Feb 1907 – 26 Jun 1983 *Josephine Draper 1 Apr 1924 – 20 Mar 2006 *Nancy L Draper 1854 – 1941 *Samuel M Draper 1846 – 1935 *Sarah Elizabeth Hunt Draper 10 Feb 1843 – 9 Jun 1931 *Tina B. Brewer-Draper 7 Nov 1902 – 27 May 1998 *Florence H. Draper 1913 – 2010 '''Los Angeles''' ZIP Codes 90001 to 91609 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/0a/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-318.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640439/chapel-of-the-pines-crematory Chapel Of The Pines Crematory]''' AKA Los Angeles Crematory Los Angeles, Los Angeles County *[[Draper-5400|Marshall Daniel Draper]] 11 Mar 1875 – 14 Aug 1953 (FAG Memorial ID: 59403679), wife: **[[Barbour-1753|Marguerite Barbour Draper]] 12 Sep 1887 – 14 Nov 1969 *[[Draper-5402|Marguerite Elaine (Draper) Ecker]] (1917 - 2006) sister of Marshall Draper above, Husband: unknown, burial unknown '''Whittier''' ZIP Code 90601 - 90609 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ea/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-440.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8308/rose-hills-memorial-park Rose Hills Memorial Park] AKA Whittier Heights Memorial Park, Located: Whittier, Los Angeles County, California *[[Draper-5600|Benjamin Franklin Draper]] 6 Jun 1860 – 16 Sep 1941 Memorial ID 124057543 ''' two wives: **[[Collyge-3|Mollie Collyge Draper]] 29 Mar 1868 – 30 Aug 1940; (1st wife); their son: ***[[Draper-5601|Charles Alexander Draper]] 10 May 1887 – 18 Jul 1951 wife: ****[[Beckworth-93|Mary Ellen Beckworth Draper]] 27 Sep 1883 – 1 Jul 1951 Memorial ID 147584413 *****Z Z Draper 1920-1920 '''CENOTAPH''' burial unknown; Infant **[[Smith-284632|Alwilda Smith Draper]] 1879–1967 2nd wife; '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/7974/forest-lawn-memorial-park Forest Lawn Memorial Park] *Amos Draper 21 Nov 1934 – 12 May 2012 Memorial ID 90574445 *Annie M. Draper 17 Aug 1864 – 28 Jul 1942 Memorial ID 180891190 *Ardis Draper unknown – 9 Dec 2010 Memorial ID 180891233 *Carole Emma Draper 9 Oct 1933 – 10 Apr 2014 Memorial ID 180891290 *Clint Draper unknown – 2 Sep 2014 Memorial ID 180891410 *Darla J. “Hunny” Draper 25 Mar 1959 – 26 Aug 2011 Memorial ID 180891430 *Donna J. Draper 11 Dec 1950 – 4 Dec 2020 Memorial ID 225431781 *Doris C. Draper unknown – 14 Mar 2002 Memorial ID 180891489 *Dwight Bruner Draper 29 Mar 1905 – 21 Apr 1981 Memorial ID 180891518 *Elizabeth A. Richwine Draper 29 Jan 1914 – 17 Nov 1998 Memorial ID 180891168 *Elmer LeRoy Draper unknown – 27 May 1988 Memorial ID 180891217 *Rev Elmer Theodore Draper 5 Feb 1898 – 12 Jun 1981 Memorial ID 180891254 *Fern Montie Draper 11 Sep 1897 – 20 May 1969 Memorial ID 161634589 *Florence A. Draper unknown – 14 Jun 1979 Memorial ID 180891314 *Florence M. Draper unknown – 27 Nov 2014 Memorial ID 180891368 *Floyd Everett Draper 26 Jul 1928 – 6 May 2016 Memorial ID 162418946 *Frances L. Draper unknown – 11 Feb 1997 Memorial ID 180891455 *Frederick Nelson Draperunknown – 30 Sep 2007 Memorial ID 145396015 *Gary Allen Draper 29 Nov 1951 – 15 Mar 2016 Memorial ID 159847478 *Harry Asa Draper 17 Jun 1879 – 27 Dec 1949 Memorial ID 180891554 *Harvey Carlton Draper 12 Dec 1913 – 14 Mar 1978 Memorial ID 180891603 *Iva Joyce Draper16 Aug 1929 – 26 Nov 2013 Memorial ID 174722065 *[[Draper-5598|Jack Dalton Draper]] 27 Jan 1923 – 14 Jan 2003 '''FAMILY''' *James Douglas Draper 29 Jun 1951 – 1 Aug 2005 Memorial ID 180891728 *Joan H. Reeves Draper 3 Jul 1925 – 3 Mar 1993 Memorial ID 180891765 *John David Draper 28 Nov 1928 – 6 Sep 2012 Memorial ID 96868872 *John Jackson Draper unknown – 25 Apr 1980Memorial ID 180891809 *Johnnie Draper 27 Nov 1984 – 27 Nov 1984 Memorial ID 180891875 *Judith Ann “Judy” Becht Draper 3 May 1940 – 13 Mar 1999 Memorial ID 180891979 *Lee Earl Draper 5 Jun 1918 – 25 Dec 1970 Memorial ID 180892023 *Martha E. W. Draper 1903 – 26 Mar 1996 Memorial ID 180891651 *Mary Lou Cooper Draper 29 Jul 1908 – 28 Jan 1951 Memorial ID 9385485 *Mildred S. Draper 23 Aug 1905 – 24 Feb 1991 Memorial ID 180891739 *Noble Draper unknown – 12 Sep 1986 Memorial ID 180891789 *Raymond “Ray” Draper 25 May 1901 – 10 Sep 1947 Memorial ID 180891851 *Ruby Odell Bridgewaters Draper 6 Aug 1906 – 19 Feb 1980 Memorial ID 180891959 *Sarah Helen Draper unknown – 17 Nov 1963 Memorial ID 180892001 *Shirley M. Draper 3 Feb 1923 – 27 Sep 2017 Memorial ID 185024811 *Tamara Joan Taylor Draper 2 Mar 1935 – 17 May 2017 Memorial ID 179603754 *Thelma L. Draper unknown – 1 Jun 2016 Memorial ID 180892046 *Virginia Ruth Draper14 Mar 1918 – 21 Aug 1967 Memorial ID 180892085 *Weldon Clinton Draper unknown – 16 Feb 1984 Memorial ID 180892157 *William Menzo Draper unknown – 10 Nov 1963 Memorial ID 180892071 *Winthrop Floyd Draper 19 Jul 1915 – 27 May 1984 Memorial ID 180892109 ==='''ORANGE COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-296.jpg '''Westminister''' ZIP Code 92683 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/09/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-123.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8437/westminster-memorial-park Westminister Memorial Park]''' located 14801 Beach Boulevard *[[Furnoy-2|Harriett Theodocia "Docia" Furnoy Draper]] (1855 –1933) husband: **[[Draper-4438|Ira Ellis Draper]] (1834 – 1907) CENOTAPH buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/96709/woodland-cemetery Woodland Cemetery] in Des Moines Iowa ***[[Draper-5568|Nancy Maud ''Draper'' Webb]] 28 Dec 1883 – 1947 (Daughter of Ira and Harriett) her husband: ****[[Webb-25241|Arza Lyman Webb]] (1884 - 1919) cremated '''CENOTAPH''' died from paralysis, obituary in FAG Memorial ID: 40191585 *Dogia Draper1855 – 1933 *Edna I. Draper1908 – 1968 *Harold E. Draper1887 – 1959 *Harold Ronald Draper 15 Nov 1924 – 3 Oct 2014 *Isaac N. Draper1901 – 1980 *Kyle R. Draper19 Nov 1975 – 16 Aug 2006 *Margaret Ann Draper1935 – 2010 *Marie E. Draper1911 – 1990 *Merle G. Draper1909 – 1964 *Rhoda E. Draper1886 – 1973 *Stella Maria Agnew Draper 21 Sep 1878 – 21 Nov 1971 *Walter Evander Draper 27 Jan 1868 – 22 Oct 1961 *Walter Evander Draper Jr.24 Apr 1914 – 17 Sep 1963 *Wilma Doris Ohland-Childers Draper 2 Oct 1925 – 27 Jun 1979 ==='''PLACER COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f8/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-731.jpg '''Auburn''' ZIP Code 95602 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/da/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-732.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/338197/new-auburn-cemetery New Auburn Cemetery] *Donald J Draper 26 Mar 1914 – 24 Nov 1972 *Jacob Edgar Draper 18 Mar 1905 – 12 Nov 1963 wife: **Jessie Lee Mullen Draper 15 Jan 1915 – 10 Sep 1966 *[[Draper-5914|John Thomas Draper]] (1882 - 1925) '''CENOTAPH''' buried [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1963313/forest-lawn-cemetery Forest Lawn] in Morrill, Nebraska **Joe Wylie Draper 13 Jul 1912 – 2 Mar 2004 wives: ***Belva ''Pierce'' Draper 1918-2008 1st wife '''CENOTAPH'' buried not discovered yet ***Dorothea Donna Hill Draper 21 Jun 1913 – 13 Jun 1981 2nd wife **Robert Stanley Draper Flowers have been left. 2 Dec 1908 – 26 Apr 1995 **Walter Hume Draper 19 Jul 1907 – 12 Oct 1989 ***Katheryn Marie Skudlas Draper 1904-2003 ==='''SOLANO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/ad/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-436.jpg '''Fairfield''' ZIP Code 94533 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/93/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-435.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/161276/rockville-cemetery Rockville Cemetery]''' Located: Fairfield, California *[[Draper-5596|James Elias Draper]] 18 Sep 1903 – 10 Oct 1984 (see Tahoka Cemetery Lynn Co. TX) **Elizabeth Draper-Trent 25 Mar 1925 – 11 Nov 2020 Memorial ID 220389810 ***Note James is the son of [[Draper-283|David Fanning Draper]] (1872 - 1941); His brother, [[Draper-3845|Foy James Draper]] (1911 - 1943), was a Olympic Gold Medal Winner in the Berlin Olympics, 1936 ==='''SACRAMENTO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/5/52/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-297.jpg '''Sacramento''' ZIP Code 95841 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/a/a5/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-86.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/184890/sacramento-city-cemetery Sacramento City Cemetery]''' Location: 1000 Broadway Sacramento, Sacramento County, California, 95814 USA *Albert Draper 29 Jul 1886 – 18 Sep 1951 *Joseph Draper unknown – 1850 *[[Draper-362|Joshua Draper ]] 25 Feb 1805 – 20 Dec 1852 wife: **[[Lyles-91|Christina C (Lyles) Draper]] (1802 - 1876) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8399/tehama-cemetery Tehama Cemetery] Tehama, Tehama County, California ==='''SAN BERNADINO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/02/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-313.jpg '''San Bernardino''' ZIP Codes 92346 - 92418 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/f9/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-314.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8192/mountain-view-cemetery Mountain View Cemetery]''' Located: AKA Mount View Mortuary and Cemetery San Bernardino, CA Many Celebrity Graves located here among Draper Family including: [[Earp-221| James Cooksey Earp]] (1841–1926), brother of [[Earp-113|Wyatt Earp]], who is blood related to some of our Draper family, Namely: [[Draper-4290|Joseph Merle Draper]] (1928 - 2010) and wife: [[Eby-1144|Veda ''Eby'' Draper]] (1928 - 2005) Veda is a descendant of Wyatt Earp's Aunt. Joe and Veda are buried in '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1620743/sunset-cemetery? Sunset Cemetery]''' Quincy, IL *[[Draper-4513|James Walter “Jimmy” Draper]] 4 Jul 1922 – 17 Oct 1970 *Dr David Henry Draper 5 Mar 1926 – 1 Jun 1974 wife **Nan Clair Draper 25 Nov 1926 – 1 Jun 2006 *Clinton Howard Draper 1863 – 29 Jul 1927 '''Not Family''' father born in New York, wife: **Cora Agnes Crapo Draper 14 Jan 1874 – 15 Jul 1941 *Stoddard Stevens Draper Jul 1849 – 1916 '''Not Family''' father born in New York **Florence Dennison Draper 13 Aug 1853 – 24 Oct 1937 son: ***Josh Draper 1890 – 1918 *Earl Theodore Draper 8 Apr 1890 – 21 Mar 1934 (Might be Family) wife **Olive Irene Pruden Jones 1896–1972 remarried, buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/93543/rosebank-cemetery Rosebank Cemetery], Mulberry, KS ***Grandson of [[Draper-5300|George Sanford Draper]] (1807 - 1862) buried in Missouri *Edward Samuel Draper 12 Oct 1903 – 8 Feb 1982 wife: **Evelyn Alma Dobbs Draper 8 Oct 1904 – 4 Apr 1992 *Frank S Draper 1881 – 1918 ==='''SAN DIEGO COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/ff/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-298.jpg '''San Diego''' ZIP Code 92102 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/00/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-169.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/8175/mount-hope-cemetery San Diego]''' *[[Draper-3617|Martha Jane ''Draper'' Smith]] (1853 - 1928) 2nd husband **[[Smith-104959|Oliver Bronson Smith]] (abt. 1842 - 1930) ***[[Stearns-3014|Earl Watson Stearns]] (1878 - 1936) '''CENOTAPH''' buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1447268/cypress-view-mausoleum-and-crematory Cypress View Mausoleum and Crematory] son of Martha Draper and Watson Sterns ****[[Page-14322|Edith Page Sterns]] 1888–1981'''CENOTAPH''' wife of Earl Watson Sterns, she is buried in [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1447268/cypress-view-mausoleum-and-crematory Cypress View Mausoleum and Crematory] *[[Draper-4353|John C. Draper]] 22 Jan 1851 – 9 Jun 1928 wife: **[[Worden-6965|Anna Elizabeth “Annie” Worden Draper]] Feb 1861 – 12 Sep 1947 *Harold Whiting Draper 26 Dec 1875 – 20 Feb 1941 '''Not Family''' Massachussetts *Velma Lela Smith Draper 5 Jul 1887 – 28 Nov 1963 '''Not Family''' Morman faith, Utah *Florence Draper 13 Apr 1888 – 20 Mar 1968 Not Sure /'''Not Family'''' *Vera C. Draper 1920 – 1974 Not Sure /'''Not Family''' ==Oregon 25 Burial Listings== ==='''MALHEUR COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/6/60/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-301.jpg '''Ontario''' ZIP Code 97914 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/2c/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-42.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38756/evergreen-cemetery Evergreen Cemetery]''' (use Jesse Frasier Draper link to get to other family members profiles) [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Evergreen+Cemetery/@44.0232643,-117.0979542,11.5z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x54af8e4b8b5b817b:0x41831ee78e124f81!8m2!3d44.0194065!4d-116.9756637 Satellite_View_Map] *[[Draper-176|Jesse Frasier Draper]]  6 Oct 1826 – 1 Oct 1900 **[[Johnson-5088|Naomi Johnson Draper]] 14 Oct 1828 – 20 Dec 1916 ***[[Draper-4581|Francis Marion “Frank” Draper]]  9 Nov 1851 – 8 May 1928 ****Spouse Unknown *****[[Draper-4584|Jesse Bruce Draper]]  15 Oct 1885 – 19 Jan 1889 *****Joseph Draper  16 May 1892 – 19 May 1892 ***John Achilles Draper 1857–1952 Memorial ID 244352357 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640472/santa-rosa-odd-fellows-cemetery IOOF Cemetery] Santa Rosa, Sonoma Co, California ****Hattie Belle Ingersoll Draper 1867–1954 (m. 1883) Memorial ID 244352487 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/640472/santa-rosa-odd-fellows-cemetery IOOF Cemetery] Santa Rosa, Sonoma Co, California *****Albert Jerome Draper 1893–1938 Memorial ID 30011873 *****Ina Defoe Draper Greathead 1896–1977 Memorial ID 64981355 '''CENOTAPH''' buried: [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/250143/columbia-public-cemetery Columbia Public Cemetery] Columbia, Tuolumne County, California *Ralph Eugene Draper  28 Jan 1914 – 10 Feb 1991 Memorial ID 69664877 '''NoDoTeD''' Grandfather born in Kent, England **Jane Eloise Adams Draper  29 Oct 1915 – 20 Jun 2004 ==='''YAMHILL COUNTY'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/01/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-437.jpg '''McMinnville''' ZIP Code 97128 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/41/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-438.jpg '''[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/38757/evergreen-memorial-park Evergreen Memorial Park]''' Located: McMinnville, Oregon *[[Draper-5597|Weldon Allen Draper]] 22 Nov 1906 – 20 Aug 1967 wife: ** Nadine (Unknown) Draper '''CENOTAPH''' ALL details unknown *Mary Ann Grenfell Draper 20 Oct 1919 – 15 Jan 2014 Memorial ID 123983196 *Scott Lee DraperMemorial ID9 Dec 1944 – 8 Jun 2010 Memorial ID 175649372 *Volina Corrine Kerr-Draper 13 Sep 1941 – 13 May 1997 Memorial ID 223683981 https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/83/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-439.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/39098/masonic-cemetery Masonic Cemetery] Located McMinnville, Oregon *Eilene Draper 1919 – 2010 Memorial ID 107665793 *Golda A Draper 1898 – 1901 Memorial ID 84745769 *Leta Pearl Gaines Draper 21 Nov 1888 – 2 Feb 1964 Memorial ID 90187976 *Norwood Ogden Draper 12 Jan 1917 – 10 Dec 2006 Memorial ID 17106108 *Rebecca Draper1850 – 1918 Memorial ID 107670169 *Roy John Draper 1888 – 1959 Memorial ID 107671020 *Sarah May Ogden Draper 10 May 1866 – 23 Feb 1941 Memorial ID 84745785 *Thomas H Draper 1858 – 1931 Memorial ID 84745799 *William O Draper 1893 – 1921 Memorial ID 84745816 == Canada 7 Burial Listings== ==='''ALBERTA'''=== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/24/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-300.jpg '''Milk River''' https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7d/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-38.jpg [https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2206067/milk-river-cemetery Milk_River_Cemetery] East of the intersection of Township Rd. 24A and Township Rd. 24, east of Milk River on Rt 501 [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Milk+River,+AB,+Canada/@49.1441921,-112.0675527,591m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x536bfe501ef0121b:0x57530acbffea9961!8m2!3d49.1518297!4d-112.0866981 Satellite_View_Map] * [[Draper-4327|Mabelle Estella Draper Hummel]], (1881 - 1963) family historian and husband **[[Hummel-1633|Frank Hummel]] (1883 - 1974) The Hummel family moved here from Dawson. It was her research that filled in the gaps of Draper Family that left Indianapolis, Indiana, in the mid 1800's, moved on to Iowa, then Nebraska in 1864, and the involvement of her grandfather, Ira Dillingham Draper, as a station master in the underground railway. Her history of this branch of the Draper family was made available in 2021 on WikiTree. To other branches of the Draper family this is exciting new information and history! *Dale Robert Hummel24 Mar 1957 – 15 Apr 2021 *Elizabeth “Beth” Madge Hummel 28 Oct 1920 – 5 Sep 2015 *Gloria Jean Michaelis Hummel 18 Jul 1941 – 6 Sep 2018 *Mark David Hummel 21 Mar 1952 – 3 Mar 1990 *Robert Wesley “Bob” Hummel 1 Nov 1920 – 3 Jan 2015 =='''Revolutionay War, Civil War & War of 1812'''== '''Draper vs Draper''' [https://www.battlefields.org/learn/battles?historical_period=71 '''Map_of_All_Battles_with_Casualties]''' == '''INSTRUCTIONS / CONTACT INFO:'''== To contribute information on a person(s) and cemetery locations, please send the information to Dave Draper through the WikiTree Private Message System WikiTree profile Dave Draper https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Draper-4171 Thank you for your support and taking the tour. I hope you find those nearest and dearest to you, who lived to give us life! ==ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/14/Draper-4327-1.jpg '''[[Draper-4327|Mabel Estella Draper Hummel]]''' Draper genealogist and historian who kept detailed records of the family and descendants of [[Draper-169|Ira Dillingham Draper]], we call the "Nebraskan Draper Branch" https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/ef/Draper-4291.jpg '''[[Draper-4291|Charlie Draper]]''' Draper genealogist and historian who collected rare family pictures, newspaper articles and researched our family from [[Draper-169|Ira Dillingham Draper]] back to [[Draper-169|Thomas Draper]] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/df/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-303.jpg [[Thomasson-878|Robert Kermon Thomasson]] Draper/Thomasson genealogist, historian and map maker of Draper burial locations. Kermon was passionate about genealogy and historical vignettes, many of which he penned for a regular series of articles in the Martinsville Bulletin. He also organized the annual reunions of the Draper and Thomasson families for many years. https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/98/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-305.jpg https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c3/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-304.jpg The Compilers of Draper Families In America, The Parthenon Press, Nashville, Tennessee, Dated 1963 *Ethel Nichols Anderson *Mrs. Willie Howard Draper Huddleston *Christine Spivey Jones * Dr. Eleanor Drake Mitchell *Mildred Draper Summers '''Christine Spivey Jones''' was named Tennessee Reference Librarian and Special Collections Librarian. She retired January 5, 2008, after serving 59 years, thereby ending the longest faculty tenure in the history of Tennessee Technological University. In her work as Special Collections Librarian, she provided reference assistance in history and genealogy. In connection with this, she helped many individuals from various places who were tracing their families or doing historical research in the Upper Cumberland. By providing this help, she became widely known for her expertise. She and three close friends, Dr. Eleanor D. Mitchell, Mrs. Mildred Draper Summers and Mrs. Willie Howard Huddleston started combining their research on the Draper family with Mrs. Ethel Nichols Anderson of Lexington, Kentucky and eventually wrote an exhaustive genealogy, Draper Families in America, containing 514 pages, which was published in 1964 by Parthenon Press, Nashville, Tennessee. [https://www.hhhfunerals.com/obituaries/Christine-Spivey-Jones?obId=12702562 Complete Obituary] https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/45/Farnham_Viginia_Draper_Descendants_Tour_Guide_-1-681.jpg '''Suzanne Wheeler Watt''' (10 Oct 1928 - 7 Sep 2017 (aged 88)) Wheeler / Draper family historian and genealogist who descends from Thomas and Lucy Coleman Draper Find A Grave Memorial ID [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/183273662/suzanne-watt Suzanne Wheeler Watt] Her research has corrected a mistake concerning the burial of [[Draper-40|Thomas Draper Jr.]] We are indebted to Georgia Tuck, Lebanon, MO for the names and birth dates of Thomas’ and Sarah Draper's children: IF WE HAVE LEFT ANYBODY OUT, PLEASE EMAIL ME. davedraperbloomington@gmail.com OR USE THE WikiTree "Send Private Message" IN MY PROFILE: '''[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Draper-4171 Dave Draper WikiTree Profile]''' =='''LINKS'''== https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/4/42/Research_Notes_Experimenting_with_Code-1.jpg *'''[https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Space:Draper_Family_Stories_by_The_Draper_Family&public=1 DRAPER FAMILY STORIES Collected by The Draper Family]''' *'''[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Draper-4171 DAVE DRAPER WIKITREE PROFILE]''' end

Farnworth Chapel - baptism index

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'''Farnworth Chapel of Ease''' in the ancient parish of Prescot, a chapel dedicated to St Wilfred, became a separate parish in 1859 at which time the church was rededicated to St Luke. :21 Oct 1770 - [[Penketh-92|James Penketh]] :24 Jul 1774 - [[Miller-86888|Mary Miller]] :7 Sep 1777 - [[Nailor-110|Thomas Naylor]] (?) :29 Jun 1788 - [[Glover-10032|James Glover]] :27 Sep 1789 - [[Young-46052|Isaac Young]] :25 Oct 1789 - [[Clithero-43|Ellen Clithero]] :5 Jun 1791 - [[Hill-47311|Mary Hill]] :15 Sep 1793 - [[Penketh-20|Rachel Penketh]] :14 Sep 1794 - [[Clithero-44|Hannah Clithero]] :29 Oct 1797 - [[Hill-47316|Sarah Hill]] :7 Sep 1800 - [[Ratcliff-2435|Ellen Ratcliff]] :29 Jul 1804 - [[Young-46043|Betty Young]] :26 May 1805 - [[Rigby-2676|Joseph Rigby]] :1 Jun 1806 - [[Hosker-18|Peter Hosker]] :10 May 1807 - [[Young-46057|Rachel Young]] :25 Jun 1809 - [[Fenney-73|Esther Fenney]] :12 Sep 1813 - [[Rigby-2678|Peter Rigby]] :5 Dec 1813 - [[Musket-8|Jane Musket]] :24 Jul 1814 - [[Houghton-3840|James Houghton]] :26 Mar 1815 - [[Musket-9|Mary Musket]] :11 Oct 1815 - [[Hosker-19|Henry Hosker]] :15 Oct 1815 - [[Rigby-1276|Peter Rigby]] :31 Dec 1815 - [[Houghton-3426|James Houghton]] (?) :1 Dec 1819 - [[Moss-8583|Mary Moss]] :30 Apr 1826 - [[Muskit-1|William Muskit]] :1 Oct 1826 - [[Ansdell-17|Richard Ansdell]] :7 Sep 1827 - [[Conyers-958|Ann Coniers]] :5 Jul 1829 - [[Massey-6983|Henry Massey]] :28 Aug 1831 - [[Ansdell-18|Thomas Roscoe Ansdell]] :7 Apr 1833 - [[Critchley-584|Elisabeth Critchley]] :29 Mar 1835 - [[Critchley-585|Henry Critchley]] :10 May 1835 - [[Lucas-12287|Alice Lucas]] :27 Sep 1835 - [[Thompson-61231|Henrietta Louisa Thompson]] :21 Mar 1836 - [[Milsom-216|Frances Milson]] :1 Mar 1837 - [[Moss-8585|James Moss]] :15 Apr 1838 - [[Rigby-2679|Sarah Rigby]] :10 May 1841 - [[William Priestley]] & [[Rylance-136|Mary Rylance]] :24 Mar 1850 - [[Critchley-397|James Critchley]]

Farnworth Chapel - burial index

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'''Farnworth Chapel of Ease''' in the ancient parish of Prescot, a chapel dedicated to St Wilfred, became a separate parish in 1859 at which time the church was rededicated to St Luke. :10 Jun 1799 [[Penketh-93|Elizabeth Penketh]] (?) :23 Feb 1808 [[Penketh-94|Elizabeth Penketh]] (?) :13 Jun 1818 [[Bradshaw-7259|Sarah Rigby]] :9 Feb 1840 [[Hall-55811|John Hall]] :27 Feb 1840 [[Critchley-586|John Critchley]] :8 Mar 1840 [[Critchley-419|William Critchley]] :31 Dec 1840 [[Ellison-4582|Joseph Ellison]] :30 Jul 1841 [[Roscoe-442|Alice Ansdell]] :20 Jul 1842 [[Richardson-29681|Elizabeth Gerrard]] :4 Apr 1844 [[Molyneux-905|Elizabeth Critchley]] :4 Feb 1846 [[Hosker-17|Peter Hosker]] :4 Feb 1847 [[Tinsley-1653|Mary Tinsley]] (??) :1 Jun 1851 [[Lyon-7063|Thomas Lyon]] :15 Dec 1854 [[Kenwright-9|Hannah Hosker]] :5 Aug 1855 [[Ansdell-14|John Ansdell]] :15 Sep 1896 Rebecca Cashion - possibly wife of [[Cassion-1|John Cassion]] but age off :28 Feb 1899 [[Dagnall-108|Tabitha Calland]]

Farnworth Chapel - marriage index

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'''Farnworth Chapel of Ease''' in the ancient parish of Prescot, a chapel dedicated to St Wilfred, became a separate parish in 1859 at which time the church was rededicated to St Luke. :13 Aug 1775 - [[Tarbuck-53|James Tarbuck]] & [[Alice Ashton]] :6 May 1776 - [[Appleton-1423|Samuel Appleton]] & Margaret Hatton :11 Jun 1783 - [[Hewit-142|Joshua Hewitt]] & [[Lydia Ashcroft]] :26 Oct 1785 - [[Mercer-6360|John Rigby Mercer]] & [[Tarbock-4|Sarah Tarbuck]] :22 May 1788 - [[Johnson-121821|John Johnson]] & [[Betty Sephton]] :10 Aug 1788 - [[Hewitt-5931|Joshua Hewitt]] & [[Ann Rimmer]] :14 Apr 1793 - [[Fairclough-367|Joshua Fairclough]] & [[Jane Pickavance]] :6 May 1793 - [[Tatlock-6|James Tatlock]] & [[Stockley-117|Catherine Stockley]] :23 Jun 1793 - [[Thomas Bradshaw]] & [[Bold-438|Elizabeth Bold]] :12 Jan 1794 - [[Peter Liver]] & [[Anderton-1063|Hannah Anderton]] :12 Jan 1796 - [[William Birchall]] & [[Middlehurst-43|Ann Middlehurst]] :26 Feb 1797 - [[Lyon-6969|Joseph Lyon]] & [[Heaps-333|Mary Heaps]] :20 Aug 1797 - [[Bacon-8701|Robert Bacon]] & [[Lyon-8415|Mary Lyon]] :3 Dec 1797 - [[Thomas Tickle]] & [[Welsby-119|Sarah Welsby]] :30 Sep 1798 - [[Roscoe-624|William Roscoe]] & [[Giles-7161|Elizabeth Giles]] :10 Jun 1799 - [[Roughley-358|Edward Roughley]] & [[Ellen Littler]] :17 Nov 1799 - [[Stanley-4470|James Stanley]] & [[Parker-6584|Elizabeth Parker]] :10 Aug 1802 - [[Hesketh-612|Henry Hesketh]] & [[Elizabeth Harrison]] :7 Sep 1802 - [[Shaw-22262|James Shaw]] & [[Wain-338|Martha Wain]] :11 Dec 1802 - [[Ward-44619|William Marsh Ward]] & [[Rose-23524|Elizabeth Rose]] :19 Dec 1802 - [[Surman-242|Benjamin Surman]] & [[Williamson-15138|Sarah Williamson]] :31 Jan 1803 - [[Arnold-22697|Henry Arnold]] & [[Mary Appleton]] :31 Jan 1803 - [[Ford-14244|Richard Ford]] & [[Mary Leyland]] :28 Mar 1803 - John Adamson & [[Arden-377|Ellen Arden]] :15 May 1803 - [[Pendleton-2617|Peter Pendleton]] & [[Barrow-2868|Martha Barrow]] :12 Jun 1803 - [[Mercer-5977|William Mercer]] & [[Woods-20337|Mary Woods]] :15 Aug 1803 - [[Cartwright-3279|John Cartwright]] & [[Ann Holland]] :9 Oct 1803 - [[Stott-1027|Henry Stott]] & [[Jane Hughes]] :6 Nov 1803 - [[Forber-49|John Forber]] & [[Shuttleworth-805|Grace Shuttleworth]] :2 Sep 1804 - [[Edward Reed]] & [[Atherton-2592|Ellen Atherton]] :3 Sep 1804 - [[Peter Leyland]] & [[Wainwright-1708|Martha Wainwright]] :16 Sep 1805 - [[Chorley-126|Matthew Chorley]] & [[Stott-970|Ellen Stott]] :23 Sep 1805 - [[Mercer-5058|Silvester Mercer]] & [[Mary Glover]] :6 Jan 1806 - [[Wilcock-66|William Wilcock]] & [[Mann-12323|Margaret Mann]] :30 Mar 1807 - [[Birchall-544|Thomas Birchall]] & [[Simkin-138|Ann Simkin]] :10 May 1807 - [[Henry Howard]] & [[Lyon-7843|Catherine Lyon]] :17 Aug 1807 - [[Platt-3031|William Platt]] & [[Ellen Marsh]] :24 Aug 1807 - [[Ashcroft-1056|William Ashcroft]] & [[Marsh-12786|Elizabeth Marsh]] :14 Aug 1808 - [[Sephton-238|Peter Sephton]] & [[Ann Woods]] :28 Aug 1808 - [[Edward Howard]] & [[Johnson-107093|Esther Johnson]] :11 Sep 1808 - [[Bibbey-54|John Bibbey]] & [[Lingard-563|Mary Lingard]] :6 Nov 1808 - [[Forshaw-505|Thomas Forshaw]] & [[Hawksey-5|Mary Hawksey]] :11 Dec 1808 - [[Sixsmith-115|Daniel Sixsmith]] & [[Bolton-5777|Esther Bolton]] :2 Apr 1809 - [[Thomas Lyon]] & [[Chesworth-54|Sarah Chesworth]] :16 Jul 1809 - [[Dennet-86|William Dennet]] & [[Howard-29903|Margaret Howard]] :31 Jul 1809 - [[John Critchley]] & [[Fokes-51|Elizabeth Folks]] :5 Mar 1810 - [[Robinson-38368|Robert Robinson]] & [[Mary Atherton]] :14 May 1810 - [[Thompson-78185|James Thompson]] & [[Foster-31694|Elizabeth Foster]] :5 Aug 1810 - [[Sanders-17758|Hugh Sanders]] & [[Lawrenson-139|Ellen Lawrenson]] :15 Oct 1810 - [[Plumbley-59|James Plumbley]] & [[Fairclough-550|Elizabeth Fairclough]] :5 Nov 1810 - [[Lyon-7735|Peter Lyon]] & [[Mann-13402|Ann Mann]] :24 Feb 1811 - [[Cole-23501|Thomas Cole]] & [[Cross-9766|Jane Cross]] :25 Mar 1811 - [[Henry Mercer]] & [[Brown-157235|Margaret Brown]] :25 Mar 1811 - [[Young-46052|Isaac Young]] & [[Hollihead-8|Mary Holyhead]] :6 Oct 1811 - [[Dagnall-107|William Dagnall]] & [[Eccleston-466|Jane Eccleston]] :10 Feb 1812 - [[Jam. Beesley]] & [[Brimelow-113|Rachel Bromilow]] :13 Jul 1812 - [[Jaques-879|Samuel Jaques]] & [[Porter-22736|Jane Porter]] :30 Aug 1812 - [[Gore-3601|Robert Gore]] & [[Blease-141|Fanny Bleaze]] :15 Nov 1812 - [[Glover-10035|James Glover]] & [[Elizabeth Cunliff]] :27 Dec 1812 - [[Pye-1204|Richard Pye]] & [[Halewood-72|Ann Halewood]] :22 Feb 1813 - [[Davies-14421|Richard Davies]] & [[Seddon-4832|Alice Sedden]] :14 Aug 1814 - [[Sim-899|James Sim]] & [[Harrison-23197|Ann Harrison]] :28 Nov 1814 - John Johnson & [[Bate-1215|Mary Bate]] :5 Feb 1815 - [[Rigby-460|Thomas Rigby]] & [[Sarah Woodward]] :5 Mar 1815 - [[Mollineux-20|Edward Mollineux]] & [[Tatlock-230|Ann Tatlock]] :3 Apr 1815 - [[Charnock-289|Robert Charnock]] & [[Coppel-11|Isabella Copple]] :16 Jul 1815 - [[Sim-902|Joshua Sim]] & [[Chesworth-54|Sarah Lyon]] :10 Sep 1815 - [[Ward-34954|John Ward]] & [[Cross-10894|Elizabeth Cross]] :24 Sep 1815 - [[William Parr]] & [[Harrison-28901|Bettey Harrison]] :16 Oct 1815 - [[Grundy-802|Francis Grundy]] & [[Bridget Chadwick]] :17 Dec 1815 - [[Hill-58097|Samuel Hill]] & [[Mary Pickvonts]] :12 Nov 1816 - [[Wright-54356|Joseph Wright]] & [[Cox-37002|Mary Cox]] :8 Dec 1816 - [[Bassnett-20|Thomas Bassnett]] & [[Pickering-4367|Ann Pickering]] :26 Jan 1817 - [[Moore-60528|Joseph Moore]] & [[Case-6096|Elizabeth Case]] :13 Jul 1817 - [[Anders-1450|James Anders]] & [[Twist-398|Rebecca Twist]] :16 Oct 1817 - [[Bromilow-145|James Bromilow]] & [[Ludley-22|Margaret Ludley]] :29 Dec 1817 - [[Molyneux-988|Francis Molyneux]] & [[Winstanley-427|Margaret Winstanley]] :6 Apr 1818 - [[Price-29131|Thomas Price]] & [[Mary Bromilow]] :20 Jul 1818 - [[Pye-1143|William Pye]] & [[Elizabeth Phythian]] :27 Jul 1818 - [[Parr-3713|John Parr]] & [[Rigby-1939|Mary Rigby]] :3 Aug 1818 - [[Davis-107114|William Davies]] & [[Mary Platt]] :27 Sep 1818 - [[Burrows-3360|Joseph Burrows]] & [[Hannah Myatt]] :7 Dec 1818 - [[Marsh-8804|William Marsh]] & [[Lawson-9468|Alice Lawson]] :22 Feb 1819 - [[Cross-13638|William Cross]] & [[Holyhead-11|Ellen Holyhead]] :22 Feb 1819 - [[Gore-3183|John Gore]] & [[Lyon-6982|Margaret Lyon]] :2 May 1819 - [[Leyland-414|William Leyland]] & [[Ashall-131|Catharine Ashall]] :18 Jul 1819 - [[John Lloyd]] & [[Sephton-282|Christian Sephton]] :6 Dec 1819 - [[Beesley-548|James Beesley]] & [[Lyon-6968|Ann Lyon]] :10 Jan 1820 - [[Pye-1331|Thomas Pye]] & [[Young-45946|Esther Young]] :16 Apr 1820 - [[David Gillies]] & [[Gore-3054|Alice Gore]] :15 May 1820 - [[Thomas Caldwell]] & [[Speakeman-1|Mary Speakman]] :9 Oct 1820 - [[Fenney-75|John Finney]] & [[Alice Welsby]] :27 Nov 1820 - [[Grundy-137|Ralph Grundy]] & [[Cartwright-609|Jane Cartwright]] :27 Nov 1820 - [[Joseph Toping]] & [[Harrison-28899|Jane Harrison]] :5 Mar 1821 - [[Naylor-2972|William Naylor]] & [[Layland-180|Mary Layland]] :12 Mar 1821 - [[John Sephton]] & [[Latham-3281|Alice Latham]] :20 May 1821 - [[Whalley-697|John Whalley]] & [[Cukit-2|Ann Cukit]] :2 Jul 1821 - [[Jackson-54371|John Jackson]] & [[Burrows-4689|Charlotte Burrows]] :19 May 1822 - [[Varley-823|William Henry Varley]] & [[Scott-59781|Betty Scott]] :1 Sep 1822 - [[Fillingham-4|Samuel Fillingham]] & [[Stockley-74|Phoebe Stockley]] :15 Sep 1822 - [[Saxon-545|James Saxon]] & [[Brierly-148|Mary Brierly]] :4 Nov 1822 - [[Case-7589|Isaac Case]] & [[Turner-43215|Ellen Turner]] :16 Dec 1822 - [[Roughley-235|William Roughley]] & [[Birchall-512|Rachel Birchall]] :3 Feb 1823 - [[Millington-1251|William Millington]] & [[Margaret Sanders]] :14 Apr 1823 - [[Molyneux-1060|John Molyneux]] & [[Fishwick-206|Jane Fishwick]] :6 Jul 1823 - [[John Mulvany]] & [[Hughes-31202|Harriot Hughes]] :18 Aug 1823 - [[Jaques-907|William Jaques]] & [[Rigby-2080|Mary Rigby]] :15 Sep 1823 - [[King-57100|Henry King]] & [[Tither-39|Mary Tither]] :23 Nov 1823 - [[Heaps-340|Benjamin Heaps]] & [[Pilkington-1263|Ann Pilkington]] :1 Dec 1823 - [[Brown-116864|John Brown]] & [[Hesketh-432|Ann Hesketh]] :1 Dec 1823 - [[Nelson-24358|Peter Nelson]] & [[Lancaster-4653|Mary Lancaster]] :28 Dec 1823 - [[Waterworth-284|Charles Waterworth]] & [[Cole-26218|Jemima Cole]] :11 May 1824 - [[Eccleston-591|Isaac Eccleston]] & [[Margaret Jump]] :7 Nov 1824 - [[Fairclough-510|James Fairclough]] & [[Ducker-356|Esther Ducker]] :14 Nov 1824 - [[Tither-23|Thomas Tither]] & [[Brown-129553|Elizabeth Brown]] :12 Dec 1824 - [[Martindale-1482|William Martindale]] & [[Garner-4533|Elizabeth Garner]] :26 Dec 1824 - [[Priestley-1147|Samuel Priestley]] & [[Marsh-13981|Jane Marsh]] :23 Jan 1825 - [[Gee-3268|James Gee]] & [[Latham-3371|Margaret Latham]] :13 Feb 1825 - [[Tickle-581|Robert Tickle]] & [[Naylor-3024|Hannah Naylor]] :4 Apr 1825 - [[Sumner-3634|Thomas Sumner]] & [[Ellison-4604|Mary Ellison]] :4 Jul 1825 - [[Stott-1027|Henry Stott]] & [[Ashcroft-913|Alice Heys]] :18 Sep 1825 - [[Lawrenson-147|Thomas Lawrenson]] & [[Young-46057|Rachel Young]] :11 Dec 1825 - [[Bromilow-95|Enock Bromilow]] & [[Atherton-1995|Ann Atherton]] :2 Jan 1826 - [[Thompson-69174|George Thompson]] & [[Fyldes-4|Mary Fyldes]] :2 Feb 1826 - [[Rigby-460|Thomas Rigby]] & [[Margaret Wilson]] :26 Mar 1826 - [[Davies-17700|William Davies]] & [[Penkethman-42|Alice Penkethman]] :11 Jun 1826 - [[Naylor-3002|Lambert Naylor]] & [[Mary Scott]] :23 Jul 1826 - [[Hurst-1874|James Hurst]] & [[Mary Parr]] :24 Jul 1826 - [[James Fenny]] & [[Martindale-1479|Ellen Martindale]] :9 Oct 1826 - [[Arnold-20332|William Arnold]] & [[Roughsedge-100|Ann Roughsedge]] :16 Oct 1826 - [[Gillicker-1|Edward Jilliker]] & [[Isabella Morris]] :20 Nov 1826 - [[Conyers-957|James Conyers]] & [[Harper-16997|Ann Harper]] :24 Dec 1826 - [[Richard Longworth]] & [[Knight-22306|Ellen Knight]] :15 Jan 1827 - [[Wilson-113719|Joseph Wilson]] & [[Bibby-981|Ann Bibby]] :28 Jan 1827 - [[John Gee]] & [[Lythgoe-205|Mary Lythgoe]] :18 Feb 1827 - [[William Heyes]] & [[Fenney-74|Margaret Fenney]] :11 Mar 1827 - [[Hunter-3950|James Hunter]] & [[Pendleton-2696|Frances Pendleton]] :30 Apr 1827 - [[Dearden-233|Ralph Dearden]] & [[Pinnington-49|Elizabeth Pennington]] :14 Aug 1827 - [[Walker-67314|James Walker]] & [[Margaret Houghton]] :16 Nov 1827 - [[Rigby-2357|John Rigby]] & [[Glover-9657|Ann Glover]] :17 Dec 1827 - [[Howard-26240|Henry Howard]] & [[Thompson-67836|Margaret Thompson]] :5 Feb 1828 - [[Atherton-1879|Thomas Atherton]] & [[Hooley-2152|Mary Hooley]] :10 Aug 1828 - [[Forber-31|Joseph Forber]] & [[Garner-6574|Elizabeth Garner]] :13 Oct 1828 - [[Arnold-22984|William Arnold]] & [[White-82291|Ellen White]] :2 Feb 1829 - [[Jackson-38125|Richard Jackson]] & [[Cartwright-3278|Alice Cartwright]] :9 Feb 1829 - [[Bigerstaff-1|Robert Bickerstaff]] & [[Sixsmith-124|Mary Sixsmith]] :22 Feb 1829 - [[Seddon-10688|Edward Seddon]] & [[Ashton-2261|Elizabeth Ashton]] :2 Mar 1829 - [[Jaques-909|Thomas Jaques]] & [[Elizabeth Lydiate]] :7 Jun 1829 - [[Coulter-4360|William Coulter]] & [[Plumbley-85|Ann Plumbley]] :5 Jul 1829 - [[Joseph Scott]] & [[Vose-960|Margaret Vose]] :26 Jul 1829 - [[Knowles-6978|David Knowles]] & [[Bate-1152|Ellen Bate]] :29 Nov 1829 - [[Glover-6960|John Glover]] & [[Winstanley-337|Mary Winstanley]] :27 Dec 1829 - [[Winstanley-480|Henry Winstanley]] & [[Williams-114038|Margaret Williams]] :10 May 1830 - [[Gee-4203|William Gee]] & [[Alice Parr]] :6 Jun 1830 - [[Finney-2330|James Finney]] & [[Tatlock-229|Phebe Tatlock]] :26 Sep 1830 - [[Heyes-167|John Heyes]] & [[Bate-1208|Ann Bate]] :17 Oct 1830 - [[Gerard-1755|William Gerrard]] & [[Jackson-58547|Sarah Jackson]] :22 Nov 1830 - [[Parr-3774|Joseph Parr]] & [[Hankinson-667|Agnes Hankinson]] :28 Nov 1830 - [[Forber-37|Edward Forber]] & [[Atherton-2012|Elizabeth Atherton]] :16 Jan 1831 - [[Farrar-3898|James Farrar]] & [[Harper-16769|Sarah Harper]] :13 Feb 1831 - [[Ashcroft-935|Thomas Ashcroft]] & [[Lyon-6978|Sarah Lyon]] :13 Feb 1831 - [[Wild-2248|John Wild]] & [[Tickle-531|Ellen Thompson]] :8 Mar 1831 - [[Pigot-166|James Pigot]] & [[Tarbuck-30|Mary Tarbuck]] :15 May 1831 - [[Roscow-65|Matthew Roscow]] & [[Mather-2160|Mary Mather]] :14 Aug 1831 - [[Johnson-91255|Matthew Johnson]] & [[Kilshaw-61|Ann Kilshaw]] :16 Oct 1831 - [[Cross-10801|James Cross]] & Hannah Briscoe :23 Oct 1831 - [[Grayson-1160|Edward Grayson]] & [[Mary Burrows]] :5 Dec 1831 - [[Platt-2710|James Platt]] & [[Atherton-1952|Elizabeth Atherton]] :4 Mar 1832 - [[Denton-4664|John Denton]] & [[Anderton-905|Elizabeth Anderton]] :4 Mar 1832 - [[Price-29145|Charles Price]] & [[Mary Byron]] :6 Mar 1832 - [[Hurst-4486|Henry Hurst]] & [[Peters-14674|Mary Peters]] :27 May 1832 - [[Large-1880|William Large]] & [[Read-8785|Ellen Read]] :22 Jul 1832 - [[Prescot-58|William Prescot]] & [[Chorley-143|Jane Chorley]] :27 Aug 1832 - [[White-68438|William White]] & [[Pickavance-86|Jane Pickavance]] :9 Sep 1833 - [[James Hewitt]] & [[Bacon-8702|Mary Bacon]] :9 Sep 1833 - [[Daniel Houghton]] & [[Lyon-7736|Ellen Lyon]] :15 Sep 1833 - [[Millington-1031|Andrew Millington]] & [[Roughley-238|Mary Roughley]] :29 Sep 1833 - [[Howard-30098|Thomas Howard]] & [[Sixsmith-80|Ann Sixsmith]] :6 Oct 1833 - [[Brown-62983|James Brown]] & [[Trantum-10|Lucy Trantum]] :11 Oct 1833 - [[George Shaw]] & [[Fenney-73|Esther Fenney]] :10 Nov 1833 - [[Bibby-650|John Bibby]] & [[Hill-47734|Margaret Hill]] :5 Jan 1834 - [[Graham-24067|Joseph Graham]] & [[Pendleton-2620|Ann Pendleton]] :26 Jan 1834 - [[Platt-4217|James Platt]] & [[Mercer-5905|Elizabeth Mercer]] :2 Feb 1834 - [[Denton-5055|William Denton]] & [[Wilcock-520|Wilcock]] :9 Feb 1834 - [[Fillingham-295|Anthony Fillingham]] & [[Chorley-193|Esther Chorley]] :16 Mar 1834 - [[Davis-89477|Samuel Davis]] & [[Pinnington-99|Ellen Pinnington]] :7 Apr 1834 - [[Hankinson-574|James Hankinson]] & [[Mills-19651|Mary Mills/Milns]] :11 May 1834 - [[Fairclough-411|Edward Fairclough]] & [[Mousdell-2|Mary Mousdell]] :11 May 1834 - [[Hardman-1763|Henry Hardman]] & [[Helsby-218|Ann Helsby]] :18 May 1834 - [[Sephton-271|John Sephton]] & [[Pickavance-75|Jane Pickavance]] :13 Jul 1834 - [[Green-37849|James Green]] & [[Esther Taylor]] :28 Jul 1834 - [[Robinson-52350|Richard Robinson]] & [[Hughes-27718|Elizabeth Hughes]] :18 Aug 1834 - [[Harrison-23220|James Harrison]] & [[Leyland-306|Tabitha Leyland]] :30 Sep 1834 - [[Houghton-4190|John Houghton]] & [[Webster-14525|Ellen Webster]] :12 Oct 1834 - [[Davies-17219|William Davies]] & [[Ellen Williams]] :15 Dec 1834 - [[Platt-3035|William Platt]] & [[Jane Knight]] :2 Feb 1835 - [[Calland-163|John Calland]] & [[Dagnall-108|Tabitha Dagnall]] :11 Feb 1835 - [[Tinsley-1652|John Tinsley]] & [[Robinson-46716|Ann Robinson]] :11 Mar 1835 - [[Arnold-22697|Henry Arnold]] & [[Twist-518|Sarah Grounds]] :27 Apr 1835 - [[Thomas Lloyd]] & [[Ball-22748|Elizabeth Ball]] :3 May 1835 - [[Pinnington-15|John Pinnington]] & [[Cartwright-613|Margaret Cartwright]] :11 May 1835 - [[John Kennion]] & [[Martindale-1510|Elizabeth Marcleton]] :17 May 1835 - [[Holden-5894|George Holden]] & [[Woods-16950|Esther Woods]] :21 Jun 1835 - [[William Cornwell]] & [[Briers-232|Ann Briers]] :21 Jun 1835 - [[Hurst-6691|John Hurst]] & [[Tunstall-801|Elizabeth Tunstall]] :3 Aug 1835 - [[Travis-4383|William Traverse]] & [[Goodall-2019|Mary Ann Goodall]] :31 Aug 1835 - [[Lea-2257|James Lea]] & [[Hughes-28674|Ann Hughes]] :27 Sep 1835 - [[Foster-37002|Thomas Foster]] & [[Middlehurst-49|Ann Middlehurst]] :16 Nov 1835 - [[Pinnington-95|William Pinnington]] & [[Stott-1055|Elizabeth Stott]] :31 Dec 1835 - [[Sephton-283|James Sephton]] & [[Bibby-686|Susannah Bibby]] :14 Feb 1836 - [[Jaques-908|Richard Jaques]] & [[Marsh-11817|Jane Marsh]] :15 Feb 1836 - [[Thrilwind-3|John Thrilwind]] & [[Durdam-1|Alice Durdam]] :3 Apr 1836 - [[Fairclough-665|John Fairclough]] & [[Trantum-12|Mary Trantum]] :10 Jul 1836 - [[Palmer-24856|Richard Palmer]] & [[Mason-19976|Margaret Mason]] :11 Jul 1836 - [[Rowson-245|Edward Rawson]] & [[Forshaw-513|Margaret Forshaw]] :14 Aug 1836 - [[Bradshaw-6718|William Bradshaw]] & [[Harrison-28899|Jane Topping]] :7 Sep 1836 - [[Forber-55|Peter Forber]] & [[Rigby-2107|Martha Rigby]] :25 Sep 1836 - [[James Harrison]] & [[Twist-359|Catherine Twist]] :26 Oct 1836 - [[Paul Hewitt]] & [[Hollihead-7|Sarah Hollihead]] :31 Oct 1836 - [[Johnson-108194|Robert Johnson]] & [[Houghton-3742|Jane Houghton]] :7 Nov 1836 - [[Kennion-8|Stephen Kenyon]] & [[Lloyd-11610|Ellen Lloyd]] :24 Nov 1836 - [[Hewitt-6530|James Hewitt]] & [[Hankinson-668|Margaret Hankinson]] :16 Jan 1837 - [[Appleton-2071|John Appleton]] & [[Mary Ann Ridgway]] :9 Apr 1837 - [[Fazakerley-55|John Fazakerley]] & [[Duckworth-2479|Martha Duckworth]] :29 May 1837 - [[William Anders]] & [[Pickett-3034|Mary Pickett]] :2 Jul 1837 - [[Lyon-6936|William Lyon]] & [[Houghton-3619|Esther Houghton]] :25 Jul 1837 - [[Boardman-2894|Edward Boardman]] & [[Elizabeth Bate]] :6 Aug 1837 - [[Burril-21|William Burril]] & [[Lydiart-1|Ann Lydiart]] :28 Aug 1837 - [[Lyon-7734|Peter Lyon]] & [[Woods-18069|Esther Goulding]] :11 Sep 1837 - [[Anderton-765|Richard Anderton]] & [[Heaps-335|Ann Heaps]] :22 Oct 1837 - [[Colquit-21|William Colquit]] & [[Culshaw-109|Mary Hunter]] :27 Nov 1837 - [[Twist-173|Henry Twist]] & [[Moore-29590|Elizabeth Moore]] :21 Jan 1838 - [[Fairclough-706|Richard Fairclough]] & [[Price-32351|Martha Price]] :11 Feb 1838 - [[Penketh-78|George Penketh]] & [[Ellen Pinnington]] :15 Feb 1838 - [[Hewit-133|Joseph Hewit]] & [[Eaton-9952|Mary Eaton]] :1 Apr 1838 - [[Bullock-6390|John Bullock]] & [[Harrison-26785|Elizabeth Harrison]] :29 Apr 1838 - [[Gregson-1134|James Gregson]] & [[Harrison-25369|Elizabeth Harrison]] :7 May 1838 - [[Wright-54752|William Wright]] & [[Ann Mills]] :29 Jul 1838 - [[Johnson-112178|Richard Johnson]] & [[Thompson-68972|Agnes Thompson]] :15 Oct 1838 - [[Ratcliffe-1532|John Ratcliff]] & [[Barrow-3667|Ann Adamson]] :21 Oct 1838 - [[Aspinall-497|Samuel Aspinall]] & [[Unknown-532415|Mary Hill]] :4 Nov 1838 - [[Pinnington-101|Paul Pinnington]] & [[Lawrenson-140|Margaret Lawrenson]] :5 Nov 1838 - [[Lawrence Williams]] & [[Vose-931|Ellen Vose]] :28 Dec 1838 - [[William Leyland]] & [[Stephens-15013|Hannah Stephens]] :31 Mar 1839 - [[Dagnall-145|Richard Dagnall]] & [[Nailor-109|Ann Naylor]] :22 Apr 1839 - [[Travers-990|John Travers]] & [[Sankey-370|Sarah Ellison]] :9 Jun 1839 - [[Ward-37697|Charles Ward]] & [[Cheetham-682|Alice Cheetham]] :22 Jul 1839 - [[Prescot-70|William Prescot]] & [[Stott-1197|Ann Stott]] :28 Jul 1839 - [[Briers-291|William Briers]] & [[Burrows-5312|Alice Burrows]] :10 Nov 1839 - [[Fairhurst-281|William Fairhurst]] & [[Hughes-21791|Jane Hughes]] :11 Nov 1839 - [[Kay-3845|Peter Kay]] & [[Martha Tickle]] :2 Dec 1839 - [[Ashall-85|John Ashall]] & [[Howard-26592|Elizabeth Owen]] :29 Dec 1839 - [[Johnson-54329|James Johnson]] & [[Mary Hall]] :13 Jan 1840 - [[Webster-16789|George Webster]] & [[Holyhead-19|Margaret Gilbert]] :6 Feb 1840 - [[Lupton-899|George Lupton]] & [[Hollihead-7|Sarah Hewitt]] :5 Jul 1840 - [[Rigby-1620|James Rigby]] & [[Allen-51597|Elizabeth Allen]] :12 Jul 1840 - [[Finney-2523|James Finney]] & [[Scarisbrick-55|Elizabeth Scarisbrick]] :23 Aug 1840 - [[Molineux-186|James Molineux]] & [[Pinnington-100|Mary Pinnington]] :6 Sep 1840 - [[Devenport-111|George Devenport]] & [[Burrows-3359|Mary Burrows]] :14 Sep 1840 - [[Vose-923|John Vose]] & [[Ranson-496|Elizabeth Ranson]] :7 Oct 1840 - [[Brownbill-18|John Brownbill]] & [[Rigby-459|Martha Rigby]] :26 Dec 1840 - [[Holme-356|John Holme]] & [[Sephton-301|Ann Sephton]] :24 Jan 1841 - [[Smith-277746|James Smith]] & [[Williams-113619|Mary Williams]] :11 April 1841 - [[Barker-3074|John Barker]] & [[Cartwright-608|Elizabeth Cartwright]] :20 Jun 1841 - [[Martindale-1554|Henry Martindale]] & [[Hazleden-5|Mary Ann Hazleden]] :17 Oct 1841 - [[Anders-1385|John Anders]] & [[Sixsmith-67|Rachel Sixsmith]] :18 Oct 1841 - [[Pendleton-2622|John Pendleton]] & [[Edwards-32480|Jane Edwards]] :21 Nov 1841 - [[Walker-19299|Thomas Walker]] & [[Finney-638|Hannah Finney]] :20 Feb 1842 - [[Pendleton-2624|Mary Pendleton]] & [[Taylor-75206|William Taylor]] :3 Jul 1842 - [[Hunt-23651|Thomas Hunt]] & [[Mary Shaw]] :3 Jul 1842 - [[Singleton-4258|William Singleton]] & [[Ann Harrison]] :25 Jul 1842 - [[Pickavance-89|John Pickavance]] & [[Worrall-918|Bridget Worrall]] :31 Jul 1842 - [[Halsall-43|Thomas Halsall]] & [[Atherton-278|Catherine Atherton]] :16 Oct 1842 - [[Burrows-3360|Joseph Burrows]] & [[Ellen Anders]] :24 Nov 1842 - [[Kingsley-2095|Peter Kingsley]] & [[Mary Smith]] :29 Jan 1843 - [[Cross-10803|William Cross]] & Margaret Holme :15 May 1843 - [[Matthew Chorley]] & [[Franks-3204|Margaret Franks]] :25 Sep 1843 - [[Thomason-3077|Richard Thomason]] & [[Mary Critchley]] :22 Oct 1843 - [[Fildes-98|Thomas Fildes]] & [[Jane Cole]] :5 Nov 1843 - [[James Leyland]] & [[Foster-33283|Jane Foster]] :10 Dec 1843 - [[McMeal-3|Charles McMil]] & [[Leyland-376|Mary Ann Leyland]] :11 Dec 1843 - [[Thomas Gouldson]] & [[Taylor-100561|Mary Taylor]] :7 Jan 1844 - [[Woods-18225|Charles Woods]] & [[Mary Appleton]] :4 Feb 1844 - [[Pye-1203|William Pye]] & [[Brown-115397|Sarah Brown]] :28 Apr 1844 - [[Lyon-5518|William Lyon]] & [[Rigby-1204|Ann Rigby]] :27 May 1844 - [[William Appleton]] & [[Wright-54755|Jane Wright]] :2 Jun 1844 - [[Thomas Finney]] & [[Howard-29437|Lucy Howard]] :9 Jun 1844 - [[Platt-3397|Edward Platt]] & [[Seddon-14613|Ann Seddon]] :14 Jul 1844 - [[Paterson-1976|Walter Paterson]] & [[Finney-765|Ellen Finney]] :15 Sep 1844 - [[Atherton-855|James Atherton]] & Cicely Millington :15 Sep 1844 - [[Joshua Finney]] & [[Orford-288|Jane Orford]] :11 May 1845 - [[Benjamin Denton]] & [[Hesketh-613|Margaret Hesketh]] :22 Jun 1845 - [[George Ellison]] & [[Naylor-3023|Sarah Naylor]] :15 Sep 1845 - [[Ford-16162|Peter Ford]] & [[Dennett-534|Elizabeth Dennett]] :16 Sep 1845 - [[William Smith]] & [[Owen-11471|Ellen Owen]] :30 Oct 1845 - [[William Scarisbrick]] & [[Norris-11494|Margaret Norris]] :30 Nov 1845 - [[Hulme-1013|John Hulme]] & [[Rigby-2383|Ann Rigby]] :8 Feb 1846 - [[Davies-14423|Richard Davies]] & [[Jane Davies]] :13 Sep 1846 - [[Platt-3719|Richard Platt]] & [[Alice Whally]] :13 Sep 1846 - [[James Colquit]] & [[Spencer-25100|Catherine Spencer]] :20 Sep 1846 - [[Ford-14241|Richard Ford]] & [[Hannah Houghton]] :16 May 1847 - [[Edward Atkinson]] & [[Fairclough-561|Margaret Fairclough]] :20 Jun 1847 - [[Martindale-1597|William Martindale]] & [[Saunders-13204|Lydia Sanders]] :19 Jul 1847 - [[Ashall-86|Peter Ashall]] & Thomasin Parr :1 Aug 1847 - [[Isaac Kelshaw]] & [[Mulvany-89|Ann Mulvany]] :5 Sep 1847 - [[Thomas Jones]] & [[Roberts-37890|Elinor Roberts]] :12 Dec 1847 - [[Foster-24304|Thomas Foster]] & [[Fairclough-366|Ann Fairclough]] :20 Feb 1848 - [[Clitherow-32|George Clitherow]] & [[Elizabeth Parr]] :19 Jun 1848 - [[Muskit-1|William Muskett]] & [[Mary Taylor]] :25 Jun 1848 - [[Coulter-4360|William Coulter]] & [[Ellen Clayton]] :26 Jun 1848 - [[Glover-10033|William Glover]] & [[Ann Constantine]] :17 Jul 1848 - [[Mills-21679|James Mills]] & [[Mary Rose]] :14 Jan 1849 - [[Thomas Davies]] & [[Walker-67313|Elizabeth Walker]] :1 Apr 1849 - [[Pennington-6766|William Pinnington]] & [[Price-32351|Martha Fairclough]] :8 Apr 1849 - [[Grundy-722|Ralph Grundy]] & [[Pye-1144|Ann Pye]] :30 Apr 1849 - [[Gee-3268|James Gee]] & [[Ann Clarke]] :1 Jul 1849 - [[Jenkins-15817|John Jenkins]] & [[Stephens-13028|Esther Stevens]] :26 Aug 1849 - [[Hurst-1874|James Hurst]] & [[Alice Willis]] :4 Nov 1849 - [[Hewitt-6993|Thomas Hewit]] & [[Mary Dennet]] :2 Dec 1849 - [[Bridge-2874|Peter Bridge]] & [[Martha Battersby]] :21 Apr 1850 - [[Hugh Spencer]] & [[Towlerton-14|Mary Towlerton]] :20 May 1850 - [[Wilcock-365|Stephen Willcocks]] & [[Smith-252823|Eliza Smith]] :13 Jun 1850 - [[Wood-53402|Thomas Wood]] & [[Sarah Littler]] :16 Jun 1850 - [[Joseph Brunt]] & [[Boardman-2955|Elizabeth Boardman]] :16 Jun 1850 - [[Rigby-1620|James Rigby]] & [[Holden-5724|Margaret Holden]] :7 Jul 1850 - [[Thomas Ormroyde]] & [[Knowles-10777|Maria Louisa Knowles]] :12 Aug 1850 - [[William Marsh]] & [[Moss-8583|Mary Swift]] :2 Sep 1850 - [[Robinson-45390|James Robinson]] & [[Hughes-24087|Alice Hughes]] :14 Oct 1850 - [[Davies-12970|James Davies]] & [[Jones-125772|Sarah Jones]] :25 Dec 1850 - [[Briers-216|James Briers]] & Ann Denson :29 Dec 1850 - [[Whittle-1784|Benjamin Whittle]] & [[Margaret Holland]] :16 Feb 1851 - [[Seddon-2997|Richard Seddon]] & [[Platt-1485|Mary Platt]] :12 May 1851 - [[Henry Jones]] & [[Bibby-872|Jane Bibby]] :19 May 1851 - John Spencer & [[Glover-7736|Ellen Glover]] :1 Jun 1851 - [[Highcock-19|Thomas Highcock]] & [[Saunders-7602|Jane Saunders]] :9 Jun 1851 - [[Lawrence-15136|William Lawrence]] & [[Marsh-9652|Ann Marsh]] :30 Jun 1851 - [[Lancaster-6302|Thomas Lancaster]] & [[Eccleston-246|Ann Eccleston]] :6 Oct 1851 - [[Richard Sephton]] & [[Hulme-912|Ann Hulme]] :28 Dec 1851 - [[Smith-252819|Elias Smith]] & [[Hall-55932|Sarah Hall]] :22 Feb 1852 - [[Crooks-1386|Thomas Crooks]] & [[Finney-1715|Ellen Finney]] :12 Apr 1852 - [[Houghton-2290|Thomas Houghton]] & [[Nicholson-6198|Ellen Nicholson]] :5 Jul 1852 - [[Garner-3768|George Garner]] & [[Fildes-28|Sarah Fildes]] :25 Jul 1852 - [[Vose-1056|William Vose]] & [[Latham-3673|Olivia Latham]]] :19 Sep 1852 - [[Critchley-327|Peter Critchley]] & [[McCulloch-1420|Elizabeth McCulloch]] :16 Oct 1852 - [[Briers-241|Joseph Briers]] & [[Louisa Dawson]] :31 Oct 1852 - [[Glover-7018|Hugh Glover]] & [[Mary Pye]] :26 Dec 1852 - [[Houghton-2300|Stephen Houghton]] & [[Hulme-530|Mary Hulme]] :20 Mar 1853 - [[Richard Boardman Ellison]] & [[Johnson-109617|Ann Johnson]] :27 Mar 1853 - [[Halsall-72|Edward Halsall]] & [[Norcross-204|Ann Norcross]] :18 Apr 1853 - [[Anderton-906|Henry Anderton]] & Mary Robinson :25 Apr 1853 - [[Roberts-37889|Robert Roberts]] & [[Margaret Twist]] :8 May 1853 - [[Naylor-2575|Joseph Naylor]] & [[Elizabeth Platt]] :15 May 1853 - [[Berry-20051|Peter Berry]] & [[Roughley-282|Ann Roughley]] :1 Oct 1854 - [[McCulley-372|Arthur McCulley]] & [[Ann Hunt]] :30 Oct 1854 - Joseph Hartley & Ellen Boardman granddaughter of [[Rothram-2|Elizbath (Rothram) Boardman (1792-bef.1864)]] (?) :9 Sep 1855 - [[Glover-4588|Jonathan Glover]] & [[Johnson-91254|Elizabeth Johnson]] :20 Apr 1856 - [[Archibald Campbell]] & [[Gorst-193|Mary Bacon]] :11 May 1856 - [[Birch-2526|Nathan Birch]] & [[Garbage-4|Mary Garbige]] :10 Aug 1856 - [[Martindale-1589|Ralph Martindale]] & [[Lofthouse-262|Elizabeth Lofthouse]] :17 Nov 1856 - [[Henry Parr]] & [[Martindale-1479|Ellen Fenney]] :17 Jan 1857 - [[Seddon-7596|Peter Seddon]] & [[Holden-7208|Mary Holden]] :19 Jul 1857 - [[Greenall-158|Edward James Greenall]] & [[Ellen Broadhurst]] :4 Oct 1857 - [[William Roughley]] & [[Muskett-113|Elizabeth Muskett]] :22 Nov 1857 - [[Barr-4876|William Barr]] & Alice Brownbill :25 Dec 1857 - [[Hatton-1951|Robert Hatton]] & [[Welsby-56|Jane Welsby]] :28 Feb 1858 - [[Holden-7819|Richard William Holden]] & [[Elizabeth Topping]] :1 Mar 1858 - [[Bacon-7052|Samuel Bacon]] & [[Tabern-7|Sarah Tabern]] :31 May 1858 - [[Burrows-3284|Thomas Burrows]] & [[Atherton-1587|Ellen Wagstaff]] :29 Nov 1858 - [[Joseph Maley]] & [[Wright-54761|Margaret Wright]] :31 Jan 1859 - [[Fildes-102|Peter Fildes]] & [[Sarah Dockerty]] :23 Aug 1859 - [[Ford-24107|Edward Ford]] & [[Elizabeth Rigby]] :27 Nov 1859 - [[John Mather]] & [[Foster-27752|Ellen Tickle]] :1 Jan 1860 - [[Bate-1719|John Bate]] & [[Martha Case]] :1 Jan 1861 - [[Glover-10033|William Glover]] & [[Elizabeth Wainwright]] :3 Aug 1862 - [[Lythgoe-145|George Lythgoe]] & [[Burrows-3247|Ann Fisher]] :2 Mar 1863 - [[Addison-1331|Joseph Addison]] & [[Tupman-44|Jane Tupman]] :11 Oct 1863 - [[Roberts-37880|Thomas Roberts]] & [[Stephens-13028|Esther Jenkins]] :1 May 1864 - [[John Carroll]] & [[Heath-7266|Mary Ann Heath]] :14 Aug 1864 - [[Yates-6465|John Yates]] & [[Greenough-321|Mary Jane Greenough]] :4 Oct 1864 - [[Glover-7227|James Glover]] & [[Whitfield-2876|Sarah Ann Whitfield]] :23 Oct 1864 - [[Brown-138173|Richard Brown]] & [[Seed-358|Martha Seed]] :12 Aug 1866 - [[Fairhurst-280|James Fairhurst]] & [[Grayson-1159|Mary Grayson]] :31 May 1868 - [[William Henry Baker]] & [[Cork-714|Mathilda Corke]] :20 Aug 1872 - [[Rimmer-716|John Rimmer]] & [[Byrne-5832|Margaret Byrne]] :14 Jul 1873 - [[Critchley-397|James Critchley]] & [[Thompson-60570|Tamar Thompson]] :26 Jun 1875 - [[Hankinson-576|John T Hankinson]] & [[Bate-1213|Margaret Bradbury]] :4 Oct 1879 - [[Dixon-13403|Moses Dixon]] & [[Crow-4027|Johanna Crow]] :27 Nov 1881 - [[Williamson-13791|John Williamson]] & [[Goulding-861|Sarah Ann Maria Golding]] :28 May 1882 - [[Nicholson-9153|William Nicholson]] & [[Leather-218|Esther Leather]] :25 Dec 1882 - [[Kenyon-1863|John Kenyon]] & [[Dickinson-6361|Alice (Dickinson) Whitfield]] :14 June 1886 - [[Profitt-143|George Profitt]] & [[Phythian-118|Lucy Emma Phythian]] :13 Aug 1905 - [[Kenyon-2286|Roger Kenyon]] & [[Manifold-496|Clara Manifold]]

Farr family group

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The goal of this project is to research the Farr history. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Eustes-1|Barb Burch]]. Not really some of the tasks that need to be done. I'll be working on finding my ancestors and would love any help. We may find we are just one large family! * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=24466854 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Farrant’s in U.K., USA, Canada and Australia

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Kilmer-626|Nelson Kilmer]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=24414617 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Farrar

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The Farrar study is open to all who were born with the surname Farrar or Farrow, and are of English ancestry or any variant except Ferris, Farris, Farrier. What is sought is a common English Ancestor. Contrary to some publications, the name is not a derivative of Ferrer or Ferrers and it is not proven that the English line descends from Henry de Ferrers. Especially desired are males who will test their YDNA. Three English varieties have been found, Danish/Saxon or haplogroup I1, aboriginal Brit haplogroup R1b1 and Eurasian R1a1a1b2. See: www.worldfamilies.net/surnames/farrar

Farrell Family Tree

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Barnes-18954|Jody Barnes]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=25107582 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Farris one name study

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Farris-740|Melissa Farris]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10234223 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FARROW / MASTERSON

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The goal of this project is to find SOURCE DOCUMENTATION for the marriage of Joseph FARROW (b. 1742) and Elizabeth MASTERSON (b. 1744) of Virginia. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Wood-4955|Mike Wood]]. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=3402273 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Farwell Roots

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Farwell-497|Carol Kelly]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=18516950 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fasby family

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The goal of this project is to find the ancestors of William Fasby a Naval Captain who died 1.9.1711 in Rochester Kent, UK and was buried 24.9.1711 at St Alphege, Greenwich, Kent. His wife Judith was also buried there 22.12.1704. They had at least 7 children, but only a daughter Elizabeth baptised 11.10.1668, St Alphege appears to have survived and went onto marry Mathias Fletcher (HIs name is spelt variously Faseby ffasbee ffaceby ffacebie) ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Bower-2776|DP Bower]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Marriage to Judith ?? before 1660 * His Birth or baptism and his parents * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=24177083 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fasnakyle Free Church

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Fasnakyle_Free_Church.jpg
{{Image|file=Fasnakyle_Free_Church.jpg|align=c|size=l||caption=Photograph of Fasnakyle Free Church as it appears today.}} The Free Church at Fasnakyle is located off the present-day Glen Affrick Road at DMS coordinates: [https://geohack.toolforge.org/geohack.php?params=57_19_28_N_4_47_43.47_W 57°19'28"N, 4°47'43"W] The church was described in the Ordnance Survey Name Book as follows:
"FREE CHURCH [Fasnakyle] [...] A neat building, erected in 1870 by private Subscription for the accomodation of the inhabitants in the Western portion of the Parish, Seated for 600, it is Situated 1¾ miles south of Cannich".
The church appears to have been planned and built by the long-serving minister, [[Fraser-8866|Rev Mr Colin Fraser (abt.1807-1889)]] before he retired due to failing eyesight. In correspondence with the editor of the Inverness Courier in 1868 Rev Fraser is quoted as follows:
"At the commencement of this century there were very few Protestants in the upper district of Strathglass; there is now a considerable number, and they need a church […] The mission, 34 miles in length, I divided into two districts. I said we had a small church in the lower district, supplying the wants of about seven miles of country, so that there were twenty-seven miles left for the upper district, for which the new church was wanted."
[Source: "Church Accommodation in Strathglass," The Inverness Courier [Scotland], 13 February 1868, page 5, column 5; British Newspaper Archive, database with images (https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk : accessed 22 October 2020), citing Rev. C. Fraser, Strathglass.] For more informaiton, please see the entry for [http://www.strathglass-heritage.co.uk/fasnakyle-free-church/ Fasnakyle Free Church], written by the Strathglass Heritage Association.

Fat Boys RC

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A loose association of like minded gentlemen who meet on a regular basis to undertake practical research into the fitness of elderly alcoholics.

Fatal Brake Outing Alverstoke Man's Fall

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'''Portsmouth Evening News 20 September 1909 Page 5''' There was an exceedingly sad termination to a Gosport brake outing on Saturday. James Ings, 49, a pensioner from the Navy, and a labourer in the employ of Mr Lear, of Alverstoke, went with a party of other men to Finchdean in one of Mr Tutt's brakes. On the return journey, a call was made at the "Bugle" Hotel, Fareham, about 9.15 p.m. Ings and others got to partake of refreshment, and the conductor went to the horses' heads to give them some water. The deceased was boarding the brake again and was handing a bunch of flowers to his adopted son, Richard Saunders when the horses suddenly moved forward. Ings fell backwards into the road and it was found that he had sustained an injury to the base of the skull. Dr Brook, of Fareham, was sent for and attended promptly and Ing was afterwards removed to his home, 10 Mayfield Road, Alverstoke. There Dr P.M.Terry attended him but he died at 8.30 am on Sunday. An inquest will be held. '''Hampshire Telegraph 25 September 1909 Page 5'''

Fatal Shampoo, Kensington Coroner's Court

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'''The following account of the Coroner's Inquest into the death of [[Dalrymple-513|Lady Helenora Elphinstone-Dalrymple]] is transcribed from the Wells Journal - Thursday 22 July 1909 - pg. 3''' ==FATAL SHAMPOO.== ==== BARONET’S DAUGHTER DIES SUDDENLY AT HAIRDRESSER’S. ==== The case of a baronet’s daughter who died whilst having her hair shampooed at the hairdressing rooms of Harrod’s Stores, Ltd., last Monday, was investigated by Mr. C. Luxmoore Drew, at the Kensington Coroner’s Court, on Thursday. The unfortunate young lady was Miss Helenora Catherine Horn-Elphinstone- Dalrymple, aged 29 years, a daughter of the late [[Dalrymple-512|Sir Robert Graeme Horn-Elphinstone-Dalrymple, Bart.]], lately residing in Alma Terrace, Kensington.
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Cecil,_1st_Viscount_Cecil_of_Chelwood Lord Robert Cecil, K.C., M.P.], who appeared on behalf of Harrod’s Stores, expressed on behalf of the firm their profound sympathy with the deceased lady’s relatives on her death.
[[Dalrymple-511|Lieut. Francis Horn-Elphinstone-Dalrymple]], of the Royal Horse Artillery, stationed at Aldershot, identified the deceased as his sister, and said that she enjoyed very good health.
Beatrice Clark, a hairdresser employed at Harrod’s Stores, said that she had been a hairdresser , for twelve years. She did not know the deceased, but the lady came to the hairdressing department on Monday, and asked for dry shampoo. She had already been manicured and looked pale. On the previous Thursday witness explained the dry shampoo to the deceased, and told her that the fumes were obnoxious and might make her feel faint. When the deceased came on Monday, the electric fan was working and the windows in the cubicle in which the witness was were open. The process of shampooing was to apply the lotion—a carbon one—to the back of the head. A pan was placed at the back of the head to take the lotion, and the face was covered with a towel, because the lotion irritated the eyes. Another towel was placed at the back. The lotion was applied from a bottle. Witness commenced to apply the shampoo, but within two minutes the deceased became very pale and looked faint, .and then she appeared to collapse, so witness called for assistance. Artificial respiration was performed.
The Coroner: Had she ceased to breathe when you summoned help?—l cannot say.
Witness added that the lotion she used she had not applied in the case of any other customer before at Harrod’s. She had, however, used it for cleaning hair, and had never seen anyone made ill by the process.
The Coroner: How did you know it would make a person ill?—I thought it would make her feel ill because of the smell of the fumes. I have used it on my head.
Replying to Lord Robert Cecil, witness said that towel was placed over the eyes to prevent the lotion trickling into them. An electric fan was used to dry the hair, and was placed near the head.
Answering the Coroner, witness said she had never known an assistant upset by the shampoo.
'''USE OF THE FAN.'''
Miss Edith Mary Dale, living at Langdale, Farnham, a friend of the deceased lady, said she had had her hair done by this particular process at Harrod’s. The first time it was done the assistant explained to her that the fan was used, not to dry the hair, but to blow off the fumes. She had never been upset by the process, although she had noticed an odour as of chloroform. A shampoo lasted about eight minutes. She was told it was a tonic for the hair.
Mr. Stretton (for the family)Joseph Hope Stretton of 7 Serjeants Inn, Temple, London, solicitor. Stretton was also (along with Helenora's brother Francis) a co-executor of her estate. : Did you feel any bad effects? —No, the fan blew like a gale in my face and blew the fumes back.
William Henry Eardley, manager of the hairdresser’s department at Harrod’s, said that the process had been used for over six years.
The Coroner; Have you seen any bad results?
—I have seen one or two slight cases of fainting.
The Coroner asked what precautions were taken, and witness explained that towel was placed over the face and the pan at the back of the head. The operator stood behind applying the lotion, and the fan bIew the fumes away.
What would be the effect of having the fan in front?— The operator would have the fumes blown in her face.
Witness said that he had never known an assistant affected. He was called up on Monday, and found the lady apparently dead. He noticed no fumes, and the windows were open. The lotion was made up by a firm of City chemists, and witness produced the formula. He had never recognised any danger.
Examined by Lord Robert Cecil, the witness said that from 90 to 100 customers used this shampoo daily. Some 20,000 or 30,000 had been dry shampooed by this process, and 14 tons of the liquid had been used, but he had never known any serious case. In one case he had his notice brought to a slight faint. In addition to the use of the shampoo the firm sold a large quantity of it. When he was called to the deceased lady his attention was directed to the tightness of her corsets. Miss Clark was a most capable assistant, and had used a large quantity of this shampoo in the workshop, in which twenty assistants were engaged. This was the only kind of dry shampoo, except spirit, which was not often used, because it was not so volatile.
Dr. Paul Jones, of Walton Place, said that he was called to Harrod’s Stores Monday, and saw the lady lying on the floor of a cubicle, which was about seven feet by twelve feet. The partitions were six feet high. There was plenty of ventilation, but there was an odour of tetra chloride of carbon. The deceased’s face was discoloured and her pupils dilated. The fan was working.
The Coroner: Have you any experience of this shampoo ?
'''FAINTED AFTER SHAMPOO.'''
Witness said that it first came to his notice in 1907, when he saw a lady some time after she had had a shampoo. She was taken faint, and suffered from a rapid irregular pulse for from an hour to an hour and a half. He knew of another case of a healthy woman becoming faint when having her hair dry cleaned. In consequence of this he made a suggestion that the fan should used, and this was done. There was a vapour like chloroform given off, but it was not chloroform.
The Coroner: Do you consider it safe to use?
—It is a safe thing to use with precaution as to fresh air, etc.
Do you think that anybody undergoing it should be medically fit?— That is the ideal.
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Spilsbury Dr. B. H. Spilsbury], pathologist at St. Mary's Hospital, who made an autopsy, said that the body was quite healthy, but the heart cavities were dilated and the heart muscles were degenerated, which was unusual in a young person. The tonsils were enlarged. There was status lymphaticus.Old term for a syndrome of supposed enlargement of the thymus and lymph nodes in infants and young children, formerly believed to be associated with unexplained sudden death; it was also erroneously believed that pressure of the thymus on the trachea might cause death during anaesthesia. (from Mondofacto.) Death was due to sudden heart failure, from degeneration of the muscles, and possibly part of the condition of status lymphaticus, and also possibly accelerated by inhaling tetra chloride of carbon. The status lymphaticus which would predispose to sudden death, could not be discovered during life.
Have you ever had experience of these cases?
—No.
What do you think about the safety of administering the lotion?—I think, in a perfectly healthy subject, there is no danger to life.
Further questioned, the witness said that the inhaling of tetra chloride might cause sudden death to a person with a weak heart, but the effect varied. If the vapour was inhaled there would be temporary discomfort.
Witness added that he had no personal record of any other fatal case. Persons with this young lady’s disease would run greater risk in inhaling tetra chloride than healthy persons.
'''NOT FOR UNHEALTHY PERSONS.'''
Replying to a juror, Dr. Paul Jones said that he had advised persons to go to Harrod’s to have their hair dry shampooed, but not unhealthy persons.
Dr. Spilsbury, in reply to Lord Robert Cecil, said that he considered the process absolutely safe, if one could ensure no vapour being inhaled by unhealthy subjects.
You would not attach any blame to Harrod's in the circumstances?—Oh, no.
What is the percentage of death in tetra chloride administered as an anaesthetic ?—About one in 20.000.
John Charles Maron, a hairdresser at Harrod's, said that during the six years he had been there he had had about 1,000 dry shampoo cases with this particular process, and he had never known of one bad case. There were three cases where customers were a little queer, but they soon recovered. He had used the shampoo on elderly ladies in nursing homes.
By Lord Robert Cecil: Nine persons out of ten asked for this treatment. He did not think there was any risk in Miss Clark doing the work.
The Coroner said that it was for the jury to consider whether death had been accelerated by the tetra chloride, and their verdict would be one of misadventure. This case would have the effect of calling attention to the risks unhealthy persons ran in undergoing this particular process of shampooing.
The jury, after deliberating in private, returned a verdict of "Accidental death, accelerated by the fumes of the tetra chloride.” They added a rider that Harrod’s were not justified in employing unskilled operators in performing this dangerous operation. ====Footnotes====

Father of Edward Chamberlayne 1653 -1694 of Princethorpe, Warwickshire

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Father_of_Edward_Chamberlayne_1653_-1694_of_Princethorpe_Warwickshire.jpg
{{One Name Study|name=Chamberlayne}} ==Research Notes for Edward Chamberlayne== * https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Chamberlayne-133&public=1 ==Research Notes for William Chamberlayne== *https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Chamberlayne-134 According to Burke’s Peerage, William Chamberlayne was born in Princethorpe, Warwickshire, on Thursday, 26th December 1628. This is an exact date, but unfortunately, so far, no corroborating evidence has been found to back it up.A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland" John Burke, Bernard Burke, Henry Colburn, 1846. Retrieved from [https://books.google.de/books?id=2FE4AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA203&lpg=PA203&dq=William+Chamberlayne+Princethorpe&source=bl&ots=RaWNp8seB6&sig=ACfU3U1kj4MxKJdLyvxJmWhJyr4p7LaxAw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjD8cPXy6TtAhUksaQKHRDIBlsQ6AEwCXoECAcQAg#v=onepage&q=William%20Chamberlayne%20Princethorpe&f=false Available Online ] Accessed 3 Dec 2020 *PROBLEM: Virginia Gleanings - https://www.jstor.org/stable/4243432?seq=4#metadata_info_tab_contents {{Image|file=Father_of_Edward_Chamberlayne_1653_-1694_of_Princethorpe_Warwickshire.jpg |caption=p.159 Virginia Gleanings }} MUST be a mistake, because it: Mentions an Edward Chamberlayne, supposedly High Sheriff of Gloucestershire in 1597, (39 E.R. I). * But see wikipedia list of Gloucestershire High Sheriffs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Sheriff_of_Gloucestershire#16th_century * and here: https://www.geni.com/projects/High-Sheriff-of-Gloucestershire/38198 *London Gazette Issue: 4081, 18 December 1704, p.2 - mentions an Edmund Chamberlayne Esq. 1705, High Sheriff of Gloucestershire - https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/4081/page/1 and in 1596: John Chamberlain of Prestbury (unreferenced) but no''' Edward''' ''Italic text''Chamberlayne. An EDMUND Chamberlayne of Maugersbury died 12 April 1634. * Visitation of Gloucestershire 1682-3 - https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/227274-the-visitation-of-the-county-of-gloucester-begun-by-thomas-may-chester-and-gregory-king-rouge-dragon-in-trinity-vaction-1682-and-finished-by-henry-dethick-richmond-and-the-said-rouge-dragon-pursuivant-in-trinity-vacation-1683-by-virtue-of-several-deputacons-from-sir-henry-st-george?viewer=1&offset=0#page=44&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= ...This doesn't mention an Edward at all. Sir Thomas Chamberlayne of Prestbury had no son named Edward - no Edward is mentioned in his Will, only a John, an Edmund and a Theophila from his 2nd wife (Elizabeth Luddington) and from his 3rd, Anne Carkeke, whose name is not mentioned, he had a son (Thomas) Chamberlaine of Oddington. Find out: Who has found this discrepancy in Virginia Gleanings before? == Sources ==

Father of mine

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Skaggs-1634|James Skaggs]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Looking for bio dad * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=20287660 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fathers of Confederation

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The following table lists the Fathers of Confederation. {| class="names compact" | width="200"|'''Name''' |width="80"|'''(Born - Died)''' | width="60"|'''Managed''' | width="75"|'''Ancestors Added''' | width="75"|'''Descendents Added''' | width="100"|'''State of Biography''' |- |[[Archibald-361|Sir Adams George Archibald]] |(1814-1892) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs additional translation) |- |[[Brown-20715|George Brown]] |(1818-1880) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs additional translation) |- |[[Campbell-7115|Sir Alexander Campbell]] |(1822-1892) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Carter-7776|Sir Frederick Bowker Terrington Carter]] |(1819-1900) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Acceptable (Needs translation) |- |[[Cartier-127|Sir George-Étienne Cartier]] |(1814-1873) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Chandler-2242|Edward Barron Chandler Sr.]] |(1800-1880) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Chapais-1|Jean-Charles Chapais]] |(1811-1885) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Acceptable |- |[[Cockburn-162|James W. Cockburn]] |(1819-1883) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Coles-390|George Coles]] |(1810-1875) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal |- |[[Dickey-289|Robert Barry Dickey]] |(1811-1903) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Fisher-5629|Charles Fisher]] |(1808-1880) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Galt-89|Sir Alexander Tilloch Galt]] |(1817-1893) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Gray-7083|Sir John Hamilton Gray (P.E.I.)]] |(1811-1887) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal |- |[[Gray-7085|Sir John Hamilton Gray (New Brunswick)]] |(1814-1889) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Haviland-291|Sir Thomas Heath Haviland]] |(1822-1895) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal |- |[[Henry-3153|William Alexander Henry]] |(1816-1888) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal |- |[[Howland-1175|Sir William Pearce Howland]] |(1811-1907) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs translation) |- |[[Johnson-25328|John Mercer Johnson]] |(1818-1868) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs translation and cleanup) |- |[[Langevin-56|Sir Hector-Louis Langevin]] |(1826-1906) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Macdonald-2627|Andrew Archibald Macdonald]] |(1829-1912) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Acceptable |- |[[Macdonald-1567|Sir John A. Macdonald]] |(1815-1891) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Acceptable |- |[[McCully-91|Jonathan McCully]] |(1809-1877) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[McDougall-508|William McDougall]] |(1822-1905) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[McGee-941|Thomas D'Arcy McGee]] |(1825-1868) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Mitchell-7484|Peter Mitchell]] |(1824-1899) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Mowat-101|Sir Oliver Mowat]] |(1820-1903) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs additional translation) |- |[[Palmer-6738|Edward Palmer]] |(1809-1889) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Non-existent |- |[[Pope-1450|William Henry Pope]] |(1825-1871) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal |- |[[Ritchie-1277|John William Ritchie]] |(1808-1890) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Acceptable (Needs translation) |- |[[Shea-553|Sir Ambrose Shea]] |(1815-1905) |Yes |Yes |No |Non-existent |- |[[Steeves-113|William H. Steeves]] |(1814-1873) |Yes |Yes |Some |Minimal |- |[[Taché-3|Sir Étienne-Paschal Taché]] |(1795-1865) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal |- |[[Tilley-643|Sir Samuel Leonard Tilley]] |(1818-1896) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Minimal (Almost non-existent) |- |[[Tupper-249|Sir Charles Tupper]] |(1821-1915) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs additional translation) |- |[[Whelan-163|Edward Whelan]] |(1824-1867) |Yes |Yes |No |Non-existent |- |[[Wilmot-227|Robert Duncan Wilmot]] |(1809-1891) |Yes |Yes |Yes |Good (Needs additional translation) |}

Fatkin

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My fiance's grandmother's maiden name is Fatkin. She traced them back to a William Fatkin in the lowland region of Scotland. I was wondering if anyone doing research on the Fatkins found if they were affiliated with any lowland clan. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Rodgers-3200|Michael Rodgers]]. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16841434 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fattigvård Sverige

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{{Space:WhatLinksHere}}

Fauquier County Virginia Land Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fauquier_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Fauquier County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fauquier'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fauquier'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fauquier County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Fauquier'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fauquier'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fauquier County Land Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Fauquier County Land'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Grantor||Grantee||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |2||280||James and Judith Campbell (of Charles Co, MD)||Judson Coolige||1765||1,748 acres on the E. side of Goose Creek|| |- |5||352||Alexander Campbell (of Prince William Co)||William Cunningham||1773|| Farm animals|| |-

Fauquier County Virginia Marriage Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fauquier_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Fauquier County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fauquier'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fauquier'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fauquier County. This page has the '''Campbell Marriage Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Fauquier'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fauquier'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fauquier County Virginia Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fauquier_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Fauquier County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fauquier'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fauquier'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fauquier County. This page has the '''Campbell Probate Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Fauquier'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fauquier'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fauth Family Mysteries

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Family tree can be traced back to Johaness Fauth presumably born in Au Am Rhine Rastatt Baden in Baden Wurenburg, Germany in 1766. Migrated to Odessa Ukraine on or around 1808. He married Barbra Jundt (30 June, 1788- 27 April, 1850) in Cassel; not sure if this is the Cassel in Ukraine or in Germany. Once settled in Odessa he had a son named Heinrich, my direct ancestor, in 1817 in Bergdorf, Odessa, Ukrain/Russia. There were two brothers named Johannes and Christof. Heinrich had a son named Christoph 19 Aug, 1855 and they, with the whole family migrated to southern South Dakota until they homesteaded 10 miles west of Strasburg North Dakota in 1892. Christof moved his family to the Eureka, SD area in 1910. He had a son, Jacob (born 1886) who married Magdalena Lapp and had 4 sons; Milbert, Eugene, Willie, and Reinie. Rhinie is my grandfather who had two sons, Tom and Michael (01 May 1959) both born in South Dakota.

Favorite Recipes of Grandma Humphrey

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This is a collection of photographs, copies, of [[Dick-192| Grandma Mae (nee Dick) Humphrey (aka Priestly)]], as found in her daughter, [[Priestly-14|Daisy's]] recipe collection, as well as those submitted to her church cookbook. Grandma Mae loved meat, so you will notice that theme in her favorite recipes. Her granddaughter, Gail, talked about how family would often give her meat for gifts, since it was a bit of a luxury on her budget. If you have recipe favorites of Grandma Humphrey's, please add them! ---- == Recipes == === Banana Nut Bread === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/3a/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-3.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-3.jpg Banana Nut Bread "Very good" 2 small pans or 1 no. 2 round can Pans 1/3 full ''* Abby's note, makes one regular loaf pan'' * ½ c. corn oil * 1 c granulated sugar * 2 ''well-beaten eggs'', with sugar and oil * salt to taste * 1 t soda in 6 T. buttermilk * 1 t baking powder * 2 bananas ''fine'' with fork * 1 3/4 cups flour * 1/3 to 1 c walnut meats Bake ½ hour to ¾ hour or until straw test it is done. 325 degrees. ''* about 1/2 hour at 350 degrees works well'' Very delicious! http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/36/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-19.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-19.jpg === Corn Beef Casserole === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/8/87/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-4.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-4.jpg http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/c/c0/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-18.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-18.jpg * 2 8-ounce package noodles * 1 can cream of mushroom soup * (the hand written variation adds 1 can cream of celery soup) * 2 tall cans evaporated milk * 2 12-ounce cans corn beef * 1/2 pound American Cheese, cubed * 1 tablespoon minced onion * 1 small jar pimentos Mix all ingredients together. Put in buttered casserole. Top with crumbled potato chips. Bake 1 hour in 350 degree oven. This makes a big casserole. === Tuna Rice Casserole === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/8/89/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-5.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-5.jpg * 1 can cream of mushroom soup (or 1 cup cream sauce) * 2 teaspoons vinegar * 2 teaspoons worcestershire sauce * 1/2 cup milk * green pepper, if desired * 1 can tuna * 2 cups cooked rice Top with buttered corn flakes (crushed). Bake 45 minutes in a 350 degree oven. === Scallop Chicken (or Tuna) === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/9/91/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-6.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-6.jpg * 1 fat hen, removed from bones, cut up * 1 loaf bread, broken up * 1 quart broth or enough milk to make 1 quart * 1 cup mushrooms * 1 can cream of chicken soup * pimentos and green pepper * 6 well beaten eggs * season to taste Mix all together. Bake in 325 degree oven. Corn can be used in this way. For milder flavor: rinse tuna in cold water. === Pork and Veal Casserole === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/2/2b/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-7.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-7.jpg * 3/4 pound veal, cubed * 3/4 pound lean pork, cubed Simmer meats until tender. Use enough water so there is 1 pint liquid after cooking. Let cool in stock. * 4 slices fresh or dried bread (broken up) * 2 eggs, slightly beaten Mix all together. Put in greased casserole or pan. Cover with corn flakes, no butter. Bake in moderate oven, 325 to 375 degrees, for 45 minutes to 1 hour. Celery or onions may be added for variation. Served 8. === Pork Loaf === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/3d/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-8.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-8.jpg * 2 pounds ground lean pork * 1 cup fine bread crumbs * 1 egg * Milk to moisten bread well * season to taste Mix and bake in load until 1/2 hour before load is done, about 1 hour at 325 degrees. Take from oven. Slice apples over top and replace in oven until apples are done. === Veal Loaf === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/f/fa/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-9.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-9.jpg Mix: * 1 1/2 pounds veal * 1/2 pound lean fresh pork * 2 eggs * 1 1/2 to 2 cups milk or canned milk * 1 cup cracker crumbs * dash of powdered sage * salt and pepper to taste Bake in bread pan 1 1/2 hours at 350 degrees. === Dried Beef Casserole === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/39/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-10.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-10.jpg * 1 pound dried beef in medium pieces * 1 can pimentos * 6 hard boiled eggs * 1 green pepper Make 1 quart real thick white sauce for this amount. Add all eggs, pimentos, green pepper to the white sauce. (Run cold water over dried beef if it is too salty.) Brown beef lightly. Alternate layers of beef and sauce. Cover with buttered crumbs on top. Bake slowly for 1 hour. This makes a nice dish baked in oblong glass or aluminum pan. Cool a little and cut out in squares. === Ham Meat Loaf === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/c/c2/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-11.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-11.jpg * 2 pounds fresh ground pork * 1 pound smoked ham, ground * 2 eggs, well beaten * 1 cup bread crumbs, soaked in 2 cups tomato juice * 1 cup milk * 1/2 teaspoon pepper Pour milk and eggs over mix. Add minced bread crumb tomato juice. Be sure all are mixed well. Set in large pan of water to bake. 1 1/2 hours at 325 to 350 degrees. Baste with tomato juice! This is very good and should serve 10 people. === Dill Pimento Pickles === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/c/cb/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-12.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-12.jpg * 1 quart jar good dills, sliced thin * 1 cup (1/2 brown, 1/2 white) sugars * 1 cup vinegar * 1 small can pimentos, cut small Bring all to a boil, seal, or let stand open 24 hours to use soon. === Pear Salad === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/0/03/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-13.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-13.jpg Nice for Christmas * 1 package lemon Jello Dissolve in 1 pint pear juice, heated. * 2 tablespoons vinegar with juice. As liquid starts to congeal, stir in 1 cup pieces of pears from juice, 1 tablespoon chopped green pepper, small can clipped pimento, 3 tablespoons chopped celery. Mold. Serve with salad dressing. === Good Tomato Salad === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/9/9a/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-14.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-14.jpg * 2 packages lemon Jello * 1 cup boiling water * 1 tablespoon lemon juice Cool. Add: * 1 1/2 cups finely chopped celery * 1 1/2 cups cheese (old fashioned cottage cheese) * 1 can condensed tomato soup * 2 tablespoons grated onion * 1/4 teaspoon salt Mold until set. Good with any kind of meal, or Hot Dog or Hamburger sandwiches. === Pea Salad === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/d/d5/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-15.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-15.jpg * 1 can peas, drained * 1 small onion, cut fine * 5 teaspoons grated cheese * 3 boiled eggs, cut up * 1/2 dozen small sweet pickes * 1/2 cup chopped pecans, added before serving * mayonnaise mixed with evaporated milk or cream Season with a little sugar or salt if needed. === Chocolate Bread === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/6/68/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-16.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-16.jpg Bread sponge: * 1 cup lukewarm water * 1 cup milk * flour to make soft dough. Let rise in warm place * 2 eggs * 1 teaspoon salt * 1 cup sugar * 2/3 cup shortening * 2 squares chocolate, melted * 1 teaspoon vanilla * 1 cup nut meats * flour-enough to handle Mix, knead, raise, and re-raise. Form in loaves and raise to double in size. Bake in slow oven 1 hour to 1 1/2 hour. === Fruit Cocktail Cake === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/4/4f/Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-17.jpg/500px-Favorite_Recipes_of_Grandma_Humphrey-17.jpg * 1 cup fruit cocktail * 1 cup white sugar * 1 cup flour * 1 teaspoon baking powder or soda * 1 egg Pour into a 9X9 pan. Bake at 350 degrees until done. Can use nut meats on top. === Do Nuts === {{Image|file=Grandma_Daisy_s_Delicious_Dishes.jpg |align=c |size=500px }} Mae's great-granddaughter, Gail, remembers these as a special treat, especially for holidays. This recipe was in with Daisy's recipes. * 2 3/4 c Gold Medal (all purpose flour) * 2 1/2 teaspoon Calumet baking powder * 1 tablespoon melted butter or shortening * 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg * 1/2 teaspoon vanilla * 1/2 teaspoon to 1 teaspoon salt * 3/4 c milk * 1 whole egg * 2/3 to 1 small cup sugar Mix in mixer as for a cake, stirring in with a spoon the last of the flour. Chill. Cut 1/2 inch thick. Drop into 370 degree hot lard, and turn over as soon as they round up a bit. Not too long, then keep turning. {{Image|file=Grandma_Daisy_s_Delicious_Dishes-17.jpg |align=c |size=500px }}

Fay Family Tree

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Fay Family Tree. "Presented to Mrs Ruth Fay by the Director and Staff of the Society of Australian Genealogists to mark the occasion of her retirement on 14 August, 1981." Signed "N.S.A. Layton. 1981."

Fay Reseach Notes

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The following notes about 19th and 20th century Fay families was found on Fay-25, a 17th century individual. They've been moved here for reference. == Research Notes == 5. Horace Albert FAY b: ABT 1820 in New York 6. Hiram FAY b: ABT 1821 in New York 7. Matilda FAY b: ABT 1826 in Java Township, Wyoming County, New York The story of James Riley Fay has already been told here, and Peterson has a great deal of information about Silas. Peterson's information about Rufus is less complete than about Silas; he lists 8 children born before 1850, but does not continue their lines. Part of that lack is supplied by the work of Cecil Larsen, whose information on Rufus is a bit less sourced, but whose descendancy is far more complete. It is Larsen who names Justina and James, and tells where they are in 1860: each is with an older sister. It is Melvina Miranda, the oldest, who interests Larsen the most, and he follows her line. Therefore only the first generation of her line is given here. Peterson's notes for Rufus may also be found below. 1856 Iowa State Census, Carlton, Tama County Based on the above material, the children of Rufus and Miranda are: Melvina Miranda Fay b: January 1827 Alzina C Fay b: about 1830 Son Fay b: between 1830 and 1835 Emily A Fay b: about 1839 Frederick C Fay b: about 1842 Peter J\Phebe J Fay b: about 1845 Eunice A Fay b: about 1847 Justina G Fay b: about 1851 James L Fay b: about 1852 Israel travelled from Connecticut to Bethany in Genesee County, NY, before 1812 (see below for additional information from Charles Peterson). James Israel (see below for Peterson's notes) lived in Genesee, but the family branched out into Allegany, Wyoming, Livingston, and Monroe. Rufus lived in Java, Wyoming County, NY for most of his life; all of his children were born there. Yet in 1856, he is in Iowa. When did he move? He is in NY in 1850. In 1855, he sold land in Java to Liberty Curtis. I believe that that was in preparation for his trip, and that he moved between then and the Iowa census. After that, Rufus disappears, and his two younger children are in the care of older ones. Emily joined the household of her cousin Amos (son of Silas) and married in Iowa. It is not known what happened to Frederick, Peter/Phebe or Eunice. Descendants of Rufus and Maranda (Blakely) Fay Contributed by Arlene Halsen, additions from research Material from the ancestry trees of Charles Peterson, Cecil Larsen, Pat Miller 7 Melvina Miranda Fay b: 1/1827 ...+Edwin Libby b: 8/23/1827 d: 1874 .......8 E. Emmogene Libby b: 9/29/1849 .......8 Lilly A. Libby b: 1854 d: 1895-1898 .......8 Alida D. Libby b: 1856 d: before 1860 .......8 W. A. Libby b: 1858 d: 3/1860 .......8 Edwin Ray Libby b: 1860 .......8 Phebe Seville Libby b: 5/23/1870 d: 3/22/1948 (see Larsen for continuations) 7 Alzina C. Fay b: 1830 ...+William Carson Stover b: ABT 1838 .......8 Charles Stover b: ABT 1858 .......8 Eliza A Stover b: 1860 Alzina seems to have died before 1865. William remarried. Neither William nor Charles has been found in 1900. 7 Emily A. Fay b: 1834 d: 4/1879 ...+Tiberius Donaldson b: 2/21/1835 d: 1/16/1907 .......8 Morris T. Donaldson d: young .......8 Don Carlos Donaldson b: 7/15/1867 d: after 6/1947 ........ +Sophia b: 11/1861 ..............9 Della (or Delia) May Donaldson b: 8/1892 ............... +unknown Pucci ..............9 Mable M. Donaldson b: 4/1896 ..............9 Pearl Donaldson b: 10/1898 ..............9 Don Carlos Donaldson Jr. b: 10/17/1898 d: 3/1982 ............... +unknown Ayers .....................10 Forrest E. Donaldson b: 7/2/1919 ............... +Elizabeth Oran m: 1925 .....................10 Lavern May Donaldson 24 Mar 1926 .....................10 Don Carlos Donaldson b:2/7/1930 d:12/1990 .......8 Willard Elmer Donaldson b: 12/1868 d: 2/13/1938 ........ +Nellie M. Tompkins b: 5/1875 ..............9 Leon Clyde Donaldson b: 8/1894 d: 6/7/1938 ..............9 Jesse M. Donaldson b: 3/2/1901 d: 10/7/1916 ..............9 Burton W. Donaldson b: 1902 d: 4/13/1951 ..............9 Harold A. Donaldson b: 1908 .......8 Benjamin Donaldson b: 1870 d: 1872 .......8 Alonzo Nathan Donaldson b: 4/14/1873 d: 9/28/1944 ........ +Amanda E. Wrenkel b: 1881 d: 5/15/1966 ..............9 Ethel M. Donaldson b: 1903 ..............9 Alonzo N. Donaldson b: 10/2/1904 d: 5/31/1927 ..............9 Norman Donaldson b: 1906 Emily died in 1879. The census of 1880 shows Tiberius still in Iowa with his three sons. He married again, choosing Clarissa C. Spickler, with whom he had two daughters and a son. According to Arlene, a descendant of this part of the line, he was cruel to Clasissa and her children. 7 Frederick C. Fay; Peter J. Fay; Eunice A. Fay. Nothing further is known of these three. The names come from the censuses of 1850 and 1856. 7 Justina G. Fay b: 1851 (listed in 1856 and 1860; nothing further is known) 7 James L. Fay b: 1852 (listed in 1856 and 1860; nothing further is known) From Charles Peterson's notes on Israel Fay IGI. Of Bethany, Genesee County. S.E. North 1899, Our Country and People, p. 106. Israel Fay was in Bethany before 1812. An Ezekiel Fay is also noted as being in Bethany at this time. Genesee County Library Family Files. Israel Fay came to Bethany in 1812. Married Mary ? Died 8 February 1884 at age of 79. She died 23 December 1837. Both buried in Bethany Center Cemetery. F.W. Beers, Gazetteer and Biographic Record of Genesee County, New York, 1788-1890, p. 360. Israel Fay was in Bethany. Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 29, p. 281. Israel Fay purchased land in lots 59 and 60 T11 R1 of the Holland Land Grant from Emory Cheney. Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 73, p. 166. Land transaction in lot 50 T11 R1 of the Holland Land Grant Survey. Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 78, p. 35. Israel Fay purchased from Jesse Fay land in lot 1 S11 R2 of the Holland Land Grant Survey. Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 105, p. 40, 1855. Israel Fay sold land in lots 59 and 60 of T11 R1 of the Holland Land Grant Survey to Jonas L. Fay. From Charles Peterson's notes on James Israel Fay O. Turner 1850, Pioneer History of the Holland Purchase of Western New York, p. 455. James Fay in T10 R1 in 1802. History of Wyoming County, New York, 1880, p. 212. James Fay was settler 1803 west of the village of Wyoming. So was David Torrey. K.E. Livsey 1991, West New York Land Transactions 1804-1824, p. 45. James Fay, 2 November 1809, original transaction for property in Township 11 Range 1 Genesee County, New York. Robert Morris of Massachusetts purchased Genesee County (originally all of western New York) in 1791. It was sold to the Holland Company 20 July 1793. The Holland Company was a group of Dutch bankers. Their first land sale was 1801. 1810 New York census, Genesee County, 3-0-1-0-0 / 0-0-1-0-0 / 1 [males of age 0-10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45, and >45; females 0-10, 10- 16, 16-26, 26-45, and >45; other individuals]. K.E. Livsey 1991, West New York Land Transactions 1804-1824, p. 84. James Fay, 12 March 1812, subsequent receipt for property in Township 11 Range 1. K.E. Livsey 1991, West New York Land Transactions 1804-1824, p. 179. James Fay, 21 March 1817 and 31 March 1817, subsequent transactions on lot 58, Township 11 Range 1. 29 March 1817 (father-in-law) Timothy Torrey is receipted for the same lot. Paul Castillo, 11 March 1998, Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 14, 1818-1823, p. 18: James Fay from Calvin Barross, lot 42 T11 R1. K.E. Livsey 1991, West New York Land Transactions 1804-1824, p. 306. James Fay, 7 October 1819, original transaction for property in Township 8 Range 3, Wyoming County. 1820 New York census, Bethany Township, Genesee County p. 52. James Fay, 2-1-1-1-1-0 / 0-0-0-1-0 / 0-3 [males of age 0-10, 10-16, 16-18, 16-26, 26-45, and >45; females 0-10, 10-16, 16-26, 26-45, and >45; individuals not naturalized; number in agriculture]. 1830 New York census, China Township, Genesee County p. 158. James Fay, age 40-50 with wife of same age. Three male children of ages 5- 10 (Hiram), 15-20 (?), and 15-20 (James R.). Daughter of age 0-5 (Matilda). Paul Castillo, 11 March 1998, Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 37, 1836, p. 482. James Fay from Mary Fay, lot 50, T11, R1. Genesee County, New York, Deed Book 37, p.482, 12 December 1835. Mary Fay of the town of Bethany sold to James Fay of the town of Bethany for $1000 a parcel of 46 acres in lot #50 T11 R1. 1840 New York census. There are 4 Fay families listed in Java Township of Genesee County: 1) Horace Fay, p. 122, age 20-30. Considered a son and potentially with Amos in the household. 2) James Fay, p. 104, age 50-60 with one other male of age 15-20 in the household (Hiram?); wife of age 50-60 (Chloe?), one other female of age 10-15 (Matilda). 3) James R. Fay, p. 104. Age 20-30. 4) Rufus Fay, p. 104. Age 30-40. Wyoming County, New York, Deed Book 4, p. 355, 10 September 1845. Horace A. and Eleanor Fay, and James and Chloe Fay, both of Wethersfield, conveyed part of lot 34 in Wethersfield to Ambrose P. Mosier of Wethersfield. 1850 Wyoming County, New York, census, pp. 62 and 63, Java, 13 and 14 August 1850, shows three Fay families: (1) Dwelling 917/family 917, Rufus Fay 44 Connecticut, and family. (2) 925/925, Silas Fay 47 Connecticut, and family. (3) 926/926, James Fay 67 Connecticut, laborer, with Chloa 67 Connecticut, and Matilda 24 New York. James and Chloe Fay are almost certainly the parents of Silas and Rufus. They apparently are also the parents of Hiram Fay with whom Chloe is found in the 1860 Iowa census. Jones County, Iowa, Probate Index. Estate of of James Fay, packet #0116, also Book C, p. 283. Packet includes only a copy of the estate notice published in the Jones County Bulletin, Anamosa, Iowa, dated 3 December 1855. Chloe Fay, administrator. According to this notice the will had been read in the county court and would be proven in court 7 January 1856. Jones County, Iowa, Will Book. Last Will and Testament of James Fay. It is my will that my wife Chloe Fay is to have all the household furniture beds & bedding. It is my will that she has the Cow and Calf and the hog in the pen. It is my will that my sife is to have the money that my land in New York State will bring. It is my will that my wife is to have my land warrant from the War Department. It is my will that all the money on hand or coming likewise, all the property in the house or out a doors is to by my wife Chloe Fay. Except it is my will that my Son Silas Fay to have one dollar & Rufus Fay to have one dollar and Harris Fay one dollar like wise Hiram Fay one dollar it is my will that all my honest debts is to be paid first and my Funeral expenses to be paid likewise. It is my will that at the death of my wife if do be that my daughter Matilda should be living that she Fall Heir to all that her mother leaves it is my will that my wife Chloe Fay be the Executor of my will. James (his mark) Fay, Attest Samuel Spear and Jane Spear, June the 4th 1855. Recorded by the County Clerk 4 February 1856. Another Fay family located about the same time in Jones County; see pp. 169-171 of Anamosa 1838-1988 . . . A Reminiscence. John H. (1822- 1914; married Cynthia Loesa Cameron 17 April 1868 in Anamosa, Jones County) and Edwin (married Margaret Mulconnery 1856 in Chicago) fled Ireland for unknown reasons. Who is Adeline Fay who married Joseph Brownell, 21 September 1857, Jones County, Iowa, Marriage Record A, p. 76, license #543? The 1860 Iowa census lists Joseph W. Brownell 52 New York in Decatur County p. 116, but he is single. Beers History of Wyoming County, New York. James Fay, p. 212. F.W. Beers, Biographic Record of Genessee County, New York, 1788- 1890, pp. 63, 70, 81, 82, 95, 144, 357, 360, 361, 502, 589, 603, and 611. Jones County, Iowa, Probate Records, Book C, p. 283. Estate #0116. James Fay. Probate Records, Book C (LDS film 1737955), p. 283: Last Will and Testament of James Fay filed 3 December 1855. Notice to be published in the Jones County Bulletin. O.K. Porter 1934, Iowa Genealogical Records from the DAR Chapter of Anamosa, p. 144. James Fay died 1855 at age 70. Buried White Oak Cemetery, Greenfield Township, Jones County, Iowa. From Charles Peterson's notes on Rufus Fay 1830 New York census, China Township, Genesee County, p. 157. Rufus Fay, age 20-30, wife wife of same age. Two daughters of age 0-5. 1840 New York census, Java Township, Genessee County, p. 104. Rufus Fay, age 30-40 and wife of same age. 1 male child age 5-10 and four daughters of ages 0-5 (Emily), 5-10 (Alzina), 10-15 (?) and 10-15 (?). Wyoming County, New York, Vital Records. Daughter born 10 August 1848 in Java, to Rufus and Meranda Fay. 1850 New York census, Wyoming County p. 62, Java Township, 13 August 1850, dwelling 917, family 917. Rufus Fay 44 Connecticut, assets $700, with Maranda 41 Vermont, and children (all born New York) Alzina 20, Emily A. 11, Frederick C. 8, Peter J. 5, and Eunise A. 3. Was a farmer in the Torrey Hill Section of Java Township. Purchased a farm from the Holland Land Grant along with James and Silas Fay. Wyoming County, New York, Deed Book 42, p. 478, 7 March 1855. Rufus and Maranda Fay of the town of Java conveyed to Liberty Curtis for $990 part of lot 20 in the town of Java. Not identified in 1860 or 1870 census. 1880 national census. Neither Rufus or his wife Maranda are identified. None of children identified. ==Sources==

Fayette County Pennsylvania Land Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fayette_County_Pennsylvania|The Campbells of Fayette County Pennsylvania]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fayette'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fayette'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fayette County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Fayette'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fayette'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fayette County Land Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Fayette County Land'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Grantor||Grantee||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |A||4||Henry Beeson||Matthew Campbell||1784||Lot No. 10 in the town of Union|| |- |A||6||Dennis Springer||Matthew Campbell||1783||38 acres in Mandallan Township|| |- |A||16||Henry Beeson||Collin Campbell||1784||Lot No. 43 in the town of Union|| |- |A||79||Matthew Campbell||John Bratzman||1785||Lot No. 10 in the town of Union|| |- |A||105||Collin and Rebecca Campbell||Samuel Saller||1786||Lot No. 43 in the town of Union|| |- |A||203||Henry Beeson||William Campbell||1788||104 acres near Redstone Creek|| |- |A||206||Thomas Brown||Matthew Campbell||1787||Lot No. 1 in the town of Brownsville|| |- |A||397||Matthew Campbell||John Bratzman||1786||Release of Lot No. 10 in the town of Union|| |-

Fayette County Tennessee Deeds (Grantee)-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fayette_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Fayette County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fayette'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fayette’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fayette County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the year 1829'''. If your ''Fayette'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fayette'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fayette County Land (Grantee)-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Fayette County'''
'''Land Records (Grantee)'''
'''1829'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !From !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1829 | |Campbell |James G. |Thomas Henderson |B |117 |160 acres in the county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-BZLN?i=236&cat=57193 Doc Image] |- !1829 | | |William P. |Thomas Henderson |B |118 |160 acres in the county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-BZY5?i=237&cat=57193 Doc Image] |}

Fayette County Tennessee Deeds (Grantor)-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fayette_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Fayette County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fayette'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fayette’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fayette County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1827-1833'''. If your ''Fayette'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fayette'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fayette County Land (Grantor)-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Fayette County'''
'''Land Records (Grantor)'''
'''1827-1833'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !To !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1827 | |Campbell |William (of Madison Co., TN) |Edward Willinghamd |A |68 |310 acres on Wolf River granted to him in 1826 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-B4ZP?i=70&cat=57193 Doc Image] |- !1829 | | |William (of Madison Co., TN) |John C. Cooper |A |207 |His right to Lots No. 1 and 13 in the town of Somerville |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-BW1K?i=142&cat=57193 Doc Image] |- !1830 | | |David (of Wilson Co., TN) |Reece Brown |B |266 |235 acres on the Big Harpeth River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-BZVW?i=315&cat=57193 Doc Image] |- !1832 | | |William P. (of Franklin Co., TN) |John Wigginton |C |269 |Power of Attorney for 160 acres granted by Thomas Henderson |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-BCX2?i=539&cat=57193 Doc Image] |- !1833 | | |James G. |Edwin Whitmore |C |291 |160 acres granted by Thomas Henderson |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-BC75?i=550&cat=57193 Doc Image] |}

Fayette H. Norvell - Application to West Point 1825

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FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPoint1825Pg2LetterFrRepDavidSGarland.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg16LetterFrJamesSaunders.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg15LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg24LetterFrJohnMOtey.jpg
FayetteHNorvellAppliToWestPt1825Pg8LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg19LetterFrHonMEllis.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg21LetterFrZTaylor.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg12LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825PG11LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg17LetterFrJasSaunders.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg18LetterFrHonMEllis.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplicationToWestPoint1825Pg1LetterFrRepDavidSGarland.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg13LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg7LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg6LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg10LetterFrWmBLynch.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg14LetterFrWmWNorvell.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg9LetterFrWmBLynch.jpg
FayetteHNorvellAppToWestPt1825Pg4LetterFrFathersFriend.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPtPg22LetterFrHDavenport.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg20LetterFrZTaylor.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPoint1825Pg3LetterFrRepDavidSGarland.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg5LetterFrFathersFriend.jpg
FayetteHNorvellApplToWestPt1825Pg23LetterFrHDavenport.jpg
This collection of letters, written on behalf of [[Norvell-27|Fayette H. Norvell]], urging his admittance as a cadet in the U. S. Military Academy at West Point, shows quite a coordinated campaign by his brother and many other influential people in his home town of Lynchburg, Virginia to get him into the academy. Reading these letters.....and, thinking about who the people were who authored them, made me realize just how hard it was to be selected for the honor of attending this school. Several of the letters were written by his brother, William W. Norvell, who seemed to be the coordinator of the effort, making sure that all needs were met in order to secure Fayette's appointment to West Point. One letter was from John M. Otey, his brother-in-law; but no less of an influential person, being President of the City Council. William W. Norvell, himself, had been Captain of the Lynchburg Rifles and City Treasurer. Of course, the impressive eleven letter campaign also included the required letter from the area representative, David S. Garland. It would be very interesting, indeed, to research each of the other men who wrote the letters and discover just who they were.

Fazenda Cachoeira

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sdfdfdfd

FDR cross-reference

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'''Legend''': B&L - [http://lesfillesduroy-quebec.org/images/Les_filles_du_Roy_par_nom_de_famille.140212.pdf Iréne Belleau 'à partir' d'Yves Landry's 2013 list], D - B&L list deviation, NF - Not a FDR, RF - Returned to France, SP - Without prosperity. {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" |'''B&L ref.'''||'''Landry FDR''' ||'''1st spouse married in CA'''|| '''Mar./arr. in CA''' || '''Bio''' || '''PM'''||'''N o t e s''' |- |1 (Abraham)|| [[Abraham-367|Abraham, Marguerite]] ||[[Nadeau-309|Nadeau Ozanie-Joseph]] || 06/11/1665 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |2 (Adam)|||[[Adam-610|Adam, Anne]] || [[Poliquin-9|Poliquin, Jean]] ||07/11/1761 || Y || [[WikiTree-68| PFDRP]]|| |- |3 (Agathe)|||[[Agathe-3|Agathe, Marie-Anne]] |||[[Armand-22 |Armand, Laurent]] ||16/10/1663 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |4 (Albert)|||[[Albert-186|Albert, Marie]] |||[[Chauveau-21|Chauveau, Jean]] || 29/10/1663 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |5 (Allence)|||[[Alain-167|Alain, Marie]] ||[[Le_Tardif-11| Tardif, Louis]] || 13/11/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |6 Amiot)||[[Amiot-33|Amiot, Jeanne]] ||[[Pion-20|Pion, Nicolas]] ||19/09/1663 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |7 (Ancelin)||[[Asselin-74|Asselin, Françoise]] || [[Valade-7|Valade, Guillaume]] ||10/11/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |8 (André)||[[André-514|André, Louise]] ||[[Bossu-22|Bossu, Nicolas]] || 18/01/1672 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |9 (Andrieu)||[[Andrieu-4|Andrieu, Marguerite]] || [[Augran-2|Augran, Pierre]] || 19/09/1673 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |10 (Angelier)||[[Langelier-59|Langelier, Marie]]||[[Rochereau-12|Rochereau, Vivien]]||<13/03/1670||Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |11 (Anthoine)||[[Antoine-33|Antoine, Françoise-Denise]] || [[Buy-11|Buy, Laurent]] || 11/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |12 (Anneville)||[[D'anneville-10|D'anneville, Gabrielle]] || [[Blanchard-1706|Blanchard, Louis]] || 11/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |13 (Arcular)||[[Arcular-1|Arcular, Marie Ursule]] || [[ Lefebvre_dit_Boulanger-2 | Lefebvre, Claude]] || 28/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |14 (Ardion)||[[Ardion-1|Ardion, Marie Marguerite]] || [[Rabouin-12|Rabouin, Jean]] || 28/10/1663 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |15 (Arinart)||Arinart, Anne || Jean, Réal || 30/07/1671|| N ||||SP |- |16 (Ariot)||[[Ariot-1|Ariot, Marie Renee]] || [[Vandet-2|Vandet, René]] ||11/04/1671 || Y ||[[ WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |17 (Asserin)||Asserin, Fleurance ||||1667|| N ||N||RF |- |18 (Aubé)||[[Aube-2|Aube, Françoise]] || [[Roy-113|Roy, Michel]] || 08/10/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |19 (Aubert)|| [[Aubert-18|Aubert, Elisabeth]] || [[Lambert-772|Lambert, Aubin]] || 29/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |20 (Aubert)|| [[Aubert-169 |Aubert, Jeanne]] || [[Buisson-77 |Bisson, Jean]] ||20/11/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |21(Aubigny)||[[D'Aubigny-94|D'Aubigny, Marguerite]] || [[Daveau-8|Daveau, Charles]] || 19/09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |22 (Aubineau)||[[Aubineau-1|Aubineau, Suzanne]] || [[Campagna-25|Campagna, Mathias]] || 25/04/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |23 (Aubry)||[[Aubry-5 |Aubry, Marie Anne]] |||[[Caille-44 | Caillé, Antoine]] || 05/07/1675 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |24 (Aubry)||[[Aubry-121| Aubry, Jacqueline]] || [[Gros-53 |Gros, Antoine]] || 09/09/1670 || Y ||[[ WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |25 (Aubry)||[[Aubry-123 |Aubry, Marie Françoise]] || [[Mercier-531 | Mercier, Antoine]]||19/08/1674 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |26 (Auger)||[[Auger-294 |Auger, Jeanne]] ||[[Nolet-35 | Nolet, Sébastien]] || 26/10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |27 (Aupé)||[[Aubert-130 |Aupé, Isabelle]] ||[[De_Lavoye-7 | Lavoie, Pierre]] || 25/08/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |28 (Auvray)||[[Auvray-7 |Auvray, Madeleine]] ||[[Matte-50 | Matte, Nicolas]] ||12/10/1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |29 (Bagau)||[[Bagau-1 |Bagau, Antoinette]] ||[[Roberge-49 | Roberge, Pierre ]]|| 22/10/1672 || N || |[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |31 (Baillon)||[[Baillon-1|Baillon, Catherine]] || [[Miville-10|Miville, Jacques]] || 12/11/1669 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |31 (Bailly)||[[Bailly-14|Bailly, Madeleine]] || [[Vanier-Lafontaine-1|Vanier, Guillaume]] || 05/07/1672 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |32 (Baiselat)||[[Baiselat-3|Baiselat, Françoise]] || [[Cambin-1|Cambin, Laurent]] || 16/08/1668 || N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |33 (Baillié)||[[Baille-1| Baille, Catherine]] || [[Bouvier-6 |Bouvier, Pierre ]]||24/11/1667|| N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |34 (Baumont)||[[Baumont-1 |Bamont, Marie-Anne ]]||[[Morisseau-22 | Morisseau, Vincent ]]|| 23/10/1673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |35 (Banse)||[[Banse-14 |Banse, Françoise]]||[[Le_Prou-1 |Prou, Jacques]] || 04/10/1667|| N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |36 (Barbant)||[[Barbant-2|Barbant, Marie]] || [[Lalonde-63|de Lalond, Jean]] ||14/11/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |37 (Barbereau)||[[Barbereau-1|Barbereau, Jeanne]]||[[Larrivée-15|Arrivée, Jean]]||1666||N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |38 (Barbery)||[[Barbery-21|Barbery, Marie Françoise ]]||[[Dardenne-4|Dardenne, René]]||12/11/1668 ||N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |39 (Barbier)||[[Barbier-43|Barbier, Jeanne]] || [[Plumereau-5|Plumereau, Julien]]||03/11/1670||N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |40 (Bardet)||[[Bardet-22 | Bardet, Anne or Jeanne]]|| [[Paulin-400 |Paulin, Jean]] ||05/10/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |41 (Bardou)||[[Bardou-1|Bardou, Marie]] || [[Drouet-29|Drouet, Mathurin]] || 30/09/1669|| N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |42 (Baril)||[[Baril-62|Baril, Marie]] || [[Sauvin-2|Sauvin, François]] || 13/10/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |43 (Barillet)||[[Barillet-1|Barillet or Baril, Anne]] ||[[Vacher-72 | Vacher, Guy]]||09/11/1671||N||[[ WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |44 (Baron)||[[Baron-411 |Baron, Barbe]] || [[Chevreux-2 |Chevreux, Simon]] || 03/11/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |45 (Barré)||[[Barré-83|Barré, Catherine]] || [[Chaille-35|Chaillé, Mathurin]] || 11/01/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |46 (Barré)||[[Barré-111 | Barré, Catherine]] ||[[Le_Roy-75 |Roy, Nicolas]] || 22/10/1663 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |47 (Barton)||[[Barton-829|Barton, Françoise-Marthe]] || [[Chevalier-139|Chevalier, Joseph]] || 07/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |48 (Basset)||[[Basset-441|Basset, Catherine]]|| [[Bourgoin-79|Bourgouin, Pierre]]|| 17/10/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |49 (Baugé)||[[Bauge-3 |Baugé, Anne]] || [[Corruble-2 |Corruble, Guillaume]] ||02/10/1673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |50 (Beaudin)||[[Beaudin-16|Beaudin, Catherine]] || [[Coquin-2|Coquin, Pierre]] ||12/10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |51 (Beaudon)||[[Baudon-2|Baudon, Étiennette]] || [[Cotin-4|Cotin, Tugal]] ||10/01/1672|| N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |52 (Beaugrand)||[[Beaugrand-11|Beaugrand, Marie]] || [[Marquis-268|Marquis, Charles]] || 18/09/1673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |53 (Beaujean)||[[Beaujean-19|Beaujean, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Juin-5| Juin, Pierre]] ||11/08/1666|| N ||N|| |- |54 (Beauregard)||[[Beauregard-81|Beauregard, Marie]] || [[Langelier-52|Langelier, Sébastien]] || 12/11/1665|| N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |55 (Beauregard)||[[Beauregard-2|Beauregard, Marthe]] || [[Lemieux-5 |Lemieux, Gabriel]] || 26/11/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |56 (Beauveau)||[[Beauveau-1|Beauveau, Jeanne]] || [[Blet-2|Blet, Jean-Pierre]] || 16/04/1674 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |57 (Belleau)||[[Belleau-27|Belleau, Catherine]] || [[Morin-1000|Morin, Jean-Baptiste]] ||22/11/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |58 (Bellehache)||[[Bellehache-1|Bellehache, Marie]] || [[Bourret-11|Bourret, Gilles]] ||09/09/1673 || N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |59 (Bellesoeur)||[[Bellesoeur-3 |Bellesoeur, Anne]] || [[Massard-2 |Massard, Nicolas]] || 12/10/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |60-D (Bénard)||Bénard, Jeanne||Gadois, Pierre||1665||Y||N||NF |- |61 (Benoît)||[[Benoit-19|Benoît, Marie]] || [[Favreau-24|Favreau, Pierre]] || < 1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |62 (Béraud)||[[Beraud-4|Béraud, Anne]] ||[[Jaroson-2 | Jarosson, Mathieu]] || 19/06/1674 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |63 (Bercier)||[[Bercier-15|Bercier, Louise]] ||[[Filion-71|Filion or Feuillon, Michel]] || 15/10/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |64 (Berger)||[[Berger-177|Berger, Marguerite]] || [[Courtois-40|Courtois, Charles]] ||09/10/1670|| N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |65 (Bernard)||[[Bernard-205|Bernard, Jeanne]] || [[Thuillier_dit_Desvignets-1|Thuillier, Jacques]] ||29/04/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |66 (Berrin)||[[Berrin-2|Berrin, Marguerite]] || [[Bouin-8|Bouin, Julien]] || 02/07/1675 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |67 (Bertault)||[[Bertault-4|Bertault, Anne]] || [[Chartier-84|Chartier, Robert]] || 21/10/1669 || N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |68 (Bertin)||[[Breval-2|Breval, Marie]] || [[Séguin-385|Séguin, Charles]] || 03/10/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |69 (Bérunine)||Bérunine, Marie||||1671||N||N||RF |- |70 (Besche)||[[Besche-1|Besche, Marie]] |||[[Chaperon-14 | Chaperon, Pierre]] ||19/11/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |71 (Beuzelin)||[[Beuzelin-1 | Beuzelin, Catherine]] || [[Lonlabard-2 |Lonlabard, Jean]] ||19/10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |72 (Bidequin)||[[Bidequin-1|De Bidequin, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Bouvet-10|Bouvet, Jean]] || 17/10/1673 || N |||| |- |73 (Billot)||[[Billot-16 |Billot, Catherine]] ||[[Jagot-3 |Jagot, Urbain]] || 01/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |74 (Billot)||[[Billot-32 |Billot, Geneviève]] || [[Denis-506 |Jean dit Denis, Jean]] || 24/08/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |75 (Billot)||[[Billot-1|Billot, Lucrèce]] || [[Sigouin-16|Sigouin, Jean]] || 26/08/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |76 (Bilodeau)||[[Bilodeau-15|Bilodeau, Jeanne]] || [[Couillard-23|Couillard, Pierre]] ||08/02/1666 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |77 (Binaudière)||[[Binaudière-1|Binaudière, Marguerite]] || [[Rousseau-161|Rousseau, Symphorien]] || 14/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |78 (Biret)||[[Birette-3|Birette, Renée]] |||[[Balan-34 | Balan, Pierre]] || 09/06/1672 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |79 (Blain)||[[Blain-116 |Blain, Marie-Anne]] ||[[Gervais-364 | Gervais, Pierre]] || 19/10/1665 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |80 (Blainvillain)||[[Blainvillain-1|Blainvillain, Anne]] |||[[Charbonnier-1 | Charbonnier, Louis]] ||01/01/1672 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |81 (Blais)||[[Blais-7|Blais, Élisabeth]] || [[Roche-1028 |Roche, Pierre]] || 07/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |82 (Blaise)||[[Blaise-20|Blaise, Marguerite]] || [[Paquet-205|Paquet, Jean]] || 23/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |83 (Blanchard)||[[Blanchard-1563|Blanchard, Marie]] || [[Brunet-97|Brunet, Mathieu]] || 10/11/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |84 (Blondeau)||[[Blondeau-32|Blondeau, Jeanne]] || [[Abraham-271|Abraham, René]] ||16/11/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |85 (Bluteau)||[[Blutteau-1|Blutteau, Antoinette]] ||[[De_La_Croix-10 |de La Croix, David]] || 19/10/1671|| Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |86 (Boileau)||[[Boileau-28|Boileau, Marie]] || [[Chauvin-188|Chauvin, Pierre]] || < 1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |87 (Boisandré)||[[Boisandré-3|De Boisandré, Catherine]] || [[Gobelin-6|Gobelin, Marc-Antoine]] || 20/10/1663 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |88 (Boisandré)||[[Boisandré-1|De Boisandré, Jeanne-Claude]] || [[De_la_Chaise-2|Lachaise, Louis]] ||31/10/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |89 (Boivin)||[[Boivin-4|Boivin, Françoise]] || [[Lamoureux-13|Lamoureux, Louis]] || 1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |90 (Bolper)||[[Bolper-1|Bolper, Marie-Louise]] || [[Marceau-14|Marceau, François]] || 12/10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |91 (Bonheur)||[[Bonheur-1|Bonheur, Marie]] || [[Inard-3|Énard, Paul]] || 27/10/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |92 (Bonin)||[[Bonnin-6 |Bonnin, Nicole]] ||[[Quatresou-1 |Quatresous, Damien ]] ||19/10/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |93 (Bonneau)||[[Bonneau-257 |Bonneau, Hélène]] ||[[Desmoulins-9 | Desmoulins, Jacques]] || 18/07/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| SP |- |94 (Bonnefoy)||[[Bonnefoy-3|Bonnefoy, Marguerite]] || [[Achon-11|Achon, Jacques]] ||04/12/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |95 (Bouart)||[[Bouart-2|Bouart, Marie]]||[[Antrade-2|Antrade, Jacques]]||16/08/1668||Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |96 (Boucault)||[[Boucault-1|Boucault, Jeanne]] || [[Coulombe-39|Coulombe, Louis]] || 30/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |97 (Bouchard)||[[Bouchard-476 |Bouchard, Jeanne]] ||[[Foisy-7 | Foisy, Martin]] || 26/10/1665 || Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |98 (Bouchard)||[[Bouchard-345|Bouchard, Louise]] || [[Guillory-294|Guillory, Simon]] || 06/12/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |99 (Boucher)||[[Boucher-1430 |Boucher, Madeleine]] |||[[Blanchard-1708 | Blanchard, François]] || 20/10/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |100 (Bouet)||[[Bouet-11|Bouet, Marie]] || [[LeGrapt-1|Guérard, Martin]] || 24/10/ 1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |101 (Bouillon)||[[Boüillon-11|Bouillon, Marie]] || [[Téchénay-_Techené-1|Téchenay, Alexandre]] || 16/08/1668 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |102 (Bourgeois)||[[Bourgeois-280|Bourgeois, Catherine]] || [[Binet-38|Binet, René]] || 19/10/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |103 (Bougeois)||[[Bourgeois-831|Bourgeois, Françoise]] || [[Vigneault-24 |Vignault, Paul]] || 03/11/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |104 (Bourgeois)||[[Bourgeois-612 | Bourgeois, Jeanne]] || [[Coudret-2 |Coudray, André]] || 25/10/1665 || N||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| SP |- |105 (Bourgeois)||[[Bourgeois-1403|Bourgeois, Marie]] |||[[Anet-2| Anet, Jacques]] ||02/06/1668 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| SP |- |106 (Boutard)||[[Boutard-1|Boutard, Marie]] || [[Bourgery-9|Bourgery, Pierre]] || 21/11/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |107 (Boutet)||[[Boutet-11|Boutet, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Bisson-10|Bisson, Gervais]] || 15/09/1664 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |108 (Boyer)||[[Boyer-1162|Boyer, Barbe]] || [[Cartier-126|Cartier, Paul]] ||23/10/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |109 (Braconnier)||[[Braconnier-1|Braconnier, Jeanne]] ||[[Thuillier-15 | Thuillier, Crespin]] || 18/09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |110 (Brandon)||[[Brandon-514|Brandon, Anne]] || [[Dagenais-23|Dagenais, Pierre]] || 17/11/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |111 (Bremaille)||[[Bremaille-1|Bremaille, Marie]] || [[Doublet-14 |Doublet, Jacques]]|| 22/01/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |112 (Brétigny)||[[De_Bretigny-1|De Brétigny, Marie]]||[[Leclerc-392|Leclerc, Denis]]||24/10/1667||Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |113 (Brière)||[[Brière-58|Brière, Marie]] || [[Guay-39|Guay, Jean]] || 16/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |113 (Briset)||Briset, Marie||||31/07/1670||N||N||RF |- |115 (Bruneau)||[[Bruneau-4 |Bruneau, Catherine]] ||[[Monin-45|Monin, Jean]] || 03/09/1670 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |116 (Brunet)||[[Brunet-494 |Brunet, Anne]] |||[[Carrier-643 | Coirier, Pierre]] || 23/11/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |117 (Bruent)||[[Brunet-105|Brunet, Françoise]] || [[Sureau-4|Sureau, Théodore]] ||08/11/1663 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |118 (Bulté)||[[Bulté-10|Bulté, Marguerite]] || [[Robitaille-94|Robitaille, Jean]] ||27/11/1670 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |119 (Buot)||[[Buot-2|Buot, Marie]] || [[Martin-3468|Martin, Pierre]] || 06/10/1670 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |120 (Bureau)||[[Bureau-27|Bureau, Catherine]] || [[Corriveau-83|Corriveau, Étienne]] || 28/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |121 (Burel)||[[Burel-36|Burel, Jeanne]] || [[Poutre-4|Poutré, André]] || 03/11/1667 || N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |122 (Caillaud)||[[Caillaud-3 |Caillaud, Andrée]]||[[Thibault-471|Thibault, Denis]]|| 13/08/1669 ||Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |123 (Caillé)||[[Caille-1|Caillé, Jeanne]]|||[[Reignor-1|Renouard, Jacques]]|| ~1671 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |124 (Caillé)||[[Caillé-49|Caillé, Marie]]||[[Pasquier-18|Paquet, Pierre]]||26/08/1668 || Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |125 (Caillé)||[[Caillé-35|Caillé, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Pepin-171|Pepin, Jacques]] ||16 /11/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |126 (Calais)||[[Calais-6|Calais, Hélène]] || [[Belleau-32|Belleau, Blaise]] || 25/09/1673 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |127 (Campion)||[[Campion-6|Campion, Marie]] || [[Dubé-80|Dubé, Mathurin]] || 03/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |128 (Canard)||[[Canard-3|Canard, Marie-Madeleine]]||[[Thuillier-15|Thuillier, Crespin]]|| 12/10/1671 ||Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |129 (Carbonnet)||[[Carbonnet-1|Carbonnet, Madeleine]] || [[Sédilot-9|Sédilot, Étienne]] ||11/08/1664 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |130 (Carcireux)||[[Carcireux-1|Carcireux, Sylvine]] |||[[Andrieu-2| Andrieu, Antoine]] || 11/01/1668 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |131 (Cardillon)||[[Cardillon-1|Cardillon, Marguerite]] ||[[Desjardins-98| Desjardins, Claude]] || 12/01/1666 ||Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |132 (Carlier)||[[Carlier-44|Carlier, Marie]] || [[Fezeret-3|Fezeret, René]] || 11/11/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |133 (Cartignier)||[[Cartignier-1|Cartignier, Marie]] ||[[Vanier-58| Vanier, Germain]] || 30/09/1669 || Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |134 (Cartois)||[[Cartois-1|Cartois, Henriette]] || [[Audebout-2|Audebout, Michel]] || 26/10/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |135 (Chabert)||[[Chabert_de_la_ Charière-1|Chabert, Marguerite]]||[[Du_Mesnil-Heurry-2|Dumesnil, Jacques]]||17/09/1668||Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |136 (Chamois)||[[Chamois-1|Chamois, Marie-Claude]] ||[[Frigon-68|Frigon, François]] || < 1674 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |137 (Chancy)||[[Chausy-1|Chancy, Marie]] ||[[Prezot-7| Prézeau, Michel]] || 02/10/1673 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |138 (Chandoiseau)||[[Chantoiseau-1|Chandoiseau, Nicole]]||[[Benoit-264| Benoît, Étienne]]||07/10/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |139 (Chanfrain)||[[Chamfrin-2|Chamfrin, Renée]] || [[Garand-11|Garand, Pierre]] ||27/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |140 (Chanvreux)||[[Chanvreux-1|Chanvreux, Renée]] ||Lefebvre, Jean || 30/06/1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |141 (Charbonnier)||[[Charbonnier-23|Charbonnier, M.-Madeleine]] ||[[Lenoir-70| Lenoir, François]] ||02/01/1673 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |142 (Charebert)||[[Charebert-1|Charebert, Marie]] ||[[Lesieur-65| Lesieur, Jean]] || 1672 or '73 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |143 (Charlier)||[[Charier-2|Charlier, Michelle]] || [[Besnier-15|Besnier, Massé]] ||09 /10/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |144 (Charmesnil)||[[De_Charmenil-1|de Charmesnil, Françoise]] ||[[Gélinas-15|Gélinas, Jean]] || 17/10/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |145 (Charpentier)||[[Charpentier-2|Charpentier, Marguerite]]|| [[Lucas-6734|Lucas, Toussaint]] || 11/06/1669 || ---|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |146 (Charpentier)||[[Charpentier-114|Charpentier, Marguerite]] ||[[Le_Meusnier-1| Meunier, René]]||16 /10/1668 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |147 (Charpentier)||[[Charpentier-8|Charpentier, Marie]] || [[Gendras-2|Gendras, Pierre]] ||11/11/1671 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |148 (Charpentier)||[[Charpentier-49|Charpentier, Marie-Reine]] || [[Prinseau-2|Prinseau, Louis]] || 28/07/1672 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |149 (Charrier)||[[Charrier-4|Charrier, Louise]] || [[Barette-13|Baret, Guillaume]] || 19/11/1663 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |150 (Charrier)||[[Charrié-1|Charrié, Marie ]] || [[Renaud-198|Renaud, Jacques]] || 13/10/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |151 (Charron)||[[Charron-599|Charron, Françoise]] || ||1664||n|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |152 (Chartier)||[[Chartier-192 |Chartier, Jeanne]] |||[[Aubrenan-1| Aubry, Thècle-Cornelius]] || 10/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |153 (Chartier)||[[Chartier-185|Chartier, Jeanne]] || [[Rousset-9|Rousset, Pierre]] || 03/11/1669|| Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |154 (Charton)||[[Charreton-1|Charetton, Jeanne]] || [[Robin-138|Robin, Jean]] || 10/10/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |155 (Chaton)||[[Chaton-5|Chaton, Marie]] || [[Lagarde-82|Lagarde, Pierre]] || 05/02/1667 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |156 (Chauvet)||[[Chauvet-21|Chauvet, Marie]] ||[[Fagnant-30| Fagnan, Pierre]] || 16/08/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |157 (Chemereau)||[[Chaumereau-2|Chaumereau, Marguerite]] || [[Piette-58|Piet, Jean]] || 1669 or '70 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |158 (Cherfault)||[[Cherfault-1|Cherfault, Denise]] || [[Grandry-15|Grandry, Thomas]] || 16/11/1665 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |159 (Chevalier)||[[Chevalier-375|Chevalier, Françoise]] || [[Habert-2|Habert, Jacques]] || 19/04/1668 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |160 (Chevalier)||[[Chevalier-345|Chevalier, Jeanne]] || [[Lecanteur-1|Lecanteur, Guillaume]] ||19/10/1671|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |161 (Chevalier)||[[Chevalier-271|Chevalier, Suzanne]] || [[Foubert-17|Foubert, Robert]]|| 14/04/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |162 (Chevrainville)||[[Chevrainville_dit_Lafontaine-1|De Chevrainville, Claude]] ||[[Brault-70| Brault, Henri]] || 12/08/1665 || Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |163 (Chevrainville)||[[De_Chevrainville-1|De Chevrainville, Madeleine]] ||[[Lamy-2| Lamy, Joseph-Isaac]] ||22/10/1663 ||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |164 (Chevreau)||[[Chevreau-7|Chevreau, Marie]] || [[Reaume-11|Réaume, René]] || 29/10/1665 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |166 (Chrétien)||[[Chrétien-119|Chrétien, Madeleine]] || [[Chicoine-5|Chicoine, Pierre]] || 20/10/1670|| Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |167 (Chrétien)||[[Chrétien-124| Chrétien, Marie]] ||[[Perrault-158| Perrault or Perrot, Paul]] || 04/11/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |168 (Clerice)||[[Clerice-1|Clérice, Catherine]] || [[Lussier-9|Lussier, Jacques]] ||12 /10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |169 (Coignard)||[[Coignart-1|Coignard, Marie]] || [[Germain-9|Germain, Robert]] || 29/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |170 (Coipel)||[[Coipel-1|Coipel, Marie]] ||[[Fagot-13| Fagot, Guillaume]] || 21/10/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |171 (Colin)||[[Colin-9|Colin, Anne]] || [[Boissonneau-2|Boissonneau, Vincent-Nicolas]] || 18/10/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |172 (Colin)||[[Colin-1|Colin, Denise]] || [[Thouin-2|Thouin, Roch]] || 17/11/1673 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |173 (Colin)||[[Collin-57|Colin, Marie-Rose]] || [[Deguire-12|Deguire, François]] || 1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |174 (Collet)||[[Collet-281|Collet, Jeanne]] || [[Simon-3341|Simon, Grégoire]] || 31/12/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |175 (Collet)||[[Collet-8|Collet, Marguerite]] || [[Bissonnette-42|Bissonnet, Jacques]] || 19/11/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |176 (Compagnon)||[[Compagnon-3|Compagnon, Antoinette]] ||[[Gerny-1|Gerny, Jacques]] || 08/10/1668 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |177 (Confians)||[[Conflans-1|Conflans, Françoise]] ||[[Rancin-3|Rancin, Charles]] || 11/10/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |178 (Coppequesne)||[[Coppequesne-2|Coppequesne, Charlotte ]]||[[Gateau-6|Gateau, Jean]]||10/01/1667|| Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |179 (Cottin)||[[Cottin-13|Cottin, Catherine]]|| [[Brunet-474|Brunet, Pierre]] || 01/02/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |180 (Couet)||[[Couet-1|Couet, Marie]] || [[Leclerc-330|Leclerc, Jean]] || 11/11/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |181 (Cousin)||[[Cousin-24|Cousin, Françoise]] || [[Gauterot-2|Gaudreau, Charles]] || 13/10/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |182 (Couture)||[[Couture-63|Couture, Anne]] || [[Moreau-43|Moreau, Jean]] || 12/11/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |183 (Courturier)||[[Courturier-7|Couturier, Isabelle]] ||[[Chatelou-2|Chantelou, François]] || 15/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |184 (Coy)||[[Coy-444|Coy, Charlotte]] ||[[Brard-2| Bérard, Jean]] || 12/11/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |185 (Crépin)||[[Crépin-22|Crépin, Marie]] || [[Fournier-1898|Fournier, Jean]] || 1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |186 (Cretel)||[[Cretel-1|Cretel, Élisabeth]] ||[[Langlois-238| Langlois, Nicolas]] || 26/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |187 (Croiset)||[[Croiset-1|Croiset, Marie]] || [[Laquerre-1|Laquerre, Jean]] || 29/08/1671|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |188 (Crosnier)||[[Crosnier-29|Crosnier, Jeanne]] ||[[Le_Magan-2| Magnan, François]] || 30/09/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |189 (Crosnier)||[[Crosnier-2|Crosnier, Martine]] || [[Destroismaisons-12|Destroismaisons, Philippe]] || 18/11/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |190 (Curé)||[[Curé-32|Curé, Françoise]] || [[Loiseau-18|Loiseau, Lucas]] || 19/12/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |191 (Dailly)||[[D'Ailly-5|Dailly, Anne]] ||[[Lesot-2| Lesot, Jacques]] || 28 /10/1671|| N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |192 (Dain)||[[Dain-94|Dain, Marie]] ||[[Marquet-61| Marquet, François]] || 1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |193 (Dallon)||[[D'allon-6|Dallon, Marie]] || [[Bissonnette-29|Pierre Bissonnet]] || 09 /10/ 1668|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |194 (Damané)||[[Damane-1|Damané, Denise]] ||[[Aure-4| Houray, René ]]|| 26 /10/ 1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |195 (Damisé)||[[Damise-2|Damisé, Claude]] || [[Perthuis-7|Perthuis, Pierre]] || 10 /12/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |196 (Damois)||[[Damois-1|Damois, Marie]] || [[Faucher-24|Faucher, Léonard]] || 15/10/ 1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |197 (Damours)||[[D'Amours-101|D'Amours, Hélène]] || [[Foucher-42|Foucher, Louis]] || 06/08/1668|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |198 (Dannesé)||[[Annese-4|Dannese, Esther]] || [[Couillard-51|Couillard, François]]||17 /10/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |199 (Debure)||[[Debure-1|Debure, Marie]] ||[[Henart-4| Énard, Gilles]] ||06/10/ 1665||Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |200 (Déchard)||[[Dechard-2|Déchard, Jeanne]] ||[[Collette-130| Collet, Jean]] ||16 /02/ 1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |201 (Delastre)||[[Delastre-3|Delastre, Adrienne]] || [[Mortrel-1|Mortrel, Pierre]] ||16 /11/1665 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |202 (Delaunay)||[[Delaunay-25|Delaunay, Madeleine]] || [[Guillet-66|Guillet, Pierre]] || 11/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |203 (Delestre)||[[Delestre-1|Delestre, Anne]] || [[César-4|César, François]] || 1673 or ‘74 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |204 (Delorme)||[[Delorme-13|Delorme, Marguerite]] || [[Chartier-101|Chartier, René]] || /10/ 01 1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |205 (Denot)||[[ Denote-2|Denot, Jeanne]] || [[Robidou-4|Robidou, André]] || 07/06/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |206 (Denoyon)||[[De_Noyon-12|Denoyon, Marie]] || [[Davenne-5|Davenne, Charles]] || 08/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |207 (Dequain)||[[Dequain-1|DeQuain, Anne]] || [[Lareau-27|Lareau, François]] || 28/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |208 (Deschalets)||[[Deschalets-9|Deschalets, Claude]] || [[Roy-2123|Roy, Siméon]] || 03/09/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |209 (Deschalets)||[[Deschalets-3|Deschalets, Élisabeth]] || [[Paris-29|Paris, François]] ||26 /11/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |210 (Deschalets)||[[Deschalets-2|Deschalets, Madeleine]] || [[Giron-4|Giron, Jean]] ||03 /09/1668 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |211 (Deschamps)||[[Des_Champs-8|Deschamps, Anne]] ||[[Bouttet-2| Boutet, Michel]] || 29/10/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |212 (Deschamps)||[[Deschamps-219|Deschamps, Marie]]|| [[Pouillard-5|Pouillard, Pierre]] || 12/10/1667 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |213 (Deschamps)||[[Deschamps-55|Deschamps, Marie]]|| [[Verret-3|Verret, Michel]] || 13/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |214 (Deschamps)||[[Deschamps-25|Deschamps, Marie]] || [[Marest-2|Marais, Marin]] || 1672 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |215 (Deschamps)||Deschamps, Madeleine || ||1670|| N ||N ||RF |- |216 (Desenne)||[[De_Seine-1|Deseine, Catherine]] || [[Senecal-58|Senécal, Jean]] || 15-10-1672 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |217 (Desfossés)||[[Desfossés-4|Desfossés, Françoise]] || [[Bidet-13|Bidet, Jacques]] || 18/10/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |218 (Desgranges)||[[Desgranges-4|Desgranges, Louise]] || [[Delisle-62|Delisle, Louis]] || 15/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |219 (Deshayes)||[[Deshayes-11|Deshay, Marguerite]] || [[Menard-623|Ménard, Pierre]] || 1670 or ‘71 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |220 (Deshayes)||[[Deshay-1|Deshay, Marie]] || [[Betourne-1|Bétourné, Adrien]] || 1668 or ‘69 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |221 (Desjardins)||[[Desjardins-95|Desjardins, Françoise]] || [[De_Royssy-1|Droissy, Nicolas]] || 12/10/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |222 (Desmarais)||[[Desmarest-16|Desmarais, Catherine]] ||[[Lirette-82| Hileret, François]] || 20/10/1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |223 (Desmarais)||[[Desmarais-479|Desmarais, Étiennette]] || [[Beaudin-13|Beaudin, Pierre]] ||03 /09/1669 || N |||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |224 (Desportes)||[[Desportes-22|Desportes, Françoise]] || [[Renaud-234|Renaud, Pierre]] || 05/11/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |225 (Després)||[[Després-2|Després, Madeleine]] || [[Audet-54|Audet, Nicolas]] ||15 /09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |226 (Destouches)||[[Destouches-1|Destouches, Marie-Agnès]] || [[Dompierre-21|Dompierre, Charles]] || 27/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |227 (Devault)||[[DeVaux-2|Devault, Marie]] || [[Coderre-42|Émery, Antoine]] || 1667 or ‘68 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |228 (Dodiers)||[[Dodier-16|Dodier, Jeanne]] || [[Joliet-5|Joliet, Adrien]] || 22/01/1664 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |229 (Dodin)||[[Dodin-2|Dodin, Anne]] || [[Mouflet-7|Mouflet, Jean]] || 19/08/1669 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |230 (Doigt)||[[Doigt-1|Doigt, Ambroise]] || [[Mignier-29|Magnan, Jacques]] || 14/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |231 (Dorange)||[[D'Orange-3|Dorange, Barbe]] || [[Tardif-67|Tardif, Jacques]] || 06/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |232-NF (Doriant)||Doriant, Simone || Hébert, Jean || 1667 || N ||N|| |- |233 (Doribeau)||[[Doribeau-1|Doribeau, Catherine]] || [[Genest-122|Genest, Jacques]] ||1669 or ‘70 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |234 (Doucinet)||[[Doucinet-6|Doucinet, Élisabeth]] || [[Bedard-37|Bédard, Jacques]] || 14/10/1666 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |235 (Drouet)||[[Drouet-1|Drouet, Catherine]] || [[Chamard-3|Chamard, Pierre]] || 19/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |236 (Dubicourt)||Dubicourt, Jeanne||||1669||N||N||RF |- |237 (Dubié)||Dubié, M.-Françoise||||1671||N||N||RF |- |238 (Dubois)||[[Dubois-915|Dubois, Marie]] || [[Brouillette-16|Brouillet, Michel]] || 03/11/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |239 (Dubreuil)||[[Breüillet-_Dubreuil-1|Dubreuil, Isabelle]] || [[Faure-146|Faure, Bernard]] ||26/08/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |240 (Ducharme)||[[Ducharme-69|Ducharme, Catherine]] || [[Roy-353|Roy, Pierre]] || 12/01/1672 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |241 (Duchemin)||[[Duchemin-23|Duchemin, Marie-Anne]] || [[Yvelin-2|Yvelin, Pierre]] || 19/09/1673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |242 (Duchesne)||[[Duchesne-97|Duchesne, Barbe]] || [[Badet-2|Badel, André]] ||26/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |243 (Decors)||[[Decors-1|Ducorps, Jeanne]] || [[Masse-7|Massé, Martin]] || ~ 1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |244 (Ducoudray)||[[Ducoudray-1|Ducoudray, Marie]] || [[Grenet-2|Grenet, François]] || 15/09/ 1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |245 (Dufaye)||[[Du_Faye-1|Dufaye, Françoise]] || [[Henne-36|Pire, Martin]] || 15/10/1674 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |246 (Dufiguier)||[[Du_Figuier-1|Dufiguier, Hélène]] || [[Fournier-922|Fournier, Jacques]] || 24/10/1663 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |247 (Dufossé)||[[Dufossé-2|Dufossé, Jeanne]] || Doré, Louis || 01/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |248 (Dufresne)||[[Dufresne-301|Dufresne, Jeanne]] || [[D'aleret-2|Dalleray, Marin]] ||<1666 census ||N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |249 (Dumont)||[[Dumont-16|Dumont, Anne-Julienne]] || [[Dubois-138|Dubois, René]] || 25/11/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |250 (Dumont)||[[Dumont-603|Dumont, Barbe]] || [[Le_Breton-335|Le Breton, François]] ||11/11/1668 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |251 (Dumontier)||[[Dumonstier-3|Dumontier, Antoinette]]||[[Martineau-157| Martineau, Jacques]] || 28/11/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |252 (Dumortier)||[[Deleurs-1|Dumortier, Madeleine]] ||[[Roussel-37| Roussel, Timothée]] || 22/11/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |253 (Dupré)||[[ Dupré-238| Dupré, Françoise]]||[[Loubat-1| Loubat, Jean]] || 07/10/1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |254 (Dupuis)||[[Dupuis-291|Dupuis, Catherine]] || [[Martin-10342|Martin, Charles]] || 28/11/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |255 (Durand)||[[Durand-2|Durand, Catherine]] || [[Piche-81|Piché, Pierre]] ||25 /11/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |256 (Durand)||Durand, Élisabeth||||1670||N||N||RF |- |257 (Durand)||[[Durand-29|Durand, Françoise]] || [[Baudouin-30|Beaudouin, Jacques]] || 24/03/1671 || B|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |258 (Durand)||[[Durand-14|Durand, Suzanne]] || [[Gibault-2|Gibault, Gabriel]] ||30 /10/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |259 (Durosaire)||[[Du_Rosaire-1|Durosaire, Esperance]] ||[[Longueville-5| Longueville, Simon]] || 09/10/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |260 (Dusauçay)||[[Du_Saucay-1|Dusauçay, Marie-Anne]] || [[Rouër-2|Rouer, Louis]] || 26/11/1675 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |261 (Dusson)||[[Dusson-3|Dusson, Marguerite]] || [[Lavallee-322|Lavallée, Jean]] ||31 /12/1671|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |262 (Duval)||[[Duval-6|Duval, Françoise]] ||[[Courault-34|Courault, Pierre]] || 16/11/1671|| B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |263 (Duval)||[[Duval-33|Duval, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Joubert-973|Joubert, Jacques]] || < 1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |264 (Duval)||[[Duval-313|Duval, Michelle]]||[[Bon-21|Bon, Pierre]] || <. 1672 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |265 (Eloy)||[[Deloy-2|Éloy, Antoinette]]||[[Masta-16|Masta, Mathurin]]||14/12/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |266 (Eloy)||[[Deloy-4|Éloy, Marguerite]]||[[Cosset-5|Cosset, Jean]]||12/02/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |267 (Enfre)||Enfre, Françoise||||1669||N||N||RF |- |268 (Esquincourt)||[[D'Esquincourt-5|D'Esquincourt, Anne]] || [[Damien-40|Damien, Jacques]] || 21/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |269 (Évin)||[[Hevain-1|Évin, Marguerite]]||[[Richard-1329|Richard, Pierre]]||24/09/1670|| N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |270 (Faucheux)||[[Faucheux-2|Faucheux, Jeanne]]||[[Leduc-92|Leduc, Antoine]]||1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |271 (Faucon)||[[Faucon-4|Faucon, Marie]] || [[Chartier-179|Chartier, Guillaume]] || 27/11/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |272 (Fauconnier)||[[Fauconnier-15|Fauconnier, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Dufresne-74|Dufresne, Antoine-Nicolas]]|| 04/12/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |273 (Faure)||[[Faure-50|Faure, Louise]] || [[Gagné-125|Gagné, Pierre]] || 28/10/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |274 (Fauvault)||[[Fauvault-2|Fauvault, Jeanne]] || [[Le_Prévost-4|Provost, Jacques]] ||25 /11/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |275 (Fayet)||[[Fayet-3|Fayet, Anne]] || [[Siret-3|Siret, René]] || 08/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |276 (Ferré)||[[Ferre-58|Ferré, Catherine]] || [[Lefebvre-1041|Lefebvre, Louis]] || 04/11/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |277 (Ferron)||[[Ferron-21|Ferron, Marguerite]] ||[[Bertrand-113| Bertrand, Guillaume]] || 12/10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |278 (Fièvre)||[[Fièvre-2|Fièvre, Catherine]] || [[Allaire-2|Allaire, Charles]] || 10/11/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |279 (Firmand)||Firmand, M.-Anne||||1667||N||N||RF |- |280 (Flamand)||[[Flamand-6|Flamand, Nicole]] || [[Le_Parc-2|Leparc, Louis]] ||06 /01/ 1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |281 (Fléchet)||[[Fléchet-3|Fléchet, Anne]] || [[Luneau-39|Louineau, Pierre]] || 02/10/1673 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |282 (Fleure)||Fleure, M.-Anne||||1673||N||N||RF |- |283 (Fleureau)||[[Fleureau-1|Fleureau, Marie]] ||[[De_Launay-3| Delaunay, Jean]] || 30 /09/1669 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |285 (Foubert)||[[Foubert-26|Foubert, Anne]] ||[[Boisseau-34| Boisseau, Pierre]] || 20/10/1670 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |286 (Fouquet)||[[Foucques-1|Fouquet, Marie]] ||[[Beatrix-30| Béatrix, Jacques]] || 16/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |287 (Fourrier)||[[Fourrier-9|Fourrier, Catherine]] || [[Mercadier-1|Mercadier, Mathurin]] || 14/10/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |288 (Fourrier)||[[Fourrier-7|Fourrier, Jeanne]] || [[Baillaux-1|Baillaux, Jean]] || 1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |289 (Foy)||[[Foy-105|Foy, Marguerite]] || [[Dumas-82|Dumas, François]] || 05/07/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |290 (Fressel)||[[Fressel-11|Fressel, Isabelle]] || [[Emereau-2|Émereau, François]] ||30 /10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |291 (Fressel)||[[Fresset-3|Fressel, Jeanne]] || [[Jacob-138|Jacob, Étienne]] || 14/10/1670 || B|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |292 (Fro)||[[Fro-1|Fro or Frost, Louise]] || [[Meunier-6|Meunier, Julien]] ||09 /09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |293 (Gaillard)||[[Gaillard-41|Gaillard, Marguerite]] || [[Provost-96|Provost, François]] || 26/07/1664 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |294 (Gaillard)||[[Daire-5|Gaillard, Marie]] || [[Perrier-16|Perrier, Jean-Baptiste]] || 06/10/ 1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |295 (Galet)||[[Gallet-193 |Gallet, Anne]] ||[[Veau-4|Veau, Sylvain]] || 13/10/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |296 (Galet)||[[Galet-3|Galet, Anne]] || [[Hébert-1099|Hébert, Michel]] || 01/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |297 (Galien)||[[Gallien-93|Galien, Marie-Thérèse]] ||[[Gouin-156| Gouin, Laurent]] || 22/10/1665 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |298 (Gambier)||[[Gambier-31|Gambier, Marguerite]] || [[Legardeur-10|Legardeur, Michel]] ||26 /07/1664 || Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |299 (Gargotin)||[[Gargottin-1|Gargottin, Louise]] || [[Perron-16|Perron, Daniel]] || 26/02/1664 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |300 (Gateau) ||[[Gateau-2|Gateau, Catherine]] || [[Jean-57|Jean, Vivien]] ||29 /11/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |301 (Gaumond)||[[Gaumond-2|Gaumond, Madeleine]] || [[Langlois-641|Langlois, Jean]] || 25/10/ 1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |302 (Gauthier)||[[Gauthier-87|Gauthier, Marie]] || [[Prou-7|Prou, Pierre]] ||07 /11/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |303 (Gauthier)||[[Gaultier-42|Gauthier, Marie-Jeanne]] ||[[Masson-212| Masson, Gilles]] || 17/10/1668 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |304 (Gendreau)||[[Gendreau-1|Gendreau, Anne]] || [[Leduc-36|Leduc, René]] || 28/10/1664 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |305 (Genest)||[[Genest-110|Genest, Jeanne-Léonarde]] ||[[Cardin-61| Cardin, Nël]] || 01/11/ 1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |306 (Geoffroy)||[[Geoffroy-27|Geoffroy, Anne]] || [[Flibot-2|Flibot, Charles]] || 01/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |307 (Geoffroy)||Geoffroy, M.-Marthe|| ||1673 || Y |||| |- |308 (Gilles)||[[Gilles-1|Gilles, Jeanne]] || [[Fleury-2|Fleury, François]] || 24/08/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |309 (Girard)||[[Girard-418|Girard, Anne]] || [[Daudelin-3|Daudelin, Nicolas]] ||22 /10/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |310 (Girard)||[[Girard-87|Girard, Marguerite]] || [[Forcier-11|Forcier, Pierre]] || 10/02/1675 || N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |311 (Girard)||Girard, Marie || ||1667 || N|||| |- |312 (Goard)||[[Goard-1|Goard, Mathurine]] || [[Marie-52|Marie, Louis]] || 31/05/ 1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |313 (Gobert)||[[Gobert-14|Gobert, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Grouleau-2|Groleau, Pierre]] || 08/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |314 (Godeby)||[[Godeby-1|Godeby, Anne]] || [[Talua-2|Talua, Julien]] || 07/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |315 (Godequin)||[[Godequin-3|Godequin, Jeanne]] || [[Croteau-96|Croteau, Vincent]] ||22 /09/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |316 (Godillon)||[[Godillon-1|Godillon, Élisabeth]] || [[Éthier-40|Éthier, Léonard]] || 22/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |317 (Goiset)||[[Goiset-1|Goiset, Anne]] || [[Albert-191|Albert, André]] ||21/10/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |318 (Gossard)||[[Gossard-28|Gossard, Nëlle]] || [[Bussiere-19|Bussière, Jacques]] || 16/10/ 1671 || N|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |319 (Goubilleau)||[[Goubilleau-1|Goubilleau, Françoise]] || [[Daze-5|Dazé, Paul]] ||15/04/ 1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |320 (Grandin)||[[Grandin-1|Grandin, Marie]] || [[Beaudet-4|Beaudet, Jean]] || 23/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |321 (Grandin)||[[Grandin-22|Grandin, Jeanne]] || [[Brière-108|Brière, Jean]] || 19/10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |322 (Grandin)||[[Grandin-7|Grandin, Marie]] || [[Morel-49|Morel, Michel]] || ~ 1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |323 (Grandjean)||[[Grandjean-2|Grandjean, Adrienne]] || [[Bauché-52|Baucher, René]] || 08/01/1666 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |324 (Grangeon)||[[Granjon-1|Grangeon, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Richard-1743|Richard, Marin]] || 21/10/ 1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |325 (Granger)||[[Granger-704|Granger, Catherine]] || [[Lepine-83|Lépinay, Jean]] ||11 /09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |326 (Graton)||[[Graton-49|Graton, Mathurine]] || [[Toupin-6|Toupin, Pierre]] || 30/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |327 (Gravois)||[[Gravois-20|Gravois, Marie]] || [[Étienne-53|Étienne, Philippe]] || 03/11/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |328 (Grimbault)||[[Grimbault-1|Grimbault, Anne]] || [[Jouanne-6|Jouanne, Jean]] || 17/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |329 (Groisard)||[[Groisat-1|Groisat/Groisard, Jeanne]] || [[Dupuis-550|Dupuis, Zacharie]] || 25/10/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |330 (Groleau)||[[Groleau-5|Groleau, Madeleine]] || [[Marchand-103|Marchand, François]] || 30/09/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |331 (Grossejambe)||[[Grossejambe-2|Grossejambe, Françoise]] || [[Boissil-1|Boissy, Julien]] || 26/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |332 (Gruaux)||[[Gruau-1|Gruaux, Jeanne]] ||[[René-14| René, Jean]] || 09/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |333 (Grusseau)||[[Grusseau-1|Grusseau, Marie]] || [[Chénier-64|Chénier, Jean]] || 23/08/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |334 (Guédon)||[[Guédon-3|Guédon, Marie-Anne]] || [[Benoît-113|Benoît, Gabriel]] || 26/10/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |335 (Gueneville)||[[Gueneville-1|Gueneville, Jeanne]]||[[Molleur-5| Molleur, Pierre]] || 03/11/ 1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |336 (Guérard)||[[Guérard-38|Guérard, Catherine]] || [[Dubord-19|Dubord, Julien]] || 12/02/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |337 (Guérin)||[[Guérin-217|Guérin, Madeleine]] || [[Julien-19|Julien, Jean]] || 10/11/ 1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |338 (Guérin)||[[Guérin-322| Guérin, Marie-Jeanne]] ||[[Dupré-128| Dupré, Antoine]] ||13 /07/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |339 (Guerier)||[[Gueriere-1|Guerrier/Guerrière, Bonne]] || [[Fauque-1|Fauque, Jacques]] || 12/10/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |340 (Guesnel)||Guesnel, Jeanne-Marie||||1671 || N ||N|| |- |341 (Guichelin)||[[Guichelin-1|Guichelin, Catherine]] || [[Buteau-67|Buteau, Nicolas]] || 23/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |342 (Guillaume)||[[Guillaume-27|Guillaume, Anne]] || [[Dubois-662|Dubois, François]] || 19/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |343 (Guillaume)||[[Guillaume-49|Guillaume, Marie]] || [[Maheu-75|Maheu, Nicolas]] || 15/01/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |344 (Guilleboeuf)||[[Guilleboeuf-1|Guilleboeuf, Madeleine]] || [[Plouffe-4|Plouffe, Jean]] || 24/06/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |345 (Guillin)||[[Guillin-3|Guillin, Françoise]] ||[[Trajot-1| Trajot, André]] ||12 /11/1668 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |346 (Guillaudeau)||[[Guillaudeau-2|Guillaudeau, Madeleine]] || [[Poitevin_dit_Laviolette-1|Poitevin, Jean]] || 19/08/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |347 (Guillot)||[[Guiot-2|Guillot, Catherine]]||[[Jacquereau-4|Jean Jacquereau]]||, 25/10/1663||N||N|| |- |348 (Guyard)||[[Guyard-14|Guyard, Catherine]] || [[Beaudry-438|Beaudry, Antoine]]|| 24/11/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |349 (Guyet)||[[Guyet-10|Guyet, Marie]] || [[Ledoux-31|Ledoux, Pierre]] || 09/10/1668 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |350 (Halley)||[[Halley-141|Halay or Halle, Marie]] || [[Courtois-181|Courtois, Bertrand]] ||24/08/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |351 (Halley)||[[Halay-9|Halay, Marie]] ||[[Augeron-1| Augeron, Antoine]] || 11/01/1672 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |352 (Hallier)||[[Hallier-2|Halier, Pierrette]] || [[Bordeleau-6|Bordeleau, Antoine]] || 15/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |353 (Haneton)||[[Haneton-2|Haneton, Madeleine]] || [[Reguindeau-4|Reguindeau, Joachim]] || 06/01/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |354 (Hardy)||[[Hardy-2436|Hardy, Jeanne]] || [[Trotain-1|Trottain, François]] || 16/08/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |355 (Hatanville)||[[Hatanville-1|Hatanville, Marie]] || [[Sénat-4|Sénat, Robert]] || 15/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |356 (Hébert)||[[Hébert-1520|Hébert, Françoise]] ||[[Baptiste-115|Baptiste, Jean]] || 03/05/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |357 (Hébert)||[[Hébert-1436|Hébert, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Brosseau-1|Brosseau, Denis]] ||15/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |358 (Hédouin)||[[Hédouin-6|Hédouin, Marguerite]] || [[Barbeau-64|Barbeau, François]] ||24/08/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |359 (Héron)||[[Heron-408|Héron, Jacqueline]] || [[Galarneau-23|Galarneau, Jacques]] || 15/10/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |360 (Hiardin)||[[Hiardin-7|Hiardin, Marguerite]] ||[[Vérieu-15| Verieul, Nicolas]] || 12/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |361 (Housseau)||[[Housseau-3|Housseau, Marguerite]] ||[[Meunier-403| Meunier, Jean]] || 05/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |362 (Hubert)||[[Hubert-2|Hubert, Elisabeth]] || [[Bolduc-5|Bolduc, Louis]] || 20/08/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |363 (Hubert)||[[Hubert-157|Hubert, Marie]] || [[Fournier-474|Fournier, Nicolas]] || 30/09/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |364 (Hubinet)||[[Hubinet-2|Hubinet, Louise]] || [[Fournel-9|Fournel, Jacques]] || 12/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |365 (Huché)||[[Huché-3|Huché, Françoise]] || [[Bonhomme-8|Bonhomme, Guillaume]] || 30/10/1664 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |366 (Hué)||[[Hué-14|Hué, Marie]] || [[Boesme-2|Boesmé, Jean]] || 07 /01/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |367 (Humelot)||[[Humelot-1|Humelot, Catherine]] || [[Hardy-5575|Hardy, Jacques]] || 01/09/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |368 (Hutru)||[[Hutru-1|Hutru, Perrine]] || [[Sureau-4|Sureau, Théodore]] ||09/10/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |369 (Isambert)||[[Isambert-2|Isambert, Catherine]] || [[Denys-78|Denis, Louis]] || 09/09/1673 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |370 (Itas)||[[Itas-2|Itas, Marguerite]] || [[Aubuchon_dit_Le_Loyal-1|Aubuchon, Jacques]] ||11 /11/1667 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |371 (Jacquier)||[[Jacquier-77|Jacquier, Louise]] || [[Pousset-1|Pousset, Jean]] ||17 /01/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |372 (Jallais)|||[[Jallais-1|Jallais, Marie]] || [[Lauzé-5|Lauzé, Jean]] || 26/08/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |373 (Jasselin)||[[Jasselin-1|Jasselin, Marguerite]] ||[[Lelièvre-88| Lelièvre, Mathurin]] || 31/10/1676 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |374 (Javelot)||[[Javelot-1|Javelot, Anne]] || [[LeBoeuf-38|Leboeuf, Jacques]] || 24/01/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |375 (Jodon)||[[Jaudon-147|Jaudon or Jodon, Marie]] ||[[Barbault-2|Barbeau, André]] || 12/08/1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |376 (Jolivet)||[[Jolivet-3|Jolivet, Charlotte-Catherine]] ||[[Girardin-2|Girardin, Léonard]]|| 12/10/1671|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |377 (Joly)||[[Joly-55|Joly, Charlotte]] || [[Drapeau-22|Drapeau, Antoine]] || 20/08/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |378 (Jossard)||[[Jossard-1|Jossard, Elisabeth]] || [[Poithier-8|de Poitiers, Jean-Baptiste]] || 06/10/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |379 (Jourdain)||[[Jourdain-23|Jourdain, Marguerite]] || [[Delpêsches-2|Delpêche, Bernard]] || 25/11/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |380 (Juin)||[[Juin-1|Juin, Jeanne]] || [[Dumouchel-6|Dumouchel, Bernard]] || 17/04/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |381 (Julien)||[[Julien-84|Julien, Anne]] || [[Choquet-10|Choquet, Nicolas]] || 1211/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |382 (La Motte)||La Motte, Diane||||1671||N||N|| |- |383 La Tour)||La Tour, Renée||||1671||N||N|| |- |384 (Labastille)||[[Labastille-1|Labastille, Renée]] ||[[Gauthier-120| Gauthier, René]] || 11/04/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |385 (Labbé)||[[Labbé-128|Labbé, Anne]] || [[Girard-446|Girard, Marc]] || /11/ 05 1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |386 (Labbé)||[[Labbe-132|Labbé, Jacqueline]] ||[[Collin-184|Colin, Mathurin]] || <. 1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |387 (Labbé)||[[Labbé-134|Labbé, Jeanne]] || [[Hély-17|Élie, Jean]] || 28/11/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |388 (Lacour)||[[De_La_Cour-9|De Lacour, Marie]] ||[[Roger-102|Gabriel, Roger]] || 12/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |389 (Lacroix)||[[De_La_Croix-4|De Lacroix, Françoise]] ||[[Hubert-34| Hubert, René]] || 04/11/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |390 (Lacroix)||[[Lacroix-160|Lacroix, Suzanne]] || [[Savaria-5|Savaria, Jacques]] ||17 /10/1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |391 (Lafaye)||[[Lafaye-14|Lafaye, Marie]] || [[Emond-69|Émond, René]] || 22/10/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |392 (Lafitte)||[[De_La_Fitte-2|De Lafitte, Apolline]] ||[[Rousselot-11| Rousselot, Nicolas]] || 17/10/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |393 (Lafleur)||[[Lafleur-181|Lafleur, Joachine]] || [[Martin-10923|Martin, Pierre]] || 11/02/1664 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |394 (Lafontaine)||[[Lafontaine-120|Lafontaine, Marie-Anne]] || [[D'aleret-2|Dalleray, Marin]] || 28/08/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |395 (Lagou)||[[Lagou-1|Lagou, Anne]] || [[Valliere-12|Vallière, Pierre]] || 08/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |396 (Laguéripière)||[[Laguéripière-5|De Laguéripière, Élisabeth]] || [[Rainville-73|de Rainville, Jean]] ||26 /10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |397 (Lahaye)||[[Lahaie-23|de Lahaye, Catherine]] ||[[Gignard-20| Guignard, Pierre]] || 18/11/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |398 (Lahaye)||[[Delahaye-19|De Lahaye or Lahaie, Jeanne]] ||[[Chauvin-199| Chauvin, Philibert]] || 25/10/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |399 (Lahaye)||[[De_La_Haye-71|De Lahaye or Lahaie, Michelle]] ||[[Potier-47|Pothier, Étienne]] || 09/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |400 (Lahogue)||[[Delahogue-1|Delahogue, Marie-Claire]] || [[Sédilot-31|Sédilot, Jean]] || 27/11/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |401 (Laîné)||[[Lainé-85|Laîné, Anne]] || [[Contant-16|Content, Étienne]] || 14/10/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |402 (Laîné)||[[Laisné-6|Laîné, Catherine]] || [[Mesny-3|Mesny, Étienne]] || 23/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |403 (Laîné)||[[Laine-111|Laîné, Geneviève]] || [[Vanchy-2|de Vanchy, Pierre]] || 21/11/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |404 (Lalore)||[[Lalore-4|De Lalore, Catherine]] ||[[Badaillac-2| Badaillac, Louis]] || 1671 or ‘72 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |405 (Lamain)||[[Lamain-1|Lamain, Marguerite]] || [[Rognon-51|Rognon, Michel]] ||14 /09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |406 (Lamarche)||[[Lamarche-96|Lamarche, Charlotte]] || [[Lussier-9|Lussier, Jacques]] || 30/09/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |407 (Lamarche)||Lamarche, Charlotte||||1669||N||N|| |- |408 (Lamarre)||[[Lamarre-26|Lamarre, Anne]] || [[Duquet-37|Duquet, Pierre]] ||25 /08/1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |409 (Lamarre)||[[De_La_Mare-39|De La Mare, Marie]] || [[Renaud-324|Renaud, Guillaume]] ||27/11/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |410 (Lambert)||Lambert, Jeanne || Bellinier, Étienne || 04/10/1669 || B || N|| |- |411 (Lamirault)||[[L'Amireaud-1|Lamirault, Marguerite]] || [[Martel-24|Martel, Honoré]] || 26/11/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |412 (Lamoureux)||[[Lamoureux-96|Lamoureux, Antoinette]] ||[[Nourice-2|Nourrice, Marin]]|| 25/09/1667 || Y|| N|| |- |413 (Lamy)||[[Lamy-3|Lamy, Marie]] || [[Chevrefils-5|Chèvrefils, François]] || 1671 or ‘72 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |414 (Landry)||[[Landry-1105|Landry, Louise]] ||[[Comptant-2| Content, Pierre]] ||26/09/1667 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |415 (Lanfillé)||[[Lanfillé-1|Lanfillé, Marie]] || [[Roche-1028| Roche, Pierre]] || 09/11/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |416 (Lange)||[[Lange-805|Lange, Françoise]] ||[[Moreau-411| Moreau, Étienne]] || 17/10/1673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |417 (Langlois)||[[Langlois-662|Langlois, Anne]] || [[Cauchon-45|Cauchon, René]] || 10/11/1671 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |418 (Langlois)||[[Langlois-976|Langlois, Jacqueline]] || [[May-7525|May, Jean]] ||17/11/1668 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |419 (Langlois)||[[Langlois-180|Langlois, Marie]] || [[Gladu-4|Gladu, Jacques]] || 28/10/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |420 (Langlois)||[[Langlois-455|Langlois, Marie]] || [[Poirier-321|Poirier, Jean]] || 18/03/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |421 (Anguille)||[[Anguille-1|Languille, Jeanne]] || [[Allard-117|Allard, François]] || 01/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |422 (Lapierre)||[[Lapierre-62|Lapierre, Perrine]] || [[Dany-3|Danis, Honoré]] || 20/03/1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |423 (Laplace)||[[Laplace-9|De Laplace, Marguerite]] || [[Lesiege_Fontaine-2|Lesiège, Pierre]] || 1671 or ‘72 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |424 (Laporte)||[[De_la_Porte-9|De Laporte, M.-Anne]] || [[Genaple-2|Genaple, François]] || 12/10/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |425 (Larcher)||[[L'Arche-5|Larcher, Madeleine]] || [[Voisin-36|Voisin, Élie]] || 15/10/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |426 (Larchevêque)||[[Larchevêque-5|Larchevêque, Françoise]]|| [[Dubuc-6|Dubuc, Jean]] || 14/01/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |427 (Larteau)||Larteau, Marie||||1668||N||N|| |- |428 (Larue)||[[De_Larüe-1|De Larue, Charlotte]] ||[[La_Vanois-2| Lavannois, Jean]] || 19/09/1673 ||Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |429 (Lasnon)||[[Lasnon-1|Lasnon, Marie]] || [[Ferré-22|Ferret, Pierre]] || 24/11/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |430 (Latier)||[[Latier-3|Latier, Françoise]] || [[Levert-20|Levert, Jean]] || 15/09/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |431 (Latouche)||[[Latouche-18|Latouche, Marguerite]] || [[Manseau-15|Manseau, Jacques]] || 21/09/1673 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |432 (Laurent)||[[Laurent-75|Laurent, Catherine]] || Hilaret, Moïse ||28/09/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |433 (Lauvergnat)||[[Lauvergnat-1|Lauvergnat, Jacqueline]] || [[Gaulin-22|Gaulin, Pierre]] || 21/04/1664 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |434 (Laval)||[[Laval-12|Laval, Claude]] || [[Bonnodeau-3|Bonnodeau, Louis]] || 26/10/1671 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |435 (Laverdure)||[[Laverdure-12|Laverdure, Marguerite]] || [[Crépeau-12|Crépeau, Maurice]] || 12/10/1665 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |436 (LeBlanc)||[[Blanc-104|Leblanc, Anne]] || [[Mesnage-4|Ménage, Pierre]] || 13/03/1673 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |437 (LeBon)||[[Le_Bon-12|Lebon de Champfleury Marie]] || [[Bidard-1|Bidard, François]] || 29/11/1665 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |438 (Lebrun)||[[Lebrun-5|Lebrun, Marie]] || [[Barbary-54|Barbary, Pierre]] || 24/02/1668 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |439 (Leclerc)||[[LeClerc-40|Leclerc, Anne]] || [[Chrestien-10|Chrétien, Vincent]] || 1668 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |440 (Leclerc)||[[Leclerc-127|Leclerc, Denise]] || [[Delaunay-57|Delomay, Claude]] || 03/10/1669 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |441 (Leclerc)||[[Leclerc-393|Leclerc, Françoise]] || [[Riffaut-2|Rifault, Michel]] || 27/08/1668 || B |||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |442 (Leclerc)||[[Leclerc-327|Leclerc, Geneviève]] || [[Poiré-5|Poiré, Laurent]]|| 26/11/1671 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |443 (Leclerc)||[[Leclerc-435|Leclerc, Marguerite]] || [[Blois-9|Beloy, Julien]] || 26/11/1665 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |444 (Lecomte)||Lecomte, Jeanne||Senécal, Adrien||1671||N||N|| |- |445 (Lecomte)||Lecomte, Marguerite|| de Laroux, Olivier || 14/06/1672 || B || NW||NW |- |446 (Lecomte)||[[Lecomte-70|Lecomte, Marie]] || [[Habert-2|Habert, Jacques]] || 22/10/1672 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |447 (Lecomte)||[[LeCompte-77|Lecomte, Suzanne]] || [[Arsenault-808|Arsenault, François]] || 1665 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |448 (Leconte)||Élisabeth||||1666||N||N|| |- |449 (Lecoq)||[[LeCocq-6|Lecoq, Jeanne]] || [[Dubeau-42|Dubeau, Guillaume]] || 08/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |450 (Lecoutre)||[[Lecoutre-1|Lecoutre, Louise]] || [[Crevier-6|Crevier, Nicolas]] || ~ 1665 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |451 (Ledoux)||[[Ledoux-247|Ledoux, Jacquette]] || [[Grimault-11|Grimault, Jacques]] || 10/11/1664 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |452 (Lefebvre)||[[Lefebvre-265|Lefebvre, Antoinette]] || [[Limousin-6|Limousin, Hilaire]] || 09/11/ 1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |453 (Lefebvre)||[[Lefebvre_DeLacroix-1|Lefebvre, Barbe]] || [[Goyer-36|Goyer, Mathurin]] || 14/01/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |454 (Lefebvre)||[[Lefebvre-25|Lefebvre, Élizabeth-Agnès]] || [[Thibault-9|Thibault, François]] ||14/10/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |455 (Lefebvre)||Lefebvre, Marie || Bernier, Jean || 1671 || B ||NW|| |- |456 (Lefebvre)||[[Lefebvre-27|Lefebvre, Marie]] || [[Marsil-1|Marcil, André]] || 16/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |457 (Lefebvre)||[[Lefebvre-1495|Lefebvre, Marie]] || [[De_L'Astre-2|Delastre, Jean]] || 15/10/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |458 (Lefebvre)||[[Lefebvre-91|Lefebvre, Marie]] || [[Guilbault_-Grandbois-2|Guibault, Louis]] || 13/10/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |459 (Lefrançois)||[[Lefrançois-138|Lefrançois, Françoise]] || [[Lavergne-32|Lavergne, François]] || 19/10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |460 (Legendre)||[[Legendre-61|Legendre, Jeanne]] || [[Sauvageau-61|Sauvageau, Claude]] || 03/12/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |461 (Legrand)||[[Legrand-52|Legrand, Antoinette]] || [[Preunier-1|Prunier, Nicolas]] || 03/10/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |462 (Legrand)||[[Le_Grand-10|Legrand, Nicolle]] || [[Nel-148|Noël, François]] || 22/10/1669 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |463 (Leguay)||[[Leguay-6|Leguay, Madeleine]] || [[L'Archevêque-13|Larchevêque, Jacques]] || 03/06/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |464 (Leguay)||[[Leguay-2|Leguay, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Garnier-82|Garnier, Jean]] ||06/11/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |465 (Lelong)||[[Lelong-9|Lelong, Marie]] || [[Dumas-251|Dumas, René]] || 12/10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |466 (Lelong)||[[LeLong-10|Lelong, Marie-Anne]] || [[Bonneau-146|Bonneau, Joseph]] ||16/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |467 (Leloup)||[[Leloup-2|Leloup, Catherine]] || [[Nafrechou-2|Nafrechou, Isaac]] || 19/11/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |468 (Lemaire)||[[Le_Mer-1|Lemaire, Anne]] || [[Hulin-11|Hulin, Philippe]]|| 11/09/1673 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |469 (Lemaire)||[[Lemaire-19|Lemaire, Marie]] || [[Ratel-16|Ratel, Pierre]] || 28/12/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |470 (Lemaître)||[[Lemaistre-20|Lemaître, Anne]] || [[Blanquet-5|Blanquet, Adrien]] || 07/11/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |471 (Lemaître)||Lemaître, Gabrielle ||Rallé, Jean || 25/09/1667 || N ||N|| |- |472 (Lemerle)||[[Lemerle-7|Lemerle de Hautpré, Marguerite]] || [[Bory-2|Bory, Laurent]] || 08/02/1672 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |473 (Lemesle)||[[Le_Mesle-1|Lemesle, Catherine]] || [[Morin-288|Morin, Pierre]] ||13 /06/1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |474 (Lemoine)||[[Lemoine-5|Lemoine, Françoise]] || [[Niquette-10|Niquet, Pierre-René]] || 15/06/1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |475 (Lemoine)||[[Lemoyne-19|Lemoine, Marie]] || [[Duhault-3|Duhault, Jacques]] || 16/11/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |476 (Lenoir)||[[Lenoir-32|Lenoir, Antoinette]] || [[LeBoeuf-38|Leboeuf, Jacques]] || 29/10/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |477 (Léonard)||Léonard, Marie || Rémy, René || /01/ 24 1667 || B ||NW|| |- |478 (Lepage)||[[Lepage-42|Lepage, Constance]] || [[Garinet-1|Garinet, François]] || 05/02/1674 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |479 (Lepage)||[[Le_Page-8|Lepage, Marie-Rogère]] || [[Thoéry-3|Thoery, Roch]] || 05/12/1667 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |480 (Leper)||[[Leper-6|Leper, Anne]] || [[Pinsonnault_LaFleur-3|Pinsonnault, François]] || 1673 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |481 (Lépine)||[[L'Espine-1|Lépine, Andrée]] || [[Challe-5|Chasle, Claude]]|| 19/11/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |482 (Lépine)||[[Lespine-5|Lépine, Anne]] || [[Boucher-1134|Boucher, François]] || 21/04/1664 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |483 (Lépine)||Lépine, Marie || Faure, Moïse || /10/ 29 1677 || B ||NW|| |- |484 (Lequin)||[[Le_Quin-1|Lequin, Élizabeth]] || [[Gaigneux-3|Gaigneur, Jean]] || 05/07/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |485 (Leroux)||[[Leroux-323|Leroux, Catherine]] || [[Goulet-259|Goulet, René]] || 29/10/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |486 (Leroux)||Leroux, Marguerige||||1665||N||N|| |- |487 (Leroux)||[[Leroux-70|Leroux, Marie]] || [[Enaud-Canada-1|Énaud, Jacques]] || < 1673 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |488 (Lesaint)||[[Lesaint-2|Lesaint, Marie]] || [[Marandeau-3|Maranda, Étienne]] || 26/11/1671 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |489 (Lesdiller)||Lesdiller, Michelle || Milet, Nicolas || 27/12/1668 || B ||NW|| |- |490 (Lespérance)||[[L'Espérance-12|Lespérance, Marie]] || [[Ponsart-1|Ponsart, Benoît]] || 04/11/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |491 (Levaigneur)||[[Levaigneur-1|Levaigneur, Marguerite]] || [[Montreau-1|Montreau, Léonard]] || 01/03/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |492 (Levasseur)||[[Le_Vavasseur-1|Levasseur, Jeanne]] || [[Tesson-54|Tesson, Barthélemy]] || 24/10/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |493 (Levieux)||Levieux, Claire || Neveu, Pierre || 02/09/1670 || B ||NW|| |- |494 (Liardin)||Liardin, Marie || Lancougnier, Pierre || 09/10/1668 || B ||NW|| |- |495 (Licerace)||[[De_Licerace-1|De Licerace, Suzanne]] ||[[Bisson-256| Bisson, Michel]] ||08 /11/1663 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |496 (Limoges)||[[Delimoges-57|De Limoges, Marie]] || [[Laurence-268|Laurence, Noël]] || 03/11/1667 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |497 (Linière)||Linière, Jeanne Marie Anne || Aumeau, Louis || 19/01/1672 || B ||NW||SP |- |498 (Loiseau)||[[Loiseau-60|Loiseau, Anne]] || [[Gendron-132|Gendron, Guillaume]] || 21/07/1664 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |499 (Loiseau)||[[Loiseau-53|Loiseau, Françoise]] || [[Grégoire-106|Grégoire, Mathurin]] || 07/10/1669 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |500 (Loret)||[[Loret-3|Loret, Étiennette]] || [[Lebeau-6|Bau, Jean-Baptiste]] || 1671 or ‘72 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |501 (Loriot)||[[Loriot-1|Loriot, Perrette]] || [[Buteau-9|Buteau, Pierre]] || 21/10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |502 (Lostelneau)||[[De_Lostelneau-1|De Lostelneau, Catherine]] || [[Denys-75|Denis, Charles]] || 18/10/1668 ||Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |503 (Louvet)||[[Louvet-5|Louvet, Catherine]] || [[Brassard-65|Brassard, Guillaume]] || 15/02/1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |504 (Lucos)||Lucos, Catherine || Moreau, Martin|| 14/11/1671 || B ||NW|| SP |- |505 (Mabille)||[[Mabille-23|Mabille, Anne]] || [[Salois-40|Salois, Claude]] || 1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |506 (Magdelain)||[[Magdelain-1|Magdelain, Jeanne]] || [[Tapin-3|Tapin, Antoine]] || 04/11/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |507 (Magnan)||[[Magnan-21|Magnan, Anne]] || [[Gauvin-18|Gauvin, Jean]] || 22/10/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |508 (Magnier)||[[Magné-1|Magnier, Marie]] || [[Chartier-171|Chartier, Michel]] || 1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |509 (Major)||[[Major-1048|Major, Marie]] || [[Roy-302|Roy, Antoine]] || 11/09/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |510 (Malo)||Malo, Marie || Brin, Jacques || 24/09/1670 || B ||NW|| |- |511 (Mangeon)||[[De_Mangeon-1|De Mangeon, Claude]] || [[Lesueur-143|Lesueur, Thomas]] || 23/11/1664 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |512 (Mansion)||[[Mansion-1|Mansion, Jeanne]] || [[Cherlot-4|Cherlot, Jean]] || 09/10/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |513 (Marchand)||[[Marchand-250|Marchand, Catherine]] || [[Nafrichon-1|Nafrechou, Laurent]] || 17/09/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |514 (Marchand)||[[Marchand-254|Marchand, Marie-Elisabeth]]|| [[Coeur-2|Coeur, Pierre]] || 06/10/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |515 (Marchessault)||[[Marcheneau-3|Marchessault, Marie]]|| [[Boutin-103|Boutin, Pierre]] || 1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |516 (Maréchal)||[[Marechal-31|Maréchal, Marguerite]] || [[Doyson-2|Doison, Sébastien]] ||02 /11/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |517 (Maréchal)||[[Marechal-5|Maréchal, Madeleine]] || [[Poupardeau-3|Poupardeau, Pierre]] || ~ 1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |518 (Marié)||[[Marier-1|Marié, Denise]] || [[Quenneville-5|Quenneville, Jean]] || 12/02/1674 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |519 (Marié)||[[Marie-41|Marié, Jeanne]] || [[Vezina-8|Vézina, François]] || 29/10/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |520 (Martin)||[[Martin-3461|Martin, Marie]] || [[Vallée-13|Vallée, Jean]] || 04/02/1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |521 (Martin)||[[Martin-12973|Martin, Marie]] || [[Février-34|Février, Christophe]] || 16/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |522 (Martin)||Martin, Reine||||1667||N||N|| |- |523 (Masseron)||[[Masseron-6|Masseron, Marie]] || [[Marset-2|Marset, François]] || 1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |524 (Masson)||[[Masson-128|Masson, Anne]] || [[Galien-3|Galien, Robert]] || 08/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |525 (Matras)||[[De_Matras-1|De Matras, Jeanne-Judith]] || [[Legardeur-20|Legardeur, Charles]] ||02 /12/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |526 Menancier)||[[Menancier-1|Menacier, Louise]] || [[Ledran-2|Ledran, Toussaint]] || 12/11/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |527 (Ménard)||[[Ménard-592|Ménard, Barbe]] || [[Vermet-19|Vermet, Antoine]] || 26/08/1669 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |528 (Mercier)||[[Mercier-524|Mercier, Marie]] || [[Chabaudie-3|Chevaudier, Jean]] || 19/10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |530 (Merlin)||[[Merlin-12|Merlin, Agathe]] || [[Loriot-6|Loriot, Jean]] || 31/08/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |531 (Méry)||Méry, Anne||||1669||N||N|| |- |532 (Mesuré)||[[Mesuré-1|Mesuré, Marie]] || [[Montambault-2|Montambault, Michel]] || 20/12/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |533 (Métru)||[[Metru-1|Métru, Marie-Anne]] || [[Samson-46|Samson, Jacques]] || 26/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |534 (Meunier)||[[Meunier-76|Meunier, Antoinette]] || [[Aubert-75|Aubert, Jacques]] || 09/11/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |535 (Meunier)||Meunier, Marie || Bonin, Charles || 07/10/1665 || B ||NW||SP |- |536 (Meunier)||[[Meunier-71|Meunier, Marie]] || [[Chrétien-63|Chrétien, Michel]] || 13/10/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |537 (Michaud)||[[Michaud-8|Michaud, Marie-Louise]] || [[Daniau-15|Daniau, Jean]] || 10/09/1670 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |538 (Michaud||[[Michaud-38|Michel, Françoise]] || [[Dupont-34|Dupont, Gilles]] || 10/08/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |539 (Michel)||[[Michel-286|Michel, Anne]] || [[Paviot-Lapensee-1|Paviot, Jacques]] || 1668 or ‘69 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |540 (Michel)||[[Michaud-563|Michel, Jacquette]] || [[Mignier-9|Mignier, André]] ||23/10/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |541(Michel)||[[Michel-1149|Michel, Marie]] || [[Morin-2339|Morin, Charles]] || 03/11/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |542 (Migneault)||[[Mignot-28|Mignault, Catherine]] || [[Le_Moyne-5|Lemoine, Pierre]] || 15/10/1673 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |543 (Mignolet)||[[Mignolet-1|Mignolet, Gillette]] || [[Minson-45|Minson, Nicolas]] || 19/10/1671 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |544 (Millot)||[[Millot-5|Millot, Françoise]] || [[Le_Picq-1|Lepicq, Jean]] || 15/10/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |545 (Moisan)||[[Moisan-3|Moisan, Françoise]] || [[Brunet-593|Brunet, Antoine]] || 28/11/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |546 (Moitié)||[[Moitié-7|Moitié, Marie]] || [[Magnan-42|Magnan, Jean]] || 19/03/1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |547 (Moitié)||[[Moitié-9|Moitié, Marguerite]] || [[Gauthier-336|Gauthier, Joseph-Élie]] || 24/10/1663 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |548 (Moitié)||[[Moitie-4|Moitié, Catherine]] || [[Viger-24|Viger, Désiré]] || 19/09/1667 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |549 (Montminy)||[[Montminy-1|Montminy, Marie]] || [[Roze-7|Rose, Nël]] || 07/01/1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |550 (Mauvoisin)||[[Mauvoisin-3|Monvoisin, Françoise]] ||[[Gariteau-1| Gariteau, Nicolas]] || 10/10/1668 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |551 (Moreau)||[[Moreau-8|Moreau, M.-Françoise]]||[[Morin-9|Morin, André]]||26-08-1670||Y|| [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |552 Moreau)||[[Moreau-408|Moreau, Marguerite]] || [[Faye-32|Faye, Mathieu]] || 30/09/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |553 (Morin)||[[Maurice-2|Morin, Charlotte]] || [[LeTendre-6|Letendre, Pierre]] || 1668 or ‘69 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |554 (Morin)||[[Morin-418|Morin, Marie]] || [[Dauphin-33|Dauphin, Étienne]] || 15/11/1665 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |555 (Morin)||[[Morin-534|Morin, Marie]] || [[Gignard-1|Gignard, Laurent]] || 11/09/1673 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |556 (Morin)||[[Morin-14|Morin, Marie]] || [[Boissel-3|Boissel, Noël]] || 23/07/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |557 (Mouillard)||[[Mouillard-1|Mouillard, Éléonore]] ||[[Chapelain-5| Chapelain, Bernard]] || 09/11/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |558 (Moutrachy)||[[Moutrarchy-1|Moutrachy, Marguerite]] ||[[Dupré-233|Dupré, Antoine]] || 25/07/1672 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |559 (Mullois)||[[Mullois-1|Mullois, Marie]] || [[St-Ours-1|de St-Ours, Pierre]] || 08/01/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |561 (Navarre)||[[Navarre-303|Navarre, Marguerite]] ||[[Roy-842| Roy, Étienne]] || 26/08/1669 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |562 (Nevelet)||[[De_Nevelet-1|De Nevelet, Marguerite]] || [[Bouat-2|Bouat, Abraham]] || 19/03/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |563 (Niel)||[[Niel-2|Niel, Madeleine]] ||[[Charles-1001| Charles, Étienne]] || 24/10/1667 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |564 (Normand)||[[Normand-72|Normand, Catherine]] || [[Normand-73|Normand, Pierre]] || 07/09/1665 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |565 (Normand)||[[Normand-16|Normand, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Morin-143|Morin, Alphonse]] || 10/02/1670 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |566 (Olivier)||[[Olivier-328|Olivier, Agnès]] || [[Sivadier-4|Sivadier, Louis]] || 09/10/1669 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |567 (Olivier)||[[Olivier-674|Olivier, Jeanne]] || [[Le_Roux-414|Leroux, André]] || 26/10/1671 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |568 (Olivier)||[[Olivier-12|Olivier, Madeleine]] || [[Rousseau-47|Rousseau, Thomas]] || 05/10/1667 || B ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |569 (Ollery)||Ollery, Anne || Frérot, Thomas|| 1669 or ‘70 || B ||NW|| |- |570 (Ouache)||Ouache, M.-Madeleine||||1667||N||N|| |- |571 (Ouinville)||[[Ouinville-1|Ouinville, Michelle]] || [[Barabé-28|Barabé, Nicolas]] || 21/10/1668 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |572 (Pahin)||[[Pahin-1|Pahin, Claude-Philiberte]] || [[Coirier-3|Coirier, Pierre]] || /09/181673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |573 (Papin)||[[Papin-18|Papin, Madeleine]] || [[Cachelièvre-2|Cachelièvre, Jacques]] || /09/121672 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |574 (Paquet)||[[Paquet-13|Paquet, Marguerite]] || [[Biville_Dit_le_Picard-1|Biville, François]] || /11/261670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |575 (Parement)||[[Parement-1|Parement, Perrette]] || [[Lory-8|Lory, François]] || /10/ 011670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |576 (||[[Parenteau-36|Parenteau, Marie]] || [[Fauvel-30|Fauvel, Pierre]] || /10/ 061671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |577 (Paris)||[[Paris-35|Paris, Françoise]] || [[Petitclerc-1|Petitclerc, Pierre]] || /09/111673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |578 (Pasquier)||[[Pasquier-25|Pasquier, Marie]] || [[Couillard-21|Couillard, Charles]] || /01/101668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |579 (Paul)||[[Paul-1848|Paul, Catherine]] || [[Dechambre-3|de Chambre, Jean]] || /10/211668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |580 (Paulo)||[[Paulo-2|Paulo, Catherine]] || [[Campeau-22|Campeau, Étienne]] || /11/261663 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |581 (Paviot)||[[Paviot-7|Paviot, Marie]] || [[Mondin-1|Mondain, Antoine]] || /05/131668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |582 (Payan)||[[Payant-13|Payant, Marie-Marthe]] || [[Corneau-8|Corneau, Mathurin]] || /10/ 061670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |583 (Péchina)||[[Péchina-1|Péchina, Marie]] || [[Gourault-1|Gourault, Guillaume]] || /08/111672 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |584 (Pecquet)||Pecquet, Charlotte || Richard, René || 1671 || N ||NW|| |- |585 (Pednel)||[[Pedenelle-1|Pednel, Françoise]] || [[Arrive-16|Arrivé, Maurice]] || /06/ 2 1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |586 (Pelletier)||Pelletier, Anne || Papin, Pierre || /12/141665 || N ||NW|| |- |587 (Pelletier)||[[Pelletier-994|Pelletier, Marie]] || [[Renaut-8|Renaud, Mathurin]] || /10/ 071669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |588 (Pelois)||[[Pelois-1|Pelois, Marguerite]] || [[Boivin-102|Boivin, Jacques]] || /11/171665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |589 (Perodeau)||[[Perodeau-8|Pérodeau, Marie]] || [[Stems-2|Stems, Georges]]|| /09/161669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |590 (Perreault)||[[Perrault-43|Perrault, Anne]] || [[Blais-32|Blais, Pierre]] || /10/121669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |591 (Pescher)||[[Pescher-1|Pescher, Marie]] || [[Harel-10|Harel, Jean]] || 1671 or 1672 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |592 (Petit)||[[Petit-2|Petit, Jeanne]] || [[Séguin-386|Séguin, François]] || /10/311672 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |593 (Petit)||[[Petit-345|Petit, Louise]] || [[De_Laurice-2|Delaurice, Charles]] || /09/141670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |594 (Petit)||[[Petit-131|Petit, Marie]] || [[Delage-6|Delage, Nicolas]] || /10/101669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |595 (Petit)||[[Petit-13|Petit, Marie-Rose]] || [[Frappier-2|Frappier, Hilaire]] || /10/161668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |596 (Petit)||[[Petit-728|Petit, M.-Thérèse]] || [[Laurent-289|Laurent, Christophe]] || /10/291669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |597 (Peuvrier)||[[Peuvrier-1|Peuvrier, Marguerite]] || [[Meneux-3|Meneux, Jacques]] || /10/231663 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |598 (Philippe)||[[Philippe-2|Philippe, Anne]] || [[Bacquet-18|Bacquet, François]] || /11/241671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |599 (Philippe)||[[Philippe-57|Philippe, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Tousignan-6|Tousignan, Pierre]] || /10/171668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |600 (Philippeau)||[[Philippeau-12|Philippeau, Nicole]] || [[Gauthier-48|Gauthier, Mathurin]] || 1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |601 (Piéton)||[[Piéton-8|Piéton, Françoise]] || [[Achin-17|Achin, André]] || /10/241667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |602 (Pillard)||[[Pillat-6|Pillat, Catherine]] || [[Charron-28|Charron, Pierre]] || /10/191665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |603 (Pilois)||[[Pilois-7|Pilois, Françoise]] || [[Cassé-32|Cassé, Antoine]] || /10/141665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |604 (Pilois)||[[Pilois-1|Pilois, Françoise]] || [[Barsa-1|Barsa, André]] || /12/ 021669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |605 (Pineau)||[[Pineault-4|Pineault, Anne]] || [[Gaudreau-27|Gaudreau, Gilles]] || 15/10/1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |606 (Piton)||[[Pitau-1|Pitau (Piton), Marie]] || [[Bergevin-21|Bergevin, Jean]] || 26/11/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |607 (Planteau)||[[Planteau-1|Planteau, Isabelle]] || [[Talon-13|Talon, Lucien]] || 12/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |608 (Plémaret)||[[Plémaret-1|Plémaret, Marie-Geneviève]] || [[Renauld-1|Renaud, Antoine]] || 11/01/1666 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |609 (Plouard)||[[Plouard-1|Plouard, Madeleine]] ||[[Viau-79|Viau, Jacques]] || 21/01/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |610 (Poignet)||[[Poignet-2|Poignet, Marguerite]] || [[Cousson-2|Cousson, François]] || 30/10/1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |611 (Pointel)||[[Pointel-2|Pointel, Marthe]] || [[Benoit-350|Benoît, Abel]] || 09/11/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |612 (Poiré)||[[Poiré-9|Poiré, Marie]] || [[Hardy-2446|Hardy, Jean]] || 21/10/1669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |613 (Poisson)||[[Poisson-50|Poisson, Catherine]] || [[Gautron-12|Gautron, Michel]] || 18/09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |614 (Poitevin)||[[Poitevin-8|Poitevin, Catherine]] || [[Isabelle-39|Isabelle, Adrien]] || 10/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |615 (Poiraud)||[[Poitreau-1|Poitreau (Poitraud), Anne]] || [[Bruneau-47|Bruneau, René]] || 17/09/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |616 (Poitron)||[[Poitron-1|Poitron, Anne]] || [[Martin-15198|Martin, Pierre]] || 25/08/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |617 (Portas)||[[Portas-12|De Portas, M.-Angélique]] ||[[Lecomte-22| Lecompte, Jean]] || 30/01/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|SP |- |618 (Pothier)||[[Pothier-207|Pothier, Marie]] || [[Prevost-380|Prévost, Élie]] || 24/11/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |619 (Poussin)||[[Poussin-2|Poussin, Marie-Anne]] || [[L'Archevêque-3|Larchevêque, Jean]] || 07/09/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |620 (Prat)||[[Pratte-2|Pratte (Prat), Claude]] || [[Giard-2|Giard, Nicolas]] || 17/11/1665 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |621 (Prévost)||[[Prévost-84|Prévost, Marie]] ||[[Aubin-42| Aubin, Michel]] || 11/06/1670 || Y ||N|| |- |622 (Prévost)||[[Prévost-16|Prévost, Marie]] || [[Bruneau-70|Bruneau, François]] || 09/10/1669 || N ||N|| |- |623 (Prévost)||[[Prevost-Provost-2|Prévost, Élisabeth]] || [[Foucault-7|Foucault, Jean-François]] || 14/11/1671 || N ||N|| |- |624 (Prévost)||[[Prévost-363|Prévost, Marguerite]] || [[Poisson-93|Poisson, Martin]] || /10/271669 || N ||N|| |- |625 (Priault)||[[Briau-1|Priault, Marie]] ||[[Geoffrion-12|Geoffrion, Pierre]] || 1668 or ‘69 || N ||N|| |- |626 (Provinlieu)||[[Provinlieu-1|De Provinlieu, M.-Marguerite]] || [[Houssy_dit_Bellerose-1|Houssy, Jean]] ||11 /10/1672|| Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |627 (Provost)||[[Provost-135|Provost, Marguerite]] || [[Venne-7|Venne, Jacques]] || 1670 or ‘71 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |628 (Prunier)||[[Prunier-12|Prunier, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Gailloux-14|Gaillou, Jean]] || 04/11/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |629 (Quelvé)||[[Quelue-1|Quelue (Quelvé), Jeanne]] || [[Brassard-16|Brassard, Jean-Baptiste]] || 26/04/1672 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |630 (Quentin)||[[Quantin-8|Quentin/Quantin, Jeanne]] || [[Chanas-2|Chanas, Jean-Pierre]] || 09/09/1673 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |631 (Quéquejeu)||[[Quequejeu-1|Quequejeu, Marie]] || [[Rivaut-2|Rivault, Pierre]] || 30/10/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |632 (Quitel)||[[Quitel-1|Quitel, Marthe]] || [[Verreault-3|Verreau, Barthélemy]] || 22/09/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |633 (Rabady)||[[Rabady-1|Rabady, Anne]] || [[L'Ecuyer-4|Lécuyer, Antoine]] || 1672 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |634 (Rableau)||[[Rableau-1|Rableau, Florimonde]] || [[Chamard-3|Chamard, Pierre]] || 13/10/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |635 (Raclos)||[[Raclos-1|Raclos, Françoise]] || [[David-112|David, Michel]] || 02/12/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |636 (Raclos)||[[Raclos-2|Raclos, Madeleine]] || [[Perrault-96|Perrault, Nicolas]] || 11/11/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |637 (Raclos)||[[Raclos-5|Raclos, Marie]] || [[Beaudoin-202|Beaudoin, René]] || 12/10/1671 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |638 (Ragot)||[[Ragot-21|Ragot, Marthe]] || [[Samson-651|Samson, Louis]] || 26/02/1664 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |639 (Raimbault)||[[Raimbault-16|Raimbault, Jeanne]] || [[Raimbault-15|Raimbault, Étienne]] || ~ 1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |640 (Raisin)||[[Raisin-5|Raisin, Marguerite]] || [[Deniger-6|Deniger, Bernard]] || 1670 or ‘71 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |641 (Raudy)||Raudy, Marthe||||1670||N||N||RF |- |642 (Raveau)||[[Raveau-1|Raveau, Barbe]] || [[Malherbaut-2|Malherbeau, Jean]] || 09/10/ 1673 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |643 (Relot)||[[Relot-1|Relot, Catherine]] || [[Badié-26|Badier, Charles]] || 24/04/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |644 (Remondière)||[[Remondière-3|Remondière, Andrée]] || [[Rondeau-30|Rondeau, Thomas]] || 31/10/1666 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |645 (Rémy)||[[Rémy-83|Rémy, Marie]] || [[Desautels-8|Desautels, Pierre]] || 11/01/1666 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |646 (Renard)||[[Renard-49|Renard, Jeanne]] || [[Dion-138|Dion, Jacques]] || 26/04/1672 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |647 (Renaud)||[[Renault-30|Renaud, Anne-Michelle]] || [[Laspron-2|Lampron, Jean]] || 07/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |648 (Renaud)||[[Renaut-9|Renaud, Élisabeth]] || [[Olivier-677|Olivier, Jean]] || 20/09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |649 (Renaud)||[[Renaut-3|Renaud, Marguerite]] || [[Lopes-337|Lopez, Emmanuel]] || 03/10/1667 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |650 (Renaud)||[[Renaud-113|Renaud, Marie]] || [[Leroux-66|Leroux, François]] || 25/10/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |651 (Renouard)||[[Renouard-5|Renouard, Marie-Catherine]] || [[Durand-194|Durand, Nicolas]] || 22/12/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |652 (Rentier)||[[Rentier-3|Rentier, Madeleine]] || [[Roy-1429|Roy, Olivier]] || 06/11/1668 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |653 (Repoche)||[[Repoche-8|Repoche, Jeanne]] || [[Bilodeau-403|Bilodeau, Jérôme]] || 04/02/1664 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |654 (Repoche)||[[Repoche-1|Repoche, Marie]] || [[Jamin-6|Jamin, Julien]] || 16/09/1664 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |655 (Richard)||[[Martin-228|Martin, Anne-Françoise]] ||[[Campagna-3|Campagna, Pierre]] ||05/01/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |656 (Richard)||[[Richard-347|Richard, Marie]] || [[Daunay-6|Daunay, Antoine]] || /08/241669 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |657 (Richer)||[[Richer-37|Richer, Georgette]] || [[Dupuis-61|Dupuis, François]] || /10/ 061670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |658 (Richer)||[[Richer-190|Richer, Marguerite]] || [[Verdon-99|Verdon, Jean]] || /09/191672 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |659 (Rigaud)||Rigaud, Jeanne || Poirier, Michel || ~ 1676 ||N||NW|| |- |660 (Rigaud)||[[Rigaud-2|Rigaud, Geneviève]] || [[Têtu-10|Têtu, Pierre]] || /10/111667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |661 (Rivet)||[[Rivet-16|Rivet, Anne]] || [[Ouellet-20|Ouellet, René]] || 08/03/1666 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |662 (Rivet)||[[Rivet-52|Rivet, Catherine]] || [[Duchesne-34|Duchesne, Pierre]] || 07/01/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |663 (Rivière)||[[Rivière-80|Rivière, Anne]] || [[Seleurier-1|Sellurier, Jean]] || ~ 1676 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |664 (Rivière)||Rivière, Marie || Ratier, Jean || /02/161672 || N ||NW|| |- |665 (Rivière)||[[Rivière-39|Rivière, Renée]] || [[Croiset-3|Croiset, Mathurin]] || 1666 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |666 (Robin)||[[Robin-172|Robin, Louise]] || [[Gaumont-45|Gaumond, Robert]] || 26/10/1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |667 (Robineau)||[[Robineau-16|Robineau, Marguerite]] ||[[Gauron-3|Gauron, Michel]] || 17/10/1668 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |668 (Robineau)||[[Robineau-3|Robineau, Marie]] || [[Forgues-9|Forgues, Jean-Pierre]] || 16/10/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |669 (Rossignol)||[[Rossignol-14|Rossignol, Jeanne]] || [[Petit-180|Petit, Charles]] || 01/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |670 (Roteau)||[[Rotteau-1|Roteau, Barbe]] || [[Moisan-34|Moisan, Pierre]] || 11/09/1673 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |671 (Rou)||[[Rioult-3|Rou, Madeleine]] || [[La_Vallée-6|Lavallée, Louis]] || 10/09/1673 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |672-D (Rousseau)||Rousseau, Anne||Jouineau, Pierre || < 11-1663 || Y ||[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:Quebecois Quebecois]||NF |- |673 (Rousseau)||[[Rousseau-274|Rousseau, Henriette]] || [[Paquet-95|Paquet, Étienne]] || 06/11/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||NF |- |674 (Roussel)||[[Roussel-59|Roussel, Charlotte]] || [[Gauthier-395|Gauthier, Pierre]] || 12/11/1668 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |675 (Roussel)||[[Roussel-4|Roussel, Marguerite]] || [[Duchiron-1|Duchiron, Mathurin]] || 28/09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |676 (Rousselin)||[[Rousselin-4|Rousselin, Suzanne]] || [[Leblanc-2277|Leblanc, Jacques]] || 06/06/1666 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |677 (Rousselot)||[[Rousselot-1|Rousselot, Marguerite]] || [[Flibot-2|Flibot, Charles]] || 22/09/1673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |678 (Routy)||Routy, M.-Marguerite || Guillaud, Nicolas || 22/10/1668 || N ||NW|| |- |679 (Roux)||[[Roux-171|Roux or Leroux, Aimée]] || [[Tinon-3|Tinon, Aimard]] || 06/02/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |680 (Roy)||[[Leroy-227|Roy, Anne]] || [[Rodrigue-14|Rodrigue, Jean]] || 28/10/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |681 (Roy)||[[Roy-111|Roy, Anne]] || [[Bouchard-68|Bouchard, Nicolas]] || 30/09/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |682 (Roy)||[[Roy-1333|Roy, Catherine]] || [[Salvail-5|Salvaye, Pierre]] || 13v1673 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |683 (Roy)||[[Roy-1167|Roy, Élisabeth]] || [[Paillereau-2|Paillereau, Pierre]] || 12/10/1665|| Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |684 (Roy)||[[Roy-1647|Roy, Jeanne]] || [[Bonnet-79|Bonnet, Étienne]] || 26/01/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |685 (Roy)||Roy, Marie || Pérusseau, Pierre || /03/ 081666 || N ||NW|| |- |686 (Roy)|||[[Roy-964|Roy, Marie]] || [[Thibodeau-56| Thibodeau, Mathurin]] || 11/07/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |687 (Roy)||[[Le_Roy-37|Roy, Marguerite]] || [[Charbonneau-199|Chardonneau, Hilaire]] || 27/07/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |688 (Roy)||Roy, Marie-Anne || Binet, Mathieu || 21/10/1670 || N ||NW|| |- |689 (Roybon)||Roybon, Madeleine||||1671||N||N|| |- |690 (Royer)||[[Royer-361|Royer, Nicole]] || [[Desmeillers-2|Desmilliers, Martin]] || 03/11/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |691 (Sageot)||[[Sageot-1|Sageot, Geneviève]] || [[Adhemar-4|Adhémar, Antoine]] || 10/10/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |692 (Salé)||[[Salé-236|Salé, Isabelle]] || [[Marcotte-6|Marcotte (Marcot), Jacques]] || 09/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |693 (Salé)||[[Sale-312|Salé, Madeleine-Thérèse]] || [[Raimbault-18|Raimbault, Claude9393]] || 15/12/1670 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |694 (Samson)||[[Samson-667|Samson, Marguerite]] || [[Beaugrand-15|Beaugrand, Jean]] || 1670 or ‘71 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |695 (Saulnier)||[[Saulnier-66|Saulnier, Nicole]] || [[Brochu-6|Brochu, Jean]]|| 28/10/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |696 (Sonnois)||[[Sonnois-4|Saunois, Thérèse]] || [[Vacher-71|Vacher, Pierre]] || 26/10/1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |697 (Savard)||[[Savard-44|Savard, Gillette]] || [[Filteau-39|Filteau, Pierre]] || 22/02/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |698 (Savonnet)||[[Savonnet-1|Savonnet, Jeanne]] || [[Soucy-7|Soucy, Jean]] || 1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |699 (Sederay)||[[Sederay-1|Sederay, Jeanne]] || [[Picard-162|Picard, Pierre]] || 21/07/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |700 (Seigneur)||[[Seigneur-4|Seigneur, Anne]] || [[Besset-25|Besset, Jean]] || 03/07/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |701 (Seigneur)||[[Leseigneur-4|Seigneur (Le Seigneur), Marie]] || [[Sasseville-15|Sasseville, Pierre]] || 08/09/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |702 (Sel)||[[Selle-33|Sel or Decelles, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Aurio-2|Auriot, Louis-Pierre]] || 21/09/1673 || Y |||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| B&L 702: [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/575858 See G2G]. |- |703 (Sel)||[[Selle-30|Sel or Decelles, Marie]] || [[Guillemet-2|Guillemet, Nicolas]] || 17/10/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |704 (Sel)||[[Sel-16|Sel, Marguerite]] || [[Noël-681|Noël, Jean]] || 12/10/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |705 (Sellerin)||[[Sellerin-1|Sellerin, Marguerite]] || [[Denys-78|Denis, Louis]] || 12/10/1671 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |706 (Senécal)||[[Sénécal-101|Senécal, Catherine]] || [[Lafond-92|Lafond, Jean]] || 12/10/1670 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |707 (Senécal)||[[Sénécal-134|Senécal, Louise]] || [[Guilbeau-25|Guilbault, Pierre]] || 06/10/1667 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |708 (Servignan)||[[Servignan-1|Servignan, Jeanne]] || [[Ronceray-4|Ronceray, Jean]] || 13/10/1665 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |709 (Sicard)||[[Sicard-92|Sicard, Jeanne]] || [[Guillot-4|Guillot, Vincent]] || 09/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |710 (Simon)||Simon, Françoise||Cognac, Claude||1673, '74||N||N|| |- |711 (Souillard)||[[Souillard-1|Souillard, Nicole]] || [[Gabory-2|Gaboury, Louis]] || 16/11/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |712 (Suret)||[[Suret-38|Suret, Catherine]] || [[Fasche-3|Fâche, Nicolas]] || 07/10/1669 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |713 (Talbot)||[[Talbot-4|Talbot, Anne]] || [[Gareau-40|Gareau, Jean]] || 02/11/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |714 (Targer)||[[Targer-1|Targer, Marie]] || [[Royer-46|Royer, Jean]] || 22/11/1663 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |715 (Tarragon)||[[ De_Tarragon-10|De Tarragon,Anne Élisabeth ]]|| [[Couturier-117|Couturier, Gilles]]|| < 03-1676 || N || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |716 (Tavernier)||[[Tavernier-40|Tavernier, Anne]] || [[Moussion-1|Moussion, Robert-Charles]] || 05/05/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |717 (Tavrey)||[[Tavrey-1|Tavrey, Martine]] || [[Marcot-9|Marcot, Nicolas]] || 14/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |718 (Tellier)||[[Tellier-85|Tellier, Jeanne]] || [[Gerbert-21|Gerbert, Mathurin]] || 11/10/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |719 (Ténard)||[[Ténard-5|Ténard, Marguerite]] || [[Boyer-29|Boyer, Charles]] || 23/11/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |720 (Térillon)||[[Tessier-119|Térillon, (Tessier) Geneviève]] ||[[Joly-39| Joly, Pierre]] || 04/07/1673 || Y ||N||B&L 720: Unmerged match to Térillon-1 |- |721 (Tesson)||[[Tesson-59|Tesson, Marguerite]] || [[Maheu-1|Maheu, Jean-Paul]] || 13/11/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |722 (Têtu)||[[Tetu-5|Têtu, Madeleine]] || [[Joubert-64|Joubert, Jean]] || 04/11/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |723 (Thibault)||Thibault, Mathurine||Milot, Jean||26-11-1663||N||N|| |- |724 (Thibierge)||[[Thibierge-3|Thibierge, M.-Madeleine]] || [[St._Denis-117|Saint-Denis, Pierre]] || 13/09/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |725 (Thirement)||[[Thirement-1|Thirement, Anne]] || [[De_Peiras-2|de Peiras, Jean-Baptiste]] || 18/08/1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |726 (Thoine)||[[Vallée-173|Thoine dite Vallée, Madeleine-Judith]] || [[Herpin-15|Herpin, Jean]] || 03/10/ 1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |727 (Thomas)||[[Thomas-1102|Thomas, Anne]] || [[Jodoin-2|Jodoin, Claude]] || 22/03/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |728 (Tierce)||[[Tierce-3|Tierce, Françoise]] || [[Coulon-27|Coulon, Auffray]] || 13/10/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |729 (Tiremont)||[[Tirmont-1|Tiremont, Nëlle]] || [[Bertin-38|Bertin, Bernard]] || 23/09/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |730 (Tisserand)||[[Tisserand-2|Tisserand, Madeleine]] || [[Parenteau-55|Parenteau, Pierre]] || 12/09/1673 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |731 (Topsan)||[[Topsan-1|Topsan, Catherine]] || [[Dumont-194|Dumont, Julien]] || 02/11/1667 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |732 (Toussaint)||[[Toussaint-3|Toussaint, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Carpentier-12|Carpentier, Nël]] || ~ 1672 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |733 (Touzé)||[[Touze-2|Touzé, Jeanne]] || [[Gazaille-12|Gazaille, Jean]] || 08/10/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |734 (Trochet)||[[Trochet-1|Trochet, Françoise]] || [[Pelletier-158|Pelletier, Pierre]] || 10/12/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |735 (Tru)||[[Le_Tru-1|Tru or Trut, Suzanne]] || [[Cadou-1|Cadou, Jean]] || 23/08/1666 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |736 Turbar)||[[Turbar-1|Turbar, Ursule-Madeleine]] || [[Gely-6|Gély, Jean]] || 19/10/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |737 (Vaillant)||[[Vaillant-18|Vaillant, Marguerite]] || [[Dania-4|Dania, Jean]] || 1668 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |738 (Vaillant)||Vaillant, Perette||de Lalonde, Jean||1669||N||N||RF |- |739 (Valade)||[[Valade-3|Valade, Marie]] || [[Cadieux-12|Cadieux, Jean]] || 26/11/1663 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |740 (Valet)||[[Valet-19|Valet, Cécile]] || [[Durand-201|Durand, Michel]] || 27/10/1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |741 (Valet)||[[Valet-16|Valet, Louise]] || [[Bisson-187|Bisson, René]] || 16/09/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |742 (Vallée)||[[Vallée-172|Vallée, Perrette]] || [[Bourassa-64|Bourassa, Jean]] || 20/10/1665 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |743 (Valois)||[[De_Valois-220|De Valois, Catherine]]|| [[Lesné-11|Laîné, Benoît]] ||26 /01/1672 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |744 (Vanzèque)||[[Phansèque-1|Phansèque, Anne-Marie]] || [[Leroux-33|Leroux, Hubert]] || /11/201673 || Y || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |745 (Vara)||[[Vara-6|Vara, Marie]] || [[Bariteau-4|Bariteau, Louis]] || 1671 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |746 (Varin)||[[Varin-14|Varin, Catherine]] || [[Tessier-163|Tessier, Pierre]] || 05/07/1666 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |747 (Varin)||[[Varin-8|Varin, Marie]] || [[Branche-2|Branche, René]] || 22/11/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |748 (Vassal)||[[Vassal-18|Vassal, Françoise]] || [[LeCacheux-2|Cacheux, Nicolas]] || 03/05/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |749 (Vaublin)||[[Vaublin-1|Vaublin, Marie]] || [[Cochereau-1|Cochereau, Pierre]] || 03/11/1665 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |750 (Vaucher)||[[Vaucher-2|Vaucher, Louise]] || [[Delguel-2|Delguel, Jean]] || 28/11/1668 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |751 (Vauquet)||[[Vauquet-1|Vauquet, Marie]] || [[D'orillard-2|Dorillard, Guy]] || 31/07/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |752 (Verger)||[[Verger-5|Verger, Marie]] || [[Hus-71|Hus, Jean]] || 15/09/1670 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |753 (Verrier)||[[Verrier-12|Verrier, Catherine]] || [[Rondeau-26|Rondeau, Pierre]] || 30/09/1669 || Y||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |754 (Viard)||[[Viard-6|Viard, Marguerite]] || [[Benard-9|Bénard, Mathurin]] || 11/10/1672 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |755 (Vié)||[[Vié-13|Vié, Marie-Sainte]] || [[Poitras-104|Poitras, Jean]] || 27/08/1664 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- ||756 (Veiellot)||[[Vieillot-1|Vieillot, Catherine]] || [[Dubois-624|Dubois, Jacques]] || 18/10/1667 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |757 (Viel)||[[Viel-6|Viel, Marie-Thérèse]] || [[Boyer-643|Boyer, Étienne]] || 26/10/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |758 (Vigny)||[[De_Vigny-1|Vigny, Marie]] || [[Mory-9|Amaury, Jean]] || 25/09/1673 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |759 (Vilain)||[[Villain-32|Vilain, Jeanne]] || [[Bernier-583|Bernier, Mathurin]] || 28/10/1670 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |760 (Vitard)||[[Vitard-1|Vitard, Louise]] ||[[Denevers-1|Denevers, Guillaume]] || 10/12/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |761 (Vitry)||[[Vitry-4|Vitry, Marguerite]] || [[Derry-80|Déry, Jacques]] || 13/10/1669 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |762 (Vivien)||[[Vivien-5|Vivien, Marie-Rose]] || [[Boudeau-3|Boudreau, Jean]] || 12/09/1673 || N ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||SP |- |763 (Voquer)||[[Voguer-1|Voguer, Marie]] || [[Chiron-3|Chiron, Louis]] || 04/11/1669 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |764 (Zachée)||[[Zachée-1|Zachée, Françoise]] || [[De_Xaintes-2|de Xaintes, Claude]] || 27/04/1671 || Y ||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |} ==FDR List Reconciliation== ===Landry Substractions from B&L 2013 List=== {| class="wikitable" |'''B&L ref.'''||'''Landry FDR''' ||'''1st spouse married in CA'''|| '''Mar./arr. in CA''' || '''Bio''' || '''PM'''||'''N o t e s''' |- |NA||[[Meusnier-11|Meunier, Marie]] || [[Hudde-4|Hudde, Jacques]] || 1666 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||Resolve conflict between WikiTree and B&L 2013?Subtractions from B&L 2013 list are according to [http://lesfillesduroy-quebec.org/images/Les_Filles_du_Roy_en_un_tableau.pdf SHFR / Loranger's FDR Tableau]. |- |NA||[[Laurence-519|Laurence, Geneviève]] || [[Michelon-10|Michelon, Adrien]] || 1664 || B || [[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]|| |- |NA||Renaud, Marie || Petit, Charles || 1669 or 1670 || N ||NW|| |- |} ===WikiTree Subtractions from B&L 2013 List=== {| class="wikitable" |'''B&L ref.'''||'''Landry FDR''' ||'''1st spouse married in CA'''|| '''Mar./arr. for CA''' || '''Bio''' || '''PM'''||'''N o t e s''' |- |60-D (Bénard)||[[Benard-111|Bénard, Jeanne]]||[[Gadois-11|Gadois, Pierre]]||20/04/1665||Y||N||NF, B&L 60-D: Engagée, contract notarized at La Rochelle.. |- |672-D (Rousseau)||[[Rousseau-318|Rousseau, Anne]] || [[Juneau-47|Jouineau, Pierre]] || < 11-1663 || Y ||[https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:Quebecois Quebecois]||NF, B&L 672-D: Very likely arrived before 1st FDR contingent in 1663.B&L 672-D: See [http://www.migrations.fr/700fillesroy.htm#D Migrations] FDR profile.B&L 672-D: See [http://www.francogene.com/gfan/gfan/998/fdr.htm francogene website] FDR listing. |- |} ===WikiTree Additions to B&L 2013 List=== {| class="wikitable" |'''B&L ref.'''||'''WikiTree FDR''' ||'''1st spouse married in CA'''|| '''Mar./arr. in CA'''|| '''Bio''' || '''PM'''||'''N o t e s''' |- |NA||[[Desprez-8| Després, Marguerite]] ||[[Becquet-11|Becquet, Francois]]||03/12/1663|| N||[[WikiTree-68|PFDRP]]||, |- |} ===Unequivocally Not a FDR=== {| class="wikitable" |'''B&L ref.'''||'''Not a FDR''' ||'''1st spouse married in CA'''|| '''Mar./arr. in CA'''|| '''Bio''' || '''PM'''||'''N o t e s''' |- |NA||Giraud/Troller/Trolleau, Anne || [[Gauthier-662|Gauthier, Mathurin]] || 16/07/1669 || N || N||NF |- |} ==Notes==

Fearnhill School

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Secondary school of Harry Hughes-Slattery

Fears Family

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Ancestors of Robert Lee Fears, Jr.

Feature Friday

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Feature_Friday.png
This page is to help organize and schedule the Feature Friday livecast. == What is Feature Friday? == Feature Friday is a bi-monthly livecast. Each livecast focuses on a feature of WikiTree and demonstrates how it can be used and its benefits. == Feature Friday Schedule == * Nov 5 - [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1321531/join-first-ever-feature-friday-livecast-overview-wikitree Overview of WikiTree Apps Part I.] * Nov 19 - Rob Pavey will be joining the livecast to talk about his [[Space:WikiTree_AGC|AGC]] and [[Space:WikiTree_Sourcer|WikiTree Sourcer]] extensions * '''Announcement''' Unfortunately, due to unforeseen circumstances, we need to postpone Feature Friday until the New Year. We will pick up with the Overview of WikiTree Apps, Part Deux, then! :-) * '''2022''' - Overview of WikiTree Apps Part II == Topic Suggestions == === Education === * Tutorial Pages * Mentors === Features for Organizing Your Work === * Free-Space Profiles * Personal Categories === Making Editing Easier === * Biography Generator * WikiTree AGC * WikiTree X === Research Features === * RootSearch * WikiTree Sourcer * Projects === Little Things We Take for Granted === * Copy ID, etc * Question marks linked to help pages * Text edit toolbar

February 2024 RAWKERS

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This is our list of amazing RAWKERS for February 2024. #[[Tucker-11084|Donna Baumann]] #[[Bazley-67|Michele Bazley]] #[[Armstrong-17381|Jutta Beer]] #[[Breen-120|Erin Breen]] #[[Brunson-1754|Pat Brunson]] #[[Combs-1687|Matthew Combs]] #[[Costa-1428|Janet Costa]] #[[Daniels-2254|Christine Daniels]] #[[DeHart-1478|John DeHart]] #[[Fachner-1|Victoria Fachner]] #[[Fry-8548|Judith Fry]] #[[Macklem-13|Liza Gervais]] #[[Hill-53077|Steph Hill]] #[[Jacobsen-3873|Anne-Grethe Jacobsen]] #[[Jowett-548|Ruth Jowett]] #[[Ko-31|Betsy Ko]] #[[MacLeod-1797|Susie MacLeod]] #[[Maynard-5042|Melissa Maynard]] #[[Doherty-2064|Melanie McComb]] #[[Miller-57070|Christine Miller]] #[[Kelsey-745|Lisa Murphy]] #[[Urbach-13|Kathy Nava]] #[[Craig-4574|Sandy Ptak]] #[[Soltysiak-9|Erin Robertson]] #[[Rowlands-690|Malc Rowlands]] #[[Snow-2128|Chet Snow]] #[[Stacy-2346|Patrick Stacy]] #[[Stewart-763|Karen Stewart]] #[[Sullivan-17177|Matthew Sullivan]] #[[Stephens-3929|Alice Thomsen]] #[[Tomaszewicz-6|Stephen Tomaszewicz]] #[[Tyner-799|John Tyner]] #[[Vernon-2152|Caroline Verworn]] #[[Langholf-2|Eowyn Walker]] #[[Wall-7415|Jeffrey Wall]] #[[Fearn-339|Maureen Wilkins]] #[[Cox-27529|Nancy Wilson]] #[[Stuewe-5|Kathy Zipperer]]

Federal Census Records

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=== Federal Census Records === * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1803765 United States Census, 1810] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1803955 United States Census, 1820] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1803958 United States Census, 1830] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1786457 United States Census, 1840] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1401638 United States Census, 1850] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1473181 United States Census, 1860] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1438024 United States Census, 1870] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1417683 United States Census, 1880] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1325221 United States Census, 1900] *[https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1727033 United States Census, 1910] *[https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1488411 United States Census, 1920] *[https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1810731 United States Census, 1930] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/2000219 United States Census, 1940] * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/4464515 United States Census, 1950] ----

Fedorova-Ratmanov

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Fedorova-Ratmanov.pdf
* '''Part of [[Space:Heering_Digital_Library | Heering Digital Library]]''' === Федорова О. М. Контр-адмирал М. И. Ратманов === * Федорова О. М. Контр-адмирал М. И. Ратманов // Вопросы истории. – 2008. – №5. – С. 105-115. === Available online at these locations: === * Федорова О. М. Контр-адмирал М. И. Ратманов ::* http://www.reenactor.ru/ARH/PDF/Fedorova.pdf

Feeney Family History

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'''The following is a narrative written by [[Rogers-29532|Charles Francis Rogers]] about his grandparents [[Feeney-667|Charles Feeney]] and [[Donnelly-2840|Katherine Donnelly]].''' ---- January 1994 It's me again. this time I'll tell the reader what I know about the Feeney side of the family. The maternal grandparents, Charles and Catherine (Kate) Fenney. Getrude's family. The Irish side. Were you ever surprised to find something you were looking for? Well that happened to me. I was searching in the Philadelphia Archives, actually it was the Federal Archives, at 9th and Market Sts. I was searching back in the Philadelphia census books. I started at the Civil War and worked my way up to 1870, and bingo, there he was "Timothy Feeney," (see map). Roughly I figure he was born in 1840, (see census page). Timothy married Margaret Hawkins. They lived around St. Pauls' Church at 9th and Christian Sts. In Philadelphia, Pa. I guess the only thing they brought with them was their strong Catholic background. What I remember about Charlie Feeney is very little. His daughter, Gertude, told me they lived in the "Meadows," (88th and Brewster Ave.) in southwest Philadelphia. that was, at the time, the outskirts of the city. It was probably after the turn of the century. Gertrude remembered they had a mean gander, (a male goose). Whenever she went out of the house, that damned gander knew she was out, and began to chase and nip at her. They must have raised poultry. Charlie moved his family to south Philadelphia. He worked for a lumberyard, Mitten Brothers. The business was located at Front and Reed Sts. Charlie drove a team of horses with a delivery wagon. Gertrude would be right there by his side. He would allow her to handle the team when no one could see them. On the corner of Front and Reed Streets, was Pat Garrity's Saloon. Pat was good to his neighbors. When there was food left from their lunch crowd, he would share it with the poor, (just about everyone was poor then). I can smell his homemade vegetable soup right now! Charlie took a job working as a checker along the docks. (waterfront) around 1920. He recorded all the items being loaded and unloaded off the ships. He worked at that until his death in 1939. Charlie was more than a fan of baseball. He was a coach with a Phillies minor league team. They played on the field at Front and Carpenter Streets. He was a close friend of Baseball Hall of Famer, Chuck Klien. Chuck would visit Charlie's home on Moymensing Ave. and Reed Sts. to have dinner and play some catch. Charlie and Catherine were living with us when I was just a small tyke. Once when I had a sore throat, Charlie made a funnel, put it in my mouth and blew in some sulfur he had scraped, down my throat. It must have worked, I'm still here. There were times I remember looking up at him. I felt tiny, "I guess I was." He was very tall and I was very small. Charlie Feeney is where Mummers fever gets into the family. He was a member of the old "Lobster New Years Club." He designed, built, and sometimes carried those huge framed suits. In a way I feel proud to be the only Rogers boy named after an "Irishman." Getting back to the Mummers, til this day his descendants carry on the family tradition. A family where "Happy New Year" means a long march up Broad Street. Read about the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mummers_Parade Mummers Parade] held each New Year's Day in Philadelphia. Charles and Catherine Feeney had only one child. A daughter they named [[Feeney-666|Gertrude Marie]].They also had a daughter named Margaret who was born before Gertrude, but died before 10 years old. Catherine (Kate) Feeney, at the age of 50, developed stomach cancer. The doctors opened her stomach, then closed it up again, saying there was no hope for her. She lived another 23 years! Catherine died at her daughter's home. She was holding her grandson Charlie's hand. Catherine had a sister, Mary, and a brother, Charles. Catherine had a total of 7 siblings. They lived at 3rd and Dickerson Street. Both have died. Charlie Feeney also had sisters, Maggie (short for Margaret), and another named Kate (Catherine). ==Researcher Footnotes==

Felix Leroy Knight Photos

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Felix_Leroy_Knight_Photos.jpg
{{Image|file=Felix_Leroy_Knight_Photos.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption=[[Knight-18070|Felix Leroy Knight (1903-1937)]] }} {{clear}}

Felix Oubre

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Multiple people named Felix Oubre and Marcelin Oubre occur in South Louisiana in the 1800's. This page is a place to sort through the identities and relationships. For example: * There are two Marcelin Oubres born in 1818 (one born 10 Feb and the other on 14 Feb) and one more born in 1815 * There are two Felix Oubres married to Marie (one Mire and the other Caillouette) '''Family tree with Felix and Marcelin Oubres'''
''Note: this tree only highlights children of interest, not all children'' [[Huber-1103|Pierre "Pedro" Huber (b 1772)]] m. [[Pertuis-8|Felicitas Pertuis (b. 1777)]] : 1). [[Oubre-130|Pedro Oubre (b. 30 Oct 1792)]] m. [[Guidry-123|Ann Marie Guidry (b. 16 Oct 1792)]] :: 1). [[Oubre-141|Marcellin Pierre Oubre (9 Feb 1815)]] m. [[Michel-373| Marie Useline "Eugenie" Michel (b. 26 Mar 1822)]] ::: 1). [[Oubre-158|Marcellus Oubre (b 14 Dec 1842)]] ::: 2). [[Oubre-158|Felix M Oubre (b. 4 Oct 1844)]] m. Marie Caillouette (have not yet created profiles) :2). [[Oubre-121|Marcellino Oubre (b. 21 Oct 1796)]] m. [[Oubre-123|Felicitas Carmelitas Borg (b. 23 Jan 1797)]] :: 1). [[Oubre-122|Marcelin Oubre (b. 14 Feb 1818)]] m. [[Gaudin-457|Florestille Gaudin (b. 1818)]] ::: 1). Marcellin Oubre (b c1845) (Marie Marcelline?) (have not yet created a profile) ::: 2). [[Oubre-100|Joseph Felix Oubre (b. 25 Mar 1845)]] m. [[Mire-35|Marie Mire (16 Jan 1850)]] :::: 1). [[Oubre-126|Felix Oscar Oubre (b. 4 Aug 1873)]] m. [[LeBlanc-5914|Rosa LeBlanc Oubre (b. 27 Oct 1881)]] :3). [[Oubre-138|Marcelin Oubre (b. Feb 10 1818)]] Another Felix Oubre, b. 1872, son of Philomine Oubre, married to Myrtle Roussel, father of Felix Jr in St John the Baptist Parish '''Previous notes from sorting out Felix Oubre:'''
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~darnellbrunner/oubre.pdf has these entires for Felix Oubre: :FELIX OUBRE, b. October 04, 1844, St James Parish Louisiana; d. Unknown. ::Son of MARCELLIN PIERRE OUBRE b 1815 and EUGENIE MICHEL ::Baptism: May 17, 1845, SMI-6 157 (Source: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records.) :JOSEPH FELIX OUBRE, b. March 25, 1845, St James Parish Louisiana; d. Unknown. ::Son of MARCELIN OUBRE b. 1818 and FLOESTILLE GAUDIN ::Baptism: December 20, 1845, SMI-6 162 (Source: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records.) ::Succession: September 11, 1889, NI Ct Hse Succ# 558 (Source: Father Donald J Hebert, Southwest Louisiana Records , V-1 to V-42.) ::Church Marriage: February 28, 1869 to Marie Mire, SMI-17 8 (Source: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records.) :JOSEPH FELIX OUBRE, b. July 20, 1862, New Ibera Ibera Parish Louisiana; d. Unknown. ::AUGUSTIN OUBRE and ANNE COMEAU ::Date born 2: July 20, 1862, NI CH v-1 p-288 (Source: Father Donald J Hebert, Southwest Louisiana Records , V-1 to V-42.) :FELIX OSCAR OUBRE, b. August 04, 1873, Loreauville Iberia Parish Louisiana; d. Unknown. ::Son of JOSEPH FELIX OUBRE and MARIE MIRE ::Date born 2: August 04, 1873, Loreauville CH v-1 p-10 (Source: Father Donald J Hebert, Southwest Louisiana Records , V-1 to V-42.) :JOSEPH FELIX OUBRE, b. October 12, 1886, St James Parish Louisiana; d. Unknown. ::Son of LOUIS EVARISTE OUBRE and RAYMONDIA GARCIA ::Baptism: October 30, 1886, SMI-14 95 (Source: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records.) :FELIX OUBRE, b. June 27, 1889, Vacherie St James Parish Louisiana; d. Unknown. ::Son of JOSEPH OUBRE and ADELE MCANESPY ::Baptism: July 16, 1889, OLP-3-78 (Source: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records.) '''War Veteran''' Which Felix Oubre is the veteran that died 27 Nov 1917 and was married to Marie? Need to do more research on Felix M Oubre FamilySearch has lots of records for a Felix Oubre married to Marie/Maria Carelloiette. *'''United States General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934''', database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QJDG-V7J9 : 3 April 2015), Felix Oubre Or Oube, 7 May 1909, Marie Oubre widow, Louisiana *'''United States Veterans Administration Pension Payment Cards, 1907-1933,''' database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2M2G-3Z4 : 12 December 2014), Felix Oubre, 1907-1933; citing NARA microfilm publication M850 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 1,635,745. "Marie Oubre, Soldier name Felix, Pri K 1 La Vol cav, Law: Act 19 Apr 1908, commencement date 7 May 1909, died 27 Nov 1917, bureau notified 21 Jan 1918" *'''United States Civil War and Later Pension Index, 1861-1917''', database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N4LF-MZD : 24 March 2016), Felix Oubre, 07 May 1909, Louisiana, regiment 1, cavalry unit, company K

Felony Plea of Alphansus Neiderer No. 150 October 1967

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Felony_Plea_of_Alphansus_Neiderer_No_150_October_1967.pdf
:January 2 1967 :The Defendant Pleads guilty :[[Neiderer-7|Alphonsus Neiderer]]

Felony Plea of Alphansus Neiderer No. 24 October 1967

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Felony_Plea_of_Alphansus_Neiderer_No_24_October_1967.pdf
:D.A. Docket No. 1757 :Felony :CRIMINAL ACTION NUMBER :24 October, 1967 :Commonwealth of Pennsylavania :vs. :Alphansus Neiderer :Elwood E. Anderson :David William McWilliams :1–Burglary :2–Larceny :3–Receiving Stolen Goods :WITNESSES: :Leon E. Krebs :Ray A. Lecrone :GRAND JURY ACTION: December 13 1967 approved :January 2 1967 :The Defendant Pleads Guilty :[[Neiderer-7|Alphonsus Neiderer]]

Feltman Journey through history

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The goal of this project is to shift through all the Feltmans, Feltmann, Feldman, Feldtman, Feldmann, etc out there to find my lineage, possibly find out if the story is true that our real last name was VonVelderman. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Feltman-134|Jessica Potts]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * William John's Parents * Confirm Area of Germany was Lower Saxony * Confirm USA entry locals Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=24877570 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Felton - Cape Town

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Looking for any ancestors of Jesse Harry Felton and Harriet Gray Higgo.

Fenner Angell Cote Barton Trees-1

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My Fathers' name was Mervin Clifford Fenner His 1st relative who came to Rhode Island was Arthur Fenner around 1630's My Mothers' name was Barbara Mable Angell Her 1st relative who came to Rhode Island was Thomas Angell around 1630's

Fentres County Tennessee Deeds (Grantee)-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fentress_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Fentress County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fentress'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fentress’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fentress County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1832-1839''. If your ''Fentress'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fentress'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fentress County Land (Grantee)-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Fentress County'''
'''Land Records (Grantee)'''
'''1821-1841'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !From !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1832 | |Campbell |James |John McDonald |A-B |206 |800 acres of land that James lives on |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9P2-N?i=73&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1831 | |Campbell |William |Robert McGee |A-B |197 |Bond for an undivided part of 146 acres on Cove Creek and 45 acres on Donelson Creek |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9P2-R?i=71&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1834 | |Campbell |William |Robert McGee |A-B |423 |100 acres on Cove Creek |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9RQ-T?i=146&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1834 | |Campbell |William |Robert McGee |A-B |425 |Undivided part of 29 acres in Poplar Cove |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9R3-B?i=147&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1831 | |Campbell |William R. and Robert McGee |Jesse Cobb |A-B |428 |27 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9RQ-G?i=148&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1839 | |Campbell |William R. |Eli Mullinax |C |44 |200 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V955-X?i=227&cat=200807 Doc Image] |}

Fentress County Tennessee Deeds (Grantor)-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fentress_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Fentress County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fentress'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fentress’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fentress County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1821-1841''. If your ''Fentress'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fentress'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fentress County Land (Grantor)-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Fentress County'''
'''Land Records (Grantor)'''
'''1821-1841'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !To !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1821 | |Campbell |Joseph (of Overton Co., TN) |Early Albertson |A-B |77 |15 acres on Crooked Creek; Winchester District |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V959-7?i=34&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1832 | |Campbell |James and Jessee Smith |Sperry Smith |A-B |286 |123 acres on Lick Creek |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9PF-9?i=100&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1833 | |Campbell |James |Samuel Blair |A-B |301 |50 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9P6-2?i=105&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1833 | |Campbell |James |Phillip Smith Sr. |A-B |353 |162 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9RH-7?i=123&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1834 | |Campbell |James |Alexander Davidson |A-B |385 |164 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9R4-C?i=133&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1835 | |Campbell |James, Jesse Smith, and William Chilton |William Noland |A-B |416 |147 acres on Wolf River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V9R7-5?i=144&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1840 | |Campbell |John, William Wood, James and Elizabeth Gibbons, and Edmund and Jane Gibbons (heirs of James Campbell dec.) |William B. McDonald |C |46 |150 acres on Lick Creek belonging to James Campbell dec. |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V95P-V?i=228&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1839 | |Campbell |James dec. heirs |John Campbell (his son) |C |51 |All their right to James Campbell dec. land |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V955-L?i=230&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1840 | |Campbell |Joseph |John Ramacks |C |95 |150 acres on Mill Creek |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V95G-3?i=252&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1841 | |Campbell |William R. |Thomas Brown |C |136 |Bond for 300 acres on Mill Creek |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V95K-T?i=274&cat=200807 Doc Image] |- !1841 | |Campbell |William R. |Isaac Wood |C |145 |30 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSKX-V95V-G?i=279&cat=200807 Doc Image] |}

Fenwick Visitations

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Various visitation pedigrees, at least partly based on the earliest of 1552, make a muddle of some of the early generations of the Fenwick pedigree.William Flower, ''The Visitation of Yorkshire in the Years 1563 and 1564'', Charles Best Norcliffe, ed. (London: Harleian Society, 1881), 121, [https://archive.org/stream/visitationofyork00flow#page/120/mode/2up Internet Archive].Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees Recorded at the Heralds' Visitations of the County of Northumberland, … in 1615, … and … in 1666'' ( ), 47--52, 54-55 [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/239424 Family Search Catalog]. Ralph's wife, Margery Mitford, does have some unknown descent from the Corbet family, but it is unrecorded. See also the research note on [[Harbottle-8#Research Notes|his mother's profile]]. Harvey's visitation of 1552 appears to be the earliest of the nine. In it, he shows Ralph married Margery, daughter and sole heir to Sir Walter Corbet of Stanton, knight. Ralph's mother (and his father's wife) is shown as the daughter of Wydryngton of Wydrynton.William Harvey, "Heraldic Visitation of Northern Counties Made in 1552" in ''Visitations of the North: or some Early Heraldic Vistations'', Publications of the Surtees Society, vol 122, (Durham: Surtees Society, 1912), 21, [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/267422 FamilySearch Catalog]. Flower's visititation of 1563 follows Harvey. There is a note to see the "Visit, Ebor., 1584, p. 69," but this refers to the Gargrave pedigree applicable to the wife of[[Fenwick-268|William Fenwick Esq. (1581-1647)]]. Foster presents seven pedigrees, noting on the first "The discrepancies between the various Fenwick Pedigrees are irreconcileable."Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 47. * "Fenwick, of Northumberland," from a "Key Pedigree from MS. in Queens College, Oxford," shows Ralph as the son of Agnes, daughter of …Harbottle. * "Fenwick, of Butterlawe" does not cover Ralph.Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 48. * "Fenwick, of East Haddon and of Brinckburne," from 1666, does not cover Ralph.Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 49. * "Fenwicke, of Langshawes" shows Ralph married to Mary, daughter and "sole heire of …Mitford, of Stanton, esqr."Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 50. * "Fenwick, of Stanton," (from Flower's Visitation of Yorkshire, 1563-4, p. 121) shows Ralph married to Margery, daug. and sole heir to Water [''sic''] Corbet, of Stanton, Knight. Ralph's mother (and his father's wife) is shown as the daughter of one Wedryngton of Wedryngton.Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 51. * "Fenwick, of Stanton," shows Ralph married to Mary, daughter and sole heir to …Mitford, of Stanton.Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 52. * "Fenwick, of Wallington," from 1666, shows Ralph married to an unnamed daughter and sole heir to Mitford, of Stanton. His mother is unnamed.Joseph Foster, ''Pedigrees of Northumberland'', 54-55. ==Sources== See also: * George W. Marshall, ''The Visitation of Northumberland in 1615'' (London: Mitchell and Hughes, 1878), 45, [https://archive.org/details/visitationofnort00sainrich/page/44/mode/2up Internet Archive]. * Charles H. Hunter Blair, ''Visitations of the North: Part IV: Visitations of Yorkshire and Northumberland in 1575'', Publications of the Surtees Society, vol 146, ( London: Surtees Society, 1932), 77, [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/267422 FamilySearch Catalog].

Ferdinand Propsting and the Battle of the Nile

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In the 1841 England census [[Propsting-12|Frederick Propsting]] was described as being born of ‘Foreign parts’, those parts believed to be the Low Countries at the lower reaches of the Rhine. '''Flanders Campaign''' Ferdinand, or Frederick, as he came to be known, could have been involved in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flanders_Campaign Flanders campaign of 1792 to 1795] when he would have been in his mid-twenties. This campaign against the French Revolutionary Wars was a combined army of Anglo-Hanoverian, Dutch, Hessian, Imperial Austrian, and Prussian troops. After some early victories the allies were forced to withdraw due to French counter-offensives. They established a new front to the south of Netherlands and Germany, but lacked supplies. Forced to retreat, the French transformed the Dutch Republic to the Batavian Republic, and the Austrian Netherlands and Belgium were annexed by the French Republic. The British had retreated northwards to the port of Bremen and were eventually evacuated to Britain with the remnants of Austrian, Dutch and German troops. This may have been Frederick Propsting’s route to England. From there he may have joined the British navy. '''Seamen''' Sailors generally went to sea as boys and by the time they were 16 years of age they could be rated as seamen. They generally served for another ten years before settling on shore or to a local sailing position. A small percentage of seamen remained at sea to rise to the position of naval petty officers and merchant shipmasters. Women also went to sea, in large numbers. They were usually mature women, the wives of petty officers. Their extended roles were such as providing medical treatment and handling ammunition. The Able or Ordinary Seamen were an elite group. They were headed by the topmen who spent much of their day in the spars aloft, in the spacious areas beyond the reach of officers and the deck bound seamen, and forming their own mess of six to ten men who cooked and ate together. To advertise their clique the topmen wore unique and colourful clothes, hairstyles, personal jewellery and were marked with tattoos. On shore their behaviour was riotous with carefree expenditure. Professional sailors were resourceful men, skilled and daring. Although their shore behaviour brought scorn from local inhabitants, the state knew their worth. It was these men that gave Britain command of the sea. '''Crimping''' During wartime the Royal Navy would press professional seamen from the merchant service; and others, ‘landlubbers’ and foreign sailors, could be attracted by pay and opportunity. A significant portion of British crews were made up of foreign sailors. '''Zealous''' The extended family believes that Frederick Propsting served under Captain Hood on the ‘Zealous’ in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Nile the Battle of the Nile] which was fought on 1 to 3 August 1798 under the command of the British Rear Admiral Horatio Nelson at Abu Qir Bay. ‘Zealous’ engaged the French ship ‘Guerrier’ in this battle, helping to force the surrender of ‘Guerrier’. The British had about 900 casualties, the French 9000; and the French lost eleven ships. This resounding victory isolated Napoleon’s army in Egypt, brought prestige to the British and secured their control of the Mediterranean. In 1801 ‘Zealous’ was cruising off Cadiz then missed the Battle of Trafalgar as she was being resupplied at Gibraltar. Still continuing with the blockade of Cadiz, ‘Zealous’ assisted the fleet to detain ‘Nemesis’ on 25 November 1805. ‘Nemesis’ was sailing with a cargo of spice, indigo dye, and other goods to Leghorn, Italy. '''Nemesis Prize Money''' ‘Zealous’, under the command of John Oakes Hardy, Esquire, shared the ‘Nemesis’ prize money with ten other British warships, and this was advertised in the [https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/16364/page/617 ‘London Gazette’ on 24 April 1810 (Issue 16364, p. 617)]: "London, April 26, 1810. Notice is hereby given to the Officers and Ships’ Companies who were actually on board the undermentioned Ships at the Capture of the Nemesis by his Majesty’s Ship Thunderer, on the 24th November 1805, that they will be paid their respective Proportions of the Proceeds of the said Prize, on Tuesday the 15th Day of May, at No. 70, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury; where the unclaimed Shares will be recalled every subsequent Tuesday and Friday for Three Months, pursuant to Act of Parliament." '''Expectations''' Perhaps, if he was a crew member of 'Zealous', it was in the expectation of this prize money that Ferdinand married on 17 Jun 1806 at Saint Leonards Shoreditch to Ann Mary Bispham and settled at Hadley to grow his business and family. '''But note that he was signed on to HMS Acasta on 16 April 1797 - so probably not in this battle after all.''' See list of vessels in Battle of the Nile [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_battle_at_the_Battle_of_the_Nile here] == Sources ==

Ferdinand Westheimer Family Tree

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Ferdinand_Westheimer_Family_Tree.jpg
A Family Tree for Ferdinand Westheimer date May 30, 1925 with many handwritten additions added after the original printing. Part of a collection of family trees I received from my aunt, Margaret (Flarsheim) Moseson.

Fergus Falls State Hospital

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Fergus_Falls_State_Hospital.jpg
The National Park Service explains the significance of the Fergus Falls State Hospital [https://www.nps.gov/places/fergus-falls-state-hospital.htm here]. "The Fergus Falls State Hospital is historically significant under National Register Criterion A in the area of Health and Medicine for its association with the state’s enduring commitment to provide humane treatment for its mentally ill citizens. Officially known as the Third State Hospital for the Insane, the facility expanded the state’s system of mental hospitals in addition to those previously established in St. Peter (1866) and Rochester (1878). It became the first state mental hospital to serve the growing population in northern Minnesota and by 1970 over 40,000 patients had received treatment. Unlike the earlier state hospitals, the Fergus Falls State Hospital was given a legislative mandate to incorporate the principles of homeopathic medicine into its program, making it the first state mental institution in Minnesota to formally adopt a therapeutic approach to the treatment of mental illness. The main complex is also significant under Criterion C in order to recognize the architectural significance of the Kirkbride-inspired design of the hospital. The 120-acre property contains a large complex of buildings, located on landscaped grounds, that was constructed for the treatment of the mentally ill. The property is dominated by the main hospital complex, an immense, awe-inspiring building based on the design principles of nineteenth century physician Dr. Thomas Story Kirkbride. The hospital first opened in 1890, but as the number of patients increased and the needs of the institution evolved, buildings were continually added to the hospital complex. Specialized hospital buildings, staff quarters, and even a hospital farm were built, until an eclectic mix of buildings surrounded the Kirkbride complex. The buildings feature a variety of architectural styles that range from Romanesque, Tudor Revival, and Craftsman, to modernism of the postwar era. The nominated property also includes the eight acre hospital cemetery. The Fergus Falls Regional Treatment Center, as it was later renamed, officially closed in 2005."

Ferguson Brothers During the California Gold Rush of 1849

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Ferguson_Brothers_During_the_California_Gold_Rush_of_1849.jpg
:When the “gold fever” struck four of [[Howes-1051|Fanny Ferguson's]] sons wanted to go to California: [[Ferguson-19508|Thomas Jefferson Ferguson]], [[Ferguson-16250|Daniel]], ,[[Ferguson-19518|William]] and Albert; three went: Thomas, Daniel and Albert. Only Thomas and Daniel came back east: Albert was buried in San Francisco and William Ferguson didn’t get to go. ===Thomas Jefferson Ferguson's Letters=== :During this adventure Thomas Jefferson Ferguson exchanged affectionate and newsy letters with his wife Rosalinda. While he was out west finding gold in California with his brother Daniel, she was at home in Key West, Florida with their three young children. These letters describes the life of a couple of industrious and lucky gold miners; in addition they are a testament to Rosalinda and Thomas’s love for each other. The letters were found about 30 years ago when Tom Hambright, who was the curator for the Key West Art and Historical Society, found these letters which were written in 1849 and 1850. In 2012 Mary Haffenreffer transcribed most of these letters and published them along with her research about the Ferguson family in the Florida Keys Sea Heritage Journal, fall 2012 and winter 2013. :Extensive parts of these letters are quoted-- the parts referring to the trip to the gold fields of California and their industry in California in 1849 and 1850 were relevant to Daniel and Thomas's story. :Around the time Thomas left Key West Florida for Havana, Cuba, he received this letter from his brother '''William E. Ferguson'''. It reads:
:Charleston April 5th, 1849 :Brother Thomas, I have thought it advisable to write you to give you the particulars brought by the Steamer ''Northerner'' from Chagres. I was conversing with a passenger who went from New York in company with fifteen others. They thought to get passage from Chagres but they found no opportunity to get from there. There is onboard three who bought steerage tickets in New York for $100.00 for each. One sold at Chagres for $450.00, one for$500.00 and the other for $700.00, and they state that there is 2500 persons on the Isthmus now waiting for a passage to San Francisco. My informant states that they think that there is a poor chance of the steamers returning from San Francisco and there is no sailing vessels at Panama. He states that he is going to New York to procure tickets if possible to go through, if not to write them to return to New York and proceed around the hook. I would advise you to go by land some route through Mexico if possible. I think '''we''' will get from here next week. They are getting every ready as soon as possible. :Remember me to all friends. :W.E. Ferguson William E. Ferguson, Letter to Thomas, 5 April 1849, copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
===Letters to Rosalinda=== :The first letter Thomas wrote to his wife [[Corcoran-2183|Rosalinda Corcoran Ferguson]] reflects what his brother William said.
:Havana, April the 8th, 1849 :I arrived here at 9 o’clock the next morning after I left home. I learn here that there are two thousand passengers at Panama waiting for passage. I think of altering my route to Vera Cruz and go through Mexico.Thomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson [wife],5 April 1849, p3
:The trouble with going through Mexico was that the United States had just won a war with Mexico, known as The Mexican War in the States and The American Intervention War in Mexico. Mexico lost on third of its territory by the “Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo”. Traveling from Vera Cruz through Mexico, those Americans who chose to that way were likely meet angry Mexican citizens who would have no interest in aiding them and might even rob and kill them. :In his next letter also written from Havana to his wife, he had changed his mind about traveling through Mexico. He now planned to sail to Chagres on the steamer ''Falcon.''
:Panama April the 22th, 1849 :Dear Wife, :I write you once more from this place though I expected to leave here before this but receiving information from Vera Cruz not very favorable of the route through Mexico, I have altered my mind and shall go the way of Panama… I expect I shall find my brother Daniel there if he has not got passage away which is doubtful. The steamer ''Falcon'' will be here on the 25th going to Chagres… Write me whether you heard anything more from Albert before he left Charleston.Thomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 22 April 1849,copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
:The ''Falcon'', a small steamship with Captain Thomson at the helm, was one of the three ships carrying U.S. mail as well as passengers on the Atlantic side of the Isthmus of Panama. The ''Falcon’s'' first trip between New York City and Chagres, Panama happened in December of 1848 and took 26 days. The ''Falcon'' left New York City on December 1 and arrived in Chagres on December 27. The route, New York to Savannah to Charleston to Havana to New Orleans to Chagres included mail pick-ups and drop offs as well as passenger pick-ups.“Steamship Falcon,” Spectator, (New York) 4 December 1848, p.1, digital images, GenealogyBank, (http:///www. genealogybank.com:accessed27 April 2019) “Sailing of the U.S. Mail Steamers Panama and Falcon,” Weekly Herald (New York) 2 December 1848, p. 180, digital images, GenealogyBank, (http:///www. genealogybank.com:accessed27 April 2019)Here is a newspaper item about this first trip in December of 1848 printed in the Spectator, a New York newspaper. {{Image|file=Edwin_ReynoldsFamily_Photos-1.png|caption=Steamship Falcon}} :Thomas Ferguson left Havana on the ''Falcon'' heading to Chagres on April 25, 1849 and arrived in Panama City on the Pacific side of the Isthmus on May 9, 1849. :Daniel likely had a similar though longer journey as he traveled this route from New York City; however, he arrived in Panama City before his brother Thomas.
:Panama May the 11th, 1849 :Dear Wife, :I arrived here day before yesterday and shall leave day after tomorrow morning on the ship ''Norman'' in company with my brother Daniel, Stafford and Saywood and the rest of the Key West party who I have found here all well, all excitement to get away to the Land of Promise. Daniel tells me he had a talk with fifteen young men who arrived here a few days ago on the steamer Oregon from California on their way home. They said they got as much gold as they wanted and were going home to enjoy it. They had got seven bushels of pure gold with them that they had dug themselves in the space of six months. Daniel says they told him to keep cool, that there was enough gold there for all…I have got my passage in a first rate ship by Daniel’s having a pass engaged for his brother-in-law who hasn’t got here yet. : Thomas J. FergusonThomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 11May 1849,copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
:Here is an image of a news item printed in a New York newspaper called the ''Spectator''. The ship ''Norman'' is said to be at port in Panama.The Falcon was on the way back to after leaving Chagres on May 12th. "From Chagres, Arrival of the Steamer Falcon", ''Spectator'', New York. May 17, 1849, Genealogy Bank {{Image|file=Edwin_ReynoldsFamily_Photos-2.jpg|caption=From Chagres}} :Thomas didn't say much about his travel accross the Isthmus after he landed at Chagres. :Paul Bailey in ''Water Trails West'' described how others traveled the 60 miles between Chagres and Panama City and it was challenging for most people; it involved first chugging up the Chagres River in a small steamboat for 12 miles. Then the river became very shallow and the travelers boarded flat bottomed canoes called bungas which were poled or dragged by men. Clouds of mosquitoes, stifling heat and big alligators added to the atmosphere. The passengers rode mules for the last 24 miles because the waterway ended at the very small village of Gorgona. In addition to the discomfort and death caused by heat, reptiles, insects and illnesses such as cholera, malaria or yellow fever occurred often.Paul Bailey, ''Water Trails West'',(Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1978),page 176
:San Francisco- July 31st, 1849 :Dear Wife, :I arrived here on the 15th of this month having sixty three days passage from Panama, rather a tedious passage but well and hearty, the weather at sea was calm and sea very Smooth. On my arrival here Daniel and I took a small job which we done in a week for which we got five hundred dollars. Since then we have built us a boat to go up to the mines and intend to leave tomorrow. I was offered sixteen dollars a day the day I got here and refuse good jobs now to go up to the mines so you may judge what I think of the prospect. The gold stories we heard about California before I left home was no humbug. I have seen lots of the gold here, one lump weighing fourteen and half pounds. I don’t know as I shall find any of those big lumps but I am bound to have gold of some sort; there is plenty of it here and no mistake. This place is very healthy though cold. I have wore flannel shirt and drawer with my thick buckskin pantaloons ever since I have been here and then been cold with a severe wind from the sea like our Northers in Key West but back from the coast it is warm. I eat apples, Pears and blackberries here. Some things here sell high, others very low .Clothing is cheaper than it is in the States, flour $10, pork $25, beef $5,of the best salt, fresh beef from 12 to 18 cents a lb., potatoes $10 for a hundred lbs., onions seventy five cents a pound, cheese fifty, saleratus (baking powder)$2.50, butter $1.50, cheese fifty cents. This town is overrun with goods, the streets and yards full, lying about open, nobody steals. There ain’t a quarter stores enough to hold them. … :I am looking for Al here soon. I wish he was here to go up with me and Daniel. : Thomas J. FergusonThomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 31 July 1849,copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
:By October they were on the Yuba River prospecting and had made a claim. The Yuba River, located in the Sierra Nevada’s in northern California, is a major tributary to the Feather River.
:Uba (Yuba) River Calif. Oct 21st 1849 :Dear Wife, :… I will now give you a statement of my success. After arriving here I spent a month in hunting, or prospecting as they call it here, up and down the river for a good place to locate. I at length found one which prove to be good on which my brother and myself built two machines for washing out gold and a water wheel to lift up water out of the holes we dig which works them all effectually so much so that we have made over five thousand dollars in the last three weeks… :By a great odd we have got the richest spot I have ever seen on the river. It is a small bar on the side of the river in the form of a triangle about fifty yards on each side with rocks ten feet high on two sides and the river on the other. We have the whole of it to ourselves and nobody troubles us… :I am faring very well here. We have got plenty of pork, dried beef, ham, flour, hard bread, beans, cornmeal, coffee, sugar, molasses, dried peaches and cherries. We get fresh beef every few days so we fare pretty well. I made some molasses cake this morning which went very well. It wasn’t quite as good as you used to make but it done very well. :Albert is not here. We are looking for him every day. I have wrote letters directing him where to find us. : Thomas J. FergusonThomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 21 October 1849,copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
:In January of 1850 Thomas found Albert Ferguson in San Francisco near death. He had intended to go to Sacramento City but it was badly flooded so he came to San Francisco instead where he found Albert. They can’t work the mines in the rainy season so Thomas and Daniel have started selling supplies to other miners. They had started one small store and had another in the works. ===Thomas Finds Albert in San Francisco===
:San Francisco Jan 14th, 1850 :Dear Wife, :…I arrived here yesterday and found Albert very sick in a tent laying on the ground. I was lucky in finding him in a half hour after I arrived. I this morning hired him a good comfortable room and a woman to nurse him, bought him a good bed and bedding so that he is now very comfortable, and I can see he is better since morning. I shall stay with him til he is better and then take him up the River with me. We have good employment for him and can afford to pay him well… :It is a very lucky thing on Albert’s account: it so happened though he had very kind attention from John Roberts and a young doctor who came out passenger with him. They done all they could for him under circumstances. They were living in a tent and sleeping on the ground which was very bad for Albert. I found his bed very damp under him. The weather had been rainy and they had no chance to dry it. I think it ten chances to one if he would have ever recovered if I hadn’t removed him and now he must have kind attention and nursing which he will now have. The woman in whose house I have him in an Englishwoman. She is very kind and attentive to him. I told her not to let him want for any comfort money would buy him and I shall stay with him and sleep in the room so I can see to him myself til he is out or danger though my business is very urgent for me to return. : Your ever affectionate husband : Thomas J. Ferguson
Thomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson,14 Januarys 1850, copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]] :Albert did die shortly after this letter was mailed. In April of 1850 Rosalinda Ferguson wrote to Thomas Ferguson telling him about his family’s reaction to Albert’s death.
:Key West April the 8th, 1850 :My Dear Husband, :…The family here is quite discouraged about California. Hearing of Albert’s death never shall I forget the morning he left Key West. He was full of hope and future prospect for the better. His day was not to come. I can imagine how you found him but I am sorry that he had no friend to see to him sooner. Poor Albert’s tomb lies in a foreign land amongst strangers. I hope you will take care of all his things and bring them home to his mother (Fanny Ferguson)for I know she will think a great deal of them. I sent her the letter that gives the account of his death. I did not feel like writing to her as I was not acquainted with her as she never wrote to me. I have never got any account of my people since you left. It is true what Sister Mary said that they never should write me until I went to see them. My Dear Husband, I am one of the most miserable creatures in the world. All the gold in California will not recompense me for the anxiety of mind that I feel. The babies are playing cheerfully at this moment. They do not know the anxiety of mind. Thomas asks me what do I cry for, it is for his Uncle Albert. He is a wise good boy and I assure you he does not forget you. He remembers the clothes that you wore and can tell me about them. Cecelia says that her uncle is dead and put in the grave with Mama Harvey. : Rosalinda FergusonRosalinda Ferguson, Letter to Thomas Ferguson, 8 April 1850, copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
===Thomas and Daniel's Mining Supply Businesses Grow=== :Daniel’s and Thomas businesses have grown and they are buying more goods for sale to their fellow miners on the Yuba River.
:San Francisco Feb 28th, 1850 :I am here now buying goods to take to the mines. Since I was here and wrote you, last, Daniel has been down and taken up $3000 worth of goods. Immediately on his return I came down again. We are selling a great many goods, as soon as I return now we shall start another store at Eliza Town on the Feather River at the head of Steam navigation. We purchased a lot there a few days since for which we paid six hundred dollars. We have been offered six hundred for one half of it. We also have another lot in the town given to us by the Proprietor of the town in consideration of our being the first who landed goods there from a steamboat… We have our own teams to haul our goods, eight mules and six horses, which we bought last winter when they were cheap. Now they are worth from two to three hundred dollars apiece.Thomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 28 February 1850,copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
:By March of 1850 Daniel and Thomas established two more stores and are buying a stock of goods large enough to have freight bills over twenty five hundred dollars. Daniel has taken charge of the mining and trading operations in Yuba while Thomas travels up and down the river to buys goods.Thomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 19 March 1850, copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]] :In his April 8th letter to Rosalinda living in Key West, Thomas said he had been to San Francisco three times buying about four thousand dollars’ worth of goods each time. Daniel worked on some damming projects to turn the river. Thomas also mentions three towns they had invested in, Elisa, Fredonia, and Lindd City. Could this be Linn City of Oregon, the town on the Willamette River where Daniel worked and lived when he brought his family west?Thomas Ferguson, Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 8 April 1850, copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]] ===Going Home=== :Before leaving California, Daniel and Thomas made plans to bring their families to San Francisco and the gold fields. In his letter of May 29, 1850 to his wife Roslinda, Thomas writes:
Daniel or myself will, one of us, go home this fall and bring out both of our families. He (Daniel) is getting as anxious to have his here as I be to have mine. If you can't wait til then sell out stock and (illegible) in Key West and come to me.Thomas Ferguson Letter to Rosalinda Ferguson, 29 May 1850, copy of letter in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]]
:In the winter of 1850-1851 the Ferguson brothers returned to their wives and children- Thomas to Roslinda and his young children in Key West, Florida and Daniel to Jeannette and his children in Danbury, Connecticut. Mary Haffenreffer in the Florida Keys Heritage Journal estimated Thomas returned with about 7.5 million dollars (2013 dollars). :Daniel did take his family west, first to San Francisco, then to Portland, Oregon and Oregon City. :Thomas Ferguson and his wife kept their house in Key West and in 1851 purchased another, a large estate near Baltimore, Maryland.Haffenreffer, Mary L, ''Florida Keys Sea Heritage Journal'', Vol 23 No.2, Winter 2012/2013, "Epilogue",p 9, (https://keywestmaritime.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/v23-2_2013-winter.pdf) ==Sources== *Haffenreffer, Mary L, Florida Keys Sea Heritage Journal, Vol 23 No.2, Winter 2012/2013, (https://keywestmaritime.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/v23-2_2013-winter.pdf) *Haffenreffer, Mary L, Florida Keys Sea Heritage Journal, Vol 23 No.1, Fall 2012, (https://keywestmaritime.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/v23-1_2012fall.pdf)

Fermor-8 Scratchpad

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A Scratchpad for the changes below which need to be added ot the profile of [[Fermor-8|Richard Fermor ''alias'' Farmer]], as it has a pre-1500 lock. If you use this to update the profile, please delete the updates from this page. Marriage to [[Norris-9160|Elizabeth Norris]] can be shifted forwards to being before 20 Oct 1533. ==Biography== ===Timeline=== *'''1525 Sep 01 [[Space:Will_(1525)_and_Probate_(1525)_of_Thomas_Busshe_of_Northleach%2C_Gloucestershire_-_TNA_PROB_11/21/625|Thomas Busshe's Will]]:''' [[Busshe-7|BUSSHE, Thomas]], brother-in-law of half-brother [[Wenman-186|Richard Wenman]]; maister, clerk of the crowne; Overseer; £10 for his labour[[Space:Will_(1525)_and_Probate_(1525)_of_Thomas_Busshe_of_Northleach%2C_Gloucestershire_-_TNA_PROB_11/21/625|PROB 11/21/625; The National Archives, Kew, London]] *'''1533 Oct 20 [[Space:Will_(1533)_and_Probate_(1534)_of_Richarde_Wenman_of_Witney%2C_Oxfordshire_-_TNA_PROB_11/25/267|Half-brother's Will]]:''' [[Wenman-186|WENMAN, Richard]]; husband of [[Norris-9160|Elizabeth ffarmer]]; 'coadintor' of the will with brother Richard; £20 sterlinge for his labour and 'shalbe goode frindes unto the said [[Wenman-187|Thomas]] my sonne'[[Space:Will_(1533)_and_Probate_(1534)_of_Richarde_Wenman_of_Witney%2C_Oxfordshire_-_TNA_PROB_11/25/267|PROB 11/25/267; The National Archives, Kew, London]] ==Sources==

Fern Chapel

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Methodist Church and burial ground founded by William Wood and L.I. Williamson Wood at the corner of their farm east of Perry, MO (Ralls County) after the death of their daughter Fern. Graves can be searched at https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2372922/fern-chapel-cemetery.

'Fern Tree Vale' (aka 'Greenaway')

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Page 166, 167, 168 of 911 of South Gippsland Heritage Study VOLUME 3 HERITAGE PLACE CITATIONS December 2004 http://www.southgippsland.vic.gov.au/download/downloads/id/1239/south_gippsland_heritage_study_-_vol_3_citations.pdf Excerpt: What is Significant? The 'Fern Tree Vale' homestead, constructed c.1892, at Hodgsons Road, Hedley. Why is it Significant? The 'Fern Tree Vale' homestead is of local historic and aesthetic significance to South Gippsland Shire. Historically, the homestead is one of the oldest in the Shire and is one of a relatively small number of rural buildings, which demonstrate the important phase of settlement and development that occurred prior to the disastrous bushfires of 1898. It is also of interest for its continuing association with the locally important Greenaway and Hodgson families. (AHC criteria - A.4, D.2, and H.1) Aesthetically, it is a substantially intact example of an early rural dwelling, and is enhanced by the mature trees in the surrounding garden. (AHC criterion - E.1) The exact date of the homestead at "Fern Tree Vale" is not known, although it is believed that the original part was constructed as early as 1892 for John and Margaret Hodgson, and replaced the first house, which was a simple bush hut constructed of local timber and bark. John Hodgson is listed as the owner of this property in the Shire of South Gippsland Rate Book for 1894-95, which describes it as comprising a house and 120 acres at Welshpool with a Net Annual Value of £30. This description remains the same until 1898-99 when the NAV increases to £50, while the acreage remains the same, indicating that additions were made to the homestead in this year. The next change in the property description comes in 1902-03 when CA 12 is added to give a total of 200 acres with a combined NAV of £60. John Hodgson first arrived at Hedley (then known as 'Nine Mile Creek') c.1879 after selecting the property and travelling overland via Woodside. He then set about clearing the land and arranged for his family with their stock and belongings to sail to Port Albert from Geelong on the "Rosedale". Margaret and their family of five children arrived in February 1880 and moved temporarily into a house on a property near the Albert River. In 1881, the family moved to their selection, which they named "Fern Tree Vale". Three more children were born on the property. The Hodgsons were active in the early development of the Hedley district and the homestead at "Fern Tree Vale" was the venue of the first school in the area. Margaret assumed the role of midwife for local settlers and also administered first aid when necessary. For a number of years in the early 1900s, various members of the family collectively owned or leased a total of over 1000 acres in the Hedley area. Eldest son Robert built his own homestead on the opposite side of Hodgsons Road in 1908-09 (see separate citation) The property is presently owned by FJ Greenaway. Mr Greenaway's mother was Susan Hodgson, who was the second daughter of John and Margaret. She married Teamster, John Greenaway, in 1938. Greenaway, S. Family History & Notes. Blake, J (ed.) (1973) 'Vision & Realisation. Volume 3'. p.1243 Shire of South Gippsland Rate Books 1894-1910

Fernandes de Lima

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The goal of this project is to study a family in the Northeast of Brazil and the marriages between cousins. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Asensi-1|Cristina Asensi]]. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15138526 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Ferns riding

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Did English, western, bareback. Rode 4-H, pricision drill teams, trail rides, a member of beaver plaines Appaloosa club, Alberta Blues, Canada ride Will soon add photos and newspaper articles

Ferree Family Website

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http://www.ferreedescendants.com/ The purpose of the Ferree Family website is to provide a diversity of information and share with others interested in our Ferree Family in America that are descendants of Daniel Ferree & Marie Warenbuer Ferree.

Ferreira Families. Janet Melville & Emmarentia S Ferreira; Des 2015

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'''Ferreira Families''' Janet Melville & Emmarentia S Ferreira; Des 2015. ISBN 0-86988-727-0

Ferren

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'''Ferren History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms The name Ferren thought to be of Norman heritage. It is a name for a person who was a person with gray hair, or who habitually dressed in gray. Checking further we found the name was derived from the Old French word, ferrant, which means gray (a reference to the color of iron). Another derivation suggests that the name is a corruption of Ferrant, the Old French form of Ferdinand. Time has confused the different derivations, and it is now extremely difficult to tell which is appropriate in a given situation. The goal of this project is to ...discover ferren and everything about them Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Brookshaw-19|Greta Brookshaw]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Early Origins of the Ferren family The surname Ferren was first found in Yorkshire where they were granted lands by William the Conqueror and appointed to the Wardenship of Skipton Castle, for the Cliffords, the chief tenants shown in the Domesday Book. They were under the protection and patronage of the ancient Earl of Albermarle. * Migration of the Ferren family to the New World and Oceana For many English families, the political and religious disarray that plagued their homeland made the frontiers of the New World an attractive prospect. Thousands migrated, aboard cramped disease-ridden ships. They arrived sick, poor, and hungry, but were welcomed in many cases with far greater opportunity than at home in England. Many of these hardy settlers went on to make important contributions to the emerging nations in which they landed. Among early immigrants bearing the name Ferren or a variant listed above were *Contemporary Notables of the name Ferren (post 1700) John Ferren (1905-1970), American artist Bran Ferren (b. 1953), American technologist, artist, architectural designer, vehicle designer and engineer, former President of Research and Development of Walt Disney Imagineering Phil Ferren, American Republican politician, Candidate in primary for U.S. Representative from Iowa 3rd District, 1998 Carlyle Ferren MacIntyre (1890-1967), American poet who was awarded Fulbright Fellowships in 1948 and 1953 Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10981523 send me a private message]. Thanks! ^ "New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JX3D-FYX : 6 December 2014), Emma Ferren, 04 Nov 1895; citing departure port Southampton, arrival port New York, ship name Berlin, NARA microfilm publication T715 and M237 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ^ "New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JX8D-J2Z : 6 December 2014), Mary Ferren, 09 May 1900; citing departure port Londonderry, arrival port NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, NEW YORK, ship name Ethiopia, NARA microfilm publication T715 and M237 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ^ "New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JXYK-9PB : 6 December 2014), Abelardo Ferren, 05 May 1909; citing departure port Havana, arrival port New York, ship name Havana, NARA microfilm publication T715 and M237 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ^ "New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J6QS-RT1 : 6 December 2014), Bridget Eileen Ferren, 19 Dec 1919; citing departure port Liverpool, arrival port New York, ship name Baltic, NARA microfilm publication T715 and M237 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ^ "New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J6HF-D65 : 6 December 2014), Lucy Ferren, 20 Dec 1920; citing departure port Bordeaux, arrival port New York City, New York, New York, ship name Caroline, NARA microfilm publication T715 and M237 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ^ "New York Passenger Arrival Lists (Ellis Island), 1892-1924," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J6JM-V57 : 6 December 2014), Domenico Ferren, 04 Jul 1921; citing departure port Trieste, arrival port New York, ship name President Wilson, NARA microfilm publication T715 and M237 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.).

Ferris Family Material

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This page is for photos and documents related to James Royce Ferris and his descendants and ancestors.

Ferrovia Tereza Cristina

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Do_Nascimento-11.jpg
== Breve resumo == A Ferrovia Tereza Cristina (FTC) é herdeira da histórica Estrada de Ferro Donna Thereza Cristina (EFDTC). É a atual EF-488 no Estado de Santa Catarina, Brasil. A ferrovia foi construída pela companhia inglesa "Donna Thereza Cristina Railway", entre 1880 e 1884, para escoar a produção de carvão mineral descobertas nos municípios de Lauro Müller e Pedras Grandes até os portos de Laguna e Imbituba. Devido à existência de impurezas nas jazidas, o interesse comercial no carvão foi comprometido, e a ferrovia conseqüentemente abandonada em 1902. Porém, com uma nova descoberta de jazidas de carvão mineral de melhor nível de pureza em Criciúma, novas concessões e extensões da linha férrea foram viabilizadas. A ferrovia funciona até hoje transportando a produção de carvão e cerâmica do extremo sul catarinense até o porto de Imbituba.
[[Image:Do_Nascimento-11.jpg|650px]]
Acima: Linha Tereza Cristina. Fonte: Arquivo Histórico de Criciúma. == Ligações externas == *[http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estrada_de_Ferro_Donna_Thereza_Christina Estrada de Ferro Donna Thereza Christina - Wikipédia] *[http://www.ftc.com.br/main/default.php?pg=2722DRlR4: Site oficial FTC - Ferrovia Tereza Cristina - História da Estrada de Ferro no Sul de Santa Catarina] *[http://museuferroviario-sc.webnode.com.br: Museu Ferroviário de Tubarão] *[http://www1.dnit.gov.br/ferrovias/historico.asp Departamento Nacional de Infra-Estrutura dos Transportes - Histórico de Ferrovias] *[http://www.estacoesferroviarias.com.br/eftc/cabecuda.htm Estações ferroviárias do Brasil] == Leituras relacionadas == *BELOLLI, Mário et al. História do Carvão de Santa Catarina/ Mário Belolli, Joice Quadros, Ayser Guidi. Criciúma: Imprensa Oficial do Estado de Santa Catarina, 2002. 300 p. il. *MENDES, Luana Wasseleski. Estudando a dimensão do local: O município de Içara e a ferrovia Tereza Cristina, um símbolo de modernidade no ensino de História. Criciúma: Universidade do Extremo Sul Catarinense: Curso de Pós-Graduação: Especialização em História, 2008. *SETTI, João Bosco. Ferovias no Brasil: um século e meio de evolução. Rio de Janeiro: Memória do trem, 2008. *GERODETTI, João Emílio - CORNEJO, Carlos. As Ferrovias do Brasil nos cartões postais e álbuns de lembranças. São Paulo: Solaris Edições Culturais, 2005.

Ferruzzano, RC, Italy

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A profile of Ferruzzano, a town in Reggio Calabria. This profile is created to support a One Place Study of this town.

Ferry

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Kaufmann-550|Dave Kaufmann]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Categorize and list all Ferry Vessels in Operation * Categorize and list all Ferry Vessels in No-longer Operation * Categorize and list all Historic Ferry Vessels in Operation * Link Ferry Vessel Captains in their profiles to the proper vessel page * Properly Categorize all Vessels Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=18810039 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Festivities Leading Up To The Edgerton-Little Wedding

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'''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Sun, Oct 9, 1921

'''
'''Mrs. Pound Gives Reception'''
: Mrs. Ralston Murphy Pound gave a beautiful reception at her home on East Boulevard, Dilworth, yesterday afternoon from 4 to 6 o’clock in honor of her attractive house guest, Miss Miss Allen Palmer House of Gallatin, Tenn., Miss Mary Rogers Gibbon, Miss Minnie Everett Little and Miss Carolyn Brevard Moore, pretty brides-elect. : The living room was arranged with floor vases filled with rich red autumn leaves and goldenrod and the lights were covered with red shades. The library was decorated with yellow flowers and the lights were covered with yellow shades. : Mrs. Pound received her guests in her wedding gown of heavy white satin embroidered with pearls. : Miss House was gowned in orchid and light blue changeable taffeta; Miss Gibbon was gowned in red chiffon; Miss Little was gowned in black lace; Miss Moore was gowned in pink taffeta with overdress of pink chiffon. : Misses Olive and Ellen Brice met the guests at the door. : Receiving with Mrs. Pound and the guests of honor in the living room was Mrs. George H. Moore. : Miss Annie Beal Clarkson of Corsicana, Texas, Miss Esther Springs and Miss Rosalie Burbank of Wilmington, stood between the living room and dining room. : The dining room table was covered with handsome lace and in the center was a silver basket of pink and white gladiolus. : Small silver vases of pink and white cosmos encircled the center piece. The lights were shaded in pink. Elaborate refreshments in two courses were served. : Receiving in the dining room were Mrs. B. J. Witherspoon, Mrs. John Q. Myers, Miss Julia Baxter Scott, Miss Corinne Gibbon, Miss Catherine Gilmer, Miss Ann Tallaferro, Miss Ruth Crowell, Miss Elizabeth Miller. : During the afternoon several hundred guests called. '''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Sun, Oct 30, 1921

''' : One of the prettiest card parties of the autumn was that given by Misses Lila and Fan Little at their home on North Poplar Street yesterday afternoon in honor of their cousin, Miss Minnie Everett Little, whose marriage to Mr. Henry Yates Edgerton will take place on the 9th. The home was arranged with quantities of yellow chrysanthemums and ferns and Halloween decorations. : Miss Little, the bride-elect, was presented with a bride book tied with white satin ribbons and a miniature bouquet of orange blossoms. : The score cards were bride pictures. : After the game elaborate refreshments were served. : The guests present were: Miss Minnie Everett Little and guest, Miss Jeanet Fairley, Miss Julia Hagood, Miss Ruth Crowell, Miss Cornie Fore, Miss Essie Stokes, Miss Cora Annette Harris, Miss Rosa Little, of Washington, Miss Mary Brockenbrough, Mrs. J. P. Little, Sr., Mrs. J. P. Little, Jr., Mrs. Henry L. Sloan, Mrs. Charles W. Tillett, Jr., Mrs. Charles Tillett, Mrs. W. H. Bethea, Mrs. John H. Roddey, Mrs. Eddie E. Jones. '''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Sun, Oct 30, 1921

'''
'''Mrs. Ross Honors Miss Little'''
: Mrs. Joseph Russell Ross gave a charming bridge party at her home on East Boulevard, Dilworth, Friday afternoon in honor of Miss Minnie Everett Little, whose marriage to Mr. Henry Yates Edgerton will take place on the 9th. : Miss Jeanet Fairley, of Rockingham, won the prize for the top score, Miss Margaret Yorke cut the consolation prize and Miss Little received the honor prize. : The home was artistically arranged with a profusion if rich fall blossoms. Mrs. Ross was assisted in entertaining by Mrs. Robert J. Walker. Mrs. Ross’ guests included: Miss Little, bride-elect and her house guest, Miss Jeanet Fairley, Miss Margaret Yorke, Miss Julia Hagood, Miss Ruth Crowell, Misses Hattie and Elizabeth Yorke, Miss Ruth Chapman, Misses Gladys and Elsie Palmer, Miss Ellen Victor, Miss Maria Tucker, Mrs. Randall Brooks, Mrs. J. P. Little, Jr., Mrs. Edward Stitt Ross, Mrs. Cameron Price. '''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Tue, Nov 1, 1921

'''
'''Canteen Tea for Miss Little'''
: Mrs. Hugh Montgomery gave a charming and informal canteen tea at her home on Hermitage court, Myers Park, yesterday afternoon in honor of Miss Minnie Everett Little, whose marriage to Mr. Henry Yates Edgerton takes place on the 9th. Mrs. Montgomery was captain of troop G of the American Red Cross canteen during the war and Miss Little was one of the most active and popular members. : The home was arranged with quantities of chrysanthemums and other fall flowers. : An artistic arrangement of yellow chrysanthemums formed the center piece of the dining room table. : Mrs. John F. Yorke poured tea. : Mrs. Montgomery’s guests included Mrs. Ralph Van Landingham, commandant of the A. R. C., and the following members of the troop: Miss Minnie Little, bride-elect and guest of honor, Miss Marie Tucker, Mrs. Robin Brem, Mrs. John F. Yorke, Mrs. John P. Watters, Mrs. John C. : : Myers, Mrs. M. M. Murphy, Mrs. Robert Lassiter, Mrs. Jeremiah Goff, Mrs. Richard Cameron Price, Mrs. J. A. Forney. : Other guests were Miss Jeanet Fairley, of Rockingham, and Miss Rosa Little, of Washington, the former guest of Miss Minnie Little and the latter a guest of her sisters, Misses Lila and Fran Little. '''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Wed, Nov 2, 1921

''' : Misses Hattie and Elizabeth Roark entertained delightfully at bridge at their home in Myers Park yesterday morning in honor of Miss Minnie Everett Little, bride-elect. : The prize for the top score was won by Mrs. Julian Herndon, Miss Elizabeth Burns cut the consolation prize and Miss Little received the honor prize. : The home was arranged with quantities of yellow chrysanthemums. After the game a salad course was served. : The invited guests were: Miss Minnie Everett Little, Miss Jeanet Fairly, of Rockingham, Miss Rosa Little of Washington, Miss Esther Springs and guest, Miss Annie Beal Clarkson, of Corsicana, Texas, Miss Julia Hagood, Miss Ruth Crowell, Miss Maria Tucker, Miss Alethia Bland, Miss Elizabeth Bruns, Miss Florence Butler, of Henderson, Mrs. W. M. Jones, Mrs. Albert Clark, Mrs. W. H. Bethea, Mrs. Edward Stitt Ross, Mrs. J. P. Little, Jr., Mrs. Charles W. Tillett, Jr., Mrs. John Tillett, Mrs. William Moore, Mrs. Lane Etheridge, Mrs. Julian Herndon. '''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Sun, Nov 6, 1921

'''
'''EDGERTON-LITTLE WEDDING WEDNESDAY'''
: Ceremony to be Solemnized at Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church - Small Reception Follows. : A wedding of much interest to society throughout the state is that of Miss Minnie Everett Little, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Little, and Mr. Henry Yates Edgerton, which will take place at Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock. : Rev. Lacy L. Little, a kinsman of the bride’s father, and missionary to China for the past 20 years, will perform the ceremony, assisted by Rev. W. A. Jenkins, former pastor at Trinity church. : Mrs. William D. Alexander, Jr., will render the wedding music. : The bride will be given in marriage by her father, Mr. John Phillips Little. : The groom will be attended by his brother, Mr. Claude Edgerton, of Kenly, as best man. : Mrs. Ozmer Lucas Henry, a cousin of the bride, will be dame of honor. : Mrs. Henry, prior to her marriage on the 26th, was Miss Sarah Lilly Dockery, of Rockingham. : The bridesmaids will be Miss Rosa Little, of Washington, cousin of the bride; Miss Inez Edgerton, of Kenly, sister of the groom; Miss Ruth Crowell, of Charlotte; Miss Eleanor Horton, of Wadesboro. : The groomsmen will be Mr. Edward Edgerton, of Raleigh, brother of the groom; Mr. Jesse Sauls, of Wilson and Messrs. Joe Choate and Erwin, of Charlotte. : The ushers will be Mr. J. P. Little, Jr., brother of the bride; Messrs. Stephen Davis, Francis Clarkson, Flynn Wolfe. : Misses Louise and Ann Everett Little, pretty little daughters of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Little, Jr., and nieces of the bride, will be flower girls. : A reception will follow the wedding at the home of the bride’s parents, 706 Queen’s Road, east, Myers Park. It will be a small affair, the invitations including relatives and a few intimate friends. : Miss Little is one of Charlotte’s most attractive and popular young women and has been entertained extensively during the past several weeks. : Tuesday Mrs. John Phillips Little, Jr., will entertain the bridal party and out of town guests at a luncheon at the Charlotte Country Club; Tuesday evening at 6 o’clock Messrs. Francis Clarkson and Stephen Davis will host a stag dinner in compliment of Mr. Edgerton. : Tuesday evening after the rehearsal Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Goff will entertain the bridal party and out of town guests at their home on Queen’s Road, east, Myers Park. : Wednesday Mrs. Paul Whitlock will give a buffet luncheon at her home in Myers Park in honor of the bridal party and out of town guests. : Miss Little shared honors with her cousin, Miss Sarah Lilly Dockery, at a bridge party given by Miss Elizabeth Cloud of Hamlet, and at a bridge party given by the Mesdames W. N. Everett, W. N. Everett, Jr., and Mrs. Isaac London of Rockingham, and at a rook party given by Mrs. LeGrand Everett, and at a bridge party given by Mrs. John L. Everett, both of Rockingham. : Miss Jean Ashcraft entertained at cards at her home in Monroe in honor of Miss Little, and Miss Jeanet Fairley gave an evening party at her home in Rockingham for her. : Miss Little shared honors with the other brides-elect of the season at a reception given by Mrs. Charles W. Tillett and Mrs. Charles W. Tillett, Jr., and at one given by Mrs. R. M. Pound, and she shared honors with Miss Carolina Brevard Moore at an evening card party given by Miss Margaret Yorke, and shared honors with Miss Sara Lilly Dockery at a luncheon given by Mrs. John Q. Myers at the Charlotte Country club. Mrs. Joseph Russell Ross gave a card party at her home on East Boulevard, Dilworth, in honor of Miss Little, Mrs. W. H. Bethea gave a luncheon at her home in Myers Park for her; Misses Lila and Fan Little gave a bridge party for her; Miss Maria Tucker gave a luncheon at the Charlotte Country Club; Mrs. Hugh Montgomery gave a canteen tea; Misses Hattie and Elizabeth Roark gave a bridge party; Mrs. T. C. Guthrie gave a luncheon at the Charlotte Country Club; Mrs. Esley O. Anderson gave an afternoon tea and Miss Ruth Crowell gave a luncheon at the Charlotte Country club. She shared honors with Mrs. Howard Payne Conway of Greenville, S. C., at a luncheon given by Miss Helen Parker, sister of Mrs. Payne, Thursday afternoon. : Mrs. John Caldwell McDonald entertained at bridge for her at her new home on Hermitage court; Miss Julia Hagood entertained for her yesterday afternoon. : Out of town guests for the wedding will include Mrs. H. C. Dockery, Miss Bess Everett, Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Everett, Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Everett , Jr., Mr. and Mrs. LeGrand Everett, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac London, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Everett, Mr. and Mrs. Ozmer Lucas Henry, Misses Nancy, Glenn, Jeanet, Katherine, Dorothy and Elsie Fairley, all of Rockingham; Mr. H. F. Edgerton and Misses Inez and Miriam Edgerton of Kenly, father and sisters of the groom; Mrs. Herbert Grizzard of Kenly; Miss Eleanor Horton of Wadesboro; Mr. Jesse Sauls of Wilson; Mr. Edward E. Edgerton of Raleigh. '''

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) · Wed, Nov 9, 1921

'''
'''Mrs. Little Honors Bride-Elect'''
: Mrs. John Phillips Little, Jr., gave a beautiful luncheon at the Charlotte Country Club yesterday in honor of her sister, Miss Minnie Everett Little, whose wedding to Mr. Henry Yates Edgerton, of Kenly, will take place this evening at 7 o’clock at Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church. : Mrs. Little’s guests included members of the bridal party, out-of-town guests and a few intimate friends. : An artistic arrangement of fruit formed the centerpiece of the table. The place cards and favors were suggestive of the approaching Thanksgiving season. : A six-course luncheon was served. : Covers were laid for Mrs. Little, Miss Minnie Everett Little, bride-elect, and her attendants, Mrs Ozmer Lucas Henry, of Rockingham, dame of honor; Miss Jeanet Fairley, of Rockingham, maid of honor; and Miss Inez Edgerton, of Kenly, Miss Cloud, of Hamlet, Miss Eleanor Horton, of Wadesboro, Miss Rosa Little, of Washington, Miss Ruth Crowell, of Charlotte. : Out-of-town guests were: Mrs. H. C. Dockery, Miss Bess Everett, Mrs. W. N. Everett, Mrs. LeGrand Everett, Miss Dorothy Fairley, all of Rockingham, Mrs. Cornelius W. Waddill, of Cheraw, S. C. Mrs. Herbert Grizzard, of Kenly, Mrs. M. C. Bridger, of Bladenboro, Misses Lillian and Miriam Edgerton, of Kenly, and Mrs. J. P. Little, Sr., Mrs. L. E. Crosland, Mrs. J. Q. Myers, Mrs. Paul C. Whitlock, Mrs. W. H. Beathea, Mrs. Jeremiah Goff, Mrs. Easley O. Anderson, Mrs. Cameron Price, Mrs. Caldwell McDonald, Misses Julia Hagood, Hattie and Elizabeth Roark.

Feystown Chapel

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Feystown_Chapel.jpg
Feystown_Chapel-1.jpg
==Facts== *Also known as St. Mary's Church * Diocese of Down and Connor *Located in Feystown, Glenarm, BT44 OEA Ireland. Tickmacrevan Civil Parish, Deer Park Farms Townland. *It is one of the main Roman Catholic burial grounds in the area. *It was remodeled in 1878 "Feystown Church, Glenarm will be reopened on September 8th. Rt. Rev. Dr. Gorian will preach the opening sermon." The Cincinatti Daily Star, 5 Sept 1878 via Newspapers.com. *The Ardclinis Crozier is associated with this parish MURRAY, G. (2008). THE PROVENANCE OF THE COUNTY ANTRIM CROZIER. Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 67, 112-117. Retrieved January 30, 2021, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/41220771 *One of the locations of the 2020 film Pixie https://www.northernirelandscreen.co.uk/production-catalogue/feature-films/pixie/ ===Father O'Laverty's Description 1878=== ''In the year 1810 Father James McMullan erected a little chapel in Feystown, in the townland of Clady. Father James O'Neill, in 1827, obtained, at the nominal rent of 6d per annum, from Edmond McDonnell, Esq., and his wife, the Countess of Antrim, a lease of a plot of ground, containing 1a, 2r. 29p. in Glenarm, Old Park [Deer Park Farms Townland], for the purpose of erecting on it a church, school-house, and forming in it a graveyard, and for other purposes. The church was dedicated, in 1828, by Dr. Crolly, under the invocation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The new church, commonly called that of Feystown, is about a quarter of a mile west of the old chapel, which, after the erection of the church, was allowed to moulder to ruin. The church was improved by Father Starkey, but it was completely rearranged by Father Delahunty.'' O'Laverty, James. "An historical account of the Diocese of Down and Connor, ancient and modern" Dublin : J. Duffy,1878. Volume IV, p. 584 [https://archive.org/details/historicalaccoun04olav/page/584/mode/2up/ Archive.org] == Sources == See also: *[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2584074/feystown-roman-catholic-graveyard? Findagrave Feystown]

Fezzik

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Fez was my blue betta fish. He was really big. In 2015 I had to give him away.

FFA and the Stanislaus County Fair

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My daughter raised a goat each year she was in high school for the Future Farmers of America aka FFA. She raised the goat for about 4 months and then she showed the goat at the our local county fair. Just before fair ended she sold her goat at the auction. ==FFA== “Future Farmers of America” was founded by a group of young farmers in 1928. FFA is the premier youth organization preparing members for leadership and careers in the science, business and technology of agriculture. https://www.ffa.org/ Members are future chemists, veterinarians, government officials, entrepreneurs, bankers, international business leaders, teachers and premier professionals in many career fields. As of today, 1 Aug 2022, there are 735,038 student members Nationwide, there are 8,817 local FFA chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands. There are three levels of FFA - local FFA chapters, State FFA Associations and the National FFA Organization. ==Stanislaus County Fair== ==Sources== *CONTACT - National FFA Organization 6060 FFA Drive Indianapolis, IN 46278-1370 1-888-332-2668 Contact us Monday – Friday: 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. EST

FGC10120 (Old) Loudoun HaploTree

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Insert reference hereHere are three of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Proven lines to Campbell of (old) Loudoun Campbell of Loudoun is one of the oldest cadet families of Campbell of Lochow as a branch of Campbell of Argyll. It continued until Master George Campbell, d. 1612, had two daughters, Margaret and Elizabeth. Margaret inherited the title and married John Campbell of Lawers, who, after he married, he was created, 12th May 1633, 1st Earl of Loudoun, Lord Terrinyean AND Machline, and Lord Chancellor of Scotland 1641-60. Hence, any descendants of John, 1st Earl of Loudoun, would carry the YDNA of Lawers, a descendant of Campbell of Glenorchy. Look for more information about Campbell of Loudoun on the Clan Campbell Society of North America page: https://www.ccsna.org/earl-of-loudoun * Encouraging YDNA Testing of Campbells who think they are connected to Campbell of Loudoun The cadets are likely from earlier generations of Campbells of Loudoun. The lines are not clear. * Identifying cadet families of Loudoun Here is an example: > FGC10122 (Loudoun) > FT10120 (Killoch) FT138216 (Auchmannoch) >FT139733 (Fairfield) Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, , in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-39663#PM-26504036 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fgh sdfasdfsd

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https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/e26e9e636492a12e07960a191068459f.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/1696db74dd65b9a94e8806e37f673786.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/749b9f00ab6d39fba547a19a57878e05.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/0c58d4124bcabc891e2910a4e2c53c1a.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/49b5b457f7d742d01251be37e17fd4d1.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/0b1c30d495927ba51aedb184c61e95e5.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/a9fd0e18c4d5cab99b89db68d8af59d3.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/7fa66610db697d5c031fd5ab0b372490.pdf https://sites.psu.edu/srmbd/files/2022/01/01372a43909ba893d76c4d245f0f1b61.pdf

FHC Look ups

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I am a non member consultant at the Family History Center (FHC) in the town where I live. I am happy to do any look ups that anyone needs. If it says image unavailable please still post it here as I have been able to see those images while at the FHC. There are some images that I am not able to see and I will let you know. My schedule is Tuesday and Friday from 1pm to 3pm, Wednesday will change slightly starting this week and will be from 1:45pm to about 4pm and Thursday night from 6:30pm to 9pm. All times are in PDT as I am in California, USA. Things do come up and my schedule changes but I try to let everyone know ahead of time. There are two things that I would like for each look up. #Please have a link to the index page which has the name(s) and the date and the direct link to the image(s) if possible. There are times that I have to look through a collection of hundreds or thousands of images and knowing the name(s) and date helps. #Please leave your WikiTree ID so I know who the image is for. I will tag you in discord with the image or I can send you a private message on discord with the image(s) == Requests == * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/004517717?cat=590357 Manuela Blanco, page 117] If there is more than one book it should be the fourth one. [[Silva-1055]] * Francisco Pelegrina Parriya Marriage Date 6 May 1867 https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:CSSW-QJ2M [[Silva-1055]] * Francisco Pelegrina Parrilla Marriage Date 12 Apr 1899 https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:C911-B16Z [[Silva-1055]]

FHL Research To-Do List

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===Books=== * '''Abstract and index to Lake County, Indiana Circuit Court docket book : Jan 2 1884 - Jun 12 1888''' by Martha Daugherty Latko and Marlene Polster. Call #: 977.299 P2L. Search for [[Harney-11|Fredrick Harney's]] Naturalization Record. * '''Index to Lake County, Indiana naturalization records, 1854 to 1932''' by Betty Brandt-Johnson and Northwest Indiana Genealogical Society. Call # 977.299 P42i. Search for [[Harney-11|Frederick Harney's]] Naturalization Record. ===Microfilm=== *''' Film #: 571172''' Title: Index to marriages - Lake County, Aa-Ja, 1850- 1920 (County Clerks Office, Crown Point). Search for [[Frederick Harney|Harney-11]] and a marriage to a Lizzie - maybe Steinmetz. * '''Film #: 847620''' Title: Deed records, 1796-1892; indexes, 1795-1911; Carter County (Tennessee), Register of Deeds. Search for Dugger, Clawson, Bunton, Potter, and Vines families. * '''Film #: 944470''' Title: Index to deeds, 1836-1910 Johnson Co, Tennessee. Search for Dugger, Clawson, Bunton, Potter, and Vines families. *'''Film #: 944478''' Title: Land Surveys, 1836-1905 Johnson Co. (Tennessee) County Surveyor. Search for Dugger, Clawson, Bunton, Potter, and Vines families. * '''Film #: 860320''' Item 1 Title: Index of wills of Otsego County, New York, from 1792-1850. Search for [[Zaccheus Downer|Downer-5]] *'''Film #: 947169''' Title: Wills and administrations Bk. 8 1846-1853 Record of wills Bk. 9 1849-1853 (Otsego, NY - Surrogate's Court). Search for [[Zacheus Downer|Downer-5]], Vol 9, Pg 250. *

Fi

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The goal of this project is to ... Find the reason Surname Fincannon becomes McClain. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[McClain-1667|Gerald McClain]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Why my Third GreatGrandfather is Fincannon? * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=14054375 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FICKETT SURNAME OF CAPE ELIZABETH ME

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FICKETTS OF CAPE ELIZABETH Date: 97-10-28 19:00:24 EST From: r1sty@EROLS.COM ( C. LaRue) Reply-to: r1sty@EROLS.COM To: Itigapa@AOL.COM (David C. Young) Microsoft Mail v3.0 (MAPI 1.0 Transport) IPM.Microsoft Mail.Note From: Fickett, James (WCF) To: MSMGATE/IBMMAIL/I3126544 Subject: RE: FICKETTS OF CAPE ELIZABETH Date: 1997-10-28 16:14 Priority: 3 Message ID: 84CFAB42A84BD1119A3D444553540000 Conversation ID: RE: FICKETTS OF CAPE ELIZABETH ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Carol LaRue, Here is what I have on the early Fickett's of Cape Elizabeth: 1. Thomas Fickett #52 (son of John Fickett #50 and Susannah Ball #49) occupation Shipwright, m. ca 1720, Mary Moulton #53, b. Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine. Thomas died 1787. Children: + 2. i John Fickett #64 b. 31 Aug 1722. + 3. ii Mary Fickett #130 b. 1736. + 4. iii Mehitable Fickett #135 b. 1736. + 5. iv Benjamin Fickett #54 b. 26 Aug 1737. 6. v Thomas Fickett #132 18 Jul 1736, Scarboro and Cape Elizabeth Church Rcds. + 7. vi Nathaniel Fickett #133. + 8. vii Abner Fickett #134. 9. viii Daniel F. Fickett #131 b. 1754, d. 1789, Cherryfield,Washington,Maine. + 10. ix Jonathan Fickett #108. Second Generation 2. John Fickett #64 (1.Thomas1) b. 31 Aug 1722, Kittery, York, Maine, 01 Aug 1736, Scarboro and Cape Elizabeth Church Rcds, occupation Mariner/Farm/Wheelwright, m. 13 Dec 1749, in Falmouth, Cumberland, Maine, Isabel Dyer #65, b. 10 Jul 1729, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, 13 Jul 1729, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, (daughter of William Junisimus Dyer #591 and Hannah Strout #592) d. 09 Feb 1828. John died 09 Feb 1823, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine. He enlisted in Capt. Brient Morton's Co 05 Feb 1776 service to 01 Sept 1776. His company was stationed on the seacoast of Cape Elizabeth and Scarborough. Children: 11. i Benjamin Fickett #313 b. 26 Aug 1750, m. (1) 12 Apr 1769, Deborah Sawyer #319, b. 06 Nov 1749, (daughter of Jonathan Sawyer #362 and Sarah Sawyer #363) d. 01 Sep 1807, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. (2) 30 Dec 1807, in George E. Vaughn J.P., Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Elizabeth Roberts #364, b. 19 Jun 1791. 12. ii John Fickett Jr #316 b. 27 Mar 1752, m. 18 Aug 1774, Rev Ephraim Clark, Lucy Stanford #325, b. 18 Aug 1752, (daughter of Josiah Stanford Jr. #3289 and Sarah Woodbury #3290) d. 02 May 1841, buried: Barron Hill. John died 17 Aug 1828, buried: Barron Hill. Revolutionary War Soldier John enlisted in Capt. Daniel Strout's Co. Col. Enoch Freeman's Regt. service to days. John's company was called out buy Col. Freeman in Nov 1775 to build a fort on Falmouth Neck under command of Col. Jonathan Mitchell. Roll sworn to at Cape Elizabeth. John also served in Capt. John Wentworth's Co. Col. Peter Noyes Reg. The Company mustered by Col. Noyes May 20, 1777 and stationed at Fort Hancock, Cape Elizabeth. John was a Master Mariner and was for many years engaged in the West India Trade for Daniel Fox, of Portland, Maine. On Oct 18,1775 John arrived off Portland, Maine from the West Indies on a sloop with a cargo of coco nuts. When he attempted to enter the harbor his vessell was chased by an armed British ship under Capt. Mowatt of the Royal Navy. John's vessel being smaller than that of the enemy ran into Dyer's Cove. They were persued by the enemy in open boats. He escaped by running up the mouth of a small creek so far that the pursuers were afraid to follow. Late in life he retired from the sea and taught navagation . He was one of the earliests advocates of Universalism in Portland, Maine. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution Lucy: Died of Small Pox 13. iii Sarah "Sally" Fickett #57 b. 1754, m. 06 Aug 1780, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Falmouth,Cumberland, Maine, Zebulon Fickett #56, b. 1759, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, (son of Benjamin Fickett #54 and Sarah Sawyer #55) d. 08 Apr 1854, Milbridge,Washington,Maine, buried: Milbridge,Washington,Maine. Sarah died 1827. Zebulon: Private, Capt. Joshua Jordan's Co., Col. Jonathan Mitchall's Regt., service from 7 July 1779 to 25 Sep 1779, 2 mos. 20 days, on Penobscot expedition. Roll dated Cape Elizabeth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. 14. iv William Fickett #72 b. 1756, 01 Aug 1756, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, occupation Quaker Minister, m. (1) 17 Apr 1783, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Rev. Ephraim Clark, Abigail Fickett #71, b. 1762, (daughter of Benjamin Fickett #54 and Sarah Sawyer #55) d. 01 Aug 1818, m. (2) Hannah Swett #3299, b. Westbrook, Cumberland, Maine. William died 08 Aug 1839, South Portland, Cumberland, ME, buried: South Portland, Cumberland, ME. 15. v Hannah Fickett #318 b. 1756, m. John Densmore #324, b. 1745, d. 10 Jun 1823. Hannah died 20 Aug 1811, Milbridge,Washington,Maine. 16. vi Vincent Fickett #314 b. 1758, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, 02 Sep 1781, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, m. 07 Sep 1780, in Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, Hannah Brown #320, b. 1749, 02 Sep 1781, Sacrborough, Cumberland, Maine. Vincent Ficket on 1790 Cencus for Gorham and Scarborough, two sons under 16 and one wife Vincent was a Revolutionary War Soldier. He passed the memorable winter of 1777-1778 with General Wahington at Valley Forge. In 1820 Vincent resided in Durham, Maine and applied for a pention (No. S 35932) April 28, 1818 under the act of March 18,1818, Mass Service. Vincent enlisted at Cape Elizabth, Capt. Hart Williams Co. Col. Edmund Phinney's Regt. for one year in Dec 1776. In Dec 1777 Vincent enlisted by Lt James Means for three years as Pvt. in Capt Silas Burbank's Co. Col. Brewer's Regt. Mass, Line. Vincent was discharged in Fishkill, NY. abt Jan 1, 1780 Issued Certif No. 7396, March 5, 1819 at $96 per annum, paid at Maine Agency. 17. vii Isaac Fickett #317 m. 21 Oct 1790, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Rev Ephraim Clark, Mary Dyer #323, b. 23 Oct 1767, (daughter of Micah Dyer #3322 and Hannah Mariner #3323). 18. viii Nathaniel Fickett #315 b. 1761, m. (1) 19 Oct 1780, Susanna Brown #321, d. 27 Dec 1797, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. (2) Abigail Gammon #322, b. 1765, (daughter of William Gammon #3280 and Dorcas Gammon #3281). Nathaniel died 23 May 1832. Revolutionary Soldier No. S,36509 19. ix Mary Fickett #593 m. Richard Collins #1708. Mary died 08 Apr 1854, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine. 3. Mary Fickett #130 (1.Thomas1) b. 1736, 01 Aug 1736, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, m. 27 Oct 1764, Icabod Libby #3208, b. 1742, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, (son of James Libby #4378 and Elizabeth Meserve #4379) d. 18 Nov 1828. Mary died 08 Jul 1813. Children: 20. i Hanson Libby #3209 b. c1766, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, m. Abigail Myrick #3214, d. 27 Oct 1834. Hanson died 1796. 21. ii Mary Libby #3210 d. 22 Oct 1837. 22. iii Dennis Libby #3211 d. 21 May 1826. 23. iv James Libby #3212 b. 12 May 1773, d. 12 April 185X. 24. v Elizabeth Libby #3213. 4. Mehitable Fickett #135 (1.Thomas1) b. 1736, 18 Jul 1736, m. 06 Jun 1768, Charles Patrick #170, b. 1745, Stroudwater, (son of William Patrick #188 and Mary Hawkes #189) d. 15 Mar 1830. Mehitable died 26 Mar 1810. Died at age 62 years old Charles: Died at age 85 years old Children: 25. i Benjamin Partick #190 m. Polly McIntosh #3193. Benjamin died 28 Apr 1822. 26. ii Peggy Patrick #191 m. 12 Mar 1797, James McIntosh #3194. 27. iii Polly Patrick #192 m. 20 Nov 1797, Moses Dyer #3195. 28. iv Catherine Patrick #193 b. 1773, m. Male Dyer #3196, b. Stroudwater. 29. v David Patrick #194 b. 01 Sep 1776, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, m. 20 Nov 1803, Betsey Jordan #202, b. 1783, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, (daughter of Clement Jordan #3390 and Sarah ????? #3391) d. 15 Jan 1850, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine. David died 04 Sep 1838, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine. 30. vi Charles Patrick Jr #195 b. 08 Jan 1779, m. Susan Grant #208. 31. vii Thomas Patrick #197 b. 15 Nov 1782, m. 15 Aug 1815, Mary Fickett #224, b. 1788, d. 22 Mar 1864. Thomas died 09 Dec 1857. Mary: Died at age 76 years 32. viii Eleanor Patrick #198 b. 31 Dec 1784, m. 14 Apr 1810, Samuel Libby #3204, b. Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine. 33. ix Stephen Patrick #199 b. 15 Feb 1787, m. 02 Jan 1814, Ester Harmon #3205, b. Buxton,York,Maine. Soldier on War of 1812 34. x Nancy Patrick #200 b. 29 Dec 1789, d. 04 Jul 1801. 35. xi James Patrick #196 b. 19 Aug 1790, m. Pattie Tibbetts #3206, b. Buxton,York,Maine. 36. xii Christiana Patrick #201 m. 23 Jan 1813, James Bragdon #3207, b. Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine. 5. Benjamin Fickett #54 (1.Thomas1) b. 26 Aug 1737, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, 01 Aug 1736, Scarboro and Cape Elizabeth Church Rcds, m. (1) 02 Feb 1760, in Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, Sarah Sawyer #55, b. 1743, Falmouth, Cumberland, Maine, (daughter of Isaac Sawyer #4055 and Sarah Brackett #4056) m. (2) 03 Jun 1804, in Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, Hannah Roberts Parker #70, d. 23 Jun 1833. Benjamin died Gorham, Cumberland, Maine. Children by Sarah Sawyer: 37. i Zebulon Fickett #56 b. 1759, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. (1) 06 Aug 1780, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Falmouth,Cumberland, Maine, Sarah "Sally" Fickett #57, b. 1754, (daughter of John Fickett #64 and Isabel Dyer #65) d. 1827, m. (2) 27 Sep. 1827, in Harrington, Washington, Maine, Mary Brown #153, b. 11 Jul 1769, Michias,,Maine, d. 26 Apr 1869, Columbia,,Maine, buried: Columbia,,Maine. Zebulon died 08 Apr 1854, Milbridge,Washington,Maine, buried: Milbridge,Washington,Maine. Private, Capt. Joshua Jordan's Co., Col. Jonathan Mitchall's Regt., service from 7 July 1779 to 25 Sep 1779, 2 mos. 20 days, on Penobscot expedition. Roll dated Cape Elizabeth. Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution. 38. ii Jonathan Fickett #123 also known as: Jonathan Fickett Jr b. c1761, m. (1) 01 Jan 1788, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Rev Ephraim Clark, Lynda Cox #129, m. (2) Betsey Bryant #1727. 39. iii Abigail Fickett #71 b. 1762, m. 17 Apr 1783, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Rev. Ephraim Clark, William Fickett #72, b. 1756, 01 Aug 1756, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, (son of John Fickett #64 and Isabel Dyer #65) occupation Quaker Minister, d. 08 Aug 1839, South Portland, Cumberland, ME, buried: South Portland, Cumberland, ME. Abigail died 01 Aug 1818. 40. iv Moses Fickett #69 b. 13 Feb 1766, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. (1) 27 Jun 1791, Rev Thomas Browne, Sarah Warren #75, b. 09 Jun 1757, Westbrook, Cumberland, Maine, (daughter of John Warren #3252 and Jane Johnson #3253) d. 11 Jun 1823, Milbridge,Washington,Maine, buried: Milbridge,Washington,Maine, m. (2) 13 May 1826, Sally Howell #4018, b. Portland,Cumberland,Maine. Moses died 17 Mar 1863, Milbridge,Washington,Maine, buried: Milbridge,Washington,Maine. Sarah: 06 Jan 1766 Dirth day? 41. v Benjamin Fickett Jr #121 b. 1767, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, occupation Ship Carpenter, m. (1) 24 Dec 1795, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Sarah Stanford #4215, b. 1779, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, d. 03 Jun 1843, Portland,Cumberland,Maine, buried: Portland,Cumberland,Maine, m. (2) 20 Sep 1846, in Rev G. F. Cox, Portland,Cumberland,Maine, Sarah B Tucker #4224, b. 1802, Standish, Cumberland, Maine. Benjamin died 05 Nov 1851, Portland,Cumberland,Maine, buried: Portland,Cumberland,Maine. Western Cemetery G:1 Sarah: Western Cemetery G:1 42. vi Nathaniel Fickett #120 b. 1771, 1832, m. Abigail ????? #127. 43. vii Ezra Fickett #124 b. 1773, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. 15 Dec 1796, in Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, 19 Oct 1796, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, Sally Pensfield #171, b. 1769, d. 04 Mar 1845, Poland,,Maine, buried: Highland Cemetery, West Poland, Maine. Ezra died 04 Mar 1855, Poland,,Maine, buried: Highland Cemetery, West Poland, Maine. 44. viii Sally Fickett #125 b. 1775, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. in Kennebunk, Charles Smith #126, b. 1773, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, occupation Blacksmith. 7. Nathaniel Fickett #133 (1.Thomas1) m. 25 Jun 1765, Parson Smith, Polly Pennell #2440, (daughter of Clement Pennell #3250 and Ruth Riggs #3251). Nathaniel died 1776. Children: 45. i Anna Fickett #2441 b. 1765, m. Josiah Walker Jr #2445, b. 03 Jul 1756, Standish, Cumberland, Maine, d. 23 Jun 1844. Anna died 14 Dec 1832. 46. ii Betsy Fickett #2442 b. 06 Jun 1768, m. 23 Jun 1790, Richard Tobie #2493, b. 1768, New Gloucester,,Maine, d. 28 Nov 1861. Betsy died 28 Nov 1869. Died at 101years 5months 22 days old Richard: Died at 93 years old 47. iii Polly Fickett #2443 m. 22 Apr 1792, Rev. Thomas Brown, Jothan Newbegin #2500. 48. iv Clement Fickett #2444 m. 06 Mar 1794, Rev. Thomas Brown, Patience Wallace #2556, b. 01 Sep 1775, d. 08 Mar 1851. Clement died c1797. 8. Abner Fickett #134 (1.Thomas1) m. 17 Oct 1775, Rev Thomas Lancaster, Abigail Brown #152, b. Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine. Abner was a Revolutionary War Soldier, he enlisted as a private in Capt David Strout's Co.,19 July 1775 with service to 21 Dec 1775 , five months 25 days. This company was stationed in Cape Elizabeth and Scarborough. Abner was also a corporal in Capt Joshua Jordan's Co., Col Jonathan Mitchell's Regt, service from 7 July 1779 to 25 Sept 1779 two months 20 days on the Penobscot Expedition Children: 49. i Joshua Fickett #2669 b. 1779, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, 07 Sep 1780, Scarboro and Cape Elizabeth Church Rcds, m. 08 Mar 1798, in Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, Rev. Thomas Lancaster, Mary Hunnewell #2675, b. 08 Sep 1773, d. 26 Sep 1861. Joshua died Went to Sea and was never heard from. 50. ii Thomas Fickett #2670 b. 1781, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, m. 23 July 1807, Ruth Rice #2871, b. 10 Dec 1781, (daughter of Lemuel Rice #3246 and Anna Stone #3247) d. 03 Feb 1873. Thomas died 20 Aug 1848, Durham,,Maine, buried: Bradbury Cemetery,Durham,Maine. 51. iii Daniel Fickett #2671 b. Jun 1784, Scarborough, Cumberland, Maine, m. (1) Hannah Brown #2997, m. (2) Anna Barton #3036, b. 06 Feb 1800, (daughter of Jacob Barton #3385 and Annie Cook #3386) d. 23 Feb 1876. Daniel died 11 Dec 1862. 52. iv Hannah Fickett #2672 m. James Johnson #3190, b. 03 Mar 1759, Harpswell,,Maine, d. 10 Feb 1838, Freeport,,Maine. 53. v Abba Fickett #2673 m. Male Sawyer #3191, b. Saco,,Maine. 54. vi Sarah Fickett #2674 m. Male Bagley #3192, b. Waterborough,,Maine. 10. Jonathan Fickett #108 (1.Thomas1) m. 21 Dec 1763, in Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, Elizabeth Crockett #109, b. 1741, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, 1741, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, (daughter of Samuel Crockett #110 and Sarah Cobb #111). Children: 55. i Mary Fickett #2249 m. Daniel Herrick #2257, b. 1759, Stroudwater, d. 1836. Daniel: Died at age 78 years 56. ii Enoch Fickett #2254 b. 09 Aug 1765, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, d. 20 Aug 1807. 57. iii Asa Fickett #2250 b. 14 Feb 1769, Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, m. (1) 29 Jan 1792, in Portland,Cumberland,Maine, Dorcus Plummer #2268, b. 20 Jun 1766, (daughter of Moses Plummer #3256 and Ester Hersey #3257) d. 11 Dec 1819, m. (2) Eliza Edwards #2378, b. 1786, d. 22 Feb 1866. Asa died 06 Sep 1835. Eliza: Died at age 79 years 3 months 58. iv Josiah Fickett #2252 m. Nancy Sweet #2414, b. Windham, Cumberland, Maine. 59. v Ephriam Fickett #2253. 60. vi Samuel L. Fickett #2251 b. 1771, m. 02 Aug 1792, in Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine, Rev Ephraim Clark, Hannah Dyer #2406, b. Cape Elizabeth,Cumberland,Maine. 61. vii Elizabeth Fickett #2255 b. 1773, m. 1792, Robert Waterhouse #2422, b. 1770, Stroudwater, (son of William Waterhouse #3261 and ?????? Waterhouse #3262) d. 07 Aug 1808. Elizabeth died 13 Aug 1829, New York age 56 yrs. Robert: Died at age 38 years 62. viii Phebe Fickett #2256 b. 1788, m. 09 Feb 1797, in Portland,Cumberland,Maine, 31 Dec 1809, Samuel Thomes #2439, b. Libbys Corner, Portland, Maine. Phebe died 23 Aug 1830. 63. ix Nancy Fickett #119 b. Stroudwater, m. William Crockett #118, b. 19 Sept. 1772, Gorham, Cumberland, Maine, (son of Samuel Crockett #115 and Tabitha Hamblen #116). I have much more, but here are the earliest Cape Elizabeth Folks (actually South Portland Today but Cape Elizabeth then) Jim Fickett NOTICE: Printing the files within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents.


The USGenWeb Project makes no claims or estimates of the validity of the information submitted and reminds you that each new piece of information must be researched and proved or disproved by weight of evidence. It is always best to consult the original material for verification.

Fiction

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A list o fiction books, poetry, television dramas, songs and films set in periods, places or depicting characters with similar occupations or backgrounds as our ancestors. Though they maybe fiction, often the backgrounds of the pieces of fiction have been well researched in order to give them more authenticity. This will be an informal list set under subject headings. Miners. ---- LLewellyn, Richard-“How Green was My Valley”(1939) depicts Welsh Miners and their village in Victorian times. Servants. ---- “Upstairs, Downstairs”, (1971). Set between 1903-1930 in Belgravia, London Wales. ---- LLewellyn, Richard-“How Green was My Valley”(1939) depicts Welsh Miners and their village in Victorian times.- note said to be based on conversations the author had with Welsh people from Gilfach Goch.

Fictitious Sir Hugh Mosher Tree

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Documentation of the fictitious story told by [[Mosher-1745|Reverend William Collins Mosher]] (1820-1908) in [https://archive.org/details/originhistoryofm00mosh/page/28/mode/2up?q=maxson "Origin and history of the Mosher family and genealogy of one branch of that family from the year 1600 to the present time"].

Fiddleton Plantation

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Fiddleton_Plantation.jpg
The Fiddleton Plantation was the homeplace for [[Berry-3310|Robert Berry]] and family. Robert removed from Princess Ann County, Va. about 1756. Initially he built a log cabin to live in as he worked the land and built a larger house. There is still a chimney left in the location of the house. There is also a family graveyard near the location of the original cabin. More to follow

Fidler family

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Boney-131|John Britton Boney]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15911567 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Field Wills

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[[Space:Sussex_Wills|Sussex Wills]] This page provides transcriptions and information on Field family wills. List of wills: *[[Space:Will_of_Edward_Field_1762| Edward Field 1762]]

Fielding Green Census Records

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==Census Records for [[Green-46975|Fielding Green Jr (abt.1813-1905)]]== *1850 US Census: Name: Fielding Green Jr; Sex: Male; Age: 30; Event Place (Original): Fleming county, Fleming, Kentucky, United States; Birth Year (Estimated): 1820; Birthplace: Kentucky; Race: White :Fielding Green Jr M 30 Kentucky :Elizabeth Green F 26 Kentucky :Melvina Green F 4 Kentucky :Clarissa Green F 0 Kentucky :William Green M 79 Virginia"United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M65S-77J : 19 December 2020), Fielding Green Jr, Fleming, Kentucky, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). *1860 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Sex: Male; Age: 40; Event Place (Original): , Bath, Kentucky, United States; Birth Year (Estimated): 1820; Birthplace: Kentucky; Race: White :Fielding Green M 40 Kentucky :Elizabeth Green F 37 Kentucky :Melvina Green F 14 Kentucky :Clarissa Green F 10 Kentucky :John Green M 5 Kentucky"United States Census, 1860", database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZY1-2SB : 18 February 2021), Fielding Green, 1860. *1870 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Sex: Male; Age: 50; Event Place (Original): White Sulphur, Bath, Kentucky, United States; Birth Year (Estimated): 1820; Birthplace: Kentucky; Race: White :Fielding Green M 50 Kentucky :Elizabeth Green F 47 Kentucky :Clarrissa Green F 20 Kentucky :Jno D Green M 16 Kentucky :Jno R Click M 14 Kentucky"United States Census, 1870", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MX7V-1T1 : 29 May 2021), Fielding Green, 1870. *1880 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Sex: Male; Age: 60; Event Place (Original): White Sulphur, ED 5, Bath, KY, United States; Birth Year (Estimated): 1820; Birthplace: Kentucky, United States; Marital Status: Married; Occupation: Farmer; Race: White; Relationship to Head of Household: Self :Fielding Green Head M 60 Kentucky, United States :Elizabeth Green Wife F 56 Kentucky, United States"United States Census, 1880," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCCM-VS1 : 14 January 2022), Fielding Green, Magisterial District 4 White Sulphur, Bath, Kentucky, United States; citing enumeration district , sheet , NARA microfilm publication T9 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), FHL microfilm . *1900 US Census: Name: Filden Green; Sex: Male; Age: 84; Event Place (Original): Magisterial District 4, White Sulphur, ED 5, Bath, Kentucky, United States; Birth Date: May 1816; Birthplace: Kentucky; Marital Status: Married; Race: White; Years Married: 55; Relationship to Head of Household: Father-in-law; Father's Birthplace: Virginia; Mother's Birthplace: Kentucky :Filden Green Father-in-law F 84 Kentucky :Betsy Green Mother-in-law F 77 Kentucky :Clara Cassity Wife F 50 Kentucky :Luther Cassity Head M 47 Kentucky :Nora Cassity Daughter F 26 Kentucky :Willie Green Nephew M 10 Kentucky"United States Census, 1900", database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M9W8-LKC : 9 March 2022), Filden Green in entry for Luther Cassity, 1900. ==Sources==

Fielding Green Census Records from Fleming

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==Fielding Green in Fleming, Virginia / Kentucky == [[Green-31954|Fielding Green (1777-1855)]] is married to [[Alfrey-19|Mary (Alfrey) Green (1793-1881)]] Fielding Green was assessed for taxes on 11 Aug 1800 in Fleming, Virginia. Clift, G. Glenn. Second Census of Kentucky, 1800. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2005. Fielding Green married Polly Alfrey on 21 Jan 1812 in Fleming, Virginia, United States."Kentucky Marriages, 1785-1979", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FWBL-9QZ : 22 July 2021), Fielding Green, 1812. ===Census=== *1810 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Flemingsburg, Fleming, Kentucky :Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44: 1 [est birth 1765 - 1784] :Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over: 1 [Mother?] : 9 :Number of Household Members Over 25: 2 :Number of Household Members: 11 "United States Census, 1810," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH2H-TM9 : accessed 20 March 2022), Fielding Green, Flemingsburg, Fleming, Kentucky, United States; citing p. 62, NARA microfilm publication M252 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 6; FHL microfilm 181,351. *1820 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Home in 1820 (City, County, State): Fleming, Kentucky; Enumeration Date: August 7, 1820 :Free White Persons - Males - Under 10: 1 :Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over: 1 [est birth Bef 1775] :Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: 3 :Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44: 1 [est birth 1775 - 1794] :Free White Persons - Females - 45 and over: 1 :Slaves - Males - Under 14: 2 :Slaves - Males - 14 thru 25: 2 :Slaves - Females - Under 14: 6 :Slaves - Females - 14 thru 25: 2 :Slaves - Females - 45 and over: 3 :Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture: 4 :Free White Persons - Under 16: 4 :Free White Persons - Over 25: 3 :Total Free White Persons: 7 :Total Slaves: 15 :Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other: 22 "United States Census, 1820," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLR-X3H : accessed 20 March 2022), Fielding Green, Fleming, Kentucky, United States; citing p. , NARA microfilm publication , (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll ; FHL microfilm . Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. 1820 U S Census; Census Place: Fleming, Kentucky; Page: 45; NARA Roll: M33_21; Image: 56 *1830 US Census: Name: Fielding Greenk [Fielding Green]; Home in 1830 (City, County, State): Eastern Division, Fleming, Kentucky :Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 9: 2 :Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: 1 :Free White Persons - Males - 50 thru 59: 1 [est birth 1770-1780] :Free White Persons - Females - Under 5: 1 :Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14: 1 :Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19: 1 :Free White Persons - Females - 30 thru 39: 1 [est birth 1790 - 1800] :Slaves - Males - Under 10: 4 :Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23: 1 :Slaves - Males - 24 thru 35: 2 :Slaves - Females - Under 10: 2 :Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23: 6 :Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35: 1 :Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54: 1 :Free White Persons - Under 20: 6 :Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 1 :Total Free White Persons: 8 :Total Slaves: 17 :Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): 25 Fifth Census of the United States, 1830. (NARA microfilm publication M19, 201 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Year: 1830; Census Place: Eastern Division, Fleming, Kentucky; Series: M19; Roll: 36; Page: 50; Family History Library Film: 0007815 *1840 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Division 3, Fleming, Kentucky :Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14: 1 :Free White Persons - Males - 15 thru 19: 2 :Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: 1 :Free White Persons - Males - 50 thru 59: 1 [est birth 1780 - 1790] :Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14: 1 :Free White Persons - Females - 40 thru 49: 1 [est birth 1790 - 1800] :Persons Employed in Agriculture: 2 :Free White Persons - Under 20: 4 :Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 2 :Total Free White Persons: 7 :Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 7 "United States Census, 1840," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHT8-BHG : 4 October 2021), Fielding Green, Fleming, Kentucky, United States; citing p. 231, NARA microfilm publication , (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll ; FHL microfilm . Sixth Census of the United States, 1840. (NARA microfilm publication M704, 580 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Year: 1840; Census Place: Division 3, Fleming, Kentucky; Roll: 110; Page: 231; Family History Library Film: 0007825 *1850 US Census: Name: Fielding Green; Gender: Male; Race: White; Age: 72; Birth Year: abt 1778; Birthplace: Virginia; Home in 1850: Division 2, Fleming, Kentucky, USA; Occupation: Farmer; Industry: Agriculture; Real Estate: 3000 :Fielding Green 72 Virginia [est birth 1778] :Polly Green 51 Virginia [est birth 1799] :John Green 25 Kentucky :Hiram Green 19 Kentucky "United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M65S-77B : 19 December 2020), Fielding Green, Fleming, Kentucky, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). ==Sources==

Fieldon Fielding Thomas marriage to Eliza Gist Gest Guess research page

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This page is to do research for Fielder (Fielden) "Fielding" Thomas and Eliza Violetta Howard Gist. [[Thomas-66253|Fielder Thomas]] appears with a variety of alternate names. William Fielding Thomas, Felden Thomas, Fieldon Thomas, Fieldes Thomas and Fielder Thomas have all been possibilities of his name. Bear in mind that these may be different people. Records for [[Gist-379|Eliza Violetta Howard Gist]] also appear with a variety of spellings. Her middle name is seen as Violet; her surname alternate spellings are Gest and Guess. [[Gist-379|Eliza Violetta Howard Gist]] is managed by [[Blair-4489|David Blair]]. [[Thomas-66253|Fielder Thomas]] is managed by [[Duett-25|Stanley Duett]]. === Research Notes === * Baber, George. “The Blairs: Outlines of a Virginia and Kentucky Family of Notable Civilians and Heroes; The True Story of President Jackson’s Famous Address to South Carolina; Old ‘Frank’ Blair as Editor of the Washington ‘Globe’; An Account of Montgomery and of Frank P. Blair, Jr.” Register of Kentucky State Historical Society 14, no. 42 (1916): 35–49. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23368610. * The Francis Preston Blair family in politics, by William Ernest Smith, New York, The Macmillan Company, 1933, Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center (https://archive.org/details/francisprestonbl00smit/page/n1/mode/2up) == Timeline == '''1809''' We know that a lady named Violet Gest married a man named Fielden Thomas in Loudoun county, Virginia on 2 February 1809"Virginia Marriages, 1785-1940", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XRV8-4NY : 1 July 2020), Violet Gest in entry for Fielden Thomas, 1809.. John Littlejohn, Methodist minister"Virginia Marriages, 1785-1940", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9XF-2C7S?i=6) performed the marriage ceremony. No vital statistics are shown in this record. '''1810''' There should be some type of record for Fielden Thomas for 1810; tax record, It will indicate what the household consists of. '''1812''' Francis Preston Blair and Fleming Trigg paid bond of 50 pounds of common money (for that time) to Franklin county, Commonwealth of Kentucky for this marriage."Franklin, Kentucky Marriage Bonds 1815–1817, 1811–1814", database of images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2QD-3XT9 : Fri Oct 20 01:42:55 UTC 2023), Marriage Bond Entry for Francis Preston Blair and Eliza Gist, 21 July 1812. In 1812, Fleming Trigg DC is the deputy clerk of Franklin County court in the Commonwealth of Kentucky when Francis Preston Blair and Eliza Gist in the year of July 21 1812 "Kentucky, County Marriages, 1797-1954," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q28D-N5FM : 22 July 2021), Francis Preston Blair and Eliza Gist, 21 Jul 1812; citing Marriage, Franklin, Kentucky, United States, various county clerks and county courts, Kentucky; FHL microfilm 266,193. == Sources == == Other Sources == *Loudoun county, Virginia Marriage Bonds etc. 1770-1850, Leesburg, Loudoun, Virginia. https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/007579005, images 1 - 503.
::[NOTE: https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/007579005 Images 7 and 8 of this film list all the people who were authorized or bonded to perform marriages in Loudoun County, Virginia. Most ministers are listed with their denomination.] * BABER, GEORGE. “THE BLAIRS: Outlines of a Virginia and Kentucky Family of Notable Civilians and Heroes; The True Story of President Jackson’s Famous Address to South Carolina; Old ‘Frank’ Blair as Editor of the Washington ‘Globe’; An Account of Montgomery and of Frank P. Blair, Jr.” Register of Kentucky State Historical Society 14, no. 42 (1916): 35–49. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23368610.

Fiestas de Valdoviño

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Baixada de Carrilanas a San Mamede. Desde 1996, año de su primera edición, en Valdoviño y haciéndolas coincidir en fechas próximas a la celebración de su patrono San Mamede (mes de Agosto), se viene desarrollando el concurso de estos peculiares autos “locos”. Estos vehículos, cuya única limitación es la de no disponer de motor, pueden llegar a alcanzar los 70 Km./hora en el vertiginoso descenso por la ladera que los lleva a cubrir los mas de 1.300 metros que configuran su trazado. Se caracteriza y premia en este concurso tanto la construcción artística, simpática y original, como la rapidez de los mismos y la destreza de sus pilotos. El número de asistentes a esta celebración se multiplica en cada nueva edición así como aumenta el número de participantes y el nivel de los mismos. Concretamente en la edición del 2002 el número de visitantes a la competición rondó los 15.000 – número considerable, más si tenemos en cuenta que el censo total del Concello se aproxima a los 7.000 habitantes -. Previo al inicio de la competición, y tal como si de un rallye se tratara, se puede recorrer el parque cerrado y ver de cerca estas pequeñas maravillas del ingenio y del atrevimiento que hay que tener para bajar con el trazado dispuesto por la organización. La fiesta, tal y como si de una aventura de Asterix se tratara, finaliza con una suculenta “Churrascada”. La Asociación Baixada de Carriladas se encarga de la organización y de velar por el buen desarrollo de la competición. Fiesta de la Malla. Esta fiesta trata de rescatar del pasado la antigua tradición de la trilla del trigo, en la que por esta zona, de Galicia, al unirse vecinos de distintas familias hacían que una jornada de duro trabajo tuviera su componente festiva. En el transcurso de la fiesta los vecinos, de San Mamede, se mezclan con la paja y trigo poniendo a funcionar una trilladora de principios de siglo y recreando las labores de aquellos días. La “dureza” de la jornada “obliga” a realizar una buena alimentación con la que paliar el desgaste de tan “entretenido” trabajo. El día finaliza a media tarde con una exquisita merienda a base de “bacalao con garbanzos”. La Asociación Baixada de Carrilanas es la encargada de la organizar esta celebración que tiene lugar en el mes de Agosto. Fiesta Gastronómica “Da Coquina” Esta celebración, que tiene lugar en la Parroquia de Pantín en el mes de Agosto, se degustan las distintas variedades de la almeja que se “marisquean” en esta zona de la costa gallega. En la degustación de este esquisito “manjar” marino se sirven cientos de raciones preparadas con distintas recetas; se presentan en cazuelas de barro y se acompañan de un trozo de “rico” pan y de una “cunca de viño”. La fiesta esta organizada por el Concello de Valdoviño, se viene celebrando desde el año 1.998. Fiesta "Cabalar" Dedicada al caballo, es organizada por la Asociación Baixada de Carrilanas y tiene lugar a mediados del mes de Mayo en las proximidades de la Laguna de la Frouxeira. La fiesta se inicia a primeras horas de la mañana con los pertinentes controles de firma e inscripción de concursantes. A lo largo de la jornada se desarrollan distintos tipos de pruebas entre los que destacan los de belleza, arrastre, doma, trote, andadura, velocidad de los caballos y destreza de los jinetes. La fiesta finaliza con la correspondiente entrega de premios y se jalona con una bien merecida “churrascada”. La asistencia de público a la pruebas aumenta de año en año, rondando la cifra de asistentes en la edición del año 2002 las 3000 personas. Esta celebración-concurso se viene desarrollando desde el año 1998. Romería da "Virxe do Porto” Se celebra en el mes de Julio en homenaje a la Virgen del Porto cuya imagen es guardada y venerada en la capilla que lleva el mismo nombre. Esta pequeña iglesia se sitúa en lo alto de un islote rodeado de acantilados, en la parroquia de Meirás, y a ella que únicamente se puede acceder en bajamar. * San Isidro Mayo (día variable) * Corphus Mayo o Junio (variable) * El Carmen 17 de Julio. * S. Mamed 17 de Agosto. * San Miguel (en Aviño) 29 de Septiembre.

Fife Ordnance Survey Map, Sheet 19

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https://maps.nls.uk/view/74426836

Fife Plantation, Beaufort County (now Jasper), South Carolina

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This is not the page for Fife Plantation. Please go here for that page: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Fife_Plantation%2C_Beaufort_County%2C_South_Carolina

Fifeshire and Bells

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Places associated with Bells and Bealls who immigrated to North America ==People== ==Places== ===Fife=== Fife is a historic county of Scotland, situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth, with inland boundaries to Perth and Kinross and Clackmannanshire. In some old documents it was known by the anglicized form of Fifeshire. *Fife is a maritime county in the east of Scotland, bounded on the north by the river Tay, on the east by the German Ocean, on the south by the Firth of Forth, and on the west by the counties of Perth, Kinross, and Clackmannan. It is about 48 miles in length and 18 in extreme breadth, comprising an area of 504 square miles or 322,560 acres. It was anciently part of the extensive district of Ross, but after the union of the kingdoms of the Scots and the Picts in about the year 971, it was granted by Kenneth II to Macduff for his services in subjugating the Picts, and he was appointed hereditary thane of the lands he had helped conquer [for this reason, the county is still referred to as the Kingdom of Fife]. The county consists of 61 parishes and four civil districts of Cupar, Kirkcaldy, St. Andrew's and Dunfermline. Sheriff's courts are held at Cupar (the county town) for the first three and at Dunfermline for the last. Besides Cupar, the county contains fourteen royal burghs, nine other populous towns, and numerous smaller towns and villages. Many of the towns are seaports. The principal port is Kirkcaldy. The population in 1851 was 140,140. Source: Samuel Lewis' Topographical Dictionary of Scotland, 2nd ed., 1851. Family Hisotry Library book 941 E5L. ===Largo=== Largo -- Upper and Lower -- are seatowns on the north side of the Firth of Forth. See: https://familysearch.org/wiki/en/Largo,_Fife,_Scotland The distance from Largo to St. Andrews is about 12 miles. ===St. Andrews=== St. Andrews is an historic town located on the northeast coast of Fife. It is well known for the University of St Andrews, one of the most ancient universities in the world and is renowned as the home of golf. It is a former Parish on the East Coast of Fife. It is 10 miles southeast of Dundee and 30 miles northeast of Edinburgh. ==Sources==

Fifty-Six Years of Married Life: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hogue, of St. Charles, Had Anniversary Yesterday

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Monday, the 56th anniversary of his marriage, [[Hogue-1391|Joseph Hogue, Sr.]], took his customary daily exercise by splitting wood in the back yard of his home in Winnipeg. He wound up his labors by carrying in a few pails of water. No tremble was perceptible in his sturdy stride, for he is as robust now as he was 20 years ago, although he passed his 80th birthday on the last day of the year. When he had finished with his chores he stepped to the kitchen shelf, took down his plug of Macdonald, sliced off a few shavings, ground them in his hands and loaded his stubby briar. His [[Turcotte-549|wife]], meanwhile, had finished with the breakfast dishes, for she, too, does her work, although she is 72 years old. She wiped out the dishpan, hung it up and draped the towel neatly over it so that it would dry. Then she stepped over to her husband, who was carefully lighting his pipe. "Joe," she said, as she laid her hand on his arm, "do you recollect what day this is?" "Sure I do, [[Turcotte-549|Pelagie]]. It's out wedding day." he answered. They smiled at each other. Like a pair of young lovers they put their arms around each other's waists and silently strolled into the sitting room. Quietly they drew chairs near together and occupied them. Their moods were identical. Both wished to reflect upon the past, so they sat in silent reminiscence. ===Father Comes West=== In his fancy Joseph drifted back to the winter evenings when, as a boy, he sat before the roaring logs in the old cabin on the farm, part of which is now known as Happyland, and listened to his father tell stories. His father's name was [[Hogue-353|Aimable Hogue]]. He was born in Montreal in 1791. He came west with [[Simpson-12170|Governor Simpson]] about 1824, and for 20 years travelled with that gentleman inspecting trading posts belonging to the Hudson's Bay company. The travelling was done principally in the hand-propelled boats and Aimable Hogue did the rowing. He was injured in the boat one trip and was the retired on a pension. A grant of 200 acres of land, six chains wide, along the Assiniboine river, and extending for four miles north, was given him. This farm included what is now known as Happyland. He married [[Taylor-612|Margaret Taylor]] and settled down to the life of a farmer. He raised a family of ten, five boys and five girls. Of his sons [[Hogue-1185|Aimabel, Jr.]], is dead, Joseph and [[Hogue-1706|Antoine]] reside in St. Charles, [[Hogue-526|Thomas]] in LaSalle Man., and [[Hogue-1723|Louis]] in Belcourt, Man. Three of the girls, [[Hogue-415|Margaret]], [[Hogue-2053|Mary Ann]] and Christina are dead, [[Hogue-547|Mary]] is now Mrs. Bremner, of St. Louis de Langevin, Sask., and [[Hogue-1707|Betsy]] is Mrs. C. Campagna of Bismark, N.D. A favorite topic with Aimable, Sr., had been his parents. His father was French-Canadian and his mother Scotch. He was proud of his ability to trace his ancestry back on his father's side to the very earliest days of Canada. At the age of 24, Joseph decided to get married. He had long been in love with his playmate, [[Turcotte-549|Pelagie Turcotte]], whose [[Turcotte-836|father]] was a wealthy trader. Pelagie's father wanted to get a large load of provisions hauled up from St. Paul, Minn., and was unable to go himself. Joseph grasped the opportunity to make himself "solid with the old man" before he "popped the question." He made the trip himself bringing back with himself, bringing back with him 15 carts loaded with provisions. He waited for what seemed a decent length of time after he had performed this favor and then asked for Margaret's hand. His request was granted and the couple were married in the first cathedral in St. Boniface–the old building which was burned down during Bishop Provencher's time. Eleven other couples were married the same morning, but death has separated every one of them except Joseph and Pelagie. As this thought flashed through his mind, Joseph glanced at his wife. She had apparently reached the same stage in her recollections, for she was looking whistfully at him. Simultaneously their aged hands crept out and his enfolded hers. And still holding hands the old sweethearts floated back to sail again over their 56 years of married life. '''Thirteen Children''' They had brought into being a family of 13 children, six boys and seven girls. One of the girls is [[Hogue-1698|Mrs. R. Grant]], of Edmonton, who is herself the mother of 10 children: then [[Hogue-1699|William Hogue]], of St. François Xavier, has a family of nine children, one of whom, L.P. Hogue, has also a little son, making Joseph and Pelagie great grandparents. Another daughter is [[Hogue-1700|Mrs. William Beachemin]] of Charleswood; another, [[Hogue-112|Mrs. Emilien Daigneault]] of St. Francois Xavier, who has a family of twelve; [[Hogue-1735|Mrs. M. Pagee]], of Vegreville, Alta., with a family of eleven; [[Hogue-1737|Mrs. N. Welsh]], of Sibret, Sask, with a family of seven; [[Hogue-1628|Mrs. A. Bruce]], of Ideal, Man., with eight children. There was also a baby daughter, Henrietta, who died at the age of two. The sons besides William, are [[Hogue-1734|Alex]] of Minnewakan, who has ten children; [[Hogue-1736|Joseph, Jr.]], of Colcleugh, Man., who has ten; [[Hogue-1705|Patrick]] of Stocton, Cal; [[Hogue-1390|Harry]], of St. Charles, Man., who has five, and [[Hogue-1738|L.A. Hogue]], of Ashern Man., with one child. As he finished going over this list Joseph noticed that his pipe had gone out. Unconsciously he packed down the ashes with his thumb, struck a match and set them aglow. As he blew a curl of smoke upward he spoke half to himself. "I've got 65 grandchildren and one great grandchild living. I've certainly been responsible for my share of the population of Manitoba."

Fignar Family Bible

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Fignar family bible, currently in possession of Louise Soltis.

File cabinet for Karen

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This free space was created to upload images found by [[Fox-8364|Karen Fox]] in order to properly display them on profiles. Can you help to translate these?

Filles du Roi, A-C

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'''Filles du Roi''' '''A - C''' Managed by [[WikiTree-68|Filles du Roi project]] ''Gérées par le projet des Filles du Roi'' {| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable" - | '''Fille du Roi''' || '''Husband''' || '''Marriage or Contract Date''' || '''Bio''' FR/EN || '''Notes'''|| |- | [[Abraham-367|Abraham, Marguerite]] ||[[Nadeau-309|Nadeau dit Lavigne, Ozanie-Joseph]] || Nov 6, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Adam-610|Adam, Anne]] || [[Poliquin-9|Poliquin, Jean]] || Nov 7, 1761 || Yes || || |- |[[Agathe-3|Agathe, Marie-Anne]] || [[Armand-22 |Armand dit Herman, Laurent]] ||Oct 16, 1663 || Yes || || |- |[[Albert-186|Albert, Marie]] || [[Chauveau-21|Chauveau dit Lafleur, Jean]] || Oct 29, 1663 || Yes || || |- |[[Alain-167|Allence, Marie]] ||[[Le_Tardif-11| Louis Le Tardif]] || Nov 13, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Amiot-33|Amiot, Jeanne]] || [[Pion-20|Pion dit Lafontaine, Nicolas]] || Sep 19, 1663 || Yes || || |- |[[Asselin-74|Ancelin, Françoise]] || [[Valade-7|Valade, Guillaume]] || Nov 10, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[André-514|André, Louise]] ||[[Bossu-22|Bossu dit Le Prince, Nicolas]] || Jan 18, 1672 || Fr/EN Y || || |- |[[Andrieu-4|Andrieu, Marguerite]] || [[Augran-2|Augran dit Lapierre, Pierre]] || Sep 19, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Langelier-59|Angelier, Marie]] || [[Rochereau-12|Rochereau, Vivien]] || Mar 17, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[D'anneville-10|d'Anneville, Gabrielle]] ||[[Blanchard-1076|Blanchard, Louis]] || July 27, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Antoine-33|Anthoine, Françoise Denise]] || [[Buy-11|Buy, Laurent]] || Oct 11, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Arcular-1|Arcular, Marie Ursule]] || [[ Lefebvre_dit_Boulanger-2 | Lefebvre dit Boulanger, Claude]] || Oct 28, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Ardion-1|Ardion, Marguerite]] || [[Rabouin-12|Rabouin, Jean]] || Oct 28, 1663 || FR / EN Y || || |- |[[Hannart-1|Arinart, Anne]] ||[[Réal-28|Jean, Réal]] || Aug 30, 1671||Fr Y/En N || || |- |[[Ariot-1|Ariot, Marie]] || [[Vandet-2|Vandet, René]] || Apr 11, 1671 ||Fr/En Y|| || |- |Asserin, Fleurance ||||1667||No||Returned to FR|| |- |[[Aube-2|Aubé, Françoise]] || [[Roy-113|Roy, Michel]] || Oct 8, 1668 || Yes || || |- | [[Aubert-18|Aubert, Elisabeth]] || [[Lambert-772|Lambert, Aubin]] || Sep 29, 1670 || Yes || || |- | [[Aubert-169 |Aubert, Jeanne]] || [[Buisson-77 |Buisson, Jean]] || Nov 20, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[D'Aubigny-94|d'Aubigny, Marguerite]] || [[Daveau-8|Daveau, Charles]] || Sep 1673 || Yes || || |- | [[Aubineau-1|Aubineau, Suzanne]] || [[Campagna-25|Campagna, Mathias]] || Apr 25, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Aubry-5 |Aubry, Marie Anne]] ||[[Caille-44 | Caillé dit Biscornet, Antoine]] || Jul 5, 1675 ||Yes || || |- |[[Aubry-123 |Aubry, Marie Françoise]] || [[Mercier-531 | Mercier dit Lépine, Antoine]]|| Aug 19, 1674 || No || || |- |[[Aubry-121| Aubry, Jacqueline]] || [[Gros-53 |Le Gros dit Laviolette, Antoine]] || Sep 9, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Auger-294 |Auger, Jeanne]] ||[[Nolet-35 | Nolet dit Larivière, Sébastien]] || Oct 26, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Aubert-130 |Aupé, Isabelle]] ||[[De_Lavoye-7 | De Lavoie, Pierre]] || Aug 25, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Auvray-7 |Auvray, Madeleine]] ||[[Matte-50 | Matte, Nicolas]] || Oct. 12, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Bagau-1 |Bagau, Antoinette]] ||[[Roberge-49 | Roberge dit Lacroix, Pierre ]]|| Oct 22, 1672 || No || || |- ||[[Baillon-1|de Baillon, Catherine]] || [[Miville-10|Miville dit Deschenes, Jacques]] || Nov 12, 1669 || Yes|| || |- |[[Bailly-14|Bailly, Madeleine]] || [[Vanier-Lafontaine-1|Vanier dit Lafontaine, Guillaume]] || Jul 5, 1672 || No || || |- |[[Baiselat-3|Baiselat, Françoise]] || [[Cambin-1|Cambin dit Larivière, Laurent]] || Aug 16, 1668 || No|| || |- |[[Baille-1| Baillé, Catherine]] || [[Bouvier-6 |Bouvier, Pierre ]]|| Nov 24, 1667|| No || || |- |[[Baumont-1 |Bamont , Marie-Anne ]]||[[Morisseau-22 | Morisseau, Vincent ]]|| Oct 23, 1673 || No || || |- |[[Banse-14 |Banse, Françoise]]||[[Le_Prou-1 |Le Prou Jacques]] || Oct 4, 1667|| No || || |- |[[Barbant-2|Barbant, Marie]] || [[Lalonde-63|Lalonde dit Lespérance, Jean]] || Nov 14, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Barbereau-1|Barbereau, Jeanne]]||[[Larrivée-15|Larrivée, Jean]]||1666||No|| || |- |[[Barbery-21|Barbery, Françoise ]]||[[Dardenne-4|Dardenne, René]]||Nov 12, 1668 ||FR / EN Y|| || |- |[[Barbier-43|Barbier, Jeanne]] || [[Plumereau-5|Plumereau dit Latreille, Julien]]||Nov 3, 1670||No|| || |- |[[Bardet-22 | Bardet, Anne]]|| [[Paulin-400 |Paulin, Jean]] || Oct 5, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Bardou-1|Bardou, Marie]] || [[Drouet-29|Drouet dit Grandmaison, Mathurin]] || Sep 30, 1669|| No || || |- |[[Baril-62|Baril, Marie]] || [[Sauvin-2|Sauvin dit Larose, François]] || Oct 13, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Barillet-1|Barillet, Anne]] ||[[Vacher-72 | Vacher, Guy]]||Nov 9, 1671||FR N / EN Y|| || |- |[[Baron-411 |Baron, Barbe]] || [[Chevreux-2 |Chevreux dit Lataupine, Simon]] || Nov 3, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Barré-111 | Barré, Catherine]] ||[[Le_Roy-75 | Le Roy, Nicolas]] || Oct 22, 1663 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Barré-83|Barré, Catherine]] || [[Chaille-35|Chaillé, Mathurin]] || Jan 11, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Barton-829|Barton, Françoise-Marthe]] || [[Chevalier-139|Chevalier, Joseph]] || Oct 7, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Basset-441|Basset, Catherine]]|| [[Bourgoin-79|Bourgouin dit Bourguignon, Pierre]]|| Oct 17, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Bauge-3 |Baugé, Anne]] || [[Corruble-2 |Corruble, Guillaume]] || Oct 2, 1673 || No || || |- |[[Beaudin-16|Beaudin, Catherine]] || [[Coquin-2|Coquin dit La Tournelle, Pierre]] || Oct 12, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Baudon-2|Beaudon, Étiennette]] || [[Cotin-4|Cotin, Tugal]] || Jan 10, 1672|| No || || |- |[[Beaugrand-11|Beaugrand, Marie or Marguerite]] || [[Marquis-268|Marquis, Charles]] || Sep 18, 1673 || No || || |- |[[Beaujean-19|Beaujean, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Juin-5| Juin, Pierre]] |||| No||Married in FR|| |- |[[Beauregard-81|Beauregard, Marie]] || [[Langelier-52|Langelier, Sébastien]] || Nov 12, 1665|| No || || |- |[[Beauregard-2|Beauregard, Marthe]] || [[Lemieux-5 |Lemieux, Gabriel]] || Nov 26, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Beauveau-1|Beauveau, Jeanne]] || [[Blet-2|Blet dit Gazaille, Jean-Pierre]] || 16 Apr 1674 || No || || |- |[[Belleau-27|Belleau, Catherine]] || [[Morin-1000|Morin dit Belleroche, Jean-Baptiste]] || Nov 22, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Bellehache-1|Bellehache, Marie]] || [[Bourret-11|Bourret, Gilles]] || Sep 9, 1673 || No|| || |- |[[Bellesoeur-3 |Bellesoeur dite Lucas, Anne]] || [[Massard-2 |Massard, Nicolas]] || Oct 12, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Benard-111|Bénard, Jeanne]] || [[Gadois-11|Gadois, Pierre]] || Apr 20, 1685|| FR Y/ EN No||NOT FdR, Engagée|| |- |[[Benoit-19|Benoît, Marie]] || [[Favreau-24|Favreau dit Deslauriers, Pierre]] || c 1668 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Beraud-4|Béraud dite Dubreuil, Anne]] ||[[Jaroson-2 | Jarosson, Mathieu]] || Jun 19, 1674 || No || || |- |[[Bercier-15|Bercier, Louise]] ||[[Filion-71|Feuillon, Michel]] || Oct 15, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Berger-177|Berger, Marguerite]] || [[Courtois-40|Courtois, Charles]] || Oct 9, 1670|| No || || |- |[[Bernard-205|Bernard, Jeanne]] || [[Thuillier_dit_Desvignets-1|Thuillier dit Desvignets, Jacques]] || Apr 29, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Berrin-2|Berrin, Marguerite]] || [[Bouin-8|Bouin dit Dufresne, Julien]] || Jul 2, 1675 || No || || |- |[[Bertault-4|Bertault, Anne]] || [[Chartier-84|Chartier, Robert]] || Oct 21, 1669 || No|| || |- |[[Breval-2|Bertin dite Breval, Marie]] || [[Séguin-385|Séguin, Charles]] || Oct 3, 1669 || No || || |- |Bérunine, Marie || ||1671 || No ||reportedly signed the marriage contract of [[Auger-294 |Auger, Jeanne]], no evidence on the contract, dubious existence|| |- |[[Besche-1|Besche, Marie]] ||[[Chaperon-14 | Chaperon, Pierre]] || Nov 19, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Beuzelin-1 | Beuzelin, Catherine]] || [[Lonlabard-2 |Lonlabard, Jean]] || Oct 19, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Bidequin-1|Bidequin, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Bouvet-10|Bouvet dit Lachambre, Jean]] || Oct 17, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Billot-16 |Billot, Catherine]] ||[[Jagot-3 |Jagot dit Laforest, Urbain]] || Sep 1, 1670 || Fr Y || || |- |[[Billot-32 | Billot, Geneviève]] || [[Denis-506 |Denis, Jean]] || Aug 24, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Billot-1|Billot, Lucrèce]] || [[Sigouin-16|Sigouin, Jean]] || Aug 26, 1669 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Bilodeau-15|Bilodeau, Jeanne]] || [[Couillard-23|Couillard, Pierre]] || Feb 8, 1666 || No || || |- |[[Binaudière-1|Binaudière, Marguerite]] || [[Rousseau-161|Rousseau, Symphorien]] || Sep 14, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Birette-3|Biret, Renée]] ||[[Balan-34 | Balan dit Lacombe, Pierre]] || Jun 9, 1672 || No || || |- |[[Blain-116 |Blain, Marie-Anne]] ||[[Gervais-364 | Gervais, Pierre]] || Oct 19, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Blainvillain-1|Blainvillain, Anne]] ||[[Charbonnier-1 | Charbonnier dit St-Laurent, Louis]] || Jan 1, 1672 || No || || |- |[[Blais-7|Blais, Élisabeth]] || [[Roche-1028 |Roche, Pierre]] || Oct 7, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Blaise-20|Blaise, Marguerite]] || [[Paquet-205|Paquet, Jean]] || Oct 23, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Blanchard-1563|Blanchard, Marie]] || [[Brunet-97|Brunet dit Létang, Mathieu]] || Nov 10, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Blondeau-32|Blondeau, Jeanne]] || [[Abraham-271|Abraham dit Desmarais, René]] || Nov 16, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Blutteau-1|Blutteau, Antoinette]] ||[[De_La_Croix-10 | Lacroix, David]] || Oct 19, 1671|| FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Boileau-28|Boileau, Marie]] || [[Chauvin-188|Chauvin, Pierre]] || before 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Boisandré-3| de Boisandré, Catherine]] || [[Gobelin-6|Gobelin dit Cinq-Mars, Marc-Antoine]] || Oct 20, 1663 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Boisandré-1|Boisandré, Jeanne Claude]] || [[De_la_Chaise-2|Lachaise, Louis]] || Oct 31, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Boivin-4|Boivin, Françoise]] || [[Lamoureux-13|Lamoureux, Louis]] || 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Bolper-1|Bolper, Marie-Louise]] || [[Marceau-14|Marceau, François]] ||Oct 12, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Bonheur-1|Bonheur, Marie]] || [[Inard-3|Inard dit Provençal, Paul]] ||Oct 27, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Bonnin-6 |Bonin, Nicole]] ||[[Quatresou-1 |Damien Quatresou ]] ||Oct 19, 1671 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Bonneau-257 |Bonneau, Hélène]] ||[[Desmoulins-9 | Desmoulins, Jacques]] || Jul 18, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Bonnefoy-3|Bonnefoy dite Ste-Foy, Marguerite]] || [[Achon-11|Achon, Jacques]] || Dec 4, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Bouart-2|Bouart, Marie]]||[[Antrade-2|Antrade, Jacques]]||Aug.16,1668||Yes|| || |- |[[Boucault-1|Boucault, Jeanne]] || [[Coulombe-39|Coulombe, Louis]] || Sep 30, 1670 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Bouchard-476 |Bouchard, Jeanne]] ||[[Foisy-7 | Foisy, Martin]] || Oct 26, 1665 || Yes|| || |- |[[Bouchard-345|Bouchard, Louise]] || [[Guillory-294|Guillory, Simon]] || Dec 6, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Boucher-1430 | Boucher, Marguerite Madeleine]] ||[[Blanchard-1708 | Blanchard dit Belleville, François]] || Oct 20, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Bouet-11|Bouet, Marie]] || [[LeGrapt-1|Guérard, Martin]] || Oct 24, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Boüillon-11| Boüillon, Marie]] || [[Téchénay-_Techené-1|Téchenay, Alexandre]] || Aug 16, 1668 ||Yes || || |- |[[Bourgeois-280|Bourgeois, Catherine]] || [[Binet-38|Binet, René]] || Oct 19, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Bourgeois-831|Bourgeois, Françoise]] || [[Vigneault-24 |Vignault dit Laverdure, Paul]] || Nov 3, 1670 || No ||| || |- |[[Bourgeois-612 | Bourgeois, Jeanne]] || [[Coudret-2 |Coudray, André]] || Oct 25, 1665 || No|| || |- |[[Bourgeois-1403|Bourgeois, Marie]] ||[[Anet-2| Anet, Jacques]] || Jun 2, 1668 ||Yes || || |- |[[Boutard-1|Boutard, Marie]] || [[Bourgery-9|Bourgery, Pierre]] || Nov 21, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Boutet-11|Boutet, Marie Madeleine]] || [[Bisson-10|Bisson, Gervais]] || Sep 15, 1664 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Boyer-1162|Boyer, Barbe]] || [[Cartier-126|Cartier, Paul]] || Oct 23, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Braconnier-1|Braconnier, Jeanne]] ||[[Thuillier-15 | Thuillier dit La Tour, Crespin]] || Sep 18, 1673 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Brandon-514|Brandon, Anne]] || [[Dagenais-23|Dagenais dit Lépine, Pierre]] || Nov 17, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Bremaille-1| Bremaille, Marie]] || [[Doublet-14 |Doublet dit Delisle, Jacques]]|| Jan 22, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[De_Bretigny-1|de Brétigny, Marie]]||[[Leclerc-392|Leclerc dit Lécuyer, Denis]]||Oct 24, 1667||Yes|| || |- |[[Brière-58|Brière, Marie]] || [[Guay-39|Guay, Jean]] || Oct 16, 1670 || Yes || || |- |Briset, Marie || || || ? ||Returned to FR|| |- |[[Bruneau-4 |Bruneau, Catherine]] ||[[Monin-45|Monin, Jean]] || Sep 3, 1670 ||Yes || || |- |[[Brunet-494 |Brunet, Anne]] ||[[Carrier-643 | Coirier, Pierre]] || Nov 23, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Brunet-105|Brunet, Françoise]] || [[Sureau-4|Sureau, Théodore]] || Nov 8, 1663 || Yes || || |- |[[Bulté-10|Bulté, Marguerite]] || [[Robitaille-94|Robitaille, Jean]] || Nov 27, 1670 ||Yes || || |- |[[Buot-2|Buot, Marie]] || [[Martin-3468|Martin, Pierre]] || Oct 6, 1670 || Yes|| || |- |[[Bureau-27|Bureau, Catherine]] || [[Corriveau-83|Corriveau, Étienne]] || Oct 28, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Burel-36|Burel, Jeanne]] || [[Poutre-4|Poutré dit Lavigne, André]] || Nov 3, 1667 || No|| || |- |[[Caillaud-3 |Caillaud, Andrée]]||[[Thibault-471|Thibault, Denis]]|| Aug 13, 1669 ||Yes|| || |- |[[Caille-1|Caillé, Jeanne]]||[[Reignor-1|Renouard dit St-Étienne, Jacques]]|| ~1671 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Caillé-49|Caillé, Marie]]||[[Pasquier-18|Paquet, Pierre]]||Aug 26, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Caillé-35|Caillé, Marie Jeanne]] || [[Pepin-171|Pepin, Jacques]] || Nov 16, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Calais-6|Calais, Hélène]] || [[Belleau-32|Belleau dit Larose, Blaise]] || Sep 25, 1673 ||Yes || || |- |[[Campion-6|Campion, Marie]] || [[Dubé-80|Dubé, Mathurin]] || Sep 3, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Canard-3|Canard, Marie Madeleine]]||[[Thuillier-15|Thuillier dit Latour, Crespin]]|| Oct 12, 1671 ||FR Y EN basic|| || |- |[[Carbonnet-1|Carbonnet, Madeleine]] || [[Sédilot-9|Sédilot dit Desnoyers, Étienne]] || Aug 11, 1664 || No || || |- |[[Carcireux-1|Carcireux, Sylvine]] ||[[Andrieu-2| Andrieu, Antoine]] || Jan 11, 1668 ||Yes || || |- |[[Cardillon-1|Cardillon, Marguerite]] ||[[Desjardins-98| Desjardins dit Charbonnier, Claude]] || Jan. 12, 1666 ||Yes|| || |- |[[Carlier-44|Carlier, Marie]] || [[Fezeret-3|Fezeret, René]] || Nov. 11, 1670 || Yes |||| |- |[[Cartignier-1|Cartignier, Marie]] ||[[Vanier-58| Vanier, Germain]] || Sep 30, 1669 || Yes|| || |- |[[Cartois-1|Cartois, Henriette]] || [[Audebout-2|Audebout dit Belhumeur, Michel]] || Oct 26, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Chabert-28|Chabert de La Charière, Marguerite]]||[[Dumesnil-26|Dumesnil Heurry, Jacques]]||Sept.17, 1668||FR / EN Y|| || |- |[[Chamois-1|Chamois, Marie Claude]] ||[[Frigon-68|Frigon, François]] || before 1674 || Yes || || |- |[[Chausy-1|Chancy, Marie]] ||[[Prezot-7| Prézeau dit Chambly, Michel]] || Oct 2, 1673 ||Yes || || |- |[[Chantoiseau-1|Chandoiseau, Nicole]]||[[Benoit-264| Benoît dit Lajeunesse, Étienne]]|| Oct 7, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Chamfrin-2|Chamfrin, Renée]] || [[Garand-11|Garand, Pierre]] || Oct 27, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Chanvreux-1|Chanvreux, Renée]] ||''Décédé sans se marier'' || --- || Yes |||| |- |[[Charbonnier-23|Charbonnier dite Seigneur, Marie Madeleine]] ||[[Lenoir-70| Lenoir dit Rolland, François]] || Jan 2, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Charebert-1|Charebert, Marie]] ||[[Lesieur-65| Lesieur dit Calot , Jean]] || 1672 or 1673 || Yes|| || |- |[[Charier-2|Charlier, Michelle]] || [[Besnier-15|Besnier, Massé]] || Oct 9, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[De_Charmenil-1|Charmesnil, Françoise]] ||[[Gélinas-15|Gélinas, Jean]] || Oct 17, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Charpentier-2|Charpentier, Marguerite]]|| [[Lucas-6734|Lucas dit Lagarde, Toussaint]] || Jun 11, 1669 || ---|| || |- |[[Charpentier-114|Charpentier, Marguerite]] ||[[Le_Meusnier-1| Meunier dit Laramée, René]]|| Oct 16, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Charpentier-8|Charpentier, Marie]] || [[Gendras-2|Gendras, Pierre]] || Nov 11, 1671 || Yes|| || |- |[[Charpentier-49|Charpentier, Marie-Reine]] || [[Prinseau-2|Prinseau, Louis]] || Jul 28, 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Charrier-4|Charrier, Louise]] || [[Barette-13|Baret, Guillaume]] || Nov 19, 1663 ||Yes || || |- |[[Charrié-1|Charrier, Marie ]] || [[Renaud-198|Renaud, Jacques]] || Oct 13, 1665 ||FR Y / EN n || || |- |[[Charron-599|Charron, Françoise]] || ''Did not marry'' || ---- ||---|| || |- |[[Chartier-185|Chartier, Jeanne]] || [[Rousset-9|Rousset dit Beaucourt, Pierre]] || Nov 3, 1669||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Chartier-192 |Chartier, Jeanne]] ||[[Aubrenan-1| Aubrenan, Thècle Cornélius]] || Sep 10, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Charreton-1|Charton, Jeanne]] || [[Robin-138|Robin dit Lapointe, Jean]] || Oct 10, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Chaton-5|Chaton, Marie]] || [[Lagarde-82|Lagarde, Pierre]] || Feb 5, 1667 ||FR Y/EN y|| || |- |[[Chauvet-21|Chauvet, Marie]] ||[[Fagnant-30| Faye dit Villefagnan, Pierre]] || Aug 16, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Chaumereau-2|Chemereau, Marguerite]] || [[Piette-58|Piette dit Trempe, Jean]] || 1669 or 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Cherfault-1|Cherfault, Denise]] || [[Grandry-15|Grandry dit Faverolle, Thomas]] || Nov 16, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Chevalier-375|Chevalier, Françoise]] || [[Habert-2|Habert, Jacques]] || Apr 19, 1668 ||Yes || || |- |[[Chevalier-345|Chevalier, Jeanne]] || [[Lecanteur-1|Lecanteur dit Latour, Guillaume]] || Oct 19, 1671|| Yes || || |- |[[Chevalier-271|Chevalier, Suzanne]] || [[Foubert-17|Foubert dit Lacroix, Robert]]|| Apr 14, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Chevrainville_dit_Lafontaine-1|de Chevrainville dite Lafontaine, Claude]] ||[[Brault-70| Brault, Henri]] || Aug 12, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[De_Chevrainville-1|de Chevrainville dite Lafontaine, Marie Madeleine]] ||[[Lamy-2| Lamy, Joseph-Isaac]] ||Oct 22, 1663 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Chevreau-7|Chevreau, Marie]] || [[Reaume-11|Réaume, René]] || Oct 29, 1665 ||Yes || || |- |[[Chiasson-26|Chiasson, Louise]] || [[Chapelain-1|Chapelain, Jacques]] || Sep 14, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Chrétien-119|Chrétien, Madeleine]] || [[Chicoine-5|Chicoine, Pierre]] || Oct 20, 1670|| Yes || || |- |[[Chrétien-124| Chrétien, Marie]] ||[[Perrault-158| Perrault dit Lagorce, Paul]] || Nov 4, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Clerice-1|Clérice, Catherine]] || [[Lussier-9|Lussier, Jacques]] || Oct 12, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Coignart-1|Coignard, Marie]] || [[Germain-9|Germain, Robert]] || Oct 29, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Coipel-1|Coipel, Marie]] ||[[Fagot-13| Fagot, Guillaume]] || Oct 21, 1669 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Colin-9|Colin, Anne]] || [[Boissonneau-2|Boissonneau dit Saintonge, Vincent]] || Oct 18, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Colin-1|Colin, Denise]] || [[Thouin-2|Thouin, Roch]] || Nov 17, 1673 || Yes |||| |- |[[Collin-57|Colin, Marie Rose]] || [[Deguire-12|Deguire dit Larose, François]] || 1670 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Collet-281|Collet, Jeanne]] || [[Simon-3341|Simon, Grégoire]] || Dec 31, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Collet-8|Collet, Marguerite]] || [[Bissonnette-42|Bissonnet, Jacques]] || Nov 19, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Compagnon-3|Compagnon, Antoinette]] ||[[Gerny-1|Gerny, Jacques]] || Oct 8, 1668 ||Yes || || |- |[[Conflans-1|Conflans, Françoise]] ||[[Rancin-3|Rancin, Charles]] || Oct 11, 1667 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Coppequesne-2|Coppequesne, M.-Charlotte ]]||[[Gateau-6|Jean Gateau]]||Jan 10, 1667|| Yes|| || |- |[[Cottin-13|Cottin dite D'Arras, Marie Catherine]]|| [[Brunet-474|Brunet, Pierre]] || Feb 1, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Couet-1|Couet, Marie]] || [[Leclerc-330|Leclerc, Jean]] || Nov 11, 1669 || FR / EN Y || || |- |[[Cousin-24|Cousin, Françoise]] || [[Gauterot-2|Gaudreau, Charles]] || Oct 13, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Couture-63|Couture, Anne]] || [[Moreau-43|Moreau dit Lagrange, Jean]] || Nov 12, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Courturier-7|Couturier, Isabelle]] ||[[Chatelou-2|Chantelou, François]] || Sep 15, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Coy-444|Coy, Charlotte]] ||[[Brard-2| Brard, Jean]] || Nov 12, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Crépin-22|Crépin, Marie]] || [[Fournier-1898|Fournier, Jean]] || 1667 || No || || |- |[[Cretel-1|Cretel, Élisabeth]] ||[[Langlois-238| Langlois, Nicolas]] || Oct 26, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Croiset-1|Croiset, Marie]] || [[Laquerre-1|Laquerre dit Rencontre, Jean]] || Aug 29, 1671|| Yes || || |- |[[Crosnier-29|Crosnier, Jeanne]] ||[[Le_Magan-2| Magnan, François]] || Sep 30, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Crosnier-2|Crosnier, Martine]] || [[Destroismaisons-12|Destroismaisons dit Picard, Philippe]] || Nov 18, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Curé-32|Curé, Françoise]] || [[Loiseau-18|Loiseau, Lucas]] || Dec 19, 1669 || Yes || || |- |}

Filles du Roi, D-F

PageID: 34936538
Inbound links: 2
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 all views 1037
Created: 8 Sep 2021
Saved: 13 Mar 2024
Touched: 13 Mar 2024
Managers: 1
Watch List: 2
Project: WikiTree-68
Images: 0
'''Filles du Roi''' '''D - F''' Managed by [[WikiTree-68|Filles du Roi project]] ''Gérées par le projet des Filles du Roi'' {| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable" - | '''Fille du Roi''' || '''Husband''' || '''Marriage or Contract Date''' || '''Bio''' || '''Notes'''|| |- |[[D'Ailly-5|Dailly, Anne]] ||[[Lesot-2| Lesot, Jacques]] || Oct 28, 1671|| No || || |- |[[Dain-94|Dain, Marie]] ||[[Marquet-61| Marquet, François]] || 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[D'allon-6|Dallon, Marie]] || [[Bissonnette-29|Pierre Bissonnet]] || Oct 9, 1668|| Yes || || |- |[[Damane-1|Damanée, Denise]] ||[[Aure-4| Houray dit Grandmont, René ]]|| Oct 26, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Damise-2|Damisé, Claude]] || [[Perthuis-7|Perthuis dit Lalime, Pierre]] || Dec 10, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Damois-1|Damois, Marie]] || [[Faucher-24|Faucher dit Saint-Maurice, Léonard]] || Oct 15, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[D'Amours-101|Damours, Hélène]] || [[Foucher-42|Foucher dit Laforest, Louis]] || Aug 6, 1668|| Yes || || |- |[[Annese-4|Dannessé dite de Longchamps, Esther]] || [[Couillard-51|Couillard dit Lafontaine, François]]|| Oct 17, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Debure-1|Debure, Marie]] ||[[Henart-4| Énard, Gilles]] || Oct 6, 1665||Yes || || |- |[[Dechard-2|Déchard, Jeanne]] ||[[Collette-130| Collet dit Le Picard, Jean]] || Feb 16, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Delastre-3|Delastre, Adrienne]] || [[Mortrel-1|Mortrel, Pierre]] || Nov 16, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Delaunay-25|Delaunay, Magdeleine]] || [[Guillet-66|Guillet dit Lajeunesse, Pierre]] || Oct 11, 1670 || FR Y/EN y|| || |- |[[Delestre-1|Delestre, Anne]] || [[César-4|César dit La Gardelette, François]] || 1673 or 1674 || Yes || || |- |[[Delorme-13|Delorme, Marguerite]] || [[Chartier-101|Chartier, René]] || Oct 1, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Denote-2|Denote, Jeanne]] || [[Robidou-4|Robidou, André]] || Jun 7, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[De_Noyon-12|Denoyon, Marie]] || [[Davenne-5|Davenne, Charles]] || Sep 8, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Dequain-1|DeQuain, Anne]] || [[Lareau-27|Lareau, François]] || Oct 28, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Deschalets-9|Deschalets, Claude]] || [[Roy-2123|Roy dit Ody, Siméon]] || Sep 3, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Deschalets-3|Deschalets, Élisabeth]] || [[Paris-29|Paris, François]] || Nov 26, 1668 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Deschalets-2|Deschalets, Madeleine]] || [[Giron-4|Giron, Jean]] || Sep 3, 1668 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Des_Champs-8|Deschamps, Anne]] ||[[Bouttet-2| Boutet dit Lépine , Michel]] || Oct 29, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Deschamps-219|Deschamps, Marie]]|| [[Pouillard-5|Pouillard, Pierre]] || Oct 12, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Deschamps-55|Deschamps, Marie]] || [[Verret-3|Verret dit Laverdure, Michel]] || Oct 13, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Deschamps-25|Deschamps, Marie]] || [[Marest-2|Marais dit Labarre, Marin]] || 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[De_Seine-1|Desenne, Catherine]] || [[Senecal-58|Senécal, Jean]] || Oct 15, 1672 || Yes|| || |- |[[Desfossés-4|Desfossés, Françoise]] || [[Bidet-13|Bidet dit Desroussels, Jacques]] || Oct 18, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Desgranges-4|Desgranges, Louise]] || [[Delisle-62|Delisle, Louis]] || Oct 15, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Deshayes-11|Deshayes, Marguerite]] || [[Menard-623|Ménard dit Saintonge, Pierre]] || 1670 or 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Deshayes-1|Deshayes, Marie]] || [[Betourne-1|Bétourné dit Laviolette, Adrien]] || 1668 or 1669 ||Yes || || |- |[[Desjardins-95|Desjardins, Françoise]] || [[De_Royssy-1|Droissy, Nicolas]] || Oct 12, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Desmarest-16|Desmarest, Catherine]] ||[[Lirette-82| Lairet, François]] || Oct 20, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Desmarais-479|Desmarest, Étiennette]] || [[Beaudin-13|Baudin, Pierre]] || Sep 3, 1669 || FR / EN Y || || |- |[[Desportes-22|Desportes, Françoise]] || [[Renaud-234|Renaud dit Locat, Pierre]] || Nov 5, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Després-2|Després, Madeleine]] || [[Audet-54|Audet dit Lapointe, Nicolas]] || Sep 15, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Desprez-8| Despres, Marguerite]] ||[[Becquet-11|Becquet, Francois]]||Dec 3, 1663|| No|| || |- |[[Destouches-1|Destouches, Marie-Agnès]] || [[Dompierre-21|Dompierre dit St-Martin, Charles]] || Oct 27, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[DeVaux-2|Devault, Marie]] || [[Coderre-42|Émery dit Coderre, Antoine]] || 1667 or 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Devisien-2|Devisien, Marie Rose]] || [[Boudeau-3|Boudeau, Jean]] || Sep 12, 1673 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Dodier-16|Dodier, Jeanne]] || [[Joliet-5|Joliet, Adrien]] || Jan 22, 1664 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Dodin-2|Dodin, Anne]] || [[Mouflet-7|Mouflet dit Champagne, Jean]] || Aug 19, 1669 || Yes|| || |- |[[Doigt-1|Doigt, Ambroise]] || [[Mignier-29|Magnan, Jacques]] || Oct 14, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[D'Orange-3|Dorange, Barbe]] || [[Tardif-67|Tardif, Jacques]] || Oct 6, 1669 || Yes || || |- |Doriant, Simone || Hébert, Jean || 1667 || No || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Doribeau-1|Doribeau, Catherine]] || [[Genest-122|Genest dit Labarre, Jacques]] ||1669 or 1670 || No || || |- |[[Doucinet-6|Doucinet, Élisabeth]] || [[Bedard-37|Bédard, Jacques]] || Oct 14, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Drouet-1|Drouet, Catherine]] || [[Chamard-3|Chamard, Pierre]] || Oct 19, 1671 || Yes || || |- |Dubicourt, Jeanne ||Fat, Pierre||Nov 14, 1669|| || || |- |Dubié, M.-Françoise ||Chevaudrier, Jean-François||October 11, 1671 || || || |- |[[Dubois-915|Dubois, Marie]] || [[Brouillette-16|Brouillet dit Laviolette, Michel]] || Nov 3, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Breüillet-_Dubreuil-1|Dubreuil, Isabelle]] || [[Faure-146|Faure, Bernard]] || Aug 26, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Ducharme-69|Ducharme, Catherine]] || [[Roy-353|Roy dit St-Lambert, Pierre]] || Jan 12, 1672 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Duchemin-23|Duchemin, Marie-Anne]] || [[Yvelin-2|Yvelin, Pierre]] || Sep 19, 1673 || No || || |- |[[Duchesne-97|Duchesne, Barbe]] || [[Badet-2|Badel dit LaMare, André]] || Oct 26, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Decors-1|Ducorps dite Leduc, Jeanne]] || [[Masse-7|Massé, Martin]] || abt 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Ducoudray-1|Ducoudray, Marie]] || [[Grenet-2|Grenet, François]] || Sep 15, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Du_Faye-1|Dufaye, Françoise]] || [[Henne-36|Pire dit Henne, Martin]] || Oct 15, 1674 || No || || |- |[[Du_Figuier-1|Dufiguier, Hélène]] || [[Fournier-922|Fournier, Jacques]] || Oct 24, 1663 || No || || |- |[[Dufossé-2|Dufossé, Jeanne]] || Doré, Louis || Sep 1, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Dufresne-301|Dufresne, Jeanne]] || [[D'aleret-2|Dalleray, Marin]] ||bef. 1666 census ||FR Y || || |- |[[Dumont-16|Dumont, Julienne Anne]] || [[Dubois-138|Dubois dit Brisebois, René]] || Nov 25, 1665 || FR / EN Y|| || |- |[[Dumont-603|Dumont, Barbe]] || [[Le_Breton-335|Breton, François]] ||Nov 11, 1668 ||FR Y / EN n|| || |- |[[Dumonstier-3|Dumontier, Antoinette]]||[[Martineau-157| Martineau, Jacques]] || Nov 28, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Deleurs-1|Dumortier de Leure, Madeleine]] ||[[Roussel-37| Roussel, Timothée]] || Nov 22, 1667 ||FR Y/EN n || || |- |[[ Dupré-238| Dupré, Françoise]]||[[Loubat-1| Loubat dit Saintonge, Jean]] || 7 Oct 1669 ||FR Y/EN n || || |- |[[Dupuis-291|Dupuis, Catherine]] || [[Martin-10342|Martin, Charles]] || Nov 28, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[Durand-2|Durand, Catherine]] || [[Piche-81|Piché dit Lamusette, Pierre]] || Nov 25, 1665 || bio || || |- |Durand, Élizabeth||Beaudoin , Jacques ||Aug 31, 1670||||Returned to FR|| |- |[[Durand-29|Durand, Françoise]] || [[Baudouin-30|Beaudouin, Jacques]] || Mar 24, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Durand-14|Durand, Suzanne]] || [[Gibault-2|Gibault dit Poitevin, Gabriel]] || Oct 30, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Du_Rosaire-1|Durosaire, Espérance]] ||[[Longueville-5| Longueville, Simon]] || Oct 9, 1668 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Du_Saucay-1|Dusauçay, Marie-Anne]] || [[Rouër-2|Rouer, Louis]] || Nov 26, 1675 || Yes || || |- |[[Dusson-3|Dusson, Marguerite]] || [[Lavallee-322|Lavallée, Jean]] || Dec 31, 1671|| FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Duval-6|Duval, Françoise]] ||[[Courault-34|Courault dit Coulon, Pierre]] || Nov 16, 1671|| bio || || |- |[[Duval-33|Duval, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Joubert-973|Joubert, Jacques]] || bef 1672 || bio || || |- |[[Duval-313|Duval, Michelle]]||[[Bon-21|Bon dit Lacombe, Pierre]] || bef. 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Eloy-2|Éloy, Antoinette Catherine]]||[[Masta-16|Masta, Mathurin]]||Dec 14, 1665 || FR Y / EN y|| || |- |[[Eloy-4|Éloy, Marguerite]]||[[Cosset-5|Cosset, Jean]]||Feb 12, 1668 || Yes || || |- |Enfre, Françoise || ||1669|| ||Returned to FR|| |- |[[D'Esquincourt-5|d'Esquincourt, Anne]] || [[Damien-40|Damien, Jacques]] || Oct 21, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Hevain-1|Évin, Marguerite]]||[[Richard-1329|Richard, Pierre]]||Sep 24, 1670|| No || || |- |[[Faucheux-2|Faucheux, Jeanne]]||[[Leduc-92|Leduc, Antoine]]||1671 || No || || |- |[[Faucon-4|Faucon, Marie]] || [[Chartier-179|Chartier, Guillaume]] || Nov 27, 1663 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Fauconnier-15|Fauconnier, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Dufresne-74|Dufresne, Antoine-Nicolas]]|| Dec 4, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Faure-50|Faure dite Planchet, Louise]] || [[Gagné-125|Gagné, Pierre]] || Oct 28, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Fauvault-2|Fauvault, Jeanne]] || [[Le_Prévost-4|Provost, Jacques]] || Nov 25, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Fayet-3|Fayet, Anne]] || [[Siret-3|Siret, René]] || Sep 8, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Ferre-58|Ferré, Catherine]] || [[Lefebvre-1041|Lefebvre, Louis]] || Nov 4, 1668 ||FR Y/EN y || || |- |[[Ferron-21|Ferron, Marguerite]] ||[[Bertrand-113| Bertrand, Guillaume]] || Oct 12, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Fièvre-2|Fièvre, Catherine]] || [[Allaire-2|Allaire, Charles]] || Nov 10, 1663 || bio || || |- |Firman, Marie Anne|| ||1667|| ||https://naviresnouvellefrance.net/html/pages16661667.html#pages16661667 Navire 854, contrat annulé, retournée en France || |- |[[Flamand-6|Flamand, Nicole]] || [[Le_Parc-2|Leparc dit St-Louis, Louis]] || Jan 6, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Fléchet-3|Fléchet, Anne]] || [[Luneau-39|Louineau, Pierre]] || Oct 2, 1673 || bio || || |- |Fleure, Marie Anne || ||1673 || ||Returned to FR|| |- |[[Fleureau-1|Fleureau, Marie]] ||[[De_Launay-3| Delaunay, Jean]] || Sep 30, 1669 || FR Y/EN N|| || |- |Fontenay, Catherine|| ||Sep 25, 1667|| ||Returned to FR|| |- |[[Foubert-26|Foubert, Anne]] ||[[Boisseau-34| Boisseau, Pierre]] || Oct 20, 1670 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Foucques-1|Foucques, Marie]] ||[[Beatrix-30| Béatrix, Jacques]] || Nov 16, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Fourrier-9|Fourrier, Catherine]] || [[Mercadier-1|Mercadier, Mathurin]] || Oct 14, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Fourrier-7|Fourrier, Jeanne]] || [[Baillaux-1|Baillaux, Jean]] || 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Foy-105|Foy, Marguerite]] || [[Dumas-82|Dumas, François]] || Jul 5, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Fressel-11|Fressel, Isabelle]] || [[Emereau-2|Émereau dit Bélair, François]] || Oct 30, 1671 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Fresset-3|Fressel, Jeanne]] || [[Jacob-138|Jacob, Étienne]] || Oct 14, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Fro-1|Fro or Frost, Louise]] || [[Meunier-6|Meunier, Julien]] || Sep 9, 1670 || bio || || |- |}

Filles du Roi, G-K

PageID: 34936545
Inbound links: 2
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 all views 1071
Created: 8 Sep 2021
Saved: 16 Mar 2024
Touched: 16 Mar 2024
Managers: 1
Watch List: 2
Project: WikiTree-68
Images: 0
'''Filles du Roi''' '''G - K''' Managed by [[WikiTree-68|Filles du Roi project]] ''Gérées par le projet des Filles du Roi'' {| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable" - | '''Fille du Roi''' || '''Husband''' || '''Marriage or Contract Date''' || '''Bio''' || '''Notes'''|| |- |[[Daire-5|Gaillard, Marie]] || [[Perrier-16|Perrier dit Lafleur, Jean-Baptiste]] || Oct 6, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Gaillard-41|Gaillard dite Duplessis, Marguerite]] || [[Provost-96|Provost, François]] || Jul 26, 1664 || Yes || || |- |[[Gallet-193 |Gallet, Anne]] ||[[Veau-4|Veau, Sylvain]] || Oct 13, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Galet-3|Galet, Anne]] || [[Hébert-1099|Hébert dit Laverdure, Michel]] || Sep 1, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Gallien-93|Galien, Marie-Thérèse]] ||[[Gouin-156| Gouin, Laurent]] || Oct 22, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Gambier-31|Gambier, Marguerite]] || [[Legardeur-10|Legardeur dit Sansoucy, Michel]] || Jul 26, 1664 || Yes|| || |- |[[Gargottin-1|Gargotin, Louise]] || [[Perron-16|Perron dit Suire, Daniel]] || Feb 26, 1664 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Gateau-2|Gateau, Catherine]] || [[Jean-57|Jean, Vivien]] || Nov 29, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Gaumond-2|Gaumond, Madeleine]] || [[Langlois-641|Langlois, Jean]] || Oct 15, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Gaultier-42|Gauthier, Marie-Jeanne]] ||[[Masson-212| Masson, Gilles]] || Oct 17, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Gauthier-87|Gautier, Marie]] || [[Prou-7|Prou, Pierre]] || Nov 7, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Gendreau-1|Gendreau, Anne]] || [[Leduc-36|Leduc, René]] || Oct 28, 1664 || Yes || || |- |[[Genest-110|Genest, Jeanne-Léonarde]] ||[[Cardin-61| Cardin, Noël]] || Nov 1, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Geoffroy-27|Geoffroy, Anne]] || [[Flibot-2|Flibot, Charles]] || Sep 1, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Gilles-1|Gilles, Jeanne]] || [[Fleury-2|Fleury, François]] || Aug 24, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Girard-418|Girard, Anne]] || [[Daudelin-3|Daudelin, Nicolas]] || Oct 22, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Girard-87|Girard, Marguerite]] || [[Forcier-11|Forcier, Pierre]] || ~ 1674 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |Girard, Marie||Dubois, Jacques||Aug 17, 1667 ||||Returned to FR|| |- |Giraud/Troller/Trolleau, Anne || [[Gauthier-662|Gauthier, Mathurin]] || Jul 16, 1669 || No || '''NOT A FDR'''|| |- |[[Goard-1|Goard, Mathurine]] || [[Marie-52|Marie dit Ste-Marie, Louis]] || May 31, 1667 ||Fr Y / EN y || || |- |[[Gobert-14|Gobert, Marie Madeleine]] || [[Grouleau-2|Groleau, Pierre]] || Sep 8, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Godeby-1|Godeby, Anne]] || [[Talua-2|Talua dit Vendamont, Julien]] || Oct 7, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Godequin-3|Godequin, Jeanne]] || [[Croteau-96|Croteau, Vincent]] || Sep 22, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Godillon-1|Godillon, Élisabeth]] || [[Éthier-40|Éthier, Léonard]] || Sep 22, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Goiset-1|Goiset, Anne]] || [[Albert-191|Albert dit Laroche, André]] || Oct 21, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Gossard-28|Gossard, Noëlle]] || [[Bussiere-19|Bussière dit Laverdure, Jacques]] || Oct 16, 1671 || No|| || |- |[[Goubilleau-1|Goubilleau, Françoise]] || [[Daze-5|Dazé, Paul]] ||Apr 15, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Grandin-1|Grandin, Marie]] || [[Beaudet-4|Beaudet, Jean]] || Sep 23, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Grandin-22|Grandin, Jeanne]] || [[Brière-108|Brière, Jean]] || Oct 19, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Grandin-7|Grandin, Marie]] || [[Morel-49|Morel, Michel]] || abt 1670 || No || || |- |[[Grandjean-2|Grandjean, Adrienne]] || [[Bauché-52|Baucher dit Morency, René]] || Jan 8, 1666 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Granjon-1|Grangeon, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Richard-1743|Richard dit Lavallée, Marin]] || Oct 21, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Granger-704|Granger, Catherine]] || [[Lepine-83|Lépinay or L'Espinay, Jean]] || Sep 11, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Graton-49|Graton, Mathurine]] || [[Toupin-6|Toupin dit Lapierre, Pierre]] || Sep 30, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Gravois-20|Gravois, Marie]] || [[Étienne-53|Étienne, Philippe]] || Nov 3, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Grimbault-1|Grimbault, Anne]] || [[Jouanne-6|Jouanne, Jean]] || Sep 17, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Groisat-1|Groisat/Groisard, Jeanne]] || [[Dupuis-550|Dupuy, Zacharie]] || Oct 25, 1668 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Groleau-5|Groleau, Madeleine]] || [[Marchand-103|Marchand, François]] || Sep 30, 1669 || Yes |||| |- |[[Grossejambe-2|Grossejambe, Françoise]] || [[Boissil-1|Boissy dit Lagrillade, Julien]] || Oct 26, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Gruau-1|Gruau, Jeanne]] ||[[René-14| René, Jean]] || Sep 9, 1670 ||FR Y / EN n|| || |- |[[Grusseau-1|Grusseau, Marie]] || [[Chénier-64|Chénier, Jean]] || Aug 23, 1667 || FR / EN Y || || |- |[[Gueneville-1|Gueneville, Jeanne]]||[[Molleur-5| Molleur dit Lallemand, Pierre]] || Nov 3, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Guérard-38|Guérard, Catherine]] || [[Dubord-19|Dubord dit Lafontaine, Julien]] || Feb 12, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Guérin-217|Guérin, Madeleine]] || [[Julien-19|Julien, Jean]] || Nov 10, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Guérin-322| Guérin dite Brunet, Marie-Jeanne]] ||[[Dupré-128| Dupré, Antoine]] || Jul 13, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Gueriere-1|Guerrier/Guerrière, Bonne]] || [[Fauque-1|Fauque, Jacques]] || Oct 12, 1665 || No || || |- |[[De_Guesnel-1| Guesnel, Jeanne-Marie]] ||[[Cassineau-2| Castineau, Jean]] || Nov 3, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Guichelin-1|Guichelin, Catherine]] || [[Buteau-67|Buteau, Nicolas]] || Oct 23, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Guillaume-27|Guillaume, Anne]] || [[Dubois-662|Dubois dit Lafrance, François]] || Oct 19, 1671 || Yes |||| |- |[[Guillaume-49|Guillaume, Marie]] || [[Maheu-75|Maheu, Nicolas]] || Jan 15, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Guilleboeuf-1|Guilleboeuf, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Plouffe-4|Plouffe, Jean]] || Jun 24, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Guillin-3|Guillin, Françoise]] ||[[Trajot-1| Trajot, André]] || Nov 12, 1668 || No |||| |- |[[Guillaudeau-2|Guillodeau, Madeleine]] || [[Poitevin_dit_Laviolette-1|Poitevin dit Laviolette, Jean]] || Aug 19, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Guyard-14|Guyard, Catherine]] || [[Beaudry-438|Baudry dit L'Épinette, Antoine]]|| Nov 24, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Guyet-10|Guyet, Marie]] || [[Ledoux-31|Ledoux dit Latreille, Pierre]] || Oct 9, 1668 || FR Y / EN n|| || |- |[[Halley-141|Halay or Halle, Marie]] || [[Courtois-181|Courtois dit Le Breton, Bertrand]] || Aug 24, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Halay-9|Halay, Marie / Marguerite]] ||[[Augeron-1| Augeron, Antoine]] || Jan 11, 1672 || No || || |- |[[Hallier-2|Hallier, Pierrette]] || [[Bordeleau-6|Bordeleau dit Laforest, Antoine]] || Oct 15, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Haneton-2|Haneton, Madeleine]] || [[Reguindeau-4|Reguindeau dit Joachim, Joachim]] || Jan 6, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Hardy-2436|Hardy, Jeanne]] || [[Trotain-1|Trottain dit St-Surin, François]] || Aug 16, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Hatanville-1|Hatanville, Marie]] || [[Sénat-4|Sénat, Robert]] || Oct 15, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Hébert-1520|Hébert, Françoise]] ||[[Baptiste-115|Baptiste dit St-Amour, Jean]] || May 3, 1668 || FR Y || || |- |[[Hébert-1436|Hébert, Marie Madeleine]] || [[Brosseau-1|Brosseau, Denis]] || Oct 15, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Hédouin-6|Hédouin, Marguerite]] || [[Barbeau-64|Barbeau, François]] || Aug 24, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Heron-408|Héron, Jacqueline]] || [[Galarneau-23|Galarneau, Jacques]] || Oct 15, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Hiardin-7|Hiardin, Marguerite]] ||[[Vérieu-15| Vérieul dit Labécasse, Nicolas]] || Dec 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Housseau-3|Housseau, Marguerite]] ||[[Meunier-403| Meunier, Jean]] || Oct 5, 1670 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Hubert-2|Hubert, Elisabeth]] || [[Bolduc-5|Bolduc, Louis]] || Aug 20, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Hubert-157|Hubert, Marie]] || [[Fournier-474|Fournier, Nicolas]] || Sep 30, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Hubinet-2|Hubinet, Louise]] || [[Fournel-9|Fournel, Jacques]] || Oct 12, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Huché-3|Huché, Françoise]] || [[Bonhomme-8|Bonhomme, Guillaume]] || Oct 30, 1664 || Yes || || |- |[[Hué-14|Hué, Marie]] || [[Boesme-2|Boesme, Jean]] || Jan 7, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Humelot-1|Humelot, Catherine]] || [[Hardy-5575|Hardy, Jacques]] || Sep 1, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Hutru-1|Hutru, Perrine]] || [[Sureau-4|Sureau, Théodore]] || Oct 9, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Isambert-2|Isambert, Catherine]] || [[Denys-78|Denis dit Lafontaine, Louis]] || Sep 9, 1673 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Itas-2|Itas, Marguerite]] || [[Aubuchon_dit_Le_Loyal-1|Aubuchon dit Le Loyal, Jacques]] || Nov 11, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Jacquier-77|Jacquier, Louise]] || [[Pouzet-2|Pouzet, Jean]] || Jan 17, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Jallais-1|Jalais, Marie]] || [[Lauzé-5|Lauzé dit Matha, Jean]] || Aug 26, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Jasselin-1|Jasselin, Marguerite]] ||[[Lelièvre-88| Lelièvre, Mathurin]] || Oct 31, 1676 || No || || |- |[[Javelot-1|Javelot, Anne]] || [[LeBoeuf-38|Leboeuf, Jacques]] || Jan 24, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Jaudon-147|Jaudon, Marie]] ||[[Barbault-2|Barbeau dit Laforest, André]] || Aug 12, 1669 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Jolivet-3|Jolivet, Charlotte Catherine]] ||[[Girardin-2|Girardin dit Sansoucy, Léonard]]|| Oct 12, 1671|| Yes || || |- |[[Joly-55|Joly, Charlotte]] || [[Drapeau-22|Drapeau, Antoine]] || Aug 20, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Jossard-1|Jossard, Elisabeth]] || [[Poithier-8|De Poitiers, Jean-Baptiste]] || Oct 6, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Jourdain-23|Jourdain, Marguerite]] || [[Delpêsches-2|Delpesches dit Belair, Bernard]] || Nov 25, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Juin-1|Juin, Jeanne]] || [[Dumouchel-6|Dumouchel dit Laroche, Bernard]] || Apr 17, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Julien-84|Julien, Anne]] || [[Choquet-10|Choquet dit Champagne, Nicolas]] || Nov 12, 1668 || No || || |- |}

Filles du Roi, L-O

PageID: 34936553
Inbound links: 2
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 all views 1557
Created: 8 Sep 2021
Saved: 28 Mar 2024
Touched: 28 Mar 2024
Managers: 1
Watch List: 2
Project: WikiTree-68
Images: 0
'''Filles du Roi''' '''L - O''' Managed by [[WikiTree-68|Filles du Roi project]] ''Gérées par le projet des Filles du Roi'' {| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable" - | '''Fille du Roi''' || '''Husband''' || '''Marriage or Contract Date''' || '''Bio''' || '''Notes'''|| |- |[[Labastille-1|Labastille dite Martin, Renée]] ||[[Gauthier-120| Gauthier dit Larose, René]] || Apr 11, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Labbé-128|Labbé, Anne]] || [[Girard-446|Girard, Marc]] || Nov 5, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[Labbe-132|Labbé, Jacqueline]] ||[[Collin-184|Colin dit Laliberté, Mathurin]] || ~ 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Labbé-134|Labbé, Jeanne]] || [[Hély-17|Élie dit Breton, Jean]] || Nov 28, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[De_La_Cour-9| de La Cour, Marie]] ||[[Roger-102|Gabriel, Roger]] || Oct 12, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[De_La_Croix-4|Lacroix, Françoise]] ||[[Hubert-34| Hubert, René]] || Nov 4, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Lacroix-160|Lacroix, Suzanne]] || [[Savaria-5|Savaria, Jacques]] || Oct 17, 1672 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Lafaye-14|Lafaye, Marie]] || [[Emond-69|Émond, René]] || Oct 22, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[De_La_Fitte-2|Lafitte, Apolline]] ||[[Rousselot-11| Rousselot dit Laprairie, Nicolas]] || Oct 17, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Lafleur-181|Lafleur, Joachine]] || [[Martin-10923|Martin, Pierre]] || Feb 11, 1664 || bio || || |- |[[Lafontaine-120|Lafontaine, Marie-Anne]] || [[D'aleret-2|Dalleray, Marin]] || Aug 28, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Lagou-1| Lagou, Anne]] || [[Valliere-12|Vallière, Pierre]] || Sep 8, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Laguéripière-5|Laguéripière, Élisabeth]] || [[Rainville-73|De Rainville, Jean]] || Oct 26, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Lahaie-23|Lahaye, Catherine]] ||[[Gignard-20| Guignard, Pierre]] || Nov 18, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Delahaye-19|Lahaye , Jeanne]] ||[[Chauvin-199| Chauvin, Philibert]] || Oct 25, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[De_La_Haye-71|Lahaye or Lahaie, Michelle]] ||[[Potier-47|Pothier, Étienne]] || Sep 9, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Delahogue-1|Lahogue, Marie-Claire]] || [[Sédilot-31|Sédilot, Jean]] || Nov 27, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Lainé-85|Laîné, Anne]] || [[Contant-16|Content, Étienne]] || Oct 14, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Laisné-6|Laîné, Catherine]] || [[Mesny-3|Mesny, Étienne]] || Nov 23, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Laine-111|Laîné, Geneviève]] || [[Vanchy-2|De Vanchy, Pierre]] || Nov 21, 1667 || bio |||| |- |[[Lalore-4|De Lalore, Catherine]] ||[[Badaillac-2| Badaillac dit Laplante, Louis]] || 1671 or 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Lamain-1|Lamain, Marguerite]] || [[Rognon-51|Rognon dit Laroche, Michel]] || Sep 14, 1670 ||FR Y /EN y || || |- |[[Lamarche-96|LaMare, Charlotte]] || [[Lussier-9|Lussier, Jacques]] || Sep 30, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Lamarre-26|Lamare, Anne]] || [[Duquet-37|Duquet dit Delachesnaye, Pierre]] || Aug 25, 1666 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[De_La_Mare-39|de la Mare, Marie]] || [[Renaud-324|Renaud, Guillaume]] ||Nov 27, 1668 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Lambert-9316|Lambert, Jeanne]] ||[[Bellivier-2|Bellivier dit La Ruine, Étienne]] || Oct 4, 1669 || FR Y /EN y || || |- |[[L'Amireaud-1|Lamirault, Marguerite]] || [[Martel-24|Martel dit Lamontagne, Honoré]] || Nov 26, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Lamy-3|Lamy, Marie]] || [[Chevrefils-5|Chevrefils dit Lalime, François]] || 1671-1672 || bio || || |- |[[Landry-1105|Landry, Louise]] ||[[Comptant-2| Constant, Pierre]] || Sep 26, 1667 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Lanfillé-1|Lanfillé, Marie]] || [[Roche-1028| Roche, Pierre]] || Nov 9, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Lange-805|Lange, Françoise]] ||[[Moreau-411| Moreau, Étienne]] || Oct 17, 1673 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Langlois-662|Langlois, Anne]] || [[Cauchon-45|Cauchon, René]] || Nov 10, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Langlois-976|Langlois, Jacqueline]] || [[May-7525|May, Jean]] || Nov 17, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Langlois-180|Langlois, Marie]] || [[Gladu-4|Gladu dit Cognac, Jacques]] || Oct 28, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Langlois-455|Langlois, Marie]] || [[Poirier-321|Poirier dit Lajeunesse, Jean]] || Mar 18, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Anguille-1|Languille, Jeanne]] || [[Allard-117|Allard, François]] || Nov 1, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Lapierre-62|Lapierre, Perrine]] || [[Dany-3|Danis dit Tourangeau, Honoré]] || Mar 20, 1666 || bio || || |- |[[Laplace-9|Laplace, Marguerite]] || [[Lesiege_Fontaine-2|Lesiège dit Lafontaine, Pierre]] || 1671 or 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[De_la_Porte-9|Laporte, Marie Anne]] || [[Genaple-2|Genaple, François]] || Oct 12, 1665 || No || || |- |[[L'Arche-5|Larcher, Madeleine]] || [[Voisin-36|Voisin, Élie]] || Oct 15, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Larchevêque-5|Larchevêque, Françoise]]|| [[Dubuc-6|Dubuc, Jean]] || Jan 14, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[De_Larüe-1|Larue, Charlotte]] ||[[La_Vanois-2| Lavanois, Jean]] || Sep 19, 1673 ||Yes|| || |- |[[Lasnon-1|Lasnon, Marie]] || [[Ferré-22|Feret, Pierre]] || Nov 24, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Latier-3|Latier, Françoise]] || [[Levert-20|Levert, Jean]] || Sep 15, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Latouche-18|Latouche, Marguerite]] || [[Manseau-15|Manseau, Jacques]] || Sep 21, 1673 || bio || || |- |[[Laurence-519|Laurence, Geneviève]] || [[Michelon-10|Michelon, Adrien]] || 1664 || bio || || |- |[[Laurent-75|Laurent, Catherine]] || [[Hilarest-5|Hilarest, Moyse]] || Sep 28, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Lauvergnat-1|Lauvergnat, Jacqueline]] || [[Gaulin-22|Gaulin, Pierre]] || Apr 21, 1664 || bio || || |- |[[Laval-12|Laval, Claude]] || [[Bonnodeau-3|Bonnodeau dit Châtellerault, Louis]] || Oct 26, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Laverdure-12|Laverdure, Marguerite]] || [[Crépeau-12|Crépeau, Maurice]] || Oct 12, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Blanc-104|Leblanc, Anne]] || [[Mesnage-4|Ménage, Pierre]] || Mar 13, 1673 || bio || || |- |[[Le_Bon-12|Lebon de Champfleury, Marie]] || [[Bidard-1|Bidard, François]] || Nov 29, 1665 || FR Y/EN n|| || |- |[[Lebrun-5|Lebrun, Marie]] || [[Barbary-54|Barbary dit Grandmaison, Pierre]] || Feb 24, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[LeClerc-40|Leclerc, Anne]] || [[Chrestien-10|Chrétien, Vincent]] || 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Leclerc-127|Leclerc, Denise]] || [[Delaunay-57|Delomay, Claude]] || Oct 3, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Leclerc-393|Leclerc, Françoise]] || [[Riffaut-2|Rifault, Michel]] || Aug 27, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Leclerc-327|Leclerc, Geneviève]] || [[Poiré-5|Poiré, Laurent]]|| Nov 26, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Leclerc-435|Leclerc, Marguerite]] || [[Blois-9|Beloy dit Servigny, Julien]] || Nov 26, 1665 || bio || || |- |Lecomte, Jeanne || De Laroux dit Desroches, Olivier || Jun 14, 1672 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Lecomte-70|Lecomte, Marie]] || [[Habert-2|Habert, Jacques]] || Oct 22, 1672 || bio || || |- |[[LeCompte-77|Lecomte, Suzanne]] || [[Arsenault-808|Arsenault, François]] || 1665 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[LeCocq-6|Lecoq, Jeanne]] || [[Dubeau-42|Dubeau, Guillaume]] || Sep 8, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Lecoutre-1|Lecoutre, Louise]] || [[Crevier-6|Crevier, Nicolas]] || abt 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Ledoux-247|Ledoux, Jacquette]] || [[Grimault-11|Grimault, Jacques]] || Nov 10, 1664 || bio || || |- |[[Lefebvre_DeLacroix-1|Lefebvre dite Lacroix, Barbe]] || [[Goyer-36|Goyer dit Laviolette, Mathurin]] || Jan 14, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Lefebvre-265|Lefebvre, Antoinette]] || [[Limousin-6|Limousin, Hilaire]] || Nov 9, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Lefebvre-25|Lefebvre, Élizabeth-Agnès]] || [[Thibault-9|Thibault, François]] || Oct 14, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Lefebvre-1071|Lefebvre, Marie]] ||[[De_Paris-74|de Paris dit Champagne, Jean ]] || 1671 ||FR/EN Y |||| |- |[[Lefebvre-27|Lefebvre, Marie]] || [[Marsil-1|Marcil dit L'Espagnol, André]] || Nov 16, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Lefebvre-1495|Lefebvre, Marie]] || [[De_L'Astre-2|Delastre dit Lajeunesse, Jean]] || Oct 15, 1669 || FR Y/EN n|| || |- |[[Lefebvre-91|Lefebvre, Marie]] || [[Guilbault_-Grandbois-2|Guibault dit Grandbois, Louis]] || Oct 13, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Lefrançois-138|Lefrançois, Françoise]] || [[Lavergne-32|Lavergne, François]] || Oct 19, 1671 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Legendre-61|Legendre, Jeanne]] || [[Sauvageau-61|Sauvageau, Claude]] || Dec 3, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Legrand-52|Legrand, Antoinette]] || [[Preunier-1|Prunier dit Picard, Nicolas]] || Oct 3, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Le_Grand-10|Legrand, Nicolle]] || [[Noel-148|Noël, François]] || Oct 22, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Leguay-6|Leguay, Madeleine]] || [[L'Archevêque-13|Larchevêque, Jacques]] || Jun 3, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Leguay-2|Leguay, Madeleine]] || [[Garnier-82|Garnier, Jean]] || Nov 6, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Lelong-9|Lelong, Marie]] || [[Dumas-251|Dumas dit Rencontre, René]] || Oct 12, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[LeLong-10|Lelong, Marie-Anne]] || [[Bonneau-146|Bonneau dit Labécasse, Joseph]] || Sep 16, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Leloup-2|Leloup, Catherine]] || [[Nafrechou-2|Nafrechou, Isaac]] || Nov 19, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Le_Mer-1|Lemaire, Anne]] || [[Hulin-11|Hulin, Philippe]] || Sep 11, 1673 || bio || || |- |[[Lemaire-19|Lemaire, Marie]] || [[Ratel-16|Ratel, Pierre]] || Dec 28, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Lemaistre-20|Lemaître, Anne]] || [[Blanquet-5|Blanquet dit La Fougère, Adrien]] || Nov 7, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[Lemerle-7|Lemerle de Hautpré, Marguerite]] || [[Bory-2|Bory dit Grandmaison, Laurent]] || Feb 8, 1672 || FR Y / EN n || || |- |[[Le_Mesle-1|Lemesle, Catherine]] || [[Morin-288|Morin, Pierre]] || Jun 13, 1672 || bio || || |- |[[Lemoine-5|Lemoine, Françoise]] || [[Niquette-10|Niquet, Pierre-René]] || Jun 15, 1666 || bio || || |- |[[Lemoyne-19|Lemoine, Marie]] || [[Duhault-3|Duhault dit Paris, Jacques]] || Nov 16, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Lenoir-32|Lenoir dite Pirois, Antoinette]] || [[LeBoeuf-38|Leboeuf, Jacques]] || Oct 29, 1669 || bio || || |- |Léonard, Marie || Rémy dit Champagne, René || Jan 24, 1667 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Lepage-42|Lepage, Constance]] || [[Garinet-1|Garinet, François]] || Feb 5, 1674 || bio || || |- |[[Le_Page-8|Lepage, Marie-Rogère]] || [[Thoéry-3|Thoery, Roch]] || Dec 5, 1667 ||FR Y / EN n|| || |- |[[Leper-6|Leper, Anne]] || [[Pinsonnault_LaFleur-3|Pinsonnault dit Lafleur, François]] || 1673 || bio || || |- |[[L'Espine-1|Lépine, Andrée]] || [[Challe-5|Chasle, Claude]] || Nov 19, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Lespine-5|Lépine, Anne]] || [[Boucher-1134|Boucher dit Vin d'Espagne, François]] || Apr 21, 1664 || bio || || |- |Lépine, Marie || Faure dit St-Vivien, Moïse || Oct 29, 1677 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Le_Quin-1|Lequin, Élizabeth]] || [[Gaigneux-3|Gaigneur dit Laframboise, Jean]] || Jul 5, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Leroux-323|Leroux, Catherine]] || [[Goulet-259|Goulet, René]] || Oct 29, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Leroux-70|Leroux, Marie]] || [[Énaud-11|Énaud dit Canada, Jacques]] || bef 1673 || FR Y / EN y || || |- |[[Le_Roy-1104|Le Roy, Marie ]] ||[[Perusseau-4|Pérusseau, Pierre]] || Mar 8, 1666 || FR y || || |- |[[Leroy-1105|Marie Anne Le Roy dite Bardin]] ||[[Binet-220| Binet dit Lespérance, Mathieu]] || Oct 21, 1670 ||FR y || || |- |[[Lesaint-2|Lesaint, Marie]] || [[Marandeau-3|Maranda, Étienne]] || Nov 26, 1671 || bio || || |- |Lesdiller, Michelle || Milet dit Marandais, Nicolas || Dec 27, 1668 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[L'Espérance-12|Lespérance, Marie]] || [[Ponsart-1|Ponsart, Benoît]] || Nov 4, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Levaigneur-1|Levaigneur, Marguerite]] || [[Montreau-1|Montreau dit Francoeur, Léonard]] || Mar 1, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Le_Vavasseur-1|Le Vavasseur, Jeanne]] || [[Tesson-54|Tesson, Barthélemy]] || Oct 24, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |Levieux dite Colombe, Claire || Neveu, Pierre || Sep 2, 1670 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Liardain-1|Liardin, Marie]] ||[[Encougnerre-2|Lancogné, Pierre]] || Oct 9, 1668 ||FR Y/EN n || || |- |[[De_Licerace-1|Licerace, Suzanne]] ||[[Bisson-256| Bisson dit St-Côme, Michel]] || Nov 8, 1663 || Yes || || |- |[[Delimoges-57|Limoges, Marie]] || [[Laurence-268|Laurence, Noel]] || Nov 3, 1667 ||Yes || || |- |Linière, Jeanne-Marie-Anne || Aumeau, Louis || Jan 19, 1672 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Loiseau-60|Loiseau, Anne]] || [[Gendron-132|Gendron dit La Rondière, Guillaume]] || Jul 21, 1664 || bio || || |- |[[Loiseau-53|Loiseau, Françoise]] || [[Grégoire-106|Grégoire, Mathurin]] || Oct 7, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Loret-3|Loret, Étiennette]] || [[Lebeau-6|Bau dit Lalouette, Jean-Baptiste]] || 1671-1672 || bio || || |- |[[Loriot-1|Loriot, Perrette]] || [[Buteau-9|Buteau, Pierre]] || Oct 21, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[De_Lostelneau-1|de Lostelneau, Catherine]] || [[Denys-75|Denys de Vitray, Charles]] || Oct 18, 1668 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Louvet-5|Louvet, Catherine]] || [[Brassard-65|Brassard, Guillaume]] || Feb 15, 1672 || FR/EN Y || || |- |Lucos, Catherine || Moreau, Marin, dit Laporte || Nov 14, 1671 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Mabille-23|Mabille, Anne]] || [[Salois-40|Salois, Claude]] || 1666 || bio || || |- |[[Magdelain-1|Magdelain, Jeanne]] || [[Tapin-3|Tapin, Antoine]] || Nov 4, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Magnan-21|Magnan, Anne]] || [[Gauvin-18|Gauvin, Jean]] || Oct 22, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Magné-1|Magnier, Marie]] || [[Chartier-171|Chartier, Michel]] || 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Major-1048|Major, Marie]] || [[Roy-302|Roy dit Desjardins, Antoine]] || Sep 11, 1668 || bio || || |- |Malo, Marie || Brin dit La Pensée, Jacques || Sep 24, 1670 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[De_Mangeon-1|Mangeon, Claude]] || [[Lesueur-143|Lesueur dit Lagrandeur, Thomas]] || Nov 23, 1664 || No || || |- |[[Mansion-1|Mansion, Jeanne]] || [[Cherlot-4|Cherlot dit Desmoulins, Jean]] || Oct 9, 1669 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Marchand-250|Marand, Catherine]] || [[Nafrichon-1|Nafrechou, Laurent]] || Sep 17, 1667 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Marchand-254|Marand, Marie Elisabeth]] || [[Coeur-2|Coeur dit Jolicoeur, Pierre]] || Oct 6, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Marchesseau-15|Marchessault, Marie]] || [[Boutin-103|Boutin, Pierre]] || 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Marechal-31|Maréchal dite Dubois, Marguerite]] || [[Doyson-2|Doison, Sébastien]] || Nov 2, 1669 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Marechal-5|Maréchal, Madeleine]] || [[Poupardeau-3|Poupardeau, Pierre]] || abt 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Marier-1|Marié, Denise]] || [[Quenneville-5|Quenneville, Jean]] || Feb 12, 1674 || bio || || |- |[[Marie-41|Marié, Jeanne]] || [[Vezina-8|Vézina, François]] || Oct 29, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Martin-3461|Martin, Marie]] || [[Vallée-13|Vallée dit Lavallée, Jean]] || Feb 4, 1666 || bio || || |- |[[Martin-12973|Martin, Marie]] || [[Février-34|Février, Christophe]] || Nov 16, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Martin-228|Martin, Anne-Françoise]] ||[[Campagna-3|Campagna, Pierre]] || Jan 5, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Masseron-6|Masseron, Marie]] || [[Marset-2|Marset, François]] || 1672 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Masson-128|Masson, Anne]] || [[Galien-3|Galien, Robert]] || Sep 8, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[De_Matras-1|Matras, Jeanne-Judith]] || [[Legardeur-20|Legardeur, Charles]] || Dec 2, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Menancier-1|Menacier, Louise]] || [[Ledran-2|Ledran, Toussaint]] || Nov 12, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[Ménard-592|Ménard, Barbe]] || [[Vermet-19|Vermet dit Laforme, Antoine]] || Aug 26, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Mercier-524|Mercier, Marie]] || [[Chabaudie-3|Chevaudier dit Lépine, Jean]] || Oct 19, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Merlin-12|Merlin, Agathe]] || [[Loriot-6|Loriot, Jean]] || Aug 31, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Mesuré-1|Mesuré, Marie]] || [[Montambault-2|Montambault dit Léveillé, Michel]] || Dec 20, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Metru-1|Métru, Marie Anne]] || [[Samson-46|Samson, Jacques]] || Nov 26, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Meunier-76|Meunier, Antoinette]] || [[Aubert-75|Aubert, Jacques]] || Nov 9, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Meusnier-11|Meunier, Marie]] || [[Hudde-4|Hudde, Jacques]] || 1657 || bio || '''Married in France|| |- |Meunier, Marie || Bonin, Charles || Oct 7, 1665 || bio || '''NOT IN WT'''|| |- |[[Meunier-71|Meunier, Marie]] || [[Chrétien-63|Chrétien, Michel]] || Oct 13, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Michaud-8|Michaud, Marie-Louise]] || [[Daniau-15|Daniau dit Laprise, Jean]] || Sep 10, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Michel-38|Michaud, Françoise]] || [[Dupont-34|Dupont, Gilles]] || Aug 10, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Michel-286|Michel, Anne]] || [[Paviot-Lapensee-1|Paviot dit Lapensée, Jacques]] || 1668 or 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Michaud-563|Michel, Jacquette]] || [[Mignier-9|Mignier dit Lagacé, André]] || Oct 23, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Michel-1149|Michel, Marie]] || [[Morin-2339|Morin, Charles]] || Nov 3, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Mignot-28|Migneault, Catherine]] || [[Le_Moyne-5|Lemoine dit Lavallée, Pierre]] || Oct 15, 1673 || bio || || |- |[[Mignolet-1|Mignolet, Gillette]] || [[Minson-45|Minson dit Lafleur, Nicolas]] || Oct 19, 1671 || FR Y /EN N|| || |- |[[Millot-5|Millot, Françoise]] || [[Le_Picq-1|Lepicq, Jean]] || Oct 15, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Moisan-3|Moisan, Françoise]] || [[Brunet-593|Brunet dit Belhumeur, Antoine]] || Nov 28, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[Moitie-4|Moitié, Catherine]] || [[Viger-24|Viger, Désiré]] || Sep 19, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Moitié-9|Moitié, Marguerite]] || [[Gauthier-336|Gauthier, Joseph-Élie]] || Oct 24, 1663 || bio || || |- |[[Moitié-7|Moitié, Marie]] || [[Magnan-42|Magnan dit Lespérance, Jean]] || Mar 19, 1672 || bio || || |- |[[Montminy-1|Montminy, Marie]] || [[Roze-7|Rose, Noël]] || Jan 7, 1666 || bio || || |- |[[Mauvoisin-3|Monvoisin, Françoise]] ||[[Gariteau-1| Gariteau, Nicolas]] || Oct 10, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Moreau-408|Moreau, Marguerite]] || [[Faye-32|Faye dit Lafayette, Mathieu]] || Sep 30, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Maurice-2|Morin, Charlotte]] || [[LeTendre-6|Letendre dit Laliberté, Pierre]] || 1668 or 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Morin-534|Morin, Marie]] || [[Gignard-1|Gignard, Laurent]] || Sep 11, 1673 || bio || || |- |[[Morin-418|Morin, Marie]] || [[Dauphin-33|Dauphin, Étienne]] || Nov 15, 1665 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Morin-14|Morin, Marie]] || [[Boissel-3|Boissel, Noël]] || Jul 23, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Mouillard-1|Mouillard, Éléonore]] ||[[Chapelain-5| Chapelain, Bernard]] || Nov 9, 1671 || bio || || |- |[[Moutrarchy-1|Moutrachy, Marguerite]] ||[[Dupré-233|Dupré dit Champagne, Antoine]] || Jul 25, 1672 || bio || || |- |[[Mullois-1|Mullois, Marie]] || [[St-Ours-1|De St-Ours, Pierre]] || Jan 8, 1668 || bio || || |- |[[Navarre-303|Navarre, Marguerite]] ||[[Roy-842| Roy, Étienne]] || Aug 26, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Neple-1|Neple, Louise]] ||[[Anseau-3|Anceau, Beanjamin]] || bef may 1672 || FR / EN Y ||some authors do not include her, others do|| |- |[[De_Nevelet-1|de Nevelet, Marguerite]] || [[Bouat-2|Bouat, Abraham]] || Mar 19, 1670 || FR Y || || |- |[[Niel-2|Niel, Madeleine]] ||[[Charles-1001| Charles dit Lajeunesse, Étienne]] || Oct 24, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Normand-72|Normand, Catherine]] || [[Normand-73|Normand dit Labrière, Pierre]] || Sep 7, 1665 || bio || || |- |[[Normand-16|Normand, M.-Madeleine]] || [[Morin-143|Morin dit Valcour, Alphonse]] || Feb 10, 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Olivier-328|Olivier, Agnès]] || [[Sivadier-4|Sivadier, Louis]] || Oct 9, 1669 || bio || || |- |[[Olivier-12|Olivier, Madeleine]] || [[Rousseau-47|Rousseau, Thomas]] || Oct 5, 1667 || bio || || |- |[[Olivier-674|Olivier dite Triboulet, Jeanne]] || [[Le_Roux-414|Leroux, André]] || Oct 26, 1671 || FR Y / EN n|| || |- |[[Ollery-2|Ollery, Anne]] || [[Frérot-9|Thomas Frérot]] || 1669 or 1670 || bio || || |- |[[Ouinville-1|Ouinville, Michelle]] || [[Barabé-28|Barabé, Nicolas]] || Oct 21, 1668 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |}

Filles du Roi, P-Z

PageID: 34936557
Inbound links: 2
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 all views 1539
Created: 8 Sep 2021
Saved: 29 Mar 2024
Touched: 29 Mar 2024
Managers: 1
Watch List: 2
Project: WikiTree-68
Images: 0
'''Filles du Roi''' '''P - Z''' Managed by [[WikiTree-68|Filles du Roi project]] ''Gérées par le projet des Filles du Roi'' {| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable" - | '''Fille du Roi''' || '''Husband''' || '''Marriage or Contract Date''' || '''Bio FR/EN''' || '''Notes'''|| |- |[[Pahin-1|Pahin, Claude-Philiberte]] || [[Coirier-3|Coirier, Pierre]] || Sep 18, 1673 || No || || |- |[[Papin-18|Papin, Madeleine]] || [[Cachelièvre-2|Cachelièvre, Jacques]] || Sep 12, 1672 || No || || |- |[[Paquet-13|Paquet, Marguerite]] || [[Biville_Dit_le_Picard-1|Biville dit Le Picard, François]] || Nov 26, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Parement-1|Parement, Perrette]] || [[Lory-8|Lory dit Gargot, François]] || Oct 1, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Parenteau-36|Parenteau, Marie]] || [[Fauvel-30|Fauvel, Pierre]] || Oct 6, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Paris-35|Paris, Françoise]] || [[Petitclerc-1|Petitclerc, Pierre]] || Sep 11, 1673 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Pasquier-25|Pasquier dite Defranclieu, Marie]] || [[Couillard-21|Couillard, Charles]] || Jan 10, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Paul-1848|Paul, Catherine]] || [[Dechambre-3|De Chambre dit Lachambre, Jean]] || Oct 21, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Paulo-2|Paulo, Catherine]] || [[Campeau-22|Campeau, Étienne]] || Nov 26, 1663 || No || || |- |[[Paviot-7|Paviot, Marie]] || [[Mondin-1|Mondin, Antoine]] || May 13, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Payant-13|Payant, Marie-Marthe]] || [[Corneau-8|Corneau, Mathurin]] || Oct 6, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Péchina-1|Péchina, Marie]] || [[Gourault-1|Gourault dit La Gaillardise, Guillaume]] || Aug 11, 1672 || Yes || || |- |Pecquet, Charlotte || Richard, René || 1671 || No || '''NOT ON WT'''|| |- |[[Pedenelle-1|Pednel, Françoise]] || [[Arrive-16|Arrivé, Maurice]] || Jun 2, 1670 || Yes |||| |- |[[Pelletier-994|Pelletier, Marie]] || [[Renaut-8|Renaud, Mathurin]] || Oct 7, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Pelletier-2160|Pelletier dite Passavant, Anne]] ||[[Papin-98| Papin, Pierre]] || Dec 14, 1665 || No |||| |- |[[Pelois-1|Pelois, Marguerite]] || [[Boivin-102|Boivin dit Panse, Jacques]] || Nov 17, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Perodeau-8|Pérodeau, Marie]] || [[Stems-2|Stems, Georges]]|| Sep 16, 1669 || No |||| |- |[[Perrault-43|Perreault, Anne]] || [[Blais-32|Blais, Pierre]] || Oct 12, 1669 || No |||| |- |[[Pescher-1|Pescher, Marie]] || [[Harel-10|Harel, Jean]] || 1671 or 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Petit-2|Petit, Jeanne]] || [[Séguin-386|Séguin dit Ladéroute, François]] || Oct 31, 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Petit-345|Petit, Louise]] || [[De_Laurice-2|Delaurice dit Jambon, Charles]] || Sep 14, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Petit-131|Petit, Marie]] || [[Delage-6|Delage, Nicolas]] || Oct 10, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Petit-13|Petit, Marie-Rose]] || [[Frappier-2|Frappier, Hilaire]] || Oct 16, 1668 || No |||| |- |[[Petit-728|Petit, Marie Thérèse]] || [[Laurent-289|Laurent dit Champagne, Christophe]] || Oct 29, 1669 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Peuvrier-1|Peuvrier, Marguerite]] || [[Meneux-3|Meneux dit Châteauneuf, Jacques]] || Oct 23, 1663 || Yes || || |- |[[Philippe-2|Philippe, Anne]] || [[Bacquet-18|Bacquet dit Lamontagne, François]] || Nov 24, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Philippe-57|Philippe, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Tousignan-6|Tousignant dit Lapointe, Pierre]] || Oct 17, 1668 || Yes |||| |- |[[Philippeau-12|Philippeau, Nicole]] || [[Gauthier-48|Gauthier dit Landreville, Mathurin]] || 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Piéton-8|Piéton, Françoise]] || [[Achin-17|Achin dit St-André, André]] || Oct 24, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Pillat-6|Pillard, Catherine]] || [[Charron-28|Charron dit Ducharme, Pierre]] || Oct 19, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Pilois-1|Pilois, Françoise]] || [[Barsa-1|Barsa dit Lafleur, André]] || Dec 2, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Pilois-7|Pilois, Françoise]] || [[Cassé-32|Cassé, Antoine]] || Oct 14, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Pineault-4|Pineau dite La Vieville, Anne]] || [[Gaudreau-27|Gaudreau, Gilles]] || Oct 15, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Pitau-1|Piton, Marie]] || [[Bergevin-21|Bergevin dit Langevin, Jean]] || Nov 26, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|||| |- |[[Planteau-1|Planteau, Isabelle]] || [[Talon-13|Talon, Lucien]] || Oct 12, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Plémaret-1|Plémaret, Marie-Geneviève]] || [[Renauld-1|Renauld dit Letambour, Antoine]] || Jan 11, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Plouard-1|Plouard, Madeleine]] ||[[Viau-79|Viau dit Lespérance, Jacques]] || Jan 21, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Poignet-2|Poignet dite Beauregard, Marguerite]] || [[Cousson-2|Cousson dit Langoumois, François]] || Oct 30, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Pointel-2|Pointel, Marthe]] || [[Benoit-350|Benoît dit Laforest, Abel]] || Nov 9, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Poiré-9|Poiré, Marie]] || [[Hardy-2446|Hardy, Jean]] || Oct 21, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Poisson-50|Poisson, Catherine]] || [[Gautron-12|Gautron dit La Rochelle, Michel]] || Sep 18, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Poitevin-8|Poitevin, Catherine]] || [[Isabelle-39|Isabelle, Adrien]] || Oct 10, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Poitreau-1|Poitraud, Anne]] || [[Bruneau-47|Bruneau dit Jolicoeur, René]] || Sep 17, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Poitron-1|Poitron, Anne]] || [[Martin-15198|Martin, Pierre]] || Aug 25, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Portas-12|Portas, Marie-Angélique]] ||[[Lecomte-22| Lecompte, Jean]] || Jan 30, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Pothier-207|Pothier, Marie]] || [[Prevost-380|Prévost dit Laviolette, Élie]] || Nov 24, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Poussin-2|Poussin, Marie-Anne]] || [[L'Archevêque-3|Larchevêque, Jean]] || Sep 7, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Pratte-2|Prat, Claude]] || [[Giard-2|Giard dit St-Martin, Nicolas]] || Nov 17, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Prevost-276|Prévost, Marie]] ||[[Aubin-42|Aubin, Michel]]|| Jun 11, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Prévost-16|Prévost, Marie]] ||[[Bruneau-70|Druineau dit Bruneau, François]] || Oct 9, 1669 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Le_Prévost-12|Le Prévost, Élisabeth]] ||[[Foucault-7|Foucault, Jean François]] || Nov 14, 1671 ||FR/EN Y |||| |- |[[Le_Prévost-11|Le Prévost, Marguerite]] || [[Poisson-93|Poisson, Martin]] || Oct 27, 1669 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Briau-1|Priault, Marie (Briau)]] ||[[Geoffrion-12|Geoffrion, Pierre]] || 1668/9 || FR/EN Y |||| |- |[[Provinlieu-1|de Provinlieu, Marie Marguerite]] || [[Hussy-24|Hussy dit Bellerose, Jean]] || Oct 11, 1672||FR Y/EN n|| || |- |[[Provost-135|Provost, Marguerite]] || [[Venne-7|Venne, Jacques]] || 1670 or 1671 || No || || |- |[[Prunier-12|Prunier, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Gailloux-14|Gaillou, Jean]] || Nov 4, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Quelue-1|Quelvé, Jeanne]] || [[Brassard-16|Brassard, Jean-Baptiste]] || Apr 26, 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Quantin-8|Quentin, Jeanne]] || [[Chanas-2|Chanas, Jean Pierre]] || Sep 9, 1673 || FR Y / EN N || || |- |[[Quequejeu-1|Quéquejeu, Marie]] || [[Rivaut-2|Rivault, Pierre]] || Oct 30, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Quitel-1|Quitel, Marthe]] || [[Verreault-3|Verreau dit Le Bourguignon, Barthélemy]] || Sep 22, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Rabady-1|Rabady, Anne]] || [[Lescuyer-3|Lescuyer, Antoine]] || 1672 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Rableau-1|Rableau, Florimonde]] || [[Chamard-3|Chamard, Pierre]] || Oct 13, 1665 || FR Y / EN n || || |- |[[Raclos-1|Raclos, Françoise]] || [[David-112|David, Michel]] || Dec 2, 1671 || Yes |||| |- |[[Raclos-2|Raclos, Madeleine]] || [[Perrault-96|Perrault, Nicolas]] || Nov 11, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Raclos-5|Raclos, Marie]] || [[Beaudoin-202|Beaudoin, René]] || Oct 12, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Ragot-21|Ragot, Marthe]] || [[Samson-651|Samson, Louis]] || Feb 26, 1664 || No || || |- |[[Raimbault-16|Raimbault, Jeanne]] || [[Raimbault-15|Raimbault, Étienne]] || about 1670 || No || || |- |[[Raisin-5|Raisin, Marguerite]] || [[Deniger-6|Deniger dit Sansoucy, Bernard]] || 1670 or 1671 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Raveau-1|Raveau dite Laumonnier, Barbe]] || [[Malherbaut-2|Malherbeau, Jean]] || Oct 9, 1673 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Relot-1|Relot, Catherine]] || [[Badié-26|Badier dit Laforest, Charles]] || Apr 24, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Remondière-3|Remondière, Andrée]] || [[Rondeau-30|Rondeau, Thomas]] || Oct 31, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Rémy-83|Rémy, Marie]] || [[Desautels-8|Desautels dit Lapointe, Pierre]] || Jan 11, 1666 || FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Renard-49|Renard dite Lecointe, Jeanne]] || [[Dion-138|Dion, Jacques]] || Apr 26, 1672 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Renault-30|Renaud, Anne Michelle]] || [[Laspron-2|Laspron or Lampron dit Lacharité, Jean]] || Oct 7, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Renaut-9|Renaud, Élisabeth]] || [[Olivier-677|Olivier, Jean]] || Sep 20, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Renault-33|Renault, Marguerite]] || [[Lopez-5063|Lopez dit Madère, Emmanuel]] || Oct 3, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Renaud-113|Renaud, Marie]] || [[Leroux-66|Leroux dit Cardinal, François]] || Oct 25, 1668 || Yes || || |- |Renaud, Marie || Petit, Charles || 1669 or 1670 || No ||'''NOT ON WT'''|| |- |[[Renouard-5|Renouard, Marie Catherine]] || [[Durand-194|Durand, Nicolas]] || Dec 22, 1665 ||FR Y / EN n|| || |- |[[Rentier-3|Rentier dite Courcoul, Madeleine]] || [[Roy-1429|Roy, Olivier]] || Nov 6, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Repoche-8|Repoche, Jeanne]] || [[Bilodeau-403|Bilodeau, Jérôme]] || Feb 4, 1664 || Yes || || |- |[[Repoche-1|Repoche, Marie]] || [[Jamin-6|Jamin, Julien]] || Sep 16, 1664 || Yes |||| |- |[[Richard-347|Richard, Marie]] || [[Daunay-6|Daunay, Antoine]] || Aug 24, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Richer-37|Richer, Georgette]] || [[Dupuis-61|Dupuis, François]] || Oct 6, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Richer-190|Richer, Marguerite]] || [[Verdon-99|Verdon, Jean]] || Sep 19, 1672 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Rigaud-2|Rigaud, Geneviève]] || [[Têtu-10|Têtu, Pierre]] || Oct 11, 1667 || Yes |||| |- |[[Rigaud-66|Rigaud, Jeanne]] ||[[Poirier-3192|Poirier dit Langevin, Michel]] || about 1673 || FR Y/ EN n|| || |- |[[Rioult-3|Rioult , Madeleine]] || [[La_Vallée-6|La Vallée, Louis]] || Sep 10, 1673 ||FR Y / EN N || || |- |[[Rivet-16|Rivet, Anne]] || [[Ouellet-20|Ouellet, René]] || Mar 8, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Rivet-52|Rivet, Catherine]] || [[Duchesne-34|Duchesne dit Lapierre, Pierre]] || Jan 7, 1666 || Yes |||| |- |[[Rivière-80|Rivière, Anne]] || [[Seleurier-1|Seleurier dit Deslauriers, Jean]] || about 1676 || FR Y |||| |- |[[Rivière-251|Rivière, Marie]] || [[Ratier-16|Ratier dit du Buisson, Jean]] || Feb 16, 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Rivière-39|Rivière, Renée]] || [[Croiset-3|Croiset, Mathurin]] || 1666 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Robin-172|Robin, Louise]] || [[Gaumont-45|Gaumond, Robert]] || Oct 26, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Robineau-16|Robineau, Marguerite]] ||[[Gauron-3|Gauron dit Petitbois, Michel]] || Oct 17, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Robineau-3|Robineau, Marie]] || [[Forgues-9|Forgues dit Monrougeau, Jean-Pierre]] || Oct 16, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Rossignol-14|Rossignol dite Grossonneau, Jeanne]] || [[Petit-180|Petit, Charles]] || Sep 1, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Rotteau-1|Roteau, Barbe]] || [[Moisan-34|Moisan, Pierre]] || Sep 11, 1673 || Yes |||| |- |[[Rousseau-318|Rousseau, Anne]] || [[Juneau-47|Jouineau, Pierre]] || bef Oct 1663 || Yes ||Arrived before 1663|| |- |[[Rousseau-274|Rousseau, Henriette]] || [[Paquet-95|Paquet, Étienne]] || Nov 6, 1668 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Roussel-59|Roussel, Charlotte]] || [[Gauthier-395|Gauthier dit Sanguingoira, Pierre]] || Nov 12, 1668 || No || || |- |[[Roussel-4|Roussel, Marguerite]] || [[Duchiron-1|Duchiron dit Deslauriers, Mathurin]] || Sep 28, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Rousselin-4|Rousselin, Suzanne]] || [[Leblanc-2277|Leblanc, Jacques]] || Jun 6, 1666 || No || || |- |[[Rousselot-1|Rousselot, Marguerite]] || [[Flibot-2|Flibot, Charles]] || Sep 22, 1673 || Yes || || |- |Routy, Marie-Marguerite || Guillaud, Nicolas || Oct 22, 1668 || No || '''NOT ON WT'''|| |- |[[Roux-171|Roux, Aimée]] || [[Tinon-3|Tinon dit Desroches et Deslauriers, Aimard]] || Feb 6, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Leroy-227|Roy, Anne]] || [[Rodrigue-14|Rodrigue, Jean]] || Oct 28, 1671 || Yes |||| |- |[[Roy-111|Roy, Anne]] || [[Bouchard-68|Bouchard, Nicolas]] || Sep 30, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Roy-1333|Roy, Catherine]] || [[Salvail-5|Salvail, Pierre]] || Nov 13, 1673 || Yes |||| |- |[[Roy-1167|Roy, Élisabeth]] || [[Paillereau-2|Paillereau, Pierre]] || Oct 12, 1665|| Yes || || |- |[[Roy-1647|Roy, Jeanne]] || [[Bonnet-79|Bonnet, Étienne]] || Jan 26, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Le_Roy-1104|Le Roy, Marie ]] ||[[Perusseau-4|Pérusseau, Pierre]] || Mar 8, 1666 || FR y ||'''see Le Roy''' || |- |[[Roy-964|Roy, Marie]] || [[Thibodeau-56| Thibodeau dit Lalime, Mathurin]] || Jul 11, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Le_Roy-37|Roy, Marguerite]] || [[Charbonneau-199|Chardonneau, Hilaire]] || Jul 27, 1665 || No || || |- |Roy dite Bardin, Marie Anne || Binet dit Lespérance, Mathieu || Oct 21, 1670 ||FR y || '''See Leroy''' || |- |[[Royer-361|Royer, Nicole]] || [[Desmeillers-2|Desmilliers, Martin]] || Nov 3, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Sageot-1|Sageot, Geneviève]] || [[Adhemar-4|Adhémar, Antoine]] || Oct 10, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Salé-236|Salé, Isabelle]] || [[Marcotte-6|Marcot, Jacques]] || Sep 9, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Sale-312|Salé, Madeleine-Thérèse]] || [[Raimbault-18|Raimbault, Claude]] || Dec 15, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Samson-667|Samson, Marguerite]] || [[Beaugrand-15|Beaugrand dit Champagne, Jean]] || 1670 or 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Saulnier-66|Saulnier, Nicole]] || [[Brochu-6|Brochu, Jean]]|| Oct 28, 1669 || Yes |||| |- |[[Sonnois-4|Saunois, Thérèse]] || [[Vacher-71|Vacher, Pierre]] || Oct 26, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Savard-44|Savard, Gillette]] || [[Filteau-39|Filteau, Pierre]] || Feb 22, 1666 ||FR/EN Y |||| |- |[[Savonnet-1|Savonnet, Jeanne]] || [[Soucy-7|Soucy dit Lavigne, Jean]] || 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Sederay-1|Sederay, Jeanne]] || [[Picard-162|Picard, Pierre]] || Jul 21, 1669 || FR/EN Y |||| |- |[[Seigneur-4|Seigneur, Anne]] || [[Besset-25|Besset dit Brisetout, Jean]] || Jul 3, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Leseigneur-4|Le Seigneur, Marie]] || [[Sasseville-15|Sasseville, Pierre]] || Sep 8, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Sel-16|Sel, Marguerite]] || [[Noël-681|Noël, Jean]] || Oct 12, 1671 || Yes |||| |- |[[Selle-30|Sel, Marie]] || [[Guillemet-2|Guillemet, Nicolas]] || Oct 17, 1667 || Yes |||| |- |[[Selle-33|Sel, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[Aurio-2|Auriot, Louis-Pierre]] || Sep 21, 1673 || Yes || '''[https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/575858 See G2G]'''|| |- |[[Sellerin-1|Sellerin, Marguerite]] || [[Denys-78|Denis dit Lafontaine, Louis]] || Oct 12, 1671 || FR Y EN N || || |- |[[Sénécal-101|Senécal, Catherine]] || [[Lafond-92|Lafond, Jean]] || Oct 12, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Sénécal-134|Senécal, Louise]] || [[Guilbeau-25|Guilbault, Pierre]] || Oct 6, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Servignan-1|Servignan, Jeanne]] || [[Ronceray-4|Ronceray dit Le Breton, Jean]] || Oct 13, 1665 || No || || |- |[[Sicard-92|Sicard, Jeanne]] || [[Guillot-4|Guillot, Vincent]] || Sep 9, 1670 || Yes |||| |- |[[Souillard-1|Souillard, Nicole]] || [[Gabory-2|Gaboury dit Lemajor, Louis]] || Nov 16, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Suret-38|Suret, Catherine]] || [[Fasche-3|Fâche, Nicolas]] || Oct 7, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Talbot-4|Talbot, Anne]] || [[Gareau-40|Gareau dit Saintonge, Jean]] || Nov 2, 1670 || Yes |||| |- |[[Targer-1|Targer, Marie]] || [[Royer-46|Royer, Jean]] || Nov 22, 1663 || Yes |||| |- |[[De_Tarragon-10|Tarragon, Anne Élisabeth ]]|| [[Couturier-117|Couturier, Gilles]]|| bef. Mar 1676 || No || || |- |[[Tavernier-40|Tavernier, Anne]] || [[Moussion-1|Mossion dit Lamouche, Robert]] || May 5, 1666 || FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Tavrey-1|Tavrey, Martine]] || [[Marcot-9|Marcot, Nicolas]] || Sep 14, 1670 || Yes |||| |- |[[Tellier-85|Letellier, Jeanne]] || [[Gerbert-21|Gerber, Mathurin]] || Oct 11, 1670 || Fr/En Y ||Listed under Tellier by most authors, signs Letellié || |- |[[Ténard-5|Ténard, Marguerite]] || [[Boyer-29|Boyer, Charles]] || Nov 23, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Terillon-3|Térillon, Geneviève]] ||[[Joly-39| Joly dit Delbec, Pierre]] || Jul 4, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Tesson-59|Tesson, Marguerite]] || [[Maheu-1|Maheu, Jean-Paul]] || Nov 13, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Tetu-5|Têtu, Madeleine]] || [[Joubert-64|Joubert, Jean]] || Nov 4, 1669 || Yes |||| |- |[[Thibierge-3|Thibierge, Marie-Madeleine]] || [[St._Denis-117|St-Denis, Pierre]] || Sep 13, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Thirement-1|Thirement, Anne]] || [[De_Peiras-2|De Peiras, Jean-Baptiste]] || Aug 18, 1671 || No || || |- |[[Thomas-1102|Thomas, Anne]] || [[Jodoin-2|Jodoin, Claude]] || Mar 22, 1666 || Yes || || |- |[[Tierce-3|Tierce, Françoise]] || [[Coulon-27|Coulon dit Mabrian, Auffray]] || Oct 13, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Tirmont-1|Tiremont, Noëlle]] || [[Bertin-38|Bertin dit Languedoc, Bernard]] || Sep 23, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Tisserand-2|Tisserand, Madeleine]] || [[Parenteau-55|Parenteau dit Lafontaine, Pierre]] || Sep 12, 1673 || No |||| |- |[[Topsan-1|Topsan, Catherine]] || [[Dumont-194|Dumont dit Lafleur, Julien]] || Nov 2, 1667 || No || || |- |[[Toussaint-3|Toussaint, Marie-Jeanne]] || [[Carpentier-12|Carpentier, Noël]] || abt 1672 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Touze-2|Touzé, Jeanne]] || [[Gazaille-12|Gazaille dit St-Germain, Jean]] || Oct 8, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Trochet-1|Trochet dite Richard, Françoise]] || [[Pelletier-158|Pelletier, Pierre]] || Dec 10, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Le_Tru-1|Tru, Suzanne]] || [[Cadou-1|Cadou, Jean]] || Aug 23, 1666 || No |||| |- |[[Turbar-1|Turbar, Ursule-Madeleine]] || [[Gely-6|Gély dit Laverdure, Jean]] || Oct 19, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Vaillant-18|Vaillant, Marguerite]] || [[Dania-4|Dania, Jean]] || 1668 || No |||| |- |[[Vallée-172|Vallant, Perrette]] || [[Bourassa-64|Bourassa, Jean]] || Oct 20, 1665 || Yes || || |- |[[Valade-3|Valade, Marie]] || [[Cadieux-12|Cadieux, Jean]] || Nov 26, 1663 || Yes |||| |- |[[Valet-19|Valet, Cécile]] || [[Durand-201|Durand dit Larose, Michel]] || Oct 27, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Valet-16|Valet, Louise]] || [[Bisson-187|Bisson dit Lépine, René]] || Sep 16, 1670 || Yes || || |- |[[Vallée-173|Vallée, Madeleine-Judith]] || [[Herpin-15|Herpin dit Tourangeau, Jean]] || Oct 3, 1669 || No || || |- |[[De_Valois-220|Valois, Catherine]]|| [[Lesné-11|Laîné dit Leboesme, Benoît]] || Jan 26, 1672 || No || || |- |[[Phansèque-1| Vanzègue, Anne-Marie]] || [[Leroux-33|Leroux dit Rousson, Hubert]] || Nov 20, 1673 || Yes || || |- |[[Vara-6|Vara, Marie]] || [[Bariteau-4|Bariteau dit LaMare, Louis]] || 1671 || No |||| |- |[[Varin-14|Varin, Catherine]] || [[Tessier-163|Tessier, Pierre]] || Jul 5, 1666 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Varin-8|Varin, Marie]] || [[Branche-2|Branche, René]] || Nov 22, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Vassal-18|Vassal, Françoise]] || [[LeCacheux-2|Cacheux, Nicolas]] || May 3, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Vaublin-1|Vaubelin, Marie]] || [[Cochereau-1|Cochereau, Pierre]] || Nov 3, 1665 ||FR/EN Y || || |- |[[Vaucher-2|Vaucher, Louise]] || [[Delguel-2|Delguel dit Labrèche, Jean]] || Nov 28, 1668 || Yes || || |- |[[Vauquet-1|Vauquet, Marie]] || [[D'orillard-2|Dorillard dit St-Jean, Guy]] || Oct 7, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Verger-5|Verger, Marie]] || [[Hus-71|Hus, Jean]] || Sep 15, 1670 || No || || |- |[[Verrier-12|Verrier, Catherine]] || [[Rondeau-26|Rondeau, Pierre]] || Sep 30, 1669 || Yes|| || |- |[[Viard-6|Viard, Marguerite]] || [[Benard-9|Bénard dit Lajeunesse, Mathurin]] || Oct 11, 1672 || Yes || || |- |[[Vié-13|Vié dite Lamothe, Marie-Sainte]] || [[Poitras-104|Poitras, Jean]] || Aug 27, 1664 || Yes || || |- |[[Vieillot-1|Vieillot, Catherine]] || [[Dubois-624|Dubois, Jacques]] || Oct 18, 1667 || Yes || || |- |[[Viel-6|Viel, Marie-Thérèse]] || [[Boyer-643|Boyer dit Lafontaine, Étienne]] || Oct 26, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[De_Vigny-1|Vigny, Marie]] || [[Mory-9|Amaury, Jean]] || Sep 25, 1673 || No || || |- |[[Villain-32|Vilain, Jeanne]] || [[Bernier-583|Bernier dit Lamarzelle, Mathurin]] || Oct 28, 1670 ||FR/EN Y|| || |- |[[Vitard-1|Vitard, Louise]] ||[[Denevers-1|Denevers, Guillaume]] || Dec 10, 1671 || Yes || || |- |[[Vitry-4|Vitry, Marguerite]] || [[Derry-80|Déry dit Larose, Jacques]] || Oct 13, 1669 || No || || |- |[[Voguer-1|Voguer, Marie]] || [[Chiron-3|Chiron, Louis]] || Nov 4, 1669 || Yes || || |- |[[Zachée-1|Zachée, Françoise]] || [[De_Xaintes-2|De Xaintes, Claude]] || Apr 27, 1671 || Yes || || |- |}

Filles du Roi Project Members

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Members of Filles du Roi Project and what they are working on: ==Administration== *[[Giffin-437|Laurie Giffin]] Leader. *[[Liard-1|Danielle Liard]] Coordinator. ==Members== (Alphabetical list) * [[Doughty-292|Doughty, Marie]] - * [[Hope-2305|Hope, Tessa]] - Currently working on cleaning up the letters 'D' to 'L'. I can translate into English for those profiles with only French, but I am terrible at actually writing in French. * [[Grand'Maison-40|''Mystery'' Grand'Maison]] - Every now and then I get in the groove to add proper biographies for the profiles :D * [[LaBossiere-31|LaBossiere, Jim]] - Currently editing the D-F List of Filles du Roi. I am adding the profile links where there were none and NOTHING which ones look like they are not yet on WikiTree. Finding some who are duplicated on different lists due to spelling varations. DO WE WANT TO KEEP THESE DUPLICATES ON PURPOSE? *[[Rogers-15338|Rogers, Jeanette]] - I'm working on sourcing and clean up. Although I can both read and speak French well, my written French is very rusty, so perhaps I should only do biographies in English and let someone else translate them. :) I am starting on Marguerite Delorme. * [[St-Amour-4| St-Amour, Louise]] - working on profiles in need of sources. * [[Tardif-59|Tardif, Gaston]] - manager of many filles du roi profiles, working on biographies as time allows. * [[Thibault-751|Thibault, Sara]] ==Want to help== *See how to join the project [[Project:Filles_du_Roi#How_To_Join|here]]

Film/TV Genres

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'''THRILLER'''
Cindy
Cheryl
Mindy
Greta
David
Rhonda
Johannes
'''MYSTERY'''
Cindy
David
Rhonda
Emma
'''HORROR'''
Karen
Mindy
Greta
Rhonda
'''SUPERNATURAL'''
Karen
Greta
Rhonda
'''COMEDY'''
Karen
Ludwig
Greta
Debi
David
Wendy
Rhonda
Ginny
Peggy W
'''ACTION'''
Mindy
David
Alex
Ginny
'''SCI FI'''
Ludwig
Karen
Lothar
Debi
Chandra
Alex
Wendy
Rhonda
Hilary
Mary
Ginny
Azure
Sondra
'''CRIME'''
Pip
Karen
David
Hilary
Emma
'''HISTORICAL'''
Pip
Hilary
Emma
'''ADVENTURE'''
David
'''WESTERNS'''
David
Karen
'''FANTASY'''
Chandra
Karen
Rhonda
Mary
Sondra
'''DOCUMENTARIES'''
Alex
Karen
Peggy W
'''FOREIGN'''
Alex
'''EPIC''' Mary
'''ESOTERIC''' Johannes

Filmography of Harry Melling

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Return to [[Melling-82|profile]] ---- Here is a more complete filmography of appearances by Harry Melling: * Film ** 2001 Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, as Dudley Dursley ** 2002 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets ** 2004 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban ** 2007 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix ** 2010 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 ** 2016 The Lost City of Z, as William Barclay ** 2017 The Current War, as Benjamin Vale ** 2018 The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, as Harrison Segment: "Meal Ticket" ** 2018 The Keeper, as Sergeant Smythe ** 2019 Waiting for the Barbarians, as Garrison Soldier 4 ** 2020 The Old Guard, as Steven Merrick ** 2020 Say Your Prayers, as Tim ** 2020 The Devil All the Time, as Roy Laferty ** 2021 The Tragedy of Macbeth, as Malcolm ** 2022 Please Baby Please, as Arthur ** 2022 The Pale Blue Eye, as Edgar Allan Poe ** 2023 Shoshana, as Geoffrey J. Morton ** TBA Harvest Post-production * Television ** 2005 Friends and Crocodiles, as Young Oliver Television film ** 2010 Merlin, as Gilli 1 episode ** 2010 Just William, as Robert Brown 4 episodes ** 2011 Garrow's Law, as George Pinnock 3 episodes ** 2016 The Musketeers, as Bastien 1 episode ** 2019 The War of the Worlds, as Artilleryman Miniseries, 2 episodes ** 2019 His Dark Materials, as Sysselman 1 episode ** 2020 The Queen's Gambit, as Harry Beltik Miniseries, 4 episodes ** TBA Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light, as Thomas Wriothesley * Stage ** 2009 Mother Courage and her Children, as Swiss Cheese Royal National Theatre ** 2010 Bedroom, Dens and Other Forms of Magic Theatre503 ** 2010 Women Beware Women, as Young Ward Royal National Theatre ** 2011 The School for Scandal, as Sir Benjamin Backbite Barbican Centre ** 2011 When Did You Last See My Mother? , as Ian Trafalgar Studios ** 2012 I Am a Camera, as Christopher Isherwood Southwark Playhouse ** 2013 Smack Family Robinson, as Sean Robinson Rose Theatre, Kingston ** 2013 The Hothouse, as Lamb Trafalgar Studios ** 2013 King Lear, as Fool Minerva Theatre, Chichester ** 2014 King Lear, as Fool Brooklyn Academy of Music ** 2014 peddling, as Boy HighTide Festival ** 2014 The Angry Brigade, as Morris, Commander, Prophet, Snitch, Manager, Jim Theatre Royal, Plymouth, Oxford Playhouse, Warwick Arts Centre, Watford Palace Theatre ** 2016 Hand to God, as Jason/Tyrone Vaudeville Theatre, London ** 2016 King Lear, as Edgar The Old Vic ** 2017 Jam, as Kane Finborough Theatre * Video games ** 2007 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, as Dudley Dursley Voice ==Acknowledgments== [[Wikipedia:Harry_Melling|Harry Melling on Wikipedia]]

Fincastle County Virginia Land Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fincastle_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Fincastle County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fincastle'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fincastle'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fincastle County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1772-1776'''. If your ''Fincastle'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fincastle'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Fincastle County Land Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Fincastle County Land'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Grantor||Grantee||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |A||12||John Buchanan exec.||Patrick Campbell (of Augusta Co)||1773||270 acres on Woods River; Reed Creek|| |-

Fincastle County Virginia Marriage Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fincastle_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Fincastle County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fincastle'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fincastle'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fincastle County. This page has the '''Campbell Marriage Records for the years 1772-1776'''. If your ''Fincastle'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fincastle'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fincastle County Virginia Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Fincastle_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Fincastle County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Fincastle'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Fincastle'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Fincastle County. This page has the '''Campbell Probate Records for the years 1772-1776'''. If your ''Fincastle'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Fincastle'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finch

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The goal of this project is to follow the lineage back as far as possible. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Finch-2244|Donald Finch]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. So far I have taken this back through my father (Fred Earl Finch 1924-1975) grandfather (Fred Lloyd Finch 1898-1970) great grandfather (John A Finch 1873-1956) 2X Great grandfather (Lyman S Finch 1835-1875) and 3X great grandfather (John Finch 1808-1860). This is where I have hit a dead end. The last ancestor John Finch lived in Bedford Westchester County NY and his son Lyman moved to Connecticut after the civil war. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12726740 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finch Hinrichs Vandecar Weidman Family Documents

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SchenectadyGazette25Oct1966WmEHinrichsObit.jpg
SchenectadyGazette09Oct1953Pg35WardFinchObit.jpg
WWIDraftCardWmEHinrichs.jpg
1905NYStateCensusGilboaSchoharieNYWardEFinch.jpg
SchenectadyGazette09Jun1952Pg2WalterFinchSvc.jpg
SchenectadyGazette05Jul1973Pg36GraduationPartyHeld.jpg
SchenectadyGazette19Nov1940Pg12JosephineVandecarHerringtonObit.jpg
SchenectadyGazette31May1973Pg27CarolynBobrowich.jpg
BapChurchCemCliftonPark-Potts.jpg
SchenectadyGazette23Nov1921Pg11LeonardFinchAnnaWeidman.jpg
SchenectadyGazette14Jul1967FriSec3Page19AnnaWeidmanFinch.jpg
SchenectadyGazette14Nov1932EdwardWeidman.jpg
SchenectadyGazetteFri27Jun1958EarlRuseObit.jpg
1892NYStateCensusFultonSchoharieNYFinch.jpg
SchenectadyGazette08Apr1953EllisWeidmanJr.jpg
SchenectadyGazette14Sep1966LeonardFinchMemorium.jpg
RenoEveGazette23Nov1979NinaAnnFinchNicholson.jpg
SchenectadyGazette18Jul1951EllisWeidmanJr.jpg
SchenectadyGazette27Feb1943Pg4ElmyraYoungWeidmanObit.jpg
SchenectadyGazette12Jun1956MarrJanetHinrichsJamesSargent.jpg
SchenectadyGazette21Apr1953EllisWeidmanJr.jpg
SchenectadyGazette09Apr1953EllisWeidmanJr.jpg
BapChurchCemCliftonPark-Collinger.jpg
SchenectadyGazette10Jun1939Pg7MarrRethaHinrichsHarryMoeller.jpg
SchenectadyGazette17Oct1944Pg11MarrFloydFinchNinaHinrichs.jpg
BapChurchCemCliftonPark-Vandecars.jpg
SchenectadyGazette05Feb1959Pg24MarrRbtFinchDawnHanson.jpg
WWIDraftCardHarveyVandecar.jpg
SchenectadyGazette24Feb1973Pg27JohnCBobrowich.jpg
SchenectadyGazette20Aug1946Pg14MarrViolaVandecarEarlRuso.jpg
WWIDraftCardJohnFHinrichsJr.jpg
WWIDraftCardBernardAHinrichs.jpg
SchenectadyGazette10Oct1953Pg20WardFinchObit.jpg
Newspaper clippings, NY State Census, Draft Cards, and other pertinent documents for the Finch/Hinrichs/Vandecar/Weidman Families.

Find A Grave Link Generator, Mike Simmons (

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Search 137.2 million cemetery records at by entering a surname and clicking search:
Surname:

Find A Grave Memorial

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with headstone photograph and biographical information https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/63897805/nancy-bunten

Find a Grave Memorial

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Henry Rhodes, son of Walter Rhodes, immigrated from England prior to 1637. He married ELIZABETH WHITE around 1639 in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Henry was a Lieutenant in the Provincial Forces in Lynn in 1637, and served against the Indians in the Narraganset War in 1657. He was a farmer and an iron worker in Lynn, Mass, and served as a representative for Lynn at the General Court in 1657. In 1679, he stated in a deposition that he was 71 years of age, and in 1701, he gave gifts of land to his sons. According to Lynn vital records, he died in 1703. His family line can be traced back 600 years to Willemus de Rode born 1040 in Normany France. It is said that he brought his coat of arms and a copy of the original charter with him to the colonies. The inscription on the charter: "There are the ancient name of the family of Rodes of Adrod, Cheshire. Whereof James Rhodes of Lancashire is descended of the second House. Henry Rodes, son of George." Thank you to Nareen, et al at Find A Grave Memorial# 32903988

Find Arthur Bayley born Arthur Capewell born 1943

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Hanks-2344|Kirsty Hanks]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=22471304 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Find Cahills

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The goal of this project is to ...find family ancestors Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Bobrownik-1|Mike Bobrownik]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * death records of Elizabeth Brien (Cahill) * Imigration records to Canada of Bobrownik family *family records from Poland Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=19575708 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Find Grandpa McKnight birth parents 1912

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Neal McKnight 1912-1970 of Caldwell County, Mo is my Great Grandfather. He was born in Newton County, MO and put up for adoption at 2 years old in St. Louis. He was adopted by James and Mary McKnight but I am unable to find his birth parents. I have come across some old notes in the family albums. The info I have is that his birth name was Neal Wilson. His mother, Mary Jane Shelton, was registered under card #6112 and Dawes #14578 at the Cherokee nation in Tehlaquah OK. His Father's name may have been James/John A Wilson. I have found her and her families records but have hit a wall past the year 1902. The notes also mention that Mary had several children and was living in Neosho Mo. May have been buried at a cemetery called cave springs in the 1930's.

Find help

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Mckinven-38|Maggie Egan]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=22515505 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Find my cousins

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This is a One Name Study to collect together in one place everything about one surname and the variants of that name. The hope is that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect. Please contact the project leader, add categories to your profiles, add your questions to the bulletin board, add details of your name research, etc.

Find the Churches of Your Ancestors

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==VISITING CHURCHES== ===Finding the Correct Church=== You may want to visit or contact the churches of your ancestors to find records of their worship and fellowship activities. You can find the correct church by learning the geography and the history of the area their ancestors lived in. Once this information is obtained, telephone books of the locality can give them phone numbers for the churches or church archive offices near their ancestor's home. ===Learning How Churches Are Ogranized=== Catholic and other liturgical churches are often grouped into dioceses which often keep local archives of old church records. Non-liturical Protestant churches are sometimes organized into associations and these groups may also contain historical documents. Even the small independent churches are required by law to record marriages they perform, so usually churches still in existance will have some records. Not all churches still exist, of course, so it is a good idea to find out the history of the particular church you need. Most churches only keep records back to the date the church or parish was formed. To find previous records, one needs to research the parent church or congregation, as earlier church events in the family's life may have occurred there. Infomation about local churches and their histories is becoming available on the web as local historians begin to record church histories as part of an overall effort to preserve local history online. An excellent example of this is Joe Hayden's Buffalo's Faith Elevators site about churches in Buffalo, New York. People all over the world exhange information about churches, their history and their architecture on a listserv entitled Church Crawling available from Yahoo Groups Unfortunately, you do get ads with this listserv however. Ancestry.com has a good article on locating hard to find churches from our family's history at Finding Your Ancestors Church ===Using Church Records=== Churches, like government entities, keep the records they need for their own purposes. Many church records parallel government vital records, but they are not the same. Churches keep baptismal records, not birth records. They keep funeral records, not death records. It is wise to get government records also, when available, but sometimes churches were keeping records prior to their local government. In that case, the church records are a good substitute. Churches keep more than just birth, marriage, and death records. Some churches have a census of their congregation, records of ceremonies and sacraments, records of who served on a particular committee or taught Sunday school. But these records belong to the church, and you need permission of the pastor, minister, or sexton in charge to view their records. == Links to Church Records for the USA, Canada, and Europe == # '''United States''' - https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Roman_Catholic_Church_in_the_United_States # '''Canada''' - https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Canada_Church_Records # '''England''' - https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/England_Church_Records # '''Ireland''' - has Roman Catholic baptismal and marriage records digitized online registers.nli.ie. You need to know the Roman Catholic parish where your ancestor was baptized or was married. These jurisdictions are different from the Civil Parish, which follows Church of Ireland parish boundaries, because the Church of Ireland was the established government church in Ireland until 1869. Some of the Irish church registers are now also indexed on irishgenealogy.ie for free and rootsireland.ie with a pay wall. # '''Italy''' - Church records for many small villages, especially in Sicily are available at familysearch.org/search and in Italian at https://www.beniculturali.it/ # '''France''' - https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/France_Church_Records # '''Germany''' - https://devilslakendlibrary.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Finally-German-Records-and-How-to-Use-Them.pdf # '''Spain''' - https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1784529 # '''Portugal''' - https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Portugal_Church_Records # '''Other Countries''' - familysearch.org has information on finding church records for almost every country in the world. ==Other Religious Institutions== Jewish synogogues, Mormon temples, and temples of Asian religions also may have records you can use. One needs to find out who is in charge, and what their policy is for record access. The genealogist also should try to find out the meanings of these records and why they were kept to get a better insight into the religious life of the ancestor being researched. Non-christian religions have some similiar and some different record keeping needs. ===Mormon or LDS Records are excellent=== The Mormons, in particular, keep extensive genealogical records of their members and all the members relatives. Because of a religious mandate, these "Latter Day Saints" research genealogy because they believe it helps their ancestors get to heaven. To accomplish this, the LDS Church has set up a huge Family History Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. Members of the church travel worldwide microfilming old archives. LDS microfilms are were available to users of the Family History Center in Utah, and at hundreds of branch libraries around the world for decades, but now these records are being digitized and are probably not available to order. Most of the microfilms and microfiche now are imaged online linked to indexed and abstracted information which you can access at https://www.familysearch.org/search/ Google for the address and phone number of these local branches if you wish to visit in person.. Non-Mormons are sometimes welcomed to use the resources of these Family History Center branch libraries, and use the LDS computers to access cdrom databases of genealogy without having to join their church..But you may need to call for an appointment, as their Family History Centers are staffed by volunteers. == Return to: == * TOP OF PAGE - https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Find_the_Churches_of_Your_Ancestors == Acknowledgements == This page written and designed by Sharon Troy Centanne

Find the Simon Past

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Maher-535|Fritz Maher]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * I have Simon ancestry back until circa 1600. * I would like to know, with certification, if my ancestry is accurate. * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=6614763 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Find your African ancestor in Australia

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Background_I-13.jpg
[[Space:African_Ancestry_Project|African Ancestry Project]]
  • '''[[Space:African Ancestry in Australia|African Ancestry in Australia Home]]'''

==Introduction== The focus of this page is to aid genealogical connection: surfacing names of people who were of African Ancestry in Australia, not yet identified through [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:African_Ancestry_in_Australia#Transported_Convicts convict] or ships lists. If you are looking to solve the mystery of your African Ancestry in Australia, this is a database of male individuals found in the Australian newspaper digitisation programme [https://trove.nla.gov.au/landing/explore Trove], under the search terms: ===Man of Colour and Darkey=== These descriptive terms were often used to identify people of African descent in 19th century Australia. In the United Kingdom (and pre Federation Australia was British) "black" was historically equivalent with "person of color", a general term for non-European peoples. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_people#Africa Wikipedia: Black people Africa] It was sometimes used for "Indians" in Australian newspapers, and where this was the case seems to have been stated. Whilst care has been taken no absolute guarantee can be made that everyone listed here was of African descent. ==='''Blackfella'''=== This term is '''not''' being used to locate people of African ancestry. The descriptor "'''blackfella'''" was/is more commonly associated with Australian Aboriginals as can be seen by the following examples from Australian newspapers taken from across 6 states:
South Australia 1890 'ABORIGINAL PHILOSOPHY.', Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), 26 July, p. 26. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article159550202. Western Australia NOTHING IN THE PAPERS. (1896, November 20). Geraldton Advertiser (WA : 1893 - 1905), p. 3. Retrieved March 23, 2024, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article252769446. Victoria: "ABORIGINAL JOLLIFICATIOIN." The Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946) 9 October 1897: 36. Web. 25 Mar 2024 . New South Wales 1888 'Thrift.', The Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser (NSW : 1843 - 1893), 15 December, p. 4. (Second sheet to Maitland Mercury), viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18963710 Queensland "To the Editor of the Moreton Bay Courier." The Moreton Bay Courier (Brisbane, Qld. : 1846 - 1861) 15 December 1858: 2. Web. 25 Mar 2024 . Tasmania ""BLACKFELLA AND MOTOR" The North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times (Tas. : 1899 - 1919) 13 March 1916: 3. Web. 29 Mar 2024 . Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackfella Wikipedia: Blackfella] Names are still being added to this list. If you wish to add any names from Australian newspapers the page is open for doing so. Many thanks. ===[[Space:Find_your_Female_African_ancestor_in_Australia|Woman of Colour]]=== =='''States'''== ==='''New South Wales'''=== *'''Russel'''
'''1833''' 'No title', The Sydney Herald (NSW : 1831 - 1842), 14 October, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12847927

*'''Stephen'''
'''1830''' 'CORONER'S INQUEST.', The Australian (Sydney, NSW : 1824 - 1848), 24 March, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article36866010

*'''Charles Afleck'''
'''1839''' 'COURT QUARTER SESSIONS.', Commercial Journal and Advertiser (Sydney, NSW : 1835 - 1840), 6 April, p. 2. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226453715

*'''Sike Alley'''
'''1875''' 'MURDER.—£50 REWARD.', New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), 4 June, p. 1625. , viewed 24 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article223684439

*'''John Brown Armstrong '''
'''1844''' 'Police Intelligence.', Parramatta Chronicle and Cumberland General Advertiser (NSW : 1843 - 1845), 30 November, p. 2. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article228248520

*'''Joe Bean'''
''' 1844''' 'Bean Joe, Royal Sovereign (2), 30, Bermuda, houseservant, 5 feet 5½ inches, black comp., black and woolly', New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), 9 August, p. 1016. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article230676997

*'''John Benjamin '''
'''1846''' 'ABSTRACT OF SALES BY AUCTION THIS DAY.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 15 October, p. 3. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12889442

*'''Imaun Buck'''
'''1841''' 'Summary of Pabilc Intelligence.', The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1803 - 1842), 28 September, p. 2. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2554576

*'''John Carr'''
'''1839''' 'EXTRACTS.', Commercial Journal and Advertiser (Sydney, NSW : 1835 - 1840), 16 November, p. 4. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226455112

*'''John Cotton'''
'''1854''' 'CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT.', The People's Advocate and New South Wales Vindicator (Sydney, NSW : 1848-1856), 19 August, p. 6. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article251542474

*'''John Dyril'''
'''1839''' 'DESTRUCTION OF THE 'LUCRETIA BY FIRE.', Commercial Journal and Advertiser (Sydney, NSW : 1835 - 1840), 29 June, p. 2. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226457591

*'''Thomas Erwin'''
''' 1847''' 'LOCAL INTELLIGENCE.', The Australian (Sydney, NSW : 1824 - 1848), 6 March, p. 3. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article37131416

*'''Joseph Fatune, Blana, A.B.'''
'''1854''' 'Government Gazette Notices', New South Wales Government Gazette (Sydney, NSW : 1832 - 1900), 18 April, p. 809. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article230695717

*'''Jacob Francis '''
'''1855''' 'WATER POLICE COURT.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 10 March, p. 7. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12966572

*'''James Haywood'''
'''1843''' 'NEWS FROM THIS INTERIOR.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 26 August, p. 3. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12410658

*'''Francis Healy '''
''' 1854''' 'WATER POLICE COURT.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 15 August, p. 5. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12952400

*'''John Hopkins'''
'''1846''' 'Supreme Court.', Sydney Chronicle (NSW : 1846 - 1848), 14 October, p. 2. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31749029

*'''Ezekiel Going'''
'''1853''''SYDNEY POLICE COURT.—FRIDAY.', Empire (Sydney, NSW : 1850 - 1875), 22 January, p. 4. , viewed 04 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article60136432

*'''John Johnston '''
'''1858''' 'SECOND COURT.', Northern Times (Newcastle, NSW : 1857 - 1918), 11 December, p. 2. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article128757301

*'''William Jones'''
1839 'News of the Day.', The Sydney Monitor and Commercial Advertiser (NSW : 1838 - 1841), 30 August, p. 2. (MORNING), viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article32165365

*'''Joseph Julie''' aka '''Joseph Williams'''
1844 'LAW INTELLIGENCE:', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 5 July, p. 2. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12422343

*'''James Morris'''
1837 'POLICE.', The Sydney Monitor (NSW : 1828 - 1838), 30 August, p. 2. (EVENING), viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article32157196

*'''Joseph Nurse'''
'''1874''' Apprehensions.', New South Wales Police Gazette and Weekly Record of Crime (Sydney : 1860 - 1930), 8 July, p. 195. , viewed 24 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article251604074

*'''Lewis Owen'''
'''1857''' 'CENTRAL POLICE COURT.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 27 July, p. 4. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12998530

*'''Peter Palmer'''
'''1845''' 'No title', The Australian (Sydney, NSW : 1824 - 1848), 21 January, p. 3. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article37159183

*'''John Perry'''
'''1856''' 'WATER POLICE COURT.—SATURDAY.', Empire (Sydney, NSW : 1850 - 1875), 20 October, p. 4. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article64978420

*'''William Peters'''
'''1847''' 'ROBBERIES AND OTHER OFFENCES.', The Australian (Sydney, NSW : 1824 - 1848), 28 January, p. 3. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article37130203

*'''Simon Machant '''
'''1859''' 'BATHURST POLICE COURT.', Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal (NSW : 1851 - 1862; 1872; 1882; 1885 - 1897; 1899 - 1904), 17 August, p. 2. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article63594797

*'''John Redman'''
'''1839''' 'POLICE INCIDENTS.', Commercial Journal and Advertiser (Sydney, NSW : 1835 - 1840), 13 July, p. 3. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226453969

*'''Moses Martin Rose'''
'''1842''' 'LAW INTELLIGENCE.', The New South Wales Examiner (Sydney, NSW : 1842), 6 July, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article228247247

*'''T Singleton '''
'''1846 ''''CRUELTY ON BOARD SHIP.', The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), 27 November, p. 2. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article12901511

*'''Robert Smith'''
'''1835''' 'ABOLITION OF SLAVERY—INTERMENT OF THE SLAVE CHAIN, &c.', The Sydney Monitor (NSW : 1828 - 1838), 25 February, p. 4. (MORNING), viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article32148318

*'''Gregory Tabbey'''
'''1841''' 'MURDER.', The Sydney Monitor and Commercial Advertiser (NSW : 1838 - 1841), 29 March, p. 2. (MORNING), viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article32188764

*'''Henry Thomas'''
'''1837''' 'Hobart Town Police Report.', Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), 13 June, p. 8. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8650102

*'''Robert Tillman'''
'''1841''' 'Court of Quarter Sessions.', The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1803 - 1842), 8 April, p. 2. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2553003

*'''William Wallace'''
'''1835''' 1835 'ABOLITION OF SLAVERY—INTERMENT OF THE SLAVE CHAIN, &c.', The Sydney Monitor (NSW : 1828 - 1838), 25 February, p. 4. (MORNING), viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article32148318

*'''Charles West'''
'''1846''' 'Supreme Court.', Morning Chronicle (Sydney, NSW : 1843 - 1846), 31 January, p. 2. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31747269

*'''James Williams'''
'''1832 ''''Sydney Quarter Sessions.', The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW : 1803 - 1842), 21 January, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2204566

*'''Henry Wilson'''
'''1852''' 'SYDNEY QUARTER SESSIONS.', Empire (Sydney, NSW : 1850 - 1875), 12 November, p. 2. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article60135313

==='''Tasmania'''=== *'''Samuel'''
'''1834''' 1834 'SUPREME C0URT—CRIMINAL SIDE.', Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), 11 March, p. 5. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8647466

*'''Thomson '''
'''1830 ''''Supreme Court,', Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), 13 August, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8645298

*'''John Charles'''
'''1832''' 'SUPREME COURT.—CRIMINAL SIDE.', The Tasmanian (Hobart Town, Tas. : 1827 - 1839), 28 December, p. 5. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article233613302

*'''Peter Franks'''
''' 1816''' 'Classified Advertising', The Hobart Town Gazette and Southern Reporter (Tas. : 1816 - 1821), 5 October, p. 1. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article651518

*'''William Fraser'''
'''1829 ''''Police Report.', Colonial Times (Hobart, Tas. : 1828 - 1857), 23 October, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article8644600

*'''Antonio Gosalwo'''
'''1848''' 'POLICE REPORTS.', Hobarton Guardian, or, True Friend of Tasmania (Hobart, Tas. : 1847 - 1854), 26 January, p. 3. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article163501813

*'''Archibald Johnson '''
'''1847''' 'SUPREME COURT.', Hobarton Guardian, or, True Friend of Tasmania (Hobart, Tas. : 1847 - 1854), 8 September, p. 3. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article163501212

*'''Ambrose L'Avoca'''
'''1848''' 'QUARTER SESSIONS.', The Britannia and Trades' Advocate (Hobart Town, Tas. : 1846 - 1851), 10 October, p. 2. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226530543

*'''Emmanuel Lewis '''
'''1848''' 'POLICE REPORT.', The Cornwall Chronicle (Launceston, Tas. : 1835 - 1880), 17 May, p. 2. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article65981634

*'''John Lyster'''
'''1850''' 'Police.', The Britannia and Trades' Advocate (Hobart Town, Tas. : 1846 - 1851), 5 December, p. 2. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226535608

*'''Bradford Minzo'''
'''1845''' 'HOBART TOWN POLICE REPORT.', The Courier (Hobart, Tas. : 1840 - 1859), 5 June, p. 2. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article294834

*'''Jesse Roberts'''
''' 1848 ''''POLICE REPORT--CONTINUED.', The Britannia and Trades' Advocate (Hobart Town, Tas. : 1846 - 1851), 16 November, p. 2. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article226530652

*'''John Sutcliffe '''
'''1848''' 'WESTBURY.', The Cornwall Chronicle (Launceston, Tas. : 1835 - 1880), 5 January, p. 2. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article65979595

*'''Robert Tidy '''
''' 1847''' 'POLICE OFFICE.', The Hobart Town Herald and Total Abstinence advocate (Tas. : 1846 - 1847), 3 February, p. 3. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article264689332

*'''Edward Wilson'''
'''1849''' 'POLICE REPORTS.', Hobarton Guardian, or, True Friend of Tasmania (Hobart, Tas. : 1847 - 1854), 14 July, p. 3. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article163504466

*'''Thomas Wilson'''
'''1844 ''''SYDNEY.', The Courier (Hobart, Tas. : 1840 - 1859), 17 December, p. 4. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2950130

==='''South Australia'''=== *'''Henderson Africanus'''
'''1887''' 'SUICIDE UNDER RELIGIOUS MANIA.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 23 May, p. 6. , viewed 27 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article46098670

*'''William Beck'''
'''1847''' 'Thursday, 11th March.', South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register (Adelaide, SA : 1845 - 1847), 13 March, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article195934698

*'''John Chew '''
'''1850''' DISTRICT COURT. Tuesday, December 17. CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.', Adelaide Times (SA : 1848 - 1858), 21 December, p. 3. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article206988499

* '''John Cole'''
'''1849''' 1849 'Friday, 14th September.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 15 September, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50245353

*'''John Davies'''
'''1857''' 'LAW AND CRIMINAl COURTS.', Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), 23 May, p. 3. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article158117847

*'''Thomas Gardiner alias "Black Tom"'''
'''1846''' 'Thursday, 28th May.', Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), 30 May, p. 8. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article158922569

*'''Lewis Green '''
''' 1848 ''''CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.', South Australian (Adelaide, SA : 1844 - 1851), 28 July, p. 3. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article71611989

*'''Charles Hill'''
'''1843''' 'RESIDENT MAGISTRATE'S COURT.', Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), 12 August, p. 5. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article158917345

* '''Henry Jacobs'''
'''1850''' 'VICE-ADMIRALTY COURT.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 17 December, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article38438643

*'''Henry Morris '''
'''1850''' 'POLICE COURT.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 13 May, p. 3. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article38436008

*'''Richard Otts'''
'''1850 ''''POLICE COURT, PORT ADELAIDE.', Adelaide Observer (SA : 1843 - 1904), 30 November, p. 4. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article159531937

*'''Adolph Pedro'''
'''1848''' 'POLICE COURT.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 14 June, p. 4. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article48726851

*'''George Shorter '''
'''1871''' 'Missing Friends.', New South Wales Police Gazette and Weekly Record of Crime (Sydney : 1860 - 1930), 19 July, p. 188. , viewed 24 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article252050382

*'''Edward Sutney'''
'''1849''' 'Tuesday, 10th April.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 11 April, p. 3. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50245589

*'''Richard Williams'''
1849 'CRIMINAL JURISDICTION.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 4 August, p. 3. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50247656

*'''John Wilson '''
'''1849''' 'Friday, 14th September.', South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900), 15 September, p. 3. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50245353

==='''Victoria'''=== *'''Robert Arthur'''
'''1861''' 'CITY POLICE COURT.', The Melbourne Leader (Vic. : 1861), 9 March, p. 15. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197522266

*'''John Bennett'''
''' 1864''' 'Police Intelligence.', The Telegraph, St Kilda, Prahran and South Yarra Guardian (Vic. : 1864 - 1888), 22 October, p. 4. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article255914314

*'''John Baptiste Cotter'''
'''1892 ''''LEGAL.', Weekly Times (Melbourne, Vic. : 1869 - 1954), 30 January, p. 15. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article220476035

*'''John Davis '''
'''1840 ''''Police Incidents.', Port Phillip Gazette (Vic. : 1838 - 1845), 30 May, p. 3. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article225007171

*'''William Emerson'''
'''1847''' 'DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE.', Port Phillip Gazette and Settler's Journal (Vic. : 1845 - 1850), 7 July, p. 2. , viewed 21 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article223154078

*'''William Henry Francis '''
'''1865''' 'A DEATH IN THE GOLD COUNTRY.', The Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), 17 June, p. 4. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article244469161

*'''Thomas Garnon'''
'''1867''' 'PRAHRAN COURT.', The Telegraph, St Kilda, Prahran and South Yarra Guardian (Vic. : 1864 - 1888), 20 July, p. 3. , viewed 26 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article108125771

*'''John Graham'''
'''1870''' 'MANSLAUGHTER.', Kilmore Free Press (Kilmore, Vic. : 1870 - 1954), 13 January, p. 2. (MORNINGS.), viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article70054437

*'''Timon Gray'''
'''1861''' 'CITY POLICE COURT.', The Melbourne Leader (Vic. : 1861), 9 March, p. 15. , viewed 23 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197522266

*'''George Green'''
'''1866''' 'MELBOURNE CRIMINAL SESSIONS.', The Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), 18 August, p. 3. , viewed 26 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article244423989

*'''William Jenkins'''
'''1864''' 'CENTRAL POLICE COURT.', Geelong Advertiser (Vic. : 1859 - 1929), 2 September, p. 2. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article150464920

*'''Joseph Jackson'''
'''1863 '''' BOURKE GENERAL SESSIONS.', The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957), 2 December, p. 6. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article5740078

*'''Verity Johnson'''
'''1898''' '"A VERY BAD LOT."', The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957), 4 May, p. 3. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9832202

* '''----- Jones'''
'''1884 ''''Shaking Hands with Vice-royalty.', Weekly Times (Melbourne, Vic. : 1869 - 1954), 23 August, p. 6. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article222467098

*'''------ McMahon'''
'''1888''' 'CAULFIELD POLICE COURT.', Oakleigh Leader (North Brighton, Vic. : 1888 - 1902), 10 March, p. 5. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66174378.

* '''James Robinson '''
'''1865''' 'HAMILTON COURT OF GENERAL SESSIONS.', Hamilton Spectator and Grange District Advertiser (Vic. : 1860 - 1870), 14 October, p. 3. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article194468859

*'''Robinson Salvador'''
1866 'POLICE COURTS.', The Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), 8 October, p. 4. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article244425448

*'''William John Stevens '''
'''1865''' 'GEELONG CIRCUIT COURT.', The Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), 27 July, p. 2. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article244471389

*'''Samuel Thomas'''
'''1865''' 'CRIMINAL SESSIONS.', The Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954), 16 August, p. 3. , viewed 26 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article244466783

*'''William Thomas'''
1883 'CRIMINAL SESSIONS.', The Australasian (Melbourne, Vic. : 1864 - 1946), 24 February, p. 21. , viewed 29 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article137584896

==='''Western Australia'''=== *'''George Balquoison'''
'''1833''' 'PETTY SESSIONS, FREMANTLE.', The Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal (WA : 1833 - 1847), 16 February, p. 26. , viewed 19 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article642218

*'''George Johnson '''
'''1839 ''''INQUIRY INTO THE DEATH OF GEORGE JOHNSON, A MAN OF COLOUR.', The Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal (WA : 1833 - 1847), 5 January, p. 3. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article639281

*'''Frederick Hodges '''
'''1840''' 'MAGISTRATE'S COURT—PERTH.', The Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal (WA : 1833 - 1847), 25 January, p. 14. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article638817

*'''Adam James '''
'''1846''' 'CIVIL COURT.', Inquirer (Perth, WA : 1840 - 1855), 15 July, p. 3. , viewed 22 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article65770585

*'''Robert Ridley'''
'''1897''' 'THE COSTA RICA PACKET CASE.', Kalgoorlie Miner (WA : 1895 - 1954), 12 March, p. 3. , viewed 06 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article87857982

*'''Joseph Surim'''
''' 1839''' 'MAGISTRATE'S COURT—PERTH.', The Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal (WA : 1833 - 1847), 8 June, p. 91. , viewed 20 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article6390

*''' John Williams '''
'''1838''' 'QUARTER SESSIONS.', The Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal (WA : 1833 - 1847), 7 July, p. 107. , viewed 25 Mar 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article639481

==='''Queensland'''=== *Davis, a Brazilian (1850)
*an Indian (1846)

*'''Peter Felix'''
'''1880 ''''THE MURDER AT STANTHORPE.', Morning Bulletin (Rockhampton, Qld. : 1878 - 1954), 5 July, p. 2. , viewed 03 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article52020236

*'''Joseph Frank Smith'''
'''1870''' 'ROCHHAMPTON DISTRICT COURT.', Rockhampton Bulletin and Central Queensland Advertiser (Qld. : 1861 - 1871), 3 December, p. 2. , viewed 03 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article51580825

==='''Northern Territory'''=== *Chinese (not African)
'''1884 ''''The North Australian.', North Australian (Darwin, NT : 1883 - 1889), 13 June, p. 2. , viewed 06 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article47991988

*Chinese (not African)
'''1926''' '(Contributed.)', Northern Territory Times and Gazette (Darwin, NT : 1873 - 1927), 24 December, p. 9. , viewed 06 Apr 2024, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article3384573

==Sources==

Find Your Doppelgänger

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Find_Your_Doppelganger-1.png
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Find_Your_Doppelganger.png
==Find your Doppelgänger - Twin Strangers== In 2015 three friends in Ireland started a Facebook challenge to each find their identical lookalike. They had such an overwhelming response that they decided to start a website for the purpose, called [https://twinstrangers.net/twin-strangers-exist '''Twin Strangers''']. As the name suggests, the main purpose is to find identical lookalikes who, as far as they know, are '''not''' related. However, they probably have some matching DNA, at least at the level of ethnicity. But environmental factors, like growing up in the same geographical area, also contribute to the development of faicial traits.[https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/arts-and-entertainment/wp/2015/04/21/how-to-find-your-doppelganger-on-facebook/ How to find your doppelganger] by Jessica Contrera, Washington Post, April 21 2015 A FamilySearch tool for comparison of facial similarity was presented in the FamilySearch Blog in November 2019. It is geared towards finding lookalikes for yourself, to see which family members you resemble most closely.https://www.familysearch.org/blog/en/find-your-doppelganger/ Do You Have a Look-alike? Find Your Doppelgänger] by Jessica Grimaud, FamilySearch blog, November 20, 2019 * You will find the tool here: [https://www.familysearch.org/discovery/compare FamilySearch Compare-a-Face] (you need a FamilySearch account, of course) ==Trying the tool== ===[[Ekeblad-7|Eva Ekeblad]]=== As you can see, the FamilySearch tool is geared towards comparing a picture of yourself with pictures of your relatives - the interface comes up with the first image pre-labelled with your own name. Since I'm not comfortable putting my own face into FamilySearch, I used a portrait of my grandmother, [[Pettersson-532|Ruth Persson]] to compare with a portrait of her daughter, my aunt [[Persson-2664|Margit]]. This turned up a 41% likeness. {{Image|file=Find_Your_Doppelganger.png |align=c |size=800 }} Well, they're not the same age and tilt their faces differently. I made a second comparison of aunt Margit and her sister, my mother, [[Persson-2642|Anna Lisa]]. These portraits must have been taken at the same time, in the same atelier and with a very similar tilt of the head. The result showed a likeness of 53%. {{Image|file=Find_Your_Doppelganger-1.png |align=c |size=600 }} I had more success comparing my grandfather, [[Ekeblad-9|Gustav Ekeblad]] with himself at two different ages - portraits taken in 1915 and 1951. He was considered 95% similar to himself, which is not bad, considering the effects of aging, the glasses and the downcast gaze in the second portrait. {{Image|file=Find_Your_Doppelganger-2.png |align=c |size=800 }} I can add that the system wasn't fooled by comparing a mirror image of my grandmother to herself. That yielded a 100% likeness. ===Add your comparison here=== I would love to see the results others get! ==Why the brothers?== {{Image|file=Pettersson-535-3.jpg |align=r |size=300 }} The first uploaded picture on this page presents two full brothers, [[Pettersson-535|Johannes Ekeblad (1856-1936)]] and [[Pettersson-654|Svante Pettersson (1852-1927)]] in their Sunday best. It is a nice illustration of what environment will do to the appearance of a person. At least, I don't think it's difficult to see who spent his life as a school teacher and who spent his life running the family farm. But I may be biassed. == Sources ==

FindAGrave Notes

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==Purpose== Thoughtful questions *Is the system able to distinguish between memorials referenced in "Research Notes" (vs other pats of the narrative? For example, see **[[Pearce-12164|Elizabeth (Pearce) Presson (1738-)]] **[[Seers-92|Robert Seers (1657-1732)]] **[[Preston-401|Mehitable (Preston) Benson (1768-aft.1829)]] *Personal impressions, having now invested a huge chunk of my recent WikiTree time in .... **Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date. Most common issue discovered is that FindAGrave may be using a date calculator to add a birth date presumably based on the the age at death. On WikiTree, I at least try to use information that is tied to a historical record. (Age at death is frequently incorrect.) **Error ___: Missing Birth Location. **Error ___: Missing Death Location. ** *First reaction to most of these items is, "Why don't they just read the profile?" Apparently that is asking too much. *Penalized for going further ... including using "associations" in genealogical analysis. *Penalized for pointing out possible conflicts, even when those have been discussed on the profile. **Elizabeth Shown Mills, "Two Rules to Break ...," August 23, 2021 posting in "Genealogy Pointers, Genealogy Tips"; web content, [https://genealogical.com/2021/08/23/two-rules-to-break-in-genealogical-research-by-elizabeth-shown-mills/ ''Genealogical.com'']. *Just because you can ... doesn't mean you should. *Purpose a source citation ... *Data scraping? *But on WikiTree, the FindAGrave source citations are being used to support data harvesting for an independent opportunity ... maybe for well meaning WikiTreer's who don't want to be bothered by reading profiles. ==WikiTree Pages of Interest== *[[Space:FindAGrave_Suggestions_GeneJ|FindAGrave Suggestions GeneJ]] *GeneJ, "Expressing frustration with FindAGrave corrections," 2024; [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1721090/expressing-frustration-with-findagrave-corrections ''WikiTree''], G2G. ==Bibliographic Notes== ==Content== '''FindAGrave memorials are''' *User Generated ... *Often/frequently unsourced as to many claims *"What is a Memorial?"; web content, [https://support.findagrave.com/s/article/What-is-a-Memorial ''FindAGrave'']. **Site created to "help record and present final disposition information for an individual person" ... and also to pay tribute to the individual being memorialized and can tell us more about their life through a biography, family links, photos, and other details ... honoring that individual's life." *"What is Find a Grave?"; web content, [https://support.findagrave.com/s/article/What-is-Find-a-Grave ''FindAGrave'']. *"Sending Suggested Edits and Notes"; web content, [https://support.findagrave.com/s/article/Suggest-Edits-Overview ''FindAGrave'']. **"... if there is differing information in historical records. Keep in mind the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genealogical_Proof_Standard Genealogical Proof Standard] when updating and adding to memorials." '''Cemetery Issues.''' Especially for early folks, cemetery information (cemetery name/cemetery location) is often out of sync, for example ... * * * '''All sources are subject to error'''. Some noteworthy comments, *The U.S. census is a wonderful historical record, but many names in the U.S. census have incorrect enumeration data, and still others have been mis-indexed or mis-catalogued. '''Imagine if''' the source citation entered for a particular census record generated an "'''Error'''" only because the referenced site's index produced data that differs from that which is found on the WikiTree profile. *Town of Beverly, Massachusetts, Town Clerk Compilations ... *Pick a couple proof example, to show the array of sources ... **Thomas Patch ... ** '''Common FindAgrave memorial Usage on WikiTree'''. *To report about a memorial intended to be about the person. *To report the spouse's memorial, as support for the marriage and or information about the spouse. *To support details of the principal's marriage (like date or location, is often the eldest child's memorial) *Child list ... and their marriage/marriage details. *Obituaries ... that might call out the names of family members *Memorial "bio" claims, that might be relevant to any item *Military service ... *Research Notes ... to address an array of conflicts or hints/leads. ===Examples=== *[[Houghton-1202|Ebenezer Houghton Jr. (1732-)]]; profile reports about say six (6) memorials, about which further detail is given as part of a FindAGrave Research note. **Template format is fine; WikiTree happy. >> {{FindAGrave|35955304}} **Alternative format is not fine; WikiTree not happy. >> Ebenezer Haughton (1732-1814), memorial 35955304 and gravestone photographs; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/35955304/ebenezer_haughton ''FindAGrave''], reports burial at Godfrey Hill Cemetery, Hebron, Tolland County, Connecticut; memorial created by KC, maintained by James Bianco; gravestone images added by KC; GeneJ note--dates on Ebenezer's gravestone images not readable. *John Sleppy Sr. [no WikiTree profile]; he is the son of [[Schleppi-9|Daniel Schleppi (1782-1853)]]. His FindAGrave memorial is cited as support for his father's marriage on the profiles of his father, [[Schleppi-1|grandfather]] and [[Theobald-2158|grandmother]]. **Template format is fine >> {{FindAGrave|26526452}} **Alternative format is not >> John Sleppy, Sr. (1810-1897), memorial and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/26526452/john-sleppy ''FindAGrave''], managed by Pam Estes Holeton gedmatch# T131729, gravestone image added by curlyseux. ==Research Notes== ===Problem Memorials=== (Starting this list March 2024 ... work in process as I have not kept a running log. If I continue this work, it will be a very, very long list.) *'''[[Pride-115|Hannah (Pride) Corning (bef.1704-1746)]]''' vs '''[[Rayment-226|Hannah (Rayment) Corning (1705-1798)]]'''. ::Hannah ''Pride'' Corning (1706-1798), memorial 47724433, gravestone image and early transcription record; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/47724433/hannah_corning ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 2022), reporting burial at Central Cemetery; memorial maintained by V. Nareen Lack; gravestone image added by Kenneth Gilbert; early transcription recorded added by John Glassford. ::GeneJ [[X-3336]] Note: This is the death information, gravestone image and early transcription record about [[Corning-59|Joseph Corning]]'s second wife, Hannah (Rayment) (Trow) Corning. Only the birth information is about Joseph's first wife, Hannah (Pride) Corning; she died in 1747, and Joseph married (2), later that year, Hannah Trow. *'''Elizabeth (Harris) Presson''' vs '''Elizabeth (Pierce) Presson'''. ::Elizabeth ''Harris'' Preston (1738-1806), memorial 50360105 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/50360105/elizabeth-preston ''FindAGrave''] (accessed March 2024), reports burial at Central Cemetery, Beverly; memorial managed by V. Nareen Lake; gravestone image added by Thomas F Scully. ::GeneJ [[X-3336]] Note: This attribution is quite likely in error. Is is believed that brothers John and Jonathan Presson, both of Beverly, married women named Elizabeth. ::*[[Presson-323|John]]'s wife, Elizabeth Harris, is more likely the child baptized Marblehead, 1733 (so born before that date). Assuming she survived as his widow, John's wife may have been Elizabeth Preston who died in Beverly 13 May 1805, age 78 years (suggesting born 1727). ::*[[Presson-324|Jonathan]]'s wife, Elizabeth Pierce, is presumed the child born in Beverly, 11 July 1738. Her date of birth compares favorably to the Beverly death reported in ''FindAGrave'' memorial 50360105. (The Beverly published death report cites the gravestone, with death as 22 June 1806, "a. 68 y.," thus born about 1738.) *'''[[Beach-2003|Ashbel Beach (1755-1837)]]'''. ::Ashbell Beach (1755-1846), memorial 61368432 and unreadable gravestone image, reportedly at Round Prairie Cemetery, La Grange, Walworth County, Wisconsin; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/61368432/ashbell-beach ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 24 January 2024), memorial maintained by Kellie Walton; gravestone image added by Marlene S. (notice of errant memorial communicated on FindAGrave 30 January 2024 by [[X-3336]]). ::[[X-3336]] Note: Research Notes report this as an errant memorial, see "Previous Version." Asabel died at New Hartford, Oneida County, New York, 5 May 1837; his date of death is given in Oneida County [New York] Deeds, 86:232-233. ::'''Update''': Edits accepted to (a) rename the profile "Unknown Unknown"; (b) removed the birth data. This memorial is still associated with the spouse Anna ''Bellamy'' Beach (-1846), despite that edits to her memorial were likewise suggested. *'''[[Bellamy-638|Anna (Bellamy) Beach (1757-1812)]]'''. ::Anna ''Bellamy'' Beach (1757-), memorial 61368431 and unreadable gravestone image, reportedly buried at Round Prairie Cemetery, La Grange, Walworth County, Wisconsin; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/61368431/anna_beach ''FindAGrave'']; memorial maintained by Kellie Walton; gravestone image added by Marlene S. ::[[X-3336]] Note: See Research Noes for "Prior Version," which includes a reference to this errant memorial. ::[[X-3336]] Note: Anna ''Bellamy'' Beach could not be the woman profiled in the memorial. Anna died in Whitestown, Oneida County, New York, March 1812. Edit suggestions were sent to FindAGrave in early 2024, but as of 23 March 2024, those edits have not been implemented. Memorial manager does not accept messages. *'''[[Ashby-763|Benjamin Ashby (bef.1653-bef.1713)]]'''. ::See [[Space:Benjamin_Ashby%27s_Conflicted_FindAGrave_record|Benjamin Ashby's Conflicted FindAGrave record]] (2014) *'''[[Preston-320|William Charles Preston (1780-abt.1837)]]'''. ::The memorial centers around a monument created in about 2012 and placed on the grave that is attributed to him. That attribution is in error--Early newspaper articles report the gravesite is that of his nephew's son--both the nephew and his son were named William. The monument and memorial reports various un-proven claims/myths. ::GeneJ, "Honored? Vet? or Victim of History. Let's talk," blog entry of 2012. [Needs to be recreated on WikiTree.] *'''[[Patch-950|Thomas Patch Sr (abt.1638-1711)]]''' vs '''[[Patch-46|Thomas Patch Sr. (abt.1638-1722)]]''' ::Thomas Patch (1638-1721), memorial 175279467 (only); web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/175279467/thomas_patch ''FindAGrave''], reports burial at Wenham Cemetery, Wenham, Essex County, Massachusetts; memorial maintained by Anonymous; claims his birth at Beverly, Essex County; wife as Mary Scott (1639-2728). ::[[X-3336]] Notes: The claim that he was born at Beverly is a remaining trace that he was previously confused as [[Patch-950|Thomas Patch Sr (abt.1638-1711)]], the son of [[Patch-35|Nicholas Patch (bef.1597-bef.1673)]]. As well, the place "Beverly" didn't exist in 1638. At that time, the place that became Beverly was then part of Salem. *'''[[Woodbury-203|William Woodbury Sr. (abt.1589-bef.1677)]]'''. ::William Woodbury Sr. (1589-1677), memorial 53730912 (only); web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/53730912/william_woodbury ''FindAGrave''], reports death 29 January 1677 and burial at Abbott Street Burial Ground in Beverly, Essex County, Massachusetts; memorial created by Deleted User, maintained by Barry Gates. ::[[X-3336]] Notes. Biography opens, "William is thought to be the brother of James Woodbury of Planter fame," perhaps this is intended to refer to [[Woodbury-148|John Woodbury (abt.1583-aft.1641)]]? Date of death on the memorial (29 January 1677) is the date his will was proved, so he surely died earlier. *'''[[Finne-83|Judith (Finne) Rayment (bef.1629-1702)]]'''. ::Judith ''Glover'' Raymond, memorial 131661429 (only); web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/131661429/judith-raymond_rayment ''FindAGrave''], memorial created by Ken Smith; reports she was the daughter of Jose and "[[Goodwin-1753|Susan Goodwin]]" (who WikiTree shows as Jose's mother), referencing "Information from NEHBR, Vol. 71 and the Patch family website" as well as another graver. ::No gravestone image; ::'''Update''' See profile Research Notes ("Frequently confused') that reports about the memorial and the 2022 update that corrected correct various associations and biographical information. She is now "Judith ''Finne'' Raymond/Rayment." *'''[[Houghton-1202|Ebenezer Houghton Jr. (1732-)]]'''; has WikiTree '''warnings''', (a) FindAGrave - Missing death location, and (b) FindAGrave - Empty death date. ::Ebenezer Haughton (1732-1814), memorial 35955304 and gravestone photographs (unreadable); web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/35955304/ebenezer_haughton ''FindAGrave''], reports burial at Godfrey Hill Cemetery, Hebron, Tolland County, Connecticut; memorial created by KC, maintained by James Bianco; gravestone images added by KC. ::[[X-3336]] Notes. See profile Research Note, "Did he died in Hebron, 1814?" for the notice that the tombstone inscription is unreadable. See also [[Space:Ebenezer_Haughton_family_on_FindAGrave|Ebenezer Haughton family on FindAGrave]]. ::[[X-3336]] Notes, See the Research Note on the profile of his father, [[Haughton-447|Ebenezer Haughton Sr.]]. '''Prior Version'''--"A prior version of this profile reported Ebenezer Haughton died on 15 May 1788 in New London aged 88, referencing {{FindAGrave|37355680}}, citing Godfrey Hill Cemetery, Hebron, Tolland County, Connecticut. That is the grave record of his grandson, Ebenezer, the son of [[Houghton-1202|Ebenezer Houghton Jr.]] and his wife [[Shipman-227|Temperance (Shipman) Horton]]." *'''[[Preston-401|Mehitable (Preston) Benson (1768-aft.1829)]]''', has WikiTree '''Warning''' for "FindAGrave - Missing death location." ::Mehitable "Hittie" ''Preston'' Benson (1768-1845), memorial 91583011 (only); web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/91583011/mehitable-benson ''FindAGrave''], reporting burial in Old Schuyler Falls Cemetery, Schuyler Falls, Clinton County, New York; memorial managed by Barbara Crossler; no biography; calls her "Benson," but reports only her marriage to Bradbury Carr; has her death as Schuyler Falls, 3 June 1845. ::[[X-3336]] Note: Memorial has no gravestone image. See the WikiTree profile, which reports a second marriage to Peter Benson. Research Notes on the profile as "FindAGrave Lead ... reports she is buried at Schuyler Falls. ===Messages re FindAGrave=== (Work in process ... [[X-3336]]: Having been a ''FindAGrave'' contributor now, 2024, for some 17 years, will summarize here select communications about other memorials over the years.) == Sources ==

FindaGrave photo space

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This page is for storing photos of gravestones that I sourced on "FindaGrave" use for my watchlist profiles. Out of courtesy, I request permission from the owner of the photograph before adding them to this page.

FindAGrave Suggestions GeneJ

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==WikiTree Pages of Interest== *[[Space:FindAGrave_Notes|FindAGrave Notes]] ==Bibliographic Notes== ==Content== ===March 2024 Items=== (List may be imperfect ... edited to add, resolutions may be imperfect too.) [[Seers-92|Robert Seers (1657-1732)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Seers-92 ; Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile *Note--Tucked on a "see also" source is the comment that "Others of the surname buried there are …" Profile has other sources to support his death. *Resolution: Have removed all FindAGrave references; inserted them as reply to a profile comment. [[Pearce-12164|Elizabeth (Pearce) Presson (1738-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Pearce-12164 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location *Humm ... Profile has a Research Note concerning a death information conflict related to a FindAGrave memorial. **Death and Burial. It is believed that brothers Jonathan Presson and John Presson, both of Beverly, married women named Elizabeth. ''FindAGrave'' attributes a particular death to the wife of John Presson/Preston. See Elizabeth ''Harris'' Preston (1738-1806), memorial 50360105 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/50360105/elizabeth-preston ''FindAGrave''], reports burial at Central Cemetery, Beverly; memorial managed by V. Nareen Lake; gravestone image added by Thomas F Scully. **This attribution is quite likely in error-- ***John's wife, Elizabeth Harris, is more likely the child baptized Marblehead, 1733 (so born before that date). Assuming she survived as his widow, John's wife may have been Elizabeth Preston who died in Beverly 13 May 1805, age 78 years (suggesting born 1727). ***Jonathan's wife, Elizabeth Pierce, is presumed the child born in Beverly, 11 July 1738. Her date of birth compares favorably to the Beverly death reported in ''FindAGrave'' memorial 50360105. (The Beverly published death report cites the gravestone, with death as 22 June 1806, "a. 68 y.," thus born about 1738.) *Resolution: Moved the FindAGrave citation to a profile comment, then reworded the Research Note to link to the profile comment. [[Pearce-12164|Elizabeth (Pearce) Presson (1738-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Pearce-12164 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location See above. [[Van_Dyke-1791|Heyltje (Van Dyke) Horton (1755-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Van_Dyke-1791 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date *Note: She has a probate file that I haven't seen; wasn't able to readily access, so I'm just not working on this profile right now. Have already collaborated to see that she became connected to spouse and parents. Have otherwise done a ton of work on that line. See [[Space:Henry_Beach_Horton_Ancestry_Notes|Henry Beach Horton Ancestry Notes]] https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Henry_Beach_Horton_Ancestry_Notes *Resolution: moved the FindAGrave references on that profile (for her, and for her husband) to a profile comment. [[Gage-3871|Olive (Gage) Herbert (1767-1835)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Gage-3871 Warning 579: FindAGrave - Missing birth location *Problem: Two secondary sources have different dates of birth reported. *Resolution: Added research note, sans link, and moved all the FindAGrave memorial citations and/or links to a profile comment. [[Preston-401|Mehitable (Preston) Benson (1768-aft.1829)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Preston-401 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location ; Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date *Humm... Profile included a research note ("FindAGrave Lead") that refers to the memorial. My work followed the Bartley article (cited as my source). This reports she married (2) Peter Benson. The article has no further continuing information. The FindAGrave memorial displays no gravestone, but reports her death 3 June 1845 in Schuyler Falls, Clinton County, New York; the claim is unsourced. *Resolution: Will move the memorial reference to a profile comment, then reword the research note to refer to the comment. Done. [[Blosser-158|George Blosser (1778-1852)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Blosser-158 Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date *This work was done before 2015. It looks like I was helping someone who was trying to correct a problem with the profile of his wife. I wasn't able to find quickly discover that I have a family connection to the profile, so have removed myself from his trusted list. Ditto, removed myself from his wife's trusted list, [[Garrison-1582|Rebecca (Garrison) Blosser (1783-1859)]]. [[Roller-633|Rachel (Roller) Firestone (1783-abt.1870)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Roller-633 Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date *Problem. That's not the biggest problem with this profile. It is an adopted profile that was filled with Gedcom junk and span tag reference notes. We have made some updates to the profile … but there were many. For this line, we have been following the work of George Ely Russell. Worked already to update the profile of her husband. They had 12 children and quite a few memorials were referenced in the child list on her husband's profile. Working to move those references (from his profile) to a family group free space page. *Setting up free space page for Firestone-Roller family group, and moving FindAGrave references to that page. Some update work needs to be done on those citations. When that is complete, will also add the citations to a profile comment, then will update the reference notes to refer to the free space page and profile comment. When the free space page and comment are complete, will then update Rachel's profile. Done. [[Schmachtenberger-3|Adolph Schmachtenberger (1789-1859)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Schmachtenberger-3 Warning 579: FindAGrave - Missing birth location Problem: FindAGrave has questionable information that is unsourced; the data there is in conflict with other sources. Resolved: Added research note addressing conflict; moved FindAGrave links to profile comment. [[Preston-8328|Esther (Preston) Sexton (1792-abt.1834)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Preston-8328 Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile Problem: There are no gravestone images; the burials come from a local record. She is "Mrs. Saxton" in the burial record (and his burial record had the surname as "Saxton"), so her profile cited the memorials for both Esther and her husband. Resolution. I AM the FindAGrave memorial manager for both Esther and her husband, Earl. Updated the profile details and moved the FindAGrave links to profile comments. [[Firestone-315|Daniel F. Firestone (abt.1796-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Firestone-315 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. Now false. Moved FindAGrave reference to profile comment. [[Preston-8451|Azubah (Preston) Mosher (abt.1796-1867)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Preston-8451 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Resolution: Now false. Moved FindAGrave references and citations to profile comment. [[Merrill-5926|Sally (Merrill) Baldwin (1802-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Merrill-5926 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Problem: As explained on the profile, there is a conflict with her later identify Resolution: Moved the FindAGrave reference to a profile comment. [[Minard-377|Amos M. Minard (abt.1810-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Minard-377 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: Moved the FindAGrave memorials for Amos and his wife to profile comment. [[Minard-375|Thomas Hazen A. J. Minard (1815-bef.1901)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Minard-375 Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Problem: No tombstone image. For his birth, I cite a family bible; for his death, I cite his probate. Resolution: Now False. Moved FindAGrave references to profile comment. [[Westover-873|Enos Westover (1816-bef.1906)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Westover-873 Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Now False. Moved ALL the FindAGrave references to profile comment [[Firestone-326|Susanna Firestone (1818-1894)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Firestone-326 Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date Problem: Gravestone does not report details. Resolution: Now false. Moved the FindAGrave references to profile comment. [[Kimberling-300|Mary Ann (Kimberling) Westover (1818-1899)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kimberling-300 Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Problem: Gravestone does not provide the specifics on the memorial. Resolution: Now false. Moved all FindAGrave memorial specifics to profile comments. [[Preston-10429|Edward Robie Preston (1822-1873)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Preston-10429 Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: I have the right sources … corrected. [[Frost-10279|Olive V. (Frost) Minard (1822-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Frost-10279 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Resolution: Moved all three memorial references to profile comment [[Christy-1680|Joseph Henry Christy (1827-1908)]], https://plus.wikitree.com/function/WTStatus/Status.htm?ErrID=592&UserID1=34017429&UserID2=17740520 Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father Resolution: Marked as false. I have nothing to do with Joseph Henry Christy. [[Minard-527|Sarah Jane (Minard) Hayward (1836-1926)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Minard-527 Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother Resolution: Marked as false, I have nothing to do with Sarah Jane Minard Hayward [[Minard-382|Elijah B. Minard (abt.1807-1874)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Minard-382 [[Westover-877|William Westover (abt.1837-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Westover-877 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Now false to me. Moved FindAGrave reference to profile comment; removed myself from trusted list. [[Wiggin-621|Sarah (Wiggin) Herbert (abt.1777-1851)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Wiggin-621 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Now false to me. Moved FindAGrave to profile comment; removed myself from trusted list. [[Kellerman-480|John Kellerman (abt.1782-1844)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kellerman-480 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: FindAGrave has an image; they may have calculated the date of birth, but no birth appears on tombstone. I often only use calculated dates as approximations. [[Raymond-3920|George Raymond (abt.1782-1868)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Raymond-3920 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Moved the FindAGrave link to a profile comment. [[Kimmerling-13|Dorothea (Kimmerling) Kellerman (abt.1785-1869)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kimmerling-13 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Now false. Moved the findagrave links (many) and details to a profile comment [[Williams-95584|Porter E. Williams (1867-1932)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Williams-95584 Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father … Resolution: False to me. I have nothing to do with Porter E. Williams. [[McLaughlin-8828|Anthony McLaughlin (abt.1794-1866)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=McLaughlin-8828 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution. False. FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date, but that date is otherwise unsourced; WikiTree is using the 1850 census. [[Kellerman-481|Margaret (Kellerman) Croner (abt.1816-1892)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Kellerman-481 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Possible FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date; WikiTree is using census. They report Somerset, Pennsylvania as her birth, but my research didn't report the parents there. [[Kellerman-482|Mary Ann (Kellerman) Keyser (abt.1823-1904)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kellerman-482 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Possible FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date; WikiTree is doesn't try to be so specific as that data is frequently in error. [[Butler-31976|Nancy Beatta (Butler) Preston (abt.1830-1861)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Butler-31976 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Possible FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date; profile on WikiTree isn't trying to be so specific as that data is frequently in error. [[Beach-2007|Catherine Beach (1835-1839)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Beach-2007 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Possible FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date; profile on WikiTree isn't trying to be so specific as that data is frequently in error. [[Webster-16970|Amanda Jane Webster (1836-1912)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Webster-16970&errcode=saved Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Possible FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date; WikiTree is using Illinois Death Index. FindAGrave has erroneous birth location. [[McLaughlin-8772|William McLaughlin (abt.1837-1851)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/McLaughlin-8772 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Possible FindAGrave might be using a specific calculated date; profile on WikiTree isn't trying to be so specific as that data is frequently in error. [[Gaddis-659|Martha A. (Gaddis) Firestone (1837-1896)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gaddis-659 Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother Resolution. False. Parents already attached. [[Rummel-311|John Perky Rummel (1838-1926)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rummel-311 Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother Resolution. False. I have nothing to do with John Perky Rummel [[Westover-878|Amanda (Westover) Emfield (abt.1840-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Westover-878&errcode=saved Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Error? FindAGrave - Different birth date Warning FindAGrave - Missing death location [[Westover-879|John K. Westover (abt.1841-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Westover-879 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Resolution: FindAGrave does not show his tombstone and the dates are otherwise unsourced. Moved FindAGrave to profile comment. [[Westover-881|Elis Winfield Westover (abt.1847-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Westover-881 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date [[West-30846|Sarah (West) Haughton (abt.1784-1856)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=West-30846 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: FindAGrave reports she died in 1856 and has tombstone inscription as "age 72." If she died in 1856, age 72, then she was born about 1784. [[Minard-382|Elijah B. Minard (abt.1807-1874)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Minard-382 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution, WikiTree cites his Vermont death record; tombstone says he died in 1874 at age 67-- so he was born about 1807. [[Firestone-340|Judy Ann (Firestone) Perkey (1815-1849)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Firestone-340 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. WikiTree is citing a family bible for her birth; no idea where the FindAGrave date originates. [[Schmachtenberger-12|Benjamin Franklin Schmachtenberger (1815-1895)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Schmachtenberger-12 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: FindAGrave may be using a date calculator, because there is no known record of Benjamin's birth. He died 15 August 1895, aged 79 years, 1 month, 15 days, so born about 1816. [[Cline-7108|Margaret (Cline) McLaughlin (abt.1818-1889)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cline-7108 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False because--possible FindAGrave has used a date calculator, but WikiTree's born about 1818 is accurate. As yet, no record of her birth is known. [[Preston-10428|Abigail Silver (Preston) Harriman (1820-1887)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Preston-10428 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: NHVR has 6 March 1820; tombstone has 6 March 1821--both dates are discussed in the narrative.
Note: Despite that a free space page (2014) is dedicated to the conflict. , In 2018, a well meaning soul "corrected" his birth data by adding information from FindAGrave, including Salem birth location, See [[Space:Benjamin_Ashby%27s_Conflicted_FindAGrave_record|Benjamin Ashby's Conflicted FindAGrave record]]. Chase Ashley caught the date update in 2020, and I removed the reference to Salem in 2024. [[Kemberling-32|Hester (Kemberling) Hart (abt.1824-1873)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kemberling-32 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False. WikiTree considers, among other items, court filings regarding her guardianship in setting her date of birth. [[McLaughlin-8814|Rachel (McLaughlin) Porter (abt.1824-1887)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=McLaughlin-8814 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date False. FindAGrave may have used a date calculator, but memorial says she died 1887 at age 63 …; which is about 1824 birth; WikiTree cites the 1880 census which also suggests she was born about 1824. [[Stewart-57434|Elizabeth (Stewart) Kemmerling (abt.1825-bef.1890)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Stewart-57434 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: False. No gravestone photograph; FindAGrave data is unsourced. [[Phelps-8876|Elizabeth (Phelps) Sexton (abt.1834-1905)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Phelps-8876 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False. FindAGrave data is unsourced. [[Hitchcock-5277|Sarah Adelia (Hitchcock) Webster (1837-1911)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Hitchcock-5277 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. Just a conflict; WikiTree cites the 1900 census. [[Eastman-3892|Henry Hoyt Eastman (1840-1926)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Eastman-3892 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False. We are citing his NHVR (Death) which reports his date of birth as "Year: 1840. Month 2, 27." FindAGrave data field has his birth as 2 Feb 1839, but the tombstone clearly states 1840. All this was noted in Research Notes. [[Webster-16972|Alma H. (Webster) Hall (abt.1842-1900)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Webster-16972 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: False. FindAGrave date is in error--she was age 8 in the 1850 census and age 18 at 1860; she was probably born in about 1842. [[Kemberling-5|Henry Alfred Kemberling (1842-1931)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kemberling-5 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date [[Kemberling-5|Henry Alfred Kemberling (1842-1931)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kemberling-5 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False. This is just a conflict between two published accounts; both sources are cited for the different dates of birth in the WikiTree narrative. [[McLaughlin-8775|David Todd McLaughlin (abt.1843-1864)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/McLaughlin-8775 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: False. FindAGrave data is unsourced; WikiTree data is sourced. [[Firestone-356|Rebecca Firestone (abt.1848-abt.1860)]]. https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Firestone-356 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution. False. Possible FindAGrave has used a date calculator; WikiTree cites the 1850 census. No birth record is known to exist. [[McLaughlin-8778|Elizabeth McLaughlin (abt.1848-1909)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/McLaughlin-8778 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: Removed myself from profile. [[Gibson-29248|Anna Mary (Gibson) Miller (abt.1848-1914)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gibson-29248 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: False. Gravestone has 1846, but she was age 2 in the 1850 census, and born December 1848 in the 1900 census; Anna Mary was probably born about 1848. [[Gibson-29249|William Gibson (abt.1850-1925)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gibson-29249 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Corrected. [[Westover-882|Ellen (Westover) White (abt.1851-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Westover-882 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Resolution: No gravestone image; FindAGrave data is unsourced. [[Kellerman-388|Mary Alice (Kellerman) Goodrich (abt.1851-1914)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kellerman-388 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False to me; removed myself from the profile. [[Gibson-29250|Sarah (Gibson) Miller (1852-1921)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gibson-29250 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. Corrected. [[Westover-883|Eliza (Westover) Gerhart (abt.1854-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Westover-883 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Added 1924 death; but no sources on memorial for other facts. [[Westover-884|Clara (Westover) Rodkey (1857-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Westover-884 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution. FindAGrave reports her birth as 8 November 1857, but the undated obituary clipping on FindAGrave reports 8 March 1857; tombstone has 1857 which is consistent with the 1860 census. FindAGrave has undated obituary clipping reports she lived at a street address, but does not name the city, nor does it name the paper. FindAGrave obituary reports her death "Saturday evening" but the clipping is undated. [[Shaw-29793|Samuel T. Shaw (1857-1932)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Shaw-29793&errcode=saved Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: FindAGrave details are unsourced. [[Gibson-29252|Matilda (Gibson) Confer (1857-1927)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Gibson-29252&errcode=saved Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: No gravestone image; FindAGrave data is all unsourced. >>>>[[Kemberlin-1|William Henry Kemberlin (1858-1920)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kemberlin-1 Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date Resolution. False. Gravestone reports year of death; no source for other FindAGrave details. [[Harpster-285|John Austin Harpster (abt.1860-1887)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Harpster-285 Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date Resolution. Gravestone has only year of death; no other source reported. [[Shoenfelt-31|Margaret Shoenfelt (1860-1932)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Shoenfelt-31 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: False. Gravestone image gives only year of birth [[Hall-73164|Alma Webster (Hall) Powell (abt.1869-1930)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hall-73164 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution: Alma was a celebrity, and reports of her age/date of birth varied considerably. Gravestone image on FindAGrave is about her husband's first wife. There is no photograph there now about Alma. [[Kemmerling-148|Ella (Kemmerling) Rollins (abt.1861-1912)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kemmerling-148 Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date Resolution. Corrected. [[Claar-299|George Benton McClellan Claar (1862-1903)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Claar-299 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution: False. We are using the 1900 census for his birth. Absolutely no idea how FindAGrave arrives at a it's "1 December 1858" birth date--gravestone image reports his lifespan, "1861-1903"; wife as "1866-1947." No other sources provided on FindAGrave. [[Gibson-29255|Julia Harriet (Gibson) Fishel (abt.1863-1938)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gibson-29255 Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date Resolution. False. FindAGrave displays a gravestone image with her lifespan as "1873-1938," but at 1870 she was age 7, and age 17 at 1880. Ala, she was probably born earlier than the gravestone suggests. [[Bancroft-2620|Ellen E. (Bancroft) Smith (1866-1947)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bancroft-2620 Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date Resolution. There are two FindAGrave memorials for her. This one has obituary that reports her death 2 September 1866. [[Hall-73176|Arthur H. Hall (abt.1871-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hall-73176 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Resolution: False. This frustrates me. I included a research note, "Who is this ..." and referenced a memorial -- so the system generates a WARNING! [[McNiel-115|Delbert Clinton McNiel (1876-1947)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/McNiel-115 Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father Resolution: False to me. I have nothing to to with McNiel-115 [[Boorman-691|Samuel Boorman (1877-1948)]], https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Boorman-691 Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location Resolution: False. There is no gravestone image or any other source provided on FindAGrave. The memorial claim that he died in "USA" is unsourced or unproven. [[Gibson-29043|Samuel Gibson (1820-1891)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gibson-29043 Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID … And then it proceeds to report IDs 12600460, 51445123, 12600445, 12715916, 37237360, 9868544, 12600465, 12715871, 143680051, 51445187, 59868544, 98571838 [[McLaughlin-8774|Sarah (McLaughlin) Borton (abt.1842-1928)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/McLaughlin-8774 Hint 586: FindAGrave - Link to merged Grave ID … and then lists 114953634, 9419087, 181933703, 114953630 Resolution: Both of the merged memorials were cited on the profile in Research Notes. The duplicate memorials were noted in Research Notes. The merged memorial on FindAGrave links to the surviving memorial. [[Gibson-29252|Matilda (Gibson) Confer (1857-1927)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Gibson-29252 Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave, and then lists 143680051, 9868544, 59868544, 98571838, 99346058, 99346288 Resolution: False. All of the memorials link to proper memorials. [[Van_Dyke-1791|Heyltje (Van Dyke) Horton (1755-)]], https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Van_Dyke-1791 Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date Resolution: Reported as False. FindAGrave reports she died 25 September 1831, but then reports transcription with death as 26 September 1831. I'm still trying to access her probate record. ===Subsequent Items/Notes=== *April 2024 **[[Haughton-447|Ebenezer Haughton Sr. (1699-)]], Haughton-447. Despite that his profile was materially updated in February 2022 to include both a statement, "The details of his death are unknown" and an extended research note reporting his death had been confused by that of his '''grandson''' of the same name, the profile of Haughton-447 was edited to first add an unsourced cemetery category, "Godfrey Hill Cemetery, Hebron, Connecticut" and then shortly to add further unsourced death information in the data field saying he "died 1814 at about '''age 114''' in Hebron, Tolland County, Connecticut." The latter edit confused him with the FindAGrave reported death of his son of the same name, whose FindAGrave memorial apparently sources its data only to an eroded, unreadable gravestone image. Resolution--Updated the narrative and research have moved all FindAGrave links to a profile comment ==Research Notes== == Sources ==

Finding a Cherokee Freedman Ancestor

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The Cherokee “Freedmen” are Black people who lived in the Cherokee Nation at the beginning of the Civil War, both free and formerly enslaved, who met the criteria of the 1866 Cherokee Reconstruction Treaty to qualify as “Cherokee Freedmen.” When the Civil War came, some Black and/or enslaved people remained in the Cherokee Nation, but many simply left Indian Territory and went to Kansas, which had just been admitted to the Union as a free state. Others went to different parts of Indian Territory that were not so involved in the war. Some were taken to Texas by their enslavers. Cherokee Nation officially abolished slavery in 1863 and at the end of the war some of the Black people who had lived in the Cherokee Nation at the beginning of the war returned. In July,1866 the Cherokee Nation signed a reconstruction treaty with the United States which included provision for both formerly enslaved and free Black people, who became known as the Cherokee Freedmen. The treaty reads in part: "The Cherokee Nation having, voluntarily, in February, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, by an act of the national council, forever abolished slavery, hereby covenant and agree that never hereafter shall either slavery or involuntary servitude exist in their nation otherwise than in the punishment of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, in accordance with laws applicable to all the members of said tribe alike.''' They further agree that all freedmen who have been liberated by voluntary act of their former owners or by law, as well as all free colored persons who were in the country at the commencement of the rebellion, and are now residents therein, or who may return within six months, and their descendants, shall have all the rights of native Cherokees:''' Provided, That owners of slaves so emancipated in the Cherokee Nation shall never receive any compensation or pay for the slaves so emancipated." - Article 9 of The Treaty Of 1866 Only people who could show that they had lived in the Cherokee Nation prior to the War and either remained or returned to the Cherokee Nation by the January 16, 1867 deadline were accepted as Freedmen by the Cherokee Nation. '''Where to look for a Freedman ancestor:''' The 1910 United States Federal Census is the first census taken after Oklahoma statehood. In 1900 a special census was taken in Indian Territory in preparation for statehood. That census included everyone living in the Nation regardless of race. In 1898 the Dawes Commission began its’ work - for the second time - in the Cherokee Nation. The purpose of the commission was to identify people in Indian Territory who were eligible for an allotment of tribal lands when Oklahoma became a state. The information collected by the Commission was recorded on Dawes Cards and application packets and usually include lots of detail on a person or his or her family -- residence, age, gender, relationships, parents’ names, and which previous rolls included the person. Freedman cards also include the name of the enslaver. Dawes applications contain more detail and often have other records, such as marriage certificates, attached. A printed list of the Cherokee Freedmen on the Dawes Final Roll is digitized at the National Archives. About 4500 Cherokee Freedmen (and/or their descendants) were accepted by the Dawes Commission. This list includes only the Dawes number and only includes those who were approved. index to listing at [https://www.archives.gov/research/native-americans/rolls/final-rolls.html Dawes] Each person on the Dawes has both a card/application number and a roll number. In general, all members of a household share a card, each individual has a roll number. Cards are grouped into categories - Freedmen, Freedmen Minors, Freedmen Newborns, Freedmen Rejected, Freedman Denied. Dawes cards and packets are digitized at Ancestry and Fold3 ($) Dawes cards are digitized, but not indexed, at FamilySearch. (Enter "Cherokee Freedmen" as keywords in the catalog search form) The basis for enrollment on the Dawes for all Cherokee citizens (which included intermarried whites, Adopted Shawnee, Delaware, and Freedmen) was the 1880 Cherokee Census, but there are many other censuses and payment rolls which were created between 1880 and 1897. The 1897 Freedmen Payment roll is a list of Cherokee Freedmen who were entitled to participate in an award by the U.S. Court of Claims. The microfilmed roll is a duplicate copy used by Agent Dew M. Wisdom, who completed the work of making payments that was begun by Special Agent James G. Dickson. Entries for individuals give various identification numbers, name, age, sex, amount due, and sometimes other information. The "Wallace Roll" is a list of Cherokee Freedmen eligible to receive a payment authorized by an Act of Congress in 1888. The roll was based on an 1883 Freedman Roll which the Cherokee Nation had rejected. The Wallace Roll includes lists of "authenticated" Freedmen from the 1893 list, a list of people who died between 1883 and 1890, a list of people added by Wallace, and a list of "free Negroes." Wallace apparently missed a lot of people, so there are later supplements to that roll, and in 1895-96 the Kern-Clifton Roll, supposedly more inclusive, was created. The Kern-Clifton roll includes name, position in family, age, sex, district of residence, and other information. There are sections for “authenticated” and “contesting” Freedmen and their descendants. Access Genealogy also has a searchable index for the Kern-Clifton Roll. Ancestry has both a typed index and a typed transcript of the census itself. Ancestry.com has digitized many of the Freedman rolls 1867-1897 beginning at [https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/8810/images/42369_329831-00000?ssrc=&backlabel=Return Freedman] The 1880 census was the first comprehensive census taken after the Civil War. It was used as the baseline for the Dawes Commission for all applicants Cherokee, Freedman, or white since it was much more accurate and complete than the 1867 Tompkins Roll. The Freedmen were enumerated along with everyone else, but then they were validated as meeting the 1866 requirements and a separate list of “authenticated” Freedmen was created. The 1880 Cherokee census is digitized at Ancestry ($) and FamilySearch (access limited to Family History centers). In 1867 the first post-War Cherokee Nation census, called the "Tompkins Roll" was taken in conformance with the 1866 Treaty which included the Freedmen. Unfortunately that census missed many people, both Cherokee and Freedmen and the microfilm images are very hard to read. The Tompkins Roll is digitized at Ancestry ($) [https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/8810/images/42369_329811-00000?ssrc=&backlabel=Return Tompkins] The 1860 United States census included some people in Indian Territory, both whites and Indians. The general census only enumerated whites living in Indian Territory, but the Slave Schedule included both white and Cherokee enslavers. See: 1860 U.S. Federal Census - Slave Schedules, State: Arkansas County: Indian Lands . This census is the first record of enslaved people in the Cherokee Nation in Indian Territory. It doesn’t give names, but does list ages and genders which can sometimes be correlated to known individuals.

Finding Bio Dad

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The goal of this project is to ...I am searching for my biological Father.The tree I started was working my bio Mom's line, but I have since located her. She is unwilling to give me any info on him, except he was a drummer.So I am starting a new project to see if this great resource can help me out :) Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Carten-14|Angela Carten]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Anyone that works with Kentucky genealogy I am still very new to this,but willing to learn * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12287937 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding details, vita, obituary, etc for Herbert E. Hill, artist, Pasadena. b 1896 japan, d. 1962, Pasadena. I have found some info on his parents but zero on him

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Harms-445|W. M. Harms]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * locating obituary of Herbert Eugene Hill, d. June 1962 * locating info about siblings Chester Hoyt Hill, Marion Hill *locating info about paintings, murals, etc done by Herbert E. Hill Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10744586 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding first marrage

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Pavey-519|Heather Carol Goddard]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=27461489 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding Fred Bourman

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Finding_Fred_Bourman.jpg
Finding_Fred_Bourman-1.jpg
== The Fred Bourman Mystery == [[Bourman-38|Fred Bourman]] marries [[Williams-102753|Louisa Williams]] in South Australia in 1865, has eleven children with her, and dies in 1903. We currently have no evidence for his birth. :'''Obituary.''' — We have to record this week the sudden death of Mr. Frederick Bourman, which took place at his residence, Kooringa, on Friday. The deceased was taken with a fit of vomiting at 3 o'clock, and three hours later he expired. He was well known in Burra, having resided here for the past 38 years, principally following the occupation of a drover. He leaves four daughters — Mrs. W. Gillett (Hampton); Minnie, Annie, Albina and Tilly (Burra); and five sons — John and William (W.A.), Benjamin, Walter and Alfred (Burra). The funeral took place on Saturday afternoon. He was born in Germany, and was 68 years of age.No title (1903, March 25). Burra Record (SA : 1878 - 1954), p. 2. Retrieved July 22, 2022, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article36015572 This is an attempt to document the evidence for the birth of Friedrich Rudolph Bormann a.k.a. Frederick Rudolph Bourman. It was created in response to the G2G thread [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1290279/bourman-australia-brick-wall Bourman Australia Brick Wall] === General Info === German ''Vornamen'' are pretty fluid, they might have four and use them interchangeably depending on mood (at least it seems). I have noticed that they may even adopt new names that appeal to them. This ''may'' be the case for Fred. Common variations of the surname found in sources are: Bourman(n), Bor(r)man(n), Barman, Boermann. '''Steve edit''': Searched nineteenth century emigration records from the German state of Lower Saxony. Found 65 references to Bormann, 4 to Borrmann and 0 Bourman. Bourman is an English variation of Bormann. === Family Lore === Gary - still to locate my physical files but do remember that Fred came across from a Polish area of Prussia as a seaman on a boat, got to Melbourne and abandoned that ship and came to Adelaide on the Mary Clarke in 1853 I believe (to be confirmed). Stayed in the Adelaide area for a while then moved to Burra. Recollection is that Fred was pretty illiterate and was a shepherd. There is a copy of a publication "Bourman's of Burra" which I had a third hand copy of, should be in the family tree documents when I find them, the photos are very blurred due to being photocopies of photocopies. Finding the originals of this will be a treasure trove. === Things Supported by Evidence === # Fred is born around 1835-1840 in "Germany", # [[Bormann-44|Gottfried Bormann]] appears to gift Fred a parcel of land in Lobethal in 1862, # [[Borrmann-19|Emilie Friederike (Borrmann) Stabernack]] is allowed to use Fred's land in Lobethal after the death of her husband (who owns an interest in it) # The 1862 title lists him as a ''labourer'' and his obit as a ''drover'', # Fred marries in 1865 at age 25 (gives date of birth as 1840), # He's in Burra by the time his first child is born (February 1868) - obit suggests 1865, # His cows are wandering the streets of Burra in 1894MAGISTRATES' COURT. (1894, May 30). Burra Record (SA : 1878 - 1954), p. 3. Retrieved September 3, 2021, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article36058721, # His daughter is shot in the arm in Kooringa in 1894SHOOTING ACCIDENT AT KOORINGA. (1894, January 11). The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931), p. 6. Retrieved May 30, 2023, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article25674931, # Fred dies in 1903 at age 68 (gives date of birth as 1835). The current earliest definitive record of Fred is 1862. All earlier dates and mentions are speculative. === Current Theories === # That Fred is the son of [[Bormann-44|Johann Gottfried Bormann]] and his third wife [[Minke-20|Johanne Christiane Wilhelmine Minke]]: #* We're missing only one male child in the known Gottfried Bormann family - [[Borrmann-21|Carl Rudolph Bormann]] #* [[Borrmann-21|Carl Rudolph Bormann]] is Christened on the 2nd December 1834 in Meseritz which aligns closely with Fred's date of birth calculated from his age at death, #* They share the name Rudolph #* It is documented that the Bormann family lived in Meseritz, Posen, Prussia Iwan, William (Wilhelm) (2003). Name list of "Old Lutheran" emigration of the mid-19th century from eastern Germany (mainly Pomerania and Lower Silesia) to Australia, Canada, and the United States (Rev. ed. 2003). Freistadt Historial Society, Trinity Lutheran Church of Freistadt, Mequon, WI"
http://www.archivaria.com/EmigList/ Webpage 2, Page 247 of German text, half way down the page under Kreis Meseritz is a reference, which translates "shoemaker Borrmann (45) with wife and five children;"
. This town was in the region returned to Poland at the end of WWI, and now known as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mi%C4%99dzyrzecz Międzyrzecz]. The history is consistent with the family lore that Fred came from the Polish area of Prussia, # That he's from the Harz mountains or another mining area and made his way to the Burra mines: #* Leandra Ford: "In the early 1850s there were 2000 or so German miners who came to SA from the Harz Mountains, and of course they settled in the mining communities in SA. Was Frederick a miner?" #* Dieter Lewerenz: "I also have some ancestors with the name Bormann in my family tree. They come from the Harz region and from the area between Harz and Magdeburg. This region belonged to the province Saxony of the Kingdom of Prussia at that time." #* The mining link seems tenuous - he's a labourer, farmer, and drover from the evidence so far. # He came to Australia as crew, jumped ship in Melbourne, arrived via ''Mary Clarke'' in 1853 #* According to https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/2352A0B5-F7F0-11E9-AE98-37CE4C9AA9A3?image=393 the Bourman arriving on the Mary Clarke in 1853 is 27 years old. This would make this person born in 1826 which is much earlier than the range we have for Fred. === Mentions of Fred in Australia === TO DO: * Find all Land Titles and check for family relationships and transfers * Check Sand's and Mac for addresses * Look for newspaper family notices - especially those for deaths to see if family relationships are mentioned - the search for family notices should include the newspapers printed in German, starting with the 'Süd-Australien' https://www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au/record=b1191751~S1 * Other newspapers references * Did Johann Gottlieb Bormann leave a will? * Lutheran Archives * [https://explore.history.sa.gov.au/organisation/lobethal-archives-historical-museum Lobethal Archives and Historical Museum] - '''Query Submitted''' * If he came via Melbourne can we find him there? * Gary to find his previous research * See if "Browsing the Bormanns" by Lorraine Willoughby has any info: http://worldcat.org/title/1164079229 — the book cites no sources, and doesn't mention Fred. The book is missing quite a few early family members and appears to conflate two families. More research needed, the book is in the Nuriootpa Library but is not available for borrowing. COMPLETED TASKS: * Check all Fred* born between 1834 and 1846 in SA - '''DONE''' * Check all Fried* born between 1834 and 1846 in SA - '''DONE''' * Hospital records - '''DONE''' * Skjold has parents and five(?) children - attempt to reconstruct children from birth records. - '''DONE''' - All the SA civil Birth records between 1836 and 1902 can traced back to 3 points of origin. ([[Bormann-44|Johann Gottfried Bormann]], [[Bourman-38|Friedrich Rudolph Bourman (abt.1840-1903)]], and the unrelated parents of [[Bormann-338|Friedrich Heinrich Bormann (1860-1926)]]); commented by [[Thomas-29419|Steve Thomas]] 06:03, 27 July 2022 (UTC) ---- Possibly arrived on the Mary Clarke from Melbourne in 1853 - though he'd be very young (13 to 18 years old). :PASSENGERS INWARDS. :Passengers per Mary Clarke—Misses Gilfillan and Cook, Messrs Hanson, Styles, Roberts, Frenellick, in the cabin. Messrs Nichols, Raker, Ford, Warul, Wilson, Lanley, Andrews, Smart, Saiby, Oliver, Hodson, Bourman, in the steerage.SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. (1853, February 28). Adelaide Times (SA : 1848 - 1858), p. 2. Retrieved August 25, 2021, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article207010815 '''Gary edit:''' going through the Public Record Office Victoria site to ascertain if there is record of Bormann/Bourman coming through Victoria in the lists, will advise progress. There is every chance that I will need to check Geelong, Port Fairy and Tasmania lists as well. PROV: https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/63E8C029-FA01-11E9-AE98-F33C30B7AB7B?image=124 Frederick BOORMAN at PROV: https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/3B010F26-F96C-11E9-AE98-2719F500BDE6?image=187 PLEASE DISREGARD - STARTLED FAWN IS THE SHIP, DATE OF LEAVING LONDON IS 31ST JULY 1856??? === Land Transactions === It appears that crown title XXXVI/66 in the Hundred of Onkaparinga is given to him by [[Bormann-44|Johann Gottfried BORMANN]] on the 19th December 1862. We know this because the notifications of land sales in the newspapers only list Johann: :TOWNSHIP LOBETHAL.-Lots 7, 8, 74, 75, of Sections 5124 and 5125; and Lot 9, part of Section 5171, Hundred Onkaparinga; Johann Gottfried Bormann; Residence, Lobethal.Advertising (1862, October 4). The South Australian Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1858 - 1889), p. 4. Retrieved August 27, 2021, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article31815454 These lots are contained in two titles: Johann Gottfried Bormann keeps Lots 7, 8, 74, 75 of Sections 5124 and 5125 (CT36/65), but Friedrich's CT36/66 contains Lot 9 of Section 5171.https://sailis.lssa.com.au/products/imageDelivery/historicalNameIndex/B/1858-1863/PRIVATE/46. {{Image|file=Finding_Fred_Bourman.jpg |caption=Relationship between Gottfried's and Fred's land parcels }} From the title we can infer that Fred's preferred name (at the time) is ''Friedrich Rudolph Bormann''. The title is transferred to his wife Louisa when he dies in 1903 - confirming we have the correct individual. {{Image|file=Finding_Fred_Bourman-1.jpg |caption=Lobethal title passes to Louisa - we have the right Fred. }} There is very likely a family relationship to [[Bormann-44|Johann Gottfried BORMANN]] - so it is possible that Fred arrived with the family on the SKJOLD in 1841. He would have been a child. The Will of [[Stabernack-3|Ferdinand Julius Stabernack]], dated 2nd July 1898, states in part: :I also give unto my son [[Stabernack-2|Ferdinand Julius Stabernack]] all my interest in that piece of land known as '''Frederick Bormann's''' containing three acres or thereabouts and being part section 5171 Hundred of Onkaparinga provided always that [[Borrmann-19|Fredericka Stabernack]] whom I hereby acknowledge as my wife is allowed free and unrestricted right to occupy for her own use and benefit—..."Australia, South Australia, Will and Probate Records," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q55Y-PKT2 : 26 September 2019), Ferdinand Julius Stabernack, 6 Dec 1900; citing Will, South Australia, Australia, Probate and Administration Books, Supreme Court of South Australia, Adelaide; FHL microfilm 103505917. If Fred is the son of Gottfried, then "Fredericka Stabernack" is his sister and Ferdinand Julius Stabernack is his brother-in-law. This seems to further strengthen this link. === GRO Research === The following items, from https://localwiki.org/adelaide-hills/GRO_Merge_%27Bed%27_-_%27Bow%27 should be viewed at the Grenfell Street Land Services Office: * BORMANN, Ernst Gustav linked with Section 195 Hundred of Finniss 1890 Memorial 220/401 * BORMANN, Johann Gottfried shoemaker Lobethal 1850 Memorial 238/26 * BORMANN, Gottfried farmer Lobethal 1855 Memorial 87/80 * BORMANN, Johann Gottfried shoemaker Lobethal 1862, linked with Friedrich Rudolph Bormann labourer Lobethal Application 3390 * BORMANN, Wilhelm farmer near Palmer Hundred of Finniss land grant 1891 Grant Book 58 Page 44 County Sturt === The Family of Johann Gottfried Bormann === We know that Johann Gottfried Bormann and his family fled persecution in Prussia for their Lutheran beliefs. There are two records here that need to be considered carefully as they are marked as Catholic records. We currently have 10 candidates for the 4 or 5 children on the ''Skjold''. We need to try to match children born Prussia with events in South Australia. In this way we can work out which children emigrated. Some my have died before 1841 - the oldest child in 1841 would have been 21 (just old enough to marry). {| border="1" class="wikitable" | Child || Mother || Birth || Marriage || Death |- | 1 || 1 || [[Bormann-334|Gustav Adolph Bornemann]] Born 22 Oct 1820, Baptised 29 Oct 1820, Meseritz || || |- | 2 || 1 || [[Bormann-335|Mathilde Wilhelmine Bornemann]] Born 22 Aug 1823, Baptised 24 Aug 1823, Meseritz || None || 6 Sep 1823, Meseritz |- | 3 || 1 || [[Bormann-285|Wilhelmine Amalie Bormann]] Born 29 Sep 1824, Baptised 3 Oct 1824, Meseritz || || |- | 4 || 2 || [[Bormann-284|Johanne Caroline Bormann]] Born 9 Sep 1827, Baptised 23 Sep 1827, Meseritz || None || 8 Nov 1827, Meseritz |- | 5 || 3 || Christened [[Bormann-236|Ernst Wilhelm Eduard Bormann]] 29 Apr 1829 Posen || Eduard Karl BORMANN 19-Dec-1857 Inverbrackie (DOB~1828) || Carl Edward BORMANN 22-Jul-1907 Milendella (DOB~1828) |- | 6 || 3 || Christened [[Bormann-202|Carl Wilhelm Bormann]] 8 Aug 1831 Meseritz || Wilhelm BORMANN 20-Jun-1862 Blumberg (DOB~1831) || Wilhelm BORMANN 16-Jul-1894 Milendella (DOB~1831) |- | 7 || 3 || Christened [[Borrmann-21|Carl Rudolph Borrmann]] 2 Dec 1834 Meseritz || || |- | 8 || 3 || Christened [[Bormann-47|Maria Herrmine Bormann]] 21 Jul 1837 Posen || Maria Hermine BORMAN 28-Aug-1856 Inverbrackie (DOB~1837) || Hermina M Beeck 24 Sep 1914 Katanning (DOB~1837) |- | 9 || 3 || [[Borrmann-22|Ernestine Emilie Borrmann]] Born 21 Jun 1837, Baptised 14 Nov 1837, Meseritz || || |- | 10 || 3 || Born Borrmann 20 Sep 1839 Meseritz, Christened [[Bormann-238|Friederike Emilie Bormann]] 12 Dec 1839 Posen || Friderica Emilie BORRMANN 10-Jul-1862 Inverbrackie (DOB~1840) || Emilie STABERNACK 9 May 1904 Lobethal (DOB~1840) |} * Why are 8 and 10 christened Catholic? Where they prevented from practising their own religion? See https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1464322/is-hermine-maria-bormann-a-twin for discussion * 8 and 9 are christened very close, are the corresponding births separated by at least nine months? See https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1464322/is-hermine-maria-bormann-a-twin for discussion * Try to find birth records * Assuming christenings are close to births, try to match up with known Australian events === The Lutherans === Given that Fred may be a member of Gottfried's family it is worth contacting the following Lutheran organisations to see if they have any info. * https://www.lca.org.au/departments/ministry-support/lutheran-archives/ * https://milendella.lutheran.org.au/ === Early History of Lobethal === [[Krummnow-2|Johann Friedrich Krummnow]] was born in 1811 in Posen, Prussia and in 1839 arrived at Port Adelaide on the ship, [[Space:Passenger_list_of_Catharina_1839|Catharina]]. During the voyage he taught girls but later was not deemed suitable to teach and become a pastor in Australia. In the following years, he was able to become a naturalised British citizen and thus able to purchase land. The Germans who arrived later on the [[Space:%27SKJOLD%27_From_Hamburg_to_South_Australia_1841|Skjold]] were not British subjects and so were not able to buy land. Some number of German settlers provided Krummnow with the funds for land purchases at Lobethal to establish a community: Krummnow wanted it based on his own principles of shared property and fervent prayer. The Lobethal settlers rejected Krummnow's vision and legally disputed his right to the land titles. It seems likely that Johann Gottfried Bormann was part of the group that acquired land from Johann Friedrich Krummnow. The Bormann family could be prominent in the history of the settlement of Lobethal. :In May 1842, the settlers purchased sections 5124 and 5125 from J F Krumnow by an arrangement where he retained the title as he was the only naturalised British subject of Fritsche’s congregation. These sections were divided between the 18 families and included four acres for a church and school, two acres of which were donated by Müller. The heads of the 18 founding families were: [[Meier-873|Carl Meier]]; [[Krause-946|Gottfried Krause]]; [[Wenzel-750|Christian Wentzel]]; [[Hoffmann-916|Samuel Gottlob Hoffman]]; [[Kleinitz-29|Johann Kleinitz]]; [[Menzel-155|Daniel Menzel]]; [[Felsch-13|Gottlieb Felsch]]; [[Klar-15|Emanuel Klar]]; [[Mueller-2513|Ferdinand]] and [[Mueller-2512|August Müller]]; [[Hauffe-8|Gottfried Hauffe]]; [[Henschke-16|Christian Hentschke]]; [[Bormann-44|Gottfried Bormann]]; [[Kowald-14|Christoph]] and [[Kowald-8|Friedrich Kowald]]; and [[Weinert-70|Traugott]], [[Weinert-80|August]] and [[Weinert-58|Dienegott Weinert]]. Several of these original settlers of Lobethal constructed buildings which survive to this day.https://data.environment.sa.gov.au/Content/heritage-surveys/2-Onkaparinga-Valley-Heritage-Survey-Pt-1-2003-Revised-Edition.pdf '''Note:''' the links to profiles above have only had preliminary verification - please take them with a grain of salt. According to the document above: * 5 Bridge St, Lobethal, Cottage, (1850s, Bormann, Lunn) * 101 Main Street, Lobethal, House & former shop ‘Rosedale’, (1860, Bormann) are both credited as Gottfried's. Images of "Rosedale" at: https://m.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1109371742427723&type=3 Apparently occupied by his daughter Johanne Lydia Muhlberg in 1902. A view inside "Rosedale" in 2015: https://autopsyofadelaide.com/2015/11/21/the-ghosts-of-christmas-past/ === Resources === * https://data.environment.sa.gov.au/Content/heritage-surveys/2-Lobethal-Valley-of-Praise-1983.pdf * https://localwiki.org/adelaide-hills/Ship_Skjold_%2828Oct1841%29 * There is a Bormann Road near Milendella probably named after Gottfried * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milendella,_South_Australia * https://www.southaustralianhistory.com.au/milendella.htm * https://guides.slsa.sa.gov.au/c.php?g=410329&p=2795763 * http://www.archivaria.com/EmigList/ * https://sailis.lssa.com.au/products/search/historicalNameIndexImageSearch?form * https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/SearchScreens/BasicSearch.aspx * https://sappa.plan.sa.gov.au/ * https://librariestas.ent.sirsidynix.net.au/client/en_AU/names/? * https://collections.slsa.sa.gov.au/ * https://www.familyhistorysa.org/colonists.html * https://www.genealogysa.org.au/resources/online-database-search == Sources == [https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?q.surname=Bormann&q.birthLikePlace=Meseritz&q.birthLikeDate.from=1820&q.birthLikeDate.to=1841&count=100&offset=0&m.defaultFacets=on&m.queryRequireDefault=on&m.facetNestCollectionInCategory=on The search used to produce this list] '''Marriage to Johanne Carolina Elisabeth Schultz''' :Name: Johann Gottfried Bormann :Event Type: Marriage :Event Date: 25 Jan 1820 :Event Place: Tirschtiegel, Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Event Place (Original): Tirschtiegel, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Sex: Male :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Johann Christian Bormann :Spouse's Name: Johanna Carolina Elisabeth Schulz :Spouse's Sex: Female :Spouse's Father's Name: Johann Christian Schulz :Volume: 1455 - 1460 :Volume Date Range: 1455 - 1460, 1817-1825 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DYVQ-NFP?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJ4LS-MHV '''Children of Johann Gottfried Bormann and Johanna Caroline Elisabeth Schultz''' :Name: Wilhelmine Amalie Bormann :Sex: Female :Christening Date: 3 Oct 1824 :Christening Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Johann Gottfried Bormann :Mother's Name: Caroline Elisabeth Schultz :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-4HM?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBP-NMK '''Death of Johanne Carolina Elisabeth Schultz''' :Name: Caroline Elisabeth Schultze :Event Type: Death :Event Date: 14 Jul 1825 :Event Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Event Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Sex: Female :Age: 26 :Religion: Evangelische :Birth Year (Estimated): 1799 :Spouse's Name: Johann Gottfried Bormann :Spouse's Sex: Male :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :Volume Date Range: 1416 - 1426, 1824-1835 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-WTR?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQB5-Z5W '''Marriage to Johanne Caroline Minke''' Gottfried's marriage to Caroline is short-lived - both she and their daughter die shortly after the birth. :Name: Johann Gottfried Bormann :Event Type: Marriage :Event Date: 12 Apr 1826 :Event Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Event Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Sex: Male :Age: 33 :Religion: Evangelische :Birth Year (Estimated): 1793 :Spouse's Name: Hanne Caroline Minke :Spouse's Sex: Female :Spouse's Age: 23 :Spouse's Birth Year (Estimated): 1803 :Spouse's Father's Name: Christian Minke :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :Volume Date Range: 1416 - 1426, 1824-1835 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-H4J?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQB5-JMY '''Children of Johann Gottfried Bormann and Johanne Caroline Minke''' :Name: Johanne Caroline Bormann :Sex: Female :Christening Date: 9 Sep 1827 :Christening Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Joh Gottfried Bormann :Mother's Name: Johanne Caroline Minke :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-C2F?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBR-FH2 :Name: Johanna Carolina Bormann :Sex: Female :Age: 0 :Death Date: 8 Nov 1827 :Death Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Death Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Birth Year (Estimated): 1827 :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Joh Gottfried Bormann :Mother's Name: Johanna Carolina Minke :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-W2W?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBR-58H '''Death of Johanne Caroline Minke''' :Name: Johanne Caroline Minke :Event Type: Death :Event Date: 21 Sep 1827 :Event Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Event Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Sex: Female :Age: 25 :Religion: Evangelische :Birth Year (Estimated): 1802 :Spouse's Name: Joh Gottfried Bormann :Spouse's Sex: Male :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :Volume Date Range: 1416 - 1426, 1824-1835 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-CSN?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBR-5Z7 '''Marriage to Johanna Christiane Minke''' Gottfried marries Caroline's sister, Christiane. :Name: Johann Gottfried Bormann :Event Type: Marriage :Event Date: 17 Jul 1828 :Event Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Event Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Sex: Male :Age: 37 :Religion: Evangelische :Birth Year (Estimated): 1791 :Father's Name: Joh Christian Bormann :Mother's Name: Anna Margretha Steltzer :Spouse's Name: Johanna Christiane Minke :Spouse's Sex: Female :Spouse's Age: 22 :Spouse's Birth Year (Estimated): 1806 :Spouse's Father's Name: Christian Minke :Spouse's Mother's Name: Anna Catharina Kloss :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :Volume Date Range: 1416 - 1426, 1824-1835 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-CFY?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBT-S68 '''Children of Johann Gottfried Bormann and Johanne Christiane Minke''' :Name: Ernst Wilhelm Eduard Bormann :Sex: Male :Christening Date: 29 Apr 1829 :Christening Place: Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Posen, Preuben, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Joh. Gottfried Bormann :Mother's Name: Johanna Christiane Minke :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-41S?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBT-LR4 :Name: Carl Wilhelm Bormann :Sex: Male :Christening Date: 8 Aug 1831 :Christening Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Joh. Gottfried Bormann :Mother's Name: Christiana Minke :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-W74?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQBB-38J :Name: Carl Rudolph Borrmann :Sex: Male :Christening Date: 2 Dec 1834 :Christening Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Johann Gottfr. Borrmann :Mother's Name: Johanne Minke :Volume: 1416 - 1426 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DYWS-487?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJQ19-9HK :Name: Maria Herrmine Bormann :Sex: Female :Christening Date: 21 Jul 1837 :Christening Place: Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Prittish, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: '''Katholische''' :Father's Name: Gottfr. Bormann :Mother's Name: Johanne Muenke :Volume: 1331, 1332 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6QPS-QMK?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJ389-3P8 :Name: Ernestine Emilie Borrmann :Sex: Female :Christening Date: 14 Nov 1837 :Christening Place: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Joh. Gottfried Borrmann :Mother's Name: Joh. Christiane Münke :Volume: 1426 - 1428 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-6SGF-QF?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJ3GT-VZ9 '''Note:''' Tochter = Daughter, it's not a name. :Name: Tochter Borrmann :Sex: Female :Birth Date: 20 Sep 1839 :Birthplace: Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Birthplace (Original): Meseritz, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: Evangelische :Father's Name: Joh. Gottfr. Borrmann :Mother's Name: Johanne Christiane Muenke :Volume: 1426 - 1428 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-6SGV-LS?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJ3GY-Z5T :Name: Friederike Emilie Bormann :Sex: Female :Christening Date: 12 Dec 1839 :Christening Place: Posen, Preußen, Deutschland :Christening Place (Original): Prittish, Posen, Preußen, Germany :Religion: '''Katholische''' :Father's Name: Gottfr. Bormann :Mother's Name: Johannae Muenke :Volume: 1331, 1332 :https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6QPS-QMK?cc=1491272&personaUrl=%2Fark%3A%2F61903%2F1%3A1%3AJ389-3PP

Finding Granny Martin

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Iam trying to locate birth and family records for Alice Martin. She was married to John David Talley and she is buried in Covington Cemetary, Covington, LA 8-21-1885` The goal of this project is to ... Find my great grandmother Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Pichon-57|Judie Heckel]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * *, Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=8689532 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding information for my gran

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Loveridge-340|Gemma Loveridge]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=27354966 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding Jean Baptiste DuPlessis

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https://books.google.com/books?id=pipKAQAAMAAJ&lpg=PA799&ots=zICRcW_wk0&dq=Louis%20Gatineau%20Fort%20Ponchartrain&pg=PA69#v=onepage&q=Louis%20Gatineau%20Fort%20Ponchartrain&f=false The goal of this project is to trace the lineage of Jean Baptiste DuPlessis to the Moscuten indians Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[DuPlessis-107|Denise DuPlessis]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13149441 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding Jean Baptiste DuPlessis' real family

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https://books.google.com/books?id=pipKAQAAMAAJ&lpg=PA799&ots=zICRcW_wk0&dq=Louis%20Gatineau%20Fort%20Ponchartrain&pg=PA69#v=onepage&q=Louis%20Gatineau%20Fort%20Ponchartrain&f=false The goal of this project is to trace the lineage of Jean Baptiste DuPlessis to the Moscuten indians Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[DuPlessis-107|Denise DuPlessis]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13149441 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding John Brown of kingsale Maryland

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There are several John Browne's of the 1600 Maryland and Virginia areas. I want to find the one who may have killed Sarah Blagdon. in 1687, ==John Browne #1 the oldest== William Heath, who was born in 1611 in Surry, England, and was sponsored by John Browne of the Eastern Shore in 1650, was the founder of the Heath families of Surry, Sussex and Prince George Counties. His descendents migrated throughout Southside Virginia, into the Carolinas, and beyond. He also was a member of the Heath families on the Eastern Shore of Virginia and Maryland. It would seem that William arrived with the money needed to purchase land, as Johne Browne received the headrights for William. This means he did not pay his passage; Johne Browne either purchased the headrights from the ship’s captain or sponsored William’s transport. https://geesnmore.wordpress.com/william-heath/ Toby a Negro boy Servant to Jno. Browne is adjudged six yeares old. This was after 1688 and before 1691. Surry Co. Virginia. https://freeafricanamericans.com/free_Indians.htm Sept 1694: "Nicholas Sessums haveing caused Roger Squire to be arrested to this Court & set Forth that notwithstanding his wife Catherine hath alwaies demeaned and behaved herselfe Civilly Orderly & Modestly & never was accounted a Whore nor ever gave the least occasion to be subjected, but hath lived in good name & reputation all her days, yet ye sd. Squire ye. deFdt. hath made it his endeavour to take away her good Name Fame & reputation & to cause her to be disesteemed & slighted & to Effect his Malicious Intentions had at divers places before several p:sons as he more P:ticularly did at the house oF John Browne in Lawnes Creeke P:ish the beginning of August last before a great many people there mett on an Invitation utter publish & declare these Malicious Falce & scandilous Words Vizt: that shee was a Whore & he would prove her a Whore & he would prove her a Whore & to make the same as publick as he could thereby to render her as Odious as possible very often said Kate (speaking to ye. plts. sd. wife) you are a Whore & I will prove you a Whore which was to his damage at least one hundred pds. Sterl. For which he prayed Judgment with Costs to which the Oefdt. appeared & pleaded not Guilty a Jury was therefore sworne to try the same, who Vizt: Walter Flood, Tho.Warren, Tho. Orew, Jno. Browne. Robert Hart, Jos. Wall, Augt Hunicutt, Roger Potter, Edwd. Rowell, Robt. Lancaster & Cha. Savage returne for Virdt. we findefFor the defdt. upon ye. defdts. motion the Jurys Virdt. is Confirmed and an Nonsuite granted him agt. the plt. It is therefore Ordered that the plt. pay damage according to Law with Costs als. exon." A John Browne died intestate, administration requested by Bridget Bown, his relict. D. Feb. 4,1665 . R. March 26,1666. Security,Mr. Arthur Smith, Edward Gibbs. =https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9SG-8NV5?i=100&wc=SJ7K-VZ4%3A344503801%2C344559401&cc=2034267< Land grant 3 June 1642 John Browne * Accomack County * 200 acres at Nuswattooks Creeke beg.g at the land of Leving Duewoods. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990007289140205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,John%20Browne&offset=50 Browne, John. 1655 Northampton County,Virginia Will pro. 25 Mar. 1655 Estate division rec. 7 Jan. 1662 Northampton County Wills and Administrations (1632-1800) [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990005550540205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,john%20browne&offset=20 Browne, John 1661 Isle of Wight,Virginia 2nd pagination Adms. bond rec. 9 Oct. 1661 Record of Wills, Deeds, Etc., Vol. 2, 1661-1719 (Reel 23) Part of index to Isle of Wight County Wills and Administrations (1628-1800) [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990005386770205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,john%20browne&offset=20 Browne, John. 1665 Estate administration records. Isle of Wight,Virginia 2nd pagination Adms. bond rec. 9 Feb. 1665 Part of index to Isle of Wight County Wills and Administrations (1628-1800) [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990005386780205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,john%20browne&offset=20 ==John Browne #2== Source for land granted to 40 transportees of Hugh Lee: Patent to Hugh Lee, dated April 8, 1654, for 2000 acres, named Aberconaway, Charles City County, for transportation of 40 persons, including Richrd, Sparkes, Hen. Neale, Jno. Crew, Andr. Crew, Richd. Dennis, Wm. Marsh, Morris Joyce, Hen. Allaman, Jno. Browne, Wm. Bernard, Tho. Clark, Tomasin Harris, Jno. Browne, Phill. Pledge, Mary Browne, Jno. Cox, Richd. Warren, Tho. Michell, Jno. Drennett, Barbara Petingall, Cha. Bartlett, Wm. Taylor, Jno. Floyd, Tho. Stanley, Joan Liswell, Sara King, Rebecka Love?, Sara Swetland, Jocabus Jonson, Eliz. Cooper, Tho. Woods, Tho. Dance, Jno. Burges, Tho. Ory?, Addam Bradshaw, Robt. Hyme?, Martha Gibbs, Robt. Hicks, Jno. Allen, and Tho. Alford, on South Side Appomattock River, on North side the 3rd branch of the Black Water; nigh Warrick Path. Virginia Patent Book 6, page 510. Personally Came and appeared Jno Browne aged sixty eight yeares or thereabouts who on his Oath on ye holy evangelist taken saith that in the year 1659 or 60 he this Deponent came into Virginia and lived in Henrico County some years and then came to live on Blackwater River” born: 1639 or thereabouts 1707 deposition- Land grant 1 March 1666. *John Browne * Surry County * 600 acres beginning and extending on the East side the main Black water swamp; thence along Thomas Gaultneyes line. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990007289190205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,John%20Browne&offset=50 Land grant 13 June 1655 John Browne Northumberland County 1262 acres l000 acres part thereof Easterly on the Seaboard side, Northerly upon the Southermost branch of a small creek called Robins creek the residue at the Seaboard side as aforesd. near the river of Mathepungo. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990007289180205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,john%20browne&offset=40 personally Came and appeared Richd Booth aged sixty three years or thereabouts who on his Oath on the Holy Evangelists taken saith that in or about the year 1661 this Deponent came into Virginia and served Major Merritt six years… And this Deponent further saith that in the year 1667 he being employed by one William West to go in a Canoe with Certain goods &c to the Maherine Indian Towns one Jno Browne and a certain Weyanoake Indian called Tom Frusman being in the Canoe with him as they went down Blackwater River” BROWN, JOHN John Brown -1667 employed by Wm West as Indian Trader on Blackwater near Kingsale area. participated in Bacon's rebellion in 1676. https://andersonnc.com/john-browne-of-kingsale-1639-1713-indian-trader/ 1688 Walter RUTTER and wife, Martha, sell to Daniel LONGE, 30 acres, part of a patent of 150 acres granted to RUTTER, 30 Oct. 1686. Dated 29 Oct. 1688. Teste: John BROWNE, Wm. WEST, Jr . This reference lends more credibility to his “business” relationship with William West… a William West acquires property at the “mouth” of Kingsale Sw in 1705. My thought is that this is the son of the “rebel”.) WEST, WILLIAM and REBECCA BRASWELL, daughter of Robert Braswell 1688… acquires 600 acres John Brown To all &c Whereas &c Now Know ye… give & grant unto John Brown six hundred acres of land lying in ye Isle of Wight County, beginning at a Live oake on ye south side of Kingsaile Swamp & runing thence South East Eighty chaines to a pine, then South West two hundred thirty seven chaines, then Northwest sixty six chains to a pine, then North ten deg. west twenty eight chaines to ye swamp aforesd, then along ye sd Swamp to ye first Station…. trans. twelve psons… 20 Oct 1688 1690… sells the 600 acres 9 Feb 1690…. John Browne…. 200 acres to William Scott and 100 acres to Richard Showell and 200 acres to Thomas Rives (being a patent granted said Browne in 1688). Wit: Robert Scott and Richard Scott 9 Feb 1690…. John Browne and wife, Mary Browne to ??…. 200 acres adjoining Wolf Pit Branch and Richard Howell. Wit: Robert Scott, Richard Scott and Thomas (X) Reeves. (Herein lies a quandary…is this the son of John Browne or Browne Sr and his wife? I’ve seen no proof of father/son relationship… more later…) 3 Jun 1690…. John Browne, the Elder, to Richard Shewll…. 100 acres (being part of 600 acres) on Broadneck Swamp adjoining Wolf Pit Branch. Wit: Edward (X) Floid, Henry Baker and Thomas (X) Wickins. This is the final parcel of the 600 acre patent of 1688) 1692… acquires 220 acres John Browne IOW, 1692 To All &c Whereas &c Now Know yee…give and grant unto John Browne of Isle of Wight County two hundred and twenty acres of land situate on ye South Side of Kingsale Swamp in ye Lower parish …beginning at a maple in ye sd swamp & Lower Corner tree of ye land of Jonathan Robinson & thence by their line south two hundred and sixteen pole to a white oak in their said line then west by north a hundred seventy six pole to a great pine Then north twenty six degrees east a hundred twenty four pole to a pine a corner tree of ye said Brownes former Land then by ye line of thar Land northwest a hundred and sixty pole to a small live oak in Kingsale Swamp abovesaid and soe up ye run of ye sd swamp to ye first station…trans. five psons… 29 Apr 1692 2 Dec 1692…. John Browne, Sr. appoints John Browne as his attorney in the difference with Capt. Hugh Campbell. Wit: Daniel Leigh and Mary (X) Browne (Again, is this his son?) John (X) Browne (Evidently, Browne lives on this property for the next 14 years…) 1695… This deed associates several people… IOW Deed Bk 1, HOPKINS (p.169) 23 Jul 169-… [other deeds suggest 1695] Elizabeth Booth, wife of Richard Booth of Blackwater, appoints Mr. Jeremiah Exum as her attorney to acknowledge a Deed of Sale. Wit: William Brown and John Rogawes Richard Booth and John Browne were both Indian Traders and associates… just after 1700 they both relocate to Wicocon Creek in NC… (Browne seems to remarry about this time). John Rogers and Thomas Browne were neighbors… each had property several miles south of the John Browne property at Kingsale… both Rogers and Thomas Browne later relocated to Potecasi Creek in NC, Rogers married the sister of Booth (Mary). The first mention of William Browne getting property of his own is in 1702, about 8 or 10 miles west of the Kingsale land of John Browne… it was in modern Southampton County (old Isle of Wight). To me this begs the question of perhaps William Browne was living with his father John Browne?… there is no “smoking gun” proof… 1673…witnesses deed of gift of Hodges Council On 20 Dec 1673 Hodges Council made a gift of land as follows: “I Hodges Councill of the Lower Parish do give…. to Joseph Vick of ye said Parish, 50 acres on Beaver Dam Swamp, adjacent to Robert Lawrence… and furthermore it is agreed that if the said Joseph Vicks have any other child beside this his present daughter, going by and bearing the name of Lucy, she shall after the decease of her father enjoy the land for her and her heirs, but if the aforesaid Jos. Vicks shall have any more children by this, his present wife, sonne or daughter, neverthe less the above Lucy shall enjoy ye land, but if the said Lucy shall decease without heirs, then the said land shall fall to either brother or sister, but if the said Joseph Vicks and his daughter Lucy shall both decease without heirs, then the aforesaid shall fall unto ye said Hodges Councill and his heirs again.” Signed Hodges Council Witnesses: John Brown, Rowland Buckley, & Richard Booth This deed was recorded on 9 March 1681 1676 Bacon’s Rebellion ...and did not willingly and readily surrender up themselves when they were summoned thereto by captain Thomas Powell, nor to Richard Thomson, Dominick Rice, John Bagwell, William Potts, John Richens, Arther Long, Thomas Lushington, Robert Weekes, Charles Death, John Lawson, John Browne and Mathew Sadler, who were all notorious actors in the said rebellion, but that they and every of them shall suffer and undergo such paines, penalties and punishments not extending to life, as by an act or severall acts of the said present grand assembly, or by order or orders, awards or judgments of the right honourable the governour and councell already hath passed, or shall for that purpose passe, nor to James Lanquester who being an active rebell, was taken in armes and committed to prison in the height of the rebellion, and upon his submission and takeing the oath of allegiance, was by the right honourable the governour pardoned and released, and after that entered himselfe a souldier under the command of major Robert Beverley, and soone after run a way from his coullers and became an active rebell, and is since fled and escaped not daring to abide a legall tryall. “Matthew STRICKLAND appears to have settled about 1678 in Isle of Wight County, Virginia, where he passed the rest of his life. On June 6, 1687, Matthew (M) STRICKLAND gave a power of attorney to John BROWN to execute a deed to William EVANS “by reason of my nonability to travel to court held for this County the 9th of this Instant June” in Isle of Wight County, witnessed by Richard (RB) BOOTH and Elizabeth (S) STRICKLAND.” Susanna Brown & Sylvester Brown to William Evans Nov 22, 1729. 5 pds for 100 A. On Horse swamp. Adj. John Thomas, Lazarus Thomas. Wit: Richard Williford, Mary Luden (Laden?). Feb Court 1729. Thomas Crew D. C/C.Did this William Evans hail from Kingsale Swamp in Nansemond near the immigrant John Brown? And could there be old family ties? On July 27, 1682, Robert Lawrence, William Scott, Robert Couger, and Francis Hutchins witnessed the will of Peter Edwards of Isle of Wight Co. On November 6, 1682, Robert Lawrence, Richard Booth, and John Brown, witnessed a deed of Mathew Strickland and his wife Eliz. of Lower Parish to William Evans of Upper Parish 800 acres on the main swamp of King Sale for 4,000 bls. of tobacco.. http://vagenweb.org/hening/vol02-18.htm#page_371 I don’t know for sure this is the same Browne, however, his association with William West makes him a logical candidate to be with the rebels. William West was sentenced to hang for his involvement… a petition was written in his defense and he eventually returned to IOW.) (Where was John Browne living since his arrival until his first “known” property I’m 1688?… I don’t know?) 1681… deposition Bateman, William: Nuncupative, proven by Elizabeth Goldwin, age 31 years, saayeth said Bateman being at the house of the deponent’s sister, declared his brother and sister were unhuman to him— whole estate to him or her at whose house he should decease etc. Further proof by Thomas Hutchins, age 24 years; that the said Bateman was at the house of Mr. Thomas Giles etc. deposition of Richard Read, age 27 years and of John Brown, age 44 years. (born 1637…”or thereabouts”) Probate is therefore granted Mr. Thomas Gyles on the said William Bateman’s estate. R. October 11, 1681. I’m pretty sure the folks mentioned above are in the “Kingsale” area….but I am guessing) 1682…witnesses deed for Kingsale Sw area On November 6, 1682, Robert Lawrence , Richard Booth, and John Brown, witnessed a deed of Mathew Strickland and his wife Eliz. of Lower Parish to William Evans of Upper Parish 800 acres on the main swamp of King Sale for 4,000 lbs. of tobacco. Mathew Strickland had a large chunk of property just north of John Browne in Kingsale . His grandson married who I suspect is a granddaughter of John Browne. Mathew Strickland Sr. had two large tracts of land… along with the Kingsale property was another some miles north along the Blackwater River in (modern) Isle of Wight proper. Thomas Boon lived there (and I surmise William Boon). This property in Kingsale could be the logical tie-in with the Braswells, Boons and Brownes… many of whom resettle to the Roanoke River area of North Carolina around 1712… On June 6, 1687, Mathew (x) and Elizabeth (E) STRICKLAND of the Lower Parish deeded to William EVANS of the Upper Parish for 4,000 pounds of tobacco in cask 800 acres in the Lower Parish between the Main Swamp of King Sail and Beaver Dam Branch adjoining William COLLINS (from a tract of 902 acres patented by the said STRICKLAND on September 26, 1678, of which 102 acres had been leased to Thomas JONES for ninety-nine years on November 6, 1682, witnessed by John BROWN, Richard (RB) BOOTH, and Robert LAWRENCE. Richard Boorth and John Brown had nearby property at Kingsale Swamp. This is just north of the Nansemond County line. The UPPER patent on the Blackwater River is where Thomas Boon was located. I have no idea WHEN he settled there? https://andersonnc.com/mathew-strickland-thomas-boon-iow/ Thomas Joyner, Jr and Bridgeman Joyner each signed the petition for the pardon of William West in 1677 after Bacon’s Rebellion. Whether or not they participated is open to debate. John Rogers Sr was found guilty of carrying away property belonging to Mr. Robert Caufield “during the late horrid rebellion”, (Order Bk. 1671-90, p. 165), and on the same date John Rogers, Sr. was found guilty of seizing Arthur Allen’s house, etc. (p. 167, Boddie). All these “horrid” accounts are written from the “winners” perspective of course… the “rebels” point of view would have been different I am sure. This John Rogers appears to relocate from Surry County to Nansemond. John Rogers (Sr or Jr?) is purported to marry Mary, the sister of Richard Booth who devises property to Rogers in 1681. All of these gents are of the same generation. Thomas Joyner Jr. and Bridgeman Joyner settle near the Kingsale Swamp area of IOW. Another neighbor, Thomas Mann married Elizabeth, another sister of Richard Booth. Also nearby, in Kingsale, is John Browne. In 1690 Hodges Councell, “the younger” and Thomas Man Jr. patent 200 acres “beg. at a marked gum John Brown’s corner tree in Kingsale swamp”. Same to acknowledge deed to James Peake, of Boston, Executed by my husband Charles Merritt for 130 acres on south side of Chowan River, at ye mouth of Deep Branch; Apl. 16, 1715. Test, Peter Evans, Richard Barefield (NCHGR 138). A deed associated with William Strickland is Aug. 5, 1723 which proves that Martha Brown was the husband of this William Strickland, son of Matthew Strickland, Jr. and Ann Braswell. Barnabe McKinnie & Wife Mary to Joseph Joyner, 150 acre deed of gift made by William Brown deceased by his last will did give to his daughter Martha, which is to say Martha Brown which land was laps before the aforesaid Brown’s death and is now come due to me by virture of a relapsed patent bearing the date November 22, 1723 and now being exchanged by WILLIAM STRICKLAND the husband of said Martha Brown with Joseph Joyner we do for this reason bargain and confirm to Joseph Joyner, SS Moratuck River, part of survey called Walnut Gut Fork. Wit: Isaac Ricks & William Humphrey . Will reference in Bertie County Deed Book B, Page 8 (Aug. Court 1725 …from will of James Peake 1728… “Item my will is that my executors hereafter mentioned do grant & give to John Warren of the precinct a good and lawfull deed for one hundred acres of land that he now lives on he paying at his ens__ling the said deed Tenn pounds currant mony of North Carolina not withstanding not withstanding (sic) any thing that is before mentioned to the contrary.” Charles Merrit was an old croney Indian Trader with John Brown and Richard Booth. After Booth moved to North Carolina Charles Merritt located near by. Note; William Evans was the son of John evans and brother of Winnifred Evans Hicks. Wife of Robert Hicks mention here. John Evans,William Evans,Winnifred Evans William Evans:Leg. son Thomas all my land at Kingsale;son Robert; wife and Children. Wife Extx. Her father , Mr. Robert Flake my overseer. D. July 12,1689. R. Aug.9,1689. Witt: henry Baker,Thomas Moore,Robert Flake. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Wills_and_Administrations_of_Isle_of_Wig/mFP9IHzVrGwC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=James+adams+1670+surry++va.&pg=PA10&printsec=frontcover By vertue of the Coroner's inquest 29 July 1688, Paul Williams, Robert Palford and John Browne were suposed guiltie of the murther of Sarah Blagden. The Court order that the Sherriff or his deputies take Paul Williams and Robert Palford (Browne being dead) and them safely convey to James Cittie by the fourth day of the next Generall Court, alsoe that you take the bodies of William Booth and Abraham Parker and convey them downe to the Generall Court as evedences concerning the rnurther of Sarah Blagden.(This Sarah Blagdon was the mother of Sarah Blagdon that married Lawrence Abbington Jr. Son of Lydia Kimball) https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I136827&tree=Tree1 "The Colonial Records of North Carolina, Second Series, Volume VII entitled Records of the Executive Council on page 416 has a deposition given by Richard Booth in which he states that in the year 1667 he took a canoe with trade goods to the Meherrin Indian Town down the Blackwater River. On his right the Weyanoake River joined in about 13 miles north of the Meherrin River. Accompanying him on this journey was “a Certain Weyanoake Indian Called Tom Frusman.” Also accompanying him was a man named John Browne. The Colonial Records of North Carolina, Second Series, Volume VII entitled Records of the Executive Council on page 416 24 Nov 1722…. John Rogers, Jr., Yeoman, and wife, Bridgett Rogers, of North Carolina to James Councill, Yeoman, of the lower parish of Isle of Wight…. 100 acres in the lower parish adjoining William Daughter, Jr., Hodges Council, Daniell Davis and Abraham Rixs (Ricks) (being land formerly in the possession of Richard Booth who devised it to Mary Rogers the Mother of the said John Rogers, Jr. in a deed dated 8 Nov 1681…. mention of “John Rogers, Jr. and his father John Rogers, Sr.). Wit. Robert Lawrence, Richard (X) Beale and James Holland. Rec: 26 Nov 1722 John (X) Rogers, Jr. Bridgett Rogers Remember that Richard Booth and John Browne Sr were associates (Traders) in the early days. IOW Great Book, vol 2, Hopkins, p 140 (p.500) John Rogers (son of the immigrant or the old man?) had a bit too much fun during Bacon’s Rebellion, 1676… “Mr. Robert Caufield and Mr. Arthur Allen charged certain inidividuals named John Rutherford, John Rogers, Robert Burges, John Clements and John Ironmonger for destroying certain livestock and household items during the ‘most Horrid Rebellion.'” William Rogers & Joshua Proctor were mentioned in 1685. http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/jame1/moretti-langholtz/chap10a.htm The immigrant John Rogers appears to be an old man by 1674. So I’m seriously curious if he or his son married the sister of Richard Booth. 7 Jul 1674–John Rodgers, being an old impotent man upon his petition is discharged from paying public levys” Surry Bk 3 pg 59 1706… sells the 220 acres 9 Aug 1706…. John Browne and wife, Bridgett Browne, to Samuel Canidy…. 220 acres (being a patent dated 29 Apr 1692 in the lower parish on the south side of Kingsale Swamp and bounded by Jonathan Robinson and William Stott (Scott?). Wit: Richard Exum and William Murray. John (X) Browne Rec: 10 Jun 1706 (this John Browne is alive in 1707, from his deposition…aged 68. In 1710 Philip Ludwell did his own depositions of most of the same people in1710 that Edward Moseley had deposed in 1707… John Brown was deposed somewhere between Wiccacon Creek and the Maherrin Indian Town. Now the Money Question… Where was John Brown living? He was 71 or 73 yrs of age in 1710 (per another deposition in IOW) . Ludwell says he “came up Chowan River almost from Wicocon Creek by water..to Nansemond Town” … that implies that John Brown was living very near to Wiccacon Creek as Ludwell left the next day after deposing Brown. Brown left no property records in Chowan that I can find. But there is no doubt this is the Indian Trader of Kingsale Swamp, VA, born 1639. This has moved from theory to Fact. An Aside…. Some have speculated that the John Browne (son in law of William Boddie/Body of Isle of Wight) was the father of the William and Thomas Browne that I discuss in this compilation… I disagree. Below is a deed witnessed in 1708/9 in IOW which discusses a sale to one Mr. Sawyer. The land in question was originally granted to Mr. Boddie in 1668. This land is clearly in Newport Parish, IOW and is considerably further north than the Kingsale property that I mention and map. I purport that the John Browne mentioned in this deed is indeed the son in law of Mr. Boddie. This begs the question… how to explain one John Browne in IOW and another in North Carolina? This is clearly two different men. I also propose that the body of circumstantial evidence I detail leans to the John Browne of Kingsale as the father of William and Thomas Browne of North Carolina. ==John Browne #3== 1677 John Drayton transported a John Browne and 19 others. Charles city , Virginia court. https://archive.org/details/charlescitycount00ayrerich/page/24/mode/2up?view=theater July 17,1677, Chales City County court, Judgement granted to Richard Hill plt. against LT. Coll. Daniel Clark,Sheriff for 400 lbs. tobacco for non apperence of John Browne deft. in an action for debt..Viod if Sheriff produces deft. Attachment granted sheriff on John Browne.(See page 21.) https://archive.org/details/charlescitycount00ayrerich/page/20/mode/2up?view=theater ==John Browne #4== John Browne ,Charles City,Virginia will=Nov.2,1666. To wife Elizabeth100 acres. Son John and brother Gerrard Browne residue of lands jointly. In the event that of son's death before majority,brother Gerrard to inherit said son's share. Overseers: brother Gerrard,steven Montague,and JohnWheeler. http://mdhistory.msa.maryland.gov/msaref09/pdf/baldwin_vol01.pdf july 30,1679 John Taylor married Elizabeth Relic of John Brown, was granted admin, on the estate of John Brown surities William Bridges and Edward Washington . https://www.jstor.org/stable/1923200 Elizabeth relic of first john Browne and the John Taylor married Henry Bonner Sep. 1,1674. , Maryland, https://msa.maryland.gov/msa/stagser/s1500/s1527/html/ssi1527bl.html 1 Sep 1674 Charles Maryland; Deed of Gift from Henry Bonner, Gent, and Elizabeth his wife, to her natural born sons, John Taylor and Thomas Taylor; a parcel of land surveyed for John Taylor, father of the sons, and granted by patent to Elizabeth Taylor, relict of John, 21 Aug 1658; lying on the north side of Petit's Creek which flows into the Potomac River, Weeke's Branch, and Taylor's Bite; laid out for 450 acres; signed Henry Bonner, Elisabeth Bonner; wit. Robert Doyne, Matthew Stone, Joseph Bullot https://www.anamericanfamilyhistory.com/Bonner%20Family/BonnerHenry.html ==John Browne #5== Richard Brown, m. Elizabeth Hicks, 23 Dec. 1690, Compton Martin. Richard Brown, bapt. 10 Jan 1692. Richard Browne (probably m. Frances Sexton) (Reffer to this.) Richard Browne (probably m. Frances Sexton), and Wm. Eaton of Prince Georges Co., 455 a., adj. Henry Bates, John Duke, Adam Tapley, Wm. Hough, John Brown. Wit:JOHN BROWNE, Noah Browne, FRACES BROWNE WIFE OF RICHARD, concurs to sale. Apr. 4, 1737. B. I, p. 325. Major Pryor and Anne, his wife of Brunswick Co., VA to Richard Brown of Northampton County, N.C. 350 acres on south side of Nottoway River southside of Rocky Run on lines of John Taylor Duke, James Loftin and others. ==John Browne #6== Estate of John Brown, deceased, 6 September 1684, to Temperance Brown one Indian boy valued at 2,500 pounds .https://freeafricanamericans.com/free_Indians.htm Baley, Temperance - A405; born 1617, died ca.1652, Henrico: (Muster of 1624/5); wife of John Browne and Richard Cocke. https://www.jamestowne.org/bacon---baley.html William Nicholson patent Given granted .. unto William Nicholson of the County of------- on the south ward side of the east branch of Elizabeth river in Norfolk County formerly called Lower Norfolk... 300 acres ,"therefore being land found within the bounds of two patents the one of them granted to John Browne for two hundred acres dated June 19th, 1659 and by the virtue of power of attorney to the Brother Thomas Brown sold& made over two hundred acres before granted William Nicholson Sr. as by deed dated April15,1656. https://andersonnc.com/john-browne-of-kingsale-1639-1713-indian-trader/

Finding Last Names for Those Who Were Enslaved in South Carolina

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'''Finding the Last Names of those Enslaved or Previously Enslaved in South Carolina'''
''by Michelle Detwiler'' Looking for the last names of the enslaved is often a difficult job. If you don’t know who the descendants were, it can be near impossible to find a last name of an enslaved person, unless the slave owner has added those last names in his records. That almost never happens. Recently I was working on profiling the memorials listed on ''Find-a-Grave'' in Georgetown County, South Carolina. After working on one cemetery, I realized there were cemeteries with the word '''Plantation''' in the cemetery name. I looked up one of those cemeteries, as it had been a plantation I was just starting to work on (researching the owners, finding records, etc). After profiling the first few memorials I was suddenly surprised with a great number of sources for the next person I worked on. '''His last name listed on the memorial''' not only led me to Civil War documents and Freedmen’s Labor Bureau Contracts, but to the actual plantation he was enslaved on. He had been listed without a last name in the probate inventory for the plantation owner, among 589 other enslaved persons. I was able to profile his whole family who were listed in that probate inventory all because I found his last name in the cemetery records. So, I continued on. Not every memorial in that Find-a-Grave plantation cemetery led me back to that very plantation, but many did, and now I had some last names for the enslaved and I knew who I was looking for on other sources. Cemeteries are certainly for more than just birth and death dates. One other thing that has helped me when looking in South Carolina for last names are the '''death certificates''', which begin in 1915. These death certificates often tell who a person’s parents were, and some included a last name for the mother. For the African-American community this is vital, a last name to research. The death certificate also tells where a person was born. However, when it comes to ages and birth dates the death certificate may not be the best resource, but something for noting the general time frame. One other thing, in Georgetown County, South Carolina, on the 1870 census, everyone seems to have been listed with their actual birth county or birth district within that county. Another amazing win for researching!

Finding Malta roots

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The goal of this project is to find family roots in Malta Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Thompson-60756|Hunter Thompson]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * find all the last name * Got a find a famous people roots in Malta *try to find your roots in Malta Will you join me? Please post a comment . send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding Megan Olney

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My name is Julie Padilla and I am looking for my childhood penpal Megan Olney.

Finding Milly Harper

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The goal of this project is to find the identity of Milly Harper, who was found in the household of William Powell in the 1850 Census for Upson County, Georgia. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gilbreath-460|Jonathan Gilbreath]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Where she came from * Who her parents were * How she is related to William or Lavicey (Nelson) Powell Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page in G2G [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1062613/who-was-milly-harper] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=24974643 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Notes== So far, the only record of her is in the aforementioned 1850 Census for Upson County, Georgia.

Finding missing link to roots on my grandad hunston

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Mallinson-177|Danielle Mallinson]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * samuel hunston 1917-1986 (grandad) * annie shaw prestwich * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16139438 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding my heritage.

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This is my story of how I found my biological maternal grandparents, after my mother found out that she was adopted!! The way I remember the story is that after my grandmother died back in 1980, it came out during probate, that all 3 of her children were adopted. My mother had previously assumed that she was biological because she was the oldest of the 3 children. She remembers her younger brother being adopted because her mother had not been pregnant when the boy had been brought home. So it came as a shock in 1980 (just weeks before my 16th birthday) for my mother to discover that she too was adopted. It came as a shock to me as well. Suddenly I had lost half my family. Where was I from? I'm not sure exactly why but I became quite angry with my mother for not knowing, for not telling me and most of all, for not even bothering to look. At the same time this was happening, I was also asking questions of the protestant religion my family had been raised on and I was in the process of rejecting it. In my 18th birthday I asked my parents if i could stop attending church because I no longer believed. They said NO, and as long as I still lived under their roof, I had to abide by their decision. This actually just made me more angry with my mother. I believe my mother was somewhat upset that I had stopped attending church. But none-the-less, I could not stop being angry with her. Finally I decided that it was time for me to leave home. So at the age of 22, I moved to a new city, and stayed with my older sister for a few weeks until I could find my own place to live and a job. I pretty much cut off all contact with my mother, although I did stay in touch with my dad. He had not been adopted and I knew for sure who his family were. In 1985 New Zealand passed the Adult Adoption Information Act of New Zealand under which adoptees aged 18 and above, could apply for their original birth certificates. My mother did not want to do this at all. She said she did not want to know who her family were. I think she was angry for being "thrown away". By her memory, she was raised by her mother for the first 3 years of her life and then adopted out. I do agree with her that it was cruel to have "thrown away" a 3 year old child for whatever reason. Nothing much happened over the next few years until the Internet explosion began - especially after Windows 95 came out. My aunt and uncle did travel to the UK and do some family research to start looking into my fathers family. Noone could do anything for my mothers family because we had no information. In the meantime I had slowly been persuading my mother to apply for her original birth certificate. My mother was resistant, mostly because she didnt know what to tell the counsellors. So I told her to tell them the truth. That she didn't want it for herself, but her daughter wanted it for genealogical purposes - which was the absolute total truth!! When my mother finally got her original birth certificate, she didnt even open it. She just left it in the envelope and sent it to me. I was excited to receive it, but totally disappointed to discover that while my mothers mothers name was listed on the certificate, my mothers fathers name was not. I set about applying for my maternal grandmothers birth certificate, and later obtained my great grandparents marriage certificate as well. Soon after this I got married, and left New Zealand to move to Canada, where I currently still live. Naturally I brought all my genealogical stuff with me. Upon my arrival in Canada, I discovered that my mother-in-law was an amateur genealogist like myself, and she was interested in knowing anything about the family, but she was hopeless on the computer. She asked me if I would be interested in looking. With all the new records coming online, I was more than happy to do my husbands family tree. So I did. It took me about 5 or 6 years to get most of it done. I even learned to read basic French too. French Catholic records for Canada are very well kept, and this helped me to build up a large tree going all the way back to the 1600s. Eventually I had done as much as I could for my husbands family, so I finally turned to my own family. By this time the amount and number of records available online was just exploding and now I could search for British records much more easily. I splurged on a county FHS membership in England from which I purchased a number of parish BMD records. I also purchased several CD-ROMS of census details for both my fathers family and my mothers maternal line. I was also lucky enough to locate the parish records for my mothers great grandfathers family from Cornwall where they had lived from the "civil war" era (1600s) to the late 1800s when they finally began drifting away. By 2016, we had gone through 2 desktop computers, twice having to save all my data to an external hard drive in order to move it to a new computer. So I was thinking of storing my tree in the "cloud". But which cloud. I needed one that was free, and permanent and would not sell the data just to make a profit. In December 2016, just after Xmas, I finally came across Wikitree. I'm pretty sure I had never seen or heard of it before. It seemd to be everything I was looking for, but best of all, it had a famous person of the week that I actually was connected to!! I signed up and within hours, I was connected to the wife of the famous person of the week - and the next day I was connected to the global tree. This was one of the best decisions i have ever made.

Finding Patrick Staunton

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Hi all, the aim... to explain find out the ireland history before Patrick Staunton was sent to Australia. This has a lot of info http://www.wikitree.com/g2g/191525/parents-of-patrick-1767-sarah-1769-staunton-galway-ireland And so does http://www.irelandxo.com/ireland/cork/clonfert/message-board/search-ancestors-staunton-stanton-mcevilly Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Staunton-173|Shannon Staunton]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Clearer information about where Patrick Staunton was born * Any family connections (bothers sisters etc) Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=11522815 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding Polish Roots

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The goal of this project is to ...Obtain records from ancestral sites in Poland Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Sierzchulski-1|Mark Sierzchulski]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Towns/villages in the Skoki, Poland area * Church records in the same area *Cemetery records in the same area *Tag: SIERZCHUŁA; SIESZCHULSKI(A) Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12126438 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding roots of one of my children who is Afro-American

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[[ The goal of this project is to ...find my son who is white on my side and black on his mothers. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Danforth-786|Paul Danforth]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Back track Corey's liniage on his mom's side. * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=25645862 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding Sussex Wills - Lewes

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This free space page sets out the method of locating both pre-1660 and post-1660 wills lodged within the Jurisdiction for the Consistory Court for the Archdeaconry of Lewes includes the whole of East Sussex except for the peculiars of South Malling and Battle, and includes the West Sussex parishes of Beeding, Crawley, Cowfold, Henfield, Ifield, Shermanbury, Old and New Shoreham, Southwick and Woodmancote, and held on Family Search. Firstly you need to use the Index available on Family Search and is a copy of the original held by the East Sussex Records Office (ESRO). This one is for Lewes wills and split in 2 sections, pre-1660 and post-1660 up to 1858. '''Pre-1660 wills''' The pre-1660 wills are indexed in the "Index Nominum" between images 197 and 239. For instance the Culpepper wills are on image 208 (page 469), here [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DRL3-SJP?i=207&cat=212898| Culpepper entries]. There are two entries for R (Richard), page 137 and page 292. Scroll back through the pages to find the required page, in this case p.137 is image 83 of 1036. Look down the list and we find Richard Culpepper's entry and luckily it has a hand written will number, 51. If the will is not numbered it is usually not available for that year. Next you need to access the Family Search page for Lewes Probate wills, found here. [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/685691?availability=Family%20History%20Library| Lewes wills on Family Search] All available years are listed starting in 1527. NB - Not many early wills listed in the index have survived, especially before 1550. But you may find some. Richard Culpepper's will was proven in 1603 so scroll down the page until you see the section for ''Original wills, 1598-1602, 1603-1604'', click on the image icon to open the folder. Given the file covers 7 years you'll need to scroll through images until you get to the 1603 section, and then locate will number 51. This is found here. [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6GRQ-FDH?i=651&cat=685691| Will of Richard Culpepper], the will is located on image 652 of 902, and the following image 653. Repeat the process for any other surname. Just remember that any wills not numbered for some years may not be available. But also if all of the wills for certain years are unnumbered then it might mean you need to do a manual browse through all images to find the relevant will, and tend to be in date order of the date of grant of probate. Any will listed on the ESRO catalogue search will be available there, at Falmer, often on microfilm, '''Post-1660 wills''' up to 1858 All of the post-1660 are easier to find. For example this is the link to the page listing Bennett post-1660 wills. [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DRLS-1ZB?i=282cat=212898| Bennett index], image 283 of 1036. If you look through the list you'll see John Bennet yeoman, Keymer 1758. look across to the far right column and there is the will number, 65. Then use this link to access the Probate records for Lewes also on FS (same link as above) [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/685691?availability=Family%20History%20Library| Lewes wills on Family Search]. In this case scroll down until you find the folder for ''Original Wills 1758-1763'' click on the image icon to open the folder then browse through the images until you find will number 65, look for the large number in the bottom left hand corner of the page, and there is one for John Bennett. [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6XHH-PQK?i=165&cat=685691| Will of John Bennet] To find other surnames, scroll through the Index again and repeat the above process. Hope that makes sense? Happy reading. Regards [[Hewitt-6110|Colin]]. Return to the [[Space:Sussex_Team|Sussex Team]] wills page.

Finding Tadiello

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The goal of this project is to find out more info on Carmel Sue Tadiello. She is my husbands mother and I have not been able to find anything on her. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Diedrich-119|Mae Schindler]]. This is her obit that I copied and pasted from site: http://www.jacobsfuneralhomeir.com/fh/obituaries/obituary.cfm?o_id=2309768&fh_id=14737 "Carmel S. Schindler Age 53 Iron River, MI Died Sunday, November 1, 2009 at her home. Born: May 4, 1956 in Crystal Falls, MI The daughter of the late Serio and Kathryn (Broskovetz) Tadiello attended the Crystal Falls schools, graduating from Forest Park High School in 1974, and was a lifelong resident of the area. She later attended Gogebic Community College for nursing and worked as a Nurse Aide at the Crystal Falls Hospital for several years. In recent years, she was employed as a dishwasher at Mr. T's. Carmel was a member of the Cavalry Chapel. She enjoyed her pet birds, gardening, knitting, and spending time with her family, especially her grandchildren. She was also preceded in death by her daughter Feathre. She is survived by four sons; David (Krista) Schindler of Iron River Chris Schindler of Iron River Erick Schindler of Menominee, MI Cody Schindler of Iron River Two daughters; Sierra Schindler of Iron River India Schindler of Iron River One brother, Serio (Jodi) Tadiello of Crystal Falls Three grandchildren; Christian, Dominick and Thayne Visitation: Friday, November 6, 2009 from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. at the Jacobs Funeral Home, Iron River. Funeral Service: Friday, November 6, 2009 at 2:00 p.m. at the Jacobs Funeral Home with Pastor Bill Woolley to officiate. Interment: Evergreen Memorial Cemetery, Crystal Falls, MI Funeral arrangements by the Jacobs Funeral Home, Iron River." Other helpful info is her husband's name was Brian A Schindler. He is still living. I thought I might have found her mother but because I do not know her date of birth and there was no husband listed, I don't know if its her. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Just finding her parents and other ancestors. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15607114 send me a private message]. Thanks for any and all help! Mae Schindler.

Finding the Branches of Ah Sing

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The goal of this project is to ... Find the links From China to Australia and the family of AH SIng of Midland, Western Australia, in the years of arrival and up to present day., Through His son William Ah Sing and Julia Macdonald. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Sing-103|Simone Bennett]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Finding information on AH Sing and his descendants across Australia. * Photos if any. *Living Relatives. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=26277615 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finding the parents of Samuel H Baty 1830 - 1912

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Baty-110.jpg
== Samuel H. Baty == {{One Name Study|name=Baty}} {{One Name Study|name=Beaty}} {{One Name Study|name=Beatty}} By family tradition, [[Baty-110|Samuel H. Baty]] was an orphan and literally nothing is known about is parents. There are several family legends but many are conflicting as are the historical records. The various census records, Civil War draft records, marriage and death certificates place his place of birth in many different locations with as many conflicting dates. This page is meant to be a centralized place to record and discuss the possible familial links for Samuel in an attempt to ascertain his ancestry. The earliest record known that can positively be attributed to Samuel is the 1856 Iowa State Census in Lake Prairie, Marion, Iowa.1856 Iowa State Census. Ancestry.com. Iowa State Census Collection, 1836-1925 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007. Original data: Microfilm of Iowa State Censuses, 1856, 1885, 1895, 1905, 1915, 1925 as well various special censuses from 1836-1897 obtained from the State Historical Society of Iowa via Heritage Quest. Accessed on 24 March 2008 by [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=1084&h=9434538 Ancestry].
Local file: https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Baty-110-1.
Samuel appears in the household of the family of William and Susannah George. One of the George daughters, Rebecca, who is listed at age 16 in the record will marry Samuel two years later on 11 July 1858.Samuel Baty & Rebecca George marriage index: Iowa, Compiled Marriages, 1851-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000. Accessed 4 July 2018 by [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=4460&h=147203&ssrc=pt&tid=120396692&pid=160193797879&usePUB=true Ancestry]. {{Image|file=Baty-110-1.jpg |caption=1856: Samuel Beaty (Baty) on the William and Susannah George farm }} == Candidates == The follwing are all of the Samuel Baty/Beaty/Beatties that can be identified in 1850. In total, there are 15 distinct men with the given name Samuel and the surname as a derrivative of Beatty. Through the process of eliminating those who can be identified as not our Sam (they have records showing they are somewhere else in 1860 besides Newton, Iowa), we should be able to determine if any of these Sams are the same as our Samuel H. Baty. Our Samuel H. Baty was born sometime between 1828 and 1834. By 1840 he would be too young to be listed as a head of household and the 1840 census does not list family members. The 1850 census lists all household members and if Sam was in America by 1850, he is likely listed in the 1850 census. === Naming Convention === All of the candidates will be listed numerically based on their placement in an Ancestry.com search using only the surname [https://www.ancestry.com/search/?name=Samuel_Baty&birth=1830&count=50&residence=1850&residence_x=0-0-0 Baty], [https://www.ancestry.com/search/?name=Samuel_Beaty&birth=1830&birth_x=2-0-0&count=50&residence=1850&residence_x=0-0-0 Beaty], [https://www.ancestry.com/search/?name=Samuel_Beatty&birth=1830&birth_x=2-0-0&count=50&residence=1850&residence_x=0-0-0 Beatty], and [https://www.ancestry.com/search/?name=Samuel_Beattie&birth=1830&birth_x=2-0-0&count=50&residence=1850&residence_x=0-0-0 Beattie] with a birth date of 1830 and residence in 1850 ("exact"). The search will start with Baty, then to Beaty, and then Beatty, duplicates will be omitted. === Candidates to research === ==== #01 Samuel Beatty, b. abt. 1832, Pennsylvania ==== :(member correction to Samuel Baty on Ancestry). Residence: Dist. 19, Clark, MO. Parents Leonard & Sarah H., siblings Jonathan, Leonard, Joseph, Sarah, Nancy, Elizabeth, & Angeline. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=3710336&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz945074&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #04 Samuel Beatty, b. abt. 1830, Indiana ==== :Residence: Center, Cedar, Iowa. :In household: (presumed) brother James 33, Elizabeth 32, Margaret A. 11, Amanda 8, Geo E 4, Alia D 1, Samuel 20. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=1402742&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz945074&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #05 Samuel S Beattie, b. abt. 1829, New York ==== :Residence: Ledyard, Cayuga, New York. :In household: James 46, Martha 42, Benj F 22, Samuel S 21, Martha A 11, Patrick Gray 33. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=11395403&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #06 Samuel Beaty, b. abt. 1831, (birth place not listed) ==== :Residence: Red River, Texas. :In household: Ellen 47, John 20, Samuel 19, Robert 14, William 9, Robert 0. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=1067170&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #07 Samuel Beatty, b. abt. 1831, Pennsylvania ==== :Residence: Black Lick, Indiana, Pennsylvania. :In household: Isabella 40, Samuel 19, Alvira 17, Franklin 14, Mary 12, Albert 10. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=63523&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #08 Samuel Beatty, b. abt. 1829, Pennsylvania (family Green) ==== :Residence: Prospect, Butler, PA. :In household: John Green* 32, Elizabeth Greer 29, Samuel Beatty 21, Josephine Greer 7. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=526527&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ::*The name is recorded as "Greer" at Ancestry.com. The image viewed at [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6Q1V-NG?i=3&cc=1401638 Family Search] shows that the correct name is Green."United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M44Y-7W6 : 21 December 2020), Samuel Beatty in household of John Green, Prospect, Butler, Pennsylvania, United States; citing family , NARA microfilm publication (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). :On 3 January 2021, Wikitree member and collaborator [[Beatty-3149|Karla Beatty]] forwarded a copy of an Orphan's Court ruling from Kitanning, Armstrong, Pennsylvania from 1831.''Other Court: Samuel Beatty, 1831: Armstrong County, PA.'' Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Linda Mockenhaupt. ronm@westol.com / USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. Accessed on 4 January 2021 by [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]]; the copy was forwarded by Wikitree member [[Beatty-3149|Karla Beatty]]. The Samuel Beatty Jr. in the court ruling matches all of the details of our Samuel and could be the same - further research is warranted. The court documents read: ::''Armstrong County, PA'' ::''At an orphan's court, held at Kittanning in and for the County of Armstrong, on Tuesday, the 21st day of December, 1831 before the Honorable the judges of the same court. Upon the petition of George J. Crawford Administrator of the estate of Samuel Beatty, late of said County deceased setting forth that the said Samuel Beatty left issue one son, Samuel Beatty. That the personal property of the said intestate is insufficient for the payment of his debts as by the account therewith presented appears and that the said Samuel, the intestate, died seized in his demesne as of fee of and in a certain tract of land situated in Allegheny Twp., in said County, containing 125 acres, more or less, called Beatty's Ferry, bounded by the Allegheny River on the North, by the lands of James Walker on the east, and by the land of ? heirs on the west and others on the south with a log house thereon erected - and praying the court grant him an order to make sale of the said tract of land with the appurtenances for the payment of the debts due by the said intestate - it is ordered by the court, upon due proof and consideration had of the premises, that the said George J. Crawford, administrator as aforesaid, does on Monday, the sixth day of February went between the hours of eleven in the forenoon and four in the afternoon of that day, ? the said ? seized do with the appurtenances to sale by public auction or outcry and sell the same for the purposes in the said ? mentioned - that due public and timely notice of the time and place of sale be given according to the law; and that he make report of his proceedings herein to the ? Orphan's Court to be held for said county, after such sale. By the court, Frederick Rohrer, clerk.'' :Kittanning is about [https://www.mapquest.com/directions/from/us/pa/kittanning-282034455/to/us/pa/prospect?routeType=pedestrian 30 miles east] of Prospect where this Samuel appears in the 1850 census living in the home of John Green and his family. The estimated birth year for this Samuel is 1829. Assuming that Samuel was orphaned in 1831 this would have made him about 2 years old when is father died. His mother must have died earlier, possibly even in childbirth. Samuel's parents would best know his year of birth; once orphaned (at such a young age) the ward might have guessed at his birth year and may have guessed incorrectly by several years. It is possible that this Samuel was born a year or two earlier. One of the many family legends is that Samuel was orphaned at the age of 4 - if this orphan is our Samuel, it would place his approximate year of birth in 1827. Guessing the age of an 8 year old as 6 is quite understandable, especially if the child was shy, small in size, or late in childhood development. :The direction of Prospect from Kittanning is the same direction as Iowa. It is possible that the orphan Samuel worked on the Green farm and saved some money and then pushed west to find his way. The path to Iowa leads through the other states that our Samuel has been reported as being born in: Ohio and Indiana. It is possible that he stopped and worked in Ohio and Indiana before continuing west to Iowa. Based on the 5 year gap between the 1850 and 1856 census records, if this is the correct Samuel he would have had 6 years to travel from Pennsylvania to Iowa. :Further work needs to be done to determine if this Samuel appears in later records and to see if it is possible to track the Green family and their possible movements. ==== #09 Samuel H. Beaty, b. abt. 1829, Kentucky ==== :Residence: Simpson, KY. :In household: John 47, Charlotta 37, Samuel H 21, Henry 20, Nancy J 18, Patsey 16, Elvian Bogar 14 (adoptee?). [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=17489145&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #10 Samuel Beaty, b. abt. 1832, Pennsylvania ==== :Residence: Shirley, Huntingdon, PA. :In household: Joseph 40, Mary 38, Samuel 18, Peter 15, William 13, Cath 11, Isaac 5, & Thomas 2. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=86561&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #11 Samuel Beatty, b. abt. 1832, England ==== :Residence: Norristown Upper Ward, Montgomery, Pennsylvania. :In household: William 46, Mary 45, Elizabeth 22, Samuel 18, Charles 15, Ann 13. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=4730132&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #12 Samuel Beatty, b. abt. 1832, Pennsylvania ==== * marked as excluded :Residence: Scioto, Jackson, Ohio. :In household: James 49, Elizabeth 45, Lydia A 23, Lee 21, Samuel 18, Ruth 16, Richard 13, Hetty J 11, Alpheus 7, John 4. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=13960684&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. (Note: don't remember why this was marked as excluded - need to keep better notes and update this once determined). ==== #13 Samuel Beatie, b. abt. 1832, Kentucky ==== :Residence: District 2, Owen, KY. :In household: Nancy 49, Samuel 18, George 9, Charles 5. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=17444484&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. * By the [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=7667&h=39785507&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz1849782&_phstart=successSource 1860 census], Samuel had moved out and only Nancy, George, & Charles remain in the household. * No Samuel Beatie appears in a [https://www.ancestry.com/search/?name=samuel_beatie&event=1860_owen-kentucky-usa_2275&birth=1832_kentucky-usa_20&birth_x=2-0-0_1-0&count=50&event_x=0-0-0 search of 1860 in Owen, KY] or even in all of KY. ==== #14 Samuel H Beattie, b. abt. 1828, Kentucky ==== :Residence: District 90, Saline, MO. :In household: Nottey Hall 53, William L Beatie 24, Samuel H Beattie 22, John Beattie 20. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=4156294&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz-1488879&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== #15 Saml Beatty, b. abt. 1832 in New York ==== :Residence: New York Ward 18, NY, NY. :In household: Catharine Beatty 50, Chas Turner 30, Rosannah Turner 29, Thos Beatty 25, Andw Beatty 22, Saml Beatty 18, Margett Beatty 16. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=7622565&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz-1488879&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. ==== No match (not Baty/Beaty/Beatty) ==== :: Samuel Bath (Bash) excluded. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=14358519&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. :: Samuel Batt/Batts excluded. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=4779167&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz846004&_phstart=successSource Ancestry] :: Samuel Batt excluded (surname is clearly "Batt" on the census record). [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=4779167&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz-749162&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. === Possible candidates === === Excluded candidates === The following leads have been disproved as ancestors of Samuel Baty. Each is retained here to refute the many online sites that still show these as valid connections: ==== #02 Samuel Baty, b. 1832, Maryland ==== 1850 censusYear: 1850; Census Place: Jefferson, Adams, Ohio; Roll: M432_657; Page: 209B; Image: 422. Accessed 22 April 2019 [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1850usfedcenancestry&indiv=try&h=13116439 Ancestry]. @ [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=13116439&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz945074&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. :Residence: Jefferson, Adams, Ohio. :In household: Mother: Mary Baty 57, Samuel 18, Sarah 27, and Mary Jane 10. ::Mary Baty 57 ::Samuel Baty 18 ::Sarah Baty 27 ::Mary Jane Baty 10 Mary and her husband Robert appear in Jefferson, Ohio in the 1830 census.1830; Census Place: Jefferson, Adams, Ohio; Series: M19; Roll: 126; Page: 27; Family History Library Film: 0337937. Accessed 22 April 2019 [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8058&h=1681913 Ancestry]. According to the many trees at Ancestry.com,[https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/120396692/person/160193757714/facts Ancestry profile for Robert Beatty]. Robert was born 4 May 1781 in Virginia, the son of: :Colonel Henry Beatty, b. 23 Sep 1760 in Frederick, Maryland, the son of: :Colonel William Beatty, b. 17 Jan 1739 in Frederick, Maryland, the son of: :William Beatty, b. 9 Jun 1695 in Marbletown, New York, the son of: :John Beatty, b. 2 Oct 1672 in Ayrshire, Scotland. In the last few years, many online trees are now linking our Samuel Baty as son to this lineage. Unfortunately (for us), this lineage has already been DNA tested and represents Lineage 1 at the Beatty Project and has been disproved as the same family as our Samuel."[http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~bp2000/summaries1.htm Lineages 1 - 72]," ''The Beatty Notebook: Genealogy Archives and Related Information from The Beatty Project 2000.'' Accessed 23 April 2019 [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]]. ==== #03 Samuel Beatie, b. abt. 1830, Pennsylvania ==== :(member corrected to Samuel Beatty). :Residence: Perry, Fayette, Pennsylvania. :In household: father John 52, mother Isabella 55, Samuel 20, Mary Jane 23, Joseph 18, Joseph Ann 14. [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=188596&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=lrz945074&_phstart=successSource Ancestry]. Known ancestor of Wikitreer Karla Beatty - the descendants don't match to our Sam Baty. ==== Samuel Beatty, b. 1832, of Scioto, Ohio ==== Samuel Beatty, born about 1832 in Pennsylvania and living in the home of his parents James and Elizabeth Beatty and their children in 1850 in Scioto, Jackson, Ohio in the 1850 census.1850; Census Place: Scioto, Jackson, Ohio; Roll: M432_698; Page: 348A; Image: 250. Accessed 21 April 2019 [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=8054&h=13960684 Ancestry]. :James Beatty 49 :Elizabeth Beatty 45 :Lydia A Beatty 23 :Lee Beatty 21 :Samuel Beatty 18 :Ruth Beatty 16 :Richard Beatty 13 :Hetty J Beatty 11 :Alpheus Beatty 7 :John Beatty 4 Samuel Beatty was later married to Lydia Bradshaw in 1852Shoemaker, Caryn R. F., and Betty J. Sisler Rudity, compilers. Marriage Records of Scioto County, Ohio, 1803–1860. 1987. Reprint, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co Inc., 2003. Accessed 21 April 2019 [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?dbid=3142&h=323&indiv=try&o_vc=Record:OtherRecord&rhSource=8054 Ancestry]. and they can both be found living in Washington, Scioto, Ohio, in the 1870 census:1870 U.S. census, population schedules. NARA microfilm publication M593, 1,761 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d. Accessed 22 April 2019 [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] at [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?dbid=7163&h=41048390&indiv=try&o_vc=Record:OtherRecord&rhSource=3142 Ancestry]. :Samuel Beatty 38 :Lydia Beatty 37 :Garnett Beatty 13 :Ida Beatty 9 ==== Descendants of John Beatty 1587 - 1625 ==== In March 2018, on Samuel's profile were listed several Scots-Irish candidates as the parents of Samuel. All were descendants of [[Beatty-1560|John Beatty (b. abt. 1587 - d. aft. 1625)]]. A year later, these candidates have been ruled out: * '''[[Beatty-2151|Samuel Beatty]]''', born 1826, in county Down, Ireland. Older brother's Joseph, b. 1821, & William, b. 1822, migrated to America. Records indicate that William came to America in 1849 when this Samuel would have been about 23 years old. Samuel H. Baty's first "appearance" in America is in Marion County, Iowa in 1856, about 6-7 years after Willam came to America. * '''[[Beaty-994|Samuel Beatty]]''', who fits most closely with family legend (that Sam's parents died when he was 4 years old and he was adopted): was born in 1832, in county Down, Ireland. His mother died the same year as his birth (possibly in childbirth or complications thereof?) and his father died in 1836 when he would have been 4 years old. The family records have no mention of 3 of the 4 siblings after their birth. It is possible that they some or all of them may have immigrated to America, or that their adoptive parents (most likely an uncle & aunt or grandparents) migrated to America. ::Samuel Baty represents Lineage #500 at the Beatty Project 2000. A DNA test submitted from one of his male patrilineal descendants was compared against a known descendant of John Beatty ([http://bp2000.org/wrappers/pages.php?ID=127 Lineage #5]). The DNA tests did not match.The DNA markers for lineages 5 and 500 are represented at[http://www.beattydna.org/Table_I__12-20-2011.htm Beattydna.org Table I] as participants #50 (lineage 5) and #148 (lineage 500). == Research Notes == '''George Beaty, b. 1775, Virginia ''' :DNA match to [https://www.familytreedna.com/my/family-tree/Share?k=uHB4YM0KFSxi%2FZK4SQ5IDw%3D%3D#mode=0&tp_=27089981 descendant] of [https://www.ancestry.com/search/?name=rebecca+emily_beaty&event=_south+carolina&birth=1818&count=50&father=george_beaty Rebecca Emily Beaty] and her father [https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/78009637/person/44376403801/facts George Beaty]. (2nd to 4th cousin) - sent email to descendant [[Baty-260|Baty-260]] 17:24, 18 August 2019 (UTC) * No match with any other surnames on descendan'ts list * George Beaty does not appear in the BP2000 tested lineages * Emily Beaty has a son, born 1845 (about the time our Samuel went missing) named Samuel :a different tree has Emily's father as '''James Beaty, b. before 1800, living in DeKalb, Alabama''' Another DNA match, [https://www.familytreedna.com/my/family-tree/Share?k=AGxbapGhK%2BugIxKzsLIW4Q%3D%3D#mode=0&tp_=25039346 descendant] lists '''William Robert Beaty, b. 1818 in TN,''' son of '''James Beaty of North Carolina.''' (5th to remote cousin) - sent email to descendant [[Baty-260|Baty-260]] 17:24, 18 August 2019 (UTC) '''[https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1850usfedcenancestry&indiv=try&h=16193970 Robert Beaty] was remarried in 1841, the whole family came out from Ohio and in 1850 were living in Fulton County, ILL, just east of Newton.''' In Furcuff's tree, [https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1850usfedcenancestry&indiv=try&h=15994254|'''James Beatty, b. abt 1798''] has four sons who moved out between 1840 and 1850, one was born about 1830. == Sources ==

Finding the real Jacobs-3095 Ancestors

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== Purpose of this page == This is a working space for the Global_Reunion volunteers to store and discuss documentation and proofs or disproofs of the [[Jacobs-3095|Charles E. Jacobs]] Ancestry on WikiTree. Formality here is not important; '''accuracy is paramount'''. Right now, this is ''a process of eliminating'' those who cannot be the correct people. Thanks for playing... Notes go on the bottom here, so scroll down to read or comment other than on source documents. ---- [[Space:Jacobs_One_Name_Study|Link to: Jacobs One Name Study]] ---- '''Working Premise now based upon the following documents:''' Thanks to Phil Smith for finding the correct Death Notice, we now KNOW the following: '''1)''' ''The New York Times'' 25 June 1989 Jacobs – Charles E., on June 23rd, 1989. Beloved husband of Harriet. Loving father of Arnold and Carol. Devoted brother of Lou, Etta Bernstock, Madeline McColgan and Rebecca Altabes. Cherished grandfather of Beryl, A. J., Tamara and Nadia. Service today, 11:45 A.M. at “The Riverside,” 76th St. and Amsterdam Ave."Jacobs – Charles E.", ''The New York Times''. 25 June 1989 p. 26. ~And~ It looks to me like this one fits the obituary.- Phil. Agreed, let's proceed accordingly on this. Thanks Phil! - Keith '''2)''' New York State Archives; Albany, New York; State Population Census Schedules, 1925; Election District: 11; Assembly District: 04; City: New York; County: New York; Page: 68. [http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1925NYStateCensus&indiv=try&h=14286127 1925 NY Census] : Max Jacobowitz 42 : Clara Jacobowitz 39 : Rose Jacobowitz 21 : Charles Jacobowitz 18 : Louis Jacobowitz 12 : Yetta Jacobowitz 11 : Irving Jacobowitz 08 : Minnie Jacobowitz 06 : Rebecca Jacobowitz 03 '''This ^^^^^^^^^^ IS the Family and the source documentation we should build this branch upon.''' Please post any documented counter examples ASAP. '''Possibles go vvvvv until proven, then should move up ^^^^^: * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X7DC-V2H United States Census, 1930] Max Jacobowitz, Bronx (Districts 1-250), Bronx, New York, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0131, sheet , family 309, NARA microfilm publication. Charles is not on this enumeration, though other family members are listed. Also is important because it lists Austria as country of birth for Max and Clara. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X766-BXG United States Census, 1930] Charles E Jacobs in household of Isadore Jacobowitz, Bronx (Districts 501-750), Bronx, New York, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0571, sheet , family 454, NARA microfilm publication . "Census records have been entered on profiles. Great! Thanks Phil. Regarding Max, as so often occurs, there still may be some question as to actual date of birth. Please see this record extract below, and see what you think:* ?[https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/2C46-ZVZ Hungary, Jewish Vital Records Index, 1800-1945] Miksa Jakobovits, 1881.?" ---- ---- '''Foolers - DO NOT USE the documents in the below list:''' These are some New York families that contain a 'Charles Jacobs' but are '''NOT''' direct ancestors even though they appear to be and should '''NOT''' be entered or followed: * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KSMY-4XP New York, State Census, 1925] Charles Jacobs, 1925. No cigar for this one either. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MJPW-H7P United States Census, 1920] Adolph Jacobs, Bronx Assembly District 5, Bronx, New York, United States; citing sheet , family 574, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821137. The Charles in this listing is the right age, they live in the Bronx in 1920 and the Parents are immigrants from Hungary! But this is Still NOT the right family!!! * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X4NL-K2G United States Census, 1930] Charles Jacobs in household of Charles Gelb, Brooklyn (Districts 0251-0500), Kings, New York, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0336, sheet , family 136, NARA microfilm publication. This one is hard not to like: Ages are close - BUT ''does Charles have a twin named Peter''? Morris Jacobs appears to be his father here. Wrong family. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M5Z7-RJ1 United States Census, 1910] Charles Jacobs in household of Louis Jacobs, Manhattan Ward 10, New York, New York, United States; family 111, NARA microfilm publication T624, FHL microfilm 1375022. Too young, this Charles was born 1908 or '09. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M5H4-6T5 Henry Jacobs in Bronx (1910 Federal Census)] This Charles is too old. Born in 1902 or '03. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MJYC-MT1 United States Census, 1920] Charles Jacobs in household of Joseph Jacobs, Manhattan Assembly District 4, New York, New York, United States; citing sheet , family 70, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821191. This Charles was born in 1901. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MJPM-BNR United States Census, 1920] Abraham Jacobs, Bronx Assembly District 3, Bronx, New York, United States; citing sheet , family 73, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821135. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MJYV-1C4 United States Census, 1920] Charles Jacobs in household of Jacob Jacobs, Manhattan Assembly District 6, New York, New York, United States; citing sheet , family 173, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821196. This Charles was born in 1884 - much too old. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MJYH-J4Z United States Census, 1920] Charles Jacobs in household of Leo Jacobs, Manhattan Assembly District 3, New York, New York, United States; family 239, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821191. Another "too young" Charles, born in 1915. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X4L9-7TY United States Census, 1930] Charles Jacobs in household of Paul Jacobs, Manhattan (Districts 0751-1000), New York, New York, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0828,family 79, NARA microfilm publication. This Charles is too young, born 1917. * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X7DF-9HH United States Census, 1930] Isaac Jacobs, Bronx (Districts 1-250), Bronx, New York, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0210, sheet , family 225, NARA microfilm publication . * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MK9K-KGZ Jacob Jacobs Family in Brooklyn (1905 NY State Census)] * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M5H9-4PS Max Jacobs in 1910 Fed Census] * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M5Q6-LFS Henry Jacobs Family in Brooklyn (1910 Census)] * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MJ5Z-1PL Henry Jacobs Family in Brooklyn (1920 Census)] * [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X766-BXG Henry Jacobs Family in Brooklyn (1930 Census)] ---- '''Notes:'''

Finding the right George Wallace

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Finding_the_right_George_Wallace.png
'''This space page was created as a resource page to help sort out and identify the many individuals named George Wallace located in Ontario, Canada (Canada West) ''' The profile [[Wallace-5435|George Wallace (1826-1905)]] is part of a WikiTree Challenge. It was first created by David Wallace in 2014. It contained the following information, at that time: George was born in 1826. George Wallace ... He passed away in 1905. First-hand information as remembered by [[Wallace-3616 | David Wallace]], Monday, October 6, 2014. ''Replace this citation if there is another source.'' Birth: 1826-12-07, Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland Death: 1905-05-01, Ontario, Canada There were no parents listed. == What We Know == *He died 1 May 1901. At the time, he was living on Lot 13, Concession 13, Reach Township, Ontario County, Ontario, Canada."Canada, Ontario Deaths, 1869-1937 and Overseas Deaths, 1939-1947," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JX23-13D : 2 March 2021), George Wallace, 01 May 1905; citing Reach Tp., Ontario, Ontario, yr 1905 cn 21033, Registrar General. Archives of Ontario, Toronto; FHL microfilm 1,854,397. The record further indicates he was a retired farmer and widower who was born in Scotland. He died of intestinal obstruction (duration: 6 weeks). The information was provided by Robert Wallace (relationship not stated). *His will and one codicil were administered by Robert Wallace and William Wallace, his executors.Probate records, 1901-1930, Ontario. Surrogate Court (Ontario County). "Registers 14-16 (3537-4447) 1902-1909", catalogue with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHV-X3CK-69MG-B ). No. 2934, filed May 17th 1905, transcription of the probate of the will of George Wallace, farmer of Reach Township (will dated November 28th 1901, codicil dated March 30th 1905). Film # 008661613, Images 353 to 355 of 827.Summary of the content: **his son, Allan received the North half of lot 19, Concession 13 in the Township of Reach, subject to the payment of two thousand dollars to the estate, as set out in payment instructions. **his son, John received the sum of one thousand seven hundred dollars. **his daughters, named Mary McMillan and Ellen McKay, each the sum of eleven hundred dollars **to his Baird daughters, B? and Annie, each the sum of five hundred dollars **to the children of his late daughter, Margaret, he left them each $150 to be deposited in a chartered bank, in trust. **The residue of his estate was left to his sons, namely: William, James, Robert, David, Adam, Allan and John, **he states in the will that his daughters and son George have been sufficiently provided for. **In the codicil to his will, he revokes the appointment of his son in law as an executor and in his place appoints his son, William. *Children identified in the Will and Probate record transcription: **Robert **William **John **Mary **Ellen **Margaret **B? **Annie **James **David **Adam **Allan *The 1901 Census of Canada provides the following information:Library and Archives Canada; "1901 Census of Canada"; [https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/?app=Census1901&op=img&id=z000089461 Image]; accessed 3 Feb 2023 **George Wallace is living with his son, Allan and daughter in law, Annie, in Reach Township, Ontario. **His date of birth is given as 7 Dec 1826. **He is the father of the the Head of Household (Allan) **He is 74 years old **He's a farmer **He was born in Scotland **He emigrated to Canada in 1832 (calculated age: 6 years old) - Note: The handwriting looks like it could be 1852. *Margaret died in 1891."Canada, Ontario Deaths, 1869-1937 and Overseas Deaths, 1939-1947," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JNV3-NPL : 2 March 2021), George Wallace in entry for Mrs. George Wallace Sr, 14 Nov 1891; citing Reach, Ontario, Ontario, Canada, 11726, Registrar General. Archives of Ontario, Toronto; FHL microfilm 1,853,537. *The 1891 Census of Canada provides the following information:Library and Archives Canada; "1891 Census of Canada"; [https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/ app=Census1891&op=img&id=30953_148160-00326 Image - 2nd Page]; accessed 3 Feb 2023 **George Wallace was living with his wife, Margaret in Reach Township, Ontario **His age is given as 64 (1891-1826 = 65) **Children listed: Robert, John, David, Ellen, Adam, Allen **His birthplace, and those of his parents is given as Scotland **He is a farmer and can read and write *The 1881 Census of Canada provides the following information:Library and Archives Canada; "1881 Census of Canada"; [https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/?app=Census1881&op=img&id=e008180874 Image - 2nd page]; accessed 3 Feb 2023 **George Wallace is living with his wife, Margaret, in Reach Township, Ontario **His age is given as 55 (1881-1826 = 55) **His birthplace is given as Scotland **He's a farmer *In 1875, his daughter Mary, married William McMillan. Her mother's name is documented as Margaret Gordon,"Canada, Ontario Marriages, 1869-1927," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FMN7-NZW : 8 March 2021), Margaret Gordon in entry for William Mcmillan and Mary Wallace, 20 Jan 1875; citing registration , Reach, North Ontario, Ontario, Canada, Archives of Ontario, Toronto; FHL microfilm 1,862,896. *The 1871 Census of Canada provides the following information:Library and Archives Canada; "1871 Census of Canada"; [https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/?app=Census1871&op=img&id=4396619_00075 Image - 2nd page]; accessed 3 Feb 2023 **George Wallace is living with his wife, Margaret, in Reach Township, Ontario **His age is given as 47 **His birthplace is given as Scotland **He's a farmer *The 1861 Census of Canada West provides the following information:Library and Archives Canada; "1861 Census of Canada"; [https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item/?app=Census1861&op=img&id=4391564_00621 Image]; accessed 3 Feb 2023 **George Wallace is living with his wife, Margaret and children, in Reach Township, Canada West. **His age is given as 35 **His birthplace is given as Scotland **He emigrated in 1852 *There are two land transactions pertaining to George Wallace and his wife dated 1857.These appear to be for the purchase of 100 acres of land in Reach Township, namely the East Half of Lot 18, Concession 13. The sale was recorded as occurring on 27 Feb 1857.Digital Images; "Ontario County Land Records", [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C3HX-39HS-J?i=433 Family Search database]; accessed 3 Feb 2023 The second document appears to be the mortgage agreement for said property, dated 14 Feb 1857. The mortgage is recorded as discharged in Instrument No. 20971, dated February 19th 1863. Discharge of the mortgage (from memorial #7742) Film # 008637076, Image 478 of 636. He later purchased the adjacent property described as Images 48-49, which record the transfer of land in Reach Township to George Wallace. It appears George Wallace was the highest bidder at $800 at an auction in Whitby for the purchase of foreclosed property, the north half of Lot # 19 in the 13th concession of Reach Township (adjacent to his existing land on Lot 18 of the 13th concession). See: [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C3QZ-CTS1 Lot 19, Conc. 13] In 1851, both George,"Scottish General Register Office: 1851 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/59027dbce9379091b128101a : viewed 4 Feb 2023), George WALLACE in household of George WALLACE, South Ednie, Banffshire, Scotland; from 1851 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives /166, Folio 112, Page 11, Schedule 36, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. and Margaret"Scottish General Register Office: 1851 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/59027dbce9379091b1281024 : viewed 4 Feb 2023), Margaret GORDON in household of George WALLACE, South Ednie, Banffshire, Scotland; from 1851 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives /166, Folio 112, Page 11, Schedule 36, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. are listed as living at South Ednie, Banffshire. They were both farm employees and likely met while working here. *George's birth location is stated as New Deer, Aberdeenshire. *Margaret's birth location is stated as St. Fergus, Banffshire {{Image|file=Finding_the_right_George_Wallace.png |align=c |size=l |caption=From New Deer to St. Fergus }} == What we can conclude == *George's birth location is recorded as New Deer, in 1826, according to the 1851 Census of Scotland."Scottish General Register Office: 1851 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/59027dbce9379091b128101a : viewed 4 Feb 2023), George WALLACE in household of George WALLACE, South Ednie, Banffshire, Scotland; from 1851 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives /166, Folio 112, Page 11, Schedule 36, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. *As he appears to be on his own at a young age, it is possible that his parents died when he was very young. There is no documentation to prove this one way or the other yet. *ScotlandsPeople has two marriage documents for George and Margaret. By purchasing the actual documents, it is clear they pertain to the same couple and indicate that Banns were read in Peterhead parish and the marriage occurred a few days later, in St. Fergus. Digital copies of the documents are in the possession of Kathy (Urbach-13). Due to copyright requirements they cannot be added to the profile. **WALLACE, GEORGE MARGARET GORDON/FR1150 (FR1150), 21/04/1852, 166 40 / 378, ST FERGUS Transcription: 21st April 1852 - George Wallace and Margaret Gordon after due proclamation were married here this day. **WALLACE, GEORGE MARGARET GORDON/ 19/04/1852, 232 30 / 383, PETERHEAD - Transcription: April 19th - George Wallace, farm servant, in this parish and Margaret Gordon in St. Fergus. == What we don't know == *When he and his wife emigrated to Canada West. We can be certain that it was after their marriage at St. Fergus in 1852, and before the purchase of their farm in Reach Township, in 1857. Census documents record the year as 1852, but no other immigration information has been found yet. **His FamilySearch profile provides information indicating that the birth record for the George Wallace born at St Fergus, Banffshire dated 14 March 1825 is the correct one. How do we know this? No documents have been found to support a birth location. *Who his parents were == Research Notes == *John Wallace and his wife Agnes can be ruled out as parents of this George, as they have a son, age 3 (in 1851) named George."Scottish General Register Office: 1851 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5902666fe9379091b1c8ecf2 : viewed 4 Feb 2023), John WALLACE, On Inkhorn, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; from 1851 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives /225, Folio 174, Page 1, Schedule 1, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey."Scottish General Register Office: 1841 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5a13ffe8f4040b9d6ee3ba4d : viewed 4 Feb 2023), John WALLACE in household of John WALLACE, Clofericford Savoch, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; from 1841 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives HO 107/225, Folio 12, Page 7, Schedule , The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. *Elizabeth (a widow) can be ruled out as a mother. The George listed in this census (1851) was a printer and compositor."Scottish General Register Office: 1851 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5902666fe9379091b1c8ecf2 : viewed 4 Feb 2023), John WALLACE, On Inkhorn, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; from 1851 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives /225, Folio 174, Page 1, Schedule 1, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. *Susan Wallace (a widow) is a possibility for George's mother, however she's living alone at the time of the 1851 Census."Scottish General Register Office: 1851 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5902666fe9379091b1c8ed02 : viewed 4 Feb 2023), Susan WALLACE, On Inkhorn, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; from 1851 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives /225, Folio 174, Page 1, Schedule 2, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. *George Wallace and his wife Jean are also good candidates as parents of this George. In 1841, he would have been 15 and an acceptable age to have left home for work."Scottish General Register Office: 1841 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5a13ffe0f4040b9d6ee3aa19 : viewed 4 Feb 2023), George WALLACE in household of George WALLACE, Farm On Little Auchoch, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; from 1841 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives HO 107/225, Folio 6, Page 6, Schedule , The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. **George (error in birth date) is found in the 1841 Census working as a farm labourer in Old Deer, Aberdeenshire."Scottish General Register Office: 1841 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5a140290f4040b9d6ee6bd4a : viewed 4 Feb 2023), George WALLACE in household of William DUNCAN, North Skillimarno, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; from 1841 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives HO 107/228, Folio 1, Page 6, Schedule , The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. *Robert Wallace and his wife, Jane (Jean Dargie) can be ruled out as parents as their George was born in Banffshire."Scottish General Register Office: 1841 Census Returns database, FreeCEN (https://www.freecen.org.uk/search_records/5a1427c1f4040b9d6e1295ad : viewed 4 Feb 2023), George WALLACE in household of Robert WALLACE, Corhill, Banffshire, Scotland; from 1841 "England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images; citing The National Archives HO 107/166, Folio 2, Page 1, Schedule , The National Archives, Kew, Surrey. The birth record for this George is in the possession of Amy (Crawford-15512) Gilpin. == Sources==

Finding William Kimball

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Poof that William Kimball Surry,Virginia, may have been the son of William and Lydia Kimball of Westmoreland,Virginia. See this pedigree for reference th the Kimball and Brown relationship. https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I27550&tree=Tree1'' Richard Brown, m. Elizabeth Hicks, 23 Dec. 1690, Compton Martin. Richard Brown, bapt. 10 Jan 1692. Richard Browne (probably m. Frances Sexton) (Reffer to this.) Richard Browne (probably m. Frances Sexton), and Wm. Eaton of Prince Georges Co., 455 a., adj. Henry Bates, John Duke, Adam Tapley, Wm. Hough, John Brown. Wit: John Brown, Noah Browne, FRACES BROWNE WIFE OF RICHARD, concurs to sale. Apr. 4, 1737. B. I, p. 325. Major Pryor and Anne, his wife of Brunswick Co., VA to Richard Brown of Northampton County, N.C. 350 acres on south side of Nottoway River southside of Rocky Run on lines of John Taylor Duke, James Loftin and others. . John Brown, m. Jane, Compton Martin Reg. BROWN, JOHN John Brown -1667 employed by Wm West as Indian Trader on Blackwater near Kingsale area. participated in Bacon's rebellion in 1676. https://andersonnc.com/john-browne-of-kingsale-1639-1713-indian-trader/ [https://www.genealogy.com/ftm/b/r/o/Gerald-Brown-VA/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0010.html All about the Browne's of this era] oct. 20,1688 ,Grant to John Brown for transporting of 10 persons, 500 acres Kinsale Swamp.Note: Feb. 10 John Brown and wife Mary Brown , to Thomas Reeve... this land adjoining Richard Showell.Witt: William Scott,Robert Scott,Richard Scott. signed by, John and Mary Brown https://www.bholliman.com/files/Isle-of-Wight-VA-Deeds-1647-forward-of-Hollymans-35pp.pdf From land records of Isle of Wight, Virginia: John Browne delivered a deed of sale for 200 acres to Wm. Scott, 9 Feb 1690 and 100 acres to Richard Showell and unto Thomas Reeves about 200 acres.***A pat. of 20 Oct 1688. He now empowers his wife to acknowledge these sales in court, 9 Feb. 1690. Teste Robt. Scott, Rich. Scott. John Browne, the Elder, sells Richard Showell 100 acres in I. of W. called --- Neck. 3 June, 1690. Teste, Edw. Floid, Hen. Baker. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://thereevesproject.org/data/tiki-index.php?page=Reeves_Thomas_4455 Land grant 7 July 1635 [[Upton-2359|John Upton]], 1650 acres in the county of Warresquioake, about three miles up Pagan Point Creek. Due for the importation of 33 persons (names) below: Rich. Young, Antho, a negro, Mary, a negro, Florence Richards, Roger Bagnal, Ralph Harwood, Thomas Reeves, Rich. Sparkman, Edwd. Burr, Savage Nerrie, Wm. Scott, Rich. Jones, Fr. Savage, Owen Howell, Nich. Bushell, James Parsons, Jon. Parker, Lewis Phillips, Morgan Roberts, Wm. Davis, John Fitchett, Morgan Evans, Christopher Lewis, Phillip Kennesley, Eliz, King, Martha Swann, Mary Johnson, Jonas Sadlington, Anth. Tyler, Peter Heyes, Rich. Jackson, Wm. Pincher, Eliz. Larkin. Granted July 7, 1635. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990008349320205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,John%20Upton&offset=0 Land grant 22 March 1675/1676. *Bagnall, James. grantee. * Isle of Wight County *300 acres escheat land. Formerly granted to Captn. John Upton who assigned &c. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990007186990205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,John%20Upton&offset=20 West, William *Virginia wills and administrations *1610 *Will dated 1610, Dedsham, Co. Sussex Will proved 21 June 1616, London The Va. Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 26, p. 381, from P.C.C. 60 Cope. He was a nephew of Lord Baltimore and was killed by the Indians near the falls of James River in the fall of 1610. Captain William West arrived at Jamestown in June of 1610 with his relative—the governor, Lord De La Warre—and another kinsman, Sir Ferdinando Wainman. He was killed in fighting against elite Indian warriors near present-day Richmond in the fall or winter of 1610. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://historicjamestowne.org/archaeology/chancel-burials/founders/william-west/ [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990005238560205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,William%20West&offset=10 Part of index to wills not listed in Virginia Wills and Administrations, 1632-1800 (Torrence). William West was born around 1585 in England although little is known about his life. He arrived at Jamestown in June 1610 as part of a military force commanded by his kinsman Thomas West, Lord De La Warr, the first captain general and governor of the colony. Several months later, De La Warr ordered some of his men to the falls of the James River—near present day Richmond—to repossess a fort (“Laware’s Fort”) abandoned by the English the year before. The fort was located in the heartland of the Powhatan chiefdom and fierce fighting between English soldiers and Indian warriors took place there. After West was killed he was brought back to Jamestown for burial, likely because of his kinship to Lord De La Warr. DIFFERENT WILLIAM WEST William and Henry West arrived in 1656, with their family and settled in Isle of wight county,Virginia. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3727&context=etd Richard Lawrence,John Turner,William West and Thomas Whaley, escaped the hangmans noose by breaking out of prison, and fled to the virginia frontier. This William West owned 160 acres in one plantation. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3727&context=etd [[West-480|William WEST, Sr.]] and wife, Rebeccah [BRASWELL], for 2500 lbs. tbco. sell to Anthony HERRING of Lower Parish 200 acres of land on Blackwater adj. John SMITH and Will WESTWRAY, being part of land pur. from said Wm. WEST and Wm. OLDIS adj. NOSWORTHY's and John SMITH's line. 28 Apl. 1694. Wm. KERLE, Robt. WEST, Eliza. BOAZMAN. William oldis , Oldess, estate abate granted Thomas Edwards , as marrying the relict of William Oldess, decesed. June 15,1677 on Oldess will. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.seekingmyroots.com/members/files/H011626.pdf Land grant 25 September 1665. *Willim West * Rappahannock County (extinct) * 1589 acres. *Copeland, Nicholas and West, William [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990008398390205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,William%20west&offset=10 Inv. of John THORNTON's estate filed. (no date) Dep. of John JOLIFE, aged 39, concerning being at Col. SMITH's house with Will GREEN and his wife, Mary. [Mary, daughter of William WEST and Rebecca BRASWELL, married William GREEN.] [https://www.google.com/search?q=william+kimball+1695+charles+city+va.&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS920US920&ei=-6ZCZKGeDbiawbkP1I6goAE&ved=0ahUKEwjhh7vDoLv-AhU4TTABHVQHCBQQ4dUDCBA&uact=5&oq=william+kimball+1695+charles+city+va.&gs_lcp=Cgxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAQAzIFCAAQogQyBQgAEKIEOggIABCiBBCwAzoICCEQoAEQwwQ6CgghEKABEMMEEApKBAhBGAFQlQJYuyRg5SloAXAAeACAAZYBiAH3CpIBAzYuN5gBAKABAcgBAsABAQ&sclient=gws-wiz-serp#ip=1 more about the Browne's] William Heath, who was born in 1611 in Surry, England, and was sponsored by John Browne of the Eastern Shore in 1650, was the founder of the Heath families of Surry, Sussex and Prince George Counties. His descendents migrated throughout Southside Virginia, into the Carolinas, and beyond. He also was a member of the Heath families on the Eastern Shore of Virginia and Maryland. It would seem that William arrived with the money needed to purchase land, as Johne Browne received the headrights for William. This means he did not pay his passage; Johne Browne either purchased the headrights from the ship’s captain or sponsored William’s transport. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://geesnmore.wordpress.com/william-heath/ [InternetShortcut] URL=https://geesnmore.wordpress.com/william-heath/ Land grant 1 March 1666. *John Browne grantee * Surry County *600 acres beginning and extending on the East side the main Black water swamp; thence along Thomas Gaultneyes line. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990007289190205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,John%20Browne&offset=50 Land grant 14 May 1666 *Thomas Gaultney grantee *Surry County *200 acres upon Major Sheppards land beginning and extending an the east side of the main Black Water Swamp. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://lva.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma990007576000205756&context=L&vid=01LVA_INST:01LVA&lang=en&search_scope=MyInstitution_noAER&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=LibraryCatalog&query=any,contains,Thomas%20Gaultney&offset=0 1677 [[Drayton-310|John Drayton]] transported a John Browne and 19 others. Charles city , Virginia court. https://archive.org/details/charlescitycount00ayrerich/page/24/mode/2up?view=theater John Browne ,Charles City,Virginia will=Nov.2,1666. To wife Elizabeth100 acres. Son John and brother Gerrard Browne residue of lands jointly. In the event that of son's death before majority,brother Gerrard to inherit said son's share. Overseers: brother Gerrard,steven Montague,and JohnWheeler. [InternetShortcut] URL=http://mdhistory.msa.maryland.gov/msaref09/pdf/baldwin_vol01.pdf *A refference [InternetShortcut] URL=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Cocke july 30,1679 John Taylor married Elizabeth Relic of John Brown, was granted admin, on the estate of John Brown surities William Bridges and Edward Washington . https://www.jstor.org/stable/1923200 Elizabeth relic of first john Browne and the John Taylor married Henry Bonner Sep. 1,1674. , Maryland, https://msa.maryland.gov/msa/stagser/s1500/s1527/html/ssi1527bl.html Henry Bonner was in Chowan NC. April 17,1716. https://archive.org/details/northcarolinahi00hathgoog/page/294/mode/2up?view=theater Mr. john Taylor to takr inventory of Owen Rowes Estate from the hads of John Bonner ,who is to present same. https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf In Henrico County,Virginia a John Browne received 110 acres in 1668(See page 127.) http://www.ancestraltrackers.net/va/resources/virginia-county-records-v6-p1.pdf Justinian Justice married the relic of John Browne around 1688, . https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf Let’s begin with John Ewen who was born 1569 in London, England. We see that his son William (1595-~1650) was an Immigrant and a merchant in James City Co. (Surry Co.). He was also a ship’s Captain, owing The George. The largest land owner in Surry in 1626 was Captain William Ewen. He had 1,000 acres planted and 400 acres not yet cleared. Another 1100 acres were patented in 1643. William Ewen/Evans abandoned these 1000a and went to Maryland, Anne Arundel Co., where he died. William’s grandson, John Evans, Sr. was an Indian trader. He was born 1649 in Charles City Co. VA and married Mary Rivers in 1670. Thomas Evans, Jr. was likewise an Indian trader of some fame… [InternetShortcut] URL=https://johnclinard.wordpress.com/early-austin-families-of-va-md-connections/ Mathew STRICKLAND, Jr., sells Henry BAKER, merchant, for 2000 lbs. tbco. 100 acres on Beaver Dam Swamp. 12 May 1696. Anthony HOLLODAY, Chas. CHAPMAN. [This is the Matthew STRICKLAND who married Ann BRASWELL.] [InternetShortcut] URL=http://braswellgenealogy.blogspot.com/2007/09/isle-of-wight-county-deed-book-i-1688.html HisAccording to Hugh B. Johnston in a report in 1961 in regard to the Stricklands of IOW… “There does not appear to be reliable documentary evidence of his presence in Isle of Wight county earlier than 1678.” reference is evidently the patent on Kingsale Swamp. Mathew Strickland received 2 large patents… one for 902 acres near Kingsale Swamp in 1678… another several miles north on the Blackwater River for 1802 acres in 1680. “Matthew STRICKLAND appears to have settled about 1678 in Isle of Wight County, Virginia, where he passed the rest of his life. On June 6, 1687, Matthew (M) STRICKLAND gave a power of attorney to John BROWN to execute a deed to William EVANS “by reason of my nonability to travel to court held for this County the 9th of this Instant June” in Isle of Wight County, witnessed by Richard (RB) BOOTH and Elizabeth (S) STRICKLAND.” On June 6, 1687, Mathew (x) and Elizabeth (E) STRICKLAND of the Lower Parish deeded to William EVANS of the Upper Parish for 4,000 pounds of tobacco in cask 800 acres in the Lower Parish between the Main Swamp of King Sail and Beaver Dam Branch adjoining William COLLINS (from a tract of 902 acres patented by the said STRICKLAND on September 26, 1678, of which 102 acres had been leased to Thomas JONES for ninety-nine years on November 6, 1682, witnessed by John BROWN, Richard (RB) BOOTH, and Robert ® LAWRENCE. Indenture May 1,1702 , between William Evans and George Benn, in consideration of his father William Evans deceased, did recieve of james Benn,deceased , father of George Benn full payment of said land hereafter mentioned, dying before he made a deed to said Benn,does hereby confirm to said George Benn half of 800 acres, bought of Matthew Strickland by my father,William Evans deceased is called Cpatain Benns land on Beaver Dam Swamo, William Kerle. https://books.google.com/books?id=Z2AAvycdC94C&pg=PA588&lpg=PA588&dq=james+Benn+1680+va.&source=bl&ots=zqcxq0znIt&sig=ACfU3U1FzRlw3nSjzf3PVma7DHXoYrKF4w&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwing_vU6bSCAxXSD1kFHcm_D_c4ChDoAXoECAIQAw#v=onepage&q=james%20Benn%201680%20va.&f=false April 9,1706 Robert Evans of North Carolina to George Benn of the Isle of Wight county 400 acres(being1/2 of 800 acres bought from Mathew Strickland,by my FATHER WILLIAM EVANS and considering that William Evans did reserve of James Benn,fathe of George Benn,payment for the said land,called,Captain Benns Land on Beverdam Swamp. https://www.bholliman.com/files/Isle-of-Wight-VA-Deeds-1647-forward-of-Hollymans-35pp.pdf The English immigrant John Browne/Brown died 1726 in IOW VA. His son, William Brown (Gentleman of Albemarle) married Martha Braswell and moved the family to Chowan NC where he died in 1718. Their daughter Martha married the Lumbee Indian William Strickland in NC. Their daughter Mary Anne Brown married Gideon Gibson ~1720 in NC. Recall that Gideon was a likely son of Hubbard Gibson. Gideon, along with his father, moved his family from VA to Halifax NC then Chowan NC and eventually to Craven SC where Gideon died in 1781. We follow the Brown family because there are both Gibson and Brown connections to Family Austin. The Brown connection is through Mary Austin daughter of Richard II. She first married the brother (or cousin) of Gentleman William Brown. As a widow Mary Austin Brown married the Quaker Thomas Vernon. The Thomas Vernon family settled in Cub Creek, Lunenburg VA where Mary died in 1777 at the Caldwell Settlement. https://johnclinard.wordpress.com/early-austin-families-of-va-md-connections/ [[Booth-12043|Richard Booth]] and John Brown had nearby property at Kingsale Swamp. This is just north of the Nansemond County line. The UPPER patent on the Blackwater River is where Thomas Boon was located. I have no idea WHEN he settled there? [InternetShortcut] URL=https://andersonnc.com/mathew-strickland-thomas-boon-iow/ James BAGNALL sells Will. WEST, Sr., 30 acres which was from Mr. Robert BRASWELLs, from mill to James TULLAUGHS, etc. 30 Mar. 1696. Tristram NORSWORTHY, Will BRADSHAW. Thomas Boone (1630 - c 1704) in Kent County by 1671. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://firstfamiliesofmaryland.com/qualifying-ancestors Wm. GREEN, Geo. GREEN, Wm. WEST, and James BAGNALL can not divide lands for each according to jury. Sept. 24, 1696. Rich REYNOLDS, Wm. BRADSHAW, Thos. JOYNER, Thos. (X) POPE, John (X) POWELL, Benj. (X) BEALE, Richard BEALE, Geo. (X) WRIGHT, Thos. WRIGHT, Rich. WILKISON, Jno. CLARKE, Walter WATERS, Geo. WILLIAMSON. Mathew STRICKLAND, Jr., sells Henry BAKER, merchant, for 2000 lbs. tbco. 100 acres on Beaver Dam Swamp. 12 May 1696. Anthony HOLLODAY, Chas. CHAPMAN. [This is the Matthew STRICKLAND who married Ann BRASWELL. July 17,1677, Chales City County court, Judgement granted to Richard Hill plt. against LT. Coll. Daniel Clark,Sheriff for 400 lbs. tobacco for non apperence of John Browne deft. in an action for debt..Viod if Sheriff produces deft. Attachment granted sheriff on John Browne.(See page 21.)https://archive.org/details/charlescitycount00ayrerich/page/20/mode/2up?view=theater Toby a Negro boy Servant to Jno. Browne is adjudged six yeares old. This was after 1688 and before 1691. Surry Co. Virginia. https://freeafricanamericans.com/free_Indians.htm Will of Ambrose Bennet: wife Elizabeth, and child she now goes with,reversion to Mary Beale,daughter of Benjamin Beale, Alice Blakit,Martha Rutter, daughter of Walter Rutter , Isaac Williams,Wife ext.Overseers,Col. Arthur Smith,Richard Reynolds Sr.Witt: Walter Rutter Christopher Wade. Dec. 9,1680,Isle of Wight.Isle of Wight will and deed book 2,p.14,abstacted by Chapman 1688 Walter RUTTER and wife, Martha, sell to Daniel LONGE, 30 acres, part of a patent of 150 acres granted to RUTTER, 30 Oct. 1686. Dated 29 Oct. 1688. Teste: John BROWNE, Wm. WEST, Jr. Sep. 7,1698 Apprasial of Walter Rutter estate by William West,Charles Durham,Richard Reynolds.Isle of Wight will and deed book 2,p. 400 Henry CHICHLEY granted to Thomas MANN 300 acres in Isle of Wight on Chowan River for trans. 6 persons 22 Sept. 1682. Thomas MANN now assigns this land to Wm. BUTLER 9 Feb. 1697. Richard REYNOLDS, Joyce (X) REYNOLDS. http://braswellgenealogy.blogspot.com/2007/09/isle-of-wight-county-deed-book-i-1688.html Richard Braswell. On May 1, 1668, George Gwilliam and Richard Izard qualified to act as overseers of Robert Braswell’s two sons until they were of age; they were bonded by *Thomas Green and Richard Penny. Richard Braswell, planter, sells Wm. West 100 ac., part of a pat. of 400 ac. owned by Mr. Robert Braswell, Dec. 14 Mar. 1673. 1.3. Martha, m. Walter Rutter. Walter Rutter and wife Martha sell to Joseph Bridger for 1200 lbs tbco. parcel of land in called Herring’s plantation – to James Benn’s line. Rebecca Braswell, m. William West, son of Henry. 1.4.1. Mary West, m. William Green, son of *Thomas Green. William Green’s Will of 1728 named legatees son Bartholomew, the land on which Christopher Dickinson now lives, also my mill in the Upper Parish now in the occupation of Henry White, for Capt. Joseph Bridger’s* life; son George my land at the “Freshet”, now in the tenure of William Davis; wife Mary; dau. Sarah Bevan; to Martha Montgomery; to Mary, Elizabeth and Green Green, the daus. of Mary Green, widow; dau. Prudence; dau. Rebecca. My estate to be divided by Samuel Davis, John Davis, Arthur Smith, and Christopher Dickinson. Executors, wife Mary and Samuel Davis. Proved by Richard West, Oct. 27, 1729. Wm West of Newport Parish, Isle of Wight, daughter Mray Green an Indian Girl called Pinke for & during her natural life ... son Wm West my Indian girl called Rose ... for ever. Negro Jack unto son Robt. West and my Indian woman Peg unto daughter Deborhah West ... for ever. 9 February 1708/9. https://freeafricanamericans.com/free_Indians.htm Thomas MAN, Sr., heir of Thomas MAN lately dec., for 200 lbs. tbco. paid by Nichols TYNES sell pat. of 560 acres on Corowak Swamp sold to Thomas MAN by Richard BOOTH, 9 Feb. 1692-93. 8 Nov. 1696. Boaz GWIN, Phillip RAYFORD. http://braswellgenealogy.blogspot.com/2007/09/isle-of-wight-county-deed-book-i-1688.html By vertue of the Coroner's inquest 29 July 1688, Paul Williams, Robert Palford and John Browne were suposed guiltie of the murther of Sarah Blagden. The Court order that the Sherriff or his deputies take Paul Williams and Robert Palford (Browne being dead) and them safely convey to James Cittie by the fourth day of the next Generall Court, alsoe that you take the bodies of William Booth and Abraham Parker and convey them downe to the Generall Court as evedences concerning the rnurther of Sarah Blagden.(This Sarah Blagdon was the mother of Sarah Blagdon that married Lawrence Abbington Jr. Son of Lydia Kimball) https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I136827&tree=Tree1 1678 Mr. paul Williams ordered to be summoned to next court to answer Col. Edward Hill. https://archive.org/details/charlescitycount00ayrerich/page/102/mode/2up?view=theater 1687 Charles City County,Virginia, ( ) By scire facias( ) of Paul Williams,sais Judgement be now put in execution against estate of Paul Williams ,deced the sum of 210 lbs. tobacco. Mr. John Sherwood and Mr. Lan. Bathhurst, adms odf William Armiger,deced who married the exec. of William Hill,deced.Being summoned by scire facias Thomas Sandon as marrying admx. of Paul Williams deced. to show why execution may not be had of certain judgements obtained against said Williams,in his life time in June 1683 and said Sandon setting forth( ) noneto bar the same , it is ordered said judgement be now put into execution against estate of said Williams,deced. for 1587 lbs. tobacco in casq and costs. https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf John Harrisonm Richard Jones , Plt. against Thomas Sandon as marrying Sarah, the relic of Paul Williams, deceased, is reffered to next court. Dec. 1687. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf "The Colonial Records of North Carolina, Second Series, Volume VII entitled Records of the Executive Council on page 416 has a deposition given by Richard Booth in which he states that in the year 1667 he took a canoe with trade goods to the Meherrin Indian Town down the Blackwater River. On his right the Weyanoake River joined in about 13 miles north of the Meherrin River. Accompanying him on this journey was “a Certain Weyanoake Indian Called Tom Frusman.” Also accompanying him was a man named John Browne. The Colonial Records of North Carolina, Second Series, Volume VII entitled Records of the Executive Council on page 416 (THe next excerpt shows John Browne lived at Lawes Creek ,Surry, Virginia.) Sept 1694: "Nicholas Sessums haveing caused Roger Squire to be arrested to this Court & set Forth that notwithstanding his wife Catherine hath alwaies demeaned and behaved herselfe Civilly Orderly & Modestly & never was accounted a Whore nor ever gave the least occasion to be subjected, but hath lived in good name & reputation all her days, yet ye sd. Squire ye. deFdt. hath made it his endeavour to take away her good Name Fame & reputation & to cause her to be disesteemed & slighted & to Effect his Malicious Intentions had at divers places before several p:sons as he more P:ticularly did at the house oF John Browne in Lawnes Creeke P:ish the beginning of August last before a great many people there mett on an Invitation utter publish & declare these Malicious Falce & scandilous Words Vizt: that shee was a Whore & he would prove her a Whore & he would prove her a Whore & to make the same as publick as he could thereby to render her as Odious as possible very often said Kate (speaking to ye. plts. sd. wife) you are a Whore & I will prove you a Whore which was to his damage at least one hundred pds. Sterl. For which he prayed Judgment with Costs to which the Oefdt. appeared & pleaded not Guilty a Jury was therefore sworne to try the same, who Vizt: Walter Flood, Tho.Warren, Tho. Orew, Jno. Browne. Robert Hart, Jos. Wall, Augt Hunicutt, Roger Potter, Edwd. Rowell, Robt. Lancaster & Cha. Savage returne for Virdt. we findefFor the defdt. upon ye. defdts. motion the Jurys Virdt. is Confirmed and an Nonsuite granted him agt. the plt. It is therefore Ordered that the plt. pay damage according to Law with Costs als. exon." 1715 Mar 23 - John Brown, bapt. 14 Jul. 1681, Compton Martin. John Brown, the elder of Surry Co. conveyed land to Robert Hix the younger, 1735. (ibid., p. 191). Noah Brown fr. Wm. Moore land granted Thomas Cook 23 March 1715, 200 acres. Wit. John Duke,'John Brown ''Wm. Kimball, 13 Jul 1735. (ibid. 224). [Since he was an adult in 1715, He would have been born much earlier.] https://walterfitzgilbertdehamilton.wordpress.com/2016/09/26/children-of-the-somerset-marsh/ “The last will and Testament of John Brown is proved by Edward Mosely.” February 15. 1698-1699. October 17, 1699. Sons: DANIEL and PEETER (“my plantation”). Daughters: MARGARET and JEAN. Executrix: WIFE (not named). Witnesses: DANIEL AKEHURST, WILLIAM REED. Clerk of the Court: THO. ABINGTON. Source: Abstracts of North Carolina Wills, By: J. Bryan Grimes, Secretary of State, 1910, Page 51 This is about where I suppose John Browne Sr died perhaps in 1713 (per records of Moseley and Ludwell depositions of 1707 and 1710)…. and further suppose John Browne Jr may have lived. This reference may be the death of John Brown Jr in 1719. Hofmann, Chowan Precinct, 1696-1723, pg 243… again a court minutes entry… 20, Jan 1719. John Browne, bapt. Sept. 11, 1603 (d. by June 5, 1632), m. Temperance … (parentage and any previous marriage is suppositional), who m. (2) Richard Cocke, having issue: John Cocke, who m. Mary Baugh*, half- br. of Thomas Cocke, a son by Richard Cocke’s second wife, and “friend” of Major William Harris. It is possible that John Browne had issue by a previous wife. If him, as assumed, he had a nephew and namesake. 1.1.4.1. John Browne, m. Sarah …, who m. (2) John Woodson, the br. of *Robert Woodson (whose dau., Elizabeth, m. William Lewis, of familial connection to Major William Harris, see hereinafter), a patentee of 450 ac., with William Harris (son of Major William Harris), etc., on “White Oak Swamp”. Rec. May 1, 1707. 1.1.5. Alice Browne, m. Richard Price (bapt. Sept. 21, 1587, son of John Price), on Nov. 17, 1619; possibly related to John Price of this account. John Price and Richard Cocke of Henrico would have known each other very well. They were both of Shropshire, and a number of the various branches of the Cocke family resided in Ludlow, and were, with the families of Harris and Price, parishioners of the Church of St Lawrence, the registers of which record the baptism of John Price: “Nov. 10, 1584: John, s. William Preece”: Muster of the inhabitants of the Corporation of Charles City, Feb. 24, 1624. Muster of John Price: John aged 40, ship Starr in May, 1620. Ann his wife aged 21, ship Francis Bonaventure in August, 1620. Mary, a child, 3 months’ (Hottens Original List, p. 203). Two years later, in 1626, John Price owned 100 ac. at or near the falls of James river. (Virginia Historical Magazine, ed. William G. Stanard, No. 15, p. 363). May 23, 1638. Patent granted Matthew Price as son and heir of John Price for 150 ac. on Turkey Island Creek in Henrico Co. ‘granted by patent to his late father John Price, now in possession of his mother, Ann Hallom, Widow – being due unto him in right of his father who had a patent granted Feb. 20, 1619’ (B. 1, p. 558). John Price m. (1) Elizabeth Matthews: ‘1613 May 30: John Prees & Elizabeth Matthews, widow‘; (2) Anne …, who m. (2) Robert Hallom. On May 6, 1638, a patent was issued to Anne Hallom, widow, and the heirs of Robert Hallom, dec’d for 1000 ac. in Henrico. Northeast by the woods, southwest by the river, northwest by Bremo & land of Mr. Richard Cocke, & southeast toward Turkey Island Creek adj. land of John Price. (See Land Office Patents No. 1, 1623-1643 (v.1 & 2), p. 413). Turkey Island became the plantation of William Randolph, “friend” of Major William Harris. Thomas Lewis*, aged 23 in 1623, step-brother of John Harris*, b. 1604 (father of Major William Harris), is most likely recorded here: Hannah Boyse, dau. and heir of Luke Boyse, late of Henrico, decd., patented in Nov., 1635, 300 ac. in Henrico adjoining land of her mother Alice Edlowe; due 50 ac. for her personal adventure and 50 ac. for the personal adventure of her father, and 200 ac. for transportation of servants, viz.: ‘Thomas Lewis*, Robert Hollum, Joseph Royall*, Edward Holland, and Oliver Allen’ Cocke was definitively settled in Virginia by 1632; the court recorded that he married Temperance Bailey, the widow of John Browne, on June 5, 1632, and settled Browne's estate with a fee of 6,397 pounds of tobacco Temperance was born about 1617 in Virginia, as is found living at Jordan's Journey in the household of Cecily Jordan in the 1624/25 Jamestown Muster. Temperance married between the age of 13 and 14 John Browne with whom she had children. Richard Cocke and Temperance had two known sons, Thomas and Richard. Also a daughter Elizabeth. Following the death of Temperance he married Mary Aston, a daughter of Walter Aston, with whom he had children including another son Richard, John, William, and Edward. His two sons named Richard have traditionally been differentiated as Richard the Elder and Richard the Younger. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Cocke Dorman, John Frederick, Adventurers of Purse and Person, 4th ed., v1 pp926-929 [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4244720?seq=2 ????Estate of John Brown, deceased, 6 September 1684, to Temperance Brown one Indian boy valued at 2,500 pounds. https://freeafricanamericans.com/free_Indians.htm Baley, Temperance - A405; born 1617, died ca.1652, Henrico: (Muster of 1624/5); wife of John Browne and Richard Cocke. https://www.jamestowne.org/bacon---baley.html Thomas Batte, Jr. married in Henrico, in April, 1682, Temperance Brown, the daughter of John and Sarah Brown. Thomas left no sons to continue his lineage. After his death, she married in November, 1691, John Farrar. The security was Richard Jones and Joseph Pattison. In 1693 in Henrico it records that It is ordered that Mr. John Farror who married the relict of Mr. Thos. Batte, late of this county, dec’d be summoned to appear at the next court and give bond with security for what estate he has in his hand belonging to the sd Batte’s orphans. Sarah’s mother married a Woodson as her second husband, and her brother was Jeremiah Brown. Her sister Martha also married a Batte. In March, 1684/5 Colonel John Farrar, of Henrico, deeded to Colonel John Farrar, Henrico: March 4, 1684/5: To Thomas Batte, Jun., the son of Mr. Thos. Batte of the County aforesaid, 200 acres of land lying in the sd. County on the Appamattock River, being formerly purchased of the sd. Mr. Batte ye Elder…to Tho. Batte, Jun. one of the two unbroken horses which I have now in Appamattock Woods. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://walterfitzgilbertdehamilton.wordpress.com/2022/09/19/browne-cocke-and-holland-of-shropshire-and-virginia-a-proposed-relationship/ (Virginia Magazine, v., p. 97). [InternetShortcut] URL=https://alliedfamilies.wordpress.com/early-virginia-jones-families/jones-allied-families/ BROWN, John 1668/09/16 IKL m to Sarah Minard by Henry Boston; Annamessex; OT Browne 1669/11/06 LIV registered cattle mark 1671/04/01 ESMd imm; OT Browne 1675/04/14 IKL b to John & Sarah; Nanticoke 1683/01/08 JUD3 cordwinder 1683/11/13 JUD3 Gr Jury 1687/08/13 MCW ment/w John Shipway 1689/11/28 ADVL signed Advice of Loyalty 1691/03/18 MCW witn/w Owen Maragh 1692/08/31 MCW witn/w Matthew Dorman 1697/07/19 MCW ment/w David Brown 1697/09/20 MCW O'seer/w Thomas Smith 1698/03/27 MCW witn/w William Owens [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.mdgenweb.org/somerset/tlis/tlis1_b.htm John Browne of Accomac receives 200 acres in 1642. http://www.ancestraltrackers.net/va/resources/virginia-county-records-v6-p1.pdf Library of Virginia on line record Land Office Patents No 7, 1679- 1689 (Vol 1 & 2 p. 1-719). p. 447 (Reel 7) Surry County VA. John Williams and son-in-law John Brown grantees 1200 acres A John Browne died intestate, administration requested by Bridget Bown, his relict. D. Feb. 4,1665 . R. March 26,1666. Security,Mr. Arthur Smith, Edward Gibbs. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9SG-8NV5?i=100&wc=SJ7K-VZ4%3A344503801%2C344559401&cc=2034267< "John Browne. Sr., and Bridgett, his wife, he sold to Samuel Cannady 220 acres, "the plantation he lately lived on", patented April 29, 1692, ln L. P. Kinsale. Wit. Richard Exum, William Murry. DB 2 1704- 1715". She was the mother of three daughters at the time of the death of her father. Ann, Bridgett and Mary were named in the will of their grandfather John Williams, 1694: Daughter Williams is not named in the will of John Williams she is not mentioned in the Deed of Gift by her mother, Anne Williams, dated 9 April 1694, Isle of Wight County, VA, Deeds. It is likely she had already received her share of John William's Estate at the time of her marriage. She may have been deceased by the date of Anne Williams deed of gift to her other children. She was the mother of three daughters at the time of the death of her father. Ann, Bridgett and Mary were named in the will of their grandfather John Williams, Event: Marriage Record 1692 in W. & D. B. 2, p. 318; G. B. 2, p.90 Marriage Ending Status: Death of one spouse Note: BROWN, JOHN AND _______WILLIAMS. daughter of John Williams, Sr. 1692, W & D. B. 2. p. 318. G.B. 2. p.90 Isle of Wight Records [InternetShortcut] URL=https://sites.rootsweb.com/~molcgdrg/sur/1w/williams-notest1.htm [InternetShortcut] URL=https://mywilliamssouthernroots.blogspot.com/2015/04/john-williams-welsh-emigrant-died-1692.html John Browne received 100 and another 200 acres in Northampron,Virginia.(See page 135.) http://www.ancestraltrackers.net/va/resources/virginia-county-records-v6-p1.pdf Susanna Brown & Sylvester Brown to William Evans Nov 22, 1729. 5 pds for 100 A. On Horse swamp. Adj. John Thomas, Lazarus Thomas. Wit: Richard Williford, Mary Luden (Laden?). Feb Court 1729. Thomas Crew D. C/C.Did this William Evans hail from Kingsale Swamp in Nansemond near the immigrant John Brown? And could there be old family ties? On July 27, 1682, Robert Lawrence, William Scott, Robert Couger, and Francis Hutchins witnessed the will of Peter Edwards of Isle of Wight Co. On November 6, 1682, Robert Lawrence, Richard Booth, and John Brown, witnessed a deed of Mathew Strickland and his wife Eliz. of Lower Parish to William Evans of Upper Parish 800 acres on the main swamp of King Sale for 4,000 bls. of tobacco.. A John Browne married Elizabeth Ivey,Oct. 5,1706,Norfolk County,Virginia. (See page 102.) =http://www.ancestraltrackers.net/va/resources/virginia-county-records-v6-p1.pdf Note; William Evans was the son of John evans and brother of Winnifred Evans Hicks. Wife of Robert Hicks mention here. John Evans,William Evans,Winnifred Evans William Evans:Leg. son Thomas all my land at Kingsale;son Robert; wife and Children. Wife Extx. Her father , Mr. Robert Flake my overseer. D. July 12,1689. R. Aug.9,1689. Witt: henry Baker,Thomas Moore,Robert Flake. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Wills_and_Administrations_of_Isle_of_Wig/mFP9IHzVrGwC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=James+adams+1670+surry++va.&pg=PA10&printsec=frontcover Indenture made 13 January 1747, between Richard Brown of Brunswick Co. and Major Pryor of same, £150, 350a, on South side of Nottaway River. Signed Richard Brown. Witnesses: Charles Royall, Titus Singleton, John Collier. Court Feburary 4, 1747, Indenture &; Memorandum proved by oaths of Charles Royall Titus Singleton &; John Collier. (B.3, p. 378). 13 Oct. 1727: John & Richard Brown, of Surry Co.: 230a,Brunswick Co., on S. side of Roanoak River; adj. CHARLE"S KIMBALLS land. Lydia's sister Jane married Richard Higdon and Original Browne. Richard Higdon's son John had a son Daniel that new and worked with all of the same people that William , Joseph , and Charles Kimball new. People William new first ,in order. [[Brooke-2047|Henry Brooke]],(May have been his grandfather?))Will of Henry BROOKS. HENRY, shipwright. 21 June 1662; 3 February 1662. My wife Joane to be extx; my daughter Dorothy Brooks; my grandchild Lidia Abbington daughter of Lawrence Abbington ; to Henry Saxton my god- son and his father Nicholas Saxton ; my daughter Jane Higden ; my daughter Lidia Abbington ; Richard Cole to be overseer. [[Cole-33425|Richard Cole ]]: COLE, RICHARD, Parish of Appomatox ; 4 November 1663 ; 27 April 1664. To the widow Brooks; to Nicholas Saxton; to my goddaughter Jane the wife of Richard Higden ; to Joice Arbell ; to Thomas Webb ; the widow Brooks to be extx. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://archive.org/stream/westmorelandcoun00croz/westmorelandcoun00croz_djvu.txt Originall Browne and Wm. Kimber complaine that David Whitliffe keeps and detains from them one messuage containinge 650 acres, formerly in the possession of Jane Brooks, demised to Jane Brooks for her natural life by her husband Henry Brooks' his last will and testament, bearinge date 25 June 1662 and now decendinge and cominge to the petitioners in right of ther wives, being the daughters and coheirs of Henry Brooks, which David Whitliffe well knows, to the petitioners' damage in the profitts of the land, house and especially a conciderable good orchard 16,000 pounds of tobacco, wherefore the petitioners humbly pray order to the Sheriffe to putt the petitioners in quiett,possession and, that a jury of, the vicinage may enquire into and asses the damages. The defendant pleadinge by Jno: Lord his attorny that the plaintiffs, have noe right, to the same, neither Henry Brooks ther ancestor by vertue of anny extant pattent (the Court refer to the jury)' who died seezed of the lands in controversye. The verdict: We find by the pattent that Dorothy Brooks died seezed of the 650 acres claimed by the plaintiffs and it [is] the judgment of this Court that 329 acres in the pattent specified devolve on the heires of Henry Brooks because Dorothy Brooks had not, estate in the same untill the death of Jane Brooks, who died but lately, but Dorothy longe since, and the 321 acres taken up by Dorothy Brooks alias Butler for the transportation of seaven persons devolve on the heires of Dorothy, from which judgment David Whitliff appeals to the 4th day of the next Generall Court and Capt. John Lord assumes as security with him for prosecution of his appeale, and Mr. Lawrence Washington with Originall Browne and Wm. Kimber. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I22829&tree=Tree1 Original Browne aged 43 years or thereabouts sayeth that he heard William Kimball Senr. say about a week before the said Kimball died that he would give all that he had to his wife (except one feather bed) he would give to his son William Kimball Junr. Original Browne [[Brookes-868|Lydia Brookes]]Wife of a William Kimball Sr. and mother to William Kimball Jr.. Sister to Jane Brooks, Higdon ,Browne,Campbell, Wife of Richard Higdon. Mother of John Higdon.Wife of Original Brown.Wife of James Campbell. KIMBALL, LYDIA, 28 March 1698; 27 April 1698. Son William ; son Lawrence Abington ; son in law Willark Cullum ; grandson Joseph Abington ; grandson Brookes Abington ; my dau. Eliz. Cullum and her dau. Mary Cullum ; dau. Mary Rodgers ; eor. Law. Abington. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://archive.org/stream/westmorelandcoun00croz/westmorelandcoun00croz_djvu.txt [[Brooks-1921|Jane Brooks]] Sister of Lydia Brookes. Wife of Richard Higdon, Original Browne and James Cambell. Mother of John Higdon. Grandmother of Daniel Higdon. [[Higdon-5268|Richard Higdon]] Father of John Higdon. [[Higdon-371|John Higdon]] Son of Richard Higdon and Jane Brookes, Father of Daniel Higdon. 30 Mar 1698 - Provided by Laurence Abbington.( Step cosin to William Kimball Jr.) Original Brown is since dead and John Higdon sick and not able to come to Court. Ordered that John Higdon be sworne before Capt. William Bridges. 19 May 1698 - By virtue of an odered 30 Mar 1698 John Higdon doth declare Robert Wickleff did sign and seal that will which I produced. William Bridges. 1694-1698 Westmoreland County, Virginia Order Book, Part 3 [John Frederick Dorman]; Page 261a [30 March 1698] The last will and testament of Robert Wickliff was proved by Lawrence Abbington one of the witnesses, and for that Original Brown one other of the witnesses is since dead and. John Higdon the other witness also now sick, it is ordered that John Higdon may as soon as convenient be sworn before Capt. Wm. Bridges and a certificate of the same returned. ( John did not die of the sickness like most of the family.)Because in the next entry he was still alive in 1702. CAMPBELL, JAMES,( Husband of Jane Browne,Steo father to the Higdon children.) 20 November 1702; 30 December 1702. To John Higdon's sons, Original, Daniel and John one heifer each; to Nathaniel Pope's two children Mary and William late of Richmond county when 21 years of age two cows and calves; to Elizabeth Higgins' two sons 5 shillings each; to Mary Triplett 10 shillings; to Original Roe 2 years schooling; wife Jane exx. and estate not willed. To John Higdon's three sons. Original, Daniel and John when 20; to Nathl. Pope's two children, Mary and William late of Richmond co., when 21 years ; to Elizabeth Higgins' two sons; to Mary Triplett; to Original Roe; wife Jane extx. HIGDON, JOHN, 7 Sept. 1718; 21 Oct. 1718. Sons Daniel and John. HIGDON, JOHN, 28 Apl. 1720 ; 29 June 1720. Son John ; brother Daniel Higdon ; wife Magdalene extx. Inv. of Augustine Higgins, gent.. 9 July 1721. https://archive.org/stream/westmorelandcoun00croz/westmorelandcoun00croz_djvu.txt [[Higdon-373|Daniel Higdon]] Son of John Higdon. At a Court at Westover Sept. 14, 1677 Pres: Coll. Edw. Hill: Maj. Jno. Stith: Capt. Thos. Mallory: Mr. Jno. Drayton. Admin. granted Daniel Hickdon ( Higdon) on the estate of Rich. Raines late of the Par. of Jordan, dec'd. Security. Admin. granted on the estate of Jno. Harwood late of Flowerde hundred dec'd to Wm. Gardner who married the relict. Security. The jury's verdict, Capt. Allen vs. Nevet Wheeler: Find for Capt. Allen plt. and give damages to act of assembly. The deft. appeals. Wm. Vaughn plt. vs. Dan. Higdon deft. The plt. at last court obtained an order agst. the Sherr. for non-appearance of deft. & plt. not now appearing a non-suit is granted.Aug. 4,1679 http://genealogytrails.com/vir/charlescity/orderbook1679-1679.html At a Court holden in Westover. P. 574. In case of Daniel Higdon vs Joseph Perry, deft., by Bartholomew Fowler, his attorney, confesses judgement for 1000 lbs tobacco 5th August 1695. Higdon, Daniel 1755, May 13 Acres 400, No. 153 72-A On south side of Neuse river, beginning at a red oak.(May have been Daniel Jr.) As these mills became landmarks, so did some of he early trading posts and stores. Some of the merchant mills doubled as both. In the 1750s Daniel Higdon had a trading post or store near the Falls of the Neuse, where John Higdon had owned land sinec e the mid-1740s. Lurana Higdon is dau of Daniel Higdon, Jr., son of Daniel Higdon Sr of VA and NC.Daniel Higdon Sr, and his sons were involved in the bloody Regulator Movement prior to the Revolutionary War.They were chased from NC to GA by the Colonial Govt of NC and attacked.Daniel Jr was killed and his brother survived a scalping. Daniel Higdon Jr. seems to have had a son in Prince George County ,Virginia sometime before or after 1733. In suit brought by John Higdon,an infant under 21,by Robert Moody,his guardian,vs. Daniel Higdon,adm. of Daniel Higdon dec'd and John Hill ,and John lessenby his securitiy; john hill and Daniel Higdon, the admin. being residents of North Carolina, the suit asto them is dissmissed. A copy of the suopena is to be leftat dwellingof John Lessenby and attatched awarded against him. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/59760#page=25&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= Prince George County, Virginia records,1733-1792,page 25 [[Browne-790|Original Browne]]Brother of William Browne. BROWN, ORIGINAL, 5 Feb. 1697-8; 27 April 1698. [10 Jan. 1682/3] Originall Browne and Wm. Kimber (Father of this William Kimball) complaine that David Whitliffe keeps and detains from them one messuage containinge 650 acres, formerly in the possession of Jane Brooks, demised to Jane Brooks for her natural life by her husband Henry Brooks' his last will and testament, bearinge date 25 June 1662 and now decendinge and cominge to the petitioners in right of ther wives, being the daughters and coheirs of Henry Brooks, which David Whitliffe well knows, to the petitioners' damage in the profitts of the land, house and especially a conciderable good orchard 16,000 pounds of tobacco, wherefore the petitioners humbly pray order to the Sheriffe to putt the petitioners in quiett,possession and, that a jury of, the vicinage may enquire into and asses the damages. The defendant pleadinge by Jno: Lord his attorny that the plaintiffs, have noe right, to the same, neither Henry Brooks ther ancestor by vertue of anny extant pattent (the Court refer to the jury)' who died seezed of the lands in controversye. The verdict: We find by the pattent that Dorothy Brooks died seezed of the 650 acres claimed by the plaintiffs and it [is] the judgment of this Court that 329 acres in the pattent specified devolve on the heires of Henry Brooks because Dorothy Brooks had not, estate in the same untill the death of Jane Brooks, who died but lately, but Dorothy longe since, and the 321 acres taken up by Dorothy Brooks alias Butler for the transportation of seaven persons devolve on the heires of Dorothy, from which judgment David Whitliff appeals to the 4th day of the next Generall Court and Capt. John Lord assumes as security with him for prosecution of his appeale, and Mr. Lawrence Washington with Originall Browne and Wm. Kimber. [Sept 1692] Original Browne aged 43 years or thereabouts sayeth that he heard William Kimball Senr. say about a week before the said Kimball died that he would give all that he had to his wife (except one feather bed) he would give to his son William Kimball Junr. Original Browne (THOUGHT HERE) .....Was Original and Lawrence already plotting to take William Kimball Jr.'s inheritance away? ORIGINALL BROWNE 200 acs. W'moreland Co., bet. Potornacke & Rappa..Rivers, 4 Apr. 1678, Page '631. Beg. at land of John Willis; along Mr. John Foxhall; to Ned the Indians path: along Lt, Col. John Washingtort,. &c. Trans. of 4 pers: William Browne, Robert Midleton, Jos. Rogers, Willi Morgan. (Note here Indian path?) Where was it ? [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I22829&tree=Tree1 Daughter Jane Pope ; daughter Judith Roe ; dau. Mary Brown at age of 16 ; son William ; Law. Abbington ; wife Jane extx. As we can see in William's mothers will he was still there. KIMBALL, LYDIA, 28 March 1698; 27 April 1698. Son William ; son Lawrence Abington ; son in law Willark Cullum ; grandson Joseph Abington ; grandson Brookes Abington ; my dau. Eliz. Cullum and her dau. Mary Cullum ; dau. Mary Rodgers ; eor. Law. Abington. CAMPBELL: James Campbell, husband of Jane Browne. Note he didn't leave anything to William Kimball Jr. in 1702. (He may had already been Gone?) CAMPBELL, JAMES, 20 Nov. 1702 ; 30 Dec. 1702. [[Perry-7578|Joseph Perry]] JOSEPH PERRY OF CHARLES CITY/PRINCE GEORGE/SURRY & ISLE OF WIGHT CO.’S VIRGINIA October 10, 1676. The following apprenticed in Bristol: Joseph Parry to Henry Baker, 4 years in VirginiaBetween November 19, 1677 & April 15,1678. Charles City Co., VA Order Book 1676-1679, page 234. John Turner has proved rights for importation of six persons assigned him by Captain Thomas Mallory, Viz: Christian Adams, William Lambert, Joseph Perry, Margaret Case, John Stanley and Thomas Mallory.(I believe that this is Joseph Perry’s approximate date of immigration or return to VA. 1694 Jun 4 - At a Court held at Westover, Charles City County, Joseph Kimball was a witness in the case of Joseph Perry against Thomas Harrison for defamatory words.( This showing he new a Joseph Kimball.) Joseph Perry is associated with Thomas Busby (of the 1693 Surry County indenture, and owns land on Warrick Swamp. On current maps, Warrick Creek is at the intersection of today's Prince George, Surry, and Sussex counties. In 1693–1712, this area was in Charles City, Prince George, and Surry counties. These 1693–1712 Timeline records probably all belong to a single Joseph Kimball. Roger Jones agst Thomas Busby, action of debt, for 5000 lbs pork due by obligation under a bill by deft's hand 10 March 1689, with statement that if not paid by last of January 1690, it is void. As it was paid a non suit is granted. In case of Roger Jones agst Joseph Perry, who was bail for payment of pork by Busby, a non suit granted also. 4th March 1694 14 Dec. 1693 of Capt. Thomas Busby, 400 lbs drest pork Signed Peter Perry Capt. Busby, I just now received per your Indian, 4 shotes, which weighed in all 393 lbs. p.561 Jan. 9, 1692 Signed: Peter Perry . June 4,1694, Westover court, Judgement granted John Kemball for 160 lbs. tobacco for 4 days attendance as a witness for Joseph Perry.( This should read Joseph and not John Kimball.(See page 179.)https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf At a Court holden in Westover. P. 574. In case of '''Daniel Higdon''' vs Joseph Perry, deft., by Bartholomew Fowler, his attorney, confesses judgement for 1000 lbs tobacco 5th August 1695 Two rights paid for to Wm Byrd Esqr Auditor August 19, 1709. Surry Co., VA Deed Book 5 page 424. John Doby and wife, Elizabeth Doby, and Joseph Perry and wife, Jean Perry, of Surry County to Benjamin Harrison of Charles City County for 1000 pounds tobacco… 100 acres on Jones Hole Swamp near Nottoway River and bounded by James Salmon. Land was granted to Richard Gourd. Wit: James (X) Salmon and John (X) Smith John (X) Doby Rec: 6 Sep 1709 Joseph Perry https://kipdf.com/surry-isle-of-wight-co-s-virginia_5ab611b11723dd349c81ab9d.html Nicholas wyatt and Peter Perry are requested and impowered by the court to audit what account Thomas Sandon and Sarah his wife shall offer of estate of Paul Williams, decd. and reort to court. https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf [[Lundy-128| James Lundy Sr.]] [[Lundy-300|James Lundy Jr.]] Oct.4,1733 Brunswick County,Virginia road orders,page,36. Matthew Parham is appointed to clear the road from opposite to Nathaniel Perry's into Henry Cook's road near micheal Wall's plantation where widdow trap lives and that all the male labouring tythes beloning to Charles Jenkins,Thomas Hewitt,William Smith,William,william Smith jr. Batte Peterson Gent., Mr. Battes Quarter,Thomas Reaves, JAMES LUNDY ( must me Lundy Jr.)Nathaniel Perry ,Timothy reaves,William cate,Burwell Brown , Edmond Carty,Thomas Carter, Thomas Reaves Jr.,Jerimiah Brown,Robert Douglass,William Douglass,Foster Reaves,& ROBERT HICKS (Must be Jr.) assist him and his tythes in clearing the same. [[Birchett-44|Elizabeth Birchette]]Wife of James Lundy Sr. and Joseph Perry. [[Colson-64|Jacob Colson]]Jacob COLSON - son of John COLSON, the Scott - Indian Trader Ch: Joseph COLSON Their children: Daniel COLSON Mary COLSON Abraham COLSON - Indian trader Jacob COLSON Winnie COLSON. Jacob originally came from Isle of Wight County, VA and was a Chickasaw and Cherokee Indian trader. " A trader popularly known as "Rainwater". Jacob Colson associated with Robert Hicks, Thomas Kavenaugh, Charles and William Kimball. THOMAS ADVENT Witness to will of John Barlow in 1727, Surry. Witness to will of Nicholas Brewer in 1729, Surry. Witness to will of Edward Clarke in 1713, Surry. Witness to will of Joseph Kimball in 1713, Surry. Witness to will of James Mayo in 1725, Surry . Witness to will of Lewis Solomon in 1742 in Surry. 1702 listed on Surry, Tithables. He also spent some time in North Carolina. On 17 July 1716 Thomas Avent, weaver, acknowledged sales of land to Jacob Coleson, Robert Green and Richard Moore, his wife ELIZABETH, through her attorney in fact Robert Hicks, recouncing dower. (Chowan Co. Deed (1): 19-20) Although Thomas Avent had been in VIrginia more than ten years, on the 16th of December 1714 John Nickolls, gent. obtained a patent for land in Prnce George County for transport of several persons, including Thomas Avent. Thomas Avent of Chowan Precinct, weaver, transfers (1) 270 acres more or less at Mount Royall on Morattock river, joining Robert Green at ye mouth of a branch, to Jacob Coleson of Chowan Precinct, carpenter, for 4 Pounds; (2) 370 acres more or less at Mount Royall at the mouth of the first branch, joining the branch next to the mouth of Morattock River as by patent to me July 29, 1712, to Robert Green of Chowan Precinct; for 10 Pounds (3) 200 acres on Morattock, joining Nottaway Richard Moore and Richard Moore upon ye River, to Richard Moore of the Province of N.C. for 10 Pounds; and (4) 240 acres more or less being part of a tract of land lying on the north side of Morattock river below Mount Royall which was surveyed for me the said Thomas Avent by Captain William Maule, Dept. Surveyor May 8, 1713 to Richard Moore of Nottaway River, planter, for 6 Pounds. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.aventfamily.org/TNG/getperson.php?personID=I0870&tree=avefam 1717 Apr 15 - At a Council of Colonial Virginia held at the Capitol: "… The Governor further acquainted the Board that he had certain Information that while the Senequas were at the Tuscoruro Town divers Inhabitants of this Colony particularly Jacob Coulson James Lundy, Jun'r. William and Charles Kimball and Thomas Reevis were there trading with the Tuscoruros contrary to Law, And that he has great Reason to Suspect that some of the said Traders must have given Information to the Senequas of the manner of the Western Indians encamping at Christanna … [who the Senequas had attacked and killed 5, wounded 2, and carried off 5] and therfore he desired the Advice of the Council as well upon the Proper Measures to be taken … as for detecting and Punishing Such of the Inhabitants of this Colony As have Encouraged them in that attempt … [[Colson-1106|Joseph Colson]](Son of Jacob Colson.) Oct.7,1735,Brunswick County,Virginia road orders page 138, It is orderd tha Joseph Colson(Son od Jacob Colson added here.) Clear the road to Wolf Pit at Coleman'S Path and that Patrick Damn clear from thence to Maherrin. https://www.virginiadot.org/vtrc/main/online_reports/pdf/89-r1.pdf [https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~westxan/genealogy/3566.html All about Jacob Colson Here] [[Colson-77|Sarah Colson]] Daughter of Jacob Colson, married James Lundy Jr. [[Hicks-3762|Robert Hicks]]April 8, 1654 Robert Hicks- Charles City Co., south side Appomattox River, north side 3rd. branch Blackwater (Creek), near Warrck Path (VPB#6,p.510) 2) Patent to Hugh Lee, dated April 8, 1654, for 2000 acres, named Aberconaway, Charles City County, for transportation of 40 persons, including Richrd, Sparkes, Hen. Neale, Jno. Crew, Andr. Crew, Richd. Dennis, Wm. Marsh, Morris Joyce, Hen. Allaman, ''IJohn Browne'', Wm. Bernard, Tho. Clark, Tomasin Harris, Jno. Browne, Phill. Pledge, Mary Browne, Jno. Cox, Richd. Warren, Tho. Michell, Jno. Drennett, Barbara Petingall, Cha. Bartlett, Wm. Taylor, Jno. Floyd, Tho. Stanley, Joan Liswell, Sara King, Rebecka Love?, Sara Swetland, Jocabus Jonson, Eliz. Cooper, Tho. Woods, Tho. Dance, Jno. Burges, Tho. Ory?, Addam Bradshaw, Robt. Hyme?, Martha Gibbs, Robt. Hicks, Jno. Allen, and Tho. Alford, on South Side Appomattock River, on North side the 3rd branch of the Black Water; nigh Warrick Path. Virginia Patent Book 6, page 510. Estate of Joseph Kimball Robert Hicks & Arthur Kavenaugh or any two of them being first Sworn before one of her Majties Justices of the Peace for the County are nominated and appointed to value & appraise the Estate of Joseph Kimball dece'd. And ordered that Fran's. Mallory Administ'r. of the Estate of the Said dece'd. present an Invent'y. & the Said Appraisem't to the next Court." [[Wall-2096|John Wall]] [[Irvin-438| Mary Irvin]] [https://www.ncgenweb.us/richmond/wallloupoole.pdf All about John Wall and people who knew William,Charles and Joseph Kimball] [[Busby-1915|Thomas Busby ]] Thomas's land was adjacent to Captain John Barker's land Thomas Busby was an Indian Interpreter to the Crown Thomas Busby and John Barker, Jr. were rebels that helped take possession of Bacon's castle (Bacon's rebellion). They later had to pay damages for the destruction at the home of Arthur Allen. The land was “on the south side of the western...head of upper Chippoakes CreekBeginning on Mr. Moseley line near the path that goes to Mr. Barkers North East byEast 61 chains thence again on the said Moseleys line North 115 chains and thence toJohn Barrowes. Thomas Busby had numerous dealings with Indians and was a paid interpreter for 'southern Indians in Middle Plantation'. [Middle Plantation was a general area around Williamsburg.] He was a lieutenant of militia and later captain of militia. He became embroiled in the Bacon's Rebellion of 1676. The rebellion was primarily against Governor Berkeley's lenient policy toward the Indians, especially after some frontier raids. Busby was charged with trespass when the rebels occupied the home of Arthur Allen during the rebellion. Busby was fined 12 deer skins in 1677 to pay for damages during the trespass. He was Interpreter to the Southern Indians 1682-1691 (Journal of the House of Burgesses). Knew Joseph Kimball,SURRY COUNTY TITHABLES: 1693 Lawn's Creek Parish, upper Sunken Marsh Surry, Viriginia,Tho: & Jeffrey Busby, Jos: Kimball, Con Indian - 4 Joseph was not in Busby's Tithables in 1694. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.freeafricanamericans.com/free_Indians.htm In the year 1688 John Poythress sued Thomas Busby for infringement on his land, land that had been part of the estate of David Peebles. He did this by virtue that he had married Christian Peebles, the daughter of Elizabeth Peebles. The suit went through several courts. On 5 August 1689 the suit was 'by consent let fall in court, the plaintiff averring that the land now claimed by him is within a Platt drawn by James Mine called "Bonnie cord, the Platt'. William Peebles, his son William Peebles, and Henry Peebles were witnesses to the will of Thomas Busby of Wyanoke Parish. The will was not dated, but it was probated at Merchants Hope on 9 April 1723, by the widow and executrix, Mary Busby. Henry Peebles was name Executor, but did not serve. The residue of the estate after bequests to daughters was given to May "under care of Henry Peebles". They later proved the will in court. Thomas Busby and Henry Peebles seem to have been half-brothers. Peebles Ante 1660 - 1692, page 12, by Anne Bradbury Peebles Grace Busby married either Joseph Perry or Peter Perry, In the Quit rent Rolls of 1704,Prince George County,Virginia She was called Widow Perry.(Looking into this.) https://docplayer.net/34928714-Part-3-thomas-busby.html [[Peebles-34|William Peoples]]Sr. and [[Peebles-32|William Peebles]]Jr. On 5 January 1717/18 William Peebles signed his wp mark while his brother Henry Peebles and Thomas Burrow witnessed the will of John Lanier, who in 1683 patented land south of and adjacent to their father William Peebles.They proved the will 14 April 1719. Robert Honeycut and Henry Peebles were securities for Nicholas Lanier, Executor of his father's will, John Lanier. (John Lanier participated in Bacon's rebellion.) William Peebles, his son William Peebles, and Henry Peebles were witnesses to the will of Thomas Busby of Wyanoke Parish. The will was not dated, but it was probated at Merchants Hope on 9 April 1723, by the widow and executrix, Mary Busby. Henry Peebles was name Executor, but did not serve. The residue of the estate after bequests to daughters was given to May "under care of Henry Peebles". They later proved the will in court. Thomas Busby and Henry Peebles seem to have been half-brothers. [[Byrd-25|William Byrd]]Capt. Wm. Byrd: Salary as Burgess - 2760 lbs. tob. Coll. Wm. Bird, Commander of the garrison at the head of the James River complains that he is empowered to procure or impress a boat or flatt for their use but can find none in Henrico County so he prays that the Charles City Court will order the Sherff. to impress such a boat or flat alledging that there are a number of flatts tied up in the creeks. The court orders the Sherr to impress such a boat or flatt with oars and send it up to the garrison by the 15th of June. http://genealogytrails.com/vir/charlescity/orderbook1679-1679.html [[Tatim-98|Edward Tatum]] [https://www.planetmurphy.org/pagebuild.php?pagebody1=TatumPeter1675-1771.htm Family and transactions of the Tatum family] ==Research== William kemble married Mary,daughter of Humphry Jones March 27,1716, Colonial Maryland. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://msa.maryland.gov/msa/stagser/s1500/s1527/html/ssi1527k.html Lancaster Co. was formed 1651 out of York and Northumberland Counties. Flow chart of county formations from Lancaster 1651 to Essex Co. 1692. Virginia Colonial Abstracts, Vol. 22, 1652-1655. (for JONES) Jones surname Lancaster Co. 1652-1678. Robert Jones 1665 Humphrey Jones 1666 John Jones 1655 Richard Jones 1653 Thomas Jones 1658 Humphrey Jones 1655 Lancaster Co. Orders 1657-1680 [InternetShortcut] URL=http://tjgresearchnotebooks.blogspot.com/2012/08/ Cole, Giles, Charles Co., 7th Oct., 1675; 27th Oct., 1675. To Stephen Coward and John Lemare, John Hawkins, Jr., and his brother Henry, and their sister Eliza: Hawkins; also to Thomas Hawkins, personalty. Henry Hawkins, ex. and residuary legatee. Test: Humphrey Jones, Henry Neale. 2. 358. The Maryland Calendar of Wills, Volume I Wills from 1635 (Earliest Probated) to 1685 Pages 110-123 I have a Humphrey Jones who died befor Dec. 13,1660 , When he made his will. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PX-FFBD?i=158&cat=399056[InternetShortcut] URL=http://genealogytrails.com/vir/westmoreland/wills.html 18 Oct 1678; Indenture from Richard Hodgson, planter, to Benjamin Rozer; for love and maintenance of Johannah his wife and Elizabeth his youngest daughter-in-law; a tract of land, mill and mill house on the Avon River in Nangemy or Stones' Fresh; if Elizabeth have no heirs to my brother William Hodgson; /s/ Rich. Hodgson; wit. Humphrey Jones (mark), James Gallaway (mark), Thomas Massey, John Slater p. 57, Charles County Court and Land Records, Volume II Liber H, Page 91 [InternetShortcut] URL=http://sites.rootsmagic.com/Worland/individual.php?p=5161 Headstone for a Humphry Jones [InternetShortcut] URL=http://www.vaofpa.org/fndrbrls.pdf To George Smith, Sr., ex., tract on western br. Bush R., n. side of sd. branch. Patent for sd. land at William Elden's Hogg Neck.Also 100 A., Hathway's Addition,” and personalty, including debt due from William Yorke and Thomas James, and personalty in poss. of Will. Pritchetts and Richard Ackew; also 130 lbs. tobacco for drawing conveyance bet. him and Thomas Preston, and 150 for drawing deed of gift for Charles Ramsey. Codicil–18th March, 1691. Bond of Humphrey Jones assigned to use of testator. Bond of MICHAEL JUDD ordered to ex. afsd. George Smith to keep tract “Little Marloe” for own use. Test: to codicil, Thomas Health, Robert Kess. Test: Mathias Prosser, Wm. Osborn, Thomas Loe. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/judd/2092/ John Kimball married Joan widow of William Jones April 16,1676,Colonial Maryland. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://msa.maryland.gov/msa/stagser/s1500/s1527/html/ssi1527k.html Richard Kimball Joan Kimball and John Kimball. http://sites.rootsweb.com/~mdsomers/tlis/tlis1_k.htm http://jliptrap.us/gen/cotman.htm https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc2900/sc2908/000001/000091/html/am91--35.html https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/nobles/694/ https://www.genealogy.com/ftm/l/o/g/Mamie-Logue/GENE12-0001.html Richard Kimball in Somerset Maryland ,1681-1687. [InternetShortcut] URL=http://www.mdgenweb.org/taxlists.htm Mr . Edward Smithwick Chowan NC. The 25th we arrived at (Edward Mosley) Mr Moseleys, who seemed surprized at our coming having as he told us sent a Messenger to excuse his not meeting us at Mr Harrison’s and prevent our disappointment, here we stayed this day & the next in expectation of Edward Smethwick & Francis Tomms two witnesses wch Mr Moseley sent for, but they both made excuses that they were not able to come. Richard Booth and John Browne were deposed in 1707 by Moseley… this was only one year before this map is credited with being composed. It is perhaps not a leap of logic on my part that Moseley may have been making the draft at the same time. Browne was again deposed in 1710 by Philip Ludwell of Virginia. May 22,1671, Surry,Virginia. Indenture between JOHN BROWNE and John King for five years of lawful service. King to provide sufficient,clothing,washing,and lodging,ect., andteach him the trade of cooper(making wooden casks.) for five years. Wit: Edmunde Stephen,Edward Hutchinson. (See page 103.) https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/344519#page=104&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= Another coincidence relates to the John Browne who accompanied Weyanoke Indian Tom Freeman in the canoe. John Browne was the son of Col. Tom Browne who owned over 1200 acres of land on the west bank of the Elizabeth River in Norfolk Cty., VA. John had a sister named Anne Browne. She married Richard Cording and had a son Thomas Cording. He had a daughter, Mary Cording who married William Freeman, Sr., the son of John Freeman of Norfolk, VA who is first shown there in 1673. John Freeman also owned land on the west bank of the Elizabeth River. Hence William married the Great-Niece of John Browne and, if related, would have been the Grandson or great nephew of Indian Tom Freeman. The 1st of October was very cloudy, so that we could take no observation, and the sky threatening bad weather, we resolved to stay no longer, but to go back to the Maherine Indians to examine them again in Mr Moseley’s presence, & in our way thither we took the examination of John Brown. The 2nd The Maherine Indians not being at home we proceeded to the Nansemond Indian Town, in order to take the latitude at Nottoway Rivers mouth, & to examine those Indians; but when we came there, most of the Indians were gone to get Chincopens & it being a rainy day we could take no observation. https://andersonnc.com/john-browne-of-kingsale-1639-1713-indian-trader/ William West... John orphan of William West, bound to Thomas Hales, when the orphan is of age will teach him to read English and to be taught by heart the church Catichism. William West seen as indigent, Thomas Hales being neighbor. he died ,secure, inventorized, and as he can sell at outcry what estate of the defunct there is and render account to court.1994 Westover cout. (See page 203.) https://www.americantapestry.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Charles-city-County-Virginia-Court-Orders-1687-1695.pdf The petition in the name of citizens of Isle of Wight County VA was addressed to the King's Commissioner in Virginia seeking clemency for William West, who had been involved in the Bacon Rebellion, surrendered though still condemned to death by the Governor, Sir William Berkeley, but had absconded.Reference to it is in the published "Calendar of State Papers (Colonial)" of March 1677.The original petition is in the Public Record Office - there seem to be 86 names (though the Calendar says "about 70 persons") of which only 27 could sign their names - including our Hercules Calcott. Later on 21 Nov that year the Privy Council in London heard another petition for William West's pardon, this time from his brother Henry, who had been forcefully transported back to England.I do not know the outcome - William's case was referred back to the new Governor, Lord Culpepper and Henry's by the Privy Council after further examination. William West “a rebel absconding”, who took up arms against the Indians by whom his father was barbarously murdered, was taken prisoner, carried aboard a ship, from hence to prison and condemned to death, but has made his escape and, as yet, cannot be heard of.Pray for his life and the restitution of his estate to his wife and children.Signed by about 70 persons, mostly with their mark.” Goodnes would extend his Pardon to his said Brother, who hath since made his Escape out of Prison, He taking the Oath of Obedience and giving Security for his future good Behaviour.[The petition regarding William West is referred to Lord Culpepper’s decision on his arrival in Virginia: the part regarding the petitioner himself Lord Culpepper is to examine in England and report his opinion thereon to his Majesty in Council. [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/calcote/144/ [InternetShortcut] URL=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Cathey_Family_With_32_Immigrant_Allied_a/gwFUCAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&printsec=frontcover WILLIAM WEST, 225a, NL, Isle of Wight Co., S. side Nottoway R.; S. side of Cypress Sw. 25 May 1734. https://genealogytrails.com/vir/land_patents_book15.html A Henry West (maybe father to William West that was killed by the Indians. Isle of Kent 5th April 1652: We, whose names are hereafter subscribed, do promise and engage ourselves to be true and faithful to the Commonwealth of England, without King or House of Lords. List: Thomas Ward Thomas South Tho. Wetherell Tho. Pett Tho. Taylor Hen. Carlyen John Hud Robert Martin John Smith Henry Ashley John Philips John Gould Edw. Ebes John Smyth John Richeson Hen. Taylor Will Leedes John Sepsen Anthony Calliway Robert Vaughan Philip Commins Thos. Ringgould, Thos. Bradnox Hen. Morgan William Elliott Robert Halters Richard Blunt Matthew Read Will Jones John Ringgold Francis Bright Edw. Copedge Edmt. Weebe John Russell Rich. Salter Marke Benton Will Band Francis Barnes Hen. Clay Roger Baxter James Horner Hen. Weest Isa. Ilive George Croutch Edward Burton Abraham Hollman John Winchester Nicholas Picurd Nic. Browne David Geldersen Will Price Tho. Hill John Dean Edw. Coxe Robert Dun Fran Lumbard John Gibson John Maconick Thomas Weest Joseph Wickes John Coursey John Errickson Andrew Hanson Andrew Anderso

Finding wilson

PageID: 21016043
Inbound links: 0
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Created: 4 Apr 2018
Saved: 7 Nov 2018
Touched: 7 Nov 2018
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Watch List: 0
Project:
Images: 0
The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Baker-27359|Paulette Flores]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16417284 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finger Name Study Info

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Created: 3 Sep 2017
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{{#switch: {{{1}}} |image=Photos-257.jpg }}

Finished and WIP Biographies

PageID: 21206875
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Created: 19 Apr 2018
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Touched: 19 Apr 2018
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Watch List: 1
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Images: 0
List of biographies/profiles that I have finished or are WIP. === WIP (Work In Progress)=== * [[McGlone-163|Felix Wilson McGlone (KIA)]] * [[McGLONE-166|Robert Duff McGlone (KIA)]] * [[Pilon-423|Reta Pilon]] === Finished === '''Mini Menu''' * [[Space:Possible_Matches_to_Investigate_Further|McGlone - Linlithgow Names]] *[[Space:Pilon_-_Profiles_to_Investigate|Pilon - Profiles to Investigate]] * [[Space:Finished_and_WIP_Biographies|Profiles WIP and Finished]] *[[Space:Eileen%27s_Photos|Photo Upload Page]] '''My Mini Help Menu''' *[[Help:Editing Tips|Link to Formatting Codes Help]] *[[https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Example-2&action=edit#text|Example Profile Formatting Code Example Page]] *[[Help:Biographies|Link to Biography Help]] *[[Help:Sources|Link to Sources Help]] *[[Help:Editing Family Relationships|Editing Family Relationships]]

Fink Family

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Fink_Family-4.jpg
Fink_Family-5.jpg
Fink_Family-1.jpg
Fink_Family-3.jpg
Fink_Family-2.jpg
Fink_Family.jpg
Fink_Family-7.jpg
Fink_Family-6.jpg
Miscellaneous stuff relating to the the Global Reunion project

Finland Reports

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Nordic_Project_Images.png
==Monthly Suggestions Progress Reports== This page holds the monthly progress reports for Finland suggestions by the group. Each suggestion worked on is reported along with the trajectory. The bolded numbers highlight those suggestions for extra attention during the following month. ===April 2022 Progress Report=== Weekly Suggestion Lists from 27 March and 01 May 2022 reflect work done during April 2022. {| border="1" align="left" class="wikitable" style="font-size:100%; border: 3px Solid DarkRed;" ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Suggestions By Group''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Difficulty Level''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0327'''    ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0501''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Trajectory''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Notes''' |- |Total Number of Suggestions||||9127||9207||{{Red|↑ 80}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Date''' |- | Error 104: Too old||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- | Error 111: Died too young to be parent ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- | Error 131: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status ||Advanced||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 132: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 133: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status  ||Advanced||77||77||No Change|| |- |Warning 134: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||62||61||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 205: Father is too young or not born  ||Advanced||51||52||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 206: Father is too old||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 210: Father was dead before birth||Advanced||30||30||No Change|| |- |Error 305: Mother too young or not born  ||Advanced||51||51||No Change|| |- |Error 310: Mother was dead before birth||Intermediate||23||28||{{Red|↑ 5}}|| |- |Error 404: Marriage before birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 406: Marriage after death||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 412: Marriage End Date before: Marriage Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 414: Marriage End Date before Birth Date||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 416: Marriage End after death||Intermediate||10||9||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 417: Death Date too long after: Marriage End Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Relationship''' |- |Error 105: Duplicate sibling||Intermediate||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 113: Duplicate in relatives||Advanced||0||2||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 308: Mother is also a spouse||Advanced||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 408: Multiple marriages on same day||Advanced||3||3||No Change|| |- |Hint 409: Marriage to duplicate person||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 418: Partner is also a sibling||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 419: Unmarried parents with no marriage||Intermediate||68||66||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Warning 420: Unmarried parents with other marriages||Advanced||18||16||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Name''' |- |Warning 721: Separators in First Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 723: Prefix in First Name||Intermediate||5||5||No Change|| |- |Warning 724: Wrong word in First Name||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 731: Separators in Preferred Name||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 733: Prefix in Preferred Name||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 734: Wrong word in Preferred Name||Intermediate||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 741: Separators in Middle Name||Easy||2||3||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 753: Prefix in Nicknames||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 761: Separators in Suffix||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 771: Separators in Last Name at Birth||Advanced||15||14||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 773: Prefix in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 774: Wrong word in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||7||6||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 775: Wrong character in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||15||16||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 778: Period in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||33||33||No Change|| |- |Warning 781: Separators in Current Last Name||Intermediate||8||10||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 784: Wrong word in Current Last Name||Intermediate||19||16||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- |Warning 788: Period in Current Last Name||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 912: Swedish patronym SSON for female||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Gender''' |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||2||3||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 503: Probably wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||2||4||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 505: Wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||4||5||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 507: Probably wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 508: Missing gender (probably female)  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 510: Unique name without gender||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Location''' |- |Error 602: Separators in Birth Location||Intermediate||21||23||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 604: Birth location too short  ||Intermediate||7||7||No Change|| |- |Error 608: Misspelled country in birth location||Easy||25||27||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 609: Wrong character in birth location||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 612: Location too early in birth location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 615: Birth Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||48||48||No Change|| |- |Error 631: Wrong word in death location||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 632: Separators in Death Location||Intermediate||64||65||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 634: Death location too short  ||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 637: Misspelled word in death location||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 638: Misspelled country in death location||Easy||26||27||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 645: Death Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||91||91||No Change|| |- |Warning 646: Abbreviated Death Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Warning 647: Ambiguous Death Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||5||0||{{Blue|↓ 5}}||{{Green|{{Green|{{Green|All Resolved}}}}}} |- |Error 661: Wrong word in marriage location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 662: Separators in Marriage Location||Intermediate||28||38||{{Red|↑ 10}}|| |- |Error 664: Marriage location too short  ||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 668: Misspelled country in marriage location||Easy||12||9||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- |Warning 675: Marriage Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||100||89||{{Blue|↓ 11}}|| |- |Warning 676: Abbreviated Marriage Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 677: Ambiguous Marriage Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||3||2||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Privacy''' |- |Warning 109: Profile should be open (birth date)  ||Intermediate||15||15||No Change|| |- |Warning 110: Profile should be open (death date)||Intermediate||2||1||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''PPP''' |- |Error 931: ProjectBox Without Project Account||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 933: Project Account Without ProjectBox||Intermediate||5||4||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Biography''' |- |Warning 802: Empty profile  ||Advanced||8||7||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 803: Almost empty profile  ||Advanced||11||12||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 811: Uncleaned profile after merge  ||Easy||56||56||No Change|| |- |Error 822: Heading doesn't end with =  ||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 823: Heading doesn't start with =  ||Easy||0||2||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 824: Heading different number of =  ||Easy||2||0||{{Blue|↓ 2}}||{{Green|{{Green|{{Green|All Resolved}}}}}} |- |Warning 831: Multiple duplicated lines  ||Advanced||28||28||No Change|| |- |Warning 835: Local file reference  ||Advanced||34||30||{{Blue|↓ 4}}|| |- |Warning 851: GEDCOM uncleaned Interpret date  ||Advanced||26||25||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 852: GEDCOM uncleaned Parse Lastname  ||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 853: GEDCOM Junk  ||Intermediate||39||54||{{Red|↑ 15}}|| |- |Error 951: Not recommended tag SPAN CLASS=||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 952: Not recommended tag SPAN STYLE=||Intermediate||5||5||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Template''' |- |Error 841: Template doesn't start with double {  ||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 892: Space page used as template||Easy||1611||'''1611'''||No Change||'''Extra Attention Needed''' |- |Error 893: Space page used as transclusion||Easy||3666||'''3673'''||{{Red|↑ 7}}||'''Extra Attention Needed''' |- |Error 896: Unknown parameter in template||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Category''' |- |Error 885: Using Top Level category||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 886: Died before category time frame||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''References ''' |- | Error 861: Inline citation doesn't start with   ||Intermediate||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||{{Green|{{Green|{{Green|All Resolved}}}}}} |- |Error 862: Inline citation doesn't end with   ||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 863: Missing tag  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 864: Almost empty tags  ||Intermediate||4||3||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 865: Unchanged Insert reference here  ||Intermediate||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||{{Green|{{Green|{{Green|All Resolved}}}}}} |- |Error 866: Duplicated   ||Intermediate||4||0||{{Blue|↓ 4}}||{{Green|{{Green|{{Green|All Resolved}}}}}} |- |Error 868: Inline citations after tag  ||Advanced||47||45||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 869: Duplicated named Inline citations  ||Advanced||121||122||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 870: Missing named Inline citations  ||Advanced||5||5||No Change|| |- |Error 872: Named Inline citation error||Advanced||0||2||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 943: Duplicated span Anchors||Intermediate||51||49||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 944: Missing span Anchors||Advanced||124||124||No Change|| |- |Warning 945: Unused Span Anchors||Easy||143||141||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''DNA''' |- |Warning 213: Missing fathers DNA confirmation||Advanced||20||20||No Change|| |- |Warning 313: Missing mothers DNA confirmation||Advanced||29||29||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Links''' |- |Error 961: Invalid domain name in link||Intermediate||16||16||No Change|| |- |Error 962: Domain name in link not resolved||Intermediate||150||150||No Change|| |- |Error 965: Link error 404 Not Found||Intermediate||428||462||{{Red|↑ 34}}|| |- |Error 966: Link error various||Intermediate||1286||'''1323'''||{{Red|↑ 37}}||'''Extra Attention Needed''' |- |Error 967: Link error in domain||Intermediate||128||128||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Unique Names''' |- |Warning 717: Unique name in Prefix||Intermediate||42||42||No Change|| |- |Warning 727: Unique name in First Name||Intermediate||25||26||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 737: Unique name in Preferred Name||Intermediate||19||20||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 747: Unique name in Middle Name||Intermediate||307||308||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 757: Unique name in Nicknames||Intermediate||71||73||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 767: Unique name in Suffix||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 777: Unique name in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||495||'''520'''||{{Red|↑ 25}}||'''Extra Attention Needed''' |- |Warning 787: Unique name in Current Last Name||Intermediate||232||242||{{Red|↑ 10}}|| |- |Warning 797: Unique name in Other Last Names||Intermediate||460||466||{{Red|↑ 6}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''WikiData''' |- |Hint 541: Wikidata - Clue for Father||Intermediate||19||21||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Hint 542: WikiData - Possible Father on WikiData||Advanced||6||8||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Hint 543: Wikidata - Clue for Mother||Intermediate||10||12||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Hint 544: WikiData - Possible Mother on WikiData||Advanced||16||18||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 553: Wikidata - Empty birth date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 554: Wikidata - Imprecise birth date||Intermediate||5||6||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 555: Wikidata - Different birth date||Intermediate||32||31||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 556: Wikidata - Empty death date||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- | Error 557: Wikidata - Imprecise death date||Intermediate||13||13||No Change|| |- | Error 558: Wikidata - Different death date||Intermediate||17||17||No Change|| |- |Warning 559: Wikidata - Missing birth location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 561: Wikidata - Missing death location||Intermediate||24||24||No Change|| |- |Warning 564: Wikidata - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 566: Wikidata - Possible mother||Intermediate||2||1||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''FindAGrave''' |- |Warning 571: FindAGrave - Link without Grave ID  ||Intermediate||4||1||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- |Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile  ||Intermediate||28||26||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- | Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date  ||Intermediate||9||10||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date  ||Intermediate||31||33||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date  ||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- | Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date  ||Intermediate||5||6||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location  ||Intermediate||7||8||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 585: FindAGrave - Multiple profiles link to same grave ID  ||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Profile Completeness''' |- |Warning 452: Profile completeness - Father Status not set||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 454: Profile completeness - Mother Status not set||Easy||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 456: Profile completeness - Birth date Status not set||Easy||19||19||No Change|| |- | Error 457: Profile completeness - Birth Location not set||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 458: Profile completeness - Birth Location Status not set||Easy||25||25||No Change|| |- | Error 461: Profile completeness - Death date not set||Easy||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 462: Profile completeness - Death date Status not set||Easy||13||13||No Change|| |- | Error 463: Profile completeness - Death Location not set||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Warning 464: Profile completeness - Death Location Status not set||Easy||18||18||No Change|| |- |Warning 465: Profile completeness - Death Location Country not recognized||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 467: Profile completeness - Short Biography (<500)||Intermediate||11||11||No Change|| |- | Error 469: Profile completeness - Missing span Anchors||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |} ---- ===May 2022 Progress Report=== Weekly Suggestion Lists from 01 May 2022 and 29 May 2022 reflect work done during May 2022. {| border="1" align="left" class="wikitable" style="font-size:100%; border: 3px Solid DarkRed;" ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Suggestions By Group''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Difficulty Level''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0501'''    ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0529''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Trajectory''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Notes''' |- |Total Number of Suggestions||||9207||6777||{{Blue|↓ 2430}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Date''' |- | Error 104: Too old||Intermediate||4||1||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- | Error 111: Died too young to be parent ||Intermediate||3||2||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- | Error 131: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status ||Advanced||9||10||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 132: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 133: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status  ||Advanced||77||79||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 134: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||61||59||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |205: Father is too young or not born||Advanced||0||52||{{Red|↑ 52}}|| |- |Error 206: Father is too old||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 210: Father was dead before birth||Advanced||30||29||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 305: Mother too young or not born ||Advanced||0||52||{{Red|↑ 52}}|| |- |Error 310: Mother was dead before birth||Intermediate||28||28||No Change|| |- |Error 404: Marriage before birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 406: Marriage after death||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 412: Marriage End Date before: Marriage Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 414: Marriage End Date before Birth Date||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 416: Marriage End after death||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- |Error 417: Death Date too long after: Marriage End Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Relationship''' |- |Error 105: Duplicate sibling||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 113: Duplicate in relatives||Advanced||2||0||{{Blue|↓ 2}}||All resolved |- |Error 205: Father is too young or not born  ||Advanced||52||0||{{Blue|↓ 52}}||All resolved |- |Error 305: Mother too young or not born  ||Advanced||51||0||{{Blue|↓ 51}}||All resolved |- |Error 308: Mother is also a spouse||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 408: Multiple marriages on same day||Advanced||3||4||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 409: Marriage to duplicate person||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 418: Partner is also a sibling||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 419: Unmarried parents with no marriage||Intermediate||66||66||No Change|| |- |Warning 420: Unmarried parents with other marriages||Advanced||16||16||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Name''' |- |Warning 721: Separators in First Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 723: Prefix in First Name||Intermediate||5||5||No Change|| |- |Warning 724: Wrong word in First Name||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 731: Separators in Preferred Name||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 733: Prefix in Preferred Name||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 734: Wrong word in Preferred Name||Intermediate||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 741: Separators in Middle Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 753: Prefix in Nicknames||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 761: Separators in Suffix||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 771: Separators in Last Name at Birth||Advanced||14||16||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 773: Prefix in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 774: Wrong word in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||6||8||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 775: Wrong character in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||16||17||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 778: Period in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||33||33||No Change|| |- |Warning 781: Separators in Current Last Name||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Warning 784: Wrong word in Current Last Name||Intermediate||16||17||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 788: Period in Current Last Name||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 912: Swedish patronym SSON for female||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Gender''' |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male) ||Intermediate||0||2||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 503: Probably wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||4||3||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 505: Wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||5||4||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 507: Probably wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 508: Missing gender (probably female)  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||3||1||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Location''' |- |Error 602: Separators in Birth Location||Intermediate||23||22||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 604: Birth location too short  ||Intermediate||7||7||No Change|| |- |Error 608: Misspelled country in birth location||Easy||27||27||No Change|| |- |Error 609: Wrong character in birth location||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 612: Location too early in birth location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 615: Birth Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||48||46||No Change{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 631: Wrong word in death location||Intermediate||2||3||No Change1|| |- |Error 632: Separators in Death Location||Intermediate||65||64||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 634: Death location too short  ||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 637: Misspelled word in death location||Easy||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||All resolved |- |Error 638: Misspelled country in death location||Easy||27||26||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 645: Death Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||91||90||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 646: Abbreviated Death Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||10||8||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 661: Wrong word in marriage location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 662: Separators in Marriage Location||Intermediate||38||39||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 664: Marriage location too short  ||Intermediate||2||3||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 668: Misspelled country in marriage location||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 675: Marriage Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||89||90||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 676: Abbreviated Marriage Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 677: Ambiguous Marriage Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||2||0||{{Blue|↓ 2}}||All resolved |- !Colspan=6|'''Privacy''' |- |Warning 109: Profile should be open (birth date)  ||Intermediate||15||16||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 110: Profile should be open (death date)||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 931: ProjectBox Without Project Account||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 933: Project Account Without ProjectBox||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Biography''' |- |Warning 802: Empty profile  ||Advanced||7||7||No Change|| |- |Warning 803: Almost empty profile  ||Advanced||12||14||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 811: Uncleaned profile after merge  ||Easy||56||49||{{Blue|↓ 7}}|| |- |Error 822: Heading doesn't end with =  ||Easy||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 823: Heading doesn't start with =  ||Easy||2||0||{{Blue|↓ 2}}||All resolved |- |Warning 831: Multiple duplicated lines  ||Advanced||28||28||No Change|| |- |Warning 835: Local file reference  ||Advanced||30||30||No Change|| |- |Warning 851: GEDCOM uncleaned Interpret date  ||Advanced||25||25||No Change|| |- |Warning 852: GEDCOM uncleaned Parse Lastname  ||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 853: GEDCOM Junk  ||Intermediate||54||51||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- |Error 951: Not recommended tag SPAN CLASS=||Intermediate||2||1||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 952: Not recommended tag SPAN STYLE=||Intermediate||5||4||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Template''' |- |Error 841: Template doesn't start with double {  ||Easy||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||All resolved |- |Error 892: Space page used as template||Easy||1611||'''1611'''||No Change||'''Needs extra attention''' |- |Error 893: Space page used as transclusion||Easy||3673||'''1248'''||{{Blue|↓ 2425}}||'''Needs extra attention''' |- |Error 896: Unknown parameter in template||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 897: Error in template parameters||Intermediate||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Category''' |- |Error 885: Using Top Level category||Intermediate||1||2||No Change1|| |- |Error 886: Died before category time frame||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''References ''' |- |Error 862: Inline citation doesn't end with   ||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 863: Missing tag  ||Intermediate||2||3||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 864: Almost empty tags  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 868: Inline citations after tag  ||Advanced||45||45||No Change|| |- |Error 869: Duplicated named Inline citations  ||Advanced||122||122||No Change|| |- |Error 870: Missing named Inline citations  ||Advanced||5||5||No Change|| |- |Error 872: Named Inline citation error||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 943: Duplicated span Anchors||Intermediate||49||49||No Change|| |- |Error 944: Missing span Anchors||Advanced||124||124||No Change|| |- |Warning 945: Unused Span Anchors||Easy||141||140||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''DNA''' |- |Warning 213: Missing fathers DNA confirmation||Advanced||20||20||No Change|| |- |Warning 313: Missing mothers DNA confirmation||Advanced||29||29||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Links''' |- |Error 961: Invalid domain name in link||Intermediate||16||16||No Change|| |- |Error 962: Domain name in link not resolved||Intermediate||150||148||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 965: Link error 404 Not Found||Intermediate||462||473||{{Red|↑ 11}}|| |- |Error 966: Link error various||Intermediate||1323||'''1326'''||{{Red|↑ 3}}||'''Needs extra attention''' |- |Error 967: Link error in domain||Intermediate||128||126||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Unique Names''' |- |Warning 717: Unique name in Prefix||Intermediate||42||42||No Change|| |- |Warning 727: Unique name in First Name||Intermediate||26||26||No Change|| |- |Warning 737: Unique name in Preferred Name||Intermediate||20||22||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 747: Unique name in Middle Name||Intermediate||308||312||{{Red|↑ 4}}|| |- |Warning 757: Unique name in Nicknames||Intermediate||73||73||No Change|| |- |Warning 767: Unique name in Suffix||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 777: Unique name in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||520||'''531'''||{{Red|↑ 11}}||'''Needs extra attention''' |- |Warning 787: Unique name in Current Last Name||Intermediate||242||240||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Warning 797: Unique name in Other Last Names||Intermediate||466||475||{{Red|↑ 9}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''WikiData''' |- |Hint 541: Wikidata - Clue for Father||Intermediate||21||23||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Hint 542: WikiData - Possible Father on WikiData||Advanced||8||10||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Hint 543: Wikidata - Clue for Mother||Intermediate||12||13||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 544: WikiData - Possible Mother on WikiData||Advanced||18||18||No Change|| |- |Error 552: Wikidata - Different gender||Intermediate||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 553: Wikidata - Empty birth date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 554: Wikidata - Imprecise birth date||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- | Error 555: Wikidata - Different birth date||Intermediate||31||32||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 556: Wikidata - Empty death date||Intermediate||6||9||{{Red|↑ 3}}|| |- | Error 557: Wikidata - Imprecise death date||Intermediate||13||14||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 558: Wikidata - Different death date||Intermediate||17||18||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 559: Wikidata - Missing birth location||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 561: Wikidata - Missing death location||Intermediate||24||29||{{Red|↑ 5}}|| |- |Warning 564: Wikidata - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 566: Wikidata - Possible mother||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''FindAGrave''' |- |Warning 571: FindAGrave - Link without Grave ID  ||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile  ||Intermediate||26||24||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- | Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date  ||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- | Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date  ||Intermediate||33||35||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date  ||Intermediate||1||2||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date  ||Intermediate||6||7||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date  ||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- |Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location  ||Intermediate||8||1||{{Blue|↓ 7}}|| |- |Hint 585: FindAGrave - Multiple profiles link to same grave ID  ||Intermediate||2||10||{{Red|↑ 8}}|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 586: FindAGrave - Link to merged Grave ID ||Intermediate||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID ||Intermediate||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Profile Completeness''' |- |Warning 452: Profile completeness - Father Status not set||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 454: Profile completeness - Mother Status not set||Easy||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 456: Profile completeness - Birth date Status not set||Easy||19||19||No Change|| |- | Error 457: Profile completeness - Birth Location not set||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 458: Profile completeness - Birth Location Status not set||Easy||25||25||No Change|| |- | Error 461: Profile completeness - Death date not set||Easy||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 462: Profile completeness - Death date Status not set||Easy||13||13||No Change|| |- | Error 463: Profile completeness - Death Location not set||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Warning 464: Profile completeness - Death Location Status not set||Easy||18||18||No Change|| |- |Hint 465: Profile completeness - Death Location Country not recognized||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 467: Profile completeness - Short Biography (<500)||Intermediate||11||11||No Change|| |- | Error 469: Profile completeness - Missing span Anchors||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |} ---- ---- ===June 2022 Progress Report=== Weekly Suggestion Lists from 29 May and 06 June 2022 reflect work done during June 2022 {| border="1" align="left" class="wikitable" style="font-size:100%; border: 3px Solid DarkRed;" ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Suggestions By Group''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Difficulty Level''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0529'''    ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0626 ''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Trajectory''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Notes''' |- |Total Number of Suggestions||||6777||6783||{{Red|↑ 6}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Date''' |- | Error 104: Too old||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 111: Died too young to be parent ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- | Error 131: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status ||Advanced||10||11||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 132: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 133: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status  ||Advanced||79||78||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 134: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||59||60||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |205: Father is too young or not born||Advanced||52||51||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 206: Father is too old||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 210: Father was dead before birth||Advanced||29||29||No Change|| |- |Error 305: Mother too young or not born ||Advanced||52||0||{{Blue|↓ 52}}||All Resolved |- |Error 310: Mother was dead before birth||Intermediate||28||28||No Change|| |- |Error 404: Marriage before birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 406: Marriage after death||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 412: Marriage End Date before: Marriage Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 414: Marriage End Date before Birth Date||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 416: Marriage End after death||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- |Error 417: Death Date too long after: Marriage End Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Relationship''' |- |Error 105: Duplicate sibling||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 113: Duplicate in relatives||Advanced||0||2||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 308: Mother is also a spouse||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 408: Multiple marriages on same day||Advanced||4||4||No Change|| |- |Hint 409: Marriage to duplicate person||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 418: Partner is also a sibling||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 419: Unmarried parents with no marriage||Intermediate||66||66||No Change|| |- |Warning 420: Unmarried parents with other marriages||Advanced||16||18||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Name''' |- |Warning 721: Separators in First Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 723: Prefix in First Name||Intermediate||5||5||No Change|| |- |Warning 724: Wrong word in First Name||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 731: Separators in Preferred Name||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 733: Prefix in Preferred Name||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 734: Wrong word in Preferred Name||Intermediate||8||7||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 741: Separators in Middle Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 753: Prefix in Nicknames||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 761: Separators in Suffix||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 771: Separators in Last Name at Birth||Advanced||16||15||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 773: Prefix in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 774: Wrong word in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||8||6||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 775: Wrong character in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||17||17||No Change|| |- |Warning 778: Period in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||33||33||No Change|| |- |Warning 781: Separators in Current Last Name||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Warning 784: Wrong word in Current Last Name||Intermediate||17||18||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 788: Period in Current Last Name||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 912: Swedish patronym SSON for female||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Gender''' |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male) ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 503: Probably wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 505: Wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 507: Probably wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 508: Missing gender (probably female)  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Location''' |- |Error 602: Separators in Birth Location||Intermediate||22||23||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 604: Birth location too short  ||Intermediate||7||7||No Change|| |- |Error 608: Misspelled country in birth location||Easy||27||27||No Change|| |- |Error 609: Wrong character in birth location||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 612: Location too early in birth location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 615: Birth Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||46||46||No Change|| |- |Error 631: Wrong word in death location||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 632: Separators in Death Location||Intermediate||64||64||No Change|| |- |Error 634: Death location too short  ||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 638: Misspelled country in death location||Easy||26||27||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 645: Death Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||90||93||{{Red|↑ 3}}|| |- |Warning 646: Abbreviated Death Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||8||8||No Change|| |- |Error 661: Wrong word in marriage location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 662: Separators in Marriage Location||Intermediate||39||38||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 664: Marriage location too short  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 668: Misspelled country in marriage location||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 675: Marriage Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||90||89||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 676: Abbreviated Marriage Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Privacy''' |- |Warning 109: Profile should be open (birth date)  ||Intermediate||16||15||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 110: Profile should be open (death date)||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 931: ProjectBox Without Project Account||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 933: Project Account Without ProjectBox||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Biography''' |- |Warning 802: Empty profile  ||Advanced||7||7||No Change|| |- |Warning 803: Almost empty profile  ||Advanced||14||14||No Change|| |- |Warning 811: Uncleaned profile after merge  ||Easy||49||49||No Change|| |- |Error 822: Heading doesn't end with =  ||Easy||2||1||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 831: Multiple duplicated lines  ||Advanced||28||29||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 835: Local file reference  ||Advanced||30||30||No Change|| |- |Warning 851: GEDCOM uncleaned Interpret date  ||Advanced||25||24||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 852: GEDCOM uncleaned Parse Lastname  ||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 853: GEDCOM Junk  ||Intermediate||51||50||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 951: Not recommended tag SPAN CLASS=||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 952: Not recommended tag SPAN STYLE=||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Template''' |- |Error 848: Error in template parameters||Advanced||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 892: Space page used as template||Easy||1611||'''1611'''||No Change||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 893: Space page used as transclusion||Easy||'''1248'''||1248||No Change||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 896: Unknown parameter in template||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 897: Error in template parameters||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Category''' |- |Error 885: Using Top Level category||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 886: Died before category time frame||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''References ''' |- |Error 862: Inline citation doesn't end with   ||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 863: Missing tag  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 864: Almost empty tags  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 865: Unchanged Insert reference here tags  ||||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 868: Inline citations after tag  ||Advanced||45||45||No Change|| |- |Error 869: Duplicated named Inline citations  ||Advanced||122||122||No Change|| |- |Error 870: Missing named Inline citations  ||Advanced||5||5||No Change|| |- |Error 872: Named Inline citation error||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 943: Duplicated span Anchors||Intermediate||49||49||No Change|| |- |Error 944: Missing span Anchors||Advanced||124||124||No Change|| |- |Warning 945: Unused Span Anchors||Easy||140||140||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''DNA''' |- |Warning 213: Missing fathers DNA confirmation||Advanced||20||21||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 313: Missing mothers DNA confirmation||Advanced||29||29||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Links''' |- |Error 961: Invalid domain name in link||Intermediate||16||16||No Change|| |- |Error 962: Domain name in link not resolved||Intermediate||148||148||No Change|| |- |Error 965: Link error 404 Not Found||Intermediate||473||474||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 966: Link error various||Intermediate||1326||1327||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 967: Link error in domain||Intermediate||126||126||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Unique Names''' |- |Warning 717: Unique name in Prefix||Intermediate||42||42||No Change|| |- |Warning 727: Unique name in First Name||Intermediate||26||26||No Change|| |- |Warning 737: Unique name in Preferred Name||Intermediate||22||22||No Change|| |- |Warning 747: Unique name in Middle Name||Intermediate||312||318||{{Red|↑ 6}}|| |- |Warning 757: Unique name in Nicknames||Intermediate||73||73||No Change|| |- |Warning 767: Unique name in Suffix||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 777: Unique name in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||531||'''533'''||{{Red|↑ 2}}||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Warning 787: Unique name in Current Last Name||Intermediate||240||238||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Warning 797: Unique name in Other Last Names||Intermediate||475||478||{{Red|↑ 3}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''WikiData''' |- |Hint 541: Wikidata - Clue for Father||Intermediate||23||24||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 542: WikiData - Possible Father on WikiData||Advanced||10||10||No Change|| |- |Hint 543: Wikidata - Clue for Mother||Intermediate||13||13||No Change|| |- |Hint 544: WikiData - Possible Mother on WikiData||Advanced||18||20||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Error 552: Wikidata - Different gender||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 553: Wikidata - Empty birth date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 554: Wikidata - Imprecise birth date||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- | Error 555: Wikidata - Different birth date||Intermediate||32||32||No Change|| |- |Warning 556: Wikidata - Empty death date||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- | Error 557: Wikidata - Imprecise death date||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- | Error 558: Wikidata - Different death date||Intermediate||18||18||No Change|| |- |Warning 559: Wikidata - Missing birth location||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 561: Wikidata - Missing death location||Intermediate||29||29||No Change|| |- |Warning 564: Wikidata - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 566: Wikidata - Possible mother||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''FindAGrave''' |- |Warning 571: FindAGrave - Link without Grave ID  ||Intermediate||2||3||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile  ||Intermediate||24||25||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date  ||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- | Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date  ||Intermediate||35||36||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- | Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date  ||Intermediate||7||8||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- | Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date  ||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- |Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 585: FindAGrave - Multiple profiles link to same grave ID  ||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 586: FindAGrave - Link to merged Grave ID ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Profile Completeness''' |- |Warning 452: Profile completeness - Father Status not set||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 454: Profile completeness - Mother Status not set||Easy||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 456: Profile completeness - Birth date Status not set||Easy||19||18||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- | Error 457: Profile completeness - Birth Location not set||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 458: Profile completeness - Birth Location Status not set||Easy||25||25||No Change|| |- | Error 461: Profile completeness - Death date not set||Easy||8||7||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 462: Profile completeness - Death date Status not set||Easy||13||13||No Change|| |- | Error 463: Profile completeness - Death Location not set||Intermediate||10||9||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 464: Profile completeness - Death Location Status not set||Easy||18||18||No Change|| |- |Hint 465: Profile completeness - Death Location Country not recognized||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 467: Profile completeness - Short Biography (<500)||Intermediate||11||10||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- | Error 469: Profile completeness - Missing span Anchors||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |} ---- ===July 2022 Progress Report=== Weekly Suggestion Lists from 26 June and 31 July 2022 reflect work done during July 2022. {|border="1" align="left" class="wikitable" style="fontsize:100%; border: 3px Solid DarkRed;" ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Suggestions By Group''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Difficulty Level''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0529'''    ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0626 ''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Trajectory''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Notes''' |- |Total Number of Suggestions||||6,783||6,752||{{Blue|↓ 31}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Date''' |- | Error 104: Too old||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 111: Died too young to be parent ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- | Error 131: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status ||Advanced||11||11||No Change|| |- |Warning 132: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 133: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status  ||Advanced||78||78||No Change|| |- |Warning 134: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died||Advanced||60||60||No Change|| |- |205: Father is too young or not born||Advanced||51||49||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 210: Father was dead before birth||Advanced||29||29||No Change|| |- |Error 206: Father is too old||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 305: Mother too young or not born  ||Advanced||0||50||{{Red|↑ 50}}|| |- |Error 310: Mother was dead before birth||Intermediate||28||28||No Change|| |- |Error 404: Marriage before birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 406: Marriage after death||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 412: Marriage End Date before: Marriage Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 414: Marriage End Date before Birth Date||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 416: Marriage End after death||Intermediate||9||7||{{Blue|↓ 2}}|| |- |Error 417: Death Date too long after: Marriage End Date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Relationship''' |- |Error 105: Duplicate sibling||Intermediate||2||1||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Error 113: Duplicate in relatives||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 308: Mother is also a spouse||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 408: Multiple marriages on same day||Advanced||4||4||No Change|| |- |Hint 409: Marriage to duplicate person||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 418: Partner is also a sibling||Advanced||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||All Resolved |- |Warning 419: Unmarried parents with no marriage||Intermediate||66||67||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 420: Unmarried parents with other marriages||Advanced||18||15||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Name''' |- |Warning 721: Separators in First Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 723: Prefix in First Name||Intermediate||5||6||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 724: Wrong word in First Name||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 731: Separators in Preferred Name||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 733: Prefix in Preferred Name||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 734: Wrong word in Preferred Name||Intermediate||7||7||No Change|| |- |Warning 741: Separators in Middle Name||Easy||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 753: Prefix in Nicknames||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 761: Separators in Suffix||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 771: Separators in Last Name at Birth||Advanced||15||15||No Change|| |- |Warning 773: Prefix in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 774: Wrong word in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- |Error 775: Wrong character in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||17||17||No Change|| |- |Warning 778: Period in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||33||33||No Change|| |- |Warning 781: Separators in Current Last Name||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- |Warning 784: Wrong word in Current Last Name||Intermediate||18||18||No Change|| |- |Warning 788: Period in Current Last Name||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 912: Swedish patronym SSON for female||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Gender''' |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male) ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 503: Probably wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 505: Wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 507: Probably wrong gender (female)  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 508: Missing gender (probably female)  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male)  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Location''' |- |Error 602: Separators in Birth Location||Intermediate||23||23||No Change|| |- |Error 604: Birth location too short  ||Intermediate||7||7||No Change|| |- |Error 608: Misspelled country in birth location||Easy||27||27||No Change|| |- |Error 609: Wrong character in birth location||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Error 612: Location too early in birth location||Intermediate||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||All Resolved |- |Warning 615: Birth Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||46||46||No Change|| |- |Error 631: Wrong word in death location||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 632: Separators in Death Location||Intermediate||64||64||No Change|| |- |Error 634: Death location too short  ||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- |Error 638: Misspelled country in death location||Easy||27||26||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 645: Death Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||93||93||No Change|| |- |Warning 646: Abbreviated Death Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||8||8||No Change|| |- |Error 661: Wrong word in marriage location||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 662: Separators in Marriage Location||Intermediate||38||38||No Change|| |- |Error 664: Marriage location too short  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 668: Misspelled country in marriage location||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 675: Marriage Location Country not recognized||Intermediate||89||89||No Change|| |- |Warning 676: Abbreviated Marriage Location Country not recommended||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Privacy''' |- |Warning 109: Profile should be open (birth date)  ||Intermediate||15||18||{{Red|↑ 3}}|| |- |Warning 110: Profile should be open (death date)||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 931: ProjectBox Without Project Account||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 933: Project Account Without ProjectBox||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Biography''' |- |Warning 802: Empty profile  ||Advanced||7||7||No Change|| |- |Warning 803: Almost empty profile  ||Advanced||14||15||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 811: Uncleaned profile after merge  ||Easy||49||50||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 822: Heading doesn't end with =  ||Easy||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 823: Heading doesn't start with =  ||Easy||0||1||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 831: Multiple duplicated lines  ||Advanced||29||29||No Change|| |- |Warning 835: Local file reference  ||Advanced||30||30||No Change|| |- |Warning 851: GEDCOM uncleaned Interpret date  ||Advanced||24||24||No Change|| |- |Warning 852: GEDCOM uncleaned Parse Lastname  ||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 853: GEDCOM Junk  ||Intermediate||50||50||No Change|| |- |Error 951: Not recommended tag SPAN CLASS=||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 952: Not recommended tag SPAN STYLE=||Intermediate||4||4||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Template''' |- |Error 848: Error in template parameters||Advanced||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||All Resolved |- |Error 892: Space page used as template||Easy||1,611||'''1,611'''||No Change||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 893: Space page used as transclusion||Easy||1,248||'''1,248'''||No Change||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 896: Unknown parameter in template||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Error 897: Error in template parameters||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Category''' |- |Error 885: Using Top Level category||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 886: Died before category time frame||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''References ''' |- |Error 861: Inline citation doesn't start with   ||Intermediate||4||0||{{Blue|↓ 4}}||All Resolved |- |Error 862: Inline citation doesn't end with   ||Intermediate||3||4||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Error 863: Missing tag  ||Intermediate||0||2||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 864: Almost empty tags  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Error 865: Unchanged Insert reference here tags  ||Intermediate||1||0||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||All Resolved |- |Error 866: Duplicated   tags||Advanced||0||4||{{Red|↑ 4}}|| |- |Error 868: Inline citations after tag  ||Advanced||45||45||No Change|| |- |Error 869: Duplicated named Inline citations  ||Advanced||122||122||No Change|| |- |Error 870: Missing named Inline citations  ||Advanced||5||5||No Change|| |- |Error 872: Named Inline citation error||Advanced||2||2||No Change|| |- |Error 943: Duplicated span Anchors||Intermediate||49||49||No Change|| |- |Error 944: Missing span Anchors||Advanced||124||124||No Change|| |- |Warning 945: Unused Span Anchors||Easy||140||139||No Change 1|| |- !Colspan=6|'''DNA''' |- |Warning 213: Missing fathers DNA confirmation||Advanced||21||7||{{Blue|↓ 14}}|| |- |Warning 313: Missing mothers DNA confirmation||Advanced||29||13||{{Blue|↓ 16}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Links''' |- |Error 961: Invalid domain name in link||Intermediate||16||16||No Change|| |- |Error 962: Domain name in link not resolved||Intermediate||148||148||No Change|| |- |Error 965: Link error 404 Not Found||Intermediate||474||479||{{Red|↑ 5}}|| |- |Error 966: Link error various||Intermediate||1,327||'''1,326'''||{{Blue|↓ 1}}||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 967: Link error in domain||Intermediate||126||126||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Unique Names''' |- |Warning 717: Unique name in Prefix||Intermediate||42||42||No Change|| |- |Warning 727: Unique name in First Name||Intermediate||26||27||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 737: Unique name in Preferred Name||Intermediate||22||21||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 747: Unique name in Middle Name||Intermediate||318||315||{{Blue|↓ 3}}|| |- |Warning 757: Unique name in Nicknames||Intermediate||73||74||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 767: Unique name in Suffix||Intermediate||9||8||{{Blue|↓ 1}}|| |- |Warning 777: Unique name in Last Name at Birth||Intermediate||533||'''545'''||{{Red|↑ 12}}||'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Warning 787: Unique name in Current Last Name||Intermediate||238||245||{{Red|↑ 7}}|| |- |Warning 797: Unique name in Other Last Names||Intermediate||478||480||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- !Colspan=6|'''WikiData''' |- |Hint 541: Wikidata - Clue for Father||Intermediate||24||27||{{Red|↑ 3}}|| |- |Hint 542: WikiData - Possible Father on WikiData||Advanced||10||16||{{Red|↑ 6}}|| |- |Hint 543: Wikidata - Clue for Mother||Intermediate||13||18||{{Red|↑ 5}}|| |- |Hint 544: WikiData - Possible Mother on WikiData||Advanced||20||36||{{Red|↑ 16}}|| |- |Error 552: Wikidata - Different gender||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 553: Wikidata - Empty birth date||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- | Error 554: Wikidata - Imprecise birth date||Intermediate||6||6||No Change|| |- | Error 555: Wikidata - Different birth date||Intermediate||32||33||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 556: Wikidata - Empty death date||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- | Error 557: Wikidata - Imprecise death date||Intermediate||14||14||No Change|| |- | Error 558: Wikidata - Different death date||Intermediate||18||18||No Change|| |- |Warning 559: Wikidata - Missing birth location||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- |Warning 561: Wikidata - Missing death location||Intermediate||29||29||No Change|| |- |Warning 564: Wikidata - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 566: Wikidata - Possible mother||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''FindAGrave''' |- |Warning 571: FindAGrave - Link without Grave ID  ||Intermediate||3||3||No Change|| |- |Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile  ||Intermediate||25||25||No Change|| |- | Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date  ||Intermediate||10||12||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- | Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date  ||Intermediate||36||37||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date  ||Intermediate||2||2||No Change|| |- | Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date  ||Intermediate||8||10||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- | Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date  ||Intermediate||6||8||{{Red|↑ 2}}|| |- |Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 585: FindAGrave - Multiple profiles link to same grave ID  ||Intermediate||10||11||{{Red|↑ 1}}|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID  ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 586: FindAGrave - Link to merged Grave ID ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID ||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- !Colspan=6|'''Profile Completeness''' |- |Warning 452: Profile completeness - Father Status not set||Easy||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 454: Profile completeness - Mother Status not set||Easy||8||8||No Change|| |- |Warning 456: Profile completeness - Birth date Status not set||Easy||18||18||No Change|| |- | Error 457: Profile completeness - Birth Location not set||Intermediate||1||1||No Change|| |- |Warning 458: Profile completeness - Birth Location Status not set||Easy||25||25||No Change|| |- | Error 461: Profile completeness - Death date not set||Easy||7||7||No Change|| |- |Warning 462: Profile completeness - Death date Status not set||Easy||13||13||No Change|| |- | Error 463: Profile completeness - Death Location not set||Intermediate||9||9||No Change|| |- |Warning 464: Profile completeness - Death Location Status not set||Easy||18||18||No Change|| |- |Hint 465: Profile completeness - Death Location Country not recognized||Easy||4||4||No Change|| |- |Warning 467: Profile completeness - Short Biography (<500)||Intermediate||10||10||No Change|| |- | Error 469: Profile completeness - Missing span Anchors||Advanced||1||1||No Change|| |} ---- ---- ===August 2022 Progress Report=== Weekly Suggestion Lists from 31 July and 30 August 2022 reflect work done during August 2022. {| border="1" align="left" class=">Wikitable" style="font-size:100%; border: 3px Solid DarkRed;" !align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Suggestions By Group''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |Difficulty Level ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 2022 0731''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;" |'''Totals at 20220828''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Trajectory''' ! align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Notes''' |- |Total Number of Suggestions | |6,752 |6,746 |{{Blue|↓ 6}} | |- !Colspan=6|'''Date''' |- | Error 104: Too old |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- | Error 111: Died too young to be parent  |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 131: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status   |Advanced |0 |11 |{{Red|↑ 11}} | |- |Warning 132: No Dates - No Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died |Advanced |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 133: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Unknown Status  |Advanced |0 |77 |{{Red|↑ 77}} | |- |Warning 134: No Dates - Dates on relatives - Open - Status Died |Advanced |60 |56 |{{Blue|↓ 4}} | |- |Error 205: Father is too young or not born |Advanced |0 |49 |{{Red|↑ 49}} | |- |Error 206: Father is too old |Advanced |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 210: Father was dead before birth |Advanced |29 |29 |No Change | |- |Error 305: Mother too young or not born   |Advanced |50 |50 |No Change | |- |Error 310: Mother was dead before birth |Intermediate |28 |28 |No Change | |- |Error 404: Marriage before birth |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 406: Marriage after death |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 412: Marriage End Date before: Marriage Date |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 414: Marriage End Date before Birth Date |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 416: Marriage End after death |Intermediate |7 |7 |No Change | |- |Error 417: Death Date too long after: Marriage End Date |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Relationship''' |- |Error 105: Duplicate sibling |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 113: Duplicate in relatives |Advanced |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 308: Mother is also a spouse |Advanced |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Hint 408: Multiple marriages on same day |Advanced |4 |4 |No Change | |- |Hint 409: Marriage to duplicate person |Advanced |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 419: Unmarried parents with no marriage |Intermediate |67 |66 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- |Warning 420: Unmarried parents with other marriages |Advanced |15 |15 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Name''' |- |Warning 721: Separators in First Name |Easy |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Warning 723: Prefix in First Name |Intermediate |6 |6 |No Change | |- |Warning 724: Wrong word in First Name |Intermediate |4 |4 |No Change | |- |Warning 731: Separators in Preferred Name |Easy |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 733: Prefix in Preferred Name |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 734: Wrong word in Preferred Name |Intermediate |7 |7 |No Change | |- |Warning 741: Separators in Middle Name |Easy |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Warning 753: Prefix in Nicknames |Easy |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 761: Separators in Suffix |Intermediate |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Warning 771: Separators in Last Name at Birth |Advanced |15 |15 |No Change | |- |Warning 773: Prefix in Last Name at Birth |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 774: Wrong word in Last Name at Birth |Intermediate |6 |6 |No Change | |- |Error 775: Wrong character in Last Name at Birth |Intermediate |17 |17 |No Change | |- |Warning 778: Period in Last Name at Birth |Intermediate |33 |33 |No Change | |- |Warning 781: Separators in Current Last Name |Intermediate |10 |10 |No Change | |- |Warning 784: Wrong word in Current Last Name |Intermediate |18 |18 |No Change | |- |Warning 788: Period in Current Last Name |Intermediate |14 |14 |No Change | |- |Error 912: Swedish patronym SSON for female |Advanced |2 |2 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Gender''' |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male)  |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Warning 503: Probably wrong gender (male)   |Intermediate |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Warning 505: Wrong gender (female)   |Intermediate |4 |4 |No Change | |- |Warning 507: Probably wrong gender (female)   |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 508: Missing gender (probably female)   |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 501: Wrong gender (male)   |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Location''' |- |Error 602: Separators in Birth Location |Intermediate |23 |23 |No Change | |- |Error 604: Birth location too short   |Intermediate |7 |7 |No Change | |- |Error 608: Misspelled country in birth location |Easy |27 |27 |No Change | |- |Error 609: Wrong character in birth location |Easy |4 |4 |No Change | |- |Warning 615: Birth Location Country not recognized |Intermediate |46 |44 |{{Blue|↓ 2}} | |- |Error 631: Wrong word in death location |Intermediate |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Error 632: Separators in Death Location |Intermediate |64 |64 |No Change | |- |Error 634: Death location too short   |Intermediate | |14 |No Change | |- |Error 638: Misspelled country in death location |Easy |26 |27 |{{Red|↑ 1}} | |- |Warning 645: Death Location Country not recognized |Intermediate |93 |92 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- |Warning 646: Abbreviated Death Location Country not recommended |Intermediate |8 |7 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- |Warning 647: Ambiguous Death Location Country not recommended |Intermediate |0 |1 |{{Red|↑ 1}} | |- |Error 661: Wrong word in marriage location |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 662: Separators in Marriage Location |Intermediate |38 |38 |No Change | |- |Error 664: Marriage location too short   |Intermediate |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Error 668: Misspelled country in marriage location |Easy |9 |9 |No Change | |- |Warning 675: Marriage Location Country not recognized |Intermediate |89 |90 |{{Red|↑ 1}} | |- |Warning 676: Abbreviated Marriage Location Country not recommended |Intermediate |4 |4 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Privacy''' |- |Warning 109: Profile should be open (birth date)   |Intermediate |0 |19 |{{Red|↑ 19}} | |- |Warning 110: Profile should be open (death date) |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 931: ProjectBox Without Project Account |Intermediate |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Error 933: Project Account Without ProjectBox |Intermediate |4 |4 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Biography''' |- |Warning 802: Empty profile   |Advanced |7 |7 |No Change | |- |Warning 803: Almost empty profile   |Advanced |15 |14 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- |Warning 811: Uncleaned profile after merge   |Easy |50 |50 |No Change | |- |Error 822: Heading doesn't end with =   |Easy |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 823: Heading doesn't start with =   |Easy |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 831: Multiple duplicated lines   |Advanced |29 |29 |No Change | |- |Warning 835: Local file reference   |Advanced |30 |27 |{{Blue|↓ 3}} | |- |Warning 851: GEDCOM uncleaned Interpret date   |Advanced |24 |24 |No Change | |- |Warning 852: GEDCOM uncleaned Parse Lastname   |Advanced |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Warning 853: GEDCOM Junk   |Intermediate |50 |53 |{{Red|↑ 3}} | |- |Error 951: Not recommended tag SPAN CLASS= |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 952: Not recommended tag SPAN STYLE= |Intermediate |4 |4 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Template''' |- |Error 892: Space page used as template |Easy |1,611 |'''1,611''' |No Change |'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 893: Space page used as transclusion |Easy |1,248 |'''1,248''' |No Change |'''Needs Extra Attention''' |- |Error 896: Unknown parameter in template |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Error 897: Error in template parameters |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Category''' |- |Error 885: Using Top Level category |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Error 886: Died before category time frame |Advanced |2 |2 |No Change | |- 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Imprecise death date |Intermediate |14 |14 |No Change | |- | Error 558: Wikidata - Different death date |Intermediate |18 |18 |No Change | |- |Warning 559: Wikidata - Missing birth location |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- |Warning 561: Wikidata - Missing death location |Intermediate |29 |30 |{{Red|↑ 1}} | |- |Warning 564: Wikidata - Possible father |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 566: Wikidata - Possible mother |Intermediate |2 |2 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''FindAGrave''' |- |Warning 571: FindAGrave - Link without Grave ID   |Intermediate |3 |3 |No Change | |- |Warning 572: FindAGrave - Linked grave not matching profile   |Intermediate |25 |25 |No Change | |- | Error 574: FindAGrave - Imprecise birth date   |Intermediate |12 |12 |No Change | |- | Error 575: FindAGrave - Different birth date   |Intermediate |37 |37 |No Change | |- |Warning 576: FindAGrave - Empty death date   |Intermediate |2 |3 |{{Red|↑ 1}} | |- | Error 577: FindAGrave - Imprecise death date   |Intermediate |10 |10 |No Change | |- | Error 578: FindAGrave - Different death date   |Intermediate |8 |8 |No Change | |- |Warning 581: FindAGrave - Missing death location   |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Hint 585: FindAGrave - Multiple profiles link to same grave ID   |Intermediate |11 |11 |No Change | |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID   |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Hint 586: FindAGrave - Link to merged Grave ID  |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Hint 587: FindAGrave - Link to nonexisting Grave ID  |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Hint 591: FindAGrave - Possible father |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Hint 592: FindAGrave - Possible mother |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- !Colspan=6|'''Profile Completeness''' |- |Warning 452: Profile completeness - Father Status not set |Easy |9 |9 |No Change | |- |Warning 454: Profile completeness - Mother Status not set |Easy |8 |8 |No Change | |- |Warning 456: Profile completeness - Birth date Status not set |Easy |18 |17 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- | Error 457: Profile completeness - Birth Location not set |Intermediate |1 |1 |No Change | |- |Warning 458: Profile completeness - Birth Location Status not set |Easy |25 |24 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- | Error 461: Profile completeness - Death date not set |Easy |7 |7 |No Change | |- |Warning 462: Profile completeness - Death date Status not set |Easy |13 |12 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- | Error 463: Profile completeness - Death Location not set |Intermediate |9 |9 |No Change | |- |Warning 464: Profile completeness - Death Location Status not set |Easy |18 |17 |{{Blue|↓ 1}} | |- |Hint 465: Profile completeness - Death Location Country not recognized |Easy |4 |4 |No Change | |- |Warning 467: Profile completeness - Short Biography (<500) |Intermediate |10 |10 |No Change | |- | Error 469: Profile completeness - Missing span Anchors |Advanced |1 |1 |No Change | |} ----

Finley Project

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The goal of this project is to ... Discuss the Finley name with regard to the early history of Scotland with the Houses of Dunkeld and Dalriada. King Kenneth McAlpin and Alba, the early settling of Ireland according to the Declaration of Arbroath. The continuation of the histories back to Jason and the Argonauts and other Mythology as found in the Milesian Kings list as well as the Peerage of the United Kingdom, but adding the list of Pictish queens. Also discussion of the former peerage of Scotland and various cultural organizations. We might even get involved in discussion of various creative works. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Finley-2805|Megan Finley]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Not quite ready to suggest improvements at the moment, but please stay tuned, more coming soon. Thank you! :) Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=25683452 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Finn Family Bibliography

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The following is a list of works consulted in preparing the Finn Family Tree and recommendations for further reading or reference. ==Key== 1. All United States federal census records cited are population schedules unless otherwise identified. 2. Enumeration districts in U.S. census records are abbreviated e.d. 3. The United States National Archives and Records Administration in Washington D.C. will be shortened to National Archives or NARA. 4. The Family History Library in Salt Lake City is abbreviated as FHL. 5. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is abbreviated as LDS. ==Sources== Jones, Philip. ''Descendants of Henry Straight.'' Information on the Straight and Jones family trees. Compiled 2004, in Oakdale Twp., Monroe Co., WI.

Finne and Raymond Project Notes

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==WikiTree Pages of Interest== *[[Finne-83|Judith (Finne) Rayment (bef.1629-1702)]] *[[Rayment-27|John Rayment (abt.1622-1703)]] ==Notes== Somerset burial index https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FSOMERSET%2FBUR%2F000933032 First name(s) Robertus Last name Rayment Senex Death year - Burial year 1605 Burial date 21 Jun 1605 Denomination Anglican Place Charlton Mackrell County Somerset Country England Document type Parish records Page 5 Archive Somerset Archives Archive reference D/P CHA MA 2/1/1 Event type Baptisms, marriages & burials Year range 1575-1722 Record set Somerset Burial Index Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, Great Britain Somerset burial index https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FSOMERSET%2FBUR%2F000012144 First name(s) Margaret Last name Rayment Death year - Burial year 1598-1812 Burial date 28 Mar ? Denomination Anglican Place Glastonbury Church St John the Baptist Relative's relationship Wife of Relative's name John Rayment County Somerset Country England Document type Bishop's transcripts Page - Archive Somerset Archives Archive reference D/D/RR 187 Event type Baptisms, marriages & burials Year range 1598-1812 Record set Somerset Burial Index Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, Great Britain Richard Sherwood in 1636 https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FD%2F701106287%2F1 First name(s) Richard Supplied first name Ric Last name Sherwood Birth year - Death year 1636 Burial year 1636 Church St Dunstan In The West Place London County London Country England Notes - Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, Great Britain Alice Sherwood in 1627 Greater London Marriage Index Stepney, St Dunstan, Middlesex, England https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FDOCK%2FMAR%2F032702%2F2 First name(s) Alice Last name Sherwood Marriage year 1627 Marriage date 03 Dec 1627 Marriage place Stepney, St Dunstan Marital status Maiden Spouse's first name(s) Edmund Spouse's last name Howe Spouse's occupation Weaver County Middlesex Country England Record set Greater London Marriage Index Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Marriages Collections from England, Great Britain Finne search at FindMyPast. https://www.findmypast.com/search/results?lastname=finne&keywordsplace=middlesex%2c%20england&keywordsplace_proximity=5&yearofdeath=1650&yearofdeath_offset=20&sid=999 First name(s) John Last name Finne Birth year - Baptism year - Address Ratcliffe Father's first name(s) Thomas Father's occupation Maryner Mother's first name(s) Anne Parish St Dunstan, Stepney Church address High Street County Middlesex Country England Notes 4 days old {Date of baptism obscured by binding: between 10 - 17 jun 1647} Record set London, Docklands And East End Baptisms Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Baptisms Collections from England, Great Britain "Parish Registers for St. John's Church, Glastonbury, 1603-1901, Church of England, St. John's Church (Glastonbury, Somersetshire), FHL film 1526630." https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=100&query=%2Bfilm_number%3A1526630 Recopy image 1624, 1625 and 1626. If time, copy the earlier images, What is on images 1647-1651 What is on image 1658 What of the other item numbers (Items 41 - 51)? Try again for Robert's will. it is dated dated 3 June 1605, proved 22 June 1605 I don't see a will index for 1605. See what is in Hayes 1605 wills https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/295797?availability=Family%20History%20Library Reg. will copies of Hayes, v. 105(1). 1605 Folios, 1- Reg. will copies of Hayes, v. 105(2). 1605 Folios, 17- Reg. will copies of Hayes, v. 106. 1605 Folios, 54- The Prerogative Court of Canterbury covered the south of England and Wales. The Prerogative Court of York covered York, Durham, Northumberland, Westmoreland, Cumberland, Lancashire, Cheshire, Nottinghamshire and the Isle of Man Check for John Rayment on Friendship. Who is John Rayment? Will of John Rayment, On the ship Friendship; Reference: PROB 11/158/125; Description: Will of John Rayment, On the ship Friendship; Date: 02 September 1630; Held by: The National Archives, Kew 1630 is Scroope, see v. 158, folio 125. Rayment Will search is here https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?q.surname=Rayment&f.collectionId=3259459 Got this >>> George Rayment will https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:ZQD7-N72M "England and Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1640-1660", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:ZQD7-N72M : 3 October 2020), Mr George Rayment, 1651. https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Space:John_Rayment_Collaboration&public=1
See Dwellys Bishop's Transcripts and, vol 15, "supplementary transcripts." Link from here https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/412397?availability=Family%20History%20Library to Supplementary v 15, Film 908500, Items 1 - 4 GDS 7940762 There is a 3 March 1616 baptismal record at St. John's, but the gender in that record is more likely a female, and the surname is unlikely Rayment or Raymond. See the restricted access record at [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L92H-KN2S?i=1631&cat=680927 ''FamilySearch'']. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L92H-KN2S?i=1631&cat=680927 Last saved St. John's image was 004021891 2002 of 2362. Maurice's baptisms. and Charlton Mackrell records. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L92H-KXXG?i=1641&cat=680927 For Robert Raymond's families try Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812, You may not be able to get them if you do not have ancestry except at the library. https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/60856/images/engl78030_d-p-cha-ma-2-1-1_m_00001?treeid=&personid=&hintid=&queryId=93126e480da49056f1a7db8e07dd4292&usePUB=true&_phsrc=dLC1&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true&_ga=2.175668898.1691780972.1633470180-346640992.1633470180&pId=516548. "Parish Registers for St. John's Church, Glastonbury, 1603-1901, Church of England, St. John's Church (Glastonbury, Somersetshire), FHL film 1526630." https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=100&query=%2Bfilm_number%3A1526630 [https://www.findmypast.com/articles/world-records/full-list-of-united-kingdom-records/life-events-bmds/prerogative-court-of-canterbury-administrations-1660-1700 FindMyPast] Somerset Banns Index; Somerset Baptism Index; Somerset burial index; Somerset Marriage Index; Somerset Marriages (post-1754); Somerset Marriages (pre-1754); Somerset Monumental Inscriptions; Somerset Monumental Inscriptions (Full) ''FamilySearch'' catalog has an [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/38754?availability=Family%20History%20Library entry] for Samuel Edward Raymond's work. Seems only part of the work ([https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/769089-raymond-genealogy-descendants-of-richard-raymond-v-01-pt-04?offset=15 vol 1, pt 4]) has been digitized, but it is not viewable online.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/38754?availability=Family%20History%20Library https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/769089-raymond-genealogy-descendants-of-richard-raymond-v-01-pt-04?offset=15 For Robyns, see Walton, Bishop's transcripts 1607-1851 and 1617-1663. Link from Catalog https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=20&placeId=21594&query=%2Bplace%3A%22England%2C%20Somerset%2C%20Walton%22&subjectsOpen=473111-50 One set of published Walton Bishop's Transcripts was publisher. FS images begin here for Walton next Street 1617-1663; saw nothing for Robyns. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSH9-PWQB-1?i=179&cat=230755 Woodbury/Fine and Rayment Research Court of the Commissary of the Bishop of London (London Division) https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Court_of_the_Commissary_of_the_Bishop_of_London_(London_Division) Index to testamentary records in the Commissary Court of London (London Division) : now preserved in Guildhall Library, London https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/247669?availability=Family%20History%20Library Index library (British Record Society); v. 82, 86, 97, 108, 111 NOTE Missing 102 there, but appears in the Notes: Contents: v. 1. [series v. 82] 1374-1488 -- v. 2. [series v. 86] 1489-1570 -- v. 3. [series v. 97] 1571-1625 -- v. 4, pt. 1. [series v. 102] A to G, 1626-1649 and 1661-1700 -- v. 4, pt. 2. [series v. 108] H to S, 1626-1649 and 1661-1700 -- v. 4, pt. 3. [series v. 111] T to Z, 1626-1649 and 1661-1700. London Commissary Court, will extracts of the registered copy wills on microfilm #1068469-1068473, 1374-1521 https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/819185?availability=Family%20History%20Library '''Probate records, 1374-1857 Church of England. Diocese of London. London Division. Commissary Court''' https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/283866?availability=Family%20History%20Library ANCESTRY https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1704/ London, England, Wills and Probate, 1507-1858 Search of FS Catalog for "Marc Fitch" https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=20&query=%2Bauthor_id%3A5600 Ancestry has database, "Index to administrations in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury" https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/28564/ but these seem to end at 1660. == Sources ==

Finnish history timeline

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==Important years in Finnish history== 1532-1617 [http://www.karjalatk.fi/historia.php#15321617 The Reformation] 1617-1721 [http://www.karjalatk.fi/historia.php#16171721The Swedish Expansion] 1721-1809 [http://www.karjalatk.fi/historia.php#17211809 The final period of the Swedish Empire] 1809-1917 [http://www.karjalatk.fi/historia.php#18091917 The Russian Empire] ==Source== The Karjala Database foundation * [http://www.karjalatk.fi/yhteys.php?lang=fi Finnish] * [http://www.karjalatk.fi/yhteys.php?lang=se Swedish] * [http://www.karjalatk.fi/yhteys.php?lang=en English] The operations of Karjala Database is maintained by the Karjala Database foundation. The foundation´s purpose is to promote the availablity of population register information from the ceded Karelia for research, to promote research on the Karelian population and to support the archive administration´s operations. The city of Mikkeli, the Finnish Karelian League, and representatives from University of Eastern Finland, from University of Jyväskylä, from the Finnish Ecumenical Council, from the National Archives of Finland, from the Genealogy Society of Finland and from the Population Register Centre serve as members of the board of the Foundation. Chairman Aki Kauranen, the Strategy and Development Manager of Mikkeli City is the chairman of the Karjala Database Foundation, aki.kauranen (at) mikkeli.fi

Finnish War in Västerbotten

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A brief timeline of events of the Finnish War that might have affected the daily life of the people of Västerbotten. Focus is on timeline and locations. 1808 Autumn Swedish troops retreat from Österbotten. Appr 3000 wounded soldiers arrive to Umeå and surrounding villages for housing and care. 1809-03-13 Swedish king Gustav IV is dethroned. 1809-03-20 Russian troops marches over the frozen Kvarken and arrives at Holmön. 1809-03-21 Russian troops seize Umeå. 1809-03-27 Russian troops in Umeå leaves and returns to Österbotten over Kvarken. 1809-03-28 Svedish commander in Kalix yields. 1809-05-15 Battle of Lejonströmsbron. Russian troops seize Skellefteå and occupies the surroundings. Umeå is evacuated. 1809-06-01 Umeå is seized by the Russian troops. 1809-07 A Swedish counteroffensive from the south is prepared. 1809-07-05 Battle of Hörnefors. Hörnefors Bruk is looted and burned. The Swedish troops falls back to Öre to regroup. 1809-08-19 Battle of Sävar. Swedish troops falls back to Djäkneböle and then to Ratan where new Swedish naval troops has arrived. 1809-08-20 Battle of Ratan. 1809-08-23 Last Russian troops leaves Umeå and retreats to the north. == References == Wikipedia (Swedish, Russian), other online sources.

Finsterwalde, Brandenburg Place Study Info

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{{#switch: {{{1}}} |image=Finsterwalde_Brandenburg_One_Place_Study.png}}

Fiodi Family

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Rossiter-394|Jayde Rossiter]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12668770 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fiona's Planning Page

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'''Interested in Aotearoa New Zealand? Join the New Zealand Project!''' Kia ora koutou! Get on board the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:New_Zealand New Zealand Project], a friendly, active WikiTree community. We aim to leave a lasting legacy by assisting current researchers in their quest for their Aotearoa New Zealand family history. You don't need to be an expert - we'd love to help you develop profiles for your own family. Are you keen on writing biographies and adding your personal touches to Kiwi profiles? Do you want to explore a topic like the All Blacks or Women's Suffrage? Would you enjoy challenges with the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:The_Kiwi_Crew Kiwi Crew]? We'd would love to have you as a member. Please respond by choosing “Answer this post” and we'll contact you.

Firestone - Knight - Sturgis Miscellaneous

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[[Firestone-345|Eleanor (Firestone) Sturges (1825-1899)]]
[[Knight-23099|Benoni D. Knight (1823-1853)]] ----- ===Obits and News=== Mr. Joseph Sturgis 1894 obituary (transcribed), James Blodgett to Denny Shirer and GJ, "Joseph Sturgis obit," email of June 24, 2022, cites "The Dalton (OH) Gazette February 1, 1894, p. 4, c. 2" and by subscription, [https://newspaperarchive.com/us/ohio/dalton/the-dalton-gazette/1894/02-01/page-4/ ''NewspaperArchives'']. :The Dalton (OH) Gazette :February 1, 1894, p. 4, c. 2 :Mr. Joseph Sturgis, of Applecreek, an uncle of Mr. J.R. Sturgis of this place died at his home near Applecreek, Saturday morning last. Mt. Sturgis had reached the good old age of 91 years old, 6 months and 10 days. The funeral took place from the M.E. church at Applecreek on Monday. :Mr. J.H. Sturgis and son, T.A. of this place attended the funeral. Joseph Sturgis 1894 obituary (transcribed), James Blodgett, "Joseph Sturges #22940," email to Denny Shirer and GJ of June 24, 2022, cites Wooster (OH) Daily Republican Saturday, January 27, 1894, p. 3, c. 6." :DIED :STURGIS -- At his home in East Union township, Wayne county, O., Friday, Jan. 26, 1894, Joseph Sturgis, aged 92 years. Mr. Sturgis was born in Ireland, came to America in 1812, and was for over 60 years a resident of Wayne county. Funeral from residence at 10 a.m. Monday, Jan. 29. Interment at Apple Creek. ===Other Published=== John Danner, ''Old Landmarks of Canton and Stark County, Ohio'' (Logansport, Ind., B. F. Bowen, 1904), 592-593 (George F. Knight); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/loc.ark:/13960/t5s75pr6n?urlappend=%3Bseq=727 ''Hathi Trust].

Firestone - Wayne County Ohio Burial Records

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[[Firestone-168|David Roller Firestone (1809-1851)]]; [[Firestone-148|George Washington Firestone (1784-1851)]]; ----- Unless otherwise noted, these records were developed from a 1997 review of Wayne County Historical Society, ''Wayne County, Ohio Burial Records'' (Evansville, Indiana : Unigraphic, 2nd ed.,1980); [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/242615?availability=Family%20History%20Library FHL 977.161 V38w], see also earlier dated, separately compiled [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/idviewer/151987/23 Firestone entries] in Mrs. Frances Harrsen Geitory, ''Surname Index for Wayne County, Ohio Burials'' (typescript,1977). Subject to transcription error. 1. Page 93. Chester Township -- New Pittsburg Cemetery :Firestone Plot :Firestone, D. R., died 25 September 1851, age 42 y, 10 m., 3 d. :Firestone, Elizabeth, died 24 March 1884, age 73 y, 4 m., 5 d. :Firestone, John, born 18 March 1836, died 10 November 1912, age 41, OVI :Firestone, Catherine Sparr, born 22 July 1846, died 17 April 1876, w/o John :Firestone, Floy, born 11 January 1875, died 24 September 1875, d/o J & C :Firestone, Leroy R., born 20 April 1872, died 17 October 1898, s/o J & C :Firestone [?], Joanna Herman, born 26 August 1852, died 27 October 1904, w/o John :Firestone, Unreadable name, born ---, Infant :Firestone, Rice, born 4 April 1839, died 24 July 1876 :Firestone [?], Rebecca J. Walkey, born 20 February 1844, died 13 March 1897 :Firestone, Eugene W., born 28 November 1871, died 21 August 1967 :Firestone, Kenneth R., born 24 March 1875, died 4 March 1891, s/o R & R. J. :Firestone, Omar D., born 1885, died 19__ :Firestone, Gail, born 1893, died 1865 :Firestone, Howard J., born 1915, died 1940 :Firestone, Daniel Norton, born 1935, died 1969 :Firestone, Solomon S., born 1843, died 1943, Father :Firestone, Alice J., born 1857, died 1931, Mother :Firestone, John A., born 1879, died 1966 :Firestone, Daisy L., born 1882, died 1961 :Firestone, Frederick L., born 1914, died ---- :Firestone, Odella F., born 1890, died 1963 :Firestone, Forest, born 1912, died 1912 :Firestone, Peter C., born 1851, died 1940 :Firestone, Mary T., born 1856, died 1947. 2. Page 278. East Union Township -- Apple Creek Cemetery :Firestone Plot :Firestone, Minerva, born 1823, died 1897 :Firestone, Solomon, born 1832, died 1900 :Firestone, Ann Dunn, born 1833, died 1899 3. Page 291. East Union Township -- Apple Creek Cemetery :Sturgis Plot :Sturgis, Bennoni K., born 6 January 1856, died 7 November 1947 :Sturgis, Ruthella, born 24 July 1860, died 10 May 1930 :Sturgis, Lorain O., born 1880, died 1936 :Sturgis, Anna V., born 1887, died 1969 :Sturgis, Robert L., born 1892, died 1936 :Sturgis, Mary A., born --, died 1897, 48 yrs :Sturgis, Loren O., born 10 April 1916, died 26 February 1955, WWII :Sturgis, Ruth I., born 8 February 1915 :Sturgis, William H., born 13 March 1884, died 28 June 1972 4. Page 308. East Union Township, Old Presbyterian Cemetery :Firestone Plot :Firestone, George, died 22 April 1851, DAR @ 67; R21-S-12 :Firestone, John C., died 24 July 1848, DAR @ 30; R22-S12 :Firestone, Rebecca, died 15 April 1860, R22-S7 :Firestone, Rebecca, died 21 November 1869, R21-S10 :[also as img100_Firestone_East Union Twp Old Pres burials.jpg] 5. Page 582. Salt Creek Township, East Cemetery :Firestone Plot :Emma (Celeine) Firestone Lytle, born 1875, died 1959 (stone) :Firestone, Edward, born 1874, died 1854 (stone) :Clara Firestone Barnes, born 1870, 1954 (stone) :Eddy Byron Barnes, born 1869, died 1930 (stone) :Firestone, Mary Boesgrain (stone) :Firestone, Edward Warren (stone) :Firestone, Eugene Trobridge (stone)-Vet* :Firestone, Joseph (Mason), N. C. :Children: :Firestone, Daniel W., 2 yrs :Firestone, Marella, 3 yrs :Firestone, Washington W.. 2 yrs** :Firestone, Harriet K.. 2 yrs** :Firestone, Jacob K., 5 yrs** :(*) written: vet close by-no stone :(**) written: All on a tree stone-no name for the mother, Joanne Fredericks Firestone? 6. Page 584. Salt Creek Township, West Cemetery. :Firestone Plat :Firestone, G. W., died 15 February 1891, age 79 y., 10 m., 9 d. :Firestone, Jane Hutchison, died 21 October 1878, 37 y., 8 m.. 8 d., w/o GW :Firestone, Jane D., died 23 October 1858, age 35 7. Page 589. Salt Creek Township, Fredericksburg West Side Cemetery :Firestone Plot :Firestone, John, born 1808, died September 1887, age 79 y. :Firestone, Zella, born 1816, died 1882, age 66 y. == Sources == :See also-- *For Leroy Firestone 17 October 1898 death entry, "Ohio, County Death Records, 1840-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99ZR-V9LM-2?cc=2128172&wc=7DZ2-GY3%3A1296042101%2C1296041902 : 30 September 2014), Wayne > Death records, 1867-1908, vol 1-2 > image 408 of 534; county courthouses, Ohio. *For Minerva Firestone 27 January 1897 death entry, "Ohio, County Death Records, 1840-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9ZR-V9G7-5?cc=2128172&wc=7DZ2-GY3%3A1296042101%2C1296041902 : 30 September 2014), Wayne > Death records, 1867-1908, vol 1-2 > image 386 of 534; county courthouses, Ohio.

Firestone-Roller Family Group Notes

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==WikiTree Pages of Interest== *[[Firestone-166|Johannes F. Firestone (1782-1849)]] *[[Roller-633|Rachel (Roller) Firestone (1783-abt.1870)]] ==Bibliographic Notes== George Ely Russell, C.G., FASG, FNGS, "Firestone Family of Frederick County, Maryland," ''Western Maryland Genealogy'', 9 (1, Jan 1993):2-13 and 9 (2, April 1993):62-72, at 9 (2):63-64 (#7 Mathias Firestone). "George Ely Russell, Jr. Collection," ACPL Genealogy Center; digitized archival materials, [https://www.genealogycenter.info/search_georgerussell.php ''Allen County Public Library'']. In particular, see "[https://www.genealogycenter.info/search_russellfamilies.php Russell Associated Families]" > "[https://www.genealogycenter.info/search_russellfamf.php F Families]" for four subsets of Firestone materials, including "[https://www.genealogycenter.info/search_russellfamfirestone1.php Firestone Families 1]," and materials apparently grouped by the first letter of a given name (A-H, I-J, K-...), John F. Firestone FGS and items in "Firestone Families I," at image [https://www.genealogycenter.info/viewpage_russellfamfirestonei.php?realpage=765&display=Russell_Firestone%20I153 153] and [https://www.genealogycenter.info/viewpage_russellfamfirestonei.php?realpage=770&display=Russell_Firestone%20I154 154] of 286; other items at image [https://www.genealogycenter.info/viewpage_russellfamfirestonei.php?realpage=775&display=Russell_Firestone%20I155 155], [https://www.genealogycenter.info/viewpage_russellfamfirestonei.php?realpage=780&display=Russell_Firestone%20I156 156] and [https://www.genealogycenter.info/viewpage_russellfamfirestonei.php?realpage=785&display=Russell_Firestone%20I157 157]. ==FindAGrave== See also [[Firestone-166|Johannes F. Firestone (1782-1849)]], for profile [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Firestone-166#comment_8080928 comment]. John Firestone (1782-1849), memorial 37722283, gravestone images and likeness; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37722283/john-firestone ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Lucas Cemetery, Lattasburg, Wayne County, Ohio; memorial created by Kathryn Thomas, maintained by DRWS; gravestone photos added by Karen Yuschak; likeness added by Lisby. Rachel ''Roller'' Firestone (1788-1870), memorial 24442506 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/24442506/rachel-firestone ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Lucas Cemetery, Lattasburg, Wayne County, Ohio; maintained by DRWS, gravestone photo added by Kathryn Thomas. Anne ''Firestone'' Lower (1807-1896), memorial 63830465 and gravestone images; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/63830465/anne-lower ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Lakeview Cemetery, Larwill, Whitley County, Indiana; maintained by OPPSheryl, gravestone images added by Daggz. David Roller Firestone (1809-1851), memorial 29586566, gravestone image and likeness; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39586566/david-roller-firestone ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024); reports burial at New Pittsburg Cemetery, New Pittsburg, Wayne County, Ohio; memorial created by peggy babbs, maintained by James Blodgett; gravestone image added by by Peggy Babbs; likeness added by James Blodgett. Mary Ann ''Firestone'' McMillen (1810-1842), memorial 105527826 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105527826/mary-ann-mcmillen ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), memorial created by Bill Miller, maintained by Bill Miller's Dan, gravestone image added by Bill Miller. Matilda "Malinda" ''Firestone'' McConnell (1814-1894), memorial 43336541 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/43336541/matilda-mcconnell ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports died in Perry Township, Ashland County, 1 October 1894, aged 79 yrs, 9 mos., 24 ds, burial at Rowsburg Cemetery, Rowsburg, Ashland County, Ohio; memorial created by Bill Miller, maintained by Bill Miller's Dan, gravestone image added by Bill Miller. Elizabeth ''Firestone'' Whiteleather (1817-1875), memorial 21689573 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21689573/elizabeth-whiteleather ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Moultrie Chapel Cemetery, Moultrie, Columbiana County, Ohio; memorial created by M Kemp, maintained by Merllene, photo added by M. Kemp. Susanna ''Firestone'' Firestone (1818-1894), memorial 58566924 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58566924/susanna-firestone ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Wooster Cemetery, Wooster, Wayne County, Ohio; created by peggy babbs, maintained by KBSkala, gravestone image added by peggy babbs, , likeness added by Anne Rupert. Diana ''Firestone'' Rice (1823-1915), memorial 39582750, gravestone image, death record and likeness; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39582750/diana-rice ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at New Pittsburg Cemetery, New Pittsburg, Wayne County, Ohio, memorial created by peggy babbs, maintained by Merilyn Cramer Cargo Romani, gravestone photo added by peggy babbs, death certificate contributed by James Blodgett; likeness added by Christopher. Annis ''Firestone'' Hileman (1826-1880), memorial 34063646 and gravestone image; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/34063646/annis-hileman ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Ridge Cemetery, Liberty Township, Van Wert County, Ohio; memorial managed by corgilover; photo added by Phil Myers. Dr. John B. Firestone (1828-1883), memorial 40015978 and gravestone images; web content, [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/40015978/john-b-firestone ''FindAGrave''] (accessed 27 March 2024), reports burial at Lakeview Cemetery, Larwill, Whitley County, Indiana; maintained by JC, gravestone photos added by Just Dave. ==Research Notes== == Sources ==

Firman Champagne—Pension Files

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Revolutionary War Pension File I skipped the 11th file as it isn’t legible.

Firman Champagne—Revolutionary War Service Record

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Revolutionary War Records

Firmin, Firmyn, Furman wills of Suffolk in the 1600s

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==Summary == Wills of Firmins (spelling varies) around the area of Nayland, Stoke by Nayland, Ipswich and Sudbury used in researching the origins of early New England immigrant [[Firmyn-5|John Firmyn of Watertown, Massachusetts]]. The concrete things found tying the Nayland Firmins to those listed below are: #The 1624 will of Robert of Ballingdon where he bequeaths to his "loving friend Josiah Firmin of Nayland, tanner" (other than Roger Warrick by marriage). This is very likely to be the [[Firmyn-7|Josiah Firmin]] (c. 1580-1638) of Nayland, brother of John Firmin the immigrant. Josiah's own will listed himself as a tanner. #The 1614 will of Richard of Sudbury wherein he bequeaths to Josias Firmyn, tanner of Nayland (presumably the same one as listed by Robert of Ballingdon in 1624; Allen's book says this is Joseph but the name Josias is clearly readable in the original will and Allen also listed this will as 1616 when it is clearly readable as 1614 in the will and probate). The following wills were ordered from the Suffolk Archives and are transcribed and/or noted here: #Original will of [[Warrick-260|Roger Warrick of Sudbury]] 1616 RefNo: IC/500/1/73/171 Say maker. This was the first husband of Susan Bush; they married in 1609 at Sudbury and had 3 children, 1 of whom died in infancy. Susan then married [[Firmyn-5|John Firmyn]] at Nayland in 1618. #Original will of John Furman of Ipswich 1693 RefNo: IC/AA1/123/96 Gentleman, how he connects to any of these others is unclear. #Original will of Henry Furman of Ipswich 1637 RefNo: IC/AA1/74/66 wife Prudence & several children listed but no siblings or cousins, how he fits in is uncertain. #Original will of Robert Firmin of Ballingdon 1624 RefNo: IC/500/1/80/83 Tanner bequeaths to his family plus his "loving friend" Josiah Firmyn, tanner of Nayland. #Original will of Giles Firmin of Cavendish 1616 RefNo: IC/500/1/73/160 Clothier who had a brother Thomas and was probably the son of a Thomas as described in Orrin Allen's "Fairman" book book cited below. He was the nephew of Richard Firmin of Sudbury (below) who wrote his own will in 1614. #Original will of Richard Firmyn/Firmin of Sudbury 1614 RefNo: IC/500/1/71/92 Gentleman. He had brothers John & Thomas (deceased; Thomas had sons Thomas & Giles) and brother Nicholas (living) and a sister who married a Cook (possibly Mary who married Thomas Cook and had son Henry, see his research notes). Had four kinsmen named John Firmyn, one Josias (the tanner of Nayland) and one Christopher. #Original will of Margaret Firmin of Sudbury 1616 RefNo: IC/500/1/73/96 Widow of Richard. Her will listed no other Firmins, only "kinsmen" of the name Lowe, Fryott, Gotsmith (maybe) and Maynard. One of the Maynards was listed at Long Melford, the location of the marriage of [[Firmyn-1|Giles Firmyn]] (c. 1552-1597) and [[Ive-1|Katherine Ive]] (c. 1554-1634) the parents the John Firmyn of Nayland listed above (2nd husband of Susan Bush). == Giles of Nayland: still unknown origin == Note that The "Descendants of John Fairman" on pages 4 and 5 describes some Firmyn wills of SuffolkDescendants of John Fairman, of Enfield, Conn., 1683-1898 by Allen, Orrin Peer, 1833- Publication date 1898 Publisher Palmer, Mass. : C.B. Fiske and Company, printers [https://archive.org/details/descendantsofjoh00alle_0/page/5/mode/2up p. 5] which is the apparent source of the commonly found but unsupported assertion that the parents of [[Firmyn-1|Giles Firmyn]] of Stoke by Nayland (himself the apparent father of John the immigrant) were John & Agnes of Hartest, Suffolk. However Allen in his book makes no such claim and this couple were apparently married about 1520, a full 30 years before the estimated birth date of Giles. Further, the 1549 will of John lists no son named Giles (it named wife Agnes, sons Thomas, Edmund, Robert & Mylherei and daughters Barbara, Joan & Anna). An intially hopeful origin for Giles of Nayland comes from the 2 November 1614 (Allen had this as 1616 but the will clearly says 1614) will of Richard "Fyrmyn" of Sudbury cited in Allen's book. That will names wife Margaret, un-named sons of his brother William (deceased), four un-named sons & daughters of his brother Thomas (deceased), un-named daughter of his brother Nicholas, un-named daughter of brother John; to Josias (not Joseph, Allen had this wrong) Firmyn, tanner of Nayland; to John Firmyn, clerk and son of John Firmyn of Foxearth (a village a few miles NW of Sudbury; Allen gave this as "Forerth" but Foxearth seems much more likely); '''to Gyles and Thomas sons of Thomas Firman''' (deceased and apparently not specified if this is the same deceased brother referenced earlier); to his brother Roger, to kinsman John Firmyn of Hadley, England, shoemaker; to brother Nicholas (previously mentioned), to kinsmen Christopher & Josias Furmyn (relationship not specified). And in fact, the 1616 will of Giles of Cavendish transcribed here lists a brother Thomas, a deceased uncle Richard and an un-named aunt who was still living in May 1616 but who had apparently willed land and money to Giles upon her death. Unfortunately the will of Giles of Cavendish listed a different set of children (Henry, Nathaniel, Thomas, Giles & Ann) than Giles of Nayland (born c. 1552, children Franny, Josias, Giles and others). So, was Giles of Cavendish who wrote his will in 1616 the son of Giles of Nayland? Almost certainly not since Giles of Cavendish specifically listed a brother Thomas and Giles of Nayland did not have a son Thomas based on baptismal records and on Giles' will. Both Giles had a son Henry and daughter Anne but those names are so common as to be meaningless. What about the reverse? Was Giles of Cavendish possibly the father of Giles of Nayland? Extremely unlikely. While Giles of Cavendish listed a son Giles in his will, he also specified that his sons Nathaniel & Thomas were to pay their brother Giles (son of the testator) a sum of 25 pounds. By this time Giles of Nayland would have been about 64 years old, so his father would have bequeathed to him directly and more likely to the testator's grand-children. == Roger Warrick of Balindgon Sudbury 1616 == Roger Warrick of Balingdon 1616 (spelling generally modernized). The date of the will on the second page "might" be 10 November but it is hard to read. The probate on the third page seems to be "Xember", an older spelling or abbreviation of "December" since it was the 10th month of the year at the time. His burial was 20 Jan 1617 although the double year is not certain so it would seem strange for the probate to be 11 months after his burial but it was certainly not 5 weeks before his burial. In the name of God...etc...in the reign of our sovereign lord King James...etc...I Roger Warrick of the hamlet of Balingdon next Sudbury in the county of Suffolk, saymaker being sick in body but whole in mind and of perfect rememberance...etc...my soul to allmighty God my redeemer...etc... Item I give and bequeath unto Susann Bushe my loving wife (NB: extremely unusual to include a wife's maiden name in a will of this era) all my lands lying in (here he names two locations in Cambridgeshire, one loooks like Peyton T-something or D-something, does not look like "Peyton Close"...possibly in the Peyton Baronetcy in Cambridgeshire? and Saint Giles, likely the parish of that name in Cambridge) in the said county or in what ...something, maybe "in what plashe (place) soever" i.e. "no matter where my property is?" ... until my children shall attain to the age of one and twenty years. Item it is my will and mind that Anne Warrick and Jane (looks like Joan but her 1615 baptismal record said Jane) my daughters shall have and enjoy my lands aforenamed lying in "Peyton Trobe" and in the Saint Giles to them and their heirs forever to be (something) equally between them at their age of one and twenty years. But when they each shall attain to that age I will that she shall give them presently (i.e. soon) the one half of the rent of the said lands. (NB: not exactly clear who is giving half the rent of the lands to whom, perhaps wife Susan was to have all the rents up to that point?). Item if any of my children shall die before they do attain to the age of one and twenty years then I will and my mind be that (something) that lives and survives her sister shall give unto her sister (something) all the said lands aforenamed to her and her heirs forever. (NB: given this language it seems clear that Roger had only the two daughters and no other children). Item I give & bequeath one hundred pounds which shall be due to me presently after the death of my father unto my two children Ann and Jane (here it look like Jane) which hundred pounds my brother Richard shall be bound to pay as by his bond appears. And if any of them die before they remit (possibly "receive"?) it the other to be her heir. If both my children (end of page 1) shall chance to die before they "remit" (or receive) it then I will and my mind is that Susanne my wife shall have and enjoy the said hundred pounds. Item I give & bequeath unto Susanne my wife twenty pounds which to be paid unto me after the death of my father which twenty pounds is to be paid unto me or my assignees by my tenant Richard Galot (sp). Item my house wherein I dwell in Balingdon with the appoinments (or appurtanances) I give and bequeath unto Susanne my wife and her heirs forever. Item to recieve of all my goods & chattels whatsoever moveable and immovable I give and bequeath unto Susanne my wife in (something) that she shall see my debts paid, my (something), my children brought up and my body (something) brought to the ground (i.e. Susanne is to pay his debts, raise his children, see him buried etc). I give to the poor of the "pshe" (parish) of All Saints twenty pounds thirteen shillings and also in Balingdon and six shillings eight pence on the other side of the bridge(?). Item I give to Mary Hayward my maid ten shillings, Item I give and bequeath unto Thomas Broadhurst my apprentice twenty shillings, Item I appoint and make Susanne my wife and Nicholas Bushe my father in law executors of my last will and testament. If provided always that if my wife to marry again that who so (i.e. whomever) that she shall be married unto shall enter into...difficult phrase...to let my children enjoy the rent of the lands bequeathed unto them ...something to maintain them withall. (NB: the gist is to ensure that the rents of the lands bequeathed in the will should go to Roger's daughters). === Research Notes === See https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Warrick-260 Susanna Bush married Roger Warwick or Warrick on 27 July 1609 at All Saints Sudbury, Suffolk, England.[2] Children with Roger Warrick: #Anne bp. 5 January 1611 (double year not stated)[3] #Alice bp. 26 April 1614[4] bur. 8 October 1614 #Jane bp. 26 December 1615[5] After Roger died in January of either 1616/17 or 1617/18 (the burial record of 20 Jan 1617 does not state the double year and the image is not available)[6] Susan married John Firmin/Fyrmin/Firmyn on 30 June 1618 at Nayland, Suffolk == John Firmin of Ipswich 1693 == This was certainly the John Furman buried 27 October 1693 at Ipswich St. Peter, Suffolk. (John Furman in 1693 National Burial Index For England & Wales Ipswich, Suffolk, England https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=BMD%2FNBI%2F13686193) John Firmin (1693) left most of his estate to wife Sarah and daughter Martha (executor). Martha is listed as Martha Firmin (ffurman) so does not appear to have been married. He did not mention any land or property in Nayland or Stoke by Nayland so it is hard to link him to people or previous wills there. He owned and bequeathed the Golden Lion, probably a public house and shares in the ship "Nightingale" of Ipswich. He gave to his executor all lands, buildings etc. in or adjoining to Suffolk occupied by Nathaniel Browne that John lately bought of Mr. John "Moyse". He bequeathed the mortgage that he held on the Golden Lyon in St. Matthew parish in Ipswich along with the yearly "rents and profits" of it to Sarah. Sarah may not have been his first wife, he appears to bequeath lands to "my loving wife Sarah for and in lieu of her dowry" although this could be in relation to something like land that had been left to her by her own father (see below). He also bequeathed to son Richard and to daughter Rachel, wife of Samuel Green of Ipswich, a "Block maker"(?) and to daughter Sarah Fairfax. He bequeathed to son in law John Greene of Ipswich, co-executor along with daughter Martha which raises the possibility that Sarah may have been the widow Greene when he married her and John is actually a step-son. Which might also mean that Samuel Greene, husband of Rachel was another step-son. This would all need corroboration. === Research Notes === Daughter Rachel was likely the one baptized 10 May 1663 at Ipswich daughter of John & Margaret (Margrett) Firman (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_946152371), reinforcing the idea from the will that Sarah was not John's first wife and was very possibly Sarah Greene. Rachel then married Samuel Greene in 1684 in Suffolk (record appears as "Archd M L" at findmypast in Boyd's marriage index so from the Archdeaconry records, location Melford Long?). Note that a Margaret Firmin married James Roe in 1685 at Melford Long (Long Melford) about 40 miles west of Ipswich and about 20 miles from Nayland so this may have been a different (possibly related) Firmin family since Margaret was referred to as Firmin, not Roe in John's will. A Richard Firman son of John & Mary was baptized 14 April 1665 at Ipswich (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_946151087) so was John married to 3 women? Or was Mary or Margaret the same person? Or was this a different family? A Richard Furman took the freeman's oath at Ipswich in 1690 with father John listed, very likely the same man. https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FO%2F40001760%2F1 == Henry Firmin of Ipswich 1637 == Henry Firmin of St. Matthews in Ipswich, Suffolk written 16 November(?) 1637, probated 30 (? tricesimo) March 1638 wife Prudence executor. Standard beginnning (sick in body, soul to God my redeemer etc). Bequeaths to "Henry my son" a house and all appurtenances...hard to read text referencing a Henry "Muse" "in who's house and something dwelleth...more conditions "after the death of my wife". I give unto Henry my son the "summe" of twelve (maybe) pounds to be payed him at his age of 24 years if something shall be then living. I give unto Prudence my daughter the summe of one hundred pounds to be payed her when she shall (something, maybe attain?) her age of one and twenty years. I give to Elizabeth my daughter the like summe of one hundred pounds to be payed her when she shall (same word maybe attain) her age of twenty one years. I give & bequeath unto my sonne John the sum of four score pounds to be payed him at his age of 24 years. I give to Thomas my sonne (with a capital S) the sum of 80 pounds to be payed at his age of 24 years. I give & bequeth unto Mary my daughter "the sum of the like sum of the sum of" (this phrase repeats from page 1 to page 2) four score pounds (these are all 80 pounds but Thomas' gift is written as a number, the others in words) to be payed her age her age of 21 years. I give unto Margaret my daughter the like sum of four score pounds to payed at her age of 21 years. All my goods & chattells and other household and "something" I give & bequeath to Prudence my loving wife whom I do "something" (name, appoint?) my sole executor...etc pay all my debts etc. === Research Notes === Henry was buried 19 November 1647 at Ipswich St. Matthew, Suffolk (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=BMD%2FNBI%2F13671898) Henry married Prudence Groom in 1618 at Stratford St. Mary, Suffolk (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FM%2F753711149%2F2) per Boyd's Daughter Prudence was baptized 24 July 1621 at Ipswich as daughter of Henry "Firmin or Firminge" (transcription) and Prudence (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_962840444) Son Henry baptized 29 March 1619 at St. Matthew, Ipswich as son of Henry (https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/63462274:9841) Daughter Mary baptized 20 June 1623 at Ipswich as daughter of Henry and Prudence (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_962840902) Son Thomas baptized 13 June 1632 at Ipswich as son of Henry and Prudence (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_962839093) == Robert Firmin of Ballingdon 1624 == Will of Robert Firmin of Ballingdon, Suffolk and the diocese of Norwich written 29 August 1624 with modernized spelling. Probated September 1624, possibly the 13th (Tridesimus?) Opens with standard text (King James, wasted in body but yet of a good memory, soul to Almighty God etc). Body to be buried in the churchyard of All Saints, Sudbury. Item I do give, devise & bequeath unto Margaret my loving and well beloved wife all my lands lying in Pebmarsh called the Mote (or by what names so ever) to have and enjoy the same for her and her assignees for and during the term of her natural life for and forwise (sic) the bringing up of my children. And after her death I do give & bequeath the said lands to my eldest son John Ffirmin and to heirs of his body lawfully begotten and in default of such issue, to my three daughters, Mary, Anna and Martha, and to their heirs forever. (NB: later another daughter appears...) Also I do give & bequeath unto the here (sic) said Margaret my wife my great house in Balingdon, being the messuate or tenement wherein I now dwell., with the appurtanences viz the rooms which I my self do inhabit and those also which are now leased unto Edmond Wold (NB: does not look like "Wood")...follows additional terms about the tenements... After the death of a widow "Brony" or something similar, Robert bequeaths property that she currently occupies to his "loving friend Josiah Ffirmin of Nayland, tanner" along with Jeffrey Ruggles and Daniel "Purminder" (sp) of Sudbury, clothiers. (NB: This is very likely to be the [[Firmyn-7|Josiah Firmin]] (c. 1580-1638) of Nayland, brother of John Firmin the immigrant. Josiah's own will listed himself as a tanner. How these Firmins were related is uncertain but it is interesting that he was not called "kinsman" but "loving friend"). Robert bequeaths to his "second son Richard Ffirmin" with some text about the purpose of the money being to pay for the yearly maintenance of Richard, it may be that son John is to care for Richard. Robert states that after the death of son Richard, the messuages etc are to go to John so it sounds as if Richard was not expected to live very long or to have heirs, very likely he was disabled in some way. Twenty pounds each was given to John's "four sisters, Elizabeth, Mary, Anna and Martha" to be paid within 4 years of the death of son Richard. (NB: why was Elizabeth not listed above? Was she a step-daughter of Robert's?) A few lines later he bequeaths to "my four daughters aforesaid" and includes Elizabeth, this bequest of lands & messuages if John does not outlive his brother Richard so again it seems that Richard is not capable of maintaining himself. Robert bequeaths a house in Ballingdon that goodman John Waterbury now dwells in to wife Margaret and after her death to daughter Mary and her heirs lawfully begotten and for default of issue to sisters Anna and Martha. Another house in Ballingdon where Goodman Gardiner now dwells to wife Margaret and after her death to daughter Anna & heirs, for default of issue to sisters Mary and Martha; repeat the same for yet another house where Goodman Bull now dwells to Margaret, then to Martha & sisters Mary & Anna as above. To beloved daughter Elizabeth four score (abbreviated as four sc. i.e. 80) pounds (in a later sentence the "four score" is more clear) to be paid within five years after my decease. To my grand-child Edward "Puffield" (this is hard to read) the younger the sum of ten pounds to be paid at the age of 24 years. Further bequests to friends including witness John Wilson, to the poor of the parish of All Hallows in Sudbury 30 pounds, to the poor of Ballingdon and to the poor of "the other side of the bridge". Wife Margaret to be executrix == Giles Firmin of Cavendish, clothier 1616 == Giles Firmin of Cavendish 1616 (modernized spelling, wrote his surname as firmin or ffirmin) probated 18 March 1616/17. Written 9 May 1616 by Giles Firmin of Cavendish, Suffolk, clothier being sick in body yet in good (something, strong?) rememberance do make and ordain this my last will & testatment in name & form following. First of all I give & bequeath my soul into the hands of Jesus Christ my only Savior...etc...my body to be buried in the churchyard of Cavendish. Item I give & bequeath unto "Winnifred" (NB: looks like "Winnithred" but the "W" is a bit different than "wife" maybe just because upper case) my wife all my (something) in my house (some phrase...) that is not (something) for term of her life. (NB: does not look like "appurtanences" or "all goods movable & immovable", chattell or the usual phrases here). & after her death I give & bequeath the aforesaid house (something) unto Ann Firmin my daughter. Item I give unto Henry Firmin my son all the money that is in his hand (NB: probably meaning he had already gifted Henry some amount) and one (something, bedside?) that is in my house together with my (two more short phrases). Item I give unto Nathaniel Firmin & unto Thomas Firmin my sons all my rights & interest that belonged to me to be equally divided between them of the acres of meadows & pastures which was given to (obscured, "me"?) also & to my brother Thomas Firmin to be divided betwixt us after the death of my "Annte" (sic) by the gift of Richard Firmin of Sudbury by the will & last testament of the aforesaid Richard Firmin plainly may appear. (NB: Sudbury adjacent to Cavendish, was this possibly the Richard of Sudbury who wrote his will 2 Nov 1614? Very likely, that will bequeathed to brothers Giles & Thomas who were sons of a Thomas Firman; this latter the deceased brother of testator Richard. See "Descendants of John Fairman" by Orrin Allen). Item I will that Nathaniel & Thomas my sons shall pay unto Winnifred my wife thirty shillings a year(something after?) my Annte (sic) Firmin late wife of Richard Firmin aforesaid be dead, during the life of Winnifred my wife if she be then living. Item I will also that within one year of the death of my aforesaid Annte Firmin my aforesaid sons Nathaniel & Thomas shall pay unto Giles Firmin my son 20 (maybe, it is xx with a trailing character so 25?) "something" (doesn't really look like pounds definitely not shillings) out of the aforenamed something something (from the same legacy he expected to receive after his aunt's death?) Item I make & ordain Henry Firmin my son my sole executor "having" (maybe giving) that he will, this my last will & testament I formed. Witnesses Reade "Vale"?, John Griggs, William Wilson === Research Notes === No direct connection to Giles Firmin of Nayland found unless that was the son of the testator of this will. However, Giles of Nayland was born estimated about 1550 so seems more likely to have been about the same age as Giles of Cavendish, testator. Was Thomas (son of the testator) the Thomas Firmyn [https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FB%2F200075287%2F1 baptized 28 Jan 1598/99] at Cavendish with no parent's names listed?"England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NR87-282 : 19 March 2020), Thomas Firmyn, 1599. And was he the man of this name who married Alice Morton at neighboring Glemsford on 16 Jan 1620?"England Marriages, 1538–1973", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NLMF-X2X : 13 March 2020), Thomas Firmin, 1620. Possibly but no similar records for siblings Henry, Nathaniel and Ann or for mother Winnifred have been found. == Richard Firmin of Sudbury 1614 == Richard Firmin of Sudbury will written 2 November 1614 (modernized spelling). This will is four pages long and much of it difficult to read so only highlights mentioning specific people with relationships or notable property will be transcribed. Orrin Allen's "Descendants of John Fairman of Enfield, Conn" mentions the key people in this will. In the name of God Amen...I Richard Ffirmyn of Sudbury in the county of Suffolk being sick in body yet thanks be to god of good & stout memory...etc...do make & ordain this my last will & testament in manner & form following...the usual text re my soul to Almighty God...to the aded, impotent & poor people of the town of Sudbury...he bequeaths land that he bougght of Thomas Ellen or Eden...references the parish of St. Peter of Sudbury and All Saints of Sudbury, quite a lot of text about the land or property he is bequeathing to assist the (again) aged, impotent & poor people of the parishes of St. Peter and All Saints and also St. Gergory. Item I give & bequeath unto Margaret my wife during her natural life (something) that my meadow ground called "holgate" (?) meadow...more text about said meadow again referencing St. Gregory parish. And after the death of said Margaret my wife I give & devise her said meadow ground (more difficult text) unto my kinsman John "Cook" (?) of Woodhall (NB: village on NE side of Sudbury, now Woodhall road?) in Sudbury aforesaid & to his heirs forever. And in (something) herof I do give & bequeath unto Margaret my wife ten pounds of lawful money of England to be paid unto her "if the"(?) said John Cook (something) a year next after my decease. (NB: based on Henry Cook below it seems that one of Richard's sisters may have married a Cook) Item I give & bequeath unto the three (NB: maybe 3, not 4, Allen did not transcribe this word) sons of my brother William Firmyn deceased five pounds a piece...and to the four sons & daughters of Thomas Ffirmyn my brother deceased five pounds a piece...and to the three (same word as above) daughters of Nicholas Ffirmyn my brother seven pounds & five shillings apiece...and to the two daughters of John Ffirmyn my brother deceased five pounds a piece...and to the four children of Johanne Ch(something) (NB: Johanne = Joan, surname definitely starts with Ch, does not seem like Christopher) deceased five pounds apiece. And unto Henry Cook my sisters (maybe, hard to read) son ten pounds and unto Josias Ffirmyn of Nayland, tanner five pounds and unto John Ffirmyn "clarke" (clerk), son of John Ffirmyn of Foxearth, clerk (village NW of Sudbury, Allen had this as "Forearth" but seems to have misread it, the "x" is clear) my kinsman twenty marks of lawful money of England (plus another bequest) to be paid unto him if/when? the said John Cook (something) one year next after my decease. A watermark obsucres some text, there are a few sentences about "my said brothers & sisters children shall depart their life before" etc so this seems to be secondary beneficiary text. The son of John Ffirmyn my kinsman, clerk is specifically mentioned. Item I do give & bequeath unto Gyles Ffirmyn & unto Thomas Ffirmyn the sons of the said Thomas Ffirmyn deceased & to the heirs of the said GGiles & Thomas after the death of Margaret my wife all that my Close of pasture next (something) to (something) Bridge (NB: some property description) my will & meaning is that the said Giles & Thomas & heirs of each of them shall after the decease of Margaret my wife receive & assign the said Close of pasture that my kinsman John Ffirmyn (something, owned?) of the pasutre called "Tallard"(Tallays ?) the land hereunto belonging to...(NB: text about payments for the land after Margaret's death, if kinsman John wants to buy the land etc, nothing genealogical to about halfway down the page) Unto Margaret my wife five acres of arable land...I bought of Richard Eden deceased lying in Great Waldingfield in the aforesaid county of Suffolk...description of property... and after her decease I give & bequeath "the son unto Roger Cooke of "Brente(something)" my kinsman during his natural life the remainder thereof after his decease unto Roger Cooke my godson the son of the said Roger & to his heirs forever. More property bequeathed to Margaret which goes to "Henry Cook my sister's son". Unto "Be(something, this is a name and hard to read, maybe the wife of brother Roger?) Ffirmyn and "of the"(?) sons of my brother Roger Ffirmyn their (something, maybe administrator meaning they were under-age?) euqally to be divided between them and then after (something) hereof to be...(NB: hard to read but possibly reverts back to) my kinsman John Ffirmyn of Hadley in the county aforesaid (NB: Suffolk) shoemaker his something administrator (same word as prior sentence re: sons of Roger Ffirmyn). I give & bequeath after the death of Margaret my wife unto my kinsman Richard Cooke of Great Henny in the county of Essex land near Assington...more land to Margaret at St Peter's parish in Sudbury that he bought of Robert "Burant"(?), land reverts to Henry Cook upon Margaret's death...another water blotch, more land to Roger Cook (here ends page 2) Page 3 opens with more land to Roger Cook, money to said brother Nicholas Firmin, twenty pounds to kinsman Christopher Ffirmyn of Foxearth (again the word administrator so Christopher maybe under 21)...more money to John Ffirmyn of Hadley, more land to Roger Cook, more money to kinsman Josias Cook, still more land to Roger Cook, more money to Christopher (written as xxofir) Ffirmyn, more money to John Ffirmyn clerk. Five pounds to William Ffirmyn the brother of the said John & his heirs and assigns (NB: the name is hard to read, the leading W is squashed a bit since it is written at the edge of the page) Five pounds unto Josiah Maynard my servant (NB: Richard's widow Margaret's will listed Maynards as kinsmen) and twenty shillings to John Maynard his brother...land to John Cook, rents to be payable to John Ffirmyn of Haldey...more land to John Ffirmyn (here ends page 3) More money to xxofer Ffirmyn, more to his brother William Ffirmyn of Cambridge...forty shillings to the church wardens of the parish of St. Peters, money to the parish of St. Gregory and All Saints in Sudbury...to the poor people here...forty shillings to the church wardens of Great Waldingfield & to the poor people there, money to poor people somewhere hard to read... Twenty shillings to Thomasine (commonly Thomasyn also) Ffirmyn my foresaid (something, maybe "cousin" if the c is malformed) one month next after my decease (NB: a female name, first appearance in the will)...more messuage or tenement to John Firmin of Hadley situated in St. Peter's parish of Sudbury with reference to testator's brother Nicholas...money to what looks like St. James parish and St. Peter's parish. More money to Henry Cook, money to servants Robert Ruffles, Margery "Carter"(?) and Elizabeth Clarke. Money for a sermon at his burial and at his funeral, house & goods at Sudbury & Waldingfield to wife Margaret...writing gets cramped here and hard to read but looks like remainder bequests to Margaret, one more conditional bequest to kinsman John Cook. Here ends the initial will. Page 5 is a codicil added 15 November 1614. ...I the beforesaid Richard Ffirmyn have for the (something) of (something) fifty years last have dwelt & inhabited in the town of Sudbury aforesaid and...the gist seems to be that John Cook shall within one year of the decease of testator's wife Margaret pay & give to the "Mare" (mayor?) of the town of Sudbury (some amount hard to read) pounds of lawful money of England for the "bettering & enlarging" of something...basically it seems like a gift to the town for some improvement === Research Notes === The Henry Cook, nephew of the testator "could" be the one baptized 1604 at Cavendish to Thomas Cook. Thomas Cook married Mary "Deerman" at Cavendish, it is possible this is a mis-transcription of "Ffirman" but only the transcript is available on the internet, not an original image so this is purely speculation. Orrin Peer Allen in his "Fairman" book when reading this will several times read "Joseph" when the name was actually "Josias" the tanner of Nayland. The name "Joseph" does not actually seem to appear in the will. == Margaret Firmin widow of Sudbury 1616 == Margaret Firmin widow of Sudbury written 10 July 1616, probate looks like December 1616, maybe the 21st (vicesimo primo) I Margaret Firmin, of the parish of St. Peter of Sudbury, widow, being of good and stout health...etc...my soul to God my maker etc...body to be buried at the direction of my executor...to the poor people of the parish of St. Peter before (something...a clue to her origin? different parish) etc...to the poor people of the parish of St. Gregory's and All Saints in Sudbury... Item I give and bequeath to Roberty FFryott the elder my servant & kinsman all that mine house or tenement wherein I now dwell commonly called by the name of the (two words I can't make out, second is like "foyothe") and all the (something, not messuages), barns, stables, edifices & buildlings thereunto belonging with the yards and (something, maybe outer yard?) thereunto (something) and also all the (several somethings ending with "& glass"(?)) belonging to the same house and tenement as it now stands with all & singular their appurtenances....another sentence about Robert Fryott, servant...he also gets the best bed, furniture and Robert Fryott the younger (probably his son) gets twenty pounds when he reaches twenty one...To William, Richard and Annis and Parnell Fryott "the brothers and sisters of the forenamed Robert Fryott" (NB: did not specify the elder or younger but probably the younger) six pounds to "each and so many of them" that are already 21 within one year after my death and to "each and so many of them as is under, at their several ages of one and tweny years" provided always & my will & meaning is etc... (text specifiying what happens if some die) Item I devise & bequeath unto "Cicely" Lowe my kinsman and to Gyles Lowe her husband, that my house or tenement (phrase scratched out) with yards thereunto (something, not "and appurtanances") scituated & being in the foresaid parish of St. Peter where one "Isacke Tomlynson"...etc text about this bequest including the children of Giles & Cicely viz Thomas, John & Margaret Lowe...bed & bedding to Cicely...six pounds to the three children with the same terms as to the Fryott children (NB: Cicely Lowe was Sisely Maynerde/Maynard (see Research Notes below). Item I give, devise & bequeath unto Henry Maynard of Lamarsh St. Marys my kinsman...house,lands etc of my house withall & singular... in the parish of St. Peteres in Sudbury wherein Robert Ruffle now dwells (NB: the Ruffles name appears in Firmin wills of the area as witness etc) except one barn to the same belonging (i.e. Robert owned one of the barns)...then some qualifying text hard to translate including the phrase "I, Margaret Firmin" and ending with "into (or unto?) & from the same and other yards as I the said Margaret (something) finally & (something) from time to time had". To have & to hold the said lands or tenements, houses & buildings and yards aforesaid with all & singular their appointments & (something) before (something) unto the sd. Henry Maynard and his heirs forever. Item I give & bequeath unto Joseph Maynard of Melford (NB: Melford Long?) the son of the same Henry Maynard...barns etc again referring to Robert Ruffles' tenement...six pounds to the children of Henry Maynard (not named) To the children of Margaret Barell late of "Walter Belchampe"(NB: Belchamp Walther, a village about 5 miles west of Sudbury where a John Barrell had children from at least 1602 onwards) in the county of Essex six pounds each (plus the usual conditions of above/below 21 years). NB: at the end of the will she also bequeaths her best gown to "Margaret Barrell my god daughter". To the (something, maybe five?) children of my kinsman Edmund Maynard late of Lamarsh St. Marys six pounds each (plus usual conditions of age) To ("Clement" maybe, hard to read) Gotsmyth my kinsman six pounds (plus conditions if he dies, the money goes to Robert Fryott the younger). To maid (something) Agnes Ffishesr and (some phrase) other of them twenty shillings of lawful English money...to be paid within three months after my death...ten shillings for a sermon at my funeral...I will that six pounds six shillings and eight pence be expended upon a diamond (dymon) for my (something and something, friends and something?) at my funeral...to Cicely Lowe my kinsman aforesaid my warming apparel (? something) woolen to be delivered unto her by my executors. All the rest of my goods, chattells...etc...I give unto my executors whom I do nominate and appoint Robert Fryott the elder my (something, not cousin or kinsman) aforesaid and Gyles Maynard aforesaid === Research Notes === The Lowe couple would seem to be Giles Lowe and Sisely Maynerde (as transcribed) who married on 26 Nov 1592 at Lamarsh, Essex (https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=R_860118918) about 5 miles south of Sudbury. The couple had a daughter Margaret born 17 Feb 1593, buried 17 Dec 1597 at Lamarsh so presumably the Margaret beneficiary of the 1616 will was another daughter. Thomas was baptized there 19 Nov 1598 and other children of this couple (look for father "Gyles" on findmypast.co.uk) also appear at this time at Lamarsh. The Fryotts were likely the family of Twinstead; Parnell was born in 1599 to William, interestingly a Robert Fryott was born 15 Feb 1584 son of William and then Robert Fryott Junior was born 15 Feb 1589 son of William Fryott Junior. Possibly this was a transcription mistake or possibly he had two sons Robert and Robert Junior (or Robert the younger) and therefore likely two wives over this period. Since the testator called the Maynards, Lowes & Fryotts "kinsman" but none of them sister, brother or cousin it cannot be asserted yet that one of these was her original surname. == Sources ==

Firpo Project

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{{Puerto Rican Roots Sticker}} The goal of this project is to ...expand the family tree and extend to Italy where we think our ancestors first came from before arriving in PR. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Firpo-1|Christine Firpo]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * adding more family members * extending to Italy. Genoa seems to have a number of Firpos * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=7224014 send me a private message]. Thanks!

First Bank of Genesee

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==='The Old Reliable'=== :Pres: A. E. Clarke :V.P. Pres: N. S. Vollmer-Hopkins :Cashier: F. J. Hiemann :---Taken from advertisement in Genesee News Sept. 15, 1922 :--Copy of newpaper provided by [[Space: White Spring Ranch & Museum|White Spring Ranch Museum and Library]]

First Census of the United States 1790 Records of the State Enumerations 1782 to 1785 Virginia

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First_Census_of_the_United_States_1790_Records_of_the_State_Enumerations_1782_to_1785_Virginia-1.jpg
== Source Description == Heads of families at the first census of the United States taken in the year 1790 : records of the State enumerations: 1782-1785, Virginia by North, S. N. D. (Simon Newton Dexter), 1849-1924; United States. Bureau of the Census Publication date 1908 Topics Heads of households Publisher Washington [D.C.] : G.P.O. Collection lincolncollection; americana Contributor Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection Language English Includes index At head of title: Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of the Census, S.N.D. North, Director "The loss of Virginia's original schedules for the First and Second censuses is so unfortunate that every endeavor has been made to secure data that would in some measure fill the vacancy. The only records that could be secured were some manuscript lists of state enumerations made in the years [1782-1785]; also tax lists of Greenbrier County from 1783 to 1786. The counties for which the names of the heads of families are returned on the state census lists are 39 in number, and contained in 1790 a population of 370,000; 41 counties with 377,000 population are lacking; this publication covers, therefore, only about one-half of the state"--Introd Chicago-style citation: * North, S. N. D., Director. ''Heads of families at the first census of the United States taken in the year 1790 : records of the State enumerations: 1782-1785, Virginia''. United States, Bureau of the Census, 1908. == Available online at these locations == *https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015029410787 *https://archive.org/details/headsoffamiliesa00nort

First Church of Christ in Middleborough

PageID: 13861050
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First_Church_of_Christ_in_Middleborough.jpg
First_Church_of_Christ_in_Middleborough-1.jpg
=== Organization === The First Church of Christ in Middleborough was organized on December 26, 1894 in Middleborough, Massachusetts. It is now known as the First Congregational Church at the Green.[http://www.fccmiddleboro.org/?page_id=14 Website for First Congregational Church at the Green, Our History]. === Meeting Houses === The First Meeting House for the church had been built in 1680 by the town of Middleborough. After the Second Meeting House was opened on May 29, 1700, the original meeting house was demolished the following year. The Third Meeting House was built in 1745 and was utilized until the Fourth (and current) Meeting House was erected in 1828.[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/n185/mode/1up Chronological Notices published by the Church in 1854]. [http://www.fccmiddleboro.org/?page_id=14 Website for First Congregational Church at the Green, Our History]. === Membership (1694-1895) === A catalogue was first published by the church in 1854 and lists the 1,180 members of the church who had joined between its organization in 1694 and 1853.[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/73/mode/1up Catalogue of the Members of the First Church, Middleborough, Mass.]. The list consists of 1,084 members sequentially numbered and 94 additional members in an Addenda. A supplementary catalogue was published in 1895 in honor of the two-hundredth anniversary of the church.[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/124/mode/1up Two Hundredth Anniversary of the First Congregational Church in Middleboro, Mass. (1895), p. 124]. This supplementary catalogue lists an additional 317 members who joined the church through July, 1895. The first 20 members listed below were the original organizers of the church on December 26, 1694.[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/n21/mode/1up First Church in Middleborough, Mass: Mr. Putnam's Century and Half Discourses; an Historical Account; and a Catalogue of Members (1854)], p. 14. The members listed are as follows (with a link to the page in the catalog in which the member is listed):
NumberNameYear JoinedCatalogue
1Fuller, Samuel, 1st Pastor1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
2Fuller, Elizabeth 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
3Bennet, John, Sr., Deacon1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
4Bennet, Deborah 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
5Morse, Jonathan 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
6Morse, Mary 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
7Wood, Abiel 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
8Wood, Abijah 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
9Tomson, Jacob 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
10Tomson, Abigail 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
11Tinkham, Ebenezer, Sr., Deacon1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
12Tinkham, Elizabeth 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
13Wood, Samuel, Sr. 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
14Billington, Isaac 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
15Eaton, Samuel 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
16Cutbart, Samuel 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
17Cobb, John, Jr. 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
18Bumpas, Weibrah 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
19Tinkham, Hester 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
20Barden, Deborah 1694[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/81/mode/1up p.81]
21Palmer, Thomas, 2nd Pastor1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
22Cobb, Jonathan, Deacon1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
23Cobb, Hope 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
24Tinkham, Patience 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
25Tinkham, Priscilla 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
26Lewis, Elizabeth 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
27Pratt, Thomas 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
28Fuller, John, Sr. 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
29Fuller, Mercy 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
30Barrows, Mercy 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
31Lovell, Mary 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
32Alden, John 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
33Alden, Hannah 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
34Lewis, Mary 1708[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
35Thacher, Peter, Jr., 3rd Pastor1709[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
36Margaret (African) 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
37Tinkham, Mary 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
38Vaughan, Joseph 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
39Vaughan, Joanna, Sr. 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
40Tinkham, Ephraim, Jr. 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
41Fuller, Mary 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
42Darling, Joanna 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
43Thomas, Mary 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
44Thomas, David 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
45Thomas, Susanna 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
46Tinkham, Ephraim, Sr. 1710[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
47Thacher, Mary 1712[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
48Hacket, Elizabeth 1712[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
49Haskell, Mary 1713[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
50Morse, Mary 1713[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
51Cleaves, Eleanor 1713[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
52Raymond, Mrs. 1713[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
53Winslow, Nathaniel 1712[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
54Winslow, Elizabeth 1712[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
55Soul, Martha 1712[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
56Caswell, Mary 1712[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/82/mode/1up p.82]
57Cobb, Rachel 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
58Richmond, Ebenezer 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
59Barrows, Samuel, Deacon1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
60Eddy, Melatiah 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
61Eddy, Samuel, Sr. 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
62Redding, Ebenezer 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
63Smith, Jonathan 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
64Thomas, Lydia 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
65Allen, Mary 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
66Leonard, Charity 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
67Sampson, Samuel 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
68Wood, Ephraim, Deacon1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
69Southworth, Esther 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
70Cobb, Lydia 1715[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
71Wood, Rebecca 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
72Tinkham, Joanna 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
73Nye, Elizabeth 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
74Tinkham, Mary 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
75Wood, James 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
76Allen, Nathaniel 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
77Clark, Nathan 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
78Drew, John, Sr. 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
79King, Ichabod 1716[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
80Morton, Hannah 1717[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
81Thomas, Jeremiah, Sr. 1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
82Wood, Samuel, Jr., Deacon1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
83King, Judith 1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
84Wood, Experience 1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
85Barden, Abigail 1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
86Bates, Joseph 1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
87Raymond, James 1718[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
88Barden, Stephen, Sr. 1719[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
89Delano, David, Sr. 1719[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
90Smith, Abigail 1719[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/83/mode/1up p.83]
91Fuller, Isaac 1720[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
92Vaughan, Deborah 1720[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
93Tinkham, Isaac, Sr. 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
94Fuller, Ebenezer 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
95Fuller, Elizabeth 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
96Thomas, Elizabeth, Sr. 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
97Fuller, Hannah 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
98Thomas, Mary 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
99Drew, Sarah 1721[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
100Eddy, Abigail 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
101Conant, Elizabeth 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
102Wood, Sarah 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
103Fuller, Elizabeth 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
104Raymond, John, Sr. 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
105Thomas, Elizabeth 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
106Strowbridge, William 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
107Strowbridge, Margaret 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
108Rogers, Sarah 1722[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
109Mansfield, Andrew 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
110Mansfield, Sarah 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
111Bumpas, Mary 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
112Tinkham, Hannah 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
113Vaughan, John 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
114Vaughan, Jerusha 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
115Thomas, Hannah 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
116Wood, Elnathan 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
117Prince, Nathan 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
118Wood, Patience 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
119Cobb, Joanna 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
120Prince, Samuel 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
121Prince, Mercy 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
122Wood, Mercy 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/84/mode/1up p.84]
123Redding, Mercy 1724[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
124Wood, Elizabeth 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
125Bassett, Nathan 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
126Cavender, Ann 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
127Morton, Mercy 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
128Prince, Mercy 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
129Prince, Alice 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
130Ransom, Sarah 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
131Vaughan, Joanna 1725[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
132Barrows, Samuel, Jr. 1726[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
133Barrows, Susannah 1726[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
134Tomson, Mary 1726[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
135Southworth, Nathaniel 1726[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
136Sproat, Experience 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
137Southworth, Jael 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
138Clap, Ezra 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
139Clap, Waitstill 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
140Wood, Timothy 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
141Wood, Mary 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
142Palmer, Samuel 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
143Sproat, Abigail 1727[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
144Bates, Joanna 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
145Tinkham, Mary 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
146Fuller, Silence 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
147Bennet, Samuel, Sr. 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
148Tinkham, Seth 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
149Darling, Thomas 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
150Hacket, Lydia 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
151Fuller, Lydia 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
152Mechaan, Patience 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
153Parlow, Hannah 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/85/mode/1up p.85]
154Smith, Sarah 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
155Fuller, Mercy 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
156Fuller, John 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
157Miller, Lydia 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
158Palmer, Elizabeth 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
159Tomson, Mary 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
160White, Benjamin, Sr. 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
161Smith, James 1728[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
162Dunham, Ephraim 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
163Thomas, Miriam 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
164Tucker, Benjamin, Deacon1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
165Tucker, Sarah 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
166Vaughan, Faithful 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
167Gibbs, Elizabeth 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
168Delano, Meriba 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
169Delano, Ann 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
170Barden, Abraham, Sr. 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
171Caswell, Daniel 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
172Elmes, Sarah 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
173Drew, Elizabeth 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
174Warren, Samuel 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
175Warren, Eleanor 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
176Tupper, Ichabod 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
177Wood, David 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
178Wood, Joanna 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
179Bennet, Nehemiah 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
180Bennet, Mercy 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
181Barden, Mary 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
182Warren, Priscilla 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
183Thacher, Mary 1729[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
184Palmer, Elizabeth 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
185Knowlton, Martha 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
186Billington, Mary 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
187Raymond, Elizabeth 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
188Knowlton, Thomas 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
189Canedy, Anibal 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
190Ellis, Elizabeth 1730[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/86/mode/1up p.86]
191Pratt, Hannah, Jr. 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
192Caswell, Mary 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
193Sampson, Obadiah 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
194Standish, Ichabod 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
195Sturtevant, Moses 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
196Sturtevant, Elizabeth 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
197Short, Luke 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
198Standish, Phebe 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
199White, Ann 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
200Pratt, Phebe 1731[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
201Lyon, Samuel 1732[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
202Lyon, Joanna 1732[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
203Barden, Elizabeth 1732[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
204Barden, Esther 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
205Rickard, Elkanah 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
206Sampson, Mary 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
207Bennet, Mary 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
208Barrows, Coombs 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
209Crossman, Barnabas 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
210Paddock, Ichabod 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
211Donham, Lemuel 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
212Wood, Thomas 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
213Raymond, John, Jr. 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
214Tinkham, Abijah 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
215Bennet, Eleaner 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
216Bennet, Ruth, Jr. 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
217Wood, Jemima 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
218Thomas, Susanna 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
219Cobb, Thankful 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
220Gumee, Sarah 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
221Bennet, Ruth, Sr. 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
222Alden, David 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
223Alden, Judith 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
224Sampson, Bethiah 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
225Hayford, Mary 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
226Eaton, Francis 1733[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
227Pratt, Jane 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
228Lyon, Bethiah 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/87/mode/1up p.87]
229Barden, Abraham, Jr. 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
230Vaughan, Desire 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
231Weston, Edmund 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
232Weston, Susanna 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
233Rickard, Bethiah 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
234Eddy, Jabez, Sr. 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
235Tomson, Thomas, Sr. 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
236Cobb, Ebenezer 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
237Cobb, Lydia 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
238Thomas, Henry 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
239Hayford, Benjamin, Sr. 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
240Finnea, Ebenezer, Deacon1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
241Vaughan, Hinksman 1734[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
242Wood, Sarah 1735[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
243Eddy, Samuel, Jr. 1735[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
244Eddy, Lydia 1735[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
245Redding, Bennet 1735[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
246Finnea, Jane 1735[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
247Fuller, Jabez 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
248Barrows, Fear 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
249Thomas, Abigail 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
250Thomas, Anna 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
251Griffith, Elizabeth 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
252Wood, Hannah 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
253Crossman, Hannah 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
254Raymond, Mercy 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
255Raymond, Alice 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
256Purrington, Hezekiah 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
257Purrington, Mercy 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
258Thomas, Noah 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
259Tupper, Thomas 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
260Donham, Elizabeth 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/88/mode/1up p.88]
261Paddock, Joanna 1736[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
262Thacher, Peter, Jr. 1737[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
263Eddy, Jedidah 1737[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
264Miller, Waitstill 1737[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
265Darling, Rebecca 1737[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
266Cavender, John 1738[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
267Tinkham, Mary 1738[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
268Tomson, Caleb 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
269Tomson, Abigail 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
270Pratt, John 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
271Thomas, Abigail 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
272Cobb, Gersham, Deacon1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
273Bennet, Thankful 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
274Barrows, Ruth 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
275Thacher, Samuel 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
276Fuller, Mary 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
277Caswell, Else 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
278Jackson, Joanna 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
279King, Mary 1739[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
280Wood, Sarah 1740[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
281Thomas, Mary 1740[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
282Thomas, Mary 1740[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
283Griffeth, Mary 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
284Morse, Martha 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
285Lewis, Shubael 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
286Lewis, Hazadiah 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
287Burgess, Jacob 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
288Donham, Joshua 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
289Donham, Keturah 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
290Crocker, Lydia 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
291Raymond, Christiana 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/89/mode/1up p.89]
292Sproat, James 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
293Lyon, William 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
294Bassett, Nathan, Jr. 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
295Wood, John, Jr. 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
296Palmer, Job 1741[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
297Vaughan, Jabez 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
298Thomas, Israel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
299Thacher, Thomas 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
300Weston, Elizabeth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
301Ames, Elizabeth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
302Bassett, Thankful 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
303Peggy (Indian) 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
304Fuller, Timothy 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
305Allen, Mary 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
306Thacher, John 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
307Cox, Hannah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
308Southworth, Rebecca 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
309Smith, Rachel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
310Bates, Joseph, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
311Wood, Ephraim, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
312Lazell, Joshua 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
313Smith, Deborah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
314Prince (African) 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
315Antony, Else 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
316Leach, Abiel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
317Snow, Jonathan 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
318Smith, Jonathan, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
319Vaughan, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
320Vaughan, Jerusha 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
321Thayer, Abigail 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
322Thomas, Mary 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
323Sproat, Ebenezer 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
324Felix, Thomas, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
325Raymond, Barnabas 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
326Allen, David 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/90/mode/1up p.90]
327Tucker, Woodward 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
328Thomas, Benoni 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
329Lyon, Jedediah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
330Raymond, Patience 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
331Hathaway, Mary 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
332Wood, Bathsheba 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
333Sears, David 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
334Alden, Noah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
335Jackson, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
336Tinkham, Peter, Sr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
337Tinkham, Samuel, 3d 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
338Tinkham, Susanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
339Williams, John 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
340Williams, Elizabeth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
341Eddy, Zachariah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
342Eddy, Mercy 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
343Warren, Benjamin 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
344Warren, Jedidah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
345Tinkham, Joseph 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
346Tinkham, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
347Tinkham, Hannah, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
348Tinkham, Priscilla 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
349Tinkham, Patience 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
350Thomas, Eleazer 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
351Vaughan, Elisha 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
352Thacher, Susanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
353Redding, Deborah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
354Finney, Nelson 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
355Wood, Ephraim 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
356Wood, Edmund 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
357Tinkham, Martha 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
358Tinkham, Agnes 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
359Tinkham, Esther 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
360Smith, Samuel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
361Leach, Susanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/91/mode/1up p.91]
362Clap, Elijah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
363Vaughan, Daniel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
364Vaughan, Joseph 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
365Darling, John 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
366Winslow, Susanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
367Lovell, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
368Cushman, William 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
369Cushman, Susanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
370Fuller, Mary 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
371Vaughan, Joanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
372Vaughan, Sarah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
373Raymond, Elizabeth, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
374Rickard, Japheth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
375Clap, Hope 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
376Tomson, John 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
377Wood, Joanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
378Wood, Nathaniel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
379Wood, Ichabod 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
380Wood, Patience 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
381Lewis, Elizabeth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
382Howland, Joseph 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
383Chummuck, Martha 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
384Ellis, Elizabeth, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
385Thomas, Phebe 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
386Thomas, Sarah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
387Thomas, Abigail 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
388Knowlton, Prudence 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
389Lyon, Martha 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
390Lyon, Sarah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
391Lyon, Phebe 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
392Smith, Sarah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
393Raymond, Ebenezer 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
394Pratt, Eleazer, Sr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
395Vaughan, Mercy 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
396Pratt, Joanna 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
397Tinkham, Hannah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/92/mode/1up p.92]
398Cox, John, Sr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
399Sears, Phebe 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
400Wood, Samuel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
401Alden, Solomon 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
402Thomas, Sarah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
403Thomas, Asa 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
404Donham, Ephraim, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
405Bumpas, Nathaniel 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
406Pratt, Samuel, 3d 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
407Pratt, Hannah, Sr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
408Lovell, Lydia 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
409Miller, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
410Cox, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
411Tupper, Rebecca 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
412Williamson, Fear 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
413Lovell, Thankful 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
414Wood, Lydia 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
415Sambo (African) 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
416Jenny (African) 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
417Smith, Experience 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
418Tomson, Lydia 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
419Cobb, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
420Harris, Seth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
421Cobb, John, Sr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
422Cobb, Mary 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
423Darling, Elizabeth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
424Thomas, William, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
425Thomas, Benjamin, Deacon1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
426Redding, John 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
427Alden, John 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
428Tinkham, Ebenezer 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
429Wood, Lydia 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
430Cox, Hannah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
431Cox, Mary 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
432Canada, Elizabeth 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
433Dunham, Mercy 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
434Cobb, Patience 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
435Leach, Sarah 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
436Cobb, Hope 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/93/mode/1up p.93]
437Clap, Manasseh 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
438Delano, David, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
439Redding, William 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
440Pratt, Samuel, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
441Pratt, Jerusha 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
442Soul, John, Jr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
443Leonard, Margery 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
444Peru (African) 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
445Cushman, Ichabod 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
446Leonard, John, Sr. 1742[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
447Simmons, Martha 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
448Parlow, Hannah 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
449Lovell, Joseph 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
450Eddy, Jabez, Jr. 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
451Eddy, Patience 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
452Thomas, Barzillai 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
453Hall, Mercy 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
454Thacher, Oxenbridge 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
455Cobb, Meletiah 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
456Turner, Elizabeth 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
457Raymond, Thomas, Sr. 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
458Raymond, Mary 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
459Raymond, Amos 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
460Raymond, Peter 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
461Parker, Joseph 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
462Jackson, Sarah 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
463Calliminco (African) 1743[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
464Soul, Rebecca 1744[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
465Soul, Rachel 1744[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
466Pratt, Elizabeth 1744[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
467Redding, Thomas 1744[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
468Conant, Sylvanus, 4th Pastor1745[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
469Cobb, Ebenezer 1746[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
470Cobb, Mary 1746[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/94/mode/1up p.94]
471Soul, Esther 1746[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
472Booth, Priscilla 1747[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
473Cole, Thomas, Sr. 1748[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
474Bates, Mary 1748[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
475Pumroy, Hannah 1748[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
476Faunce, Abigail 1749[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
477Benson, Samuel 1750[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
478Redding, Joanna 1750[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
479Savery, Mary 1750[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
480Tilson, Ann 1751[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
481Williams, Thomas 1751[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
482Tinkham, Isaac 1754[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
483Shaw, Elkanah 1755[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
484Thomas, Elizabeth 1756[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
485Pumroy, Francis, Jr. 1757[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
486Freeman, Bethiah 1757[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
487Willis, Ebenezer, Sr. 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
488Willis, Mary 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
489Tucker, Sarah 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
490Briggs, John 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
491Briggs, Remember 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
492Conant, Abigail 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
493Weston, Hannah 1758[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
494Redding, Thankful 1759[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
495Morton, Ichabod, Deacon1760[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
496Morton, Deborah 1760[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
497Cushman, Deborah 1760[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/95/mode/1up p.95]
498Morse, Desire 1761[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
499Billington, Ichabod 1762[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
500Powers, Stephen 1762[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
501Powers, Lydia 1762[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
502Totman, Experience 1762[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
503Vaughan, Abraham 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
504Leach, John 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
505Leach, Betty 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
506Thomas, Elizabeth 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
507Purrington, Mercy 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
508Redding, Sarah, Jr. 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
509Thomas, Lucy 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
510Thomas, Lemuel 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
511Warren, Joseph 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
512Warren, Mercy 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
513Redding, Fear 1763[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
514Billington, Elenor 1764[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
515Tilson, Silence 1764[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
516Eddy, Nathan 1765[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
517Leach, Phebe 1765[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
518Cobb, Abijah 1765[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
519Tinkham, Hannah 1766[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
520Brannack, Consider 1766[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
521Maxfield, Catharine 1766[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
522Briggs, Ebenezer 1767[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
523Briggs, Abigail 1767[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
524Elmes, Elkanah 1767[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
525Cobb, Mercy 1768[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/96/mode/1up p.96]
526Tinkham, Sarah 1770[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
527Shaw, Elizabeth 1770[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
528Oliver, Peter, Jr. 1771[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
529Shaw, Thomas 1771[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
530Shaw, Mary 1771[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
531Oliver, Sarah 1771[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
532Thomas, Keziah 1771[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
533Maxham, Edmund 1773[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
534Wright, Cuffee 1773[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
535Eddy, Samuel 1773[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
536Carey, Ichabod 1773[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
537Carey, Hannah 1773[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
538Bennet, Bachelor 1773[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
539Washburn, Huldah 1774[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
540Bryant, Margaret 1776[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
541Tucker, Benjamin, Jr. 1776[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
542Wood, Elizabeth 1776[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
543Eddy, Susanna 1777[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
544Thomas, Daniel 1780[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
545Barker, Joseph, 5th Pastor1781[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
546Thomas, David 1781[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
547Thomas, Churchill 1781[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
548Cushman, Susanna 1781[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
549Morse, Isaac 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
550Thomas, Deborah 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
551Tinkham, Chloe 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/97/mode/1up p.97]
552Barrows, Ruth 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
553Wood, Rebecca 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
554Soule, Sarah 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
555Soule, Lydia 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
556Thomas, Mercy 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
557Shaw, William 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
558Shaw, Lydia 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
559Washburn, Azel 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
560Miller, Sarah 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
561Brown, Elizabeth 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
562Sampson, Thankful 1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
563Bourne, Abner, Deacon1782[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
564Smith, Susannah, Jr. 1783[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
565Cushman, Mercy 1783[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
566Thomas, Thankful 1783[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
567Vaughan, Lucy 1783[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
568Bourne, Mary 1783[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
569Thompson, Caleb, Jr. 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
570Thompson, Mary 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
571Weston, Priscilla 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
572Shaw, James 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
573Shaw, Lois 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
574Morse, Thankful 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
575Bourne, Abigail 1784[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
576Ripley, Tilson 1785[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
577Tinkham, Lucy 1785[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
578Tinkham, Ruth 1785[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/98/mode/1up p.98]
579Barker, Eunice 1785[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
580Bryant, Hannah 1785[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
581Thompson, Wm. 1786[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
582Thompson, Deborah 1786[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
583Thompson, Isaac 1786[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
584Thompson, Lucy 1786[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
585Thompson, Freelove 1786[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
586Phinney, Sarah 1786[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
587Bourne, Newcomb 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
588Bourne, Abigail 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
589Lyon, Mary 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
590Torry, Samuel, Sr. 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
591Torry, Mary 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
592Tinkham, Jeremiah 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
593Cornish, William, Sr. 1787[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
594Haskell, Abigail 1788[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
595Tinkham, Hannah 1788[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
596Bump, Mercy 1788[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
597Redding, Luther 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
598Haskell, Zebulon 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
599Lucas, Elijah 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
600Lucas, Sarah 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
601Tinkham, Mary 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
602Thomas, Abigail 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
603Leonard, Lucy 1789[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
604Pratt, Sarah 1790[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
605Tisdale, Jacob 1791[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
606Valler, Mercy 1791[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/99/mode/1up p.99]
607Bourne, Lydia 1791[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
608Thomas, Nathan, Sr. 1792[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
609Finney, Martha 1792[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
610Pratt, Margaret 1793[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
611Carver, Josiah 1793[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
612Carver, Jerusha 1793[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
613Weston, Isaiah 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
614Tinkham, Elizabeth 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
615Doty, Isaac 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
616Turner, Priscilla 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
617Alden, Elijah 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
618Alden, Mary 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
619Alden, Elihu 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
620Porter, Mercy 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
621Pratt, Benaiah 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
622Norcutt, Mary 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
623Ellis, Lucia 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
624Pratt, Lucy 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
625Holmes, Thankful 1794[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
626Morse, Desire 1795[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
627Sturtevant, Sarah 1795[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
628Cobb, Ebenezer 1795[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
629Cobb, Lydia 1795[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
630Wright (African) 1796[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
631Tinkham, Sarah 1796[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
632Harlow, Betsey 1797[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/100/mode/1up p.100]
633Eddy, Joshua, Deacon1797[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
634Eddy, Lydia 1797[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
635Tucker, Samuel 1797[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
636Bryant, Jesse 1797[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
637Bryant, Mercy 1797[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
638Thomas, Zilpah 1798[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
639Wilder, Ebenezer 1799[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
640Thompson, Otis 1799[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
641McDowall, John 1779[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
642Peirce, Experience 1800[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
643Sparrow, Rhoda 1800[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
644Cobb, Binney 1800[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
645Cobb, Azubah 1800[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
646Pratt, Benjamin 1801[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
647Fuller, Betty 1801[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
648Shaw, Isaac 1802[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
649Thomas, Perez, Deacon1802[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
650Thomas, Sarah 1802[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
651Shaw, Samuel 1803[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
652Tilson, Calvin, Deacon1803[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
653Tilson, Joanna 1804[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
654Shaw, Mark 1805[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
655Thompson, Weltha 1806[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
656Thompson, Lydia 1806[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
657Finney, Margaret 1806[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
658Ling, Jane 1806[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/101/mode/1up p.101]
659Warren, Keziah 1806[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
660Tinkham, Squire 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
661Tinkham, Anna 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
662Morton, Daniel Oliver 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
663Tinkham, Silas 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
664Soule, James, 2d 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
665Eddy, Seth 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
666Eddy, Jerusha 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
667Savery, Daniel 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
668Savery, Huldah 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
669Thomas, Zenas 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
670Thomas, Mary 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
671Bent, Experience 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
672Wood, Sarah 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
673Fuller, Lucy 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
674Fuller, Sally 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
675Ellis, Deborah 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
676Freeman, John, Deacon1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
677Bates, Susanna 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
678Bates, Joseph 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
679Smith, Levi 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
680Ellis, Southworth, Sr. 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
681Eddy, Sylvanus 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
682Eddy, Nathaniel, Deacon1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
683Eddy, Lydia, Jr. 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
684Cobb, Mary 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
685Fuller, Sophia 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
686Leonard, Betsey 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
687Kidder, Sally 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/102/mode/1up p.102]
688Ripley, Hezekiah 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
689Ripley, Priscilla 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
690Smith, James 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
691Smith, Patience 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
692Thomas, William 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
693Tilson, Calvin, Jr. 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
694Tisdale, Hannah 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
695Tribou, Bathsheba 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
696Warren, John 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
697Wood, Lydia 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
698Wood, Lucy 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
699Paddock, Lydia 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
700Thomas, Edward 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
701Thomas, Lydia 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
702Thomas, Betsey 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
703Sears, Abiah 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
704Leach, Susanna 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
705Thompson, Reuel 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
706Thompson, Nathaniel 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
707Cobb, Jacob 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
708Briggs, George 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
709Briggs, Patience 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
710Soule, John 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
711Soule, Joanna 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
712Morse, Sage 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
713Wood, Maria 1807[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
714Barker, William 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
715Darling, Daniel 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
716Darling, Polly 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
717Torry, Lydia 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/103/mode/1up p.103]
718Eddy, Zechariah 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
719Eddy, Sarah 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
720Atwood, John 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
721Atwood, Rhoda 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
722Thompson, Lydia 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
723Thompson, Lucy 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
724Thompson, Mary 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
725Thompson, Irene 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
726Wilder, Mary 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
727Wilder, Mary 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
728Hubbard, Serena 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
729Porter, Sybil 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
730Thompson, Ezra 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
731Sturtevant, Abigail 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
732Sampson, Samuel, Deacon1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
733Sampson, Lydia 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
734Sparrow, Josiah 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
735Sparrow, Minerva 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
736Thomas, Jacob 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
737Thomas, Lucy 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
738Thomas, Hope 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
739Tilson, Hannah 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
740Standish, Irene 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
741Cushman, Sylvia 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
742Wood, Abigail 1808[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
743Thomas, Sylvanus 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
744Thomas, Susanna 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
745Weston, Priscilla, Jr. 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
746Tucker, Jedidah 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/104/mode/1up p.104]
747Wood, Israel 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
748Wood, Ichabod 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
749Perkins, Lothrop 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
750Perkins, Mercy 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
751Wood, Elizabeth 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
752Wood, Theodate 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
753Wilder, Susanna 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
754Cobb, Priscilla 1809[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
755Bourne, Abigail 1810[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
756Rider, Jael 1810[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
757Tucker, Hannah 1810[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
758Lovell, Jerusha 1810[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
759Curtis, Sally 1810[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
760Barker, Anna 1810[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
761Eddy, Anna 1811[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
762Weston, John 1812[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
763Bennet, Mercy 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
764Sturtevant, Priscilla 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
765Bourne, Joseph 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
766Bourne, Sophia 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
767Harlow, Mercy 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
768Wood, Betsey 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
769Harlow, Hepzibah 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
770Williams, Jabez 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
771Tinkham, John 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
772Pratt, Thomas 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/105/mode/1up p.105]
773Gisby, William 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
774Coade, Hannah 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
775Bennet, Mercy 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
776Porter, Sarah 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
777Weston, Hannah 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
778Weston, Salome 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
779Sturtevant, Eunice 1813[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
780Bennet, Jacob 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
781Tinkham, Orin 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
782Burgess, Temperance 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
783Wood, Ichabod, 2d 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
784Wood, Mary 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
785Thomas, Serena 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
786Swift, Lucy 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
787King, Mercy 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
788Barker, Elizabeth 1814[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
789Morton, Hepzibah 1815[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
790Perkins, John 1815[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
791Paine, Emerson, 6th Pastor1816[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
792Elmes, Leonard 1816[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
793Sproat, James, Deacon1816[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
794Bennet, Rebecca 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
795Sturtevant, Fanny D. 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
796Tilson, Joanna 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
797Eddy, Abby 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
798Paddock, Julia 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
799Fuller, Sylvea 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/106/mode/1up p.106]
800Wood, Elizabeth 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
801Wood, Horatio G., Deacon1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
802Willis, Ebenezer 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
803Doggett, Eliphalet 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
804Elmes, Eliphalet, Jr. 1819[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
805Littlejohn, Deliverance 1820[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
806Tinkham, Susanna 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
807Clarke, Josiah 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
808Clarke, Mary 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
809Clarke, Deborah P. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
810Washburn, Abiel 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
811Washburn, Elizabeth 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
812Washburn, Abigail 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
813Washburn, Caroline 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
814Washburn, Louisa Jane 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
815Bourne, Louisa 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
816Bryant, Hilliard 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
817Elmes, Eliphalet, Sr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
818Elmes, Chloe 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
819Finney, Jane 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
820Freeman, Hannah 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
821Littlejohn, Miriam 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
822Lucas, Job 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
823Pratt, Lydia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
824Pratt, Phebe 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
825Sparrow, Bathsheba 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
826Standish, Josiah O. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
827Sproat, Lucy 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
828Swift, Joseph, Jr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
829Swift, Mercy 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
830Swift, Lucy, Jr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
831Tinkham, Elizabeth 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
832Warren, James 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
833Warren, Margaret 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/107/mode/1up p.107]
834Weston, Thomas, Sr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
835Weston, Abigail 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
836Weston, Abigail, Jr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
837Weston, Bethania 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
838Weston, Lavinia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
839Weston, Thomas, Jr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
840Atwood, Francis 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
841Atwood, Shadrach 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
842Buss, Martin 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
843Buss, Eliza 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
844Chamberlain, Joseph 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
845Clarke, Elizabeth 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
846Cobb, Otis T. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
847Cobb, Adaline 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
848Darling, Alanson 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
849Darling, Hannah H. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
850Darling, Aurilla 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
851Eddy, Thalia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
852Eddy, Ann Juliett 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
853Edson, Charlotte 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
854Elmes, Lavinia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
855Elmes, Louisa 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
856Freeman, Mercy 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
857Fuller, Lauretta Ann 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
858Holmes, Rufus 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
859Holmes, George L. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
860Holmes, Eunice 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
861Littlejohn, Hannah 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
862Morton, Lendall P. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
863Perkins, Nathan, Jr. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
864Pratt, Olive 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
865Smith, Lydia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
866Soule, James, 4th 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
867Soule, Ruth 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
868Sproat, Thomas 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/108/mode/1up p.108]
869Thomas, Daniel 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
870Thompson, Arad 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
871Thompson, Marietta T. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
872Thompson, Cordelia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
873Tilson, Judith 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
874Wing, Betsey L. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
875Wilder, James D. 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
876Willis, Jane 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
877Wood, Lydia 1823[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
878Fuller, Jabez 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
879Fuller, Sally 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
880Wing, Lura 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
881Fuller, Susan B. 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
882Miller, Susanna 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
883Sproat, Mary 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
884Thomas, Silas 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
885Thomas, Eleazer 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
886Eaton, William, 7th Pastor1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
887Thomas, Azel 1824[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
888Leonard, Elizabeth 1825[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
889Morse, Lucy W. 1825[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
890Eaton, Lydia 1826[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
891Morse, Ruth 1826[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
892Thomas, Phebe 1826[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
893Freeman, Mary 1827[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
894Thomas, Betsey 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/109/mode/1up p.109]
895Bourne, Lucy 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
896Pickens, Ebenezer 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
897Pickens, Mary B. 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
898Eddy, Lydia M. 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
899Caswell, Polly W. 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
900Standish, Jane 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
901Tinkham, Barbara 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
902Wing, Lauretta 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
903Cobb, Olive T. 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
904Morton, Eliza S. 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
905Norcutt, Mary 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
906Pool, Samuel 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
907Pool, Lydia 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
908Warren, Betsey 1829[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
909Jackson, Sarah 1830[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
910Morton, Hannah D. 1830[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
911Wood, Lucy C. 1830[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
912Tucker, Susanna 1830[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
913Tucker, Mandana 1830[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
914Barrows, Freeman 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
915Eddy, Betsey 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
916Eddy, Betsey m. 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
917Thomas, Hannah 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
918Thomas, Seneca, Deacon1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
919Thomas, Hope 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
920Thomas, Eunice 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
921Thomas, Anna 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
922Thomas, Lucia Ann 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
923Thomas, Winslow 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
924Thomas, Huldah 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
925King, Nathan 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
926Thompson, Charles F. 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/110/mode/1up p.110]
927Thompson, Florantha 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
928Gisby, Thomas 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
929Staples, Simeon 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
930Cushman, Susanna 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
931Rounseville, Freelove G. 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
932Eastman, Mary Jane 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
933Tinkham, Betsey 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
934Wood, Matilda 1831[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
935Thompson, Cephas 1832[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
936Harlow, David 1832[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
937Reed, Ruth 1833[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
938Tinkham, Harvey 1833[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
939Putnam, Israel W., 8th Pastor1835[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
940Willis, Sabina 1836[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
941Putnam, Julia Ann 1836[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
942Osgood, Adeline H. 1836[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
943Pickens, Caroline M. 1836[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
944Eddy, Joshua 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
945Hill, Harriet 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
946Washburn, Elizabeth H. 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
947Wood, Wilkes 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
948Wood, Charles W. 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
949Wood, Emily Louisa 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
950Wood, Mary T. 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
951Leonard, Sally 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
952Soule, Irene 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/111/mode/1up p.111]
953Wood, William Henry 1837[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
954Orrington, Mary Ann 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
955Eddy, Jane Ellen 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
956Harrington, Lucy 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
957Thomas, Lothrop, Jr. 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
958Thomas, Louisa Faunce 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
959Thomas, Saba S. 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
960Thomas, Mary Ann 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
961Thomas, Mary H. 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
962Atwood, Mary Reed 1838[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
963Pratt, Betsey L. 1839[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
964Dean, Eliab 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
965Lawrence, Sarah 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
966Colwell, Mary Ann 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
967Eddy, Charles E. 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
968Eddy, Eliza 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
969Eddy, Susan M. 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
970Eddy, Ann Elizabeth 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
971Ellis, Susanna M. 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
972Freeman, Jane 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
973Haskins, Jerusha 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
974Nichols, Lucia Maria 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
975Orcutt, Harriet 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
976Pratt, William 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
977Smith, Mahala 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
978Soule, Isaac 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
979Soule, Priscilla 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
980Soule, Rebecca 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
981Thompson, Anna T. 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
982Washburn, Eunice 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
983Dunham, Henry 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
984Ellis, Lucia C. 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/112/mode/1up p.112]
985Tinkham, Jane 1840[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
986Dean, Lydia 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
987Dean, Lois 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
988Eddy, Charlotte Elizabeth 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
989Harlow, Stephen, Jr. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
990Harlow, Jonathan E. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
991Harlow, Sarah 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
992Harlow, Betsey B. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
993Harlow, Mary L. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
994Thompson, Venus 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
995Thompson, Jane 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
996Thompson, Benjamin F. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
997Tinkham, Oliver G. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
998Vineca, Rachel 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
999Vineca, Dorlisea N. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1000Vineca, Lydia 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1001Wilder, Bathsheba L. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1002Wood, Abigail T. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1003Wood, Mercy L. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1004Atwood, Joanna 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1005Wood, Mary C. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1006Putnam, Harriet O. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1007Thompson, Sarah T. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1008Wood, Alfred, Jr., Deacon1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1009Eddy, Lucy Ann 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1010Eddy, Mary Jane 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1011Soule, Alfred B. 1841[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1012Cushman, Adoniram J. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1013Cushman, Ann S 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1014Wood, Abiel 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1015Clarke, Zilpha M. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1016Morse, Marston S. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1017Thomas, Phebe 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1018Wilbur, Perry A. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1019Warren, George 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1020Wood, Mary 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1021Earle, Halford 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1022Earle, Elizabeth 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/113/mode/1up p.113]
1023Perkins, Eunice 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1024Pratt, Benjamin F. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1025Pratt, Abby B. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1026Pratt, Mahala S. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1027Thompson, Mary H. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1028Wood, Eleanor B. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1029Harlow, Bethiah O. 1842[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1030Robbins, Consider 1843[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1031Doane, Calvin 1843[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1032Pratt, Thomas A. 1843[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1033Pickens, Abigail S. 1843[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1034Briggs, Mary 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1035Foley, James 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1036Putnam, William F. 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1037Wood, Phebe H. 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1038Hitchcock, Henry D. 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1039Hitchcock, Olivia 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1040Wrightington, Hope 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1041Burgess, Cornelius S. 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1042Burgess, Melissa 1844[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1043Perkins, Ann S. 1845[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1044Brand, Joanna 1845[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1045Goddard, Almira 1846[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1046Smith, Susanna B. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1047Dean, Ruth E. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1048Leach, George M. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1049Leach, Betsey E. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1050Fuller, Consider 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1051Soule, Hannah W. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/114/mode/1up p.114]
1052Soule, Marcia 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1053Morse, Charles S. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1054Smith, Elisabeth S. 1850[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1055Bryant, Mercy E. 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1056Cornish, Louisa 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1057Putnam, Julia Maria 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1058Tinkham, Sarah Jane 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1059Eddy, Melinda B. 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1060Dexter, Elijah 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1061Freeman, Virtue M. 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1062Littlejohn, Elisabeth 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1063Savery, Thomas 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1064Savery, Penelope 1851[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1065Caswell, Susan H. 1852[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1066Weston, Thomas, Jr. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1067Comstock, Saba Adams 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1068Eddy, Elira Jane 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1069Atwood, Sarah A. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1070McGlathlin, Freeman T. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1071Thomas, Seneca R. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1072Thomas, Zilpha B. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1073Thomas, Melinda 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1074Thomas, Clarissa Jane 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1075Tyner, Sarah 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1076Shaw, Lydia 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1077McGlathlin, Harriet 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1078Shaw, Francis M. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1079Shaw, Benjamin 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1080Shaw, Bethiah 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1081Shurtliff, Zilpha 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1082Morse, Mary M. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1083Vaughan, Salome 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1084Savery, Rhoda J. 1853[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/115/mode/1up p.115]
1084.01 (ad1)Howland, Pegge unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.02 (ad2)Kalton, Anna unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.03 (ad3)Nannine (African) unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.04 (ad4)Tomson, Jacob unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.05 (ad5)Perkins, Isaac unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.06 (ad6)Bennet, Jacob unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.07 (ad7)Bennet, Hope unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.08 (ad8)Perry, Elijah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.09 (ad9)Perry, Saray unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.10 (ad10)Morton, Livy unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.11 (ad11)Morton, Hannah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.12 (ad12)Scollay, Rebecca unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.13 (ad13)Chard, Samuel unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.14 (ad14)Cobb, Samuel unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.15 (ad15)Lewis, Shubael unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.16 (ad16)Winslow, Ann unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.17 (ad17)Smith, John unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.18 (ad18)Coomes, James unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.19 (ad19)Vaughan, Hannah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.20 (ad20)Vaughan, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.21 (ad21)Hall, Jane unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.22 (ad22)Leonard, Elkanah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/118/mode/1up p.118]
1084.23 (ad23)Thomas, William, Jr. unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.24 (ad24)Thomas, Joseph unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.25 (ad25)Thomas, Josiah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.26 (ad26)Cobb, Betty unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.27 (ad27)Conant, Jerusha unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.28 (ad28)Conant, Prudence unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.29 (ad29)Thomas, Elisabeth unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.30 (ad30)Caswell, Abiah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.31 (ad31)Mackfun, Roberk unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.32 (ad32)Drew, John, Jr. unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.33 (ad33)Drew, Thomas unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.34 (ad34)Vaughan, George unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.35 (ad35)Robbins, Elisabeth unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.36 (ad36)Holmes, Elisabeth unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.37 (ad37)Fuller, Samuel unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.38 (ad38)Eaton, Thankful unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.39 (ad39)Thomas, Marty unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.40 (ad40)Thomas, Eunice unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.41 (ad41)Thomas, Betty unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.42 (ad42)Holmes, Sarah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.43 (ad43)Holmes, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.44 (ad44)Sampson, Gershom unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.45 (ad45)Wood, Ebenezer unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.46 (ad46)Warren, Samuel, Jr. unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.47 (ad47)Warren, Cornelius unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.48 (ad48)Canedy, William unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.49 (ad49)Miller, Susann unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.50 (ad50)Bennet, Joseph unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.51 (ad51)Bennet, Priscilla unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.52 (ad52)Nellson, William unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.53 (ad53)Ellis, Joel unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.54 (ad54)Eaton, Barnabas unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.55 (ad55)Eaton, Elisabeth unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.56 (ad56)Wood, Jabez unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.57 (ad57)Barrows, Robert unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.58 (ad58)Morton, Ebenezer unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.59 (ad59)Palmer, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.60 (ad60)Tinkham, Samuel, Sr. unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.61 (ad61)King, Thomas unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.62 (ad62)Savery, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.63 (ad63)Weston, Contents unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.64 (ad64)Tomson, Martha unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.65 (ad65)Smith, John unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.66 (ad66)Shaw, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.67 (ad67)Barden, Ichabod unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/119/mode/1up p.119]
1084.68 (ad68)Wood, Jedidah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.69 (ad69)Sampson, Mrs. _____ unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.70 (ad70)Bates, Amos unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.71 (ad71)Bennet, Esther unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.72 (ad72)Brown, Jane unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.73 (ad73)Warren, James unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.74 (ad74)Warren, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.75 (ad75)Barlow, Joanna unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.76 (ad76)Whaley, Elisabeth unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.77 (ad77)Cobb, Gershom, Jr. unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.78 (ad78)Cobb, Mirian unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.79 (ad79)Harris, Joseph unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.80 (ad80)Clarke, Mrs. _____ unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.81 (ad81)Montgomery, John unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.82 (ad82)Southworth, Gideon unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.83 (ad83)Harlow, Lemuel unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.84 (ad84)Pratt, Benjamin unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.85 (ad85)Thomas, Mehitabel unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.86 (ad86)Shaw, Jonathan, Jr. unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.87 (ad87)Morse, Sarah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.88 (ad88)Reed, Joanna unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.89 (ad89)Tilson, John unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.90 (ad90)Ellis, Elisabeth unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.91 (ad91)Tinkham, Nathan unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.92 (ad92)Waterman, Joseph unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.93 (ad93)Hacket, Abigail unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.94 (ad94)Willis, Mary unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.95 (ad95)Billington, Deborah unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1084.96 (ad96)Phinney, John unknown[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/120/mode/1up p.120]
1085Thompson, Franklin Southworth1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1086Thompson, Lucy Macintosh (Putnam)1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1087Thurston, Francis Thomas1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1088Caswell, Azubah H.1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1089Wood, Willard1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1090Wood, Anna W.1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1091Wood, Warren1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1092Wood, Julia M.1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1093Gisby, Olive E.1857[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1094Wrightington, Henry1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1095Morris, Betsy L. (Pratt)1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/125/mode/1up p.125]
1096Thompson, Ivory H.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1097Thompson, Jerusha B.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1098Thompson, Ivory B.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1099Thompson, Philander1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1100Thompson, Eliza G.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1101Cornish, Angeline F. (Thompson)1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1102Thompson, Mary Elizabeth1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1103Thompson, Philander Williams1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1104Thompson, Charles L.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1105Thompson, Ann E1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1106Thompson, Alfred W.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1107Wood, Pauline T.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1108Dexter, Mary P. (Wood)1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1109Phillips, Lydia Ann (Tinkham)1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1110Cornish, Charles F.1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1111Cornish, Mary Louisa1858[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1112Gisby, Deborah1859[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1113Osgood, Julia Henrietta1859[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1114Snow, Olive1859[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1115Willis, Mary J.1859[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1116Higgins, Mary (Weston)1859[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1117Deane, Nancy D.1859[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1118Freeman, Harriet1861[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1119Tilson, Amanda1861[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1120Pratt, Francis Greenleaf1862[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1121Wood, William Wirt1862[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/126/mode/1up p.126]
1122Wood, Maria A.1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1123Thompson, Buel Francis1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1124Thompson, Eliza P. (Shaw)1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1125Washburn, Lucia A. (Thompson)1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1126Gray, Ellen W. (Thompson)1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1127Clark, Helen Elizabeth (Williams)1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1128Hambly, Susan H. (Cushman)1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1129Thompson, Lucy Ann (Cushman)1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1130Penniman, Virtue M.1863[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1131Bradford, De Witt C.1864[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1132Bradford, Lydia R.1864[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1133Cobb, Geroge E.1864[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1134Cobb, Martha1864[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1135Soule, Elizabeth B.1865[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1136Coffin, Sarah B.1865[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1137Soule, Augustus Hamilton1865[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1138Soule, Amanda1865[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1139Sawyer, Rufus M., 9th Pastor1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1140Sawyer, Sophia B.1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1141Wilbur, Emeline1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1142Alden, George L.1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1143Alden, Marietta1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1144Smith, Mary Ann1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/127/mode/1up p.127]
1145Bryant, Esther S.1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1146Wood, Louisa Elizabeth1866[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1147Warren, John Milton1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1148Littlejohn, Orsamus1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1149Pratt, Simeon M.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1150Driggs, Leonard1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1151Reynolds, Louisa L. (Weston)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1152Soule, Otis1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1153Bennett, John1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1154Bryant, Ira1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1155Haskins, Job R. 1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1156Thompson, Edward1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1157Warren, Polly L.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1158Bliss, Lucy S. (Bryant)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1159Thompson, Mary Abby1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1160Thomas, Susan M. (Eddy)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1161Eddy, William Cady1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1162Eddy, Anna C.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1163Cornish, Josiah T.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1164Bryant, Arad1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1165Bryant, Betsy J.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1166Bryant, Sarah Ella1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1167Nichols, James Gilbert1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1168Thompson, Susan M. (Nichols)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1169Thompson, Ruel1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1170Thompson, Leroy1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1171Wood, Rhoda Ella S. (Thompson)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1172Thompson, Saray Evely1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1173Thompson, David W.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1174Thompson, Mandana A.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1175Thompson, Weltha Emma1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1176Atwood, Jacob1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1177Freeman, Morton1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/128/mode/1up p.128]
1178Freeman, Benjamin1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1179Freeman, Nancy C.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1180Howard, Angeline Ella (Freeman)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1181Bryant, Susan E. (Freeman)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1182Freeman, Samuel1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1183Freeman, Anna B.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1184Freeman, Henrietta1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1185Freeman, Andrew1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1186Sparrow, James P.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1187Sparrow, Persis Lavinia1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1188Crosby, William H.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1189Crosby, Maria A.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1190Boomer, Benjamin Loring1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1191Boomer, Rebecca Churchill1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1192Vaughan, William H.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1193Fuller, Phebe Ann (Alden)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1194Baldwin, Etta Pauline (Alden)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1195Soule, Caroline E.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1196Chase, Sarah E. (Tinkham)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1197Fuller, Lucy T.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1198cobb, Annie1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1199McCrillis, John1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1200McCrillis, Sarah A.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1201Bryant, George F.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1202Bryant, Isaac, Jr.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1203Bryant, Irene1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1204Bump, James S.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1205Bump, Huldah P.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1206Cobb, Heman1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1207Smith, Sarah B. (Cobb)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/129/mode/1up p.129]
1208Eddy, Joshua M.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1209Leach, Jephthah1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1210Leach, Giles1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1211McCrillis, Mary E.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1212Pratt, Francis G., Jr.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1213Pratt, George W.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1214Pease, Clara1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1215Shaw, Ebenezer A.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1216Shaw, Sarah M.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1217Shaw, Relief1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1218Savery, Albert Allen1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1219Savery, Elizabeth Thomas1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1220Ingalls, Elizabeth A. (Savery)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1221Swift, John L.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1222Thompson, Lewis Henry1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1223Thompson, Mary W.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1224Thomas, Albert1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1225Ellis, Abby L. (Vaughan)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1226Wood, Lucretia E. (Wilbur)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1227Wood, Albert J.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1228Wood, Eliab, Jr.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1229Gurney, Charlotte H.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1230Hagen, Desire R.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1231Penniman, Prince1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1232Smith, James1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1233Smith, Mercy T.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1234Wood, Benjamin F.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1235Wood, Louisa1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1236Shaw, Deborah C.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1237Kendall, Harriet S. (Hagen)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1238Littlejohn, Eliza S.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/130/mode/1up p.130]
1239Savery, Everett William1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1240Bennett, Grover1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1241Gifford, Elizabeth H. (Haskins)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1242Bryant, Lorin1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1243Bryant, Lois L.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1244Bryant, Rebecca1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1245Leach, Anna E.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1246Burgess, Amanda (Penniman)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1247Raymond, Jerusha B.1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1248Raymond, Alexander1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1249Moulton, Lydia A. (Raymond)1867[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1250Wood, John F.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1251Wood, Maria L.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1252Eddy, Warburton Osgood1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1253Snow, Venus1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1254Wilbur, Horatio Nelson1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1255Wilbur, Mary A.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1256Vaughan, Harrison W.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1257Vaughan, Lydia B.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1258Thurston, Marcia Ellen1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1259Littlejohn, Elizabeth J.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1260Weston, Laura M.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1261Place, George H.1868[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1262Hidden, Ephraim N., 10th Pastor1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1263Hidden, Elizabeth1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1264Hidden, Emily P.1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1265Sampson, Thomas W.1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1266Thompson, Marcus M.1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1267Savery, Albert T.1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/131/mode/1up p.131]
1268Savery, Maria S.1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1269Fuller, Mary H.1870[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1270Drinkwater, Betsy1871[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1271Shaw, Sarah E.1871[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1272Gisby, Edward T.1873[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1273Jedermanu, Florence (Eddy)1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1274McCrillis, Herbert O.1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1275Thatcher, Clarinda1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1276Stephens, Sara1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1277Sawin, Theophilus Parson,11th Pastor1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1278Sawin, Martha M.1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1279Sawin, Laura S.1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1280Sawin, William M.1875[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1281Morse, Lucy Ann (Cushman)1876[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1282Wood, Anna S.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1283Hathaway, Ephraim1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1284Hathaway, Isabella Priscilla1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1285Howard, Asaph E.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1286Scanlin, John1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1287Scanlin, Betsy Barker1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1288Shurtleff, Elizabeth H.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1289Weston, Marcia1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/132/mode/1up p.132]
1290Wright, Winfield Scott1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1291Bagnall, Clara A.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1292Cornish, Alice H.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1293Cox, George alton1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1294Eddy, Elvira Elizabeth (Cushman)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1295Driggs, Deborah L.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1296Driggs, Mary A.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1297Smith, Mary F. (Hagen)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1298Bryant, Roxana E. (Hagen)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1299Cox, Clara Augusta (Hagen)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1300Haskell, John T. 1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1301Morse, Augusta Hope1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1302Morse, John P.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1303Morse, Fidelia J.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1304Morse, Lucy F.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1305Savery, Luther W.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1306Shurtleff, Benjamin1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1307Shaw, B. Jennie (Shurtleff)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1308Shurtleff, Cynthia A.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1309Thomas, Augustus L.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1310Thomas, Theodosia B.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1311Thomas, John B.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1312Palmer, Susan Louise (Thomas)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1313Washburn, Emma B.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1314Bryant, Addie A. (Penniman)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1315Freeman, Matilda R. (Simmons)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1316Smith, Jabez Francis1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1317Soule, Mary H.1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1318Deane, Irene L. (Soule)1877[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1319Butler, Samuel Shaw1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1320Dyer, Nathan T., 12th Pastor1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1321Dyer, Harriet M.1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1322McMann, John Elijah1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1323Raymond, Samuel Dexter1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1324Bourne, Lucy Williams (Thomas)1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/133/mode/1up p.133]
1325Wood, Edgar Warren1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1326Bowman, Mary Caswell (Wood)1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1327Wood, Horace Franklin1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1328Vaughan, Lucy Jane (Wrightington)1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1329Wrightington, Charles Gilbert1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1330Wright, Kate Lewis1878[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1331Bryant, Mary E.1879[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1332Deane, Lucy H.1879[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1333Deane, Mary Eliza1879[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1334Wright, Mercy M.1879[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1335Raymond, Frederic R.1880[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1336Bryant, Charles Morton1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1337Bryant, Henry Solon1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1338Bryant, Susan May1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1339Coffin, Charles Warren1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1340Coffin, Henrietta Eliza1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1341Cornish, Herbert Willard1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1342Dempsey, Eudora Frances (Crosby)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1343Deane, Ella Louisa1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1344Deane, Albert1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1345Deane, Florence1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1346Harlow, Reuben1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1347Malloy, William Francis1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1348McCrillis, Walter Clifton1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1349Brett, Irence Bradford (Pratt)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1350Pratt, Irene Shaw1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1351Shaw, Charles Augustus1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1352Smith, Albert Wilson1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/134/mode/1up p.134]
1353Sparrow, Emma Janette1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1354Sparrow, Sarah Fearing Crocker1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1355Washburn, Sarah Lauretta (Sparrow)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1356Thompson, Cora Frances1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1357Thompson, Leslie Irving1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1358Durfee, Lily Henrietta Richmond Andrews (Thornton)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1359Ellis, Rhoda Savery (Waterman)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1360Bowman, Annie Ardelia (Wood)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1361Wrightington, Soranus Gilbert1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1362Bowman, Abram Lincoln1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1363Clark, Mabelle Williams1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1364Harlow, Betsey1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1365Cross, Annie Wyman (Harwood)1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1366Phinney, Mary White1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1367Ryan, Mary1883[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1368Shaw, Betsy Savery1884[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1369Conant, Fred A.1886[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1370Dunham, Lura Lorena1886[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1371Thomas, Sarah Addie1886[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1372Thomas, Annie S.1887[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1373Penniman, Arabella1887[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1374Thurston, Jason F.1887[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1375Kingsbury, Josiah Weare, 14th Pastor1889[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1376Kingsbury, Mary H.1889[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1377Kingsbury, William J.1889[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/135/mode/1up p.135]
1378Fessenden, William Pitt1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1379Fessenden, Sabina Elizabeth1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1380Kingsbury, Mabel H.1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1381Nichols, Ethel Gertrude1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1382Tinkham, Rachel May1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1383Wood, Nellie Franklin1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1384Ryder, Annie J.1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1385Wilbur, George Herbert1890[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1386Fessenden, Edward Warren1891[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1387Stearns, George Warrant, 15th Pastor1892[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1388Stearns, Sarah Elizabeth1892[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1389Bradbury, Eleanor A.1892[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1390Thomas, Lewis R.1893[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1391Nichols, Frank A.1894[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1392Nichols, Mima Wilbur1894[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1393Tinkham, Emma Elvira1894[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1394Wood, Florence J. E.1894[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1395Cody, Caroline Florence1894[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1396Warrant, Jane W.1894[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1397Deane, George Alfred1895[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1398Littlejohn, Ira Orsamus1895[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1399Littlejohn, Dorcas Susan1895[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1400Fessenden, Laura J.1895[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
1401Wrightington, Roxanna C.1895[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/136/mode/1up p.136]
=== Pastors (1694-1895) === The catalogues published in 1854[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/117/mode/1up First Church in Middleborough, Mass: Mr. Putnam's Century and Half Discourses; an Historical Account; and a Catalogue of Members (1854), p. 117] and 1895[https://archive.org/stream/twohundredthanni00midd#page/116/mode/1up Two Hundredth Anniversary of the First Congregational Church in Middleboro, Mass. (1895), p. 116] list the first 15 pastors of the church:
NumberNameDate Ordained
1Samuel Fuller (1)26 Dec 1694
2Thomas Palmer (21)2 May 1702
3Peter Thacher, Jr. (35)2 Nov 1709
4Sylvanus Conant (468)28 Mar 1745
5Joseph Barker (545)5 Dec 1781
6Emerson Paine (791)14 Feb 1816
7William Eaton (886)10 Mar 1824
8Israel W. Putnam (939)28 Oct 1835
9Rufus M. Sawyer (1139)23 May 1866
10Ephraim N. Hidden (1262)3 Sep 1869
11Theophilus P. Sawin (1277)29 Nov 1874
12Nathan T. Dyer (1320)31 Jul 1878
13Howard A. Hanaford (n/a)1 Nov 1885
14Josiah W. Kingsbury (1375)10 Apr 1889
15George W. Stearns (1387)1 Nov 1891
=== Deacons (1694-1895) === The catalogue published in 1854[https://archive.org/stream/firstchurchinmid00firs#page/117/mode/1up First Church in Middleborough, Mass: Mr. Putnam's Century and Half Discourses; an Historical Account; and a Catalogue of Members (1854), p. 117] lists the first 22 deacons of the church. The 1895 catalogue lists an additional 5 deacons:
NumberNameYear Elected
1John Bennet (3)1694-95
2Ebenezer Tinkham (11)1694-95
3Jonathan Cobb (22)1694-95
4Samuel Barrows (59)1723-24
5Ephraim Wood (68)1723-24
6Samuel Wood (82)1734-35
7Ebenezer Finnea (240)1734-35
8Gershom Cobb (272)1745
9Benjamin Tucker (164)1745
10Benjamin Thomas (425)1776
11Ichabod Morton (495)1782
12Abner Bourne (563)1796
13Perez Thomas (649)1803
14Joshua Eddy (633)1805
15Calvin Tilson (652)1819
16Samuel Sampson (732)1826
17James Sproat (793)1833
18John Freeman (676)1833
19Horatio G. Wood (801)1842
20Nathaniel Eddy (682)1852
21Seneca Thomas (918)1852
22Alfred Wood, Jr. (1008)1852
23Leonard Driggs (1150)1872
24William Wirt Wood (1121)1878
25Augustus Hamilton Soule (1137)1878
26Albert J. Wood (1227)1885
27Ruel Francis Thompson (1123)1892
== Sources ==

First CongregatioFirst Congregational Church (marriages) was organized at Gloucester, Mass., in 1642,

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Marriages of the First Congregational Church, New London, Gloucester, MA Mar 1691-Dec 1800

First Day Covers: Airmail Postal Service within Alberta, Canada, 1931

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First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931.jpg
First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931-6.jpg
First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931-3.jpg
First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931-1.jpg
First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931-5.jpg
First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931-2.jpg
First_Day_Covers_Airmail_Postal_Service_within_Alberta_Canada_1931-4.jpg
First Day of Issue Covers of airmail postal service between Lethbridge, Calgary, and Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada. These were sent to the home of Wallace Johnson, his wife, Elizabeth, and his sons, Harold and Robert. courtesy of The Galt Museum, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.

First Families of America

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First Families of America was create a list of the first families of America and link them together.

First Families of Swansea, MA

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#[[Allen-2293|John Allen]] #[[Myles-81|John Myles]] #[[Willett-758|Thomas Willett]] #[[Cahoon-44|William Cahoone]] #[[Eddy-1042| Caleb Eddy]] #[[Eddy-1675| Zachariah Eddy]] #[[Winslow-212|Job Winslow]] #[[Cole-662|Hugh Cole Sr]]

First Five Generations of the George Boone Family

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First_Five_Generations_of_the_George_Boone_Family.pdf
This summary was put together by Dorothy Mack and updated regularly until 2012. Permission was given to add a copy of this document to WikiTree, as the Boone Society decided to stop publishing it.

First Fleet Africans

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Africans_transported_from_Barbados_to_Australia.jpg
[[Space:African_Ancestry_Project|African Ancestry Project]]
  • '''[[Space:African Ancestry in Australia|African Ancestry in Australia Home]]'''

The eleven ships which arrived in Botany Bay on 26 January 1788 are known as the '''First Fleet'''. They carried around 1400 convicts, soldiers and free people. This page is dedicated to those of African ancestry who arrived on that First Fleet. {| border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#C8102E | '''Name''' || '''Year and Birthplace'''||'''Date and Place of Trial'''|| '''Ship of Transportation'''|| '''Location last documented'''||'''Traced''' |- |[[Caesar-146|John Caesar]] ||1764* Madagascar* America*||13 March 1786 at Maidstone, Kent|| The Alexander||Colony of NSW||'''Yes''' |- |[[Chinery-67|Samuel Chinery]]||1767 (unknown)||7 August 1786 at Exeter, Devon||The Charlotte||Colony of New South Wales|| '''Yes''' |- |[[Coffin-4820|John Coffin]]||1762 (unknown)||9 January 1786 at Exeter, Devon||The Charlotte || Norfolk Island ||No |- |[[Francisco-1110|George Francisco]] ||1765 (unknown)|| 8th December 1784 at The Old Bailey||The Scarborough||Colony of New South Wales ||No |- |[[Gordon-16626|Daniel (Jack) (Janel) Gordon]]||1740 Province of South Carolina||5 April 1785 at Winchester, Hampshire||The Alexander||Colony of New South Wales ||No |- |[[Martin-39411|John Martin]]||1749* or 1757* Unknown||3 July 1782 at The Old Bailey||The Alexander||Colony of New South Wales ||'''Yes''' |- |[[Moseley-3012|John Moseley]]||1757 Province of Virginia*|| 21st April 1784 at The Old Bailey||The Scarborough|| Colony of New South Wales||No |- |[[Orford-109|Thomas Orford]]|| 1761 (unknown) ||7th July 1784 at The Old Bailey||The Alexander ||Colony of New South Wales|| '''Yes''' |- |[[Randall-4323|John Randall]] ||1764 Connecticut ||14 April 1785 at Manchester QS, Lancs||The Alexander||Colony of New South Wales|| '''Yes ''' |- |[[Williams-106634|James (Black Jemmy) Williams]]||1769 (unknown)||11 May 1785 at The Old Bailey|| The Scarborough|| ? ||No |- |[[Williams-106553|John (Black Jack) Williams]] || 1769 (unknown)||2 August 1784 at Maidstone, Kent|| The Scarborough|| Colony of New South Wales||No |- |'''Total: 11''' |- {|
*denotes uncertainty {| border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#4169E1 | '''Name''' || '''Year and Birthplace'''||'''Occupation'''|| '''Ship'''||'''Died'''|| '''Location last documented'''||'''Traced''' |- |[[Nelson-27222|George Nelson]]||Unknown in England*||Ship's Cook||The Prince of Wales||16th February 1788||Botany Bay, Colony of New South Wales||'''Yes''' |- {|

First letter to IR project Leaders

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Greetings, This letter is being sent to all current Irish Roots sub-project Leaders Irish Roots is in the process of switching to the new Wikitree format of Teams. We would like to invite you to join us in this transition. We have created a page at [[Space:New_Irish_Roots_Structure|Space:New_Irish_Roots_Structure]] From that page you view the progress, make recommendations, and join one or more of the Teams if you would like. We also have a Discord server that we coordinate most of our efforts. You are welcome to join us there. To join just go to https://discord.gg/6wt5xC If you have questions feel free to let me know. I am looking forward to your comments and working with you in the near future. Rich Devlin Irish Roots Project Co-Leader [[Devlin-670|Devlin-670]]

First Marriage and Divorce

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''to add transcript of marriage '' :Evening News (Sydney, NSW : 1869 - 1931), Monday 14 June 1920, page 1 :Change of Husbands :Wife's Cool Behavior :On his return from the war In September, 1919, Robert Holland found his wife living at Glebe with a man named Joseph Cox. Consequently he asked Mr. Justice Cordon, in the Divorce Court to-day to dissolve his marriage with Couriersere Frances Holland (formerly Coulson), on the ground of adultery. Cox was joined as co-respondent. :Petitioner said be went to the war, and in October, 1917, while in hospital in England, received a letter from his wife coolly telling him that she had 'picked up' with another man. She said he need not trouble any further about her, as she had found another husband. :On his return to Sydney, petitioner visited his wife, and found Cox sitting in the kitchen. There was a young child, of which petitioner was not the father. :His Honor found the adultery proved, and made a decree nisi, returnable in six months. :The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954) Tuesday 15 June 1920 page 6 :IN DIVORCE. :(Before Mr. Justice Gordon.) :HOLLAND v HOLLAND. :Robert Holland sought a divorce from Couriersere Frances Holland (formerly Coulson) on the ground of misconduct with Joseph Cox, at Melbourne, Warragul, and other places in Victoria, and at Bridge-road, Glebe, and other places in New South Wales. Joseph Cox was joined as co-respondent. :Mr. E. N. Rowley appeared for the petitioner. :The parties were married in Melbourne on December 17, 1914, according to the rites of the Church of England. :Petitioner stated that he left for the front on December 26, 1914, and while away received a letter from his wife stating that she had taken up with another man, and asking petitioner not to make any trouble. He arrived home on September 11, 1919, and about ten days later found that his wife was living in Glebe with a man named Cox. He went to the house and saw his wife with two children there. He tried to get his wife to come back to him, but she would not leave Cox. :His Honor granted a decree nisi, returnable in six months.

First Missionary in New Zealand

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THOMAS KENDALL FAMILY DOCUMENT Born: 13 December 1778, North Thoresby, United Kingdom Died: 6 August 1832, Shoalhaven River The goal of this project is to gift the family tree - it is an A3 paper version given to our family by a family historian. It is complete with dob, marriage, divorce, children, and deaths. The family believes the document is accurate as it was thoroughly compiled after years of research. Having received it as an inherited document I do not know. The aim is to assist with making connections for other families. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am Bain-3229. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them and could use your help. * finding a way to copy the Paper A3 document to be able to electronically send it to whoever would like them. * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Bain-3229#PM-29465755 send me a private message]. this is a document I do not wish to have lost to families looking for their relations. Thank You.

First Nations peoples in Lanark County

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Lanark_County_One_Place_Study-5.jpg
{{Image|file=Lanark_County_One_Place_Study-5.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption=Algonquin Lands in Frontenac and Lanark Counties }} [[Whiteduck-7|Joseph Whiteduck (abt.1794-abt.1845)]] (also noticed as Aiajawasikete, Wabichechi and Captain Joe) and his wife, [[Panosinakwe-1|Cecille Panosinakwe (abt.1795-abt.1861)]] (also noticed as Jabatawak) lived throughout the Ottawa Valley, travelling between their summer camp at the mission at Lake of Two Mountains, near Oka, Quebec and their winter hunting grounds surrounding the headwaters of the Mississippi River, near what would become Ardoch, in Frontenac County. He served in the Algonquin Auxilliary during the War of 1812. They were members of the Algonquin nation. Joe's Lake, in Lavant Township, Lanark County was named for him. They had several children: *Peter Whiteduck (Aiajawasiketch) was a master canoe maker and river-pilot on the Ottawa River. He died at Oka in 1923.Thesis; ''The Lands In Which The Savages Stood In No Particular Need: Dispossessing the Algonquins of South-Eastern Ontario of Their Lands, 1760-1930''; (Queens University; Huitema, Marijke E, 2000); citing: Letter written by JD Gemmill to the Almonte Gazette, 1924 *John Whiteduck married Mary Buckshot, daughter of Chief Buckshot. They moved to Maniwaki between 1871 and 1881. *[[Whiteduck-8|Joseph Whiteduck]] was born in 1831, in Quebec. Joseph (also called Joseph Wabichichi) married Mary Stoqua, "Canada, Ontario Marriages, 1869-1927," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KSZF-1YH : 8 March 2021), Mary Stogna in entry for Richard Cornelius and Margaret Whiteduck, 17 Aug 1908; citing registration , Douro, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, Archives of Ontario, Toronto; FHL microfilm 1,871,868.born about 1835 near Golden Lake, Algona Township, Renfrew County. **Margaret Whiteduck was born about 1873. She married Richard Cornelius on 17 Aug 1908"Canada, Ontario Marriages, 1869-1927," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KSZF-1YW : 8 March 2021), Richard Cornelius and Margaret Whiteduck, 17 Aug 1908; citing registration , Douro, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, Archives of Ontario, Toronto; FHL microfilm 1,871,868. **Herriot Whiteduck? married Thomas Perry ***Richard Perry married Helen Crowe in Peterborough, on 24 Apr 1918. They moved back to Ardoch and raised their family ****Neil Perry ****Harold Perry *[[Whiteduck-6|Simon Whiteduck]], born about 1839. He married Theresa Jacobs and lived in Quebec most of the time, but travelled the Ottawa River system between Lake of Two Mountains, Lower Canada and Calabogie, Upper Canada. **[[Whiteduck-3|Sarah Whiteduck (abt.1869-1937)]] had four children, most likely with a man named Paul Benoit. Sarah's children are listed as having no known father and all used the surname Whiteduck. ***[[Whiteduck-2|Patrick Henry Whiteduck (1903-abt.1937)]] married Pearl Hainsworth most likely in North Bay, Ontario. *Mary Ann Whiteduck, was born about 1841. She married first to Louis Mitchell with whom she had three children: Louis Mitchell Jr., Katie Mitchell, and Michael Mitchell (born the same year his father died). There was also a son named Gabriel, who may have had a different father. Katie and Louis Mitchell Sr. were murdered on a fur trading trip to Montreal in 1865. **Gabriel Whiteduck served in WWI and was discharged in 1919. Prior to the war, he had lived at Griffith, Mattawachan Township, Addington County. ==Sources==

First Peoples of Canada categories

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== Draft Proposal : Work in progress! == This is a page for identifying and developing the categories for the First Peoples of Canada. === Categories for British Columbia First Peoples === : This is not a complete list. Some categories have Band, First Nation or Nation. We may want to change these so the category naming system is consistent. : See: [[Space:Indigenous_Naming_conventions_and_categories|Indigenous Naming conventions and categories]] {|style: border=".5" class="wikitable sortable" |- ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Category''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Current category?''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Name of Current category''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Words that will automatically generate this category ''' |- ||Dakelh|| Yes||Dakelh||Dakelh, Ulkatcho, Carrier, Wet'suwet'en, Lheidli T'enneh |- ||Dane-zaa||No||none||Dane-zaa |- ||Gitxsan||No||none||Gitxsan, Gitanmaax, Glen Vowell |- ||Haida||Yes||Haida Nation||Haida, Skidegate, Massett |- ||Haisla||Yes|| Haisla Nation|| Haisla |- ||Heiltsuk||Yes||Heiltsuk||Heiltsuk |- ||Kaska Dena||No||none||Kaska Dena, Daylu Dena, Dease River |- ||Kootenai|| Yes||Kootenai but should be changed to Ktunaxa||Kootenai, Ktunaxa |- ||Kwakwaka'wakw||Yes||Kwakwaka'wakw||Kwakwaka'wakw, Gwa'sala-'Nakwaxda'xw, We Wai Kai |- ||Lil'wat||Yes but not sure if it needs to be changed||Lil'wat First Nation||Lil'wat, Lillooet |- ||Musqueam||Yes||Musqueam||Musqueam |- ||Nicola||Yes but needs updating to Nłeʔkepmxc||Lower Nicola Indian Band||Nicola |- ||Nisga'a||Yes|| Nisga'a||Nisga'a, Nisgaa |- ||Nlaka’pamux||No||none||Nlaka’pamux, Coldwater, Lytton |- ||Nuu-chah-nulth||No||none||Nootka, Nutka, Aht, Nuuchahnulth, Nuu-chah-nulth, Tahkaht, Ahousaht, Mowachaht-Muchalaht, Tla-o-qui-aht |- ||Nuxalk (Bella Coola)||Yes||Nuxalk (Bella Coola)||Nuxalk, Bella Coola |- ||Secwépemc||No||none||Secwépemc, Bonaparte, Skeetchestn |- ||Sekani||Yes||Sekani||Kwadacha, McLeod, Tsay Keh Dene |- ||Squamish||Yes||Squamish||Squamish |- ||St'át'imc||No||none||Douglas, N'Quatqua, Seton Lake, Xaxli'p |- ||Stó:lo||No||none||Stó:lo, Stolo |- ||Sts'ailes||Yes||Sts'ailes Band||Sts'ailes |- ||Tla'amin||Yes||Tla'amin Nation||Tla'amin |- ||Tsilhqot'in||No||none||Tsilhqot'in |- ||Tsimshian||No||none||Tsimshian |- ||Tsleil-Waututh||Yes||Tsleil-Waututh||Tsleil-Waututh |- ||Wuikinuxv||No||none||Wuikinuxv |- |} ===Categories for Western Subarctic and Plains First Peoples in Canada=== {|style: border=".5" class="wikitable sortable" |- ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Category''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Current category?''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Name of Current category''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Words that will automatically generate this category ''' |- || Anishinaabe ||No || Parent Category|| |- ||Plains-Ojibwa||No||Should be under Anishinaabe|| |- ||Blackfoot||No||Parent Category (maybe Blackfeet in error?)|| |- ||Kainai||No||under Blackfoot||Blood |- ||North Peigan||No ||under Blackfoot|| |- ||Siksika||No||under Blackfoot|| |- ||Dene||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Chipewyan||No||under Dene|| |- ||Sahtu||No||under Dene||Bearlake, Hare, Mountain |- ||Slavey||No||under Dene || |- ||Tlicho||No||under Dene|| |- ||Yellowknives||No||under Dene|| |- ||Dane-zaa||No||Parent Category|| Dunne-za, Beaver, Tasttine |- ||Gwich'in||Yuntut Gwi'chin||Parent Category||Kutchin, Loucheaux |- ||Hän||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Kaska||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Sekani||Yes||Parent Category|| |- ||Tagish||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Tahltan||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Inland Tlingit||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Taku River Tlingit||No||under Inland Tlingit||Áa Tlein Ḵwáan |- ||Teslin Tlingit||No||under Inland Tlingit||Deisleen Ḵwáan |- ||Nakoda||No||Parent Category|| |- ||Assiniboine||Yes|| move under Nakoda|| |- ||Stoney||Yes|| move under Nakoda|| |- ||Plains-Cree||No|| || |- ||Tslihqot'in||No||Parent Category||Chilcotin |- ||Tsuut'ina||Yes||Parent Category ||Sarcee |- ||Tutchone||No||Parent Category|| |- |} === Categories for Central and Eastern Canada First Peoples === {|style: border=".5" class="wikitable sortable" |- ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Category''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Current category?''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Name of Current category''' ! align="center" style="background:yellow;"|'''Words that will automatically generate this category ''' |- ||Abenaki|| Yes ||Abenaki|| |- ||Anishinaabe|| No||This should be the parent category for several || |- ||Algonquin||Yes||Algonquin, should be under Anishinaabe|| |- ||Nipissing||Yes||Nippissing, should be under Anishinaabe|| |- ||Ojibwa||Yes||Should be under Anishinaabe||Ojibwe, Ojibway, Mississaugas, Saulteaux |- ||Oji-Cree||No||Should be under Anishinaabe|| |- ||Ottawa||Yes||Should be under Anishinaabe||Odawa |- ||Potawatomi||Yes|| Should be under Anishinaabe|| |- ||Beothuk||Yes|| || |- ||Cree|| Yes || || |- ||Haudenosaunee|| No|| Parent group for several peoples ||Iroquois |- ||Cayuga|| Yes||Should be under Haudenosaunee || |- ||Mohawk|| Yes|| Should be under Haudenosaunee|| |- ||Oneida||Yes||Should be under Haudenosaunee|| |- ||Onondaga||No||Should be under Haudenosaunee|| |- ||Seneca|| Yes||Should be under Haudenosaunee|| |- ||Tuscarora|| No||Should be under Haudenosaunee|| |- ||Innu|| Yes || ||Labrador |- ||Maliseet||Yes|| || |- ||Mi'kmaq||Yes|| ||Micmac, Micmaw |- ||Munsee Lenape|| ||Delaware |- ||Naskapi|| No || || |- ||Neutral||No || || |- ||Passamaquoddy||No|| || |- ||Petun||No|| ||Tobacco |- ||Wyandot||Yes|| ||Huron |- |} === Related pages === * [[Space:First_Peoples_Canada_Goals_and_Tasks|First Peoples Canada Goals and Tasks]] * [[Space:Sticker_Convention_for_First_Peoples_of_Canada|Sticker Convention for First Peoples of Canada]] * [[Space:Indigenous_Naming_conventions_and_categories|Indigenous Naming conventions and categories]]

First Regiment, Essex County Militia, New Jersey

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== Officers == The Officers of the First Regiment of the Essex County Militia are listed below:Stryker, William S., comp. Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War. Trenton, New Jersey: Wm. T. Nicholson & Co.,1872. Online archives. Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/officialregister00newjuoft/page/340/mode/2up: 2023. [[Dayton-672|Elias Dayton]], Colonel
[[Thomas-2434|Edward Thomas]], Colonel
[[Potter-7914|Samuel Potter]], Lieutenant Colonel, Colonel
[[Jaques-732|Moses Jaques ]], Lieutenant Colonel, Colonel
Jeremiah Smith, Lieutenant Colonel
[[Spencer-2982|Oliver Marlborough Spencer]], First Major, Lieutenant Colonel
Jacob Crane, First Major, Lieutenant Colonel
[[Woodruff-933|Ezekiel Woodruff]], Second Major, First Major
Nehemiah Wade, Second Major
== Companies == Captain Lewis Brant's Company
Captain Stephen Chandler's Company
Captain Robert Clark's Company
Captain John Craig's Company
Captain Samuel Harriman's Company
Captain Joseph Horton's Company
[[Space:Captain_Benjamin_Laing%27s_Company%2C_First_Regiment%2C_Essex_County_Militia|Captain Benjamin Laing's Company]]
Captain Amos Morse's Company
Captain _____ Moss' Company
Captain Thomas Mulford's Company
Captain John Potter's Company
Captain Matthew Potter's Company
[[Space:Captain_John_Scudder%27s_Company|Captain John Scudder's Company]]
Captain Benjamin Winans' Company
Captain Daniel S. Wood's Company
== Sources ==

First Regiment Iowa Infantry African Descent

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Creating WikiTree profiles for thiis military unit is a work in progress. [[Fleming-14799|John M Fleming (abt.1840-1865)]] [[Green-52192|Jason Green (1844-1899)]] [[Howard-23465|Milton Howard (1852-1928)]] [[Lucas-13303|Cain Lucas]] [[Miller-116205|William S Miller]] [[Nickens-413|Samuel Nickens (1832-1912)]] In the official reports of the office of the Adjutant General of Iowa, this organization is referred to under the designation given in the title to this sketch, and also as the "First Infantry (Sixtieth U. S.) A. D., First Infantry (African Descent)", the somewhat ambiguous title to the original roster of the regiment." The regiment was organized under special orders from the War Department, bearing date July 27, 1863. At that time there were probably less than fifteen hundred persons of African descent living within the boundaries of the State of Iowa. There was an ardent desire, however, on the part of the Iowa men of negro blood, to assist in accomplishing the defeat of those who were engaged in an attempt which, if successful, meant the perpetuation of human slavery in the Southern States. They therefore gladly embraced the opportunity to enlist as soldiers in the Union army. In promulgating his order for the organization of the regiment, Adjutant General Baker says: Most of the men for the regiment, known as the First Regiment of Iowa African Infantry, made their place of rendezvous in this State, and the State authorities exerted themselves in behalf of this regiment. General Orders No. 122 of this Department declared: I. Whereas, authority has been granted by the War Department to Colonel William A. Pile, to raise a regiment of men of African descent, and, whereas, the rendezvous of said regiment has been fixed at Keokuk, Iowa, it is hereby ordered that the usual facilities for recruiting be furnished in this State, for this purpose. II. Colonel Pile will report to this Office rolls of all companies raised in this State. III. Recruiting Officers, with proper authority from the War Department, or from Colonel Pile, can make application for transportation to this office. IV. Officers recruiting for said regiment will correspond with Colonel Pile, whose headquarters are at Keokuk, Iowa, in relation to the various matters connected with recruiting for said regiment. V. The regiment will be known as the First regiment of Iowa African Infantry. 2 Six companies for the regiment were recruited in Iowa, and comprised within their ranks almost every man of African descent in the State who was capable of performing military service. Four companies were recruited in Missouri, but in all the companies appear names of men from adjoining States, as shown by the original roster of the regiment. The aggregate strength of the regiment when its last company was mustered in, December 4, 1863, was 1 Report of Adjutant General or Iowa, 1864, page 198. 2 Report of Adjutant General of Iowa, 1864, page iv. Page 1586 nine hundred eleven men, rank and file. The subjoined roster shows a long list of casualties, mainly from disease. The records give but one instance in which the regiment came into conflict with the enemy, which was at Wallace's Ferry, Big Creek, Ark., July 26, 1864. In that engagement Adjutant Theodore W. Pratt, of Keokuk, Iowa, was killed, and several enlisted men of the regiment were either killed or wounded. The compiler regrets that he has not been able to find the official report of the regimental commander, describing the part taken by the regiment in that engagement, only the returns of casualties being shown by the records. In Dyer's Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, the following summary of the history and service of the "Sixtieth Regiment of Infantry, United States Colored Volunteers," is given: The Sixtieth Regiment of Infantry, United States Colored Troops, was organized March 11, 1864, from the First Iowa Colored infantry. Attached to District or Eastern Arkansas, Seventh Corps, Department of Arkansas, to April, 1865; Second Brigade, First Division, Seventh Army Corps, to August, 1865; Department of Arkansas, to October, 1865. Service: Post and garrison duty at Helena, Ark., until April, 1865. expedition from Helena to Big Creek, July 25, 1864. Action at Wallace's Ferry, Big Creek, July 26, 1864. Expedition to Kent's Landing, August 11-13. Expedition up White River, August 29-September 3 (Companies C and F). Scout to Alligator Bayou, September 9-14 (detachment). Scouts to Alligator Bayou, September 22-28, and October 1-4. Expedition to Harbert's Plantation, Mississippi, January 11- 16, 1865. (Company C.) Moved to Little Rock, April 8, 1865, and on duty there until August 20th. Moved to Devall's Bluff, thence to Jacksonport, Ark. On duty there and at various points In sub-district of White River, in White, Augusta, Franklin and Fulton Counties, Powhatan on Black River and Batesville, until September. Mustered out at Devall's Bluff, October 15, 1865. Disbanded November 2, 1865. 3 3 Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, by Frederick H. Dyer, 1908, page 1733. It is shown in the foregoing summary that the regiment performed the greater part of its service after its transfer and change of designation. Nevertheless, its history, like that of several other Iowa military organizations in which men from other States enlisted, belongs as fully to the State as that of any of the regiments which were organized within her borders. The records of the First Regiment of Iowa African Infantry constitute a portion of the military archives of the State, and it is therefore given its distinctive place in this work as the only regiment of the Negro race which the State of Iowa sent into the field. It may truly be said of these men that, when the call to arms was extended to them, they responded as freely, in proportion to their numbers, as had the men of other races, and it may also be as truly said that they, of all men, were offered the greatest inducement to enlist, for the time had then come when the success of the Union arms meant the freedom of their race. The regiment was one of the two hundred twenty-four military organizations, composed of men of African descent, which entered the service of the United States and performed faithful and important service in the final suppression of the rebellion. The opportunity to enroll themselves among the Nation's defenders was long delayed, but, when it came, they were found ready and eager to take part in the struggle which ended in the emancipation of four millions of their race from the degradation of human slavery. They proved themselves such capable and worthy soldiers, in time of war, that several regiments of Negro soldiers have since constituted a part of the Regular Army of the United States. Page 1587 SUMMARY OF CASUALTIES. Total Enrollment 1,153 Killed 11 Wounded 2 Died of wounds 1 Died of disease 332 Discharged for wounds, disease and other causes 54 Buried in National Cemeteries 36 Captured 0 Transferred 1 Page 1588 FIRST REGIMENT IOWA VOLUNTEER INFANTRY.(AFRICAN DESCENT) Term of service three years. Mustered into the service of the United States at Keokuk, Iowa, and Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo., of dates ranging from Oct. 11, 1863, to Dec. 4, 1863, by Lieutenant Colonel William N. Grier and Colonel B. L. E. Bonneville, United States Army. Mustered out of service (Sixtieth Regiment United States Colored Troops) Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roster of Field, Commissioned and Non-Commissioned Staff Officers at muster in of organization, together with subsequent appointments from civil life. FIELD AND STAFF. John G. Hudson. Age 31. Appointed Colonel Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Milton F. Collins. Age 46. Residence Keokuk, nativity Indiana. Appointed Lieutenant Colonel Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged March 11, 1864. John L. Murphy. Age 22. Residence Keokuk, nativity Tennessee. Appointed Major Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Resigned May 25, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Theodore W. Pratt. Age 24. Residence Keokuk, nativity Ohio. Appointed Adjutant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Killed in action July 26, 1864, Big Creek, Ark. William McQueen. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity Ohio. Appointed Quartermaster Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluffs, Ark. Freeman Knowles. Age 50. Residence Keokuk, nativity Maine. Appointed Surgeon Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Resigned July 2, 1864, Nashville, Tenn. Andrew Patten. Residence Newton. Appointed Assistant Surgeon Dec. 9, 1863. Mustered Dec. 9, 1863. Promoted Surgeon Sept. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Page 1589 Cyrus E Rayburn. Appointed Assistant Surgeon Oct. 6, 1864. Mustered Oct. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. James H. Pile. Age 40. Residence Kansas. Appointed Chaplain Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Resigned April 22, 1865. NON-COMMISSIONED STAFF. Iram A. Sawyer. Age 22. Residence Clermont, nativity Vermont. Appointed Sergeant Major Dec. 9, 1863. Mustered Dec. 9, 1863. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company B, May 9, 1864. Almon P. Hallock. Age 20. Appointed Sergeant Major May 9, 1864. Mustered May 28, 1864. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company D, Sept. 19, 1864. James W. Morgan. Age 20. Appointed Sergeant Major Sept. 19, 1864. Mustered Sept. 19, 1864. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company I, Dec. 6, 1864. William F. Reed. Age 20. Residence Will County, Ill. Appointed Quartermaster Sergeant Dec. 16, 1863. Mustered Dec. 16, 1863. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company C, May 9, 1864. William E. Neville. Appointed Quartermaster Sergeant May 9, 1864. Mustered May 9, 1864. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company A, Sept. 19, 1864. William G. Work. Age 28. Appointed Quartermaster Sergeant Dec. 22, 1864. Mustered Dec. 22, 1864. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company E, July 7, 1865. Albert Decker. Age 21. Residence Sheffield, Mass., nativity Massachusetts. Appointed Commissary Sergeant Dec. 9, 1863. Mustered Dec. 9, 1863. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company K, May 9, 1864. John Greenslitt. Age 26. Appointed Commissary Sergeant May 9, 1864. Mustered May 9, 1864. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company C, Dec. 6, 1864. Charles F. Cummings. Appointed Commissary Sergeant Dec. 6, 1864. Mustered Dec. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Daniel W. Stutsman. Appointed Hospital Steward Jan. 10, 1865. Mustered Jan. 10, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Page 1590 LINE OFFICERS. Names of Company Officers at muster in of their companies. service record given opposite their names in the alphabetical roster following. COMPANY "A" COMPANY "C" John A. Hart, Captain. Henry C. Brown, Captain. Joseph A. Goodnough, 1st Lieutenant. Gustavus H. Brock, 1st Lieutenant. William H. Williams, 2nd Lieutenant. Perry A. Tietsort, 2nd Lieutenant. COMPANY "B" COMPANY "D" Gardiner A. A. Deane, Captain. Henry Sweeney, Captain. Moses Lenard Bradley, 1st Lieutenant. Charles E. Hoffman, 1st Lieutenant. Charles S. Hussey, 2nd Lieutenant. Isaac Hester, 2nd Lieutenant. COMPANY "C" COMPANY "H" Eli Ramsey, Captain. James D. Walters, Captain. Ralph R. Teller, 1st Lieutenant. Gustavus H. Brock, 1st Lieutenant. William A. E. Tisdale, 2nd Lieutenant. William B. Murray, 2nd Lieutenant. COMPANY "D" COMPANY "I" William A. Stuart, Captain. Parsalla H. Young, Captain. Parsalla H. Young, 1st Lieutenant. Joseph A. Goodnough, 1st Lieutenant. William A. Bond, 2nd Lieutenant. Hugh Brady, 2nd Lieutenant. COMPANY "E" COMPANY "K" George F. Work, Captain. Joseph T. Farris, Captain. Jonathan Anthony, 1st Lieutenant. Moses Leonard Bradley, 1st Lieutenant. Alexander F. Rice, 2nd Lieutenant. Albert Decker, 2nd Lieutenant. Page 1590 ~ 1687 COMPANY "A" Allen, Forey. Age 18. Residence Uniontown, Mo. Enlisted Jan. 8, 1865. Mustered Jan. 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Askew, Sandy. Age 22. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Adams, William. Age 18. Residence Denmark, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 30, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 301. Anderson, Henry. Age 18. Residence Denmark, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 17, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "C" Adams, George W. Age 40. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Adams, William. Age 24. Residence Davenport, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1864. Mustered Sept. 3, 1864. Discharged Sept. 12, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. Alfred, James. Age 35. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allen, William. Age 22. Residence Quincy, Ill. Died of disease Nov. 1, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. Anderson, Peter. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Jan. 7, 1865. Mustered Jan. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Armstead, Thomas. Age 19. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 8, 1865, Sixth Corporal Aug. 8, 1865, Fifth Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "D" Adams, Lewis. Age 18. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted March 4, 1864. Mustered April 7, 1864. Promoted Musician Feb. 9, 1865. Dishonorably discharged July 14, 1865. Allen, Francis M. Age 26. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allen, John H. Age 18. Residence Canton, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Arnold, Wilford. Age 18. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease July 23, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "E" Adams, Nathaniel. Age 25. Residence Montrose. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Anderson, George. Age 39. Residence Muscatine, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Anderson, John. Age 28. Residence Muscatine, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died April 26, 1864, Island Number Sixty-six, Mississippi River. Anthony, Jonathan. Age 25. Residence Hamilton, nativity Pennsylvania. Appointed First Lieutenant Nov. 6, 1863. Mustered Nov. 6, 1863. Resigned Dec. 4, 1864. See Company F, Fourth Cavalry. COMPANY "F" Alexander, William. Age 20. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 20, 1865, Seventh Corporal March 13, 1865, Sixth Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Allen, Henry. Age 27. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Seventh Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; Sixth Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allen, Thomas. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease May 29, 1864, Helena, Ark. Altum, Richard. Age 26. Residence Washington, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Anderson, George. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Austen, James W. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Allen, Clayborn. Age 25. Residence Monmouth, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Achan, Manuel. Age 24. Residence Summitville, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1864. Promoted Fourth Corporal Feb. 8, 1864; Third Corporal March 7, 1864; Second Corporal April 25, 1864. Reduced to ranks July 23, 1864. Promoted Seventh Corporal Jan. 1, 1865, Sixth Corporal March 16, 1865, Fifth Corporal April 17, 1865, Fourth Corporal July 19, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allen, Dink. Rejected Nov. 27, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Anderson, Francis A. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Anderson, Linsey. Age 20. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Anthony, Charles. Age 24. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal April 17, 1865, Seventh Corporal July 19, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff. Ark. Ardry, Samuel. Age 18. Residence Brunswick, Mo. Enlisted Jan. 5, 1865. Mustered Jan. 5, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Adams, Smith. Age 20. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 3, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allen, Calvin. Age 23. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Nov. 26, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allen, Reuben. Age 20. Residence Macon, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Allison, Thomas. Age 23. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Bailey, Clark P. Age 21. Residence Clarke County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 28, 1863. Mustered Dec. 28, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 25, 1864, Helena, Ark. Baker, Frederick. Age 25. Residence Lucas County, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Dec. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 23, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bandy, John H. Age 28. Residence Montrose, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1863, as first Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant April 25, 1864; Third Sergeant Nov. 21, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Banks, Solomon K. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Benton, Thomas. Age 27. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 24, 1863, Helena, Ark. Berry, Benjamin. Age 18. Residence Edina, Mo. Enlisted Feb. 18, 1864. Mustered April 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Berry, Harvey. Age 20. Residence Croton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 26, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Berry, Peter. Age 23. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 13, 1864, Helena, Ark Booker, John. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Boyd, Edward. Age 23. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant April 25, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Nov. 21, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bradley, Augustus. Age 19. Residence Davenport, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 17, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Brickley, William P. Age 25. Residence Delaware County, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Feb. 1, 1864. Mustered Feb. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brinkley, John. Age 2. Residence Montrose, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Briscoe, Thomas. Age 26. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Brown, Foster. Age 44. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, John. Age 40. Residence Montrose, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal April 25, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1856. Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Neal S. Age 21. Residence Monona County, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Feb. 21, 1865. Mustered Feb. 24, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Samuel. Age 22. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff. Ark. Burden, Wiley. Age 23. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Georgia. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Burrows, Francis. Age 36. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 13, 1864. Mustered Dec. 13, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Burt, Benjamin C. Residence Keokuk. Appointed First Lieutenant Oct. 11, 186. Mustered April 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Burton, Isaac. Age 18. Residence Kewanee, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bush, Milton. Age 19. Residence Warren County, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Jan. 5, 1864. Mustered Jan. 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark Butler, George W. Age 43. Residence Black Hawk County, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Jan. 4, 1864. Mustered Jan. 6, 1864. Died of disease Dec. 31, 1864, Waterloo, Iowa. COMPANY "B" Bell, George. Age 33. Residence Denmark, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Biggs, Jackson. Age 20. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 5, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bigsby, Redman. Age 22. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Florida. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bivans, Enoch. Age 23. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 27, Helena, Ark. Boosier, George W. Age 23. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Sergeant. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Boots, Jerry. Age 39. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 21, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bradley, Moses Leonard. Age 20. Residence Madison, Wis., nativity New Jersey. Appointed First Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Transferred to Company K, as First Lieutenant May 9, 1864. Promoted Captain from First Lieutenant of Company K, May 9, 1864. Dismissed March 10, 1865. Brock, Gustavus H. Age 24. Residence British Hollow, Wis., nativity Wisconsin. Promoted Captain from First Lieutenant of Company C, July 3, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company B, Twelfth Infantry. Brown, Henry. Age 24. Residence Primrose, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, John. Age 25. Residence LaGrange. Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863, as Wagoner. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bryant, George. Age 25. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Mustered Dec. 30, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Burrell, Joseph. Age 24. Residence Des Moines, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted March 7, 1864. Mustered March 10, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 12, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "C" Bedinger, Jep. Age 37. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 3, 1864. Helena, Ark. Bell, John. Age 26. Residence DeWitt, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Reduced to ranks Dec. 9, 1863. Transferred to Company K, Dec. 9, 1863. Benson, Moses. Age 20. Residence Panola, Miss. Enlisted Feb. 6, 1865. Mustered Feb. 6, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Blissett, David. Age 18. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted March 17, 1865. Mustered March 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brock, Gustavus H. Age 24. Residence British Hollow, Wis., nativity Wisconsin. Transferred as First Lieutenant from Adjutant, April 17, 1865. Promoted Captain of Company B, July 3, 1865. See Company H. Brown, Henry D. Age 19. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 11, 1864. Mustered Aug. 11, 1864. Discharged Sept. 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. (Substitute for Francis W. Brook.) Brown, James. (No. 1.) Age 44. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863, as Wagoner. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability Sept. 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Brown, James. (No. 2.) Age 25. Residence Des Moines, nativity Georgia. Enlisted Jan. 9, 1865. Mustered Jan. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Nelson. Age 16. Residence Sparta, Ill. Enlisted Jan. 1, 1864. Mustered April 6, 1864. Promoted Musician April 22, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, William Henry. Age 18. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1864. Mustered Aug. 18, 1864. Discharged Sept. 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. (Substitute for S. W. Greenbaum.) Bugg, John. Age 21. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal Dec. 22, 1863; Second Corporal Sept. 16, 1864; First Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Burk, Henry. Age 23. Residence Davenport, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Discharged Sept. 12, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. COMPANY "D" Bachelor, Doc. Age 24. Residence Iowa City, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 25, 1863, Helena, Ark. Barker, Andrew. Age 18. Residence Helena Ark. Enlisted March 26, 1865. Mustered March 25, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bell, Charles H. Age 23. Residence Iowa City, nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Aug. 10, 1864; Seventh Corporal March 24, 1865, Sixth Corporal March 27, 1865. Reduced to ranks July 14, 1865. Deserted July 30, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Bell, John. Age 19. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bell, Washington. Age 19. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 3, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Betts, Daniel. Age 18. Residence Charleston, Miss. Enlisted April 18, 1864. Mustered June 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Beverly, Robert. Age 19. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Blue, Oscar. Age 18. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bond, William A. Age 29. Residence Salem, nativity Indiana. Appointed Second Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease July 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company I, Fourth Cavalry. Briggs, Silas. Age 36. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Browning, Silas. Age 22. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 23, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "E" Baker, John E. Age 23. Residence Page County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Banks, Henry C. Age 22. Residence Albia, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff. Ark. Basket, Nelson. Age 30. Residence Eddyville, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Berry, Peter M. Age 24. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Boyd, James. Age 42. Enlisted March 11, 1864. Mustered April 16, 1864. Died of disease Sept. 30, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark Brown, Benjamin. Age 18. Residence Eddyville, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Wright. Age 18. Residence Boonville, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bryant, Alfred. Age 22. Residence Edina, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 24, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Buck, Moses. Age 18. Residence Eddyville, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bucklin, Walter. Age 18. Residence Knobnoster, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 1Y, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Buckner, Smith. Rejected Oct. 12, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Buckner, William. Age 19. Residence Canton, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 27, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "F,' Bebanean, James M. Age 18 Residence Belleville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Killed in action July 26, 1864, Big Creek, Ark. Becket, Frank. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company I. Berget, Alexander. Age 19. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Boyd, Edward. Age 40. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brawley, James. Age 18. Residence Liberty, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brock, Gustavus H. Age 24. Residence British Hollow, Wis., nativity Wisconsin. Appointed First Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Transferred to Company H, Feb. 11, 1864. Brooks, George. Age 40. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 13, 1865, Seventh Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brooks, Harvey. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Gerritt. Age 40. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Dec. 9, 1363; Seventh Corporal March 1, 1864; Sixth Corporal April 11, 1864. Died of disease June 21, 1864, Helena, Ark. Brown, Henry C. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Ohio. Appointed Captain Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Resigned May 25, 1865. Brown, James. Age 33. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 30, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Peter. Age 18. Residence Iowa City, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Oct. 28, 1863; First Corporal April 11, 1864. Reduced to ranks May 28, 1864. Promoted Eighth Corporal Aug. 10, 1864; Seventh Corporal Feb. 20, 1865, Sixth Corporal March 13, 1865, Fifth Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Butler, Jefferson. Age 25. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 20, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 5, grave 12. Bynum, Samuel. Age 19. Residence Keokuk, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Banks, Edward. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Oct. 1, 1864; Seventh Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Sixth Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; Fifth Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Basket, Rufus. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease May 5, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 371. Bass, Henry. Age 28. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal July 20, 1864; Sixth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864; Fifth Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Fourth Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; Third Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bell, Henry. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Benjamin, George. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bennett, Albert. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal July 20, 1864; Seventh Corporal Sept. 2, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Oct. 1, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Dec. 7, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Blattner, William. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Reduced to ranks Feb. 5, 1864. Promoted Eighth Corporal Sept. 6, 1864; Seventh Corporal Oct. 1, 1864; Sixth Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Fifth Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; Fourth Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bobamon, Moses. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Feb. 7, 1864; First Sergeant July 20, 1864. Reduced to ranks Oct. 1, 1864. Promoted Musician Feb. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brewer, Lawson. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 29, 1864, Helena, Ark. Brown, John. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brown, Samuel. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Bailey, Peter. Age 28. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 27, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Baman, William. Age 28. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 27, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bates, John. Age 19. Residence Fairfield, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 17, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bates, William. (No. 1) Age 18. Residence Auburn, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bates, William. (No. 2) Age 37. Residence Auburn, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Dec. 5, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 31, 1863, Helena, Ark. Baxter, George. Age 20. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease June 7, 1864, Helena, Ark. Baymont, William. Age 23. Residence Auburn, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 1, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 19, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bell, Charles. Age 22. Residence Ashley, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bernard, Isaac. Age 20. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bernard, John. Age 18. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 27, 1863, Helena, Ark. Black, George W. Age 30. Residence Washington, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863, as First Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bowles, Albert. Age 22. Residence Fulton Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal March 26, 1864; Sixth Corporal Aug. 13, 1864; Fifth Corporal Aug. 28, 1864; Fourth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Branch, Martin. Age 22. Residence Monmouth, Ill., nativity Alabama. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brock, Gustavus H. Age 24. Residence British Hollow, Wis., nativity Wisconsin. Transferred from Company F as First Lieutenant Feb. 11, 1864. Promoted Adjutant Aug. 18, 1864. Transferred to Company C as First Lieutenant April 17, 1865. Brocks, William. Age 21. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Buckner, Thomas. Age 22. Residence Monmouth, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Aug. 13, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Burders, Alfred. Age 18. Residence Jonesburg, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 27, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease March 23, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "I" Barber, Samuel. Age 20. Residence Paris, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Becket, Frank. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company F, Dec. 9, 1863. Bias, Robert. Age 38. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Blue, David. Age 27. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 17, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bonaparte, Napoleon. Age 45. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Bradford, James. Age 19. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal July 19, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865 Devall's Bluff, Ark. Brady, Hugh. Age 32. Residence Keokuk, nativity Ohio. Appointed Second Lieutenant Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Resigned Oct. 13, 1864. See Company K, Fourth Cavalry. Brown, George. Age 23. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Discharged June, 6, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Bush, Moses. Age 21. Residence Scott County, nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Bailey, Nelson. Age 18. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Banks, Thornton. Age 18. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Barnes, Jacob. Age 24. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 14, 1864, Helena, Ark. Bell, John. Age 26. Residence DeWitt, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Sergeant Dec. 9, 1863. Reduced to ranks June 8, 1865. Deserted July 14, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. See Company C. Bingham, Joseph. Age 23. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease May 4, 1864, Helena, Ark. Blissett, Andrew. Age 35. Enlisted Feb. 10, 1865. Mustered Feb. 10, 1865. Died of disease Sept. 4, 1865, Jacksonport, Ark. Bradley, Moses Leonard. Age 20. Residence Madison, Wis., nativity New Jersey. Transferred from Company B, as First Lieutenant, May 9, 1864. Promoted Captain of Company B, May 9, 1864. Brown, George. Age 37. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1864. Mustered Sept. 12, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Carter, Nathaniel. Age 27. Residence Croton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Chapman, James. Age 27. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clay, Thomas. Age 44. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cox, Isaac. Age 23. Residence Montrose, nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Caldwell, Daniel. Age 20. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 22, 1863, Benton Barracks, Mo. Carter, Benjamin. Age 19. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. Carter, Thornton. Age 26. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease July 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Cavins, Alfred. Age 22. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29,`1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Dec. 11, 1863; Sixth Corporal Dec. 28, 1863; Fifth Corporal Jan. 9, 1864; Fourth Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Third Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Chambers, Frank. Age 25. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Chambers, William. Age 18. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clayton, Green. Age 19. Residence Decatur County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered Feb. 29, 1864. Promoted Eighth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1864, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Camp, William. Age 18. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1864. Mustered Aug. 31, 1864. Discharged Sept. 12, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. Carlis, Edward. Age 28. Enlisted July 8, 1864. Mustered July 8, 1864. Deserted Aug. 21, 1864, Helena, Ark. Carpenter, Josephus. Age 18. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Carroll, James. Age 24. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal May 11, 1864; Sixth Corporal Sept. 16, 1864; Fifth Corporal Aug. 8, 1865, Fourth Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Casey, Benjamin F. Age 32. Residence Duquoin, Ill., nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clayton, Henry C. Age 21. Residence Decatur County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Coffee, Prince. Age 22. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Dec. 1, 1864. Mustered Dec. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Colman, David. Age 19. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died July 15, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 367. Colman, George W. Age 25. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Sept. 16, 1864; Seventh Corporal March 8, 1865. Deserted June 19, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Combs, Henry. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Aug. 8, 1865, Sixth Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "D" Caldwell, James. Age 18. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Callahan, Peter. Age 21. Residence Des Moines, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. Carter, John. Age 21. Residence Iowa City, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clay, William. Age 22. Residence Des Moines, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 9, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Clem, Joseph. Age 21. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 11, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Clifton, John W. Age 21. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant March 27, 1865, Third Sergeant July 21, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cochran, Samuel. Age 43. Residence Des Moines, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted March 10, 1864. Mustered March 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cooper, William. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Nov. 20, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 26, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. COMPANY "E" Canady, Hamilton. Age 43. Residence Johnson County, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Carrigher, Nathaniel. Age 20. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 1, 1864, Island Number Sixty-six, Mississippi River. See Company I. Carrigher, Samuel. Age 20. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Oct. 18, 1864; Sixth Corporal Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company I. Carson, Frank. Age 18. Residence Jefferson City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1864, Mustered Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Carter, Allen. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Christopher, Thomas. Age 18. Residence Johnson County, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Oct. 20, 1864. Mustered Oct. 20, 1864. Died Oct. 8, 1865. Buried in National Cemetery, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clark, Charles. Age 39. Residence Jacksonville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clark, Henry C. Age 25. Residence Jacksonville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Coleman, George D. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Cooper, George. Age 38. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Sergeant Nov. 28, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Cooper, Henry. Age 18. Residence Albia, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Coy, William. Age 26. Residence Albia, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Crowley, John W. Age 23. Residence Oskaloosa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Campbell, Lewis. Age 18. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Carroll, Lewis O. Age 24. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Carter, Irwin. Age 26. Residence Keokuk. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Chambers, John H. Age 24. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 13, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Chedam, Madison. Age 23. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company I. Cheek, Harry. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company I. Clark, Aaron. Age 21. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Drowned April 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Clark, John. Age 18. Residence Springdale, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Combs, George. Age 18. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Corbin, Madison. Age 40. Residence Springdale, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cox, Charles. Age 17. Residence Belleville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Crawford, Antoine. Age 24. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Oct. 29, 1863; Fourth Corporal Dec. 9, 1863; Third Corporal March 1, 1864; Second Corporal April 11, 1864; First Corporal May 28, 1864; Fifth Sergeant June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Crockett, Charles H. Age 29. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Crowley, Albert. Age 20. Residence Oskaloosa. Enlisted July 1, 1864. Mustered July 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Camp, Edward. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease July 27, 1864, Helena, Ark. Camp, Mark. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Chapman, Richard. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant Feb. 7, 1864. Discharged for disability June 14, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Chassean, Aleck. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Chassean, Hampton. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clay, Alfred. Age 28. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clay, Charles. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Clay, John H. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Dec. 7, 1864, Seventh Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Columbus, Isaac. Age 34. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 12, 1864, Helena, Ark. Cooper, William I. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal May 8, 1864; Sixth Corporal July 20, 1864; Fifth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluffs, Ark. COMPANY "H" Carter, Ballet. Age 21. Residence Millersburg, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Chambers, Green. Age 35. Enlisted Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered Aug. 6, 1864. Died of disease Jan. 31, 1865, Helena, Ark. Chambers, Jesse. Age 28. Enlisted Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered Aug. 6, 1864, Died of disease Feb. 16, 1865, Helena, Ark. Cooper, David H. Age 18. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease April 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. Cover, Scott. Age 30. Residence Louisville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Cramer, Archie. Age 22. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 16, 1865, Powhatan, Ark. COMPANY "I" Carrigher, Nathaniel. Age 20. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company E, Dec. 9, 1863. Carrigher, Samuel. Age 20. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company E, Nov. 9, 1863. Chandler, Albert. Age 18. Residence Paris, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Chedam, Madison. Age 23. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company F, Dec. 9, 1863. Cheek, Harry. Age 18. Residence St. Louis Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company F, Dec. 9, 1863. Cock, Lewis. Age 41. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease June 14, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 345. Cook, John. Age 22. Residence Macon City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cox, Edmon. Age 27. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863, as. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 15, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. COMPANY "K" Clark, Aaron. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease July 22, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Clark, Clemens. Age 43. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Collins, Henderson. Age 22. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Coutan, Henry. Age 18. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 28, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Crockett, Felix. Age 18. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cunningham, Charles. Age 22. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal April 4, 1864; Fourth Corporal Dec. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cunningham, George W. Age 20. Residence Mexico, Mo.! nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal Feb. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Cunningham, Samuel. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Dec. 24, 1864; Sixth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Daniels, Samuel. Age 21. Residence Davenport, nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dary, Lewis. Age 19. Residence Grinnell, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1864. Mustered Sept. 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865 Devall's Bluff, Ark. Davenport, Henry. Age 22. Residence Davenport, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Davis, John W. Age 20. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 26, 1864, Benton Barracks, Mo. Davis, William H. Age 21. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dodson, Miles. Age 26. Residence Davenport. Enlisted Oct. 17, 1864. Mustered Oct. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dunn, Ned. Age 36. Residence Montrose, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865 Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Davis, Charles. Age 19. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 22, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Nov. 16, 1864; Sixth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Day, Frank. Age 18. Mustered Dec. 6, 1864. Died of disease May 9, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 316. Deane, Gardiner A. A. Age 23. Residence Farmington, nativity Massachusetts. Appointed Captain Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Lieutenant Colonel May 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company B, Third Iowa Cavalry. Demar, John F. Age 18. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dishmore, Clark. Age 28. Residence Denmark, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Dotson, William. Age 40. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Downer, William. Age 22. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Dec. 28, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Datson, Elijah. Age 36. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 11, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Dolson, Henry. Age 18. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1864. Mustered Aug. 15, 1864. Died Jan. 11, 1865, Helena, Ark. See Company H. Douglas, Stephen A. Age 29. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 12, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Dec. 22, 1863; Fifth Corporal Jan. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dudley, James. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability April 6, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. COMPANY "D" Dawson, John. Age 38. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dayd, Isaac. Age 18. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Seventh Corporal Aug. 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Douglas, Frederick. Age 20. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Douglas, George. Age 19. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 24, 1865, Seventh Corporal March 27, 1865, Sixth Corporal July 14, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" Davis, Moses. Age 22. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Davis, Peter. Age 18. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Oct. 15, 1865. Buried in National Cemetery, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Davis, Tall. Age 18. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 21, 1864, Helena, Ark. Davis, William. (No. 1.) Age 18. Residence Eddyville, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Davis, William. (No. 2.) Age 27. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted May 15, 1864. Mustered June 5, 1864. Deserted July 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Dickens, Robert S. Age 23. Residence Oskaloosa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dickens, Sashel. Age 26. Residence Albia, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Nov. 30, 1863; Sixth Corporal Feb. 10, 1864; Fourth Corporal May 1, 1864; Third Corporal Oct. 6, 1864; First Corporal Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dixon, Augustus. Age 19. Residence Oskaloosa. Enlisted Jan. 19, 1865. Mustered Jan. 19, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dixon, Gilbert. Age 20. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Douglas, William. Age 40. Residence Nashville, Tenn. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Draper, Robert. Age 35. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn. Enlisted Sept. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 28, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. COMPANY "F" Dimmery, William J. Age 30. Residence Belleville, ILL, nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Doxie, Andrew. Age 22. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 18, 1864, Helena, Ark. Duncan, William L. Age 18. Residence Dunleith, Ill., nativity Ohio. Enlisted Sept. 24, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal Oct. 28, 1863; Musician Dec. 9, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Dallas, Polk. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 1, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Daniels, Robert. Age 36. Residence Sedalia, Mo. Enlisted March 21, 1863. Mustered March 23, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Davis, Joseph. Age 24. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Feb. 7, 1864; Fifth Sergeant May 8, 1864; Fourth Sergeant July 20, 1864; Third Sergeant Sept. 2, 1864. Reduced to ranks Dec. 7, 1864. Promoted Fifth Sergeant May 8, 1865, Fourth Sergeant June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Decatur, Sampson. Age 24. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Davis, Frank. Age 19. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Davis, Henry. Age 18. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dolson, Henry. Age 18. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1864. Mustered Aug. 15, 1864. Transferred to Company C, Aug. 15, 1864. Douglas, Henderson. Age 28. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dunn, Allen. Age 23. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dunn, Peter. Age 18. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Dixon, Jesse. Age 18. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dockins, Edward A. Age 19. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease April 18, 1864, Helena, Ark. Douglass, Mason. Age 19. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 17, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "K" Daniel, John. Age 23. Residence Sedalia Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 28, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Davis, Henry. Age 19. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864 Died of disease Feb. 11, 1865, Helena, Ark. Decker, Albert. Age 21. Residence Sheffield, Mass., nativity Massachusetts. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Commissary Sergeant May 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and Staff see also Company H, Second Infantry. Dorsey, Thomas. Age 22. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Dunmart, Hamilton. Age 21. Residence Delaware County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 3, 1864. Mustered Oct. 12, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Ebert, John. Age 29. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ellis, Alfred. Age 37. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Evans, Charles. Age 26. Residence Lee County, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Jan. 4, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Evans, John. Age 26. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps March 20, 1865. No further record found. COMPANY "D" Egerston, James M. Age 19. Residence Iowa City, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" Early, William M. Age 22. Residence Albia, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Sept. 9, 1864; Sixth Corporal Oct. 18, 1864; Fifth Corporal Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Emery, Thomas. Rejected Oct. 12, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Everheart, Benjamin. Age 23. Residence Page County, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal Nov. 30, 1863; Fifth Sergeant Feb. 10, 1864; Third Sergeant Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Ellington, Branch. Age 21. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Emmons, Thomas. Age 36. Residence Iowa City, nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Sergeant Oct. 28, 1863. Died of disease June 9, 1864, Helena, Ark. Ewing, William. Age 18. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" English, Edward. Age 32. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Feb. 7, 1864; First Corporal May 8, 1864, Fifth Sergeant Dec. 7, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ewbank, Andy. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 1, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "H" Edwards, William. Age 20. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Feb. 20, 1865, Sixth Corporal June 24, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Egleston, Samuel. Age 32. Residence Lee County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Jan. 24, 1865. Mustered Jan. 24, 1865. Died of disease May 13, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 322. Egleston, William. Age 18. Residence Lee County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Jan. 24, 1865. Mustered Jan. 24, 1865. Died Aug. 15, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Ewing, David. Age 25. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ewing, Thomas. Age 23. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal May 13, 1864; Seventh Corporal Aug. 13, 1864; Sixth Corporal Aug. 28, 1864; Fifth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ewing. William. Age 19. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Ellington, Jake. Age 18. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Elwood, William. Age 26. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 30, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "K" Edwards, Thomas. Age 19. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. English, Joseph. Age 24. Enlisted Nov. 19, 1864. Mustered Nov. 19, 1864. Died of disease Jan. 10, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "A" Floyd, Daniel . Age 18. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Indiana. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. Ford, Joseph . Age 20. Residence Davenport. Enlisted Dec. 3, 1864. Mustered Dec. 3, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Fairfax, Daniel . Age 25. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Field, William . Age 26. Residence Primrose, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Fleming, John M . Age 24. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 12, 1865, Searcy, Ark. Ford, Morris . Age 22. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Franklin, Lafayette . Age 23. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Dec. 22, 1863; Fifth Sergeant Sept. 16, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Sept. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "D" Flake, William . Age 18. Residence Duquoin,. Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" Furguson, James . Age 25. Residence Ravanna, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability Feb. 5, 1865, Benton Barracks, (St. Louis), Mo. Fields, Miles . Age 22. Residence Albia, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Feb. 10, 1864; Fifth Corporal May 1, 1864; Fourth Corporal Oct. 6, 1864; Second Corporal Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Fine, Alexander E . Age 21. Residence Newton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Flemming, John . Age 20. Enlisted Nov. 9, 1864. Mustered Nov. 9, 1864. Deserted Jan. 5, 1865, Helena, Ark. Ford, William . Age 22. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 8, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for, disability June 10, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Foreman, Absalom . Age 18. Residence Newton. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Franklin, Benjamin . Age 25. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Franklin, Benjamin . Age 26. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863, as First Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Flood, Joseph . Age 18. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 26, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Ford, Ephraim P . Age 21. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. French, Robert . Age 20. Residence Fairfield, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease March 17, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section C, grave 327. COMPANY "I" Filpot, Levi . Age 18. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Fisher, Charles . Age 24. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease April 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Fosey, Joshua . Age 43. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Franklin, Thomas . Age 19. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Farris, Joseph T . Appointed Captain Feb. 10, 1864. Mustered April 1, 1864. Resigned Oct. 11, 1864. Figgins, Jack . Age 18. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. nativity Tama. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. 1863. Mustered out Oct. Foster, John . Age 23. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 28, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Foxwell, Littleton . Age 34. Enlisted Nov. 15, 1864. Mustered Nov. 15, 1864. Died of disease June 26, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 350. Franklin, Joseph . Age 19. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 25, 1863, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "A" Gates, Augustus. Age 37. Residence Summitville, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Nov. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gifford, Charles L. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Goodnough, Joseph A. Age 21. Residence Dublin, Ind., nativity Indiana. Appointed First Lieutenant Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 30, 1863. Transferred to Company I, Dec. 4, 1863. Goss, Jordan. Age 21. Residence Summitville, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Drowned June 30, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "B" Green, Alexander. Age 19. Residence Hannibal, Mo. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Green, Ebsam. Age 18. Residence Primrose, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Green, George W. Age 19. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Green, Wayland. Age 18. Residence Primrose, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Dec. 28, 1863; Sixth Corporal Jan. 9, 1864; Fifth Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Fourth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Greyson, Henry. Age 21. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "C" Gatewood. Silas. Age 18. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 11, 1865, Helena, Ark. Graham, Washington. Age 19. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company K. Gray, Sandy. Age 22. Residence Keokuk, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Green, Henry. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 2, 1865, Helena, Ark. Greenslitt, John. Age 26. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Commissary Sergeant Dec. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and Staff. COMPANY "D" Gardner, Jason. Age 19. Residence Warrenton, Mo. Enlisted July 7, 1864. Mustered July 7, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Guy, Henry. Age 25. Residence Macon City, Mo. Enlisted June 20, 1864. Mustered June 20, 1864. Died of disease Sept. 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "E" Graves, Clement. Age 26. Residence Newton, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 30, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Green, Gabriel. Age 18. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863, as Wagoner. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. Green, Jason. Age 19. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Green, John. Age 35. Residence Newton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Nov. 20, 1863; Third Sergeant Nov. 30, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 4, 1864, Helena, Ark. Green, Taylor. Age 18. Residence Mount Ayr. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gibson, Charles. Age 23. Residence Boonville, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 7, 1864. Mustered Nov. 7, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gordon, Solomon F. Age 19. Residence Newton, nativity Indiana. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Griffin, Craig. Age 36. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Griffin, Jackson. Age 23. Residence Albia, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Gash, General. Age 21. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Dec. 9, 1863; Fourth Corporal March 1, 1864; Third Corporal April 11, 1864; Second Corporal May 28, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Aug. 1, 1864; Fourth Sergeant June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gilmore, Alexander. Age 24. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Oct. 28, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. Green, George. Age 30. Residence Keokuk, nativity Louisiana. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Oct. 28, 1863. Died of disease April 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "G" Gannoway, Archy. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Garnett, Alexander. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Goodwin, William. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Gray, Peter. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Accidentally wounded. Died of wounds Nov. 4, 1863, St. Louis, Mo. Green, Jacob. Age 19. Residence Scott County, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Dec. 26, 1864. Mustered Dec. 26, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Granville, Padon. Age 21. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gray, William. Age 20. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 21, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal March 25, 1864; Fourth Corporal Aug. 13, 1864; Third Corporal Aug. 28, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 29, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "I" Garner, Richard. Age 26. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Goodnough, Joseph A. Age 21. Residence Dublin, Ind., nativity Indiana. Transferred from Company A, as First Lieutenant, Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gordon, Robert. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Jan. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Grey, John. Age 28. Residence Randolph County, Mo., nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 186. Promoted Seventh Corporal Feb. 8, 1864; Sixth Corporal March 7, 1864; Fifth Corporal April 25, 1864; Third Corporal July 23, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Gamble, George. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Gilbert, Sandy. Age 18. Residence Mount Pleasant. Enlisted April 3, 1865. Mustered Aril 3, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865. Devall's Bluff Graham, Washington. Age 19. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1864. Mustered Dec. 4, 1864 Transferred to Company C, Dec. 9, 1864. COMPANY "A" Haines, John. Age 18. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, Samuel. Age 26. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863, 1864, Helena, Ark. Died of disease Feb. 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. Hart, John A. Age 26. Residence Platteville, Wis., nativity Massachusetts. Appointed Captain Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hatton, John. Age 32. Residence Monticello, Mo., Nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal April 25, 1864; Second Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henderson, Thomas. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henning, Henry. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician Feb. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Herndon, Laton E. Age 27. Residence Independence, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 8, 1863, as First Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Higgins, Joseph. Age 28. Residence Cape Girardeau, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hill, Robert. Age 20. Residence Hamilton County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered Jan. 13, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hopson, Moses. Rejected Oct. 12, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Hudson, James. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Haggins, Jackson. Age 19. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician Oct. 20, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hall, George. Age 27. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ham, Albert A. Age 25. Residence Primrose, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Dec. 28, 1863; First Corporal Nov. 1, 1864; Fifth Sergeant June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, Henry. Age 21. Residence Primrose, nativity Kentucky Enlisted. Aug. 15, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Harris, John. Age 39. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harrison, William. Age 25. Mustered Dec. 5, 1864. Deserted Jan. 13, 1865, Helena, Ark. Hawkins, William. Age 20. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863, Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, Nat. Age 38. Residence Scott County, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Herriford, Henry. Age 24. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 22, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 14, 1865, Helena, Ark. Herriford, John. Age 26. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 22, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Dec. 10, 186; Seventh Corporal Dec. 11, 1863; Fifth Corporal Dec. 28, 1863; Fourth Corporal Jan. 9, 1864; Third Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Second Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Howard, Jacob. Age 18. Residence Warren County, nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hubbard, James. Age 20. Residence Linn County, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 27, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Hussey, Charles S. Age 20. Residence Tipton, nativity Maine. Appointed Second Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Lieutenant May 9, 1864. Mustered out April 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. See Company A, Fifth Infantry. COMPANY "C" Harris, Frederic. Age 19. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 12, 1864. Mustered Aug. 12, 1864. Discharged Sept. 1, 1865 Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. (Substitute for John H. Gear.) Harrison, Henry. Age 19. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Wounded. Died of wounds July 29, 1864, Helena, Ark. Hughes, Essex. Age 20. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 7, 186, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. COMPANY "D" Hale, James. Age 18. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Nov. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 26, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Hallock, Almon P. Age 20. Promoted Second Lieutenant of Company D from Sergeant Major Sept. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and. Staff. Hamilton, Theophilus. Age 23. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hamilton, William. Age 30. Residence Davenport, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863, as First Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease July 24, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Harris, Andrew. Age 18. Residence Duquoin, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harrison, William. Age 18. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harrison, William H. Age 20. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Haskett, John. Age 21. Residence Iowa City, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Aug. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff. Ark. Henderson, George. Age 18. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, Jackson. Age 28. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, Sherrod. Age 30. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease July 17, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Herron, Jordon. Age 20. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted April 18, 1864. Mustered June 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Holder, George. Age 18. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician Feb. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Holmes, Solomon. Age 19. Residence Des Moines, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Howard, Sydney. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hutchinson, Robert. Age 45. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863, as Wagoner. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 22, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Hutton, Joseph V. Age 21. Residence Iowa City, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" Hall, Frederick. Age 23. Residence Ravanna, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal Nov. 30, 1863; Third Corporal Feb. 10, 1864, Died of disease March 25, 1864 Helena, Ark. Hart, Samuel. Age 22. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Dishonorably discharged Aug. 5, 1865, Columbus, Ohio. Hays, Anderson. Age 27. Residence Newton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Nov. 30, 1863; Fifth Corporal Feb. 10, 1864; Third Corporal May 1, 1864; Second Corporal Oct. 6, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hays, Henderson. Age 28. Residence Newton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Nov. 30, 1863. Died of disease March 3, 1864, Island Number Sixty-six, Mississippi River. Henry, Benjamin. Age 22. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn. Enlisted Sept. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, Zachariah. Age 28. Residence Albia, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Holloway, Jefferson. Age 28. Residence Eddyville, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hutchison, Isaac. Age 23. Residence Osceola, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Hamilton, Thomas. Age 18. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hanly, Albert. Age 20. Residence Muscatine, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. Harkins, Riley. Age 19. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 20, 1864, Helena, Ark. Hays, John. Age 26. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 24, 1864, Helena, Ark Henderson, George W. Age 26. Residence Iowa City, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, Marshall. Age 30. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Dec. 9, 1863; Sixth Corporal March 1, 1864; Fifth Corporal April 11, 1864; Fourth Corporal May 28, 1864; Third Corporal Aug. 1, 1864, Second Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, James. (No. 1.) Age 30. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, James. (No. 2.) Age 18. Residence Jefferson City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, John. Age 19. Residence Laconia, Ark. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, William L. Age 22. Residence Muscatine, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 9, 1864. Mustered Aug. 9, 1864. Mustered out Aug. 4, 1865, expiration of term of term of service. Henshaw, David. Age 23. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Killed in action July 26, 1864, Big Creek, Ark. Herrington, Samuel. Age 37. Residence Keokuk, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Howard, Henry. Age 18. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Killed in action July 26, 1864, Big Creek. Ark. Howard, Milton. Age 19. Residence Clayton County, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Jan. 21, 1864. Mustered Feb. 11, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Hammond, John. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, Jasper. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, Joseph. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, Thomas. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harvey, Jacob. Age 31. Residence St. Louis,. Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henderson, David. Age 27. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hennason, James. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease April 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. Henry, George. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hester, Isaac. Age 33. Residence Dublin, Ind., nativity Indiana. Appointed Second Lieutenant Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 20, 1863. Dismissed March 9, 1865. Hobson, George H. Age 24. Appointed Second Lieutenant July 3, 1865. Mustered July 3, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hoffman, Charles E. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Germany. Appointed First Lieutenant Nov. 6, 1863. Mustered Nov. 6, 1863. Transferred to Company H, Aug. 17, 1864. Howard, Felix. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff,. Ark. Howard, Thomas. Age 42. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease June 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "H" Hall, William. Age 26. Residence Ashley, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, John. (No. 1.) Age 24. Residence St. Joseph, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, John. (No. 2) Age 31. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hensley, Anderson. Age 19. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hill, Jefferson. Age 27. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hill, Jordon. Age 20. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hoffman, Charles E. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Germany. Transferred from Company G, as First Lieutenant, Aug. 17, 1864. Dismissed May 8, 1865. Holmes, Abram. Age 19. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Howard, George. Age 23. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Aug. 13, 1864; First Corporal Aug. 28, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Hunt, David. Age 19. Residence Jefferson City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Hannan, Smith. Age 27. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Height, George. Age 25. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863, Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Howard, John. Age 28. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 7, 1864; Seventh Corporal April 25, 1864; Sixth Corporal July 20, 1864; Fourth Corporal July 23, 1864; Third Corporal Jan. 7, 1865, Second Corporal March 16, 1865, First Corporal April Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Howell, Henry. Age 23. Residence Paris, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 19, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 5, grave 13. COMPANY "K" Hall, Richard. Age 27. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Dec. 3, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 20, 1864, Helena, Ark. Hannah, Anderson. Age 25. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, James. Age 23. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harris, Robert. Age 21. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease July 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Harrison, Henry. Age 18 Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harrison, John. Age 21. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Harvey, Mark. Age 20. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died Dec. 17, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Hawkins, Henry. Age 26. Residence Jefferson City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 3, 1864. Mustered Nov. 3, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Henry, John. Age 19. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 16, 1864. Deserted Jan. 3, 1865, Helena, Ark. Hopkins, John. Age 17 Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 7, 1864, Helena, Ark. Hutchinson, Preston. Age 30. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Irwin, Frank. Age 20. Residence Ashley, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Jackson, Andrew. Age 20. Residence Galesburg, Ill, nativity Georgia. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 9, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jackson, Jacob. Age 26. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 21, 1861, Helena, Ark. Jackson, Jerry. Age 22. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 22, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Jackson, John. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 19, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jackson, Milo. Age 21. Residence Benton County, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jackson, Peter. Age 21. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jeffers, Kipp B. Age 20. Residence Grinnell, nativity Indiana. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1864. Mustered Sept. 9, 1864. Died of disease Nov. 20, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Bias A. Age 23. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal April 25, 1864. Died of disease Sept. 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Corvin. Age 18. Residence Warren County, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, George. Age 20. Residence Warren County, nativity Ohio. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Harry. Age 21. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Died July 8, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Johnson, Henry. Age 21. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted Dec. 31, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Isaac. Age 35. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 25, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Johnson, Lewis. Age 19; Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 18 63. Promoted Eighth Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Moses. Age 20. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Jan. 14, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Jones, William. Age 18. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal April 25, 1864; Fifth Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jordan, Thomas. Age 21. Residence Natchez, Miss. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Jackson, Charles H. Age 44. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted. Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jones, Henry. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Mustered Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, William. Age 22. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 18, 186 as First Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark., COMPANY "C" Jackson, John. (No. 1.) Age 22. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 5, 1864; Seventh Corporal May 11, 1864; Fifth Corporal Sept. 16, 1864; Fourth Corporal Aug. 8, 1865, Third Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jackson, John. (No. 2,) Age 18. Residence DeWitt, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1864. Mustered Aug. 31, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. James, John. Age 19. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 26, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jenkins, Samuel. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Samuel. (No, 1.) Age 20. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 21, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Samuel. (No. 2.) Age 21. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Zachariah. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Jesse. Age 20. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jones, Joseph. Age 19. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 23, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jones, Lewis. Age 29. Residence Shufordsville, Miss. Enlisted July 25, 1864. Mustered July 25, 1864. Promoted Seventh Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Qually. Age 40. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark COMPANY "D" Jackson, Charles. Age 18. Residence Canton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 27, 1865, Seventh Corporal July 14, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jackson, Perry. Age 38. Residence Millersburg, Mo. Enlisted July 2, 1864. Mustered July 2, 1864. Died Nov. 1, 1865. Buried in National Cemetery, Rock Island, Ill. Jeffers. John. Age 39. Residence Richmond, Va. Enlisted July 2, 1864. Mustered July 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff. Ark. Johnson, Alfred. (No. 1.) Age 23. Residence Iowa City, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Alfred. (No. 2.) Age 20. Residence Davenport, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865. Johnson, Green. Age 18. Residence Galesburg; Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Mitchell. Age 19. Residence Duquion, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Charles. Age 28. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Henry. Age 25. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 8;, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 4, 1864; Sixth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Peter. Age 18. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "E" Jeffries, Hezekiah. Age 28. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Maryland. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Jerry. Age 20. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn. Enlisted Sept. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, John. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, William. Age 26. Residence Ravanna, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Henry. Age 23. Residence Newton, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Nov. 30, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 19, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "F" Jackson, Benjamin. Age 19, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jainer, Nathan. Age 25. Residence Belleville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Seventh Corporal Aug. 10, 1864; Sixth Corporal Feb. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, George. Age 22. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, John. Age 25. Residence Muscatine, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Robert. Age 25. Residence St. Paul, Minn. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Oct. 28, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jordon, Andrew. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Jackson, Andy. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease May 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jackson, Louis. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal Feb. 7, 1864. Died of disease Feb. 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Nelson. Age 24. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Died of disease May 5, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 305. Johnstone, Charles. Age 29. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Jackson, Andrew. Age 23. Residence Portland, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease May 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, George. Age 20. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Henry. Age 24. Residence Washington, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Lawrence. Age 19. Residence Monmouth, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 21, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Lewis. Age 23. Residence Hannibal, Mo. Enlisted Feb. 3, 1865. Mustered Feb. 3, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Daniel. Age 25. Residence Burlington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15i 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, John. Age 20. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 17, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Wesley. Age 30. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Tennessee Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 25, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "I" Johnson, Joseph. Age 18. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Harrison. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jones, Henry. Age 42. Residence Wright City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1864. Mustered Nov. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Jackson, Henr. Age 30. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 18, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jackson, Lewis. Age 22. Residence Saint Charles, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1864. Mustered Nov. 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Jackson, Preston. Age 35. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted First Sergeant Nov. 23, 1864. Reduced to ranks Feb. 11, 1865. Promoted Fifth Corporal March 16, 1865, Third Corporal March 24, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Henry. (No. 1.) Age 24. Residence Keokuk. Enlisted Oct. 15, 1864. Mustered Oct. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Henry. (No. 2.) Age 21. Residence Jacksonville, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Jacob. Age 19. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of. disease June 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. Johnson, Robert. Age 24. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Johnson, Samuel. Age 21. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease March 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Jones, Thomas. Age 35. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1864, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Dec. 8, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" King, Joshua. Age 20. Residence Kewanee, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Knight, Aaron H. Age 22. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Indiana. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Kinselo, John. Age 18. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 1, 1865, Seventh Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Kinslow, James. Age 18. Residence Scott County, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Jan. 14, 1865. Mustered Jan. 14, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Kinton, Samuel R. Age 18. Residence Decatur County, nativity Missouri; Enlisted February 24, 1864. Mustered Feb. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "D" Key, William R. Age 32. Residence Des Moines, nativity District of Columbia. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Transferred to Company I Dec. 19, 1863. Kurts, Augustus. Age 18. Residence Huntsville, Mo. Enlisted July 2, 1864. Mustered July 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" King, Oliver. Age 26. Residence Bedford, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease March 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company I. Kirk, James. Age 24. Residence Jacksonville, Ill., nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 18, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa COMPANY "H" Kinsellow, Frank. Age 20. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Keibo, George. Age 25. Residence Paris, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863, Promoted Second Sergeant Jan. 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Kemp, Franklin. Age 37. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 26, 1863. Mustered; Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Kemp, William. Age 19. Residence Callaway County, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 21, 1863i Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died Dec. 25, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Key, William R. Age 32. Residence Des Moines, nativity District of Columbia. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Sergeant Dec. 9, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company D. King, Oliver. Age 26. Residence Bedford, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company E, Dec. 9, 1863. COMPANY "K" Kertley, John. Age 37 Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal Feb. 15, 1864; Third Corporal April 4, 1864; Second Corporal Dec. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Lawson, Noah. Age 22. Residence Davenport, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 29, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Lee, George. Age 32. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted March 8, 1865, Helena, Ark. Lena, Boyd. Age 30. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Lockridge, William. Age 31. Residence Davenport. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered out May 5, 1865, Davenport, Iowa. (Substitute for Rob Anton.) Lucas, Cain. Age 20. Residence Grinnell, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1864. Mustered Sept. 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Levi, Samuel B. Age 18. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Langford, Finley. Age 18. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted March 11, 1864. Mustered March 11, 1864. Died of disease May 10, 1865, Helena, Ark. Lewis, Robert. Age 34. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Lightle, Henry. Age 26. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Jan. 17, 1864, Seventh Corporal Feb. 5, 1864; Sixth Corporal May 11, 1864; Fourth Corporal Sept. 16, 1864. Discharged for disability June 22, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Lowe, James. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 20, 186, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. COMPANY "D" Langford, Henry. Age 19. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. Mustered Nov. 24, 1863. Died July 3, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 361. Legan, William. Age 20. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Legan, Willis. Age 18. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" Lewis, Capleton. Age 26. Residence Newton. Enlisted Aug. 30, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 14, 1864, Helena, Ark. Lewis, Charles. Age 38. Residence Eddyville, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Lewis, Gerrit. Age 23. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn. Enlisted Sept. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 31, 1864, Helena, Ark. Lewis, John. Age 24. Residence Bedford, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Luckadoo, Enos. Age 29. Residence Knoxville, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Lambert, Alexander. Age 20. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal May 28, 1864; Seventh Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Sixth Corporal Aug. 10, 1864. Discharged for disability Aug. 8, 1865 Lewis, Lafayette. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Lewis, Raymond. Age 32. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability Aug. 3, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Linzy, Albert. Age 22. Residence Dubuque, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 26, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery; Keokuk, Iowa. Lockett, William G. Age 36. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Dec. 9, 1863; Fifth Corporal March 1, 1864; Fourth Corporal April 11, 1864; Third Corporal May 28, 1864; Second Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; First Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Linn, Pinckney. Age 32. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity. Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Livers, Edward. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Lamar, James. Age 19. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Kentucky Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Aug. 28, 1864; Seventh Corporal Sept. a, 1864; Fifth Corporal Jan. 13, 1865, Fourth Corporal Feb. 20, 1865, Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Lawrence, Perry. Age 36. Residence Troy, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease June 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. Leeper, Josiah. Age 27. Residence Washington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863, as Second Sergeant Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Lewis, Clay. Age 18. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Musician Dec. 6, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Lewis, John. Age 19. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Musician Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Lewis, Mason. Age 21. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Logan, Dixon. Age 18. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Long, Gabriel. Age 18 Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 5, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 7, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "K" Lewis, James. Age 19. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 1, 1863, Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Lewis, Robert. Age 24. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 1, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease July 20, 1864, Helena, Ark Lincoln, George. Age 21. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" McCrabb, John. Age 30. Residence Columbus City. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1864. Mustered Nov. 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark McKnight, Jefferson. Age 28. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "B" McCracken, Merritt. Age 28. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" McBride, Hiram. Age 25. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "D" McCormick, Olmstead. Age 21. Residence Iowa City, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 10, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. McCullock, Henry. Age 26. Residence Warrenton, Mo. Enlisted June 27, 1864. Mustered June 27, 1864. Died of disease March 15, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "F" McCoy, Washington. Age 40. Residence Belfast. nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. COMPANY "G" McCoy, Jerry. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Drowned Aug. 21, 1865. COMPANY "H" McAfee, Joseph. Age 21. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1864. Mustered Aug. 15, 1864. Deserted Aug. 20, 1864, Helena, Ark. McAfee. Thomas. Age 20. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1864. Mustered Aug. 15, 1864. Deserted Aug. 20, 1864, Helena, Ark. McClure, Richard. Age 31. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 14, 1864, Helena, Ark. Buried in Mississippi River National Cemetery, Memphis, Tenn. Section 20, grave 3803. McCracken, Henry. Age 21. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. McIntosh, Henry. Age 16. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Aug. 6, 1864; Mustered Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. McKeel, Charles. Age 39. Residence Burlington, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. McPike, Charles. Age 18. Residence Ashley, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 27, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. McPike, Richard. Age 24. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 27, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal March 25, 1864; Third Corporal Aug. 13, J864; Second Corporal Aug. 28, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. McQuiddy, William. Age 19. Residence Rockport, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" McCutchen, Andrew. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 24, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease May 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. McKinney, Scott. Age 35. nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1803. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Mason, George. Age 30. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted Jan. 27, 1865, Helena, Ark. Middleton, Willis. Age 21. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Miles, Amanuel. Age 26. Residence Davenport, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 26, 1863, Helena, Ark. Miller, Thomas. Age 27. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted Jan. 27, 1865, Helena, Ark. Milton, James. Age 18. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 8, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. Moore, Joseph. Age 21. Residence Davenport, nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Moore, Robert. Age 25. Residence Warren County, nativity Tennessee Enlisted Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865, Discharged for disability June 24, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Mosely, David. Age 30. Residence Davenport, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 31, 1864, Helena, Ark Munroe, Horace. Age 18. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 27, 1863. Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. COMPANY "B" Mack, George. Age 23. Residence Dec. County, nativity Tennessee Enlisted Sept. 29, 1864. Mustered Oct. 3, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Madison, James. Age 21. Residence Brunswick, No., nativity Louisiana. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Nov. 21, 1863, Seventh Corporal Dec. 10, 1863; Sixth Corporal Dec. 11, 1863, Fourth Corporal Dec. 28, 1868; Third Corporal Jan. 9, 1864. Second Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; First Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Magruder, James. Age 19. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician March 10, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Matson, Henry. Age 25. Residence Primrose, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 4, 1864, Helena, Ark. Mathews, Henry. Age 22. Residence Randolph, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff; Ark. Matson, Henry. Age 18. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 16, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Meeks, Samuel. Age 20. Residence Denmark, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Nov. 21, 1863; Fourth Sergeant Dec. 10, 1863; First Sergeant July 25, 1864. Mustered oat Oct. 15, 1865. Miller, Olmstead. Age 30. Residence Primrose, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Monroe, Charles W. Age 23. Residence Denmark. Mustered Dec. 31, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Morgan, Albert. Age 18. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Morris, George. Age 18. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Manuel, Julius. Age 20. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Meredith, John. Age 27. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. Mitchell, Thomas. Age 22. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity, Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. Morgan, Charles. Age 18. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died disease March, 1864, Helena, Ark. Mosby, George. Age 21. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 28, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Moss, George W. Age 24. Residence Clinton County, nativity Alabama. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1864. Mustered Sept. 2, 1864. Died Aug. 14, 1865, Cairo, Ill. Buried in National Cemetery, Mound City, Ill. (Representative Recruit for Nathan P. Hubbard.) Motin, Henry. Age 30. Residence Quincy, Ill. nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Myers, James. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863 Died of disease Dec. 21, 1863, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "D" Martin, John. Age 19. Residence Fulton, Mo. Enlisted June 16, 1864. Mustered June 16, 1864. Died of disease July 3, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 363. Meredith, Austin. Age 23. Residence Sparta, Ill. nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct.. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "E" Marshall, Thomas. Age 25. Residence Newton, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Martin, Frank. Age 36. Residence Newton. Enlisted Dec. 9, 1864. Mustered Dec. 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mays, Lewis. Age 18. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mitchell, Samuel. Age 28. Residence Knoxville, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant Nov. 20, 1863; Fourth Sergeant Nov. 30, 1863; Third Sergeant Feb. 10, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Montgomery, Thaddeus. Age 18. Residence Oskaloosa. Enlisted Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Moore, James. Age 21. Residence Osceola, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 14, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "F" Mason, Alfred. Age 27. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn. nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant Oct. 28, 1863; Fourth Sergeant March 1, 1864; Third Sergeant May 28, 1864. Transferred to Company K June 9, 1865. Mason, John. Age 25. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant May 28, 1864. Died of disease July 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Mosely, Cupid. Age 40. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Tennessee Enlisted Oct. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 1, 1864; Seventh Corporal April 11, 1864, Fifth Corporal May 28, 1864; Fourth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864;t Third Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company I. COMPANY "G" Mack, William. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Marion, Frank. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. out Oct. 15, Martin, Hiram. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Martin, Isaac. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mason, John. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Feb. 7, 1864; Fifth Corporal Feb. 19, 1864; Musician April 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, May, Alexander. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Milburn, David. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Miller, William S. Age 24. Residence Monmouth, Ill., nativity Kentucky Transferred from Company H, as First Sergeant, Nov. 28, 1863. Died of disease July 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Miner, Scipio. Age 23. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Moffatt, James. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal Feb. 7, 1864; Third Corporal Feb. 19, 1864; Second Corporal May 8, 1864; First Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; Fifth Sergeant June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Montgomery, Washington. Age 35. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Dropped from rolls May 31, 1865. No further record found. Moore, William. Age 21. Residence Jasper County, nativity Kentucky Enlisted Dec. 21, 1864, Mustered Dec. 21, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Morris, Philip. Age 33. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Miller, William S. Age 24. Residence Monmouth, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Transferred to Company G, Nov. 28, 1863. 61 Montgomery, Jasper. Age 40. Residence Burlington, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Murray, William B. Age 29. Residence Fairfield, nativity Virginia. Appointed Second Lieutenant March 16, 1864. Mustered March 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company B, Fourteenth Infantry. COMPANY "I" Malone, Albert. Age 44. Residence Randolph County, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 6, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Discharged for disability Aug. 18, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Mason, Fort. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Monroe, Sipy A. Age 23. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease March 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. More, Alexander. Age 31. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863, Mustered Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Morgan, James W. Age 20. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Sergeant Major Dec. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and Staff. Morris, William. Age 19. Residence Paris, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Feb. 8, 1864; Fourth Corporal March 7, 1864; Third Corporal April 25, 1864; First Corporal July 23, 1864; Fifth Sergeant March 16, 1865, Fourth Sergeant April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mosely, Cupid. Age 40. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Oct. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company F, Dec. 9, 1863. COMPANY "K" Mansfield, Lewis M. Age 18. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Martin, Robert. Age 18. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease April 9, 1864, Helena, Ark. Martin, William. Age 22. Residence Jefferson City. Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Nov. 21, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mason, Alfred. Age 27. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Transferred from Company F, as First Sergeant, June 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mayweather, George. Age 20. Residence Scott County, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Jan. 26, 1865. Mustered Jan. 26, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Moore, Andy. Age 18 Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 28, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Dec. 24, 1864; Fifth Corporal March 24, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Moore, Charles. Age 22. Residence Scott County, nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Jan. 26, 1865. Mustered Jan. 26, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Moore, Edward. Age 20. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 26, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 26, 1863, Helena, Ark. Morton, Meredith. Age 18 Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease March 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. Mosely, Pleasant. Age 35. Residence Burlington, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Oct. 8, 1864. Mustered Oct. 8, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Mournin, Joseph. Age 19. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease March 12; 1864, Helena, Ark. Muldron, Simon. Age 42. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Feb. 15, 1864; Fifth Corporal April 4, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Murphy, Anderson. Age 22. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 3, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863 Died of disease Dec. 30, 1863, Helena, Ark. Myers, George. Age 20. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Neal, Richard. Age 27. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Neal, Vert. Age 22. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. Nelson, George. Age 26. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Neville, William E. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Quartermaster Sergeant Sept. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and Staff. New, John. Age 21. Residence Delaware County, nativity Tennessee Enlisted Feb. 1, 1864. Mustered Feb. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Nicholas, Austin. Age 22. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 26, 1864, Helena, Ark. Norman, Samuel. Rejected Oct. 12, 1863, by Mustering Officer. COMPANY "B" Nichols, Samuel. Age 20. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Nunn, John. Age 31. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Newman, Lewis. Age 25. Residence Keokuk, nativity Maryland. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Sergeant May 11, 1864. Discharged for disability June 10, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "D" Neal, Primus. Age 21. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 8, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Jan. 1, 1864; Sixth Corporal March 4, 1864; Fourth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Fifth Sergeant March 27, 1865, Fourth Sergeant July 21, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Newbern, William. Age 20. Residence Des Moines, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 26, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E " Nance, Archibald. Age 44. Residence Albia, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 26, 1864, Helena, Ark. Newland, Joseph. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Reduced to ranks Nov. 20, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Nichols, Alexander. Age 29. Residence Newton, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Nov. 30, 1863; Fourth Corporal Feb. 10, 1864; Second Corporal May 1, 1864. Died of disease Oct. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "G" Nelson, Henry. Age 36. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Nicholas, James. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Nelson, George. Age 19. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Nelson, Henry. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease July 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "B" Orrison, James. Age 34. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Olcorn, William H. Age 23. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted July 24, 1864. Mustered July 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Orr, Edward. Age 43. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted. Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Owens, Israel. Age 25. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. Owens, John. Age 22. Residence Qunicy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Sept. 16, 1864. Drowned Feb. 17, 1865. COMPANY "F" Osborn, George W. Age 23. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease May 18, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company I. COMPANY "G" Owens, Alfred. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Osborn, George W. Age 23. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Transferred to Company F, Dec. 9, 1863. Owens, Ned. Age 30. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Paine, Calvin. Age 20. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted Feb. 4, 1865, Helena, Ark. Palmer, Armstead. Age 22. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1863. Mustered April 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Parker, Henry. Age 18. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted Jan. 27, 1865, Helena, Ark. Patton, Hayden. Age 19. Residence Birmingham, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 25, 1864, Helena, Ark. Peach, Walter. Age 26. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Peters, John. Age 25. Residence Cape Girardeau, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Polk, George W. Age 19. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 22, 1864, St. Louis, Mo. Press, Carey. Age 22. Residence Croton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863, as Wagoner. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 28, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. COMPANY "B" Parsons, Anderson. Age 19. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Parsons, Daniel. Age 26. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pempleton, Robert. Age 32. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Porter, Sanford. Age 18. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Prevard, Lewis. Age 25. Residence Denmark, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Parker, James. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician April 22, 1864. Reduced to ranks Feb. 10, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865 Devall's Bluff, Ark. Patten, Adam. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Sergeant May 11, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 27, 1864, Helena, Ark. Buried in Mississippi River National Cemetery, Memphis, Tenn. Section 16, grave 2847 Phillips, John P. Age 24. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease July 24, 1864, Helena, Ark. Phillips, William. Age 27. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Dec. 1, 1863; Third Sergeant May 11, 1864; Second Sergeant Sept. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pierce, Hiram. Age 41. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 22, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Posten, Eli. Age 18. Residence Lyons, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 20, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. Pratt, Lewis. Age 28. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Dec. 22, 1863; Sixth Corporal Jan. 17, 1864; Fifth Corporal Feb. 5, 1864; Fifth Sergeant May 11, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Sept. 16, 1864; Third Sergeant Sept. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pullen, Archy. Age 18. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark, COMPANY "D" Patterson, George W. Age 24. Residence Johnson County, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 4, 1864. Mustered Oct. 4, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Polk, Frank. Age 17. Residence Warrenton, Mo. Enlisted July 7, 1864. Mustered July 7, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pratt, Alfred. Age 24. Residence Des Moines, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 11, 1864, Helena, Ark. Prophet, George P. Age 34. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Prophet, Rolin. Age 26. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company I. COMPANY "E" Phillips, William C. Age 28. Residence Knoxville, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863, as First Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Palmer, Oscar. Age 23. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Patten, William. Age 27. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Oct. 28, 1863; Third Corporal Dec. 9, 1863; Fifth Sergeant March 1, 1864; Fourth Sergeant May 28, 1864; Third Sergeant June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Phelps, Edwin C. Age 29. Appointed Second Lieutenant May 9, 1864. Mustered May 9, 1864. Promoted First Lieutenant of Company H, July 3, 1865. COMPANY "G" Patterson, Benjamin. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Perkins, Charles. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease. Helena, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Helena, Ark. Pierre, Jesse. Age 24. Residence Edinburgh, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Promoted Eighth Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pierson, Franklin. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Musician April 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Poster, Cyrus. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Pare, James W. Age 22. Residence Jefferson City, Mo. Enlisted March 3, 1865. Mustered March 7, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 18635, Devall's Bluff, Ark, Patron, James. Age 21. Residence Memphis, Tenn. Enlisted Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Phelps, Edwin A. Age 29. Promoted First Lieutenant from Second Lieutenant of Company F, July 3, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Porter, Joseph. Age 24. Residence Burlington, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863. Mustered. Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Paine, James. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo. nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov., 17, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Patten. Charles. Age 30. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863; as Third Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Feb. 8, 1864. Died March 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Pernell, Jenkins. Age 28. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal Feb. 8, 1864; Second Corporal March 7, 1864; First Sergeant April 25, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Phillips, Anderson. Age 19. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pitt, Joseph. Age 45. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Pitts, Linsey. Age 18. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Porter, William. Age 31. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Price, Dallas. Age 19. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Jan. 7, 1865, Sixth Corporal Jan. 7, 1865, Fifth Corporal March 16, 1865, Fourth Corporal April 17, 1865. Died-of disease July 16, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Prophet, Rolin. Age 26. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company D, Dec. 9, 1863. COMPANY "K" Parker, Charles H. Age 18. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Pettus, Thomas. Age 19. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died Dec. 18, 1863. Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Phillips, Logan. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 28, 1863, Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Died Dec. 14, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis}, Mo. Powell, Richard. Age 21. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863, Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 15, 1864; Sixth Corporal April 4, 1864; Third Corporal Dec. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Price, Franklin. Age 25. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Feb. 15, 1864; Fifth Sergeant April 4, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Dec. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Price, Lewis. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of, disease April 25, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 292. Pullen. Lewis. Age 21. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863, as. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal July 24, 1864; Fifth Corporal Dec. 24, 1864. Died of disease March 1, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "C" Qualls, James. Age 22. Residence Tallahatchie, Miss. Enlisted Feb. 20, 1865. Mustered Feb. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Riddle, Thomas. Age 20. Residence Davenport, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ross, John. Age 19. Residence Monticello, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 24, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "B" Rashey, Samuel. Age 20. Residence Primrose, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Reese, George. Age 39. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Richards, Samuel. Age 24. Mustered Dec. 13, 1864. Deserted March 3, 1865, Helena, Ark. Richardson, William. Age 18. Residence La Grange, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered, out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roberts, George. Age 27. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863, Died of disease, June 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Robinson, Daniel. Age 18. Residence Lee County, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 29, 1864. Mustered Oct. 3, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roler, John. Age 32. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rucker, John. Age 18. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 22, 186. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 21, 1863, on Steamer "W. L. Ewing." COMPANY "C" Ramsey, Eli. Age 33. Residence Keokuk, nativity Tennessee. Appointed Captain Oct.. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Resigned June 20, 1865. Reed, Thomas. Age 20. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Feb. 6, 1865. Mustered Feb. 6, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Reed, William F. Age 20. Residence Will County, Ill. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Quartermaster Sergeant May 9, 1864. Promoted First Lieutenant Dec. 6, 1864; Adjutant April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and Staff. Rice, Alonzo. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Riddle, Edward. Age 38. Residence Lyons, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 27, 1865, Helena, Ark. Robinson, Taylor. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rogers, Jesse. Age 20. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rogers, Moses. Age 23. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Rools, Wilson. Age 21. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Russell, James. Age 18. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 28, 1864, Helena; Ark. COMPANY "D" Ray, George W. Age 19. Residence Corydon, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 26, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See record in Adjutant General's Office. Riddle, Franklin. Age 18. Residence Warrenton, Mo. Enlisted July 5, 1864. Mustered July 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roberts, Charles M. Age 21. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Sergeant March 27, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roberts, William H. Age 23. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 8, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Sergeant March 27, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Robison, Gabriel. Age 25. Residence Des Moines, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 10, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. COMPANY "E" Reed, Curry. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal May 1, 1864; Seventh Corporal Oct. 6, 1864; Fifth Corporal Oct. 18, 1864; Fourth Corporal Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Reed, Samuel. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rice, Alexander F. Age 35. Residence New London, nativity Indiana. Appointed Second Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Resigned June 5, 1865. See Miscellaneous. Richards, James. Age 24. Residence Osceola, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 18, 1864, Island No. 66, Mississippi River. Richardson, Charles. Age 19. Residence Des Moines. Enlisted Oct. 2 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company I Ricketts, Shadrick. Age 44. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Robison, David H. Age 31. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 10, 1864; Sixth Corporal May 1, 1864; Fifth Corporal Oct. 6, 1864; Third Corporal Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Robison, John R. Age 24. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal May 1, 1864; Sixth Corporal Oct. 6, 1864; Fourth Corporal Oct. 18, 1864; Third Corporal Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Reed; Cassius. Age 18. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Reed, James. Age 19. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Reed, John. Age 18. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal May 28, 1864; Sixth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Fifth Corporal Aug. 10, 1864; Fourth Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Reynolds, Solomon. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Committed suicide Oct. 2, 1865, Jacksonport, Ark. Ricks, George W. Age 26. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease May 25, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 332. Ricks, James T. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863, Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Feb. 7, 1864; Sixth Corporal Feb. 19, 1864; Fifth Corporal April 2, 1864; Fourth Corporal May 8, 1864; Fifth Sergeant July 20, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Sept. 2, 1864; First Sergeant Oct. 1, 1864. Reduced to Second Sergeant March 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ricks, William. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 10, 1864; Seventh Corporal Feb. 19, 1864; Sixth Corporal April 2, 1864; Fifth Corporal May 8, 1864; Fourth Corporal July 20, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Sept. 2, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Oct. 1, 1864; Third Sergeant Dec. 7, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roach, David. Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 12, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease March 29, 1864, Helena, Ark. Robinson, Morton. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Ross, Joseph. Age 42. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. Rutherford, George. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Feb. 7, 1864; Fourth Corporal Feb. 19, 1864; Third Corporal May 8, 1864; Second Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; First Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Reading, David. Age 21 Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Reading, Monroe. Age 21. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Reading, William. Age 20. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Reynolds, Harry. Age 27. Residence Fairfield, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 17, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Jan. 13, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roberts, James. Age 18. Residence Washington, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Robinson, George. Age 20. Residence Baltimore, Md. Enlisted Dec. 19, 1864. Muster. Ed Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865. Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Ray, Robert. Age 21. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Redden, Charles. Age 18. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Richardson, Charles. Age 19. Residence Des Moines. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company E, Dec. 9, 1863. Robenson, Joseph. Age 22. Residence Paris, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 8, 1864; Seventh Corporal March 7, 1864; Sixth Corporal April 25, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rowe, Henry M. Age 19. Residence Cincinnati, Ohio. Enlisted Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rush, James. Age 22. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 27, 1863, Helena, Ark. Russell, Simon P. Age 22 Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal April 25, 1864; Seventh Corporal July 20, 1864; Fifth Corporal July 23, 1864; Fourth Corporal Jan. 7, 1865, Third Corporal March 16, 1865, Second Corporal April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rutherford, Lonz. Age 22. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 23, 1864, Helena, Ark. Ryan, Isaac. Age 18. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Richardson, Henry. Age 18. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Riley, John. Age 20. Residence Marshall, Tenn. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Roberts, Tucker. Age 21. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 28, 1863, Helena, Ark. Robinson, Daniel. Age 22. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Rogers, Carey. Age 45. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Nov. 26, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Saxon, Silas . Age 18. Residence Edina, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician April 25, 1864 Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, Joseph A . Age 36. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 12, 1864, Helena, Ark. Shelby, Nelson . Age 25. Residence Montrose, nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Aug. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Simpson, Henry . Age 21. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 25, 1864, Helena, Ark. Slaughter, William . Age 27. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smiley, Samuel . Age 18. Residence Croton, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863 Died of disease Dec. 26, 1863, Helena, Ark. Smith, Troop . Age 17. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stanford, John H . Age 21. Residence Poweshiek County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Steward, Henry . Age 21. Residence Davenport, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Sergeant April 25, 1864; Second Sergeant Nov. 21, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Strather, Albert . Age 19. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 8, 1864. Mustered Sept. 8, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Sales, William . Age 36. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Oct. 19, 1864, Helena, Ark. Sanders, James . Age 21. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Louisiana. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Sawyer, Iram A . Age 22. Residence Clermont, nativity Vermont. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Sergeant Major May 9, 1864. Resigned May 25, 1865 See Field and Staff; see also Company F, Third Infantry. Shedrick, Samuel . Age 22. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Turner . Age 25. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Smith, William . Age 29. Residence Primrose, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Steward, Isaac . Age 26. Residence Adams County, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Feb. 1, 1864. Mustered Feb. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Steward, William . Age 24. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 12, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company K. Stuart, Dennis . Age 27. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Swanson, Edward . Age 22 Residence Denmark, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Sergeant Dec. 8, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Scott, Walter . Age 22. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 22, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Seymour, Jacob . Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Dec. 22, 1863; Seventh Corporal Jan. 17, 1864; Sixth Corpora, Feb. 5, 1864; Fifth Corporal May 11, 1864; Third Corporal Sept. 15, 1864; Second Corporal Sept. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 11, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Sims, Albert . Age 22. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 26, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Smith, George . Age 18. Residence Lee County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1864. Mustered Aug. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. (Substitute for John Given.) Smith, James . Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Drowned May 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Smith, Samuel . Age 18. Residence Lee County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1864. Mustered Aug. 23, 1864. Died of disease Sept. 14, 1865, Jacksonport, Ark. (Substitute for W. N. Sturges.) Smothers, John . Age 29. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant Dec. 1, 1863; Fourth Sergeant May 11, 1864; Third Sergeant Sept. 16, 1864. Died of disease Sept. 20, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 5, grave 26. Speller, George . Age 18. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Louisiana. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability Aug. 9, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Stanley, Henry. Age 17. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company K. Stewart, William . Age 25. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1863, as First Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Reduced to ranks at his own request Dec. 22, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Sutherland, Joseph . Age 25. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863 Died of disease Jan. 7, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company K. COMPANY "D" Saylor, James . Age 19. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. f9, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, John . Age 26. Residence Iowa City, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 30, 1865. Shannon, Willis . Age 25. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Alabama. Enlisted Sept. 8, 1863, as Eighth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Nov. 20, 1863; Sixth Corporal Jan. 1, 1864; Fifth Corporal March 4, 1864; Third Corporal Aug. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Shelton, Robert . Age 22. Residence Flint Hill, Mo. Enlisted July 5, 1864. Mustered July 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff Ark. Shepherd, Frank . Age 28. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 24, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Smith, George . Age 19. Residence Warrensburg, Mo. Mustered Nov. 30, 1863, Died of disease March 4, 1864, Helena, Ark. Stuart, William C . Age 27. Residence Pella, nativity Illinois. Appointed Captain Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company B, Third Infantry. COMPANY "E" Samuel, Austin . Age 23. Residence Newton, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, William . (No 1.) Age 25. Residence Indianola, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 31, 1864, Helena, Ark. Scott, William . (No. 2.) Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 12, 1864. Mustered Dec. 12, 1864. Promoted Musician Feb. 9, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 1D, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Seigel, Daniel . Age 24. Residence Newton, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Sergeant Nov. 30, 1863; Fourth Sergeant Feb. 10, 1864; Second Sergeant Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Shelton, Alfred . Age 24. Residence Bedford, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Sherer, John . Age 21. Residence Newton, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 30, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stephens, Leroy . Age 25. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stout, Robert F . Age 20. Residence Indianola, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 26, 1865, Jacksonport, Ark. COMPANY "F" Schafers, Jesse . Age 26. Residence. Belleville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, George . Age 17. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 24, 1863, as Drummer. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, Henry . Age 21. Residence Fort Snelling, Minn., nativity Missouri Enlisted Sept. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician Nov. 7, 1863j. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Shedrick, Frank . Age 35. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal April 11, 1864; Sixth Corporal May 28, 1864, Fifth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 9, 1864, Helena, Ark. Sheldon, Smith . Age 22. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Shelton, Thomas . Age 18. Residence Jefferson City, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865. Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Samuel . Age 18. Residence Galesburg Ill., nativity Delaware. Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, William . (No. 2.) Age 20. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Discharged for disability June 13, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. See Company I. Smock, Daniel D . Age 25. Residence Benton County, nativity Indiana. Appointed First Lieutenant March 19, 1864. Mustered March 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company G Thirteenth Infantry. Staley, Frank . Age 18. Enlisted Nov. 16, 1864. Mustered Nov. 16, 1864. Died of disease April 26, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 6, grave 295. Stephens, William . Age 18. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Kentucky Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 1D, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Switzer, Benjamin . Age 26. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Sharp, Samuel Lee . Age 25. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 6, 1864, Helena Ark. Shaw, Allen . Age 25. Residence Sedalia, Mo. Enlisted March 21, 1865. Mustered March 21, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smallwood, Evans . Age 30. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Charles . Age 18. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Lewis . Age 26. Residence Washington, D. C. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Spotzer, Harrison . Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Spotzer, Joseph . Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Feb. 19, 1864; Seventh Corporal April 2, 1864; Sixth Corporal May 8, 1864; Fifth Corporal July 20, 1864; Fourth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864; Third Corporal Dec. 7, 1864; Second Corporal June 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stapleton, Henry . Age 35. Residence St. Louis,. Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Sweeney, Henry . Age 30. Residence Sulphur Springs, Mo., nativity Ireland. Appointed Captain Sept. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Scott, George . Age 27. Residence Franklin, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered Dec. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Shaw, Leander . Age 21. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Sheppard, John . Rejected Nov. 21, 1863, by Mustering Officer . Skinner, Samuel . Age 29. Residence Jonesburg, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 28, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Jan. 14, 1865, Sixth Corporal Feb. 20, 1865. Discharged for disability June 24, 1865. Smith, David . Age 25. Residence Troy, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 13, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stanford, John . Age 19. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Musician Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stanford, Preston . Age 27. Residence Bowling Green, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 20, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal March 25, 1864; Fifth Corporal Aug. 13, 1864; Fourth Corporal Aug. 28, 1864; Third Corporal Sept. 2, 1864, Second Corporal Feb. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Samuels, Henry . Age 21. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 30, 1863, Helena, Ark. Samuels, Silas . Age 19. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, Burrell . Age 20. Enlisted Dec. 20, 1864. Mustered Dec. 2D, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 17, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Simcoe, Enoch . Age 25. Residence Fulton, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered Dec. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Simpson, Sandy . Age 25. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Maryland. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smalley, Sandy A . Age 38. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal March 16, 1865, Sixth Corporal April 17, 1865, Fifth Corporal July 19, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Edwin . Age 21. Residence Davenport. Enlisted Jan. 2, 1865. Mustered Jan. 2, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Henry . Age 18. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died March 2, 1864; St. Louis, Mo. Smith, Nicholas . Age 19. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal July 20, 1864; Sixth Corporal July 23, 1864; Fifth Corporal Jan. 7, 1865, Fourth Corporal March 16, 1865, Third Corporal April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, William . (No. 1.) Age 22. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Feb. 8, 1864; Fifth Corporal March 7, 1864; Fourth Corporal April 25, 1864; Second. Corporal July 23, 1864; First Corporal March 16, 1865, Fifth Sergeant April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, William . (No. 2.) Age 20. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Transferred to Company F, Dec. 9, 1863. Snell, John . Age 19. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 19, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died Jan. 5, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Snowdown, Albert . Age 21. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 25, 1863, Helena, Ark. Steward, George. Age 20. Enlisted Dec. 9, 1864. Mustered. Dec. 9, 1864. Deserted Jan. 14, 1865. Helena, Ark. Stockwell, Ford . Age 28. Residence Bedford, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant Jan. 11, 1865, Third Sergeant April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stuart, Harrison . Age 21. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Switzler, John . Age 23. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Samuels, Henry . Age 40. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Schruggs, Stephen . Age 40. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 22, 1863, as Fifth Sergeant. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Fourth Sergeant April 4, 1864; Third Sergeant Dec. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, Henry . Age 38. Enlisted Aug. 5, 1864. Mustered Aug. 5, 1864. Died of disease April 30, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Scott, Samuel . Age 22. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Scott, William . Age 24. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Smith, Doctor . Age 21. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered. out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff Ark. Smith, Henson . Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Stanley, Henry . Age 17. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Transferred to Company C, Dec. 9, 1863. Stanley, Mingo . Age 24. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 22, 1863, as Wagoner. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863, Died of disease Dec. 24, 1863, Helena, Ark. Steward, William . Age 24. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Transferred to Company B, Dec. 9, 1863. Stone, William B . Age 18. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 25, 1863, Helena, Ark. Surber, Preston . Age 33. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 15, 1864, Helena, Ark. Sutherland, Joseph . Age 25. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Transferred to Company G, Dec. 9, 1863. COMPANY "A" Thompson, Clark. Age 35. Residence Poweshiek County, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Thompson, Dennis. Age 22. Residence Davenport, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Jan. 29, 1864. Mustered Jan. 30, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Thompson, William. Age 21. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Deserted. Thorn, Henry. Age 44. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Delaware. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 6, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. Turpin, Daniel. Age 20. Residence Croton, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 7, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "B" Taits, Burrell. Age 21. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Jan. 27, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Talbott, William T. Age 21. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Nov. 7, 1864; Fifth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tally, Barley. Age 31. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered March 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Taylor, David. Age 38. Enlisted July 17, 1864. Mustered July 17, 1864. Discharged for disability Aug. 25, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Taylor, Grannison. Age 26. Residence Memphis, Tenn. Enlisted July 17, 1864. Mustered July 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Taylor, Virgil. Age 29. Residence Memphis, Tenn. Enlisted July 17, 1864. Mustered July 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865. Devall's Bluff. Ark. Thomas, Robert. Age 20. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Supposed to have been murdered at Searcy, Ark., Thompson, George. Age 20. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 3, 1864, Helena, Ark. Thompson, Henry. Age 25. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Thompson, Madison. Age 21. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. misted Sept. 6, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Dec. 30, 1863, Helena, Ark. Thompson, William. (No. 1.) Age 19. Residence Lee County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 3, 1864. Mustered Aug. 3, 1864. Discharged Aug. 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. (Substitute for Benjamin Cook.) Thompson, William. (No. 2.) Age 18. Residence Johnson County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 6, 1864. Mustered Oct. 6, 1864. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Todd, Levi. Age 18. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability April 6, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Tompkins, Thomas J. Age 20. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Turner, John. Age 23. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Turner, John W. Age 18 Residence Oskaloosa. Mustered Jan. 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "C" Teems, Robert. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865 Devall's Bluff, Ark. Teller, Ralph R. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity New York. Appointed First Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Captain of Company K, Dec. 6, 1864. Thurman, Samuel. Age 22. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tinsley, James. Age 33. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company K. Tisdale, William C. E. Age 26. Residence; DeWitt, nativity Massachusetts. Appointed Second Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Lieutenant of Company D, May 9, 1864. Triplett, Isaac N. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity Wisconsin. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863, as First Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Triplett, Lewis. Age 27. Residence Keokuk, nativity Wisconsin. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Fifth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fourth Corporal Dec. 22, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 31, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "D" Thomas, George. Age 44. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Thomas, John. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 8, 1864, Helena, Ark. Thompson, John. Rejected Oct. 11, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Tisdale, William A. E. Age 26. Residence DeWitt, nativity Massachusetts Promoted First Lieutenant from Second Lieutenant of Company C, May 9, 1864. of detached service of Freedmen's Bureau, to Sept. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 4, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. See Company A, Fifth Infantry. Tolliver, Henry. Age 21. Residence Decatur County, nativity Missouri Enlisted Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tolls, James. Rejected Oct. 11, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Trasper, Henry. Age 41. Residence Iowa City, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Feb. 19, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "E" Tait, William. Age 23. Residence Newton, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 30, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Oct. 18, 1864; Seventh Corporal Feb. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "F" Taylor, Creed. Age 28. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 21, f863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Taylor, Jonas. Age 18 Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease April 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Thompson, Henry. Age 17. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 24, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Thompson, Joseph. Age 18. Residence Duquoin, Ill., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tietsort, Perry A. Age 31. Residence Cassapolis, Mich., nativity Michigan. Appointed Second Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Lieutenant of. Company K, April 28, 1864. Triggs, Alonzo. Age 17. Residence Davenport, nativity Louisiana. Enlisted Aug. 24, 1864. Mustered Aug. 24, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Taylor, James. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died Nov. 3, 1863, St. Louis, Mo. Taylor, John. As 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. l., 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal April 2, 1864; Seventh Corporal May 8, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Thompson, Samuel. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted act. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Taylor, Creed. Age 27. Residence Montgomery, Mo. nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 29, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Taylor, Stewart. Age 25. Residence Fairfield, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 26, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 21, 1863. Died of disease March 1, 1864, Helena, Ark. Todd, George. Age 33. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Taylor, Claibourn. Age 19. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 20, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died Jan. 5, 1864` Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. Tilison, Robert. Age 22. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Triplett, London. Age 30i Residence Keokuk, nativity Wisconsin. Enlisted Aug. 18, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Third Sergeant Jan. 11, 1865, First Sergeant April 17, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Talson, Henry. Age 18. Residence Jefferson City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tate, Daniel. Age 21. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Teller, Ralph R. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity New York. Promoted Captain from First Lieutenant of Company C, Dec. 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company A, Second Infantry Thomas, Henry. Age 34. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 8, 1863. Discharged for disability Aug. 25, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Thurman, Samuel. Age 21. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Jan. 7, 1865, Seventh Corporal-March 24, 1865, Sixth Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tietsort, Perry A. Age 31. Residence Cassapolis, Mich., nativity Michigan. Promoted First Lieutenant from Second Lieutenant of Company F, April 28, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Tinsley, James. Age 33. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1862 Transferred to Company C, Dec. 9, 1863. Turner, James. Age 32. Residence Howard County, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "A" Underwood, Johnson. Age 24. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Corporal April 25, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Nov. 21, 1864. Mustered out Oat. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Valley, Frank. Age 23. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863, Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "H" Vance, John. Age 29. Residence Louisville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864; Sixth Corporal Jan. 13, 1865, Fifth Corporal Feb. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Valle, John. Age 23. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1864. Mustered Nov. 18, 1864. Died Nov. 13, 1865. Buried in National Cemetery, Rock Island, Ill. Venable, William. Age 19. Residence Hannibal, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Died Jan. 1, 1864, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. COMPANY "A" Webster, William H. Age 28. Residence Waterloo, nativity Kentucky Enlisted Sept. 8, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal April 25, 1864; First Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. ; Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wheeler, Jackson. Age 30. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 21, 1864, Helena, Ark. White, William. Age 22. Residence Scott County, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, George. Age 25. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Richard. Age 23. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 14) 1864. Mustered Dec. 14, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, William H. Age 22. Residence Manchester, nativity Iowa. Appointed Second Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted First Lieutenant of Company G, Sept. 19, 1864. Wilson, Joseph B. Age 19. Residence Pottawattamie County, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Jan. 20, 1864. Mustered Jan. 20, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. 88 Wilson, Thomas. Age 21. Residence Galesburg, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal April 25, 1864; Third Corporal Nov. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Walker, Frank. Age 19. Residence Warren County, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, General. Age 26. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, George. Age 19. Residence St. Louis Mo. Enlisted Dec. 30, 1863. Mustered Dec. 30, 1863. Died Dec. 11, 1865. Buried in National Cemetery, Rock Island, Ill. White, Horace. Age 24. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 15, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock Ark, Section 5, grave H. White, Robert. Age 25. Residence Keosauqua, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 19, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died May 18, 1864, Helena, Ark. White, William. Age 28. Residence Brunswick Mo., nativity Kentucky Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Jake. Age 22. Mustered Dec. 13, 1864. Deserted Jan. 13, 1865, Helena, Ark. Williams, William. Age 40. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864, Deserted Jan. 22, 1865, Helena, Ark. Wilson, William. Age 35. Residence LaGrange, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Nov. 21, 1863; Fifth Corporal Dec. 11, 1863; Third Corporal Dec. 28, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 9, 1864, Helena Ark. Winster, Alexander. Age 21. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Dec. 13, 1864. Mustered Dec. 13, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Winters, Persley. Age 18. Residence Chillicothe, Mo. Enlisted March 25, 1864. Mustered April 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Woods, Isaac. Age 43. Mustered Dec. 13, 1864. Died of disease July 29, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Section 5, grave 1. Woodson, Moses. Age 20. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company K. 89 COMPANY "C" Wakefield, Henry. Age 19. Residence Davenport, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1865. Mustered Jan. 4, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Walden, Jackson. Age 42. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. Walter, Edward. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 28, 1864, Helena, Ark. Washington, George. Age 19. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 1, 1863, Keokuk, Iowa. Buried in Oakland Cemetery, Keokuk, Iowa. Washington, John H. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Watson, Benjamin F. Age 18. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo. Enlisted, Dec. 1, 1863. Mustered Dec. 1, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Watts, Henry. Age 21. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wheedon, Washington. Age 20. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark, Wheeler, Hugh T. Age 25. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Tennessee Enlisted Sept. 5, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 17, 1864, Helena, Ark. White, Henry. Age 18. Residence Burlington, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 11, 1864. Mustered Aug. 11, 1864. Discharged Sept. 1, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. (Substitute for Nathan P. Sutherland.) White, Jerry. Age 28. Residence Keokuk, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Third Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Second Corporal Dec. 22, 1863; First Corporal Sept. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wiggins, Josiah. Age 19. Residence Sparta, Ilk, nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wilber, Edward. Age 18. Residence Keokuk. Enlisted Oct. 29, 1864. Mustered Oct. 29, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Dock. Age 18. Residence Mahaska County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 23, 1864. Mustered Aug. 23, 1864. Accidentally killed July 15, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. (Substitute for John W. Jones.) Williams, James. Age 21. Residence Keokuk, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863 Died of disease Dec. 20, 1863, Helena, Ark. Williams, Lewis. Age 23. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williamson, John. Age 29. Residence Des Moines, nativity Arkansas. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1864. Mustered Aug. 29, 1864. Discharged Sept. 12, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. Wilson, Dyer. Age 19. Residence Davenport, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1864. Mustered Sept. 6, 1864. Discharged Sept. 12, 1865, Little Rock, Ark., expiration of term of service. Winsett, William. Age 23. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 2, 1863, as Sixth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Fifth Corporal Dec. 22, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 16, 1864, Helena, Ark. Wood, Philip. Age 30. Residence Davenport, nativity Mississippi. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1865. Mustered Jan. 4, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Woods, William. Age 22. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "D" Waley, Joshua. Age 20. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 12, 1864, Helena,. Ark. Waley, Peter. Age 18. Residence Edina Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Aug. 23, 1864, Helena, Ark. Walker, William. Age 18. Residence Salem, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease May 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Washington, George. Age 18. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, James. Age 17. Residence Canton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1863, as. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Webster, Joseph. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal July 14, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Webster, Samuel. Age 24. Residence Keokuk, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 17, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Seventh Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Sixth Corporal Aug. 10, 1864; Fifth Corporal March 27, 1865 Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Weeden, Perry. Age 18. Residence Keokuk, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wesley, William. Age 25. Residence Iowa City. Enlisted Aug. 5, 1864. Mustered Aug. 5, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wheeler, Stephen. Age 18 Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. White, Griffin. Age 22. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 14, 1863, Benton Barracks (St. Louis), Mo. White, Moses A. Age 36. Residence Newark, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 4, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died Dec. 15, 1863, Benton Barracks (So. Louis), Mo. White, Walter. Age 18. Residence Des Moines, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 20, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wilkinson, James. Age 18. Residence Sparta, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Adam. Age 18. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 3, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. See Company K. Williams, Anthony. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863, as Seventh Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal Nov. 20, 1863; Fifth Corporal Jan. 1, 1864; Fourth Corporal March 4, 1864; Second Corporal Aug. 1, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Thomas T. Age 44. Residence Keokuk, nativity Pennsylvania. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Sergeant March 27, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Winn, Allen. Age 21. Residence Savanna, Mo.`, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Jan. 1, 1864, Seventh Corporal March 4, 1864; Fifth Corporal Aug. 1, 1864; Fourth Corporal March 27, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Winn, Robert. Age 28. Residence Keokuk, nativity Iowa. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wright, David. Age 48. Residence Price's Branch, Mo. Enlisted July 2, 1864. Mustered July 2, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "E" Washington, Reuben. Age 21. Residence Mount Ayr. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wheatley, Lewis. Age 26. Residence Vicksburg, Miss. Enlisted March 27, 1865. Mustered March 27, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Whiteside, Benjamin. Age 25. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Transferred to Company I, Dec. 9, 1863. Williams, George. (No. 1.) Age 25. Residence Bedford. Enlisted Sept. 16, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Williams, George. (No. 2.) Age 19. Residence Venice, Ill. Enlisted Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865. Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, John. Age 28. Residence Washington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1865. Mustered Jan. 16, 1865. Died of disease Sept. 11, 1865, Jacksonport, Ark. Wilson, Jerry. Age 25. Residence Newton, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 13, 1864, Helena, Ark. Wolden, Lilburn. Age 26. Residence Des Moines, nativity Virginia. Enlisted March 4, 1865. Mustered March 4, 1865. Died of disease Sept. 4, 1865, Little Rock Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Wolden, Walker. Age 23. Residence Newton, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Aug. 29, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Woods, Burton. Age 24. Residence Mount Ayr, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 13, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Woodson, Andy. Age 19. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted May 16, 1864. Mustered June 5, 1864. Died of disease Aug. 27, 1864, Helena, Ark. Work, George F. Age 24. Residence Newton, nativity Ohio. Appointed Captain Oct. 11, 1863 Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company B, Fifth Infantry. Work, William G. Age 28. Promoted Second Lieutenant from Quartermaster Sergeant July 7, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Field and Staff. COMPANY "F" Washington, George. Age 20. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Jan. 1, 1865. Mustered Jan. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Weeden, Richard. Age 19. Residence Keokuk, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 22, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Musician April 30, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Welch, George. Age 23. Residence Keokuk, nativity Africa. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863, as Fourth Corporal. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Third Corporal Dec. 8, 1863. Discharged for disability July 21, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Weldon, Benjamin. Age 44. Residence Keokuk, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. West, Robert. Age 32. Residence Belleville, Ill., nativity Illinois. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Discharged for disability Aug. 8, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Williams, Flem. Age 19. Residence Brunswick, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Hanson. Age 19. Residence Sedalia, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered Nov. 17, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wilson, Charles E. Age 29 Residence Springdale, nativity Kansas. Enlisted Aug. 26, 186 3, as Second Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out. Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Winson, Thomas. Age 19. Residence St. Paul, Minn., nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1863. Mustered Oct. I.1, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal June 11, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "G" Walker, William. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863, as Fourth Sergeant. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Promoted Third Sergeant Feb. 7, 1864; Second Sergeant Sept. 2, 1864; First Sergeant March 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, Sprigs. Age 27. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863 Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wheeler, Henry. Age 20. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Frederick. Age 25. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died Jan. 28, 1864, St. Louis, Mo. Williams. Samuel. Age 19. Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Died of disease Feb. 6, 1864, Helena, Ark. Williams, William H. Age 2Z. Residence Manchester, nativity Iowa. Promoted First Lieutenant from Second Lieutenant of Company A, Sept. 19, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company E, Fifth Infantry. Wilson, Lindsey. Age 21 Residence St. Louis, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1863. Mustered Oct. 15, 1863. Deserted Dec. 4, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "H" Wales, Charles. Age 23. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 5, 1864, Helena, Ark. Walker, David. Age 30. Residence Helena, Ark. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Walter, James D. Age 33. Appointed Captain Dec. 1, 1863. Mustered April 6, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Weeks, James R. Age 18. Residence Washington, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Whitney, John. Age 25. Residence Louisville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 22, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wiggs, Sidney. Age 20. Residence Fulton, Mo., nativity Kentucky Enlisted Oct. 22, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, John. Age 18. Residence Burlington, nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal Aug. 13, 1864; Seventh Corporal Aug. 28, 1864; Sixth Corporal Sept. 2, 1864; Fourth Corporal Jan. 13, 1865, Third Corporal Feb. 20, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Joseph. Age 22. Residence Fairfield, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Robert. Age 18. Residence Ottumwa, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Willis, Ellis. Age 28. Residence Louisville, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 30, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease July 10, 1864, Helena, Ark. Willis, Richmond. Age 26. Residence Burlington, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 14, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Discharged for disability June 24, 1865. Wilson, Esau. Age 18. Residence Saint Charles, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 11, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease April 9, 1864, Helena, Ark. Wright, George A. Age 18. Residence Mount Pleasant, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wright, Henry. Age 21. Residence Auburn, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 13, 1863, Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Died of disease June 22, 1864, Helena, Ark. Wright, William. Age 19. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 21, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "I" Washington, Arge. Age 32. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal July 23, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, George. (No. 1.) Age 19. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 18&5, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, George. (No. 2.) Age 24. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, George. (No. 3.) Age 26. Residence St. Louis, Mo. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1864. Mustered Nov. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865. Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, Henry. Age 18. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, Riley. Age 29. Residence Chillicothe, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 18, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Watson, Silas. Age 19. Enlisted Dec. 1, 1863. Mustered April 7, 1864. Discharged June 23, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Weeden, Francis. Rejected Nov. 27, 1863, by Mustering Officer. Whiteside, Benjamin. Age 25. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. See Company E. Wilburn, Burt. Age 30. Residence Des Moines, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered Feb. 29, 1864. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 16, 1865, Seventh Corporal April 17, 1865, Sixth Corporal July 19, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, Louis. Age 18. Residence Keytesville, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wilson, Jackson. Age 34. Residence Burlington. Enlisted Dec. 4, 1864. Mustered Dec. 4, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wilson, Robert. Age 33. Residence Shelbyville, Mo., nativity Missouri Enlisted Oct. 25, 1863. Mustered Nov. 27, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Winfrey, Christopher C. Age 19. Residence Decatur County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Feb. 29, 1864. Mustered Feb. 29, 1864. Died of disease Jan. 14, 1865, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "K" Walker, George. Age 21. Residence Nashville, Tenn. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 16, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Walters, Edward. Age 18. Residence Davenport, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Oct. 17, 1864. Mustered Oct. 18, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Washington, Wesley. Age 30. Residence Davenport, nativity Virginia. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1864. Mustered Sept. 5, 1864. Discharged Sept. 12, 1865, expiration of term of service. Watts, Theothelus. Age 29. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1863, as Third Sergeant. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Sept. 17, 1864, Helena, Ark. Webb, Joseph. Age 18. Residence Keokuk. Enlisted March 1, 1865. Mustered March 10, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Webster, Daniel. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 29, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Eighth Corporal March 24, 1865; Seventh Corporal June 8, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wesley, John. Age 18. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Kentucky. Enlisted Nov. 26, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Died of disease Nov. 25, 1864, Helena, Ark. Williams, Adam. Age 18. Residence Benton Barracks, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Dec. 3, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Transferred to Company D, Dec. 9, 1863. Williams, Albert. Age 19. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 27, 1863, as Second Corporal. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted First Corporal Dec. 23, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, George W. Age 18. Residence Macon City, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 25, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Williams, John. Age 29. Residence New Orleans, La. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Willis, Henry. Age 26. Residence Sedalia, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wilson, Wesley. Age 22. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 26, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal, Feb. 15, 1864; Fourth Corporal April 4, 1864; Fifth Sergeant Dec. 24, 1864; Fourth Sergeant Sept. 1, 1865. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865 Devall's Bluff, Ark. Wittle, Elijah. Age 18. Residence Mexico, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Nov. 28, 1863. Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. Woodson, Moses. Age 20. Residence Warrensburg, Mo., nativity Virginia. Enlisted Nov. 23, 1863., Mustered Dec. 4, 1863. Transferred to Company B, Dec. 9, 1863. COMPANY "A" Yates, Jacob. Age 18. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease June 8, 1865, Little Rock, Ark. Buried in National Cemetery, Little Rock, Ark. Yates, James A. Age 18. Residence Edina, Mo., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Sept. 9, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Sixth Corporal April 25, 1864; Fourth Corporal Nov. 1, 1864, Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "B" Young, George. Age 28. Residence Primrose, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease Jan. 4, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "C" Young, James. Age 43. Residence Quincy, Ill., nativity Missouri. Enlisted Aug. 25, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Died of disease March 2, 1864, Helena, Ark. COMPANY "D" Young, Parsalla H. Age 34. Residence Waupun, Wis., nativity Maine. Appointed First Lieutenant Oct. 11, 1863. Mustered Oct. 11, 1863. Promoted Captain of Company I, May 9, 1864. COMPANY "I" Young, Parsalla H. Age 34. Residence Waupun, Wis., nativity Maine. Promoted Captain from First Lieutenant of Company D, May 9, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. COMPANY "K" Young, Henry. Age 18. Residence Memphis, Tenn. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered Dec. 15, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 15, 1865, Devall's Bluff, Ark. UNASSIGNED RECRUITS. Crump, William. Age 18. Residence Tama County, nativity North Carolina. Enlisted Aug. 31, 1864. Mustered Aug. 31, 1864. No further record found. Payten, Jefferson. Died Nov. 11, 1863. See Cemetery Record, Volume 3,. Roll of Honor, Quartermaster Department, U. S. A., page 160. Smith, Cap. Age 39. Residence Burlington, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted Oct. 6, 1864. Mustered Oct. 8, 1864. Mustered out Oct. 5, 1865, Davenport, Iowa, expiration of term of service. See Record, Adjutant General's Office; Tunnell, Richard. Age 19. Residence Decatur County, nativity Tennessee. Enlisted March 29, 1864. Mustered March 29, 1864. No further record found. Walker, Henry. Age 19. Residence Davenport, nativity South Carolina. Enlisted Jan. 9, 1865. Mustered Jan. 11, 1865. No further record found. Walker, William. Age 22. Residence Scott County, nativity Missouri. Enlisted Jan. 21, 1865. Mustered Jan. 21, 1865, No further record found. Page reformatted July 5, 2018 by Lynn McCleary ==Sources== http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/books/logan/mil718.htm file:///C:/Users/eliza/Downloads/annals-of-iowa-5816-brodnax.pdf https://iowa.minisisinc.com//SCRIPTS/MWIMAIN.DLL/144/COLLECTIONS/WEB_COLLECTIONS_DETAIL_REPORT?SESSIONSEARCH&exp=sisn%2070442 https://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-battle-units-detail.htm?battleUnitCode=UUS0060RI00C

First Regiment of Col Edward Bradley’s Tennessee Volunteer Militia, Infantary

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First Regiment of Col Edward Bradley’s Tennessee Volunteer Militia, Infantary Capt. John Kennedy’s Company. In service from Dec. 10, 1812 to April 20, 1813 (Raised at Monroe TN) '''Officers''' John Kennedy Capt James Harrison 1st Lt Eki Burden 2nd Lt David Matlock Ensign

First Responder

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First Responders - End of Watch

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The End of Watch (Last Call) is a ceremony observed by many first responder agencies (in the United States and Canada) after the death of a member, generally when the death occurred in the line of duty. The radio call is initiated by a dispatcher or senior officer who issues several calls to the fallen, followed by silence, then a call of either 10-7 (Out of Service) or 10-42 (Ending Tour of Duty) depending on the agency, and may also contain a memoriam type message. For examples of these calls, see: *[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkRvfcjKGM4 End of Watch: Police Officer Sean Paul Tuder] ''(Mobile Police Department, Alabama)'' *[https://youtu.be/pLlFF57bXuA End of Watch: Sheriff Deputy Zackari Parrish] ''(Douglas County Sheriff's Office, Colorado)'' *[https://youtu.be/sV3_fmxTAxw?t=50 Last Call: Firefighter Chris Ray] ''(City of Conway Fire Department, South Carolina)''

First Responders - First Responder Qualification

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A first responder is a person with specialized training who is among the first to arrive and provide assistance at the scene of an emergency, such as an accident, natural disaster, or terrorist attack. First responders typically include paramedics, emergency medical technicians, police officers, firefighters, rescuers, and other trained members of organisations connected with this type of work. In some areas, Emergency department personnel are also required to respond to disasters and critical situations making them first responders. For more information, see [[Wikipedia:First_responder]]. The list of First Responders currently recognized by this project include: :'''EMTs''' ''(Emergency Medical Technicians / Paramedics)'' ::This includes all emergency clinicians that are trained to respond to emergency situations, such as *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Medical_Responder Emergency Medical Responders], *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical_technician#Primary_Care_Paramedics Primary Care Paramedics], *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical_technician#Advanced_Care_Paramedics Advanced Care Paramedics] or *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_medical_technician#Critical_Care_Paramedic Critical Care Paramedics]. :'''Firefighters''' ::This includes both [[Wikipedia:Firefighter|professional and volunteer firefighter]] positions. :'''Law Enforcement Officers''' ''(Police Officer, Peace Officer)'' ::This includes all jobs where the primary duty is the [[Wikipedia:Police_officer|enforcement of laws]]. Terms may vary from country to country. :'''Rescuers''' ::This includes all jobs where the primary duty involves [[Wikipedia:Rescuer|rescuing]] someone from harm or danger. These types of jobs often consist of highly trained individuals who are trained in specialty areas, such as: *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_rescue technical rescue], *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diver_rescue diving], or *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrication extrication].

First Responders - Line of Duty Death

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{{End of Watch}}'''Line of Duty Death (LODD)''' is a term commonly used in the United States and other countries, describing the death of a first responder which occured as part of their regular work, or as a result of it. While this term may not be used in all countries, the principal is the same, in that no matter where the first responder lived, they laid down their life in the service of their community in to protect and preserve life, property, evidence, and/or the environment. When a first responder is determined to qualify for a Line of Duty Death as outlined below, please use the [[Template:End of Watch|{{End of Watch}}]] sticker on the profile. While local definitions and inclusion criteria may differ from country to country, and from job to job, this Project focuses on the following for inclusion in WikiTree as a Line of Duty Death: :'''Accidental or Intentional Causes:''' :Any first responder who dies in an accidental or intentional way while in the performance of their job duties, and which ultimately results in their death. Examples include First Responders who are: * involved in a fatal motor vehicle accident while responding to a service call. * shot during the course of a lawful investigation. :'''Natural or Health Causes:''' :Any First Responder who dies of natural or health-related causes (e.g., heart attack, disease, or infection). Examples include First Responders who: * suffers a fatal heart attack due to extreme physical exertion while fighting a fire. * dies due to a duty related contraction of an infectious disease or illness (i.e., Tuberculosis, Hepatitis, Rabies or AIDS). :'''Off Duty Deaths:''' :Any First Responder who dies or is killed off-duty is eligible for inclusion, while: * acting in an official capacity to prevent loss of property, injury, or death; or * is targeted because of their duties (job) as a First Responder. ---- :'''Disqualification:''' :Any First Responder whose death meets one of the following conditions is ineligible for qualification as a Line of Duty Death. A First responder whose death is: *... attributed to alcohol or controlled substance abuse; *... the result of deliberate misconduct; *... intentional (i.e., suicide or assisted suicide); *... the result of gross negligence at time of death; *... the result of an accident that is not directly attributable to a duty related activity; *... the result of any causes while serving as an overseas peacekeeper, government contractor, or while on active-duty assignment with the military; or *... the result of any causes while under the employment of for-profit company (i.e., private investigator).

First Responders - Resources

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This page is designed to facilitate finding information about First Responders, both within WikiTree, and through other available websites/sources. ==Australia== *[[Wikipedia:List_of_Australian_Federal_Police_killed_in_the_line_of_duty]] ==Canada== *[https://www.cfff.ca/EN/fallen.html Canadian Fallen Firefighters Foundation (English)] *[https://www.cfff.ca/FR/fallen.html Canadian Fallen Firefighters Foundation (Français)] ==New Zealand== *[[Wikipedia:List_of_New_Zealand_police_officers_killed_in_the_line_of_duty]] ==United Kingdom== *[[Wikipedia:List_of_British_firefighters_killed_in_the_line_of_duty]] ==United States== *{{ODMP}} *[[Wikipedia:Emergency_workers_killed_in_the_September_11_attacks]] ''(see also: [[Project:9-11]])'' *[https://www.respondersafety.com/Line-Of-Duty-Deaths-LODD/Default.aspx Emergency Responder Safety Institute] *[https://www.joinipsa.org/2019-LODDs International Public Safety Association (2019 LODDs)] *[[Wikipedia:List_of_law_enforcement_officers_killed_in_the_line_of_duty_in_the_United_States]]

First Statistical Account of Scotland

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The First Statistical Account of Scotland

FirstFishers

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FirstFishers.png
:[[Fisher-725|John Fisher (1647-1686)]] :[[Hindle-16|Margaret (Hindle) Fisher (1657-1689)]] '''John and Margaret Fisher of Lancashire, Philadelphia and Delaware'''[[#RN1|RN1]] John and Margaret (Hindle [[#RN2|RN2]]) Fisher have been studied thoroughly.Fisher, Jackie L. 2010. ''The First Fishers of Pennsylvania and Adjacent Colonies, 1650 - 1747''. Self-published, Wimberley, Texas. Digital copy available at cephasfisher.net [http://www.cephasfisher.net/FirstFishersofPA.pdf]. Smith, Anna Wharton. 1896. ''Genealogy of the Fisher family, 1682 to 1896''. Philadelphia: [publisher not identified]. Digital copy available at archives.org[https://archive.org/details/genealogyoffishe00smit].Lewis, John Frederick. 1934. ''The history of an old Philadelphia land title: 208 South Fourth street''. Philadelphia: [Printed by Patterson & White Co.]. p. 38-48. Digital copy available at hathitrust.org [http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/2853205.html]. Turner, C.H.B., ''Some Records of Sussex County, Delaware''. 1909, Allen, Lane & Scott, Philadelphia, PA. Digital copy available at archive.org [https://archive.org/details/cu31924028865520/page/n6]. Many of the sources for their family records (and secondary studies) are given in a free-space profile which an be accessed [[Space:Notes_JLFisher| here]]. It should be noted that the availability of primary records has improved greatly since some of the early studies of this family were published, and with sufficient attention a greatly improved picture of their lives and ancestry could probably be developed. [[#RN1|RN1]] It has been claimed that John and Margaret Fisher came from Clitheroe in Lancashire, immigrating to Pennsylvania aboard the “Welcome” with William Penn on his first voyage to America in 1682.[[#RN3|RN3]] Their marriage record has never been found, either in the Quaker records or in the parish records of England. Margaret is generally assumed to be a daughter of Bryan Hindle and sister of John Hindle, although this is an assumption based upon her son Thomas Fisher’s will, which mentions his Uncle John Hindle, son of Bryan. The Fishers were among the original purchasers of proprietary land from William Penn. John Fisher was a glazier (and possibly ship-builder) from Clitheroe, Lancashire, England. Old land surveys show two of John Fisher’s town lots in the city of Philadelphia. John served on a Philadelphia jury in 1683 (which unfortunately convicted Margaret Matson as a witch). He appears in the Quaker records of Philadelphia. But he had some sort of falling-out with the Philadelphia Quakers, and soon moved about a hundred miles southward, to his land grant in Sussex County which he had obtained from William Penn in 1682. The estates were called “Fisher’s Island” (actually a marshy area on the mainland). The Fishers were located on the south side of the mouth of Broad Creek, on the Atlantic coast. The family later had additional holdings in Kent County. Six children of John and Margaret Fisher are mentioned in John’s will, probated at Georgetown, Sussex County, in 1685. The will names eldest son Thomas and other sons John and James; daughters Rachell, Sarah, Allis (youngest) and Annie Adkins (wife of Samuel). The will also mentions Thomas Scott. Executors were son Thomas and wife Margaret. Witnesses were William Emmott, Richard Coore and Anna Dougdull. Thomas was probably close to age 30 when he married Margery Maud in 1692. Known children of Thomas are Jabez, Joshua, James, Margaret, Elizabeth, Margery and Esther. John married Elizabeth --; their known children are John, James, William, and Ann. James had a wife Katherine and daughter Sarah, and probably had other heirs. Of the immigrant daughters, we know that Ann (Annie) married Samuel Adkins, a glover and merchant of Philadelphia. We know nothing of the other daughters, except that they “died young.” Samuel Atkins has been reported to be the one in London who was secretary to the famous diary author Samuel Pepys. An anonymous manuscript in the Pennsylvania Genealogical Society claims a lineage for John Fisher in Lancashire and Westmoreland, proposing that John was the second son of Nicholas and Elizabeth (Brockholes) Fisher, born in 1646 in Kentmere, Lancashire. ==Sources== ===Research Notes === '''Research Note 1. Preliminary Remarks,''' When I first found John Fisher's profile my initial impression was that it was a jumble of questionable merges and that a couple of hours of work would put it straight. Several days later I came to understand that it was not a jumble of merges, but rather it was an untidy collection of life events of a single person presented in no particular order. As I was attempting to bring order to the chaos, I discovered Fisher's ''The First Fishers of Pennsylvania.'' Of particular interest is the section entitled ''John and Margaret Fisher of Lancashire, Philadelphia and Delaware'' (pages 22-27). In an effort to discover his own antecedents, Fisher investigated the genealogy and origin of a dozen or more early Fisher immigrants to Pennsylvania and its immediate surroundings. This particular section presents the results of Fisher's study for our principal and his wife. The section consists of two parts. The first part is a short (single page) biography and the remaining five pages of the section are Fisher's notes. In the first paragraph of the biography Fisher notes ''that the availability of primary records has improved greatly since some of the early studies of this family were published'' and suggests that this will lead to better understanding of the genealogy of John Fisher and his family. Twelve years on, and it is apparent that not only has this trend continued but has accelerated. When I compared my notes from my attempts to verify "facts" presented in the original profile with Fisher's notes it first becomes clear that my notes are a subset of Fisher's notes, and second, what little new I have added are sources for digital copies of the various documents. Another item to note is that Fisher gives permission to reproduce ''The First Fishers of Pennsylvania.'' With this in mind I have reworked this profile. In this process I see myself as an editor/annotator. I have used Fisher's biography on page 22 in Ref. as a starting point. In its present form it does not meet Wikitree standards. I have edited the biography so that it does meet Wikitree standards, principally be citing sources. The types of modification that I have made can be seen in the first paragraph. First, of course, I cited sources, and were possible, include sources (preferably free) for digital copies. The second type of edit again stems from change of media, instead of placing Fisher's notes below the biography, I have placed them in a free-space profile named JLFisherNotes, this is reflected in the changes found in the second sentence. My personal comments will be made in the form of Research Notes such as this one. And finally, on the subject of transcripts of primary documents, when I quote from a scripted source, my goal is readability, not "authenticity." For example, script documents from the 17th century use the double f (ff) as a capital F. In my opinion the use of "F" instead of "ff" are improves the readability. Another set of examples are abbreviations; In 17th century written English abbreviations abounded. Consider the phrase "the sd Scott." Here sd is an abbreviation of said. Again, it is my opinion that using said instead of the contraction improves readability. This example also raises the question of the use of superscripts. The above discussion demonstrates that use of superscripts is possible on Wikitree, but again it is my opinion that writing ye instead of ye improves the readability. Another set issues concern are archaic spellings (doe for do) and archaic words (ye for the). And again, the use of the modern spelling and the modern word improves the readability. '''Research Note 2. John Fisher's Wife: Margaret Hindle.''' John Fisher's wife's given name is found in numerous sources. The most convincing being John Fisher's Last Will and Testament. Here John Fisher twice refers to his wife as "my well beloved wife Margaret Fisher." Margaret's maiden name is more difficult. It has not been passed down in the Fisher family records. Instead we are left to deduce her maiden names from other records. Thomas Fisher, John and Margaret Fisher's eldest son, provides a clue in his will. The sixth item in [[Fisher-2473|Thomas Fisher's]] will is reproduce below:
''Item — I give and bequeath unto my sons and daughters, that house, land and appurtenances which was left to me by my uncle, John Hindle, the son of Bryan Hindle of Cletheroh, to be equally divided between them their heirs and assigns, excepting my loving wife Margery Fisher her Thirds therein, whom I give full power, as if I were personally present to employ attorney or attorneys one or more under her as is lawful for the division of the said house land and appurtenances for the use of aforesaid.''
Thomas is John and Margaret Fisher's eldest son. Thomas' uncle John Hindle could be his mother's brother, in which case, his mother's maiden name would be Hindle. On the other hand, his uncle could be the husband of Thomas' father's sister, which gives us no information concern Margaret's maiden name. Another scenario is that Bryan and Margaret are brother and sister and that they have marry another brother/sister pair, that is, John Fisher and his unnamed sister. The evidence is not sufficient to determine Margaret Fisher's maiden name. '''Research Note 3. Immigration .''' According to Fisher family tradition, John Fisher with his family arrived in Philadelphia on the first voyage of William Penn's ship "Welcome." According to the [https://www.welcomesociety.org/ ''The Welcome Society of Pennsylvania''] John Fisher and party did not arrive with Wm. Penn on the Welcome but rather may have arrived on the Lamb. ::Egle, William Henry. 1976. ''Early Pennsylvania land records: minutes of the Board of Property of the province of Pennsylvania''. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Pub. Co. : Originally published as volume XIX, second series, Pennsylvania Archives, Harrisburg, 1893. ::Genealogical Publishing Company. 2000.''1600s - 1800s : immigration records''. Genealogy.com. Available at Family History Library. ::The Welcome Society of Pennsylvania. '"Ancestors", database ''Welcome Society'' (https://www.welcomesociety.org/ancestors.html : 3 Apr 2022) ::Tepper, Michael. 1988. ''New World immigrants: a consolidation of ship passenger lists and associated data from periodical literature''. Baltimore, Md: Genealogical Pub. Co. Digital copy available for search only at ''Hathitrust''. [http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/17986715.html] ::McCracken, George Englert. 1979. ''The Welcome claimants proved, disproved and doubtful with an account of some of their descendants''. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co.: digital copy available at Google Books. [http://books.google.com/books?id=M-V4AAAAMAAJ]. *U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s ::Name: John Fisher; ::Arrival Year: 1682; ::Arrival Place: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; ::Primary Immigrant: Fisher, John; ::Family Members: :::Wife: Margaret; :::Son: John: ::Source Publication Code: 9143; :Covers 27,500 immigrants from the years 1618-1878, with excellent index. Similar lists are in Boyer, nos. 0702, 0714, 0717, and 0720. ::Source: Tepper, Michael, editor. ''New World Immigrants: A Consolidation of Ship Passenger Lists and Associated Data from Periodical Literature''. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1979. 568p. and 602p. Repr. 1980. Vol. 1.Household Members '''Research Note 20. John Fisher's Last Will and Testament.'''
:In the name of God Amen. I, John Fisher of Sussex County in the Territories of Pennsylvania, being sick and weak but of sound and perfect memory, have here in this my Last Will and Testament given and bequeathed all my worldly estate as follows: :First, I give unto Thomas Scott fifty acres of land out of that dividend of land which I bought of Roger Gum in Sussex County always provided the said Scott do come to live upon it himself but not to dispose of it or sell it to any person. :I give unto my well beloved wife Margaret Fisher, one third part of my moveable Estate as goods, chattels, debts, in what nature so ever and also one third part of all my lands houses & tenements during her life, but the said third part not to be taken out of my Estate until my younger daughter Alice comes at age. :I give unto my eldest son Thomas Fisher, three hundred acres of land lying behind the ScooleKill near Philadelphia and to his heirs and assignees forever, but not to be sold until my youngest daughter Alice come of age, except my wife Margaret Fisher and my son Thomas both see it convenient, she having her third part in it during her life. I give and bequeath unto my three sons Thomas, John and James Fisher their heirs and assignees forever seven hundred acres of land lying in Sussex County, their mother’s third excepted, during her life, but not to be equally shared until my youngest daughter Alice comes at age, the said seven hundred acres of land lying as follows, vis. five hundred acres of land that I bought of Roger Gum and two hundred acres out of that dividend of land that I bought of Henry Stretcher. :I give and bequeath unto my children viz: Thomas, John and James Fisher, Rachel, Sarah and Alice Fisher their heirs and assignees forever, the other two third parts of my moveable estate as goods, chattels, servants, debts, houses in Philadelphia, lots or other tenements not already given and to be equally shared amongst these six children, the daughters to have as good a share as the sons but not to be shared nor divided until my youngest daughter Alice Fisher come at age. I give unto my daughter Annie, the wife of Samuel Adkins, five shillings within one year after my decease, but if my daughter Annie should come to want or poverty or other ways constrained by the unkindness of her husband, so that she come to want that then it is my will she shall have a maintenance amongst the rest. :Lastly I ordain constitute and appoint my beloved wife Margaret Fisher and my eldest son Thomas Fisher to be my executrix and executor jointly to administer of all & singular of this my estate And to dispose thereof according as it is expressed in this my last will & testament and also to take care of the rest of my children until they come to lawful age and that neither my wife nor my son Thomas shall at any time act or do anything touching the managing of this my estate without the joint consent of both if it please God that they both live until the expiration and finishing thereof as witness my hand and seal this sixth day of the twelfth month one thousand six hundred eighty five. :Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of us Wm Emmett, Richard (mark R C ) Coore, Ann (mark ?) Dougdull. (Probate Reg. Sussex County, p. 95). Signed John Fisher (Seal). Letters :Testamentary were granted to Margaret Fisher and Thomas Fisher by Wm. Clark, deputy register of the counties of Sussex and Kent 2/30/1686.''
'''Research Note: Land records.''' Two type of transactions of which we make note. The first is the initial purchase of the land from the state. The second type is the subsequent transfer of ownership from one private individual to another. Consider the first type of transaction. Five basic documents are generated in a typical land transaction of this type. These are Application, Warrant, Survey, Return, and Patent. Initially, the Application to initiate a land purchase was very informal, subsequently, the process was formalized. The Warrant, which is issued by the Secretary of the Land Office in response to the Application, is a certificate authorizing the Surveyor General to survey of a tract of land. The Survey is a result of the Warrant. The Return is an internal document sent from Surveyor General to Secretary of the Land Office with a description of property boundaries. The Secretary of the Land Office then issues a Patent for the land. John Fisher is reputed to have arrived in the new world in 24th of October, 1682 and died shortly after preparing his will on the 6th of February, 1685/6. His will was probated on the 30th of April, 1685. In this time frame the initial Application was not recorded. It was probably made orally. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has made of Land Record Indices available online. These can be found at [https://www.phmc.pa.gov/Archives/Research-Online/Pages/Land-Records-Indices.aspx] Pre-1733 Land Record Indexes :Pennsylvania, Surveyor General. 1976. ''Original surveys, 1682-1920''. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (1006501). * Old Rights Index: Bucks and Chester Counties - Index to warrants, surveys and returns filed for lands in Bucks and Chester Counties, generally prior to 1733 [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-78OldRightsIndexBucksChester/r17-78MainInterface.htm] :::'''Old Rights Index for Bucks and Chester counties, 1682-1740. {series #17.78}''' :::Bucks County Index - Yields no hits on either Fisher or Fish. :::Chester County index - Yields three hits [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-78OldRightsIndexBucksChester/r17-78OldRightsIndxChester%2030.pdf] on either FIsher or Fish. These are shown in the following table. :::{|border="3" style="text-align:center" |Number||Name||Type||Acres||Date|| (Bk. Vol. Pg.) |- |F17||John Fish||Warrant||250||23 Nov 1682*||(D80-272) |- |F21||John Fisher||Draft||300||24 Mar 1684||(D80-275) |- |F23||John Fisher||Draft||300|| ||(D80-277) |} :::F17: Warrant issued to John Fish, 27 Nov 1682, ''Old Rights Index, Chester County, 1682-1740 {series #17.78}'', p.50, Warrant#F17. Records of the Land Office, Record Group 17, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; digital images, ''Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission'' (http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-78OldRightsIndexBucksChester/r17-78OldRightsIndxChester%2030.pdf : 28 Mar 2022); warrant for 250 acres, dated 27 Nov 1682 (Bk. D, Vol. 80, Pg. 272). :::F21: Warrant issued to John Fisher, 24 Mar 1684, ''Old Rights Index, Chester County, 1682-1740 {series #17.78}'', p.50, Warrant#F21. Records of the Land Office, Record Group 17, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; digital images, ''Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission'' (http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-78OldRightsIndexBucksChester/r17-78OldRightsIndxChester%2030.pdf : 28 Mar 2022); draft warrant for 300 acres, dated 24 Mar 1684 (Bk. D, Vol. 80, Pg. 275). :::F23: Warrant issued to John Fisher, no date, ''Old Rights Index, Chester County, 1682-1740 {series #17.78}'', p.50, Warrant#F21. Records of the Land Office, Record Group 17, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; digital images, ''Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission'' (http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-78OldRightsIndexBucksChester/r17-78OldRightsIndxChester%2030.pdf : 28 Mar 2022); draft warrant for 300 acres, no date (Bk. D, Vol. 80, Pg. 277). * Original Purchases Register - Register of Original Purchasers of rights to land in Pennsylvania who bought land directly from William Penn [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-83OriginalPurchases/r17-83OriginalPurchMainInterface.htm] :::'''Original Purchase Register, 1682-1762. {series #17.83}''' :::Yields two hits. The first for Joseph Fisher.[http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-83OriginalPurchases/r17-83OriginalPurchReg%2052.pdf] He made extensive purchases from Wm. Penn. The second is John Fish, who made a single purchase. [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-83OriginalPurchases/r17-83OriginalPurchReg%2054.pdf] :::{|border="3" style="text-align:center" |Purchaser||Acres||Grantee||Date of Warrant||Number |- |John Fish||250||himself||23 Jan 1682*||F17 |} :::* The date on the actual document is 23d 11m 1682. This is an old style date and thus it translates to 23 Jan 1682/3, this is to be read as 23 Jan 1682 (OS) or 23 Jan 1683 (NS). * Patent Indexes - Index to land records by name of patentee, 1684-1957 [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17PatentIndexes/r17-PatentIndexMainInterface.htm] :::'''Patent Index, A and AA Series, 1684-1781. {series #17.147}''' :::Of interest to us is Series A Number 1 Feb 1683 - Jan 1693 [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17PatentIndexes/A-AAPatentIndex86.pdf] :::A search on Fish and Fisher yields three hits on Joseph Fisher.[http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17PatentIndexes/A-AAPatentIndex86.pdf] * Philadelphia Old Rights (Index) - Index to warrants, surveys and returns filed for lands in Philadelphia County, generally prior to 1733 [http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/rg/di/r17-79OldRightsIndexPhila/r17-79OldRightsPhilaInterface.htm] :::'''Philadelphia Old Rights (Index), 1682-1745. {series #17.79}''' :::A search on Fish and Fisher in the correct time frame yields five hits. These are shown in the following table. :::{|border="3" style="text-align:center" |Number||Name||Type||Acres||Date|| (Bk. Vol. Pg.)||29 |- |F758||Joseph Fisher||Draft||front lot|| ||(B22-179)||31 |- |F815||Joseph Fisher||return||5062|| ||(D75-19)||31 |- |F821||Joseph Fisher||Warrant||11400||14 Feb 1683||(D71-15)||31 |- |F841||William Fisher||Warrant||500||25 Nov 1685||(D75-18)||32 |- |F865||John Fish||Warrant||city lot||21 Feb 1683||(D71-16)||33 |} Pennsylvania. Thomas E. Slattery, and Charles E. Hughes. 1962. ''Warrants and surveys of the province of Pennsylvania, 1682-1759: transcribed from the records of the Surveyor General's and Proprietaries Secretary's offices by John Hughes, recorder of warrants and surveys under the Act of Assembly July 7, 1759; with a guide to the books and index, an historical background and a copy of the Act''. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. Department of Records. Digital copy available at ''FamilySearch'' [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/376582-warrants-and-surveys-of-the-province-of-pennsylvania-including-the-three-lower-counties-1759] From the ''WorldCat'': :A short description of contents of each volume from the Guide: ::Vol. 1: surveys of "Old Rights" for the City and County of Philadelphia with scattered surveys for Bucks and Chester counties. Entries correspond to numbering and alphabetical arrangement in the Pennsylvania Archives, third serie, v. 2-3; but only letters F-H and P-S are given. ::Vol. 2: Philadelphia City 1682-1692 and Philadelphia City new returns 1735-1759; also some scattered returns for Philadelphia, Bucks, Chester, and Lancaster counties. ::Vol. 3: General returns and papers of the Society of Free Traders; contains entries for City and County of Philadelphia and counties of Bucks, Chester, Kent and Newcastle for 1682-1698. ::Vol. 4: Copies of the Surveyor General's returns for 1700; contains entries for City and County of Philadelphia and counties of Bucks, Chester, Kent and Newcastle. ::Vol. 5: Copies of the Surveyor General's returns for Oct. 20, 1733; contains entries for City and County of Philadelphia and counties of Bucks, Chester, Kent, Lancaster, Newcastle, and Sussex. ::Vol. 6: Philadelphia County 1684-1713 and Bucks County new returns 1734-1758. ::Vol. 7: General returns 1735-1741 contains entries for City and County of Philadelphia and counties of Bucks, Chester, Kent, Lancaster, Newcastle and Sussex. ::Vol. 8: General returns 1752-1759 contains entries for City and County of Philadelphia and counties of Berks, Bucks, Chester, Cumberland, Kent, Lancaster, Newcastle, Northampton, and York and for the towns of Carlisle, Easton, Reading and Yorktown. ::Vol. 9: Philadelphia County new returns 1734-1758. Searching "Warrants and surveys of the province of Pennsylvania" for the surname Fisher yields seven hits out of a possible thirteen. Fishers are found in the following political units: Philadelphia County, Philadelphia City, Berks, Town of Reading, Bucks, Lancaster, and Chester. Selecting out from these hits those associated with our John Fisher is relatively easy. John Fisher arrived in the new world in the fall of 1682 and he died in in the spring of 1685/86. Four entries match our requirements are listed in the following table. ::{|border="3" style="text-align:center" |Location||Year||Book||Page |- |Philadelphia County||1683||VI||31 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||II||29 |- |Philadelphia City||1684||II||46 |- |Philadelphia City||1684||II||47 |} Consider the remaining Fishers. Who among these are John's contemporaries? There are two who met the requirements. Between them they they are associated with seven warrant/surveys. These are listed in the following ::{|border="3" style="text-align:center" |Location||Name||Year||Book||Page |- |Philadelphia County||William||1685||I||592 |- |Philadelphia County||Joseph||1682||III||592 |- |Philadelphia County||Joseph||1684||VI||28/32 |- |Philadelphia City||Joseph||1683||I||351 |- |Philadelphia City||Joseph||1683||I||367 |- |Philadelphia City||Joseph||1684||lot 67||Delaware High Street Lot |- |Philadelphia City||Joseph||1684||II||46 |} It is worthwhile to search on "FIsh, John". This gives hits in two different political divisions, Philadelphia County and Philadelphia City. We list these in the following table. Note that all of John Fish's warrants/surveys fall within John FIsher's time frame (1682-1685). Is John Fish a pseudonym for John Fisher? ::{|border="3" style="text-align:center" |Location||Year||Book||Page |- |Philadelphia County||1684||III||585 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||I||363 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||III||223 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||Lot 110||Delaware Back Lot |- |Philadelphia City||1683||Lot 19||Delaware Back Lot |} Land Records and Court Records of Pennsylvania Transcripts of Old Rights Warrants, 1682-1732 {series 17.74} :Loose original warrants for land granted in Pennsylvania under the Proprietary government. Information generally given is the date of the warrant, warrant number, name of warrantee, name of county, acreage warranted, location, a recitation of any descent of title, and whether any improvements were made on the land. Occasionally also found is information on whether the warrant was issued as a result of a re-survey or was a warrant to accept a survey. Most of the warrants for the 1682-1732 period were copied into the Transcripts of Old Rights Warrants, 1682-1732 {series 17.74} (volumes D-91 through D-114, B-22, and B-23). Copied Surveys, 1681-1912. {series #17.114} :::Pennsylvania. Surveyor General. 1976. ''Original surveys, 1682-1920''. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah. LDS Film 1006501 Pa Warrants and Surveys. :D80-272 John Fisher 1682 Sale 250a Headland 250 a Warrant. Wife, 1 son, 2 svts. On Schulkill. {{Image|file=FirstFishers.png |align=l |size=s |caption=Here's an image. }} :D80-276 John Fisher’s return of survey, Radnor 300a. :D80-278 John Fisher Radnor 300a Survey. LDS Film 0986897 Pa. Old Rights Index :Fish, John Warrant 250a Apr 12 1683 D80 274. :Fisher, John Draft 300a Mar 24 1684 D80 275 (Prob. NE Corner of Radnor Twp, Chester Co. near Schulkyl) :Fisher, John Draft 300a – D80 277 :::Sussex County (Del.). County Recorder. 1948. ''Deed records of Sussex County, Delaware, 1693-1886; general index, 1682-1949''. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (FHL Film 006625). :This film contains informative deeds in reference to the children of John and Margaret Fisher, including mention of James Fisher’s decease, his wife Catharine and daughter Sarah. See Fisher, Jackie L. ''Descendants and Ancestors of Cephas Fisher Jr. (1812-1895) of Henry County, Iowa and Allied Families''. Seabrook, Tex.: J.L. Fisher, 1996. Print. LDS FHL Film 567014 :A. C. Myers notes on immigrants to Pa. 1683 7m 19 Margie Smith of Schuylkill Chester Co., sold to John Fisher a lot in city of Philadelphia being for 500 a. of land purchased in England. Phil. Deeds E-2. p. 12 Edmund Cartlidge’s deed granting his Phil. Lots to John Fisher dated Phi. 7m Sep. 10, 1683. Pennsylvania Warrants & Surveys By warrant dated 21 of 1st mo. 1683, surveyed 28 of 1 mo. 1683, to John Fisher, purchaser of 250 acres, bounded on north by Walnut Street, west by Robert Holgate, east by 3rd Street, No. 115 Thomas Holme 4m 5, 1684 Phila. By warrant from Wm. Penn 1m 21, 1683 to John Fisher purchaser of 250 a. N. Walnut St. Widd. Fisher 7m 27 1688 By virtue of a warrant 2 of 5 mo. 1683, surveyed 14 of 5 mo. 1683, lot in city, bounded north by Walnut Street, east by Robert Holgate, Edmund Cartlidge declared on 10, 7 mo. 1683, that he sold to John Fisher. Recorded 3, 3 mo. 1688. Edmund Carthidge’s (Cartlidge) deed granting his Phil. Lots to John Fisher dated Phi. 7m Sep. 10, 1683. Warrant 25 10 mo. 1683, surveyed 24 of 3 mo. 1684, to John Fisher, 300 acres in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, not identified 250 acres on old purchase, 50 acres on new purchase, bounded by Henry Jones and by Company Land. Recorded 25 March 1688. Patent Radnor Twp. 1688 8m 24 to John Fisher’s Executors 300 a. – plate 13 part of Radnor shows draft of John Fisher’s land on n.e. corner of Radnor twp. Next Tredyffrin Twp. 300 a. sur. 3m 24 1684. Phila. Deeds E No. 1, p. 226. September 2, 1684, John Fisher bought from Thomas Wynne a property in Philadelphia, which his widow Margaret and son Thomas, executors of his will, conveyed to Samuel Atkins of Philadelphia, glover, in consideration of love and affection, described as “a certain house or cave in the bank of the river Delaware.” April 14, 1686, Margaret and Thomas Fisher, executors of John Fisher, sold to Samuel Atkins for L10, a lot on the north side of Walnut St. 40 x 250 ft. with messuage. (Deed Book E 1, p. 224) 3/26/1688, same grantors conveyed to Charles Pickering of Philadelphia in consideration L45, a tract of 300 acres and three lots on the north side of Walnut Street which John Fisher had purchased May 10, 1683, from E. Cartlidge. In 1685, John Fisher and Richard Core purchased of Henry Stretcher, 400 acres called Millburne on the east side of Mill Creek. Myers, Albert Cook. 1968. Notes on immigrants to Pennsylvania, 1681-1737, Vol 20. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (FHL Film 567014). :1683 7m 19 Margie Smith of Schuylkill Chester Co., sold to John Fisher a lot in city of Philadelphia being for 500 a. of land purchased in England. Phil. Deeds E-2. p. 12 Edmund Cartlidge’s deed granting his Phil. Lots to John Fisher dated Phi. 7m Sep. 10, 1683. 3/5/1686, John Fisher, late of the County of Sussex, Pennsylvania, purchased of Rodger Gum, Five hundred acres called Twiver, both these deeds are recorded at Georgetown, Del. He finally settled on the south side of the Broadkill near Lewistown. Will of James Standfield. :James Standfield, uncle of Elizabeth (Huntley) Fisher of Chester County, is believed to have learned the merchant trade in Philadelphia, as an apprentice for a time to Samuel Atkins, who married Annie, daughter of John and Margaret Fisher. Although the original Standfield estate was in Marple, Chester County, James Standfield moved into John Fisher’s original house on the riverbank in Philadelphia. The house was sold 30 April 1686 by John Fisher’s executors (wife Margaret and son Thomas) to Samuel Atkins. The house was a timbered cave built into the cliffs, near the Standfield water lot where the Standfield’s brigantine (the “Betsy”) was berthed. James Standfield’s estate account, after his death in 1699, mentioned a part ownership in Samuel Atkin’s house, and payment to the doctor who attended the deceased in the Atkins house. Francis Chads, who married Grace Standfield (aunt of Elizabeth Huntley Fisher of Chester County) was executor. Francis liquidated James Standfield’s large land tract in Sussex County, Delaware (then part of Pennsylvania), by selling it to John and William Fisher of Sussex County. This John Fisher was the son of John and Margaret Fisher. William was a suspected son or relative of John and Margaret who was not mentioned in John Fisher’s 1685 will, but the records indicate an obvious family connection of some sort. Thomas E. Slattery, and Charles E. Hughes. 1962. ''Warrants and surveys of the province of Pennsylvania, 1682-1759: transcribed from the records of the Surveyor General's and Proprietaries Secretary's offices by John Hughes, recorder of warrants and surveys under the Act of Assembly July 7, 1759; with a guide to the books and index, an historical background and a copy of the Act''. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Philadelphia. Department of Records. {|border="4" style="text-align:center" |Location||Year||Book||Page |- |Philadelphia County||1683||6||31 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||2||29 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||2||46 |- |Philadelphia City||1683||2||174 |} '''Research Note: Court Records.''' Samuel Atkins vs. John Fisher Phila. Court Docket 1685 John Fisher represented by his son Thomas Fisher. Charles Pickering asked for a continuance until the next term of court in order that John Fisher might be present. S. W. Pennypacker Pa. Colonial Cases (Phil. 1892) 75-76. '''Research Note: Genealogies.''' Fisher, Jackie L. 2010. ''The First Fishers of Pennsylvania and Adjacent Colonies, 1650 - 1747''. Self-published, Wimberley, Texas. Digital copy available at cephasfisher.net [http://www.cephasfisher.net/FirstFishersofPA.pdf]. Smith, Anna Wharton. 1896. ''Genealogy of the Fisher family, 1682 to 1896''. Philadelphia: [publisher not identified]. Digital copy available at archives.org[https://archive.org/details/genealogyoffishe00smit]. :Extensive account of descendants of John Fisher and Margaret Hindle, mostly from Thomas line Lewis, John Frederick. 1934. ''The history of an old Philadelphia land title: 208 South Fourth street''. Philadelphia: [Printed by Patterson & White Co.]. p. 38-48. Digital copy available at hathitrust.org [http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/2853205.html]. Myers, Albert Cook. 1968. ''Notes on immigrants to Pennsylvania, 1681-1737'', Vol 20. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (FHL Film 567014). :1683 7m 19 Margie Smith of Schuylkill Chester Co., sold to John Fisher a lot in city of Philadelphia being for 500 a. of land purchased in England. Phil. Deeds E-2. p. 12 Edmund Cartlidge’s deed granting his Phil. Lots to John Fisher dated Phi. 7m Sep. 10, 1683. :1684 3m 15 At Marsden MM Lancashire: A collection to be --- for ye sending two children of John Fisher to Pennsylvania. Friends of Sawley M to write to friends with – they are to go in name of the meeting. Fisher, William Logan. 1839. ''An account of the Logan and Fisher families''. [Place of publication not identified]: [publisher not identified]: Digital copy available at ''FamilySearch'' [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/163215]. :Early family notes about John Fisher and descendants Cummings, Benjamin F. 1981. ''A Fisher family of Chester County, Pa''. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (FHL Film 1033648). Leslie, Pauline. 1960. ''Families of Fisher, Durnell, Littler, Zimmerman: and records of Fairview Friends Meeting''. Wilmington, Ohio: Clinton County Historical Society. Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah (FHL Film 1571763). Fisher, Thelma Lucille. 1978. ''Atkinson-Fisher: English Quaker emigrants with William Penn''. Wilmington, Ohio: Cox Printing. Digital copy available here [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/99540] :Detailed ancestry of Cephas Fisher Jr. and the Atkinson family Potts, Thomas Maxwell. 1895. ''Our family ancestors''. Canonsburg, Pa: The author; digital copy available at ''FamilySearch'' [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/216443] ''Miscellaneous church and genealogical records to 1968 in the Chester Co. Historical Society (Penn)''. 1968. Salt Lake City, Utah: Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah. (FHL Film 0565685) :Anonymous manuscript in Pennsylvania Genealogical Society. Summary of the manuscript, which contains much more: : John Fisher and wife came to Pennsylvania in 1682 from Clitheroe, a parish in North Lancashire, 15 miles from Garstang, 20 miles from Lancaster, and about 25 miles from Kendal, Westmoreland. Alexander Fisher represented Clitheroe in parliament in 1585. The seat of the Hindley family was at Hindley, now a parish, but formerly a chapelry of Garstang. Earliest was Henry Fisher of Kendal, reign of Henry VIII. Son Nicholas of Kendal bought manor of Kentmere, 1626. Sons Henry, Edward, Nicholas. John Fisher, second son of Nicholas and Elizabeth (Brockholes) Fisher, b. 1646, aged 18 years 1664. M. ca 1667 Margaret Hindley, dau of Bryan , granddau of John Hindley of Clitheroe. John Fisher and John Hindley were admitted to Queen’s College on the same day, Foster’s Grays Inn Register. '''Research Note: Quaker Minutes''' LDS Film 03848350 Philadelphia Monthly Meeting Minutes. :Pg. 11 6, 9 mo 1683. Agreed mutually and concluded by the parties proposed, and here subscribed, that each of them will provide a form of 14 feet long, for the service of friends in the Meeting House, Viz. Thomas Holmes, Thomas Wynne, John Songhurst, Benjamin Chambers, Charles Pickering, John Day, John Parsons, John Fisher, John Goodson, Edward Roose. :Pg. 34 Quarterly Meeting the first of the fourth month, 1683. Barnabus Willcox complaining of this meeting that John Fisher had greatly abused him with bad words and names. The meeting appointed Thomas Fitzwater, John Songhurst & James Claypoole to speak with him about the same, and to bring his answer to next meeting, and if possible to persuade him to give Barnabus satisfaction. :Pg. 36 At our Quarterly Meeting the twelfth of the seventh month 1685. The difference between Barnabus Wilcox and John Fisher being again mentioned John Moon and John Goodman are appointed to write to William Clark and other friends below, respecting said Fisher. (Note: “Below” meant Delaware, in this case Sussex County.) Quaker Family History Society (Great Britain) web site, Lancashire. Marsden Monthly Meeting was at Little Marsden, 1 ½ miles SW of Colne. Still at that location, now 21 Walverden Rd., Brierfield, BB9 0PJ. Web site, Holgate family. – Holgate came to Philadelphia from Marsden MM in Lancashire. '''Notes of Jackie L. Fisher''' LDS IGI :Possible relative of Margaret (Hindle) Fisher of Sussex Co. Delaware: Bryan Hindle b. 1675, Kirkby Overblow, North Yorkshire, England (35 miles ENE of Clitheroe, Lancashire.) LDS IGI James Fisher b. 18 Sep 1670, Clitheroe. (Note: Unable to verify this in parish records or Quaker records.) Possible descendant of the Hindles: Bryan Hindle b. 1675, Kirkby Overblow, Yorkshire, England (35 miles WNW of Clitheroe in N. Yorkshire) (Note: No search was made to verify.) A study of the Fishers of Sussex County, Delaware (originally annexed to Pennsylvania) revealed some indirect associations with the Fishers of Chester County, Pennsylvania, but did not prove that the Fishers of those two counties were related. Some of the findings are included here. Thomas Gilpin (1776-1853) ms in his own hand. “ by a memorandum of his grandson Joshua Fisher it would appear that John Fisher the emigrant removed from Clithero in Lancashire, England and came to America in the ship Welcome with arrival at Phil. On 24 Oct. 1682.” But a search made by Joshua Francis Fisher at the north of England for the paternity of the family he concluded that the ancestor could not have come from Clithero in Lancahire, because there were no persons of the name of Fisher resident there – nor had there been for many years preceding the settlement of Pennsylvania. Excerpt from the manuscript: John Fisher, second son of Nicholas and Elizabeth (Brockholes) Fisher, b. 1646, aged 18 years 1664, d. 1685/6. M. circa 1667, Margaret Hindle or Hindley, daughter of Bryan Hindle and granddaughter of John Hindley of Clitheroe (Thomas Fisher’s will). He was the American pioneer. In Foster’s Grays Inn Register, John Fisher’s name appears as a student in Queen’s College and John Hindley was admitted on the same date. John Fisher purchased in England 500 acres of land, as appears from a deed recorded in Philadelphia Deed Book E2, p. 12, dated 7/19/1683. When the family arrived they made their home in a cave on the bank of the river Delaware. These so-called caves were excavations made in the hill sides and lined with logs and afforded an excellent protection from the severe cold of the winter. Will of Thomas Fisher of Sussex County, Delaware, son of John and Margaret Fisher of Lewes: :In the name of God Amen, the seventeenth day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and thirteen, I Thomas Fisher of Sussex County upon Delaware being sick and weak in body but of sound and perfect memory thanks be therefor to Almighty God and calling to remembrance the uncertain estate of this transitory life and that all flesh must yield unto death, when it shall please God to call, do make constitute and ordain and declare this my last will and testament in manner and form following, Revoking and annulling by these presents all and every Testamt and Testamts Will and Wills heretofore by me made and declared, either by word or writing and this is to be taken only for my last Will and testamt and none other. :First I give and Committ my Soul unto Almighty God my Savior and Redeemer and now for the settling of my temporall estate and such goods Chattles, Lands and debts as it hath pleased God to bestow upon me, I do order give and dispose the same in manner and form following (that is to say) :First I will that all those debts as I owe to any manner of person or persons whatsoever shall be well truly paid. :Item – I give and bequeath to my son Jabez Maud Fisher his heirs and assigns forever the Plantation whereon I now live called Island with fifty acres of marsh land one hundred and ninety one acres of landsituate adjoining to the land of Eliz. Hill William Fisher and Cornelius Wiltbank in the Broad Creek Neck, also one hundred and fifty acres of land adjoining to the above land called by the name of Brights Island. :Item – I give and bequeath to my son Joshua Fisher his heirs and assigns forever Three Hundred acres of land with a plantation thereon lying and being between the land that John Fisher now lives on and the land of Baptist Newcomb, called by the name of Swan Hill, also five hundred acres of land, being part of a tract of one thousand acres took up by Alexander Mollison of John Kipshaven lying on the Cold Spring at the head of Long Branch, as by the deed and Patents thereof may more largely appear. :Item – I give and bequeath to my daughter Margaret Fisher her heirs and assigns forever Five Hundred acres of land in Kent County upon Delaware being part of a tract of Two thousand acres called Millford, the which five hundred acres I purchased of David Roe. :Item – I give and bequeath to my two daughters Margery and Hester Fisher and to the survivors of them, their heirs and assigns forever that piece of land in quantity Thirty nine acres, being parts of two tracts adjoining to the lands of Samuel Rowland and fronting the Creek of Lewistown as may by the deeds and Patents more at large appear. I likewise give unto my daughters one negro girl called Hannah. :Item – I give and bequeath unto my sons and Daughters, that House Land and appurtenances which was left to me by my uncle John Hindle the son of Brayan Hindle of Cletheroh to be equally divided between them their heirs and assigns, excepting my loving wife Margery Fisher her Thirds therein, whom I give full power, as if I were personally present to imploy attorney or attorneys one or more under her as is lawfull for the division of the said House Land and appurtenances for the use of aforesaid. :Item – I give and bequeath unto my daughter Margaret Fisher her heirs and assigns forever all and Singular those Horses, Mares and Cattle that are known as hers and marked with her own mark. :Item – I give and bequeath to my Daughter Elizabeth Fisher her heirs and assigns forever all those Cattle that I have running on my plantation now in tenancy of John Syms, together with their increase. :Item – I give and bequeath unto my daughter Margery Fisher her heirs and assigns forever, four cows and a young mare an a young horse which came of a Sorrall mare that is now lost, to run here with their increase. :Item – I give and bequeath unto my daughter Elizabeth Fisher her heirs and assigns forever one negro girl called Doll, after my wife's decease. :Item – I give and bequeath unto my son James Fisher his heirs and assigns forever That House and Lotts in the Second Street of the town of Lewis between the Lotts of Jacob Kollock and the Heir of Isaac Coggeshall. :Item – I give and bequeath unto my daughter Margret Fisher and her heirs and assigns forever one Bond due unto me from Edward Williams of Philadelphia, butcher, for Sixteen pounds. :Item – My Will and meaning is that my loving wife Margery Fisher shall hold and enjoy all and singular the Lands before herein by me bequeathed during her life, without impeachment of waste, except that five hundred acres of land in Kent County which I give my daughter Margery provided that when my children comes to age that they shall be admitted to seats on some part of their respective Land, without molestation of their mother. :Item – I give and bequeath all the rest and residue of my estate in what nature or kind soever it be unto my well beloved wife Margery Fisher, whom I also by these presents constitute and appoint the whole and Sole Executrix of this my Last Will and Testament. :In Witness and conformation hereof I have hereunto put my hand and Seal the day and year first within written. ::Cornelius Wiltbank, ::Richard (his mark R) Williams, ::John (his mark) Lukecues. ::::::::Signed Tho. Fisher,

Fischbach, Styria, Austria

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A list of all the Gesselbauer, Gesslbauer, Gösselbauer, Gösslbauer farms and houses in Fischbach, Styria, Austria based on the book:

700 Jahre Fischbach 1295-1995 by Gottfried Allmer (ed.),
especially the chapter "Historisches Häuserbuch der Gemeinde Fischbach", pages 309-354.

Katastralgemeinde Fischbach

page 310 house number 4 (old nr. 66), Dorfschmied, Birkenstein UN 241 1/2, Bp. 33/1, EZ. 57
1961- GÖSSLBAUER Heribert and Gertrude
page 312 house number 10, Fasch/Mühlbacher, Taverne, Bischofshof UN 73, Bp. 16, EZ. 10
1841-1857 GESSELBAUER Josef
page 315 house number 28, Baderkeusche, Klosterhäusl, Birkenstein UN 251 1/2, Bp. 11, EZ. 56
1939-1948 [[Geßlbauer-102|Ambros Geßlbauer (1904-1945)]] and [[Filzmoser-12|Maria (Filzmoser) Geßlbauer (1907-)]]
1948-1966 [[Filzmoser-12|Maria (Filzmoser) Geßlbauer (1907-)]], Raimund and Ambros d. J.
1966- GESSLBAUER Raimund and Johanna
page 320 house number 60 (old Völlegg nr. 40), Schanzblas, Birkenstein UN 272, Bp. 2, EZ. 44 der KG. Völlegg
1928-1937 GESSLBAUER Franz and Elisabeth
1937-1942 GESSLBAUER Franz
page 321 house number 61 (old nr. 43), Ebenhermann, Birkenstein UN 261, Bp. 117, EZ. 39
1890-1907 [[Gesselbauer-34|Leopold Gesselbauer (1859-1937)]]
page 325f. house number 92 (old nr. 54), Oberer Kalchbauer, Birkenstein UN 290, Bp. 65, EZ. 49
1908-1916 [[Geßlbauer-111|Franz Geßlbauer (1877-1935)]] and [[Fasching-71|Rosalia (Fasching) Geßlbauer (1879-1915)]]
1916-1917 [[Geßlbauer-111|Franz Geßlbauer (1877-1935)]]
1917-1928 [[Geßlbauer-111|Franz Geßlbauer (1877-1935)]] and [[Kandlbauer-2|Juliana (Kandlbauer) Geßlbauer (1890-)]]

FISCHER

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Fischer Names Fischer, Krasnaya Polyana, Telausa, Teljausa, Telyausa, Telyauza Location 51º41' N 46º37' E History Fischer was founded as a Lutheran colony on 25 July 1765 by the Government. Church Originally the congregation in Fischer was part of the Rosenheim parish which had been established in 1767.

Fischer, Mary or Maria

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Maria married Max Menz in Cincinnati, ohio in 1875.

Fischer Genealogy

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Fischer_Genealogy.jpg
The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Fischer-2728|Cheryl Fischer]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12819475 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fish Hoek/Visch Hoek

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This page is part of the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Fish_Hoek_Valley_One_Place_Study Fish Hoek Valley One Place Study]. == History == ===The 1700s === Although the first grant of land at Fish Hoek is usually said to be in 1818, made by [[Somerset-129|Lord Charles Somerset]], Governor of the Cape Colony, to [[Bruyns-17|Andries Bruijns]], there was interest in the land before that. By the late 1700s fishing had become more commercialised and there was a good living to be had from it. In June 1797 [[Kirsten-13|Johannes Pieter Kirsten]] applied to the then Governor, [[Macartney-13|Earl George Macartney]], for land at “the Visch Hok, that may be granted as a Loan Land without any prejudice either to Government or to any individual. Your Excellency’s Petitioner requests Your Excellency to grant the said Place called the Vischoek as a Loan Land to him on the usual rent of Rds 24 per annum.” (rix dollars) The letter was endorsed “To lie over” so no grant was made at that time. Later that year [[Rhenius-135|Johannes Isaak Rhenius]], also applied for land to establish a fishing business in the bay. He was a member of a well known Cape family and in 1795 had been appointed Collector-General and Treasurer by the Military Administrator, [[Craig-4439|General James Henry Craig]]. Although it was not granted then, in March 1801 Rhenius was granted permission “to cause a cover to be put on the small Government Building at Visch Hoek Bay for the purpose of depositing his fishing materials therein on express condition that he shall be obliged to give the building up to the government whenever it shall be wanted.” This government building was the Dutch East India Company’s Watch House which had been deserted for many years and had fallen into disrepair. It was already being used by the fishermen but it would seem that Rhenius wanted to stake a claim to it. === The 1800s === In August 1801 he was given permission to cultivate a piece of land at what was to become Clovelly, “not exceeding two acres in extent, subject to six months notice by the Government, no house or building to be erected on it.” So Rhenius was the first official farmer in the Fish Hoek valley. In August 1802 he was granted land for a fishery in the bay but as the Cape was in the process of being handed over to the Batavian Republic he had to reapply to the new Governor, [[Janssens-173|General Jan Willem Janssens]], for confirmation of the grant, which was approved. This must have been a profitable business as it was not long after this that an Englishman, [[Row-875|Robert Row]], also applied to [[Janssens-173|General Janssens]] for land at Fish Hoek to operate a fishery. Rhenius protested, but after investigating the situation the authorities decided that there was room for both of them and Row received his grant. There must have been great competition between them as to who reached the shoals of fish first, they must both have had their lookouts posted and would race out into the bay as the signal was given. Rhenius gave up his business about 1805 and Row, who was described as being “a man of speculative tendencies’, had many business projects going, but was eventually declared insolvent and left the area. It seems that [[Bruyns-17|Andries Bruijns]] moved into Fish Hoek when Rhenius left. Whether this was by mutual consent or whether he just took over when the property became vacant is not known. However in 1806 he wrote to [[Baird-2782|Sir David Baird]], the British Commander at the Cape, stating there had been a fire in some of his buildings at Fish Hoek and he needed wood to repair them. He therefore asked for permission to cut two wagon loads of wood from “the Government woods near Noordhoek”. This request was referred to the Inspector of Government Woods who replied that the wood was known as “Bosch Wood and is solely appropriated for such spars, stakes, rails etc. as are suitable to the erection of Huts. It comprises under that name various species, amongst which are the Wild Pear, the Olive, the Red Elser and the White”. He was given permission to cut his two wagon loads of wood. Although occupying the land Bruijns had never applied for ownership. However, it came to the notice of the authorities that he had a very prosperous business and was only paying a small rent for the land although he had improved and added to the buildings at his own expense. So in 1817 the Resident of Simon’s Town, [[Brand-2811|Johannes Hendricus Brand]], was instructed to sell the land at Fish Hoek, thus putting Bruijns into the position of having to buy the land himself or go out of business. Brand must have sympathised with him for he inserted a clause into the advertisement of the sale stating that if anyone other that Bruijns bought the land the buildings would have to be demolished. For anyone else buying the land it would have been an expensive business to rebuild, so possibly because no one else was interested in it, on payment of 250 rix dollars [[Bruyns-17|Andries Bruijns]] became the owner of the Fish Hoek Farm on 25 June 1818. For many years farmers coming from the western end of the valley had used Fish Hoek as an outspan as there were springs for water for their cattle and themselves. To keep the cattle from fouling the springs a kraal was built, probably near the area of the traffic circle at the Simon’s Town end of the Main Road. To preserve these, and other rights, six conditions were put into the title deed. These were:- :1. That the field lying behind the former Klip Kraal as far as the head of the mountain together with the watering place and dam which is situated a little beyond this, shall be used for the purpose of grazing and drinking for cattle of people unteaming their wagons in frequenting the road, also a free passage to the left for cattle to and from Simon’s Town, Noordhoek or elsewhere. :2. That he shall be obliged to keep the fountain in good condition for the use of travellers passing there but not for the drinking of any cattle at all. :3. That his oxen-kraal shall also be at the disposal of those who either go thither for the purpose of fishing or others passing by and unteaming their oxen. :4. That also a passage be allowed or left for the purpose of digging iron stones (if necessary) either by Government or any other. :5. Not to keep a Public wine house and finally, :6. That the right of fishing shall be free as heretofore and the strand itself quite open to the public. Most of these conditions have lapsed, although there has been much discussion over the years with regard to the last two. Fishing had been the main business of those occupying the land until this time, but one of the conditions of the title deed granted to Bruijns was that the land had to be cultivated as much as possible within three years. He carried on fishing for two years and then on 9 July 1820 sold the land to [[Leser-18|Isaac Lesar]] at a good profit. Lesar was a fisherman and it was in October 1821 that the brig Waterloo sailed into Fish Hoek Bay to load whale oil from his catch. She must have dragged her anchor and was blown on to the shore and wrecked. Early in November the Cape Town Gazette and African Adviser printed a sale notice. “On Tuesday the 6th instant, a Sale will be held on the beach at Fisch Hoek Bay, of the Masts, Yards, Sails, Rigging, Boat, Provisions, Furniture, Material and Damaged Cargo, saved from the wreck, with the Anchors and Cables, and such part of the Cargo as is not recovered. The sale will commence at 11 o’clock.” Lesar kept the land for two years before, on 3 May 1822, he sold it to an American sea captain, [[Palmer-31805|Thomas Delozier Palmer]], for £3000. Palmer took out a mortgage of £6000 from a Cape Town businessman, [[Richardson-15639|James Richardson]], for improvements to the farm. Although it is not known exactly when the first part of the farmhouse was built it was probably Palmer who built it. Built in traditional Cape Dutch style, E shaped, with gables, it was called Bellevue and situated on the beach, before the days of the railway, it must, indeed, have had a wonderful view of the bay. The date 1710 was added to one of the gables at some point, perhaps by a later owner who wanted to boast of his old house, however there was no recorded building on this scale at Fish Hoek in the early 1700′s. Palmer was not popular with other fishermen. [[Twycross-1|Stephen Twycross]], the owner of the fishery at Kalk Bay and who had been part owner of the 'Maria', an 80 ton brig previously captained by Palmer, complained to the authorities in 1823 that “he has in a second instance this day sent his boat and crew to land and hover about my fishery”. In 1827 Richardson was declared insolvent and as Palmer was unable to repay the balance of his debt to him the executors took over the farm. Realising that as most of the land was undeveloped sand hills it would fetch a better price if subdivided for sale, they sold it off in three lots. Lot A was the smallest but included the old Watch House. The whaling rights were included in this section which became known as The Great Whale Fishery. Lot B was the largest and included the farmhouse, Bellevue, and the fishing rights, this was known as the Harring Fishery, probably referring to the harders which were plentiful in the bay. Lot C was called Klein Tuin, some fields had been cultivated in what is now called Clovelly. Lot A was sold to [[Osmond-729|John Osmond]] of Simon’s Town, who owned a lot of property in the Peninsula. In 1830 he resold it to Thomas Thwaites who ran a whale fishery. One of the conditions of the sale of Lots A and B was that the owner of A should have access to the spring on B, however Thwaites was denied access to the water and had to complain to the authorities. Possibly this is what ruined his business. Something did, for he was declared insolvent in 1833 and the land sold to Collison and Co. run by Nicholas Collison and Joseph Starkey, who sold to J. H. J. and J. M. Muller in 1842. When the land was divided, in 1827, Lot B was sold to J. G. Muller who kept it for only five months before selling to John Leibrandt for the same price for which he had bought it, £250. For this sum Leibrandt purchased 693 morgen which included the farmhouse. He was the owner of whom Thwaites wrote, “he has caused this spring or fountain of pure water aforesaid to be enclosed and unlawfully as it is contrary to the express conditions of sale at which the purchase of the said property was made, put the same under lock and key, which I fear must have been done with a malicious and cruel intent to deprive the fishermen employed on the adjoining property, Lot A, amounting to nearly 30 persons, of the use and benefit of said water, which nature absolutely requires, thereby excluding them and the public from the enjoyment of their natural rights”. Leibrandt only kept the land for three years, during which time the situation with his neighbours must have been very strained. He sold to John Hendrik Muller in 1830 who sold to the brothers J. H. J. and J. M. Muller, who on buying Lot A in 1842 became the owners of what was then the entire Fish Hoek Farm. Lot C, Klein Tuin, was sold to Jacob Hurter in 1827. It changed owners several times before it became the property of Gwendolyn McIntyre, and in 1902 the land was subdivided for sale as residential plots. The area was marketed as Mayville, but soon became known as Clovelly. Cape Estates Ltd. bought land there and in 1922 laid out a nine hole golf course, the beginning of the Clovelly Country Club. The Muller brothers, who were part of a well known local fishing family, fished and farmed at Fish Hoek until 1871 when they sold out to James McLachlan for £850. However he did not make a success of his business and by 1875 he was in financial difficulties and was lucky enough to be able to sell the farm to James Wilson for £2 000, a very good profit, which hopefully solved his financial problems. Seven years later, on 5 October 1883, he sold it to [[De_Kock-1051|Hester Sophia de Kock]]. A spinster, fifty one years old, when she bought the farm, [[De_Kock-1051|Hester de Kock]] had run a small school in Wale Street, Cape Town before coming to Fish Hoek. Why she bought the land is not known, although various reasons have been suggested. Perhaps she inherited some money or sold her school for a good price, whatever the reason she must have been a very strong character as in those days it was not usual for an unmarried woman to go into business on her own. Whilst the previous owners had concentrated more on the fishing side of the business she was more interested in farming and laid out fields for growing vegetables and wheat. The farmhouse was by now quite an extensive building. About 1837 an addition to the farmhouse had been built, called Goede Hoop, and a coach house was also added later, known as Brighton. In 1884 Hester married [[De_Villiers-1621|Jacob Izaak de Villiers]], a widower with 8 living children ranging in age from 24 down to 6 years, and a farm at Noordhoek. His eldest son took over that farm and he came to live at Fish Hoek where he and Hester farmed together. === The 1900s === The business did well, but more cultivation needed more water, so in 1902 she bought the rights to the water from the Klein Tuin spring at Clovelly and had water piped to Fish Hoek where she built a small reservoir to augment the springs which supplied the farm. These water rights were passed on to the residents of Fish Hoek and were eventually leased to the Clovelly Country Club for a peppercorn rent. The 1818 grant stipulated that public access to Fish Hoek beach had to be ensured and by the early 1900s it was beginning to be known as a wonderful place for a day’s outing. The extension of the railway from Kalk Bay to Simon’s Town in 1890, and the siting of a halt at Fish Hoek, made it easy for people from the suburbs of Cape Town to come and enjoy a day of sun and sea bathing. It was not long before they were asking permission from the de Villiers to be allowed to camp on their land. Being a shrewd businesswoman [[De_Kock-1051|Hester de Villiers]] soon realised that that she could make money from this. She let rooms in the farmhouse and converted her barn and coach house to provide holiday accommodation. The old Watch House, later to be known as Uitkyk, but then called Wharncliffe, although it had probably been called Uitkyk earlier, was also converted to rooms. Her accommodation seems to have been very comfortable with water from her reservoir piped into all her buildings. Although the beach was not part of the farm property [[De-Villiers-1621|Izaak de Villiers]] kept a very stern eye on the visitors, rowdy behaviour and littering were not tolerated. So, with its clean beach and safe bathing Fish Hoek soon became known as a wonderful place for a family holiday. When [[De_Kock-1051|Hester de Villiers]] died in 1914, she left instructions in her will that “after the death of my husband, [[De_Villiers-1621|Jacob Izaak de Villiers]], the farm Vischoek near Kalk Bay shall be sold.” She asked that it be sold in building plots and that after sums of money had been deducted for three of her nieces, and for various charities, the balance was to be equally divided between her husband’s children and her other nieces and nephews. Being a shrewd businesswoman, and realising how popular Fish Hoek had become, she obviously felt that more money would be raised for her heirs by selling it off in this way. She also asked that a sum of £150 “shall be placed in the savings bank at Cape Town and used for the maintenance of the family cemetery”. An interesting addition to this clause reads that “no trees shall be planted in the cemetery.” No explanation is given for this but perhaps she thought that the roots might undermine the graves. This cemetery, in which Hester and Izaak de Villiers is also buried, is alongside the Dutch Reformed Church in Kommetjie Road and is looked after by the Church Seniors’ Club. There was great interest in the proposed sale of plots in Fish Hoek. On 7 December 1917 we read in the weekly paper, The Cape, that “Fish Hoek is at last to be laid out as a seaside residential resort.” The writer hoped that “before passing the plans for the sub-division of the Fish Hoek Estate, a definite scheme of laying out the roads and erecting buildings should be followed. Without some such plan Fish Hoek will inevitably grow up anyhow, as Muizenberg has done. Visitors who are gifted with any sense of the picturesque become mentally ill when they see the town of Muizenberg for the first time, with its houses elbowing and crowding each other and facing all ways. The Divisional Council now has a unique opportunity of rendering a service to the Peninsula and the public by taking steps to see that Fish Hoek is, from the beginning, built on the lines of order and picturesqueness which will add to instead of detract from the natural beauty of the place.” I wonder what the writer would have thought of Fish Hoek today. ==== The Sale of Plots ==== On 16 March 1918 the first sale of plots was advertised.
'''Colonial Orphan Chamber and Trust Company.''' :'''The Famous Estate, Fish Hoek near Kalk Bay''' :'''South Africa’s Premier Watering Place.''' :'''Preliminary Notice of Sale of Portion of this most charming and delightful Seaside Resort.''' :'''First Sale by Public Auction of exceptionally valuable, most attractive and desirably situated.''' :'''Residential Building sites in the Estate of the late Mrs. H. S. de Villiers''' :'''On Wednesday, April 24th at 11 o’clock on the spot.''' :'''The Executors of the Estate will cause to be submitted a large number of lots on this Estate, in order to satisfy the wishes of intending purchasers.''' :'''Further and fuller particulars will appear in later issues.''' :'''Lithographic Plans will be available on and after the 10th April at this and the Auctioneers Offices.''' :'''Executors Testamentary Cape Town, 9th March 1918. I. C. D. DE VILLIERS J. B. ZOUTENDYK & CO J. C. FAURE-JURITZ Auctioneers and Sworn Appraisers Secretary'''
That sale, and a further one in May 1918, were very well attended and plots were sold at prices ranging from £10 to £140, the most popular sites being those overlooking the bay. In a reference book on the area, published that year, we read that “The estate has been cut up into building plots, of which nearly 3 000 have been sold, and houses are springing up in all directions.” We are also told that “there is a postal delivery twice a day” and ‘for residences or camping, Fish Hoek is an ideal place and, owing to its situation, it enjoys three hours more sunlight a day than the neighbouring resorts on False Bay.” A newspaper advertisement for a further sale of “336 Splendid Plots” appeared in January 1921. It pointed out that “The keen competition for this land at earlier sales points to the necessity for prompt action if you wish to secure one or more plots before it is too late. The land is increasing in value every day: many who purchased at earlier sales have since resold at a good profit.” A cutting from 25 February 1929 tells us that nearly a hundred people assembled on the Outspan for a further sale of plots, which were mostly on the mountainside. As building on the higher plots would be more difficult they could be bought more cheaply than those lower down. High plots were sold for as little as £2 whilst those on Kommetjie Road fetched up to £100. Even at these prices profits were being made - a plot bought in 1918 for £35 had been resold in 1929 for £600. The first residents were mainly weekenders, many of them having previously camped in the area, put up what they called “weekend shacks” which were wooden huts in which they could sleep overnight and leave their camping gear. The Robertsons bought a wartime shooting box which they had railed to Fish Hoek. They built rooms on to the sides of it which meant that the shooting apertures were now between rooms and their children enjoyed opening the little shutters to chat to each other. The Ohlssens brought a railway carriage to turn into their home, much to the envy of their children’s playmates. “The Caboose” remained for many years, being used for extra accommodation after the building of a more conventional house. Gradually more permanent structures were built, most of them wooden cottages with roofs of corrugated iron, but many of them were still only used over the weekends and the Christmas season. In the early 1920s Mr Rice caused a sensation by building a very imposing house on the top of a sandhill on what is now the corner of de Waal Road and Third Avenue. As most of the development in Fish Hoek at that time was on Elsie’s Peak, overlooking the bay, or at the top of the early Avenues, people thought that he was crazy. “Fish Hoek is never going to develop that far” they said, and nicknamed the house Rice’s Folly. The Rice family sold it, it became a hotel and then flats before being pulled down in the 1970s, but even then was still known as Rice’s Folly. The plan from which the plots were sold was based on hexagons, something quite different from the usual system of blocks, and one that has made Fish Hoek a very confusing place for succeeding generations. The open hexagons were to be recreational open spaces. On the one bounded by Central Circle, which now is the Civic Centre, sports fields and a bowling green were laid out. In 1932 a hall was built next to the sports fields. Known as the Recreation Hall this wooden building, with its thatched roof, became the centre of social life in the village. The sports clubs used it for changing and hospitality to visiting teams and many social events took place there. The Dramatic Society put on plays, there were film shows and many dances and parties at what was known as the Rec Hall. In 1960 the Municipality decided that Fish Hoek needed a bigger hall, the sports fields were relocated, and the Civic Hall and Minor Hall were built. In 1988 new Municipal Offices and a Library were also built there. With the building of the Senior High School the sports fields were again relocated to their present site. ==== Water and Electricity ==== There was no water or electricity supply when the first plots were sold. Candles or paraffin lamps were used for lighting and most people used Primus stoves for cooking, but as more houses were being built the supply of water became a problem. The early householders used water butts to catch the rain water but these did not always supply enough to see them through the dry summer season. Most of the earliest homes were built just above the beach, on Simon’s Town Road, and these houses were allowed to tap into the water pipe that took the supply from the farmhouse to Uitkyk. Even so, as the population expanded more water had to be provided. In 1920 a loan was raised to build a reservoir on the plot behind what is now the circle at the Simon’s Town end of Main Road. Built by T. Stewart it was a concrete structure measuring 40 x 20 x 10 feet designed to hold 4 200 gallons of water. A pipe was laid from the reservoir to a tap on a plot behind what is now Connock Park and residents took their own containers and paid a fee for the supply. It was calculated that with the number of houses in Fish Hoek at that time it would supply each household with up to 150 gallons per day. By 1921 it was already obvious that as Fish Hoek was becoming more popular, and as more houses were being built, more water was going to be needed. The Railways had already connected Fish Hoek Station to the Cape Town water supply and built a water tower to supply their steam engines. The Local Board asked the railway authorities if it would be possible to have a connection, with a meter, from their mains supply to the local reservoir. The railways agreed that this could be done as a temporary measure until Fish Hoek sorted out its water problems. The connection was made and the water started running into the reservoir in November 1921, with the account to be paid to the Railways. However, the Cape Town City Council objected to this, saying that the Railways were not authorised to resell water supplied to them and that they intended to install their own meter to measure the amount of water supplied to Fish Hoek. The sum would then be deducted from the Railways account and charged directly to the Local Board. This led to utter confusion as both the Railways and the Cape Town City Council were demanding payment as there were now two meters, which were registering different amounts, and the one installed by the Railways appeared to be faulty. It took months to sort out the situation. Whilst all that was going on the Local Board received a letter from Cape Estates Ltd. who had bought land at Clovelly. They noted that the Local Board were now the owners of the Kleintuin spring and that under the terms of the transfer from the de Villiers Estate the spring and the dam had to be fenced and maintained by the owner, and the pipe from the dam had to be two feet underground. As they intended to build a golf course on their land they demanded that work on ensuring that the pipe was properly laid begin immediately. As no one had any idea of the exact course of the water pipe this meant that the Local Board would have had to get approval from the ratepayers to raise a loan to engage a surveyor to trace the pipe and possibly have it re-laid, not something that could be done quickly. In the meantime the contractors had continued working and completed the nine hole golf course without any problems, fortunately nothing more was heard from Cape Estates Ltd. In June 1920 it was reported that there were already 152 buildings in Fish Hoek with a further 123 being built, and the population was estimated at about 830 people. More water was needed, so in January 1922 the Local Board inquired about connecting up with the Cape Town water supply which was done via a six inch pipe connection at Clovelly. Each house was supplied with their own water meter and the Local Board thought that the water problem was now solved. Unfortunately these water meters were not very efficient and by 1929 the pipes had rusted and half the meters were not working. A ratepayers meeting was held in May of that year which asked that the Board improve the system and permission was given by the ratepayers for the raising of a £4 000 loan for a new water system. At several times over the years the use of the Kleintuin spring water was also suggested. Analysis of the water proved that it was not now suitable for domestic purposes but could be used for watering the sports fields and bowling green. However, because of the costs involved, this did not prove practicable. Sewerage was another problem. The first residents merely erected an outhouse over a hole in the ground and moved the building once the hole was full. Dirty water went on to the garden. Later some of them put in septic tanks and french drains. In 1923 the Local Board signed a contract for the removal of sewerage from the bucket toilets. The cart started the round at about 10pm and those coming home late were often unfortunate enough to meet it on the way. As there were no street lights there was often spillage as the contents of the bucket missed their mark, which left the owner of the property with a smelly problem the next morning. So in 1930 the Board inquired about a non-flush system which used crystals put into the buckets, but it proved to be too expensive. Whilst the village was still small the smells in hot weather were bearable, but as the village grew and more houses were built closer together the contractor could not cope and the residents were complaining. A waterborne sewerage scheme was needed. So in 1936 the Board obtained conditional assent from the Administrator of the Cape and the assent of the ratepayers to raise a loan of £49 000 for the scheme and to buy land for the pump stations. Final approval was given in 1937 and work started with a ceremonial turning of the first sod by the Chairman of the Village Management Board, Mr H. S. Jager, on 7 January 1938 at the corner of Recreation Road and Second Avenue. It was completed in June 1940 and Fish Hoek residents, no doubt, breathed a sigh of relief! By 1921, as they lit their paraffin lamps each night, people in Fish Hoek must have been envious of the electric lights they could see shining in Clovelly. So in November 1921 the Local Board resolved, if possible, to bring electricity to Fish Hoek. Quotations were obtained for the installation and then a letter was sent out to all house owners pointing out that “this can only be undertaken provided the Board is assured that the majority of the properties are connected up and that a certain quantity of energy will be consumed.” Each owner would have to sign an agreement with the contractor for the number of lighting points and power plugs required. In September 1922 another letter was sent out to home owners stating that before taking out a loan the Board wanted to be absolutely sure that enough houses would be connected to make it worth while. They were asked to sign a form committing them to the installation and to paying the cost of a minimum amount of current for two years. Those who could not afford the initial installation costs could have it paid by the Board and pay it off in instalments at 7% interest. The provision of the electricity was estimated to cost £4 650 and it was proposed to take out a loan and not to have to levy a special rate to cover it. As might be expected there were some who did not bother to reply to these letters. So in a circular in February 1923 they inform the residents that they had given up the idea. “After very carefully considering the whole question from the financial point of view the Board reluctantly came to the conclusion that under the circumstances they could not venture upon the scheme unless a larger number of persons were prepared to take the current.” This must have at last roused those who had not replied before and when replies to this circular came in the Board decided that there were now enough house owners interested to go on with the scheme. They signed a contract with the Cape Town City Council for the supply of electricity which they would resell to their ratepayers. The site chosen for the transformer house was on the Outspan, where the Garden of Remembrance is today. However, this area was covered by a servitude, it had to remain as open space, so no building could be erected there. Instead, it was built on the triangle at the end of the Main Road, now the circle. Meanwhile the poles were being put in and wiring was being done in the houses. On 31 July 1924 the current was switched on, it having taken three years to get the scheme completed - in many houses all the lights were switched on to celebrate the occasion. In May 1930 the City Electrical Engineer wrote to the Village Management Board to tell them that the transformer house was now too small to supply the increased population of Fish Hoek and would have to be replaced. For some reason the Board did not want it touched, perhaps because it looked so pretty there surrounded by trees. In spite of a lot of correspondence on the subject they would not agree to the rebuilding. Eventually the City Electrical Engineer lost patience with them, he said that they were making it very difficult for the City Council to give them an efficient service and he would not be responsible for any failure in the supply. If Fish Hoek found itself without power the Board would have to deal with the situation themselves. Still they did not react, and he had probably decided not to bother with them anymore, when in August of that year he received a letter saying that there had been an election in Fish Hoek, a new Board was in place, and they would like to settle the matter. Originally provision had been made on the Triangle for a post office and a police station, so when, in 1942, it again became necessary to enlarge the sub station an exchange of land was effected to make space for the new building to be erected. When the new building was ready the old one had to be demolished. As this was during the Second World War a permit had to be obtained to do this. It was granted, but the Fish Hoek Council, being prepared for any eventuality, asked for it to be left for the duration of the war as it would make a suitable mortuary. Fortunately it never had to be used for that purpose. ==== Fish Hoek and the Railway ==== Fish Hoek owes its access by rail to the fact that it is close to Simon’s Town. The line had reached Kalk Bay, then a popular seaside resort, in 1883. The Simon’s Town Dockyard was expanding and before long the Cape Government Railways was asked to extend the line to Simon’s Town. Work began in 1889 and the first train arrived in Simon’s Town station on 1st December 1890. There were problems with building the line across the Fish Hoek valley. The land was privately owned and had to be bought from the owner of the farm, [[De_Kock-1051|Mrs de Villiers]]. A single track concrete bridge had to be built to carry the line across the Silvermine River, which tended to spread across the sands as it came down in flood in the winter. To try and prevent this flooding, 44 gallon drums filled with concrete were used to strengthen the river banks. Iron deck plates from the wreck of the Kakapo, on Noordhoek beach, were also used. At Sunnycove there was very little room for the line and it was laid on old iron water tanks filled with concrete, the tanks rusted away but the concrete foundations remained. What was thought to be a reasonably sheltered site was chosen for the station, opposite what is now Windsor Lodge, but there was actually very little shelter from the elements. Initially it was just a wooden platform with a loop in the single line passing on each side and when the southeaster blew, or it rained, waiting for a train was an unhappy experience. It was not until about 1910, after many complaints from the passengers who used the station, that small waiting rooms were built at each end of the platform. After the sale of plots in 1918 the railway authorities decided that as a village was about to grow up here the station needed to be moved to a more convenient position. In 1919 a new station, with three platforms connected by an overhead bridge, was built in its present position. The station buildings date from 1927. To cater for local commuters a new timetable was drawn up which included trains that ran only as far as Fish Hoek and a turntable was put in to turn the engines for their return trip to Cape Town. A water tower had to be built to supply water to the steam engines which had previously been re-watered in Simon’s Town. The new station proved to be right in the path of the southeaster which blew in so much sand that it drifted into the gap between the platforms making it impossible to get through. A lot of money and labour went into clearing this before, in the late 1920s it was decided to remove the sand dunes on the beach at the back of the station. This was done at railway expense, with special trains being run to take the sand away. Most of it was dumped but some of it was taken to the railway works in Salt River to be used in engine sand boxes. Every steam engine had such a box so that the fireman could spread sand on the lines when they were too slippery for progress. Old railway sleepers were also sunk into the sand along the edge of the beach to try and keep the line clear. When the line was electrified in 1928, it was found that the pedestrian bridge over the line was too low for the overhead wires to pass underneath and it was removed. No provision was made for those using platforms two and three and passengers had to walk across the line. It was only in 1938 that a subway was built. Because of the apartheid laws a second subway had to be provided in the 1950s and this proved to be a real problem. The excavation soon became water logged and it was impossible to complete it. New plans had to be drawn up with sheets of copper placed between a double layer of bricks and pumps, used to control the water seepage. The stipulation in the 1818 grant, that there had to be public access to the beach, had to be complied with and so when the line was built in 1890, a crossing had to be provided for carts taking away fish caught in the bay. The original crossing, in its present position, was a narrow road with a gates to keep out wandering animals. These had to be opened and shut by those using the crossing and there were also pedestrian gates. As the village developed so more people were using the crossing and although there were gates it was difficult to see trains coming from Simon’s Town. In 1937 the Village Management Board wrote to the Railways asking that the crossing be moved nearer to the station to make it easier to see the oncoming trains. This was not done but instead, in 1941, the crossing was widened so that two cars could pass each other and the gates were removed. The Municipality, worried about the safety of those using the crossing, asked for a flagman to be posted there or flashing lights to be erected. Warning bells were put up but as this was during the Second World War, the authorities did not want to put up flashing lights which might be used by enemy submarines as a marker to Simon’s Town dockyard. Even after the flashing lights were put up there were several fatal accidents before booms were finally erected. There are pedestrian crossings at the side of the Silvermine River and near the station. More road crossings were planned but were never built. In 1938 the subway near the restaurant was rebuilt as the open line over the heads of those passing underneath was thought to be dangerous, and a second subway, on the Catwalk, was built in the 1950s. As more houses were built at Clovelly the residents began to complain that they had a long walk to get to either Kalk Bay or Fish Hoek stations, so it was only in 1936 that Clovelly station was built. There was very little room for building and it was squeezed in between the road and the beach with an overhead bridge providing access to the beach. There cannot have been many stations with a notice reading “Fishing prohibited from this platform”. The platform on the sea side having been declared unsafe the overhead bridge was closed and for a short time trains stopped only on the way to Cape Town before the station was finally closed completely. Clovelly commuters returning from work once again have to alight at either Kalk Bay or Fish Hoek. Those living at Sunnycove had the same problem, it was a long walk to Fish Hoek station. They were fortunate to get their station in 1928 as a certain railway official lived there and objected to the long walk to catch his train. Both these stations were really halts, with no ticket offices, and one had to pay the fare on the train. In the days when tickets were clipped by the guard on the train, instead of at the barrier at the station, the local youths often used to try and get a free ride to Cape Town. They would get on the train without a ticket hoping that there would not be a guard on that train but if one did appear they would declare that they had got on the train at Clovelly. The guards soon realised what was going on and if the train was not full they made a quick check between Fish Hoek and Clovelly and those with no ticket had to pay double the fare. There have been two railway accidents at Fish Hoek. An eyewitness account of the first one in appeared in the South African Railways and Harbours Magazine of July 1919. Dr Davies was on Fish Hoek beach about 5.15pm on the afternoon of 24 May 1919. He saw a train from Kalk Bay come into the station and a train coming from Simon’s Town run into it. Fortunately one train was stationary and he estimated that the other was only moving at about eight miles per hour. There were no fatalities although Dr Davies said, “I jumped through the train and gave all the medical assistance I could to those injured. The first man I saw was practically dying and I sent messengers over to call for medicine and other help and to the surrounding houses for linen etc. These were soon forthcoming, many people supplying many articles very rapidly and generously.” The second accident was more serious. On 24 January 1928 an engine jumped the points on the Clovelly side of the station and the train was derailed. Six people were killed and twenty four injured. In 1900 a company called Kommetjie Estates Ltd. purchased a large tract of land at Kommetjie and laid out a township where plots were advertised for sale in 1902. To make this area more accessible the company decided that a railway line from Kommetjie, linking up with the existing line at Fish Hoek, would enhance the value of the plots by making it easy to commute to Cape Town. An engineer was employed to survey the area and plans were drawn up. An Act of Parliament had to be passed to sanction the building of a new railway line and, the plans having been approved, Act No 14 of 1903 was passed. This authorised “The company styled “The Kommetjie Estates Ltd.” to construct and work a railway line in the Cape Division between Fish Hoek and The Kommetjie.” This was going to be an expensive project. The land had to be bought from the owners, who were probably not very pleased at the idea of a railway line through their property, and the area had a high water table which would make construction difficult. The Anglo-Boer War having just ended it was not easy to find investors and the line was never built, but what a convenience it would have been for those living in Ocean View and Masiphumelele. ==== Vischoek, Vishoek or Fish Hoek? ==== It is difficult to say when Fish Hoek was named. Many names appear on early maps and at various times it has been described as Visch Baai, Visbaai, Vishoeks Baai and many other variations. The name Vischoek was first given to the promontory between Kalk Bay and Fish Hoek and later extended to the bay beyond. The title deeds of the farm used the name Visch Hoek, however when the first plots were laid out for sale the plan had both Visch Hoek and Fish Hoek on it. Why the English word fish was used but the Dutch word hoek retained is not known. It is very confusing for tourists who, not knowing that hoek is Dutch for corner, often ask if the town is called Fish Hoek because the bay is shaped like a fish hook! As most of the first residents of the new village were English speaking they called their village Fish Hoek. They were therefore most annoyed when the following report, headed “Vis Hoek not Fish Hoek” appeared in the Cape Times of 16 May 1934. “Road sign posts at Fish Hoek will in future show the name of the locality as Vis Hoek. At yesterday’s meeting of the Divisional Council a recommendation to this effect was agreed to. It is understood that the railway proposes re-naming the station as Vis Hoek and the Council’s Engineer reported that all official plans of the locality have its name spelt this way.” The Village Management Board Immediately queried this with the Divisional Council who replied that the report was correct. “The Automobile Association has informed the Council of the decision of the Railway Department to re-name the station Vis Hoek and inquired which spelling the Council desired should be adopted in the manufacture of road signs. In view of the change of name of the station and as all original plans of the diagram refer to the farm as Vis Hoek the Council decided to keep this spelling on the road signs.” A protest meeting was held in the village and angry letters were written to the newspapers. It appeared that in 1928 the railway authorities had decided that “the name of stations, sidings etc., of which one half appeared in the one language and the other half in the other language should be changed so that a pure name was retained in the one or other official language.” This was being implemented when stations were painted and no double names would be allowed, therefore Fish Hoek would now be known as Vishoek. However, it was pointed out even Vishoek was not correct as the original farm was called Visch Hoek. A petition against the name change was circulated and the Chairman of the Village Management Board wrote to the Divisional Council stating that the Board had “unanimously resolved that they will not countenance any alteration in the present name of the Township.” The residents were getting ready to fight! The Automobile Association, having also received an irate letter from the Village Management Board, backtracked and wrote to the Divisional Council suggesting tactfully that “under the circumstances” it would be better to retain the name of Fish Hoek. The Divisional Council rescinded the motion and the name remained Fish Hoek. Feelings on the subject were very heated and there were many letters to the press. One correspondent wrote that as “The Fish Hoek Village Management Board is a proper, legally constituted, and legally named Board. Think how interesting Deeds of Transfer will be in the future. They will read, I think, something like this. Certain piece of land being Lot No….. situate at Vis Hoek, in the Village Management Board area of Fish Hoek, part of the Visch Hoek Estate.” Another correspondent, citing the very long names on some Welsh railway stations suggested “why not call the station Vishoekfishoekvischoek?” Now that would have really put us on the map! ==== Beach Development ==== One of the reasons for the popularity of Fish Hoek has always been the beautiful beach with safe bathing. However, as more visitors began using the beach, although the residents wanted it to remain as natural as possible, more facilities needed to be provided. When Villeria Flats were built, in the 1920s, on what is now the open space behind the first subway, bathing cubicles were built underneath them. People were more modest in those days and would not have dreamed of changing in public or going home in a wet bathing costume. So in 1927 the Local Board decided to build some bathing boxes on the beach. The residents were informed that they could be hired at a monthly rate which varied, with the time of the year, from £2 per month in December and January to 5 shillings per month from June to September. The first six bathing boxes were built in 1929, more being erected as visitors from Cape Town, and further afield, discovered how useful it was to have somewhere to change. About 1922 a large raft, from a ship, was bought at an auction in Cape Town and moored off the rocks. It was a big box-like structure kept afloat by empty drums and was much used by bathers. Unfortunately, being rather heavy, it tended to break loose in rough seas and wash up on the beach where it eventually broke up. Later a diving board was erected there but was removed after a bather was injured by diving off it at low tide. The first tea room was built in 1925, a wooden building known as the Pavilion. It was built on stilts to allow extra high tides to wash underneath and many of our older residents remembered scrabbling in the sand under the Pavilion looking for coins that had been dropped through the gaps in the floor boards as people pocketed their change. It was replaced by the first part of the present building in 1954 and this has been added on to several times. In 1957 the Fish Hoek Women’s Association presented the clock on the front of the restaurant. Although this was regarded as a useful addition by most people the local children now had no excuse for being home late for supper! In 1931 the Village Management Board employed a chartered engineer to draw up plans for a cement path from the beach to Sunnycove. The rocks along the side of the bay were a favourite spot for sunbathing and swimming and the easiest way to get there was to walk along the railway line, which for safety reasons was not a good idea. Nine people submitted tenders for the first section, to be built as far as the second subway. A tender of £440, from J. H. Tyler, was accepted with the work to be completed by 31 October 1932, in time for the summer season. Eight tenders were received for the second section, which would complete the walk. It was built by J. Gordon at a cost of £275 and completed on 9 January 1933. The new walkway was named the Jager Walk after H. S. Jager, the Chairman of the Village Management Board. Who first called it the Catwalk is not known, there are several claimants, and although there is a name board up with Jager Walk on it, it is always known locally as the Catwalk. A 1785 map marks a path along this area called “Diamanten Pad”. A possible explanation of this is the presence of crystals in the granite boulders along what is now the Catwalk which sparkle in the sun. Alas, no diamonds have ever been found there! To accommodate the gentlemen a changing booth, open on the sea side, was built on the first section of the Catwalk and labelled “Men Only Changing Booth”. Many visitors to Fish Hoek used it, including [[Smuts-60|General Smuts]]. On hearing this Mr Jager offered him the use of his bathing box which was gratefully accepted. “Men Bathers”, as it was known locally, was part of the history of Fish Hoek until the Fish Hoek Municipality was replaced by the South Peninsula Municipality. Suddenly it was remodelled, a wall being built down the middle with ladies being permitted to change on one side and gentlemen on the other, perhaps the authorities felt that Fish Hoek was being sexist! Whatever the reason, it created a problem as the beach law enforcement were having increasing trouble with vagrants and drinking and drug taking on the beach. When challenged wrongdoers soon discovered that the place to take cover was the ladies side as the male law enforcement officers were not supposed to follow them in there. There was talk of demolishing the building but instead it was decided to take out the dividing wall and restore it to the original “Men Only”. In 1935 a local resident submitted plans for a new foreshore development. This was to provide a promenade, a pavilion and a tidal pool. Steps would lead up from the beach to a sundeck and restaurant and a second storey would have a hall suitable for dances, films and other entertainments. At beach level there would be two hundred bathing cubicles. Each of the corners of the sun deck would have a tower housing a water tank. This was to be in about the same position as the present restaurant. Other areas would be developed for parking, games and walkways and the water from the tanks in the towers was to be used to wash away piled up sand. A grandiose scheme indeed, which would have been completely impractical when the high spring and autumn tides washed up. Perhaps it is just as well that the estimated cost of £30 000 was way beyond anything the Village Management Board could raise, even if the scheme had been practicable. In the 1920s the beach was the centre of entertainment for those living in the village. Hockey and cricket were played on a gravel pitch at the back of the beach opposite the station, known as “the black pitch”. The local children learned to swim at an early age and as they grew up spent many hours at the beach. Impromptu games of touch rugby were played in the summer evenings, as they still are today. On 5 November, Guy Fawkes Night, a huge bonfire would be lit and everyone in the village gathered to watch the fireworks. Donkey rides were very popular. In 1940 Mr and Mrs Ayres, who ran a private hotel, Bellaire, in Second Avenue, bought two donkeys and named them Hurricane and Spitfire after the aeroplanes used by the Royal Airforce during World War 2, which had just started. The Ayres thought that donkey rides would be a good way to raise funds for the war effort and the Municipality agreed, so every morning, Tek, who looked after them, could be seen, in his white coat, taking the donkeys to the beach. For almost twenty years they, and later their baby, Meteor, were a source of pleasure to many children, with all the proceeds going to charity. But by 1958 Fish Hoek was no longer the small village it had been and quite a large fee was being demanded for the right to take the donkeys on to the beach. As all proceeds from the rides had always gone to charity their owners were not happy about this, so the donkeys were retired to their paddock on the site of what is now the Second Avenue car park. Such a quiet life was not to their liking, and after several “escapes” and the accusation by one irate gardener that they had eaten his dahlias, they were sent to live out their lives in a field at the SPCA. Many local residents were very annoyed about this and visited them regularly with sympathy and bunches of carrots. In January 1954 the Fish Hoek Echo advertised “See a moving picture of real life in colour at the Camera Obscura on the beach. Admission 6d, children 3d.” The camera obscura is a fascinating show consisting of a round table on which a moving picture of what is actually happening around the building at that moment is projected from a periscope on the roof. A small building was specially erected but presumably it was not a paying proposition as it lasted for only one season. The swings, slide and roundabout provided enjoyment for children for many years before a climbing frame and a boat named “Samson” were added to the playground. Samson Mankai was employed by the Fish Hoek Municipality for more than thirty years, clearing the seaweed and litter from the beach. He was well known to all the locals, particularly the children. When he retired, in 1987, the Council decided to name the boat in the children’s playground after him. Perhaps an ironic decision when you realise that for all the years he worked there Fish Hoek was a “white” beach and neither he, nor any member of his family, could use the beach for recreation. By 1958 the members of the 1st Sea Scout Rover Crew were performing unofficial lifesaving duties at the beach. The idea of Lifesaving Clubs with the members being trained for duty came from Australia, and in March 1958 the Fish Hoek Surf Lifesaving Club was officially registered. Initially they had no facilities and it was not until 1963 that they were allocated land to build a hut. The club members built this themselves in the workshop at the Windsor Hotel on Beach Road. It was then taken across the railway in sections and erected on the beach. Although, in time, it was extended it did not compare with the facilities at other clubs and providing hospitality for visiting teams, when it was Fish Hoek’s turn to host competitions, became quite an embarrassment. It was not until 1993 that their present clubhouse was built. ==== Beach Controversies ==== It was not long after the first plots were sold, that that the first controversy over the use of the beach erupted. Plots had been laid out where the bathing boxes are today and further along the beach proposed roads were set out on the plan for later development. One of Fish Hoek’s well known residents, “Bull” Pritchard, who had built his house, “Drano”, on the Catwalk in 1919, first drew attention to the situation. He was a surveyor in the Government Survey Department and on looking at the plans realised that houses on the sea side of the railway would ruin the beach. The administrators of the de Villiers Estate insisted that this area was above the high water mark and was therefore part of the farm. The original survey had been done before the 1818 grant of land to [[Bruyns-17|Andries Bruijns]] and the eastern limit of the farm was set down as the seacoast. The Government Surveyor at the time had taken this as a straight line between two pegs, one at the Fish Hoek end of the beach and the other one at the Clovelly end. Over the years attempts to stop the sand encroaching on the railway line and variations in the course of the Silvermine River, had altered the shoreline and so the legitimacy of the plots hinged on exactly where the high water mark had been in 1818. The local residents were very concerned and to canvas for support a public meeting, chaired by W. H. Wardley, Chairman of the Fish Hoek Ratepayers Association, was held in the Metropolitan Hall on Greenmarket Square, Cape Town, on 7 November 1919. A fund was opened to provide money for any legal proceedings but it was not until three years later, on 10 October 1922, that the case came to court. It was brought to the attention of the public by a notice that appeared in the Cape Times. ''“We, the Ratepayers of Fish Hoek, hereby assure our Local Area Board that they will have our wholehearted support in all steps they take to assist the Surveyor-General in his forthcoming case regarding our Foreshore, and we earnestly trust that he will be successful, as the grave public interests involved are vital to our future welfare.”'' It was submitted that the shore line had changed over the years, and that the tide had at one time washed over the area where the railway line was built, so that the land on which the plots were laid out had been below the high water mark in 1818. On 19 December 1922 judgement was given in favour of the de Villiers Estate but an appeal was lodged and on I I April 1923 the case went to the Appellate Division in Bloemfontein, where a panel of judges, in a fifty page judgement, upheld the decision of the lower court. The Government had been watching the judgement with interest in case it led to other cases of disputed coastline, and were anxious to have it settled as soon as possible. However, the matter dragged on and it was not until December 1926 that an agreement was made between the Fish Hoek Local Board, the Ratepayers of Fish Hoek, the Administrator of the Cape Province, the Government of the Union of South Africa and the de Villiers Estate. It was arranged that on payment of £3 000 the Fish Hoek Local Board could become the owner of the disputed plots. Even then the matter was not settled as the Local Board could not raise a loan unless they held the title to the land and the de Villiers Estate could not part with the title until they had the money. It was a deadlock! To finalise the matter the House of Assembly adopted a resolution on 20 June 1927, which was then passed by the Senate, concerning “The sanctioning of certain arrangements between the Fish Hoek Village Management Board and the Executors in the Estate of the late [[De_Kock-1051|Mrs Hester Sophia de Villiers]].” This resolution enabled the Village Management Board to raise a loan which was to be paid back over thirty years, finally being settled in the late 1950s. The disputed land was returned to the Government which rented it to the Village Management Board in exchange for £3000 to be paid to the executors of the de Villiers Estate. A Supreme Court order was issued and the transactions took place simultaneously on 7 March 1928 subject to “the condition that the land shall only be used for public purposes and shall not be capable of being sold, and to such further conditions as the Government may approve.” It took nine years, but the residents of Fish Hoek had saved the beach. Another controversy arose over the building of a new sea wall. By the early 1970s the palisade of railway sleepers, put in to try and control the sand being blown on the railway line, was in a bad state. Having been there for over forty years, the wood was decaying and the high tides were washing through and undermining the path in front of the bathing boxes. In 1976 the railway authorities declared that the first subway, under the line at the back of the beach, was unsafe and unless the Fish Hoek Municipality would agree to pay half the cost of reconstruction it would have to be bricked up. The Council decided that the subway had to be kept open so plans were drawn up to rebuild the subway and extend the Catwalk, which at that time started at the subway, to the front of the restaurant and put steps down to the beach. The second stage would be the replacing of the old railway sleepers with a new sea wall. Also included were plans fora new caravan park, which until then had been behind the Lifesaving Clubhouse, and a clubhouse for the Beach Sailing Club. When the plans were published this became the hot topic of discussion in the town and a strong anti-wall lobby soon appeared. It was said that extending the Catwalk would encourage the sea to swirl around in the corner and make bathing unsafe. It was also suggested that the sand would all wash away from the area leaving only exposed rock, or alternatively that the sand would pile up and cover the walkway. The subway, path and steps in front of the restaurant were completed by the end of 1976 but on 19 February 1977 a high tide flooded the new subway and exposed rubble which had been buried instead of being removed after construction. A new pump had to be purchased and the rubble removed. Older residents pointed out that perhaps the builders of the old wooden Pavilion had had the right idea when they built it on stilts so that high tides could wash underneath it. Meetings of the Residents Association at this time were very argumentative. The second stage of the development had been designed by the Fish Hoek Town Engineer specifically for the local conditions and was to be built using municipal labour, an idea which many thought to be impossible. An oceanographer was asked to speak on the subject and a group of engineers was asked to prepare a report on what many thought would be a colossal mistake. At a meeting in December 1979 a motion of no confidence in the Fish Hoek Town Council was proposed by the anti-wall lobby which was defeated by 42 votes to 36. Someone pointed out that as the Council had been re-elected unopposed at the last election it might prove difficult to replace them should they be forced to resign en bloc! Despite all this the Council expressed confidence in the Town Engineer and the wall was built, being completed in 1982 at a very reasonable cost of R38 869. Many visitors do not even realise that it is there. The only outward sign is a small brick wall on the sea side of the path at the back of the beach but under the sand below that wall is a v shaped trench filled with interlocking concrete blocks. It fills with sand but in some way prevents the sand from building up and covering the pathway. In comparison to the sea wall controversy the building of Seaside Village only caused minor dissatisfaction. Some residents were not happy that because the land on the foreshore could not be sold, the houses could be bought but the land had to be leased from the Council. Others felt that as people walking their dogs in the sand dunes in the area had been mugged it was perhaps a good idea. It was also said that it was a very ugly development and for some time after completion was referred to as “Noddy Town”. Initially permission was given by the Administrator of the Cape for the land to be leased for ten years for the construction of what was intended to be a holiday village. At the end of that period an application to the Deeds Office for renewal of the leases for a period of 25 years was refused on the grounds that the land should not have been built on in the first place. Without a valid lease on the land, transfer could not be taken, so no sales could be completed but the situation was eventually resolved in 2015. A proposal to fence off the beach and charge for admission enraged most residents. As this could not be allowed, being in conflict with the stipulation in the 1818 grant to [[Bruyns-17|Andries Bruijns]] that the beach should remain open to the public, it was proposed to levy a parking fee instead. It was pointed out that the beach would still be open to the public in that the payment is for parking a car and pedestrians do not pay. The residents demanded that as they paid municipal rates which were used for the upkeep of the beach they should be given free passes. This was one they could not win as it would have been impossible to ensure that those giving local addresses really were local residents, but a season ticket was introduced. It was also stipulated that all parking fees had to kept in a separate account and used for the upkeep and improvement of the parking area. Unfortunately when the Fish Hoek Municipality was absorbed into a larger area, parking fees went into the big municipal pot. ==== Public Services ==== Coming through Fish Hoek in the 1800s you would have had to negotiate the Trappies before crossing the Silvermine River. This was a series of step like excavations cut into the hillside to ease the steep descent. Crossing the river, before the building of the bridge, had to be done with care as there were quicksands and everyone knew the story of the rider and his horse who were swallowed up and never found. The road then went along the back of the beach before turning up to go behind the farmhouse and on to Simon’s Town. The first bridge across the Silvermine River was a single track wooden bridge with hand rails, at that time quite sufficient to take the animal drawn traffic. In 1902 a bus service was started between Muizenberg and Kommetjie. Passing through Fish Hoek was quite a problem, as the road was often covered with sand making it almost impassable. The unreliability of the early engines, and the fact that the passengers objected to paying high fares if they had to get out and push, led to the service being discontinued. Transport in the area returned to the horse drawn cart or ox wagon until the reliability of the petrol engine was improved. When the railway station was moved in 1919, it was decided to resite the Main Road from its position along the back of the beach, as the sand drifting across it was still a hazard for the increasing number of motor vehicles using it. Sandhills had to be taken away and the Post Office had to move a telephone pole that stood in the middle of the new route, for which they charged £14.5.11. By the early 1930s the single track bridge was not safe for the increased motor traffic and in 1932 the old bridge was removed in preparation for a bigger concrete bridge to be constructed. A temporary wooden bridge was put up between the road and the railway line to provide access to Fish Hoek and Simon’s Town until the new bridge was finished. The Victorian Times pub is now the oldest building on the Main Road, being one of the few wood and iron houses, dating from the early 1920s, left in Fish Hoek. Number 3 First Avenue is another one, which has been changed very little apart from the stoep having been enclosed. Warwick House was also built in the 1920s and at various times has been a boarding house, flats and shops. Whitstable, on the corner near the traffic circle, was originally the Fish Hoek Farm stables, the road having been built up it now being below road level. As the weekenders were replaced by a more permanent population, shops started to appear. Initially these were built on street corners for the convenience of those living in the area. The shops on the corners of Kommetjie Road and First and Second Avenues were some of the first to open. As the village got larger more shops were opened, mainly on the western side of the Main Road, the eastern side remaining mostly residential for many years. The Village Management Board built offices in the Main Road in 1933 and as Fish Hoek grew the municipal complex expanded to take over a whole block between Main Road, Central Road and Beach Road. The house behind the offices, which had at one time been the Lounge Tea Room, became the Town Engineers Department and the Library, Traffic Police and Fire Department were all sited there. In the 1940s there were at least two commercial libraries in Fish Hoek, one at the Red Roof Tea Room on Simonstown Road and one in G. W. Morris’s shop in the Main Road. Later Jane Eliza Hasted, an author herself, opened a bookshop with a subscription library. In 1953 the Committee of the Fish Hoek Women’s Association, having heard that a Provincial Library Service was being started, wrote to the Fish Hoek Town Council asking for a Library to be opened in Fish Hoek. The Council invited representatives of local organisations to a meeting to discuss the project and it was decided that Fish Hoek should become part of the Provincial Library Service and open a free library for residents of the town. People outside the town boundaries would be able to join but would have to pay a subscription. A room was made available in the Town Engineer's building and applications were invited for the post of Librarian. As the library was only to be open for an hour in the morning and an hour in the evening there were over forty applicants for what was seen to be “a cushy job”! They were all interviewed by the Mayor and the Town Clerk and the post went to Ethelmay Gillard, who having been brought up in Fish Hoek had, at the age of twenty-one, contracted polio and was trying to cope with a permanent disability and become independent. Little did they know that Miss G, as she later became known to her staff, was to run the Fish Hoek Library for thirty-six years, seeing them through vast expansion and two moves. On her retirement she returned as a volunteer helper and was elected Chairman of the Friends of the Library. The Provincial Library Service delivered a thousand books, which had to be fitted into a 10ft by 6ft room. By the time the shelves were fitted on all the walls there was very little space left for a chair and table for the Librarian. This was the second Provincial Library to be opened, the first being at Gordons Bay. A Library Committee of local residents was elected at a public meeting and the library opened on 1 April 1954. The opening day was chaotic, the queue stretched right around the block as people waited to be registered. The evening hour was so busy that helpers from Toc H volunteered to help put the books away as they came in. Because of the apartheid laws the library was for whites only and there was much discussion as to whether elderly borrowers should be able to send their maids in to change their books. Eventually it was decided to allow this provided the maid brought a note from her employer! The library was so popular that it was not long before two more rooms had to be used. In 1956 a story hour for children was started. This was the first to be held at any library in the Cape Peninsula. More space was soon needed and the Provincial Library Service asked that a proper building be provided. The new library, with a reading room, a children’s room and a hall, financed by the municipality with the aid of a government subsidy, opened in Beach Road in 1958. Immediately forty librarians from all over the Cape Peninsula converged on Fish Hoek for a two week training course held in the new Library Hall. The patrons were not pleased, as THEIR librarian was on the course and there were strangers on the counter in THEIR new library who did not know what kind of books they liked! Dogs were not allowed in the library but there was one small dog, Blackie, who had his own place there. Fish Hoek being “dry” the dog’s master went by train to his favourite watering hole in Kalk Bay every morning. The dog would walk as far as the library with him and spend the morning behind the counter where he had his own supply of biscuits. On hearing the whistle from the goods train which went through shortly before his master’s usual train he would take himself off to the station to wait for his boss. The Traffic and Fire Department was located next to the municipal offices in the Main Road, the traffic cops also serving as firemen. The first photographic evidence we have of a fire on Elsie’s Peak dates from 1910 and mountain fires have always been a threat. On 24 April 1936 a fire started in the Glencairn Valley and came over the mountain to threaten the houses on the slopes of Elsie’s Peak. A school boy on his way home from school in the train saw the flames beginning to appear over the top of the mountain. He rushed home to change and with a friend went up the Ravine to see the fire. It was only when some of the beaters started shouting at them that they realised that they were in danger of being surrounded by the fire and had to run for their lives. At that time the only way of fighting a fire in Fish Hoek was to call out local volunteers but this fire was too big for local resources. The Cape Town Fire Brigade was called and the Navy and the owners of the Glencairn Quarry also sent men to help. The nearest fire hydrant was on the Outspan but there was a problem getting sufficient water pressure for the hoses. By this time the highest house on the mountain was being threatened and our schoolboy was helping to remove the owner’s possessions. In the kitchen he was given a box with jars of preserved peaches to carry out and the temptation was too much for him. Having had nothing to eat since his school lunch, that jar of peaches tasted really good! The house was saved and the fire extinguished but then came the accounts from all those who had sent men to fight the fire. It was suggested that the cost be divided amongst the owners of the homes that had been threatened, who, as you can imagine, were not very pleased with this idea. Their insurance companies were approached and agreed to meet the cost of fighting the fire as it would have cost them much more if the houses had burned down. However, it took six months to get the home owners to submit their claims and refund the money to the Village Management Board who had paid the bills. In 1947 the original house of the Fish Hoek Farm, which was then the Homestead Hotel, burned down. Perhaps as a result of this the Fish Hoek Municipality decided to act on a suggestion from one of the Town Councillors, Capt. Fairley, and start their own Fire Brigade. The contract with the Cape Town Fire Brigade was terminated as not only did it take them some time to get to Fish Hoek but it was becoming increasingly more expensive. Capt. Fairley located a Ford V.8 troop carrier and a trailer pump which were bought from the War Store Disposal Board and combined into a homemade fire engine. The Town Engineer, Mr J. N. Griffiths, and another municipal employee, Mr W. G. Mair, worked in their spare time to produce the fire engine in less than three months at a total cost of only £900, all the mechanical work being carried out in the Fish Hoek municipal workshops. The finished engine was valued at £4 000. It was 26 feet long and designed to operate from both hydrants and other water sources with a 50 gallon tank to deal with fires in isolated places. It had 2 000 feet of hose and a ladder which could be extended to 35 feet. Recognising that without Capt. Fairley the building of the fire engine would not have been possible it was named the Capt. Fairley Fire Tender and a plaque bearing the name was attached to the vehicle. It remained in service until 1971 when the Fire Station moved from the Main Road to its present building. By the 1980s the library and municipal offices were too small for the growing town. The site between the Main Road and Beach Road was sold to the developers of the Town Square Shopping Centre and a library, municipal offices and engineers department were added on to the Civic Hall at Central Circle, the new complex being opened in 1988. Until the middle 1920s there was no police station in Fish Hoek, it was included in the Simon’s Town area. In case of emergency it took time for the police to arrive, so in November 1921 the Local Board requested a mounted policeman to patrol the Fish Hoek area and this was agreed. The first police station in Fish Hoek was opened in the 1920s and was not in the Main Road but in Recreation Road on the site of Calders Kings Hotel. In October 1921 what must have been the first prosecution for speeding in the village, a charge of “furious riding” in the Main Road, was thrown out of court when the Magistrate at Simon’s Town discovered that when the Police Offences Act of 1882 was drawn up, the area of Fish Hoek was not included. The Board had to write to the Department of Justice to get the matter rectified and on 5 May 1922 a proclamation in the Government Gazette made it illegal to break the speed limit in the Fish Hoek area. In October 1927 it was recorded that in the previous three months there had been fifteen cases of housebreaking, six of theft and four of breaking into shops. Additional police were requested to cope with this “crime wave” and the complement at the Fish Hoek station was increased to three. This must have solved the problem as the crime level dropped, and presumably the personnel became bored, because in April 1932 a complaint was laid that both the sergeant and the constable on duty had been seen in the Kalk Bay cinema on the same night, leaving Fish Hoek without police protection! It had become so peaceful that in November 1934 the Village Management Board was informed that the police station was to be moved to Kalk Bay, to a house on the Fish Hoek side of Clairvaux Road. The residents were outraged, and the Board was asked to request the immediate return of the station before crime in the village escalated again. Letters were written to the papers and a letter of protest signed by most of the prominent residents was sent to General Smuts, who was then a Cabinet Minister. In view of all this protestation it was decided to build a police station in Fish Hoek on a site in Beach Road opposite the station. So the police returned to Fish Hoek to a brand new building which opened on 2 May 1936. This police station closed at the end of May 1984 when the site was sold and a new station was planned in the Main Road. In the meantime a house on Highway was to be used. The neighbours were not pleased about this and protested that there would be noisy police vans coming and going at all hours, not to mention the shouts of recalcitrant prisoners. The editor of the Fish Hoek Echo wrote a tongue in cheek article about how lucky they would be to have a cell with a view. The Station Commander at the time must have had very little sense of humour as he wrote a letter protesting that the article undermined the dignity of the police, which only amused the readers even more! However, the authorities realised that a residential area was not the best place for a police station and a Divisional Council building in a more isolated spot in Brakkloof, near the Sun Valley traffic lights, was used instead, until the present building was completed in December 1988. For many years if you had said “Mardi Gras” to anyone in the Cape Peninsula they would have replied “Fish Hoek”. From small beginnings it grew to be an annual event drawing hundreds of people to watch the procession in Fish Hoek Main Road. It was started by Lynette Barling, who soon became known as “the Queen of the Mardi Gras”. Well known in local handicraft and Dramatic Society circles, and as the wearer of enormous hats, Lynette was also a wonderful organiser. In 1959 Fish Hoek was trying to raise funds for the building of a home for the elderly, and what better than to involve as many people as possible by having a Mardi Gras procession through the streets of the town. Probably no one realised just how much work this was going to be, but Lynette and her friends and family just went ahead and did it. Every year her home became a workshop as floats were designed and costumes made. Traditionally it was always held on 2nd January and 1960 saw the very first Mardi Gras. £393 was collected which was made up to £500 by donations. This was presented to the fund for what was to be Carlisle Lodge. It was obvious that although it took a lot of effort it was a fun way of raising money and so it became an annual event, growing in size each year, with fundraisers being held for the money for materials as local groups vied with each other to build the most ingenious floats. After processing along the Main Road they ended up at the sports fields where the judging of the various categories took place. It had become such a part of the town that everyone was horrified when, in 1978, it was cancelled as Lynette was not well and could not get anyone to take over from her. At this point the Town Council decided that if the Mardi Gras was to continue it must have a properly drawn up constitution and reasonable notice must be given of proposed activities. They also asked that the number of floats be limited, with no more than forty being allowed, so by then it had become a really spectacular procession. In 1981 Mardi Gras celebrated its 21st birthday with a very wet procession. It was reported that the Mardi Gras Queen “looked lovely in wet white” and the kilts of the pipe band “swung wetly in marchtime”. That year there were also twenty five marching groups. With no one willing to take on the overall organisation there was no procession in 1982. However, a group of local young people, dressed in black, walked the route on the afternoon of the 2nd January. They carried a mock coffin, draped in black, and placards proclaiming the death of the Fish Hoek Mardi Gras. Although it was later revived for some years, it was only a shadow of Mardi Gras in its heyday. ==== Early Businesses ==== Even before the first sale of plots in 1918, business opportunities were being explored. The Delbridge brothers, who were builders, realised that the sandstone in a koppie on Elsies Peak was ideal for building and particularly good for flooring as it polished very well. A lease was negotiated with [[De_Kock-1051|Mrs Hester de Villiers]], the owner of the Fish Hoek Farm, allowing the stone to be quarried. In the late 1700s farmers from the western end of the valley had built a track over the mountain as a short cut to Simon’s Town. This was not used for long as a better route was found but it was opened up again to give access to the quarry site. It started opposite the Primary School, in Kommetjie Road, taking an easy gradient to about three quarters of the way up the ravine opposite Second Avenue, after which it ran up more steeply to the quarry. The wagons containing the stone went up and down on rails opposite the Main Road circle. They were presumably powered by a mule or donkey operated capstan at the top as the remains of horse shoes have been found on the site. As there was only one set of rails there must have been some sort of braking system for the empty waggons coming down. The stone was cut and dressed on site, only the finished product being brought down to the road where it was then loaded into carts to be taken to local building sites or to the railway siding near the farmhouse. In 1896 Fish Hoek stone was railed to Wellington for the building of Cummings Hall at the Wellington Training College. The business closed about 1905, possibly as a result of the opening of the larger Glencairn Quarry. The Delbridges had building businesses and were not dependent on the Fish Hoek Quarry, so presumably closed it when it became uneconomical. In 1903 Lambert Colyn opened a quarry at the side of the Clovelly Road on the site of the present electrical sub-station. He was given permission to build a railway line to the siding at Fish Hoek to load his stone. To do this he had to build a bridge over the Silvermine River and a line that ran alongside the Simon’s Town line to the siding near the farmhouse. The railway line remained after the closing of the quarry and by 1930 had become rather hazardous to traffic where it crossed the Main Road as the lines were slightly below the road level. The remains of the supports for the bridge could be seen in the Silvermine River for many years. Another type of building material, ash blocks, was made in a building on the foreshore in 1924/5. They were made from a mixture of coal cinders from the railway, sea sand and shells with a little cement to bond the mixture together. The Local Board thought that the railway authorities had given permission for this business to be carried on there and the railway authorities thought that permission had been given by the Local Board! It was only in March 1925 that someone realised that no permission had ever been given and they were forced to close. In 1930 an application was made to start a fish smoking business and in 1931 there was an application for a fish processing factory. Both applications were refused as Fish Hoek wanted to remain a residential area only. Tea rooms and cafes soon appeared as more visitors came to the beach. In 1925 Costa and Maria Pnematicatos took over a cafe in Beach Road. This became the local rendezvous for the young people coming and going from the beach. For visitors it was the place to go and buy their delicious ice creams. In October 1923 the Local Board passed the plans for a cafè on the corner of Main and Recreation Roads. It was called Santoy Tea Rooms and in an early advertisement is described as “five minutes from the railway station ” and tells us “Table Boarders a Speciality.” A stoep on the Main Road side was a very popular place for tea. It was taken over in 1925 by an owner who changed the name to “The Green Parrot Tea Room” and brought her parrot with her. Polly soon became very popular with the customers. The stoep was built in so that it could be used in all weather but when the Main Road was rebuilt in the 1940s it was discovered that it was actually built on public land, so the stoep had to be removed to make room for a sidewalk. The business changed hands several times but the parrot remained. The building was demolished in 1964 and replaced with the present building. On the corner of Main and Recreation Roads, opposite the Green Parrot was a low lying site which flooded in winter. This remained empty for several years until Ted Holwill bought it in 1941. He already owned the adjoining block of shops and on his new site he built Devonshire Court flats and opened Kents Stores underneath on the Main Road side. By 1944 he owned the whole block as far as A. P. Jones and in June 1986 the old shops were demolished and the building of the Arcade was started. It took a year to build, being completed in June 1987. The property still belongs to the Holwill Family Trust. Wakefords Furnishing and A.P. Jones are the only two of the original Fish Hoek businesses still running. In 1920 Albert Wakeford came to Fish Hoek on holiday with his parents. He met an elderly couple who owned a grocery shop at the end of the Main Road and they asked him if he would run the business for them. Service was much more personal in those days and he would set out on horseback each morning to collect the grocery lists from his customers. In the afternoon the horse would be harnessed to a cart and they would set off to deliver the orders. In 1922 he bought the grocery shop and four years later another two plots further down the road, where in 1929 he built a garage, the Triangle Garage, so called because the present circle at the end of the Main Road was then a triangle. During the 1940s he started selling second hand furniture at the garage and realising that as Fish Hoek was growing and there was a demand for furniture he converted the garage into shops and so Wakefords Furniture was born. In 1945 he bought the Fish Hoek Garage, where Pep Stores is today, which was renamed the Triangle Garage. A.P. Jones was a Cornishman who had worked in a gentleman’s outfitters before joining the army during World War 1. Although he got his old job back after the war, prospects for advancement were not good, and he joined his two brothers who had immigrated to South Africa and lived with one of them in Rondebosch. In 1921 his brother moved to Fish Hoek and he came too. Although there was plenty of entertainment fora young bachelor he could not forget his Cornish sweetheart, so he sent her a ticket to Cape Town and they were married at Holy Trinity Church in Kalk Bay in 1925. After living with his brother for a while they moved to a flat in Tamboers Kloof where their first daughter was born. As a founder member of the Commercial Employees Association he fought for improved conditions for shop workers until he started travelling as an agent for Garlicks, taking orders for their goods in the country districts. Travelling by train and staying in country hotels his route took him three months to complete. This was not a good job for a man with a wife and two children so his brother persuaded him to buy a grocery business in Kommetjie Road. As more shops were opening up in the Main Road he approached Mr Burton, the owner of some plots between Warwick House and Wakefords who agreed to build a shop and let it. Now A.P. Jones began to sell clothing and materials as well as groceries and the shop was built with two doors for the different departments. As Fish Hoek grew, the clothing and material side became so popular that he sold the grocery side, and when Oxleys, a ladies clothing shop in Warwick House was put up for sale he bought it. The ladies department was moved there whilst the men's department moved further down the Main Road. Running two separate shops was not ideal so he bought a plot next to the bank and built a shop big enough to take all their departments. As the business prospered a house behind the shop was demolished and the premises extended through to First Avenue. In November 1948 a meeting was held to consider the formation of a Business Association. Fifteen people attended with G. W. Morris, who had a shop in the Main Road, acting as Chairman. A resolution was passed that “An Association of Business Interests be formed in Fish Hoek.” The Fish Hoek Business Association represented local interests until 1953 when, at their Annual General Meeting, a resolution was passed that the Fish Hoek Business Association be wound up and its assets transferred to a newly formed Chamber of Commerce. They would then be able to send a delegate to meetings of the Association of Chambers of Commerce. In 1956 “a sub-committee for propaganda for promoting Fish Hoek as a shopping centre” was formed. Special attention was to be drawn to “Easy Parking arrangements in Fish Hoek, Competitive Prices, Competitions, Leisurely Shopping”. The idea of competitions was discarded as “Fish Hoek residents (particularly children) being in the majority would probably carry off everything – which was not the aim of the project.” “It was therefore considered that the approach to the scheme should be a dignified attitude, advertising our shopping area to draw custom from outside areas and presenting all we have naturally and “in our stride” and to cut out all competitive stunts.” ==== Local Government ==== When the first plots were sold in the new Fish Hoek Township in April 1918, the area was administered by the Divisional Council of the Cape. A Vigilance Committee was formed to keep an eye on affairs in the new village. This was a voluntary organisation with no legal standing, although they probably had quite a lot of influence amongst the residents. It was not until 1921 that a group of residents held a meeting at which it was decided that a Local Board should be formed to control the village. A Board consisting of three members was elected, L. Jacobson, E. W. Rice and F. H. Daniels. At their first meeting, held at Dynevor, the home of E. W. Rice, in September of that year L. Jacobson was elected as the Chairman. Working behind the scenes was Reg Kemp, a well known estate agent and the owner of several properties, who organised the Ratepayers Association and compiled a voters list. He never held office, either in the Ratepayers Association or on the Board, but campaigned vigorously for residents rights, often crossing swords with those in authority. It was proposed to levy a rate for general purposes. This was to be one halfpenny in the pound, to be payable in November of each year. In the meantime the Administrator of the Cape was asked to sanction a bank overdraft of £200 for necessary expenditure until the rates were paid. This Board had to start from scratch in raising money and providing services for the residents. At the first meeting they also discussed the provision of a post office, the sanitary arrangements, water supply and the naming of the streets. By 1927, with the increased size of the village and its facilities, it was given added status as a Village Management Board and H. S. Jager was elected as the first Chairman of the new Board. The village continued to grow and develop. The annual revenue of £1 625 in 1921 had grown to £12 000 by 1933 and the property valuation had risen from £64 000 to £436 000 in the same period. The Village Management Board moved into their new offices in the Main Road, having previously been housed in a shop building in Beach Road. The water supply was improved, electricity installed and the sewerage scheme started. The roads were upgraded and the turning into Hillside Road from Simonstown Road was improved. On this corner stands the large rock known as “Sewe Mans Klip” where, according to tradition, the rock had rolled down on an early road-making gang and had killed seven of them. The story goes that it was impossible to move the rock and the bodies are still lying underneath it. In 1929 a group of residents, dissatisfied with the way the Village Management Board was running the village, proposed that the Cape Town City Council be approached with regard to Fish Hoek being amalgamated into the City Council area, but the proposal was not accepted by the City Council. In December 1939 the Provincial Secretary wrote to the Board to say “It is considered that the time has arrived for the status of the Fish Hoek Village Management Board to be raised to that of a Municipality.” There was much discussion of the matter and it was not until 30 August 1940 that the Board resolved that Fish Hoek should become a Municipality. An election was held on 20 November 1940 when six Councillors were elected, H. S. Jager, who had been the first, and only, Chairman of the Village Management Board was elected as Mayor. The Cape Town City Council presented the new Municipality with a Mayoral Chair and a Mayor’s Chain was bought. This chain is unusual in that it consists of linked silver plates on a velvet ribbon and the name of every Mayor of Fish Hoek is inscribed on it. Many prominent residents served on the Council and in 1959 the Council decided to honour H. S. Jager, who served for thirty-two years on the Village Management Board and Town Council, by making him the first Freeman of Fish Hoek. A local calligrapher, “Robbie” Roberts produced a special book in which the photograph and particulars of Freemen were recorded. The Freedom of Fish Hoek was awarded to Herman Scott Jager on 27 October 1959 and he is recorded as having introduced the Fish Hoek Town Planning Scheme and being the first President and a life member of the Fish Hoek Bowling Club. He was also the joint founder, with Dr Eric Noble, of the South African Archaeological Society and was a member of the Council of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science. As well as being represented in the Freedom Book each Freeman was presented with an illuminated scroll in a wooden box. On 16 September 1974 Charles de Stadler became a Freeman of Fish Hoek. After service in both world wars he was a founder member of the Fish Hoek MOTH Shellhole. As a Councillor for fourteen years, he was Deputy Mayor of Fish Hoek for three years and Mayor for four years. He was an executive member of the Fish Hoek Music Society, and a founder member of the Fish Hoek Association Football Club of which he was Chairman for forty years, also a founder member of the Fish Hoek Central Sports Association and the Chairman for two years. The third Freeman was Alleyne Yeld, who was awarded the Freedom of Fish Hoek on 24 November 1988. After a distinguished Public Service career he was a Town Councillor for eighteen years, Deputy Mayor for six years and Mayor for three years. He served as a Justice of the Peace in the Simon’s Town district and was a founder member of the Fish Hoek Association for the Welfare of the Elderly and an Elder of the Dutch Reformed Church in Fish Hoek. The last man to be awarded the Freedom of Fish Hoek before the Municipality disappeared was Hilary Langley. After serving as a pilot in the South African Airforce during World War 2 he married a Fish Hoek girl and worked for the Cape Town City Council, retiring as City Property Manager, making his retirement final after a further five years with a property company. He was a Councillor for 22 years and mayor for two years. During this time he was Chairman of the Fish Hoek Primary and High School Committees and a member of the Cape School Board for twenty three years, a Councillor on the Cape Divisional Council for eight years and a Regional Services Councillor for four years. He was convenor of a special committee appointed by the Fish Hoek Town Council which led to the formation of the Fish Hoek Valley Historical Association who were responsible for the establishment of the Fish Hoek Valley Museum. A special freedom award was made in 1987. In the days when young South African white men had to do two years national service they were then liable for further service, being called up for a month a year for two years and three months in the third year for a period of twelve years. A special naval unit was formed in Simon’s Town to accommodate the young men on temporary call up and named SAS Yselstein after the first ship to be recorded in the bay. As many of them were from Fish Hoek the unit was awarded the freedom of the town. This entitled them to march through the streets of the town on all ceremonial occasions with swords drawn, bayonets fixed, drums beating and colours flying. On 28 November 1987 this right was exercised when the Mayor of Fish Hoek, Councillor John Florence, presented to the unit, under the command of Cdr C. T. Harris, a scroll awarding them the freedom of the town. With South Africa’s new Constitution in 1994 came a new thinking on local government. All the small municipalities were swept away, Fish Hoek lost its independence and became part of a Fish Hoek/Kommetjie/ Noordhoek Transitional Municipal Sub-structure until local government elections were held in 1995 and the South Peninsula Municipality was formed, stretching from Wynberg to Cape Point. At the elections in 2000 the South Peninsula Municipality was incorporated into the Unicity of Cape Town. Seventy years later the residents who had asked for unification with Cape Town had finally got their way, although none of them lived to see it happen! ==== The War Years ==== With the advent of World War 2 in 1939 the residents of Fish Hoek were determined to do all they could to support the allied cause. It was still a relatively small community. A census taken in 1940 tells us that there were 1 200 white residents, 136 coloured and 37 black servants living in the town. Although there was no conscription, by September 1941 152 men and 2 women had volunteered to join the armed forces, and there were others who enlisted later. In May 1940, at a meeting in Fish Hoek, the Deputy Commissioner of Police enrolled over 80 men as Police Reservists. A few weeks later the Civilian Protection Services, the South African equivalent of the Air Raid Precautions in Britain, was formed. Local men and women were trained to deal with air raids and possible invasion, although their main task here was the enforcement of the blackout. As a precaution against enemy ships attacking the harbours at Simon’s Town and Cape Town the whole of the Cape Peninsula was blacked out. No lights were allowed to be shown from doors or windows, street lights were not lit and car headlights and torches had to be screened. No unauthorised access was allowed to Simon’s Town and a barrier was put up at Glencairn. The Fish Hoek Red Cross Detachment trained with the Civilian Protection Services in the treatment of casualties, with the Girl Guides and Boy Scouts acting as “victims”. This was fun for a while, but boring if you were not supposed to be very badly hurt and had to wait your turn to be treated. One young man got so fed up with waiting that he drew the international scouting sign for “gone home” and did just that! There was much fundraising for the war effort. The Fish Hoek Women’s Association was particularly active in this field. They had been very busy raising money for local causes since the Association was formed in 1934. In 1936 they were responsible for persuading the Divisional Council to open a clinic at Noordhoek which they supported with funds and voluntary workers. In 1938 they supported the formation of a Voluntary Aid Detachment in Fish Hoek and when war broke out the VADs performed valuable service in many parts of the world. The Women’s Association War Markets were held monthly in the Recreation Hall. Each month the proceeds went to a different cause, amongst them were the Air Ambulance, the Red Cross, the London Distress Fund, the Merchant Navy Fund, the Lifeboat Service, St Dunstans, parcels for troops and prisoners of war, Russian Relief and the South African Women’s Auxiliary Services funds. One particular cause received their regular support. Mrs Waterson, the Governor General’s wife had visited one of their meetings in Fish Hoek to speak about the Red Cross. In 1941 she sent a cable from London asking if they could contribute towards equipment urgently required for the treatment of facial burn cases. An alfra red lamp and a steriliser were bought with their first donation and this was the start of their support for the Plastic Surgery Unit at the East Grinstead Hospital where so many airmen were treated. A plaque acknowledging the contributions made by the Fish Hoek Women’s Association was put up in one of the prefab wards at the hospital and unveiled by Mrs Waterson. In 1946, when many men were still being treated there, a consignment of dried fruit was shipped to them. They also had a “Spinning Contingent’ which operated from a shop in the Main Road, spinning pure wool into yarn to be dyed and knitted into garments to be sent off to the troops. One of the ladies, Mrs Margaret Cobern, had a “sock machine”, which knitted a long tube, the width of a sock, with only the heel having to be turned by hand. The South African Women’s Auxiliary Services, known as SAWAS, had a very active branch in Fish Hoek and one of their main activities was entertaining the men from troop ships passing through Cape Town and sailors from ships docking in Simon’s Town. At first the Recreation Hall was used for this but when Reg Clark joined up, his garage, in the Main Road, was taken over as an entertainment centre with the Municipality paying half of the rent. Meals were provided and dances and parties were held, with everyone, including the local lasses having a good time. Some of the men came from Cape Town by train but transport was mainly provided by local residents who would meet the troopships at the docks and open their homes to those men who could stay overnight. At the Homestead Hotel a group of young ladies, know as “The Good Companions” provided company at social events for sailors passing through Simon’s Town. Of the Fish Hoek men who volunteered to serve in the armed forces fifteen did not return. In 1946 it was proposed that some sort of war memorial should be erected. Unfortunately agreement could not be reached on what should be done. Several schemes were suggested, one of which was a proposal by the MOTHS for a complex which would cost £30 000 and entail the Municipality taking out a thirty year loan and levying an extra rate to repay it. A more modest idea for a hall and communal centre for ex-servicemen would only cost £10 000. A very poorly attended public meeting was held where two other ideas were put forward, the endowment of a ward in the Red Cross Children’s Hospital or a Children’s Park and Garden of Remembrance to be built on the sports fields. No decision was reached, so the Women’s Association asked for the money they had donated to be returned to them to be banked in an interest paying account until the matter was settled. By April 1947 still nothing had been done and the Mayor wrote to the Women’s Association suggesting that “a strong sub-committee be formed from this Association” to try and get something done. They were obviously known as ladies who got the job done! By this time they were considering only two plans, the building of a hall or the laying out of a park at the sports field. In November 1947 it was reported that the residents of Fish Hoek were losing interest in the war memorial and the committee was having difficulty in finding a site suitable for the building of a hall. In April 1949 it was suggested that the money that had been raised should be used to enlarge the Recreation Hall, which would then be renamed the Fish Hoek Memorial Hall. This would require an assurance from the Town Council that the hall would never be demolished and “a suitable plaque would be affixed in the hall.” By August 1950 the various organisations who had been raising money for the memorial had handed over their contributions to the Council and it had been planned to build the hall in the school grounds using the money collected with the addition of a loan of £1 000 to be raised by the Council. However at a meeting of the War Memorial Committee it was discovered that this would not be possible as the Ratepayers Association had vetoed the raising of a loan and that any hall built in the school grounds would become the property of the School Board. It was also said that a hall on school property “would restrict activities for the MOTHs, noticeably billiards.” In desperation it was decided that a meeting of representatives of the Women’s Association, SAWAS and MOTHS be convened to decide on what form the war memorial should take. The Women’s Association instructed their representatives to vote for a children’s play park, but as nothing was being done they lost interest. The matter dragged on for several more years until finally it was decided to lay out a Garden of Remembrance on part of the Outspan, which was designated as public open space. In 1965 the MOTH cairn in the park was dedicated and the saga of the war memorial was finally ended. ==== The Steps and Lanes ==== The Fish Hoek Municipality used names associated with the history of Fish Hoek for the steps leading up from Simonstown Road to Hillside Road and Highway. Starting from Sunnycove Steps, which are very short and used as a shortcut to Sunnycove Station from Hillside Road, and walking towards the Main Road, Mossop Steps are next. They are named after the Mossop brothers who, in the 1918 sale of plots, bought the cottages, on the site of the Dutch East India Company Watch House, which had been used by [[De_Kock-1051|Hester de Villiers]] as holiday accommodation. Dr Ernest Mossop, the medical superintendent of Somerset Hospital, was an amateur archaeologist , who in the 1920s and 30s collected Stone Age tools in the Fish Hoek Valley. He kept careful records of where they were found and made a Cabinet in which to store them. They were presented to the Fish Hoek Municipality and can now be seen at the Fish Hoek Valley Museum. Hobbs Steps are in memory of the Hobbs family who, having come to Fish Hoek on holiday from Kimberley in 1925, saw a business opportunity, bought plots on Beach Road and built a hotel. The original Windsor Hotel was a single storey building but there were many visitors coming to Fish Hoek and the hotel was often full, so it was not long before another storey was added. When tourists stopped coming to South Africa most of the hotels in Fish Hoek went out of business. The Windsor Hotel was demolished in October 1972 and a block of flats built on the site, however, the name was kept and the flats were called Windsor Lodge. Mrs Hobbs was a prominent member of the Fish Hoek Women’s Association and 1944 became the first woman to be elected to the Fish Hoek Town Council. Ballyclyme Steps are named after the house built by Tom Mossop next to the steps. His daughter married an architect, a Mr Roberts, and they lived in the house for many years. Why the name? Well, perhaps because it was a “bally climb” to get there! Pritchard Steps recalls the Pritchards who have been very closely associated with the history of Fish Hoek. Bull Pritchard built his house in 1919, overlooking what later became the Catwalk. He called it Orano after the ship that rescued him, after several hours in the water, when the troop ship Galway Castle was torpedoed and sank during World War 1. Being a surveyor it was he who organised the residents protest against the sale of plots on the beach. He was a very strong swimmer and as his house overlooked the beach he several times saw swimmers in difficulty and went to rescue them. An empty plot next to his house was bought by a family from Kimberley who had a holiday house opposite it on the top side of Simonstown Road. They bought it to stop anyone building on it and spoiling their view and suggested to Bull Pritchard that if he added it into his garden it would solve the problem of keeping it tidy. The Pritchards had two small daughters and for their amusement he put miniature buildings and people into the garden. Passersby stopped to look at it and during the war it was open to the public and money was collected for the war effort by means of a wishing well. Bull was also a founder member of the Kosy Korner Koffie Klub made up of retired gentlemen who met at the Green Parrot Tearoom, and later at the Homestead Hotel, every morning for coffee and conversation, which also got them out of their wives way! Zoutendyk Steps are called after another family who lived in the village for many years. Mr Zoutendyk was the auctioneer who conducted the first sale in 1918 and subsequent sales. He liked the area so much that, having married a granddaughter of Mr de Villiers, he built a house, on Simonstown Road, and came to live in Fish Hoek. Both he and Bull Pritchard were founder members of the Fish Hoek Sports Club. Outspan Steps go up to Outspan Road, overlooking the original outspan area used by the farmers from the western end of the valley. A stream flowed down the mountain there and a small dam was built across it to provide a pool from which the oxen could drink. This stream, now underground, floods in very wet weather and water flows down the steps. De Villiers Steps run up the side of the de Villiers cemetery next to the Dutch Reformed Church and are named after [[De_Kock-1051|Hester]] and [[De_Villiers-1621|Izaak de Villiers]], the last owners of the Fish Hoek Farm, who with other members of their family are buried there. If you continue along Kommetjie Road you will notice that behind the houses on the mountain side of the road there is a second row of houses with access to Kommetjie Road via short lanes. The lanes start just after the end of Hillside Road with Burton Lane which runs up beside the house occupied by the Burton family for many years. Mr and Mrs Burton bought several plots in one of the early sales of land, including some in what is now the Main Road business area. They decided to build their house, Ionia, on the corner of de Waal Road and Seventh Avenue, which at that time was almost in the country! They built a tennis court , as did several of the early residents, and such was the enthusiasm for the game amongst the young people of the village that it was not long before the Fish Hoek Tennis Club was formed. The Burtons were also very active in church affairs. When St Margaret’s Church was built in 1934, they donated the altar in memory of their parents and brother and in 1941 Mrs Burton donated a table and bookshelves for the hymn books. After the death of Mr Burton, in the 1930s, Mrs Burton and her daughter loline moved to Kommetjle Road where they lived for many years and where Mrs Burton celebrated her one hundredth birthday with a visit from the Mayor and Mayoress. Rickard Lane can be found alongside 51 Kommetjie Road. Dr and Mrs Rickard and their two children came to Fish Hoek in 1925 and lived at number 47. The residents were very pleased to have a resident doctor and the family was soon absorbed into local life. Dr Rickard was a Justice of the Peace and was soon elected to the Village Management Board whilst his wife was a leading member of several local organisations. Cronwright Lane runs between 63 and 65 Kommetjie Road. Peter Cronwright brought his family to Fish Hoek from Kalk Bay, bringing with them his wife’s small herd of cows. In the 1920s the cows used to wander all over the village and W. T. Cobern, who lived in First Avenue, was probably not the only resident who used to herd them into his garden to crop the grass! Fresh milk being a very salable commodity in the village this was the beginning of Cron Dairies, run for many years by Peter’s son Louis, after whom the lane was named. He was very prominent in local affairs, serving as a Fish Hoek Town Councillor and also as Mayor. His son, Morthland, also a Councillor and Mayor, took over the business and when small dairies were no longer viable closed it and built the Valyland Centre on the land where the dairy had stood. This is still owned by the Cronwright family. The land beside the Fish Hoek Veterinary Clinic is Ross Lane. Mr Ross, a cartage contractor with a flourishing business in the area, had his stables at the top of it until the arrival of motor delivery vehicles. Cobern Lane, at the side of the Fish Hoek Home Nursing Centre, is named after W T. Cobern who was a well-known local character in the early days of the village. Having retired from business at the early age of 45 he had plenty of time to keep an eye on how things were being run. If the Ratepayers Association wanted to get a good turn out for their meeting they had only to let people know that Mr Cobern was going to register a complaint and everyone would come to hear him! The Guy Fawkes Day celebration on the beach was his special task and every year he organised a big bonfire of old railway sleepers and a firework display. He was also Father Christmas at the annual Christmas party for the children of the village. His son, Malcolm Cobern was a founder member of the Fish Hoek Valley Historical Association, and wrote a history of the area, The Story of the Fish Hoek Valley. ==== Our Local Newspapers ==== In June 1951 Mr Francis attended a meeting of the Business Association to talk about starting a local newspaper, this was to be called the Fish Hoek News. The cost of production was to be covered by the advertising and one thousand copies would be printed and distributed to the public free of charge. An editing sub-committee was appointed to look at any articles “of a contentious nature” and “to avoid any possible irritation to any section of the local community.” An almost impossible task! It appeared monthly until October 1952 when it ceased publication. This was partly because of the lack of enthusiasm on the part of local advertisers, and perhaps also because it was said that “too much space is being given to Social Notes which leads to jealousies and misunderstandings” and that it was not really necessary to publish a long sermon in each edition. However, the few issues that did appear give us a fascinating look at the Fish Hoek of that time. The advertisements tell us that films were being shown at the Recreation Hall, now the MOTH Hall, every Friday night, admission 1/4d and 3/8d. This was before our currency was decimalised and at that time there were twenty shillings to the pound and twelve pence to the shilling. When we changed to the rand, in 1961, the exchange rate was R2 to the pound, so the prices were then under 50c. It was proposed to build a cinema in the Main Road seating almost 800 people but as the films in the Recreation Hall could not draw a big enough audience to keep them going the cinema was never built. If it was entertainment you were looking for you could go to the Dalmally Cafe, now Dalmally Flats on Beach Road, where there was dancing nightly, except Sunday and Monday and they kept open until I I pm on Saturday nights! Westbrook’s Pharmacy, on the corner of Recreation and Main Roads, was advertising their Cough Curer at 1/6 and 2/6 and Ban-Tick for your dog at 1/3d. At A. P. Jones you could buy Rite-Fit Frocks in half sizes, 38in to 50in for 75 shillings. Rabkins Stores, next to Wakefords Furniture, had “the very latest in chic hats” and at CNA you could buy Munro’s Bowls Encyclopaedia for 15 shillings, “a book every bowler should have”. At Morris’ Bazaar, in the Main Road, your mother could buy sock wool at 1/7 per ounce to hand knit your socks and it was “guaranteed shrinkless”! Male thoroughbred Pekinese puppies were offered for £5.5s and females at £3.3s. You could even buy a plot for £300 or £3 monthly. The Fish Hoek Women’s Association Morning Market had been a great success, raising the grand sum of £184. The 4th Annual Flower Show organised by St Margaret’s Horticultural Club raised only about £40 for the organ fund “probably because it was such a shocking afternoon”. In the Mayor’s Report for 1950-51 it was noted that Fish Hoek was growing. Plans had been submitted for 63 new dwellings, 21 blocks of flats, 6 blocks of shops, flats and offices and 74 for alterations and additions to existing buildings, but we are not told if they were ever built. There was talk of widening the Main Road but this was not to be considered for several reasons. “The cost would be prohibitive and beyond the means of the Fish Hoek ratepayers. The proposal will cause undue hardship to property owners. The traffic requirements at present and in the foreseeable future do not justify it. Despite parking on both sides of the road there has never been any congestion.” If only they could see it now! At the 8th Annual General meeting of the Ratepayers Association more police protection was asked for as there had been several cases of housebreaking. Three burglaries had been reported at one shop in Kommetjie Road but only a small amount of meat was taken each time! There was a complaint about growth on vacant plots which were “a harbouring place for rats, snakes and also for ill-doers.” There was also a complaint about the noise from milk deliveries, which started at 1.40am. It was suggested that 6am would be a more suitable hour. However Cron Dairies replied that Fish Hoek had now become so large that if deliveries only started at 6am some people would not get their milk until after 8am and this would not be acceptable. Who could foresee the day when there would be no home deliveries. In 1953 the Business Association supported the publication of the Fish Hoek Magazine by Mr Playfair. He felt sure that “of the possible 10 000 visitors to Fish Hoek during the season an appreciable number would purchase the Magazine.” At sixpence per copy he visualised a thriving business, but although three editions were published the expected volume of sales did not materialise and there were no more. Mr Francis started the Fish Hoek Echo in 1953. This was much more successful, perhaps he had learnt what sort of paper the Fish Hoek public wanted, or did not want, during his short stint as editor of the Fish Hoek News. He soon took on an assistant, Cedryl Greenland, who had lived in Fish Hoek since 1921, when her father decided to make his holiday home his permanent residence. As Mr Francis used the pen name of Porpoise she wrote under the name of Dolphin and was soon reporting on more and more of the events in the town. In 1963 she took over the paper completely and ran it until 1978. It was then a monthly paper with reports on all the Fish Hoek weddings, funerals, parties, meetings and other occasions. She attended most of these events herself and being a gentle little lady tried never to offend anyone. Her accounts of social occasions were warm and friendly, brides were always beautiful and their mothers elegant, and the obituaries were written from her heart, for most of these people were her friends. The paper was printed in Caledon and railed to Fish Hoek where Ceddie and a young helper would get out her basket on wheels and deliver it to all the local shops. Trade was good on “Echo days” as everyone came to the shops to get their copy. It was always a “good read” sometimes running to sixty pages. She also found time to write several books. Starting by editing a cookery book, Tasty Tips, for the Fish Hoek Women’s Association she went on to write Before We Forget, a book about the early days of Fish Hoek, a book on Peers Cave and the Peers family and a small book of poetry, Land of Colour and Contrast. She published a book of her most interesting articles from the Fish Hoek Echo, called Echoes of Yesterday and her last book was A Century in Shreds, an account of her parents early lives. After her death, in 1985, her many friends contributed to a fund to erect a statue in her memory. A local sculptor, Ernest Lodge, was commissioned to produce a statue of a family of three dolphins which was first erected on the grass area behind the first subway but, after having been vandalised several times, was moved to a more central location on the edge of the parking area. On 12th December 1987 a group of her family and friends gathered at the newly erected statue. The Mayor, Councillor John Florence, performed the ceremonial unveiling and one of her poems was read by Ethelmay Gillard. In June 1978, when Ceddie felt that it was time for her to retire from the Echo she sold the paper to Joe and Lyn Frylinck who published it fortnightly and printed it in Paarl. The printing costs almost caused a charge to be made for it until the advertisers agreed to increased rates to cover the extra costs and so it has remained a free paper. In 1984 it was bought by Stoffel Lotz and his son Barry. It later merged with the False Bay News, an Argus publication, and so the False Bay Echo was born. As a part of Cape Community Newspapers it reflects a wider area so that some in Fish Hoek were aggrieved that it no longer carried so much Fish Hoek news. Seeing this, Joe Frylinck, who had returned to Fish Hoek with his second wife, Simone, saw an opportunity and started the People’s Post, which continues to be “our local newspaper”. ==== The Battle of the Bottles ==== One of the conditions included in the original grant of land at Fish Hoek made to [[Bruyns-17|Andries Bruijns]] in 1818 was, in the original Dutch, “dat by aldaar geen tapneering zal mogen dryven”. This was translated in the English version as “not to keep a Public Winehouse”. The exact meaning of these words has been argued about ever since but it would appear from other documents from that time that this was meant as a complete ban on liquor sales. The first sale of plots at Fish Hoek having taken place in April 1918 the first application for a liquor licence in the village was made in August 1918. This application was made by Stephen William Cavanagh who had owned the Grand Hotel in Muizenberg. The application, which was for the recently opened Homestead Hotel, was refused by the Magistrate at Simon’s Town. In 1922, at a public meeting held in Fish Hoek it was resolved to fight any applications for liquor licences. A letter from the Fish Hoek Vigilance Committee was published in the Cape Times on 24 February 1925 stating that the residents were completely opposed to the granting of liquor licences. In October 1928 the proprietors of both the Homestead Hotel and the Windsor Hotel applied for licences. The Fish Hoek Village Management Board submitted a petition objecting to this, which was signed by the majority of voters in the village. The Magistrate refused to grant the licences but the applicants appealed to the Cape Supreme Court where, after much discussion and reference to archival documents, the appeal was dismissed with costs. However, licence applications continued to be made as businessmen realised that a licence in Fish Hoek would be a paying proposition, but the residents, by submitting petitions against them, continued to keep Fish Hoek “dry”. It was not that those residents were teetotallers, far from it, in fact it was said that the delivery vans from the bottle stores “up the line” could be seen in the streets of Fish Hoek every day. It was just that they did not want a bottle store in the area to encourage “layabouts”. In 1955 a special organisation was formed specifically to fight liquor licence applications and called the Defenders of Fish Hoek. They had no written constitution and no subscription but donations were accepted and annual meetings were held to elect officers. In 1956 there were nine applications for licences. A petition against them being granted containing the signatures of 1393 registered municipal voters, out of a total of 2083, and a further 1409 residents who were not voters, was presented by the Defenders. This was estimated to be nearly 85% of the total adult population of the town. The licences were not granted and another six applications were successfully contested in 1957. This had become an annual event! After the publication of the draft Liquor Amendment Bill in 1963 a delegation consisting of Councillors, members of the Defenders of Fish Hoek and the Ratepayers Association, met with the Minister of Justice. They asked that a stipulation that no further liquor licence applications in Fish Hoek would be considered for at least ten years be included in the Bill. Speaking at a public meeting in the Fish Hoek Civic Hall the Minister of Justice, [[Vorster-1171|B. J. Vorster]], replying to a vote of thanks for his help, said that the period could be fifty years, or longer, if the residents wished. In future the onus would be on the applicant for a licence to prove that the residents were not opposed to it being granted. In the 1970s the granting of a club licence to the Fish Hoek Sports Club was hotly debated. A referendum was held in June 1981 at which the granting of such a licence was rejected by 1055 votes to 758. Out of an estimated 5057 eligible voters only 1816 people voted, three of those being spoilt papers. The newer residents did not seem to care very much whether there were licences or not. After the new Government was elected in the 1994 election the new Liquor Act did not contain the provision about Fish Hoek. Businessmen soon discovered this and there were soon five applications for licences in Fish Hoek. The Residents Association held a public meeting and after much heated debate it was decided to regularise the situation, in which liquor was being served illegally in local restaurants, by agreeing to the provision of restaurant and bar licences but not to off sales. So it was that for the first time one could legally buy an alcoholic drink in Fish Hoek. However in 2018 after much further debate the first off sales licence was granted in Fish Hoek by Western Cape Liquor Appeal Tribunal, ending 200 years of Fish Hoek having no bottle store. == Acknowledgement == Most of this page is based on the excellent history of Fish Hoek published in a book called '''Fish Hoek: Looking Back by Joy Cobern Printed & Published by Fish Hoek Printing & Publishing 2003'''. Joy was an early curator of the Fish Hoek Valley Museum. However some of it has been amended and updated and for that I take full responsibility for the accuracy of the information. [[Johnston-3146|Johnston-3146]] 08:11, 30 January 2024 (UTC) == Sources ==

Fisher Families

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Walker-17276|Debbie Walker]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10747229 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fisher Family Collection

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Mostly photos plus some original documents from the Fisher family, preserved by [[Ward-20895|Ruth (Ward) Fisher]]. Current custodian of material, [[Pelles-4|Audrey (Pelles) Seale|2020]]

Fisher line

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Emmons-1775|David Emmons]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * find all birth, marrahe and death records * make sure all the kids are there * and link any dna that can be link and help the fisher dna project on family dna tree Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=30539069 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fisher tree

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the true line of Manville k fisher

Fishing and Whaling in Fish Hoek

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== Introduction == This page is part of the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Fish_Hoek_Valley_One_Place_Study Fish Hoek Valley One Place Study]. Earning a livelihood by harvesting fish from shore-based boats has been a traditional means of subsistence from the sea for ages. Historical records reveal that the early inhabitants of the South Peninsula, specifically the Hunter Gatherers, relied partly on sea resources to supplement their diet of fynbos plant foods. The techniques employed for trek fishing or seine-netting from the beach have remained largely unchanged over the centuries, continuing to serve as a method for gathering food. The process typically begins with an observer, known as the 'uitkyker' or 'wagter,' spotting a shoal of fish from an elevated position like a hill or promontory overlooking the bay. Different colors of the water signify various types of fish: blue or light yellow for harders, a bluish hue for elf, and a darker shade indicating a dense shoal. Skilled fishermen could estimate the quantity of fish present. {{Image|file=Fishing_and_Whaling_in_Fish_Hoek.jpg |caption=Fishermen Mural at Fish Hoek Beach |size=1000px }} Once the colorful spread of fish is within reach of the trekkers, a signal—via whistle or flag—is given, prompting a boat prepared with a net at its stern to set out from the shore. Volunteers, including members of the public at times, assist in securing one end of the net to the shore using a rope. The net is then deployed from the stern of the boat, maneuvering in a circular motion as instructed by signals from the lookout post. Simultaneously, a hauling rope on the opposite end of the net is brought ashore. Subsequently, the net is drawn in, bringing the enclosed fish to the shore. Importantly, no motors are used aboard the boat to avoid startling the fish.

Fisica

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trabajo de fisica

Fisica Victoria Natalia Florencia

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hola somos del richard 3ºA

Fisk

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The goal of this project is to ... To find the descents and ancestors of. The surname of Fisk Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[McConnell-4021|LJ McConnell]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Clarence Joseph Fisk death certificate. This may grandfather but I don’t know where he is buried * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=21213212 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fissinger

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Fissinger-1|Alessandra Fissinger]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=17267190 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fitch family of America

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Neice-26|Anita Neice]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Gathering together all Fitch family descendents. * Sharing our information with each other of a large Family name. *Create help and support for others also trying to connect the Fitch family ancestry. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=14214869 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fitchard-Wolfe Hop Ranch

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===Fitchard-Wolfe Hop Ranch=== :Hops grew well in the fertile soil and the mild climate of the Willamette Valley. These plants are vining perennial plants which in this region could produce a small crop of hop cones in the first year of planting. In the early days hop farmers didn’t need to fertilize. The vine can reach up to 25 feet in length in one year.Cooler, Kathleen E. Hudson, "Hop Agriculture in Oregon: The First Century" (1986). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 3608. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4617&context=open_access_etds, pages12 and 23 :[[Wolfe-7062|Lloyd Wolfe]], [[Wolfe-7034|Henry “Bert” Wolfe]]’s half-brother, in the history of his family described details from time he spent on Bert’s hop farm Polk County, Oregon. This is how Bert got into the hop growing business.
Bert, who decided to remain in Oregon, took the team of mules and $300 which Father gave him and started a life of his own. He became acquainted with a man named Fitchard who owed a hop ranch near Independence, twelve miles south of Salem, on the Willamette River, who persuaded him to become a partner.Wolfe, Lloyd McKinley. ''Henry Harrison and His Family''. Self published by author in 1977. p.37. copy in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]].
:[[Wolfe-7033|Helen Lonski]], Bert's daughter, called this place the Wolfe-Fitchard hop ranch which was near Independence, Oregon, 2 miles from the city center, toward the Willamette River on the Salem Independence Road.Wolfe, Helen. Personal recollection, 2007, as told to[[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]] in about 2007. Helen's birth certificate lists the residence on Independence Road, 3 miles north as the place where Helen was born. Oregon State Board of Health, "Certified Copy of Corrected Birth Record #64 for Helen Margaret Wolfe," in the files of [[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]] :[[Fitchard-4|Charles L. Fitchard]] was a hop grower from New York who had been hop farming in Independence since around 1893. "Obituary for Charles L. Fitchard", ''Oregonian'' (Portland, Oregon), 6 Nov 1926, page 17 (https://www.genealogybank.com/doc/obituaries/image/v2:11A73E5827618330@GB3OBIT-129ED327488AD79F@2424826-1294E2AFC0099432@16-17544FFA9A06AAD3) :The hop business was growing rapidly when Charles started farming in the Willamette Valley. A comparison report by a field reporter from the ''Oregonian'' surveying the hop farms within a 2 mile radius around Independence shows this early growth. In 1892 there were 16 growers and 107 acres in hops. In 1893 there were 480 acres in hops. Five pickers were needed for every acre of hops grown so in 1893 the Independence area would need 2400 pickers to pick the crop."Hops in Polk County," ''Oregonian'' ,(Portland, Oregon), p.2, https://www.genealogybank.com/doc/newspapers/image/v2%3A11A73E5827618330%40GB3NEWS-1236AC032678B588%402412704-12316ACC70305D60%401-12D51A7DABE895D8 ===Hop Farming in the Willamette Valley=== :During August the small town of Independence, Oregon went from being a quiet place with little traffic to a busy town filled with hop pickers. Businesses ramped up to meet the demands of these extra people. Whole families came out to pick and some from a distance. Some came on the trains from Portland; some came on steamboats running up and down the Willamette River. Others drove in their own vehicles, horse drawn wagons or motor driven autos. They camped in tents on the hop farms and in those days young children picked. Sidney Newton remembers being expected to pick 74 lbs. of hops a day when he was a child of six years.Newton, Sidney, ''Early History of Independence, Oregon'', Panther Printing Co., Salem, Oregon, 1971, p.68 :By 1910 hop pickers came in August and September to Independence by the thousands. Here is an article from the Oregon Daily Journal supporting this claim.
::'''Hop Pickers Off on Annual Trip to Oregon Field''' They're off to the hop fields! Thousands of men, women and children are making the annual trek to the upper valley, where 25,000 acres of hops are ready for picking. The work will continue during September. The first large shipment of pickers to leave Portland went to the Krebs ranch at Independence this morning. Eight coaches made up the train, which left the Union station at 7:20. At Fourth and Yamhill streets about 100 people were taken aboard, packing the coaches to the limit. Two full cars of baggage, consisting of tents, bedding and supplies, were taken by the pickers. At the Taylor street dock at 6:45 the Oregon City Transportation company loaded the ''Oregona'' to her capacity with pickers. For a week small numbers have been going out daily by boat, but the movement this morning was a record-breaker."Hop Pickers Off on Annual Trip to Oregon Field", The Oregon Daily Journal (Portland Oregon), 3 Sep 1910, p. 5, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84538403/1910-krebs-train-full-of-pickers/
The location of this photo of downtown Independence taken in 1910 during the busy season is at the corner of Main and Monmouth Streets. This photo was taken from the same location as a later photo showing the paving of Main Street in 1912.Newton, Sidney, ''Early History of Independence, Oregon'', Panther Printing Co., Salem, Oregon, 1971, p.61 {{Image|file=Wolfe_ Family_ Photos-2.jpg| caption=Busy Time in Independence, 1910| size=l }} :This photograph shows the Fitchard family in front of the cook tent. It was probably around 1902 when the Fitchard boys were 11 and 18. Standing on the left side of the tent and starting at the left are Florence Fitchard who was Charles Fitchard’s wife, Harold their youngest son, Charles Fitchard the hop farmer and Thomas their oldest son. On the right are two well dressed kitchen helpers. Likely Florence was the cook as she was known to be a good cook. It looks like the owners cooked for the pickers at this camp. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-16.jpg| caption= Fitchard Family }} :At most hop camps the pickers cooked their own meals but were provided with tents, fuel and even pasture for their horses. :Here is what the cooking set-up looked like in 1913 at the Fitchard- Wolfe Hop Ranch. This time the kitchen crew included [[Olsen-9018|Edna Olson]], [[Olson-7190|Sigrid Olson]] and Florence Fitchard. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-17.jpg| caption=Edna, Sigrid, Florence }} :This 1915 photo, taken after Edna and Bert were married, shows Charles Fitchard, Thomas Fitchard, Edna Wolfe, Bert Wolfe, Margaret Fitchard, Harold Fitchard, baby Robert Lewis Fitchard and Dorothy Fitchard. Margaret is the wife of Harold and Robert is their son. Dorothy is the youngest child of Charles and Florence. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-7.jpg| caption=Fitchards and Wolfes }} ===Hop Horticulture=== :In the early 1900s work in the fields was often done with a hoe or with real horse power as shown in this photo of Harold Fitchard with Blackie and Maude. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-18.jpg| }} :The process of planting and growing hops was quite involved. Hops needed tall supports after to grow up after they were planted. Here is a photo of workers setting posts. The poles are about 12 feet high. After the posts are set wires are set between the poles. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-19.jpg| caption=Setting Poles }} :Later in the spring when the vines are about 2 feet long, they are trained on to strings which have been connected to the wires. Here is a photo. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-12.jpg| caption=Training the Vines }} :Lloyd wrote about this. He said,
So back to work at Bert’s ranch. First, we had to repair the damage done by the flood. The iron wire trellis and some poles were replaced. Ira being an electrician lineman did the wire work, while others dug and replaced poles. Then the hoeing began at which time we staked each vine and tied strings on which they grew and reached the wires. Then we had to “turn them down”. That was turning the vines and starting them onto the wire trellis overhead, meanwhile, hoeing continued around the base. (Page76)
:Most vines twine counterclockwise, but the hop vine is among the 10% of vines that turn and twist clockwise. Lloyd goes on to say while working with hop vines he learned their unusual twining pattern in a hurry. :In September and November when it was time to harvest the hop cones, the hop yard became a noisy place. Calls of “Wire down” and “Box Full” and “Weigh them Up” could be heard up and down the hop fields. :This photo of Bert Wolfe shows the hook at the end of the long pole that he would take the wire down to bring the hops to a level reachable by the pickers. Notice the long pole visible in the middle of the next photo which shows a group of pickers. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-6.jpg| caption=Bert the Hop Farmer }} :Notice the long pole visible toward the right side of this photo which shows a group of pickers. The pickers were a mixed group of women, children and some men. Every acre of hops needed 4 or 5 people to see the hops from vine to bale. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-20.jpg| caption=Bert the Hop Farmer }} :Here is a photo of young pickers and their baskets; a full basket of hops weighed about 50 pounds, hence the cry “box full” and ‘’weigh them up”. The weighing job would go to the stronger bodies. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-21.jpg| caption=Pickers and Baskets }} :After weighing a box full of hops the picker would get a stub listing the weight of their pickings. This could be exchanged for cash at the end of the day. Days often ended with campfires, singing and storytelling. On the weekend there were often dances or “hops”. :This end of the season photo shows Bert in the back row, third from the right. His half- brother, Earl Wolfe, is just right of Bert. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-13.jpg| caption=Done }} :In this “to market” photo Bert and his driver are taking the dried and baled hops to market. The bales each weigh about 100 pounds. {{Image|file=Wolfe_Family_Photos-22.jpg| caption=to Market }} == Sources == *Newton, Sidney, ''Early History of Independence, Oregon'', Panther Printing Co., Salem, Oregon, 1971 *Cooler, Kathleen E. Hudson, "Hop Agriculture in Oregon: The First Century" (1986). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 3608. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4617&context=open_access_etds *Wolfe, Helen. Personal recollection, 2007, as told to[[Lonski-12|Jill Foster]] in person. *"Hop Pickers Off on Annual Trip to Oregon Field", The Oregon Daily Journal (Portland Oregon), 3 Sep 1910, p. 5, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/84538403/1910-krebs-train-full-of-pickers/ *"Hops in Polk County," ''Oregonian'' ,(Portland, Oregon), p.2, https://www.genealogybank.com/doc/newspapers/image/v2%3A11A73E5827618330%40GB3NEWS-1236AC032678B588%402412704-12316ACC70305D60%401-12D51A7DABE895D8 *[[Space:Wolfe_Family_Photos| Wolfe Family Photos]]

Fitton family Cheshire

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Notes and sources relating to the Fitton family of Chester ===Obvious problem=== '''There are two Joanna Fittons marrying two Robert Grosvenors.''' '''Couple number 1''' [[Fitton-65|Johanna Fitton]], daughter of [[Fitton-8|Thomas Fitton]] according to Wikitree married [[Grosveneur-2|Robert Grosveneur]] son of Raufe Grosvenor and Joan Eton. This Robert Grosveneur (although it should be Grosvenor) was a real person. His father was Raufe Grosvenor. Robert died in 1502 and his son and heir was Thomas Grosvenor. Keeper, ''Great Britain Public Records Deputy. Report, 1840-1908'', 1876. Appendix II, No. 1. Welsh Records: Calendar of Recognizance Rolls of the Palatinate of Chester, from the beginning of the reign of Henry V. to the end of the reign of Henry VII, p. 328-9. [https://books.google.com.au/books?id=mjhKAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA2-PA328 Google Books] An inquisition in 1508 states that Thomas Grosvenor died in 1508 and his brother and heir was Richard Grosvenor. Also mentioned is the wife of [[Grosveneur-2|Robert Grosveneur]] who was named Katherine, they were the parents of Thomas and Richard Grosvenor. Also mentioned are a Richard and John Norres. Wikitree has a supposed brother of Thomas and Richard Grosvenor, [[Le_Grosvenor-17|Robert Le Grosvenor]] married to a Catherine Norris. I am thinking [[Le_Grosvenor-17|Robert Le Grosvenor]] does not belong or did not exist and that [[Grosveneur-2|Robert Grosveneur]] was married not to [[Fitton-65|Johanna Fitton]] but to Katherine Norris or Norres. Whether that is the same person as Catherine Norris is still to be determined. '''Couple number 2''' [[Fitton-8|Thomas Fitton]] had a sister, [[Fitton-89|Joan Fitton]], who married a Robert Grosvenor in 1415. This line seems to check out ok so far. '''First step:''' Remove [[Fitton-65|Johanna Fitton]] as the wife of [[Grosveneur-2|Robert Grosveneur]] (and fix his LNAB). Find the correct Katherine (probably Norris) to be his wedded wife and mother of Thomas and Richard. ==Sources== *Renaud, Frank. ''Contributions Towards a History of the Ancient Parish of Prestbury: In Cheshire.'' Chetham Society, 1876. Google-Books-ID: yXxpAAAAcAAJ. *Earwaker, John Parsons. ''East Cheshire: Past and Present: Or, A History of the Hundred of Macclesfield, in the County Palatine of Chester.'' From Original Records. The author, 1877. Google-Books-ID: VwMcAQAAMAAJ. *Lysons, Daniel. ''Magna Britannia: Pt. 1. Cambridgeshire. Pt. 2. The County Palatine of Chester.'' T. Cadell and W. Davies, 1810. Google-Books-ID: _ysgAQAAMAAJ. *''Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of Lancaster and Chester.'' Chetham Society., 1876. Google-Books-ID: cfoMAAAAYAAJ. *''Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families,'' 2nd Edition, 2011. Douglas Richardson, n.d., [https://books.google.com.au/books?id=kjme027UeagC&pg=RA1-PA9 p. 9] *“The Fytton (Fitton) Family of Gawsworth Hall | Gawsworth.” Home | Gawsworth | St James Gawsworth, St James Church Gawsworth. Accessed January 17, 2019. https://www.gawsworthchurch.co.uk/fittons-of-gawsworth. *Cheshire, Historic Society of Lancashire and Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, 1850. Google-Books-ID: UrwDAAAAMAAJ.

Fitts Family Mystery

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What ever happened to Sarah Alice Fitts Tolan?

Fitz Randolph Name Study Info

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FitzHugh, Melton, Constable and Berkeley Family Research

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There has been a Milton/Melton pedigree online for several decades. The pedigree is unsourced. I have been sourcing the pedigree for over forty years. The Milton/Meltons who lived during the Reformation period of English history branched off from the de Melton family of Yorkshire during the time of the War of the Roses. '''Thomas Richard Milton [Milton-45]''' Thomas Milton was the second son of John Melton, Esq. [Melton-69] and Margery FitzHugh [FitzHugh-418]. The WikiTree ID for Thomas Milton is [Milton-45]. His profile name is Thomas Richard Milton. He has been called Thomas and also Richard, so his name became Thomas Richard in the old Milton pedigree. Thomas is said to have been born about 1455 and died about 1515. He is said to have married Joan. Some researchers identify her as Joan Ryse. Thomas is said to have had three children: Mary b. 1479, William b. 1484 and Richard b. 1485. William, or his descendants, are said to have come to Virginia. '''Richard Milton [Milton-41].''' Richard is said to have married twice. His first wife was the widow Foxe, whose son was Rev. John Foxe, the Martyrologist, who wrote Foxe’s Book of Martyrs. John Foxe dedicated the book'' An Instruccyon of Christian Fayth'' to his stepfather, Richard Milton, stating, “With every mark of affection”. Source: Dictionary of National Biography. By Stephen, Leslie, Sir, 1832-1904. Publication date 1885-1900. Publisher New York Macmillan. Volume 20. Page 141. [https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofnati20stepuoft/page/156/mode/1up Foxe] (Accessed 10 March 2024) Richard Milton and the widow Foxe had a son, Henry Milton [Milton-50]. Henry is not linked to his father, Richard Milton, in WikiTree. '''Margery Fitzhugh''' Margery Fitzhugh [FitzHugh-418], the mother of Thomas [Richard] Milton, was born to Sir William Fitzhugh [Fitzhugh-319], the 4th Baron Ravensworth, and his wife Margery Willoughby. Ravensworth Castle, Yorkshire, England was the ancestral home of the Fitzhugh family. Margery’s WikiTree ID is [Fitzhugh-418]. Her date of birth is not estimated on her profile nor her date of marriage. Her husband, John Melton, Esq. [Melton-69], was born about 1435, therefore we can estimate Margery’s birth to be about 1437, or two years after the birth of her husband. Margery was probably born at Ravensworth Castle, the ancestral home of the Fitzhugh family. She had six sisters and one brother, Henry, who was the heir of the Fitzhugh estate. Margery’s brother, Henry Fitzhugh, 5th Baron Fitzhugh [Fitzhugh-447] married Lady Alice Neville. Their daughter, Elizabeth, married William Parr, 1st Baron Parr of Kendal and, from this marriage, Elizabeth was the mother of Sir Thomas Parr and paternal grandmother of Queen consort and last wife of Henry VIII, Catherine Parr. Margery Fitzhugh, married John Melton, Esq. [Melton-69] of Aston, Yorkshire, England about 1443, and settled in Swine, Holderness, Yorkshire, England. John’s father and second wife, Cecile Mainwaring, were living at the family manor in Aston, Yorkshire. The Swine estate came to the Melton family through John’s mother, Elizabeth Hilton. Source: The History of Yorkshire by Harrison, George, fl. 1817 Publication date 1885 Publisher London: Printed by Hazell, Watson, and Viney. [https://archive.org/details/historyofyorkshi00harr/page/136/mode/1up Fitzhugh] (Accessed 13 February 2024) Margery’s sister, Lora Fitzhugh, [Fitzhugh-409] married Sir John Constable of Halsham in 1449 and settled in Halsham, Yorkshire, England. Margery Fitzhugh, her brother and five married sisters were married and settled before the War of the Roses began, which commenced in 1455 and ended in 1487. '''Margery Fitzhugh, John Melton, Esq. and son, Thomas Milton.''' Margery and her husband, John Melton, Esq. had two sons. A translation of the epitaph on John’s gravestone, within the Chantry of Swine Church in Holderness, England, is as follows: " The splendour of honour, here lies a man of noble family, he was called John Melton Esquire, and is now blessed: he was son and heir of John Melton, knight: he was beloved by all men, thanks to thee, O Christ! and he married a wife called Margery, the much loved daughter of William Lord Fitzhugh; between them they had ''two amiable children''. He died in 1458 on the blessed 23rd day of April. To whom, I pray Almighty God, be salvation, Amen." Source: ''A history of the church and priory of Swine in Holderness''. Author: Thomas Thompson Publisher: London, J. Nichols. 1824. [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=BqYLAAAAYAAJ&pg=GBS.PA172 Melton] (Accessed 17 February 2024) The names of their sons are not inscribed on the gravestone but other documentation reveals that the eldest son, John Melton, was born 02 Feb 1455 at Swine, Holderness, Yorkshire, England. On 4 May 1455, John, 7th Lord Lucy and his wife Elizabeth transferred the Manor of Towton and land in Towton, Oustwyk and Catwick to their grandson, John de Melton, Esq. and his wife Margery Fitzhugh, whose son John de Melton had been born on 02 Feb 1455. Source: https://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/fines/abstracts/CP_25_1_281_161.shtml John Melton, Esq. died on 23 Apr 1458 v.p. (vita patris. During the life of the father) The year John died, the Lancastrian King Henry VI, son of King Henry V, was on the throne of England. King Henry VI reined between 1422-1461 and 1470-1471. John Melton, Esq. of Church Fenton, son of Sir John Melton of Aston by Sheffield was attained in 1459. The land held by John Melton was taken back into control of the king and Margery had to live on whatever property she owned herself. Source: Wars of the Roses A Gazetteer. Vol. 2. By Michael Ryan Jones. Publisher: Bob Prichard 2018. Page 526. John Melton, of Aston, Yorks, Bramley, Staff., and Aissheton, Lanc., Esq., and Margaret his wife received a pardon from King Henry VIII on 20 May 1509-1510. Source: Henry VIII: Pardon Roll, Part 3', in Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Volume 1, 1509-1514, ed. J S Brewer (London, 1920), pp. 234-256. British History Online [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/letters-papers-hen8/vol1/pp234-256 John Melton] (accessed 20 January 2024). After the attainder in 1459, Margery had to survive on her personal property and other resources, until the pardon in 1509-1510, a period of 51 years. Margery is said to have died after 1513. Her elder son, John, succeeded to the Melton estate after the death of his grandfather in 1474 and died 11 Jul 1510. Widow Margery FitzHugh Melton, as a member of the Fitzhugh family, could draw on the resources of her powerful family during the time of her widowhood. '''Margery Fitzhugh and Sir Marmaduke Constable''' Margery Fitzhugh is said to have married Sir Marmaduke Constable [Constable-43], who had a second wife, Joyce Stafford [Stafford-15]. Source: Dugdale's Visitation of Yorkshire, with additions. By Dugdale, William, Sir, 1605-1686; Clay, John William, 1838-1918, ed. Publication date 1899. Publisher Exeter: W. Pollard & Co. Volume 2. Page 289. [https://archive.org/details/dugdalesvisitati2dugd/page/293/mode/1up] Margery is said to be the first wife of Sir Marmaduke Constable [Constable-43] who married his wife Joyce Stafford in about 1473. The birthdates of Marmaduke and Joyce are not established but the couple would have been in their early twenties. There is no room in this timeline for Marmaduke to have married Margery Fitzhugh, as his first wife. Margery was widowed in 1458 and would have been free to remarry but Joyce Stafford died around 1500, so Marmaduke was not eligible for a second marriage until 1500. If Margery was the second wife of Marmaduke, there would have been time for Margery to marry after the death of John Melton and during the time she was raising her two sons. Margery is a generation older than Marmaduke. '''IPM of Sir William Constable [Constable-179]''' Source: Fenwick Allied Ancestry: Ancestry of Thomas Fenwick of Sussex County, Delaware By Edwin Jaquett Sellers [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=cj9MAAAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PP8&hl=en Melton] (Accessed 20 January 2024) Note: Sir William Constable [Constable-179] is the eldest son of Robert Constable and Agnes Wentworth. Sir Marmaduke Constable [Constable-43] was the second son of Robert and Agnes. Therefore, Margery Fitzhugh Melton married the second son of William Constable, however, the feoffee property arrangement of Margery and her two sons was contracted with William, the eldest son of William and Agnes. Page 41 March 14, 1528, administration of the goods of Sir William Constable [Constable-179], late of Carethorp, York Diocese, Knight, deceased, were granted to Lady Joan Constable, the widow, and Marmaduke Constable, son of the said decedent ( Dickering Act Book; York. Arch. Soc., Rec. Ser., Vol. xi, Appendix). Sir William Constable was buried at Rudston, in Dickering Wapentake, South of and adjoining Holderness Wapentake (Lewis' Topographical Dictionary of England). 16 April, 19 Henry VIII [1528], an inquisition post mortem was held at Hornsea, Co. of York, upon the estate of Sir William Constable [Constable-179], Senior, Knight, in which it was found that he did not possess any manors or manorial rights; that Thomas Fairfax, of Walton, Arminger, conveyed 20 messuages, 300 acres of land, 100 acres of meadow, 40 acres pasture, 10 acres wood, and 20 shillings rent in Carethorp, Thorp, Rudstan Carr and Gransmoor to Sir William Constable 6 May, 5 Henry VIII [1514]; that afterwards Marmaduke Constable, Arminger, Robert Constable, Arminger, and William Constable, Junior, Arminger, recovered said lands of Thomas Fairfax 4 July , 5 Henry VIII , and became seized to the use of the said Sir William Constable; that Nicholas Fairfax, Arminger, conveyed 1 messuage, 40 acres meadow, 10 acres pasture and 10 acres pasture in Bempton to said Sir William Constable the 14 Sep., 14 Henry VIII [1523]; that afterwards William Eure, Knight, and the said Sir William Constable recovered from said Nicholas Fairfax said lands the 12 Feb., 13 Henry VIII [1522], and became seized to the use of the said Sir William Constable and his heirs; that the said Sir William Constable afterwards died and the said William Eure survived him and still did to the use aforesaid; that afterwards the said Sir William Constable, 19 Feb. 1506 the use of his heirs; that the said Sir William Constable died siezed of 1 messuage, 4 bovats meadow, 6 acres pasture in Thorp, 30 messuages, bequeathed his interests in Carethorp, Bempton, Rudston Carr and Gransmore to the use of Johanna Constable his wife for life and after her death to, 12 bovats pasture in Killom, I caracute, 30 bovats pasture in Driffeld, I messuage 5 bovats of pasture in Thweng, I messuage, 30 bovats pasture in Thornthorp joining Kirkham, I messuage, 6 bovats pasture in Wyverthorp, I messuage, 60 acres pasture, 40 acres pasture, 40 acres pasture, 200 acres meadow, 20 acres wood in Kirkeby Moresid, Fadmore and Gillemore; that so seized, by deed of 23. Oct., 13 Henry [Page 42] VIII [1522], he enfeoffed '''William Melton''' (Note: William Melton is the son of Thomas Milton b. 1482 second son of Margaret Fitzhugh Melton Constable), Marmaduke Constable, of Evryngham, Knight [1480-1545] [Constable-13], (Note: Marmaduke Constable, of Evryngham [Constable-13] is the son of Marmaduke Constable and Joyce Stafford, of whom Margaret Fitzhugh Melton Constable is said to be his second wife) Edward Roos, of Routh, Arminger, William Levynyng, gent., and John Dobson in aforesaid lands in Thweng, Thorp, Killom, Weveerthorp, Driffeld-sup-le-Wold, Kirkeby Moresed, Fadmore, Gillemore and Thorn Thorp joining Kirklom; that afterwards the said Sir William Constable constituted the aforesaid '''William Melton''' feoffee of said lands to the use of Marmaduke Constable and Roger Constable his sons jointly for each of their lives and after the life of each to the use of the right heirs of the said Sir William Constable; that the messuages in Carethorp and 4 caracutes of pasture in the fields of Carethorp were held of the Chapter of St. Peter at York; that the 4 caracutes of pasture in Carethorp were held of the Abbot of St. Mary's near the walls of the City of York; that the 6 bovats of pasture in Carethorp were held of the Monastery and that all the said messuages, caracutes, pastures and bovats in Carethorp rendered the annyal rent of £ 60 ; that the lands in Bempton were held of Lord Neville, Earl of Westmoreland; that the land in Thorp was held of Menyll Fee; that the lands in Killom were held of '''John Mellon, Arminger''' (Note: Eldest son of Margaret Fitzhugh and John Melton, Esq,); that the lands in Dreffeld were held of the Chapter of St. Peter at York; that the lands in Thweng were held of Lord Lumley as of the manor of Thweng; that the lands in Weverthorp were held of Henry , Earl of Cumberland ; that the lands in Thornthorp joining Kirkeham were held of '''Thomas Melton''' (Note: Second son of Margaret Fitzhugh and John Melton, Esq.) as of the manor of Edilthorp; that the lands in Kirkeby Moresid, Fadmore , and Gillmore were held of the Earl of Westmoreland as of the manor of Kirkby Moresid; that the lands in Rudstan Carr were held of St. Mary's at York; that the lands in Gransmore were held of .... Gaunt; that the said Sir William Constable died 16 July, 19 Henry VIII, and that John Constable, Arminger, was found next of blood and heir, viz son and heir of Robert Constable, Arminger, deceased, son of said Sir William Constable, aged 22 years and more (Chancery Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series II, Vol. 48, No. 91. Public Record Office, London). The feoffee arrangement continued through John Constable [Constable-155], son of Marmaduke and Joan Stafford Constable and was mentioned in his IPM in 1543. Page 47 10 August , 34 Henry VIII [1543] , an inquisition post mortem was held at York upon the estate of John Constable [Constable-155], Arminger, in which it was found that he was seized of 20 messuages , 300 acres land, 100 acres meadow, 40 acres pasture, 10 acres woods and 20 shillings rent in Carethorpe, Thorpe, Rudston Carr and Gransmore; I messuage, 40 acres land, 10 acres meadow, 10 acres pasture in Benton; 200 acres land, 200 acres pasture, 100 acres meadow in Twheyng, Thorpe, Kyllom, Wevthorpe, Driffeld on-the-York Wold, Kyrkbymoresyd, Fadmore, Gellymore and Thornethorpe joining Kyrkam after the death of Marmaduke and Roger Constable; that he was seized of the Manor of Worsall; 4 caracutes of land in the fields of Carethorpe which he held of the Chapter of St. Peter; 4 caracutes in Carethorpe held of the Abbey of St. Mary joining the walls of the City of York; 6 caracutes in Carethorpe held of the Monastery; lands in Benton held of Lord Neville; 4 bovats in Thorpe held of Memill Fee; land in Kyllom held of''' John Melton''' as of the manor of Killome; lands in Dreffeld held of the Chapter of St. Peter's at York; land in Thewyng held of Lord Lumley as of the manor of Thewyng; land in Weverthorpe held of Henry, Earl of Cumberland, as of the manor of Ŵyverthorpe; land in Thornelthorpe held of '''Thomas Melton''' as of the manor of Edylthorpe; land in Kyrkbymoresyd, Fadmore and Gillemore held of the Earl of Westmoreland as of the manor of Kyrkbymoresyd; land in Rudston Carr held of the King by the Abbey of St. Mary; land in Graunsmore held of .... Gaunt; that John Constable died 10 April, 33 Henry VIII, and that Francis Constable was his brother and heir aged 22 years and more (Chancery Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series II, Vol. 65, No. 79. Public Record Office, London). Source: Fenwick Allied Ancestry: Ancestry of Thomas Fenwick of Sussex County, Delaware. By Edwin Jaquett Sellers. Page 41. [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=cj9MAAAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PP8&hl=en Melton] (Accessed 20 January 2024) '''The Melton, Constable, Berkeley Connection. ''' Sir Marmaduke Constable [Constable-43], and wife, Joyce Stafford [Stafford-15] had a daughter, Eleanor [Constable-25] who married Thomas Berkeley [Berkeley-2], 5th Baron Berkeley of Gloucester, England. Margery Fitzhugh Melton Constable, as Marmaduke’s second wife, was related to the Berkeley family by marriage and Margery and her sons John and Thomas, would have no problem settling in Gloucestershire during her widowhood, opening the door for her descendant through Thomas to be close to the Berkeley family and to be selected to immigrate to Virginia. The following link is a Free Space Page created for research on the Fitzhugh, Melton, Constable and Berkeley families. [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:FitzHugh%2C_Melton%2C_Constable_and_Berkeley_Family_Research] I am not certified to add to pre-1500 profiles, so I am bringing this research to the attention of the current profile managers to evaluate and integrate into the current profiles. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me by private message. Best Regards, Cynthia Bayer Melton Bayer-1265 This FSP will be linked to the following profiles: Margery FitzHugh [FitzHugh-418] John Melton, Esq. [Melton-69] Thomas Richard Milton [Milton-45] Richard Milton [Milton-41] Sir William Constable [Constable-179] John Constable [Constable-155] Sir Marmaduke Constable [Constable-43] Joyce Stafford [Stafford-15] Henry Milton [Milton-50] '''Richard Milton; yeoman of the chamber''' About the time of Thomas Richard Milton, Richard Milton, was yeoman of the chamber in the time of Edward IV of England who reigned from 4 March 1461 to 3 October 1470, then again from 11 April 1471 until he died in 1483. Calendar of the Patent Rolls: Edward IV-Richard III. By Great Britain. Public Record Office 9 Edward IV - Part 2 Page 179 HathiTrust. [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015066345359&seq=191 Richard Milton] (Accessed 21 April 2024) '''November 11, 1469'''. Westminster. Grant for life to '''Richard Milton''' of the office of parker of the king’s parks of Assheley and Guddosbere, parcel of the manor and borough of Tyverton, co. Devon, in the king’s hands by the forfeiture of Thomas Courteney, last earl of Devon, attainted of high treason by an act in Parliament at Westminster, 1 Edward 1V. and because Walter Moyle, justice of the Bench, Baldwin Fulford, knight, and others were seised of the same in their demesne as of fee to the use of the said earl for his life; and grant to him for life of wages of 611 daily from the issues of the said manor or borough, with all other profits. Calendar of the Patent Rolls: Edward IV-Richard III. By Great Britain. Public Record Office 9 Edward IV - Part 2 Page 338 HathiTrust [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015066345359&seq=350&q1=kelsale Milton] (Accessed 22 April 2024) 25 December 1472. Westminster. Appointment of Roger Kelsale, yeoman of the crown, to take carpenters Westminster called whelers' and 'cartwrightes and other carpenters, stone-cutters, smiths, plumbers, bowmakers, boltmakers and other workmen for the works of the king's ordnance and bombards, 'colverynes,' 'fowlers,'' serpentynes' and other canons and powder, sulphur, saltpetre, iron, stone, lead and other necessaries for them, crossbows and bolts for them, arrows, bowstaves,' "bowstringes,' lances, gley ves' and hammers and other necessaries for the ordnance and carriage for the same and horses called 'hakneys' and ships and other vessels. " By K. The like of the king's servant '''Richard Milton'''; yeoman of the chamber. ''A yeoman-of-the-chamber is an obsolete term for a servant in a royal household who had access to the bedchamber. During the reign of King Edward III, there were two groups of yeomen: yeomen of the King's Chamber and yeomen of the Offices. Yeomen of the King's Chamber were members of noble families who only waited on the King, while yeomen of the Offices were commoners who performed similar duties for other household residents and guests. Yeoman is an early term that refers to a servant or attendant in a late Medieval English royal or noble household. Yeomen were usually of higher rank in the household hierarchy, reflecting the feudal society in which they lived. In English history, a yeoman was a class intermediate between the gentry and the laborers. They were usually landholders but could also be retainers, guards, attendants, or subordinate officials.'' From Wikipedia. C. D. Szaro states in his Master’s Thesis, regarding this entry into the Patent Rolls of December 25, 1472: “Again, the records show the existence of a robust central administration which did not diminish in strength or importance during the civil war. The Crown continued to effectively mobilize ordnance and manpower through the use of royal officials and commissioners. The impressment of laborers and craftsmen was an essential aspect of this process. There are no instances of large-scale defiance to these demands recorded within the patent rolls, which suggests that the Crown could still expect obedience from its subjects. Additionally, the records from this period show that numerous individuals were appointed to a variety of offices related to the production and maintenance of arms and ammunition. The power of the Crown was still strong. The mobilization of arms for expeditionary action required even more administrative activity. Because Edward IV’s preparations in the early 1470s were so extensive, there is considerable 309 Ibid., 85. 310 Ibid., 23. 311 Ibid., 69. 312 Ibid., 52-53. 67 information about mobilizing men and materiel for foreign service in the patent rolls for that period. An entry dated December 25, 1472, reads as follows:” Szaro, Cory Daniel, "Mobilization and the Power of the English Crown During the Wars of the Roses" (2022). Master's Theses and Capstones. 1577. Page 66. [https://scholars.unh.edu/thesis/1577] 1483 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office: Edward IV [Henry VI, Edward V, Richard III] A. D. 1461-[1485] Prepared Under the Superintendence of the Deputy Keeper of the Records, Volume 3 page 336 Great Britain. Public Record Office. Jan 1901 · [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=AVVJAQAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PA336&hl=en&q=Milton Richard Milton] (Accessed 21 April 2024) February 15, 1483. Westminster. Grant for life to '''Richard Milton''' and John Hays of the office of parker of the king's parks of Aissheley and Goddesbear, parcel of the manor and borough of Tiverton, co. Devon, and 6d. daily from the issues of the said manor and borough with all other profits and the herbage of the parks,''' in lieu of, a grant to the said Richard by letters patent dated 11 November, 9 Edward IV''', surrendered. By K. Following is information on Ashley Park mentioned in the Calendar of Patent Rolls. “In addition to the portions of Pitt, Clare, Tidcombe, and Priors, there is a fifth division called "All fours," a portion of which comprehends Ashley Park, containing about 621 acres, and Castle Barton, about 160 acres. These lands anciently formed the deer park, and Home Park, or Demesne Estate, belonging to the Castle, which in earlier days was the principal residence of the Earls of Devon. They are subject to a modus, which has always borne the singular title of Buck and Doe money, being doubtless the equivalent for an annual presentation of a Buck and Doe to each of the Rectors. When these parks were destroyed, (which Cleaveland, in his history of the Courtenay family, ascribed to Henry 8th, acting under the advice of Sir Richard Pollard, Kt. of St. John's, who says," the great park of Okehampton, Tiverton park, and all the parks belonging to the Earls of Devon, were destroyed, by the King, acting on the advice of Sir Richard Pollard, an act which his Majesty is said to have afterwards much regretted, ") this modus was doubtless formed; as the Buck and Doe could no longer be given, an annual payment of the 50s. per annum, or 12s. 6d. to each Rector, for Ashley Park, and 30s. or 7s. 6d. to each, for Castle Barton, appears to have been paid as early as 1602. In what way these parks were destroyed is now impossible to say, (that is, if the account be true), probably little more than getting rid of the deer, felling the timber, and making some partial divisions; for it appears by a deed still existing, bearing date, 2nd February 1624, that one - eighth part of the "disparked park called Ashley Park," was, a short time previous to this date, enclosed by Roger Giffard.) The History of Tiverton, Volume 2 By William HARDING (Lieut.-Colonel.) The History of Tiverton. Book IV. Antiquities, Public Buildings, Etc., page 30 [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=sQ45LXVF3_IC&pg=GBS.RA2-PA30&hl=en]

Fitzpatrick

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Sawka-11|Patricia Sawka]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * finding John Patrick's from Wexford county, Ireland parents. * tracing John's path from Wexford to Bracebridge, Ontario Canada *eventually trace his 21 children and their families Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=25537683 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire

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{{OnePlaceStudy | place = Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire | category = Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire }} == Genealogy Resources == * [[Wikipedia:Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire | Fitzwilliam on Wikipedia]] * [http://www.fitzwilliam-nh.gov/Public_Documents/index Town website] * Norton, John F. ''[[Space:The History of Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire, from 1752-1887|The History of Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire, 1752-1887]]'' (Burr Printing House, 18 Jacob Street, New York, 1888) == Cemeteries in Fitzwilliam == * http://fitzwilliam-nh.gov/index.asp?SEC=B01F83FE-182A-4F51-9CC3-61EEE331D9DC&Type=B_BASIC * [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=2190322 Find-A-Grave: Fitzwilliam Village Cemetery] * [http://www.nhoga.com/sites/oga_F02.htm New Hampshire Old Graveyard Association] == Maps ==

Five Daughters in Search of Learning by Margaret Goodbody (Book)

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==Five Daughters in Search of Learning by Margaret Goodbody (Book) == The Sturge Family 1820 - 1944 *by Margaret Goodbody, sometime Senior Lecturer, University of Bristol *published by Margaret Goodbody Ltd in 1986 *66 pages *[[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Five Daughters in Search of Learning by Margaret Goodbody (Book)|WikiTree Profiles that use this source]] ===Available online at these locations:=== Not available === Table of Contents === * PREFACE * I WILLIAM: THE FATHER ** 1. A QUAKER SCHOOLING ** 2. THE PROFESSIONAL MAN ** 3. THE RETROSPECT * II THE DAUGHTERS ** 1. CHILDHOOD AND SCHOOLING ** 2. HIGHER EDUCATION AND CAREERS ** 3. CARTA THE MADCAP ** 4. CAROLINE THE DOCTOR ** 5. THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE ** 6. ELIZABETH AND HOUSING REFORM ** 7. EMILY: A CAREER CUT SHORT ** 8. THE HOME DAUGHTERS ** 9. WOMEN'S RIGHTS ** 10. FAMILY HISTORY ** 11. ELIZABETH AND HELEN IN OLD AGE * FOOTNOTES

Five Year Diary of Katie Cleaver

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Diary of [[Reider-31|Katie Cleaver]] ==1959== ===March=== :10 :: Judy's birthday. Snow ::flourishes cold + windy. Spam, ::mashed potatoes, kidney beans and ::cream puffs. Two gift cakes ...[?] get another. : 11 ::Had a litter ...[?]. Dad is ::coming home from Florida on ::March 16. Mary Ellen Hoffman will ::be buried today, aged 71. Starts to snow 8[?]pm ==1960== ===March=== :10 ::Thur. - Judy's birthday ::Striped dress and [illegible] ::wanted tr..[?] ca..[?]. Roast beef, ...[?], ::...[?] potatoes + birthday ...[?] cake[?]. :11 ::Fri - Judy goes to 4H[?] banquet ::at Bernville and gets a National Award ::...[?] Girl Scout Dance after- ::ward. C..[?] ..[?] late Mrs. Yeager ==1961== ===March=== :10 :: Fri - 9am working Dad ::brings half a turkey and has ::it roasting when we ..[?] home ::Birthday dinner at six. :11 ::Sat - Eleanor + the girls came ::in the P..[?] I try to catch up on ::my sewing. Card[?] party in the evening ::no prizes for us. ==1962== ===March=== :10 :: Sat - Sewing and cleaning ::Judy's birthday a duck for ::dinner. a heart cake (white). :: :11 ::Sun - a day of rest, very nice ::weather :: :: ==1963== ===March=== :10 :: Sun - I made an angel food ::for her birthday. They came ::home about 1:30 very happy ::Theresa, Mary, and Eleanor :11 ::...[?] The children come for ::supper and sort of reception ::The children could not go ::but ...[?] Monday, it was a riot.

Flacks from the Ulster Counties of Ireland

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The goal of this project is to identify a common Flack ancestor(s) of the 24 family histories of Flacks listed in WikiTree with origins in the northern counties (Ulster) of Ireland... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Flack-381|Ted Flack]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Who was my William Flack's (b.1810 in Bailieborough, Cavan) father? I know his mother was Elizabeth Flack d.1863 in Burnley, Lancashire, England. * Create a record of the possible descendants of Fergus Flack who was listed in the Muster Rolls in Fewes, County Armagh in 1630 *Create a record of the possible descendants of Nevin Flack who was listed in the Muster Rolls in Great Ardes, County Down in 1630 Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=7224677 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Flag of Belgium

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Flag of Belgium

Flag of Finland

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white with a blue cross

Flake Plantation

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== Slaves of the Flake Family== '''[[Flake-42|Samuel Flake]]''', born 1701 in Virginia, was a large Landowner as he was issued many Land Grants perhaps in excess of 1600 acres. 4 Nov 1763 in Anson County, North Carolina.[1] 24 Nov 1767 in Anson County, North Carolina.[1] 2 Nov 1771 in Anson County, North Carolina for 250 Acres and a second one for 200 Acres -- Majesties' Letters Patent. Book #20 page 728.[1][10] 22 Feb 1771 in Anson County, North Carolina -- Majesties' Letters Patent.[1] 2 Apr 1785 in Anson County, North Carolina for 100 Acres for 100 pounds S.W. of Pee Dee River on Smith Creek.[10] 7 Aug 1787 in Anson County, North Carolina for 100 Acres Grant #846 Book #64, Page 187.[10] 7 Aug 1787 in Anson County, North Carolina for 600 Acres Beginning at a stake Samuel Flackes 4th corner of his 250 acre survey n. prong of Smith's Creek[11] 6 Dec 1799 in Anson County, North Carolina for 100 Acres Grant #1549 Book #106, Page 243.[10] Samuel Flake Home in 1790 (City, County, State) Anson, North Carolina Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over 2 Free White Persons - Males - Under 16 3 Free White Persons - Females 2 '''Number of Slaves 1''' Number of Household Members 8 {{Image|file=Flake_Plantation-3.jpg |caption=Last Will and Testiment of Samuel Flake, 1802 }} (In the order of appearance) Jo, Tom, Abraham, boys Dill, a girl (There is a Mingo listed on an abstract, but doesn't show on the Will) '''[[Flake-41|Jordan Flake]]''' Born 1764 Name Jordon Flake Residence Date 6 Aug 1810 Residence Place Anson, North Carolina, USA Free White Persons - Males - Under 10 3 Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44 1 Free White Persons - Females - Under 10 1 Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44 1 '''Number of Enslaved Persons 3''' Number of Household Members Under 16 4 Number of Household Members Over 25 2 Number of Household Members 9 Name Jordan Fake Home in 1820 (City, County, State) Clark, Anson, North Carolina Enumeration Date August 7, 1820 Free White Persons - Males - Under 10 3 Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15 1 Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over 1 Free White Persons - Females - Under 10 2 Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15 1 Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44 1 '''Slaves - Males - Under 14 3 '''Slaves - Males - 14 thru 25 1 '''Slaves - Females - Under 14 3 '''Slaves - Females - 14 thru 25 1''' Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture 10 Free White Persons - Under 16 7 Free White Persons - Over 25 2 Total Free White Persons 9 '''Total Slaves 8''' Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other 17 Name Jourder Flake Home in 1830 (City, County, State) Anson, North Carolina Free White Persons - Males - Under 5 1 Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14 1 Free White Persons - Males - 15 thru 19 1 Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29 1 Free White Persons - Males - 50 thru 59 1 Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 9 1 Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14 2 Free White Persons - Females - 40 thru 49 1 '''Slaves - Males - Under 10 6 '''Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23 5 '''Slaves - Males - 24 thru 35 1 '''Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54 1 '''Slaves - Males - 100 and over 1 '''Slaves - Females - Under 10 2 '''Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23 2 '''Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35 1''' '''Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54 1''' Free White Persons - Under 20 6 Free White Persons - 20 thru 49 2 Total Free White Persons 9j '''Total Slaves 20 Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored) 29 Name Jordan Flake Home in 1840 (City, County, State) Anson, North Carolina Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14 1 Free White Persons - Males - 60 thru 69 1 Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19 1 Free White Persons - Females - 50 thru 59 1 Free White Persons - Females - 70 thru 79 1 '''Slaves - Males - Under 10 3 '''Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23 2 '''Slaves - Males - 24 thru 35 3 '''Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54 1 '''Slaves - Females - Under 10 4 '''Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35 2 '''Slaves - Females - 36 thru 54 2''' Persons Employed in Agriculture 12 Free White Persons - Under 20 2 Total Free White Persons 5 '''Total Slaves 17''' Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves 22 From his Last Will and Testiment: Ned, Daniel and Isham, boys Lucy, Ruben, Endjo Abram, Holy his wife, Arther and Jude To my son James M. Flake two negroes Green and Lyse Allonzo, Seller and her child Claborn Lydia, King, George, Rosan, and her two children Aaron and Arther Sarah and her two children Hannah and Ann Aaron, Jack, Cindy and Mary [5] *'''1810 Census''' "United States Census, 1810", database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLM-N7B : accessed 24 February 2016), Jordon Flake, 1810. '''3 slaves''' *'''1820 Census''' "1820 United States Federal Census AncestryInstitution.com." 1820 United States Federal Census - AncestryInstitution.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 27 Jul. 2013..http://recordseek.com/v/MMMM-FNTT/1374965036070/ '''8 slaves''' *'''1830 Census''' Year: 1830; Census Place: Anson, North Carolina; Series: M19; Roll: 118; Page: 55; Family History Library Film: 0018084 https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/70655837/person/392466889380/facts '''20 slaves''' *'''1840 Census''' "United States Census, 1840," database with images, FamilySearch https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHR5-5BG : 3 January 2023), Jordan Flake, Anson, North Carolina, United States; citing p. 88, NARA microfilm publication , (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll ; FHL microfilm . '''17 slaves''' A combination of the last Will and the 1840 census. Many matches are a best guess on age. 1 Jordan Flake Claborn under 10 male 1840 Census ''' 2 Jordan Flake Aaron under 10 male 1840 Census under 3 3 Jordan Flake Arthur under 10 male 1840 Census under 3 4 Jordan Flake Ned 10 to 23 male 1840 Census 5 Jordan Flake Daniel 10 to 23 male 1840 Census 6 Jordan Flake Isham 24 to 35 male 1840 Census 7 Jordan Flake Green 24 to 35 male 1840 Census 8 Jordan Flake Ruben 24 to 35 male 1840 Census 9 Jordan Flake Endjo 36 to 54 male 1840 Census 10 Jordan Flake Lydia under 10 female 1840 Census under 3 11 Jordan Flake Mary under 10 female 1840 Census 12 Jordan Flake Cindy under 10 female 1840 Census 13 Jordan Flake Lucy under 10 female 1840 Census 14 Jordan Flake Rosan 24 to 35 female 1840 Census 15 Jordan Flake Seller 24 to 35 female 1840 Census 16 Jordan Flake Lyse Alonzo 36 to 54 female 1840 Census 17 Jordan Flake Haley 36 to 54 female 1840 Census 17 King male George male '''[[Flake-460|Elijah Flake, born 1777]]''' Name Elijah Flake '''Home in 1820''' (City, County, State) Mays, Anson, North Carolina Enumeration Date August 7, 1820 Free White Persons - Males - Under 10 3 Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15 1 Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44 1 Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 15 1 Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44 1 '''Slaves - Males - Under 14 1 '''Slaves - Females - Under 14 3 '''Slaves - Females - 14 thru 25 2''' Number of Persons - Engaged in Agriculture 4 Free White Persons - Under 16 5 Free White Persons - Over 25 2 Total Free White Persons 7 '''Total Slaves 6''' Total All Persons - White, Slaves, Colored, Other 13 Name Elijah Flake '''Home in 1830''' (City, County, State) Anson, North Carolina Free White Persons - Males - Under 5 1 Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 9 1 Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14 1 Free White Persons - Males - 15 thru 19 1 Free White Persons - Males - 50 thru 59 1 Free White Persons - Females - 5 thru 9 1 Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19 1 Free White Persons - Females - 40 thru 49 1 '''Slaves - Males - Under 10 3 '''Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23 1 '''Slaves - Males - 36 thru 54 1 '''Slaves - Females - Under 10 3 '''Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23 1 '''Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35 2 '''Free White Persons - Under 20 6 '''Free White Persons - 20 thru 49 1 Total Free White Persons 8 '''Total Slaves 11 Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored) 19 [[Williams-123498|Elizabeth Williams]] Birth 1778 Anson, North Carolina, USA DIFFERENT Death 7 June 1861 Henderson, Tennessee, USA Name Elizabeth Flake Home in 1840 (City, County, State) Henderson, Tennessee Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 9 1 Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 14 1 Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29 1 Free White Persons - Females - 50 thru 59 1 '''Slaves - Males - Under 10 3 '''Slaves - Males - 10 thru 23 1 '''Slaves - Females - Under 10 3 '''Slaves - Females - 10 thru 23 2 '''Slaves - Females - 24 thru 35 2 Persons Employed in Agriculture 6 Free White Persons - Under 20 2 Free White Persons - 20 thru 49 1 Total Free White Persons 4 '''Total Slaves 11 Total All Persons - Free White, Free Colored, Slaves 15 Name Elizebeth Flake Residence Date 1860 Residence Place District 17, Henderson, Tennessee, USA '''Number of Enslaved People 31 Pages 180-184, January 1862 Commissioners to divide slaves among met at the residence of ELIZABETH FLAKE, December 20, 1861 and made this division with valuations for each slave: 1. To heirs of WILLIAM B. FLAKE: ELLEN and children THANEY and FRANCES, $1325; LEWIS, $950; ANN, $100. 2. To children of MRS. MARY LILES; LUCY, $850; CHARLES, $400; WILLIS, $850. 3. To DUDLEY L. FLAKE: CINDY and child HENDERSON, $1025; SARAH, $750; WADE, $750. 4. To JAMES S. FLAKE: EVELINE, $700; TENNESSEE, $450: LUCENA, $375; HARRY $150; ARRENA, $700. 5. To MOURNING J., wife of JAMES HOUSE: CANDIS, $600; MELIA, $300; MARY, $400; FRANK, $500; SAMUEL, $600. 6. To heirs of B.L. FLAKE: CHARLOTTE and child, NATHAN, $850; RICHARD, $800; HENRY, $750. Commissioners: PETER PEARSON, WILLIAM PEARSON, BROWN BOSWELL, HENRY KIRBY {{Image|file=Flake_Plantation-4.jpg |caption=Flake Plantation }} {{Image|file=Flake_Plantation-6.jpg |caption=Flake Plantation 2 }} {{Image|file=Flake_Plantation-8.jpg |caption=Flake Plantation 3 }} (click to expand photos) [[Flake-92|James M Flake]] became a member of the LDS Church between 1830 - 1848. James Flake was a Latter Day Saint pioneer. He had six slaves on his journey == Sources ==

Flanagan murders and deaths

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Flanagan_murders_and_deaths.pdf
[[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Flanagan_murders_and_deaths| Other WikiTree pages that link to this page]] The story of John Clarence Flanagan and the death of his wife Mary Roy in 1840. The subsequent mysterious death in 1883 of Frances Summerfield, John C Flanagan's (John Clarence's grandson) lover. See the PDF of the newspaper article for full details. The Appeals case of John C Flanagan. Start at the bottom of page 116: [https://books.google.com/books?id=H3gtAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA116&lpg=PA133&dq=state+vs+flanagan+murder+of+frances+summerfield+1883&source=bl&ots=epE4CbTaCh&sig=5I1mV4d-kPhThI0nrcU1k_jJ1N4&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjU6N-52tTWAhVI4WMKHY_FBN0Q6AEILzAC#v=onepage&q=state%20vs%20flanagan%20murder%20of%20frances%20summerfield%201883&f=true]

Flanders family from Europe to America

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http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/78163112/story http://dunhamwilcox.net/me/me_bio_flanders.htm

Flanders Family Fun Facts

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== A Flanders born in every state == I wanted to see if I could find the first Flanders born in every state of the union to give an idea of the spread of the family across the USA. {| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" ! State !! Name !! Birth Date !! Town |- | Massachusetts || [[Flanders-113|Stephen Flanders]] || 1646-03-08 || Salisbury, MA |- | New Hampshire || [[Flanders-515| Tabitha Flanders]] || 1711-04-07 || Salisbury, NH |- | Maine || [[Flanders-1343| Thomas Flanders Sr.]] || 1774-01-25 || Northport, ME |- | Georgia || [[Flanders-1302|Barnabus Flanders]] || 1784 || Emanuel County, GA |- | New York || [[Flanders-1344|William Flanders]] || 1791 || Sugartown, NY |- | Vermont || [[Flanders-1172|Sally Flanders]] || 1798-01-05 || Bradford, VT |- | Connecticut || [[Flanders-1345| David Flanders]] || 1799-01-15 || Norwich, CT |- | Ohio || [[Flanders-1352|Thomas Flanders Jr.]] || 1816-02-16 || Fearing Township, OH |- | Rhode Island || [[Flanders-1346| Francis Kinlock Flanders]] || 1854-08-23 || Wickford, RI |- | Pennsylvania || [[Flanders-1350|Alton Andrew Flanders]] || 1857-7-1 || Columbus, PA |- | New Jersey || [[Flanders-1347|Sarah F. Flanders]] || 1883-02-18 || Bayonne, NJ |- | Illinois || [[Flanders-1353|Lenora Matilda Flanders]] || 1855-01-06 || Lukin, IL |- | Iowa || [[Flanders-1348|Sarah Flanders]] || 1868-02-15 || Clark County, IA |- | Arkansas || [[Flanders-1366|Clara Ethel Flanders]] || 1891-2-14 || Malvern, AK |- | Delaware || [[Flanders-1356|William Deforrest Flanders]] || 1916-05-05 || Wilmington, DE |- | Colorado || [[Flanders-1362|Phillip James Flanders]] || 1927-1-2 || Denver, CO |- | Michigan || [[Flanders-1370|James R Flanders]] || 1835-11-24 || Charleston, MI |- | Louisiana || [[Flanders-1138|Katherine Anna Flanders]] || 1848-09-11 || New Orleans, LA |- | Wisconsin || [[Flanders-54|Henry M Flanders]] || 1847-09-01 || Unkown |}

Flannery of Ballyguy

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The history of three generations of the Flannery family of Ballyguy townland, which straddles the boundary between the civil parishes of Abington and Clonkeen in County Limerick, can be reconstructed from the records of the estate of [[Bourke-361|Sir Richard Bourke]].Power, Margaret M. C. "[http://www.limerickcity.ie/media/NMAJ%20vol%2041%2006%20Sir%20Richard%20Bourke%20and%20his%20Tenants%201815-55,%20by%20Margaret%20Power.pdf Sir Richard Bourke and his Tenants 1815-55]." North Munster Antiquarian Journal, vol. 41, 2001, pp. 75-88.Manuscript rentals of the estate of Sir Richard Bourke of Thornfield in National Library of Ireland (MS 19,761) and online extracts [https://www.limerick.ie/sites/default/files/atoms/files/estate_maps_of_county_limerick_0.pdf here] and [https://docplayer.net/52942555-Estate-maps-of-county-limerick.html here]. According to Power (2001, pp. 77 and 85), quoting an 1830 memorandumThis memorandum, along with the rent rolls, estate accounts and correspondence of [[Bourke-361|Sir Richard Bourke]] and his son [[Bourke-1072|Richard Bourke jnr.]] referred to below, are all in the possession of Dan Lawless of Moher, Co. Tipperary. from [[Bourke-361|Sir Richard Bourke]] to his agent Barrington (pp. 5 and 37), [[Bourke-361|Sir Richard Bourke]]'s father [[Bourke-1073|John Bourke]] (who died in 1795) had leased about 138 acres in Ballyguy to John Dwyer, who in turn sublet these lands to three tenants, John Duhy and [[Flannery-721|William]] and [[Flannery-907|John Flannery]], who were brothers. In the early 1820s, Dwyer's lease expired and [[Bourke-361|Bourke]] took the lands into his own hands and retained the three tenants, giving each of them a lease of one life with a restricting clause forbidding subletting and subdivision. The [[Unknown-510068|mother]] of the Flannery brothers lived in her own cottage on the farm and [[Bourke-361|Bourke]] left instructions to his agent that should the Flannerys' leases expire before she died she was not to be disturbed. Power (2001, p. 80), quoting rent rolls in the Bourke papers, notes that [[Bourke-361|Bourke]] offered a lease of twenty-one years to John Nicoll, who took over [[Flannery-907|John Flannery]]'s thirty acres in Ballyguy after he emigrated in 1852. Power (2001, p. 81), quoting estate accounts in the Bourke papers, notes that the Flannery brothers, who were leaseholders of one life, were both dispossessed for non-payment of rents. [[Flannery-721|William]] was evicted by legal process and [[Flannery-907|John]] surrendered his holding and emigrated in 1852. Power (2001, p. 82), quoting a letter dated 26 January 1850 [sic] from [[Bourke-361|Sir Richard Bourke]] to his son [[Bourke-1072|Richard jnr.]], records that [[Flannery-907|John Flannery]] farmed thirty acres in Ballyguy, paying a rent of £76 14s. a year. He was in arrears for ten years in 1852 [sic] when he owed £134 18s. 2d. He had been under notice to quit earlier but it was deferred as it was known to Bourke that the Flannery sons were anxious to emigrate. The estate accounts revealed that they were waiting for [[Flannery-907|their father]] to agree and that the family eventually surrendered their holding and emigrated to America in 1852, when they were paid £30 compensation for disturbance and £19 11s. 3d. for the hay and manure. In Griffith's Valuation (printed 12 Feb 1852), the only Flannerys in the civil parishes of Abington or Clonkeen were both occupiers in the townland of Ballyguy, which straddles the parish boundary: * [[Flannery-907|John Flannery]] occupied no. 2a in Clonkeen (house and offices with rateable annual valuation of 50 shillings on 7a 3r 6p) and no. 2 in Abington (50a 2r 38p); and * [[Flannery-720|John Flannery, jun.]] occupied no. 3a in Clonkeen (house and offices with rateable annual valuation of 30 shillings on 11a 1r 38p) and no. 3 in Abington (75a 3r 32p). Both sublet from [[Bourke-361|Sir Richard Bourke]], who occupied the remainder of the townland. The senior of the Griffith occupiers must have been the man who surrendered his holding later in 1852 and went to America. The junior of the Griffith occupiers must have been the [[Flannery-720|John Flannery]] who married Margaret Ryan in Croom parish on 27 November 1852https://registers.nli.ie/registers/vtls000634977#page/135/mode/1up
`27 Johannem Flannery et Margaritam Ryan de Ballyculleen mat. junxi
coram Edvardo Ryan et Edvardo Mulqueen. Laur. Harnett'
and who continued to have children baptised in Murroe and Boher parish up to 1860, with further children baptised in Clonlara parish in 1862 and 1863 (with his address there given as "Prospect", possibly referring to the vicinity of Prospecthill House in Knockbrack Lower townland in Kiltenanlea civil parish. Some time after 1863, this family also emigrated, to Australia. == Sources ==

Flat Branch Township, Snell Family farms, 1875 plat book

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Flat_Branch_Township_Snell_Family_farms_1875_plat_book.jpg
NW corner of Flat Branch Township with family farms, plat book published in 1875

Flattem Family Bibliography

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The following is a list of works consulted in preparing the Flattem Family Tree and recommendations for further reading or reference. ==Key== 1. All U.S. federal census records cited are population schedules unless otherwise identified. 2. Enumeration districts in U.S. census records are abbreviated e.d. 3. The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration in Washington D.C. will be shortened to National Archives or NARA. 4. The Family History Library in Salt Lake City is abbreviated as FHL. ==Sources== ''Jensen Cemetery Tombstone Photos, Fulton Township, Rock County, Wisconsin.'' Larry and Linda Kopet compilers. Accessed 22 April 2012 online at USGenWeb [http://www.usgwarchives.net/wi/cemetery/rock-fultontwp-jensen.html] ''They Came to Milton''. John Saunders compiler. Accessed 21 April 2012 online at Rootsweb[http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jonsaunders&id=I121408].

Flattem Family Time Line

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The following is a chronological listing of major events in the Flattem Family timeline: ==19th Century== 1880 [[Flöttem-2|Jens Herman]] is born to [[Flöttem-1|John Pedersen Flöttem]] and [[Jensdatter-251|Dorothea Jorgine Jensdatter]] 1883 [[Flöttem-5|Alfred Julius]] is born to [[Flöttem-1|John Pedersen Flöttem]] and [[Jensdatter-251|Dorothea Jorgine Jensdatter]] 1885 [[Flöttem-3|Johan Jorgen]] is born to [[Flöttem-1|John Pedersen Flöttem]] and [[Jensdatter-251|Dorothea Jorgine Jensdatter]] 1889 [[Flöttem-4|Einar Marius Pedersen]] is born to [[Flöttem-1|John Pedersen Flöttem]] and [[Jensdatter-251|Dorothea Jorgine Jensdatter]] ==20th Century== 1907 [[Flöttem-3|Johan Jorgen Flöttem]] immigrates from Norway to USA and changes his name to John George Flattem. 1924 [[Flattem-1|Doris Lucille]] is born to [[Flattem-3|John G.]] and [[Richard-662|Lucile Flattem (Richard)]] 1943 [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Flattem]] marries [[Kersten-24|Harold F. Kersten]] 1944 [[Kersten-23|Donna Jean]] is born to [[Kersten-24|Harold F.]] and [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Kersten (Flattem)]] 1946 [[Kersten-40|David Richard]] is born to [[Kersten-24|Harold F.]] and [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Kersten (Flattem)]] 1953 [[Kersten-41|Sue Ellen]] is born to [[Kersten-24|Harold F.]] and [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Kersten (Flattem)]] 1959 [[Kersten-35|Donna Dennis Dean]] is born to [[Kersten-24|Harold F.]] and [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Kersten (Flattem)]] 1960 [[Kersten-43|Ronald Dwayne]] is born to [[Kersten-24|Harold F.]] and [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Kersten (Flattem)]] 1991 [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Flattem]] dies 1998 [[Kersten-24|Harold F.]] husband of [[Flattem-1|Doris L. Kersten (Flattem)]] dies ==21st Century==

Flattem Family Tree Surname Index

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=== '''''Flattem Family Tree Surname Index''''' === '''Babin''' [[Babin-25|Antoine]], [[Babin-11|Jeanne]] '''Blabaum''' [[Flattem-8|Marion (Flattem)]] '''Bossi''' [[Bossi-2|Philomine]] '''Caulfield''' [[Caulfield-51|Daniel]], [[Flattem-11|Susan (Flattem)]] '''Coleson''' [[Coleson-62|Nicole]] '''Demers''' [[Demers-103|Joseph]], [[Demers-105|Leonie]], [[Demers-104|Ozeline]], [[Demers-102|Roshilda]] '''Derousseau''' [[Demers-105|Leonie (Derousseau)]] '''Flattem''' [[Flattem-10|Donald]], [[Flattem-1|Doris L.]], [[Young-5675|Ella (Young)]], [[Flattem-4|Georgia L.]], [[Wiess-7|Ila M. (Wiess)]], [[Flattem-2|Jens]], [[Flattem-9|John]], [[Flattem-3|John G.]], [[Richard-662|Lucile (Richard)]], [[Flattem-5|Margaret D.]], [[Flattem-8|Marion]], [[Flattem-6|Richard L.]], [[Flattem-3|Vera J.]] Flöttem [[Flöttem-3|Johan Jörgen (John G. Flattem)]] '''Fournier''' [[Desjardins-42|Clementine (Desjardins)]], [[Fournier-302|Francois]], [[Fournier-301|Leon]], [[Demers-104|Ozelina (Demers)]] '''Gaudet''' [[Gaudet-260|Jean]], [[Gaudet-14|Marie Francoise]] '''Harried''' [[Harried-1|Truman O.]], [[Flattem-3|Vera J. (Flattem)]] '''Kersten''' [[Kersten-64|Conner]], [[Kersten-67|David]], [[Kersten-40|David R.]], [[Kersten-23|Donna]], [[Flattem-1|Doris (Flattem)]], [[Kersten-24|Harold]], [[Kersten-60|John A.]], [[Kersten-66|Kerowyn]], [[Kersten-62|Madison]], [[Kersten-61|Mike]],[[Kersten-63|Morgan]] '''Kleven''' [[Flattem-5|Margaret D. (Flattem)]], [[Kleven-15|Sanford G.]] '''Richard''' [[Richard-663|Joseph J.]], [[Richard-662|Lucile]] '''Sommervold''' [[Sommervold-2|Anton]], [[Flattem-4|Georgia L. (Flattem)]] '''Turner''' [[Flattem-7|Dorthy (Flattem)]] '''Young''' [[Young-5675|Ella]]

Flavius Joseph Cook

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Flavius was born (supposedly) in Deposit, NY to Ward and Nancy (Bassett) Cook. Ward's father was Stephen Russel Cook and Mary Polly (Black) of Connecticut. The family moved from Connecticut to New York, where Stephen Russel died in Masonville, and Ward moved and continued to live in Tompkins and Deposit with his family. Flavius' brother was Bishop Ashbury Cook of Tompkins, NY. both were named after noted preachers of the day of their congregation. Flavius came to Hawaii from (Deposit, NY) in 1851/1852 and worked & settled in Maui, Hawaii and the Big Island of Hawaii. He was a blacksmith in Paia, Maui. He died in 1895 on the Big Island. Leaving 6 children. (source: Ward's Story, Hawaii Newspapers, and family records)

Fleenor Family Mysteries

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Amos Milton was the son of George Fleenor and his wife Mary E Smith. He was born abt 1866. The 1870 Census of Gibson, Washington, Ind. says George is 22, Mary is 21 and Amos was 1. George is never mentioned again. His wife remarried on Jun23, 1878 In Greenfield, Fayette, Indiana to John Harmon Jacobs. So far I have found 8 George Fleenors but not the one I am seeking.

Fleming

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Rex Fleming

Fleming, Laird, Russell, Matches

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——————- What the following means is that I believe there was a Charlton living in the area (Georgia) related to Samuel and Alice Charlton and that is why I am forever linked to them through DNA. The following is not proven and is from Find a grave; The following rough draft line is only one way that Laird is related to Kellam. There are three matches to Laird. Parents of Eldridge; rough draft Rev. Seth Kellam & Susannah Bryan. Maternal Grandson of David Jacob Snell and Frances Reeves. *Parents of David; rough draft Eldridge R. Kellam b: 7 SEP 1806 in Washington County, Ga and Cornelia Lavania Caroline Snell b: 13 NOV 1815 in Pulaski County, Ga. Parents of Martha; rough draft Count Pulaski Fleming (1814 - 1876) Martha A. Bembry Fleming (1816 - 1886) *David Seth Kellam (1834 - 1876) Mary Frances Fleming Kellam (1837 - 1909) they had at least one son John and may be Robert...and more? Please note: This is my spin on the genealogy as shown via Courtesy of the Georgia Archives “Vault”. Robert Fleming ( the brother) Kellam Born; 26 December 1877 Citing this Record "United States World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZZF-MWJ : 13 March 2018), Robert Fleming Kellum, 1917-1918; citing Putnam County, Georgia, United States, NARA microfilm publication M1509 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 1,558,384. John Fleming Kellam Born; 14 June 1861 Died; 10 September 1930 Atlanta, Fulton Georgia Citing this Record "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVKZ-T3BW : 13 December 2015), John Fleming Kellam, 1930; Burial, Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia, United States of America, Oakland Cemetery; citing record ID 40856128, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com. http://vault.georgiaarchives.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/vg2/id/6448/rec/9 This is the Charlton that I believe I am related to. I also believe that they are related to Samuel Fleming and Alice Charlton. Catherine Charlton Jenkins This information was found in the Georgia Archives; courtesy of the Georgia Archives Born; 3 June, 1879 Died; 7 January, 1958 Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia, United States of America in the Oakland Cemetery Citing this Record "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVKZ-T3BH : 11 July 2016), Katherine Charlton Jenkins Kellam, 1958; Burial, Atlanta, Fulton, Georgia, United States of America, Oakland Cemetery; citing record ID 40856148, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com. http://vault.georgiaarchives.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/vg2/id/6453/rec/8 Courtesy of the Georgia Archives John Fleming Kellam Jr. son of John and Catherine http://vault.georgiaarchives.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/vg2/id/6453/rec/8 Courtesy of the Georgia Archives 1. Match with Laird [[Maternal relationship is confirmed with a 23andMe test match between David C. Fleming and C. Laird, Fourth cousins. Predicted relationship from 23andMe: "3st to 6th Cousin based on .40% DNA shared across 1 segments." Mitochondria T2b3. Also related to Kellum.]] 2. Match with Laird [Maternal relationship is confirmed with a 23andMe test match between David C. Fleming and C. Laird, Fourth cousins. Predicted relationship from 23andMe: "3rd to 6th Cousin based on 40% DNA shared across 1 segments." Maternal Haplogroup T2b3;True.] 3. Match with Laird Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between David C. Fleming and P.C.,Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 9.8 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment; Confidence: Moderate. [1] [2] [[3] Thomas Fleming and William Fleming mentioned.] [[4] Courtesy of the Courtesy of the Georgia Archives] My DNA was tested twice by Ancestry.Com. The DNA sample was used in an early settlers study of America by Ancestry.Com. DNADNADNADNADNADNADNA Paternal relationship is confirmed with a 23andMe test match between Fleming-7182 and S. Fleming, Fourth cousins Predicted relationship from 23andMe: "3rd to 6th Cousin based on 54% DNA shared across 1 segment. Maternal Haplogroup U2e2. Paternal Haplogroup R-L21. Paternal relationship is confirmed with a 23andMe test match between Fleming-7182 and Chris Fleming, Fourth cousins Predicted relationship from 23andMe: "3rd to 6th Cousin based on 38% DNA shared across 1 segment. Maternal Haplogroup H1e1a. Paternal Haplogroup R-P311. DNA evidence for Samuel Fleming’s children James Fleming, William Fleming, and Mary. Just two more paper trails which help prove the linage of Sara Jane Fleming who’s father was David C Fleming. David’s father was James William Fleming. His father was Samuel who was married to Alice Charlton. The two other children that DNA evidence shows as well as a paper trail are William and Mary. Both can be viewed in the photo’s I have added. Although with more research there may be slight changes to the personal identifiers this can only be expected as with any line. Thank you. Three Alice Charlton and Samuel FLEMING DNA Matches; Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between William Fleming-5576 and R.P., 5th-8th cousins. Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: 5th-8th Cousins based on sharing 7.0 cM shared across 1 DNA segments; Confidence: Moderate. Page 8. Direct Descendant. Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between William Fleming-5576 and McNash209, 5th-8th cousins. Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: 5th-8th Cousins based on sharing 6.1 cM shared across 1 DNA segments; Confidence: Moderate. Page 8. Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between William Fleming-5576 and W. Pendry, 5th-8th cousins. Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: 5th-8th Cousins based on sharing 10.2 cM shared across 1 DNA segments; Confidence: Moderate. Page 8. Alice Charlton DNA Match for Mary the sister of (James William) [5] Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between James William Fleming and GH, Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 12.7 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment ; Confidence: Moderate. Page 3. [6] Mary Laird DNA Match for Rutha the sister of David C. Fleming Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between David C. Fleming and P.C.,Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 9.8 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment; Confidence: Moderate. [7] Martha Patsy Russell’s Grandfather Robert Rusell and his wife Ann Stirling. Martha is the wife of David C. Fleming (Flemming). Page 4. Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between Robert Russell and J. Sink,Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 10.4 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment ; Confidence: Moderate. [8] the Grandfather of Absillah Eason (who married John Rhoades) George Eason and Sarah Perry. Page 4. Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between Abner Eason and J Lattery,Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 9.5 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment; Confidence: Moderate. DNA Match for Mary Gainer wife of John Rhodes(@1723-1795) who’s son was John Rhoades. Page 3. Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between John William Rhoades and D.D., Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 11.2 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment; Confidence: Moderate. Paternal relationship is confirmed with an AncestryDNA test match between John William Rhoades and Peterson_Martha,Possible range: 5th - 8th cousins; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Distant Cousins based on sharing 6.0 centimorgans shared across 1 DNA segment; Confidence: Moderate. Page 8. Other DNA Matches E Black, Possible range: 1st cousin; Predicted relationship reported by AncestryDNA: Close Family based on shared 2,010 centimorgans shared across 55 DNA segments; Confidence: Extremely High. Maternal relationship is confirmed with a 23andMe test match between Lamb-5488 and Brent Hines (managing, Fourth cousins Predicted relationship from 23andMe: "3rd to 5th Cousin based on 34% DNA shared across 3segments."Maternal Haplogroup J1c3, Paternal Haplogroup I-M223.

Fleming -1

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==Birth== About 1720 believed to be in Antrim, Ulster, Ireland *Citizens and Immigrants South Carolina 1768; print by Mary Bondurant Warren; Records of the Public Treasurer of South Carolina; William Harper Family, Benjamin Harper Family, Robert Harper and Family and Danial Harper. *Check out this photo I found on the Ancestry mobile app (shows James Fleming as listed as immigrating).[https://www.ancestry.com/sharing/12593912?h=bb4a23] *The Will of Samuel Fleming’s Mother-InLaw[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9T1P-95KK?i=91&cc=1803986]

Fleming -2

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The goal of this project is to ...discover Scottish Fleming ancestry Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Chartrand-231|Rosanne Chartrand]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16418049 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fleming Family Mysteries

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Fleming Family-Quanah Parker Family Puzzle I have traced my tree very far back to the Parker/Duty families, and would also love to learn about the Cox relationship. I would also love to learn more about my Cox side, especially referring to the Mayflower, and the many descendants also from there. I would also love to learn more about my McClure side. The most I have managed to learn about is my 2 great grandfather Edward McClure from Ireland. These families have clanned together, and also with the McCoy/s. But how does Quanah fit in? Was one of my Cox family members one of the Indian agents that took them to Fort Sill?

Fleming Farmhouse

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Built: Unknown Living room addition: 1980 Garage addition: Unknown

Fleming Wadkin Waldron family and Jonathan Grooms family story

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(Assembled and written July 1, 1974 by Ernest Lyle Secrest, Orlando, Florida) Fleming Wadkin Waldron was born in Bedford County, Virginia, January 28, 1849, married Barbara Ann Watson 1867. She was born January 11, 1848. They had a total of 6 children, 4 boys and 2 girls, including Hester Gertrude Waldron Secrest, my mother. He lived there on the farm where he was born his entire life span of 83 years, growing the most of what was needed to live on, such as corn, wheat, oats, a few cattle and hogs, tobacco (a cash crop, all types of fruit and a good garden. He could not read or write, but he was a successful farmer, and owned a good farm of about 150 acres, which he purchased after the death of his father, Beverly D. Waldron, who had owned it. All of the buildings on this farm were orginally built with logs, as most were during the early 1800's. The dwelling is still standing, but has been modernized several times and all of the logs are now covered up. The other buildings - barns, tobacco houses and slave quarters - fell victim to the elements in the early 1900's. My grandmother, Barbara Ann Watson, told me the slaves belonged to Beverly D. Waldron and their quarters was a log building out at the foot of the long field going up the side of the mountain. At that time it was half rotten and falling down. She was showing me the big old black iron pot that was still there and was what the slaves used for cooking their food in over a fireplace or an open fire outside, depending on the weather. The following people are buried there in the family burial plot - Fleming Wadkin Waldron, Barbara Ann Watson Waldron (their) one son and one daughter - Oscar Fleming Watson and Hester Gertrude Waldron Secrest, Tilden Secrest and the two Secrest babies. This place is now owned by a Mr. Ted Dameron (1974-bjs). To reach this place - going East from Montvale, Virginia on Highway U.S. 460 - about 3 miles turn right onto State Road 726 and continue for about 2 more miles, then turn right into a private road leading up a valley. The will take you up to the home on top of the hill. Beverly D. Waldron married Nancy Moorman May 4, 1820. They had a total of 11 children, 9 boys and 2 girls. Six of their sons - Paschal, Samuel, Burrell, Griffin, Henry and William served in the war between the States. Several were in Company I, 34th Virginia Infantry. Fleming and Robert being the younger ones - their mother set their ages back so they would not have to serve. William, Burrell and Henry were killed at Seven Pines, Virginia, and are buried on top of Porter Mountain (Bedford County, Virginia) on the old Burrell Gray farm, now owned by Mason Cook (1974-bjs). In 1935, the D.A.R.'s placed headstones or markers by their graves. Beverly D. Waldron and his wife Nancy Moorman are also buried there. Burrell Gray married Mary Jane Waldron - the daughter of Beverly. They lost 4 sons in the war between the States also. One of these sons was shot in the head and sent home to recovery. After recovering he returned to his Company and was killed in the next battle. (This is very hard to believe - but I have just learned that this historic cemetery has recently been destroyed with a bulldozer leaving nothing of historical value.) At the time Beverly D. Waldron was buried there was 15 inches of snow on the ground and he had to be taken up the mountain on a sled pulled by horses. The Waldron farm being at the foot of Porter Mountain and better than 2 miles to the top, and almost straight up in places. To date (1974-bjs) we have no record of where Beverly D. Waldron came from, but his wife, Nancy Moorman, was the daughter of Jacob Moorman and Katy Grooms Moorman, they married March 6, 1799 Katy Grooms Moorman was the daughter of Jonathan D. Grooms. (Another daughter - Nancy Grooms - married Jacob Atkinson September 22, 1800). This making Jonathan D. Grooms a great, great, great, great grandfather of my son, Ernest Lyle Secrest II. Jonathan D. Grooms was born February 5, 1756 in London, England, and was brought to this country while quite young. The manner of his leaving London was interesting, a stranger offered to bring him to this country and without letting his people know he left, never to return or see his parents again, as this country and his native England were at war for about seven years, and not much writing was done in those days either. While a resident of Bedford County, Virginia, he enlisted in February 1777 to fight against his native England, serving 4 months in Captain Terrell's Company as a Private in the 5th Virginia Regiment. He enlisted again in the Fall of 1780, at which time he lived in Botetourt County, Virginia, serving three months as a Private under Captain Pauling, Patton and Major Reid in the Virginia Troops. After that he came back to Botetourt County and married Elizabeth Moon, and returned to Bedford County in 1781, where he spent the balance of his life. The Record Division in Washington, D.C. states that the last payment of his pension covered the period of six months from September 4, 1840 to March 4, 1841. He either purchased or staked out a very large tract of land in the Bore Auger Valley area to hew a home out of the wilderness. While cleaning up a piece of land one of his small children started to go where he was working and was never seen again, though the search was made for weeks. His wife, Elizabeth, never recovered from the shock and died. Also, it has been said that this child got into quick sand near "Bar Wallow" on her way up the mountain to see her father where he was helping a neighbor "raise a house". ("Bar Wallow" was a pond in the creek where bears would come to wallow and play.) The farm he owned in the Bore Auger Valley was since known as the Ike Wade Place, near Robert Stiff's (G332) farm on Gimblett Creek, which was then a part of the Jonathan Groom's Farm. He is buried there on the Robert Stiff's old place about one quarter mile back of the house. About half-way between two old cemeteries there is a headstone that was placed there in 1935 by the D.A.R.'s that reads - "John Groom Prit. 5 Va. Regt. Rev. War". He no doubt owned a very large tract of land there in Bore Auger Valley at one time, as the record of the Bedford County Court House shows between the period of 1792 and 1833 he sold and deeded large tracts of land to various people - Lewis Atkinson, William Miller, Jr., Joshua Adkisson, Marquis D. Gray, Irvin Bowles and John D. Patterson, and on December 3, 1836, he deeded to Reubin Atkinson his personal and real property of 220 acres (by patent) given to him to take care of him for the balance of his natural life. On April 21, 1841, Mr. Grooms stated that he had been a resident of Bedford County for the last 60 years. No doubt he must have passed away shortly after this date by the date of his last pension. Note: This story was written as an introduction of the family tree worksheets package that Ernest Lyle Secrest I and Claude Wayne Secrest researched and made available to family members in 1974. I have included this to share some of the history of these family. [[Secrest-288|BJS]]

Fleming Waldron and Jonathan Grooms Story, Bedford County, Virginia

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(Assembled and written July 1, 1974 by Ernest Lyle Secrest, Orlando, Florida) Fleming Wadkin Waldron was born in Bedford County, Virginia, January 28, 1849, married Barbara Ann Watson 1867. She was born January 11, 1848. They had a total of 6 children, 4 boys and 2 girls, including Hester Gertrude Waldron Secrest, my mother. He lived there on the farm where he was born his entire life span of 83 years, growing the most of what was needed to live on, such as corn, wheat, oats, a few cattle and hogs, tobacco (a cash crop, all types of fruit and a good garden. He could not read or write, but he was a successful farmer, and owned a good farm of about 150 acres, which he purchased after the death of his father, Beverly D. Waldron, who had owned it. All of the buildings on this farm were orginally built with logs, as most were during the early 1800's. The dwelling is still standing, but has been modernized several times and all of the logs are now covered up. The other buildings - barns, tobacco houses and slave quarters - fell victim to the elements in the early 1900's. My grandmother, Barbara Ann Watson, told me the slaves belonged to Beverly D. Waldron and their quarters was a log building out at the foot of the long field going up the side of the mountain. At that time it was half rotten and falling down. She was showing me the big old black iron pot that was still there and was what the slaves used for cooking their food in over a fireplace or an open fire outside, depending on the weather. The following people are buried there in the family burial plot - Fleming Wadkin Waldron, Barbara Ann Watson Waldron (their) one son and one daughter - Oscar Fleming Watson and Hester Gertrude Waldron Secrest, Tilden Secrest and the two Secrest babies. This place is now owned by a Mr. Ted Dameron (1974-bjs). To reach this place - going East from Montvale, Virginia on Highway U.S. 460 - about 3 miles turn right onto State Road 726 and continue for about 2 more miles, then turn right into a private road leading up a valley. The will take you up to the home on top of the hill. Beverly D. Waldron married Nancy Moorman May 4, 1820. They had a total of 11 children, 9 boys and 2 girls. Six of their sons - Paschal, Samuel, Burrell, Griffin, Henry and William served in the war between the States. Several were in Company I, 34th Virginia Infantry. Fleming and Robert being the younger ones - their mother set their ages back so they would not have to serve. William, Burrell and Henry were killed at Seven Pines, Virginia, and are buried on top of Porter Mountain (Bedford County, Virginia) on the old Burrell Gray farm, now owned by Mason Cook (1974-bjs). In 1935, the D.A.R.'s placed headstones or markers by their graves. Beverly D. Waldron and his wife Nancy Moorman are also buried there. Burrell Gray married Mary Jane Waldron - the daughter of Beverly. They lost 4 sons in the war between the States also. One of these sons was shot in the head and sent home to recovery. After recovering he returned to his Company and was killed in the next battle. (This is very hard to believe - but I have just learned that this historic cemetery has recently been destroyed with a bulldozer leaving nothing of historical value.) At the time Beverly D. Waldron was buried there was 15 inches of snow on the ground and he had to be taken up the mountain on a sled pulled by horses. The Waldron farm being at the foot of Porter Mountain and better than 2 miles to the top, and almost straight up in places. To date (1974-bjs) we have no record of where Beverly D. Waldron came from, but his wife, Nancy Moorman, was the daughter of Jacob Moorman and Katy Grooms Moorman, they married March 6, 1799 Katy Grooms Moorman was the daughter of Jonathan D. Grooms. (Another daughter - Nancy Grooms - married Jacob Atkinson September 22, 1800). This making Jonathan D. Grooms a great, great, great, great grandfather of my son, Ernest Lyle Secrest II. Jonathan D. Grooms was born February 5, 1756 in London, England, and was brought to this country while quite young. The manner of his leaving London was interesting, a stranger offered to bring him to this country and without letting his people know he left, never to return or see his parents again, as this country and his native England were at war for about seven years, and not much writing was done in those days either. While a resident of Bedford County, Virginia, he enlisted in February 1777 to fight against his native England, serving 4 months in Captain Terrell's Company as a Private in the 5th Virginia Regiment. He enlisted again in the Fall of 1780, at which time he lived in Botetourt County, Virginia, serving three months as a Private under Captain Pauling, Patton and Major Reid in the Virginia Troops. After that he came back to Botetourt County and married Elizabeth Moon, and returned to Bedford County in 1781, where he spent the balance of his life. The Record Division in Washington, D.C. states that the last payment of his pension covered the period of six months from September 4, 1840 to March 4, 1841. He either purchased or staked out a very large tract of land in the Bore Auger Valley area to hew a home out of the wilderness. While cleaning up a piece of land one of his small children started to go where he was working and was never seen again, though the search was made for weeks. His wife, Elizabeth, never recovered from the shock and died. Also, it has been said that this child got into quick sand near "Bar Wallow" on her way up the mountain to see her father where he was helping a neighbor "raise a house". ("Bar Wallow" was a pond in the creek where bears would come to wallow and play.) The farm he owned in the Bore Auger Valley was since known as the Ike Wade Place, near Robert Stiff's (G332) farm on Gimblett Creek, which was then a part of the Jonathan Groom's Farm. He is buried there on the Robert Stiff's old place about one quarter mile back of the house. About half-way between two old cemeteries there is a headstone that was placed there in 1935 by the D.A.R.'s that reads - "John Groom Prit. 5 Va. Regt. Rev. War". He no doubt owned a very large tract of land there in Bore Auger Valley at one time, as the record of the Bedford County Court House shows between the period of 1792 and 1833 he sold and deeded large tracts of land to various people - Lewis Atkinson, William Miller, Jr., Joshua Adkisson, Marquis D. Gray, Irvin Bowles and John D. Patterson, and on December 3, 1836, he deeded to Reubin Atkinson his personal and real property of 220 acres (by patent) given to him to take care of him for the balance of his natural life. On April 21, 1841, Mr. Grooms stated that he had been a resident of Bedford County for the last 60 years. No doubt he must have passed away shortly after this date by the date of his last pension.

Fleming-Mack Family Reunion

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Hey Family, I have created this web page so that we can keep in touch and also to share ideas about our upcoming family reunion. Last year I was unable to attend but I heard you guys had a great time, so lets make our 2011 family reunion a Blast. A few ideas I came up with was releasing white balloons in remembrance of those family members we have lost. Hey what about a 70's night (a blast from the past)

Fletcher Preston Research

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==WikiTree Pages of Interest== *[[Preston-10374|Fletcher Burnham Preston (1828-1884)]] ==Bibliographic Notes== ==Adrian B. Preston== Adrian, was born in 15 Oct/Nov 1854. He married first 29 Jun 1880 at Ipswich to Francena Wade, b. 17 Oct 1859, dau. of David and Susan (Perkins) Wade. They resided Ipswich and Lynn, Essex Co., Massachusetts, where Francena dec’d __ ___ 1900. Afterward, Adrian married 31 Mar 1904 at Lynn, as her second husband, to Emma Clark, nee Holmes, born __ ___ ____ (c1858) the dau. of Daniel J. Holmes and his wife, Eliza Foye. Adrian married third, before 1920, Emma K., ancestry unknown. Adrian had issue by first and third wives. Known children: Frank Wade Preston, b 1882; m1 Margaret Ryan; m2 Elizabeth V., ancestry unknown Harold Lord Preston, b. 1883 (see notes) Adrian B. Preston, Jr., b. c1917 (see notes) ** Her death is indexed by NEHGS, but the image is not available to be viewed. Select Sources‐‐‐‐‐ Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Reading, Middlesex Co., Births .....Preston (Male) .....Father: Fletcher B., carpenter, b. Rumney, NH .....Mother: Eliza, b. Parsonsfield, ME [York Co.] .....Residence of Parents: Reading .....Place of Birth: Reading .....Date of Birth: 1854 Nov. 15 .....Vol.: 82 Page: 149 Birth Note: Presumed the birth of Adrian B. Preston Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Ipswich Marriages .....Preston Adrian B. . of Ipswich, ae 25, occ: freight master, b. Reading (first) .....Parents: Fletcher B. and Lizzie (Fenderson) [Preston] .....Bride: Francena Wade, of Ipswich, ae 20 (first) .....Parents: David L., and Susan (Perkins) [Wade] .....Marriage Place: Ipswich .....Date: June 29, 1880 .....Service: P. M. Vinton, Clergyman of Ipswich. .....Vol. 316 Page: 209 Marriage Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Ipswich Births .....Wade (Female) .....Father: David L., carpenter, b. Ipswich .....Mother: Susan L. , b. Ipswich .....Place of Birth: Ipswich .....Date of Birth: 17 October 1859 .....Vol. 123 Page: 206 Birth .....Note: Presumably the birth of Francena Wade. Record available at NEHGS. Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Lynn Deaths .....Preston Francena Wade (Wade) .....Reporting Location: Lynn .....Date of Death: __ ___ 1900 .....Vol. 504 Page: 624 Death .....Note: Image not available. Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Ipswich Births .....Preston Frank W. (male) .....Parents: Adrian and Francena (Wade) Preston, of Ipswich .....Father: Depot Master, b. Reading .....Mother: b. Ipswich .....Place of Birth: Ipswich .....Date of Birth: Apr 15, 1882 .....Vol. 331 Page: 235 Birth Note: WWI Draft provides his full name as Frank Wade Preston. Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Ipswich Births .....Name: Preston Harold L. (male) .....Father: Adrian, of Ipswich, depot master, b. Reading .....Mother: Francena nee Wade, b. Ipswich .....Place of Birth: Ipswich .....Date of Birth: May 30, 1883 .....Vol. 340 Page: 244 Birth Note: WWI Draft provides his full name as Harold Lord Preston Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Lynn Marriages .....Preston Adrian B. [Indexed as E., but in error, original record reads B.] .....Groom: ae 49, second marriage, widow, of Lynn, salesman, b. Reading .....Parents: Fletcher B. [Preston] and Eliza Fenderson .....Bride: Emma S. Holmes (Holmes), ae 45, second (div), of Strafford, N. H., b. Strafford. .....Parents: Daniel J. Homes and Eliza Foye. .....Place: Lynn .....Date: 1904 March 31, at Lynn .....Service: Frank _. Holt, Clergyman of Lynn. .....Vol. 546 Page: 463 Marriage Year: 1900; Census Place: Lynn Ward 3, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: T623 644; Page: 8B; Enumeration District: 371. 7 June 1900 373 Eastern Avenue Dwelling 115; Family 141 Curtis, Frederick W., head, W M, b. Dec 1862, age 37, married 15 years, b. NY/NY/NY, occ: paper hanger " Elizabeth M., wife, W F, b. Oct 1865, age 34, married 15 years, has had three children, three survive, b. NY/ENG/ENG " Marguerite L., dau., W F, b. May 1886, age 14, single, b. NY/NY/NY, attended school " Frederick W., son, W M, b. Feb 1890, age 10, single, b. NY/NY/NY, attended school " Elizabeth B., son [sic], W M [sic], b. Dec 1892, age 7, single, b. NY/NY/NY, attended school Dwelling ‐‐; Family 142 Preston, Adrian B., head, W M, b. Oct 1854, age 45, married 19 years, b. MA/NH/ME, occ: salesman/lumber " Francena W., wife, W F, b. Oct 1859, ae 40, married 19 years, has had two children, two survive, b. MA/MA/MA " Frank W., son, W M, b. Apr. 1882, age 18, single, b. MA/MA/MA, occ: general work (shoes), attended school " Harold L., son, W M, b. May 1883, age 17, single, b. MA/MA/MA, occ: general work (shoes), attended school Year: 1910; Census Place: Strafford, Strafford, New Hampshire; Roll: T624_866; Page: 6B; Enumeration District: 304; Image: 1299. 23 April 1910 Dwelling 159; Family 62 Preston, Adrian B., head, M W, ae 55, married 2, six years, b. MA/NH/ME, occ: farmer/general farm “ Emma S., wife, F W, ae 52, married 2, six years, has had no children, b. NH/NH/NH Dwelling 160; Family 163 Holmes, Herb___ J., head, M W, ae 55, widow, b. NH/NH/NH, occ: farmer/general farm “ Eliza J., mother, F W, ae 80, widow, has had one child, one survives, b. NH/NH/NH Year: 1920;Census Place: Strafford, Strafford, New Hampshire; Roll: T625_1009; Page: 1B; Enumeration District: 188; Image: 545. 6 Jan 1920 Dwelling 21; Family 21 Preston, Adrian B., head, owns/farm, M W, ae 65, married, b. MA/NH/ME, occ: farmer/gen. farm “ Emma K., wife, F W, ae 41, married, b. NB/NH/Nova Scotia “ Beulah B., dau., F W, ae 21, single, b. NH/NH/NB “ Muriel M., dau., F W, ae 12, single, attends school, b. NH/NH/NB “ Melvin A., son, M W, ae 10, single, attends school, b. NH/NH/NB “ Adrian B., son, M W, ae 2‐3/12, single, b. NH/NH/NB Which of these children are those of Adrian? The father for all reported b. NH, but the youngest is a Jr. See 1930. Year: 1930; Census Place: Strafford, Strafford, New Hampshire; Roll: 1306; Page: 6A; Enumeration District: 37; Image: 1093.0. 30 Apr 1930 Dwelling 142; Family 146 Preston, Adrian B., head, owns, $8500, has radio, is a farm, ae 75, M married first at 25, b. MA/NH/ME, occ: farmer/gen. farm “ Ella K., wife, F W, ae 50, married, first at 18, b. CAN/NH/Nova Scotia Clark (crossed out), Melvin C., step son, M W ae 21, single, b. NH/MA/CAN, occ: farmer Clark (crossed out), Beulah B., step dau., F W, ae 30, single, b. NH/MA/CAN Preston, Adrian B., Jr., son, M W, ae 12, single, b. NH/MA/CAN, attends school. Wyatt, Amanda, Step mother, F W, ae 81, married, first at 22, Nova Scotia/ME/Nova Scotia Note: To whom was this _Amanda Wyatt_ married that she would be a “step mother?” She appears the wife of Asa Wyatt in the census of 1920. Adrian’s father predeceased his mother and was believe married to her at the time of his death. Might she have been Ella K’s step mother? Could she have been a second wife of Ella’s K.’s father? GeneJ Research Notes Continue with entries for Adrian's son, Frank Wade Preston; Harold Lord Preston; Adrian B. Preston ==Frank H. Preston== Frank H. Preston was born Aug 1858 (1900 Census) the son of Fletcher B. Preston and his wife, Eliza Fenderson. He married probably 8 Jan 1888 at Cornish, York Co., Maine to Alice Pendexter, b. __ Aug 1868, the dau. of ______ and _______. The relationship between Alice Pendexter and Frank’s maternal grandmother, Eliza Pendexter is not known. Frank and Alice lived at Sanford, York Co., Maine and three children are known born to them. In the census of 1910, Alice was reported a widow living at Portland, Cumberland Co., Maine, and Frank is presumed to have dec’d before that time. Afterward, 8 Nov 1911 at Maine, Alice remarried to William J. McMillan and continued to live at Portland. Alice could not be located in the 1930 census. Children of Frank H. Preston and his wife, Alice Pendexter: ‐‐‐‐‐Eliza Mabel Preston, b. __ Jan 1890, at Maine; m. Harry Winn ‐‐‐‐‐Aurelia F. Preston, b. __ May 1895, at Maine; m. Walter H. Lane ‐‐‐‐‐Fred P. Preston, b.31 Oct 1897, at Maine; dec’d 1 Jul 1975; probably m. Bertha, ancestry unknown Select Sources‐‐‐‐‐ Frank’s wife is Alice, and her unmarried sister is called out as Lizzie Pendexter at 1900, thus Frank’s wife seems Alice Pendexter. As such, their marriage is called out in an IGI submitted record: IGI Individual Record FamilySearchTM International Genealogical Index v5.0 Note: Submitted (not extracted) record: ALICE M. PENDEXTER Marriages: Spouse: FRANK H. PRESTON Family Marriage: 08 JAN 1888 Cornish, York, Maine Maine Marriages, 1892‐1996 .....Groom's Name: Macmillan William J /Groom's Residence: S Portland, ME .....Bride's Name: Preston Alice M /Bride's Residence: S Portland, ME .....Marriage Date: 8 Nov 1911 /Certificate: 0 Note: Maine Marriages reports separately that an Alice M. Preston of Columbia Falls m. 31 Au 1927 to Carrol L. Grant; and another Alice M. of Belfast m. on 31 Aug 1955 to Roy Curtis. Year: 1900; Census Place: Sanford, York, Maine; Roll: T623 603; Page: 51A; Enumeration District: 252. 30 Jun 1900 Dwelling 863; Family 864 Preston, Frank H., head, W M, b. Aug 1858, ae 41, married 12 years, b. NH/NH/ME, occ: harness maker “ Alice, wife, W F, b. Aug 1868, ae 31, married 12 years, has had three children/all survive, b. ME/ME/ME “ Eliza, dau., W F, b. Jan 1890, ae 10, single, b. ME/NH/ME “ Aurelia, dau., W F, b. May 1895, ae 5, single, b. ME/ME/ME “ Fred, son, W M, b. Oct 1897, ae 2, single, b. ME/NH/ME Pendexter, Lizzie, sister in law, W F, b. Aug 1866, ae 33, single, b. ME/ME/ME, occ: shoeshop laborer. Note: one door down lives Susan _ Lord, a 55 yrs old widow b. Aug 1844, ME/ME/ME Year: 1910; Census Place: South Portland Ward 2, Cumberland, Maine; Roll: T624_540; Page: 9A; Enumeration District: 103; Image: 37. 25 Apr 1910 50 ______ Dwelling 146; Family 147 Preston, Alice M., head, F W, ae 41, widow, has had three ch/all surv., b. ME/ME/ME, occ: boarding house/mistress “ Aurelia F., dau., F W, ae 14, single, b. ME/ME/ME “ Fred P., son, M W, ae 12, single, b. ME/ME/ME Winn, Harry, boarder, M W, ae 24, married 1, within the year, b. ME/ME/ME, occ: carpenter/house “ Eliza M., boarder, F W, ae 20, married 1, within the year, b. ME/NH/ME Note: this is a boarding house; others, including other families live there. Year: 1920;Census Place: South Portland Ward 4, Cumberland, Maine; Roll: T625_639; Page: 10A; Enumeration District: 70; Image: 303. 12 Jan 1920 23 ?Walnut Dwelling 154; Family 227 Schofield, Fred a., head, M W, ae 43, married, imm. 1900, b. CAN/CAN/CAN, occ: asst supt., street rail road “ Jennie F., wife, F W, ae 49, married, b. ME/ME/ME Pendexter, Herald E., boarder, M W, ae 24, single, b. ME/ME/ME Dwelling ‐‐; Family 228 McMillan, William J., head, M W ,ae 43, married, imm ___, b. CAN/CAN/CAN, occ: laborer/st___ rail road “ Alice M., wife, F W, ae 51, married, b. ME/ME/ME Lane, Walter H., son in law, M W, ae 27, married. b. CT/CT/CT, occ: bookkeeper/RR office “ Aurelia F., dau., F W, ae 24, married, b. ME/NH/ME “ Walter H., Jr., grandson, M W, ae 5/12, b. ME/CT/ME Preston, Fred P., step son, M W, ae 22, single, b. ME/NH/ME, occ: master/?? RR driver Who’s this? Year: 1930; Census Place: Littleton, Grafton, New Hampshire; Roll: 1300; Page: 15A; Enumeration District: 31; Image: 1046.0. Home of William J. McMillan and wife “Millie” ae 47. Have son “Preston McMillan,” ae 17. GeneJ notes continue with entries for Elizabeth Mable Preston; Frank Winn (son of Elizabeth Mable); Aurelia Preston (dau. of Frank H.); Fred P. Preston (son of Frank H.) ==Fred A. Preston== Fred A. Preston was born 29 Jan 1861 at Reading, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, the son of Fletcher Burnham Preston and his wife Eliza Fenderson. He married __ ___ 1894, probably at Winchester, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, to Vienna Larrivee, nee Goddu, b. Feb 1873, ancestry unknown. Fred and Vienna lived at Winchester. The details of their deaths is not known. Known child of Fred A. and Vienna (Goddu) Preston: ‐‐‐‐‐Burnham Goddu Preston, b. 6 June 1897 at Winchester; dec’d __ Mar 1968, of Woburn; m1 Meriel Thomas. Select Sources‐‐‐‐‐ Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Reading, Middlesex Co., Births .....Preston Fred Elmer .....Father: Fletcher Burnham Preston, of Reading, occ: carpenter .....Father born: Rumney, NH .....Mother: Lizzie P., nee Fenderson .....Mother born: Parsonsfield, ME .....Place of Birth: Reading .....Date of Birth: 1861 Jan 29 .....Vol.: 142 Page: 177 Birth Note: He seems to have used the name Fred A. Preston. The son Fred A. is perhaps Fred A. Preston who married at Winchester; image not available: Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Winchester Marriages .....Preston FredA. Winchester 1894 443 391 Marriage .....Larrivee Vienna Winchester 1894 443 391 Marriage .....Note: image not available; Her maiden name is given as Goddu in the birth record of her son. Massachusetts City Directories; Winchester, 1919 .....PRESTON (page 292) ..........Burnham G., mechanic, bds 12 Madison ..........Fred A., ladies neck wear, 55 Bedford B., h 12 Madison av. Massachusetts City Directories, Winchester, 1937 .....PRESTON, Burnham G., heating eng. R12 Madison av ..........“ Fred A., (Vienna G.) h 12 Madiosn av .......... “ Meriel T., Mrs., h. 378 Main Massachusetts VR (NEHGS); Winchester Births .....Preston Burnham Goddu .....Parents: Fred A., and Vienna (Goddu) [Preston] .....Father: Commercial Traveler, b. Reading .....Mother: b. Winchester .....Place of Birth: Winchester .....Date of Birth: 1897 June 6 .....Vol.: 467 Page: 484 Birth 1880 U.S. Federal Census, Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts; Roll: T9_528; Family History Film: 1254528; Page: 74.4000; Enumeration District: 160; Image: 0150, Date: 1 Jun 1880 ‐ ‐Name: Fletcher B. Preston, White, Male, Age 51, Head, Married, Birthplace: NH, Father: NH, Mother: NH ‐Name: Lizzie Preston, White, Female, Age 49, Wife, Married, Birthplace: ME, Father: ME, Mother: ME ‐Name: Frank H. Preston, White, Male, Age 21, Son, Single, Birthplace: NH, Father: NH, Mother: ME ‐Name: Fred A. Preston, White, Male, Age 19, Son, Single, Birthplace: ME, Father: NH, Mother: ME ‐‐‐‐‐ Mike Olsen, "RE: Eliza Fenderson / Mike & Maria Olsen Family 12‐10‐2005." Email to author dated 1 Jan 2007 including various census transcriptions about Eliza Fenderson Preston." Year: 1900; Census Place: Winchester, Middlesex, Massachusetts; Roll: T623 668; Page: 20B; Enumeration District: 996. 1 June 1900 13 Madison Ave. Dwelling 406; Family 428 Goddu, Louis, head, W M, b. Oct 1837, ae 62, widow, b. CAN/CAN/CAN, occ: investor Laur, Roanne E., dau., W F, b. Jan 1862, ae 38, widow, has had one child/one surv., b. CAN/CAN/CAN Goddu, Elise, son, W M, b. Dec 1865, ae 34, single, b. MA/CAN/CAN, occ: pattern maker “ Eda, dau., W F, b. Aug 1882, ae 17, single, b. MA/CAN/CAN Lou__, In__ A., granddau, W F, b. Dec 1884, ae 15, single, b. MA/CAN/MA French, Sarah J., servant, W F b. Apr 1868, ae 32, single, b. CAN/VT/CAN, occ: servant Dwelling 407; Family 429 Preston, Fred A., head, W M, b. Jan 1861, ae 38 married 5 years. B MA/ME/ME, occ: commercial ____ “ Vienna, wife, W F, b. Feb 1873, ae 27, married 5 yrs, has had one child, who surv., b. MA/CAN/MA “ Burnham G., son, W M, b. Jun 1897, ae 2, single, b. MA/MA/MA Paulson, Dusina, servant, W F, b. Jan 1879, ae 21, single, b. DEN/DEN/DEN Year: 1910; Census Place: Winchester, Middlesex, Massachusetts; Roll: T624_606; Page: 33B; Enumeration District: 1065; Image: 1205. c6 May 1910 12 Madison Avenue Dwelling 578; Family 666 Preston, Frank A., head, M W, ae 49, married1 15 yrs, b. MA/NH/ME, occ: manufacturer/ ? wichugar; cotton and cloth “ Fred A., wife, F W, ae 37 married 1, 15 yrs has had one child/one survives, b. MA/CAN/CAN “ Burnham G., son, M W, ae 12, single, b. MA/MA/MA, attends school Larson, Clars, servant, F W, ae 21, single, b. SWE/SWE/SWE.... Year: 1920;Census Place: Winchester, Middlesex, Massachusetts; Roll: T625_720; Page: 20A; Enumeration District: 533; Image: 769. 13 Madison Ave Dwelling 295; Family 466, Goddue, Eda, head, F W, ae 37, single, b. MA/CAN/CAN, occ: none Lane, Rozanna E., sister, F W, ae 58, widow, imm 1870, b. CAN/CAN/CAN Dwelling 396 Family 467 Preston, Fred A., head, M W, ae 59, married, b. MA/ME/ME, occ: manager/shirt factory “ Vienna G., wife, F W, ae 47, married, b. MA/CAN/CAN “ Burnham G., son, M W, ae 22, single b. MA/MA/MA, occ: shoe machinist/machine co. Year: 1930; Census Place: Winchester, Middlesex, Massachusetts; Roll: 932; Page: 16B; Enumeration District: 542; Image: 558.0. 11 Apr 1930 12 Madison Ave. Dwelling 377;Family ___ Preston, Fred A., Owns home, $9000, has radio, M W, ae 54, married, first at 33, b. MA/NH/ME, occ: machinist/clothing “ Vienna G., wife, F W, ae 57, married, first at 21, b. MA/CAN/CAN GeneJ research notes continue with details for Burnham Goddu Preston ==Research Notes== == Sources ==

Flickinger Flückinger Connections

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The goal of this project is to ...connect Flickinger descendants of Swiss & German families. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Flickinger-183|Robin Gaynor]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * research original locations of the 18th century Flickinger immigrants * locate male Flickinger surnamed people wanting to yDNA test * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=9751887 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Flickinger Reunion

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This is the final reunion unless someone wants to host it in the future.

Flight 793 Viet Nam

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SP4 Robert Baggett, Burlington, NC Sgt Robert Baks, Elbridge, NY Sgt Donald Barnes, Granite City, IL Pfc Thomas Baxley, Thomasville, GA SP5 Richard Bayse, Prince George, VA MSgt Henry Biernacke, Colorado Springs, CO SFC George Bliss, Ft Jay, NJ Pvt James Bowen, Indianapolis, Ind. Pvt Joseph Breema, Danville, VA SFC John Burns, San Luis Obispo, CA Sgt John Callahan, Hazelton, PA Pvt Larry Canon, Chino, CA MSgt William Caseldine, Dover, TN SP5 Edward Cox, Amarillo, TX Sgt Cucius Croft, Augusta, GA MSgt Harold Curry, Mangum, OK SP5 Douglas Dickey, Alexandria, LA Sgt Ernest Dixon, Jesup, GA Pvt James Edwards, Hanceville, AL SP4 Lawrence Fox, Canestoga, NY MSgt Howard Gallipeau Jr., Alerwood Manor, WA Sgt Clarence Gananca, Renasalner, NY Sgt John Geisler, Granite, MD MSgt Robt Glassman, San Jose, CA Sgt Walter Glynn, Tacoma, WA SP5 Roy Greenleaf, Bloomfield, NM Pfc Charles Griffith, Cincinnati, OH Pfc Sidney Grissom, Newburgh, MO SP4 Douglas Haaf, Syracuse, NY SFC Melvin Hatt, Huachuca City, AZ Pvt Donald Henderson, MountAuburn, IL Pvt Robert Henderson, San Francisco SFC Lindsay Hester, Fort Monroe, VA SP5 Timothy Hopkins, Spokane, WA Sgt Clinton Hoy, Sierra Vista, AZ Pfc Samuel Hunter, Claflin, KS MSgt William Jarvis, Glendale, KY Pvt John Jennings, Newell, WV Sgt James Johnston, Clarksville, TN Pvt John Jones, Columbus, GA Sgt John Jones, Ogden, UT Sgt John Kanisky, Haren, Holland Sgt John Karibo, Bellefontaine, OH SP5 Guy Kinnison, Kaneohe, HI SP4 Charles Kissee, Stockton, CA Sgt Jack Lattie, Grovetown, GA SP6 Adams Leddy, Guam Sgt Warren Lehmkuhl, Columbus, GA SP4 Franklin McClure, Dallas, GA Pvt Stanley McEntee, Detroit Sgt Steven Medwid, Alexandria, VA Sgt Billy Mick, Sierra Vista, AZ Sgt Tom Morrison, Plattsmouth, NE SFC Raymond Myers, Warren, AZ Sgt Nicholas Nichols, Seaside, CA SP4 Roger Oliver, Victory, WI Pvt Jack Packard, Lodi, WI SP4 Charles Pardonnet, Colorado Springs, Co. Sgt Frank Pelkey, Farmington, ME Pvt Lawrence Perkins, Chicago SFC James Powell, Fort Worth, TX SFC Walter Reinhardt, Hammond, IN SFC Hubert Rice, Waynesville, MO MSgt Delbert Riggins, Boise, ID WO Edison Roberts, Tacoma, WA SP5 Eddie Robinson, Benton, AK SP6 Leslie Roderick, Houston, MO SP4 Samuel Rogers, Pine Bluff, AR SFC Edmond Saenz, Lakeview Terrace, CA SP4 George Sager, Bergton, VA SSgt Leslie Salada, Erie, PA SP4 Donald Sargent, Ossipee, NH Pvt Andrew Sheard, Radner, PA Sgt Efisio Simola, San Antonio, TX SP4 George Slocum, Westfield, NY SP5 Elmer Smith, Louisiana, MO Sgt James Sorenson, Spanaway, WA SP4 Fred Talbot, Salamanca, NY SP4 James Taylor, Olive Branch, MI MSgt Peter Thamy, Vallejo, CA MSgt John Thomas, Ridgeway, OH SP4 Clarence Thompson, Big Spring, TX MSgt Jack Tranum, Augusta, GA SSgt James Twitty, Brooklyn, NY SFC Wallace Walcott, Tacoma, WA SFC Ross Walker, Pickens, SC SP4 Leonard Wedge, Millnocket, ME SFC John Wendell, San Antonio, TX SFC Albert Williams, Tacoma, WA SP5 James Wong, Lahaina, Hawaii

Flight Lieutenant Herbert Marshall Godsall Military Service Record

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==Flight Lieutenant Herbert Marshall Godsall Military Service Record== :Service Numbers:--- Q128738, QX41743, 429427 :Enlisted in RAAF:--- 7th March 1942 at Sydney, New South Wales. :Born:--- Toowoomba, Queensland, 30th September 1913 :Home Town:---Toowoomba, Queensland. :Martial Status:--- Married :Religion:--- Roman Catholic :Next of kin:--- Wife, Mrs Margaret Mary Godsall, P.O. Box 89, Toowoomba, Queensland. :Civilian Profession:--- Articled Law Clerk / Solicitor. :Final Rank:--- Flight Lieutenant :Last Unit: No. 461 Squadron (RAAF), Sullom Voe Detachment, Shetland Islands, Scotland. :Fate:--- Died in Air Operations whislt in No. 461 Squadron Sunderland aircraft ML735, off the Norwegian Coast, on the 1st October 1944, at the age of 31 Years. :Burial details:--- No known grave - "Known Unto God" :Memorials:--- Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Runnymede Air Forces Memorial:--- Toowoomba Grammar School WW2 Honour Board, Toowoomba Roll of Honour World War 2, Toowoomba WW2 Roll of Honour Book, Toowoomba War Memorial :Unit: :Parents:--- Albert Richard Godsall and Ruth Marshall, married 15th November 1904 in Toowoomba, Queensland. :Wife:--- Mary Margaret Murphy married Herbert on 16th January 1940 in Toowoomba, Queensland. :Roll of Honour:--- Toowoomba, Queensland. :Remembered:--- Panel 256, Runnymede Memorial, Surrey UK :Remembered:--- Panel 108, Commemorative Area, Australian War Memorial, Canberra :Remembered:--- Rathmines Memorial Bowling Club, Rathmines NSW :Details of Last Flight:--- Patrols in Norwegian waters began on 30th September and continued throughout October: A total of 39 independent sweeps and searches in cooperation with naval hunting groups all proved negative, but one Sunderland was lost on 1st October. Flight Lieutenant H M Godsall and crew in Sunderland ML 735 (UT-A) failed to return from a patrol along the Norwegian coast. Nothing further was heard of the missing flying-boat and it was assumed that it was taken by surprise by enemy fighters and shot down. '''Extract from Ashworth, N. (Norman) The ANZAC Squadron: A history of No. 461 Squadron RAAF 1942-5, Hesperian Press Victoria Park WA 6100, 1994 – Page 207 17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC)''' :Operations from Sullom Voe were partly governed by intelligence from the Norwegian underground. They regularly wirelessed reports of U-boat movements, of departures and arrivals, and this information often determined where the aircraft would fly. Sometimes the patrols were against the Norwegian coast, sometimes they were west beyond the Faroes, sometimes north knocking at the door to the Arctic Circle. They were never less than cold; often they were downright freezing. Number 461's Sunderlands were not adequate for the climate. As always, they were stripped of everything which the crews conceivably could do without. For operations in the Bay of Biscay where cold did not often reach the level a man could not endure in silence, all heating arrangements, along with other non-essentials, had been removed. This made way tor extra equipment, for a heavier petrol load, for more armament, and a greater endurance in the air. The boys accepted this as logical and right and would not have had it any other way, but in the Shetlands and over the bitter seas which surrounded them the crews were suddenly confronted by the fact that cold was affecting their efficiency. Despite the truly incredible amount of clothing they wore they felt naked. :Mere fabric seemed incapable of stopping the cold. Its powers of penetration were remarkable. A sojourn in the Sunderland's toilet however brief was pure torture in the air although not without its humour. The crews entered their aircraft wearing very nearly every item of apparel they possessed. There were times it was almost impossible to walk for it; there were times when it required considerable effort to force the body into the pilot's seat or the turret because the pressure of clothing resisted every movement. But it still didn't stop the cold. When the pilot began to fly the chill would creep into his feet and his legs and they would begin to ache. Before long the ache was just a numbness in his limbs and spine and if he had been called upon to really fly his aircraft, to weave through flak or match the manoeuvres of an enemy fighter, he may have been incapable of doing it. Perhaps that was what happened to Marsh Godsall on the second of October, because he vanished with his crew on that day without an SOS and without trace. The boys looked for Godsall for days but couldn't find a thing. Group knew well there was no hope, but the squadron wanted to search so Group allowed them to. But Group knew, and the boys knew too, that men could not stay alive in that water for long. Life would not last for very many minutes. ''' Extract from Southall, I.F. (Ivan Francis) (418900) They Shall Not Pass Unseen, Angus and Robertson Sydney NSW, 1956 – Pages 185-6''' :17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC)~~The crew members of ML735 were:17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC)17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC)17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC)17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC)17:21, 9 May 2022 (UTC) Warrant Officer Patrick Hope Brewin (418247) (Air Gunner) Sergeant John Cottam (1147382) (RAFVR) (Air Gunner) Pilot Officer John Colin Cottier (423654) (Wireless Air Gunner) Warrant Officer Percival Richard Criddle (417621) (Wireless Air Gunner) Flight Lieutenant Herbert Marshall Godsall MID (429427) (Pilot) Flying Officer Donald James Jennings (408152) (Second Pilot) Sergeant Francis Reed (619357) (RAFVR) (Flight Engineer) Warrant Officer Leslie George Remblance (619992) (RAFVR) (Flight Mechanic Engines / Air Gunner) Flight Sergeant George Lindsay Toose (423267) (Wireless Air Gunner) Flying Officer Henry Hume Turnbull MID (418211) (Navigator) Flying Officer Edwin Brand Willis (419103) (First Pilot)Military Service Record, Royal Australian Air Force, RAAF, World War Two

Flinders - Drimmie Head and Drimmie Rock Australia 1803

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===Flinders at Drimmie Head 1803 Australia=== :Drimmie Head and Drimmie Rock on the :Gove Peninsula Northern Territories Australia :During the period between December 1801 and 9 June 1803 :he (Flinders) proceeded to sail around Australia, :charting and surveying the entire coastline :as well as islands, bays and headlands. :Flinders named many features after members of his crew. :Memory Cove was named when eight members of his crew :drowned whilst searching for fresh water. :He named a beautiful harbour Port Lincoln after his home county. :Sir Joseph Banks, the famous botanist, :has a group of islands named for him. :It was Flinders who suggested that Terra Australis be named Australia. :Extracts from Flinders Diaries :14.02.1803 Flinders at Drimmie Head :Early in the morning a party of men was sent to cut wood, :and the botanical gentlemen :landed on Point Dundas upon their pursuits; :I went to examine the north-eastern part of the bay. :Beyond a low isthmus there, a piece of water was seen :communicating with the south-eastern part of the bay, :and making a peninsula of the high rocky land named Drimmie Head; :at high water, indeed, it is an island, :for the tide then flows over some parts of the isthmus. :After taking two sets of bearings, :I rowed southward along the shore of Drimmie Head; :and from a hill near the south-west extremity saw the western coast :as far northward as a cliffy cape which was named Cape :after the worthy representative of Yorkshire. :16.02.1803 Flinders in Melville bay :In the morning, being frustrated by a fresh wind at north-west, :with unsettled weather, :Messieurs Brown and Bauer accompanied me :in a boat excursion to the eastern part of the bay. :Coasting along the mangrove shore northward :and after landing at one other place, :we came to the isthmus which connects :Drimmie head to the land of Point Dundas; :and it being near high water, :the boat was going over the isthmus :by a small passage through the mangroves, :and we reached the ship at one o'clock, :where every thing was prepared for weighing the anchor. :This bay is unnoticed in the Dutch chart, :and I name it , in compliment to :the Right Hon. Robert Saunders Dundas, viscount Melville, :who, as first lord of the Admiralty, :has continued that patronage to the voyage :which I had experienced under some of his predecessors. :It is the best harbour we found in the Gulph of Carpentaria; :the entrance is from the N. N. W., four miles wide, :and free from danger; and within side, :the sole dangers not conspicuous, :are a sandy spit running half a mile to the S. S. E. from Point Dundas, :and the Half-tide Rock, :half a mile from the north-west part of Drimmie Rock. :The above passages taken from the Flinders Papers :establish in my mind at least :that the naming of Drimmie Head and Drimmie Rock :took place on this voyage. :We know that some of his crew were Scots from this passage :taken from The Life Of Captain Matthew Flinders R.N. By E. Scott :"The Norfolk remained fifteen days in Moreton Bay. :An effort to tickle the aboriginal sense of humor was a failure. :Two of the crew who were Scotch, :commenced to dance a reel for the amusement of the blacks." :Discovering who this member of our family was :has taken up an inordinate amount of my time :and goes on the back burner for now. :April 2018 :After much searching at last I have found a possible candidate :for our unnamed member of Flinders crew. :From The National Archives :In the "Registers of allotments and allotment declarations, Archive" :Archive reference ADM 27/14 :Record set British Royal Navy Allotment Declarations 1795-1852 :D Drimmie Year 1805 Rank Able Seaman Vessel Mediator :Pay book number 167 Relationship Mo Ann Drimmie :David Drimmie born 1751 in Inch Fettercairn Kincardineshire Scotland :To William Drimmie and Ann Croal :This would make David Drimmie 51/52 when he :possibly joined Flinders aboard the Investigator :Drimmie is a fairly rare surname and of Scottish origin. :Among the Flinders Papers is a list of names :given by Flinders to points on the Australian coast, :with his reasons for doing so. :Flinders papers, Melbourne Public Library :APPENDIX C. NAMES GIVEN BY FLINDERS :TO IMPORTANT AUSTRALIAN COASTAL FEATURES. :VOYAGE OF THE INVESTIGATOR (Northern Territory): :Vanderlin Island, the Dutch "Cape Vanderlin." :Sir Edward Pellew Group, Cape Pellew, after Admiral Pellew. :Craggy Isles. West Island. North Island. :Centre Island. Observation Island. Cabbage-Tree Cove. :Maria Island, the Dutch "Cape Maria." :Bickerton Island, after Admiral Sir Richard Bickerton. :Cape Barrow, after Sir John Barrow. :Connexion Island. North Point Island. :Chasm Island, "the upper parts are intersected by many deep chasms." :North-West Bay. :Winchelsea Island, after the Earl of Winchelsea. :Finch's Island, after the Winchelsea family name. :Pandanus Hill, from the clump of trees upon it. :Burney Island, after Captain James Burney, R.N. :Nicol Island, after "His Majesty's bookseller." :Woodah Island, "it having some resemblance to the whaddie, :or woodah, a wooden sword used by the natives of Port Jackson. :" Bustard Isles--They "harboured several bustards." :Mount Grindall, Point Grindall, after Vice-Admiral Grindall. :Morgan's Isle, after a seaman who died there. :Bluemud Bay, "in most parts of the bay is a blue mud :of so fine a quality that I judge :it might be useful in the manufacture of earthenware. :" Point Blane, after Sir Gilbert Blane of the Naval Medical Board. :Cape Shield, after Commissioner Shield. :Cape Grey, after General Grey, Commandant at Capetown. :Point Middle. Mount Alexander. Point Alexander. :Round Hill Island. :Caledon Bay, after the Governor of the Cape of Good Hope. :Cape Arnhem, extremity of Arnhem's Land. :Mount Saunders. :Mount Dundas, Melville Isles--After Dundas, :Viscount Melville, a colleague of the younger Pitt. :Mount Bonner. :'''Drimmie Head'''. :Cape Wilberforce, after W. Wilberforce, M.P., :the slave-emancipator, who was a friend of Flinders. :Melville Bay, after Viscount Melville. Harbour Rock. Point Dundas. :Bromby Islands, after the Reverend F. Bromby, of Hull, :a cousin of Mrs. Flinders. :Malay Road. Pombasso's Island, after the chief of the Malay praus. :Cotton's Island, after Captain Cotton of the :East India Company's Directorate. :English Company Islands, after the East India Company. :Wigram Island. Truant Island, "from its lying away from the rest." :Inglis Island. Bosanquet Island. Astell Island. Mallison Island. :Point Arrowsmith, after the map-publisher. :Cape Newbald, Newbald Island--After Henrietta Newbald, :nee Flinders, who introduced him to Pasley. :Arnhem Bay. Wessell Islands, name found on a Dutch chart. :Point Dale. Wreck Reef. [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:DAVID_DRIMMIE_1787_to_1884_SCOTLAND_to_SOUTH_AFRICA NEXT Page 14 DAVID_DRIMMIE_1787_to_1884_SCOTLAND_to_SOUTH_AFRICA ] [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Alexander_Drimmie%2C_an_intelligent_bleacher_in_Aberdeen_1777-1852 BACK TO Page 12 Alexander Drimmie an intelligent bleacher in Aberdeen 1777-1852 ] [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Drimmie_Name_Study Return to NAME STUDY HOME PAGE]

Flinders Genealogy

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Flinders-60|K Flinders]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Flinders events sightings * Corrections to database here and the one at www.flinders.nz * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=19141714 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Flint High School

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Built in 1935, then extended in 1971 to accommodate more children. As of 2019, it is now the oldest school in the town of Flint, North Wales, UK.

Flint River Company, 1850, from Iowa to the California Gold Rush

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Adding WikiTree profiles to this page is a work in progress. My third great grandfather William Dobson participated in the California Gold Rush, traveling by wagon with the Flint River Company from southeastern Iowa in 1850, and was listed twice in the 1850 California census as being in El Dorado County at Weaverville and Pleasant Hill. ==Flint River Company of 1850 Members== John Atchinson [[Babb-1496|Miles Babb]] A. Bartell Joseph Beardsley James Berry John Bingaman Hamilton R. Box John Brown Thomas Brown William E. Brown L. Butin Jacob Campton A. Churchill John Churchill Edward Coad Henry Coad John Coad John Dean Samuel Derbyshire [[Dobson-4974|William Dobson]] Joseph Fiialkowsi Edward Folsom John Fury Isaac George Robert Grimes D. Grover S. Hall James Hamond Philip Harmon Eli Harold [[Hovey-1561|Zebina Curtis Hovey (1795-)]] Ephraim Husted Win. Husted Samuel Jackson David Jones Jacob Kline/Cline James Kurtz James Leffler John Leffler William Levern Chester Lusk John Martley T. McDowell Peter Moore Barney Mullen J.L. Murphy John Nevens George W. Noble M. Owens J.W. Patterson M.M. Pierson Austin Pliley Edward R. Pliley Samuel E. Pope Peter Rexreat Samuel Rice John Ridly George Roberts [[Saint-544|Samuel Saint]] David J. Sales Napoleon Schooler James Shelton Richard Shelton Thomas Shelton J. Sherman T.F. Stewart William Todd Levi W. Waldo James B. Yates ==Resources== https://onedrive.live.com/?authkey=%21AF9BR4vs22BeQ0E&id=61161417A6429B1A%21115&cid=61161417A6429B1A https://www.findagrave.com/user/profile/47010518

Flints Safeguard, Friends Denial and Huggs Purchase Plantations

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This page serves as a clearhouse of information for locating the parcels of land once known as the Flints Safeguard, Friends Denial and Huggs Purchase Plantations. == Timeline == === 1681 === * Friends Denial was patented as a 300-acre parcel of land. Source: [http://guide.msa.maryland.gov/pages/item.aspx?ID=S1601-1477 Maryland State Archives] === 1714 === * Huggs Purchase was a tract owned by Thomas Huggs in Somerset County, Maryland. Source: [https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/stagser/s1400/s1426/h/pdf/54hugg-hughe.pdf Maryland State Archives] === 1727 === * Alexander Adams patented a parcel of land named Friends Denial. Source: [http://guide.msa.maryland.gov/pages/item.aspx?ID=S1206-1014 Maryland State Archives - Guide to Government Records] === 1735 === * David Johnson was the owner of Friends Denyal [Denial]. Source: [https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/stagser/s1400/s1430/000000/000020/pdf/mdsa_s1430_20.pdf Maryland State Archives] === 1745 === * Friends Denial appears under the name "John Flint" in [https://archive.org/details/worcester-county-debt-books/page/n25/mode/1up?q=%22friends+denial%22 Debt Book for Worecester County, Maryland]. === 1755 === * Friends Denial appears under the name "John Flint" in [https://archive.org/details/worcester-county-debt-books/page/n25/mode/1up?q=%22friends+denial%22 Debt Book for Worecester County, Maryland]. === 1756 === * David Johnson's heirs were the owners of Friends Denial. Source: [https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/stagser/s1400/s1430/000000/000020/pdf/mdsa_s1430_20.pdf Maryland State Archives] === 1773 === * George Parsons, Jr. was the owner of Friends Denial. Source: [https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/stagser/s1400/s1430/000000/000020/pdf/mdsa_s1430_20.pdf Maryland State Archives] === 1795 === * John Flint pantented 226 acres called "Friends Denial Enlarged". Its location according to the record is 01/26/02/059."Friends Denial Enlarged, John Flint, 2226 Acres". Patented Certificate 1012. Series S1210-1080, Worecester County Land Office. Accessed via [http://guide.msa.maryland.gov/pages/item.aspx?ID=S1210-1080 Maryland State Archives] on November 13, 2022. === 1824 === * Friends Denial Enlarged was bequeathed to Thomas B. Smith by his father, Archibald Smith. Source: [https://genealogytrails.com/mary/wicomico/Will_extracts.html WICOMICO COUNTY, MARYLAND WILLS December 1867-December 1879] === 1877 === * Friends Denial Enlarged was bequeathed to Margaret E. Smith by her husband Thomas B. Smith. Source: [https://genealogytrails.com/mary/wicomico/Will_extracts.html WICOMICO COUNTY, MARYLAND WILLS December 1867-December 1879] === Sources ===

Flintshire, Wales CategoryInfoBox to do list

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Going to refill this

Flippo

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Rutledge-2228|Cyndi Rutledge]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=21636772 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Flood

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==Timeline== :: Adam DOB: 0Gen 1 v 24-31 qv :: Seth DOB: 130Gen 5 v 3 "And Adam lived an hundred and thirty years, and begat a son in his own likeness, after his image; and called his name Seth" :: Enos DOB: 235Gen 5 v 6 "And Seth lived an hundred and five years, and begat Enos" :: Cainan DOB: 325Gen 5 v 9 "And Enos lived ninety years, and begat Cainan" :: Mahalaleel DOB: 395Gen 5 v 12 "And Cainan lived seventy years, and begat Mahalaleel" :: Jared DOB: 460Gen 5 v 15 "And Mahalaleel lived sixty and five years, and begat Jared" :: Enoch DOB: 622Gen 5 v 18 "And Jared lived an hundred sixty and two years, and he begat Enoch" :: Methuselah DOB: 687Gen 5 v 21 "And Enoch lived sixty and five years, and begat Methuselah" :: Lamech DOB: 874 :: Noah DOB: 1056 ::[[Space:Flood|FLOOD]] Date: 1656Gen Ch 7 v 6 "And Noah was six hundred years old when the flood of waters was upon the earth." ==Methuselah could have Died in the Flood== :: Adam DOB: 0 :: Seth DOB: 130 :: Enos DOB: 235 :: Cainan DOB: 325 :: Mahalaleel DOB: 395 :: Jared DOB: 460 :: Enoch DOB: 622 ::MethuselahDOB: 687 DOD: 1656Gen 5 v 27 "And all the days of Methuselah: were nine hundred sixty and nine years: and he died." ==Sources==

Flora Etta Waunch Photo Album

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I found this beautiful Album out of an Antique store in Forks, Washington from a gentleman who bought estate items in Auctions. They are not related to me, I'm simply hoping to help get the photos home to their families. So in the spirit of that, I'm workingon building out profiles and linking the people up as I can.

Floral Hills Memory Gardens

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:::'''''*The purpose of this page is to list the names of individuals that are buried in this cemetery. Please feel free to add the names of individuals that you know are buried in this cemetery. Also feel free to add plots and/or coordinates if you know them.''''' :::'''''*Listed below are the names of individuals that are buried in this cemetery''''' :::'''''*[[McPherson-4261|Modena Maud McPherson Rudisill]].'''''

Florance chappell obituary

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Presented Bywww.chathamdailynews.ca Florence Alverna (Sedgewick, Alta) Chappell CHAPPELL, Florence Alverna (Sedgewick, Alta) - After a courageous acceptance of her final days, Florence came to rest June 18, 2010. Born in Chatham, Ontario Feb. 6, 1931 to Wallen & Ellen Crowder. After marrying and raising a family she later embarked on a career as a RN graduating in 1973, retiring in 2000. Lovingly remembered by son Dana (& Margaret) Chappell and daughters Gerrianne (& Brian) Mehlenbacher, Cindi (& Glenn) Poyser, Robie (& Perry) Mayne. Also sadly missed by 12 grandchildren, (one predeceased) 6 great-grandchildren, brothers Ken, Bill, Bruce & Rick Crowder, sister Wendy Taylor & their families. “Memories be with you as you face the days ahead Love will be the echo of the words we left unsaid“ 9224999

Florence County, Wisconsin

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Florence County is a county located in the U.S. state of Wisconsin whose county seat is the city of Florence. Florence County takes its name from the Florence Mining Company

Florence Rayner

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Florence Winfrey Birth Record

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[[Winfrey-449|Florence Winfrey]]'s birth was recorded in the District of Columbia. This record, on Ancestry located in the collection "District of Columbia, Select Births and Christenings, 1830-1955," does not have a share option. The record is in the FamilySearch collection "Birth records, (Washington, District of Columbia), 1874-1897; indexes, 1874-1897, https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F75P-RB3," and is not viewable outside a Family History Library. Summarizing the Ancestry record: Winfrey was born in Washington, District of Columbia on 25 Jan 1896 to [[Winfrey-531|John Winfrey]] and [[Simons-3696|Nellie Symonds]] (sic). FamilySearch reveals that the original record is from ''District of Columbia Birth Returns, 1874-1897'', birth return number 84994.

Florida

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== State of Florida Timeline == === Prehistory === * '''X,XXX BCE''' - Prehistoric Native American cultures inhabit the region now known as Florida. === Exploration and Colonization === * '''1513''' - Juan Ponce de León, a Spanish explorer, arrives in Florida, naming it "La Florida." * '''1565''' - St. Augustine, the oldest continuously inhabited European settlement in the continental United States, is founded by Pedro Menéndez de Avilés. * '''1698''' - Pensacola is established by Spanish explorer Don Andrés de Arriola. === British Rule === * '''1763''' - The Treaty of Paris cedes Florida from Spain to Britain. * '''1783''' - The Treaty of Paris returns Florida to Spain. === Spanish Rule === * '''1783-1821''' - Florida remains under Spanish control. === U.S. Territory and Statehood === * '''1810''' - West Florida declares independence from Spain and is annexed by the United States. * '''1819''' - Spain cedes East Florida to the United States through the Adams-Onís Treaty. * '''1821''' - Florida becomes a U.S. territory. * '''1845''' - Florida is admitted to the Union as the 27th state. === Civil War and Reconstruction === * '''1861-1865''' - Florida secedes from the Union and joins the Confederacy during the American Civil War. * '''1868''' - Florida is readmitted to the Union after Reconstruction. === 20th Century === * '''1920''' - The Florida land boom leads to a rapid increase in population and economic growth. * '''1935''' - The Labor Day Hurricane devastates the Florida Keys, causing significant loss of life and property damage. * '''1959''' - Alaska and Hawaii become states, leaving Florida as the sole state bordering both the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico. === Recent History === * '''1992''' - Hurricane Andrew strikes South Florida, causing widespread destruction and prompting improvements in hurricane preparedness. * '''2000''' - The disputed presidential election between George W. Bush and Al Gore draws national attention to Florida's voting process. == Sources == * Gannon, Michael. A Short History of Florida. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1993. *Florida Historical Society's website and publications contain a wealth of historical information about the state.

Florida African-American Notables

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[[Space:US_Black_Heritage_Project_Florida_Team|US Black Heritage Project Florida Team]] '''The Florida Team covers activity for the [[Project:US_Black_Heritage|US Black Heritage Project]] in the state of Florida.''' == Florida African-American Notables == *'''Entertainment Figures''' :*[[Adderley-159|Julian Edwin Adderley (1928-1975)]], jazz alto saxophonist of the hard bop era :*[[Poitier-20|Sidney Poitier (1927-2022)]], born in Florida, first African American to win the Academy Award for Best Actor *'''Sports Figures''' :* [[Lloyd-10463|John Henry "Pop" Lloyd]], was a Negro League shortstop Hall of Famer, "Regarded as finest shortstop to play in Negro Baseball" *'''"Politicians and Government Office Holders"''' :*[[Dean-14491|James Dean (1858-1914)]], first African-American judge elected in Florida after Reconstruction

Florida Governors

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'''GOVERNORS of the TERRITORY of FLORIDA 1822 - 1845''' Link to [[Space:US_Black_Heritage_Project_Florida_Team|US Black Heritage Project Florida Team]] ''Spanish Florida'' was acquired from Spain in the ''Adams–Onís Treaty'', which took effect July 10, 1821. Parts of West Florida had already been assigned to Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi; the remainder and East Florida were governed by a military commissioner with the powers of governor until the territory was organized and incorporated. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_governors_of_Florida [[Jackson-1115|Andrew Jackson]] was the Military commissioner from 10 March 1821 to 31 Dec 1821.https://dos.myflorida.com/florida-facts/florida-history/florida-governors/andrew-jackson/ The Florida Territory was organized on March 30, 1822, combining East and West Florida. {| border="2" class="wikitable sortable" ! # !! Picture !! Governor !! Took office !! Left office !! Appointed by!! Slave holder |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |1 |{{Image|file=Duval-446.jpg |size=s }} |[[Duval-446|William Pope Duval]] |17 Apr 1822 |24 Apr 1834 |James Monroe
John Q. Adams
Andrew Jackson |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |2 |{{Image|file=Eaton-3148.jpg |size=s }} |[[Eaton-3148|John Eaton]] |24 Apr 1834 |16 Mar 1836 |Andrew Jackson | |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |3 |{{Image|file=Call-801.jpg |size=s }} |[[Call-801|Richard K. Call]] |16 Mar 1836 |2 Dec 1839 |Andrew Jackson |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |4 |{{Image|file=Reid-4440.jpg |size=s }} |[[Reid-4440|Robert R. Reid]] |2 Dec 1839 |19 Mar 1841 |Martin Van Buren | |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |5 |{{Image|file=Call-801.jpg |size=s }} |[[Call-801|Richard K. Call]] |19 Mar 1841 |11 Aug 1844 |William Henry Harrison
John Tyler |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |6 |{{Image|file=Branch-128.jpg |size=s }} |[[Branch-128|John Branch]] |11 Aug 1844 |25 Jun 1845 |John Tyler |YES |} '''GOVERNORS of the STATE of FLORIDA - 1845 - 1901''' The State of Florida was admitted to the Union on March 3, 1845. It seceded from the Union on January 10, 1861 and joined the Confederate States of America on February 8, 1861 as a founding member. Following the end of the American Civil War, it was part of the Third Military District. Florida was readmitted to the Union on June 25, 1868.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_governors_of_Florida {| border="2" class="wikitable sortable" ! # !! Picture !! Governor !! Took office !! Left office !! Party!! Slave holder |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |1 |{{Image|file=Moseley-1004.jpg |size=s }} |[[Moseley-1004|William Dunn Moseley (1795-1863)]] |25 Jun 1845 |1 Oct 1849 |Democrat |Yes |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |2 |{{Image|file=Brown-33078.jpg |size=s }} |[[Brown-33078|Thomas Brown (1785-1867)]] |1 Oct 1849 |3 Oct 1853 |Whig | YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |3 |{{Image|file=Broome-105.jpg |size=s }} |[[Broome-105|James Emelius Broome Sr. (1808-1883)]] |3 Oct 1853 |5 Oct 1857 |Democrat |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |4 |{{Image|file=Perry-3159.jpg |size=s }} |[[Perry-3159|Madison Starke Perry (1814-1865)]] |5 Oct 1857 |7 Oct 1861 |Democrat |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |5 |{{Image|file=Milton-466.jpg |size=s }} |[[Milton-466|John Milton (1807-1865)]] |7 Oct 1861 |1 Apr 1865 |Democrat |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |6 |{{Image|file=Allison-753.jpg |size=s }} |[[Allison-753|Abraham Kyrkyndal Allison (1810-1893)]] (Resigned) |1 Apr 1865 |19 May 1865 |Democrat |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |0 | |Office Vacated
Post Civil War |19 May 1865 |13 Jul 1865 |''None'' | |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |7 |{{Image|file=Marvin-451.jpg |size=s }} |[[Marvin-451|William Marvin (1808-1902)]] |13 Jul 1865 |20 Dec 1865 |Provisional Governor
appointed by President |NO |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |8 |{{Image|file=Walker-14660.jpg |size=s }} |[[Walker-14660|David Shelby Walker Sr. (1815-1891)]] |20 Dec 1865 |4 Jul 1868 |Democrat |YES |- {{Party shading/Independent}} |9 |{{Image|file=Reed-7277.jpg |size=s }} |[[Reed-7277|Harrison Jackson Reed (1815-1899)]] |4 Jul 1868 |7 Jan 1873 |Republican |NO |- {{Party shading/Republican}} |10 |{{Image|file=Hart-5232.jpg |size=s }} |[[Hart-5232|Ossian Bingley Hart (1821-1874)]]
died in office |7 Jan 1873 |18 Mar 1874 |Republican |NO (although his family did) |- {{Party shading/Republican}} |11 |{{Image|file=Stearns-1237.png |size=s }} |[[Stearns-1237|Marcellus Lovejoy Stearns (1839-1891)]] |18 Mar 1874 |2 Jan 1877 |Republican |NO |- {{Party shading/Republican}} |12 |{{Image|file=Drew-997.jpg |size=s }} |[[Drew-997|George Franklin Drew (1827-1900)]] |2 Jan 1877 |4 Jan 1881 |Democrat |NO |- {{Party shading/Democrat}} |13 |{{Image|file=Bloxham-54.jpg |size=s }} |[[Bloxham-54|William Dunnington Bloxham Sr. (1835-1911)]] |4 Jan 1881 |7 Jan 1885 |Democrat |YES |- {{party shading/Democrat}} |14 |{{Image|file=Perry-6070-1.jpg |size=s }} |[[Perry-6070|Edward Aylesworth Perry (1831-1889)]] |7 Jan 1885 |28 Jan 1889 |Democrat |YES (only one) |- {{party shading/Democrat}} |15 |{{Image|file=Fleming-3429.jpg |size=s }} |[[Fleming-3429|Francis Philip Fleming Sr. (1841-1908)]] |28 Jan 1889 |3 Jan 1893 |Democrat |NO |- {{party shading/Democratic-Republican}} |16 |{{Image|file=Mitchell-9278.jpg |size=s }} |[[Mitchell-9278|Henry Laurens Mitchell (1831-1903)]] |3 Jan 1893 |5 Jan 1897 |Democrat |NO |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} |17 |{{Image|file=Bloxham-54.jpg |size=s }} |[[Bloxham-54|William Dunnington Bloxham Sr. (1835-1911)]] |5 Jan 1897 |8 Jan 1901 |Democratic-Republican |YES |- {{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}} |}

Florida Team

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Members of the Florida Project Team

Flo's Notes

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"Flo's Notes" are considered an important document in the family research of [[Morgan-25093|Eliza (Morgan) McKinney Singleton]]. Written for a cousin by Eliza's granddaughter, Florence Tryon (who passed away in 2004, daughter of [[McKinney-5534|Grace McKinney Tryon]]), much of the information provided in these papers has proven verifiable. ''Mentioned in Flo's Notes:'' * [[Morgan-25093|Eliza (Morgan) McKinney Singleton]] * [[Morgan-25249|Martha (Morgan) Rensch]] * [[Morgan-14899|Maynard Morgan]] * [[McKinney-5529|George McKinney]] * [[Singleton-3036|Nelson J. Singleton]] * [[McKinney-5531|Lawrence McKinney]] * [[McKinney-5532|Bessie Lee (McKinney) Cunningham Gilmore]] * [[McKinney-5515|Maynard McKinney]] * [[McKinney-5533|John Benton McKinney]] * [[McKinney-5534|Grace Margaret (McKinney) Tryon]] * [[McKinney-5561|Otto McKinney]] * [[McKinney-5535|Delpha June (McKinney) Covey Schufle]] * [[Singleton-3037|Lelia/Lela Bell (Singleton) Archer]] * [[Singleton-3038|Annie (Singleton) Yarschenko Woodfall]] * [[Singleton-3039|Nelson "Ted" Morgan Singleton]] * [[Singleton-3041|Daniel Webster Singleton]] * [[Singleton-3042|George Washington Singleton]] * [[Morgan-26670|Harriett (Morgan) Ratcliff]] * [[Wells-9828|Isabelle (Wells) Stevenson Binkley]] * [[Morgan-27724|Lewis Morgan]] * [[Morgan-38064|Ida Belle (Morgan) Hiles]] * [[Morgan-27725|John William Morgan]] * [[Rensch-31|Gladys (Rensch) Sacamano Embree]] * [[Rensch-29|Maude Edith (Rensch) King]] * [[Rensch-30|Dewey Rensch]] {{Image|file=Flo_s_Notes.jpg |align=c |size=600 }} {{Image|file=Flo_s_Notes-1.jpg |align=c |size=600 }} {{Image|file=Flo_s_Notes-2.jpg |align=c |size=600 }} {{Image|file=Flo_s_Notes-3.jpg |align=c |size=600 }}

Flower Backgrounds

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These are flower background images. All flower images were taken from photos by D. Scott Lee.

Flower Banners

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Flower banners for profiles.

Flower family records

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne_County,_Michigan
[[Lewis-26356|Lewis-26356]]
https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/450359/family-brick-wall-william-scott-flower-of-german-descent?show=450359#q450359
https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/736056/who-were-william-scott-flowers-parents
[[Flower-826|Flower-826]]
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MXHH-KF3
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MG9Y-FVM
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RKZ-X9T?cc=1727033
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MDLN-NKZ
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YB3-9M6Y?i=4&cc=1417683
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9XG-8PST?i=701&cc=2224537
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-67YS-QX9?i=9&cc=1401638
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GBSQ-X5X?cc=1473181
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99XG-8RTT?i=700&cc=2224537
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bsurname%3ALogan~%20%2Bany_place%3AMichigan~
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3APhebe~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~%20%2Bspouse_givenname%3AWilliam~%20%2Bspouse_surname%3AFlower~
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:36KF-KZJ
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bsurname%3ALagan~%20%2Bbirth_year%3A1815-1830~%20%2Bspouse_givenname%3AWilliam~%20%2Bspouse_surname%3AFlower~
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:36KX-NQL
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3AAlbert~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~%20%2Bbirth_year%3A1803-1807~
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:36KX-V71
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:1:MWY8-JSC
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MHC3-ZBR
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3A%22William%20Scott%22~%20%2Bsurname%3AFlower~%20%2Bbirth_place%3AMichigan~%20%2Bbirth_year%3A1845-1849~%20%2Bfather_givenname%3AWilliam~%20%2Bfather_surname%3AFlower~%20%2Bmother_givenname%3APhebe~%20%2Bmother_surname%3AEdgett~
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3AAlbert~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~%20%2Bmother_givenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bmother_surname%3AEdgett~
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:1:M7K1-33L
https://www.familysearch.org/search/tree/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~
https://www.familysearch.org/search/tree/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:3H7B-PNT
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:SPJN-PX4
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVGQ-8DJZ
https://www.familysearch.org/search/tree/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ALamrock~%20%2Bsurname%3AFlower~%20%2Bbirth_year%3A1780-1790~
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8999012/rhoda-edgett
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/search?firstname=&middlename=&lastname=Flower&birthyear=1810&birthyearfilter=before&deathyear=&deathyearfilter=before&location=New+York%2C+United+States+of+America&locationId=state_36&memorialid=&datefilter=&orderby=&page=3#sr-154239447
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/search?firstname=&middlename=&lastname=Flower&birthyear=1810&birthyearfilter=before&deathyear=&deathyearfilter=before&location=New+York%2C+United+States+of+America&locationId=state_36&memorialid=&datefilter=&orderby=&page=3#sr-154239447
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8999009/albert-edgett
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/109947574/phebe-p_-perkins
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/search?firstname=William&middlename=&lastname=Flower&birthyear=&birthyearfilter=&deathyear=&deathyearfilter=before&location=&locationId=&memorialid=&datefilter=&orderby=
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/92227069/william-f-flower
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/122039105/william-scott-flower
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/135752504/james-flower
https://www.findagrave.com/user/profile/47747305
http://howmanyofme.com/search/
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8999013/rhoda-flower
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/search?firstname=William&middlename=&lastname=Flower&birthyear=&birthyearfilter=&deathyear=1900&deathyearfilter=before&location=United+States+of+America&locationId=country_4&memorialid=&datefilter=&orderby=&page=2#sr-15170440
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/79340934/william-a-flower
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/78274095/john-l-edgett
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~%20%2Bdeath_place%3AMichigan~%20%2Bdeath_year%3A1848-1848~
https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARhoda~%20%2Bsurname%3AEdgett~%20%2Bdeath_place%3AMichigan~%20%2Bdeath_year%3A1848-1848~
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Census#History
[[Flower-830|Flower-830]]

Flower-1

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Beaver-1965|Albert Beaver]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=19947835 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FlowerPat

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'''I put in a spring garden in the back of the house, planting bulbs for my father in the fall of 1993. He was ill and I hoped he would live longer. In the spring of 1994 he sat out on the patio and enjoyed the flowers. He passed away in the summer of 1994. I put in a garden at the front of the house in 1996 so mom could see it from her bedroom window. Both my parents loved flowers and my efforts did give them something pretty to enjoy.''' '''My Parents''' '''[[Miller-56461|John Russell Miller]]''' '''[[Stielow-18|Evelyn Alberta Stielow]]''' '''In 2002, after mom died, I planted gardens at the back of the property and filled them with my favorite plant, the daylily. Every summer it's a riot of color and there are moments where I feel I've died and entered heaven. Not everyone loves flowers. Not everyone loves daylilies. We all do what moves us. It is, I think, a good idea to share what moves us.''' {{Image|file=Patpics-2.jpg |caption=Daylily Quilt }} ''Hemerocallis or daylily began as an tall plant with showy orange flowers that grows wild all over North America. Then it moved into gardens and now there are 35,000 varieties. Here are some of the daylilies I have, blooms plucked and set on a patio table for a picture.'' {{Image|file=FlowerPat-2.jpg |caption=After the Rain }} ''Daylilies are named because they bloom for one day, but each plant produces new blooms for the next day. They are hardy and can even stand a little rain and still retain their beauty.'' {{Image|file=FlowerPat-7.jpg |caption=Phlox Hedge }} ''Another showy plant is the Garden Phlox. I first saw this in Vermont when someone was growing phlox as a hedge. My best friend and neighbor, Yasmin, who is also a gardener, also a daylily fan, suggested we do a Vermont-style phlox hedge between our properties. The result is lovely. I added another phlox hedge beside my driveway.'' {{Image|file=FlowerPat-4.jpg |caption=A Butterfly Arrives }} ''If you have gardens the bees and butterflies will find you. Sometimes they stay still long enough for a picture.'' {{Image|file=FlowerPat-6.jpg |caption=King George }} ''With 35,000 varieties of daylilies some of them have similar blooms and similar names. Sometimes there's a connection like color and size of blooms for King George. Sometimes the name is a mystery. I have daylilies called Real Wind, Fire and Fog, Hush Little Baby and Persian Priest'' {{Image|file=FlowerPat-9.jpg |caption=Surprise Daylily }} ''Most of my plants were purchased from gardening centers and growers in rural areas. You buy a small plant and over the years it grows into a huge clump. then you divide it and have two plants. The growers know their daylilies but sometimes the gardening centers mislabel the plant. If you purchase when there is no bloom you can get a surprise. I purchased a daylily called pumpkin delight. The photo showed a dark orange bloom. This is the Surprise Daylily that grew from my purchase.'' {{Image|file=FlowerPat-10.jpg |caption=Peonies in June }} ''A dear friend Stella dug out her peonies from her mother's garden and gave me a few plants. Another friend Doug dug out peonies from his mother's garden first planted in the 1920s and gave me a plant. So I have peonies that are 20 years old, 40 years old and one is 100 years old. I am so grateful they shared. One year when I was working I brought 25 plants to give to fellow employees.''

Flowers, both wild and domestic

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Over the years, my wife wanted to have flowers growing on our place. I obliged and also took photographs to preserve their beauty. Now it is time to save these photographs as part of my wife's legacy.

FLOYD BRICE ADCOCK'd Death Certificate

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Adcock, Floyd Brice in tree "Adcock Family Tree" Remove Record Image View Add alternate information Report issue Name: Floyd B Adcock Birth Date: 1912 Gender: Male Race: White Death Date: 4 Jul 1949 Age at Death: 37 Death Place: York, South Carolina Cause of Death: 1703 Certificate Number: 009225 Volume Number: 19

Floyd C Crews - Autobiography for Cora

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Floyd C Crews - Autobiography for Cora
by [[Crews-1530|Floyd Coachman Crews (1867-1958)]] (edited to remove references to relatives who may be living)

Floyd Name Study Teams

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WikiTree's Floyd Name Study serves as a collaborative platform to collect information on the Floyd name. To join one of these teams, please see our [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Floyd_Name_Study Floyd Name Study Home Page] for information on how to join the project. == Project Teams == === Profile Improvement === The goal of the Profile Improvement Team is to create, improve, manage, source, and connect Floyd profiles. === Categorization === The goal of the Categorization Team is to create and maintain categories that assist researchers in finding and organizing WikiTree profiles and other information. Categories are also used to facilitate profile improvement and connections. == Location Teams == Location teams will be added as team leaders volunteer.

Floyd Otto Wittum's Obituary

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Floyd_Otto_Wittum_s_Obituary.jpg
The date on the news paper clipping is Thursday July 17,1947.

Floyd`s Westwood memorial Garden Prepetual Care Established 1986

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This cemetery is currently being photographed by Mary G. starting March 27, 2017 Floyd`s Westwood Memorial Garden Perpetual Care Established 1986 6101 Reidville Rd. Moore, South Carolina 29369 864-582-1249 GPS Coordinates : Latitude 34.88189 Longitude -82.07220 Information will be updated when need be. South Carolina Cemeteries Project# ↓ Last Name ↓ First/Middle /Initials ↓ Born ↓ Dead ↓ 1. Adam, Howard Christopher Sr. B: 1918/06/14 D: 1992/08/17 2. Adams, PVT. Michael Scott B: 1983/08/01 D: 2003/08/21 3.Adkins, Dorothy Helen B;1941/04/03 D; 2003/05/23 4.Adkins, Johnny Thomas B: 1971/03/19 D:2002/11/01 5. AKins, Clarence R. B: 1919/08/28 D; 1988/09/06 6. Akins, Mary Capps B; 1926/09/29 D:2011/08/12 7. Alexander, Donald Lee B: 1935/10/24 D:2016/06/21 8. Anderson, Marshall Le Shun "Shun" B: 1977/12/20 D: 2006/08/30 9. Anderson, Travis Earle B: 1984/06/10 D: 2006/08/30 10. Arrowood, Allen R. B: 1950/07/12 D: 2007/09/25 11. Arrowood, Judy Carol Mauney B: 1950/02/26 D: 2012/06/16 12. Ashmore, Betty F. B: 1938 D: 2004 13. Ashmore, Otis H B: 1939 D: 2007 14. Bacon, Garnet Lee B: 1924 D: 2003 15. Bacon, Irene Cooksey B: 1927/08/30 D: 2006/03/21 16. Bailey, Earline Sloan B: 1938/08/10 D: 2005/06/26 17. Bailey, Phillip Edward B: 1960/11/17 D: 1998/03/09 18. Ballenger, Doris B: unknown D: 2005/12/10 19. Barnes, Donnie Bailey B: 1947/06/30 D: 2015/07/04 20. Barnes, Mayorie L. B: 1930/01/21 D: 2006/12/14 21. Barnes, Susan J. B: 1941/07/03 D: 1996/01/20 22. Barnes, William B> 1940/04/29 D: 1994/04/29 23 .Barnette, Kenneth Wayne B: 1944/11/03 D: 2017/01/14 24. Barnwell, Edwin Eugene B: 1951/03/30 D: 2011/01/12 25. Baytes, William Burton B: 1922/06/08 D: 2001/07/20 26. Belcher, Carroll Dean "Noot" B: 1947/10/01 D:2000/03/17 27. Belue, Fred B: 1930/05/03 D: 1988/06/07 28. Belue, Kenneth W. B: 1952/09/06 D: 2008/12/28 29. Bennett, Charles E. Jr. B:1942 D: 2002 30. Bennett, Edith F. B: 1927/03/05 D: 2007/04/01 31. Bennett, Fred Jr. B: 1929/09/06 D:2000/11/02 32. Benson, Minnie Esther "Drummond" B:1920/09/30 D: 1993-11/20 33.Benson, Raymond Jesse B: 1926-09/19 D:2003/04/05 34. Bethea , Pamela C. B: 1958/07/29 D: 2000/11/30 35. Betsill, Charles Keller Jr. B: 1939/09/28 D: 2009/04/11 36. Richard, Homer Raymond B: 1939/09/20 D: 2016/02/27 37. Black, Debra P. B: 1958/04/21 D: 1989/06/16 38. Black, Nancy J B: 1936/12/13 D: 1994/07/08 39. Black, Richard W. B: 1933/07/19 D: 1991/04/05 40. Blackwell, Bill B: 1936/08/11 D:2002/01/07 41. Blackwell, Catherine *Weathers* B: 1932/07/22 D: 2014/01/14 42.Blackwell, Ronnie Walden *Ron* B:1941 D: 1989/10/18 43. Blackwell, Ruby, M B: 1931/11/01 D: 2008/10/12 44.Blackwell, Tim Godfrey B: 1938/12/09 D: 1999/08/30 45.Blackwell, William T . Jr. B: 1920/08/05 D: 2006/08/17 46.Blunt, Charles Joseph *Joe* B: 1918/02/02 D: 1999/02/15 47.Blunt, Mary Virginia *Ginny* B: 1917/06/03 D: 2002/02/26 48.Blythe, James Michele Ray *Mickey* B: 1955/10/11 D: 2004/10/15 49. Boldin, , Julia Drummond B: 1914/02/10 D: 2003/01/10 50.Brady , Rev. James Durant B: 1926 D: 1987 51.Brice, Clarence Albert B: 1943/02/18 D: 2009/07/29 52. Bridges, Jeannette Kemp B: 1938/01/26 D: 2012/07/19 53. Bridges, Robert C. Sr. B: 1949/08/19 D: 2013/01/22 54. Bridges, Ted Jackson B: 1931/08/22 D: 2004/07/19 55. Bridges, Willie Hugh B: 1929/08/23 D: 2017/03/01 56. Bridwell, Judy P. B: 1940 D: 1988 57. Bright, Henry Greyson B:2010/02/06 D:2010/02/13 58. Briles, Carl , Braxton Sr. B: 1933/02/13 D: 2017/03/30 59. Brogden , Emma Rose B: 2005/03/15 D: 2005/03/21 60.Brown , Bill Ray B: 1961 /04 /09 D: 2014/04/03 61. Brown, Lynda Kay *McCombs* B: 1951/04/21 D: 2012/07/08 62. Brown , Sara *Tater* B:1948/06/20 D:2002/06/11 63. Brown, William James *Dubby* B: 1947/03/24 D: 2016/12/22 64. Bullington, William W. B: 1973/02/09 D: 1989/06/05 65. Burnett, Joan C. B: 1950/01/22 D: 1996/07/08 66.Burnett, Patricia K. B: 1943/07/03 D: 1997/05/25 67. Byrd, Patricia Ann Baker B: 1945/11/27 D: 2012/03/14 68. Caldwell, Edward Reid B: 1935/12/12 D: 2016/11/17 69.Cantrell, Clara Mae Davis B: 1927/01/19 D: 2013/12/18 70. Cantrell, B: 1924/09/12 D: 2001/05/26 71. Carmack, Kathryn Starr *Kathy* Mcmana B: 1959/01/16 D: 1998/10/17 72. Carper, Kevin Earl B: 1967/11/19 D: 2007/02/27 73. Carros , Kaye Howell B: 1948/04/28 D:2005/06/24 74. Carter, John G. B: 1955/03/22 D:2009/01/07 75. Cartledge, Paul B: 1929 D: 1991 76. Cassell Dwight Elmer B: 1943/04/03 D: 2014/04/17 77. Cassell, Joan Jenkins B: 1943/11/17 D: 2007/02/15 78. Caulfield, Edward P. B: 1910 D: 2002 79. Caulfield, Kathleen H. B: 1908 D: 2001 80.Chao, Hsien Lin *Shirley* B: 1956/11/27 D: 2001/08/28 81. Christopher, Fujiko L. B: 1933/11/02 D: 2009/05/16 82. Christopher, Norman B: 1932/10/18 D:2000/08/13 83. Clark, John William B: 1942/06/17 D:2015/09/24 84. Cloer, Brittany, Elaine B: 1989/04/11 D: 1989/04/11 85. Cloer, Dr. Daniel Webster Sr. B: 1922/09/15 D: 1987/11/11 86. Cloer, Emily, Lucile Hammett B: 1922/02/09 D: 2010/06/07 87. Cochran, Andy Clifford B: 1938/02/02 D: 2007/08/13 88. Cochran, Betty Lou McCombs B: 1944/01/16 D: 2012/01/13 89.Cochran, Coty Joseph B: 1993/01/26 D: 2013/09/27 90. Cochran, Danielle Lin Booth B: 1973/09/08 D: 2010/12/10 91. Cochran, Robert Daniel B: 1925/08/22 D:2014/09/24 92. Collins, J. Ernest B: 1930/08/04 D: 2007/08/17 93. Collins, Raymond W . B: 1912/07/12 D: 1995/07/21 94. Connelly , Charles Vincent B: 1906/01/19 D: 1990/11/04 95. Connelly, Elizabeth Ann S. B: 1947/05/02 D: 2009/04/2 96. Cook , Carl Thomas *Tom* SR. B: 1936/08/06 D: 2013/09/20 97. Cooper, Dorothy Mae *Riddle* B: 1924/01/0 D: 2012/03/08 98. Cooper, Rudolph Gorham B: 1926/12/24 D: 2013/11/22 99. Cope, Leslie *Les* B: 1957 D: 2004 100. Cordell , Harold E. *BUDDY* Jr. B: 1953/03/28 D: 2005/11/11 101. Cox, Annie Ruth B: 1931 D: 2008 102. Cox, James F. B: 1938/08/04 D: 2000/09/14 103. Cox, Jerry Wayne B: 1942/02/16 D: 2012/09/29 104.Cox, William Walter B: 1926 D: 2001 105. Crowe, Thomas Wayne B: 1963/04/28 D: 2003/03/24 106. Culbreth , Shelby J. B: 1938/12/11 D: 2004/11/16 107. Cyrille, Frank P . Jr. B: 1938/12/11 D: 2011/04/27 108. Davis, Carol Wayne B: 1936/12/16 D: 2004/07/13 109 Davis , Floyd B: 1910/06/23 D: 2007/12/12 110. Davis, Lawrence, Sr. B: 1924/01/24 D:1995/09/09 111. Davis, Suelena P. B: 1909 D: 1999 112. Dean , Russell *Rut* B: 1939/04/01 D:1999/04/14 113. Deichman, Dorothy W. B: 1920/05/31 D: 2009/03/16 114. Deichman, Mark W. B: 1923/10/21 D: 2003/10/18 115. Derr, Lorraine Marie B: 1983/04/28 D:2001/02/16 116.Dillinger, Dan B B: 1930/07/27 D: 2011/01/21 117. Dobbins, James Gary B: 1941/04/29 D: 2003/12/29 118.Doll, Carole Anne Poling B: 1943/07/16 D:2013/0502 119. Donald , Jack C B: 1934/02/07 D: 2005/04/01 120. Dover , Corrie G. Glenn B: 1944/07/02 D: 2010/03/03 121. Dover, Maxie C. B: 1942/01/24 D: 2009/08/15 122. Drummond, Jimmie J. Sr. B: 1939/08/16 D: 1994/10/05 123. Drummond, Marshall B: Unknown as of 06/24/2017 124. Drummond, Ruby L Peake B: 1942/04/01 D: 2000/02/26 125. Drummond, Willie B: 1910/04/07 D: 1999/06/22 126. Duckworth, Sharon Virginia *Sherlin* B:1944/03/21 D: 2015/12/18 127. Dumpert, Marjorie Miller B: 1934/04/06 D: 2015/12/22 128. Dumpert, Robert W. B: 1931/09/05 D: 2009/09/21 129.Dunbar, Kelsey Alexis B: 2005/12/21 D: 2005/12/21 130. Dunham, Lana Johnson B: 1949/05/04 D: 2009/12/25 131. Dunlap, Imogene, Seymour B:1929/07/07 D: 2015/07/17 132. Dunlap, James D *JD* Jr. B:1931 D;1999 133. Eckard, Merrill *paw-paw* B: 1919/09/16 D: 2013/03/24 134. Eckard, Virginia Bungarner B: 1918/03/28 D: 1997/12/01 135. Edwards, Dorothy Burbee B: 1926/09/13 D: 2006/02/13 136. Edwards, Scott Wayne B: 1963-11/06 D: 2016/12/05 137. Emory, Doris B B: 1933/03/24 D: 2006/08/23 138 Emory, Lewis O`Neal B: 1930 D: 2003 139. Emory, Scott Paul B: 1964/12/21 D: 1964/12/21 140. Emory, Thomas Edward B: 1924/04/03 D: 1995/09/18 141. Emory, Willie Sue Messer B: 1927 D: 1964/12/21 142. Estlow, Charles Grant B: 1945/02/10 D: 1997/08/03 143. Estlow, Marilyn Louise B: 1938/02/24 D: 2014/03/20 144. Evati, Michael Samuel *Sam* B: 1952/07/16 D: 2014/04/17 145. Everts, George Roberts *Sonny* B: 1935/11/03 D: 2012/05/25 146. Everts, Sharon Louise Fitz Patrick B: 1937/10/02 D: 2013/12/10 147. Fazzone, Paul Michael Sr. B: 1943/06/10 D: 2011/12/09 148. Finch , Elizabeth Laughter B: 1939/12/09 D: 2008/12/19 149. Finch, Melvin Paul B: unknown D: 2017/01/19 150. Fitzgerald, Charles B: 1942 D: 2004 151. Ford, Harold Bernard III B: 1945/07/24 D: 2011/04/04 152. Fortenberry, Annie Elizabeth B: 1914 D: 1993 153. Fortenberry, James J. Sr. B: 1911 D: 1999 154. Foster, Robert Lee Jr B: 1949/03/23 D: 1992/02/13 155. Foster, Virginia Mattie Pearl Drummond B: UNK D: 2013/01/28 156. Fowler, Brandy Diana Hamrick B: 1982/05/07 D: 2015/11/23 157. Fowler, Eddie B: 1928/10/06 D: 2005/12/10 158. Fowler, William Edward Billy Jr. B: 1988/07/22 D: 2010/03/16 159. Franklin, Joan Meckley B: 1941/12/12 D: 2014/08/25 160. Freeman , Billy E. B: 1937/05/04 D: 2014/11/09 161.Fuller, Delia McEvilly B: 1912/06/29 D: 2008/03/19 162. Fuller, Mary Alice Towery B: 1930/12/11 D: 2011/01/01 163. Gahagan, Elva Virginia Cook B: 1953/05/16 D: 2010/12/17 164. Gentry, Mary Belle Tinsley B: 1926 D: 2016/08/01 165. Gibby, Roderick T. B: 1940 D:2009 166. Gibson, Mark Adam B: 1988/08/16 D: 2010/11/12 167. Gilreath, Michael Leon *Mike* B: 1950/01/01 D: 2013/10/10 168. Gilstrap , Jennifer Harvey B; 1973/08/06 D: 2013/01/30 169. Godfrey, Madison, Ann B: 2004/08/16 D: 2004/10/21 170.Goldsmith, Curtis Edward B: 1956/09/26 D: 2013/08/14 171. Gonzalez, Allison *King* B:1958/08/05 D: 2005/11/12 172. Gowan, Eber Charles *Chuck* B: 1948/01/05 D:2014/01/22 173. Green, Mllie Gertrude Tranner B: 1918/08/13 D: 2006/01/18 174. Gregory, Margaret Kelly B: 1937/09/12 D:2012/07/17 175 Gregory, Noah Scott B:1999/04/27 D: 1999/05/31 176. Griffin, Carolyn Joann B: 1959/07/24 D: 1991/09/11 177. Griffin, Doris Shelnilt B: 1932/01/18 D: 2005/07/20 178. Griffin, Jackie Ray B: 1953/04/25 D: 2015/04/16 179. Griffin, Ruby Waters B: 1934 D:1991 180.Griffin, Thomas Edward *Little ed* Jr. B:1927/06/19 D: 2009/08/13 181. Grizzle, John M. B: 1947/01/03 D: 2011/06/15 182.Guida, Arthur J Sr. B; 1924/12/24 D: 2004/01/28 183. Guida, Patsy K. B: 1927/01/03 D: 2001/09/01 184. Guilfoyle, Stephen Christopher Sr. B: 1930/12/05 D: 2013/06/29 185. Gurley, William Dallas B: 1931/09/02 D: 1992/08/24 186. Hahn, Irving Daneil Jr. B: 1933/02/10 D: 2012/04/19 187. Hall, Belve Joseph B: 1935/11/19 D: 1987/04/04 188. Hall, Robert Anthony B: 1983/08/22 D: 2014/10/02 189. Hamlin, Jeffery Scott B: 1964/08/07 D: 2004/08/10 190. Hammett, Rachel Bridwell B: 1930 D: 1997 191. Hammett, Robert Earl Jr,. B: 1956/12/20 D: 2010/07/21 192. Hammett, Robert Earl Sr. B: 1933 D: 1996 193. Hance, James Gerald *Sonny* Jr. B: 1940/10/31 D:2003/07/27 194. Hand, Robert Louis *Bobby* B: 1939/08/13 D: 2004/03/10 195. Hardy, Norman E. B: 1928/10/01 D: 2002/02/12 196. Harmon, James D. B: 1918 D: 1994 197. Harris, Ann Howard B: 1929/10/06 D: 2005/03/16 198. Harris, Joseph Robert B: 1928/12/24 D: 2010/02/14 199. Harrison, Corine Sanders B: 1933/03/28 D: 2012/03/16 200. Harrison, Jacquelyn Drummond B: 1963 D: 2004/10/13 201. Harvey, Jimmy William B: 1942/02/27 D: 2014/11/29 202. Hastings, Malcolm Lynn Jr. B: 1988/11/19 D: 1999/10/18 203. Haulbrook, Betty J. B: 1939 D: 2012 204. Haulbrook, Robert F. B: 1937 D: 2013 205. hawkins, Betty B. B: 1932/12/16 D: 1994/10/10 206. Hawkins, Fred C. *Ted* B: 1939 D: 1996 207. Hawkins, Juanita B: 1936/06/08 D: 2003/10/26 208. Hawkins, Lewis B: 1932/10/31 D: 2004/06/02 209. Hawkins, Lewis Dewayne *Wayne* B: 1957/09/10 D: 2014/12/17 210. Hawkins, Peggy Jeans Hammett B: 1957/10/09 D: 2009/09/20 211. Hawkins, Ted B: 1964/02/16 D: 2014/06/21 212. Hawkins, Thurman Lee B: 1925/02/26 D: 1997/08/22 213. Hayes, Barbara Sparks B: 1937/11/15 D: 2012/06/20 214. Hayes, Broadus K. B: 1940 D: 1998 215. Hayes, Charles B: 1934/12/05 D: 1996/09/07 216. Hayes, Richard Allen B:1962/05/18 D:2011/01/18 217. Henderson, Jane Bryan B: 1932/12/09 D: 2015/09/04 218. Heng, Angmouldlead T. B: 1961/12/15 D: 2015/03/04 219. Heng, Ty Rong B: 1929/02/16 D: 2008/11/19 220. Hicks, James Lester Jr. B: 1927 D: 2010/05/16 221. Higgs, Robert Unkown info 222. Hill, Joan C. B: 1934/05/13 D: 2005/03/12 223. Holder, Kenneth Ray B: 1949/08/20 D: 2006/12/24 224. Hollingsworth, Walter W. B: 1930/11/27 D: 2002/11/16 225. Holsten, Catherine *Cathy* Mitchell B: 1932/01/13 D: 2008/01/22 226. Holsten, Dr, John *jack* B: 1931/02/27 D: 2015/03/01 227. Horton, Connie Lloyd B: 1958/10/05 D: 2013/03/13 228. Howard, Myrtle Brock B: 1917/06/28 D: 2003/11/18 229. Howard, William Thomas B: 1942/02/18 D: 2001/05/22 230. Infinger, Mattie T. B: 1920/05/13 D: 2014/01/31 231. Inman, Janice O B:1947 D:1998 232. Ivey, Blake James B: 1961/05/31 D: 2010/05/29 233. Ivy , Jessie J Powell B: 1933/02/15 D: 2007/07/13 234. Jackson, Wallace Hayward Sr. B: 1925/09/21 D: 2010/02/08 235.James, Margaret B. B: 1921/12/15 D: 1999/04/30 236. Jennings, Mary Lee Waddell B: 1910/03/06 D: 1994/06/29 237. Jennings, William Daniel B: 1951/08/08 D: 2004/02/20 238. Jewell, Kay B. B: 1938/09/08 D: 2009/09/12 239. Johnson, Gladys H. B: 1914/10/10 D: 2008/01/06 240. Johnson, Louise Smith B: 1937/11/11 D: 2015/05/16 241.Johnson, Ralph Allgood B: 192/03/10 D: 2007/11/16 242. Johnson, William *Buddy* B: 1940/01/24 D: 2011/05/05 243 .Johnson, Harold C. B.1938/01/23 D:201/04/29 244. Jones, Billy Eugene B: 1930 D: 2009/04/02 245. Jones, Joyce A. Mathis B: 1930/08/01 D:2012/03/29 246.Jordan, Annie Ruth W. B: 1946 D: 1990 247. Jordanoff, Maria B: 1921 D: 2007 248. Jordanoff, Nickola B: 1915 D: 2006 249.Kane, Larry Wayne B:1941/07/04 D: 2002/07/07 250.Kane, Michael Wayne B: 1961/01/29 D:2012/12/03 251.Kane, Wanda B: 1941/09/22 D:????? 252. Kanith, Karen W. B:1948/09/30 D: 2000/12/17 253.Keller, Elizabeth Marie Hennecke B:1917/01/23 D: 2004/11/14 254.Keller, Karl Sanders B: 1916/08/23 D: 2000/07/16 255. Kelly, Bennie Allen ^Hood^ B: 1959/07/14 D; 2005/01/15 256. Kelly, Bennie B. B: 1924/04/09 D: 2003/08/26 257. Kelly, Betty Collins B: 1933/03/07 D: 2015/02/10 258. Kelly, Mary F. B: 1936/03/01 D: 259. King, Autenee Elizabeth Newman B: 1931 D: 2011/09/07 260. King, Jimmy Richard B: 1934/05/17 D: 2011/07/02 261. Kinnebrew, Henry Sloan *pop* Jr. B: 1924 D: 2003 262. Kirkland, Clara B. B: 1916 D: 2000 263. Kirkland, James Vernon B: 1943/04/07 D: 2012/11/19 264. Kirkland. Oc John B: 1912 D: 1988 265. Knight, Julie Yates B: 1967/10/15 D: 2003/05/25 266. Kubitscheck, Joyce B: 1929/09/02 D: 2004/04/17 267. Kyle, Cathrine J. B: 1934 D: 268. Kyle, Hardy Eugene B: 1933 D: 1989 269. Kyle, Tommy Eugene B: 1956 D: 2001/05/01 270. Lamb, Betty M. B: 1931 D:2002 271. Lamb, Charles, S. B: 1926 D: 1995 272. Lamb, Claude B. B: 1921 D: 273. Lamb, Della S. B: 1928 D: 2014/07/25 274. Lamb, James Dewey B: 1931/01/29 D: 2000/11/30 275. Lamb, James Scott B:1964/11/12 D:2005/02/05 276. Lamb, June Cox B: 1937/01/30 D: 2009/10/25 277.Lamb, Ruby Gowan, B: 1933/09/24 D: 2005/01/04 278. Lamb, Shirley W. B: 1935/06/04 D: 1991/06/17 279. Lambert, Robert Dennis B: 1957/10/03 D: 1999/10/18 280. Lane, Bobby *Catfish* B: 1947/11/20 D: 2005/11/05 281. Lanford, Irene Chesney B: 1936/07/23 D: 2014/11/19 282. Lanford, Sean Michael B: 1987/03/23 D: 2004/11/27 283. Langley, Christille *Chris* Cassell B:1960/02/18 D: 2015/05/27 284. Larry, Audrey Priscilla Krulder B: 1930/05/04 D: 2013/04/07 285. Lavender, William Earl B: 1941 D: 2011/07/31 286. Lawrence, Claude Howe B: 1923/05/12 D: 1990/08/08 287. Lawrence, Loree Thomas B: 1924/02/03 D: 2011/10/24 288. Lawter, Martha Jean Gosnell B: 1948/08/22 D: 2012/01/11 289. Leap, Kim Chea B: 1934/07/22 D: 2011/04/12 290. Leap, Lawrence Sophea B: 1950/08/01 D: 2010/09/06 291. Ledford, Bobby Joe B: 1938/11/24 D: 2011/11/11 292. Leitschuh, Joseph H. B: 1941/05/06 D: 2001/02/03 293. Leonard, Jane L B: 1914 D: 2006 294. Leonard, T. Vernon B: 1907 D: 1986 295. Linville, Rev. Ray B: 1917 D: 2011/01/06 296. Lord, Albert Marett B: 1946/05/05 D: 2012/10/06 297. Lowe, Calvin J. B: 1926/10/26 D: 2002/03/11 298. Lowe, Martha Alice Tapp B: 1933/03/05 D: 2010/03/03 299. Lyda, Betty M. B: 1932/07/31 D: 1998/10/03 300. Lyles, Garland Payne B: 1934/01/21 D: 2017/02/23 301. Mabrey, Betty A. B: 1932 D: 2006 302. Mach, John W. B:1920/07/19 D:1997/08/31 303. Mack,Vera Brown B: 1922/08/30 D: 1991/01/12 304. Marler, J. Charles B: 1930/01/16 D: 2001/06/03 305. Marr , Elaine ( O`shields) B:1949/06/27 D:2012/01/30 306. Martin, Charles V. B: 1950/08/01 D: 2002/07/25 307. Martin, Daniel Shealy Sr. B: 1922/03/07 D: 2009/11/15 308. Martin, Dudley G. B: 1947/06/23 D: 2008/09/21 309. Martin, Edith Winonah B: 1928/11/23 D: 2015/03/16 310. Martin, Teresa Renee Leonard B: 1963/02/04 D: 2009/10/19 311. Mason, James Alan B: 1948/04/20 D: 2010/01/01 312. Mason, Robert Lee B: 1930/10/03 D: 1995/12/11 313. Massey, Walter Dillard B: 1932/02/20 D: 2011/05/22 314. Maxa, Elfrida E. B: 1929/09/22 D: 1994/09/19 315. Maxa, Robert L. B: 1924/08/25 D: 2011/05/17 316. Mayfield, Andrew Steven "Steve" B: 1940/07/23 D: 2003/12/18 317. Mayfield, Cora Elizabeth *Libby* Jamison B: 1939/06/22 D: 1998/10/810 318. Mayfield, Tracy Rene B: 1962/02/20 D: 1971/06/28 319. Mc Abee , Thomas B: 1926/01/28 D: 1995/07/29 320. McCombs, Mamie Gertrude Rodford B: 1913/01/07 D:1997/07/31 321. McIntyre, Max Clyde B: 1922 D: 1993 322. McIntyre, Merle Harding B: 1928/03/28 D: 2006/03/01 323. McMillen, Richard L. B:1954/08/03 D:1995/0/17 324. McPherson, Rodney R. *Rusty* B: 1960/04/15 D: 2001/04/14 325. Means, Annie Louise Staggs B: 1934/06/24 D: 2014/09/30 326. Melton, Mary Edna Coker B: 1914/01/04 D: 1993/02/28 327. Melton, Olin Glen B: 1904/03/18 D:2000/04/25 328.Miller, David Lee B: 1935 D: 2005/09/03 329. Miller, Ila G. B: 1914/07/21 D: 2008/04/15 330. Miller, Jennie V. B: 1918/08/24 D: 2008 331.Miller, Otis B: 1914/01/09 D: 2000/08/08 332. Mitchen, Gladys Barbara Coner B: 1935/03/25 D: 2010/06/17 333. Moody, Michael E. B: 1951/11/24 D: 1998/06/24 334. Moore. Essie Mae Phillips B: 1926/03/11 D: 2011/09/24 335. Moore, Freda Pridmore B: 1947/10/04 D: 2011/10/24 336. Moore, Herbert Lee B: 1928/11/13 D: 1992/02/23 337. Moore, James David B; 1936/06/04 D: 1986/05/28 338. Moore, (SGT) James David B: 1957/12/26 D: 2014/04/12 339. Moore, Lawerence Jenkins *LJ* B: 1930/10/03 D: 2004/03/20 340. Moore, Mary Alice Gibbs B: 1937/06/01 D: 2008/07/05 341. Moore, Mattie M B: 1916/09/03 D: 2002/11/10 342. Morgan, Jerleen B. B: 1929/03/07 D: 2011/08/08 343. Moss, John Earl B: 1944/07/22 D: 2010/03/30 344. Mullinax, *Mc* Charlie B: 1947/01/19 D: 2001/11/20 345. Mullinax, Terry Blackwell B: 1945 D: 1994 346. Nanney, Arnold Lee B: 1932/04/16 D:1996/09/29 347. Nix, Donna Lee McCallister B: 1951/03/28 D: 2012/09/30 348. Norman, Betty Davis B:1947/07/15 D:2000/07/01 349. Nutt, Sandra Kaye Butler B: 1941/11/16 D:2002/02/07 350. O`Brien, Eleanor Grace *Nor* Panetta B: 1934/09/22 D:2006/08/2006 351. O`Brien Frank A. B: 1932/07/06 D: 2006/10/29 352. O`Sullivan, Reece Valerie B: 2005/03/01 D: 2005/03/22 353.Olsheski, Barbara Suder B: 1953/08/31 D: 2001/07/21 354. Orr, lisa Marie B: 1966/07/10 D: 2008/07/29 355. Osorio, Carlos Edwards B: 1936/03/29 D: 2016/03/28 356. Owens, James M. B: 1921/08/21 D: 1996/07/28 357. Owings, Ronald Aaron B: 1941/10/26 D: 2013/06/11 358. Pace, James C. B: 1932/08/02 D: 1998/03/29 359. Park, Edgar B: 1923/10/25 D: 2004/09/05 360. Park, Ethel Mary B: 1922/11/18 D:2009/01/18 361. Parker, Eddie Lee II B: 1961/02/03 D:1999/09/07 362. Parker, Joseph Beverly B:1934/03/08 D: 2002/06/24 363. Parker, Lorene M B: 1939/03/19 D:2014/07/31 364. Patterson, Richard Wayne B: 1982/08/09 D: 2005/07/03 365. Patterson, Walter L. B: 1923/11/19 D: 1999/12/02 366. Pearman, William Jess Jr. B: RESEARCH FILES 367. Pearson, Anthony W. B: 1923/02/10 D:1998/05/13 368. Pearson, Bessie, May Stephens B: 1943/05/31 D:2015/02/02 369. Pearson, Fred R. B: 1941/08/13 D: 2008/07/30 370. Pearson, Hazel Virginia Dill B: 1928/11/17 D: 1998/11/08 371.Pearson, Horace M. *Snooty* B:1934/05/03 D:2016/08/16 372.Pearson, James Ronald B: 1946/06/29 D: 2009/09/22 373. Pearson, Juanita Henderson B: 1946/04/30 D;2009/03/22 374. Pearson, Karen M. B: 1947/08/21 D: 375. Pearson, Melvin Leon *Jack* B: 1936/02/14 D:2015/01/27 376. Pearson, Minnie Lee *BeeBee* Martin B:1919/11/22 D:1995/03/26 377. Pearson, Robin Anette B: 1977/08/13 D:2000/12/25 378. Pearson, Robin Ann B: 1968/09/06 D: 1987/06/02 379. 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William, Lillie May Jones *Granny* Hamby B: 1920/09/21 D: 2015/10/12 558. Williams, Randy Harrison B: 1960/05/30 D: 2012/11/03 559. Wilson, Bessie Mae B: 1912/08/21 D: 2013/12/24 560. Wilson, Claude Allen B: 1921/06/27 D: 2012/12/05 561. Wilson, John *Bootsie* B: 1940/07/18 D: 2009/09/21 562. Wilson, Julia Drake B: 1946/01/20 D: 2008/09/30 563. Wilton, John D. B: 1925/10/24 D: 2015/02/21 564. Wolf, Gary L. B: 1954/07/01 D: 1990/06/02 565. Wolf, Lorrie A. Phillips B: 1966/07/30 D: 1990/06/02 566. Wolf, Ricky Lynn B: 1961/01/24 D: 2015/10/31 567. Wood, Bobby Earl B: 1946/06/26 D: 2005/09/05 568. Wood, Shirley Lee B: 1942/10/07 D: 2009/06/20 569. Wood, Wanda Kay B: 1961/04/30 D: 2003/03/02 570. Wright, Barbara A. B: 1958/12/22 D: 2007/10/14 571. Yarborough, Larry E. B: 1941/01/04 D: 1996/05/01 572. Yonce, Jean Cowen. B: 1942/03/17 D: 2003/04/11 573. Young, REV. Andy B: 1941/03/22 D: 2015/09/08 574.Young, Velma Burnett B: 1940/10/19 D: 2010/11/22 This free space page is part of WikiTree's South Carolina Cemeteries Project. The South Carolina Cemeteries Project is a sub-project of the larger U.S. Cemeteries Project. This page is a work in progress, and will remain so until the Table of Interments (below) is completed. The Table of Interments is a sort able listing of persons interred at this cemetery, some or all of whom are linked to existing WikiTree profiles. The photos can only be displayed for persons with existing WikiTree profiles. The created profiles can include other genealogical and biographical information as well as a listing of sources for documentation. Profile and photo links and transcribed information needs to be cross-checked to ensure accuracy. Images: As a Wiki Genealogist, you're invited to improve this profile and upload images. (For merging, request to join the Trusted List.) 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Fludgate family

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Hunt-2486|Bernard Hunt]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=3229502 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fly Family

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''The information below was originally included in the profile of [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Mitchell-24789 Mary (Mitchell) Fly]. It is included here because it appears to pertain to the Fly family in general, rather than Mary specifically. Some re-formatting might be helpful. So please feel free to improve this profile. '' From the Memoirs of the "Flye Forum" Fly Family Legends: Colonel William Fly & Mary Mitchell Fly William Fly, the second son, married Mary Mitchell in 1810. She was the daughter of Andrew Mitchell, all of Maury County, Tennessee. They were a young couple - The bridegroom was about 16 years old and the bride 17. They were both blessed with extraordinary energy and force of character. Contemptuous remarks, by some of their relatives on their youth and probable success in life, aroused their ambition and caused them to put forth all their energy and vim that they might show their skeptical friends that they would succeed. The consequence was that, though they met some breaks in their prosperity, they soon outstrip(ped) all their relatives and acquaintances in acquiring wealth. Col. William Fly was a man or extraordinary natural ability. His early opportunities for an education were very limited, but in mature years, few would have known that his early education had been neglected. He was a magistrate in Maury Co., Tenn. for a number of years. He filled various offices in the Militia of the county.He was invariably elected when he became a candidate for office. I well recollect the last time he was a candidate for office in Maury County. It was for the office of Colonel of the Militia, and his opponent was Lucius Polk. It was a very spirited contest and William Fly won. He was a very handsome and commanding-looking man, and when dressed in his regimentals, and mounted on his fiery white horse, his children thought him the most distinguished-looking of men. After William Fly's marriage, he first settled on a tract of land given him by his father-in-law on Turkey Creek in Maury County, Tennessee. Here his three oldest children were born.They were - 1. Fly, Andrew Tate Mitchell 2. Fly, Sarah Jane and 3. Fly, John Dalton He then moved to Williamson County and settled on Leper's (or Leiper's) Creek. Here his fourth child was born. 4. Fly, David Williamson Eighteen months later, he moved back to Maury County, and settled near his father-in-law Andrew Mitchell, on Turkey Creek.In this place was born - 5.Fly, Elijah Madden Mr. Fly sold this place, intending to move to the Obion country in West Tennessee, but afterwards bought James Doty's place on Beach Creek, another branch of Snow Creek. On this place the town of Benton is now located. It is 10 miles north of Columbia, the county seat of Maury County. While living on this place, Sarah Jane Fly, his daughter, died in her 17th year. She was very pretty with dark auburn hair and fair complexion. Andrew Tate Mitchell Fly was married to Eliza Jones about 1830. He afterward married a Miss Rabb. While living on Beach Creek William and Mary Fly had 4 children - 6. Fly, Mary Malinda 7. Fly, Sophia Louisiana (twin) (GREAT GRANDMOTHER OF TANNERS) Sophia Fly Seat, Reverend Seat's wife. 8. Fly, Benjamin Franklin (twin) 9. Fly Elvira Josephine 10. Fly, George Washington Lafayette was the youngest. William Fly moved from Tennessee to Yalabusha county, Mississippi where he owned 2 plantations. While there Governor Polk visited his cousin, Mary Mitchell Fly. The story goes that when Gov. (afterwards President) Polk came to the plantation, Frank Fly, then 13 years old, was sent to the other plantation tell his brother Willie of the arrival. As he was running along, repeating to himself the message, "The Governor's come. The Governor's come", he stumped his toe, fell down and rolled, forgetting his message. As he came in sight of his brother, he shouted excitedly, "Oh Brother Will, the Clark's come; the Clark's come." - the county Clerk being the highest official he knew. The house on this plantation was a large brick structure, called, "the Castle". Later Col. Fly sold these two plantations and moved to Madison County, Mississippi to educate his children. He bought a large plantation two or three miles from Sharon, but lived in the town until his youngest daughter graduated, when he moved to the plantation. In 1853 or 1854 he moved, with his family, and 100 slaves, to Texas, settling on Oyster Creek, Brazoria County. The land was very rich, but the climate was so malarial, that Col. Fly and 13 slaves died the first year. A year later, this plantation was sold, and Mrs. Fly moved to Big Hill in Gonzales County, Texas. At the close of the war 300 slaves were set free by Mrs. Fly and her children. She died a year later in 1866. The energy, intelligence and uprightness of the parents were impressed on the children in a remarkable degree. It is said that in three generations of the Flys there have been between 25 and 30 lawyers (two are Supreme Court Judges of Texas, and several others are judges) ministers and physicians. It may be of interest to descendants of the family to know how planters lived in by-gone days. One year, on Col. Fly's plantation 300 hogs were killed, which meant that 600 hams and 600 shoulders were consumed, for not a pounds of meat or a pound of anything else was ever sold. In addition 600 chickens were raised, and others were bought from the negroes. 45 cows were milked and all the milk and butter consumed. It took the milkers from before daylight to nearly noon to attend to the milk.The ladies of the household instructed the slaves and visited and cared for them in sickness. Each of the daughters, as well as their mother, had her own ladies maid. The garments of the negroes were cut out and sewed by colored sewing women, superintended by their mistress. Colonel Fly's family consisted of the following members -Fly, Colonel William, married in 1810, Mary Mitchell, daughter of Andrew Mitchell of Maury County, Tennessee. Issue - 1. Fly, Andrew Tate Mitchell, married 1st, Eliza Jones in 1830 married 2nd Ellen Rabb 2. Fly, Sarah Jane died at age 17 3. Fly, John Dalton m. 1st Martha Irvine Divine m. 2nd Julia Stokes m. 3rd Nora Compton 4. Fly, David Williamson (a Methodist Minister) m. Fannie Harper 5. Fly, Elijah Madden m. Nancy McKie 6. Fly, Mary Melinda m. Rev. Asbury Davidson, Methodist Minister 7. Fly, Sophie Louisiana m. Rev. W. H. Seat, Methodist Minister 8. Fly Benjamin Franklin m. 1st Sarah Robards; 2nd Mary R. Chambliss 9. Fly, Ella Josephine m. Thomas Catchings 10. Fly, George Washington Lafayette, b. 1835 in Yalobusha Co., Miss. d. 1/27/1904, in Victoria, Texas m. Callie Bell of Starkville, Miss. in 1857 This is the end of this particular version of "the Flye Records" as circulated in the family under Col. William and wife, Mary (Mitchell) Fly . I have tried to copy this material carefully. I will now go back and proof-read it. I hope you will print out this posting and keep a copy with other important documents. We are very fortunate to have this particular document for the reference of the WHOLE family. Sources & Credits: James Whitney Fly "Cousin Jim" P.S. When the author starts by telling us "Two Brothers came to the colonies, I wonder if he did not know that there had been the THIRD brother John, left behind when the father and the OTHER two brothers came from Pennsylvania to Virginia.Or is it possible that the story, originally was, "Our ancestor, William, and two brothers came to the colonies?The biography-writers for the Goodspeed Publishers in the 1880's described the THREE Fly brothers who immigrated to the colonies; and Goodspeed refers to the Pennsylvania brother, the Virginia brother and the Georgia brother on the generation of Rev. John Fly's grandfather, William Fly, b. ca. 1726/7 Sources "The Flye Family Forum" Author, Jim Whitney Fly Descendants of William Fly Generation No. 1 1. WILLIAM8 FLY (JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 11 Sep 1794 in Northhampton County, North Carolina, and died 01 Mar 1855 in West Columbia, Brazoria County, Texas. He married MARY MITCHELL 15 Nov 1810 in Maury County, Tennessee, daughter of ANDREW MITCHELL and MARY TATE. She was born 05 Aug 1793 in Buncombe County, North Carolina, and died 26 Apr 1866 in daughter Ella's Plantation, Gonzales County, Texas. Notes for WILLIAM FLY: At marriage->Maury1810->Williamson1818->Maury1822->Yalobusha1835->Madison->Texas1853 [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Col. Fly filled various offices in the militia of the county, and was a Magistrate in Maury Co for a number of years. Whenever he became a candidate, he invariably was elected. He was handsome and commanding looking man and, when dressed in his regimentals and mounted on his fiery white steed, he was most distinguished looking. After his marriage, they settled on a tract of land given by his father-in-law in Maury Co, TN. Later he moved to Williamson Co and then back Maury Co on Beach Creek. The next move was to Yalobusha Co, MS, where he had two plantations and was a very successful planter. The house here was a large brick structure called "The Castle". It was here that his wife's cousin, Governor Polk, later president, came to visit them. Later Col. Fly sold out and moved to Madison Co, MS to educate his children. He bought a large plantation several miles form Sharon and lived in town until his youngest child graduated, when he moved to the plantation. In 1853 he moved his family and 100 salves to Texas, settling on Oyster Creek, Brazoria Co (presently Angleton, possibly the grounds of Retrive State Prison). They traveled overland and were months on the way. The youngest daughter, Ella and her husband, Thomas Catchings, went with them, as did most, if not all, of their children and grandchildren. The land was very rich, but the climate was so malarial that Col Fly And thirteen slaves died. A year later this plantation was sold And Mrs. Fly moved to Big Hill, Gonzales Co, Texas. At the close of the Civil War, 300 slaves were set free. She died a year later in 1866. The energy, intelligence and uprightness of the parents were manifested by the children in a remarkable degree. It is said that in three generations of the Fly's there have been 25 to 30 lawyers, two of whom are Texas Supreme Court Judges, several other judges, ministers and physicians. Planters lived in the bygone days. One year on Col Fly's plantation 300 hogs were killed, which meant that 600 hams and 600 shoulders were consumed, for not a pound meat or anything else was ever sold. In addition, 600 chickens were raised and others were bought from the negroes. 45 cows were milked and all the milk and butter consumed. It took the milkers form before daylight until almost noon to attend the milking. The ladies of the household instructed the slaves and visited and cared for them in sickness. Each of the daughters, as well as their mother, had her own ladies maid. The garments of the negroes were out and sewed by colored sewing women, superintended by their mistress. When Col. Fly left the place on Turkey Creek, after making several moves, his father-in-law, Andrew Mitchell, was worried over his not settling down in one place. on hearing of this Col. Fly made a prophecy that in given number of years he would be able to buy out all the other relatives and their families. The prophecy was literally fulfilled as he proved to be a fine business man. (family recollection author unknown, some of this info is also contained in a letter by GWL Fly) Col. William Fly Born in Northampton County, N.C. September 11th 1794 , Died in Brazoria County, Texas, March 1st 1855 He was a man of great energy of character , His memory is embalmed in the heart of his wife and children fore whom he toiled with ceaseless care for more than forty years. He had many conflicts in life but his end was peace He was for many years a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church (From his tomb covering, Methodist Cemetery, West Columbia, Brazoria Co, Texas) Sold two plantations in Miss, and moved to Madison Co, Miss, bought plantation; to educate children. More About WILLIAM FLY: Burial: Methodist Church Cemetery, West Columbia, Texas Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/8 Military: Various offices of military Occupation: Magistrate - Maury co Residence: 1835, Tax List of Yalobusha Co, MS More About MARY MITCHELL: Burial: outside the fence of the Askey Cemetery on Highway 97 West Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/8 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 372/344 Fact 1: 26 Apr 1866, buried where J.C. Wilson was buried, west of Guadalupe River Marriage Notes for WILLIAM FLY and MARY MITCHELL: Fly, William Mitchell, Mary 10 Nov 1809 Tennessee Maury County More About WILLIAM FLY and MARY MITCHELL: Marriage: 15 Nov 1810, Maury County, Tennessee Children of WILLIAM FLY and MARY MITCHELL are: 2. i. ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9 FLY, b. 03 Aug 1811, Turkey Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 01 Oct 1855, Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi. ii. SARAH JANE FLY, b. 21 Jun 1814, Turkey Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 02 Apr 1829, Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee. More About SARAH JANE FLY: Fact 1: 21 Jun 1814, Died in infancy ?age 2, note from Louisiana Fly 3. iii. JOHN DALTON FLY, b. 16 Dec 1816, Turkey Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 03 Mar 1899, Canton, Madison County, Mississippi. 4. iv. DAVID WILLIAMSON FLY, b. 28 Jun 1819, Williamson County, Tennessee; d. 12 Jan 1892, Hondo, Medina County, Texas. 5. v. ELIJAH MADDEN FLY, b. 17 May 1824, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 24 Jul 1899, Rockport, Aransas County, Texas. 6. vi. MARY MALINDA FLY, b. 21 Jan 1826, Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 24 Nov 1905, Georgetown, Williamson County, Texas. 7. vii. SOPHIA LOUISIANA FLY, b. 15 Jan 1827, Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. Dec 1905, San Angelo, Tom Green County, Texas. 8. viii. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN FLY, b. 15 Jan 1827, Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 1895, Goliad, Goliad County, Texas. 9. ix. ELVIRA JOSEPHINE FLY, b. 07 Dec 1831, Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 12 Apr 1896, Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi. x. SAMUEL MADDEN FLY, b. 28 Mar 1834, Maury County, Tennessee; d. 1847, Yalobusha County, Mississippi. 10. xi. GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE FLY, b. 02 Jun 1835, Coffeeville, Yalobusha County, Mississippi; d. 27 Jan 1905, Victoria, Victoria County, Texas. xii. JULES LEONIDAS FLY, b. 1838, Yalobusha County, Mississippi; d. 1847, Madison County, Mississippi. Generation No. 2 2. ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 03 Aug 1811 in Turkey Creek, Maury County, Tennessee, and died 01 Oct 1855 in Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi. He married (1) ELIZA JONES 24 Mar 1831 in Maury County, Tennessee, daughter of WILLIS JONES and ELIZABETH GEE. She was born 28 Nov 1813 in Chatham County, North Carolina, and died 15 Dec 1846 in Madison County, Mississippi. He married (2) MARY ELLEN RABB 10 Mar 1847 in Madison County, Mississippi. She was born 24 Feb 1829 in Jefferson County, Mississippi, and died in Louisiana. More About ANDREW TATE MITCHELL FLY: Cause of Death: Yellow Fever Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 Fact 1: 01 Oct 1855, Died while attending a General Methodist Conference. Fact 2: moved family from TN to MS Occupation: Methodist Ordained Minister Notes for ELIZA JONES: Fly Eliza, Mrs. Wife of Rev. A.T.M. Fly / b. in Chatham Co.,N.C. / d. in the triumph of faith. More About ELIZA JONES: Burial: Sharon Cem, Madison County, Mississippi Marriage Notes for ANDREW FLY and ELIZA JONES: A. T. M. Fly Eliza Jones 3/21/1831 (3/24/1831) More About ANDREW FLY and ELIZA JONES: Marriage: 24 Mar 1831, Maury County, Tennessee Marriage date: Title: MAURY COUNTY TENNESSEE MARRIAGES Notes for MARY ELLEN RABB: Groom Name: ANDREW T. M. FLY Bride Name: MARY ELLEN RABBS Marriage Date: 10 March 1847 County: MADISON State: Mississippi More About MARY ELLEN RABB: Burial: Bunkie, Louisiana Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 Marriage Notes for ANDREW FLY and MARY RABB: Groom Name: ANDREW T. M. FLY Bride Name: MARY ELLEN RABBS Marriage Date: 10 March 1847 County: MADISON State: Mississippi More About ANDREW FLY and MARY RABB: Marriage: 10 Mar 1847, Madison County, Mississippi Children of ANDREW FLY and ELIZA JONES are: i. WILLIAM JONES10 FLY, b. 10 Feb 1832, Mississippi; d. 21 Sep 1837, Mississippi. 11. ii. MARY ELIZABETH FLY, b. 24 Dec 1833, Mississippi; d. 04 Aug 1863. 12. iii. JAMES MITCHELL FLY, b. 08 Nov 1835, Panola County, Mississippi; d. 15 Mar 1913, Centerville, Wilkinson County, Mississippi. 13. iv. MALINDA JANE FLY, b. 12 Aug 1837, Mississippi. v. MARTHA MARIE FLY, b. 12 Aug 1837, Mississippi; d. 06 Feb 1839, Mississippi. 14. vi. SARAH LANE FLY, b. 02 May 1840, Mississippi; d. 02 Jun 1920. vii. ANNIE ELIZA FLY, b. 20 Sep 1842, Mississippi; d. 06 Jul 1843. viii. JOSHUA ANDREW FLY, b. 05 Dec 1846, Mississippi; d. 09 Jul 1847. Children of ANDREW FLY and MARY RABB are: ix. JOHN NICHOLAS10 FLY, b. 12 Apr 1848, Mississippi; d. 1900, New Orleans, LA (possible). More About JOHN NICHOLAS FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 15. x. HENRY WILLIAMSON FLY, b. 11 Feb 1850, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi; d. 21 Nov 1941, San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. xi. GEORGE BROWN FLY, b. 26 Feb 1853. xii. ANDREW TATE MITCHELL FLY, b. 20 Nov 1855. xiii. ELIJAH FRANKLIN FLY. 3. JOHN DALTON9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 16 Dec 1816 in Turkey Creek, Maury County, Tennessee, and died 03 Mar 1899 in Canton, Madison County, Mississippi. He married (1) MARTHA IRVINE DIVINE 16 Aug 1842 in Madison Co, MS, daughter of KINSMAN DIVINE and ELIZABETH UNKNOWN. She was born 21 Apr 1825, and died 27 Oct 1846. He married (2) JULIA FLETCHER STOKES 05 Jul 1848 in Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi. He married (3) ELEANORA COMPTON 1866 in Gonzales Co, Texas. She was born 1829 in Mississippi. More About JOHN DALTON FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 466/476 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 369/341 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, Enum 70 HH 278/336 Probate: Gonzales Co #730/712 JD and Julia Marriage Notes for JOHN FLY and MARTHA DIVINE: Groom Name: JOHN D. FLY Bride Name: MARTHA J. DIVINE Marriage Date: 11 August 1842 County: MADISON State: Mississippi More About JOHN FLY and MARTHA DIVINE: Marriage: 16 Aug 1842, Madison Co, MS More About JULIA FLETCHER STOKES: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 466/476 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 369/341 Probate: Gonzales Co #730/712 JD and Julia More About JOHN FLY and JULIA STOKES: Marriage: 05 Jul 1848, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi More About ELEANORA COMPTON: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Pvt 3, Enum 70 HH 278/336 More About JOHN FLY and ELEANORA COMPTON: Marriage: 1866, Gonzales Co, Texas Child of JOHN FLY and MARTHA DIVINE is: 16. i. WILLIAM KINSMAN10 FLY, b. 01 Mar 1845, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi; d. 14 Oct 1881, Gonzales County, Texas. Children of JOHN FLY and JULIA STOKES are: 17. ii. JOHN N. MITCHELL10 FLY, b. 30 May 1849, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi; d. 12 Nov 1927, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas. iii. DAVID SAMUEL FLY, b. 1850, Sharon, Madison Co, MS; d. 05 Jul 1851, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi. iv. REUBEN MADDEN FLY, b. 1852, Mississippi; d. 1853, Mississippi. v. MARY ELIZA FLY, b. 12 Oct 1853, Mississippi; m. (1) ??? DENMAN; m. (2) ??? WILLIAMS. More About MARY ELIZA FLY: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 369/341 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 18. vi. MARTHA LOU FLY, b. 21 Apr 1855, Mississippi. vii. SARAH JANE FLY, b. 1858; d. Feb 1860, Gonzales County, Texas; m. PERRY. viii. FRANKLIN JONES FLY, b. Jan 1860, Gonzales County, Texas; d. Feb 1860, Gonzales County, Texas. Child of JOHN FLY and ELEANORA COMPTON is: ix. THOMAS COMPTON10 FLY, b. 19 Mar 1867, Gonzales Co, Texas (possible); d. 01 Dec 1884. More About THOMAS COMPTON FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Pvt 3, Enum 70 HH 278/336 4. DAVID WILLIAMSON9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 28 Jun 1819 in Williamson County, Tennessee, and died 12 Jan 1892 in Hondo, Medina County, Texas. He married FRANCES RACHEL HARPER 06 Feb 1849 in Mississippi. She was born 1831 in Tennessee. More About DAVID WILLIAMSON FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Attala County, Kosciusko, HH 1368/1388 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 370/342 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refurio County, Div 4, HH 317/317 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 219/219 Occupation: Methodist minister More About FRANCES RACHEL HARPER: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Attala County, Kosciusko, HH 1368/1388 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 370/342 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refurio County, Div 4, HH 317/317 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 219/219 More About DAVID FLY and FRANCES HARPER: Marriage: 06 Feb 1849, Mississippi Children of DAVID FLY and FRANCES HARPER are: i. WILLIAM WELDON10 FLY, b. Bet. 1850 - 1870, Gonzales Co, Texas (possible); d. TX (infancy). ii. GEORGE MITCHELL FLY, b. 1859, Gonzales Co, Texas. More About GEORGE MITCHELL FLY: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 370/342 19. iii. JOHN SIDNEY FLY, b. 03 Sep 1864, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 28 Mar 1944, Hondo, TX. 20. iv. DAVID HARPER FLY, b. 09 Dec 1875, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. Dec 1958, Hondo, TX. 5. ELIJAH MADDEN9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 17 May 1824 in Maury County, Tennessee, and died 24 Jul 1899 in Rockport, Aransas County, Texas. He married NANCY EDMONDSON MCKIE 05 Dec 1848 in Sharon, Madison Co, Mississippi. She was born 1829 in Tennessee. More About ELIJAH MADDEN FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 227/229 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 246/246 More About NANCY EDMONDSON MCKIE: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 227/229 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 246/246 More About ELIJAH FLY and NANCY MCKIE: Marriage: 05 Dec 1848, Sharon, Madison Co, Mississippi Children of ELIJAH FLY and NANCY MCKIE are: i. MICHAEL JEFFERSON MCKIE10 FLY, b. 05 Apr 1850, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi; d. Sep 1850, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi. More About MICHAEL JEFFERSON MCKIE FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 227/229 21. ii. WILLIAM SEAT FLY, b. 29 Oct 1851, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi; d. 01 Jun 1934, San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. 22. iii. MARGARET EUGENIA FLY, b. 12 Nov 1853, Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi; d. 20 Sep 1920. 23. iv. MARY ADA FLY, b. 17 Sep 1855, Yalobusha County, Mississippi. 24. v. MARTHA LOUISA FLY, b. 24 Aug 1857, Texas. 25. vi. EDWIN MADDEN FLY, b. 17 Jul 1859, Texas; d. 1903, Eagle Pass - 1884. 6. MARY MALINDA9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 21 Jan 1826 in Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee, and died 24 Nov 1905 in Georgetown, Williamson County, Texas. She married ASBURY DAVIDSON, REV 11 Jul 1844 in Madison Co, MS. He was born 1822 in Tennessee. Notes for MARY MALINDA FLY: Cem: Davidson, Mary Malinda Division G-099 2405 Davidson, Mary Malinda Jan 26 1826 Nov 24 1905 More About MARY MALINDA FLY: Burial: Georgetown I.O.O.F. Cem, Williamson County, Texas Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 10/11 More About ASBURY DAVIDSON, REV: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 10/11 Occupation: Methodist minister More About ASBURY DAVIDSON and MARY FLY: Marriage: 11 Jul 1844, Madison Co, MS Children of MARY FLY and ASBURY DAVIDSON are: i. ELIZA10 DAVIDSON. 26. ii. WILLIAM LEWIS DAVIDSON, b. 05 Nov 1845, Mississippi; d. 25 Jan 1921. iii. MARY M. DAVIDSON, b. 1847, Mississippi. More About MARY M. DAVIDSON: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 10/11 iv. ELLA JANE DAVIDSON, b. 05 Nov 1849, Mississippi; d. 05 Apr 1915; m. NATHANIEL MILBURN NEWTON, 02 Dec 1868. More About ELLA JANE DAVIDSON: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 10/11 More About NATHANIEL NEWTON and ELLA DAVIDSON: Marriage: 02 Dec 1868 27. v. SUSAN SOPHIA DAVIDSON, b. 12 Aug 1852; d. 06 Sep 1888. vi. NANNY FRANCES DAVIDSON, b. 1857. 7. SOPHIA LOUISIANA9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 15 Jan 1827 in Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee, and died Dec 1905 in San Angelo, Tom Green County, Texas. She married WILLIAM HENRY SEAT, REV 15 Dec 1847 in Sharon, Madison Co, MS. He was born 15 Dec 1824 in Tennessee, and died 28 Jan 1885. More About SOPHIA LOUISIANA FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/9 More About WILLIAM HENRY SEAT, REV: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/9 More About WILLIAM SEAT and SOPHIA FLY: Marriage: 15 Dec 1847, Sharon, Madison Co, MS Children of SOPHIA FLY and WILLIAM SEAT are: i. MARY T.10 SEAT, b. Mississippi. More About MARY T. SEAT: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/9 ii. ANDREW TATE MITCHELL SEAT. 28. iii. IDA BASKERVILLE SEAT. 8. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 15 Jan 1827 in Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee, and died 1895 in Goliad, Goliad County, Texas. He married (1) MARY RUTLEDGE CHAMBLISS. He married (2) ??? UNKNOWN. He married (3) SARAH BARBARA ROBARDS 28 Oct 1847 in Mississippi. She was born 1832 in Mississippi. Notes for BENJAMIN FRANKLIN FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Fly, Major B. F., no dates, age: 67, bur: 16-B-V 2 FLY MAJOR B. F. 67 16 B V 2 Oak Hill Cemetery, Goliad, Goliad Co. TX "College Hill", Goliad Fly, B.F., Asks Parker to speak, V1 #3 Gonz.Inq 18 Jun 1853 P2 Fly, B.F., Public Meeting, V1 #3 Gonz.Inq 18 Jun 1853 P2 More About BENJAMIN FRANKLIN FLY: Burial: Oak Hill Cemetery, Goliad, Goliad Co. TX 16-B-V 2 Census 1850: 1850, Louisiana, Caldwell Parish, Western Dist, HH 1/1 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Lavaca County, Lavaca, HH 111/111 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 More About MARY RUTLEDGE CHAMBLISS: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Lavaca County, Lavaca, HH 111/111 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 More About SARAH BARBARA ROBARDS: Census 1850: 1850, Louisiana, Caldwell Parish, Western Dist, HH 1/1 More About BENJAMIN FLY and SARAH ROBARDS: Marriage: 28 Oct 1847, Mississippi Children of BENJAMIN FLY and MARY CHAMBLISS are: 29. i. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN10 FLY, JR, b. 1860, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 1933, Texarkana, AR (Possible). ii. IDA FLY, b. 1862, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 1864, Gonzales Co, Texas. 30. iii. KALULLA L. FLY, b. 1864, Texas; d. 1939. iv. GEORGE ROBARDS FLY, b. 1866, Texas; d. 1889, Hondo, TX. More About GEORGE ROBARDS FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 v. SAMUEL FLY, b. 1868, Texas. More About SAMUEL FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 vi. JULES FLY, b. 1872, Texas. More About JULES FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 Child of BENJAMIN FLY and ??? UNKNOWN is: 31. vii. NATHANIEL DALTON10 FLY, b. 1857, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 1913. Children of BENJAMIN FLY and SARAH ROBARDS are: viii. WILLIAM B.10 FLY, b. 1848, Mississippi; d. 1883, Tombstone, AZ (Possible). More About WILLIAM B. FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Louisiana, Caldwell Parish, Western Dist, HH 1/1 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Lavaca County, Lavaca, HH 111/111 ix. BENJAMIN BALLARD FLY, b. 1850, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 1856, Gonzales Co, Texas. x. LAURA FLY, b. 1852, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 1855, Gonzales Co, Texas. xi. SARAH FLY, b. 1854, Gonzales Co, Texas; d. 1869. More About SARAH FLY: Fact 1: ? refrence a Sallie A. Fly on Family Tree Mkr vol 2 record # 2710 9. ELVIRA JOSEPHINE9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 07 Dec 1831 in Beach Creek, Maury County, Tennessee, and died 12 Apr 1896 in Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi. She married THOMAS JEFFERSON CATCHINGS 28 Oct 1854 in Madison County, Mississippi, son of BENJAMIN CATCHINGS and LETITIA HIGGENBOTHAM. He was born 1828 in Mississippi. More About ELVIRA JOSEPHINE FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/8 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, HH 277/258 More About THOMAS JEFFERSON CATCHINGS: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Copiah County, HH 543/543 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, HH 277/258 More About THOMAS CATCHINGS and ELVIRA FLY: Marriage: 28 Oct 1854, Madison County, Mississippi Children of ELVIRA FLY and THOMAS CATCHINGS are: i. SALLY10 CATCHINGS, b. 1854, Mississippi. More About SALLY CATCHINGS: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, HH 277/258 32. ii. MARY EMMA CATCHINGS, b. 1855, Texas. 33. iii. SILAS FLY CATCHINGS, b. 1856. 34. iv. WILLIAM BENJAMIN CATCHINGS, b. 1858, Texas. v. HARRIETT MALINDA CATCHINGS, b. 1860, Texas; d. 25 Mar 1899; m. ROBERT STANTON THERRELL. More About HARRIETT MALINDA CATCHINGS: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, HH 277/258 vi. LOUELLA CATCHINGS, b. 1865; m. CHARLES P. SEARLES. 35. vii. SARAH FRANCES CATCHINGS, b. 1867; d. 1902. 10. GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE9 FLY (WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 02 Jun 1835 in Coffeeville, Yalobusha County, Mississippi, and died 27 Jan 1905 in Victoria, Victoria County, Texas. He married MARY CAROLINE BELL 16 Apr 1857 in Starkville, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi, daughter of JAMES BELL and MARY GLENN. She was born 12 Dec 1835 in Troup Co, Georgia, and died 15 Jun 1929 in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. Notes for GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] [The New Handbook of Texas Online] FLY, GEORGE WASHINGTON LAFAYETTE (1835-1905). George Washington Lafayette Fly, Confederate Army officer and Texas legislator, the youngest of ten children of William and Mary (Mitchell) Fly, was born on June 2, 1835, in Yalobusha County, Mississippi; in 1846 the family moved to Sharon, Madison County. Fly enrolled at the University of Mississippi in 1851 but after one term went to Madison College, where he graduated in 1853. He then traveled to Texas to join his parents, who had settled on Oyster Creek in Brazoria County earlier that year. At the death of his father in1855 he moved with his mother to Big Hill Prairie in Gonzales County. There he became a planter. Fly was a staunch supporter of states' rights and a regionally noted orator. He favored the Breckinridge-Lane ticket in 1860. During the Civil Warqv G. W., as he was called, was a seasoned commander in the Second Texas Infantry and commandant of Galveston. In 1861 he gathered a small group of volunteers in Gonzales County who elected him their captain. These men were mustered into Confederate ervice as Company I, Second Texas Infantry, known as the Gonzales Invincibles, and later joined the Wilson Rifles to form a complete infantry company. Though designated the second, this unit was really the first infantry regiment organized in the state. Its colonel was John Creed Moore. With his regiment Fly saw action in the battles of Shiloh in April 1862 and Iuka in September; he was reported killed at Corinth in October. His family mourned at least three weeks before learning that he had been captured, exchanged, and returned to his command. He was promoted to major before the siege of Vicksburg, where his regiment served. He was again captured upon the surrender of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863, and again paroled and exchanged. He was ordered briefly to Demopolis, Alabama, and Enterprise, Mississippi, but in November was told to return to Texas to take command of and reorganize the regiment. With the forces he raised, Fly joined the expeditionary forces under Col. John S. Ford. In August 1864 he was made commandant of the post at Galveston, which he defended until the war's end. At that time he returned to his family in Gonzales County. From 1866 to 1870 Fly ran an independent boarding school named Stonewall Institute (after Confederate general Thomas J."Stonewall" Jackson), about six miles from Gonzales at Big Hill. He also took up the practice of law and was admitted to the Texas bar at Gonzales in February 1871. From 1873 to 1875 he served as president of Gonzales College. He was elected to the Seventeenth Texas Legislature in 1880 but refused to run for reelection despite his popularity. About 1885 he moved with his family to Victoria, where he continued his law practice and was a charter member of the William R. Scurry Camp, United Confederate Veterans. He was also a promoter of the Pan-American Railway Company. Fly long served as a lay member of the West Texas Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. His original law partnership with lieutenant governor Asbury Bascom Davidson and civil appeals judge William Lewis Davidson, known as Fly, Davidson, and Davidson, dissolved in 1889, and Fly formed a new partnership with his son-in-law, J. L. Hill. On April 4, 1857, he married Mary Caroline Bell of Madison County, Mississippi; the couple had four sons and one daughter. Fly died at his law office in Victoria on January 27, 1905, and was buried in the Masonic Cemetery at Victoria. A son, Ben W. Fly, was county judge of Victoria County and city attorney of Victoria; another son, William M. Fly of Gonzales, was a state legislator. BIBLIOGRAPHY: H. L. Bentley and Thomas Pilgrim, Texas Legal Directory for 1876-77 (Austin: Democratic Statesman Office, 1877). Joseph E. Chance, The Second Texas Infantry: From Shiloh to Vicksburg (Austin: Eakin Press, 1984). Roy Grimes, ed., 300 Years in Victoria County (Victoria, Texas: Victoria Advocate, 1968; rpt., Austin: Nortex, 1985). Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Journal of the West Texas Conference, 1905. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin. The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Theora H. Whitaker, comp., Victoria (Victoria, Texas: Victoria Advocate, 1941). Dudley Goodall Wooten, ed., A Comprehensive History of Texas (2 vols., Dallas: Scarff, 1898; rpt., Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1986). Betty D. Fly and Craig H. Roell The Handbook of Texas Online is a joint project of The General Libraries at the University of Texas at Austin and the Texas State Historical Association.© The Texas State Historical Association, 1997,1998,1999. Last Updated: February 15, 1999. Comments to: comments@www.tsha.utexas.edu Evergreen Cemetery is located on the corner of Vine St. and Red River St, Victoria, Texas More About GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE FLY: Burial: Evergreen Cem, Section 6, Victoria County, Texas Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 8/8 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 372/344 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Enum 72 HH 272/272 Census 1900: 1900, Texas, Victoria County, Victoria, Enum 87 HH 271/272 Probate: Gonzales Co #788 Notes for MARY CAROLINE BELL: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Story in "Victorian Childhood" by Milton Fly Hill, Sr. (grandson) relates that Callie Bell was chased by indians while out on horse back when they lived at Big Hill, Gonzales Co. More About MARY CAROLINE BELL: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 372/344 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Enum 72 HH 272/272 Census 1900: 1900, Texas, Victoria County, Victoria, Enum 87 HH 271/272 Census 1910: 1910, Texas, Bexar County, San Antonio, Enum 21 HH 136/150 Census 1920: 1920, Texas, Bexar County, 4th Ward, Enum 14 HH 48/125 More About GEORGE FLY and MARY BELL: Marriage: 16 Apr 1857, Starkville, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi Unknown-Ending: Dr. L.T.C. Thorton - Official Children of GEORGE FLY and MARY BELL are: 36. i. WILLIAM MADDEN10 FLY, b. 26 Dec 1857, Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 1944, Gonzales, Gonzales Co, Texas. ii. JAMES MILTON FLY, b. 12 Feb 1860, Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 21 Oct 1887, Gonzales, Gonzales Co, Texas; m. (1) E. J. MATTHEWS, 25 Oct 1877, Gonzales Co, Texas; m. (2) MOLLY BRANCH, 06 Jan 1886, Gonzales, Texas. Notes for JAMES MILTON FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Gonzales Inquirer (GI) article vol 26, #12, 24 Aug 1878, pg3 Index - Fly, Milton - Won prize target shooting (if James - age 18) Family letters mention troubling aspects to James life. Letter from Joe L Hill (in Gonzales) to his wife Georgie Fly Hill [JM's sister] (in Caldwell) dated Oct 3, 1884 defences trial in Ft. Davis against Buddie Milton being dismissed & a visit by GWL Fly's [JM's father] brothers Madden and Milton to Ft. Davis to help. Article in GI index - Fly Milton - acquitted of murder at Ft. Davis, vol 31, #9, 1 Sep 1883. Also article in GI index - Fly, JM - Marshal at jail Vol 36, #18, 22 Oct 1887 (the day after his death). From other family letters JM died in a gun fight with or at the hands of a one Booth(e)?. Letter (Nov 7 1887) from Ben W Fly to Mary Georgie Fly Hill [JM's bro & sister] references death of brother Milton at the hands of another & his desire for revenge. More specifically, Ben Fly states "that if not for the loving, restraining hands of my dear sister and mother that I too would be a corpse next to my brother." The letter also references murder charges against a Boothe. Letter from Joe L Hill to Georgie Fly Hill (Jan 4, 1888) references him going to a trial against Booth in Gonzales. A young deputy sheriff enters the grocery goods store in downtown Gonzales. With a set jaw he cuts through the late afternoon light streaming in the windows. Moving to the back of the store, he finds the owner and confronts him over a personal issue. Voices are raised, tempers flair and as guns are drawn, a scuffle ensues. Shots ring out into the fall air. And, in the company of the proprietor and his two sons, the deputy twists and falls dying to the floor. Sawdust settles in the fading light as the deputy grimaces and gasps a final time. Such were most likely the last moments in the life of twenty-seven year old James Milton Fly, Deputy Marshal of Gonzales, Texas. October 21, 1887 What led to this? Who was at fault? What impact rippled out from that fateful day? Many of these questions may never be fully answered, but we can review documents, facts and judge what has been said and what has been left unsaid. First an over view of JM Fly's presence as a peace officer is in order. Apparently J.M. Fly was not killed "in the line of duty", though it is documented that he was a peace officer. No mention of his death by article or obituary appears in the local newspaper. A local law enforcement officer being shot and killed would have been ripe for front-page news at any time in history. The index of the Gonzales Inquirer (GI) is devoid of any such event. There was not even an obituary. It should be noted that J M Fly was the subject of an article published in the GI Saturday, October 22, 1887,[Attachment 1] the day after his death. The article covered a jailbreak attempt that was thwarted by Marshal Fly on Monday of that same week. JM Fly was killed the Friday after this event occurred. His presence in the community as an officer of the law is also established by his documented pledge as a deputy under Sheriff W.E. Jones, dated 18 May 1887 [A-2]. The article in the GI refers to him as Marshal JM Fly. In a letter by his own hand written five days before his death JM Fly asks for his brother-in-law's, Joe L. Hill, assistance in securing a US Marshal post for Sheriff W.E. Jones [A-3]. Jones, he writes, has promised to appoint JM sheriff when Jones vacates the office. Obviously J.M. Fly has career aspirations in law enforcement. Now, who was James Milton Fly in the community of Gonzales, Texas? Born in the Big Hill community, Gonzales Co. on February 12, 1860 to George Washington Lafayette Fly and Mary Callie Bell, James was an infant during the most tumultuous period of our nations history. In fact, he was in the midst of the conflict more than most children his age. After the fall of Vicksburg, July 4, 1863, James' father was held in a parole camp in Demopolis, Alabama. Callie, upon learning of his condition and thankful that the earlier report of his death was false, gathered her three children, William Madden age 5, James 3, and Mary Georgie 1, and took off east to recover her husband. After a rather harrowing adventure the family returned, intact, to Gonzales. GWL Fly returned to Gonzales and started a boarding school, served as president of Gonzales College and took up the practice of law [A-4]. William and Ben, JM's brothers, as well as his brother-in-law Joe L. Hill (married to Mary Georgie) were also attorneys. JM's only other sibling Frank Merriman served as deputy, sheriff, county clerk, justice of the peace and banker during his lifetime in Gonzales. James Milton married Mollie Branch in 1885. In a letter [A-5] written shortly after JM's death, his brother Ben refers to a neighbors report that the neighbor "never knew a happier couple". Ben also states James Milton "deserved her [Mollie's] love for he was a kind, indulgent husband". Molly Branch's grandfather had been a mayor of Gonzales before and after the Civil War. The storeowner that apparently shot James Milton Fly was George Jefferson Boothe, owner of a goods store located on the southwest corner of St. Joseph and St. Louis Streets in Gonzales. Two other members of the Boothe family were present in the store at the time of JM's death. Shown in the bonds posted under the charge of murder were a George Boothe, assumed to be George Jefferson, Jr., age 27 and son of GJ Boothe and a one W. M. Boothe. The identity this person is more difficult as GJ Boothe had a son William Harvey, age 21, but the William H. does not match with the bond that reads W. M. Boothe. All three posted bonds on the charge of murder on January 12th 1888 [A-6,7,8]. The later two Boothes were seemingly acquitted of any charges related to the incident. G.J. Boothe was apparently found guilty on the charge of murder. Though no direct court records seem to exist pertaining to the outcome of this trial (a fire at the court house destroyed "some" documents), District Court Minutes dated Sat. January 26 1889, case # 2717 (this number matches the original Indictment number on the January 12th, 1888 bond), State of Texas vs. G.J. Boothe show that defendants motion for a new trial is granted [A-9]. This means that the previous trials outcome did not suit Mr. Boothe. A motion for a change of venue is granted on January 28, 1889 moving the trial to Lockhart, Caldwell County, Texas [A-10]. A $5,000 bond is pledged by G.N. Dilworth, J.P. Raudle and J.D. Houston for that court appearance [A-11]. This second trial ends in a mistrial in April 1890 as reported by the Luling Signal on April 10, 1890. Who were the Boothes in the community of Gonzales, Texas? George Jefferson Boothe, son of Joseph and Nancy K. Whitfield Boothe was born October 10, 1824. He married Mary Ann Jones in Arkansas March 8, 1857. He died on February 6, 1892 and was buried in the City Cemetery. GJ Boothe was born in North Carolina. Married Mary Ann Jones at St. Francis, Arkansas March 8, 1857. The Boothe's had ten children. Two of these children married Houstons, a prominent ranching family in Gonzales. The Boothes were active socially as judged by the frequent references in the Gonzales Inquirer. It should be noted here that the use of deadly force by the Boothe family to settle arguments was not unique to this one situation. On August 21, 1899, Thomas H. Boothe, son of GJ Boothe, was killed in a shoot out with his wife's uncle, J. D. Houston and J. D.'s son George Houston. This brief, but decisive battle occurred at 6:00 PM on the streets of Gonzales in front of the Berlinger Building. The GI article of Tuesday, August 22, 1899 states, "The INQUIRER understands the difficulty was the outcome of a difference in the settlement of the R. A. Houston estate of which Mr. J. D. Houston was executor". Apparently the settlement was not to Mr. Boothe's satisfaction. J. D. and his son were seriously wounded, but lived. Note that J. D. Houston was one of the men that pledged against GJ Boothe's bond just nine years before. It must be understood that this time frame following the Civil War was violent. Though Texians stopped fighting with the Union Forces, they continued to fight with each other. And unfortunately they were now (as a result of the War) better trained and possibly more inclined. The Taylor-Sutton Feud rampaged in and around Gonzales for over 30 years during the late 1800's. This famous ongoing "circumstance" makes the Hatfield-McCoy Feud look like a family spate. As many as 200 to 2,000 men were armed and after each other during the course of these difficulties. Many men were taken from their homes, at times by "officers-of-the-law", and shot and/or hung within minutes. This was often done with much celebration and joy at having successfully "bagged" one of the enemy. No official death toll has even been estimated from this conflict. There is at least one documented "battle", involving as many as 100 men that ended with a formal, signed peace treaty. But, as the author of "I'll Die Before I'll Run", C. L. Sonnichsen states, "One of the laws of feuding seems to be the principle that a truce holds only long enough for the signers to take cover". So, the fact that people would pull guns out to settle arguments cannot be considered very shocking, even in polite society (at least in Texas) (even today?) Much of the evidence that does exist in this case does not shine favorably on James Milton Fly. A finding of "Not Guilty" was never issued for G.J. Boothe. He ultimately "walked away" or as the term back then used "was that he came clear" from this incident a free man. A wrongful death suit filed by James Milton's widow against G.J. Boothe, et al for $75,000 was dismissed on July 11, 1890 [A-12, 13, 14]. The defendants pleading filed in response to Mollie Fly's suit is less than complementary towards J.M. Fly. The pleading states that JM "was quarrelsome and desperate when drinking and carried his life in his hand and was liable at any and all times to become engaged in a deadly fight from slight provocation either real or imaginary." And that JM Fly had perpetrated an unprovoked attack on GJ Boothe while in drunken rage [A-15]. Understand that JM Fly never got to tell his side of this story. A bit of negative history in JM's background is that he was himself charged with murder and "came clear" in Ft Davis, Texas in 1884. This is documented in the GI article Volume 31, #9, 1 September 1883 and correspondence from Mary Georgie Fly Hill to her husband [A-16]. A disturbing aspect of this case is that aside from a couple of letters discussing the family loss of JM, no one in the family ever discussed or even would discuss how J. M. Fly died or what happened. In a 1952 letter [A-17] from JM's sister-in-law, Stella Fly (wife of Frank Merriman Fly) to JM's nephew and namesake, Milton Fly Hill, Sr., Stella writes that Frank would never discuss how his brother died, only that "he was my Buddie". This is a double-entendre that refers to JM's nickname of "Buddie Milton" and that he was Franks "compadre". Frank was only ten when he lost his older brother. This "veil of silence" relating to his death implies (to the author) that something was not "straight" about JM's side of the story. Surely, if James Milton had died under a "noble" circumstance this too would have been added to the family legacy, much of which is recorded. The effects that rippled out from this tragic moment? One family loses a much loved son, brother, husband and friend. Another is dogged by lawsuits and criminal charges, that are only cleared at short time before his death. A sad note to any family history. Maybe, a lesson that settling differences at the point of a gun generally has long lasting consequences or that fair treatment is the best way to avoid conflicts in the first place. Again, much about this situation will never be known or understood, except for the pain it left behind. JM's brother, Ben sums up the outcome of this best as he laments the bitterness of his loss in a letter to his sister, Mary Georgie. "Many a time in the last two weeks have I almost wished that I had no father, mother, and sister to bewail my misdeeds. No one to restrain me with loving hands. If such had been the case, I would today be a corpse with my brother or his death would have been avenged trice fold. But, they have not yet reached the City of Refuge and perhaps justice will still over take them." A sad note on which to close a sad story. Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, Jas. Milton, son of G.W.L. & M.C. Fly More About JAMES MILTON FLY: Burial: Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 372/344 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Enum 72 HH 272/272 Fact 1: 21 Feb 1887, May have died in a gun fight or shot to death by ? Booth, trial in Gonzales Note: Acquitted of murder in Ft Davis 10/4/1884 Marriage Notes for JAMES FLY and E. MATTHEWS: Fly, J.M. and E.J. Matthews - 10/25/1877 - #2327 More About JAMES FLY and E. MATTHEWS: Marriage: 25 Oct 1877, Gonzales Co, Texas Marriage Notes for JAMES FLY and MOLLY BRANCH: Fly, J.M. and Mollie M. Branch - 01/06/1886 - #3693 More About JAMES FLY and MOLLY BRANCH: Marriage: 06 Jan 1886, Gonzales, Texas 37. iii. MARY GEORGIE FLY, b. 20 Jan 1862, Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 25 Jan 1937, San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas. 38. iv. FRANK MERRIMAN FLY, b. 12 Jun 1867, Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 14 Jul 1962, Gonzales, Gonzales Co, Texas. 39. v. BENJAMIN WATT FLY, b. 22 Aug 1869, Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 01 Mar 1929, Victoria, Victoria Co, Texas. Generation No. 3 11. MARY ELIZABETH10 FLY (ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 24 Dec 1833 in Mississippi, and died 04 Aug 1863. She married GEORGE BROWN PETTY 04 Feb 1852. More About MARY ELIZABETH FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 More About GEORGE PETTY and MARY FLY: Marriage: 04 Feb 1852 Children of MARY FLY and GEORGE PETTY are: i. JAMES11 PETTY. ii. WILLIAM H. PETTY. iii. GEORGE PETTY. 12. JAMES MITCHELL10 FLY (ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 08 Nov 1835 in Panola County, Mississippi, and died 15 Mar 1913 in Centerville, Wilkinson County, Mississippi. He married MARY ELIZABETH ANTHONY 19 Nov 1857 in Adams County, Mississippi. She was born 1842 in Mississippi. More About JAMES MITCHELL FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Karnes County, Helena, HH 2/2 More About MARY ELIZABETH ANTHONY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Karnes County, Helena, HH 2/2 More About JAMES FLY and MARY ANTHONY: Marriage: 19 Nov 1857, Adams County, Mississippi Children of JAMES FLY and MARY ANTHONY are: i. ELLA11 FLY, b. 14 Sep 1858, Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi; d. Mar 1863, Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi. More About ELLA FLY: Fact 1: Single ii. IDA FLY, b. 16 Oct 1860; d. 30 Dec 1899; m. JAMES ROGER KIRKPATRICK, 26 Dec 1883, Natchez, Adams Co, MS; b. 27 Nov 1857; d. Jun 1923. More About IDA FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Karnes County, Helena, HH 2/2 More About JAMES KIRKPATRICK and IDA FLY: Marriage: 26 Dec 1883, Natchez, Adams Co, MS iii. NORA FLY, b. 26 Jan 1867; d. 12 May 1942; m. (1) WALTER CARLETON JELKS, 31 Oct 1888, Natchez, Adams Co, MS; b. 21 Dec 1854; d. 09 Jan 1902; m. (2) GLANCY QUITMAN JONES, 25 Oct 1906. More About NORA FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Karnes County, Helena, HH 2/2 More About WALTER JELKS and NORA FLY: Marriage: 31 Oct 1888, Natchez, Adams Co, MS More About GLANCY JONES and NORA FLY: Marriage: 25 Oct 1906 iv. ANTHONY FLY, b. 24 Jun 1869, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 04 Feb 1940, Summit, Pike County, Mississippi; m. MARY AMA JELKS, 02 Feb 1891, Quamoclit, Wilkson Co, MS. More About ANTHONY FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Karnes County, Helena, HH 2/2 More About ANTHONY FLY and MARY JELKS: Marriage: 02 Feb 1891, Quamoclit, Wilkson Co, MS v. SUSAN FLY, b. 12 Feb 1872, Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi; d. 18 Mar 1872, Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi. vi. JAMES MITCHELL FLY, JR, b. 09 Sep 1873, Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi; d. 05 Jul 1951; m. PATTI WHITE SIMMS, 21 Nov 1900. More About JAMES FLY and PATTI SIMMS: Marriage: 21 Nov 1900 13. MALINDA JANE10 FLY (ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 12 Aug 1837 in Mississippi. She married SYLVANUS PETTY 26 Oct 1852. More About MALINDA JANE FLY: Name 2: Martha Marie Fly Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 More About SYLVANUS PETTY and MALINDA FLY: Marriage: 26 Oct 1852 Children of MALINDA FLY and SYLVANUS PETTY are: i. LOU11 PETTY. ii. ANNIE PETTY. iii. HATTIE PETTY. iv. SALLIE PETTY. v. MITCHELL PETTY. vi. MARSHALL PETTY. vii. HENRY PETTY. viii. VAN PETTY. ix. FREDONIA PETTY. 14. SARAH LANE10 FLY (ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 02 May 1840 in Mississippi, and died 02 Jun 1920. She married SANFORD PERRY 14 Mar 1865. More About SARAH LANE FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 More About SANFORD PERRY and SARAH FLY: Marriage: 14 Mar 1865 Child of SARAH FLY and SANFORD PERRY is: i. MARY ALICE11 PERRY, b. 03 Mar 1868; m. PAUL M. BROWN, REV, 26 Aug 1891. More About PAUL BROWN and MARY PERRY: Marriage: 26 Aug 1891 15. HENRY WILLIAMSON10 FLY (ANDREW TATE MITCHELL9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 11 Feb 1850 in Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi, and died 21 Nov 1941 in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. He married MARY ALICE MOUNT 20 Aug 1872 in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. More About HENRY WILLIAMSON FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 9/10 More About HENRY FLY and MARY MOUNT: Marriage: 20 Aug 1872, San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas Children of HENRY FLY and MARY MOUNT are: i. FANNIE EUDORA11 FLY, b. 24 Nov 1873, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 04 Nov 1895. ii. WILLIAM BASCOMB FLY, b. 28 Feb 1875, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 01 Aug 1904, Memphis, Shelby Co, TN; m. MARGARET SCHAEFFER, 15 Jan 1901, Memphis, Shelby Co, TN. More About WILLIAM FLY and MARGARET SCHAEFFER: Marriage: 15 Jan 1901, Memphis, Shelby Co, TN iii. HENRY MILTON FLY, b. 17 Jan 1879, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 1906, Away from home, incognito ?. iv. MARY ELOISE FLY, b. 18 Jan 1881, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 31 Mar 1954. v. EUGENE MITCHELL FLY, b. 03 Sep 1882, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 10 Feb 1963, MS; m. NYSHIE JENKINS, 23 Nov 1909. More About EUGENE FLY and NYSHIE JENKINS: Marriage: 23 Nov 1909 vi. JAMES DOUGLAS FLY, b. 25 Nov 1887, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 24 Nov 1960, McComb, Pike Co, MS; m. BESSIE RIEGGER, 21 Apr 1909. More About JAMES DOUGLAS FLY: Fact 1: Buried - Hollywood Cem More About JAMES FLY and BESSIE RIEGGER: Marriage: 21 Apr 1909 vii. DELLA FLY, b. 16 Sep 1888, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 16 Nov 1889, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA. viii. ROBERT CURTIS FLY, b. 08 Nov 1889, New Iberia, Iberia Parish, LA; d. 06 Feb 1920; m. MARY RIDDLE. ix. MABEL ALICE FLY, b. 29 Nov 1895, Centerville, Wilkinson Co, MS; d. 1996, San Antonio, Bexar Co, TX. Notes for MABEL ALICE FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Very charming lady. Lived by her self in a apartment until 98, when she moved into an assisted living. Told me that the President (Bill Clinton) had sent her a letter for her 100th BD. I asked her if she had framed it, to which she said "I threw it away, it's none of his business to know how old I am!" KF Hill 16. WILLIAM KINSMAN10 FLY (JOHN DALTON9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 01 Mar 1845 in Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi, and died 14 Oct 1881 in Gonzales County, Texas. He married SALLIE GERTRUDE HASTINGS 28 Jan 1875 in Nockenut, Texas. She was born 25 Jan 1858 in Nockenut P.O., Guadalupe (now Wilson Co.), Texas, and died 22 Jul 1909. Notes for WILLIAM KINSMAN FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, W.K. More About WILLIAM KINSMAN FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 466/476 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 369/341 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Wilson County, Enum 150 HH 125/133 Residence: Wilson Co, Tx June, 1880 More About SALLIE GERTRUDE HASTINGS: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Wilson County, Enum 150 HH 125/133 More About WILLIAM FLY and SALLIE HASTINGS: Marriage: 28 Jan 1875, Nockenut, Texas Children of WILLIAM FLY and SALLIE HASTINGS are: i. MARTHA E.11 FLY, b. 18 Oct 1876, Texas; d. 10 Mar 1893, Texas. More About MARTHA E. FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Wilson County, Enum 150 HH 125/133 ii. JOSEPH DALTON FLY, b. 24 Feb 1878, Texas; d. 11 Mar 1960, Bandera, Texas; m. STELLA FOWLER, 28 Nov 1900; b. 1880; d. 17 May 1919. More About JOSEPH DALTON FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Wilson County, Enum 150 HH 125/133 More About JOSEPH FLY and STELLA FOWLER: Marriage: 28 Nov 1900 iii. PATRICIA MAMIE NORA FLY, b. 17 Jul 1880, Texas; d. 07 May 1888. 17. JOHN N. MITCHELL10 FLY (JOHN DALTON9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 30 May 1849 in Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi, and died 12 Nov 1927 in Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas. He married (1) ELLA JOHN MATTHEWS 15 Oct 1877 in Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas, daughter of ??? MATTHEWS and SARAH ???. She was born 1861 in Alabama, and died 23 Mar 1886. He married (2) ANGERONIA WILLIE BROWN 16 Dec 1891 in Canoochee, Emanuel County, Georgia. She was born 08 Sep 1860 in Canoochie, Georgia, and died 22 Feb 1946 in Victoria, Texas. Notes for JOHN N. MITCHELL FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Doctor Fly customarily read a chapter from the Bible to all the members of the family as they assembled together just prior to bedtime. He operated his own drug store which later expanded into mercantile lines as well. Educated in private school in Gonzales, Texas, then at Stonewall Institute, he is a Master Mason, Leesville Lodge #334 and a Royal Arch Mason of the Chapter of Gonzales, Texas, a Methodist. Began practice of medicine at age 22. At 24 attended University of New Orleans and graduated with Medical degree in 1874. Practiced medicine in Leesville, Texas. Also serves as a druggist and planter. Politically a Jeffersonian Democrat Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, Dr. John M. More About JOHN N. MITCHELL FLY: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 466/476 Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 369/341 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, Enum 70 HH 271/325 Fact 1: Physician Fact 2: Buried - Leesville Cem w/ Both wives and all children Notes for ELLA JOHN MATTHEWS: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Fly, Ella John, wife of John M. Fly Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX More About ELLA JOHN MATTHEWS: Burial: Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, Enum 70 HH 271/325 More About JOHN FLY and ELLA MATTHEWS: Marriage: 15 Oct 1877, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas Notes for ANGERONIA WILLIE BROWN: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Family plantation destroyed by Shermans March in May 1864. Family heirlooms and treasures buried in a field and recovered later. Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, Mrs. Annie Brown More About ANGERONIA WILLIE BROWN: Burial: Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX More About JOHN FLY and ANGERONIA BROWN: Marriage: 16 Dec 1891, Canoochee, Emanuel County, Georgia Children of JOHN FLY and ELLA MATTHEWS are: i. CLARA MAUDE11 FLY, b. 01 Aug 1881, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 1964; m. (1) ??? WILLIAMSON; m. (2) COLIN NEAL. ii. HATTIE BEATRICE FLY, b. 12 Nov 1882, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 29 Oct 1902. Notes for HATTIE BEATRICE FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Fly, Hattye B., dau of John M. And Ella J. Fly Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX More About HATTIE BEATRICE FLY: Burial: Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Children of JOHN FLY and ANGERONIA BROWN are: iii. ROGER QUITEN11 FLY, b. 02 Sep 1892. Notes for ROGER QUITEN FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, Roger Q., son of Dr. J.M. and Annie Fly More About ROGER QUITEN FLY: Burial: Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX iv. ELLA JEWEL FLY, b. 22 Jan 1896, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 12 Nov 1896, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas. Notes for ELLA JEWEL FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Fly, Ella J. Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX More About ELLA JEWEL FLY: Burial: Leesville Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX v. MATTIE INEZ FLY, b. 13 Mar 1897; d. 14 Jun 1976; m. CHARLES RAYMOND WALLACE, 07 Mar 1917. More About CHARLES WALLACE and MATTIE FLY: Marriage: 07 Mar 1917 vi. INA JULIA FLY, b. 28 Oct 1897, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 21 Sep 1977, Oklahoma City, OK; m. (1) ??? TAYLOR; m. (2) JULIAN ASHLEY BARKELEW. More About INA JULIA FLY: Fact 2: Her father's pet name for her was "Baby" vii. JOHN MADDEN FLY, b. 11 Aug 1899, Leesville, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 26 Jan 1931; m. RUBY UNKNOWN, 1925. More About JOHN MADDEN FLY: Fact 1: Also reported as John Dalton Fly for his paternal GF Fact 2: d- reported as Jan 31, 1931 by AA Wallace More About JOHN FLY and RUBY UNKNOWN: Marriage: 1925 18. MARTHA LOU10 FLY (JOHN DALTON9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 21 Apr 1855 in Mississippi. She married JOHN ELDRIDGE SORRELL 1879. More About MARTHA LOU FLY: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 369/341 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refugio County, Div 4, HH 322/322 More About JOHN SORRELL and MARTHA FLY: Marriage: 1879 Child of MARTHA FLY and JOHN SORRELL is: i. WILLIAM FRANKLIN11 SORRELL, b. 24 Jun 1881. 19. JOHN SIDNEY10 FLY (DAVID WILLIAMSON9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 03 Sep 1864 in Gonzales Co, Texas, and died 28 Mar 1944 in Hondo, TX. He married ANNALEE FISHER 22 Aug 1889 in Gonzales Co, Texas. More About JOHN SIDNEY FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Refurio County, Div 4, HH 317/317 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 219/219 More About JOHN FLY and ANNALEE FISHER: Marriage: 22 Aug 1889, Gonzales Co, Texas Children of JOHN FLY and ANNALEE FISHER are: i. WILLIE D.11 FLY, b. 24 May 1891, TX; d. 15 Apr 1970, Hondo, TX. ii. ORCENETH ASBURY FLY, b. 16 Feb 1894, TX; d. 03 Feb 1976, Hondo, TX; m. WILLIE BARTON, 1917. More About ORCENETH FLY and WILLIE BARTON: Marriage: 1917 iii. STERLING HARPER FLY, b. 27 Nov 1896, Hondo, TX; d. 23 Jul 1963, Uvalde, TX; m. MARY SUTHERLAND, 01 Aug 1923, Sabinal, TX. More About STERLING HARPER FLY: Fact 7: Social Security #: 454-62-3992 More About STERLING FLY and MARY SUTHERLAND: Marriage: 01 Aug 1923, Sabinal, TX iv. FANNIE RUTH FLY, b. 1900, TX; d. 1945; m. GRAHAM ROGERS. v. MARIETTA FLY, b. 05 Mar 1908, TX; m. ROBERT CLARK BARTON, 16 Jun 1928, TX. More About MARIETTA FLY: Fact 1: 1989, Living @ Buda, TX More About ROBERT BARTON and MARIETTA FLY: Marriage: 16 Jun 1928, TX 20. DAVID HARPER10 FLY (DAVID WILLIAMSON9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 09 Dec 1875 in Gonzales Co, Texas, and died Dec 1958 in Hondo, TX. He married ETTA SALE 1899. More About DAVID HARPER FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 219/219 More About DAVID FLY and ETTA SALE: Marriage: 1899 Children of DAVID FLY and ETTA SALE are: i. NETTIE FRANCES11 FLY, b. 23 Feb 1901; m. GEORGE BISHOP. More About NETTIE FRANCES FLY: Fact 1: 1989, Living @ San Antonio ii. ROBERT SIDNEY FLY, b. 24 Jun 1902; m. CAMILLE CURRY. iii. SADIE ELIZABETH FLY, b. 27 Sep 1905; m. STEWART CLENDENIN, REV, 26 Jan 1929. More About SADIE ELIZABETH FLY: Fact 1: 1989, Living @ Dallas, TX More About STEWART CLENDENIN and SADIE FLY: Marriage: 26 Jan 1929 iv. ETTA SELBY FLY, b. 17 Aug 1906, San Antonio, Bexar Co, TX; d. 1970, Dallas, TX. 21. WILLIAM SEAT10 FLY (ELIJAH MADDEN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 29 Oct 1851 in Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi, and died 01 Jun 1934 in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas. He married CAYLOMA PILGRIM 16 Nov 1876 in Gonzales Co, Texas. She was born 1855 in Texas. Notes for WILLIAM SEAT FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] FLY, WILLIAM SEAT (1851-1934). William Seat Fly, drover, Democratic leader, and jurist, son of Elijah Madden and Nancy Edmondson (McKie) Fly, was born in Madison County, Mississippi, on October 29, 1851. In November 1855 the family moved to Gonzales County, Texas. In 1869 Fly worked in a hide and tallow factory in Rockport and in 1870 drove a herd of horses to Mississippi, where he studied anatomy and physiology and got some practical experience as a clerk in a drugstore. He changed the course of his study, however, and in October 1873 was admitted to the bar at Gonzales, Texas. He became a prominent lawyer and a leader in the Democratic party; he was one of the electors on the Grover Cleveland ticket in 1888, presided over the state convention in 1890, and was chairman of the convention in 1892. He was appointed associate justice of the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District in San Antonio in 1893 and was elected chief justice in 1912. He married Cayloma Pilgrim on November 16, 1876; they had one daughter. Fly died on June 1, 1934. BIBLIOGRAPHY: San Antonio Express, June 2, 1934. Clarence R. Wharton, ed., Texas under Many Flags (5 vols., Chicago: American Historical Society, 1930). The Handbook of Texas Online is a joint project of The General Libraries at the University of Texas at Austin and the Texas State Historical Association. © The Texas State Historical Association, 1997,1998,1999. Last Updated: February 15, 1999 Comments to: comments@www.tsha.utexas.edu More About WILLIAM SEAT FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 15/15 More About CAYLOMA PILGRIM: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 15/15 Marriage Notes for WILLIAM FLY and CAYLOMA PILGRIM: Fly, William S. and Cayloma Pilgrim - 11/16/1876 - #2212 More About WILLIAM FLY and CAYLOMA PILGRIM: Marriage: 16 Nov 1876, Gonzales Co, Texas Child of WILLIAM FLY and CAYLOMA PILGRIM is: i. EDITH11 FLY, b. 08 Dec 1877, Gonzales County, Texas; d. 1950, Gonzales County, Texas; m. WALTER JUNIUS HILDEBRAND, DR., 23 Jul 1915, Gonzales Co, Texas. More About EDITH FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 15/15 More About WALTER HILDEBRAND and EDITH FLY: Marriage: 23 Jul 1915, Gonzales Co, Texas 22. MARGARET EUGENIA10 FLY (ELIJAH MADDEN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 12 Nov 1853 in Sharon, Madison County, Mississippi, and died 20 Sep 1920. She married ARTHUR GLENN BARDWELL 08 Nov 1871 in TX. More About ARTHUR BARDWELL and MARGARET FLY: Marriage: 08 Nov 1871, TX Children of MARGARET FLY and ARTHUR BARDWELL are: i. NANNIE11 BARDWELL, b. 1873; m. TRAVIS A. WHITE. ii. LUELLA BARDWELL, b. 1875; m. JAMES S. MCCULLOCH. iii. CECIL MADDEN BARDWELL, b. 1877; m. ADDIE FERRELL. iv. ARTHUR GLENN BARDWELL, b. 1879; m. ESTHER CROWE. v. ESSIE Q. BARDWELL, b. 1881; m. LEE OWEN. vi. ADA BARDWELL, b. 1883; d. B'ham, AL; m. THOMAS C. BRASFIELD. vii. MARGUERITE MCKIE BARDWELL, b. 1886; m. MILTON D. ODUM. 23. MARY ADA10 FLY (ELIJAH MADDEN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 17 Sep 1855 in Yalobusha County, Mississippi. She married BRAINARD BARDWELL 25 Feb 1875 in TX. More About BRAINARD BARDWELL and MARY FLY: Marriage: 25 Feb 1875, TX Children of MARY FLY and BRAINARD BARDWELL are: i. EDDIE MADDEN11 BARDWELL, b. 1877. ii. EMMA BARDWELL, b. 1879; m. SAM GLASS. iii. BRAINARD BARDWELL, JR, b. 1881. iv. ZOE BARDWELL, b. 1883; m. WILL COOK. v. ELIZABETH BARDWELL, b. 1885; m. WITT. vi. ADA BARDWELL, b. 1887; m. SAMUEL WITT. vii. ROBERT BARDWELL, b. 1889. viii. NETTIE BARDWELL, b. 1891; m. HERSCHEL BAIRD. ix. GERTRUDE BARDWELL, b. 1893. 24. MARTHA LOUISA10 FLY (ELIJAH MADDEN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 24 Aug 1857 in Texas. She married SAMUEL B. J. BEATTY 10 Dec 1881 in About Gonzales County, Texas. More About MARTHA LOUISA FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 246/246 More About SAMUEL BEATTY and MARTHA FLY: Marriage: 10 Dec 1881, About Gonzales County, Texas Children of MARTHA FLY and SAMUEL BEATTY are: i. LOUISE11 BEATTY. ii. WILLIAM BEATTY. iii. LIZZIE BEATTY. iv. SAMMY BEATTY. v. MADDEN BEATTY. 25. EDWIN MADDEN10 FLY (ELIJAH MADDEN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 17 Jul 1859 in Texas, and died 1903 in Eagle Pass - 1884. He married EMMA MONTGOMERY in Texas. More About EDWIN MADDEN FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 246/246 Fact 1: May have died in Rockport or San Antonio, TX More About EDWIN FLY and EMMA MONTGOMERY: Marriage: Texas Children of EDWIN FLY and EMMA MONTGOMERY are: i. JOHN MOTGOMERY11 FLY, LT., b. Texas; d. 1917, St. Mihiel, France; m. DORTHY ?. More About JOHN MOTGOMERY FLY, LT.: Fact 1: 1917, Died in WW I ii. NANCY MCKIE FLY, m. ROLLIN HILDEBRAND. iii. MARY FLY, m. RALPH CAMERON. iv. EDITH FLY, m. JARRELL. 26. WILLIAM LEWIS10 DAVIDSON (MARY MALINDA9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 05 Nov 1845 in Mississippi, and died 25 Jan 1921. He married SUSAN BROWN HOWARD 22 Dec 1872. More About WILLIAM LEWIS DAVIDSON: Census 1850: 1850, Mississippi, Madison County, HH 10/11 More About WILLIAM DAVIDSON and SUSAN HOWARD: Marriage: 22 Dec 1872 Children of WILLIAM DAVIDSON and SUSAN HOWARD are: i. LEWIS11 DAVIDSON. ii. HOWARD DAVIDSON. iii. ELLA DAVIDSON. iv. KATE DAVIDSON, m. GRAVES. 27. SUSAN SOPHIA10 DAVIDSON (MARY MALINDA9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 12 Aug 1852, and died 06 Sep 1888. She married HENRY NORTH GRAVES 22 Dec 1870. More About HENRY GRAVES and SUSAN DAVIDSON: Marriage: 22 Dec 1870 Children of SUSAN DAVIDSON and HENRY GRAVES are: i. HARRY NEWTON11 GRAVES. ii. ELLA GRAVES, m. BIGBEE. iii. FANNIE GRAVES. 28. IDA BASKERVILLE10 SEAT (SOPHIA LOUISIANA9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) She married JAMES G. TANNER, REV. Children of IDA SEAT and JAMES TANNER are: i. ELOISE11 TANNER. ii. GRACE TANNER. iii. FRANK TANNER. iv. EDITH TANNER. 29. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN10 FLY, JR (BENJAMIN FRANKLIN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1860 in Gonzales Co, Texas, and died 1933 in Texarkana, AR (Possible). More About BENJAMIN FRANKLIN FLY, JR: Date born 2: 1857, Gonzales Co, Texas Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 Child of BENJAMIN FRANKLIN FLY, JR is: i. THOMAS FRANKLIN11 FLY, b. 1890; d. 1939, Los Angeles, CA. 30. KALULLA L.10 FLY (BENJAMIN FRANKLIN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1864 in Texas, and died 1939. She married PAUL JONES. More About KALULLA L. FLY: Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 Children of KALULLA FLY and PAUL JONES are: i. PAUL11 JONES, JR. ii. JOHN THOMPSON JONES. 31. NATHANIEL DALTON10 FLY (BENJAMIN FRANKLIN9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1857 in Gonzales Co, Texas, and died 1913. He married SERENA TAYLOR 1890. More About NATHANIEL DALTON FLY: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Lavaca County, Lavaca, HH 111/111 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Tarrant County, Ft Worth, Enum 90 HH 367/378 More About NATHANIEL FLY and SERENA TAYLOR: Marriage: 1890 Children of NATHANIEL FLY and SERENA TAYLOR are: i. PAUL JONES11 FLY, b. 1900, Victoria, TX; d. Victoria, TX; m. RUBY ESTELLE DOUGLAS. ii. JOSEPH TAYLOR FLY, b. 1902; m. ANN. iii. ROBERT FRANKLIN FLY, b. 21 May 1904, Victoria, TX; d. Apr 1984, Houston, TX; m. HELEN FRANCES SCHAEFFER, 16 Nov 1927, Houston, TX. More About ROBERT FLY and HELEN SCHAEFFER: Marriage: 16 Nov 1927, Houston, TX iv. NATALIE FLY, b. 1906, Victoria, TX; m. (1) AUBREY PATTON; m. (2) GETTY. v. KALLULA FLY, b. 1908; m. BOYD GUILFORD. vi. MAUDE FLY, b. 1910; m. ROSS HANLEY. vii. THOMAS FLY, b. 1912; d. 1930. 32. MARY EMMA10 CATCHINGS (ELVIRA JOSEPHINE9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1855 in Texas. She married FRED HUDSON. More About MARY EMMA CATCHINGS: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, HH 277/258 Children of MARY CATCHINGS and FRED HUDSON are: i. THOMAS CATCHINGS11 HUDSON. ii. WILMA HUDSON. iii. BARNES HUDSON. iv. HARRIETT HUDSON. 33. SILAS FLY10 CATCHINGS (ELVIRA JOSEPHINE9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1856. He married NORA WADDELL. Children of SILAS CATCHINGS and NORA WADDELL are: i. WADDELL11 CATCHINGS. ii. NORA SHELBY CATCHINGS. 34. WILLIAM BENJAMIN10 CATCHINGS (ELVIRA JOSEPHINE9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1858 in Texas. He married FERMINE BAIRD 09 Dec 1879. More About WILLIAM BENJAMIN CATCHINGS: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, HH 277/258 More About WILLIAM CATCHINGS and FERMINE BAIRD: Marriage: 09 Dec 1879 Children of WILLIAM CATCHINGS and FERMINE BAIRD are: i. WILLIAM BAIRD11 CATCHINGS. ii. THOMAS BAIRD CATCHINGS. iii. BAB CATCHINGS. iv. MARJORIE CATCHINGS. v. BENJAMIN SILAS CATCHINGS. vi. NELLIE CATCHINGS. 35. SARAH FRANCES10 CATCHINGS (ELVIRA JOSEPHINE9 FLY, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 1867, and died 1902. She married HUGH SWINTON POTTS 1896. More About HUGH POTTS and SARAH CATCHINGS: Marriage: 1896 Children of SARAH CATCHINGS and HUGH POTTS are: i. HUGH SWINTON11 POTTS, JR. ii. LENORA POTTS. 36. WILLIAM MADDEN10 FLY (GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 26 Dec 1857 in Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas, and died 1944 in Gonzales, Gonzales Co, Texas. He married ELIZA CLARA LEESON BELDING 24 Apr 1883 in Gonzales, Texas. Notes for WILLIAM MADDEN FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] He remembered the trip to Vicksburg with his mother to pick up his father at Vicksburg in 1863 (Complete account written by GWL Fly in The Confederate Veteran, June, 1903, Vol II, # 6). Attended Stonewall Institute. Worked as "printers Devil" for the Southwestern Index. Crushed his finger there in 1871, then went to work a Tate and Badger Drug Store (where he had sought first aid for the finger). Became a registered Pharmacist. When the store went out of business he and Ben Peck, Sr bought the stock and opened Peck and Fly - General Store and Pharmacy (remained in business until mid-1940's). Fly brokered cotton. Note by W. Lamar Fly Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, William Madden Fly, W.M., picture, honored by Masonic Lodge, 2 Feb 1935 Gonzales Enquirer 1935 More About WILLIAM MADDEN FLY: Census 1860: 1860, Texas, Gonzales County, Big Hill, HH 372/344 Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Gonzales, Enum 72 HH 93/93 Fact 1: Severed several terms as a State Legislator Fact 2: 33rd degree Mason, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of TX Fact 3: buried - Gonzales Masonic Cem Notes for ELIZA CLARA LEESON BELDING: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, Clara Lee More About ELIZA CLARA LEESON BELDING: Burial: Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Marriage Notes for WILLIAM FLY and ELIZA BELDING: Fly, William and Eliza Lee Belding - 04/04/1883 - #3245 More About WILLIAM FLY and ELIZA BELDING: Marriage: 24 Apr 1883, Gonzales, Texas Children of WILLIAM FLY and ELIZA BELDING are: i. CLARA MADELEINE11 FLY, b. 15 Jan 1884, Gonzales, Texas; m. THOMAS P. TRAYLOR, 11 Jan 1905. More About THOMAS TRAYLOR and CLARA FLY: Marriage: 11 Jan 1905 ii. MARY ELLEN FLY, b. 18 Sep 1888, Gonzales, Texas; m. WARREN TAYLOR, 08 Jan 1908. More About WARREN TAYLOR and MARY FLY: Marriage: 08 Jan 1908 37. MARY GEORGIE10 FLY (GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 20 Jan 1862 in Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas, and died 25 Jan 1937 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas. She married JOSEPH LAFAYETTE HILL 01 Jan 1885 in Gonzales County, Texas, son of WILLIAM HILL and SARAH COLEMAN. He was born 02 Sep 1861 in Caldwell, Burlison County, Texas, and died 03 Jan 1935 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas. Notes for MARY GEORGIE FLY: "About the time I was grown I made a visit to relatives in Caldwell, Texas. There I met Joe L. Hill who had just graduated at the State Normal School at Huntsville and returned home. the town was full of young people and something always going on. I went to a picnic one day and as I walked up the said Joe L. Hill was very intent on squeezing lemons with a pretty girl sitting by seeing it well done. I was then and there introduced to the lemon squeezer. The next night he with the other members of a brass band disturbed my slumbers by a serenade, the gentleman in question performing on a large brass horn which encircled his body perhaps more than once. Of course I thought it was beautiful music, and I guess it was. I went from Caldwell to Waco to visit my Aunt and family, Mrs. B. H. Carroll. Uncle Harvey being one of the leading Baptist ministers in the south. I had a wonderful visit there. Returning to Caldwell I made another visit attending several camp meetings, etc. Mr. Hill and I were married three years later Jan. 1st 1885 at the Old Methodist Church at Gonzales by my uncle, Rev. Wm. H. Seat, then pastor at Goliad. He died with pneumonia the same month. Mrs. Sallie Dilworth, my Sunday school teacher, played the wedding march. Members of my family stood as attendants for us, Papa, Mamma, Frank and Ben on one side, Buddie Madden, Clara (his wife) and Buddie Milton on the other. Mr. J. H. Rochelle and Judge W. L. Davidson acting as ushers; Maude, Eva, Rozelle, Nellie and Willie occupying a seat of honor in front of the altar. From the church we left immediately for Caldwell going to Col. W. K. Homan's (Mr. Hill's partner) home where we boarded. There we were entertained with a dinner. The next day a large crowd were entertained at dinner at Mother Hill's. We boarded the first four months. During that time a pretty little cottage was built and we moved in to our first home. After living there about five months we sold it and moved to Victoria." (From a letter written by Mary Georgie Fly Hill, 519 W. Mistletoe Ave., San Antonio, Texas October 2 1930) More About MARY GEORGIE FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Enum 72 HH 272/272 Census 1910: 1910, Texas, Bexar County, San Antonio, Enum 21 HH 136/150 More About JOSEPH LAFAYETTE HILL: Census 1910: 1910, Texas, Bexar County, San Antonio, Enum 21 HH 136/150 Fact 1: Graduate State Normal School, Huntsville, TX Marriage Notes for MARY FLY and JOSEPH HILL: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] "About the time I was grown I made a visit to relatives in Caldwell, Texas. There I met Joe L. Hill who had just graduated at the State Normal School at Huntsville and returned home. the town was full of young people and something always going on. I went to a picnic one day and as I walked up the said Joe L. Hill was very intent on squeezing lemons with a pretty girl sitting by seeing it well done. I was then and there introduced to the lemon squeezer. The next night he with the other members of a brass band disturbed my slumbers by a serenade, the gentleman in question performing on a large brass horn which encircled his body perhaps more than once. Of course I thought it was beautiful music, and I guess it was. I went from Caldwell to Waco to visit my Aunt and family, Mrs. B. H. Carroll. Uncle Harvey being one of the leading Baptist ministers in the south. I had a wonderful visit there. Returning to Caldwell I made another visit attending several camp meetings, etc. Mr. Hill and I were married three years later Jan. 1st 1885 at the Old Methodist Church at Gonzales by my uncle, Rev. Wm. H. Seat, then pastor at Goliad. He died with pneumonia the same month. Mrs. Sallie Dilworth, my Sunday school teacher, played the wedding march. Members of my family stood as attendants for us, Papa, Mamma, Frank and Ben on one side, Buddie Madden, Clara (his wife) and Buddie Milton on the other. Mr. J. H. Rochelle and Judge W. L. Davidson acting as ushers; Maude, Eva, Rozelle, Nellie and Willie occupying a seat of honor in front of the altar. From the church we left immediately for Caldwell going to Col. W. K. Homan's (Mr. Hill's partner) home where we boarded. There we were entertained with a dinner. The next day a large crowd were entertained at dinner at Mother Hill's. We boarded the first four months. During that time a pretty little cottage was built and we moved in to our first home. After living there about five months we sold it and moved to Victoria." (From a letter written by Mary Georgie Fly Hill, 519 W. Mistletoe Ave., San Antonio, Texas October 2 1930) More About JOSEPH HILL and MARY FLY: Marriage: 01 Jan 1885, Gonzales County, Texas Children of MARY FLY and JOSEPH HILL are: i. CALLIE FLY11 HILL, b. 03 Sep 1886; d. 11 Nov 1886. Notes for CALLIE FLY HILL: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Died from terrible conditions created by hurricane that struck Texas coast in fall of 1886 at Indianola. Roof of the house was torn off. ii. MILTON FLY HILL, b. 17 Oct 1890, Victoria, Victoria County, Texas; d. 08 Jan 1975, Mineral Wells, Texas; m. JESSIE MABEL WILSON, 17 Feb 1915, Dallas, Texas; b. 13 Jul 1893, Woodhaven, Long Island, NY; d. 10 Mar 1970, Mineral Wells, Texas. More About MILTON FLY HILL: Census 1910: 1910, Texas, Bexar County, San Antonio, Enum 21 HH 136/150 Notes for JESSIE MABEL WILSON: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Article from Independence Examiner, Oct 23, 1942. "Has Glorious Memories of A Childhood in Old Concord" by Susannah Gentry Lived in a home built in 1728 in Concord, lives now at 708 West Maple Ave. Had personal chats with Miss Ellen Emerson, youngest sister of famed author. She lived in the old Emerson home. She also wandered gardens of "Dove Cote" the early home of Louisa May Alcott, Attended sunday school where Daniel Chester French, designer and sculptor of the famous "Minute Man" statue (appeared on defense stamps) was the superintendent. Lived in the Hoseph Hosmer house a mile NW of town. Maj. Hosmer was in the Battle of Concord. Mrs. Hill is an accomplished musician and vocalist, having studied piano and organ in Boston with Raymond C. Robinson and harmony and counterpoint under John P. Marshall. Vocal from Benjamin F. Berry, Boston tenor. Studied with Thomas Whitney Surrette and Archibald Davidson founders of the Concord School of Music. She attended Boston University and Oxford College, Oxford(Miami?), Ohio. Mother's Obit shows here in Milton, Oregon - 1924 More About JESSIE MABEL WILSON: Fact 8: Last residence: TX 76067 More About MILTON HILL and JESSIE WILSON: Marriage: 17 Feb 1915, Dallas, Texas Unknown-Ending: Bishop Edwin D. Mouzon & Dr. SHC Burgin Officiating iii. JOE LAFAYETTE HILL, JR, b. 02 Jul 1894, Victoria, Victoria County, Texas; d. 04 Oct 1967, Austin, TX; m. ETHEL SIMMS, May 1915, Dallas, TX. More About JOE LAFAYETTE HILL, JR: Census 1910: 1910, Texas, Bexar County, San Antonio, Enum 21 HH 136/150 More About JOE HILL and ETHEL SIMMS: Marriage: May 1915, Dallas, TX iv. WILLIAM MADDEN HILL, b. 24 Aug 1899, Victoria, Victoria County, Texas; d. Mar 1978; m. LAILA FOSTER, 31 Aug 1926, Dallas, TX; b. 04 Mar 1897; d. Feb 1987. More About WILLIAM MADDEN HILL: Census 1910: 1910, Texas, Bexar County, San Antonio, Enum 21 HH 136/150 Fact 8: Last residence: TX 75225 More About LAILA FOSTER: Fact 8: Last residence: TX 75225 More About WILLIAM HILL and LAILA FOSTER: Marriage: 31 Aug 1926, Dallas, TX 38. FRANK MERRIMAN10 FLY (GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 12 Jun 1867 in Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas, and died 14 Jul 1962 in Gonzales, Gonzales Co, Texas. He married STELLA MILLER 11 Nov 1908 in Gonzales Co, Texas, daughter of ROBERT MILLER and SARAH HOPKINS. She was born 26 Apr 1885, and died 08 Jul 1980 in Houston. Notes for FRANK MERRIMAN FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] [Go back to the TSHA home page] [The New Handbook of Texas Online] FLY, FRANK MERRIMAN (1866-1962). Frank M. Fly, Gonzales County sheriff and banker, son of Callie (Bell) and George Washington Lafayette Fly was born at Big Hill in Gonzales County, Texas, on June 12, 1866. After a brief schooling and a short employment with the Peck and Fly store in Gonzales, he became a deputy under Sheriff Richard M. Glover and later under Capt. W. E. Jones. On June 14, 1901, Sheriff Glover was killed by the notorious Gregorio Cortez and on June 17 Fly was appointed sheriff. After a search described as "one of the greatest manhunts ever pulled off in South Texas," Cortez was apprehended near Laredo and returned to the county jail at Gonzales, where he was indicted for murder, tried and found guilty, and sentenced to fifty years in the state penitentiary. After receiving a tip that a lynch mob was forming to take Cortez, Fly locked himself in the jail with the Mexican. At midnight the mob first attempted to pick the lock and then began ramming the door with a telephone pole. Fly saved Cortez's life by confronting the crowd with drawn pistol through a barred window and convincing them that he would defend the prisoner to death; he took Cortez to the railroad station the next day and conducted him safely to San Antonio. Fly was also a personal acquaintance of the notorious John Wesley Hardin during Hardin's attempt to establish a law practice in Gonzales after his release from the penitentiary. Fly joined the staff of the Gonzales State Bank in 1909 and served as its president during the Great Depression. From 1946 to 1962 he was justice of the peace. He was a member of the Selective Service Board, the Red Cross, the County Fair Association, the Chamber of Commerce, the Good Roads Commission, the Gonzales School Board, and other bodies. He described himself as "a Methodist, a Mason, and a Democrat." He married Stella Miller of Waelder in 1908, and they had five children. He died on July 13, 1962, at the age of ninety-six, and was buried in the Gonzales Masonic Cemetery. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Gonzales Inquirer, September 28, 1961. Houston Post, July 17, 1962. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin. W. Lamar Fly Last Updated: February 15, 1999 Comments to: comments@www.tsha.utexas.edu Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Fly, Frank Merriman More About FRANK MERRIMAN FLY: Burial: Gonzales Masonic Cemetery- Gonzales County, TX Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Enum 72 HH 272/272 Fact 1: Jun 1901, Involved in man hunt for Gregorio Cortez Fact 2: Served as Sheriff of Gonzales Co 1901 - 2 Fact 3: Was Justice of Peace, Gonzales Co at age 90 More About STELLA MILLER: Fact 2: Tenth of Twelve children Fact 3: Taught school in Waelder, also Principal Fact 4: Member Colonial Dames, DAR, United Dau of Confederacy Marriage Notes for FRANK FLY and STELLA MILLER: Fly, Frank and Stella Miller - 11/11/1908 - #9360 More About FRANK FLY and STELLA MILLER: Marriage: 11 Nov 1908, Gonzales Co, Texas Unknown-Ending: They met when she had been called as a witness for a trial & he was a dep sherif Children of FRANK FLY and STELLA MILLER are: i. CALLIE ELIZABETH11 FLY, b. 09 Nov 1908; m. HENRY JOSEPH SCHAEFER, 26 Dec 1938. More About CALLIE ELIZABETH FLY: Fact 1: Living in Schulenberg, TX (1989) More About HENRY SCHAEFER and CALLIE FLY: Engagement: Fly, Callie, engaged to Henry Schaefer, 11 July 1935 Gonzales Enquirer Marriage: 26 Dec 1938 ii. FRANK MERRIMAN FLY, JR, b. 13 Aug 1911, Gonzales, Texas; d. 12 Oct 1995, Austin, Texas; m. FRANCES BROWN BYFIELD, 26 Dec 1938. More About FRANK MERRIMAN FLY, JR: More About FRANK FLY and FRANCES BYFIELD: Marriage: 26 Dec 1938 iii. WALTER LAMAR FLY, DR., b. 01 Sep 1913, Victoria, TX; m. MELBA MORGAN, 16 Jul 1938, Gonzales County, Texas. Marriage Notes for WALTER FLY and MELBA MORGAN: Fly, W. Lamar and Melba Morgan-07/16/1938-#18566 More About WALTER FLY and MELBA MORGAN: Marriage: 16 Jul 1938, Gonzales County, Texas iv. FRANCES FLY, b. 22 Dec 1915; m. LOUIS ETHELBERT OTTS, JR, 11 Jun 1938. More About LOUIS OTTS and FRANCES FLY: Marriage: 11 Jun 1938 v. WILLIAM MADDEN FLY, b. 13 Nov 1917, Gonzales, Texas; m. MARY BETH DEANS, 02 Apr 1948. More About WILLIAM MADDEN FLY: Fact 1: 1989, Living in St. Laurel, MD More About WILLIAM FLY and MARY DEANS: Marriage: 02 Apr 1948 39. BENJAMIN WATT10 FLY (GEORGE WASHINGON LAFAYETTE9, WILLIAM8, JOHN7, ELISHA6, WILLIAM5, JOHN4, JEREMIAH3, WILLIAM2 FLYE, JOHN1) was born 22 Aug 1869 in Big Hill, Gonzales County, Texas, and died 01 Mar 1929 in Victoria, Victoria Co, Texas. He married (1) JESSIE MCCUTCHEON 09 Feb 1899 in Victoria, Victoria Co, Texas. He married (2) MARY JANE STONER 10 Jun 1908 in Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co). Notes for BENJAMIN WATT FLY: [Andrew_Tate_Fly.FTW] Date of death from State records 1903-40 pg 8991, ref # 18505, also newspaper article, he may have eaten some bad food (Oysters ?) More About BENJAMIN WATT FLY: Census 1870: 1870, Texas, Gonzales County, Pct 3, HH 59/59 Census 1880: 1880, Texas, Gonzales County, Enum 72 HH 272/272 Marriage Notes for BENJAMIN FLY and JESSIE MCCUTCHEON: license Gonzales Co Fly, Ben W. and Jessie McCutcheon - 02/15/1898 - #6261 More About BENJAMIN FLY and JESSIE MCCUTCHEON: Marriage: 09 Feb 1899, Victoria, Victoria Co, Texas More About BENJAMIN FLY and MARY STONER: Marriage: 10 Jun 1908, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co) Children of BENJAMIN FLY and MARY STONER are: i. GEORGE LAFAYETTE11 FLY, b. 18 Oct 1910, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co); m. (1) MYRTHEL MORGAN; m. (2) LILLIAN BEAMAN, 30 Oct 1938. More About GEORGE LAFAYETTE FLY: Fact 1: Lived (ing?) Hong Kong, China More About GEORGE FLY and LILLIAN BEAMAN: Marriage: 30 Oct 1938 ii. BENJAMIN MADDEN FLY, b. 04 Apr 1912, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co); m. CELESTE MARIE BODIN, 1950. More About BENJAMIN FLY and CELESTE BODIN: Marriage: 1950 iii. MARY JANE FLY, b. 07 Jun 1914; m. (1) JAMES A. MOORE, 06 May 1937; m. (2) ROBERT EMMETT MAHER, 24 Dec 1958. More About MARY JANE FLY: Fact 1: Living in New Orleans, LA (1960) More About JAMES MOORE and MARY FLY: Marriage: 06 May 1937 More About ROBERT MAHER and MARY FLY: Marriage: 24 Dec 1958 iv. JESSIE MCCUTCHEON FLY, b. 15 Feb 1917, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co); d. 10 Feb 1919, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co). v. WILLIAM STONER FLY, b. 15 Mar 1920; d. Apr 2000, Victoria, Texas; m. BECKY DICKSON CLEMENTS, 07 Dec 1946. More About WILLIAM FLY and BECKY CLEMENTS: Marriage: 07 Dec 1946 vi. GERALDINE FLY, b. 07 Sep 1922; m. ROBERT LEBBY CLINE, JR, 12 Apr 1947, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co). More About ROBERT CLINE and GERALDINE FLY: Marriage: 12 Apr 1947, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co) vii. JAMES MILTON FLY, b. 12 Jul 1924, Victoria, Texas (Victoria Co); m. DOROTHY JEAN HUDEPOHL SANDUTORIS, 10 Mar 1945. More About JAMES MILTON FLY: Fact 1: 1989, Living @ Victoria, TX More About JAMES FLY and DOROTHY SANDUTORIS: Marriage: 10 Mar 1945 Source Website & Author: Rootsweb Ancestry.com https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:_DOvCnGxpawJ:https://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~txgonzal/doc/fly1_sarah.doc+&cd=5&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

Flynn / Flinn Land records 1830-1880 in Queens Co., Prince Edward Island

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Land records in Queens County, Prince Edward Island, Canada relating to the Flynn or Flinn families 1830-1872 in Lots 58, 60 & 61 This research is being compiled to determine the father of Sarah Elizabeth (Flynn) Dougherty [[Flynn-3747]]. '''1858''' '''Michael Flynn''' - Land purchased by the Commissioner of Public Lands, 10 March 1862 (125 acres) 2-6:71 Index [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSLV-N1JZ?i=106&cat=966203] '''1862''' 79:712 -''' Bernard Flynn''' from Peter Flynn (17 Jan. 1862) Assignment of Lease of 100 acres on '''Township [Lot] 61'''. Index source: [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSV2-291C-H?i=239&cat=506382]; Deed: [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSRK-W3PT?i=567&cat=506382]

FLYNT family

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The goal of this project is to find ancestors and grave of John Flynt, born in Monroe County, MS, USA about 1849, died probably in Meridian, Lauderdale County, MS, after 1910. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Griffith-5297|Fred Griffith]]. John is my GGrandfather. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. Search burial info in Meridian Investigate the Flynt family in Monroe county Check for an obituary in Meridian Any help would be most appreciated! Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16218874 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FMP Hendee Family Tree

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The goal of this project is to find the connection of Richard Hendee b.1611 who may or may not have arrived on the ship Hopewell in 1639 in Boston, Massachusetts to either England, France, Holland or Scotland. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Hendee-100|Paul Hendee]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Prove he was either crew or passenger on the Hopewell (Winthrop Fleet) * Prove his birth Year and place *Did original family come from France as expelled Huguenots Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=11236182 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Focke Jansz (Bontekoe, 1660)

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== Biography == === Origins & Parentage === : The first record that can tell us about the origin of Focke Jansz is the bill for his travel of the Bonte Koe in 1660 New York State Archives. New Netherland. Council. Dutch colonial administrative correspondence, 1646-1664. Series A1810. Volume 14. ''New York State Archives'' (https://digitalcollections.archives.nysed.gov/index.php/Detail/objects/54615 : 17 February 2022). Scan 70 / 180.. The record states that he came from Drenthe, as well as that he had a wife and several children (the oldest being 19 years of age). This suggests that Focke had already lived a large part of his adult life in the Netherlands before moving to New Netherland. :
Focke Janß, uijt Drent lantbouw debet
voor vracht en cort(?)goet dat hij ao 1660 den
15 april per 't schip de bonte koe schipper pieter
lucaß is hierarts gecomen.................... f36
voor sijn vrouw ..................................... ,,36
,, 7 kinderen van 19, 17, 13, 11, 9, 3, jaaren
en suijgelingh ....................................... ,,186
==== Records ==== ==== Summary ==== === Marriage & Offspring === ==== Records ==== ==== Summary ==== === Death === ==== Records ==== ==== Summary ==== == Sources == === TODO ===

Foelkersam

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* '''Part of [[Space:Heering_Digital_Library | Heering Digital Library]]''' === Фелькерзам, А.Е. Алфавитный указатель с.-петербургских золотых и серебряных дел мастеров, ювелиров, граверов и проч. 1714-1814. Санкт-Петербург, 1907. === === Available online at these locations: === * Алфавитный указатель с.-петербургских золотых и серебряных дел мастеров, ювелиров, граверов и проч. 1714-1814. ::* https://www.litres.ru/a-felkerzam/alfavitnyy-ukazatel-s-peterburgskih-zolotyh-i-serebryanyh-del-masterov-uvelirov-graverov-i-proch-1714-1814/ ::* https://search.rsl.ru/ru/record/01003745177

Foley Roots

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The goal of this project is to find the Foley family from Waterford Ireland Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Almy-172|Suzanne Almy]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * work with DNA connections * Research church records in Ireland * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=9604018 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Foljambe pedigree

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This page presents an analysis of the pedigree of Foljambe of Tideswell, Derbyshire, as presented in two publications in 1873 and 1874 and presents drafts of new profiles for the relvant individuals. The outline is as follows. The line from Regner Lodbrok to Richard de Foleschamp is provided only by ''Pedigree of Foljambe''. This is all likely to be legendary. The later part from Godfrey to John is in ''Pedigree of Foljambe'', generally with more details than in a very similar pedigree found in ''Monumenta Foljambeana''. #Regner Lodbrok, King of Denmark. #Eric, King of Sweden, 30th son #[[Emundsson-4|Sweno]], younger son. #[[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]], came over to Normandy with Rollo. #[[Foleschamp-5|William, surnamed Niger]]. #[[De_Foleschamp-4|Robert Fitzniger]]. #[[De_Foleschamp-3|Gilbert de Foleschamp]], Vicecomes under the Earl of Eu. #[[De_Foleschamp-2|Richard de Foleschamp]] #[[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]], came to England with William The Conquerer [1066] and married a [[Daughter_of_Uchtred-1|daughter of Uchtred]], Saxon Lord of Elton. #[[Foleschamp-4|Sir Raphe de Foleschamp]], Knight, Lord of Tideswell, Elton, &c., temp. Hen. 1 [1100-1135]. married [[Ferrers-184|Gundred]], daughter of [[Ferrières-4|Henry de Ferrars]]. #[[Foljambe-41|Geffrey de Foleschamp]], Lord of Tideswell, 5 Steph [1140], died 30 Hen 2 [1184], who married [[Musard-8|Matilda]], daughter and heiress of [[Musard-3|Hasculfus Musard]]. #[[Foljambe-23|Henry Foljambe]], Knight, Lord of Tideswell temp. Rich 1 and John [1189-1216] who married [[FitzHerbert-183|Eleanor]], daughter and heiress of [[Fitzherbert-54|Thomas Fitzherbert]]. #[[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]], c.1178-1249, knight of Tideswell and Wormhill &c, in the High Peak, ob. 1249, buried at Tideswell, who married [[Luttrell-627|Margaret]], daughter of [[Luttrell-631|Geffrey Lutterell]]. == [[Emundsson-4|Sweno Emundsson (abt.0920-)]] == >>> PM [[Petersen-214|Sheri (Petersen) Sturm]] >>> Born c.825 Sweden >>> '''Disproven Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, Sweno is shown as younger son of Eric, King of Sweden, who was 30th son of Regner Lodbrok, King of Denmark. He is also shown as father of [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] who "came over to Normandy with Rollo". Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]]''. (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. As [[Normandie-54|Rollo]] invaded Normandy about 890 and died between 928 and 933, Sweno can be dated a generation earlier, born very approximately 825 in Sweden. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's six generations from Sweno to [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] who "came to England with William the Conqueror" and ten generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date or place. === Critical evaluation=== Commenting on this pedigree, Chris Phillips has said "the first few generations give a typical legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) The earliest reliably attested King of Sweden is [[Segersäll-13|Eric the Victorious]][[Wikipedia:Eric_the_Victorious]] who reigned c.970-995, far too late to be the grandfather of a companion of Rollo. There can therefore be no evidence for Sweno as Swedish royalty. On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of Sweno, he should be classed as Disproven Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 0920 in Tideswell, Yorkshire, England * Died [date unknown] in Tideswell, Yorkshire, England but the only (though unreliable) source for him contradicts this, as detailed above. == [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald (Svensson) Swensson (abt.0946-)]] == >>> PM [[Petersen-214|Sheri (Petersen) Sturm]] >>> born c.860 >>> '''Disproven Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, Ragnald is shown as son of [[Emundsson-4|Sweno]], younger son of Eric, King of Sweden, who was 30th son of Regner Lodbrok, King of Denmark. It is also stated that he "came over to Normandy with Rollo". He is shown as the father of [[Foleschamp-5|William surnamed Niger]]. Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. As [[Normandie-54|Rollo]] invaded Normandy about 890 and died between 928 and 933, Ragnald is best dated as an adult in 890, born very approximately 860. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's five generations from [Ragnald to [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] who "came to England with William the Conqueror" and nine generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date or place. === Critical evaluation === Commenting on this pedigree, Chris Phillips has said "the first few generations give a typical legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of Ragnald, he should be classed as Disproven Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 0946 in Tideswell, Yorkshire, England * Died [date unknown] in Tideswell, Yorkshire, England but the only (though unreliable) source for him contradicts this, as detailed above. == [[Foleschamp-5|William Niger Foleschamp (abt.0972-)]] == >>> PM [[Atkinson-107|John Atkinson]] >>> Born 895 Normandy >>> '''Disproven Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, William surnamed Niger is shown as the son of [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] (who "came over to Normandy with Rollo") son of [[Emundsson-4|Sweno]], younger son of Eric, King of Sweden, son of Regner Lodbrok, King of Denmark. He is also shown as father of [[De_Foleschamp-4|Robert FitzNiger]]. Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. As [[Normandie-54|Rollo]] invaded Normandy about 890 and died between 928 and 933, William is best dated in the next generation, born say 895 in Normandy. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's five generations from [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] to [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] who "came to England with William the Conqueror" and nine generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date or place. === Critical evaluation === Commenting on this pedigree, Chris Phillips has said "the first few generations give a typical legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of William, he should be classed as Disproven Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 0972 but the only (though unreliable) source for him contradicts this, as detailed above. == [[De_Foleschamp-4|Robert de Foleschamp (abt.0998-)]] == >>> PM [[Atkinson-107|John Atkinson]] >>> Born c.930 >>> de should be removed from LNAB as per [[Help:Name Fields for European Aristocrats|European Aristocrats naming standards]] >>> '''Disproven Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, Robert FitzNiger is shown as son of William surnamed Niger, son of [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] who "came over to Normandy with Rollo". He is also shown as father of [[De_Foleschamp-3|Gilbert de Foleschamp]], Vicecomes under the Earl of Eu. Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. As [[Normandie-54|Rollo]] invaded Normandy about 890 and died between 928 and 933, Robert is best dated two generations later, born say 930 in Normandy. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's five generations from [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] to [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] who "came to England with William the Conqueror" and nine generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date or place. === Critical evaluation === Commenting on this pedigree, Chris Phillips has said "the earlier parts of this work should be treated with caution", though this part is clearly beyond what he describes as the "legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of Robert, he should be classed as Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 0998 [location unknown] but the only (though unreliable) source for him contradicts this, as detailed above. == [[De_Foleschamp-3|Gilbert de Foleschamp (abt.1025-)]] == >>> PM Orphan >>> Born c.965 >>> De should be removed from LNAB as per [[Help:Name Fields for European Aristocrats]] naming standards >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, Gilbert de Foleschamp, Vicecomes under the Earl of Eu, is shown as son of Robert FitzNiger, who was grandson of [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] who "came over to Normandy with Rollo". He is also shown as father of [[De_Foleschamp-2|Richard de Foleschamp]], and grandfather of [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] who "came to England with William the Conqueror". Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. As [[Normandie-54|Rollo]] invaded Normandy about 890 and died between 928 and 933, and [[Normandie-32|William]] conquered England in 1066, Gilbert's birth may be very approximately estimated as 965 in Normandy. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's five generations from [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] to [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] and nine generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date or place. === Critical evaluation === Commenting on this pedigree, Chris Phillips has said "the earlier parts of this work should be treated with caution", though this part is clearly beyond what he describes as the "legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of Robert, he should be classed as Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 1025 [location unknown] but the only (though unreliable) source for him contradicts this, as detailed above. == [[De_Foleschamp-2|Richard de Foleschamp (abt.1050-)]] == >>> PM Orphan >>> De should be removed from LNAB as per [[Help:Name Fields for European Aristocrats]] naming standards >>> born c.995 >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, Richard de Foleschamp, is shown as son of Gilbert de Foleschamp, Vicecomes under the Earl of Eu, who was great-grandson of [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] who "came over to Normandy with Rollo". He is also shown as father of [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] who "came to England with William the Conqueror". Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. As [[Normandie-54|Rollo]] invaded Normandy about 890 and died between 928 and 933, and [[Normandie-32|William]] conquered England in 1066, Richard's birth may be very approximately estimated as 995 in Normandy. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's five generations from [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] to [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp]] and nine generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date or place. === Critical evaluation === Commenting on this pedigree, Chris Phillips has said "the earlier parts of this work should be treated with caution", though this part is clearly beyond what he describes as the "legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of Robert, he should be classed as Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 1050 [location unknown] but the only (though unreliable) source for him contradicts this, as detailed above. == [[De_Foleschamp-1|Godfrey de Foleschamp (abt.1076-)]] m. [[Daughter_of_Uchtred-1|Unknown (Daughter of Uchtred) de Foleschamp (abt.1080-)]] == >>> PM Orphan >>> Born 1040 Normandy >>> De should be removed from LNAB as per EuroAristo naming standards >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, Godfrey de Foleschamp who "came to England with William the Conqueror" is shown as son of [[De_Foleschamp-2|Richard de Foleschamp]]. Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. In that pedigree and in ''Monumenta Foljambeana'' published in 1873, he is also shown as married to the daughter (and heiress) of Uchtred, Saxon Lord of Elton (Derbyshire), and they are the parents of [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph Foleschamp]] who married [[Ferrers-184|Gundred]] daughter of Henry de Ferrars, and the great-great-grandparents of [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. [[Foljambe-60|Foljambe, Cecil G Savile]]. "Monumenta Foljambeana." ''The Reliquary'' Volume 14 (1873) Pages 65-70 and 237-242. ([https://books.google.ca/books?id=0Jg1AAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA239&pg=PA237#v=onepage&q&f=false Pages 237 and 239].) Godfrey's birth may be very approximately estimated as 1040 in Normandy. With 35-year generations, this would also be consistent with the pedigree's five generations from [[Svensson-1085|Ragnald]] who "came over to Normandy with [[Normandie-54|Rollo]]" (about 890) to Godfrey and a further four generations to [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. There is no evidence of his death date, though his fief of Elton would be a good guess for the place. His wife's father Uchtred (Uctred or Uhtred) is indeed shown as holding part of Elton in 1066, and by 1086 it was held by [[Ferrières-4|Henry de Ferrars]], shown in the pedigrees as his daughter-in-law's father. Powell-Smith, Anna. ''Open Domesday'' entry for Elton, Derbyshire. https://opendomesday.org/place/SK2261/elton/ (Accessed 10 April 2023.) === Critical evaluation === Commenting on the ''Pedigree of Foljambe'', Chris Phillips has said "the earlier parts of this work should be treated with caution", though this part is clearly beyond what he describes as the "legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) The claim that he "came to England with William the Conqueror" cannot be substantiated. Only 32 names of those who arrived with William in 1066 can be ascertained, and Godfrey de Foleschamp is not among them. Douglas, D. C. "Companions of the Conqueror". ''History'' Volume 28, no. 108 (1 September 1943) pages 129–147. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-229X.1943.tb00845.x
See also [[Wikipedia:Companions_of_William_the_Conqueror]] for a shorter list (accessed 10 April 2023).
Godfrey de Foleschamp does not appear in the ''Domesday People'' or ''Domesday Descendants'', which while not comprehensively listing all persons mentioned in English records 1066-1166, do cover 80% of all names identified in sources, with a focus on "providing information about birth and marriage families, dates of succession to fees and obit dates". Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday People: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: I Domesday Book''. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 1999.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781846153105. Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday Descendants: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: II. Pipe Rolls to'' Cartae Baronum. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2002.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781800105034. Pages 3, 5. Certainly he does not appear in the Pipe Rolls as the first reference to any Foljambe there relates to the will of William Foljambe in 18 Henry II (1172). Yeatman, John Pym, Sitwell, George R. and Foljambe, Cecil J. S. ''The Feudal History of the County of Derby: (Chiefly during the 11th, 12th, and 13th Centuries)''. (London: Bemrose, 1886) [https://archive.org/details/cu31924091761464/page/n139/mode/1up Page 114]. On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of Godfrey, he should be classed as Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 1076 [location unknown] but the only (though unreliable) sources for him contradict this, as detailed above. == [[Daughter_of_Uchtred-1|Unknown (Daughter of Uchtred) de Foleschamp (abt.1080-)]] == >>> PM Orphan >>> Born c.1045 >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' >>> '''Estimated Date''' In a ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' published in 1874, and in ''Monumenta Foljambeana'' published in 1873, the daughter (and heiress) of Uchtred, Saxon Lord of Elton (Derbyshire) is shown as married to Godfrey de Foleschamp, Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. [[Foljambe-60|Foljambe, Cecil G Savile]]. "Monumenta Foljambeana." ''The Reliquary'' Volume 14 (1873) Pages 65-70 and 237-242. ([https://books.google.ca/books?id=0Jg1AAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA239&pg=PA237#v=onepage&q&f=false Pages 237 and 239].) who "came to England with William the Conqueror" and was son of [[De_Foleschamp-2|Richard de Foleschamp]]. They are the parents of [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph Foleschamp]] who married [[Ferrers-184|Gundred]] daughter of [[Ferrières-4|Henry de Ferrars]], and the great-great-grandparents of [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe]] born about 1178. Her father Uchtred (Uctred or Uhtred) is indeed shown as holding part of Elton in 1066, and by 1086 it was held by [[Ferrières-4|Henry de Ferrars]], her daughter-in-law's father. Powell-Smith, Anna. ''Open Domesday'' entry for Elton, Derbyshire. https://opendomesday.org/place/SK2261/elton/ (Accessed 10 April 2023.) The implication of the pedigrees is that Godfrey married the daughter of Uchtred sometime soon after 1066. Presuming this was her first marriage, a rough estimate for her birth would be about 1045. Nothing is known of her death date, but a death place of her fief of Elton is possible. === Critical evaluation === Commenting on the ''Pedigree of Foljambe'', Chris Phillips has said "the earlier parts of this work should be treated with caution", though this part is clearly beyond what he describes as the "legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) On this basis and given no other sources for the existence of the daughter of Uchtred, she should be classed as Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously she was shown as * Born about 1080 [location unknown] but the only (though unreliable) sources for her suggest an earlier date, as detailed above. == [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph Foleschamp (abt.1070-)]] m. [[Ferrers-184|Gundred (Ferrers) de Foleschamp (abt.1072-)]] == >>> PM [[Athey-67|Darlene (Athey) Athey-Hill]] >>> born c.1075 >>> '''Estimated Date''' >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' Ralph or Raphe de Foleschamp appears in two pedigrees published in 1873 and 1874 as the son of [[De_Foleschamp-2|Richard de Foleschamp]] and the [[Daughter_of_Uchtred-1|daughter of Uchtred]] Saxon Lord of Elton. Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) [[Foljambe-60|Foljambe, Cecil G Savile]]. "Monumenta Foljambeana." ''The Reliquary'' Volume 14 (1873) Pages 65-70 and 237-242. ([https://books.google.ca/books?id=0Jg1AAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA239&pg=PA237#v=onepage&q&f=false Pages 237 and 239].) He is described simply as a knight of Tideswell (Derbyshire) or in more detail as a knight, Lord of Tideswell, Elton etc. in the time of Henry I (1100-1135). He married [[Ferrers-184|Gundred]] daughter of [[Ferrières-4|Henry de Ferrars]] and had a son [[Foljambe-41|Geoffrey Foljambe]] who died in 30 Henry II (1184). As his great-grandson [[Foljambe-22|John]] "desired to be buried in the chancel of the church at Tideswell with his forefathers", it is possible that Geoffrey was also buried there, and also that he died at Tideswell. === Critical evaluation === Ralph Foleschamp does not appear in the ''Domesday People'' or ''Domesday Descendants'', which while not comprehensively listing all persons mentioned in English records 1066-1166, do cover 80% of all names identified in sources, with a focus on "providing information about birth and marriage families, dates of succession to fees and obit dates". Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday People: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: I Domesday Book''. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 1999.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781846153105. Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday Descendants: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: II. Pipe Rolls to'' Cartae Baronum. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2002.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781800105034. Pages 3, 5. Certainly he does not appear in the Pipe Rolls as the first reference to any Foljambe there relates to the will William Foljambe in 18 Henry II (1172). Yeatman, John Pym, Sitwell, George R. and Foljambe, Cecil J. S. ''The Feudal History of the County of Derby: (Chiefly during the 11th, 12th, and 13th Centuries)''. (London: Bemrose, 1886) [https://archive.org/details/cu31924091761464/page/n139/mode/1up Page 114]. That Ralph Foleschamp was married to Gundred daughter of Henry de Ferrers is questionable. Firstly, because a daughter of a very powerful tenant-in-chief was unlikely to marry a man of much lower social status (his grandfather Uchtred being described as "a small landowner in north Derbyshire" ‘[https://domesday.pase.ac.uk/Domesday?op=5&personkey=40352 Uhtræd 23]’, Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England, http://www.pase.ac.uk, accessed 10 April 2023. ). Secondly, because the only known daughter of Henry de Ferrers was Amice. Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday People: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: I Domesday Book''. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 1999.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781846153105.
Entry for Henricus De Ferrariis, page 247.
Costambeys, Marios. "Ferrers, Henry de (d. 1093x1100), magnate and administrator." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 23 Sep. 2004. https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-9361. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) There is no evidence that the Foljambes were Lords of Tideswell before 1282. This claim is not made in the ''Monumenta Foljambeana'' pedigree, but is made in the ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' for [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph]] (in the time of Henry 1 – 1154-1189), [[Foljambe-41|Geoffrey]] (5 Stephen – 1140, died 30 Henry 2 – 1184), and [[Foljambe-23|Henry]] (in the time of Richard I and John – 1189-1216), though in the next generation John (c.1178-1249) is simply 'of Tideswell'. The early descent of the manor of Tideswell is thinly documented. It was held by the King in 1086 according to Domesday and then passed to the Peverell family, but King John granted it to Thomas Armiger in 1205, and it was held by the Brampton family in 1250, and confirmed to the Daniells in 1304. Lysons, Samuel. ''[[Space:Magna Britannia|Magna Britannia]]. Volume 5: Derbyshire''. (London: Cadell, 1817.) [https://www.british-history.ac.uk/magna-britannia/vol5/pp275-306#p12 Page 277]. However, it is recorded that the Sir Thomas Foljambe "had the manor of Tideswell from Richard Daniel" in 1282. Cox, J Charles. ''Memorials of Old Derbyshire''. (London: Bemrose, 1907.) Page 98 It seems then that the family were lessees of the manor from this point, and there is no evidence they held the Lordship any earlier. Commenting on the ''Pedigree of Foljambe'', Chris Phillips has said "the earlier parts of this work should be treated with caution", though this part is clearly beyond what he describes as the "legendary descent from Scandinavian royalty". Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) Given this assessment, the doubts about his marriage and the absence of other sources for the existence of Ralph, he should be classed as Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 1070 [location unknown] but analysis of the only (though unreliable) sources for him suggest slightly later date, as detailed above. == [[Ferrers-184|Gundred (Ferrers) de Foleschamp (abt.1072-)]] == >>> PM [[Athey-67|Darlene (Athey) Athey-Hill]] >>> Disconnect from father >>> '''Estimated Date''' >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' TO RESEARCH: she appears in [https://ia800502.us.archive.org/10/items/The_Gresleys_of_Drakelowe/TheGresleysofDrakelowe.pdf a pedigree] as daughter of Henry Ferrers who died 1088 or 1089. For the whole two-page pedigree down to 1633 this cites: * [https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A36794.0001.001/1:6.63?rgn=div2;view=fulltext Dugdale's Baronage i 257] - no mention of Henry's daughters * [https://archive.org/details/completepeerage03cokahrish/page/n65/mode/1up Cokayne's Peerage] - under Earls of Derby starts with Robert son of Henry * Planché in Journ. of the Archaeol. Assn. vii (1852) p.220 * Jewitt, Derbyshire Domesday (1871) p. vii * Cox in [https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archiveDS/archiveDownload?t=arch-2300-1/dissemination/pdf/009/DAJ_v009_1887_118-178.pdf Derb. Archaeol. Soc. ix (1887) p.118] - discusses sons but not daughters of Henry * [https://archive.org/details/cu31924029787250/page/n126/mode/1up Shirley's Stemmata Shirleiana p.103] - Pedigree of Devereux and Ferrars has only Henry and son John * Shaw's Staffordshire i, 418. - about a marriage Temp H 5. * Sir Tho. de Ferrers' Will, dated Feb. 149 . [sic one died 1429 another 1498] * H. Norris, [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Baddesley_Clinton/Z8QuAAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1 Baddesley Clinton] (1897) - pages 101-102 enumerates children of Henry Ferrers: Engenulph, William, Robert, Amicia wife to Nigel d'Albini, Emmeline, Gundreda, wife to Sir Robert le Blount, first feudal baron of Ixworth, co. Suffolk. ** Wikitree currently shows [[Le_Blount-34|Robert le Blount]] married to Henry's ''sister'' Gundreda, ** as does [http://www.thepeerage.com/p21199.htm#i211981 The Peerage]. ** Domesday People p.370 notes his sons are also landholders in DB, no mention of wife, he was dead by Temp H 1 (1100-1135). ** [https://archive.org/details/manorsofsuffolkn01copiuoft/page/333/mode/1up Manors of Suffolk] says he married Gundred daughter of Henry, citing H.R. ii 151 for the paragraph. ** [https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntdk.htm#_Toc36368840 MedLands for Ferrers] notes evidence for more than one daughter of Henry but can only name Amice, it also states Henry as the only known child of his father, which is odd given the first citation on [[De_Ferrieres-1|Guillaume De Ferrieres (-aft.1066)]] * &c. As her great-grandson [[Foljambe-22|John]] "desired to be buried in the chancel of the church at Tideswell with his forefathers", it is possible that Gundred was also buried there, and also that she died at Tideswell. == [[Foljambe-41|Geoffrey Foljambe (abt.1112-1184)]] m. [[Musard-8|Maud (Musard) Foljambe (abt.1115-)]] == >>> PM [[Athey-67|Darlene (Athey) Athey-Hill]] >>> born c.1110 >>> Add surname de Foleschamp >>> '''Estimated Date''' >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' Geffrey de Foleschamp appears in two pedigrees published in 1873 and 1874 as the son of [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph de Foleschamp]] and [[Ferrers-184|Gundred]] daughter of [[Ferrières-4|Henry de Ferrars]] . Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) [[Foljambe-60|Foljambe, Cecil G Savile]]. "Monumenta Foljambeana." ''The Reliquary'' Volume 14 (1873) Pages 65-70 and 237-242. ([https://books.google.ca/books?id=0Jg1AAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA239&pg=PA237#v=onepage&q&f=false Pages 237 and 239].) He is described as Lord of Tideswell in 5 Stephen (1140) and is said to have died in 30 Henry 2 (1184). He married [[Musard-8|Matilda]] daughter and heiress of [[Musard-3|Hasculfus Musard]], and had a son [[Foljambe-23|Henry Foljambe]], Lord of Tideswell in the time of Richard 1 (1189-1199) and John (1199-1216), who accompanied Richard I to the Holy Land. As his grandson [[Foljambe-22|John]] "desired to be buried in the chancel of the church at Tideswell with his forefathers", we can presume that Geoffrey was also buried there, and likely died at Tideswell. === Critical evaluation === Geoffrey Foljambe and his wife Matilda Musard do not appear in the ''Domesday People'' or ''Domesday Descendants'', which while not comprehensively listing all persons mentioned in English records 1066-1166, do cover 80% of all names identified in sources, with a focus on "providing information about birth and marriage families, dates of succession to fees and obit dates". The family of Harscoit Musard is discussed, with the implication that Matilda is not mentioned in documents of this period. Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday People: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: I Domesday Book''. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 1999.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781846153105. Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. ''Domesday Descendants: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166: II. Pipe Rolls to'' Cartae Baronum. (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2002.) https://doi.org/10.1017/9781800105034. Pages 3, 5. Certainly he does not appear in the Pipe Rolls as the first reference to any Foljambe there relates to the will William Foljambe in 18 Henry II (1172), and the next mention is Tom Foljambe in 10-11 John (1208-1210). Yeatman, John Pym, Sitwell, George R. and Foljambe, Cecil J. S. ''The Feudal History of the County of Derby: (Chiefly during the 11th, 12th, and 13th Centuries)''. (London: Bemrose, 1886) Pages [https://archive.org/details/cu31924091761464/page/n139/mode/1up 114], [https://archive.org/details/cu31924091761464/page/n200/mode/1up 175]. Whether Geoffrey Foljambe married a daughter and heiress of Hasculfus Musard should also be questioned. Hasculfus Musard is to be identified as Ha(r)scoit Musard. There were two men of this name. The first was a Domesday tenant-in-chief, who before 1112 had become a monk at Ely, and whose heir was his son Robert. Keats-Rohan, ''Domesday People'', entry for Hascoit Musard, on page 244. Keats-Rohan, ''Domesday Descendants'', entry for Musard, Robert, on page 1048. The second was "apparently the great-grandson" of the first, succeeded his father in 1162 and died in 1185 leaving a son and heir Ralph who was of age in 1190.Keats-Rohan, ''Domesday Descendants'', entry for Musard, Harscoit II, on page 1048. Chronologically it is just possible for either of them to be the father of Matilda, though she would have to be either a very late child of the first or a much older sister to the heir of the second who married a man of a similar age to her father. The claim that she was the heiress of Hasculfus Musard is refuted by the evidence that their sons and grandsons succeeded them. In addition, no daughter Matilda is shown for either man in a pedigree with detailed citations of evidence (though it does omit the generation of Robert son of the first Harscoit and grandfather of the second).[https://archive.org/details/collectaneatopog04londuoft/page/n14/mode/1up Pedigree of the Frecheville and Musard Families, Lords of Crich and Staveley in Derbyshire]. ''Collecteanea Topographica et Genealogica'', Volume 4, Pages 1-28. Finally, a daughter of a very powerful tenant-in-chief was unlikely to marry a man of much lower social status. There is no evidence that the Foljambes were Lords of Tideswell before 1282. This claim is not made in the ''Monumenta Foljambeana'' pedigree, but is made in the ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' for [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph]] (in the time of Henry 1 – 1154-1189), [[Foljambe-41|Geoffrey]] (5 Stephen – 1140, died 30 Henry 2 – 1184), and [[Foljambe-23|Henry]] (in the time of Richard I and John – 1189-1216), though in the next generation John (c.1178-1249) is simply 'of Tideswell'. The early descent of the manor of Tideswell is thinly documented. It was held by the King in 1086 according to Domesday and then passed to the Peverell family, but King John granted it to Thomas Armiger in 1205, and it was held by the Brampton family in 1250, and confirmed to the Daniells in 1304. Lysons, Samuel. ''[[Space:Magna Britannia|Magna Britannia]]. Volume 5: Derbyshire''. (London: Cadell, 1817.) [https://www.british-history.ac.uk/magna-britannia/vol5/pp275-306#p12 Page 277]. However, it is recorded that the Sir Thomas Foljambe "had the manor of Tideswell from Richard Daniel" in 1282. Cox, J Charles. ''Memorials of Old Derbyshire''. (London: Bemrose, 1907.) [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/69017/69017-h/69017-h.htm#Page_97 Pages 97-98] It seems then that the family were lessees of the manor from this point, and there is no evidence they held the Lordship any earlier. On the basis of the disproof of most of the statements about him in the pedigrees, he should be considered as of Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously he was shown as * Born about 1112 in Derbyshire, England * married before 1152 [location unknown] but analysis of the only (though unreliable) sources for shows no justification for a precise birth date, and no evidence for a marriage date, as detailed above. == [[Musard-8|Maud (Musard) Foljambe (abt.1115-)]] == >>> PM [[Athey-67|Darlene (Athey) Athey-Hill]] >>> Born >>> '''Estimated Date''' >>> '''Uncertain Existence''' >>> Section on Soddington should be removed. The cited source dates this to Temp Hen. III (1216-1272), which is a century later. >>> Need to evaluate whether [[Musard-1|Matilda Musard]] and [[Musard-8|Matilda Musard]] may be the same person.
The Frecheville & Musard pedigree shows ''Matilda ux. Mathei de Haversheg (15 c)'' as sister of the second Hasculfus. Source 15c is a transcript of a charter (MS Lansd. 207 F. p.92) where Ralph Musard confirms four bovates his father Hasculfus gave as a marriage portion to Matthew de Haversheg and Matilda, the aunt of Ralph. No date is given, but it must be between the death of Hasculfus in 31 H 2 (1184) and of Ralph in 14 H 3 (1229). This Matilda, being of the same generation as the second Harscoit would be closer in age to Geoffrey, but he would have to be her second husband and their marriage take place after 1184, which is as chronologically awkward as her being Harscoit's daughter, and makes her much older at the time of marriage [[Musard-8|Matilda]] daughter and heiress of [[Musard-3|Hasculfus Musard]] appears in two pedigrees published in 1873 and 1874 as the wife of [[Foljambe-41|Geoffrey Foljambe ]] . Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) [[Foljambe-60|Foljambe, Cecil G Savile]]. "Monumenta Foljambeana." ''The Reliquary'' Volume 14 (1873) Pages 65-70 and 237-242. ([https://books.google.ca/books?id=0Jg1AAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA239&pg=PA237#v=onepage&q&f=false Pages 237 and 239].) Her husband is described as Lord of Tideswell in 5 Stephen (1140) and is said to have died in 30 Henry 2 (1184). They had a son [[Foljambe-23|Henry Foljambe]], Lord of Tideswell in the time of Richard 1 (1189-1199) and John (1199-1216), who accompanied Richard I to the Holy Land. As her grandson [[Foljambe-22|John]] "desired to be buried in the chancel of the church at Tideswell with his forefathers", we can presume that Matilda was also buried there, and likely died at Tideswell. === Critical evaluation === Whether Geoffrey Foljambe married a daughter and heiress of Hasculfus Musard should be questioned. Hasculfus Musard is to be identified as Ha(r)scoit Musard. There were two men of this name. The first was a Domesday tenant-in-chief, who before 1112 had become a monk at Ely, and whose heir was his son Robert. Keats-Rohan, ''Domesday People'', entry for Hascoit Musard, on page 244. Keats-Rohan, ''Domesday Descendants'', entry for Musard, Robert, on page 1048. The second was "apparently the great-grandson" of the first, succeeded his father in 1162 and died in 1185 leaving a son and heir Ralph who was of age in 1190.Keats-Rohan, ''Domesday Descendants'', entry for Musard, Harscoit II, on page 1048. Chronologically it is just possible for either of them to be the father of Matilda, though she would have to be either a very late child of the first or a much older sister to the heir of the second who married a man of a similar age to her father. The claim that she was the heiress of Hasculfus Musard is refuted by the evidence that their sons and grandsons succeeded them. In addition, no daughter Matilda is shown for either man in a pedigree with detailed citations of evidence (though it does omit the generation of Robert son of the first Harscoit and grandfather of the second).[https://archive.org/details/collectaneatopog04londuoft/page/n14/mode/1up Pedigree of the Frecheville and Musard Families, Lords of Crich and Staveley in Derbyshire]. ''Collecteanea Topographica et Genealogica'', Volume 4, Pages 1-28. Finally, a daughter of a very powerful tenant-in-chief was unlikely to marry a man of much lower social status. On this basis she should be considered as of Uncertain Existence. === Removed BMD info === Previously she was shown as * Born about 1115 in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England * married before 1152 [location unknown] but analysis of the only (though unreliable) sources for her shows no evidence for a marriage date, as detailed above. If one of the Harscoit Musards is her father, then their caput was at Staveley, not Chesterfield. == [[Foljambe-23|Henry Foljambe (abt.1152-)]] == >>> PM [[Athey-67|Darlene (Athey) Athey-Hill]] >>> born c.1145 As his son [[Foljambe-22|John]] "desired to be buried in the chancel of the church at Tideswell with his forefathers", we can presume that Henry was also buried there, and likely died at Tideswell. === Critical evaluation === There is no evidence that the Foljambes were Lords of Tideswell before 1282. This claim is not made in the ''Monumenta Foljambeana'' pedigree, but is made in the ''Pedigree of Foljambe'' for [[Foleschamp-4|Ralph]] (in the time of Henry 1 – 1154-1189), [[Foljambe-41|Geoffrey]] (5 Stephen – 1140, died 30 Henry 2 – 1184), and [[Foljambe-23|Henry]] (in the time of Richard I and John – 1189-1216), though in the next generation John (c.1178-1249) is simply 'of Tideswell'. The early descent of the manor of Tideswell is thinly documented. It was held by the King in 1086 according to Domesday and then passed to the Peverell family, but King John granted it to Thomas Armiger in 1205, and it was held by the Brampton family in 1250, and confirmed to the Daniells in 1304. Lysons, Samuel. ''[[Space:Magna Britannia|Magna Britannia]]. Volume 5: Derbyshire''. (London: Cadell, 1817.) [https://www.british-history.ac.uk/magna-britannia/vol5/pp275-306#p12 Page 277]. However, it is recorded that the Sir Thomas Foljambe "had the manor of Tideswell from Richard Daniel" in 1282. Cox, J Charles. ''Memorials of Old Derbyshire''. (London: Bemrose, 1907.) Page 98 It seems then that the family were lessees of the manor from this point, and there is no evidence they held the Lordship any earlier. == [[FitzHerbert-183|Eleanor (FitzHerbert) Foljambe (abt.1154-)]] == >>> PM Orphan >>> Born == [[Foljambe-22|John Foljambe (abt.1179-abt.1249)]] == >>> PM [[Lamoreaux-297|Ron Lamoreaux]] >>> born c.1178 John Foliamb or Foljamb appears in two pedigrees published in 1873 and 1874 as the son of [[Foljambe-23|Henry de Foliamb or Foljamb]] and [[FitzHerbert-183|Eleanor]] daughter (and heiress) of Thomas Fitzherbert. Foster, Joseph. ''[[Space:Pedigrees_of_the_County_Families|Pedigrees of the county families of Yorkshire: Volume 1 West Riding]] (London: W W Head, 1874). No pagination. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofcount01fost/page/n142/mode/1up Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall]. Ayars, Barbarann K, and Phillips, Chris. Transcription of, and commentary on, [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/families/foljambe/foljambe.shtml Pedigree of Foljambe, of Aldwarke Hall] on Phillips, Chris [http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html Some Notes on Medieval English Genealogy]. (Accessed 10 April 2023.) [[Foljambe-60|Foljambe, Cecil G Savile]]. "Monumenta Foljambeana." ''The Reliquary'' Volume 14 (1873) Pages 65-70 and 237-242. ([https://books.google.ca/books?id=0Jg1AAAAMAAJ&lpg=PA239&pg=PA237#v=onepage&q&f=false Pages 237 and 239].) He is described as a knight of Tideswell and Wormhill, etc., in the High Peak. He died in 1249, aged 71, and was buried at Tideswell, having expressed a desire "to be buried in the chancel of the church at Tideswell with his forefathers". Presumably he died at Tideswell. A rather different account of his ancestry is given by Cox: Cox, J Charles. ''Memorials of Old Derbyshire''. (London: Bemrose, 1907.) [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/69017/69017-h/69017-h.htm#Page_97 Pages 97-98]
One of [the Foljambe family] was enfeoffed as a forester of fee (that is an hereditary forester) by William Peverel in the days of the Conqueror. William Foljambe, who was probably his grandson, died in 1172. Thomas Foljambe, of Tideswell, is mentioned in 1208, and again in 1214, when he was a knight. He had three sons, whose names appear as witnesses to various charters between 1224 and 1244; John and Roger are described as being of Tideswell, and Thomas of Little Hucklow. John died in 1249.
He married [[Luttrell-627|Margaret]] daughter of Geoffrey Lutterell and had issue: * [[Foljambe-21|Thomas]] * John * William * Roger * Henry * Robert == Sources ==

Folk og slekt i gamle Trondenes

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Bjørkenes, Bergljot Holte; Meyer, Tore; Jensen, Margareth. "Folk og slekt i gamle Trondenes: B 1. Familiekatalog" B.H. Bjørkenes, Harstad, 1997 https://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-nb_digibok_2011090208038

Folk på Syrdal som jeg er usikre på

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Jeg trenger en plass å lagre personer og resonementer jeg ikke er helt 100 % sikker på.

Folsom Robert W Legal Notice

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The Binghamton Press, Saturday Evening, June 28, 1930. (Transcibed from www.fultonhistory.com) LEGAL NOTICES CITATION SURROGATE'S COURT Act 189, 140. The People of the State of New York, by the Grace of God Free and Independent: To Melbourn Folsom, sometimes known as Melville Folsom, if he be living, a brother aud heir at law and next of kin of Robert W. Folsom, deceased, late of the City of Binghamton, in the County of Broome, New York, and if the said Melbourn Folsom, sometimes known as Melville Folsom, be not living, then his surviving widow, if any there be, executors or administrators, if any there be, and all of his heirs at law and next of kin, if any there be, and all of his devisees, legatees, assignees, transferees and successors in interest, if any there be, whose names, residences and postoffice addresses are unknown and unascertainable, and who would be heirs at law aud next of kin of, and persons and parties interested in the estate of said Robert W. Folsom, deceased; and if the above named Melbourn Folsom, sometimes known as Melville Folsom, and all of the above described unknown persons and parties be not living, then to Mary Ella Folsom, Maude F. Jackson, Lottie May Colburn and Albert F.? Folsom, cousins and heirs at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and grandchildren of William Thomas Folsom, deceased, who was a brother of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator, also to Maude R. Shaffer, Nelson E.? Folsom, Frances Folsom Baker and Mary Folsom Milburn, cousins and heirs at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and great grandchildren of said William Thomas Folsom, deceased, who was a brother of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator; also to Jennie Richards Houlden, a cousin and heir at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and a granddaughter of Louisa Veazie, deceased, who was a sister of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator; also to Carrie Harrison, Mae Winters and Clarence Richards, cousins and heirs at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and great grandchildren of said Louisa Veazie, deceased, who was a sister of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator; also to F. Melvln Veazie, a cousin and heir at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and a son of Sarah Folsom Veazie, deceased, who was a sister of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator; also to Nettie V. Healy, Max Veazie, Fay Veazle and Cecil Hugh Veazie, cousins and heirs at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and grandchlldren of said Sarah Folsom Veazie, deceased, who was a sister of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator; also to Henry Cram, Rhea Cram, Bertram Cram and Gusta? Hoyt, cousins and heirs at law and next of kin of the testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, and great grandchlldren of said Sarah Folsom Veazie, deceased, who was a sister of Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator; and also to all other heirs at law and next of kin of said testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, if any there be, being the descendants, heirs at law and next of kin of the deceased brothers and sisters of said Robert Hilcon Folsom, the deceased father of said testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, whose names, residences and postoffice addresses are unknown and unascertainable; and the descendants, heirs at law and next of kin of the deceased brothers and sisters, if any there be, of Vashti Folsom Bradley, the deceased mother of said testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, whose names, residences and postoffice addresses are unknown and unascertainable; and if any of the heretofore and above, described unknown heirs at law and next of kin, if any there be, have died subsequently to the death of said testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, then to their heirs at law, next of kin, husbands or widows, executors or administrators, devisees, legatees, assignees, transferees and successors in interest, if any there be, of all such persons, whose names, residences and postoffice addresses are unknown and unascertainable, and who would be heirs at law and next of kin of, and persons and parties interested in the estate of said testator, Robert W. Folsom, deceased, late of the City of Binghamton, in the County of Broome, New York - Greeting: You and each of you are hereby cited to show cause In the Surrogate's Court of the County of Broome, New York, before our Surrogate of said County, at his office in the Court House in the City of Binghamton, in said County, on the 28th day of July, 1930, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon of that day, why the last Will and Testament of said decedent, which relates to real and personal property, and is propounded for probate by City National Bank of Binghamton, the petitioner herein, of the City of Binghamton in the County of Broome, New York, the Executor therein named, should not be admitted to probate as the last Will and Testament of said decedent, valid to ???? real and personal property, and why Letters Testamentary thereon should not be issued; and such of you as are hereby cited as are under the age of twenty-one years, are notified to appear by your guardian, if you have one, or if you have none you are each notified to appear nnd apply for one to be appointed; or show cause why one should not be appointed; or in the event of your neglect or failure to do so, a special guardian will be appointed by the Surrogate; to represent and act for you In this proceeding. In Testimony Whereof, we have caused the Seal of our said Surrogate's Court for the County of Broome, New York, to be hereunto affixed. WITNESS - HON. BENJAMIN BAKER. Surrogate of the County of Broome, at the City of Binghamton, in said County of Broome, New York, the 25?th day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred thirty. FRANCIS V. V. LEARY. Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. JOSEPH P. MANGAN, Attorney for Petitioner. O'Nell Bldg. Blnghamton, N. Y.

Folwell Wills

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[[Space:Sussex_Wills|Sussex Wills]] *[[Space:1878_Thomas_Folwell|1878 Thomas Folwell]].

Fontaine dit Bienvenu 1991 family gathering remembering

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Fontaine_dit_Bienvenu_1991_family_gathering_remembering.jpg
This is a memory event to remember our Fontaine dit Bienvenu gathering at the Sainte Agathe, Manitoba, Community Fair Grounds in August of 1991, celebrating 102 years in Manitoba, having settles there in 1889. It is also intended to recruit and invite those who would like to re-assemble in 2025 (location to be determined) to celebrate 136 years since arriving to Manitoba. 600 relatives came and participated in the weekend event in August 1991, with mass given by Father Edouard Fontaine who came from Lafayette Louisiana for the celebration. We also held a baseball softball event on the saturday. We finished event with a shared lunch on the sunday. The relatives of Pierre Adolphe Fontaine dit Bienvenu, Heli Fontaine, Henry Fontaine, and their descendants from both sides of the Red River near Sainte Agathe Manitoba. This is to remember the event, have participants share their email addresses with the. host, Roger Fontaine, and to prepare for our next gathering proposed for 2025, Those relatives interested in joining our hosting committee are invited to contact host at

Foobar zak

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this is a test

Football

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Fletcher2803_468x375_1.jpg
The game is started with a kickoff, then the offense has a possession to try to score a field goal, worth three points, or a touchdown, worth six points, After a touchdown, the team can add an extra point worth one point or go for a two-point conversion. The offense has four downs to pick up 10 yards and get a new set of downs, or they can choose to punt the ball to the other team rather than turning the ball over on downs.

Football Teams

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This is a list page for grouping footballers who played in the same team together. Link to the team from each team member's profile, and then you can jump between team-mates with ease. Feel free to add teams as required. == England 1966 World Cup Squad == Final Starting XI * [[Banks-6030|Gordon Banks]] * [[Wilson-106978|Ray Wilson]] * [[Cohen-6632|George Cohen]] * [[Charlton-2538|Jack Charlton]] * [[Moore-53451|Bobby Moore]] (c) * [[Stiles-5341|Nobby Stiles]] * [[Ball-24036|Alan Ball]] * [[Peters-18177|Martin Peters]] * [[Charlton-2534|Bobby Charlton]] * [[Hunt-28844|Roger Hunt]] * Geoff Hurst ([[Hurst-6474|father]]) Other Squad Members * Jimmy Greaves * Peter Bonetti * John Connelly * Ron Springett * Jimmy Armfield * Gerry Byrne * Ron Flowers * Norman Hunter * Terry Paine * Ian Callaghan * George Eastham == The Lisbon Lions (Celtic, 1968) == https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisbon_Lions Starting team in the final: * Ronnie Simpson * Jim Craig * Tommy Gemmell * Bobby Murdoch * Billy McNeill (captain) * John Clark * Jimmy Johnstone * Willie Wallace * Stevie Chalmers * Bertie Auld * Bobby Lennox Unused Squad Members: * John Fallon (substitute goalkeeper, not used) * Charlie Gallagher * John Hughes * Joe McBride * Willie O'Neill * Jock Stein (Manager) * Sean Fallon (Assistant Manager) * Neil Mochan (Trainer) == Team 3 == == Team 4 ==

Foote, 1846

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Excerpt from Foote, William Henry, '''''[http://www.worldcat.org/title/sketches-of-north-carolina-historical-and-biographical-illustrative-of-the-principles-of-a-portion-of-her-early-settlers/oclc/1117119&referer=brief_results Sketches of North Carolina, historical and biographical : illustrative of the principles of a portion of her early settlers]'''''. New York : Robert Carter, 1846. transcribed by Jim Vondrak ([[Vondrak-7]]). Available for download [http://www.electricscotland.com/history/america/nc/chapter13.htm here]. :Colonel James Smith, of Tennessee, an emigrant from North Carolina, and son of Colonel Samuel Smith, one of the founders of Grassy Creek church, in Granville county, in a letter to Dr. Alexander Wilson, of Caldwell Institute, says, "some time between 1753 and 1760, Samuel Bell, with his brothers and son-in-law, Donnell, removed from Pennsylvania, and settled in the forks of Rico. They were strict Presbyterians, and were soon supplied with preaching by a Mr. Black, afterwards by Mr. McAden, from the lower part of the State." It appears that this gentleman was not aware that McAden had previously visited Rico, and found a few families of Presbyterians already there, and that Mr. Pattillo had been invited there in 1758. The emigrants he mentions formed the congregation of Upper Hico (now Greers); from other families Mr. McAden organized Middle Rico (Red House); and from the emigration of the Barnet family and their friends, he gathered Barnet's, or Lower Hico. :Mr. Smith states that about the time the Bells settled in the forks, Hugh Barnet, his brother, and their friends, seated them- selves some fifteen or twenty miles southeast of that settlement, and planted a church, which was frequently called Barnet's, sometimes Criswell's, from their first minister, James Criswell, who was licensed by Hanover Presbytery. This church was sometimes also called Lower Hico, and though it has ceased to have a place in the records of the church, it at one time contained more members than any of the sister churches in the State. :There was another church in Caswell of long standing, called Bethany, or Rattlesnake, situated on the road from Milton to Yanceyville, near the residence of Mr. George Wilhamson. It was never under the care of Mr. McAden. For a long time it was a flourishing church, and for a series of years enjoyed the labors of Rev, Ebenezer B. Currie, now (1846) the oldest minister in Orange Presbytery. This church has been divided, and the old place of preaching abandoned ; one part of the church and congregation worshipping in Yanceyville, and the other forming the church of Gilead, some five miles southwest of Milton. :Mr. McAden had another place of preaching, and a church organized near Pittsylvania court-house, in Virginia, on which he regularly attended during his life. May the church now rising in Pittsylvania come up like a phoenix from the ashes of the more ancient and almost forgotten, though once flourishing, congregations. :The Bell family, says Mr. Smith, early removed from this to Guilford, carrying their attachment to religion and to Presbyterianism along with them, and their descendants are to be found there to this day. Two of the sons of Samuel Bell, and the daughter, Donnell, removed to the west, still carrying their attachment to religion and Presbyterianism along with them. The two sons lived to anadvanced age. One of them, while on his knees at family prayer, faltered in his voice, and said, "What is this ?" — and ceased to breathe. But of this family, says Mr. Smith (many years since), sprung four preachers of strong common sense, full of zeal, and eminent for piety. By this family much has been done for propagating the gospel in Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, and the Cherokee nation. :The Covenant of God stands sure. " I will be a God to thee and thy children after thee." Information about Dr. Alexander Wilson can be found here [http://piedmontwanderings.blogspot.com/2009/10/sketch-of-life-of-rev-dr-alexander.html here] :The exactness of the information in the Foote book is somewhat questionable. The Foote book skips the Bell family's time in Virginia, also refers to Samuel Bell moving with his son-in-law Donnell when they did not marry until after 1773. Mary Bell Donnell would have been a toddler/child at the time of the referenced move to Caswell county. :According to the interview with Rev Robert Bell in the Draper Manuscripts the Bell family timeline is: ::1736 Robert Bell born in Pennsylvania ::1748 family moved to Amherst, Virginia ::Subsequently to Caswell county, NC ::1771 Robert Bell moves to Guilford county ::1785 Robert Bell, brother Samuel and the Donnells move to Sumner Tennessee [[User:Norman-673|Norman-673]] 20 May 2014

Footnotes on family of Edward Michael and Effie Scott Mayer, by Reece Mayer, January 1991

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'''“Footnotes on family of Edward Michael and Effie Scott Mayer”, by [[Mayer-1323|Reece Mayer]], January 1991''' [[Scott-13051|Effie Lillian Melverne Scott]] and [[Mayer-1125|Edward Michael Mayer]] were married on Sunday Nov 5 (or 6?) 1916 in the town of Roseberry, Idaho. At that time, Roseberry was largest town in Long Valley, Van Wyck and Lardo were other villages in Long Valley. Today they are gone. Roseberry replaced by Donnelly, 1 mile west on new railroad, Van Wyck became Cascade 1 mile east on Railroad, and Lardo became McCall 1 mile east on Payette Land and end of the Railroad. Marriage performed at the home of Effie Scott’s brother, [[Scott-13317| G.K.(Kay)]] and wife [[Coski-1|Gertrude Coski Scott]]. Very good friend (and 2nd [sic] cousin) of Effie’s, [[Bennett-9911|Gladys Bennett]] and Gladys' beau [[Fairbrother-252|Guy Fairbrother]] were witnesses. They got married a little later. Ed and Effie set up house keeping on a 160 A. ranch located 6 mi. south of present day McCall, on N. Fork of the Payette River. Ranch was part of estate of Effie’s father, D. G. Scott, who died early that year (19 January 1916) in Emmett, Idaho. When they were married, Effie had just finished 9 years of teaching school, with last year at Roseberry. Ed had been farming with his dad [[Mager-63|Michael]] on the Mayer farm of 640 acres 4 miles east of Roseberry. Effie’s brother, [[Scott-13317|G. K. Scott]], had just recently taken over the half of the McDougall-Scott Mercantile Store in Roseberry that was part of their father’s estate. Kay and McDougal dissolved partnership and Kay started the Scott Mercantile across the street. Effie’s stepmother [[Leeper-187|Annie Leeper Scott]] and Mom’s half-sister [[Scott-13333|Elizabeth]] and half-brother [[Scott-13334|Leonard]] were living in Emmett. Effie’s sister [[Scott-13315|Cora Scott Fields]], her husband [[Fields-1906|Geo. Fields]] and children Dave, Ralph, Florence, Roy and Nora, were living on a farm near Van Wyck. Effie’s oldest brother [[Scott-13301|Burt]], wife [[Ellis-7056|Fannie (Frances)]] and baby son, [[Scott-13302|Burton]], had sold their homestead farm located near present day Lake Fork, located 5 miles north of Donnelly, and were living at Montour, 13 miles North of Emmett. Burt was working with his team and fresno for the contractor building the Black Canyon irrigation canal that would eventually irrigate the farmland on the Emmett Bench. Burt and Fannie soon after bought a farm near [Kuna, where they lived until Burt died. Ed’s oldest sister, [[Mayer-3715|Lilly]], was married to [[Mickelson-281|Bob Mickelson]] and living in Pittsburgh [Pennsylvania]. Their only child, [[Mickelson-282|Robert Mickelson]], was born there in August 1917. Ed’s sister [[Mayer-3752|Bertha]] was attending Albion Normal School at Albion, working to get her teaching certificate. [[Mayer-3753|Frieda]] had finished high school and was at home helping her mother. [[Mayer-3754|Hilda]] and [[Mayer-3755|Henry]] were in Roseberry High School, [[Mayer-3756|Marie]] and [[Mayer-3757|Irma]] in Roseberry grade school. Jan. 6 1918, [[Mayer-1323|Edward Reece]] was born on the Ranch. Delivered by a mid-wife, Mrs. McFall, who lived in for 2 weeks. Snow was 3 ft. deep at the time. When it cam near time for second child, [[Mayer-1124|Ellen Anna Mayer]], to be born, Effie went to Emmett and stayed with her step-mother Annie, and Elizabeth and Leonard. Anna was born 10 January 1920 and attended by Dr. Reynolds. On same day, in same town, Reece’s first wife, [[Hart-6427|Elma Maxine Hart]], was born and attended by the only other Dr. in town, Dr. Cummings. Ed Mayer had taken 2 yr old “Eddie” Reece over to his folks at the Roseberry Mayer Family farm while he stayed at home to take care of the stock and “batch”. After Anna was born, Effie had a “nervous break-down”, so called in those days and spent time in an Emmett nursing home and with her folks. [[Bennett-9920|Joe Bennett]]’s parents, who lived only two mile from Ed and Effie’s home in Long Valley, took Baby Anna for the next 6 months or so. ([[Scott-15603|Linnie]] and [[Bennett-9907|Henry Bennett]]. Linnie was a Scott and Mom’s first cousin.) Poor Ed! His wife was 100 miles away in Emmett; his oldest child “Eddie” was 15 miles down the Valley with his parents; Baby Anna was only 2 miles away tho; and Ed was “batching”, farming, milking a few cows and raising hogs. During the summer of 1920 his sister Frieda came home from teaching her first school and lived with Ed. In those days, a person could get their teaching certificate after attending normal school for 1 year! Eventually, all five Mayer sisters in Idaho attended Albion Normal and received their teaching certificates. Bertha, Frieda and Hilda taught in elementary schools all their working careers and never married. Marie and Irma each taught a couple years but didn’t like it and quit. In late August of 1920, Effie was well enough to come back home, Frieda left to return to teaching. Effie said she came back to Norwood siding on Railroad where Ed picked her up with horse and buggy. In those days, everyone traveled around Long Valley by Horse and Buggy or team and wagon. The railroad from Nampa through Emmett and on to the end at McCall was finished at McCall in 1914. It was a godsend for the people of Long Valley to get people and freight to the lower country: Emmett, Nampa, and Boise. 100 miles, McCall to Emmett. Effie said that before Railroad arrived, her brothers Burt and G.K. did some freighting by team and wagon to Boise Valley. Going down, hauling rough lumber and sacks of oats (horse feed) it took 3 days. Coming back up hill, hauling salt, sugar, coffee, nails, and various supplies, it took 6 days. Effie attended summer school, for teachers, 2 summers, at the old Boise High School building. When I asked her how she got there (this was 1909-1910) before the railroad, she said she went down and back on the freight wagons – but they did have a horse drawn stagecoach also that she could use if her brothers weren’t hauling freight at the time. Commercial Stage Coach. Ed picked up Effie at Norwood siding, which was closest rail stop to their ranch home. (A few years ago, 30 miles of that railroad between McCall and Cascade was abandoned and rails hauled away.) They went across Valley (about 14 miles) to Ed’s parents to pick up little Eddie. Mom said I was just learning to talk quite well, but it was in German! Then back up Valley to Linnie Bennett’s to collect baby Anna, 8 months old. Joe Bennett was at home then, 22 years old, and he always had a warm spot in his heart for Anna, watching her grow for 6-8 months. 1920 was a good year for farmers. Joe Bennett said he rented 40 acres across road from his folk’s farm and planted it to wheat. That fall, wheat was a good price and he sold the crop for $5000. Most money he saw for years. Ed and Effie should have done as well also, because Ed and his dad Michael, always planted wheat as their main crop. In 1921 a recession set in and wheat sold for only 10¢ a bushel. Joe said people in Boise Valley were burning wheat instead of coal in their heating stoves because it was cheaper. In the winter of 1921-22 the Ed Mayer family moved to the Emmett Valley. They rented a house and in the spring of 1922 Ed got a job at Boise-Payette saw mill. Hard times apparently forced the move as the ranch was eventually sold for taxes. Mom’s brother G. K. Scott had moved his store business from Roseberry to Donnelly, one mile away on the railroad. About the time Ed and Effie moved to Emmett, G. K. went bankrupt in the store and went back to farming near Donnelly. On April 19, 1923, [[Mayer-1615|Harold Scott Mayer]] was born at home, 1014 S. Boise Ave, Emmett, Idaho. Dr. Commings attended. I was 5 and Anna was 3. Mom felt labor pains about 3 p.m. on a nice sunshiny spring day. She sent me over to the neighbors to have them call the doctor. Soon Doctor drove up in his Model T Ford and came into house carrying his bag. Mom then had me take Anna and walk over 3 blocks on Commercial Street where the Lester Cases’ lived. Mom pre-arranged for Mrs. Case to babysit us. Lester Case and Dad were at work at the Mill. About 9 o’clock that nite Dad came up to the Case’s and took us home to see our new baby brother. He was in a bassinet-on legs next to Mom in the big bed. A fine looking baby and was Dad proud – he was grinning all over and so was Mom. In September 1924 Reese started to first grade in old Wardwell grade school. All three children went through Wardwell Grade School and Park View High School. Mom never did tell me why they moved from the Ranch to lower country. She did say winters were terrible and they were so isolated on that ranch, especially so in winter. Dad told me once, when I asked, “Your mother never did like it on the ranch. And she got homesick for her step-mother and sister Elizabeth (Lizzie) and brother Leonard (Shorty). It was too bad,” he said, “because we were just getting a good start on the ranch.” Seeds of differences all ready being sown early in marriage. A farmer with only a 6th grade education married to a well educated school teacher!! Until I, Reese, started to school, all the Scott’s called me “Reece” as well as Mom. All the Mayers and my Dad called me “Eddie”. Before school started, Mom took me to Wardwell school and registered me in. I walked to school first day along with some older kids in the neighbourhood. In school, teacher said first order of business was to learn to write our names, which she had pasted on strips of paper on our desktops. I had three name; all the other kids only had two!! The teacher came along and said I couldn’t have three names, “Edward Reece Mayer”. That I couldn’t have but two and I had to choose one. Deep inside me I always blamed my Mom for putting me in such a spot. I loved both my folks and knew if I took the problem home, there would be an argument. Edward was my first name and probably should have been used. But Mom didn’t register me as Edward or Reece but both. Well, I couldn’t write either one on first day of school. But I soon realized it was lot easier to write “Reece” than “Edward”. I don’t think the folks knew what had happened until I took home my first report card. Don’t know how they settled that one but that is reason I’m “Reece” to this day. All the school kids and Mom called me Reece. But Dad kept on calling me “Eddie”, or son, for a long time after that. Even the Mayer aunts! Mom always wanted to buy a house, Dad always said it was cheaper to rent. Or maybe it was the other way around. Anyway, they didn’t agree and always rented while living in Emmett. In 1927 we moved to a larger and better rented house, closer to town and schools at 522 S. Hays. It was about this time that Mom switched from being a Sunday Baptist-Methodist church goer to a Seventh Day Adventist, and she took us kids along also to Saturday services. This was another area of disagreement. Dad was baptised and raised in the German Lutheran church! In the middle of the night once, I was awakened by Dad and Mom arguing in their bedroom. Dad was telling Mom, in a loud voice, “Send those kids to church on Sunday.” Couldn’t hear what Mom said back but Dad said again, “Damnit. I said send those kids to Sunday school!” Guess he lost because Mom kept on marching us to Sabbath school after that anyway. Dad never went to church in Emmett but was always very friendly with Lutheran Minister Kellerman, who lived nearby. December 7, 1924, [[Reusswig-1|Grandma Mayer]] died in her sleep on the ranch at Roseberry. Frieda didn’t teach that year, but stayed home to take care of her mother and housekeep for granddad, Henry and Irma. Irma was a junior in High School – Henry farming with his Dad, and Hilda and Bertha away teaching school. Marie was at Albion Normal. They had funeral services at family home in Roseberry then shipped casket on train down to Emmett for graveside services at cemetery. I remember it was a bitter cold day with 3-4 inches snow on ground. Aunt Lily and Uncle Bob Mickelson came out on train from Pittsburgh for the funeral. Aunt Lilly and son Bobby (6 years) had been out the summer before to visit her folks (1923). Mom didn’t go to graveside services but stayed home with Anna and Harold. But Dad took me along. Besides Aunt Lily and Uncle Bob, I remember Bertha and Hilda being there. Don’t remember Grandpa, Uncle Henry or Marie and Frieda. In 1926 Dad bought his first car, four door Willys Knight Overland with wooden spoke wheels. Made many trips to Long Valley and Boise. Cost $500 new. About 1927 or ’28 Granddad Mike tried to get Dad to take over the ranch, but Dad didn’t want it. Granddad turned it over to Uncle Henry then, and moved to Cascade. While Henry was “batching” and farming the place, the two story ranch house that Granddad had built in 1920 caught fire and burned to the ground while Henry was working in the fields, 1930 or 1931. Henry got a loan from Federal Land Bank in Spokane to keep on farming but couldn’t make a go of it and eventually let the bank have it. Henry moved to Donnelly and lived in a small house one block off the highway. He was County Commissioner for a term or two, then worked several years for the County Road Department. Married late (about 40) and had one child, Judy. Died at McCall hospital 12 December 1977 from lung cancer and emphysema. In looking back at all our deceased ancestors, it is pretty easy to see where our folks got the names for us kids, all except the name “Harold”. Wonder where they got that name? When Harold was born, the folks were friends with the Lester Case’s. They had a daughter my age, Pauline, and a boy Anna’s age, Harold. But surely that isn’t where the name came from? From the time he was real little, Dad started calling him “Pug” because, when Dad came home at nite from the mill, Harold would fly at him, and they would pretend to prize fight. Dad called him a “Pug”, short for a Prize fighter. Soon the kids started calling him that too, and he carried it all thru school. People in Emmett still ask me where “Pug” is today. In 1931, because of the depression, Boise-Payette mill shut down completely for over 2 years. Five hundred men out of work!! Dad was a good Odd Fellow lodge member. He was head of the Odd Fellow’s section in the Emmett Cemetery for years. He spent a lot of week-ends in the 20’s, making an area of sand, rocks and cheat grass into a nice green cemetery. In later years, the Lodge donated it to the city in exchange for them to care for it Perpetually. One of Dad’s good lodge friends was Henry Cutler, owner of a grocery store and mayor at the time. Dad was fortunate. Mayor Cutler got Dad a job with the city working as a day laborer in the water, sewer and street dep’t. Eventually, thru good work and attrition he ended up being Chief of Police of Emmett. When he first started he got $125.00 a month. But during the depression that was good wages. Mom was glad to see it, compared to other mill worker’s wives around town. In the late thirties, while Chief, he personally worked himself, in spare time, putting in a nice Rose Garden in the City Park. Reece graduated from Hi School in 1935. I was only 17 and skinny as a rail. Against my desires, Dad pushed me into going to U of Idaho that fall. Thu local druggist, Geo Hailey, owner of local drugstore and Chairman of the Idaho State Republican party. Dad got Hailey to contact Senator Borah about securing an appointment to West Point for me. I got good grades in school and played good Basket Ball. Haily said it was time Emmett received a service academy apptmt. Eventually, word came down from Borah, that since I was so young, if I would go to College for two yr, take lots of Math, Physics and Chemistry Courses, he would give me a non-completive appointment and all I had to do was pass Army “A” and “B” tests (Physical and Mental). At Univ, I had to take R.O.T.C. – upper classmen took great delight in “Hazing” the recruits. I didn’t like it, and there were always stories in the papers of what the upperclassmen at West Point were making the Plebes do – “Hazing” was Terrible. I knew this obstinate bull-headed German-Scotch-Irish boy wouldn’t take that stuff very long before I would slug some officer. Then Court-Martial and dis-honourable discharge. You kids of Harold’s – ask him sometime what a service-man gets for slugging a superior officer! And Harold got off lucky! Anyway, in spring of my yr. at U. of I. Dad sent up word to go down to Moscow some Sat (a date given), that other Idaho Senator (Pope) was giving all his potential service appointees competitive Exams. That I could take the exam and get an idea of what I would have to take the following yr. Heck, I didn’t like Math, and hadn’t even signed up for any Math courses. I didn’t take the Exam and after school yr. ended, I wouldn’t go back to school. Worked all summer and fall in logging camp. In later yrs, Dad told me he was only trying to get me an education, that he didn’t have the money to send me to College. I told him that the kid that got my appointment (named Trapnell from Couer D,Alene) started in fall of ’37, graduated in spring of ’41 as 2nd Lt. When Pearl Harbor attack came, he was on Corregedor and was killed in 1st 3 wks of war. When Japs hit Pearl Harbor, Reece, [[Hart-6427|Maxine]], and [[Mayer-1324|Michele]] were living in Mowich.Mowich, Oregon, probably a logging camp near Crescent, Oregon. Worked for Deschutes Lbr. Co. Moved back to Emmett late ‘42’ and worked awhile at Boise Payette Mill. In spring of ’43, for some reason, Mom was living with us at the time. Ann was married and living with [[Knott-435|Norm]] and Gayel at Yakima, I think. Harold had enlisted in Navy at end of semester in his first yr. at So. Idaho State at Pocatello. Some time before Pearl Harbor time – Dad resigned as Chief of Police and went to Ptld [Portland, Oregon] to work as a guard in the ship yards. He and Mom were separated. Anyway, one Sat. morning in spring of ’43 (I was home), Dad’s real good friend, Sheriff Boise Riggs came out to House. He asked me if my mother was home. I called Mom out of house and there on the front steps, Boise handed Mom divorce papers from Dad at Portland. I’ll never forget the look on her face! I believe she always held out hope Dad would come back some day or send for her!! Well, you all know the rest of story. Dad and [[Parrott-1637|Mary Parrot]] got married in Ptld in 1944. They looked for a place to buy and ended up with nice house & 3 acres just out of town at 92nd & Chrystal Sprgs Blvd. Dad had chickens & a nice garden and worked at Doernbecker Furniture. Mary, a registered nurse, worked in a medical clinic. They became good Sunday church members and both even sang in the choir. A yr. or so before he died, on one of my sales trip thru there, Dad drove me up to Mt Scott, Lincoln Memorial Cemetery. It was real close to where they lived. We went clear to the top (that was developed) and he showed me the burial plots he and Mary had recently bought. He loved the view from up there, looking out over the city. That’s when I knew he wasn’t going back to Emmett to be buried near his parents. Mom’s good friend, Sup’t of Gem County Schools Mrs. Alma Dolphin, gave Mom a temporary teacher’s certificate and a job teaching school at little village of Ola, about 30 miles up country from Emmett. They were short of teachers during the war. It was a one room school with a teacherage where Mom could live. Or board and Rm. with some people in town. She taught 2 or 3 yrs. there. After war, she came down to Emmett and worked for yrs. as Society Editor at local weekly Index paper. I spent war yrs of ’43 thru ’46 working as Brkman for U Pacific R. Road. Harold spent War yrs. in the Naval Air Force. Ann’s husband spent war yrs. on his regular job with Wash. State Fish and Game Dep’t. Norm & I weren’t drafted were in essential war time jobs and were pre-Pearl Harbor fathers to boot.

For Donnie Blackstone

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documents https://mediasvc.ancestry.com/v2/thumbnail/namespaces/9061/media/004779585_00015?maxSide=600&client=imageviewer-ui https://mediasvc.ancestry.com/v2/thumbnail/namespaces/9061/media/004779585_00016?maxSide=600&client=imageviewer-ui https://mediasvc.ancestry.com/v2/thumbnail/namespaces/9061/media/004779585_00016?maxSide=600&client=imageviewer-ui

For further research

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Holloways: https://www.familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/L7BW-49R

For Gaile Connolly's great grandson

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https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Goetsch-Family-Tree-46

For My Children

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The goal of this project is to ... Form a family tree for my children Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Mealey-66|Brandy Denison]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=17267419 send me a private message]. Thanks!

For Paula

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have never been able to find enough information on these two sons; [[Johnson-21102|Johnson-21102]] [[Johnson-21103|Johnson-21103]] Other names Earl(e), Campbell, Carroll, Maxey, Paul, Clement, Hawkins, Maurice (this may be from grandma’s side), Shelton, Dean. Dean is an especially recent one that I can’t track down. First names and middle names for the men are always past family surnames. The first names for the women are Mary Ella, Ida Mae, Cora, Ruth. Ella seems to be a particular one just to the Johnson line so far as I can tell. They tend to be Presbyterian or Methodist (except for the German branches which are Lutheran), they are mostly highly educated with many teachers among them, they have a thing for land (they like to collect it and are usually surveyors as well as farmers) but they don’t want to settle down (with the exception of my great grandfather and since). My branch owned few if any slaves because of the terrain most likely not being conducive to larger plantations/farms but collateral branches tended to be slave owners in Virginia. They always fight in the wars. The early draft cards indicate they were medium height and stature (like my dad probably around 5’10”) with black hair, gray eyes, and ruddy complexion. They don’t tend to have very large families (like my mothers family which does) with 5 chicken being a large family for them. Many were peach orchardists in SC. That could be due to the terrain again. Eric was certain that his wife was likely a cousin [[Finger-68|Finger-68]] It’s odd that her nickname was Arkansas All the lines connected to JB’s wife are German and came down through Lincoln, NC Daddy swore that the Johnson line is English, but you know how that goes. He also used to tell this story that may or may not be true but he probably heard as a kid about our Johnson immigrant ancestor escaping to America after having an affair with the wife of a Spanish commander of some sort (and that honestly sounds like my Johnsons). All of my other lines with the exception of his wife’s ancestors have been here since very early on and their property in SC is near the border of what would have been the Cherokee Nation when the upcountry was settled. You can trace most of them down the old wagon road from Virginia staying close to the edges of the frontier but on the other hand they were never the first trappers/traders. They always traveled in groups of families. Apparently they have a tendency to fuss and turn away form each other at times and I think that is why I can’t find JB’s family. He dropped the names and started using mostly the names of his wife’s family. My dad and his brother did the same thing. That didn’t come from any of the German families - they stuck tight together. All my family tends to marry distant cousins. The fact that JB came to Fingerville, Spartanburg District, SC after the Civil War appears to me to indicate he had family already here. Also, he appears to have had ancestors or cousins already in Texas when he went there. I have his letters from the Civil War where he was reporting troop strength from Galveston and I don’t know how he got there. Anyway, none of that is genealogical but it’s the slim clues I have. When we built our own church they went and dug JB up and moved him. Where he was buried before seemed like it ought to hold clues. Oh and they are all musicians. The genetics for that are so strong it has to go back a ways. We were all processional musicians. My uncle still plays in a band at 74. My dad was playing in one when he died at 84. We absolutely love the water. I’d swear I should be a fish and it’s what I remember about all my great uncles etc. We all live on water now. I have no photos of them. But if you find photos I tend to be able to recognize my own ancestors. We have an unusual attitude where we would rather be related to each other than royalty. Yet we aren’t otherwise narcissistic. So that seems a bit clannish to me. I’ll send you my DNA thing. Paula Previous Message | Next Message © 2018 Charter Communications. All rights reserved. | Advertise with Us | Terms of Use | Web Privacy Policy | Your California Privacy Rights | TWC Subscriber Policies Time Warner Cable and the Time Warner Cable logo are trademarks of Time Warner Inc., used under license. Road Runner is ™ and © War

For Sarah Blagdon

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[[Griffin-1453|Sarah Griffin Blagdon]]

For Terrys Unique Touches

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For_Terrys_Unique_Touches.jpg
Make look better and if you can do a brief bio and do your thumb thingy please and take look at spouse to see if needs anything You are the bestest can you do me a favor on the Copes If I marked as Quakers can you tag the image for the male or female silhouette to that person I think I missed listing some the Quaker wives want to check for me and do the silhouette? http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Quaker_Notes

Ford County Illinois Land Records-Campbell

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Campbells_of_Ford_County_Illinois-1.png
==Purpose== The purpose of the [[Space:Campbells of Ford County Illinois|'''Campbells of Ford County Illinois''']] is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through Ford County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of Ford County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Ford County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1856 to 1877'''. If your Ford County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your Ford County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Land Records== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Ford County Deeds'''
'''1856-1877'''
'''Updated: 29 Apr 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |'''Year''' |'''From''' |'''Party_1''' |'''To''' |'''Party_2''' |'''Book''' |'''Page''' |'''Comments''' |'''Doc_Image''' |- |1856 |From |John Campbell |To |Gustaves S Foos |3 |266 |1760 acres wife: Julietta) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-89JZ-5 Doc Image] |- |1856 |From |John Campbell |To |Charles S Waller |3 |278 |1760 acres (wife: Juliett) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-89KT-V Doc Image] |- |1856 |From |William Trickle & Fredrick Sneland |To |Abraham Campbell |3 |568 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-89XD-Y Doc Image] |- |1856 |From |William Swinford |To |Abraham Campbell |3 |569 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-89XD-Y Doc Image] |- |1858 |From |Robert Trickle |To |Abraham Campbell |4 |99 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-C9M5-8 Doc Image] |- |1859 |From |Alexander Campbell |To |Abraham Campbell |4 |202 |640 acres (wife: Mary) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-CBV3 Doc Image] |- |1859 |From |william L Campbell |To |John L Greenwood |11 |147 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-49P7-L Doc Image] |- |1861 |From |Edwin S Fowler/Rufus S Lord |To |James Campbell |2 |256 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-89V9-K Doc Image] |- |1866 |From |Arthur Campbell |To |Jesse A Smith |5 |112 |(wife: Nancy) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-C9Q1-B Doc Image] |- |1866 |From |Arthur Campbell |To |Fredrick Miller |6 |369 |40 ares (wife: Nancy) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-432C-T Doc Image] |- |1867 |From |Alexander Campbell |To |Theodore Robinson |6 |528 |160 acres (wife:Mary) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43X6-H Doc Image] |- |1867 |From |John J Campbell |To |Frank E Laft |8 |112 |(wife: Eliza) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43NG-P Doc Image] |- |1867 |From |Alexander Campbell |To |Martin Schafroth |8 |343 |160 acres (wife:Mary) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43KG-V Doc Image] |- |1868 |From |James Y Campbell |To |Etta McCaughy |8 |227 |(wife: Hattie C) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43JZ-5 Doc Image] |- |1868 |From |William L Campbell |To |Henry Bank |8 |368 |(wife: Margaret |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43KQ-V Doc Image] |- |1868 |From |Alexander Campbell |To |Martin Schafroth |8 |437 |160 acres (wife:Mary) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43FY-J Doc Image] |- |1868 |From |Alexander Campbell |To |Prosper Claude |8 |508 |160 acres (wife:Mary) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-43JP-Y Doc Image] |- |1868 |From |Nathaniel Johnson |To |william L Campbell |26 |114 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-694V-G Doc Image] |- |1869 |From |James Campbell |To |John Pollack |10 |605 |80 acres (wife: Mary Ann) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-49PM-3 Doc Image] |- |1869 |From |James Y Campbell |To |E S Estes |11 |186 |(wife: Harriet C) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-49G9-5 Doc Image] |- |1870 |From |William G Campbell |To |Jasper J Grunby |11 |309 |(wife: Susan S) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-49YB-2 Doc Image] |- |1870 |From |Addison D & Almeda A Loose |To |Robert Campbell |11 |427 |160 acres |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-49L7-S Doc Image] |- |1870 |From |Alexander Campbell |To |Theodore Robinson |13 |328 |80 acres |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-H3G1-5 Doc Image] |- |1870 |From |James K Nelson |To |Eliza Campbell |14 |175 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-H31D-B Doc Image] |- |1872 |From |Elzabeth (Elisabeth) Wineland |To |Obadiah [[Campbell-39816|'''Campbell''']] |27 |281 |160 acres |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-697F-G Doc Image] |- |1874 |From |John B Kinnear. Master in Chancery |To |Obadiah [[Campbell-39816|'''Campbell''']] |27 |121 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-697K-N Doc Image] |- |1877 |From |Jesse B Straight |To |William Alfred Campbell |21 |303 |160 acres |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-Z88K Doc Image] |- |1877 |From |Samuel Hester |To |William A…? Campbell |21 |341 |160 acres (estate of Emily S Hester) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37H-Z6Y8 Doc Image] |} ==Sources==

Ford County Illinois Marriages-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the [[Space:Campbells of Ford County Illinois|'''Campbells of Ford County Illinois''']] is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through Ford County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of Ford County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Ford County. This page has the '''Campbell Marriage records for the years 1859 to 1927'''. If your Ford County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your Ford County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Marriage Records== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Ford County Marriages'''
'''1859-1927'''
'''Updated: 29 Apr 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |'''Date''' |'''Bride''' |'''Groom''' |'''Book''' |'''Page''' |'''Comments''' |Doc_Image |- |1862 |Campbell, Lizzie |Shields, Reuben P |A |3 |Elizabeth Melissa Campbell L1H8-JX7 / Arthur Campbell GDXG-RKS (father) / Reuben Childs? LZXN-GY8 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939J-VTK9-3 Doc Image] |- |1866 |Campbell, Mary |Webster, Abel |A |8 |Mary LDX7-ZM3 / Abel LDX7-ZMQ / |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939J-VTGT-H Doc Image] |- |1868 |Irving Elizabeth C |Campbell, W A |A |11 |Elizabeth C Iwing LD6L-PRM / W A LD6L-PRS |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939J-VTG1-9 Doc Image] |- |1868 |Campbell, Margarie A |Westbery, A B |A |12 |Margaret A Campbell LJLT-BLG / Andrew B Westbery MBLV-JJ6 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939J-VTGJ-N Doc Image] |- |1868 |Trickel, Carrie |Campbell, James |A |12 |Carrie LD6L-P1N / James LD6L-P1J |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939J-VTGJ-N Doc Image] |- |1872 |Campbell, Ella |Walker, John T |A |22 |Sarah Ella LKW3-87B / John Thornton LKW3-Z1B |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939J-VTGV-F Doc Image] |- |1878 |Campbell, Mary E |Todd, William J |1 |9 |Mary KVV4-5DY / David Campbell 2H27-3W3 (father) / Audley Campbell LHK7-BVS (grandfather) / George Campbell GNX5-5G9 (g-grandfather) / William Jason Todd 9ZWV-FRB | |- | |Jordan, Nancy E |Campbell, Rolla Wilbur |1 |14 |Dr. Rolla Wilbur L8M5-BVZ / Dr. Issac M GCJT-RBC (father) / James MF3W-X5Z (grandfather) / David K6S5-TV1 (g-grandfather) / James Jr. LHPS-98C (gg-grandfather) / James KHTG-ZW8 (ggg-grandfather) / Nancy L4MQ-8LT | |- | |Rice, Nancy Jane |Campbell, Jas H |1 |24 |Jas H 9ZWV-JMC / Jas 9ZWV-JM8 (father) / Nancy Jane LHQ1-WFZ | |- |1880 |Campbell, Henrietta |Mowdy, David |1 |26 |Henrietta 2WM1-FBG / Obadiah 9VSF-3MY (father) / James LH6M-ZC9 (grandfather) / Obadiah L6VS-FQL (g-grandfather) / Robert, Laird of Sterling GSKL-JBG (gg-grandfather) /Patrick Ruahd 6MWK-7BW (ggg-grandfather) / Alexander GLR4-Z6P (gggg-gf) / JoShn G7GD-FTN (ggggg-gf) / Patrick LRBW-MM9 (gggggg-gf) / Sir Duncan LBQS-X77 / Sir Colin L27P-PBB /Colin GFQV-88W / Sir Duncan MTLS-XRQ / |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q292-4XF3 Doc Image] |- | |Underwood, Rosa A |Campbell, James |1 |64 |Rosa Anna LZHL-SHG / James LZHL-SCF / James GQ9N-ZCB (father) | |- | |Campbell, Sarah M |Boots, Stephen E |1 |69 |Sarah M GS69-569 / Aaron Lyle 29SL-VBC (father) / John KDMT-1PY (grandfather) / Arthur GSHP-LMT (g-grandfather) / John Duncan LQR7-HFX (gg-grandfather) / Eliza 2SH9-VVL (daughter) / Ella K2HX-6C1 (daughter) | |- | |Sackett, Jennie |Campbell, Lawrence E |1 |78 |Jennie Myrtis 9ZWV-G67 / Lawrence E 9ZWV-G6Q / Joseph Wallace 9ZWV-G6W (father) / John Garvin LTJ7-SK3 (grandfather) / Arthur GKWF-V55 (g-grandfather) | |- | |Campbell, Sarah |White, James W |1 |95 |Sarah F LTC2-KHJ / Joseph Wallace 9ZWV-G6W (father) / John Garvin LTJ7-SK3 (grandfather) / Arthur GKWF-V55 (g-grandfather) |- | |Kirby, Eliza A |Campbell, O L |1 |100 |Eliza Ann Byron 9ZWV-P94 (1st wife) / Oscar Lowell L73P-NF2 / Obadiah 9VSF-3MY (father) | |- | |Davis, Alice A |Campbell, H J |1 |232 |Alice A Knight GWQ4-DQ5 / Hilary J G9XG-5P3 / Joseph Wallace 9ZWV-G6W (father) / John Garvin LTJ7-SK3 (grandfather) / Arthur GKWF-V55 (g-grandfather | |- | |Rennard, Clara Bell |Campbell, Eframonondus |1 |237 | | |- | |Morrow, Olive B |Campbell, O L |1 |239 |Olive LKXT-WVC (2nd wife) / Oscar Lowell L73P-NF2 / Obadiah 9VSF-3MY (father) | |- | |Campbell, Margaret |Snelling, G H |2 |11 |Margaret 9ZWL-W7Z / Alfred 9ZWL-W76 (father) / Guy H L7JC-8HV | |- | |Ledderboge, Estelle |Campbell, Leslie |2 |48 | | |- | |Maloney, Elizabeth |Campbell, Edward |2 |77 |Elizabeth Margaret 9ZWL-DZ1 / Edward 9ZWL-DZB / Wilson 9ZWL-D8M (father) | |- | |Proctor, Maude |Campbell, Owen |2 |94 |Maude G8FG-SY6 / Owen Alva K2NW-FZH / John KLF9-K3T (father) | |- | |Campbell, Eliza |Thompson, Andrew H |3 |1 |Eliza 2SH9-VVL / Aaron Lyle 29SL-VBC (father) / John KDMT-1PY (grandfather) / John Duncan (g-grandfather) | |- | |Campbell, Carrie |Charles McCulloch |3 |7 |Caroline L41H-K2R / Aaron Lyle 29SL-VBC (father) / John KDMT-1PY (grandfather) / John Duncan (g-grandfather) / Rev. Charles Olin LXQV-C7B | |} ==Sources==

Ford Family History by Lottie Ford McEntee

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Ford_Family_History_by_Lottie_Ford_McEntee.pdf
Ford_Family_History_by_Lottie_Ford_McEntee.jpg
Space to hold the Source - "The Ford Family Who Couldn't Quit" written by Lottie Ford McEntee in 1983. This is "The Story of Middleton William and Pearlie Dungan Ford and Their Family. Source similar to family bible?

FORD Family Reunion

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FORD_Family_Reunion.jpg
FORD_Family_Reunion-1.jpg
This reunion is hosted by the Marion County Historical Society, it will co-inside with the John Ford Encampment event. All are invited!

Ford vs Ford

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'''This site is a work in progress to gather sources and tell the story of Ford vs Ford regarding the contesting of a will that freed the persons previously enslaved by Lloyd Ford and named them as inheriting his farm.''' Ford vs. Ford was a landmark case settled in the Tennessee Supreme Court. [[Ford-2935|Lloyd Ford]] owned 112 acres in Washington County, Tennessee. In his will, he freed his slaves and designated them to inherit his property. The freed slaves included [[Ford-16658|Larkin Ford]] and his family. Weblinks: * https://www.tncourts.gov/news/2020/04/24/tennessee-judiciary-museum-judge-andy-bennett-help-family-uncover-history-nbc * https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/ford-v-ford/ * https://www.jstor.org/stable/42623531?seq=1 * https://www.anamericanfamilyhistory.com/TennesseeFamilies&Places/Ford%20Family/Ford%20Lloyd%201748.html

FORDERS ZA

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Forder-167.jpg
Forder-172-1.jpg
FORDERS_ZA-2.jpg
The goal of this project is to ... TBA1 Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Forder-167|Peter Antony Forder]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * TBA2 * TBA3 * TBA4 Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=28640760 send me a private message]. Thanks! PLEASE NOTE CAREFULLY: At ALL TIMES, the Philipps Line is spelt with 1x "L" and 2x "P's". Certain profiles in WikiTree use 2x "LL's" and/or 1x "P" or a mixture of these. Don't confuse yourself - be sure of what you are doing !!! !!! !!! ---- [ Forder-167 ] Results of Investigation into the CONFUSION currently showing in WikiTree as at 20th August 2021 Ap_Bran-6 Caradog Ap Bran Father of Unknown Linus, Eurgen of Llan Llid, Eurgen Ap Meric Of Siluria, Gladys (KNOWN) Unknown and Cyllinus (Caradoc) ap Caradoc ? Cambelinus True Father of ... (WikiTree ID yet to be created) Cunobelin-1 Guiderius True son of Cambelinus Legendary son of Cunobelinus Ap_Cunobelin-1 Arvirargus True son of Cambelinus Legendary son of Cunobelinus Space:Beli_Mawr Beli Mawr GREAT-GRANDFATHER ? Tasciovanus GRANDFATHER (WikiTree ID yet to be created) Space:Cunobelinus Cunobelinus FATHER ? Adminius True son of Cunobelinus (WikiTree ID yet to be created) Cunobelinas-2 Togadomnus True son of Cunobelinus Catuvellauni-4 Caratacus Catuvellauni True son of Cunobelinus ......................................................................................................................................................... SOURCES 1^ " A genealogy preserved in the medieval Welsh manuscript Harleian 3859 (see Harleian genealogies) contains three generations which read "Caratauc map Cinbelin map Teuhant". This is the equivalent of "Caratacus, son of Cunobelinus, son of Tasciovanus", putting the three historical figures in the correct order. " [ Source: 1 ^ Harleian Genealogies 16; The Heirs of Caratacus - Cunobelinus and his relatives in medieval Welsh genealogies. ] 2^ " Beli Mawr ("Beli the Great") was an ancestor figure in Middle Welsh literature and genealogies. He is the father of Cassivellaunus, Arianrhod, Lludd Llaw Eraint, Llefelys, and Afallach. In certain medieval genealogies he is listed as the son or husband of Anna, cousin of Mary, mother of Jesus. " [ Source: 2 ^ https://www.google.com/search?q=Who+was+Beli+Mawr&client=firefox-b-d&ei=ibUfYbrKAZSdgQay55KQBw&oq=Who+was+Beli+Mawr&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3Mtd2l6EAMyBggAEBYQHjoHCAAQRxCwA0oECEEYAFCimAJYg7kCYJnRAmgBcAJ4AIABpQOIAbcUkgEFMy02LjGYAQCgAQKgAQHIAQjAAQE&sclient=gws-wiz&ved=0ahUKEwj6soi-4b_yAhWUTsAKHbKzBHIQ4dUDCA0&uact=5 ] 3^ " When King Cambelinus had reigned two years, he died and left two sons of whom the eldest was named Guiderius and the other Arviragus. " [ Source: 3 ^ FIRST VOLUME: BOOK II Page 129 CHAPTER XL of ... ... ... https://books.google.co.za/books?id=ER_VejS6Q9QC&pg=PA128&lpg=PA128&dq=Who+was+Cambelinus&source=bl&ots=-I_8Q6lzbC&sig=ACfU3U0yhTDO1z0bkVM7tHefdxgCC-s69A&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjO_oeF7b_yAhWKIsAKHZFmCD4Q6AF6BAgjEAM#v=onepage&q=Who%20was%20Cambelinus&f=false ---- so, LOGICALLY, '''Beli Mawr''' to '''Thomas Philipps''' is as follows (Name; Relation; ID; Birth Year) :- '''Beli Mawr''' Great-Grandfather Space:Beli_Mawr <0001 Tasciovanus Grandfather Space:Tasciovanus? <0001 Cunobelinus Father Space:Cunobelinus <0001 Caratacus Catuvellauni Son Catuvellauni-4 0010 Cyllin Catuvellauni, Princess Daughter Catuvellauni-5 0030 Ystdrawl Gadeon Catuvellauni Catuvellauni-6 0085 Coel ap Meurig, King Ap_Meurig-24 0080 Eurgen "Eugein" Britain Meric-2 0107 King Caradog Ap Bran aka King Caradoc Ap_Bran-6 0035 Cyllinus (Caradoc) ap Caradoc Caradoc-1 0050 Owain "King Owain of Wales" ap Cyllin Cyllin-8 0100 Merichion Fawdfilun ap Owain Ap_Owian-1 0140 Cwrrig Fawr ap Merichion Ap_Meirchion-7 0170 Cwrrig (Cwrrig of Ewyas) Goruc Fauir Goruc_Fauir-1 0180 Gwrddwfn ap Cwrrig Ap_Cwrrig-3 0215 Einydd (Einydd of Ewyas) Gwrddwfn-1 / Ap_Gwrddwfn-3 0250 Arthfael (Einudd) ap Einudd Einudd-8 ? Gwrgant (Arthfael) ap Arthfael Arthfael-2 0330 Meirchion ap Gwrgant Gwrgant-3 0370 Unknown Meirig Meirig-1 ? Unknown Brechrwy Brechrwy-1 ? Unknown Edrig Edrig-1 ? Unknown Urban Urban-57 ? Mynon [family name unknown UNKNOWN-130458 ? formerly [surname unknown] - maybe ap Anwn ? Tudwal ap Anwn Ap_Anwn-2 0371 Tewdrig Tudwal formerly ap Tudwal Ap_Tudwal-3 0387 Marchel "Marchell" ferch Tewdrig Ferch_Tewdrig-1 0404 Brychan "Brycheiniog" ap Anlach, Saint Ap_Anlach-1 0419 Gwawr (Gwawr Verch) Elidir Lydanwyn formerly Brychan Brychan-2 0480 Llywarch Hen ap Elidyr formerly Elidir, "Llywarch Hen Elidir-4 0510 Diwg ap Douc Dwywg (Dwg ap) Dalriada Llywarch-34 0525 Gweir Ap Douc, Prince Douc-1 0570 Tegid (Tegid of Man) ap Gwair formerly Gwair, Prince Gwair-5 0600 Alcwn ap Tegid formerly Tegid, Prince Tegid-1 0658 Sandde ap Alcwn formerly Alcwn Alcwn-1 0678 Elidir ap Sandde, "King Elydry of Isle of Man" Ap_Sandde-6 0708 Gwriad ab Elidir Ab_Elidir-4 0738 Merfyn (Merfyn Frych) ap Gwriad Ap_Gwriad-11 0764 Rhodri ap Merfyn, "Rhodri Mawr", King Ap_Merfyn-19 0820 Elen verch Rodri formerly Rhodri Rhodri-38 0860 Idguallaun (Owain) ap Morgan Morgant-1 0920 Ithel ap Owen aka King of Glywysing, "King of Glywysing" Ap_Owen-5 0945 Gwrgan ab Ithel , "King of Glywysing" Ab_Ithel-2 1000 Myfanwy ferch Gwrgan Ferch_Gwrgan-2 1045 Meurig Fychan Cydifor, "Senghenydd" Cydifor-1 1080 Gruffudd ap Cydrych, King Ap_Cydrych-6 1047 Clydwen gwraig Bledri Latimer ap Cydifor Fawr Ferch_Gruffudd-11 1057 Rhys ap Bledri Ap_Bledri-2 1115 Aron ap Rhys, Sir Ap_Rhys-61 1165 (Knighted by King Richard, " The Lion Heart " for his bravery against the Saracens). Gwilym ab Aron formerly ap Aron Ap_Aron-3 1200 Madog ap Gwilym formerly Gwilym Gwilym-23 ? Evan ap Madog formerly Madog Madog-59 ? Philip Ap Evan formerly Evan Evan-43 ? Meredudd Ap Philip formerly Philip Philip-217 1382 Philip Phillips formerly Ap Meredudd Ap_Meredudd-1 1415 Thomas Phillips formerly Philipps Philipps-8 1465 John Phillips Phillips-771 1502 Morgan Philipps Philipps-9 1540 John Philipps Philipps-244 1566 "1st Baronet Philipps of Picton Castle" Philipps MP, Sir Richard Philipps Phillipps-30 1594 "2nd Baronet Philipps of Picton Castle" Phillipps Erasmus Philipps Phillipps-66 1623 "3rd Baronet Phillips, of Picton Castle" Phillipps John Philipps Phillips-26357 1666 "4th BaronetPhillips of Picton Castle" Phillips, Sir Erasmus Philipps Phillips-35074 1699 "5th Baronet Phillips of Picton Castle" Phillips MP, Sir John Philipps Phillipps-68 1701 "6th Baronet Philipps, of Picton Castle" Phillipps Thomas Philipps Philipps-181 1702 Edward Philipps, Reverend "Ned" Philipps-120 1737 Richard Philipps … … … he had no Children. ? 1744 "7th Baronet Philipps, of Picton Castle", "Lord Milford of Picton Castle", Sir. '''Thomas Philipps''' - "1820 Settler" Philipps-119 177

Fore Family

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The goal of this project is to ... Connect the Fore family and many spellings together. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Rose-4105|Nancy Rose]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Fore any one that needs help with Fore Family and has DNA on GEDMatch to compare with mine kit #A125363. * According to research written most of the Fore family came from a widow and her children. Especially Pierre defoure. Work together to see if this is true or not. *Most records have been hard to find. But helping eachother to break through brickwalls to help build the Family Tree. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=7158926 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Forest County, Wisconsin

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Forest County, Wisconsin is in the northeast of the state & the city of Crandon is the county seat. The Forest County Potawatomi Community and the Sokaogon Chippewa Community have reservations in Forest County.

Forest Lawn Memorial Park

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:::'''''*The purpose of this page is to list the names of individuals that are buried in this cemetery. Please feel free to add the names of individuals that you know are buried in this cemetery. Also feel free to add plots and/or coordinates if you know them.''''' :::'''''*Listed below are the names of individuals that are buried in this cemetery''''' :::'''''*[[McPherson-4225|Ivy Hoke McPerson]].''''' :::'''''*[[Shadrix-18|Harry Pope Shadrix]].''''' :::'''''*[[Shadrix-20|Mosses Edward Shadrix]].''''' :::'''''*[[Hamrick-951|Nellie Mae Hamrick McPherson]].''''' :::'''''*[https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/93073022/ermon-mitchell-mcpherson Ermon Mitchell "Buck" McPherson].''''' :::'''''*[[McPherson-4306|Edna Lee McPherson Barton]].''''' :::'''''*[[Barton-7119|Robert Leonard Barton]].''''' :::'''''*[[McPherson-4307|Alonzo Purcell "Bud" McPherson]].''''' :::'''''*[[Richards-13030|Geraldine Richards McPherson]].''''' :::'''''*[[Jones-79867|Barbara Jones McPherson]].'''''

Förfrågan 2008-04-28 D nr K 1644/08

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'''Din förfrågan 2008-04-28 Dnr K 1644/08''' ::Enligt Domkyrko församlingsbok volym [http://www.arkivdigital.se/aid/show/v82238.b259.s4280 AIIa: 15, sidan 4280], var :::[[Sjöstrand-31|Hilma Charlotta Elisabeth]], född 1903-05-16, :::dotter till [[Johansson-1950|Anton Rudolf Ludvig Sjöstrand]], skrädderiarbetare, född 1873-10-07 i Häggesled, Skaraborgs län, och ::: [[Bildt-8|Elin Ottilia Bernhardina Bildt]], född 1880-08-31, gifta 1899-09-10. ::I Sveriges släktforskareförbunds databas ”Sveriges dödbok 1947-2006” noteras: :::18731007-501 [[Johansson-1950|Sjöstrand, Anton Rudolf Ludvig]] Örgrytehemmet, ::::Fredriksdalsgatan 3, Gbg S :::Död 26/7 1961 :::Kyrkobokförd i Göteborgs Johanneberg, Göteborgs kn (Göteborgs och Bohus län, Västergötland) :::Född 7/10 1873 i Häggesled (Skaraborgs län, Västergötland).Änkling (23/9 1930). ::19000220-5029 [[Sjöstrand-32|Sjöstrand, Elsa Viola Margareta]], ::::Ribbingsg 18/Simonsen/ ::::416 52 Göteborg :::Död 9/1 1985 ::::Kyrkobokförd (1985) i Härlanda, Göteborgs kn (Göteborgs och Bohus län, Västergötland). Mantalsskriven (1985) på samma ort. ::::Född 20/2 1900 i Göteborgs Masthugg (Göteborgs och Bohus län, Västergötland). Ogift kvinna. ::Enligt Haga församlingsbok volym [http://www.arkivdigital.se/aid/show/v210763.b1700.s2366 AIIa: 39, sidan 2366], utflyttar [[Sjöstrand-34|Britta Sonja Linnéa Sjöstrand]], ::::född 1922-11-07 i Haga, ::::till Uppsala Domkyrkoförsamling 1943-11-08. {{Image|file=Sjostrand-34.png |caption=Picture from [http://www.arkivdigital.se/ Arkiv Digital] of [http://www.arkivdigital.se/aid/show/v210763.b1700.s2366 Göteborgs Haga AIIa:39 (1925-1939)] |label=Göteborgs Haga AIIa:39 (1925-1939) Image 1700 / page 2366 (AID: v210763.b1700.s2366, NAD: SE/GLA/13184) |size=l}} ::För vidare forskning hänvisas till Landsarkivet i Uppsala ::::Box 135 ::::751 04 ::::UPPSALA ::::Telefon: 018-65 21 00 ::Telefax folkbokföringssektionen: ::::018-65 21 55 ::::e-post: folkbokforingen@landsarkivet-uppsala.ra.se
[[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Förfrågan_2008-04-28_D_nr_K_1644/08|Wikitree Profiler som länkar hit]]

Formal Family Doccuments

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Last names in Naylor, Jayde Vanessa's family tree. '''Last names''' with formal family documents * Burton * Bramma *'''Bradbury''' *'''Bratley''' *Broadhead * '''Chambers''' *'''Chessey''' * Cowell * Cowling *Darker *Fishburn *'''Greenhough''' *''' Goss''' *Heseldin *'''Hindley''' *Horner * '''Judge''' * Mathews * '''Mead''' * Milligan/Mulligan * Mills * '''Mumford''' * Morris * '''Moverley''' * '''Naylor''' * '''Lee'''/'''Levy'''/Lewin/Lewyn * Lindell * '''Lockridge''' * Parr * Pawson * '''Pile/Pyle''' * Pollard * '''Safe''' * Stoloff/Stolloff * Rhodes * '''Rochford''' * Rooney * Rosevere/'''Rosevear''' * '''Wright''' *''' Yates-Farrah'''

Forman Family Bible

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FORMAN FAMILY BIBLE David James Forman. Born January 18th, 1837, at half past 2 o’clock in the morning in London, England. Sophia Isabella Forman. Born May 22nd, 1839, at half past 9 at night in Scotland. Sophia Isabella Forman. Died August 17, 1840, aged 14 months and 25 days at ten minutes before 5 o’clock. At Bird Settlement on the 16th December 1871, Sophia Johnston, wife of Robert Forman, aged 61 years. At Bird Settlement on the 25th March 1877, Robert Forman, aged 66 years. Buried by Rev. S. Crisp. David James Forman. Died at Birdton November 28, 1926. Aged 89 and 10 months. Sunday morning at half past 12. Lucy Darlene Forman. Born January 25, 1926 (married Edward Urias Gilbert). William James Forman. Born May the 2nd 1928 at Burtts Corner. Sophia E. Forman. Born July 26th at 6 o’clock in the morning 1871. Robert B. Forman. Born March 8, 1873 (married Mary Elliot). Annie Hutton Forman. Born June 25th at 3 o’clock in the morning 1876. William J. Forman. Born May 24th, 1878. David M. Forman. Born May 24th, 1878. Jessie M. Forman. Born August 17, 1881 (married Hayward Clayton). John F. Forman. Born August 31st, 1883 (married Annabelle Bird). Mary J. Forman. Born September 18th, 1886, Saturday morning 12 o’clock (married Manzer Allen). Sadie A. Forman. Born June the 24th at 6 o’clock Monday evening 1889. Myrtle W. Forman. Born June the 3rd 1898 Friday evening (married George R. Foster) Elizabeth Ann Munroe. Born August the 9th 1850. Garry Edward Gilbert born June 4th, 1946, at Zealand. Neil William Gilbert born November 5th, 1947, at Birdton. Brenda Marie Gilbert born February 10th, 1949, at Birdton. Stephen Perley Gilbert born March 27th, 1950, at Zealand. Deborah Ann Gilbert born March 27th, 1952, at Zealand. Dale Ray Gilbert born October 9th, 1956, at Birdton. Sadie Adeline Forman died December 13th, 1897, aged 8 years and 6 months at half past 12 o’clock Monday afternoon. Funeral conducted by W.W. Wass. Jessie Maude Forman Clayton died February 5, 1944, at the age of 62 years and 6 months. Sophia Elizabeth Forman died February 5th, 1948, age 75 years and 7 months. Myrtle Winifred died September 29th, 1948. Frederick John Forman died October 7th, 1953, age 70 years. William James Forman died October 16th, 1953. Age 75 years and 5 months. Mary Jane Riley died March the 23rd 1909. Aged 83 years. Funeral conducted by the Rev. R. Peppers - annotation by [[Forman-1260|Darlene Gilbert]]: we think she was the either mother or grandmother of Elizabeth Ann Munroe because Aunt Annie Hutton Forman always called her Grandmother Riley & she lived in Birdton with the family. Elizabeth Ann Munroe Forman died August the 9th 1923 aged 73 years at 7 o’clock Thursday evening. Funeral conducted by Rev. Laird. Mary (Rob’s wife) died November 9th, 1942 - annotation by [[Forman-1260|Darlene Gilbert]]: Maiden name Elliot, wife of Robert Forman. Robert Forman died April 22, 1953. Annie Hutton Forman died December 5th, 1953. Aged 77 years and 6 months. David Munroe Forman died August 4th, 1955, age 75 years and 7 months. Children of Winifred and George Foster: Bernice Mildred Foster born May 12th, 1925. Wendell Ralston Foster born April 16th, 1927. Eldon Murray Foster born October 21, 1932. Stewart Atwood Foster born February 19th, 1936. Carl Donald Foster born June 24, 1939. Winifred Foster (Forman) died at Burtts Corner September 29, 1948, age 50 years - annotation by [[Forman-1260|Darlene Gilbert]]: she died of cancer.

Format for Reporting UK Census Data

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I am working on updating my wikitree ancestors biographies based on UK census data. I find having the census data reported is useful in trying to trace relatives through time. As such, I have 4 issues I'd like to discuss. I'd appreciate any feedback and suggestions. 1. The census reporting headings changed with time. See attached image #2. My preference is to display the same fields regardless of census year to reduce the complexity of generating the reporting. As such, my approach is to display just the following fields, and add any missing data (e.g. Infirmity, which is often blank) in the Notes column. See attached image #3 2. As noted above, I have produced a common format table, which displays the census data, and allows the person within whose biography this appears to be listed in bold. See attached image #4. As an aside, because writing the HTML code to produce this table is time-consuming and error prone, I've written an Excel workbook that allows me to enter the data and produce the HTML code that I can paste directly into the wikitree Biography section, including the reference. 3. The original census hand-written data is sometimes hard to decipher and has shorthand (e.g. Notts for Nottinghamshire, dau for daughter). When working from transcriptions, there are sometimes errors. Correcting the errors by referring to the original seems like a no-brainer, but I also have been replacing abbreviations with the original value. 4. For references, I've been including most of the fields at the top of the page, but the district/ward/parish/borough/town/village don't seem to be consistently filled in, so I've just combined them into one field. Here's a sample of the generated reference for the example above. See attached image #5

Formation of the Tyler-Howells name

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Work in progress, TBC. == Researchers == * [[Tyler-Howells-1|Matthew Tyler-Howells]] (Main researcher. Second generation Tyler-Howells.) == Formatting == The surname "Tyler-Howells" is a double-barrelled surname, joined with a hyphen. When using initials, the surname is represented as "TH". For example, [[Tyler-Howells-1|Matthew Tyler-Howells]]' initials are MTH, and his full initials (including middle names) is MPATH. It is important to note that "Tyler" is not a middle name, nor is "Howells" a surname. The chosen surname is "Tyler-Howells" spelt exactly, with the hyphen, in its entireity. == Formation of the name == The surname "Tyler-Howells" was formed following [[Blight-646|Phillip Blight]]'s deed poll name change on 24 August 1999Printed deed poll of Phillip J Blight to Philip J Tyler-Howells, dated 24 Aug 1999. Verified in person by [[Tyler-Howells-1|Matthew Tyler-Howells]] to be accurate. Verified with the subject of the source, [[Blight-646|Philip Tyler-Howells]]. Scanned copy of the document available upon request from [[Tyler-Howells-1|Matthew Tyler-Howells]]. Confidence: certain. in Cardiff, Wales. Wanting to distance himself from the Blight family following his rocky relations with his father, [[Blight-647|John Richard Blight]], Phillip created a new surname. In the process, however, the solicitor made several mistakes and dropped one of the "L"'s from the first name, resulting in the new name "[[Blight-646|Philip Tyler-Howells]]". === Howells === "Howells" is the maiden name of [[Howells-681|Marlene June Blight]], inherited from her father, [[Howells-684|Brynley Richard Howells]]. [[Howells-681|Marlene]] is [[Blight-646|Philip]]'s mother. [[Howells-681|Marlene]] originates from Llanelli (then Llanelly), in Carmarthenshire, Wales. === Tyler === "Tyler" is the maiden name of [[Tyler-8040|Emily Margaretta Howells]] (or [[Tyler-8040|Emily Margareita Howells]], spelling unknown). [[Tyler-8040|Emily]] inherited the Tyler surname from her father, [[Tyler-8041|Herbert Henry Tyler]] (or [[Tyler-8041|Herbert Frank Tyler]], middle name uncertain). [[Tyler-8040|Emily]] is [[Howells-681|Marlene]]'s mother, and [[Howells-681|Marlene]] is [[Blight-646|Philip]]'s mother. [[Tyler-8040|Emily]] and her mother, [[Roberts-39526|Sarah Jane Roberts]], originate from Llanelli (then Llanelly), in Carmarthenshire, Wales. [[Tyler-8040|Emily]]'s father, [[Tyler-8041|Herbert]] originates from Bristol, England. == Living Tyler-Howells Family == It is believed that the only living Tyler-Howells family (with a hypenated surname) consists of 3 people living in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom. The first person to inherit the "Tyler-Howells" surname within this family is [[Tyler-Howells-1|Matthew Tyler-Howells]]. This was inherited from Matthew's father, [[Blight-646|Philip Tyler-Howells]], and adopted by Matthew's mother, [[Preece-936|Allison Preece]]. == Sources ==

Formatting

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*https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1184963/formatting-tools *https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Proposed_Style_Guide

Former content of Cassell-824

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:'''This is a temporary holding space.''' :''The text below came from the original [[Cassell-824|Cassell-824]] (authored by [[Whitt-1176|Kimberly Lindsey]]) prior to its merge into [[Castle-331|Castle-331]]. Some, but not all, of this text should be incorporated, as appropriate, into the merged profile. Note that there is current disagreement about relationships for the man represented by this profile. -- Jillaine, project coordinator, WikiTree's Native Americans Project'' == Biography == {{1776 Sticker}} {{German Roots Sticker}} {{Pennsylvania Sticker|an early settler in Pennsylvania}} :'''The Life Summary of Jacob "White Tassel" Cassel:''' When Jacob Cassel was born on 1 April 1717, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, British Colonial America, his father, [[Castle-332|Hans Peter Cassel]], was 43 and his mother, Catherine Elizabeth Hobart, was 41. He lived in Letterkenny Township, Franklin, Pennsylvania, United States in 1800 and Rockingham, Virginia, United States in 1774. He registered for military service in 1780."United States Rosters of Revolutionary War Soldiers and Sailors, 1775-1783," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG29-9N1C : 1 March 2021), Jacob Kastle, 1782; citing Military Service, , Citing various published state rosters, United States; FHL microfilm 102229246. He died on 26 September 1803, in Russell, Virginia, United States, at the age of 86, and was buried in Castlewood, Russell, Virginia, United States.https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/139043975/jacob-'white_tassel'-cassel_castle For more information about this man 'about town', see: https://sites.google.com/site/thecassellfamilyhistory/home/jacob-cassell-castle == Military Service == ::'''7 Oct 1780, Battle of King's Mountain: American Revolution''' https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/timeline/L5GQ-CDR ::'''Jacob Kastle: U.S. Rosters of Revolutionary War Soldiers and Sailors, 1775-1783''' ::'''Name: Jacob Kastle''' ::'''Event Type: Military Service''' ::'''Event Date: 1782''' ::'''Military Regiment: 8th Company 7th Battalion Of Lancaster County''' ::'''Military Rank: 7th Class''' ::'''Military Rank (Original): 7th Class'''."United States Rosters of Revolutionary War Soldiers and Sailors, 1775-1783," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QG29-9N1C : 1 March 2021), Jacob Kastle, 1782; citing Military Service, , Citing various published state rosters, United States; FHL microfilm 102229246. == Sources == == Research Notes == About Jacob "The Hunter" Castle Jacob Castle, Sr. was born in Palatinate, Germany. On September 5, 1738 Jacob arrived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania with some other German settlers. Most of those German settlers traveled to and settled in Southwestern Virginia. Jacob settled in what is now known as western Russell County, Virginia. Another Name for Jacob Castle: White Tassel-hunter-taumee Elene-Corn Man Jacob had more than four native wives and twenty known children, though Sowege was his primary wife. "Jacob Castle was probably of German stock, most likely Palatinate. The first record I find of Jacob Castle is when he appeared on the 1738 Tithe List for Orange Co., VA. Also appearing on the list was Jacob Stover." (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) Castlewood, Virginia takes it name from "Castle’s Woods", the vast expansion of forest land that Jacob Castle acquired from the Indians. There are many stories regarding Castle’s acquisition of the land. Some historians say that (in 1746) he traded the Indians a butcher knife and a musket for the expanse of woodland that later took his name. (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) Daniel Boone lived in the Castlewood area from 1773 to 1775 before moving on to Kentucky. Castle would probably have known him and would have had at least 30 years of woodsman experience on him. It is known that Boone took credit for a lot of the deeds of William Russell and it is probable that he claimed some of Jacob Castle’s as well. (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) Jacob fought in The Battle at Kings Mountain during the American Revolutionary War. "On June 25, 1740, Jacob Cassell purchased 200 acres of land from Jacob Stover in Orange County, VA for 40 pounds current money (Orange Co., VA Deed Book 4, pages 47-48). On June 26, 1740, Jacob Cassel sold 75 acres to Jacob Coger for 17 pounds Pennsylvania money (Orange Co., VA Deed Book 4, pages 52-54). On September 23, 1742, Jacob Castle leased 125 acres in Orange County to Elizabeth Downs for 5 pounds current money (Orange Co., VA Deed Book 8, pages 228-230). This document goes on to say that the 125 acres is the remaining part of the original 200 acres purchased from Jacob Stover after having sold 75 acres to Jacob Coger." (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) "In Augusta Co., VA Court Order Book 2, page 105, is an entry for Jacob Castle being charged by Adam Harmon with threatening to aid the French. Castle is ordered to be arrested and brought before a called court on the next Monday. The date is May 17, 1749. In the same book, on page 130, Jacob Castle is acquitted of the charge of treason in going over to and assisting the French. The date is May 22, 1749." (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) In December 1785, a group of inhabitants of extreme southwest Virginia petitioned the government to form the new county of Russell. Among those signing the petition were: Jacob Castle and Joseph Castle. (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) From Russell Co., VA Land Entry Book 1, Page 275: May 31, 1798 - Jacob Castle enters fifty acres of land on his own line by virtue of part of one land office treasury warrant No. 14,292 dated the 16th day of Sept. 1781 Beginning at Little Hollow & running with his line crossing his spring he now drinks out of, thence running toward Copper Creek for compliment. (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) Early American Traditional Folklore about Jacob Castle, Sr. "Historians, as well as court records, indicate that Jacob Castle was a "long hunter" and lived for great periods of time with the Indians in the vicinity of what, today, is Castlewood in the western part of Russell County, Virginia. Castle dressed in Buckskin moccasins and leggings, a leather hunting shirt and "breeches" and a cap made of beaver or otter skin. He carried a hatchet, knife, shotpouch, powder horn, rifle (or musket) and enough food for at least 2 days." (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) "Most of his descendents in Russell, Wise and Scott counties bear the traits and appearance of the Indian to whom he was married. He was married legally, according to Indian law, which was the only law on the frontier when Castle was in the southwestern portion of Virginia." (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) "The story of Jacob Castle fits the pattern of western activity in pre-revolution days. "Long Hunters" spent long periods of time in the forests away from farmers and civilization. They lived much as the Indians did, depending upon their hunting skills to provide food, clothing and trade goods. Try as they might, the long hunters often found civilization catching up with them. This was the case in Russell County since the first permanent settlers moved there in 1769. The people who came that year were squatters since several years would pass before they could claim legal title to their land." (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) "Castle was a longhunter who lived for months in the woods and traded deerskins and animal pelts. He would leave home in the fall and disappear for months dressed in a deerskin hunting shirt, beaver cap, buckskin moccasins and leggings. The tail of the beaver cap would hang to the nape of his neck. He took a hatchet, knife, shot pouch and provisions such as meal, salt, jerked beef and pemmican in a sling over his shoulder. He carried a long-barrelled rifle commonly made by Germanic gunsmiths in eastern Pennsylvania, Maryland and along the western trail. Originally it was called the Pennsylvania rifle but later became more famous as the Kentucky Hunter's Rifle. The wagon road later became part of the Wilderness Road. Travelers would go for miles and days without seeing but little evidence of civilization. Occasionally there would be a log hut along the rugged land of cliffs and forest in southwest Virginia. In 1769, other pioneers cleared patches of land at Castle's Woods and moved in as squatters. Threats from Indians compelled them to live close together. The Loyal Land Company owned so much land at the time that emigrants would build a cabin and set up housekeeping without the formality of buying or renting. If the land was poor or the area proved unsafe they would move on. Otherwise they would stay until confronted by the owner and forced to buy." (Excerpt from the article "In and Around the State of Cumberland: Jadon Talks about Pioneer Life of 1700's," by Jadon Gibson, from THE POWELL VALLEY TIMES, December 5, 1990.) "The earliest Castle men who settled in southwestern Virginia obtained, from the indians, a large tract of land situated on the Clinch River. The area was known in the early records as Castle's Woods. Although the Castle's had traded with the indians to obtain their land they did not have sufficient title to it. As other white settlers came into the area they settled there and eventually obtained land warrants. Isaiah Salyer apparently lived on land in the Castle's Woods area when he first arrived in southwestern Virginia. Both Jacob and Joseph Castle lived among the Indians and were known to have been Indian traders. Records indicate that they both produced children of Indian ancestry." (Copyright © 2003, "Descendants of Jacob Castle," as edited by William C. Reed.) In 1982 the writer of The Heritage of Russell County visted a field in Russell County, near the Scott County line, that was said to be an old Indian Graveyard. The area was full of depressions indicating sunken graves. Many of the graves were marked with broken field stones. One grave in particular was interesting in that it was not sunken and had a cut stone marker. The stone was barely protruding above ground. Upon digging out the stone, she found it inscribed "J. Castle, Age 67 years, Died September 26 18__." Source: https://sites.google.com/site/thecassellfamilyhistory/home/jacob-cassell-castle Jacob took a different path—he went native. His first wife was Shawnee; her name Sowege means “gliding swan.” They married about 1736, and she was the mother of Jacob Jr. and perhaps others. Jacob may have had several other wives, reputedly all Cherokee, with whom he had other children. He came to southwest Virginia when it was the frontier, and apparently traded with the natives for land that became known as “Castle’s woods.” Because his name had been associated with the area long before Daniel Boone set foot there, it has been suggested that old Jacob may have been the one who pointed out the Cumberland Gap to Boone. Jacob’s Indian name was “White Tassel,” and some have even gone so far as to describe him as an albino. It is more probable that, with his German heritage, he was very fair-haired compared to his Indian neighbors. As a longhunter, he would have ranged far from home, killing deer for meat and hides with his long-barreled rifle made by German gunsmiths in Pennsylvania. In 1740 Jacob bought land on the New River from Jacob Stover. When he was home from his travels, he seemed to have conflicts with his neighbors, particularly one named Adam Herman (or Harmon.) In 1746 Jacob and other settlers were detailed to build a road from Adam Harmon’s to the river; Jacob objected. In April 1749 Herman’s home was robbed of several deer and elk skins on three consecutive days. Jacob became a suspect since he hunted with a party of Indians that had been known to steal horses and other livestock in the settlement. Herman applied for a writ to arrest Jacob Castle and led a posse to Jacob’s hunting camp in Castle’s woods, but Jacob’s Indian friends chased the posse away. Later in the month Adam and his brother were arrested because they had robbed Jacob. By May 17 Adam was out of jail, charging Jacob with “threatening to aid and assist the French against his Majesty’s forces.” Jacob was arrested, tried, and acquitted of the charge of treason. Others have commented that Jacob probably did feel more loyalty to his Indian friends—and thus the French—than he did to the British. I would like to think so, since my sympathies have always been with the Indians. (Wait till you hear about my ancestor on the other side of the family, William Whitley. He and Jacob Castle are my only claims to famous ancestors, and they couldn’t have been more different.) In any case, Jacob was thought to have taken part in the Battle of Kings Mountain in the Revolutionary War—with the Americans. Historical Information about Jacob Castle, Sr. "Jacob Castle was probably of German stock, most likely Palatinate. The first record I find of Jacob Castle is when he appeared on the 1738 Tithe List for Orange Co., VA. Also appearing on the list was Jacob Stover." (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) "On June 25, 1740, Jacob Cassell purchased 200 acres of land from Jacob Stover in Orange County, VA for 40 pounds current money (Orange Co., VA Deed Book 4, pages 47-48). On June 26, 1740, Jacob Cassel sold 75 acres to Jacob Coger for 17 pounds Pennsylvania money (Orange Co., VA Deed Book 4, pages 52-54). On September 23, 1742, Jacob Castle leased 125 acres in Orange County to Elizabeth Downs for 5 pounds current money (Orange Co., VA Deed Book 8, pages 228-230). This document goes on to say that the 125 acres is the remaining part of the original 200 acres purchased from Jacob Stover after having sold 75 acres to Jacob Coger." (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) "In Augusta Co., VA Court Order Book 2, page 105, is an entry for Jacob Castle being charged by Adam Harmon with threatening to aid the French. Castle is ordered to be arrested and brought before a called court on the next Monday. The date is May 17, 1749. In the same book, on page 130, Jacob Castle is acquitted of the charge of treason in going over to and assisting the French. The date is May 22, 1749." (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) In December 1785, a group of inhabitants of extreme southwest Virginia petitioned the government to form the new county of Russell. Among those signing the petition were: Jacob Castle and Joseph Castle. (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) From Russell Co., VA Land Entry Book 1, Page 275: May 31, 1798 - Jacob Castle enters fifty acres of land on his own line by virtue of part of one land office treasury warrant No. 14,292 dated the 16th day of Sept. 1781 Beginning at Little Hollow & running with his line crossing his spring he now drinks out of, thence running toward Copper Creek for compliment. (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) "Bazil Castle, who was born in Virginia circa 1760 and died in Kentucky on October 8, 1846, gave the following information in his pension statement on February 27, 1834, "Indian spying in western Virginia 1779-1780 under Colonel Preston, Capt. Lewis, Lt. Robinson at battle of Ruby Falls, Guilford Courthouse. April 1779 entered service as an Indian spy. Two spies working together took a certain range and at night they met at an appointed place. The first four months spent on Bluestone River. September 1779 marched with whole company down Clinch River to Fort Blackamore, arriving there in late September. Served at Fort Blackamore till December. In February 1780 marched from Blackamore to Fort Chiswell Hill. April 1780 discharged at Fort Chiswell Hill. Fall 1780 remained at home with his mother while his father went to Kings Mountain with Campbell and other Virginia men. His father, Jacob Castle, was at the battle of Kings Mountain." " (Copyright © 1999 by Brian Keith Nichols.) Early American Traditional Folklore about Jacob Castle, Sr. "Historians, as well as court records, indicate that Jacob Castle was a "long hunter" and lived for great periods of time with the Indians in the vicinity of what, today, is Castlewood in the western part of Russell County, Virginia. Castle dressed in Buckskin moccasins and leggings, a leather hunting shirt and "breeches" and a cap made of beaver or otter skin. He carried a hatchet, knife, shotpouch, powder horn, rifle (or musket) and enough food for at least 2 days." (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) "Most of his descendents in Russell, Wise and Scott counties bear the traits and appearance of the Indian to whom he was married. He was married legally, according to Indian law, which was the only law on the frontier when Castle was in the southwestern portion of Virginia." (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) "The story of Jacob Castle fits the pattern of western activity in pre-revolution days. "Long Hunters" spent long periods of time in the forests away from farmers and civilization. They lived much as the Indians did, depending upon their hunting skills to provide food, clothing and trade goods. Try as they might, the long hunters often found civilization catching up with them. This was the case in Russell County since the first permanent settlers moved there in 1769. The people who came that year were squatters since several years would pass before they could claim legal title to their land." (Copyright 1997 © by Ron Hall.) "Castle was a longhunter who lived for months in the woods and traded deerskins and animal pelts. He would leave home in the fall and disappear for months dressed in a deerskin hunting shirt, beaver cap, buckskin moccasins and leggings. The tail of the beaver cap would hang to the nape of his neck. He took a hatchet, knife, shot pouch and provisions such as meal, salt, jerked beef and pemmican in a sling over his shoulder. He carried a long-barrelled rifle commonly made by Germanic gunsmiths in eastern Pennsylvania, Maryland and along the western trail. Originally it was called the Pennsylvania rifle but later became more famous as the Kentucky Hunter's Rifle. The wagon road later became part of the Wilderness Road. Travelers would go for miles and days without seeing but little evidence of civilization. Occasionally there would be a log hut along the rugged land of cliffs and forest in southwest Virginia. In 1769, other pioneers cleared patches of land at Castle's Woods and moved in as squatters. Threats from Indians compelled them to live close together. The Loyal Land Company owned so much land at the time that emigrants would build a cabin and set up housekeeping without the formality of buying or renting. If the land was poor or the area proved unsafe they would move on. Otherwise they would stay until confronted by the owner and forced to buy." (Excerpt from the article "In and Around the State of Cumberland: Jadon Talks about Pioneer Life of 1700's," by Jadon Gibson, from THE POWELL VALLEY TIMES, December 5, 1990.) "The earliest Castle men who settled in southwestern Virginia obtained, from the indians, a large tract of land situated on the Clinch River. The area was known in the early records as Castle's Woods. Although the Castle's had traded with the indians to obtain their land they did not have sufficient title to it. As other white settlers came into the area they settled there and eventually obtained land warrants. Isaiah Salyer apparently lived on land in the Castle's Woods area when he first arrived in southwestern Virginia. Both Jacob and Joseph Castle lived among the Indians and were known to have been Indian traders. Records indicate that they both produced children of Indian ancestry." (Copyright © 2003, "Descendants of Jacob Castle," as edited by William C. Reed.) === More Notes === In The Post (Big Stone Gap, Virginia 06 Jan 1938, Thursday, page 1 and six is an article PIONEER DAYS IN CASTLEWOODS that states, "All historian agree that the settlement, and later the down, derived its name from a man named Castle or Cassel. But we find one writer saying that Castle was a horse thief and that irate settlers chased him into a forest here, where he was captured and hanged to a tree, while another tells us that Castle was an honest settler, the first to ever build a home at the place which was to bear his name. I am inclined to believe that Castle was the first, or among the first settlers here, and that the horse thief and lynching story has been transferred name and all, from some other locally and planted here on the hills of the winding Clinch. " By James Taylor Adams. Source: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/139043975/jacob-'white_tassel'-cassel_castle

Former Mayors of Van Alstyne, Texas

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Former_Mayors_of_Van_Alstyne_Texas.jpg
A list of every individual who's served as mayor of Van Alstyne, Texas from 1899 - present day. This project was thought up by the mods of the Van Alstyne History Facebook page, Donald Hash and Katrina Dawn Miller. After learning that a complete list of all the mayors of Van Alstyne, Texas was nowhere to be found online, we decided to research the city's past and create a thorough list for anyone interested. If an individual has passed away, we attached a link to their obituary and Find a Grave memorial so you can read about their achievements as mayor. This project isn't affiliated with city hall, the Van Alstyne Library, or the Van Alstyne Historical Society in any way. This is something we thought up ourselves to be used for persons interested in historical, or genealogy research. Everything is a public record. Photos belong to Donald or Katrina, or they were taken from the Van Alstyne Library with permission. '''Mayors''' Jim Atchison - (2020 - present)https://www.lubbockonline.com/story/news/2020/06/10/atchison-named-van-alstyne-mayor-after-riley-resigns/113687114/ Steven Riley - (2018 - 2020)https://www.kten.com/story/38172960/van-alstynes-new-mayor-takes-office Larry Cooper - (2015-2018)https://www.kten.com/story/38172960/van-alstynes-new-mayor-takes-officehttps://www.kxii.com/content/news/Van-Alstyne-mayor--468527643.html Teddie Ann Salmon - (2013 - 2015)https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/2013/05/22/salmon-wins-fourth-term-van-alstyne-mayor-html/24320940007/ Kim Demasters - (2011 - 2013)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=kim%20demasters&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_20110520_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 Ruth Ann Collins - (2009 - 2011)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=ruth%20ann%20collins&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_20090514_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 Mike Parker - (2005 - 2009)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=mike%20parker&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_20050728_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 Willie Boddie - (2003 - 2005)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=willie%20boddie&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_20070301_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/54795211/willie_james-boddie Willie Boddie - mayor pro tem (2002 - 2003)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=willie%20boddie&i=f&d=01012000-12312009&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_20020718_english_1&df=51&dt=60&cid=2970 Benny Edwards - (1999 - 2002)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=bennie%20edwards&i=f&d=01011990-12312009&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19990506_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/250999723/benny_wayne_edwards Teddie Ann Salmon - (1993 -1999)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=teddie%20ann%20salmon&i=f&d=01011990-12311999&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19930506_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 David Schatz - (1986 - 1993)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=david%20schatz&i=f&d=01011980-12311999&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19890504_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.scogginsfuneralhome.com/obituaries/David-Wayne-Schatz?obId=30291660#/celebrationWall Sherman Taylor - (1983 - 1986)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=%22sherman%20taylor%22&i=f&d=01011980-12311989&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19830217_english_1&df=21&dt=30&cid=2970 B. E. "Ted" Nevils - (1979 - 1983)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=nevils&i=f&d=01011980-12311999&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19901220_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/139853965/burness-elwin-nevils Desmon E. Billups - (1971 - 1979)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=desmond%20billups&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19901018_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87387640/desmon-earl-billups Rev. James Isham Gregory - (1969 - 1971)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=gregory&i=f&by=1983&bdd=1980&d=01011898-12311989&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19830505_english_3&df=1&dt=9&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10554129/james-isham-gregoryhttps://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=gregory%20mayor&i=f&by=1969&bdd=1960&d=01011960-12311969&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19690410_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 Roscoe Kincaid Garver - (1951 - 1969)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=%22roscoe%20garver%22&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19801120_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21246666/roscoe_kincaid_garverhttps://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=garver&i=f&by=1951&bdd=1950&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19510504_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 [[Hynds-124|Henry Hynds]] - (1945 - 1951)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=henry%20hynds&i=f&by=1983&bdd=1980&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19831208_english_1&df=1&dt=8&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/140086781/henry-david-hynds#add-to-vc J. M. McLemore - (1941 - 1945)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=mclemore&i=f&by=1941&bdd=1940&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19410612_english_1&df=1&dt=4&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/59552228/james-madison-mclemore [[Blassingame-240|William Winsor Blassingame]] - (1935 - 1941)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=mclemore&i=f&by=1941&bdd=1940&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19410612_english_1&df=1&dt=4&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10468289/winsor-william-blassingame J. M. McLemore - (1926 - 1935)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=mclemore&i=f&by=1927&bdd=1920&d=01011920-12311959&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19270407_english_1&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=mclemore&i=f&by=1927&bdd=1920&bm=4&bd=21&d=04211927-04211927&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19270421_english_10&df=1&dt=3&cid=2970 Ed P. Williams - (1920 - 1926)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=williams%20mayor&i=f&by=1926&bdd=1920&d=01011920-12311929&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19260520_english_5&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/117715457/ed-p-williams#add-to-vc [[Cartwright-4932|Dr. Thomas Speed Cartwright]] (1907-1909) Louis Garver - (1910 - 1917)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=%22louis%20garver%22%20mayor&i=f&d=01011898-12312020&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19230111_english_5&df=1&dt=10&cid=2970 [[Cartwright-4932|Dr. Thomas Speed Cartwright]] - (1907-1909) J. H. Moore - (1905 - 1907) [[McKinney-9765|Joseph Ashley McKinney]] - (1901-1905)https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10581103/joseph-ashley-mckinney#add-to-vc J. J. Holliday - (1900 - 1901)https://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/viewer/?k=%22mayor%20holiday%22&i=f&d=01011898-12311908&m=between&ord=k1&fn=van_alstyne_leader_usa_texas_van_alstyne_19020712_english_3&df=1&dt=2&cid=2970 Lewis James Reynolds - (1896 - 1897)Public records from the Van Alstyne, Texas City Hall.https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/120766151/lewis_james-reynolds [[Cave-1404|William Henry Cave]] - (1892 - 1896)Public records from the Van Alstyne, Texas City Hall. Newton Taylor - (1891 - 1892)Public records from the Van Alstyne, Texas City Hall.https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10593183/newton-taylor '''Credits''' 1. Find a Gravefindagrave.com (Links to memorials. User submitted photos and obituaries.) 2. GoogleGoogle.com (Used to search for news articles that didn't come from ''The Van Alstyne Leader'.' 3. Van Alstyne City Hallhttps://cityofvanalstyne.us/ (Open records request. See images section.) 4. ''Van Alstyne Leader'' Newspaper Archiveshttps://vanalstyne.advantage-preservation.com/ (Links to obituaries, and past Van Alstyne City election results.) 5. Van Alstyne Public Libraryhttps://cityofvanalstyne.us/departments/library/ (Genealogy and Reference Dept.) == Sources ==

Former profile of Tah-Chee-1

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:'''NOTE''' Hello Carole! Thank you so much for getting back so fast, I was not expecting that, Great Ideas! ;) I also wrote to the Many managers of Tah Chee "Dutch" "The Long Warrior" of Tellico on GENI since they use a link to Tahchee, A Cherokee Chief that states he was born in 1790 [Major b. abt 1771 Can't be his son!] I also noticed not only is his wife on there is the daughter of Oconastota [fag memorial] apparently his Mother was too? I asked them about that... ----------------- I actually have much more information on Kah-nung-da-tla-geh aka. Major Ridge then his parents, I had just started to dig around looking at his folks when I noticed all the differences in what folks have out there. I added some links that I used to Major Ridge on Wikitree [and a couple photos] from loc.gov site "The Cherokee Indian Nation resisted the encroachment of Euro-Americans on their lands, while at the same time adopting many of their cultural trappings. Major Ridge (Kah-nung-do-tla-geh) (ca. 1771–1839) a mixed-blood, slave-owning leader of the Chickamuaga Cherokees in Georgia and a friend of government agent Benjamin Hawkins, fought American settlers for years before becoming an advocate for cultural adaptation. He signed the Treaty of New Echota in 1835, which eventually resulted in the Trail of Tears, the forced migration of the Cherokee people to lands west of the Mississippi. He was killed by fellow Cherokees." My relation is Major Ridge's Daughter Sollee [Sarah] RIDGE Paschal PIX married one of the men charged with helping the Cherokees, George Washington Paschal Jr is my Cousin [they divorced he was a Lawyer she remarried to Charles Sisson PIX] , his mother Agnes BREWER Paschal[5th great aunt] is sister to my 4th great grandma Elizabeth BREWER Paschal who married George Washington Paschal SR Nephew John Paschal... this is our maternal side, our Paternal side our grandma is a Jackson that came from Randolph County, NC James M Jackson b.1818 we don't know who his folks are yet, but I do know that is where Andrew Jackson's family came from.... ugh! I'll go look & see if I have anymore info, I did this awhile back & lost a lot of research changing computers when my old one got sick ;) I need to add Sollee as Major's daughter on wikitree still, here is Major in my tree with some weblinks attached, https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/8722757/person/330115809847/facts Major Ridge PG398 TAHCHEE PG 251 [the 1 b.1790] History of the Indian tribes of North America : with biographical sketches and anecdotes of the principal chiefs. Illustrated with colored portraits of ... V1. History of the Indian tribes of North America : with biographical sketch... History of the Indian tribes of North America : with biographical sketches and anecdotes of the principal chiefs... Major Ridge Stand Watie Elias Boudinot I Think* they have just about ALL the Links & PICS Etc Etc Etc... [Paul is also on ancestry] ------------------------------------------------- :Hello!, : the find a grave link goes to OCONASTOTA not to OGANOSTOTA so the info you put on him from there is incorrect, :Note* the AGE Oconastota b.1710 Major Ridge's father :Tarchee Ogonostota, son of Onacona "White Owl" Attakullkulla, Fullblood of the Bird Clan & Ollie Nionee Oconostota, Ani'-Wa'Ya (Wolf) Clan, Oganstota, Dutsi Tah Chee (Tarchee Ogonostota), Long Warrior, Long warrior of Tellico. was b.bet.1738-48.... I Think* you just mixed up those Native American names that look close to the same spelling but were different folks... Oh! OR you mixed them because the FAG guy Oconastota is [major Ridge dad-->] Oganstota, Dutsi Tah Chee FATHER IN LAW! [https://www.geni.com/people/Ailsey-Paint-Clan-married-into-Cherokee-Bird-Clan/6000000016025143691?through=6000000001637194329} Thoughts? This message is from Jen Hill (charjenpits@yahoo.com). Click here for their WikiTree profile: https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Harris-25184 The sender was on this profile page when they sent the message: https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Tah-Chee-1 I will make a new profile if you do not want to and try to get the data changed over or better yet just fix the spelling etc. and open a new one for Ogonostota... found them on rootsweb. no sources... but I will re read the Book I have Trail of Tears and will use that as our source, thank you for catching it. ==Biography== {{Native American Sticker|tribe=Cherokee}} :He is not listed as Dutsi but he is listed under his "Mother's" Cherokee name.......... :'''Oconostota, 1775 – 1780''' "After the Tennessee Valley Authority announced plans to build Tellico Dam in 1967, which would flood historic Cherokee sites, the University of Tennessee initiated a plan to conduct salvage archeological excavations throughout the Little Tennessee Valley. Excavations were conducted at '''Chota''' between 1969 and 1974, as litigation stalled the dam project. The excavations uncovered 783 features (mostly refuse pits), the postmold layouts of 31 structures, and '''91 burials.[18] ''' '''Burial 10, uncovered in 1969, was identified by its grave goods (namely a pair of wire spectacles) as that of chief Oconostota'''.[19] Thousands of stone and ceramic artifacts were uncovered, including projectile points dating to the Archaic period (8000–1000 B.C.).[20]" (wikipedia.com) ==Disputed Origins== Often confused with Oconostota, an earlier, prominent chief. There is no connection. Some claim that he was related to Attakullakulla. Author Thurman Wilkins (without documentation) also says he may have also been called "Dutsi" or Tarchee. Wilkins, Thurman. ''Cherokee Tragedy.'' University of Oklahoma Press, 1989. p. 7 == Biography == :From wikipedia.com [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chota_(Cherokee_town)] :"Chota (also spelled Chote, Echota, Itsati, and other similar variations) :is a historic Overhill --'''Cherokee town site in Monroe County, Tennessee''', in the :southeastern United States. Developing after nearby Tanasi, from the late 1740s :until 1788 Chota was the most important of the Overhill towns, replacing Tanasi :as the de facto capital of the Cherokee people. '''A number of prominent Cherokee leaders were born or resided at Chota, among them Attakullakulla, Oconostota''', Old Hop, Old Tassel, Hanging Maw, and Nancy Ward.[1][2]" NOTE:: There is a difference of opinion between the geni.com site and the wikipedia site as to who his father was--- The wikipedia bio gives Attakullakulla as a Cousin...and Possibly the son of Moytoy,,,,, Find-a-grave memorial states: Cherokee Chief. '''Born the son of Moytoy Pigeon of Tellico''' and his Shawnee wife sometime between 1700 and 1710. " : From the geni.com site ::Note: Also known as Dutsi Tachee, Tarchee Ogonostota, Tarchee Ogonostota, Tatsi aka "Dutch" :"Son of Attakullakulla / Onacona and Ollie Nionee Oconostota, Ani'-Wa'Ya (Wolf) Clan :Husband of Susannah Catherine, of the Deer Clan and E-li-si :Father of Oo-loo-tsa (Lucy) Bowles; Major Ridge, "The Ridge"; David Oo-Watie; Nettle Carrier and Gi-yo-s-ti :Brother of Hannah "Nikitie" Rebecca Arthur; Chief Dragging Canoe; Little White Owl; Oocumma "The Badger" Attakullakulla; Old Abraham (Ooskiah Oskuah) . of Chillowe/Chillhowie and 8 others" :Father of [[Ridge-298 | Major Ridge]] and Oo-watie :::'''TRAIL OF TEARS''' As I read the book and glean the information about "Ridge's" life this is what I find. Ridge's birth and the place of his mother's house was (pg.1) "The place was the town of Hiwassee, on the Hiwassee River, at Susannah Ford, North Carolina Territory." Later to become Tennessee. "His mother had borne before-3 sons, all now dead by reasons of the cold hand of sickness..." When "Ridge was about 5 when his "Mother" and "Father" decided to flee Hiwassee." They built a new house for the family and did not tell the "Uncles" where they were. "Ridge was aged 10 .....when the family decided to move back to their old town of Hiwassee, which had been badly damaged." (p.20) "Here Ridge helped with the building of his mother's third house, '''and his father, Dutsi''', was accepted in the local council." The boy and his younger '''sisters''', were taken into the Clan's affection." "Ridge was 17 when the war dance began in his village." "Ridge's sister and '''younger brother''' took him away to the house." (p.29) After the "final defeat at Erowah, with Sevier at Hightower, Ridge had by now moved with his younger brothers and sisters to the village of Pine Log, near members of the Bird Clan. On returning he did his absolution in the river near where a Shaman chanted bleak intonations..............., he walked thru the field to '''his fiance's house,...........Susanna.''' (pg.43- There is no mention yet as to where they met) '''After Jan 27 1795''', the book speaks about "Ridge courting in the traditional way." (Ridge's mother was not around, "as one of Ridge's aunts, taking the part that his mother would have played.........." The main Chief came forward and joyously announced "The blankets joined".. (which means there is no record of their marriage) (p.56 Susanna is called Wickett). The real life "'''The Trail of Tears was a series of forced relocations of Indian nations in the United States following the Indian Removal Act of 1830."''' The relocated people suffered from exposure, disease, and starvation while on route, and more than four thousand died before reaching their various destinations. The removal included members of the Cherokee, Muscogee, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations, from their ancestral homelands in the Southeastern United States to an area west of the Mississippi River that had been designated as Native Territory. The phrase "Trail of Tears" originated from a description of the removal of the Cherokee Nation in 1838.[1][2] [3] Between 1830 and 1850, the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, Seminole, and Cherokee people (including Native Americans, and the African freedmen and slaves, who lived among them) were forcibly removed from their traditional lands in the Southeastern United States, and relocated farther west.[4] Those relocated were forced to march to their destinations by state and local militias.[5] The Cherokee removal in 1838 (the last forced removal east of the Mississippi) was brought on by the discovery of gold near Dahlonega, Georgia in 1828, resulting in the Georgia Gold Rush.[6] Approximately 2,000-6,000 of the 16,543 relocated Cherokee perished along the way.[7] [8][9][10][11] (wikipedia) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trail_of_Tears#Cherokee_forced_relocation] {{Native American Sticker|tribe=Cherokee}} Oganstota was a Cherokee man probably born about 1750. According to Wilkins his wife was a mixed-blood Cherokee of the Deer Clan. Little is known of him other than his name and his children, [[Ridge-298|The Ridge]], and [[Oo-Watie-1|David Oo-wa-ti]]. Hampton, David K. Cherokee Mixed-Bloods. Arc Press of Cane Hill, Lincoln, Arkansas. 2005. p. 243 The Moravian missionaries also mentioned a daughter, but not by name. McClinton, Rowena, ed. The Moravian Springplace Mission to the Cherokees. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE. 2007. Vol. 1, Dec. 1, 1811, p. 459 According to memories of The Ridge, the family was displaced in 1776 during the Revolutionary War when American militia under Rutherford destroyed the Cherokee towns near Hiwassie Isenbarger, Dennis L. ed. Native Americans in Early North Carolina. Office of Archives and History, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Raleigh, N.C. 2013. pp. 242-244. and moved to the Sequatchie valley farther down the Tennessee River. The family made a final move to Pine Log (now Georgia) about 1785. Oganstota and his wife are believed to have died there about about 1789. Wilkins, "Tragedy," p. 21 == Sources == *"'''TRAIL OF TEARS''' The Rise and Fall of the Cherokee Nation" --- Author: John Ehle copyright: 1988 *{{FindAGrave|6584626}} *:'''Tennessee Genweb Project''' [http://www.tngenweb.org/tnfirst/firstpeople/tahchee.html tngenweb] :"First People of Tennessee and the American Southeast" ::: Tah-Chee or Dutch, Cherokee Chief *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chota_(Cherokee_town) Chota Tennessee] * [https://www.geni.com/people/Major-Ridge/6000000001637194329 Major

Former Text of Colbert-146

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: ''This page contains text originally found on [[Colbert-146|William Colbert]]. It appears to be a cut-and-paste from an unknown source, and much of it is only peripherally related to the profiled subject. As such, it's been removed from that profile, but retained here in case someone wants to pull from it for other purposes. '''If someone knows the source, please cite it. Thank you.''' '' ---- == Biography == ''General William Colbert, or Chooshemataha, was a military character of consequence. He fought for his own people against the Creeks, and, it has been stated, assisted Andrew Jackson against the same tribe. “Old Hickory” presented him with a military coat, which the chief wore on important occasions until the end of his days. He lived a few miles south of Tocshish. Tocshish was south of where Pontotoc now is, and was put on old maps as “Mclntoshville.”’ In the summer of 1780 Gov. Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, having sent instructions to place a post on the Mississippi river, with cannon to fortify it, Col. Geo. Rogers Clark with some soldiers, left Louisville and proceeded to the Iron Banks, at the mouth of the Mayfield creek, five miles below the mouth of the Ohio. He there erected Fort Jefferson. The Chickasaws at this time were the owners of the country west of the Tennessee river, including the ground where Fort Jefferson was erected. The Governor’s instructions to buy the site or get the Indians’ consent was not complied with, and their resentment was aroused. They commenced to maraud and to kill members of the families that had settled around the fort. Mr. Music’s entire family, except himself, was killed. A white man was taken prisoner and forced to reveal the condition of the fort, etc. There were about thirty men in the garrison, under Captain George. Many of these were sick. They were reduced in supplies of food on account of those who had taken refuge there, and the destruction of their crops near by, by the Indians. “In this condition, and under the lead of a Scotchman named Colbert, who had lived with and acquired a great influence over these Indians, they appeared in force, several hundred strong, and began a siege and attack upon the fort in the summer of 1781. After resistance of five days the respective leaders, Colbert and George, met under a flag of truce to try to agree on terms of capitulation, a summons to surrender within an hour having been refused. Terms could not be arranged, and the fighting was resumed. The issue was near at hand, as a messenger had been dispatched to Kaskaskia for aid. A desperate night assault was made by the Indians in force. "When they had advanced in short range and in close order, Captain George Owens, who commanded one of the block-houses, had the swivels loaded with rifle and musket balls, and fired them into the crowded ranks. The fire was very destructive and the slaughter excessive. The enemy, repulsed and disheatened, fell back to their camps. "Soon after, Colonel Clark arrived with a relief force and the Chickasaw army gave up the siege. This fort was some time after abandoned, from its isolated position, and the difficulty of supplying so remote a garrison. The evacuation was the signal for peace, which was tacitly accepted by the Indians and faithfully observed by both parties after.” [Z. F. Smith's Hist. Ky, 160-1]' [http://www.natchezbelle.org/ahgp-ms/chiefs/chiefs1.htm#William Colbert] "The collapse of the Jacobite Uprising in Scotland, fomented by the Scottish adherents of James the Pretender, in 1715, and the ensuing years of reprisal exacted by the English, influenced the emigration to America of many of the grim Highlanders. The inflow continued for many years. The first contingent of these people to settle in Georgia arrived at Savannah, in January, 1736, and among these earliest arrivals was young Logan Colbert. He doubtless came with the party led by John Mohr McIntosh which sailed from Inverness, Scotland, on October 18, 1735, on the ship "Prince of Wales" commanded by Capt. George Dunbar. Soon after landing at Savannah, courageous young Colbert abandoned the white settlement, ventured to the far West and settled among the militant Chickasaw Indians who then ranged along the eastern banks of the Mississippi from the mouth of the Ohio to the vast stretches of the lower river. It was an adventurous undertaking and his life story, if known, doubtless 3 Among whom should be mentioned the late Charles D. Carter, for many years a Congressman from Oklahoma; Reford Bond, Chairman of the State Corporation Commission; Jessie R. Moore, a former Clerk of the State Supreme Court and today, a member of the Board of Directors of the State Historical Society and its Treasurer; Douglas H. Johnston, Governor of the Chickasaws since 1898, (with the exception of the term that Palmer S. Mosley was chief); Judge Earl Welch, a Supreme Court Justice; W. C. Lewis, United States Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma; Ben Harrison, a Secretary of State; Otis Leader, a noted World War veteran; and former Governors Lee Cruce and William H. Murray, who became members of the Chickasaw Tribe by intermarriage. 4 The Indian Champion (Atoka, Indian Territory), April 18, 1885; H. F. O'Beirne, Leaders and Leading Men of the Indian Territory (Chicago, 1891), I, 209; H. B. Cushman, A History of the Choctaw, Chickasaw and Natchez Indians (Green. ville, 1899), 513 et seq. Under the new constitution the title of "Governor" was substituted for "Chief." Page 376 would be one of dramatic interest. He seems to have cultivated a sympathetic understanding with the Indians, married into the tribe and became a character of much prominence among them and a renowned leader in their wars against the French. The descendants of Logan Colbert in Oklahoma today, recall with much pride, the emigrant Scotch lad of the early days of the eighteenth century.5 He met a tragic death at the hands of a negro slave who was accompanying him on a trip back to Georgia. Major William Colbert, a son of Logan Colbert, became a famous war chief among the Chickasaws and early in life took an active part in the political affairs of the tribe. He represented his people at Washington, upon numerous occasions, and in the very early days, was received by President Washington, in Philadelphia. At the solicitation of Washington he led a contingent of Chickasaw warriors in support of Gen. Anthony Wayne at the battle of Fallen Timbers, Ohio, on August 20, 1794, against Little Turtle and the Northwestern Confederation of Indians. Major Colbert served nine months in the 3rd Regiment of United States Infantry in the War of 1812, concluding his military career by an effective participation in the war against the recalcitrant Creeks. As a commissioner from the Chickasaws, he was a signer of the treaty of October 4, 1801,6 and the treaty at Washington, of September 20, 1816.7 By the terms of the latter treaty, he was granted an annuity of $100 for the remainder of his life and was also styled a major-general. He also signed the Chickasaw treaty of October 19, 1818.8 The major signed these treaties by mark, which would indicate his lack of any scholastic training, although he is recognized as a character of pronounced native courage, ability and fine judgment. Major Colbert married a Chickasaw Indian woman by the name of Mimey and lived at Tokshish, Mississippi. {{FindAGrave|11787222}} 5 Though generally considered as a Scotch family, the Colberts were originally of French stock. 6 Kappler, op. cit., II, 55. 7 Ibid., II, 135 et seq. 8 Ibid., II, 174 et seq. Page 377 some four miles southeast of Monroe, and doubtless was largely instrumental in securing the establishment of the celebrated mission at that place. He was a contemporary of the famous Chief Piomingo of the Chickasaws, and passed away at an advanced age, sometime shortly before the Chickasaw removal of 1837-8. An interesting character among the Chickasaws in Mississippi was Mollie,9 daughter of Major William Colbert. As a young woman she married Christopher Oxbury, a mixed-blood Chero- 9 The life story of Mollie Colbert, the attractive Indian princess daughter of Major William Colbert of the Chickasaws, is one of romantic interest. After the death of Christopher Oxbury, her Cherokee husband by whom she had several children, she married James G. Gunn, a wealthy English planter. Gunn was a native of Virginia, fought with the British in our war of the Revolution and after the war removed from Viriginia to the remote edge of white settlement and located among the Chickasaw Indians and in what is today Lee County, Mississippi. He never composed his disdain for the new United States Government and would suffer no observance of the Fourth of July to be held upon his plantation, although he thoughtfully observed the birthday of George III. He died in 1826. Rhoda, the only child of James and Mollie Gunn was famed as a celebrated beauty and of her engaging qualities much has been written. Perhaps the story which is handed on down, of her romantic marriage to Humming Bird, a Chickasaw warrior, is more or less legendary. From his home at Mill Creek, C. N., Gov. Cyrus Harris, on August 10, 1881, wrote an interesting letter to Harry Warren of the Mississippi Historical Society in which he narrates many interesting details, some of which divest the romance from this oft repeated story about the marriage of Rhoda. He says, "Molly Gunn, my grandmother, was the wife of the old man James Gunn, who died rich, leaving one child, Rhoda. She (Rhoda) died two years ago, on Red River (Indian Territory) at her half-sister's, who was my aunt, a full-sister of my mother and a half-sister of my Aunt Rhoda. My grandmother's first husband, my mother's father, was a Cherokee, named Oxberry. After his death, she married old man James G. Gunn. Rhoda married Samuel Colbert, a nice man, but they separated and she married Joseph Potts, a white man. He died during the Civil War (1862) by taking strychnine by mistake. He died at my house. Aunt Rhoda had two sons living, Taylor and Joseph Potts. Her first child by Sam Colbert was a girl named Susan. She married and went off and never was heard of since. Malcolm McGee was my step-father. He had one daughter by my mother and named her Jane. My sister Jane married Robt. Aldridge, a white man who lived at Tuscumbia, but after they came to this country (Indian Territory) he got so trifling she drove him off. He then went to Texas and died. They had one daughter who is yet living. Jane afterwards married a nice gentleman by the name of William R. Guy and soon after she and Mr. Guy were married they went after sister Jane's father, old man McGee, and had him with them at Boggy Depot, Chickasaw Nation, but he, being very old, lived but a few months after getting there. I saw the old man die and was at his funeral. Old man McGee was a little over one hundred years old when he died. He was a long time United States Interpreter for the Chickasaws and it was said he could beat the Chickasaws talking their own tongue. Mr. and Mrs. Guy had nine children when Mrs. Guy died at Boggy Depot. About a year after her demise, Mr. Guy died at Paris, Texas, being there on a visit." Harry Warren, "Chickasaw Traditions, Customs, etc.," Mississippi Historical Society Publications (Oxford, 1898-1914), VIII (1908) 546 n.; Harry Warren, "Missions, Missionaries, Frontier Characters and Schools," loc. cit., 587-8. E. T. Winston, "Father" Stuart and the Monroe Mission (Meridian, Miss., 1927), 50-51. Among the nine children of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Guy above mentioned were William Malcolm Guy, who was born at Boggy Depot, on February 4, 1845, and was Governor of the Chickasaw Nation, in 1886-8; Cerena Guy, who married Ben W. Carter and became the mother of Hon. Charles D. Carter, a former congressman; and Mary Angelina Guy, who married Capt. Charles LeFlore and became the mother of Mrs. Lee Cruce, the wife of the second Governor of Oklahoma. Mollie Gunn seems to have been a member of the Presbyterian Church at Monroe Mission, but the following disquieting notation appears in the old church records: "April 5, 1834, the following persons having been under suspension from the privileges of the church for a length of time and giving no evidence of repentance, but continuing impenitent, were solemnly excommunicated, viz: Mollie Gunn, Nancy Colbert, Sally Frazier, James B. Allen, Benjamin Love and Saiyo." Her father, Major Colbert, also appears to have run counter to church discipline as it appears from the same record, "September 7, 1834. Session convened and was constituted by prayer. Mr. William Colbert, a member and an elder of this church, having been cited to appear before the session to answer the charge of intemperance, appeared accordingly, and having confessed his sin, expressed deep contrition for the same, and promised amendment; the session resolved that it is a duty to forgive him after requiring him to make a public confession before the congregation and promising to abstain in the future. Concluded in prayer. T. C. Stuart, Mod. Examined and approved by Presbytery at Unity Church, March 7, 1835." The old major passed away a year or two later. See Winston, op. cit., 40-41. It is of interest to know that the Chickasaws had no clans as did most of the other tribes, but were distinguished by distinctive House names, the ancestry being traced back through the mother. Mollie Colbert and her descendants were of the House of Inchus-sha-wah-ya. Page 378 kee, a proficient interpreter and a person of high standing among the Chickasaws. They lived upon her comfortable estate three miles south of Pontotoc, Mississippi, where her daughter Elizabeth or Betty was born. Her interesting home stood upon an ancient mound, the highest point in that part of the State, and surrounded by 1,000 acres of beautiful table-land. All of her children were born there as well as her famous grandson, Cyrus Harris, who was born there on August 22, 1817. The identity of the father of Cyrus Harris is somewhat confused. He is reputed to have been a white man by the name of Harrison, the name being subsequently shortened to Harris. Elizabeth's marriage to him was of brief duration, as she soon left him and returned to the home of her mother, where her son, Cyrus Harris, was born. The father declined to remove with the Chickasaws, at first, although he later attempted to join his son in the old Indian Territory. Cyrus Harris declined to have anything to do with him. Elizabeth married Malcolm McGee, very shortly but again returned to her mother at Malcolm McGee, of Scotch parentage who had recently emigrated from Scotland, was born in New York City about 1757, his father having been killed shortly before, at the battle of Ticonderoga, in the French and Indian War where he fought with the Colonial troops. While he was quite young, his mother removed to and settled on the north bank of the Ohio River, in southern Illinois, at Ft. Massac, and immediately across the river from the Chickasaw country. McGee had no schooling, but served as an interpreter among the Chickasaws, for forty years. It is said, "He assumed the Indian costume and conformed to all their customs except their polygamy." He married Elizabeth, a daughter of Christopher and Mollie Oxbury as his second wife, about 1819, and had one daughter, Jane. Shortly thereafter Elizabeth left him, taking the child with her. The mother later returned the child and she was placed by McGee in the home of Dr. T. C. Stuart, to be educated at Monroe Mission. In 1849, Malcolm McGee removed from Mississippi to the old Indian Territory, where he lived at the home of his daughter, Jane (Mrs. William R. Guy), at Boggy Depot, and where he died on November 5, 1849. Cyrus Harris became the guardian of their minor children whom he reared and educated. For further details, see Winston op. cit., 84 et seq., and Cushman, op cit., 509 et. seq." https://web.archive.org/web/20171228193657/http://digital.library.okstate.edu/Chronicles/v015/v015p373.html ===Death=== Unsourced date given as 1827 or 1836. ===Burial=== * Fact: Burial Pontotoc City Cemetery, Pontotoc, Pontotoc County, Mississippi, USA === Children === A previous version of this profile attached, without source, a son [[Colbert-1676|Jonathan Colbert]] for which there is no source. He's been detached. == Sources == See also: * [[Space:Indian_Nation_in_the_War_of_1812 | Indian Nation in the War of 1812]] * Find A Grave, database and images (accessed 1 April 2017), {{FindAGrave|11787222}} for Gen William Cooshemataha Pyaheggo Colbert (1742 - 1836) - Find A Grave Memorial.

Formerly PGM Profiles

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The purpose of this page is to track profiles which have been removed from the PGM Project so they can be evaluated and considered for possibly having arrived during the Great Migration...this wouldn't necessarily affect inclusion in the PGM Project, but may spin-off into another project. * [[Yates-50|John Yates Sr (bef.1631-bef.1651)]]

Forrest Family Bible Transcript

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Transcription of Pages copied from the [[Forrest-781|David Forrest]] & [[Morse-2715|Abigail Morse]] Family Bible Transcription By [[Duggan-996|James Duggan]] of copy provided by Fran Hardman. Also available on Tri-Counties Site: https://www.joycetice.com/bibles/forrest1.htm The original was passed down through the line of [[Forrest-4438|Josiah Hyde Forrest ]] and [[Forrest-4695|Asa Beaumont Forrest]]. It's current location is unknown. It appears at least some of the earlier entries were made by Abigail Forrest recording her children and grand-children's births, marriages and deaths. Dates before August 1807 likely were from memory or copied from another source. Dates after that may have been recorded at the time of the event. '''1. Cover''' The Holy Bible containing the Old and New Testaments …., Philadelphia, Printed by John Adams for Mathew Carey, No 122 Market Street Nov 7 1803 '''2.Inscription''' Cambridge January the twentieth, Year 1807 Then bought this Bible. Price (Eight?) Dollars [[Forrest-781|David Forrist]] his book given (?) To [[Morse-2715|Abigail Forrist]] the wife of my youth To remember me by after my Death this I (?) Give her as my property for her use as long As she liveth and after her death to be Returned back to my children to this I (?) (?) and (?) [[Forrest-781|David Forrist]] Guilford August the 30th 1807. '''3. Page 677 Family Record''' [[Forrest-772|Daniel Forrist]] was Married December the forth day year one thousand Eight Hundred and five Miss [[Forrest-4467|Esther Forrist ]] was married to Mr [[Rice-20269|Daniel Rice ]] April the 24th Year One thousand Eight hundred and eight Miss [[Forrest-787|Susanna Forrist]] was married to Mr [[Stone-5532|Johathan Stone ]] February the 4th Year one thoustand eight hundred and ten. [[Forrest-789|Azubah Forrist]] was married June 28th 1813 to [[Rose-4718|Tartus Rose]] [[Forrest-785|Oliver Forrist]] was married [[Forrest-786|Abigail Firrest ]] was married to [[Pease-871|Jesse Pease]] Jan 2 1823 '''(SECOND COLUMN)''' [[Forrest-782|David Forrist]] was married April the ninth one thousand eight hundred and one to [[Allard-832|Sally Allard]] of conway in the twenty fourth year of her age from the twenty ninth of March. [[Forrest-788|Asa Forrist]] was married July the fourth one thousand eight hundred and fifteen to [[Eames-605|Esther Eames]] of Smithfield in the 21st year of her age from the 23rd of February [[Forrest-791|Solomon Forrist ]] was married February(?) in the seventeenth to [[Oviatt-467|Familiar Oveatt]] of Rome in the 24th year of her age (?) (?) (?) (?) one thousand eight hundred and twenty four. '''4. Page 678 Family Record''' Births [[Forrest-781|David Forrist]] Born in Stoughton Mass June 24 1754 [[Morse-2715|Abigail Forrist]] Born in Stoughton October 25 1755 [[Forrest-782|David Forrest Junior]] born in Stoughton April 2, 1777 [[Forrest-784|Experience Forrist ]] Born in Stoughton June 11, 1779 [[Forrest-785|Oliver Forrist]]Born in Foxborough July 28 1781 [[Forrest-772|Daniel Forrist]] Born in Mansfield March 9 1783 [[Forrest-4463|Darius Forrist]] Born in Sharon May 11 1785 [[Forrest-4467|Esther Forrist]] Born in Sharon September 1 1786 [[Forrest-786|Abigail Forrist]] born in Guilford April 30 1788 [[Forrest-787|Susanna (Forrist]] born in Guilford July 28 1790 [[Forrest-789|Azubah Forrist]] born in Stoughton September 12 1794 [[Forrest-788|Asa Firrest ]] Born in Guilford October 25 1792 [[Forrest-790|Ira Forrist ]] Born in Guilford November 19 1794 [[Forrest-791|Solomon Forrist]] Born in Guilford April 19 1797 Multiple line --------------------------------------------------(all of above in the same hand) Polly Forrest was born the 20th February 1802 on Sunday Hanery Forrist was born the 8th March 1807 on (?) Eliza Forrist was born on the 22 of sept 1810 on Tuesday These are the names of the children of [[Forrest-782|David Forrest]] Abigail Forrest (?) was born December the 2xth 1824 in Smithfield Phinian Pratt Forrist was born January 13 1826 '''5. page 679''' ''Birth'' The names of my Granchildren Daniel Forrist june born in guilford Nove 15 1806 Dolphis Forrist Born in Guilford February 26 1809 Dena Forist born in Guilford March 31 1811 Eliza Forrist daughter of Oliver Forrist born in Eaton Richard Forrist born in [[Forrest-4438|Josiah Hyde Forrist ]] son of Asa Forrist was born in Smith Februarty the twenty-second 1816. David H Forrist was born in Guilford (?) 10, 1813 ''Death (Second Column)'' [[Forrest-784|Experience Forrist ]] died September 20 1782 [[Forrest-4463|Darius Forrist]] died in the 21st year of his life in the year 1806 September [[Blanchard-1085|Abigail Blanchard]] born august 1721 [[Forrest-791|Solomon Forrist]] died in Smithfield July the 1834 aged thirty-seven years [[Forrest-781|David Forrest Senior]] died July 2, 1834 aged 81 years and 8 days [[Morse-2715|Abigail Forrist]] wife of the above [[Forrest-781|David Forrest Senior]] died August (?) 1839 aged 82 years and ten months and five days. '''6. Page 680''' [[Pease-871|Jesse Pease]] died May 16 1862 [[Eames-605|Esther]], wife of [[Forrest-788|Asa Forrest]] died March 25th 1877 aged Eighty Three years [[Rose-4718|Tartius Rose]] October 26th 1877 aged 96 years [[Forrest-786|Abigail Pease ]] died March 9th 1880 Aged 92 years [[Forrest-788|Asa Forrest]] husband of [[Eames-605|Esther Forrest]] died in August 1881 aged 89 years (?) [[Forrest-4438|Josiah Hyde Forrest ]] died Covington PA [[Shelton-9062|Catherine E. Shelton]] wife of [[Forrest-4438|Josiah H. Forrest ]] died Covington PA [[Forrest-4695|Asa B Forrest]] son of [[Forrest-4438|J. H. Forrest ]] and [[Shelton-9062|Catherine E. Shelton]] died Raleigh NC Feb 8 1920. ==Research Notes== Aim is to connect this Free Space Profile to the referenced individual. [[Morse-2715|Abigail]] was the daughter of Solomon Morse (1720-1804) originally of Dedham and Abigail Blanchard (1721-1814) of Norton. Solomon and Abigail were married in Norton 30 November 1747 then moved to what is now Foxborough MA. ==Sources==

Fort Columbus

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Formally named Fort Jay. Following the 1806 rebuilding, and with the change in presidential administrations and the recent transfer to the federal government, the fort was renamed Fort Columbus, presumably for Christopher Columbus. In the early years of the Civil War, the north barracks were used to hold Confederate officers taken as prisoners of war pending transfer to other Union prisons such as Camp Johnson in Ohio, Fort Delaware or Fort Warren in Boston Harbor. Fort Columbus and Castle Williams also served as a temporary prisoner of war camp and confinement hospital for Confederate prisoners during the war. Major General William H. C. Whiting (CSA) died of dysentery in February 1865 in the post hospital shortly after his surrender at the Battle of Fort Fisher, North Carolina. He was the highest ranking Confederate officer to die as a prisoner of war. ==Sources== *Fort Jay-Wikipedia"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Jay"

Fort Freeland

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Web Sites About Fort Freeland ==WEB SITES== Our Family of Vincents by Vincent Boyd [https://archive.org/details/ourfamilyofvince00vinc/page46/mode/1up History of Fort Freeland [ https://archive.org/details/historyoffortfre00godc/page/n2/mode/1up ==Sources==

Fort Gaspareaux

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Gaspareaux

Fort Gibson

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The island known to most of the world, called Ellis Island had a history before the area was ever called that. As long as the land has been here, the island has been too. The Mohegan tribe that inhabited the area, called it "Kiosh" which means Gull Island. It got this name because of the constant bird population. Many generations, when the Dutch colonists called the area home, it was called Oyster Island. This was due to the area being rich in oyster beds and plentiful shad. The British took over and changed it back to Gull Island but it changed quickly. Gibbet Island was given as a nickname to the island, because of a post of gibbet that served to display deceased bodies of pirates and mutineers that had been hanged. Gibbet is another word for gallows. At the time that Samuel Ellis bought it, there was barely more than a sandy lot of 3 acres that remained just slightly higher than high tide. It was turned into a picnic spot and then he tried to sell it. No one wanted to buy it. When he passed away, it went to family. The family did not want it so, New York State bought the island. A year later, the United States bought it from NY state for the huge price at that time of 10,000.00 dollars, which today equates to $201,747.62. It took a while but eventually it had so much soil, rocks and other debris dumped there that it was no longer 3 acres. It had grown to 27 1/2 acres. Between 1808 and 1814, the U.S. War Department established a federal arsenal. With a 14-gun battery, mortar battery, and magazine was also barracks. It was originally called Crown Fort. Colonel James Gibson of the 4th Regiment of Riflemen was killed in the Siege of Fort Erie during the war of 1812. By the end of the war, the name had been changed, by Governor of New York, Daniel D Tompkins, to honor him. Fort Gibson served well. After the buildings were dismantled and the new naval magazine was set up, it was used for ammunition supply in the Civil War. It had been a military post for about 80 years. It was then at that time, turned into the federal immigration station we know as [[Space:Ellis Island|Ellis Island]] Later when the Immigrant Wall of Honor was being built, some of the fort’s foundation walls were uncovered. They have been preserved and put on display with a plaque. == Other Markers Nearby == All within steps from Fort Gibson Marker Fort Gibson: Uncovering the Past The American Immigrant Wall of Honor Fort Gibson: Ammunition to Immigration Fort Gibson: Oyster Banks to Batteries Fort Gibson: Defending the Approaches Fort Gibson: The New York Harbor System The American Immigrant Wall of Honor Delaware Indian Burials == Timeline == '''Pre 1630s''' Island known as: Kioshk Island '''1630s-1663''' It was called Oyster Island by the Dutch settlers '''1664''' The British briefly called it Gull Island but soon changed it to Gibbet Island, due to wooden post of gibbet on the island Other names it went by Dyre Island, Bucking Island, and Anderson's Island '''1770s''' Samuel Ellis bought the island, as a private owner '''January 20, 1785''' Ellis tried to sell it to someone else '''July 11, 1794''' Samuel Ellis passed away '''1807''' New York state bought the island from Ellis' family '''1808''' The United States government bought it from New York '''1808-1814''' It served as a federal arsenal. '''1812''' Fort used as garrison and Prisoner of War camp. '''1861''' The buildings were dismantled. A new magazine was set up for the Navy. == Sources == They Used to Hang Pirates at Ellis Island: and Few Other Things you Didn't Know!: https://www.neilperrygordon.com/blog/they-used-to-hang-pirates-at-ellis-island Ellis Island: Oysters, Pirates and Ammunition: the Early Days of Ellis Island:https://www.abcteach.com/free/r/rc_history_ellisisland_earlydays.pdf Ellis Island, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellis_Island Forts: Fort Gibson, New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center: NYS Division of Military and Naval Affairs: http://dmna.ny.gov/forts/fortsE_L/gibsonFort.htm Fort Wood (Liberty Island) and Fort Gibson (Ellis Island), National Park Service: https://www.nps.gov/places/fort-wood-fort-gibson.htm Fort Gibson: The other Ellis Island Story, HMdb.org, The HIstorical Marker Database: https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=49298 Fort Gibson (2), FortWiki Historic U.S. and Canadian Forts: http://fortwiki.com/Fort_Gibson_(2) Fort Gibson (historical) - Historical Feature (MIlitary) in New York County: https://newyork.hometownlocator.com/maps/feature-map,ftc,3,fid,2359512,n,fort%20gibson.cfm Fort Gibson: The New York Harbor System, HIstorical Marker Project: https://www.historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMX9W_fort-gibson-the-new-york-harbor-system_Jersey-City-NY.html Fort Gibson (historical), Part of Statue of Liberty National Monument, AnyplaceAmerica.com: https://www.anyplaceamerica.com/directory/ny/new-york-county-36061/military/fort-gibson-historical--2359512/

Fort Hawkins Grammar School

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Outside Photo of Fort Hawkins Grade School - Date not known: Source - http://www.forthawkins.com/forthawkinsschool.html

Fort Jefferson

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'''''Photos can be seen at:'' ''' [[Space:Photographs_of_Dry_Tortugas_National_Park_and_Fort_Jefferson|Dry Tortugas and Fort Jefferson Photos]] https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Dry_Tortugas_National_Park https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Fort_Jefferson_Post_Cemetery https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Fort_Jefferson_Quarantine_Hospital https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Jefferson_(Florida)

Fort Jefferson Quarantine Hospital

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https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/underwater-cemetery-found-off-floridas-dry-tortugas-national-park/3026425/ '''''Currently Under Construction''''' https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Fort_Jefferson_Post_Cemetery https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Dry_Tortugas_National_Park

Fort Piqua Plaza

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Background on the Fort Piqua Hotel The exterior of the Fort Piqua Hotel is sandstone, and has a huge clock tower on the front right corner of the building. Sculpted gargoyle faces peer grotesquely down from the stone window sills all around the outside. Over the front entrance of the hotel is a balcony with wrought iron railings, where celebrities appeared before their adoring fans, and politicians would stand and speak to the people who gathered. Some who put in appearances through the years were Teddy Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Warren Harding, Harry Houdini, and John Philips Sousa. During Prohibition, the hotel was used for the meetings of the local Women's Christian Temperance Union. Ironically, after Prohibition, it became the first business in the city to open a bar. In 1947, the NAACP staged a sit-in at a lunch counter at the hotel, ending, once and for all, Piqua's restaurant segregation policies. Due to the small size of the city, though, the hotel struggled to stay afloat financially. It changed owners many times, and many changes in the hotel itself were made, but nothing was successful for any length of time. By the 1970's, it had been reduced to a hotel for transients, and also a bus depot. But soon it became vacant and in a severe state of disrepair, and it was boarded up and closed for good in 1987. For the next couple of decades, it sat empty and unused, a dismal shadow of its former elegance and grace. In the first half of the 2000's, while everything else in the city was being improved during a revitalization project, it was finally decided to do something about this empty hazardous structure. Using Federal and state grants, tax credits, city funds, and almost $4 million in private donations--approximately $20 million in all--the plans were finalized. The dollar amount from private donations in itself was staggering, considering Piqua has a population of only around 20,000 people. The city's library was going to become the main tenant for three floors in this building, as it had outgrown its present site. Also planned was a banquet/conference center in the old ballroom/dining room on the 4th floor, and a coffee shop and restaurant on either side of the first floor of the library. Scattered throughout the building were also going to be other meeting rooms, a "President's Room", remembering past presidential visits, a "Veteran's Room", where they would have military exhibits and presentations. The building was restored, as much as possible, to its original condition. Where original paint or design was found, the workers stayed faithful to it. The old fireplace and staircase, along with the stained glass windows and magnificent chandelier in the ballroom were all restored to their original beauty. There is no sign that this was, for many years, forgotten about and left to crumble... The construction project began in January of 2007, and was finished in October of 2008. The Fort Piqua Hotel was re-christened Fort Piqua Plaza, and approximately 1000 people attended the Grand Opening on October 19th of that year. Residents of Piqua can be proud of the work done on this building, and thankful that the city leaders decided to restore it, and not demolish it, as some had suggested at the time of the decision making. I for one am thrilled to be a resident of Piqua, and to have been able to go to this building several times since it's reopened. It's hard to describe how beautiful this place really is, and I invite everyone to come and take a tour through this...you won't be disappointed. *https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Piqua_Plaza *https://hubpages.com/travel/116-year-old-Ohio-Hotel-gets-Renovated-The-abandoned-Fort-Piqua-Hotel-becomes-Fort-Piqua-Plaza

Fort Pulaski

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= History = = Conditions = = References = Wikipedia: [[wikipedia:Fort_Pulaski_National_Monument|Fort Pulaski National Monument]] = External Links =

FORT SEYBERT, VA, (WV, USA) MASSACRE

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''Fort Seybert Massacre''
Grant County Press
May 13, 1937
---- "New Interpretations of Fort Seybert"
(By Mrs. Lee Keister Talbot) April 27 and 28 of this year marked one hundred and seventy-nine years since the disasters at Fort Upper Tract on the South Branch of the Potomac, and Fort Seybert on the South Fork of the South Branch. So far little is known of Fort Upper Tract except that it was burned, a number of people killed and captured with few names left behind. A little more is known of Fort Seybert "the history of which, says DeHass, "fills such a dark page in the annals of Virginia." Fort Upper Tract was built "at Hugh Man's Mill in Shelton's Great Tract," (familiarly known as Upper Tract of Virginia) in 1756; it appears that today it[s] location is not known. Fort Seybert, also, was built within one hundred yards of a mill which had been erected at the edge of the river some years before Fort Seybert was built. The first owner of the land was John Patton, Junior, who purchased from Robert Green of Orange on the 5th of November, 1747, 210 acres of land "on the southernmost fork of the South Branch of the Potomack." This land had a "corner to Roger Dyer." In the Original Petitions filed in Augusta County for 1751-52 there is a petition for a road "from Widow Cobern's Mill, on the South Branch, to John Patton's Mill on the South Fork." On May 21, 1755, John Pat[t]on, Jr., sold back his land to his Father in Law, Jacob Seybert. Jacob Seybert built the mill and the location of the Fort was on his land based on the fact that Jacob Seybert was the Captain. As recently as the last fifty or sixty years, people, when plowing in the field by the river at Fort Seybert have found "tight rocks." The tradition is that they marked the site of an old mill. Page 34, *Oren F. Morton. ''History of Pendleton County West Virginia''. Dayton: Ruebush-Elkins Co., 1910. Print. Plans for the building of Fort Seybert have not yet been uncovered in records, but there has been for some years a discrepancy between the pictured representation of Fort Seybert given by DeHass, and the remaining depressions in the ground at the site of the fort, as well as in the description handed down by those living in the vicinity of Fort Seybert. The DeHass picture is a wood engraving with no artist's name attached. An authority on wood engravings finds it difficult to trace the origin of this type of drawing, as they were frequently made by the printing company, when printing a book, after the manner that lithographs are made today. This represents Fort Seybert as a large, square stockade, much after the fashion of the conventional combined trading-post and fort, sufficiently extensive to provide for a large garrison. This picture has been used repeatedly by historians as a source of description, and is the source of Mr. Koontz's information as to its size and strength. DeHass says: "It was a rude enclosure, cut out of the heart of the forest, but sufficiently strong to have resisted any attack from the enemy had the inmates themselves been strong." People living in the vicinity of Fort Seybert today state that they can still trace the depression in the ground where the palisades were sat on end, and can well remember when the depression was more distinct than it is now. They consider it impossible that it was a number of log houses so built as to form a square or rectangle. Mr. Alonzo D. Lough, who lives at Fort Seybert, wrote a description of Fort Seybert some years ago as follows: "Fort Seybert was located on the left hand side (west) of the South Fork River, and situated on an elevation which sloped rapidly to a ravine on the north and descended abruptly over a ledge of rocks to the river on the southeast. Westwardly a gradual incline sloped back to the mountain. "The defense consisted of a circular stockade some thirty yards in diameter, consisting of logs or puncheons set on end in the ground, side by side, and rising to a height often of twelve feet. A puncheon door closed the entrance. Within the stockade stood the two storied block-house twenty-one feet square. From the upper loop-holes the open space about the fort could be swept by the rifles of the defenders." The drawing pictured above does not represent this description of Fort Seybert as accurately as might be desired, and a more accurate drawing will be made. However, this more nearly answers the description given by those living in the vicinity, and handed down traditionally for generations. There were numerous causes of the Fort Seybert massacre, both remote and immediate; some of them have gone unnoted. Reverberations and echoes of it continued for many years. There are notations in Augusta county records as late as 1772 which trace to this disaster. It was not until after Braddock's defeat in July, 1755, that the Virginia Frontier was threatened by incursions of parties of French and Indians, but they were continuously in danger for many years following, especially in the spring and fall. George Washington was aware of the danger soon after he returned from Braddock's defeat. At Fort Cumberland he wrote on July 18, 1755 to Governor Dinwiddie: "I tremble at the consequences that this defeat may have upon our back settlers, who, I suppose, will all leave their habitations unless there are proper measures taken for their security." Thus began the long struggle to protect the settlers; a cause championed by Washington in charge of the militia of Virginia at Winchester, and a situation only slightly understood by Gov. Dinwiddie and the Virginia Assembly. The long struggle to give the frontier adequate protection, and the activities of the militia would make a voluminous book of interesting and valuable proportions. Forts were gradually built, but nothing that was done was adequate. Many people fled from their homes in the South Branch Valley in the fall of 1755 and there was no unbroken peace for many years. The irony in the building of Braddock's Road to the west to meet the French is well described by Reuben Gold Thwaites: "Braddock's road, laboriously cleared through the wilderness to reach the French and Indians now proved equally convenient to the latter as a pathway to the English border." Dunas had often six or seven war parties out at a time "always accompanied by French-men." Among the records of forts, militia and attacks, Washington and other militia officers mention both Upper Tract and Fort Seybert, either by location, or by name, as well as other on the South Branch and the South Fork. In August 1756 Washington wrote to Gov. Dinwiddie saying "we have built some forts and altered others as far south on the Potomac as settlers have been molested, and there remains one body of inhabitants at a place called Upper Tract who need a guard. Thither I have ordered a party. *** Beyond this, if I am not misinformed there is nothing but a continued series of mountains uninhabited until we get over to the waters of the James River, not far from the fort which takes its name from your Honor; and thence to May River. " Buidling the forts did not give the people a feeling of safety, for in November 1756 Washington wrote further to Gov. Dinwiddie, in a plea for more adequate protection as follows: "In short, they (inhabitants) are so affected with approaching ruin that the whole back country is in a general motion toward the other colonies; and I expect that scarce a family will inhabit Frederick, Hampshire or Augusta county in a little time." Washington was opposed to the plan for the building of a chain of small forts, and preferred to have several strong forts, well garrisoned, with companies of Rangers going out from them. However, he presented a plan for the forts (23), as the Assembly favored, in November 1756 at which time he said: "Besides most of the forts are already built by the country people or soldiers, and require but little improvement save one or two, as Dickinson's and Cox's." If Forts Upper Tract and Seybert were over-garrisoned the garrison must have been removed, for on September 1, 1937 [sic], after five people had been killed and eight captured on the Branch, Major Andrew Lewis, who had been ordered to regulate the militia of Augusta County, wrote to George Washington: "There is one place yt (yet) vacant which is not garrisoned. Ye consequences may be bad, that is ye So. Branch or So. Fork Between Capt. Woodward's old Station and Preston's (Capt. Preston was stationed in the Bullpasture) as ye governor has not given me a Direct Answer nor I Believe wont I am afraid that place must be Deserted." How bad the consequences were the following April is appreciated only slightly, even by those familiar with the published records and traditional stories of the surprise attack on Fort Seybert on a foggy morning when a number of the men were away from the vicinity, having gone across the mountain on business. Waddell says that there was a shortage of ammunition in the fort. Capt. Seybert surrendered to the unfaithful promises of the Indians in the hope of saving the lives of the people in the fort. No censure or blame should be placed on him for what he did in the hope of safety. Following the surrender came the massacre of seventeen people; the capture of upwards of twenty-four, and the burning of the fort. Six days after this happened, on the 4th of May 1758, Washington wrote to John Blair (then acting Governor of Virginia) from Fort Loudoun (Winchester) to tell him of the disasters: "The enclosed letter from Capt. Waggener will inform your Honor of a very unfortunate affair. From the best accounts I have yet been able to get there are about 60 persons killed and missing. Immediately upon receiving this Intelligence I sent out a Detachment of the Regiment, and some Indians that were equipped for war (Indians were in the employ of the colonists as well as the French) in hopes of their being able to intercept the Enemy in the retreat. I was fearful of this stroke, but had not time enough to avert it, as your Honor will find by the following account which came to hand just before Capt. Waggener's letter, by Capt. Mackenzie." The notes on this report are that Lieutenant Gist with six soldiers and 30 Indians marched the 2nd of April from the South Branch towards Fort Duquesne. After a tedious march, occasioned by deep snows on the mountains, they got on the waters of the Monongahela, where Mr. Gist was lamed by a fall from a steep bank and rendered incapable of marching. Some of the party stayed with him and the rest, all Indians, divided themselves into three parties and separated. Ucahala and two others found a large Indian Encampment about fifteen miles on "this side" of Ft. Duquesne. From the size of it and the number of tracks they judged it to be at least 100, making directly for the frontiers of Virginia, as they again discovered by crossing their tracks. After the parties had joined, and were marching in, Lieutenant Gist came upon the tracks of another large party pursuing the same course. Undoubtedly, among these were the Indians who perpetrated the massacres at Forts Upper Tract and Seybert some days later, before Washington could send aid to the people. There is more to be learned from official records and reports of these incidents and revealing information is gradually being uncovered. The Roger Dyer Family Association is planning to erect a monument at the grave of the victims of the Fort Seybert massacre, five of whose names are known. It is hoped that the residents of the South Branch and South Fork Valleys, as well as all others interested in dignifying their historic past, and honoring the memory of the early settlers, whose difficulties were so overwhelming, may encourage the undertaking. List of Those Killed: : John Blair, Hance Conrad, [[Dyer-6617 | Roger Dyer]], [[Dyer-6620 | William Dyer]] (shot outside the fort), Henry Hawse, [[Hevener-22 | William Hevener]], [[Hevener-21 | Catharine Hevener]] (William's wife), Hanna Hinkle (burned in the fort), Hanna Lawrence (Jacob Seybert's mother-in-law), John Reager, [[Johanna-22 | Johanna Lorentz-Seybert]] (John Seybert's mother), George Hause, [[Seybert-23 | John Jacob Seybert]] and [[Theiss-39 | Mary Elisabeth Theiss-Seybert]] (Jacob's wife). List of Those Abducted: : Hannah Conrad, Josephus Conrad, 3 Conrad Children (names not known), [[Dyer-6623 | James Dyer]] (son of Roger Dyer), [[Dyer-6622 | Sarah Hause]] (wife of Peter Hause and daughter of Roger Dyer), Mary Mallow, Adam Mallow, 4 Mallow Children (names not known), [[Maus-34 | Elizabeth Hause]] (wife of Frederick Hevener and daughter of George Hause who was killed at Fort Seybert), Heavener daughter (name not known), Sarah Peterson, [[Seybert-14 | Catherine Seybert]], [[Seybert-15 | Elizabeth Seybert]], George Seybert, [[Seybert-16 | Henry Seybert]], [[Seybert-13 | Nicholas Seybert]] Note: Oren Morton's book states that Nicholas Seybert was killed, not abducted. (children of Jacob & Mary Seybert), Catherine Swadley (later married Jacob Hevener), Archibald Wood, Mrs. Martha Drake Wood, Magdalene Wood, and Sarah Wood. List of Those Who Escaped: : [[Hiatt-7 | Margaret Dyer]], [[Dyer-6626 | John Dyer]], [[Dyer-6624 | Roger Dyer]] (sons of Margaret Dyer), [[Hawes-54 | Hanna Hause]], [[Dyer-6616 | Hanna Keister]], [[Keister-3 | James Keister]], [[Keister-1 | Hannah Keister]] (children of Hanna Keister), and Mr. Robertson (first name not known). == Sources ==

Fort Victoria

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directed from [[Space:Victoria Settlement Provincial Site|Victoria Settlement Provincial Historical Site]] === Fort Victoria: 1864-1883 And 1887-1897 === The Hudson’s Bay Company opened Fort Victoria in 1864 to serve as a post for the eastern trade out of Fort Edmonton. The first building to be erected was the Clerk’s Quarters. Constructed in 1864-65, it soon became the centre of a complex which consisted of seven buildings surrounded by a palisade. By the 1890s, the Fort had been reduced to five buildings and a rail fence. Chief Factor Richard Hardisty’s 1874 groundplan of Fort Victoria gives us an accurate description of the post prior to its first closure in 1883. As his plan indicates, the Fort consisted of the Clerk’s Quarters, trading shop, provision store, men’s house, blacksmith’s shop, stable and dairy. Fort Victoria never grew beyond this. In September, 1889, two years after the post had been reopened, Clerk Francis D. Wilson noted the “very bad condition” of the five remaining buildings. When in 1897 Fort Victoria was finally abandoned, only the Clerk’s Quarters and the trading shop were in useful condition. The Clerk’s Quarters is today the oldest structure in Alberta on its original location. Typical of one type of mid-19th century post-on-sill construction, it is built of roughly hewn logs laid horizontally between vertical posts. This method of construction, also known as Red River Frame, was widely used by the Hudson’s Bay Company throughout the Northwest.

Fort Worth, Texas

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{{Image|file=Fort_Worth_Texas.jpg |alignm=c |size=m |caption='''City of Fort Worth Seal''' }}{{clear}}
'''Cowtown - Where The West Begins'''
{{Image|file=Fort_Worth_Texas-1.jpg |align=c |size=l |caption='''Fort Worth Skyline at Sunset'''. }}{{clear}} Fort Worth is the county seat of [[Space:Tarrant_County,_Texas|Tarrant County]] which is located in the '''Prairie and Lakes''' area of Texas. ===Treaty of Bird's Fort=== {{Image|file=Fort_Worth_Texas-2.jpg |align=r |size=300 |caption='''Fort Worth Historical Marker'''. }} The Treaty of Bird's Fort between the Republic of Texas and several Indian tribes was signed in '''1843''' at Bird's Fort in present day Arlington, Texas. Article XI of the treaty provided that no one may ""pass the line of trading houses"" at the border of the Indians' territory without permission of the President of Texas, and may not reside or remain in the Indians' territory. These "trading houses" were later established at the junction of the Clear Fork and West Fork of the Trinity River in present day Fort Worth. At this river junction, the U.S. War Department established Fort Worth in '''1849'' as the northernmost of a system of 10 forts for protecting the American Frontier following the end of the Mexican–American War. The City of Fort Worth continues to be known as '''Where The West Begins'''. {{clear}} ===The Mexican–American War=== Lithograph (1876) A line of seven army posts were established in '''1848–49''' after the Mexican War to protect the settlers of Texas along the western American Frontier and included Fort Worth, Fort Graham, Fort Gates, Fort Croghan, Fort Martin Scott, Fort Lincoln, and Fort Duncan. Originally 10 forts had been proposed by '''Major General William Jenkins Worth''' (1794–1849), who commanded the Department of Texas in '''1849'''. In '''January 1849''', Worth proposed a line of 10 forts to mark the western Texas frontier from Eagle Pass to the confluence of the West Fork and Clear Fork of the Trinity River. One month later, Worth died from cholera in South Texas. '''General William S. Harney''' assumed command of the Department of Texas and ordered '''Major Ripley A. Arnold''' of Company F, Second United States Dragoons. to find a new fort site near the West Fork and Clear Fork. On '''June 6, 1849''', Arnold, advised by '''Middleton Tate Johnson''', established a camp on the bank of the Trinity River and named the post Camp Worth in honor of the late General Worth. In '''August 1849''', Arnold moved the camp to the north-facing bluff, which overlooked the mouth of the Clear Fork of the Trinity River. The United States War Department officially named the post Fort Worth on '''November 14, 1849'''. Native American attacks were still a threat in the area, as this was their traditional territory and they resented encroachment by European-American settlers, but people from the United States set up homesteads near the fort. '''E S Terrell''' (1812–1905) from Tennessee claimed to be the first resident of Fort Worth. The fort was flooded the first year and moved to the top of the bluff; the current courthouse was built on this site. The fort was abandoned '''September 17, 1853'''. No trace of it remains today. ===Town Development=== As a stop on the legendary Chisholm Trail, Fort Worth was stimulated by the business of the cattle drives and became a brawling, bustling town. Millions of head of cattle were driven north to market along this trail. Fort Worth became the center of the cattle drives, and later, the ranching industry. It was given the nickname of '''Cowtown'''. During the Civil War, Fort Worth suffered from shortages of money, food, and supplies. the population dropped as low a 175, but began to recover during Reconstruction. By 1872, Jacob Samuels, William Jesse Boaz, and William Henry Davis had opened general stores. The next year, Khleber M. Van Zandt established Tidball, Van Zandt, and Company, which became Fort Worth National Bank in 1884. Panther City and "Hell's Half-Acre"[edit] This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) In 1875, the Dallas Herald published an article by a former Fort Worth lawyer, Robert E. Cowart, who wrote that the decimation of Fort Worth's population, caused by the economic disaster and hard winter of 1873, had dealt a severe blow to the cattle industry. Added to the slowdown due to the railroad's stopping the laying of track 30 miles (48 km) outside of Fort Worth, Cowart said that Fort Worth was so slow that he saw a panther asleep in the street by the courthouse. Although an intended insult, the name Panther City was enthusiastically embraced when in 1876 Fort Worth recovered economically.[19] Many businesses and organizations continue to use Panther in their name. A panther is set at the top of the police department badges.[20] Entrance to Fort Worth Stockyards, 1999 The "Panther City" tradition is also preserved in the names and design of some of the city's geographical/architectural features, such as Panther Island (in the Trinity River), the Flat Iron Building, the Intermodal Transportation Center, and in two or three "Sleeping Panther" statues. In 1876, the Texas and Pacific Railway finally was completed to Fort Worth, stimulating a boom and transforming the Fort Worth Stockyards into a premier center for the cattle wholesale trade.[21] Migrants from the devastated war-torn South continued to swell the population, and small, community factories and mills yielded to larger businesses. Newly dubbed the "Queen City of the Prairies", Fort Worth supplied a regional market via the growing transportation network. Texas and Pacific Passenger Station, Fort Worth, Texas (postcard, circa 1909) Fort Worth became the westernmost railhead and a transit point for cattle shipment. With the city's main focus on cattle and the railroads, local businessman, Louville Niles, formed the Fort Worth Stockyards Company in 1893. Shortly thereafter, the two biggest cattle-slaughtering firms at the time, Armour and Swift, both established operations in the new stockyards. ===Hell's Half Acre=== Pioneer Tower With the boom times came a variety of entertainments and related problems. Fort Worth had a knack for separating cattlemen from their money. Cowboys took full advantage of their last brush with civilization before the long drive on the Chisholm Trail from Fort Worth up north to Kansas. They stocked up on provisions from local merchants, visited the colorful saloons for a bit of gambling and carousing, then galloped northward with their cattle only to whoop it up again on their way back. The town soon became home to "Hell's Half-Acre", the biggest collection of saloons, dance halls, and bawdy houses south of Dodge City (the northern terminus of the Chisholm Trail), giving Fort Worth the nickname of "The Paris of the Plains".[22]Template:Page 2016[23] Certain sections of town were off-limits for proper citizens. Shootings, knifings, muggings, and brawls became a nightly occurrence. Cowboys were joined by a motley assortment of buffalo hunters, gunmen, adventurers, and crooks. Hell's Half Acre (the Acre) expanded as more people were drawn to the town. Occasionally, the Acre was referred to as "the bloody Third Ward" after it was designated one of the city's three political wards in 1876. By 1900, the Acre covered four of the city's main north-south thoroughfares. Local citizens became alarmed about the activities, electing Timothy Isaiah "Longhair Jim" Courtright in 1876 as city marshal with a mandate to tame it. Courtright sometimes collected and jailed 30 people on a Saturday night, but allowed the gamblers to operate, as they attracted money to the city. After learning that train and stagecoach robbers, such as the Sam Bass gang, were using the area as a hideout, he intensified law enforcement, but certain businessmen advertised against too many restriction in the area as having bad effects on the legitimate businesses. Gradually, the cowboys began to avoid the area; as businesses suffered, the city moderated its opposition. Courtright lost his office in 1879. Despite crusading mayors such as H. S. Broiles and newspaper editors such as B. B. Paddock, the Acre survived because it generated income for the city (all of it illegal) and excitement for visitors. Longtime Fort Worth residents claimed the place was never as wild as its reputation, but during the 1880s, Fort Worth was a regular stop on the "gambler's circuit" by such gambler/gunmen as Bat Masterson, Doc Holliday, and the Earp brothers (Wyatt, Morgan, and Virgil). James Earp, the eldest of his brothers, lived with his wife in Fort Worth during this period; their house was at the edge of Hell's Half Acre, at 9th and Calhoun. He often tended bar at the Cattlemen's Exchange saloon in the "uptown" part of the city. Reforming citizens objected to the dance halls, where men and women mingled; by contrast, the saloons or gambling parlors had primarily male customers. Consolidated B-24 Liberators (long-range bombers) at the Consolidated-Vultee Plant, Fort Worth, 1943 In the late 1880s, Mayor Broiles and County Attorney R. L. Carlock initiated a reform campaign. In a public shootout on February 8, 1887, Jim Courtright was killed on Main Street by Short, who claimed he was "King of Fort Worth Gamblers." As Courtright had been popular, when Short was jailed for his murder, rumors floated of lynching him. Short's good friend Bat Masterson came armed and spent the night in his cell to protect him. The first prohibition campaign in Texas was mounted in Fort Worth in 1889, helping to shut down the Acre's worst excesses. Other business development began in the area, as well as residential. Another change was the influx of black residents. Excluded by state segregation from the business end of town and the more costly residential areas, the city's black citizens, who numbered some 7,000 of a total population of 50,000 around 1900, settled into the southern portion of the city. Though some joined in the profitable vice trade (to run, for instance, the Black Elephant Saloon), many others found legitimate work and bought homes. The popularity and profitability of the Acre declined and more derelicts and the homeless were seen on the streets. By 1900, most of the dance halls and gamblers were gone. Cheap variety shows and prostitution became the chief forms of entertainment. Some politicians sought reforms under the Progressive Era. President Kennedy stayed at the Texas Hotel in downtown Fort Worth on Thrsday hight and left Fort Worth on Friday morning, November 22, 1963. He was assassinated 30 miles away in Dallas later that day. In '''1911''', the '''Reverend J Frank Norris''' launched an offensive against racetrack gambling in the Baptist Standard and used the pulpit of the First Baptist Church of Fort Worth to attack vice and prostitution. Norris used the Acre to scourge the leadership of Fort Worth. When he began to link certain Fort Worth businessmen with property in the Acre and announce their names from his pulpit, the battle heated up. On '''February 4, 1912''', Norris's church was burned to the ground; that evening, his enemies tossed a bundle of burning oiled rags onto his porch, but the fire was extinguished and caused minimal damage. A month later, the arsonists succeeded in burning down the parsonage. In a sensational trial lasting a month, Norris was charged with perjury and arson in connection with the two fires. He was acquitted, but his continued attacks on the Acre accomplished little until 1917. A new city administration and the federal government, which was eyeing Fort Worth as a potential site for a major military training camp, joined forces with the Baptist preacher to bring down the final curtain on the Acre. The police department compiled statistics showing that 50% of the violent crime in Fort Worth occurred in the Acre, which confirmed respectable citizens' opinion of the area. After Camp Bowie (a World War I Army training installation) was located on the outskirts of Fort Worth in 1917, the military used martial law to regulate prostitutes and barkeepers of the Acre. Fines and stiff jail sentences curtailed their activities. By the time Norris held a mock funeral parade to "bury John Barleycorn" in 1919, the Acre had become a part of Fort Worth history. The name continues to be associated with the southern end of Fort Worth.[24] ===Late 20th and Early 21st Centuries=== 1920 panorama On March 28, 2000, at 6:15 pm, an F3 (some estimates claim an F4) tornado smashed through downtown, tearing many buildings into shreds and scrap metal. One of the hardest-hit structures was the Bank One Tower, which was one of the dominant features of the Fort Worth skyline and which had Reata, a popular restaurant, on its top floor. It has since been converted to upscale condominiums and officially renamed "The Tower". This was the first major tornado to strike Fort Worth proper since the early 1940s.[25] When oil began to gush in West Texas in the early 20th century, and again in the late 1970s, Fort Worth was at the center of the wheeling and dealing. In July 2007, advances in horizontal drilling technology made vast natural gas reserves in the Barnett Shale available directly under the city, helping many residents receive royalty checks for their mineral rights.[26] Today, the city of Fort Worth and many residents are dealing with the benefits and issues associated with the natural gas reserves under ground.[27][28] Fort Worth was the fastest-growing large city in the United States from 2000 to 2006[29] and was voted one of "America's Most Livable Communities. ===Notables=== ===Sources===

Forte-Shelton Family Mysteries

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Female born July 4th 1965, to Margaret Surette- Blaszek, St Joes Hospital? in Warren Ohio. Given up for Adoption. Only first name is known for birth father, Victor. Alias Vic. Vic POSSIBLY worked in bar/restaraunt industry, in Canton, Massilon, area...not confirmed....may have hung out at a bar in Massilon called the Alibi.....again, just a guess. Ethnic background may be, Romanian, Italian or even lebaneese but none of this has EVER been confirmed. Margaret Surette was French, and her family is from Maine and surrounding areas. THIS MYSTERY NEEDS TO BE SOLVED, A.S.A.P.!! Any info that will shed light on this 53 year old mystery, will be greatly, greatly appreciated. At the time of this birth in 1965, Margaret had 2 previous children from a previous marriage that ended around 1964.

Forward Air Controllers

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Forward Air Controllers are Air Force Pilots who flew FAC mission in the OV-1, O-2, OV-10, OA-37, etc. Each typically has a FAC call sign that was theirs while they were a FAC.

Fossier

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Dufour-558|Denise Dufour]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=17979287 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Foster

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Foster-14268|Susan Putman]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16607822 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Foster Bible

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I asked my mom, and these are what's left of my great grandmother Grace Cameron's bible. So the information is probably from her mother Martha Jane. I just wish she had listed her mother's maiden name and where William Monroe Cameron had died.

Foster Family LIne

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The search for Robert Foster's family line ... Summary of Search for [[Foster-20991|Robert L. Foster]], Sr. (Middle name unknown) The search for R.L.F. was started by questioning his only known child still living - Naomi Foster Helms. Little was discovered that was not already available – that is, he married [[Oglesby-735|Mary Elizabeth Oglesby]] and had a family. Robert died while living in North Georgia, near Dalton. He was buried in an unknown cemetery in an unmarked grave. A break in our search came when we researched the 1860 Census, Spalding County, Georgia, Birdie Community. A Robert L. Foster, age 10, was living in the home of a Dupree family. He was the only Foster in that household. The search moved to the 1870 Census for the same area. We found a Robert L. Foster (white), age 20, living with a colored family. Robert's name was listed first which normally would have meant that it was his dwelling. We can't offer any other explanation. Thomas R. Bishop and Minor T. Oglesby had adjoining farms in the Birdie area in the 1870's. Thomas and Matilda had two daughters, Dolly, age 30 and Amanda, age 20. They had another daughter, Harriet who was married to Minor T. Oglesby. The Oglesby family had several children, including one daughter, Mary Elizabeth who was 13 years old in 1870. Robert L. Foster married [[Bishop-13463|Amanda Bishop]] on August 13, 1870. In 1876, Robert turned in, for tax purposes, fifty acres of land plus other items. On March 18, 1878, Thomas and Matilda Bishop deeded their home place and fifty acres of land to Robert and Amanda. We found that on October 7, 1879, this property was sold by the sheriff to the highest bidder. R. L. Foster was highest bidder and purchased the property for $135.00. In the 1880 Census Thomas, Matilda, Robert and Amanda were still living in the same household. On October 28, 1880, Robert L. Foster sold the property that he purchased at the sheriff's sale to his brother-in-law, John E. Bishop We assume that Amanda died after the census was taken in 1880. Robert married Mary Elizabeth Oglesby who was Amanda Bishop Foster's niece, on June 7, 1881. Mary Elizabeth Oglesby had a son out of wedlock on September 13, 1877. After the marriage, the son was hereafter known as Minor Adnes Foster. The Oglesby name was dropped. Robert, Mary E. and son left the Birdie area and went to the Dalton, Georgia, area. Robert and Mary E. had four girls and one son before he died in 1891. The son born to this marriage was given the name Robert L. after his father. We will refer to him as Robert L., Jr. Mary Elizabeth took the children and moved back to Spalding County near her mother, father and other kin. Their first stop was across the road from our grandparents, J.W. and Elizabeth Chappell Nations. They had several children including Viola, one of the youngest girls, born in 1879. She and Adnes married on July 4, 1895. In 1896 Mary Elizabeth Oglesby Foster married a widower, Matt (Madison) Helms, who lived in the Digby Community near Brooks in Fayette County. Previously, Charlie Oglesby, Mary E. Oglesby Foster's brother, had married Matt Helm's daughter. Elizabeth died in 1899 as a result of a porch swing fall. She was pregnant at the time. She is buried in the County Line Christian Church Cemetery at Digby. The name on her headstone is incorrect. It is listed as “Elizabeth S. Helms.” The records in detail that we have consist of fifty pages of typed material and are available for copying. Joseph P. Foster 1204 Hood Avenue Scottsboro, Al. 35769 (256)259-5695 8/22/01

Foster Family Mysteries-1

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Looking for anyone related to Thomas Foster (1820-1900) and Rebecca Davis (1828-1900) who lived in the Candler Upper Hominy area of Buncombe County, NC. They were my great great grandparents and a big mystery to me. Please message or email me sydney29611@gmail.com

Foster Heritage based on DNA

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Per Dr Billy G Foster & other Researchers of this Foster / Forster Line "Our Immigrant Foster " was the son of Robert Foster first Husband of Dorcas Isham (MIRA DORCS ISHAM ) daughter of John Isham . But according to other reports "The Immigrant's " father was called Thomas . Thanks to Dr Billy G Foster PHd ; Charles " Chuck" Foster ; Wayne Dunn and the Folks at FosterDNA for helping link up the Foster Pedigree . Per Wayne Dunn: Descendants of Thomas Forster Generation No. 1 1. Thomas1 Forster was born Abt. 1474, and died Abt. 1520. He married Elizabeth of Featherstonhaugh Abt. 1810 in England. She was born Abt. 1489 in England. Children of Thomas Forster and Elizabeth Featherstonhaugh are: + 2 i. Sir Roger2 Forster, born Abt. 1511. 3 ii. Nicholas Forster, born Abt. 1513. + 4 iii. Sir Thomas Forster, born Abt. 1515. Generation No. 2 2. Sir Roger2 Forster (Thomas1) was born Abt. 1511. He married Joan Hussey. She was born Abt. 1511. Children of Sir Roger Forster and Joan Hussey are: + 5 i. Thomas3 Forster, born Abt. 1530; died October 11, 1599 in Hunsden Hertford, England. 6 ii. John Forster, born 1537. 7 iii. Emile Forster, born 1539. 8 iv. Richard Forster, born 1541. 4. Sir Thomas2 Forster (Thomas1) was born Abt. 1515. He married Jane ???. Children of Sir Forster and Jane ??? are: 9 i. Patrick3 Forster. 10 ii. Regionald Forster. 11 iii. Constance Forster. + 12 iv. Sir Thomas Forster Jr.. Generation No. 3 5. Thomas3 Forster (Sir Roger2, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1530, and died October 11, 1599 in Hunsden Hertford, England. He married Margaret Browning Abt. 1545. She was born Abt. 1530 in Essex, England. Children of Thomas Forster and Margaret Browning are: 13 i. Richard4 Forster, born Abt. 1565. + 14 ii. Thomas Forster, born 1567 in England; died May 1612 in Hunsden Hertford, England. + 15 iii. Robert Forster, born 1569; died Abt. 1588 in Salop, England. 16 iv. Susan Forster, born 1571 in England. She married Thomas Brooke1; died 1612. 17 v. Mary Forster, born 1573 in England. 12. Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr. (Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) He married Dorothy Ogle. Children of Sir Thomas Jr. and Dorothy Ogle are: 18 i. Regionald4 Forster. 19 ii. Rowland Forster. 20 iii. Elizabeth Forster. She married Thomas Orde. 21 iv. Angus Forster. 22 v. Robert Forster. + 23 vi. Sir Thomas Forster III, born Abt. 1530. + 24 vii. Sir John Forster, Lord Wardon, born Abt. 1520; died 1602. 25 viii. Roger Forster. Generation No. 4 14. Thomas4 Forster (Thomas3, Sir Roger2, Thomas1) was born 1567 in England, and died May 1612 in Hunsden Hertford, England. He married Susan Foster. Children of Thomas Forster and Susan Foster are: 26 i. Thomas5 Forster, born 1586. He married Mary Anne Bakerville. 27 ii. Sir Robert Forster, born 1589; died October 4, 1663 in Egham, Surry, England. He married Elizabeth Buxton. 15. Robert4 Forster (Thomas3, Sir Roger2, Thomas1) was born 1569, and died Abt. 1588 in Salop, England. Child of Robert Forster is: + 28 i. Robert5 Forster, born Abt. 1587 in England; 23. Sir Thomas4 Forster III (Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr., Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1530. He married (1) Fearina Florence. He married (2) Feorina Wharton. Children of Sir Forster and Fearina Florence are: + 29 i. Sir Thomas5 Forster IV, born Abt. 1549. + 30 ii. Culbert Forster, born Abt. 1569. Child of Sir Forster and Feorina Wharton is: + 31 i. Sir Thomas5 Forster, born Abt. 1566. 24. Sir John4 Forster, Lord Wardon (Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr., Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1520, and died 1602. He married Isabel Sheppard. Children of Sir Forster and Isabel Sheppard are: + 32 i. Nicholas5 Forster, born Abt. 1541. 33 ii. Julianna Forster, born Abt. 1540. She married Sir Francis Russell. 34 iii. Mary Forster, born Abt. 1579. She married Sir Henry Stapelton. 35 iv. Grace Forster, born Abt. 1555. She married Sir John Fenwick. Generation No. 5 28. Robert5 Forster (Robert4, Thomas3, Sir Roger2, Thomas1)1 was born Abt. 1587 in England, He married Mira Isham Abt. 1608 in England, daughter of John Isham and Elizabeth Barker. She was born Abt. 1587 in England. Child of Robert Forster and Mira Isham is: + 36 i. Richard6 Forster, born 1619 in Durham, England; died Abt. 1681 in Gloucester County, VA. 29. Sir Thomas5 Forster IV (Sir Thomas4, Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr., Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1549. He married (1) Margaret ???. He married (2) Elizabeth Carr. The Judges of England: With Sketches of Their Lives, and Miscellaneous Page 157 http://books.google.com/books?id= FngDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA157&lpg=PA157&d q=fosters+hunsdon+england&source= web&ots=GerHkYcCrz&sig=MJiW84k3eo5ybuRZgX9w-5AEt-w#PPA157,M1 FOSTER, THOMAS. Josr. C. P. 1607. THOMAS FOSTER was born about the year 1569. He belonged to the family of Foster in Northumberland, one of whom was gentleman usher to Queen Mary; and another, Sir John Foster, his second cousin, was made a knight-banneret at Musselburg for his valour in defeating the Scots.1 The earliest notice of Thomas's name is as a barrister in 1587, when he appears both in Coke's and Croke's Reports. He became reader of the society of the Inner Temple in autumn 1596; and was one of the persons designated by Queen Elizabeth to be serjeants two months before her death. The writ being renewed by King James, he assumed the coif in Easter Term 1603, and was afterwards counsel to Queen Anne and Prince Henry. On the 24th of November, 1607, he was called to the bench as a judge of the Common Picas 2; and sat in that court for four years and a half, performing his duties in such a manner as to acquire the character of " a grave and reverend judge, and of great judgment, constancy, and integrity." He was nominated by Thomas Sutton to be one of the first governors of his hospital—the Charter House.3 He died on May 18, 1612, and was buried at Hunsdon in Herefordshire under a massive arched monument of variegated marble, with an effigy of the judge in his robes.4 His town residence was in St. John Street. Robert, the youngest of his sons became chief justice of the King's Bench in the reign of Charles II. 1 Gent. Mag. Ixxxiv. pt. i. 341. * Dugdale's Orig. 161.; Chron. Ser. 10 Coke's Reports , 235. 4 I am indebted to the Rev. T. M. Thackeray, the Rector, for an account of it. a:1d a copy of the inscription. Children of Sir Forster and Margaret ??? are: 37 i. Elizabeth6 Forster, born Abt. 1600. 38 ii. Ephram Forster. 39 iii. John Forster. 40 iv. Matthew Forster. + 41 v. Thomas Forster. 42 vi. Reginold Forster. 30. Culbert5 Forster (Sir Thomas4, Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr., Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1569. He married Elizabeth Bradford. She was born Abt. 1578. Child of Culbert Forster and Elizabeth Bradford is: 43 i. Thomas6 Forster. 31. Sir Thomas5 Forster (Sir Thomas4, Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr., Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1566. He married Margaret ???. Child of Sir Forster and Margaret ??? is: 44 i. John6 Forster, born Abt. 1615. 32. Nicholas5 Forster (Sir John4, Sir Thomas Forster3 Jr., Sir Thomas2 Forster, Thomas1) was born Abt. 1541. He married Jane Radcliff. Children of Nicholas Forster and Jane Radcliff are: 45 i. Sir Claudius6 Forster. He married Elizabeth Finwick. + 46 ii. John Forster, died 1625. Generation No. 6 36. Richard6 Forster (Robert5, Robert4, Thomas3, Sir Roger2, Thomas1)1 was born 1619 in Durham, England, and died Abt. 1681 in Gloucester County, VA. He married (1) Anne ???. She was born Abt. 1619, and died in VA. He married (2) Sussan Garnett 1642 in Hampton County, VA, daughter of Thomas Garnett and Elizabeth Powell. She was born 1621 in Elizabeth City, VA, and died Abt. 1663 in Gloucester County, VA. Children of Richard Forster and Sussan Garnett are: + 47 i. Richard7 Foster, Jr., born 1643 in Gloucester County, VA; died Aft. 1704 in Gloucester County, VA. 48 ii. James Foster, born 1645 in Gloucester County, VA; died Aft. 1704 in Gloucester County, VA. 49 iii. William Foster, born 1647 in Essex County, VA; died in NC. + 50 iv. Robert Foster, born 1651 in Essex County, VA; died 1716 in St. Ann Parish, Essex County, VA. 51 v. Thomas Foster, born 1656 in Gloucester County, VA; died in Kings and Queen Coutny, VA. + 52 vi. John Foster, born 1660 in Gloucester County, VA; died 1735 in Essex County, VA.

Foster Profile Images

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==Book Excerpts==
''Excerpt from Family tree book, genealogical and biographical, listing the relatives of General William Alexander Smith and of W. Thomas Smith by William Thomas Smith, William Alexander Smith, Osmer D. Flake; Publisher: W. T. Smith - Anson County (N.C.)'' :North Carolina in the section now known as Anson County. William Bennett maried Miss Huckston and to them were born William and Elizabeth. He saw active service as captain in the Continental Army. After the war of the Revolution, he lived and died in Bennettville, S.C., which town was named as a tribute to him. Capt. William Bennett's son, William, married Susanna Dunn of ... [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89065701930;view=1up;seq=175 page 165 to read more] :William Bennett No. 2, (1717-1815) married Nancy Huckston (1748-1773) of Maryland in 1769. To them were born Elizabeth, 1771, who married Covington of Anson Co., N.C. When William Bennett No. 3 was only a few months old, his father left Maryland and moved to Anson County, N.C. William Bennett (1773-1840) in 1798 married ...[http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89065701930;view=1up;seq=133 page 123 to read more] :Salisbury District, N.C., in the Revolutionary war. After coming to Anson County, he married Miss Chears of Marboro County, S.C., and is buried in that county near "Burnt Factory." There were born to him in Maryland, by Miss Huckston, two children, she dying shortly after the second one was born and he then came to ...[http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89065701930;view=1up;seq=109 page 101 to read more]
''Excerpt from Tillman & Hamilton family records: with their many ancestral lineages, Volume 1 by James David Tillman; Year: 1959'' :William Bennett, ancestor of a family of that name, came originally from Maryland to Anson County, N. C. where he was living during the Revolution. He was a Baptist preacher, yet spent some time with the patriot army. He seems to have made himself especially obnoxious to the torries, who fired a volley into his dwelling in Anson. Whether it was the prayers or ... William Bennett, as already stated, married about 1769 in Maryland, Nancy Huckston (1748-1773). His wife died and the same year he moved to Anson, N.C., with his two small children, Elizabeth and William. He lived in Anson County and married Olivia Chears. Near the close of the revolution he moved to Marlboro County, S.C., near what is now Bennettsville. William ...[http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89062498571;view=1up;seq=215 page 195 to read more]
'' Excerpt from Early southern Fullers by Theodore Albert Fuller; Year: 1967;'' :6—Hamlet Fuller and wife Clarrissa. She was the dtr of Capt William Bennett of North and South Carolina and his second wife Olivia Chears. 7 Hamlet Fuller was named in the 1814 will of Rev. Wm. Bennett as a son- in-law. Hamlet Fuller is shown in the 1810 census of Marlboro ...https://books.google.com/books?id=qn1MAAAAMAAJ&q=%22olivia+chears%22+%22william+bennett%22
--------------- Bennett-10689 His second wife was Olivia Chears. He served as captain in the continental army.[https://books.google.com/books?id=KItRAAAAMAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=huckston Family tree book, genealogical and biographical, listing the relatives of General William Alexander Smith and of W. Thomas Smith] by William Thomas Smith, William Alexander Smith, Osmer D. Flake; Publisher: W. T. Smith - Anson County (N.C.); Page 165; Quote: ... North Carolina in the section now known as Anson County. William Bennett maried Miss Huckston and to them were born William and Elizabeth. He saw active service as captain in the Continental Army. After the war of the Revolution, he lived and died in Bennettville, S.C., which town was named as a tribute to him. Capt. William Bennett's son, William, married Susanna Dunn of ... === Name === : Name: Captain William (Rev.) /Bennett/Source: [[#S189]] Source: [[#S1]] Page: SAR Membership Number: 96054 Object: @M3288@Source: [[#S395]] === Birth === : Birth: :: Date: 1717 :: Place: Providence, MarylandSource: [[#S189]] Source: [[#S1]] Page: SAR Membership Number: 96054 Object: @M3288@[https://books.google.com/books?id=KItRAAAAMAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=huckston Family tree book, genealogical and biographical, listing the relatives of General William Alexander Smith and of W. Thomas Smith] by William Thomas Smith, William Alexander Smith, Osmer D. Flake; Publisher: W. T. Smith - Anson County (N.C.); Page 123; Quote: William Bennett No. 2, (1717-1815) married Nancy Huckston (1748-1773) of Maryland in 1769. To them were born Elizabeth, 1771, who married Covington of Anson Co., N.C. When William Bennett No. 3 was only a few months old, his father left Maryland and moved to Anson County, N.C. William Bennett (1773-1840) in 1798 married ... === Religion === : Religion: Baptist Preacher :: Date: 1776 :: Place: Wades, North Carolina [https://books.google.com/books?id=nBdWAAAAMAAJ&q=%22olivia+chears%22+%22william+bennett%22 Tillman & Hamilton family records: with their many ancestral lineages, Volume 1] by James David Tillman; Year: 1959; Page: 195; Quote: William Bennett, ancestor of a family of that name, came originally from Maryland to Anson County, N. C. where he was living during the Revolution. He was a Baptist preacher, yet spent some time with the patriot army. He seems to have made himself especially obnoxious to the torries, who fired a volley into his dwelling in Anson. Whether it was the prayers or ... William Bennett, as already stated, married about 1769 in Maryland, Nancy Huckston (1748-1773). His wife died and the same year he moved to Anson, N.C., with his two small children, Elizabeth and William. He lived in Anson County and married Olivia Chears. Near the close of the revolution he moved to Marlboro County, S.C., near what is now Bennettsville. William ... === Death === : Death: :: Date: 21 Sep 1814 :: Place: Burnt Factory, Marlboro, South Carolina, USASource: [[#S1]] Page: SAR Membership Number: 96054 Object: @M3288@Source: [[#S395]] [https://books.google.com/books?id=KItRAAAAMAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=huckston Family tree book, genealogical and biographical, listing the relatives of General William Alexander Smith and of W. Thomas Smith] by William Thomas Smith, William Alexander Smith, Osmer D. Flake; Publisher: W. T. Smith - Anson County (N.C.); Page 101; Quote: ... Salisbury District, N.C., in the Revolutionary war. After coming to Anson County, he married Miss Chears of Marboro County, S.C., and is buried in that county near "Burnt Factory." There were born to him in Maryland, by Miss Huckston, two children, she dying shortly after the second one was born and he then came to ... : Death: :: Date: 21 Sep 1815 :: Place: Marlboro County, South Carolina, USASource: [[#S1]] ===Will=== === Burial === : Burial: :: Place: Lester, Marlboro County, South Carolina, USASource: [[#S395]] [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=69876306 Find A Grave Memorial], Bennett Cemetery, Lester, Marlboro County, South Carolina, USA == Sources == * Source: S1 Author: Ancestry.com Title: U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970 Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.Original data - Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970. Louisville, Kentucky: National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Microfilm, 508 rolls; Quote: Captain William Bennett's residence during the America Revolution was Anson County N.C. & Marlboro County, S.C. (Cheran District) and assisted in war of the Revolution as: He was a Baptist preacher at start of war and served as Chaplain with Wades North Carolina Militia. Was very much hated by the Tories and on a number of occasions suffered severely at their hands. Later in the war he moved to Marlboro County, South Carolina, where he was a Captain of Militia.; Quote 2: Capt. William Bennett (Rev) born 1717 Providence MD, died 9/12/1814(15) Marlboro County, S.C. married 1769 to 1st wife Nancy Huckston born 1748 Maryland, died 1775 Providence, MD.; Repository: [[#R1]] * Repository: R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com E-Mail Address: Phone Number: * Source: S189 Author: Edmund West, comp. Title: Family Data Collection - Births Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2001.; Repository: [[#R1]] * Source: S395 Author: Ancestry.com Title: Web: South Carolina, Find A Grave Index, 1729-2012 Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012; Repository: [[#R1]]

Fotoboekie/Photo Booklet

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==Die Fotoboekie / The Photo Booklet== * Die fotoboekie bevat 24 foto's van familie en vriende na aan [[Geertsema-38|Jan Geertsema snr]] wat hy vermoedelik in 1888 met sy emigrasie na Transvaal saamgebring het. Sommige foto's, geoordeel aan die geboortedatums van die persone, moes hy waarskynlik later ontvang en in die boekie gesit het. // ''The photo booklet contains 24 photos of family and friends close to [[Geertsema-38|Jan Geertsema snr]], which he presumably brought with him in 1888 with his emigration to the Transvaal. Some photos, judging by the birth dates of the persons, he probably should have received later and put in the booklet.'' * Die foto's op hierdie profiel dek al die foto's in die fotoboekie, insluitend die foto van "Koningin Emma in Friese Drag" en van "Mnr J de Groot", wat onbekend is. // ''The photos on this profile cover all the photos in the photo booklet, including the photo of Queen Emma in Frizian Garb and of Mr. J de Groot, which is unknown.''

Fouche

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Fouche-421|Angela Jordan]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=20636835 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fougere Ancestry

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Fougere-105|Dan Fougere]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Integration of Fougere/Frazier ancestry * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15024105 send me a private message]. Thanks!

FOUGERONS IN AMERICA

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This is a family history page about the Fougeron family in Buffalo, New York. '''FOUGERONS IN AMERICA''' was started in 1970 with a hand-drawn chart by my Dad. We were both baptized in the "old French church" in Buffalo, New York and we both inherited the MARCHAL name. There is a street in Buffalo, New York named Fougeron Street which once encompassed the boundaries of the original Fougerons farm.
Joseph Simon Fougeron and his family arrived in the port of New York on the 23rd of August,1829. They sailed down the Erie Canal westward and Joseph Fougeron pledge allegiance to his new homeland in the Buffalo, Erie County (NY) courthouse. He bought a farm on Walden & Genesee Streets (which was then called Adams Road in the former Holland Land Purchase Tract). When they arrived in Buffalo, his wife was 4 months pregnant with their first American born child, Francis Fougeron. They had two sets of twins following him. Joseph Simon Fougeron bought neighboring property around him until he had a substantial farm. He was a successful farmer delivering his produce to the Buffalo and Black Rock markets. His sons and their descendants furthered the traditional businesses by opening market stands and groceries throughout Buffalo up into the 1960's
Family tradition and some early U.S. documentations had described the family as "being from Belfort" but no documentation in the American Fougeron families unearthed the actual village of their origins. When I located my great-great French Grandmother's obituary, I got closer to the villages of their origin. One day while cranking the microfilms for the city of Belfort, I found a death record for a Fougeron in the 1780's from "Evette" so I targeted that area for our Fougerons, eventually winding my way on microfilm to the village of''' Petitmagny'''. Using the birth date found on Joseph Simon Fougeron's tombstone in Buffalo, I located Joseph Simon Fougeron's baptismal record, then his wife's baptismal and their marriage record, plus the baptismal of all his French-born children. He is buried in Buffalo, New York.
Since this discovery, I called any Fougerons listed in phone books as far as Nebraska and California. They all came to visit Buffalo, the burial grounds of our immigrants, and we traded notes. Recently, I have been contacted by Fougeron descendants of Petitmagny though DNA testing. '''NOTE OF INTEREST about Petitmagny - the Germanic name for the village was "Kleinmeng(e)latt" or, Bittmeni''' ==[http://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Fougeron New Additions are on Fougeron Surnames Page] == :'''Click on green link above for new additions of Fougerons''' ---- :Other Surnames that married into Fougerons in France ~ :[http://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Vautier VAUTIERS] :[http://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Henneman HENNEMAN] :[http://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Corre CORRE] : [https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Marchal Marchal] : [https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/LaMielle Lamielle,Lamiel] : [https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/BARBERET Barberet] ::::::Click on green link for new additions of similiar surnames ---- === The Fougerons of Petit-Magny, Franche-Comte, France and the first generation from the Immigrants === :[http://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/Fougeron FOUGERONS IN FRANCE & USA ] ---- ===Credits=== This family history is a combination of my own Franche-Comte and New York State research. In California and Nebraska, other US Fougeron descendants have shared their American family history which I further sourced for them in the Nebraska and California branches of the Fougerons. For privacy sake, no one on here or in my own database is born after 1913. However, if other Fougeron relations attach their own branch of the family at WikiTree, these dates may overlap.
---- === Privacy on Families === No database is ever error free or complete, including this one. If you have corrections or additions, please email from this page on green link below.If you would like to add, please do not add the living folks full details ( ''go by the 100 years rule'' ) However,you can adjust the privacy status of your own tree on Wikitree . You can have a trusted list and only share with who you trust .
----

Foulkscourt Castle

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*[[Hely-28|John Hely]] b. 1650 - 1701 lived in Foulkscourt Castle. FOULKSCOURT, parish of Erke, barony of Galmoy. *1745 Gorges Hely of Foulkscourt having a mind to dispose of all his deer, 50-200 brace of male & female deer. *1749 Marr John Hely eldest son of Gorges Hely, at Foulks Court to Miss Aylward dau of Nicholas Aylward of Shankhill. See [[Hely-23|Sarah Hely]] *8.2.1768 Patrick Lowry of Foulks Court, Co Kilkenny, yeoman. [Mar Lic] *c1770 John Healy, Foulkscourt built Johnstown village c1770. *1782 Poem on improvements of Foulks Court. [FLJ 6.11.1782] *1784 To let, house & demesne of Foulkes Court, 3-400 acres, apply John Hely. [FLJ 14.1.1784] *1784 Gorges Hely of Violet Hill advertising that his father has no right to let Foulkes Court. [FLJ 17.1.1784] *29.3.1788 Hampden Hely Esq., Folke’s Court, Freshford. [FLJ] *4.1.1794 H Hely Esq., Foulks Court. [FLJ] *30.12.1795 Hampden Hely, Folkes Court. [FLJ] *3.10.1797 Hampden Hely of Foulks Court to Ann Shaw of Leugh, spinster. [Mar Lic] *1.8.1801 To let, house & demesne of Folkescourt, 260a, proposals to Hampden Hely Esq., Kilkenny. [FLJ] *1801 Foulkscourt belonging to Mr Hely, though now, unfortunately, neglected. [Tighe] *1803 Died in Dublin, John Hely Esq., age 85, late of Foulkscourt, Co. Kilkenny. [LJ 30.3.1803] *4.2.1807 To let, house and demesne of Foulks Court and 140a, ¼ mile of Johnstown Ballyspellan, proposals to William Lanigan, Esq., Luigh. [LJ] *1814 Died, Hampden Hely of Foulkscourt, Esq., age 56. [St Marys Church grave] *24.7.1847 Charles Hely, Foulkscourt. [KJnl] *1853 Charles Hely, JP, Foulkscourt, Johnstown. [Thom] *1856 Charles Healey Esq., Foulkscourt, Johnstown. [Thom] *31.1.1857 Charles Hely, JP, Folkscourt. [Mod] *1863 Charles Hely, Foulkscourt. [Will] *1863 Charles Hely, Foulkscourt. [Mod 10.1.1863] *1876 Capt. Gorges Hely, Foulkscourt Castle, 6,461a. [Land] *1884 Major Gorges Hely, Foulkes Court, Johnstown. [Bassett] *1993 Foulkscourt, very fine tall tower in Land Commission property now virtually inaccessible owing to drain laying, 1½ miles NW of Urlingford. 18.S.28.67. [KK Dev Plan] *2017 Access difficult, but visible from a distance. ==Sources== http://irishantiquities.bravehost.com/kilkenny/foulkscourt/foulkscourtcastle.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hely http://homepage.eircom.net/~lawekk/HSESF.HTM

Found Graves

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==Introduction== Betty Lewis was horseback riding in the forest when she discovered a lone marker grave, last name Callahan. She contacted me as leader of the Callahan Name Study and offered the information regarding the grave and a photo. I added it to WikiTree and found the parents. She was so excited that she went exploring and found more graves. This space page contains the information that she has sent to me. Individual profiles will be added from this information and connected to the tree! ===Links=== ====Maps==== *[http://www.mikehitch.com/worcmaps.htm Map] ===Emails=== 10/22/2018 12:32 pm: Now for the exciting news! About a mile or mile and a half through the woods, 50 yds off of another trail, I found the graves of Capt. John A Callahan, Louisa O. Callahan. David F. Callahan and 3 stone markers with no inscription. GPS: 38.12274, -75.47315 After some research, John H. husband of Elizabeth J. is the son if Capt. John A. Callahan, grandfather of David C. (I will send you evidence of why I think that and pics of each grave.) Betty From a Facebook posting from Bob Jones, local historian on his site: Worc. Co., MD History, Bob Jones, Coordinator: Drowning in the Pocomoke River: To cross the Pocomoke River In horse and buggy days, there were landings up and down the river where there were ferry crossings, with usually a flat-bottom boat just large enough for one horse and buggy. One of the main ferry crossings was at Mattapony Landing, not far from the site of the old Beth Eden Baptist Church. Howard Dickerson tells the story of a fatal night-time crossing at Mattapony .Landing . . . a story as recounted to him by wife Ramona who recalled her grandmother talking about an uncle who drowned in the Pocomoke River. It is thought it was David Frank Callahan, 1855-1883. Howard found a reference to it in a small book called "The Pocomoke River" by Charles C. Kencey, as follows: "At the turn of the century, there was an unusual drowning at Mattapony Ferry. At midnight while the Ferryman was asleep in his home, a horse and carriage with a driver fast asleep came down the road. Since the horse had no one to stop him, he trotted onto the ferry and then off the other end into thirty feet of water, drowning both the horse and sleeping driver." David was the youngest of the six children of John Callahan, 1802-1884, and Louisa O. Bevans, 1810-1890. David's brother John Henry Callahan married Elizabeth Jane Pruitt and left many descendants. His sister Fannie Beaugard Callahan married Aaron Webb. Another sister Sarah married James T. Waters. And sister Annie married Alfred T. Sharpley. Many group members can claim descent from these folks. Betty

Found Photographs Interest Group

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An interest group for people who find and rescue old photographs in attics, antique shops, estate sales, and are looking for the history behind them.

Founders of Blue Hill

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Massachusetts Archives, State House, Boston Haverhill, 6 Jan 1762 To Monsieurs David Marsh, Enoch Bartlett, James McHard, James Duncan , Captain Edmond Moors, Captain Peter Parker, Dudley Carleton, Benjamin Harrod: We the subscribers being desirous of settling some of the Land upon the Sea Coasts or Rivers between the Land belonging to the Heirs of the late Honourable Brigadier General Waldo and the River Passamaqade or St. Croix, desire our names may be carryed to the Great and Generall Court at their next Session with a petition which we desire you'll please draw and Lay before the same for Lands within said Limmits for the purpose aforesaid: {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" | 1762 FName || LName || M>15 || M<16 || F ||page || Wikitree |- | William || Fairfield || [[Fairfield-593|William Fairfield (1732-1773)]] |- | Benjamin || Clements || |- | Benjamin || Clements || |- | Benjamin || Clements || |- | Benjamin || Clements || |- | Benjamin || Clements || |- | Benjamin || Clements || |- |}

Founders of Danbury, Connecticut

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Other: [[Space: Sources-Connecticut|Connecticut Sources]] __TOC__ == Founders of Danbury == "Danbury was settled in 1684." ([[#Hill|Hill]]: Page 1) "The eight ''originals'' came here in the spring of that years. The families of a part came with them and remained here. The others returned to their homes and came back to Danbury with their families in the spring following." ([[#Hill|Hill]]: Page 39) Here is a list of the Original eight families that settled what was to become Danbury, Connecticut. The mother of some of these children died before the move to Danbury. # [[Bushnell-78|Francis Bushnell]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Bushnell-78 relationship]. #:* Wife: [[Seymour-250|Hannah Seymour]] #::# [[Bushnell-60|Hannah (Bushnell) Knapp]] #::# [[Bushnell-118|Mary (Bushnell) Taylor]] #::# [[Bushnell-112|Lydia (Bushnell) Fitch]] #::# Abigail (Bushnell) Shove, b. Danbury #::# Mercy (Bushnell) Lockwood, b. Danbury #::# Rebekah (Bushnell) Starr, b. Danbury #::# Judith Bushnell, b. Danbury # [[Barnum-306|Thomas Barnum]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Barnum-306 relationship]. #:* Wife: [[Unknown-238279|Hannah Unknown]], d. bef. 1684 #::# Thomas Barnum #::# Sarah (Barnum) Hayes #::# Esther (Barnum) Abbit/Abbott #::# Abigail (Barnum) Stevens #::# Francis Barnum #::# Richard Barnum #::# John Barnum #::# Hannah Barnum #::# Ebenezer Barnum Sr. #:* Wife: [[Thompson-3091|Sarah Thompson]] #::10. Ruth Barnum # [[Hoyt-604|John Hoyt]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Hoyt-604 relationship]. #:* Wife: [[Lindall-7|Mary Lindall]] #::# Nathaniel Hoyt #::# John Hoyt #::# Samuel Hoyt #::# Joshua Hoyt #::# Thomas Hoyt #::# Mary Hoyt #::# Deborah (Hoyt) Barnum #::# Benjamin Hoyt # [[Gregory-1629|Judah Gregory]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Gregory-1629 relationship]. #:* Wife: [[Hoyt-362|Hannah Hoyt]] #::# Hannah Gregory #::# John Gregory #::# Persis (Gregory) Crofut #::# Joseph Gregory #::# Lydia (Gregory) Wildman #::# Josiah Gregory #::# Benjamin Gregory # [[Taylor-632|Thomas Taylor]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Taylor-632 relationship]. #:* Wife: [[Ketcham-6|Rebecca Ketcham]] #::# Thomas Taylor #::# Phebe Taylor #::# Deborah (Taylor) Betts #::# John Taylor #::# Joseph Taylor #::# Daniel Taylor #::# Timothy Taylor #::# Nathan Taylor #::# Rebecca (Taylor) Benedict #::# Theophilus Taylor, b. Danbury #::# Eunice (Taylor) Starr, b. Danbury # Capt. [[Beebe-126|James Beebe]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Beebe-126 relationship]. #:* Wife1: [[Boltwood-37|Mary Boltwood]] #::# Mary Beebe #::# James Beebe #::# Rebecca Beebe #::# Samuel Beebe #::# Mary (Beebe) Chapman #:* Wife2: [[Benedict-162|Sarah Benedict]] #::# James Beebe #::# Joseph Beebe #::# Sarah Beebe #:* Wife3: [[Beardsley-18|Rebecca Beardsley]] # [[Benedict-12|James Benedict]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Benedict-12 relationship]. #:* Wife1: [[Gregory-286|Sarah Gregory]] # [[Benedict-82|Samuel Benedict]] - your [https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:Relationship&action=calculate&person1_name=&person2_name=Benedict-82 relationship]. #:* Wife1: [[Beebe-170|Mary Beebe]] #:* Wife2: [[Andrews-433|Rebecca Andrews]] == Sources == * Hill, Susan Benedict. ''[[Space:History of Danbury, Conn. 1684-1896|History of Danbury, Conn. 1684-1896]]'' (Burr Printing House, New York, 1896) * [[Wikipedia: Danbury,_Connecticut]]

Fountas Family Mysteries

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Please add to our family tree xx

Four and Fifty Years, the timeline from 1835-1860

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[http://onesearch.slq.qld.gov.au/SLQ:SLQ_PCI_EBSCO:slq_alma21138105330002061 '''Four and Fifty Years'''] 1835 Some time during 1835 all Tickets of Exemption are withdrawn. 25th March Application for the publication of wedding banns at Maitland prospective bride & groom Ann Elliot (assigned servant to Mr. Dixon) and William Barron. Request for permission to marry sent by Rev. George Keylock Rusden, Convict Chaplain, Maitland. Permission granted, however ............. 30th November Application for the publication of wedding banns at Maitland, prospective bride & groom Ann Elliot (assigned servant of Wm. Harper of Oswald) and John Lock, T. of E., overseer to Wm. Harper. As before, the request for permission to marry was forwarded by the Rev. G. K. Rusden. 15th December Letter to the Colonial Secretary from the Police Magistrate, Maitland, recommending John Lock for a Ticket of Leave. 25th December (Christmas Day) John Lock, overseer to Wm. Harper of Oswald, lends the key to the store to Wm. Barnes, an assigned servant. George Tuckey, farm constable, informs Harper that goods have been stolen from the store and trouble follows .......... 29th December John Lock convicted before the Bench of Magistrates, Maitland of "highly improper conduct in his capacity of overseer to Mr. Wm. Harper of Oswald", to be detained in Newcastle Gaol pending the Governor's decision. A deposition re events on Christmas Day submitted by Wm. Harper, whom before Campbell, J.P. and H. Mitchell, J.P. 30th December John Lock admitted to Newcastle Gaol waiting the decision of H. E. the Governor. 1836 lst January Letter to the Colonial Secretary's Office from Campbell. Wm. Barnes receives 50 lashes for absconding. Arthur O'Brien receives 50 lashes for absconding and 50 lashes for assaulting a special constable. 9th January Letter from the Col. Secretary's Office stating that the Governor approves the recommendation of the Maitland Bench that Lock be returned to Government service and assigned in the district of Maitland until he merits a Ticket of Leave by his future good conduct and his name to be submitted to the board accordingly. Signed by the Acting Principle Superintendent of Convicts T.C.H. 22nd January John Lock granted a Ticket of Leave, No. 36/129 26th January Ann Elliott, assigned to Wm. Harper is charged before the Bench of Magistrates at Maitland with being "drunk and disorderly" and sentenced to 14 days in the cells (solitary confinement). Same for Ann Davis, Elizabeth Cauly and Mary Ann ......... 27th January Ann Elliott admitted to Newcastle Gaol for 14 days solitary confinement. 6th February John Lock assigned to Mr. Lewis, Hunter River. 15th March Ann Elliott assigned to Mr. Dunn, Hunter River. 1Oth May Williarn Harper dies at Oswald. *'''1836 7th June''' John Lock and Ann Elliott married by the Rev. G.K. Rusden at Maitland. Both are working for Housten Mitchell, younger brother of T. L. Mitchell, Surveyor General of N.S.W. John is described as T. of L. Ann is described as Bond, age 19. Thomas Parker and Mary Carr are witnesses. *'''1836 7th September''' William Locke born at Maitland. John Lock's occupation given as overseer to H. Mitchell, Esq. 27" November William baptised at Maitland by the Rev. G. K. Rusden. 1837 14 th June John Lock before the Police Magistrate at Maitland. Convicted of "dishonest conduct in withholding money which had been given to him for the purpose of being changed". 16t1' June Letter to the Principal Superintendent of Convicts from E. D. day notifying him of Lock's conviction & recommending that he be deprived of his Ticket of Leave. 71 July John Lock's Ticket of Leave Cancelled *'''1838 23 d November''' [[Locke-1383|John (Lang) Lock]] born at Wollombi. 1840 22nd May An order in council abolishing transportation to NSW was issued although convicts continued to arrive until 1841.* *'''1840 14th July''' 1-1-3. [[Locke-2923|Ann Locke]] born at Harpers Hill. *'''1841 30th July''' 1-1-4. [[Locke-2075|Walter George Locke]] born at Harpers Hill 25th August John Lock has Ticket of Leave restored for Maitland District. *'''1843 1Oth August''' [[Locke-2963|Louisa Locke]] born at Harpers Hill, Oswald, father described as a tenant farmer. 20 September Louisa baptised. *'''1845 10th January''' [[Locke-932|James Locke]] born at Harpers Hill, Oswald 9 th March James baptised *'''1846 6th August''' [[Locke-1385|Albert Locke]] born at Harpers Hill. 1847 28th May N.S.W Government Gazette, first official use of the name Warwick for the locality in Canning Downs. 15th October Petition received by the Col. Secretary for a conditional pardon for John Lock. *'''1848 29th August''' [[Locke-2964|Emily Locke]] born at Harpers Hill. 29th October Emily baptised, father described as farmer. 20th December Governor Fitzroy signs a Conditional Pardon for John Lock. 1849 1st February Conditional Pardon No. 49/197 entered on record. FREEDOM Abbreviations W.A. "The Warwick Argus & Tenterfield Chronicle". E. & T. "The Warwick Examiner & Times" 1849 The Locke family sails on the P.S. TAMAR to Moreton Bay & from Ipswich travel via Spicer's Gap to Warwick on the bullock drays of Ned Collins; the journey occupying three weeks John Locke from Lochinvar is under engagement as Overseer of Rosenthal Station whose Manager is John Deuchar *'''1850 16th September''' [[Locke-2965|Isabella Locke]] born at Warwick. The Locke children attend the first school in Warwick. *'''1853 3 rd April''' [[Locke-2935|Annabella Locke]] born at Warwick 1854 21st July John Locke purchases 22 ac. 5 rd. of land at the Warwick Land Sales. 1855 30th January 7 acres purchased by John Locke *'''1856 25th February''' [[Locke-2966|James Henry Locke]] born at Warwick 1857 7th February 7 acres purchased by John Locke 1858 31st August 7 acres purchased by Walter Locke 7th September 2 acres 2 rd. purchased by Ann Locke 2 acres 2 rd. purchased by William Locke 8th November 1 acre 6 per. Purchased by Williarn Locke 1859 10th December Queensland made a separate colony. *'''1860 12th February''' [[Locke-2634|Alice Locke]] born at Warwick; she was the last child to be born to John & Ann Locke

Four Brothers in Oconee County

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This document is a part of the [[Space:The_Dillard_Family_Association|Dillard Family Association]] ==Four Brothers in Oconee County== By John M. Dillard Originally appeared in the Dillard Annual Four of the seven sons of John B. Dillard and Rachel McKinney Dillard left Rabun County at different times starting about 1885, and made their homes in Westminster, Oconee County, South Carolina, which is some thirty four miles southeast of Dillard, Georgia in the adjoining county in South Carolina. These were William McKinney Dillard (nicknamed "Mac"), James Doctor Marshall Dillard (nicknamed "Doc"), Albert Lafayette Dillard, all three with McKinney family names, and John B.Dillard, Jr. The two brothers who remained in Rabun County, Georgia were Beavert Rush Dillard (nicknamed "Bede"), who lived in Rabun County until his death on September 15, 1949 at age 80, and Robert L. Dillard. Robert L. Dillard at age 28 in 1897 and is buried next to his parents in Head of the Tennessee Baptist Church cemetery at Dillard. A seventh brother, George Macon Dillard, had migrated to Johnson City, Tennessee prior to 1892, the year of his marriage to Mary Elizabeth "Mollie" Hyberger of Timber Ridge near Greeneville, Greene County, Tennessee. He later moved to Oklahoma and Texas, but died in Robertstown, Georgia. The names and a brief history of all of the seven sons and three daughters of John B. Dillard, Sr. and his wife, Rachel McKinney Dillard, is at pages 193 and 194 in Ritchie's Sketches of Rabun County History. Ritchie elsewhere mentions that when Rabun County had no public school system, a pioneer teacher, W. A. Curtis came into the county in 1873 and started a private school in exchange for a schoolhouse, a house and one hundred acres of land. Listed among the enrolled students at that school during the session of 1875-1876 were John B. Dillard, James D. M. Dillard and William M. Dillard, three of the four sons who migrated to Westminster, South Carolina as well as Sarah C. Dillard, all children of John B. Dillard, Sr. and Rachel McKinney Dillard. The Town of Westminster had its first United States Post Office in 1874, and was incorporated on March 17, 1875. It is located in the northwestern most corner of South Carolina adjoining the Georgia border, seven miles distant from Walhalla, an 1850 German settlement and the present county seat, and some ten miles distant from Seneca, all three of which towns are small towns located in this presently mixed rural and industrial county. From the comparatively recent vintage of Westminster as a town, it appears that the Dillard brothers were among its pioneer settlers. With the coming of the Atlanta and Richmond Air Line Railway, Seneca was subdivided into lots from rural property in 1873 by developers and promoters Doyle, Easley, Green, Norton and Thompson. This successful undertaking was tried again with Westminster in 1874 with the completion of this railroad through that town. ===William McKinney Dillard=== William McKinney Dillard, was deeded property in Westminster as early as 1886, was in the retail grocery business who was born at Dillard on March 18, 1860 and married Ida King Dillard at Westminster on September 5, 1886. Documentary evidence seems to indicate that he could have been the first Dillard brother to come to Westminster, South Carolina. He lived his entire remaining life in Westminster until his death on January 26, 1940. He also served for many years as a Magistrate in Oconee County. Mac Dillard's colorful obituary in the Tugaloo Tribune by its well known editor, Gus Gossett, dated February 1, 1940 states "William McKinney Dillard was born in Rabun County. Georgia on March 18, 1860. The town of Dillard sprang up at his birthplace after the expansion of the Tallulah Falls railroad through the mountains to Franklin, North Carolina....Coming to Westminster in 1882 just after reaching his majority, W. M. Dillard lent a helping hand in the up building of the town. He began work as a clerk in the stores and later entered the mercantile field and sold goods for many years on his own account. He was engaged in the sawmill and lumber business a while and served several years as a Trial Justice....In Mr. Dillard's first mercantile venture he found himself in the condition a lot of merchants face - he had to borrow some money. A shipment of flour amounting to $350.00 had to be paid. He went to his first employer, William J. Stribling. and asked him for the loan. Mr. Stribling had $350.00 in gold and let him have it without any paper or security, the only requirement being the money must be paid back in gold as soon as he was able to pay the debt. When he sold the flour he took Mr. Stribling the money and part of it was currency, but Mr. Stribling held out for all gold and "Rabun" (nickname of W. M. Dillard among his Westminster contemporaries) had to exchange the currency for gold." Mrs. E. J. King conveyed to William M. Dillard part of Lots 30 and 32 on Main Street extending to Green Street by deed dated June 28, 1886 for a consideration of $150.00. In a deed dated January 5, 1891 Mac Dillard was conveyed title to Lot 5 and one-half of Lot 4 on Lucky Street extending to Augusta Street in the Town of Westminster. This deed quitclaimed Lot 5 and part of Lot 4 from an earlier deed recited to have been lost and stated "This is the lot William M. Dillard now lives on". An early E. R. Doyle plat of the layout of the original Town of Westminster dated November, 1888, and an investigation on the scene of presently located streets in that town, seem to indicate that both the 1886 and 1891 deeds included property south of Main Street near the old uptown of Westminster in the general area of the existing City Hall and Westminster Baptist Church. The final home of Mac and Ida Dillard was some blocks away on the then opposite or eastern side of Main Street fronting transects the center of town, on which site William Barnett Dillard, their son, built a home in his later years after the Mac Dillard residence was destroyed. This property was purchased in the name of Ida T. Dillard from N. Olive Smithson on November 17, 1893 and from C. E. Abbott on April 2, 1904. According to Rachel Dillard Scott, it is on this real estate that the store building operated by Mac and Ida Dillard for many years stood next door to their residence. Rachel Dillard Scott also recalls that this also was the site of the Magistrate's Court for many years over which Mac Dillard presided for the conduct of marriage ceremonies and other civil and criminal matters. The 1900 United States Census for South Carolina verifies that the William McKinney Dillard household was in "Westminster Town" consisting of William M. Dillard, born l860 in Georgia, 40 years of age; his wife, Ida T., born November 1871 in South Carolina, age 28, and children, Claude N. Dillard, born September, 1887, King Dillard, born July, 1889 and William B. Dillard born October 1891. Rachel Dillard Scott states that Ida King Dillard was correctly born in 1868 and was in 1900 31 years of age. The census taker was not always correct. Further shown are two other persons in the household, Albert L. Dillard, born October 1865 in Georgia and one unnamed boarder. These family members are not found in the South Carolina l880 Census which indicates the four Dillard brothers had not then migrated into South Carolina. The 1910 South Carolina census shows William M. Dillard, age 50, and his wife, Ida, age 41, with children "Joe K.", age 20, and William B., age 18. Claude Dillard had apparently left home. William M. Dillard appeared to have sold most of his earliest property acquisitions in Westminster between 1887 and 192. Ida King Dillard purchased other property in Westminster in her name. Ida King Dillard, born in Anderson County, South Carolina on November 28, 1868, died in Westminster on September 24, 1939. She and William McKinney Dillard are buried in the same grave lot in Eastview Cemetery along with their son, William Barnett Dillard, born October 7, 1891 and died October 3, 1950 at Westminster and who served in combat in World War I in France. William Barnett Dillard married Florrie Wylie of Cartersville, Georgia on December 24, 1921, who died March 6, 1990. Their only child, Dr. William B. Dillard, Jr., died survived by no children on October 23, 1989. "Bill" Dillard was a salesman for most of his life. Dr. William Barnett Dillard, Jr., was a practicing physician of Cartersville, Georgia. William Barnett Dillard, Jr., who was a classmate of his second cousins, Barham Foster Dillard, Jr. and James Calvin Stone (children of B. F. Dillard and Stella Dillard Stone through their father, J.D.M. Dillard) at Clemson College in 1939-1942, achieved distinction as a student in Clemson College, served as a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne Division in Japan and married Jane Jernigan on December 8, 1951. He died from cancer and is buried in Cartersville, Georgia. His mother, Florrie Wylie Dillard, survived her son for approximately one year and is also buried in Cartersville, Georgia, her hometown. A thirty-two year old son, Claude N. Dillard, who was born September 14, 1887 and who died on September 14, 1919 following injuries in the Norfolk Navy Shipyard, is buried in the same plot with William McKinney Dillard and Ida King Dillard as well as an infant son, Ivan Dillard, who was born August 28, 1894 and died February 10, 1896. Ivanhoe Dillard, the youngest son, was a victim of measles and died prior to maturity. The second child of Mac and Ida Dillard was Joseph King Dillard, a well known plumbing contractor who spent his life in Westminster. For many years, King Dillard worked for the Town of Westminster as its supervisor over all water and sewer installations. He was born on July 17, 1889, married Daysie Holcombe on July 16, 1916, and died on October 24, 1956. Daysie Holcombe Dillard died November 4, 1962. They are also buried in Eastview Cemetery in Westminster. Rachel Dillard Scott is the only presently living child of Joseph King Dillard and Daysie Holcombe Dillard. She married Fred Alexander Scott of Toccoa, Georgia on October 3, 1940. Another child of Joseph King Dillard and Daysie H. Dillard was Jack Holcombe Dillard, employed with Daniel Construction Company, who was born December 22, 1924 and died July 15, 1989. His wife, Ruth Gray Dillard, died a few days later , both victims of cancer. The only child of this marriage was David Kyle Dillard, born July 16, 1963. A stepson born to Ruth Gray Dillard by a previous marriage, William Eugene Hopkins, survived them. Another son, Joseph King Dillard, Jr., was born May 10, 1917 and died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on February 13, 1988 where he is buried. Joseph King Dillard, Jr. married Elizabeth Wash in Greenwood, South Carolina on December 8, 1939 and enjoyed a 32-year career with Westinghouse Corporation mostly at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as a professional electrical engineer where he was general manager of Westinghouse's advanced systems technology operations. The children of Rachel Dillard Scott are Martha Diane Scott, born December 26, 1942 now of Columbia, South Carolina and twin sons Robert Claude Scott and Joseph King Scott, born August 19, 1941 of Atlanta, Georgia, all three of whom are unmarried to this date. The children of Joseph King Dillard, Jr. are William King Dillard born September 8, 1952 of Duluth, Georgia and John Holcombe Dillard, born April 15, 1955 of Columbia, South Carolina. The children of William King Dillard are Rhea Ann Dillard born September 30, 1978 and John Joseph Dillard born April 24, 1985. On the date of W. M. Dillard's death, there was a thick blanket of snow on the ground. "This reminded a few of the citizens of the weather which prevailed early in the year 1894 when Mr. Dillard's father, J. B. Dillard, was seriously sick and death soon followed. The snow was deep on the ground and a blizzard was in the Southland. Mac and his brother, J.D.M. (Dock) Dillard hitched up a mule to the buggy to make the trip to see their father. Travel was well nigh impeded on all the roads. When the Dillard brothers struck the mountains the mule and vehicle mired down so deep they were compelled to turn back home and abandon the journey. The elder Dillard lived at the old home place near Clayton, Ga." ===James Doctor Marshall Dillard=== James Doctor Marshall Dillard, born in Dillard, Georgia on January 25, 1862, married Mattie Center Foster in Westminster on July 16, 1885, at a ceremony witnessed by William McKinney Dillard. At least the first three of their six children, Stella Dillard (born July 27, 1886), James Doctor Marshall Dillard, Jr. (born March 26, 1890) and George Bookter Dillard (born December 15, 1891) were born in Westminster. The date of his marriage, the dates of birth of his first three children and the date of his property acquisitions in Westminster seem to indicate that Dock Dillard came to Westminster about the same time as his brother, Mac, which was about 1885. Dock Dillard's first recorded real property purchase in Westminster was on February 15, 1887 for lots on Main Street extending back to Depot Street and Windsor Street, which appear to be located near the first properties acquired by his brother, Mac Dillard. A lot on Retreat Street was purchased on February 17, 1887, lots at the corner of Lucky Street and an alley and on Augusta and Retreat Streets on January 5, 1891 and Lots 68 and 69 on Cemetery Street on March 21, 1891. All of this property appears to be in the old uptown section of the original town of Westminster near the present City Hall. Witnesses to one of these deeds recorded in Deed Book O, Page 502 were William M. Dillard and G. W. C. Wikle, a brother-in-law with a colorful career who married Rosette Dillard, a daughter of John B. Dillard, Sr. and Rachel McKinney Dillard. James Doctor Marshall Dillard also acquired 66 acres on Colonel Fork Creek at Corner Cross Creek waters of Seneca River on January 21, 1889. The latter was sold on January 18, 1890 as evidenced in Deed Book Q, Page 340. Cross deed records indicate he also owned tracts of 59 acres and 30 acres on Shoals Creek of Tugalo River, for which no deed into Dock Dillard is indexed . These properties could have been acquired in connection with Dock Dillard's saw mill business which he operated in Westminster. Where and how J.D.M. Dillard learned the lumber business is unknown. It is likely that for awhile, his brother, William M. Dillard, was in business in Westminster with him. One would have expected that he learned this business in Rabun County, Georgia where he probably resided until he went to Westminster when he was about twenty-three years of age. The 1880 United States Census of Rabun County, Georgia, for Tennessee District No. 556, shows "James D. M. Dillard" , age 18, (as well as William M. Dillard, age 20, Albert L. Dillard, age 15) connected with the household of their parents under the occupation description of "son - works on farm". Ritchie in describing Rabun County from 1865-1900 states that with the third generation, farms were becoming smaller notwithstanding the continuation of the resource of the "free range" for livestock, and that the only form of manufacturing was the local grist mill "and a few sawmills at widely separated places". The extension of the Tallulah Falls Railroad and the coming of large timber corporations for the manufacturing and shipping of timber did not come into Rabun County until after 1905, well after the time Dock Dillard had already left. Starting in late 1889, and ending in 1894, the above properties were sold off to third parties in that Dock Dillard and his family moved to Greenville County, South Carolina at least by 1892, the dates of his first real estate purchases in Greenville County, South Carolina, and other facts supporting this probable date set out in From Westminister to Greenville. ===Albert Lafayette Dillard=== This Dillard brother according to his imposing gravestone in Eastview Cemetery in Westminster was born on October 23, 1864 and died at only 43 years of age on April 20, 1907. Ritchie records that he served as Sheriff of Rabun County, Georgia from 1891 through 1894. Albert and his brother B. R. Dillard were appointed by the Ordinary of Rabun County on January 6, 1896 to serve as administrators of the estate of their father, John B.Dillard, Sr. It appears in subsequent proceedings in this estate in Rabun County that only Beavert R. Dillard alone continued to serve and finally settled this estate as set forth in the Minutes of the Ordinary Court for Rabun County, Georgia, 1887-1898. At the January Term in 1896, at page 350 F. A. Bleckley, Ordinary issued Letters of Administration on the estate of John B. Dillard, Sr. to B. R. Dillard upon his giving bond in the sum of $2,000.00. It was ordered on January 6, 1896 that title to all properties of this estate be vested in Rachel M. Dillard. On October 6, 1896 this court at page 377 authorized B. R. Dillard to sell the lands of the estate to pay indebtedness and distribute the same among the heirs of the estate. On October 4, 1897 B. R. Dillard sought discharge as administrator of this estate. Finally, at the January, 1898 term of this Court, B. R. Dillard was discharged as administrator by order dated January 3, 1898. Only B. R. Dillard was mentioned in all these subsequent proceedings as administrator of his father's estate, and not Albert L. Dillard. In the order of the Ordinary dated January 6, 1896 the words "with Albert L. Dillard" seem to have been added as an afterthought following the appointment of B. R. Dillard as sole administrator of the estate of J. B. Dillard,Sr . In a Sale Bill of the real and personal property of the John B. Dillard, Sr. estate dated January 6, 1896, B. R. Dillard was referred to as "temporary administrator". This same Sale Bill states that Albert L. Dillard purchased two tracts of land from the Estate of John B. Dillard, Sr. with undisclosed acreage at respective prices of $83.00 and $46.50. No deed has been found to date conveying this property to Albert L. Dillard. The Book of Sales in the Court of the Ordinary of Rabun County dated 1881-1903 at page 88 records that Albert L. Dillard purchased a horse from the Estate of G. W. Kelly on October 26, 1897. Cash to Albert seems to have been easy to obtain. The petition of George M. Dillard, another brother, to have the Ordinary of Rabun County appoint a suitable guardian for his mother, Rachel M. Dillard, "an imbecile from old age", (she was then 66 years of ago having been born in 1831) dated July 27, 1897 recites that A.L. Dillard, B. R. Dillard and John B. Dillard were then residents of Rabun County, Georgia and were "the nearest adult relatives of Rachel M. Dillard". Albert L. Dillard was issued guardianship of his mother's property (which appeared to consist of all of the real and personal estate of John B. Dillard, Sr., except that part sold off by his administrator) by the Ordinary of Rabun County on October 4, 1897. He was also appointed as administrator of his mother's estate on her death on June 17, 1899 in that he petitioned the Ordinary for that county on April 2, 1900 for his discharge as such and "letters of dismission" were granted by that court. Albert L. Dillard's first real estate purchase in Westminster was in l902. His being shown in the l900 Census as living in the household of his brother, William McKinney Dillard, along with his affairs with the Estate of Rachel McKinney Dillard as late as April 2, 1900 in Rabun County, Georgia, pinpoint his becoming a resident of Westminster during the year 1900. The date of his marriage to Callie Hull Dillard was reported in the Keowee Courier on February 28, 1906. Callie Hull was, it appears, already a resident of the Town of Westminster with extensive kindred there. It appears that Albert L. Dillard was unmarried until 1896 and had lived at least for some time as a single man in his brother, Mac Dillard. D. W. Allen, J.H. Harshaw, W. F. Ferguson et. al. as trustees of Joint Stock Company of Westminster by deed dated August 15, 1902 sold to Albert L. Dillard Lot 8 fronting fifty five feet on Main Street and running back to the railroad right of way for a consideration of $200.00. Three years later, J. J. Stoddard sold to Albert L. Dillard another lot fronting on the right of way of the Southern Railway running back to Main Street for $500.00. Other real estate was conveyed to Albert L. Dillard in Westminster as late as the year of his death by Wiley Ferguson and John Gray. Rachel Dillard Scott, who was raised in Westminster and was born after the date of death of Albert L. Dillard, recalls a residence on the eastern side of Main Street backing up to the railroad right of way across that street from the residence of her father, J. King Dillard, being identified as the home of Albert L. Dillard. The Oconee County Clerk's cross conveyance indices through 1920 indicate that Albert L. Dillard never sold during his lifetime any of the real estate he had acquired in Westminster. Albert L. Dillard was a town policeman in Westminster, which was a continuation of his law enforcement interests in his having served as sheriff of Rabun County. Death from unknown but natural causes took Albert L. Dillard one year and two months following his marriage to Callie Hull Dillard. The petition for the appointment of Callie as guardian in the estate of Albert L. Dillard states that his only child, Alberta Calhoun Dillard, was born two days prior to the date of his death. The estate of Albert L. Dillard who had no will appears comparatively extensive. It consisted of nine rental houses and one or two store buildings and listed the ownership by the decedent of 100 acres near Dillard in Rabun County, Georgia. It also consisted of one cow and calf and one pig. Numerous notes and accounts receivable were listed as assets, including a receivable from William M. Dillard of $50.00, from R. L. Dillard (possibly R. S. Dillard) of $36.80 and Claude Dillard (probably the son of William M. Dillard). Guardianship proceedings were commenced in the Probate Court for Oconee County for Alberta Calhoun Dillard, a minor who under South Carolina law inherited one half of her father's intestate estate. In 1915, William McKinney Dillard filed suit in this court against Callie H. Dillard as guardian for the minor child in which he alleged he was the "only living brother of Albert L. Dillard" (this was not quite correct but is correct that he was the only living brother in Westminster) and asked the court to remove Callie H. Dillard as guardian and place custody of the person and property of Alberta in him on the grounds that Callie was an unfit person to raise Alberta and handle her property. Mac Dillard alleged that Callie would leave the child to frequent Greenville, South Carolina for immoral purposes and that the purpose of one of these trips was to give birth to an illegitimate child. In her answer, Callie H. Dillard alleged William M. Dillard, who was a "near neighbor" of Alberta, was a person of bad temper and habits who had no affection for Alberta, or she for him. A question existed as to whether or not the Probate Court had lawful jurisdiction in that it was unusual to bring this type of suit in that court, but the Probate judge concluded he did have jurisdiction and ruled against William M. Dillard on the grounds that he was not on "friendly terms" with Callie H. Dillard. Questions were also raised as to whether or not the Callie Hull Dillard was properly maintaining and keeping rented the rental property in the Albert L. Dillard estate. Meanwhile, in 1916 Callie H. Dillard asked the probate court to relieve her from the burdensome duties of guardian in managing the rental properties. Her brother in law, R. T. Duke, a local U. S. mail carrier, was appointed as guardian for Alberta Calhoun Dillard in her place. R. T. Duke continued to serve until 1928, when he was discharged as guardian by order of the Probate Court dated May 1, 1928. At that time, this probate court file shows that Alberta Calhoun Dillard was then a Thurman. Harry Clifton Duke of Westminster, South Carolina states that his father, R. T. Duke, managed this property for his sister in law and niece after she took her daughter, Alberta, and moved to Atlanta, Georgia, which was before 1921, the date of birth of Harry Clifton Duke. Several deeds selling off the Albert L. Dillard real estate in 1928, the year of the guardianship settlement, indicate that Callie H. Dillard had apparently remarried and was "Mrs. A. P. Owens" and Alberta Calhoun Dillard was "Mrs. H. L. Thurman". Alberta Dillard told her cousin, Harry Clifton Duke, that about 1931 or 1932 she hired an Atlanta, Georgia lawyer to gain possession of the one hundred acres of land in Rabun County, Georgia listed as an asset in the estate of her father, Albert L. Dillard. She and other Hull family members went to Dillard, Georgia and found the property, which was a large mountain with and old cabin on the very top. In walking the property, Alberta and her companions were caught in a hail storm and forced to take cover in the old cabin. They were stranded for an extended period of time in the cabin because they were surrounded by a large pack of "wild hogs" . She was never able to obtain possession and sell this property for reasons unknown. The location of this 100 acres the subject of the "wild hog" story is unknown. Albert L. Dillard purchased two tracts of land, with no acreage given, as reported in the Book of Sales of the Ordinary Court for Rabun County cited above from his father's administrator, Beavert R. Dillard. Albert L. Dillard acquired 35 acres from his father on May 18, 1892 in Deed Book K, Page 520, a part of Lots 162 and 163 which were part of the lands originally acquired by James Dillard in 1823 and 1824. Other Dillard brothers, except John B. Dillard, Jr., were deeded property by their father, John B. Dillard, Sr. in 1893 through 1896. A deed to this 100 acres, wherever it was, does not appear of record. That could have been one of the problems in Alberta's claim of ownership. Callie Hull Dillard married Albert P. Owens and operated a restaurant near the Ford plant in Atlanta where she died at 94 years of age in the l980's. Alberta Calhoun Dillard later divorced Thurman, and married Van Lee Scarborough, a barber. She never had any children and worked for over forty years in Rich's Department Store in Atlanta where she died at 81 years of age on June 29, 1988. Alberta Calhoun Dillard Thurman Scarborough was buried in Westview Cemetery, Walhalla, South Carolina. The place of burial of her mother, Callie Hull Dillard Owens is unknown. In her Last Will and Testament Alberta Scarborough devised her entire estate, including her home at 442 Euclid Terrace in DeKalb County, Georgia to what appear to be her cousins, Ila W. Fairley, Hazel D. Cleveland and Harry C. Duke, the last two named of whom still reside in the Westminister area of Oconee County, South Carolina. The Albert L. Dillard line has completely died out. There was little, if any, family contact during their lifetimes by Alberta Calhoun Dillard Scarborough and her mother with other descendants of John B. Dillard, Sr. and Rachel McKinney Dillard. ===John B. Dillard, Jr.=== John B. Dillard, Jr. was referred to as a "then resident" of Rabun County, Georgia and as one of the "three nearest adult relatives" of Rachel McKinney Dillard in the application of George M. Dillard to the Ordinary of that county dated July 27, 1897 to have his mother declared incapable of managing her own affairs. John B. Dillard, Jr. acknowledged service of process in this legal proceedings on July 28, 1897. John B. Dillard's gravestone in the First Baptist Church cemetery in Westminster states that he married his wife, Florida A. Wilburn Dillard, on April 26, 1876. Ritchie states that the wife of John B. Dillard, Jr. was Florida "Welborn", and that she was from Rabun County, Georgia. The above gravestone, as well as the death notice of John Lee Dillard, Florida Wilburn Dillard's oldest child, in the Keowee Courier on September 8, 1965, reconfirms that her name was Wilburn and not Welborn. The fact that few members of the third generation of this large family are now living (John B. Dillard, Jr. was the oldest son of his parents and 15 years older than the youngest child), and the absence of deeds and administered estates for these first three generations, make it impossible at this time to comprehensively complete this family with generations to the present date. The very large size of the John B. Dillard, Jr. family makes most of the names and whereabouts of the fourth and succeeding generations unknown to present family members. The 1880 United States Census of Rabun County, Georgia in Tennessee District No. 556 (showing John B. Dillard, Sr., age 53, and his wife Rachel M., age 48 as farmers with six sons in their household ranging in age from 20 down to 11) separately lists John B. Dillard, Jr., age 24, a "farmer" with his wife "Sarah F.", age 20, "keeping house", with one child John L., age 1. The 1900 United States Census of Rabun County, Georgia clearly shows that John B. Dillard, Jr. was still there on that date with a wife and seven children at 44 years of age. His wife was listed as "Sarah F." Dillard, born June, 1858. Children were shown in this census as follows: John L. Dillard, born October, 1878; Sallie M. Dillard, born July, 1882 (this is the same person as Sallie Missouri Dillard); Nolla E. Dillard, born February, 1885 (this is the same person as Nola Dillard); Doctor H. Dillard, year of birth not given, age 12, (this is Doctor Holman Dillard); Gulie R. Dillard, age 10, year of birth not given (the spelling of this name is uncertain; it could be "Goolie" and was reported in the press hereinafter cited as "Goola"); Nannie V. Dillard, age 8, year of birth not given and Minnie V. Dillard, age 4, year of birth not given (the latter two are Vera Dillard and Versy (which could have been spelled "Versie") Dillard). For unknown reasons, his son Norman Barnard Dillard, born 1886 is not listed in this census. No deed records have been found to this date for John B. Dillard, Jr. in either Rabun County or Oconee County, and it is difficult to determine when he first came into Westminster. The 1900 United States Census for South Carolina does not list John B. Dillard, Jr. and his family. His grave marker which reads "John B. Dillard", without explaining what the "B" stood for recites that he was born on March 6, 1856 and died on September 6, 1917, which would make his age at the date of his death 6l. His wife, Florida Wilburn Dillard, who is buried next to her husband, was born on June 18, 1859 and died on April 29, 1936. According to her grandson, K. Wylie Dillard, of Seneca, South Carolina Florida W. Dillard, a strong disciplinarian, resided with her son, Norman Barnard Dillard, at his home in Walhalla after the death of his wife, Ada T. Dillard, at thirty years of age to assist in the care of Wylie who was then a small child. K. Wylie Dillard, Floree Ida Dillard Gilden and Nellie H. Dillard, widow of Forest Dillard, state that John B. Dillard, Jr. left Rabun County, Georgia with his large family to pursue employment in the textile mills. This coincides with the description of Dr. Ritchie of economic conditions in Rabun County, particularly the lack of employment opportunities, and the well known fact that farming people sought employment in the South in the rapidly growing textile plants at the turn of the century. It is said that John B. Dillard, Jr. while working in a textile mill in Gainesville, Georgia was struck by the well known tornado which devastated that town resulting in the entire corner of the mill building being lifted up and dropped close to a nearby railroad track. Whether Uncle John was lifted up and dropped with the corner of the mill is unknown. He survived. This tornado is reported to have occurred on June 1, 1903 in a Pictorial History of Hall County to 1950. In the latter publication, photographs of the demolished Gainesville Cotton Mill and New Holland Mill in Gainesville are shown, where it is further reported that over 100 people were killed in this tornado. The foregoing would place John B. Dillard, Jr. in Gainesville in 1903, just after the l900 and just before the 1910 United States Censuses where he was shown respectively in Rabun County, Georgia and Anderson County, South Carolina. Jim Dillard, 80 year old grandson of Hiram Dillard (a son of William F. Dillard, killed in the Civil War) knowledgeable in Rabun County history, of Dillard, Georgia states that Gainesville, Georgia was a popular place for Rabun County residents to enter work in textile mills at the turn of the century and later because of lack of opportunities to earn a livelihood in Rabun County, Georgia. The Hiram Dillard family followed this pattern by going to work in the New Holland Mill in Gainesville, Georgia about the same time as the John B. Dillard, Jr. family, with the Hiram Dillard family later returning to Dillard, Georgia to permanently reside. The first South Carolina census which shows John B. Dillard, Jr. was in 1910 in which he is shown as living in Anderson County at age 54 with his wife, Florida, age 51 with a daughter, Bessie, (this is probably the census taker's mistake for Versy) age 14, a daughter Vera, age 18 and a son-in-law, Charles Parden, age 19, all of the same having been born in Georgia. Where he was living in Anderson County is not known. Anderson County is physically located approximately twelve miles from Westminster, and it is possible that John B. Dillard, Jr. was residing in a rural area in Anderson County and commuting to work in the textile mills of Westminster, South Carolina. His son, Norman Dillard, is shown in the 1910 United States Census as age 24 living in Westminster, Oconee County, with a wife Ada, age 17 and no children, which suggests that his father may have also been there. The obituary of Florida Wilburn Dillard which appeared in the May 6, 1937 issue of the Keowee Courier states that she died a resident of Walhalla, but "before moving to Walhalla she had resided in Westminster for a number of years. Her husband who was a brother of Mr. W. M. Dillard and who came here many years ago from Rabun, Ga. preceeded her to the grave some 20 years ago." All of the foregoing points to the probable conclusion that John B. Dillard, Jr. and his family came into Westminster probably close to 1910, and while he was the oldest of the Dillard brothers, he was the last to come to South Carolina. Many of the children of John B. Dillard, Jr. and Florida Wilburn Dillard followed employment in the textile industry. This includes their oldest child, John Lee Dillard, Norman Barnard Dillard and Doctor Holman Dillard. The gravemarker of John Lee Dillard in the John B. Dillard, Jr. grave plot recites that he was born in 1878 and died in 1965. His obituary, as noted above, more precisely gives his date of death as September 5, 1965. His wife, Cora Crane Dillard, was born in 1884 and died in 1964. The children of John Lee Dillard and Cora Crane Dillard were Forest Dillard, Ernest Dillard, Myrtle Dillard O'Bryant, Ila Dillard Arnold and Ethel Dillard Addis Nichols. An infant, J. D. Dillard, who died on May 22, 1922 at an unknown age is identified as a child of John Lee Dillard. Another child, Norman Ray Dillard, born November 14, 1909 who died on February 19, 1911 was a child of John Lee Dillard and Cora Crane Dillard. It appears that John Lee Dillard also earlier worked in the textile mills in Atlanta and Gainesville, Georgia. A gravestone in this same cemetery plot marks the burial of Ila Dillard Arnold, born September 1, 1904 who died October 29, 1969 and her spouse, Paul K. Arnold, who was born on August 2, 1902 and died December 26, 1981. The marriage license of Ila Dillard to Paul Killian Arnold is reported on December 25, 1929 in the Keowee Courier at page 8, Column E. Forest Dillard was born September 24, 1906 and died May 2, 1957. He is buried in Oconee Memorial Park near Seneca, South Carolina. His wife, Nellie H. Dillard, was born in 1916. The children of Forest Dillard and Nellie H. Dillard are Betty Lee Dillard Chambers, age 57, Randall Dillard, age 55, Barbara Dillard White, Nancy Dillard Stargel, Billy Ray Dillard, age 46 and Joann Dillard, age 52, who is unmarried. Ethel Dillard Addis Nichols is now alive and resides in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Myrtle Dillard O'Bryant married Elmer O'Bryant and did reside in Spartanburg. The gravestone in the nearby cemetery plot of Nola Dillard Loggins recites that she was born on February 21, 1884 and died on February 24, 1970. An infant Clyde Lord, child of Nola's first marriage to R. C. Lord, died September 9, 1910. Nola Dillard Lord divorced R. C. Lord and later married Nooney Loggins. The children of Nola Dillard Lord and R. C. Lord are Grace Lord Justice, who married a Baptist minister, Richard Justice, Beatrice Smith who died in Columbia, South Carolina, Otis Lord, found dead beside the railroad tracks in North Dakota, and Eunice Lord Hunt, who married retired Lt. Col. Thomas Cleland Hunt and resided in Laurens, South Carolina. Thomas Cleland Hunt was born on February 14, 1908 and died August 2, 1986. The date of birth of Eunice Lord Hunt is unknown but she died on May 3, 1987. Eunice and Cleland Hunt had one child, Jean Hunt Gaulden, who has three children by her former spouse, Earle Gaulden, who are Dean Gaulden, Margaret Gaulden and Hunt Gaulden of Greenville, South Carolina. In or adjoining the John B. Dillard, Jr. grave lot in the First Baptist Church of Westminster cemetery is the grave marker of Norman B. Dillard which reads he was born on February 5, l886 and died on November 1, 1941. His wife, Ada T. Dillard's gravestone recites that she was born on April 28, 1893 and died on February 28, 1923. Several infants are buried nearby, which include Carlton Dillard born December 29, 1914, died June 29, 1916, Meda (Almeda) Dillard , born June 19, 1910, died May 16, 1912, and Floyd Dillard, born 1912, died 1916. K. Wylie Dillard, the only child of Norman B. Dillard and Ada T. Dillard who survived to adulthood, states that two other infants born to this couple were Ethel Dillard, born May 21, 1918 at Westminster, died May 24, 1920 and Myrl Dillard born August 30, 1921 who died October 4, 1921. K. Wylie Dillard states that his father's name was "Norman Barnard Dillard", which supports the probability that the real name of John B. Dillard, Sr. and John B. Dillard, Jr. was Barnard and not Barnett. Norman B. Dillard lived and worked at Walhalla, South Carolina and, at the time of his death, his only surviving child, K. Wylie Dillard, now of Seneca, South Carolina was in service in World War II. Kenneth Wylie Walton Deaton Dillard, a child of Norman Barnard Dillard and Ada T. Dillard was born on July 29, 1919 and is married to Mattie Hamby Dillard. He and his wife have no children, but Mattie Hamby Dillard has several daughters by a previous marriage. Doctor Holman Dillard, a son of John B. Dillard, Jr. and Florida Wilburn Dillard, was born in 1889 and died in 1961. He and his wife, Rosaline Dickson Dillard, who was born in 1898 and died in 1981, resided at Westminster, South Carolina. They are buried in First Baptist Church Cemetery at Westminster, South Carolina. Their children were Floree Ida Dillard Gilden, born June 25, 1917, and died on January 12, 1993, who resided at Westminster, South Carolina, Malory Dillard and Norman Roy Dillard. Floree Dillard Gilden married Clyde Daniel Gilden and was employed with Beacon Manufacturing Company. She died on January 12, 1993, and was buried in the First Baptist Church Cemetery of Westminister, South Carolina. The children of Floree Dillard Gilden are Theron Gilden of Seneca, South Carolina, now married to Shirley Dillard, a son, Dave Gilden who died at twenty-nine years of age, and a granddaughter, Grechen Gilden Harbin. Guardianship proceedings exist in the Probate Court for Oconee County, South Carolina for Norman Roy Dillard which plead that he was born to D. Holman Dillard on December 14, 1912, and at age 17 recovered a $900.00 judgment against Oconee Mills Co. for personal injuries suffered on January 2, 1930. The records of the Probate Court for Oconee County, South Carolina show that Norman Roy Dillard (born in 1912 according to Oconee County cemetery card survey) died intestate at age 63 on December 24, 1975 survived by his wife, Ruth Brewster Dillard, and his children, Cheryl Dillard Webb, age 21, Norma Jean Dillard Morton, age 27, Vicki Dillard Shirley, age 25, Gary Dillard, age 14, and Garland Eric Dillard, age 6. He is buried in First Baptist Church Cemetery of Westminster, South Carolina. The Oconee County Cemetery survey indicates that Ruth Brewster Dillard, born 1929, who died March 21, 1990, a daughter of Frank Brewster and Ila Belle Wood Brewster, is buried at Clearmont Baptist Church cemetery in Westminster, South Carolina. According to information from Floree Dillard Gilden, Malory Dillard, the youngest child of Holman Dillard, is buried in Memorial Park in Seneca, South Carolina and had several children, including Dewena Dillard. Versy Dillard Ballentine married Will Ballentine and lived in Hiram, Georgia. Her children consist of Faye Ballentine, Ray Ballentine, Connie Ballentine and perhaps one or two others who names are unknown. Three other daughters of John B. Dillard, Jr. and Florida Wilburn Dillard migrated to Hiram, Georgia, a small town in Paulding County, Georgia a few miles northwest of Atlanta, Georgia. They were Gulie Dillard Sorrells, Vera Dillard Thackston and Missouri Dillard Brown, all three of whom are buried in Hiram, Georgia. The children of Gulie Dillard Sorrells are Edward Sorrells, Dillard Sorrells, Frank Sorrells, Gladys Dillard Sanders and Albert Sorrells. The marriage of "Goola" Dillard to Norman Sorrells which occurred on December 23, 1905 was reported in the Keowee Courier on page l, column D on December 27, 1905. Nannie Vera Dillard married Ed Mathis as her first husband. Her second husband was Cliff Thackston. She had no children and is said to have died and been buried in the Hiram, Georgia area. Sallie Missouri Dillard married Will Brown and is said to be buried in the Hiram, Georgia community. She had only one child, Ernest Brown, who after residing in Greenville, South Carolina was last known to have been a resident of Florida. Revised through October 5, 1994. All rights reserved by John M. Dillard, Post Office Box 91, Greenville, South Carolina 29602.

Four Corners Quilters Guild

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== Introduction == The Four Corners Quilters’ Guild was established in 1998, with the name reflecting the origins of the founding members who lived in the four townships of Egremont, Normanby, Arthur and Minto. We have anywhere from 30 to 60 members who travel to meetings from a wide local radius to build their skills and participate in charitable activities. As a community-based, volunteer organization, we have four main objectives, as defined by our Constitution: * ''To promote the art of quilting'' * ''To provide learning opportunities for members'' * ''To provide opportunities for fellowship and support'' * ''To provide meaningful contributions to our communities'' Anyone with an interest in quilting is welcome to join the guild. Our meetings feature a Show and Tell which is an opportunity to show a project that you are working on or have completed. You may also “show” anything that is quilt-related that you think would interest our members. As an incentive for participating, we hold a draw each meeting, which is a small, quilting-related item. Some months we will feature a block and give instructions for making it. Someone will demonstrate the methods used and will answer any questions or concerns you may have. The guild is managed by an elected Executive, four standing committees and a number of support positions. Every member is encouraged to participate on a committee or serve in a support position. The guild meets monthly (except July and August) in Mount Forest, Ontario the second Tuesday of each month. More recently, January, February, and March are Zoom meetings. == Block-of-the-Month and Mystery Projects == * [[Space:Quilter%27s_Knick_Knack_Shelf|2001-2002 A Quilter's Knick Knack Shelf or Cupboard]] * 2004 Hunter Star == Group Projects == * 1998-2003 [[Space:Signature_Quilt|Four Corners Quilter's Guild Signature Quilt]] * 2003 - Drunkards Path blocks demonstration * 2022 - Star of Hope == In Memory == * [[Reichelt-219|Nicole Benallick]] * [[Jack-2556|Loreen Duncan]] * [[Edgar-3887|Lois Dunlop]] * [[Winer-157|Hazel Friel]] * [[Love-9792|Margaret Gillies]] * [[McBride-7015|Mary Heenan]] * [[Nielsen-12899|Inger Jensen]] * [[Driussi-1|Erika Matheson]] * [[Mulligan-2141|Helen Miller]] * [[Anderson-78996|Ruth Shaw]] * [[Moore-84369|Shirley Small]] * [[Kerr-13516|Joan Wakelim]] * [[Toms-1667|Judy Whittle]] == Further Reading == * '''Donated Prize''' https://www.plowingmatch.org/images/2016/pdfs/IPM2016_Quilt_Winners.pdf * '''Mount Forest's Four Corners Quilters Guild celebrates 20 Years''' https://www.wellingtonadvertiser.com/mount-forest%C2%99s-four-corners-quilters-guild-celebrates-20-years/ ''Wellington Advertiser,'' Fergus, Ontario. (2018) * '''Show Time''' https://eservices.wellington.ca/museum.advertiser/Home/GetNewspaperPDF/?newspaperID=1921533f-551c-41ae-8a9a-edaae8a6a7e2#search=%22%22 Wellington Advertiser, 3 May 2018, Section B, page 21. * '''2018 Quilt Show''' https://eservices.wellington.ca/museum.advertiser/Home/GetNewspaperPDF/?newspaperID=05972b57-f852-449d-b74f-84ffb2673e2c#search=%22%22 Wellington Advertiser, 17 May 2018, page 4, "Quilt Show". * '''Star of Hope''' https://nhmrs.com/quilt/8058 2022 New Hamburg Mennonite Relief Sale

Four Drawers Under the Mantle

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When I visited my grandmother as a young child we often would spend the day looking through old post cards, Christmas cards and photos from one of the drawers above the bookcases and under the mantle. Most of the photos are on the profiles of her relatives, but here is an assortment of other memories found in these drawers.

Four Families in America

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== Four Families in America: Patch, Payne, Camp, McNabb == * by John Robert Camp and Emily Patch Camp * published 1979, revision 1981 * Source Example: ::: John Robert Camp and Emily Patch Camp. [[Space:Four Families in America|''Four Families in America: Patch, Payne, Camp, McNabb'']], Originally published 1979, revision 1981. * Inline Citation Example: ::: [[#FourFamilies|''Four Families'']], page 80 * [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Four Families in America|WikiTree Profiles that use this source]]

Fourie nee Rose-Havenga Family Mysteries

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Looking for information on the following Fourie de Villiers Rose Trollop

Fowble Family Research

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The goal of this project is to research the Fowble family, to discover when they came to the U.S. and whether the Ohio branch is the only one.... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Seeks-14|Donald Seeks]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Discover this "new" family and gain more information * Anna Elizabeth Fowble Seeks, great-great grandmother, b. 6 Feb. 1813 in Ohio, married William Seeks on 1853, d. 13 Feb, 1888, buried in Washington C.H.,Ohio *Child: William Jefferson Seeks. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=20755952 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fowers Tree - England through US

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Fowers Family Tree - US and England The goal of this project is to ... Document the migration of the Fowers Family from England and spread of descendants throughout the US.

FOWKE Surname Study

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FOWKE_Surname_Study.jpg
FOWKE Surname study - Worldwide This is a One Name Study to collect together in one place everything about one surname and the variants of that name. The hope is that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect. Please contact the project leader, add categories to your profiles, add your questions to the bulletin board, add details of your name research, etc. The Project Leader, Ray Fowke, a New Zealand resident, has been researching this surname for some 30 years and has a huge database of connected and unconnected families from around the globe, from modern times to pre-1700's.

Fowler Roots

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The goal of this project is to ... Connect Fowler relatives. Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, Thanks!

Fox Ancestry import

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Fox-11472|Michael Fox]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=18550726 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fox Documents

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Here lies the ancestral documents for the Fox family.

FOX family

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Fox Family relate to my adopted father Norman whose tree I manage. The Fox/Fuchs came originally from Poland late 1800's. Can use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16310343 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fox How

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Fox_How.jpg
Fox How house. Build in 1833 by Dr Thomas Arnold (1745-1842). http://armitt.com/armitt_website/the-arnolds-armitt-museum-and-library-cumbria/ http://www.geog.port.ac.uk/webmap/thelakes/html/lgaz/lk16746.htm

Fox Information

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Welcome! Here we will find general information on the Fox surname and it's related surnames.

Foxton Borough Chambers

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Liddell-621.jpg
The original Borough Chambers which also included a library and accommodation. It was on the same site as the present Chambers. It was bought from the Council by John Watson Liddell in 1898.

Foy Family

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Sledge-448|Catherine Sledge]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Find birth place and parents of Mathew Foy * Find death date of Jesse Foy * Find Eliza Foy in 1840 census Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=28225810 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Foyken Clan Ancestry Parade

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'''FOYKEN PEDIGREE''' (Speed Dial links) https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Teylingen-8 Gerard <1123-1164 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Teylingen-7 Hugo -1172 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Teylingen-5 Willem I https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Teylingen-6 Willem II ~1185-1244 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Van_Teylingen-39 Floris I Willemsz. ~1225-1283 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Van_Teylingen-38 Foeycken Florens ~1250 - <1306 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Foeytgensz-1 WF 1275 - <1343 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Willemsz-18 FW ~1325-<1394 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Foyetgensz-1 (B')Mees ~1375 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Meesz-1 Willem Meesz ~1410 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Willemsz-17 FW ~1440 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Foeijtensz-1 WF ~1465 Niel's Teylingen Reference Page https://wiki.nvdp.net/wiki/index.php?title=De_heren_van_Teijlingen Historiography_and_Fictional_Dutch_Genealogy https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Historiography_and_Fictional_Dutch_Genealogy Hans' Medieval Dutch Learning Page https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Nederland_Pre-1500 ______________________________________________________ '''EARLY FOYKENS''' Feukinus van Teylingen (v. 1282-87) *1250? Foycken Foykensz (v. 1325) *1285? Foykin Florensz (implied, 1362) *1315? Foyken Willemsz (v. >1348) *1325? Foeytgen Symonsz (v.1376-86) *1340? Foeykiin Dircsz (v. 1369) *1340? Foyken Boudijnsz (v. 1369-77) *1340? Foyken Foykensz (v. 1382-1411) *1350? ************** '''NOTE: THIS IS A DRAFT DOCUMENT ONLY''' '''WILLEM II VAN TEYLINGEN''' Adjust DOB to 1180 (about) Teylingen, Graafschap Holland, Heilige Roomse Rijk (Holy Roman Empire) (1101-1579) Enter Death at 4 March 1244 Teylingen, Graafschap Holland, Heilige Roomse Rijk (Holy Roman Empire) (1101-1579) [uncertain location, others suggest Slot Brederode] == WILLEM == test '''TEYLINGEN RESEARCH MAP''' https://wiki.nvdp.net/wiki/index.php?title=De_heren_van_Teijlingen '''CAUTION''' Various men were identified by the name Willem van Teylingen during Holland's medieval era. Appellations such as Willem I, II or III were not then in use, but have been assigned by modern historians to distinguish one from another. When reviewing the available contemporaneous records, it is not always possible to determine which of these men is referenced by any particular document. Most accounts draw heavily from a detailed review along with graphics for a Willem van Teylingen as published in the NL Leeuw in 1926 by Dr. Henri Obreen. This review pertains primarily to Willem II van Teylingen as he is now commonly referenced. His father is not identified by name, although footnote 14 alludes to another Willem van Teylingen appearing in an older record from 1174. The graphic also identifies a third Willem van Teylingen, who dies before 1284. There appear to be no historical records that explicitly and directly document the relationships between these men, whether as father and son or otherwise. No two of them are ever referenced in the same primary source document. In the graphic from this 1926 publication, the dates 1198 and 1244 appear beneath the name of Willem van Teylingen. The year 1198 is preceded by "verm.," indicating a first mention. In popular genealogy websites, the year 1198 is commonly presented as his year of birth. This is clearly mistaken. Moreover, it seems probable that the event recorded in 1198 involving ''Wilhelmus de Teillinga'' actually pertains to the older Willem van Teylingen who first appeared in 1174. The apparent confusion on this point also casts a cloud over other "facts" that are claimed for Willem II, both within this widely referenced document but especially elsewhere. Obreen did not attain a clear understanding of the identity of Willem II's father, and so likely conflated the two men when reviewing the records during the period when their lives may have overlapped. With respect to Willem II van Teylingen, the first ''confirmed'' record for him is from 1205, when a ''Wilhelmus de Teilinge'' is referenced as the brother of Dirk Drossaard "zijn broer Theodricus". So this cannot be Willem I. This document, presumably dating from his adult life, points to his having been born at least by 1185 if not earlier. (Are there any documents clearly establishing Dirk as the son of Willem I?) With respect to the overlap in their lives, authors most commonly contend (whether accurate or not) that his father Willem I died in 1215 and was buried in 1217. So there is a potentially extended period between 1198 and 1217 where some documents cannot be definitively assigned to the father versus the son without further investigation. However, the folks at Medlands have noted a document pertaining to his daughter Christina van Brederode dating from 1203 suggesting that he was deceased by this time. "The absence of Christina’s father in the body of the document indicates that he was deceased." https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/DUTCH%20NOBILITY.htm#_Toc62491880 If confirmed, all references to a Wilhelmus van Teylinghen being present at an event after this date would belong to Willem II. Ben de Keijzer appears to find this evidence credible. In "Van de Woerd -- Van Foreest," he makes reference to Machteld as the daughter "van Willem van Teylingen (1174, 1198-1203)," where the enclosed dates represent his view on confirmed mentions for Willem I. However, it may still be that in his mind, other records after 1203 simply remain ambiguous. '''BIOGRAPHY''' Willem II van Teylingen was likely born about 1180 in Sassenheim, to Willem I van Teylingen and possibly but not with any certainty, to Agniese Ottensdr. van Bentheim. Willem had at least two siblings, Dirk van Brederode (Dirk Drossaard) and Gerrit van Heemskerk. Some propose adding Arent, Machtelt, Hugo, and/or Simon. He is widely claimed to have married to Agnes Willemsdr. van Lijnden, the daughter of Willem van Lynden and Christina van Brederode, who was born about 1203 in Lienden. At least by 1217, if not by some earlier date, he becomes the Lord of Teylingen following the death of his father. In any event, Willem fathered (at least) three children including Dirk, Simon, and Florijs/Florens. It is commonly asserted that these children were born in the 1220's, but no records exist to confirm that. Still other children have also been proposed, including [[Teylingen-9 |Ada]] , Willem III, Hadewich, and Beatrice. There is some speculation that Willem was first married to a woman named Hadewych. Eg: https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/kwartierstaat-dekker/I535386.php (It would indeed be odd in this era for someone to first marry later in life, as with Agnes.) Still others point to several older sources associating Willem with Oda van Wassanaer. https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1220443 Willem is referenced as a knight in 1223. He was also recognized with the title of ''nobilis viri'' as of 1241. (''nobilis viri'' is latin honorific for noble man) He died in 1244. '''TEYLINGEN ORIGINS''' Teylingen is first mentioned in the 10th C. in registers of the St. Maartenskerk of Utrecht summarizing assets of the cathedral. A place named "Taglingi" was mentioned, situated near Lisse, Warmond, Oegstgeest and Poelgeest. 'Dit taglingi' would later be corrupted to Teylingen. It was not before 1143 that the name Teylingen reappears, this time by reference to ''Gerhardo de Teilinc'' (Gerard van Teylingen). https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1050109 https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Teylingen-8 Aad van der Geest, "Teylingen, van het begin tot aan de brand van 1676," De Aschpotter nr. 38, 2016 Aad van der Geest, "Willem van Teylingen x Agniese van Bentheim," De Aschpotter https://www.rijnlandgeschiedenis.nl/documenten/sassenheim-stichting-oud-sassenheim/willem-van-teylingen-x-agniese-van-bentheim.pdf Teylingen (and Brederode) were castles that flanked a narrow strip between the North sea and the Haarlemmermeer that protected the cities of Holland from invasion over land. Early in the 13th century, the original castle (Slot Teylingen) was built by Willem (II) van Teylingen as a water castle with a ring wall that was later expanded with a front section. Effective control over the castle reverted to the Counts of Holland after 1282 when there were no direct heirs to Teylingen line. But for a time into the 14th century, certain descendants continued to occupy the castle. The castle later served as a hunting lodge on a timber farm belonging to the counts of Holland and feudal lords were given an official title of woodcutter with management responsibilities. https://kasteelteylingen.nl/de-oudste-vermelding-van-teylingen/ https://www.visitduinenbollenstreek.nl/en/locations/3832884874/teylingen-castle http://home.kpn.nl/f.angevaare/teijlingen.html https://www.oocities.org/hotalingz/castle.html '''OFFSPRING''' Dirk Willemsz, Heer van Over-Sliedrecht‏‎, Ambachtsheer van Alblas, Baljuw van Holland, Heer Van Teijlingen, Waddinxveen en Polien. Married to Gheertrudis (van Heukelom ? deKeijzer doesn't endorse ). Six children, including Machteld (Margaretha) who marries Gerrit van der Wateringhe. Dies at Stavoren in 1282. Florijs/Florens Willemsz Patriarch of the Van Tol family, and presumed father of bastard child Foyken Florensz., who became the "First Foyken". ‎Simon/Symon III Willemsz van Teijlingen van Brederode. He and (unidentified) wife have four children, including Willem IV van Teylingen who was involved in the revolt and murder of Count Floris V in 1296. "Willem van Teylingens jongere zoon Simon was de vader van Willem van Teylingen (gestorven 1320), die aanwezig was bij de gevangenneming van graaf Floris V van Holland op 23 juni 1296. " (Wikipedia) Hadewich "Hazeke" Willemsdr. van Teijlingen. Married to Florens III van der Woert/Woerd. (not in Obreen and with limited support; deKeijzer has Floris II married to NN Willemsdr van Teylingen, daughter of Willem II and Oda. Oda van Wassenaar? See Hogenda: Ben de Keijzer "van der Woert - van Foreest.") Willem III van Teylingen. Mentioned in 1247 at No 437 https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1190194 Obreen appears to be uncertain, and essentially places Willem III as both (or either) the son of Willem II, and/or as his grandson and the son of Dirk. '''SOURCES''' Date of Birth/Baptism Occupations, Titles: knight, Lord of Teylingen and Noble Man Knight (militus) ''In huius rei memoriam et firmitatem presens scriptum sigilli mei appensione et testium qui'' ''interfuerunt subnotatione feci communiri. Signum Florentii comitis Hollandie,'' '''''Willelmi de Thelinghen, Philippi de Wassenere, Maurini de Monstre, militum''''', ''signum Florentii capellani, magistri HenricMe Stene, canonici Brugensis, et aliorum quamplurimum tarn clericorum quam laicorum. Actum Rinsborch, presente Emesza abbatissa et capitulo de Rinsborch, '' ''anno gratie MCCXXII P, mense iunio.'' Huygens Hollandse Oorkondes, No. 433 (June 1223) Lord of Teylingen (dominus) '''''dominus Willelmus de Teylinghe''''' James Fremerij, Oorkondeboek Holland en Zeeland, No. 344 (20 April 1233) https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1190194 '''''dominus Wilhelmus de Thelinga.''''' James Fremerij, Oorkondeboek Holland en Zeeland, No. 397 (17 Aug 1243) https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1190194 (CG does not include ''dominus'') Noble Man (nobilis viri) ''Testes affuerunt'' '''''nobiles viri Wilhelmus de Teilinge''''', ''Nycolaus Persin, Jacobus castellanus'', ''aliique quamplures''. Huygens Oorkondeboek Holland en Zeeland, No. 610; (1241/1240) Death: 4 Mar 1244 (see Obreen NL 1926, but original source is not specified therein.) Joannes Leydis, by Maathaeus, Analecta, 2e uitgave I, page 616 Theodericus Pauli, 16 century "Kroniek Schrijver" Bijdr. Vad. Gesch. 4e reeks VIII, page 379 Family Relationships: (brother of Dirk Drossaard) '''''Wilhelmus de Theilinghe en zijn broer Theodericus''''' Oorkondeboek No.202 (1205) https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1190184 Oorkondeboek No.277 (Oct 1222) https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1024954 https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1080278 https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1024074 Oorkondeboek No.325 (14 Jan 1230; 1231) https://www.collectiegroesbeek.nl/doc/1190191 '''''Wilhelmus de Theilinghe en zijn broer Theodericus dapifer;''''' Oorkondeboek No.305 (16 April 1227) Family Relationships: (other suggested family relationships; '''use for further investigation only''') https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-van-elderen-en-van-der-speld/I537800.php https://www.krommetje.nl/humo-gen/family/1/F10273?main_personI25899 (Hadewych (Hazeke), no others) https://www.geni.com/people/Willem-van-Teijlingen-heer-van-Teijlingen/6000000011766906889 (adds Ada and Floris) https://gw.geneanet.org/vanderhall?lang=en&iz=2597&m=N&v=van+teylingen&t=N (Robert van der Hall, adds Hadewich and Elizabeth) https://www.thepeerage.com/p7002.htm Willem II born 1195, .... only mentions Dirc. http://www.uwstamboomonline.nl/passie/sites/index.php?mid=245823&kid=2147&pagina=tekstpagina (Doesn't mention Dirc) This author supplies a useful catalog of relevant citations from the oorkonden and elsewhere: https://wiki.nvdp.net/wiki/index.php?title=De_heren_van_Teijlingen **************** '''FOYCKEN FOYKENSZ''' BIO Son of https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Van_Teylingen-38 (should be Teylingen) Brother of https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Foeytgensz-1 (should be Foykensz) '''CAUTION''' Foycken Foykensz was the name of three different men in this family. This profile pertains to the first known of the three, mentioned in 1325. A second man was the grandson of his half brother, who lived until 1412. And a third man carrying this name was a direct descendant of the man in this profile, mentioned only in 1424. '''BIOGRAPHY''' Foycken Foykensz was a son of Foycken Florensz (Feukinus) van Teylingen, likely born about 1275. The identity of his wife is not known, but with descendants named with variations on Boudewijn and Clara, Frans Angevaare suggests that she was related to Boudewijn van Noordwijk and his formidable sister Clara. Foycken and his wife are suspected to have had a large family, but no records tie any of their children expressly to their father. He took occupancy of Oud Teylingen about 1316 after the death of Symon Simonsz. van Teylingen. His only direct mention was in 1325, when his half brother Willem Foykensz transferred property to him. Boudijn Foykensz was the man who succeeded him in the possession of Oud Teylingen via (House of Wateringhe) Leen 51. Nevertheless, Angevaare places Boudijn as the son of Feukinus, and not his son Foycken. This profile takes a different view, and regards Boudijn as the likely son of Foycken, and so the grandson of Feukinus. Angevaare has postulated that Foycken had daughters Katrijn and Claer, who were both mentioned with the Foyken patronym that have no other suspected origins. It also seems possible if not probable that he had sons named Dirc and Jacob. '''ver MACHTELD''' Based on documents pertaining to Boudijn Foeytgensz, Angevaare postulates that Boudijn's mother was known as ''ver'' Machteld. (See 'Foyken cum socijs' at section IIg on pp 6-7). To be clear, in this profile we have ''ver'' Machteld as married to Foycken Foykensz, and not to Feukinus. (See the profile for Boudijn Foykensz for further discussion on this point.) Several generations earlier, a Boudewijn van Noordwijk was married to Aleid van Holland, with two children including an Agnese van de Boechorst about whom little is known. Did she have a daughter named Machteld? https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Van_der_Boechorst-1 '''MENTIONS''' Based on surviving records, Foyken Foykensz was mentioned only once in 1325, in connection with land transferred to him by his brother Willem Foykensz. ''1325'' ''WARMOND'' 51. De woning, die vroeger van Oude Symon van Teylingen was, strekkende van de Leede, tot de weg, groot 5 morgen, gelegen tussen de woning van Willem Foeykensz. en de hofstad van Jan Foreest. 1-2-1325 '''Foycken Foeyckensz.''', neef van de leenheer Jan van der Wateringe. ..-.-1...: Boudijn Foeytgensz. ..-.-1...: Foeitgen Boudynsz. ..-.-1...: Boudijn Foeytgensz., vermeld op 21-4-1429 (6525, f, 390 en 398v). C. Hoek, REPERTORIUM OP DE LENEN VAN DE HOFSTAD VAN DER WATERINGE, 1299-1770 (OV 1966, 1988). per Angevaare, "This is the Oud Teylingen castle in Warmond." referring to the property and Leen 51. (Foycken's relationship to Jan van der Wateringe is not expressly specified. But this annotation likely refers to Jan II, as his father Jan I was deceased before 1325. Jan I's father Gerard was married to Margriet van Teylingen, the daughter of Dirk Willemsz van Teylingen. Dirk, in turn, was the son of Willem II van Teylingen (dec. 1244).. Dirk's brother was Florens (Floris) van Teylingen, the probable father of Feukinus Florensz. van Teylingen, and grandfather of the Foycken profiled here. '''PROPERTY HOLDINGS''' Idem, fol. 390: dat Foycken Foyckenz, mijn neve hout van mij die woninge, die Oude Symons van Teylingen was, opgaende (opgaande?) van de Leede ende hout vijfmergen, luttel min of meer, in den ambacht van Warmende ende leget tussen Willem Foeykenz. woninge ende Jans hofstede van Foreest. Zie ook fol. 395. Zij voerden het wapen van Teylingen met een forse breukstreep: A.R.A. 's-Gravenhage, Archief abdij Rijnsburg inv. no. 806. reg. no. 347 en Gemeente-archief Leiden, Archieven van de kloosters inv. 622, reg. no. 43. 87 Zie hiervóór, noot 25. 88 Deze kerk wordt het eerst genoemd in 1276: Translation (italics in original) Ditto, fol. 390: that my cousin Foycken Foyckenz holds on my behalf the former home of Symon van Teylingen, stretching from the Leede (river) with more or less five morgen ("half acres") of woodlands, in the town of Warmond situated between the home of Willem Foeykensz. and the homestead of Jan van Foreest. See also fol. 395. They carried the coat of arms of Teylingen augmented by a hefty crossbar: A.R.A. The Hague, Archive Rijnsburg Abbey Inv. no. 806. Reg. no. 347 and Municipal Archives Leiden, archives of the monasteries inv. 622, Reg. no. 43. 87 See here, note 25. 88 This church is first mentioned in 1276: H. A. van Foreest "Het Huis van Foreest de Koudekerk aan de Rijn" (June 1979) at p159, fn 86 Comment/Question: "Foycken Foyckenz, mijn neve" --- who is the author here? Jan de Foreest? not clear from text connected to fn 86 (Note: Willem Foeykensz was the presumed brother (or half brother) of Foycken Foyckenz. See Angevaare (2022) "Foyken cum socijs".) '''OUD TEYLINGEN''' Warmelda's Mathieu Fannee provides this account, Terwijl de jonge Dirk opgroeide aan het hof van ridder Jan van Polanen, werd het kasteel toevertrouwd aan een bloedverwant: Foyken Foykensz., de kleinzoon van de broer van ‘Oude Simon’. Foyken en de zijnen zouden het kasteel een belangrijk deel van de 14de eeuw in bezit blijven houden. fn31 While young Dirk grew up at the court of knight Jan van Polanen, the castle was entrusted to a blood relative: Foyken Foykensz., the grandson of the brother of "Oude Simon". Foyken and his successors would continue to hold the castle for an important part of the 14th century fn31 De stamvader van de Foykens, Floris van Teylingen, was een (bastaard) broer van Oude Simon van Teylingen (zie Fannee, tlant te Waremunde - 2015, p. 236). M. Fannee, "Kasteel Oud Teylingen of Lockhorst, Oude raadsels en nieuwe inzichten - deel 1" De Hekkensluiter, 2020 (Note: "jonge Dirk" presumably refers to Dirk Symonsz. van Teylingen) In het midden van de 13e eeuw streefde de familie Van Teylingen naar machtsuitbreiding richting Warmond. Hiertoe bouwden ze twee kastelen: Dirks Steenhuis en het (toen nog naamloze) kasteel Oud Teylingen. De oudst bekende bewoner was Simon van Teylingen. Hij overleed rond 1280 en werd opgevolgd door een van zijn zonen. Rond 1316 zou kleinzoon Dirk het kasteel erven, maar hij was nog minderjarig. Hierdoor kwam het kasteel terecht bij '''Foyken Foykensz,''' een kleinzoon van Simons broer Dirk. (PvL corr: niet Dirk maar Floris) https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oud_Teylingen In the mid -13th century, the Van Teylingen family sought to expand their power towards Warmond. To do this, they built two castles: Dirk’s Steenhuis and the (then still nameless) Oud Teylingen Castle. The oldest known resident (of which?) was Simon van Teylingen. He died around 1280 and was succeeded by one of his sons. Around 1316, grandson Dirk would inherit the castle, but he was still a minor. So the castle fell into the hands of Foyken Foykensz, a grandson of Simon's brother Dirk. (PvL correction: not Dirk but Floris) In 1291 wordt diens zoon op zijn beurt vermeld in bezit van het kasteel. fn 30 30. Kruisheer, dr. J.G. (1986-2005). Oorkondenboek van Holland en Zeeland tot 1299. Van Gorcum, Assen/Maastricht, deel IV, p. 966 e.v. [nr. 2555]. Hierin wordt het kasteel slechts “ene woninghe” genoemd, met belendingen, maar zonder eigen naam. Maar heel snel diende zich de eerste wisseling van bewoners al aan. De zoons van Oude Simon waren omstreeks 1316 overleden, en de enige opvolger – kleinzoon Dirk van Teylingen – was toen minderjarig en daarom niet in staat om als kasteelheer op te volgen. Terwijl de jonge Dirk opgroeide aan het hof van ridder Jan van Polanen, werd het kasteel toevertrouwd aan een bloedverwant: '''Foyken Foykensz., de kleinzoon van de broer van ‘Oude Simon’ ''' fn 31 31. '''De stamvader van de Foykens, Floris van Teylingen, was een (bastaard) broer van Oude Simon van Teylingen''' (zie Fannee, tlant te Waremunde, p. 236). Foyken en de zijnen zouden het kasteel een belangrijk deel van de 14de eeuw in bezit blijven houden. M. Fannee, Kasteel Oud Teylingen of Lockhorst, Oude raadsels en nieuwe inzichten - deel 1 (2020) '''RESEARCH NOTES''' Men vindt in bewaard gebleven belendingen, vooral te Warmond en daaromtrent, waar Teylingen twee huizen bezat, de naam van Foreest bij herhaling genoemd, soms samen met die van aanzienlijke bastaarden, in het Teylingen-nest verwekt - onder wie Foycken en Foeyckenzoon, als voornaam en patronymicum - ten bewijzehoezeer de Teylingens zich met hun familie vereenzelvigden. Want behalve dat de Foreesten ook in de streek der nieuwe ontginningen door deze verwanten werdenomringd, hebben zij in het bottinggebied, langs de oevers van de Rijn, daarvan sporen achtergelaten This is found in preserved land records, especially in Warmond where Teylingen had two houses, referenced repeatedly by the name of Foreest, sometimes in connection with that of considerable bastards, conceived out of the Teylingen-nest - including Foycken and Foeyckenzoon, as first names and patronyms - demonstrating how their families identified with the Teylingens. Because apart from the fact that these relatives were also surrounded in the region of the new reclamations, they left tracks in the botting area (???), along the banks of the Rhine (translation demands further refinement) H. A. van Foreest "Het Huis van Foreest de Koudekerk aan de Rijn" (June 1979) at p157-8 '''SOURCES''' Date of Birth/Baptism Marriage: Profession: Death: Family: (extended) Frans Angevaare, Foyken cum socijs (2022) https://www.angevaare.eu/pdf/Foykens%20cs.pdf Family: (a probable line of paternal descent based on records tracing the possession of the Old Teylingen castle) 51. De woning, die vroeger van Oude Symon van Teylingen was, strekkende van de Leede, tot de weg, groot 5 morgen, gelegen tussen de woning van Willem Foeykensz. en de hofstad van Jan Foreest. 1-2-1325 '''Foycken Foeyckensz.''', neef van de leenheer Jan van der Wateringe. ..-.-1...: Boudijn Foeytgensz. ..-.-1...: Foeitgen Boudynsz. ..-.-1...: Boudijn Foeytgensz., vermeld op 21-4-1429 (6525, f, 390 en 398v). C. Hoek, REPERTORIUM OP DE LENEN VAN DE HOFSTAD VAN DER WATERINGE, 1299-1770 (OV 1966, 1988). Angevaare has noted in private correspondence that this land was ultimately transferred to Baertraet (a daughter of Foyken Foykensz.) in 1429 even though Boudijn F. had a son. And asks why? He believes based on this history, that these Leen records cannot confidently be used to infer lineage.

Fradd Research

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'''William Fradd''' * born c1778 in Cornwall. 1851 census St Andrew Plymouth, living with daughter Elizabeth and son-in-law Richard Ford, 73y, widower, shoemaker, born Cornwall. * Father of [[Fradd-113|George Fradd]], William born c1811 Devonport, Elizabeth bc 1819 Cornwall. * Possible son of Richard and Ann, baptised St Kew 14 Jun 1781. * 1841 Census - Wm Froud, 60y, shoe m., Cambridge St, St Andrew Plymouth - also Philippa 60y, Honor 25y, Eliza 20y. None born in Devon. * No marriage Cornwall OPC Fr%d, no marriage FMP Cornwall or Devon, The Genealogist Cornwall/Devon * Devon Burials (FindMyPast, https://www.findmypast.com/ : accessed 6 July 2021) burial record (image) for Fradd, William (Burial Date: 12 June 1853, Age: 76, Residence: 29 Cambridge Street Plymouth, Home Parish: St Andrew, Burial Place: Plymouth, Ford Park Cemetery, Memorial Reference: Section D, No.13, Row 1, Devon, Denomination: Non-Denominational) Archive: Plymouth & West Devon Record Office, Archive Reference: 2595/24, URL: https://www.findmypast.com/transcript?id=GBPRS/FHS/DEV-BUR9/0024884. '''Philippa Frood/Froud nee? * b c 1778 not in Devon * England & Wales General Register Office, GRO Online Index - Death (https://www.gro.gov.uk/gro/content : accessed 6 July 2021) database entry for Frood, Philippa (Age: 67) GRO Reference: 1845 Q1 in Plymouth, Volume 09, Page 271. '''Elizabeth Fradd''' * born c 1819 Bodmin, Cornwall to William, shoemaker and Philippa. * married Richard Ford, a white smith. Q1 1844 Plymouth * 1841 census Eliza Froud Cambridge Street, Plymouth St Andrew. * 1851 census St Andrew Plymouth * 1861 22 Tavistock Road, Charles, Plymouth, Devon * 1871 Almond Place, Charles, Plymouth, Devon * 1881 19 Gibbons Street, Plymouth Charles, Devon * 1891 Cobourg Street, Plymouth, Devon * Possible death Q3 1895 Plymouth (more likely), Q1 1901 Plympton St Mary

Fran and Dever Langholf

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== Pictures of Fran and Dever Langholf ==

Fran Maynard To-Do List

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Getting started on my adopted profiles and unsourced profiles. Getting thins on my pages straightened out. Surname Nolting , Franklin County, Missouri. Surname, Maynard, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana Surname Summers, Tennessee. Surname McDonald, Tennessee. Surname Gerbig, Tennessee, Germany. Surname Ensley, Tennessee. Surnames Bauche, Toelke, Missouri Surname Winter, Franklin, Missouri.

France

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Young-32730|Angelique Larue-Hill]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=22343071 send me a private message]. Thanks!

France/Switzerland Roots

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Hoover-3865|Christie Hoover]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=18911160 send me a private message]. Thanks!

France Basic Vocabulary

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[[Project:France|France Project]] | [[Space:France Orphaned Profiles Team|France Orphaned Profiles Team]] | Basic Vocabulary == Basic Genealogical French Vocabulary == Here is the basic vocabulary you will find in French primary sources. If you find words you don't understand in the documents you are working on, please contact us! This list is meant to be expanded. === General === {| border="1" class="sortable" !French!!English |- |né||born |- |baptisé||baptised/christened |- |décédé||deceased |- |mort||dead |- |enterré||buried |- |marié||married |- |épousé||married |- |fiançailles||engagement |- |mariage||wedding |- |muni des sacrements de l'église||received sacraments before dying (ie, did not die suddenly) |- |inhumé||buried |- |cimetière||cemetery |- |église||church |- |aujourd'hui || today |- |hier||yesterday |- |la veille||yesterday |- |avant-hier||the day before yesterday / two days ago |- |deux jours auparavant||two days before |- |ce jour||(on) this day |- |témoin||witness |- |demeurant||living |- |domicile||home |- |avec||with |- |} === Family relationships === {| border="1" class="sortable" !French!!English |- |fils||son |- |fille||daughter |- |père||father |- |mère||mother |- |parrain||godfather |- |marraine||godmother |- |oncle||uncle |- |tante||aunt |- |époux||husband or spouse |- |épouse||wife |- |femme||woman or wife |- |mari||husband |- |grand-père||grandfather |- |grand-mère||grandmother |- |aïeul||grandfather |- |aïeule||grandmother |- |cousin, cousine||cousin |- |frère||brother |- |sœur||sister |- |beau-frère||brother-in-law |- |belle-sœur||sister-in-law |- |frère germain||full (germane) brother |- |(frère) utérin||maternal (brother) |- |cousin germain||first cousin |- |cousin issu de germain||second cousin |- |neveu||nephew |- |nièce||niece |- |} === Calendar === {| border="1" class="sortable" !French!!English |- |jour||day |- |mois||month |- |semaine||week |- |an||year |- |année||year |- |lundi||Monday |- |mardi||Tuesday |- |mercredi||Wesnesday |- |jeudi||Thursday |- |vendredi||Friday |- |samedi||Saturday |- |dimanche||Sunday |- | |- |janvier||January |- |février||February |- |mars||March |- |avril ||April |- |mai||May |- |juin||June |- |juillet||July |- |août||August |- |septembre||September |- |octobre||October |- |novembre||November |- |décembre||December |- |} === Numbers === {| border="1" class="sortable" !French!!English |- |un||one |- |deux||two |- |trois||3 |- |quatre||4 |- |cinq||6 |- |six||7 |- |sept||8 |- |huit||9 |- |neuf||10 |- |dix||11 |- |onze||12 |- |douze||13 |- |treize||14 |- |quatorze||15 |- |quinze||16 |- |seize||17 |- |dix-sept||18 |- |dix-huit||19 |- |dix-neuf||20 |- |vingt||21 |- |vingt-et-un||22 |- |vingt-deux||23 |- |trente||30 |- |quarante||40 |- |cinquante||50 |- |soixante||60 |- |soixante-dix||70 |- |septante||70 |- |quatre-vingt||80 |- |octante||80 |- |quatre-vingt-dix||90 |- |nonante||90 |- |cent||100 |- |cent un||101 |- |cent dix||110 |- |deux cent||200 |- |mille||1000 |- |mil ||1000 |- |mil sept cent quatre vingt treize||1793 |- |soixante-et-onze||71 |- |soixante-douze||72 |- |soixante-treize||73 |- |quatre-vingt-onze||91 |- |quatre-vingt-douze||92 |- |premier||first |- |deuxième||second |- |troisième||third |- |quatrième||fourth |- |} === Administration === {| border="1" class="sortable" !French!!English |- |département||department |- |arrondissement||an administrative entity under the department. Between 2 and 4 per department. Rarely used for research. |- |canton||an administrative entity between department and commune. Boundaries have changed frequently. Only useful for marriages in the Revolutionary period. |- |commune||a locality with a town hall, an elected mayor, and keeping its own civil registration books. |- |registre||register |- |maire||mayor |} === Occupations === For occupations and professions, see [[Space:Lexique_professions_français-anglais|the French-English professions lexicon]]. If you would like more words added to this basic vocabulary, please contact [[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]]. [[Project:France|France Project]] > [[Space:France Orphaned Profiles Team|France Orphaned Profiles Team]] > Basic Vocabulary

France Categories

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regions_of_France

France Five Star List

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''' Welcome to the France 5 Star list Team''' This is part of the [[Space:France Profile Improvement Team|Profile Improvement Team]] of the [[Project:France|France Project]]. * '''Goal:''' To update high access profiles * '''Who should Join:''' Anyone who is interested in making our '''most viewed Profiles''' the best that they can be * '''How to join:''' Send your request to [[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]] * If there is a 5 star French related Profile not on the list that you would like to work on, contact [[Lavoie-802|Greg]] or [[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]] and they will add it to the list below. == What to do == === Sourcing === * Check that facts are sourced. Try to find sources for ones that aren't * If there aren't dates/locations, see if you can find them and add with sources. If you can't find them, or do not find sources to support them, it would be helpful to add notes about where you searched so that others don't have to repeat your efforts. === Merge === * Check if there are any duplicate family members and propose merges when necessary. === Biography === * If there is a biography, make sure it is an originally written narrative, '''excluding any copyright or licensing violations''' (for example, not something that was copied and pasted from Wikipedia; see [[Help:Copying Text|Copying Text]]) * Rearrange the Biography section into a logical order, remove any [[Help:GEDCOM-Created_Biographies|GEDCOM junk]] and clean up after any merges. See [[Help:Biographies]] * Make sure the profile meets our [[Help:Profile Aesthetics|Profile Aesthetics recommendations]] (see also [[Help:HTML and Inline CSS|HTML and Inline CSS]]). *If there's not a biography, try to lay out a basic narrative and/or timeline of the persons life. Getting the key facts in order will help later. === Family Connections === * Check that family connections (especially parents) are correct and supported by [[Space:France_Project_Reliable_Sources|reliable sources]]. '''This is particularly important for ancestors of emigrants'''. If you find a connection that seems doubtful, start a {{G2G}} thread about it, or contact [[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]]. === Other === * See if you can add '''copyright free''' photographs, pictures, maps or other visual items. * Add categories, project templates, stickers and/or succession boxes if appropriate. * When every thing is done and it is a '''quality''' profile, add '''Completed''' in the notes section or send [[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]] a note. == Post 1700 Profiles == {| border="2" class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="9" |- ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''ID-name ''' ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''Rating''' ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''Who's working it ''' ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''Notes ''' |- |[[Monet-2|Claude Monet]]||1475|||Done||EXAMPLE PROFILE |- |[[Braille-1|Louis Braille]]||426||||Needs biography |- |[[Chanel-1|Coco Chanel]]||273||[[H-949|Kyla]] ||Needs biography |- |[[Hugo-215|Victor Hugo]]||135|| || |- |[[Calment-1|Jeanne Calment]]||134|| || |- |[[Colette-7|Colette]] || 115 || || |- |[[Guillotin-1|Joseph Guillotin]]||105|| || |- |[[Breton-170|Jules Breton]]|| || || (Painter) |- |[[Rodin-1|Auguste Rodin]]|| ||[[Lavoie-802|Greg]] || |- |[[Seurat-1|Georges Seurat]] || || || |- |[[Pasteur-13|Louis Pasteur]] || || || |- |[[Toulouse-Lautrec-7|Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec]] || || || |- |[[Curie-28|Pierre Curie]]|| || || |- |[[Manet-1|Édouard Manet]]|| || || |- |[[Grosholtz-1|Madame Tussaud]]|| || || |- |[[Baron-1|Monique Baron]]|| || ||Mother of Louis Braille |- |[[Daguerre-3|Louis Daguerre]]|| || || |} == Pre-1700 Profiles == {| border="2" class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="9" |- ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''ID-name ''' ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''Rating''' ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|'''Who's working it ''' ! align="left" style="background:#4682B4;"|''' Notes ''' |- |[[Laumet-1|Antoine de La Mothe Cadillac]]||204||Done||EXAMPLE PROFILE |- |[[Trahan-100|Nicolas Trahan]]||451||Done||EXAMPLE PROFILE for immigrant ancestor with little info |- |[[Du_Bois-2336|Chrétien du Bois]]||463|| || |- |[[Hébert-1556|Nicolas Hébert]]||417|| || |- |[[Guyon-139|Jean Guyon des Granches]]||341||[[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]] || In progress |- |[[De Bourbon Comtee-1|Gaspard Bourbon Comtee]]||320|| || Did not exist |- |[[De Joyeuse-7|Louise de Joyeuse]]||244|| || |- |[[Boucher-69|Jacques Boucher]]||235||[[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]] || Cleaned up, needs children detached |- |[[Gasnier-33|Louis Gasnier]]||228|| || |- |[[Tremblay-782|Gervais du Tremblay]]||215|| ||Pre-1500 |- |[[du Bois-203|Antoine du Bois]]||208|| || |- |[[De la Rieux-5|Henry de la Rieux]]||200|| ||Did not exist |- |[[Robin-5|Eustache Robin]]||181|| || |- |[[Tremblay-783|Jacques Tremblay]]||175|| ||Pre-1500 |- |[[Ouellet-21|François Ouellet]]||169|| || |- |[[Aymard-9|Madeleine Aymard]]||166|| || Most likely spurious |- |[[Paigné-17|Françoise Paigné]]||156||[[Rassinot-1|Isabelle]] || Done, children still need sorting out |- |[[Eyquem de Montaigne-1|Michel de Montaigne]] || || || |- |[[Talon-11|Jean Talon]]|| || || |}

France Gedcom List

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== Cleaning up GedCom junk from French profiles == Removing GedCom junk from profiles in the scope of the France project is a great way to help the project: it will result in cleaner-looking, more attractive French profiles. Cleaning up Gedcom requires a bit of patience and care, but it is not a difficult task and can be done even if you are not familiar with French sources. To learn about Gedcom junk and how to remove it, read the help page on '''[[Help:GEDCOM-Created_Biographies|GEDCOM-Created Biographies]]'''. Below are lists of orphaned profiles containing junk. All the profiles have a connection to France, however, some will not represent French profiles. * To display a list, click on the link and, when on the WikiTree+ page, '''click the ''Get Profiles'' button to see the list.''' * Check that the profile has not been adopted recently before editing. ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+orphan+19cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 19th century, GedCom Junk] ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+orphan+18cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 18 th century, GedCom Junk] ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+orphan+17cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 17th century, GedCom Junk] ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+orphan+16cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 16th century, GedCom Junk] Below is a second set of list containing profiles needing cleanup. Most of the profiles have profile managers. Before making any changes to a profile, please check that the profile has not been edited by the current Profile Manager in the last six months and that it has not been adopted recently. ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+19cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 19th century, GedCom Junk] ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+18cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 18th century, GedCom Junk] ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+17cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 17th century, GedCom Junk] ::[https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GEDCOMJunk+france+16cen&MaxProfiles=4000&SortOrder=BiDa&PageSize=50 16th century, GedCom Junk] [https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm?report=srch1&Query=GALLETDESBETESBAYEUL_05_01_2012_ged&MaxProfiles=10000&SortOrder=Default&PageSize=200 GALLETDESBETESBAYEUL_05-01-12.ged]

France Images

PageID: 19217370
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Created: 6 Nov 2017
Saved: 6 Nov 2017
Touched: 30 May 2018
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 7
France_Images.jpg
France_Images.png
France_Images-1.png
France_Images-3.png
France_Images-5.png
France_Images-6.png
France_Images-2.png
This page is for storing images.

France Orphan Trail Profiles Level 1

PageID: 29536120
Inbound links: 3
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Created: 18 Jun 2020
Saved: 4 Jul 2023
Touched: 4 Jul 2023
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 0
[[:Project:France|France Project]] > [[Space:France_Orphaned_Profiles_Team|Orphaned Profiles Team page]] > [[Space:France_Orphan_Trail_1793-Present|France Orphan Trail 1793-Present]] > France Orphan Trail Profiles 1793-1900 == Stage 1: 1806-1900 == Please select a profile from List 1 below and email the ID to your guide. Once your guide has adopted the profile on your behalf and emailed you a confirmation, start working on the profile. === Orphaned Profiles List 1=== :[[Vandewalle-65|Thérèse Vandewalle (1807-1869]] (Nord) :[[Danville-4|Henriette Danville (1808-1873)]] (Yvelines) :[[Barthelemy-30|Clément Didier Barthelemy (1810-1882)]] (Meurthe-et-Moselle - Lorraine) :[[Tarnus-3|Nicolas Tarnus (1814-1895)]] (Meurthe-et-Moselle - Lorraine) :[[Weinland-28|Jules Albert Weinland (1887-1957)]] (Meurthe-et-Moselle) :[[Dumez-5|Charles Louis Dumez (1869-1919)]] (Paris) :[[Blancheton-8|Joseph Blancheton (1871-1915)]] (Loire, Puy-de-Dôme) :[[Parayre-1|Amélie Parayre (1872-1958)]] (Haute-Garonne) :[[Bayeul-2|Charles Bayeul (1872-1928)]] (Pas-de-Calais) :[[Hardon-13|Alphonsine Hardon (1877-1962)]] (Seine-et-Marne) == Stage 2: 1793-1805 == Please select a profile from List 2 below. === Orphaned Profiles List 2 === :[[Galien-19|Jean Galien (1800-unknown)]] :[[Breul-3|Jean Pierre Breuil (1800-1860)]] :[[Le_Bacquer-1|Marie Anne Le Bacquer (1801-1868)]] :[[Julien-384|Jean François Julien (1795-1881)]] == Adopted on behalf of Trailer == :[[Thévenot-54|Claudine Thévenot (1807-1882)]] (Côte-d'Or - Bourgogne) == Completed Profiles == :[[Leray-10|Jeanne Louise Leray (1818-1850)]] (Loire-Atlantique) :[[Desmons-4|Adeline Desmons (1814-1898)]] (Pas-de-Calais) :[[Morin-1833|Marie Françoise Morin (1805-1885)]]

France Reources Comté de Tende

PageID: 36581567
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Reources Comté de Tende

France Reources Principauté de Montbéliard

PageID: 36581540
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Reources Principauté de Montbéliard

France Reources Principauté de Salm-Salm

PageID: 36581586
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Reources Principauté de Salm-Salm

France Reources Sarrewerden

PageID: 36581574
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Reources Sarrewerden

France Reources Ville libre de Mulhouse

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Reources Ville libre de Mulhouse

France Reources Villes libres de Menton et Roquebrune

PageID: 36581551
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Reources Villes libres de Menton et Roquebrune

France Resources

PageID: 36609782
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Created: 24 Jan 2022
Saved: 24 Jan 2022
Touched: 24 Jan 2022
Managers: 1
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Images: 1
French_Flags-26.png
France Resources

France Resources Acadie Nouvelle-France

PageID: 36581746
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Resources Acadie Nouvelle-France

France Resources Alsace

PageID: 36581453
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France_Resources_Alsace.jpg
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Angoumois

PageID: 36581197
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 29 Jan 2022
Touched: 29 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-17.png
French_Flags-74.png
France_Resources_Angoumois.jpg
France_Resources_Angoumois-1.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital
and Origins'''''
|
'''''Years as French Province'''''
|
'''''Map with Adjacent Provinces
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 90px |France - Royal Banner]]
Kingdom of France (as of 1789)'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Succeeding départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
'''COMTÉ d'ANGOUMOIS'''

[[Image:French_Flags-74.png | 160px |Angoumois]]
||''
Angoulême
- Duchy of Aquitaine
''||''
1514 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Angoumois.jpg|400px|Angoumois]]
'''''Angoumois'''''
||
[[Image:Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-17.png | 180px |Angoumois]]
''Angoumois
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Angoumois-1.jpg|160px|Angoulême]]
''Angoulême''
''ANGOUMOIS ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angoumois Angoumois] ||''Charente, small parts of Haute-Vienne, Deux-Sèvres, Dordogne'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Anjou

PageID: 36581206
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 37 views
Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 29 Jan 2022
Touched: 29 Jan 2022
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 5
French_Flags-75.png
France_Resources_Anjou-1.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-15.png
France_Resources_Anjou.jpg
France_Resources_Anjou-2.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital
and Origins '''''
|
'''''Years as French Province'''''
|
'''''Map with Adjacent Provinces
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 90px |France - Royal Banner]]
Kingdom of France
(as of 1789)'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Succeeding départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' DUCHÉ d'ANJOU '''

[[Image:French_Flags-75.png | 200px | Anjou ]]
||''
Angers
- Duché d'Anjou
''||''
1482 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Anjou.jpg|400px|Anjou]]
''''' Anjou '''''
||
[[Image:Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-15.png | 130px |Anjou]]
'' Anjou
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Anjou-2.jpg|340px|Angers]]
'' Angers ''
'' ANJOU ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anjou Anjou] ||''Maine-et-Loire, parts of Mayenne, Sarthe, Indre-et-Loire, Vienne, two communes in Deux-Sèvres and one in Loire-Atlantique'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Artois

PageID: 36581459
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 15 views
Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
Touched: 28 Jan 2022
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 1
France_Resources_Artois.jpg
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Aunis

PageID: 36581210
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 37 views
Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 13 Jul 2023
Touched: 13 Jul 2023
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 4
France_Resources_Aunis-1.jpg
French_Flags-77.png
France_Resources_Aunis.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-9.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital
and Origins '''''
|
'''''Years as French Province'''''
|
'''''Map with Adjacent Provinces
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 90px |France - Royal Banner]]
Kingdom of France
(as of 1789)'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Succeeding départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' AUNIS '''

[[Image:French_Flags-77.png | 180px | Aunis ]]
||''
La Rochelle
- Duchy of Aquitaine
''||''
1371 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Aunis.jpg|300px|Aunis ]]
''''' Aunis '''''
||
[[Image:Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-9.png | 140px |Aunis ]]
'' Aunis
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Aunis-1.jpg|340px|La Rochelle]]
'' La Rochelle ''
'' AUNIS ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aunis Aunis ] ||''part of Charente-Maritime (Charente-Inférieure), three communes in Deux-Sèvres, one in Vendée'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Auvergne

PageID: 36581217
Inbound links: 0
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 48 views
Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 29 Jan 2022
Touched: 29 Jan 2022
Managers: 1
Watch List: 1
Project:
Images: 3
France_Resources_Auvergne-1.jpg
France_Resources_Auvergne.jpg
French_Flags-78.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital
and Origins '''''
|
'''''Years as French Province'''''
|
'''''Map with Adjacent Provinces
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 90px |France - Royal Banner]]
Kingdom of France
(as of 1789)'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Succeeding départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' COMTÉ d'AUVERGNE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-78.png | 160px | Auvergne ]]
||''
Vic-le-Comte and Clermont-Ferrand
- County and Duchy of Auvergne
- Dauphiné of Auvergne
- Clermont
''||''
(Various acquisitions to 1457) - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Auvergne.jpg|380px|Auvergne ]]
''''' Auvergne '''''
||
[[Image:Auvergne-1.png | 100px |Auvergne ]]
'' Auvergne
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Auvergne-1.jpg|340px|Château de Val]]
'' Château de Val ''
'' AUVERGNE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auvergne Auvergne ] ||''Cantal, Puy-de-Dôme, parts of Haute-Loire and Allier'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Barrois

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Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-27.png
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Basse-Navarre

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France Resources Basse-Navarre

France Resources Béarn

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 3
France_Resources_Bearn-1.jpg
French_Flags-79.png
France_Resources_Bearn.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital
and Origins '''''
|
'''''Years as French Province'''''
|
'''''Map with Adjacent Provinces
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 90px |France - Royal Banner]]
Kingdom of France
(as of 1789)'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Succeeding départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' BÉARN '''

[[Image:French_Flags-79.png | 200px | Béarn ]]
||''
Pau
- Principauté de Béarn, Royaume de Navarre
''||''
1620 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Bearn.jpg|340px|Béarn ]]
''''' Béarn '''''
||
''(Name changed to
Basses-Pyrénées)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Bearn-1.jpg|320px|Pau]]
'' Pau ''
'' BÉARN ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Béarn Béarn ] ||''Pyrénées-Atlantiques
(formerly Basses-Pyrénées)'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Berry

PageID: 36581222
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-3.png
France_Resources_Berry.jpg
France_Resources_Berry-1.jpg
French_Flags-80.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' BERRY '''

[[Image:French_Flags-80.png | 160px | Berry ]]
||''
Bourges
''||''
1101 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Berry.jpg|360px|Berry ]]
''''' Berry '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-3.png | 180px |Berry ]]
'' Berry
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Berry-1.jpg|300px|Bourges]]
'' Bourges ''
'' BERRY ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berry Berry ] ||''Cher, Indre, small parts of Creuse, Loiret and Loir-et-Cher, one commune in Allier'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Bourbonnais

PageID: 36581419
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Images: 2
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-18.png
France_Resources_Bourbonnais.jpg
=== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' === [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Bourgogne

PageID: 36581228
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
France_Resources_Bourgogne-1.jpg
French_Flags-82.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-14.png
France_Resources_Bourgogne.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' BOURGOGNE (Duché)'''
''(Burgundy)''

[[Image:French_Flags-82.png | 160px | Bourgogne ]]
||''
Dijon
''||''
1477 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Bourgogne.jpg|300px|Bourgogne]]
''''' Bourgogne'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-14.png | 180px |Bourgogne]]
'' Bourgogne
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Bourgogne-1.jpg|360px|Dijon]]
'' Dijon ''
'' BOURGOGNE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bourgogne Bourgogne ] ||'' Côte-d'Or, Saône-et-Loire, Ain, part of Yonne, small parts of Haute-Marne, Nièvre, Allier, Haute-Loire, Rhône, Jura, Switzerland '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Bretagne

PageID: 36581232
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Images: 3
France_Resources_Bretagne.jpg
France_Resources_Bretagne-1.jpg
French_Flags-83.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' BRETAGNE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-83.png | 160px | Bretagne ]]
||''
Nantes,
Rennes
''||''
1532 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Bretagne.jpg|320px|Bretagne]]
''''' Bretagne '''''
||
||[[Image:France_Resources_Bretagne-1.jpg|360px|Nantes]]
'' Nantes ''
'' BRETAGNE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bretagne Bretagne] ||'' Côtes-du-Nord, Finistère, Ille-et-Vilaine, Loire-Atlantique (Loire-Inférieure), Morbihan'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Canada Nouvelle-France

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 0
France Resources Canada Nouvelle-France

France Resources Champagne

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Project:
Images: 5
French_Flags-84.png
France_Resources_Champagne.jpg
France_Resources_Champagne-1.jpg
France_Resources_Champagne-2.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-8.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' CHAMPAGNE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-84.png | 180px | Champagne ]]
||''
Troyes
''||''
1361 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Champagne.jpg|360px|Champagne]]
''''' Champagne '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-8.png | 180px |Champagne]]
'' Champagne
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Champagne-2.jpg|380px|Bay-sur-Aube]]
'' Bay-sur-Aube ''
'' CHAMPAGNE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champagne Champagne] ||'' Ardennes, Aube, Marne, most of Haute-Marne, parts of Yonne, Seine-et-Marne, Aisne, Meuse, small parts of Vosges, Haute-Saône and Côte-d'Or'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Comtat Venaissin

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France_Resources_Comtat_Venaissin.jpg
France Resources Comtat Venaissin

France Resources Comté de Créhange

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France Resources Comté de Créhange

France Resources Comté de Dabo

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France Resources Comté de Dabo

France Resources Comté de Nice

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France Resources Comté de Nice

France Resources Corse

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France Resources Corse

France Resources Dauphiné

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Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-7.png
France_Resources_Dauphine.jpg
=== Historic Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' === [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Duché de Savoie

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France Resources Duché de Savoie

France Resources Flandre

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France_Resources_Flandre.jpg
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Foix

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France_Resources_Foix.jpg
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Franche-Comté

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French_Flags-87.png
France_Resources_Franche-Comte.jpg
France_Resources_Franche-Comte-1.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' FRANCHE-COMTÉ '''

[[Image:French_Flags-87.png | 140px | Franche-Comté ]]
||''
Besançon
''||''
1678 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Franche-Comte.jpg|360px|Franche-Comté]]
''''' Franche-Comté '''''
||
||[[Image:France_Resources_Franche-Comte-1.jpg|300px|Cléron (Le Doubs)]]
'' Cléron (Le Doubs) ''
'' FRANCHE-COMTÉ ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franche-Comté Franche-Comté] ||'' Doubs, Jura, Haute-Saône '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Gascogne

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Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-13.png
France_Resources_Gascogne-1.jpg
France_Resources_Gascogne.jpg
French_Flags-88.png
== Historic Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' GASCOGNE '''
''(Gascony)''

[[Image:French_Flags-80.png | 160px | Gascogne ]]
||''
Auch,
Saint-Sever
''||''
1453 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Gascogne.jpg|440px|Gascogne]]
''''' Gascogne'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-13.png | 180px |Gascogne]]
'' Gascogne
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Gascogne-1.jpg|300px|Paysage de vignes]]
'' Paysage de vignes ''
'' GASCOGNE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gascogne Gascogne] ||'' Landes, Gers, Hautes-Pyrénées, parts of Gironde, Lot-et-Garonne, Tarn-et-Garonne, Haute-Garonne, Ariège, Pyrénées-Atlantiques '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Guadeloupe

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France Resources Guadeloupe

France Resources Guyane

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France Resources Guyane

France Resources Guyenne

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
France_Resources_Guyenne-1.jpg
French_Flags-89.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-12.png
France_Resources_Guyenne.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' GUYENNE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-89.png | 200px | Guyenne ]]
||''
Bordeaux
''||''
1453 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Guyenne.jpg|440px|Guyenne]]
''''' Guyenne '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-12.png | 180px |Guyenne]]
'' Guyenne
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Guyenne-1.jpg|300px|Bordeaux]]
''Bordeaux
(Roman amphitheater) ''
'' GUYENNE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guyenne Guyenne] ||'' Dordogne, Lot, Aveyron, parts of Gironde, Lot-et-Garonne, Tarn-et-Garonne, small part of Corrèze, one commune in Charente '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Île-de-France

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France_Resources_Ile-de-France.jpg
French_Flags-90.png
France_Resources_Ile-de-France-1.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' ÎLE-DE-FRANCE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-90.png | 180px | Île-de-France ]]
||''
Paris
''||''
987 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Ile-de-France.jpg|440px|Île-de-France]]
''''' Île-de-France '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises.png | 180px |Île-de-France]]
'' Île-de-France
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Ile-de-France-1.jpg|340px|Paris (Notre-Dame)]]
'' Paris (Notre-Dame ''
'' ÎLE-DE-FRANCE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/France#Histoire Île-de-France] ||'' Seine (Paris, Hauts-de-Seine, Seine-Saint-Denis, Val-de-Marne),most of Seine-et-Oise (Yvelines, Val-d'Oise, Essonne), parts of Oise, Seine-et-Marne, Aisne, small part of Eure-et-Loir, Loiret, Yonne; one commune in Ardennes and one in Somme '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources La Réunion

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France Resources La Réunion

France Resources Labourd

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French_Flags-107.png
France_Resources_Labourd.jpg
France_Resources_Labourd.png
== Historic Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' LABOURD / LAPURDI
''(Pays Basque)'' '''

[[Image:French_Flags-107.png | 110px | Labourd ]]
||''
Bayonne
''||''
1450 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Labourd.png|250px|Labourd ]]
''''' Labourd / Lapurdi'''''
||
''(Name changed to
Basses-Pyrénées)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Labourd.jpg|320px|Bayonne]]
'' Bayonne''
'' LABOURD ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labourd Labourd] ||''Pyrénées-Atlantiques
(formerly Basses-Pyrénées)'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Languedoc

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France_Resources_Languedoc-1.jpg
French_Flags-91.png
France_Resources_Languedoc.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-5.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' LANGUEDOC '''

[[Image:French_Flags-91.png | 180px | Languedoc ]]
||''
Toulouse
''||''
1271 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Languedoc.jpg|360px|Languedoc]]
''''' Languedoc'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-5.png | 140px |Languedoc]]
'' Languedoc
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Languedoc-1.jpg|400px|Pont du Gard]]
'' Pont du Gard ''
'' LANGUEDOC ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languedoc Languedoc] ||'' Ardèche, Aude, Gard, Hérault, Lozère, Tarn, parts of Haute-Garonne, Tarn-et-Garonne, Ariège and Pyrénées-Orientales (Basses-Pyrénées)'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Limousin

PageID: 36581293
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
French_Flags-92.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-22.png
France_Resources_Limousin.jpg
France_Resources_Limousin-1.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' LIMOUSIN '''

[[Image:French_Flags-92.png | 160px | Limousin ]]
||''
Limoges
''||''
1589 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Limousin.jpg|340px|Limousin]]
''''' Limousin'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-22.png | 200px |Limousin]]
'' Limousin
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Limousin-1.jpg|340px|Limoges]]
'' Limoges ''
'' LIMOUSIN ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limousin Limousin] ||'' Corrèze, part of Haute-Vienne, small part of Dordogne '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Lorraine

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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French_Flags-93.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-25.png
France_Resources_Lorraine-1.jpg
France_Resources_Lorraine.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' LORRAINE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-93.png | 200px | Lorraine ]]
||''
Nancy
''||''
(Various) - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Lorraine.jpg|340px|Lorraine]]
''''' Lorraine '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-25.png | 130px |Lorraine]]
'' Lorraine
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Lorraine-1.jpg|340px|Montmédy]]
'' Montmédy ''
'' LORRAINE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorraine Lorraine] ||'' Most of Vosges, Moselle, former Meurthe (Meurthe-et-Moselle), parts of Meuse, Bas-Rhin, Haut-Rhin, Bas-Rhin, Germany, one commune in Haute-Saône '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Louisiane Nouvelle-France

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France Resources Louisiane Nouvelle-France

France Resources Lyonnais

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
French_Flags-94.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-6.png
France_Resources_Lyonnais-1.jpg
France_Resources_Lyonnais.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' LYONNAIS '''

[[Image:French_Flags-94.png | 160px | Lyonnais ]]
||''
Lyon
''||''
1313 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Lyonnais.jpg|340px|Lyonnais]]
''''' Lyonnais '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-6.png | 200px |Lyonnais]]
'' Lyonnais
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Lyonnais-1.jpg|340px|Limoges]]
'' Lyon ''
'' LYONNAIS ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyonnais Lyonnais] ||'' Rhône, Loire, part of Haute-Loire, one commune in Puy-de-Dôme'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Maine

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Images: 3
France_Resources_Maine.jpg
French_Flags-95.png
France_Resources_Maine-1.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' MAINE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-95.png | 160px | Maine ]]
||''
Le Mans
''||''
1584 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Maine.jpg|300px|Maine]]
''''' Maine '''''
||||[[Image:France_Resources_Maine-1.jpg|300px|Cortanvaux à Bessé-sur-Braye]]
'' Cortanvaux à Bessé-sur-Braye ''
'' MAINE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maine_(province) Maine] ||'' most of Sarthe, Mayenne '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Marche

PageID: 36581424
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France_Resources_Marche.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-19.png
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Martinique

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France Resources Martinique

France Resources Mayotte

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France Resources Mayotte

France Resources Nivernais

PageID: 36581496
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Project:
Images: 2
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-28.png
France_Resources_Nivernais.jpg
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Normandie

PageID: 36581313
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 3
French_Flags-98.png
France_Resources_Normandie-1.jpg
France_Resources_Normandie.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' NORMANDIE'''
''(Normandy)''

[[Image:French_Flags-98.png | 140px | Normandie ]]
||''
Rouen
''||''
1204 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Normandie.jpg|340px|Normandie]]
'''''Normandie'''''
||||[[Image:France_Resources_Normandie-1.jpg|300px|Rouen]]
'' Rouen ''
'' NORMANDIE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normandie Normandie] ||'' Calvados, Eure, Manche, Seine-Maritime (Seine-Inférieure), most of Orne '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Nouvelle-Calédonie

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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France Resources Nouvelle-Calédonie

France Resources Orléanais

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Project:
Images: 4
France_Resources_Orleanais.jpg
France_Resources_Orleanais-1.jpg
French_Flags-99.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-4.png
== Historic Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' ORLÉANAIS '''

[[Image:French_Flags-99.png | 160px | Orléanais ]]
||''
Lyon
''||''
1498 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Orleanais.jpg|340px|Orléanais]]
''''' Orléanais'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-4.png | 200px |Lyonnais]]
'' Orléanais
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Orleanais-1.jpg|340px|Orléans]]
'' Orléans ''
'' ORLÉANAIS ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orléanais Orléanais] ||'' Loiret, Loir-et-Cher, part of Eure-et-Loir, small parts of Yvelines, Essonne, Seine-et-Marne, Yonne, Cher, Indre-et-Loire, Sarthe '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Perche

PageID: 36581317
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
Touched: 28 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
France_Resources_Perche.jpg
French_Flags-100.png
France_Resources_Perche-1.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-20.png
== Historic Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' PERCHE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-100.png | 160px | Perche ]]
||''
Mortagne, Nogent-le-Rotrou
''||''
1584 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Perche.jpg|340px|Perche]]
''''' Perche'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-20.png | 200px |Perche]]
'' Perche
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Perche-1.jpg|300px|Mortagne]]
'' Mortagne-au-Perche ''
'' PERCHE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perche Perche] ||'' Parts of Orne and Eure-et-Loire, small parts of Eure, Sarthe, Loir-et-Cher '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Picardie

PageID: 36581323
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Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Project:
Images: 4
France_Resources_Picardie-1.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-1.png
French_Flags-101.png
France_Resources_Picardie.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' PICARDIE '''
''(Picardy)''

[[Image:French_Flags-101.png | 160px | Picardie ]]
||''
Amiens
''||''
1482 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Picardie.jpg|300px|Picardie]]
''''' Picardie '''''
||||[[Image:France_Resources_Picardie-1.jpg|340px|Calais (Cap Blanc-Nez)]]
'' Calais (Cap Blanc-Nez) ''
'' PICARDIE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picardie Picardie] ||'' Somme, parts of Pas-de-Calais, Aisne, Oise, small part of Nord'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Poitou

PageID: 36581329
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Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 28 views
Created: 22 Jan 2022
Saved: 28 Jan 2022
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Project:
Images: 4
France_Resources_Poitou.jpg
France_Resources_Poitou-1.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-11.png
French_Flags-102.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' POITOU '''

[[Image:French_Flags-102.png | 160px | Poitou ]]
||''
Poitiers
''||''
1416 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Poitou.jpg|340px|Poitou]]
''''' Poitou'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-11.png | 200px |Poitou]]
'' Poitou
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Poitou-1.jpg|340px|Poitiers]]
'' Poitiers ''
'' POITOU ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poitou Poitou] ||'' Vienne, Haute-Vienne, Vendée, small parts of Charente, Charente-Maritime, Indre, one commune in Loire-Atlantique, Maine-et-Loire, Haute-Vienne'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Polynésie française

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France Resources Polynésie française

France Resources Provence

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France_Resources_Provence.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-16.png
France_Resources_Provence-1.jpg
French_Flags-103.png
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' PROVENCE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-103.png | 160px | Provence ]]
||''
Aix-en-Provence
''||''
1482 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Provence.jpg|340px|Provence]]
''''' Provence '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-16.png | 200px |Provence]]
'' Provence
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Provence-1.jpg|300px|Aix-en-Provence ]]
'' Aix-en-Provence ''
'' PROVENCE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provence Provence] ||'' Var, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence (Basses-Alpes), parts of Var, Vaucluse, small parts of Drôme, one commune in Hautes-Alpes'' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Roussillon

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France_Resources_Roussillon.jpg
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-24.png
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Saint-Barthélemy

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France Resources Saint-Barthélemy

France Resources Saint-Martin

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France Resources Saint-Martin

France Resources Saintonge

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Created: 22 Jan 2022
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Images: 4
French_Flags-105.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-10.png
France_Resources_Saintonge-1.jpg
France_Resources_Saintonge.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' SAINTONGE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-105.png | 160px | Saintonge ]]
||''
Saintes
''||''
1371 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Saintonge.jpg|340px|Saintonge]]
''''' Saintonge'''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-10.png | 200px |Saintonge]]
'' Saintonge
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Saintonge-1.jpg|340px|Chalais ]]
'' Chalais ''
'' SAINTONGE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saintonge Saintonge] ||'' Parts of Charente-Maritime, Charente, Deux-Sèvres, one commune in Dordogne '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon

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France Resources Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon

France Resources Touraine

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France_Resources_Touraine-1.jpg
French_Flags-106.png
Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-21.png
France_Resources_Touraine.jpg
== Background: The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic.Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == '''''Historic Province to Modern Départements''''' == {| Border = ''1''; text align = center |
'''''Province'''''
|
'''''Capital'''''
|
'''''Years'''''
|
'''''Map of 1789
[[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 100px |France - Royal Banner]]
Royaume de France'''''
|
'''''Map of 1790
Departmentalisation'''''
|
'''''Images and
References'''''
|
'''''Names of départements
[[Image:Flags.png|90px|France - Tricouleur]]
République française'''''
|- | |- |
''' TOURAINE '''

[[Image:French_Flags-106.png | 160px | Touraine ]]
||''
Tours
''||''
1204 - 1789
''||
[[Image:France_Resources_Touraine.jpg|300px|Touraine]]
''''' Touraine '''''
||
[[Image: Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-21.png | 200px |Touraine]]
'' Touraine
(1790)''
||[[Image:France_Resources_Touraine-1.jpg|340px|Tours]]
'' Tours''
'' TOURAINE ''Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touraine Touraine] ||'' Indre-et-Loire, part of Indre, small parts of Vienne and Loir-et-Cher '' |- |} == Sources ==

France Resources Trois-Évêchés

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Cartes_des_provinces_francaises-26.png
== Historic Background:
The Kingdom of France and the '''''Ancien Régime''''' == [[Image:French_Flags-26.png | 40px |France - Royal Banner]] '''''The Kingdom of France: Historic Provinces, Duchies and Territories (pre-1790)''''' :The Kingdom of France comprised individual ''Provinces,'' ''Duchés'' and ''Comtés'' (medieval "duchies" and "counties" ruled by Dukes and Counts respectively), and associated lands that had come under overarching control of the King of France at various times and with differing degrees of integration. They were often culturally, historically and in some cases linguistically distinct - under a multi-tiered system that would eventually be called the ''Ancien régime.''Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancien_Régime France - Ancien Régime]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territoires_du_royaume_de_France Territoires du royaume de France] :The French Revolution began in 1789 and culminated with the establishment of the first French Republic in 1792. In implementing the post-revolutionary era, the French provinces of the ''ancien régime'' were all subjected to re-organization - often in a manner intended to reconfigure and alter the historic regions and alliances. The French provinces were therefore often divided into portions, and in many cases these were recombined to create the new set of départements that would form the modern French Republic. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departments_of_France Departments of France]Wikipédia [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Département_français Département français] [[Image:Flags.png|40px|France - Tricouleur]] '''''The French Republic: Départements (from 1790) - Civil Registration and Civic Archives (from 1792)''''' :An overview of the transition from French provinces to subsequent departments is provided by the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:France France Project], along with maps of individual provinces at [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments].WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:France_from_Provinces_to_Departments France from Provinces to Departments] :An expandable map entitled [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments.jpg France Provinces en 1789] by Vidal-Lablache shows the geographic relationships between historic provinces and modern departments as of 1789 and is also available via the France Project.WikiTree France Project [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/France_from_Provinces_to_Departments Carte des provinces avec les limites des départements de 1791] == Sources ==

France Resources Wallis-et-Fortuna

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France Resources Wallis-et-Fortuna

France Roots

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The goal of this project is to ... Find out more info on Charles Lejeune from France. His wife is named Jeanne Vaudet. They r from Thorigny-sur-Marne, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France, France Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Young-19262|Blair Young]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * find church records France * find census France *explore cemeteries in France Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13490414 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Frances Stetson Photo Album

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These are photos from Frances Lila Stetson's photo album. Most of the pictures have no names attached. The Stetsons came out from Massachusetts and Maine. William Francis Stetson came from Maine to California about 1865. Eliza Pearl Ayers was born in Birmingham, England in 1851,

Frances Wallace Pension Application

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Frances Wallace Pension Application; [www.footnote.com Footnote, now known as Fold3] , accessed 28 Feb 2009 (orig: NARA M804, Rev. War Application Files, North Carolina Veteran John Wallace) 3540, Evansville, Indiana [[Meador-970|Frances Wallace,]] widow of John Wallace of North Carolina, who served as a Private; Certificate of Pension issued 31 Jan 1854, sent to Geo. W. Hardin, Bloomington, IN.; Recorded on Roll of Pensioners under act 3 Feb 1853, p. 1919, Vol. A On 4 May 1853 Frances Wallace aged 74, resident of Green County, Indiana, declares that she is thee widow of John Wallace; that she was married to the said John Wallace in Tennesse on 15 January 1813 by Esq. King, a JP; and that previous to her marriage her name was Frances Medows. That John Wallace died at home on 24 August 1834 in Owen county, IN and that she has not remarried On 9 August 1853 Lewis A. Meadows and Eli Wallace of Stockton Township, Green County, IN say they are the children of Mrs. Frances Wallace, that John Wallace was a pensioner; that Frances Wallace lived with Eli Wallace both before and after his marriage and he was intended to move to MO in Nov 1852 but couldn’t because of the poor roads and his mother’s disability to travel Signed Lewis A. Meadows, Eli x his mark Wallace Testimony of Frances Wallace: She was Frances Alsop before her first marriage to [[Meador-970|Isom Meadows]] which took place in anson county North Carolina and was solemnized by Eli[z?]ah Lowry a JP in January [year left blank] and that she and John Wallace both resided in Knox County, Kentucky and went into [blank] county in Tennessee in order to be married and were married there by an Esquire King. She has no family records of either of her marriages or of the births or deaths of any of her family. She had five children by John Wallace, Isaac Wallace and John Wallace, both of Newton county, Missouri, Angus Ross Wallace of ripley county, Missouri, Elias Wallace of Hopkins County, Texas, and Eli Wallace (the youngest) of Green County Indiana. Signed Frances x her mark Wallace 27 Oct 1853 my Mothers name was Sally Rhory and my fathers name was Alsop they never was married, . . . [but] I always went by my fathers name Alsop I was born in North Carolina Anson County with in 12 or 13 miles of Wades Borough the County Ceit I Also was married to Isom Meadows in the same County and State by Elizah louray a Justice of the peace some time in the month of Jan in or about the yer 1799 or 1800 we also moved from Carolina to Kentuck Knox County on Cumberlin River below Barhursville we had five Children and he dyed ------ know Conerning the marriage of me and John Wallace we lived in knox Copunty ky know cald Whitley Copunty tho we were married in Tennessee State County I doe not remember the reason we went to Tennessee it was a great del nearer than it was to the County Ceit in knox where we lived we was married in Jan in or about the year 1812—old [[Meadors-27|John Meadows]] [[Meadows-865|Isom Meadows]] and daughter [[Meadows-1293|Edy Meadows]] and [[Meadors-112|Isah Meadows]] James Lasley all in the same neighborhood betwixt Cumberland river and Jillico Creek from there I and Wallace moved to Wayne County ky on the little south form of Cumberlin river and there lived until we had five Children . . . some of our neighbours thear was Eli Hubbard and Richard Byres Aron Byres . . . and then we moved to Indiana owen County you wisht to know of the Children in and about owen they have all left thear Mordacai Meadows is living in Morgan County near Martinsville you make inquire about one [[Meadows-864|Isom Meadows]] living in or about Bloomington and see if he recollects anything about the marridge of me and John Wallace also make enquire about Mobley Meadows yuu will find him if he is alive living some whear on blew River near Salem Ia. see if he noes eny thing about I and Wallus being married and living as husband and wife -------------- ----------------- ---------------- those people old John Meadows isom Meadows and Isiah Meadows and Edy Meadows and James Lasley all went with us and saw us married respetfuy yours Frances Walles to Geo W Hardin [Note: the nearest Tennessee County would be Campbell County, and the way to the County seat would follow the Cumberland River rather than having to cross over hills in order to reach the County Seat of Knox County. Campbell County, TN was organized in 1806, but the earliest extent marriage records are from the 1830s.]

Francesco Morphy fe de bautismo

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I recently received from a family member the image of a valuable source document - a certificate established in Cadiz in 1813 with an extract of the register of baptisms of the parish of San Antonio - a ''fe de bautismo'' in Spanish. It is the entry relating to [[Morphy_Martí-1|Francisco de Sales Morphy Martí (1800-1875)]] my great-great grandfather. Francis Morphy, as his English family knew him, was born on 18 November 1800 in Cadiz, son of Juan Morphy, born in Gibraltar, and of Salvadora Marti of Cadiz. His parents were married in Cadiz in 1799. He was baptised on the day of his birth in the Church of the Auxiliary Parish of San Antonio (I assume that this is San Antonio de Padua in the centre of Cadiz). His full baptismal name (also found on the register of his marriage to Leslie Smith in Richmond-on-Thames on 16 Dec 1830 ) was Francisco de Sales, Pedro, Juan, Salvador, Cayetano, Juan Nepumuceno, Julian. The baptism was performed by Father Domingo Gonzalez, a Reader in Theology, who had permission from his bishop and from the parish priest to perform the service. Francis’ godfather was Francisco Marti and there were two witnesses, Manuel Bouxdais (?) and Jose de Vega. '''Incomplete transcription of baptism certificate of Francisco Morphy (without accents)''' Certifico, Yo dn. Juan Bautista Carnera, Cura (2 words) del (2 words) Yg[lesia] Cathedral, con (1 word) a esta Parroquia Aux. del (1 abbreviation) St Antonio que en el libro tercero de Bautismos que existe en este Archivo de mi cargo ya se halla una Partida firmada del (1 or 2 words) ; En la ciudad de Cadiz Domingo diez y seis de Febrero de mil ocho cientos anos Yo el Padre Domingo Gonzalez, Lector de sagrada theologia (1 line partly obscured) de esta Ciudad con la licencia de mi Prelado y la del Párroco en esta Parroquia del (1 abbreviation) St Antonio baptize a Francisco de Sales, Pedro, Juan, Salvador, Cayetano, Juan Nepumuceno, Julian que nació hoy dno diez y seis del corriente hijo a dn. Juan Morphy, natural de Gibraltar, y a da. Salvadora Marti su lex[igiti]ma mujer natural de esta Ciudad, ambos vecinos de ella casados a Decreto en esta d[ic]ho Parroquia ano de mil sete cientos noventa y nueve Fue su Padrino dn. Francisco Marti, a quien adverti el parentesco espiritual y sus obligaciones siendo testigos dn. Manuel (1 name - Bouxdais ?)) y dn. Jose de Vega vecinos de esta Ciudad, y lo firme. Cadiz (1 word) Fx Domingo Gonzalez la qual Partida (1 word) con su original queda en el citado Libro a (1 word) dos cientas veinte y ocho, (1 word) a que me ne fieno. Cadiz diez et nueve di Agusto de mil ochocientos y trece anos

Frances's Profile Photos

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Free Space Profile containing public photos used for WT profiles.

Francis

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Will of Francis Culver
In the name of God Amen:
I '''[[Taylor-102075|Francis Culver]]''' being of sound mind and memory do make and publish the following as and for my last will and testament.
1st After my death, I want all my debts paid, should I owe any out of my personal property, if possible.
2nd I have heretofore given each of my children a lot of ground except my sons '''[[Culver-287|Ben]]''' & '''[[Culver-290|Nick]]''' and my daughter '''[[Culver-297|Ann]]''' and it is my will and desire to make all equal in my estate
3rd I therefore give all of my personal property after the payment of my debts to my daughter '''[[Culver-297|Ann Culver]]''' and I also give to her my homestead where I now live which lot fronts on O’Bannon street and runs south west to the cross street the same width as O’Bannon st to be hers absolutely.
4th This leaves a lot of ground lying back of the lot I gave my daughter '''[[Culver-292|Bettie]]''' and the one I sold '''Emily Sale''' and it is my will and desire that this lot of ground be divided in halves and I give and bequeath to my son '''[[Culver-290|Nick Culver]]''' the half lying on the North west side to be his in fee simple.
5th My son '''[[Culver-287|Ben]]''' being of careless and intemperate disposition I give him nothing of my estate but give the remaining half of above lot mentions lying next to the homestead given my daughter '''[[Culver-297|Ann]]''' to his children '''Julia''' & '''Harriet Culver''' should either die without heirs the interest of such one to go to the other and in case both die without children being born to them then the lot of ground herein given them to revert to my estate and be divided among all my children.
My devise of my homestead and my personal property to my youngest child '''[[Culver-297|Ann Culver]]''' is in order to make her equal with the other children and to in some measure compensate her for always living at home and caring for me.
I hereby constitute and appoint my daughter '''[[Culver-297|Ann]]''' Executrix of this my last will and Testament and require no bond of her. Witness my hand to the above my last will and testament.
This February 6/1908 '''[[Taylor-102075|Francis her X mark Culver]]'''
D Davis, G L Drury, Alex Garland
We the subscribing witnesses to the above said '''[[Taylor-102075|Francis Culver]]''' make her mark and we at her request and in her presence and in the presence of each other sign our names as witnesses hereto. This February 6/1908 G L Drury D Davis Alex Garland

State of Kentucky, County of Union
I Liston Talbott Clerk of Union County Court do hereby certify that the foregoing will of Francis Culver was this day produced in the open court and was filed and duly probated and ordered to be recorded in the proper office for record. Whereupon the same and this certificate has been truly recorded in the office
J Liston Talbott Clerk

Francis & Matilda Wiita household

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==People== ===[[Johansson_Wiida-2 | Francis Oscar Wiita]] (father)=== Francis Oscar Wiita was born in Finland but moved to Fitchburg, where he lived for many years before he died. ===Matilda (Konstanim) Wiita (mother)=== Oscar's wife, Matilda, outlived him. ===Mrs. Leo T. Silverberg (daughter)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of her father's death. ===Leah Wiita (daughter)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of her father's death. ===Elvie Wiita (daughter)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of her father's death. ===Nellie Wiita (daughter)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of her father's death. ===Elma Wiita (daughter)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of her father's death. ===Leo Wiita (son)=== Lived in Ashburnham at the time of his father's death. ===Eino Wiita (son)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of his father's death. ===Arlie Wiita (son)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of his father's death. ===Arvo Wiita (son)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of his father's death. ===Ahtu Wiita (son)=== Lived in Fitchburg at the time of his father's death. ==Sources== * Francis Blair Power of Attorney Transcription
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Know all men by these presents that I Moses Phillips of the county of Amherst and State of Virginia Guardian of '''[[Blair-10897|Francis A. Blair]]''', infant son of '''[[Blair-10896|William H. Blair]]''' dec’d late of the State of Kentucky, have constituted and appointed and by these presents do constitute and appoint James A. Higginbotham of the County of Amherst and State of Virginia my true and lawful attorney for me and in my name and for my benefit as guardian aforesaid to demand and receive of the representation of said '''[[Blair-10896|William H. Blair]]''' dec’d or from any person or persons in whose possession the same may be, a negro boy names '''Jesse''', which was loaned several years past to the said '''[[Blair-10896|Willliam H. Blair]]''' by his Father '''[[Blair-6351|Allen Blair]]''' now dec’d late of the County of Amherst and state of Virginia and which has been devised by the last will and Testament of said '''[[Blair-6351|Allen Blair]]''' dec’d now of record in the clerks office of Amherst County Court ot the said '''[[Blair-10897|Francis A. Blair]]''' his Grandson and my said attorney is hereby fully empowered to institute such proceedings and take such steps as may be deemed most advisable to procure the possession of said negro boy Jesse and to dispose of the same as he may think most advisable and all acts done are to be done by my said attorney touching the premises and hereby ratified and confirmed by me. Given under my hand & seal this 22nd of March 1836. '''Moses Phillips'''.

State of Virginia Amherst County Courty
I Robert Tinsley clerk of the county court of Amherst Count in the State of Virginia aforesaid do certify that '''Moses Phillips''', to me known as the guardian of '''[[Blair-10897|Francis Allen Blair]]''' personally appeared before me in my office and signed sealed and acknowledged the within letter of attorney to be his act and deed. In Testimony whereof I hereto set my hand and seal of office this 2nd day of April 1836 in the 60th year of the Commonwealth. Robert Tinsley.

Virginia Amherst County Towit
I Henry L. Davis presiding Justice of the County Court of Amherst County do certify that Robert Tinsley who hath given the preceeding certificate in clerk of the said Court and that his said attestation is in due form. Given under my hand this 2nd day of April 1836. Henry L. Davis

Received of '''[[Sale-492|Mrs Clary L. Blair]]''' Executrix of '''[[Blair-10896|Wm H Blair]]''' dec’d the within mentioned negro boy '''Jesse''' as the agent and attorney in fact of the within mentioned or named '''Moses Phillips''' Guardian of '''[[Blair-10897|Francis A.G.S. Blair]]''' whose name is written within '''[[Blair-10897|Francis A. Blair]]''' which negro boy is delivered to me by '''[[Sale-492|Mrs. C. L. Blair]]''' and is received by me under the within power of Attorney and the Authority therein granted to me. Given under my hand and red’d in the Count of Union and State of Kentucky this 6th day of June 1836. James A. Higgenbotham, Attorney for '''Moses Phillips''' Guardian of '''[[Blair-10897|F. A. G. S. Blair]]''' in Virginia. Test William Sale and Jos. A. Sale.

Commonwealth of Kentucky, Union County Sct: I James R. Hughes clerk of the County court for the County of aforesaid do certify that on the day of the date hereof This Letter of Attorney from '''Moses Phillips''' Guardian to '''[[Blair-10897|Francis A. Blair]]''' to James A Higginbotham to as produced to me in my office and was together with the certificates thereon endorsed duly recorded in my office. And I do further certify that the receipt thereon enclosed was at the same time acknowledge by the said James A. Higginbotham as attorney in fact for '''Moses Phillips''' Guardian to '''[[Blair-10897|Francis A.G.S. Blair]]''' to be his act and deed and was also duly recorded in my office. In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my name this 6th day of June 1836. James R. Hughes. == Sources == *'''1836 Francis A. Blair slave retrieval to slave retrieval.''' Kentucky, Union County, County Court, Deeds, Vol. E, pp. 479-480, 22 March 1836, digital image 271-272 of 662, ''FamilySearch.org'' ([https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C37Q-7C6G?i=271&cat=116301]: accessed 15 March 2023)

Francis Clopton of Suffolk Post Mortem Inquisition 1578

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==Historical Context== A post Mortem inquisition, was an inquiry, undertaken after the death of a feudal tenant in chief (that is, a direct tenant of the crown), to establish what lands were held and who should succeed to them. This inquisition related to the death of [[Clopton-272|Francis Clopton]] in 1578 and named [[Clopton-123|William Clopton]] as his heir. It took place on the 7th April 1579, in the presence of Robert Crane (possibly [[Crane-1890|Robert Crane (abt.1508-1591)]] ) ,Thomas Edone, and Thomas Andrewes, the commissioners. ==Source Material== This translation to English was based on a transcript in latin titled '”INQUISITION UPON THE DEATH OF FRANCIS CLOPTON , ESQUIRE . - 1579”'' contained in the notes provided with the 1866 edition of the Visitation of Suffolk, 1561 '''Visitations:''' “INQUISITION UPON THE DEATH OF FRANCIS CLOPTON , ESQUIRE . - 1579, Joseph Jackson Howard (ed.) ''The Visitations of Suffolke, William Harvey, with additions from Family Documents Original Wills”, publisher Samual Tymms, London, 1866 , Vol. I, p. 63, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ExI2AQAAMAAJ&dq Google Books] (accessed and translated by google translate 3 Aug 2023) . It was recorded in the visitations as having been sourced from ''Inquisition post mortem , Wards and Liveries , vol . xx . , Public Rec . Office'' this presumably now stored at The National Archives KewInquisition:"", “Clopton, Francis: Suffolk”, The National Archives Kew, Court of Wards and Liveries: Inquisitions Post Mortem, [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C7735711 ref: WARD 7/20/40], 17 Nov 1578, (record only accessed 3 Aug 2023) ==Summary of Key Facts== It noted that *Francis Clopton died on the 6th April 1578 *William Clopton the squire [armiger] is brother and next heir of the said Francis Clopton deceased, and was at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton aged twenty-seven years and more; *that a certain Anne, Lady Heydon, the wife of Christopher Heydon, the soldier, late the wife of the same Francis Clopton, still survives, and exists in full life at Baconsthorpe in the county of Norfolk. At his death Francis Clopton was seized of: {| border="1" cellpadding="4" class="wikitable sortable"t |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 | Place||location ||held of|| fee || income |- | Manor of Kentwell || Long Melford|| The Queen || the service of a quarter of one kimght's fee (no rent given)|| twelve pounds a year |- | Manor of Lutons ||Long Melford || The Queen ||| by fidelity and rent xvi. d. per year for all services and bequests || £6 13s 4d |- | manor of Woodfoules || Long Melford || Thomas, earl of Sussex|| by fealty and rent of two shillings per annum for all services and rents whatsoever||66s 8d |- | manor of Melford Monachorum|| Long Melford ||The Queen|| by the service of the fortieth part of one knight's fee, and by an annual rent of thirty-two shillings and four pence one obol [half penny]] at the feast of St. Michael the Archangel|| sixteen pounds, three shillings, and four pence |- | messuage or tenement, recently acquired from Johanne Bixbie|| Long Melford ||unknown||||20s |- | messuage or tenement called Blakes || Long Melford ||The Queen|| by fealty and rent of sixpence per annum for all services and rents whatsoever||20 [sic] |} ==Method of Translation and Warning== The Latin text was captured by copy paste from google books and then translated by google translate by [[Sansum-45|Sansum-45]] 22:30, 3 August 2023 (UTC) Sections highlighted in bold have been inspected and retranscribed manually and then retranslated. Line breaks have been introduced to facilitate reading and do not represent the layout of the original. Clarification or necessary expansion are contained within [] The method contains errors from two main sources: #The capture of the Latin text may contain errors compared to the original transcript. Obvious problems have been retranscribed manually (highlighted in bold) #The translation will certainly contain significant errors Despite these shortcomings, the translation is useful to identify key parts of the text for closer attention and it is still possible to extract useful information, both Latin and English versions of the text have been retained to allow subsequent corrections to be carried out. If you make use of a specific section of this translation: #'''CHECK THE LATIN TRANSCRIPT CONTAINED HERE AGAINST THE ORIGINAL''' #'''THEN SCRUTINISE. THE TRANSLATION OR BETTER CARRY OUT YOUR OWN.''' ==English Translation== Suff[olk] An —- inquisition taken at Sudbury in the aforesaid county, on the seventh day of April in the year of the reign of our lady Elizabeth, by the grace of God Queen of England, France, and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc. on the twenty-first [ie 21 Regnal year of Elizabeth] , in the presence of Robert Crane, Thomas Edone, and Thomas Andrewes, esquires of the feods of the lady Queen in the said county, the commissioners of the said lady Queen, by virtue of the commission in the nature of the brief of the same lady Queen of the day, closed the end of the same commissioners directed, among other things, and annexed to this inquiry, to inquire after the death of Francis Clopton the squire named in the same brief by sacrament, etc. , who say upon their oath that the aforesaid Francis Clopton named in the aforesaid brief before his death was seised in his domain as of the fee of and in the domains and manors of Kentwell, Lutons, Woodfoules, and Melford Monastery in Melford in the aforesaid county with his belongings; and of and in all those tithes of blads, sheaves, and grain, and any other tithes which grow annually for those who come, and renovate from all those lands, tenements, meadows, pastures, and Sunday pastures of the said manor of Melford Monks in any way looking; and of and in all other tithes whatsoever arising or growing from all those lands and tenements belonging to the said manor of Melford Monks; and of and in one messuage or tenement with appurtenances in the aforesaid Melford lately acquired by the aforesaid Francis Clopton of a certain John Bixby ; and of and in one messuage or tenement with appurtenances in Melford aforesaid called Blakes. And also the aforesaid jurors say upon their aforesaid oath that the aforesaid Francis Clopton named in the aforesaid brief, so as to be preferred, existing divided from the aforesaid dominions and manors of Kentwell, Lutons, Woodfoules, and Melford Monachore with their appurtenances; and about and [in] the aforesaid tithes; and of and in the said messuage or tenement lately acquired of the said John Bixby ; also of and in the aforesaid messuage or tenement called Blakes in the aforesaid Melford in the aforesaid county of Suffolk, he died there seised on the sixth day of April in the twentieth year of the reign of the aforesaid lady Queen; and that William Clopton the squire is the brother and next heir of the said Francis Clopton, deceased, and was at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton twenty-seven years of age and more; and that a certain Anna Lady Heydon, the wife of Christopher Heydon, the soldier, late the wife of the same Francis Clopton, still survives, and exists in full life at Baconsthorpe in the county of Norfolk And further the aforesaid jurors say on their aforesaid oath that the aforesaid manor is held of Kentwell and at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton was held of the said lady Queen now as of her castle of Norwich by the service of a quarter of one soldier's fee; and the aforesaid manor is clearly worth twelve pounds a year in all matters beyond the recapture; and that the aforesaid manor is held of the Lutons, and at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton was held of the said lady Queen as of her hun dred of [ ], * since the parcel of the monastery of Bury Saint Edmund was lately a hundred by fidelity and rent xvi. d. per year for all services and bequests to whomsoever, and it is worth clearly per year in all matters six pounds thirty shillings and four pence; and that the aforesaid manor is held of Woodfoules, and at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton was held of Thomas, earl of Sussex, as of his manor of Shimplinge by fealty and rent of two shillings per annum for all services and rents whatsoever, and is clearly valid per annum in all matters '''lxvi'''. s. viii.d.; and that the aforesaid lordship and manor of Melford Monks and the aforesaid tithes are held with their appurtenances and at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton they were held of the said lady Queen in chief by the service of the fortieth part of one soldier's fee, and by an annual rent of thirty-two '''shillings''' and four '''pence''' obols at the feast of St. Michael the Archangel is to be paid every year, and it is worth clearly for a year in all matters sixteen pounds, three shillings, and four pence; and that the aforesaid messuage or tenement, with the pertys, recently acquired from the aforesaid Johanne Bixbie, is worth twenty '''shillings''' a year in all matters, but of whom or of whom it is held is completely unknown; and that the aforesaid messuage or tenement called Blakes is held and at the time of the death of the said Francis Clopton was held of the said lady Queen as of her aforesaid hundred of Baberghe by fealty and rent of sixpence per annum for all services and rents whatsoever, and is valid per year in all issues twenty † And the aforesaid jurors say upon their aforesaid oath that the aforesaid Francis Clopton named in the aforesaid brief held no other or more manors, lands, or tenements of the said lady Queen or of any others in the said county of Suffolk on the day that he died on Sunday, service, reversion, or use In whose case, etc. ==Transcript of Original Latin Text== Suff . ' Inquisitio indentata capta apud Sudburye in comitatu prædicto , septimo die mensis Aprilis anno regni dominæ nostræ Elizabethæ , Dei gratia Angliæ , Franciæ , et Hiberniæ Reginæ , Fidei Defensoris etc. vicesimo primo , coram Roberto Crane , Thoma Edone , et Thoma Andrewes armigeris feodariis dominæ Reginæ in comitatu prædicto , com missionariis dictæ dominæ Reginæ virtute commissionis in natura brevis ejusdem dominæ Reginæ de diem clausit extremum eisdem commissionariis inter alia directi , et huic in quisitioni annexi , ad inquirendum post mortem Francisci Clopton armigeri in eodem brevi nominati per sacramentum etc. , qui dicunt super sacramentum suum quod prædictus Fran ciscus Clopton in dicto brevi nominatus ante obitum suum fuit seisitus in dominico suo ut de feodo de et in dominiis et maneriis de Kentwell , Lutons , Woodfoules , et Melford '''Monachorum''' in Melford in comitatu prædicto cum suis pertinentiis ; ac de et in omnibus illis decimis bladorum , garbarum , et granorum , et aliis decimis quibuscunque annuatim pro venientibus crescentibus , et renovantibus de omnibus illis terris , tenementis , pratis , pascuis , et pasturis dominicalibus dicto manerio de Melford Monachorum quoquomodo spectantibus ; ac de et in omnibus aliis decimis quibuscunque provenientibus sive crescentibus de omnibus illis terris et tenementis dicto manerio de Melford Monachorum pertinentibus ; ac de et in uno mesuagio sive tenemento cum pertinentiis in Melford prædicta nuper perquisito per prædictum Franciscum Clopton de quodam Johanne Bixbye ; ac de et in uno mesuagio sive tenemento cum pertinentiis in Melford prædicta vocato Blakes . Et etiam juratores prædicti dicunt super sacramentum suum prædictum quod prædictus Franciscus Clopton in dicto brevi nominatus sic ut præfertur scisitus existens de prædictis dominiis et maneriis de Kentwell , Lutons , Woodfoules , et Melford '''Monachorum''' cum suis pertinentiis ; ac de et [ in ] decimis prædictis ; ac de et in prædicto mesuagio sive tenemento nuper perquisito de prædicto Johanne Bixbye ; necnon de et in prædicto mesuagio sive tenemento vocato Blakes in Melford prædicta in prædicto comitatu Suffolcia obiit inde seisitus sexto die Aprilis anno regni dominæ Reginæ prædictæ vicesimo ; et quod Willielmus Clopton armiger est frater et proximus hæres prædicti Francisci Clopton defuncti , et fuit tempore mortis prædicti Francisci Clopton ætatis viginti septem annorum et amplius ; et quod quædam Anna domina Heydon modo uxor Christoferi Heydon militis nuper uxor ejusdem Francisci Clopton adhuc superstes est , et in plena vita existit apud Baconsthorpe in comitatu Norfolciæ Et ulterius juratores prædicti dicunt super sacramentum suum prædictum quod prædictum manerium de Kentwell tenetur et tempore mortis prædicti Francisci Clopton tenebatur de dicta domina Regina nunc ut de castro suo Norwici per servitium quartæ partis unius feodi militis ; et quod dictum manerium valet clare per annum in omnibus exitibus ultra reprisas duodecem libras ; et quod prædictum manerium de Lutons tenetur et tempore mortis prædicti Francisci Clopton tenebatur de dicta domina Regina ut de hun dredo suo de [ ] , * quodquidem hundredum nuper fuit parcella monasterii de Burye Sancti Edmundi per fidelitatem et redditum xvi . d . per annum pro omnibus servitiis et demaundis quibuscunque , et valet clare per annum in omnibus exitibus sex libras tresdecem solidos et quatuor denarios ; et quod prædictum manerium de Woodfoules tenetur ac tempore mortis prædicti Francisci Clopton tenebatur de Thoma comite Sussexiæ ut de manerio suo de Shimplinge per fidelitatem et redditum duorum solidorum per annum pro omnibus servitiis et redditibus quibuscunque , et valet clare per annum in omnibus exitibus lxvi . s . viii.d .; et quod prædictum dominicum et manerium de Melford Monaccorum et decimæ prædict ' cum pertinentiis tenentur et tempore mortis prædicti Frauncisci Clopton tenebantur de dicta domina Regina in capite per servitium quadragesimæ partis unius feodi militis , et per annualem redditum triginta duorum solidorum quatuor denariorum oboli ad festum Sancti Michaelis Archangeli singulis annis solvend ' , et valet clare per annum in omnibus exitibus sexdecim libras tres solidos quatuor denarios obolum ; et quod prædictum mesuagium sive tenementum cum perti nentiis nuper perquisitum de prædicto Johanne Bixbie valet per annum in omnibus exitibus viginti solidos , sed de quo vel de quibus tenetur penitus ignoratur ; et quod prædictum mesuagium sive tenementum vocatum Blakes tenetur et tempore mortis prædicti Frauncisci Clopton tenebatur de dicta domina Regina ut de prædicto hundredo suo de Baberghe per fidelitatem et redditum sex denariorum per annum pro omnibus servitiis et redditibus quibuscunque , et valet clare per annum in omnibus exitibus viginti . † Et juratores prædicti dicunt super sacramentum suum prædictum quod prædictus Franciscus Clopton in dicto brevi nominatus nulla alia sive plura maneria , terras , seu tenementa tenuit de dicta domina Regina sive de aliquibus aliis in dicto comitatu Suffolciæ die quo obiit in dominico , servitio , revercione , seu usu . In cujus rei etc. == Sources ==

Francis Colegrove

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So, I was researching a book from the 1800's. I had known the original Colegrove in America, Francis Colegrove and his wife, Ann, were members of the Seventh-Day Baptist Church in Rhode Island since 1698. Now I have the documentation. The following are quotes from that book, even detailing a dispute that Francis Colegrove, Jr. had with a fellow member of the church. Interesting note. William Colegrove in 1894 said that he believed Francis, Sr. had died around 1759, making him in his 90's. Most think that is exaggerated and place his death between 1726 and 1729, for no apparent reason. This proves Francis Sr. was still alive at least in 1728. Here follows: Excerpts from “The Memorial: Portraits of William Bliss (and others)” From this we have record of both Francis Colegrove, his wife Ann, and his son Francis, Jr. Note the name was most often spelled “Colgrove” but a few times “Colegrove”. They belonged to the Seventh-Day Baptist Church of Newport and then Westerly, RI. The Memorial Three Volumes in One – Complete Westerly, RI: G.B. & J.H. Utter, Publishers and Steam Printers, 1874 The Seventh-Day Baptist Memorial Page 127 “The Church met at Westerly, August the 20th, 1698. Francis Colgrove, Jeremiah Crandall, and Mrs. Colgrove, wife of Francis Colgrove, and Benj. Burdick, were baptized and added to the church.” Page 31 Original Male Members Francis Colgrove Females Ann Colgrove Page 176 & 177 “July the 11th, 1705, at a church meeting at Benjamin Burdick’s, the church being informed by their messengers, Joseph Crandall and Joseph Clarke, Jr., that Francis Colgrove and his wife declared to them, that the reason why they absented the meeting, was because that they differed from William Gibson about the divinity and humanity of Christ; Francis and his wife being present, (and William Gibson), did own it was true; and further declared, before the congregation, that Bro. Gibson’s conversation and doctrine did not agree – giving instances wherein: 1. In setting his fence upon land claimed by Colgrove. 2. Said Gibson hunted swine of Colgrove’s. 3. Said Gibson’s withdrawing his hand from a bond he had signed, without leave. As to the manner of brother and sister Colgrove’s withdrawing of their communion from Bro. Gibson, we deem it to be contrary to the rules of our Lord, (Matthew 7:18;) and their charging Bro. Gibson’s conversation to be contrary to his doctrine, we deem to be rash, and hope our Bro. Gibson doth endeavor and pursue a conversation agreeable to his doctrine. As to the difference in their understandings about the divinity and humanity of our Lord Jesus Christ, we deem to be no just ground of breach of communion. And for the other three particulars, we, having heard what hath been said on both sides, do judge our Bro. Gibson hath declared that which doth amount to full satisfaction, according to rule. Page 38 & 39 The names of the Brethren and Sisters belonging to the Church at Westerly, the 5th of the 9th month, 1712: Francis Colgrove Anna Colgrove Page 64 & 65 The following is a list of members in full communion, recorded in 1718 by Thomas Hiscox: Brethren Francis Colgrove Sisters Ann Colgrove Hannah Colgrove Page 69 & 70 “Church Meeting, June 20, 1727 Francis Colgrove made complaint to the church against William James, in that said William James doth wrongfully withhold from the said Colgrove the sum of six pounds ten shillings in money, due him on account of a pair of oxen sold by said Colgrove to said James, which six pound ten shillings was the last payment due for said oxen. Ordered, that Bro. Hiscox write a note to inform Bro. James of the complaint entered against him, and to notify him to appear at the next church meeting to make answer to the same, unless by agreement between themselves the matter be issued before.” “December 26, 1727. The matter controverted between Bro. Francis Colgrove, Jun., and Bro. Wm. James, being considerably debated, and some difficulty seeming to arise respecting the same, and neither of the persons being present, it is thought by said meeting necessary that both of the persons be required to attend the next church meeting, in order, if possible, that further light may appear, and that justice may be done. Also that Francis Colgrove, Sen., be desired to come, to the end that the cause may be heard, and if possible issued. To which end Bro. Joseph Maxon, Jun., and Bro. John Maxon, Jun., are hereby appointed to notify Bro. Francis Colgrove, Jun., and Bro. William James, of the church meeting, and also in the name and behalf of the church require them both to appear at said meeting; and that Bro. Hiscox notify Bro. Francis Colgrove, Sen., by note, in the behalf of the church, to desire him to attend the same.” “At a church meeting at the meeting house in Westerly, the 20th day of February, 1728, present – John Maxon, Eld. Benjamin Burdick, Dea. Joseph Maxon, Sen. John Davis Oliver Babcock Geo. Stillman Joseph Maxon, Jun. Zacheus Renels Rob’t Burdick Thomas Clarke Thomas Hiscox Francis Colgrove, Sen. Francis Colgrove, Jun. William James Tacy Maxson Content Maxson Hannah Maxson Elizabeth Davis A complaint being exhibited to the church, the 20th of June 1727, by Francis Colgrove, Jun., against William James, for wrongfully withholding from him the sum of six pounds ten shillings in money, as is more at large to be seen in the complaint on the 55th page of the church record; The matter being thus laid before the church, and having been divers times considered, debated, and seriously weighed, and being to the utmost of our power willing to have an impartial regard and unbiased affection to each of them, without the least degree preferring one before another in judgment, but to do justly, love mercy, in a humble walk with God, and faithful discharge of duty to these our brethren; and insomuch as – 1st. That Bro. Colgrove and Bro. James both agree that Bro. James did formerly and really contact the debt with and thereby became indebted to Bro. Colgrove; and, 2d. That Bro. Colgrove awfully affirms, in the presence of God and before the church, that the debt hath never been paid him; 3d. That Bro. James is so cautious, careful, and uncertain, that he hath not freedom to say or satisfaction to affirm that he hath ever paid the same, but thinks and verily believes he hath paid it; it is therefore evident, that the debt was once undoubtedly due; and that it neither appears by affirmative evidence or demonstration ever to have been answered, paid or discharged in any manner of way; therefore we conclude, that it is but justice the money should be paid, and therefore do accordingly hereby order Bro. William James to pay to said Bro. Colgrove the above said sum of six pounds ten shillings in money, in answer to the debt aforesaid. Voted without any contrary voice, excepting Sister Tacy Maxson” Page 114-116 The following is a list of members made up by a Committee of the church in 1740: – Francis Colgrove Hannah Colegrove John Colegrove Francis Colegrove Page 130-132 Elder Thomas Clarke died Nov. 26, 1767, in the 82nd year of his age. In May 1768, Joshua Clarke, who had long been an active member of the church, was ordained to the office of Elder, by the “laying on of hands of Elder Hiscox, and Elder John Maxson” of Newport, who had been invited to assist on that occasion… Elisha Stillman and Joseph Clarke, being requested by the church to ascertain who were still members of the church, reported members to the number of 278, as follows: – “The names of the brethren and sisters belonging to the Church, transcribed from the original entries, and duly examined and compared in July, A.D. 1768, by Elisha Stillman and Joseph Clarke, Jr.” Francis Colgrove Susanna Colgrove, wife of John Elizabeth Colgrove, widow • Interesting note by Christopher, there were many “negro’s” and at least one “Indian” listed in the church register, side by side with everyone, reminding us that Rhode Island was a place of great tolerance in its day Pages 175 & 183 List of members added to the church after the list of 1768 was made up. Sarah Colgrove, April 20, 1770 Ruth Colgrove, May 13, 1786 Page 124 & 125 The names of members added to the church for ten years previous were as follows: – Anna Colgrove, daugh. Of Francis Eli Colgrove

Francis Dudley ca. 1640-after 1702 of Concord, Massachusetts

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2. Joseph Dudley born 9 February 1666 at Concord, died there 3 November 1702. He married there on 25 February 1690/1, Abigail Goble, born Concord 19 January 1668 and died there 19 December 1705, daughter of Thomas and Mary (---) Goble. Joseph died so young that his father help settle the estate. Joseph had seven children: Abigail, Sarah, Jane, Joseph, Benjamin, Mary, and Sibylla. 3. Benjamin Dudley born 20 March 1698/9 at Concord, died after 1748. He married at Sudbury, Massachusetts 17 November 1726, Elizabeth Rice, born at Sudbury 4 December 1705 daughter of John and Elizabeth (Clapp) Rice. Benjamin and Elizabeth had five children: Joseph, Abigail, Benjamin, William and Ebenezer. 4a. Joseph Dudley born about 1728 at Sudbury, Massachusetts and died April 1802 at East Sudbury, Massachusetts. He married at Westborough, Massachusetts Mary Warren, born Westborough 12 September 1732 and died before 1798, daughter of Daniel and Mary (Weatherby) Warren. Joseph left a will (Middlesex Probate #6482) and was a farmer. Joseph and Mary had nine children: Mary, Sarah, Nahum, Joseph, Daniel, Submit, Moses, Luther, and Jonas. 4b. Abigail Dudley born about 1729 at Sudbury, Massachusetts and died 13 February 1814 at Westmoreland, New Hampshire. She married 12 April 1750 at Sudbury, Samuel Howe, born Framingham, Massachusetts 15 June 1727 and died 8 April 1806 at Westmoreland, New Hampshire, son of Nehemiah and Margaret (Willard) Howe. Abigail and Samuel had eight children: Caleb, Elizabeth, Nehemiah, Margaret, Samuel, William, Abigail, and Benjamin Dudley. 5. Nahum Dudley born 4 May 1757 at East Sudbury, Massachusetts and died 15 October 1799 at Westmoreland, New Hampshire. He married his first cousin before 1784 Margaret Howe, born about 1757 at Westmoreland and died there 9 October 1803, daughter of Samuel and Abigail (Dudley) Howe. Nahum was a Farmer. Administration for his estate in Cheshire County Probate #68. Nahum had eight children: Joseph, Polly, Abigail, Samuel, Nahum, Moses, Margaret, and Warren. In Cheshire Deeds 70:508 and 70:511, Moses Dudley as guardian of Moses, Margaret and Warren Dudley, minors, and Joseph, Nahum, and Joseph Underwood, Jr. yeoman of Putney, Vermont quitclaim rights to Charles Tuells on 2 acres 3/4 which was set off said children of the late Nahum Dudley as heirs to the estate of Samuel Howe, dated 29 March 1815 and recorded 10 July 1815. This shows that Polly Dudley married Joseph Underwood, Jr. There is another deed that also shows this relationship. In addition, this Polly signed her name in her father's estate papers, whereas my Polly B. Dudley could only sign her mark on deeds. Sources: History of the Dudley Family with Genealogical Tables, Pedigrees, etc. by Dean Dudley (Wakefield, MA 1892). History of Westmoreland (Great Meadow) New Hampshire 1741-1970 (Westmoreland, NH, the Committee, 1976). Howe Genealogies: This Volume Contains the Genealogy of John Howe of Sudbury and Marlborough, Massachusetts by David Wait Howe (ed. Gilman Bigelow Howe) (NEHGS, Boston/Haverhill, 1929). A Genealogical History of the Rice Family: Descendants of Deacon Edmund Rice by Andrew Henshaw Ward (Boston, 1858). Fifty Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins by John Brooks Threfall (Madison, WI, 1990). 2. Joseph Dudley born 9 February 1666 at Concord, died there 3 November 1702. He married there on 25 February 1690/1, Abigail Goble, born Concord 19 January 1668 and died there 19 December 1705, daughter of Thomas and Mary (---) Goble. Joseph died so young that his father help settle the estate. Joseph had seven children: Abigail, Sarah, Jane, Joseph, Benjamin, Mary, and Sibylla. 3. Benjamin Dudley born 20 March 1698/9 at Concord, died after 1748. He married at Sudbury, Massachusetts 17 November 1726, Elizabeth Rice, born at Sudbury 4 December 1705 daughter of John and Elizabeth (Clapp) Rice. Benjamin and Elizabeth had five children: Joseph, Abigail, Benjamin, William and Ebenezer. 4a. Joseph Dudley born about 1728 at Sudbury, Massachusetts and died April 1802 at East Sudbury, Massachusetts. He married at Westborough, Massachusetts Mary Warren, born Westborough 12 September 1732 and died before 1798, daughter of Daniel and Mary (Weatherby) Warren. Joseph left a will (Middlesex Probate #6482) and was a farmer. Joseph and Mary had nine children: Mary, Sarah, Nahum, Joseph, Daniel, Submit, Moses, Luther, and Jonas. 4b. Abigail Dudley born about 1729 at Sudbury, Massachusetts and died 13 February 1814 at Westmoreland, New Hampshire. She married 12 April 1750 at Sudbury, Samuel Howe, born Framingham, Massachusetts 15 June 1727 and died 8 April 1806 at Westmoreland, New Hampshire, son of Nehemiah and Margaret (Willard) Howe. Abigail and Samuel had eight children: Caleb, Elizabeth, Nehemiah, Margaret, Samuel, William, Abigail, and Benjamin Dudley. 5. Nahum Dudley born 4 May 1757 at East Sudbury, Massachusetts and died 15 October 1799 at Westmoreland, New Hampshire. He married his first cousin before 1784 Margaret Howe, born about 1757 at Westmoreland and died there 9 October 1803, daughter of Samuel and Abigail (Dudley) Howe. Nahum was a Farmer. Administration for his estate in Cheshire County Probate #68. Nahum had eight children: Joseph, Polly, Abigail, Samuel, Nahum, Moses, Margaret, and Warren. In Cheshire Deeds 70:508 and 70:511, Moses Dudley as guardian of Moses, Margaret and Warren Dudley, minors, and Joseph, Nahum, and Joseph Underwood, Jr. yeoman of Putney, Vermont quitclaim rights to Charles Tuells on 2 acres 3/4 which was set off said children of the late Nahum Dudley as heirs to the estate of Samuel Howe, dated 29 March 1815 and recorded 10 July 1815. This shows that Polly Dudley married Joseph Underwood, Jr. There is another deed that also shows this relationship. In addition, this Polly signed her name in her father's estate papers, whereas my Polly B. Dudley could only sign her mark on deeds. Sources: History of the Dudley Family with Genealogical Tables, Pedigrees, etc. by Dean Dudley (Wakefield, MA 1892). History of Westmoreland (Great Meadow) New Hampshire 1741-1970 (Westmoreland, NH, the Committee, 1976). Howe Genealogies: This Volume Contains the Genealogy of John Howe of Sudbury and Marlborough, Massachusetts by David Wait Howe (ed. Gilman Bigelow Howe) (NEHGS, Boston/Haverhill, 1929). A Genealogical History of the Rice Family: Descendants of Deacon Edmund Rice by Andrew Henshaw Ward (Boston, 1858). Fifty Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins by John Brooks Threfall (Madison, WI, 1990).

Francis E Fignar's Obituary

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Clipping of obituary, in the possession of Louise Soltis. Photograph by Kelly Gardner.

Francis Joseph Kain (1861-1930) Research Summary

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[[Kain-711|Francis Joseph Kain (1861-1930)]] What is his full name? :Francis Joseph KAIN: MJK’s SS-5 :Frank J KAIN: 1900 US Census, 1920 US Census, SD Death Index, grave marker, Julia’s marriage license, SD state death record abstract, wife’s death record, SD death certificate :Frank N KAIN: 1930 US Census :J Frank KAIN: 1885 IA Census :Frank KAIN: MJK’s delayed certificate of birth :To-do: children’s vital records, marriage license, baptism record, obituary, newspapers, [no Clinton Co. birth records before 1880] Who were his parents? :John and Mary KAIN: 1880 US Census :John Kain and Mary FOX: SD death certificate :To-do: baptism records, obituary, newspapers, full marriage license, [no :Clinton Co. birth records before 1880] When was he born? :14 Oct 1861: SD death certificate :abt 1862: 1880 US Census, 1910 US Census, 1920 US Census, 1885 IA Census :Oct 1862: 1900 US Census :abt 1864: 1870 US Census, 1930 US Census :1861: grave marker, SD state death record abstract :To-do: Baptism record, full marriage license, newspapers, obituary, [no Clinton Co. birth records before 1880] Where was he born? :Clinton, IA: SD death certificate :IA according to all census records :Section 29, Hampshire Twp., Clinton Co., IA: location of parent’s farm in 1864 plat map :Lyons, IA: MJK’s delayed certificate of birth :To-do: check land records to see when family went from Elk River Twp. to Hampshire Twp. (between 1860 and 1864), Verify Elk River Twp. became Hampshire Twp. btwn 1860 and 1864; Co. directory, newspapers, obituary, [no Clinton Co. birth records before 1880], children’s census records When did family move to Hampshire Twp.? :Btwn 1860 and 1864: 1860 US Census and 1864 Hampshire Co. plat map :To-do: Clinton Co. land records, co. directories, newspapers Where did he go to school? :To-do: St. Irenaeus school records, Clinton County school records How long did he go to school? :To-do: St. Irenaeus school records, Clinton County school records When did he marry? :14 Feb 1888: Clinton Co. Marriage Register from library microfilm :To-do: church records, detailed civil marriage record, newspapers Where did he marry? :St. Irenaeus Catholic Church, Lyons, IA: Clinton Co. Marriage Register from library microfilm (name of priest listed) :To-do: church records, detailed civil marriage record, newspapers When did he move to Plymouth Co., IA? :Btwn 1888 (marriage) and 1892 (Dick’s birth in Kingsley) :To-do: Land records, co. directories Where did he live in Plymouth Co. IA? :Somewhere near Kingsley: Dick Kain’s WW1 draft registration :To-do: county land records, co. directories When did he move to Knox Co. NE? :Btwn 1892 (Dick’s birth) and 1894 (Julia’s birth) :To-do: Land records, co. directories Where did he live in Knox Co.? :In 1903, SW of Bazile Mills and NW of Creighton (Closer to Bazile Mills than to Creighton), W and NE of SW quarter of section 8 and N2SE of section 7 of :Creighton Twp. : 1903 Knox County Atlas [http://beta.historicmapworks.com/Map/US/103214/Creighton+Township++Bazile+Mills/Knox+County+1903/Nebraska/] :Creighton Twp.: 1910 US Census :Creighton City, Creighton Twp.: 1920 US Census :To-do: Knox Co. land records, county directories When did he move to Yankton, SD? :After 1920 US Census and prior to 5 Apr 1930: 1920 US Census and 1930 US Census :To-do: Land records, co. directories Where did he live in Yankton, SD? :1100 Walnut St.: 1930 US Census :603 Capitol: Dec 1930 Death Certificate To-do: Yankton directory for 1930 What did he do for a living? :Farmer: 1900 US Census, 1910 US Census, SD death certificate :To-do: County and city directories When did he die? :12 Dec 1930: SD Death Index, certified copy of SD death record, SD death certificate :1930: on-line cemetery index, grave marker :To-do: obituary Where did he die? :Yankton, SD: SD Death Index, certified copy of SD death record :603 Capitol, Yankton, SD: SD death certificate :To-do: obituary What was the cause of death? :Apoplexy; cardiovascular renal disease: certified copy of SD death record, SD death certificate :To-do: obituary Where is he buried? :St. Ludgers Catholic Cemetery: on-line cemetery listing, grave marker photo :To-do: obituary

Francis McNabb and Catherine Farnan DNA Confirmations

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== Introduction == This page is for DNA matches where [[McNABB-662|Francis McNabb (abt.1841-1928)]] and [[Farnan-19|Catherine (Farnan) McNabb (abt.1845-1922)]] are the MRCA. It does not need to contain all known matches -- just those which are required to establish all of the "Confirmed with DNA" parental relationship tags for the children of Frances and Catherine. It should not contain matches where the MRCA is a descendant of Francis and Catherine. === G2G discussion === [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1145322/can-i-use-a-space-to-make-dna-confirmation-messages-tidier This concept was discussed on G2G]. == Match list == === Matches of T.J. McNabb (MyHeritage) === #[[McNabb-495 | T.J.]] is the son of [[McNabb-496|Michael Joseph McNabb (1913-1980)]] #[[McNabb-496|Michael]] is the son of [[McNabb-497|Edward George McNabb (1868-1958)]] #[[McNabb-497 | Edward]] is the son of [[McNABB-662|Francis McNabb (abt.1841-1928)]] ==== Match between T.J. McNabb and K.H. ==== #K.H. is the child of [[McNabb-971|Raymond Francis McNabb (1919-1989)]] #[[McNabb-971 | Raymond]] is the son of [[McNabb-418|Francis Joseph McNabb (1877-1950)]] #[[McNabb-418|Francis]] is the son of [[McNABB-662|Francis McNabb (abt.1841-1928)]] & Catherine. Relationship of '''second cousin''' between T.J. and K.H. is confirmed by a MyHeritage test match of '''206.8cM''' across '''10 segments''', largest segment 44cM. Expected match range for 2C from [https://dnapainter.com/tools/sharedcmv4 DNA Painter via The DNA Geek] is 41-592cM with mean of 229cM. * '''Note:''' T.J. and K.H. also have an expected half-3C1R relationship with MRCA [[Libeau-4 | Joseph Libeau]] however expected size of half-3C1R is 0-139 with mean 37cM so we can be confident that the 206.8cM match indicates more than that relationship. ==== Match between T.J. McNabb and R.M. ==== #R.M. is the child of [[Jack-2528|Thelma Harries Jack]] #[[Jack-2528|Thelma Harries Jack]] is the daughter of [[Jack-2527|Percy James Jack (1893-1956)]] #[[Jack-2527|Percy James Jack]] is the son of [[McNab-633|Jane Arabella (McNab) Jack (1866-1951)]] # [[McNab-633|Jane Arabella McNab]] is the daughter of [[McNABB-662|Francis McNabb (abt.1841-1928)]] & Catherine. Relationship of '''second cousin once removed''' between T.J. and R.M. is confirmed by a MyHeritage test match of '''153.1cM''' across '''7 segments''', largest segment 46.8cM. Expected match range for 2C1R from [https://dnapainter.com/tools/sharedcmv4 DNA Painter via The DNA Geek] is 14-353cM with mean of 122cM. === Matches of R.R. (AncestryDNA) === #R.R. is the child of [[McNabb-496|Michael Joseph McNabb (1913-1980)]] #Michael is the son of [[McNabb-497|Edward George McNabb (1868-1958)]] #Edward is the son of [[McNABB-662|Francis McNabb (abt.1841-1928)]] ==== Match between R.R and S.O. ==== #S.O. is the child of [[O'Brien-9993|Terence Daniel O'Brien (1934-2004)]] #Terence is the son of [[Schmack-7|Stella Marie (Schmack) O'Brien (1902-1977)]] #Stella is the daughter of [[McNabb-960|Catherine (McNabb) Schmack (1870-1961)]] #Catherine is the daughter of [[McNABB-662|Francis McNabb (abt.1841-1928)]] Relationship of '''second cousin once removed''' between R.R. and S.O. is confirmed by an AncestryDNA test match of '''160cM''' across '''7 segments''', largest segment 48cM. Expected match range for 2C1R from [https://dnapainter.com/tools/sharedcmv4 DNA Painter via The DNA Geek] is 14-353cM with mean of 122cM. == Sources ==

Francis Oscar Wiita's Obituary

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==Transcription== Death of Francis O. Wiita [[Johansson_Wiida-2 | Francis Oscar Wiita]], 55 years old, died early this morning at his home on Sheldon road. Mr. Wiita was born in Finland but lived in Fitchburg for many years. He is survived by his wife, Matilda (Konstanim) Wiita, five daughters, Mrs. Leo T. Silverberg, Leah, Elvie, Nellie and Elma Wiita, all of Fitchburg and five sons, Leo of Ashburnham, and Eino, Arlie, Arvo, and Ahti, all of Fitchburg, one sister, [[Wiida-1|Mrs. Matilda Suomala]] of this city and seven grandchildren. The funeral will be Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the home with burial at Forest Hill cemetery. ==Todo== * Confirm the Fitchburg Sentinel as the original source of this uploaded file, and confirm the date of publication. ==Sources== * Newspaper clipping of an obituary uploaded to findagrave.com. Suspected to be originally from the Fitchburg Sentinel on or around 9 July 1930 (the date findagrave lists as his death). {{FindAGrave|138584919}}. Accessed 14 Apr 2024. ==References==

Francis Robey's FAN club

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Examining the interactions of [[Robey-247|Francis Robey]] within his Charles County, Maryland community in an effort to identify his wife's maiden name and birth family. *1824-09-12 -- Will of [[Robey-225|'''Malachi Robey''']] names wife [[Carrington-416|'''Mary''']], sons '''Francis Robey''' (Executor), [[Robey-234|'''Henry Malachi Robey''']], [[Robey-220|'''Samuel Carrington Robey''']], daughters '''Elizabeth Robey''', '''Martha Robey''', '''Ann Robey''', [[Robey-221|'''Mary Eleanor Robey''']]. Witnesses '''Elias Robey''' (possibly Robey-441 ?) and [[Boswell-3019| '''Rezin A. Boswell''']]."Maryland, Charles County, wills" > MD Charles County Wills 1818-1825 T2721/C681-15, HB 14, pp 1-353, 1 Jan 1818–31 Dec 1825, digital images, DGS 105435314, image 356 of 371, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C397-5S16-Q); citing Maryland, Charles County, Orphans Court records, Wills, Liber HB no.14, p. 340, Will of Malachi Robey, October term 1824. *1826-08-18 -- '''Francis Robey''' and '''William Berry (of John)''' were the securities for '''Ann Robey's''' Administration Bond on the estate of '''Alexander Robey''' (possibly the son of [[Robey-213|Alexander Robey]] Sr.?)."Maryland Register of Wills Records, 1629-1999," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYMK-LDD?cc=1803986&wc=SNY8-2NL%3A146535701%2C146627501 : 20 May 2014), Charles > Administration accounts 1825-1829 > image 96 of 276; citing Hall of Records, Annapolis, Charles County Administration Accounts 1825-1829, p. 188. *1827-10-25 -- '''Francis Robey''' and '''Ignatius Stewart''' were the securities for '''Teresa Robey's''' Administration Bond on the estate of '''John N. Robey'''."Maryland Register of Wills Records, 1629-1999," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYMK-LMQ?cc=1803986&wc=SNY8-2NL%3A146535701%2C146627501 : 20 May 2014), Charles > Administration accounts 1825-1829 > image 167 of 276; citing Hall of Records, Annapolis, Charles County Administration accounts 1825-1829, p. 327. *1829-01-20 -- '''Francis Robey''' and [[Boswell-3019| '''Rezin A. Boswell''']] request compensation from the state legislature for arrest of a gambler.''Journal of the Proceedings of the House of Delegates of the State of Maryland'' (Annapolis: J. Green, printer, 1828), p. 62, digital images, ''Google Books'' (https://www.google.com/books/edition/Journal_of_the_Proceedings_of_the_House/SsQzAQAAMAAJ). *1829-08-11 -- '''Francis Robey''' paid taxes for estate of [[Luckett-489 | '''Thomas Luckett''']]."Maryland Register of Wills Records, 1629-1999," images, ''FamilySearch'' (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YMK-2KB?cc=1803986&wc=SNY8-2NG%3A146535701%2C146640701), Charles > Administration accounts 1829-1833 > image 20 of 284; citing Hall of Records, Annapolis, Charles County Administration Accounts 1829-1833, p. 12. == Sources ==

Francis Taylor Diary, 1786-1799

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Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-11.pdf
Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-4.pdf
Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-7.pdf
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Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-16.pdf
Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-1.pdf
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Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-2.pdf
Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-14.pdf
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Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-15.pdf
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Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-10.pdf
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Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-13.pdf
Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-8.pdf
Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-5.pdf
== About the Diary == [[Taylor-17742|Francis Taylor]] (1747-1799), the bachelor son of [[Taylor-4563|George Taylor]] and [[Gibson-2339|Rachel Gibson]], kept a diary of his life on his father's plantation in Orange County, Virginia from 1786 until his death in 1799. By the first year of the diary, Francis's mother Rachel was dead, as was Francis's step-mother, Sarah Taliaferro, who was the widow of Francis Conway and the second wife of George Taylor. The diary begins with Francis and his half-brother George Conway Taylor residing at their father's original Orange County home ''Collina'' and contains accounts in 1786-87 of the construction of their father's new home ''Midland'', which Francis would inherit on his father's death in 1792. === Provenance === The original diary was found in the attic of ''Rosebud'', the home of [[Taylor-20040|Robert Taylor, Jr.]], Francis's first cousin once removed, by [[Grinnan-14|Dr. Andrew Glassell Grinnan]] (1827-1902) , who was great-grandson of Francis's uncle [[Taylor-12234|Erasmus Taylor]] (1715-1794) -- ''see Relationship Chart below''. Dr. Grinnan was a respected historian of the Taylor and Glassell families of early Orange County, Virginia. His grandparents [[Glassell-5|Andrew Glassell]] (1738-1827) and [[Taylor-12632|Elizabeth Taylor]] had a close family relationship with Francis and appear frequently in the diary. During the time he owned and studied the diary, Dr. Grinnan made a number of annotations to the diary, which appear in line and are indicated in the attached transcript by his initials (AGG). Dr. Grinnan eventually sold the diary to another Taylor family historian, [[Anderson-43760|William Kyle Anderson]], great grandson of Francis's brother Commodore Richard Taylor and author of [https://archive.org/details/donaldrobertsonh00ande/page/n10 ''Donald Robertson and his wife Rachel Rogers of King and Queen County, Virginia, etc.''] Anderson's niece [[Anderson-43781|Susan Harris Anderson]] appears to be the one who transcribed Francis's diary, [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-14.pdf "Note" page accompanying the diary transcript], by Sue H. Anderson, identifying her uncle as the owner of the diary and in 1900 William Kyle Anderson wrote a forward to the diary that contains brief biographies of its most often-mentioned people. Anderson also made annotations to the diary, indicated by his initials (WKA). During the course of his work on Francis Taylor's diary ''(and possibly on his book)'', Anderson appears to have collaborated with Taylor family historian [[Taylor-17352|Philip Fall Taylor]], whose annotations on the diary are indicated by (PFT). Anderson bequeathed the original diary to his sister [[Anderson-43778|Sallie Quicksall (Anderson) Venable]] with instructions that the diary eventually be donated to the [http://www.lva.virginia.gov/ Library of Virginia] in Richmond, where it currently resides. Copies of the diary and its transcript are on file at [http://filsonhistorical.org/ Filson Historical Society] in Louisville Kentucky, where Philip Fall Taylor's papers reside, and [https://library.unc.edu/ University of North Carolina Library], Chapel Hill. This copy of the diary transcript comes from the papers of another Taylor family historian and genealogist, [[Taylor-17245|Sarah Jouett (Taylor) Prisley]]. She is the grand niece of Philip Fall Taylor and his sister [[Taylor-17351|Sarah Jouett (Taylor) Cannon]], who was secretary and treasurer of the [https://history.ky.gov/ Kentucky Historical Society] for many years, and for whom the younger Jouett was named. Jouett Taylor Prisley's handwriting can be seen filling in some of the more faded sections of this copy of the transcript, and her "About This Diary" paper is linked in the References section below. === Transcript === * The original leather-bound diary notebooks found by Dr. Grinnan were missing the entire year for 1793 * This transcript of the diary is missing the month of March 1786, and the days between 03 Apr - 24 May 1799 * Francis's annual financial account appears at the end of each year of the diary, beginning in 1787, the year that the construction of his father's home ''Midland'' was completed * Francis began adding a list of births, marriages, and deaths at the end of each year, beginning in 1789 * Dr. Grinnan made end notes for each year of the diary == The Diary == * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/c6/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799.pdf Introduction by William Kyle Anderson] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/01/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-1.pdf Diary - 1786] ''(missing the month of March)'' * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d8/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-2.pdf Diary - 1787] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/c/cf/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-3.pdf Diary - 1788] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/99/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-4.pdf Diary - 1789] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/e/e7/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-5.pdf Diary - 1790] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8e/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-6.pdf Diary - 1791] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3a/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-7.pdf Diary - 1792] * ''Diary - 1793 is missing'' * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b3/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-8.pdf Diary - 1794] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fe/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-9.pdf Diary - 1795] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/d/d5/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-10.pdf Diary - 1796] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/2/29/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-11.pdf Diary - 1797] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/7/7d/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-12.pdf Diary - 1798] * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/0/08/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-13.pdf Diary - 1799] ''(missing the days between 03 Apr - 24 May)'' == Relationship Chart == {{Image|file=Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-2.jpg |align=l |size=800 |link=https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/11/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-2.jpg |caption=''Relationships of Diary's Key Players'' }} == References == See also: * [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Taylor_Homes Historic Taylor Family Homes in Orange County, Virginia, 1722-Present] * [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=RL5YAAAAMAAJ&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA29 ''Some Notable Families of America''], by Annah Robinson Watson, New York, 1898, p. 29. * [http://www.worldcat.org/identities/np-grinnan,%20andrew%20glassell$1827%201902/ WorldCat entry for Andrew Glassell Grinnan] * [https://archive.org/details/donaldrobertsonh00ande/page/n9 Donald Robertson and his wife Rachel Rogers of King and Queen County, Virginia, etc.], by William Kyle Anderson. Detroit: Winn and Hammond, printers, 1900. * [https://www.jstor.org/stable/4243897?seq=3#metadata_info_tab_contents "Diary of Col. Francis Taylor"], published in ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography'', Vol. 30. Richmond: The Virginia Historical Society, 1922, pp. 387-388 ''(This is a brief overview, not the entire diary)'' * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/99/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-15.pdf Notes on Francis Taylor and His Diary], by Jouett Taylor Prisley * [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/b/b8/Francis_Taylor_Diary_1786-1799-16.pdf About This Diary...], by Jouett Taylor Prisley

Francis W. Lea's Will

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== Biography == The will of [[Lea-733|Francis Lea]], recorded in Louisa County, VA, Will Book 1, pages 82 and 83 follows (will was probated Louisa County, VA, July 14, 1766: "In the name of God - Amen the twenty sixth Day of April 1765 I [[Lea-733|Francis Lea]] of the County of Louisa and Parish of Fredericksville being very Sick and weak in Body but of perfect mind & memory thanks be given unto God Therefore Calling unto mind the Mortality of my Body and knowing that it was appointed for all men once to die, Do make and ordaine this My last will and Testament that is to say principally & first of all I give & recommend my Soul into hands of Almighty God that gave it and my Body I recommend to the Earth to be buried indecent Christian Burial at the Discretion of my Executors nothing doubting but at the general Resurrection Shall receive the same By the mighty Power of God and his Son Jesus Christ. And as touching Such worldly Estate wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me in this Life I give demise and dispose of the same in the following Manner and Form Imprimis it is my will that all my Just Debts be fully satisfied and paid Item I give and bequeath unto my Daughter [[Lea-1135|Mary Tate]] & [[Tate-3077|Robert Tate]] her Husband one negro Boy Named Ned and a Negro Girl named Hannah which said Negroes and their Increase after the Death of Said [[Lea-1135|Mary]] & [[Tate-3077|Robert Tate]], is to be divided Equally between the Heirs of their Bodies lawfully begotten Item I give and bequeath unto my Daughter [[Lea-734|Eleanor Vaun]] Relict of [[Vaughan-79 |Martin Vaun]] one Negro Boy named Moses and one Negro Girl named Judy during her Life and after her Decease to the Heirs of her Body lawfully begotten by the said [[Vaughan-79 |Martin Vaun]]. Item I lend to my beloved wife [[White-25016|Ann Lea]] all the remainder of my Estate real and personal for & during her Natural Life and after her Decease I give and bequeath all that Tract of Land whereon I now life to my Son [[Lea-1133|John Lea]] to him & his Heirs forever lawfully and if he should die without lawfull heir to the nex survying of my Sons [[Lea-1112|Wainsright]] & [[Lea-1132|Gideon]] or to the Lawfully Heirs of Their Bodies. Item is my will and Desire that after the Death of my said wife my Estate Not already mentioned to be equally divided amongst Children [[Lea-1133|John]], [[Lea-1112|Wainright]], [[Lea-1132|Gedion]], [[Lea-1134|Ann]] and [[Lea-1131|Susannah]], or as many of them as shall be then living. Item it is my will and Desire that if any of my Sons should died without Heir or before they should arive to the age of twenty one years then their Parts should be equally divided among my Surviving Sons. Item my Will & Desire is that if either of last mentioned Daughters Should die without Heir or before they Arive to the Age of twenty one Years then their Survivor Should possess her part. Item it is my Will and that my Negro Girl Sal who is a Natural Fool be maintained at the expense of my last mentioned children [[Lea-1133|John]], [[Lea-1112|Wainright]], [[Lea-1132|Gedion]], [[Lea-1134|Ann]] and [[Lea-1131|Susannah]]. Item I do further by this my last will and Testament Constitute appoint and ordain my beloved Wife [[White-25016|Ann Lea]] and my Friend Thomas White of Spotsyvania County to be Executors of this my last Will and Testament. Item it is my Will & Desire that my Estate shall not be appraised nor sold and I do hereby utterly Disallow revoke and disannul all and every other former Testements wills Legacies Bequests by me in any Ways beforenamed. Willed and bequeathed ratifying and confirming this and no other to be my last will and Testament in Witness whereof I have hereunto Set my Hand and Seal the Day and Date above written. Sign'd & Sealed ) interlin'd )
[[Lea-733|Francis Lea]] (Seal)
In presence of us) before Signd)
William White her Ann C White mark John Mackalester At a Court held for Louisa County on the 14 Day of July 1766 This Will was this Day in open Court proved by the Witnesses and thereto admitted to recorded and is recorded. Teste James Littlepage CL. Ct." Recorded in Will Book #1, Pages 82 and 83 Pursuant to an order of the Worshipful Court of Louisa we the Subscribers have Divided the Estate of Francis Lea (agreeable to his Will) as follows-- No. 1. - to [[Lea-1133|John Lea]]
No. 2. - to [[Lea-1132|Gidion Lea]]
No. 3. - to [[Carpenter-13613|Jonathan Carpenter]]
No. 4. - to [[Lea-1112|Francis W. Lea]]
No. 5. - to [[Acuff-110|Timothy Acough]]
By Aaron Fontaine, John Poindexter, Nathan Smith 3rd Sept. 1783. At a Court held for Louisa County 1783. Will Book 3, Page 229

FranciscanSaints

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Great Franciscan Saints The Franciscans are a group of related mendicant Christian religious orders, primarily within the Catholic Church. Founded in 1209 by Saint Francis of Assisi, these orders include the Order of Friars Minor (Franciscan Friars and Capuchin friars), the Order of Saint Clare, and the Third Order of Saint Francis. They adhere to the teachings and spiritual disciplines of the founder and of his main associates and followers, such as Clare of Assisi, Anthony of Padua, and Elizabeth of Hungary. Several smaller Protestant Franciscan orders exist as well, notably in the Anglican and Lutheran traditions. ----- *Saint Francis of Assisi (1100's-1226), feast day: 4th of October *Saint Clare of Assissi (1194-1253), feast day: 11th of August *Padre Pio, Saint Pius of Pietrelcina (1887-1968), feast day: 23rd of September *Sant Antonio di Padova (1195-1231), feast day: 13th of June *John Duns Scoutus (1265/66-1308), feast day: 8th of November *Angela di Foligno (1248-1309), feast day: 4th of January (7th of January in United States) *[[Kolbe-72|Saint Maximilian Kolbe]] (1894-1941), feast day: 14th of August

Franco Family Reunion Book

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This book was researched and assembled by Joslyn Minobe for the Franco Family Reunion that took place on Maui, Hawaii in March 1997.

Francois Xavier DesRoberts dit Jaques family

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The goal of this project is to fill in the holes in the geneology records that have been handed down to me. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[DesRoberts-1|Denise DesRoberts]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13614986 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Franco-Ontarien / Franco-Ontarian

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Franco-Ontarien_Franco-Ontarian.jpg
Les Franco-Ontariens sont les francophones qui vivent dans la province canadienne de l'Ontario. Ils représentent la plus grande communauté de francophones du Canada après celle du Québec, représentant plus de 50 % des francophones hors-Québec et forment la plus grande minorité linguistique en Ontario. Leur histoire peut etre retracée aux premiers francophones qui foulèrent le sol dans le territoire qui deviendra l'Ontario. Etienne Brûlé est historiquement reconnu comme le premier Franco-Ontarien. ---- Franco-Ontarians (French: Franco-Ontariens or Franco-Ontariennes if female) are French Canadian or francophone residents of the Canadian province of Ontario. They constitute the largest French-speaking community in Canada outside Quebec, as well as the largest minority language group within Ontario. Their history can be traced back to the first francophones to explore the territory which would be known as Ontario. Etienne Brûlé, a scout and agent of Champlain is historically recognized as the first Franco-Ontarian. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franco-Ontariens https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franco-Ontarian http://www.encyclopediecanadienne.ca/fr/article/franco-ontariens/ https://www.ontario.ca/fr/page/histoire-franco-ontarienne http://www.ameriquefrancaise.org/fr/article-327/Drapeau_franco-ontarien.html#.Wohhea6nEdU

Frank & Lilly Fiscus Family Photos

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Family pictures from Frank & Lillie Fiscus's family as well as some of their ancestors.

Frank and Frances Jackson

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== Pictures of twins, Fran and Frank Jackson == : [[Jackson-4561|Fran]] : [[Jackson-4560|Frank]]

Frank Earl Klepper's Media

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Some media that would not fit on profile page

Frank Etherington Pomerene 1925 sketch

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[[Pomerene-2|Frank Etherington Pomerene (1868-)]] ------ Charles B. Galbreath, ''History of Ohio'', 5 vols. (Chicago, The American historical society, inc., 1925), 4:418-419 (Frank Etherington Pomerene); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015070269058?urlappend=%3Bseq=782%3Bownerid=13510798887851628-818 ''Hathi Trust'']. See related, Charles B. Galbreath, ''History of Ohio'', 5 vols. (Chicago, The American historical society, inc., 1925), 3:447-448 (Warner M. Pomerene); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015070269066?urlappend=%3Bseq=821%3Bownerid=13510798887851443-847 ''Hathi Trust'']. See related, Charles B. Galbreath, ''History of Ohio'', 5 vols. (Chicago, The American historical society, inc., 1925), 3:287-288 (Hon. Atlee Pomerene); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015070269066?urlappend=%3Bseq=547%3Bownerid=13510798887851443-565 ''Hathi Trust'']. ----- Frank Etherington Pomerene. For many years the bar of Coshocton has been noted as a body of unusually able men, and among them no one bore more fully the mark of intellectual supremacy than the late Frank Etherington Pomerene, who at the time of his death, June 1, 1919, was accounted one of the ablest corporation lawyers in the State of Ohio. Mr. Pomerene was born at Coshocton, Ohio, March 25, 1868, a son of Julius C. and Irene (Perky) Pomerene. At the age of seventeen he was graduated from Coshocton High School, with honors. In 1891, he received his Bachelor of Philosophy dgree from Ohio State University. The next two years he served as secretary to Gen. A. J. Warner, who was constructing the Toledo, Walhonding Valley Railroad.
In 1895, after receiving his Bachelor of Laws degree, he entered the firm of Pomerene & Pomerene of Coshocton. He gained distinction as an able lawyer beyond local surroundings, and had a large practice in the various courts of Central Ohio. To whatever field in the profession he turned his attention his innate thoroughness, enthusiasm, and determination to excel placed him in the front ranks, and perhaps these very qualities led to the shortening of his valuable life.
Frank Pomerene organized most of the larger corporations in Coshocton, and had charge of their legal affairs. He was the leading spirit in obtaining the Carnegie Library, and for many years served on its board of Trustees. In 1905, ten years after his graduation in law, Governor Herrick appointed him a member of the Board of Trustees of Ohio State University. On February 22, 1923, the trustees of Ohio State University, dedicated the Woman's Building, Pomerene Hall, "as a memorial to a beloved comrade, a distinguished alumnus-a man who gave his heart and soul to the betterment of the University. " The University honored him by an election to membership of Phi Beta Kappa in 1911.
Mr. Pomerene married in 1896, Miss Mary Elizabeth Wilson, a daughter of James S. and Sarah (Hay) Wilson. As was her husband, she is a member of the Presbyterian Church. In political sentiment, he was a democrat. His gentleness and tenderness of heart radiated blessings all along life's way. Everywhere he went, and in everything he did, his strong personality was felt, and the world is better for his having lived in it.

Frank Martin Hathaway's Diary - 1898

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Frank_Martin_Hathaway_s_Diary_-_1898.png
This diary belonged to [[Hathaway-1203|Frank Martin Hathaway]] in 1998; he was 15 years old. It was kept by his parents [[Hathaway-1204|Hiram]] and [[Corliss-176|Mary]] until their passing in 1928, then by Frank's son [[Hathaway-1202|Robert]] until his passing in 1986, then Robert's daughter [[Hathaway-1229|Mary]] until her passing in 2014. Her sons [[Wallenfels-1|Mike]] and [[Wallenfels-3|Steve]] gave it to first cousin [[Hathaway-1200|Keith]] to safeguard and maintain for the family. Transcriptions by [[Hathaway-1200|Keith]] === For Identification === My Name is... Frank M. Hathaway My Address is... St. Albans Bay, Vt. === Things to be Remembered === The Number of my Bank Book is... (?)13046 My Weight was... 144 On... Tuesday Feb 8 189... 8 And my Height... 5 feet... 11 3/4 inches Size of my Hat... 7 3/8 Gloves... Regular Hosiery... 10' ? Collar... 15 Cuffs... 10 Shoes... 14 Shirt... ? Drawers... 32-24 === Sat Jan. 1, 1898 === It snowed about a foot last night and the wind began to blow this morning and piled it all up. The ice is 1 ft thick in the bay. === Sunday 2 === It was 10 degrees below zero this morning Heard this morning about Camell getting into the lake and drownding both his horses day before N. Y. === Monday 3 === Began to board at Mrs Kents to day. Charlie brought me up this morning. It was snowing and the wind blew hard. === Tues. Jan. 4, 1898 === Saw father this noon at the shed Went down to the Town Hall to the farmers ? this noon and after school It is snowing this evening === Wednesday 5 === Father came up to the city to day mother came with him. I went down to the dairy meeting got back at half past ten. Began to ? library book to day === Thursday 6 === Went down to the hall to night but did not stay to the meeting I got another library book to night === Fri. Jan. 7, 1898 === Father came up after me to night He paid Mrs Kent $5. for my board 2.50 for this week and 2.50 for next week. I got 100 foreign stamps which I rent for to day === Saturday 8 === Father went over to the Bay then found he had to go to St Albans so went. The wind blew all day I helped Charley carry wood to the circular saw. === Sunday 9 === The wind has all gone down. I went up to Arthurs this morning I went down to the lake and took a little skate after. === Mon. Jan. 10, 1898 === Father brought me up to school this morning I changed my Library book to night I also took 2 rides of a ? down Congress St. === Tuesday 11 === Father and Mother came up town today I did not see them. I saw uncle Rod today but not ? enough to greet. Changed my Library book and got another. === Wednesday 12 === It has rained all day. I di? not change my Library Book to night === Thurs. Jan. 13, 1898 === It snowed a little last night just enough to spoil the skating. I went down and changed my Library book tonight. === Friday 14 === Father and Mother came up this after noon and stayed till night and I came home with them There isn't any snow on the ice tonight === Saturday 15 === I went skating this morning. It has snowed all day I helped Charlie shell out 20 bushell of corn this after noon Father and mother went up to Uncle Joes to day. === Sun. Jan. 16, 1898 === It snowed all night It is good sleighing this morning Father and mother went for a sleigh ride this after noon === Monday 17 === Father brought me up this morning I paid my tuition this noon $5.50. I went down and changed my Library book to night and got another. === Tuesday 18 === Father came up to day I did not see him. Clint saw him though I went down and changed my Library book to night and got another

Frank Paine/Payne

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Galvin-381|Mabel Galvin]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * family members * forefathers back to Stephen who left England *who are the parents of potter Pain & his spouse Patience? I think he had two wives. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15285965 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Frank Streeter Gardner Family Tree

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Frank_Streeter_Gardner_Family_Tree.jpg
This is a Family Tree of Frank Streeter Gardner's ancestors going back three generations (parents, grandparents, & great grandparents). With a few added names and dates over the years.

Frank Thaxter Wendell, Genealogy Chart

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Frank_Thaxter_Wendell_Genealogy_Chart.jpg
This is a genealogy chart made in 1937 for the family of Frank Thaxter Wendell (1852-1906). Although it purports to show his ancestry back to several famous notables (doubtful), it has some value as a record of his close ancestors and other relations. Signed by A. Butler, Windsor Herald/College of Arms. Alfred Trego Butler was the Windsor Herald, 1931–1946. The initials C. W. in the lower left corner may be Constant Minns Wendell (1887-1968), son of Frank Thaxter Wendell. In the bottom margin, "Gwendolen Russell Despard" was written in to correct the name "Gwendolyn" in the chart, a common mistake suffered by family members. Located in the home of [[Wendell-596|Gwendolen (Wendell) Bryant]].

FRANK-2014 Name Study

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This is a One Name Study to collect together in one place everything about the surname FRANK-2014 and its variants. The hope is that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect. Please contact the project leader, add categories to your profiles, add your questions to the bulletin board, add details of your name research, etc.

Frankenthal (Pfalz)

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Frankenthal_Pfalz.png
Franckenthal, Kurpfalz Historisch war Frankenthal vom 16. bis zum 18. Jahrhundert einer der wichtigsten Orte des Kurfürstentums Pfalz. Frankenthal (Pfalz), Metropolregion Rhein-Neckar, Rheinland-Pfalz, BRD

Frankford Arsenal

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sources http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frankford_Arsenal

Frankland/Pollit Census Notes

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Census and other record matches for tracing Joseph Frankland (Frankland-302). 1901 census gives Age 59, Birth Bolton-by-Bowland[sic], Yorkshire. 1911 census gives Age 73, Birth Gisburn, Yorkshire. Those places are nearby. Likely Marriage Record: 13 Jun 1863 Clitheroe 8e 296: Joseph Frankland / Betsey Pollit. I have seen the names Clitheroe and Pollit both come up in other searches for Joseph.; full image here"England Marriages, 1538–1973 ", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NXGM-QXF : 12 March 2020), Betsey Pollit in entry for Joseph Frankland, 1863. Corroboration: occupation Game Keeper; ages and profession do match the Scotland Census. Residence - Grove Row, Chipping, Lancaster. His father is given as Henry Frankland; hers as Joseph Pollit. In the 1851 census Yorkshire > Easington > Gisburn > 1b, there is Joseph Frankland age 12, born Bolton , but his parents are Thomas Frankland(50, farmer, b.Bolton) and Ellen(30, b.Haidburn). It must not be his first wife given that their eldest son is 22. However, this conflicts with the "Likely marriage record" I have marked below. The 1851 census also has: Yorkshire>Grindleton, Joseph Frankland age 12 , b. Clitheroe, Lancashire; parents Joseph Frankland(48, stonemason) andMargaret Frankland(39, b.Grindleton). Again this does not match the marriage record citing Henry Frankland as father. * This one has a matching 1841 entry where he is age 3; elder brok Charles(6), sister Sarah Jane(7mo) * This one seems to also occur in the 1871 census for England which rules him out of being our guy who was in Scotland at the time. He also appears in 1881, his wife is Eliza Jane. The 1861 England census has the following entry: Yorkshire>Gisburn Forest. Henry Frankland(77, b.Bolton-by-Bowland), Ann(63, wife, b.Grindleton), William (son, 30, Gisburn Forest), Joseph (son, 22, Gisburn Forest). This is surely the same person as the 1901/11 censes which is very promising for the marriage record. In the 1871 Scotland Census (I have saved image), looked up because of citing Elizabeth as born in Muirkirk there is this family: * Joseph Frankland, Head, 31, Game Keeper, born in England * Betsy Frankland, Wife, 30, born in England * Mary do., Dau, 7, do. * Hannah do., Dau, 3, do. * Joseph Henry do., 1, do. ~~although the last entry must be in error as there is a scotlandspeople birth record for Joseph Henry~~, later showing as deceased. --- no such birth entry; in fact there is one at St Michael. However no scotlandspeople entry exists for Elizabeth. There is a baptism record 27 Oct 1867 on Lan-OPC for Hannah Franklin - Child of Joseph Franklin Game Keeper & Betsy -- this must be correct (thanks fuzzy search!!) Bapt at St Michael's on Wyre, Lancashire. There is a matching LancBMD birth record for Hannah Frankland, MMN Pollit, St. Michael Preston. Hurrah! In the 1881 UK census we have in Preston, Lancashire: [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/imageviewer/collections/7572/images/LANRG11_4227_4232-0742?treeid=&personid=&rc=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=KDm1993&_phstart=successSource&pId=11842198 this entry] -- was not found under Joseph due to transcription error, but found under Elizabeth: Joseph Frankland(39, Licenced Victualler), b. Harrogate Yorkshire); Sarah(wife,38,b.Chipping, Lancaster); Mary (dau,16,milliner, Chipping); Annie(dau,14,dressmaker,b.Chipping); Elizabeth(dau,10,Scholar,Scotland);Edward Eccles(Boarder,40, Polloc Maker STW, chipping). That is uncomfortably close to the details we want: Annie/Hannah could be misheard; Sarah could either be another name for Betsey, or a new wife. But the birth places are freaky: Hannah should be St Michael, Preston but it says Chipping which is not really anywhere near. Harrogate,Yorks is a long way from Gisburn Forest. And Joseph is now a landlord, rather than a gamekeeper. But I tend to think it's real, how many families would have had all kids born Lancashire except one called Elizabeth born in Scotland in 1873? So far we haven't had any birthplace for Betsey (the Scotland census didn't take it, and the marriage record only gave current residence of Brindle). There is a Lancs BMD record for Elizabeth Pollit b.1840, mmn Lund, at Haslingden Preston Lancs. [https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/90563817/person/330143117410/facts Possible anc tree ] for Elizabeth Pollitt daughter of Joseph, b. Haslingdeon 1841. Also, 1842 Elizabeth Pollitt, MMN Banks, at Elton. And some others. And 1842 Betsey Rebecca Pollitt, MMN Green === Betsy census === 1861 census only has one Joseph father of Betsy: Haslingden (Lancashire - Rumworth - All - 7f): Joseph Pollitt (60, farmer, b. Rishton); Elizabeth, Dau, 20, Dairy maid, b. Haslingden, James , Son, 18 b.do; Mary dau 16 b.do, Hannah Alice dau 14b.do 1851 nothing matching. 1841 Haslingden there is Joseph Pollit, 40 Publican; Mary 40; Alice 5; John 3; Elizabeth 1. === Other references === In Gale's there are various cases of Joseph Frankland, Gamekeeper: * 26 Feb 1876 - Great Harwood, Blackburn * 9 Dec 1876 - Great Harwood, Blackburn * 30 Jun 1877 - Great Harwood, Blackburn * 27 Oct 1877 - Great Hardwood, Blackburn * 5 Jan 1878 - Great Harwood, Blackburn * 3 Jul 1872 - Betsy Frankland and Ellen Quinlan were charged with being drunk and fighting in Greaves-street (Blackburn). Frankland was described as a "carder". === Sarah Singleton === I wrote out a bunch of notes but lost them when the page crashed. Anyway, there was a 1873 death for Betsey Frankland, and an 1874 marriage Joseph Frankland - Sarah Singleton. Details were credible, incl matching the 1881 census correctly; there's a birth of Sarah Singleton in Chipping in the right year; the marrage was at Blackburn where he had a game reserve accounting to the newspapers. She is found in the [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/imageviewer/collections/8767/images/LANRG9_3081_3085-0465 1861 census]. == Sources ==

Franklin County, Alabama - Chisholm sources

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Family Search Wiki page Franklin: https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Franklin_County,_Alabama_Genealogy Family Search Catalogue page Franklin: https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/results?count=20&placeId=192517&query=%2Bplace%3A%22United%20States%2C%20Alabama%2C%20Franklin%22 '''Alabama State & County Pages with Chisholm Sources:''' [[Space:Alabama_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Alabama - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Bibb_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Bibb County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Chambers_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Chambers County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Colbert_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Colbert County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Dallas_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Dallas County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Franklin_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Franklin County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Lauderdale_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Lauderdale County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Madison_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Madison County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Marion_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Marion County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Mobile_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Mobile County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Monroe_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Monroe County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Montgomery_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Montgomery County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Pickens_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Pickens County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Tuscaloosa_County%2C_Alabama_-_Chisholm_sources|Tuscaloosa County, Alabama - Chisholm sources]] '''State Pages with Chisholm sources:''' *[[Space:Alabama_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Alabama - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Georgia_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Georgia - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Kentucky_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Kentucky - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Maryland_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Maryland - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Mississippi_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Mississippi - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:North_Carolina_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|North Carolina - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:South_Carolina_-_Statewide_Chisholm_resources|South Carolina - Statewide Chisholm resources]] *[[Space:Tennessee_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Tennessee - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Texas%2C_Arkansas_%26_Louisiana_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Texas, Arkansas & Louisiana - Statewide Chisholm sources]] *[[Space:Virginia_-_Statewide_Chisholm_sources|Virginia - Statewide Chisholm sources]] '''Links to Chisholm pages related to this county''': (add links below): * '''FACTS and SOURCES:''' War of 1812 Pension Application – Gillington Chisum – White County, Tennessee – Franklin County, Alabama (29 pgs)
wife Cynthia Hill married Aug 1817 in White Co, TN
1851 residence of Franklin Co, AL
1871 residence of Davidson Co, TN
service dates – enlisted Dec 10, 1812 – discharge Apr 20, 1813
in 1851 he was 55 years of age in Franklin Co, AL
in 1855 he was 59 years of age in Franklin Co, AL
https://www.fold3.com/image/304656323 1830 in the 1830 United States Federal Census
Name: [G Chisholm]
Home in 1830 (City, County, State): Franklin, Alabama
Free White Persons – Males – Under 5: 1
Free White Persons – Males – 5 thru 9: 2
Free White Persons – Males – 30 thru 39: 1
Free White Persons – Females – Under 5: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 5 thru 9: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons – Under 20: 5
Free White Persons – 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 7
Total – All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): 7
Year: 1830; Census Place: Franklin, Alabama; Series: M19; Roll: 1; Page: 41; Family History Library Film: 0002328
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1030:8058?tid=&pid=&queryId=2e01770ecafe77c759f7120a9630fa26&_phsrc=TDt82&_phstart=successSource 1840 US Census Name: [William Chisom]
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Franklin, Alabama
Free White Persons – Males – Under 5: 1
Free White Persons – Males – 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 20 thru 29: 1
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 1
Free White Persons – Under 20: 1
Free White Persons – 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 3
Total All Persons – Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 3
Year: 1840; Census Place: Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 4; Page: 269; Family History Library Film: 0002332
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1711186:8057?_phsrc=Zmn141&_phstart=successSource&gsln=Chism&ml_rpos=5&queryId=ed44e2c514ffbf407be933c4cac1cdf5 1840 US Census Name: [Obediah Chisom]
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Franklin, Alabama
Free White Persons – Males – Under 5: 1
Free White Persons – Males – 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 20 thru 29: 1
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 1
Free White Persons – Under 20: 1
Free White Persons – 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 3
Total All Persons – Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 3
Year: 1840; Census Place: Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 4; Page: 269; Family History Library Film: 0002332
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1711184:8057?_phsrc=Zmn141&_phstart=successSource&gsln=Chism&ml_rpos=6&queryId=ed44e2c514ffbf407be933c4cac1cdf5 1840 US Census Name: [Sarah Chisom]
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Franklin, Alabama
Free White Persons – Males – 5 thru 9: 1
Free White Persons – Males – 10 thru 14: 2
Free White Persons – Males – 15 thru 19: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 15 thru 19: 2
Free White Persons – Females – 20 thru 29: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 40 thru 49: 1
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 4
Free White Persons – Under 20: 6
Free White Persons – 20 thru 49: 2
Total Free White Persons: 8
Total All Persons – Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 8
Year: 1840; Census Place: Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 4; Page: 269; Family History Library Film: 0002332
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1711185:8057?_phsrc=Zmn141&_phstart=successSource&gsln=Chism&ml_rpos=7&queryId=ed44e2c514ffbf407be933c4cac1cdf5 1840 US Census Name: Gillington Chisom
Home in 1840 (City, County, State): Franklin, Alabama
Free White Persons – Males – Under 5: 2
Free White Persons – Males – 5 thru 9: 1
Free White Persons – Males – 15 thru 19: 2
Free White Persons – Males – 40 thru 49: 1
Free White Persons – Females – Under 5: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 5 thru 9: 2
Free White Persons – Females – 10 thru 14: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 15 thru 19: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 30 thru 39: 1
Free White Persons – Females – 40 thru 49: 1
Slaves – Females – 36 thru 54: 1
Persons Employed in Agriculture: 2
Free White Persons – Under 20: 10
Free White Persons – 20 thru 49: 3
Total Free White Persons: 13
Total Slaves: 1
Total All Persons – Free White, Free Colored, Slaves: 14
Year: 1840; Census Place: Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 4; Page: 264; Family History Library Film: 0002332
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1711048:8057?_phsrc=Zmn141&_phstart=successSource&gsln=Chism&ml_rpos=8&queryId=ed44e2c514ffbf407be933c4cac1cdf5 1850 US Census Name: Gillington Chisam
Gender: Male
Age: 54, Birth Year: abt 1796
Birthplace: Kentucky
Home in 1850: District 6, Franklin, Alabama, USA
Occupation: Farmer, Industry: Agriculture, Real Estate: 500
Line Number: 32, Dwelling Number: 745, Family Number: 745
Household Members Age
Gillington Chisam 54 KY
Cintha Chisam 50 GA
Elizabeth Chisam 16 AL
William Chisam 21 AL
Obadiah Chisam 18 AL
Mary Chisam 14 AL
Edmond Chisam 12 AL
Year: 1850; Census Place: District 6, Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 5; Page: 224a
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/18359273:8054 1850 US Census Name: James T Chisum
Gender: Male, Age: 30, Birth Year: abt 1820, Birthplace: Alabama
Home in 1850: District 6, Franklin, Alabama, USA
Occupation: Carpenter, Industry: Construction
Real Estate: 120, Line Number: 16, Dwelling Number: 394, Family Number: 394
Household Members Age
James T Chisum 30 AL
Arminda Chisum 29 GA
Malinda Chisum 6 AL
Tralucia Chisum 4 AL
Murtha Chisum 2 AL
Year: 1850; Census Place: District 6, Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 5; Page: 198b
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/18357162:8054 1850 US Census Name: Lewis C Chisum
Gender: Male, Age: 28, Birth Year: abt 1822
Birthplace: Alabama, Home in 1850: District 6, Franklin, Alabama, USA
Attended School: Yes
Line Number: 40, Dwelling Number: 28, Family Number: 22
Household Members Age
Lewis C Chisum 28 AL
Jane Chisum 22 TN
Joanah Chisum 0 AL
Jane Sevier 60 NC
Samuel Sevier 21 AL
Year: 1850; Census Place: District 6, Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 5; Page: 172b
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/18354974:8054 1850 US Census Name: John Sevier
Gender: Male
Age: 41, Birth Year: abt 1809
Birthplace: Tennessee
Home in 1850: District 5, Franklin, Alabama, USA
Occupation: Merchant, Industry: Not Specified Retail Trade, Real Estate: 2800
Line Number: 22, Dwelling Number: 930, Family Number: 930
Household Members Age
John Sevier 41 TN
Mildred Sevier 32 KY
Ruth Sevier 17 AL
Ann Sevier 14 AL
Mary Sevier 12 AL
John Sevier 9 AL
Saml Sevier 2 AL
Sarah Sevier 0 AL
Thos Strain 20 AL
W C Chisholm 22 AL
Saml Sevier 20 AL
Year: 1850; Census Place: District 5, Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 5; Page: 167a
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/18354606:8054 1850 US Census Name: Andrew Parker
Gender: Male
Age: 39, Birth Year: abt 1811
Birthplace: North Carolina
Home in 1850: District 6, Franklin, Alabama, USA
Occupation: Farmer, Industry: Agriculture, Real Estate: 500
Line Number: 35, Dwelling Number: 440, Family Number: 440
Household Members Age
Andrew Parker 39 NC
Malinda E Parker 41 KY
Joseph Parker 11 AL
Margarette E Parker 9 AL
Plesant A Parker 6 AL
Lewis C Parker 4 AL
Crestena Parker 88 VA
Marry F Chisum f 17 AL
Year: 1850; Census Place: District 6, Franklin, Alabama; Roll: 5; Page: 201b
https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/18357433:8054

Franklin County, Georgia, Plat Book, 1784-1791

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[https://vault.georgiaarchives.org/digital/collection/adhoc/id/9080| Franklin County, Georgia, Plat Book, 1784-1791] Selections from the index; *Clarke, Elijah - 47,116,117, 118,120,182,194?, 192? *Cleveland, Benj - 108, 109,110, 112 *Cleveland, J? - 270 *Cleveland, Jno - 159, 230, 231 *[[Cleveland-65|Cleveland, Larkin]] - 20, 51, 68, 93, 94, 95, 161, 174, 189, 190 *Cleveland, Wm(?) 174,182, 198 *Estang, Count D. - 3, 4, 130, 137 (Count Charles Henri d'Estaing?) *Hay, Wm. - 131 or 137, 138,149, 157, 166, 190, 207, 223, 224, 227, 272, 274, 275, *[[Philpott-954| Philpott, Warren]] - 149, 155, 156 *Walton, George 28, 47 *[[Walton-3795| Walton, Jesse]] - 22, 23, 95, 133, 134, ???, 132,169, 174, 224, 227, 237 *Walton, Jesse - heirs of - 84 *Walton, Kellis - 167 *Walton, Robert - 7 *Walton, Wm - 86, 137, 172, 271 *Walton, W. W. - 134 *Ward, Bryan - 82,83, 85, 86, 132, 139, 208, 214, 234

Franklin County, Massachusetts

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This page is a work-in-progress. [[Keniston-36|Keniston-36]] 20:11, 9 February 2017 (EST) ==Welcome to the Franklin County, Massachusetts Project== ===Maps and Boundaries=== * Windham County, Vermont to the north * Cheshire County, New Hampshire to the northeast * [[Space:Worcester_County%2C_Massachusetts|Worcester County]] to the east * [[Space:Hampshire_County%2C_Massachusetts|Hampshire County]] to the south ===Communities=== ====Cities==== ====Towns==== ===History=== ===Landmarks=== ===Notables=== ===Records and Resources=== *[[Wikipedia:Franklin County, Massachusetts | Franklin County on Wikipedia]]

Franklin County Pennsylvania Land-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Pennsylvania|The Campbells of Franklin County Pennsylvania]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Land Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Franklin County Land'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Book||Page||Grantor||Grantee||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |1||9||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']] et. al||John Dickenson||1784|| Bond|| |- |1||91||John and Mary Campbell (of Cumberland Co, PA)||Peter Duckey||1785||50 acres in Lurgan Twp.|| |- |1||180||Robert and Margaret Campbell||Samuel Walker||1780||40 acres in Peters Township|| |- |1||256||Charles and Michael Campbell (of Westmoreland Co, PA)||Thomas Campbell||1785||Half of the part of land in Peters Township|| |- |1||279||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']] and Terrance [[Campbell-63723|'''Campbell''']] (of Cumberland Co, PA)||Samuel Purviance||1782||Lot No. 17 in Chambersburg|| |- |1||357||Michael Campbell||Thomas Campbell||1787||His 1/6th part of his father (Michael Campbell dec) plantation. Children of Michael Dec. are: Sarah, Thomas, George (dec), William, Michael, and James (dec)|| |- |1||375||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']]||Matthias Sitler||1789||2 lots in Chambersburg|| |- |1||399||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']] and Terrance [[Campbell-63723|'''Campbell''']]||Edward Fitzgerald||1787||Lot No. 7 in Chambersburg|| |- |2||16||John Campbell||David Kennedy||1788||224 acres in Montgomery Twp.|| |- |2||284||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']]||John Calhoun||1790||Lot No. 9 in Chambersburg|| |- |2||324||John and Rebecca Campbell||Henry Angle||1791||192 acres|| |- |2||370||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']] and Terrance [[Campbell-63723|'''Campbell''']]||Christian Wolff||1791||Lot No. 7 in Chambersburg|| |- |3||73||Terrance [[Campbell-63723|'''Campbell''']]||Henry Wagoner||1793|| Part of Lots No. 93, 94, and 95 in Chambersburg|| |- |3||301||James and Cassandra Campbell||James Hamilton||1794||304 acres of his father (Francis Campbell dec.) land in Franklin Co|| |- |3||323||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']]||James Graham||1793||Lot No. 148 in Chambersburg|| |- |3||519||Robert McClellend dec. exec.||James and Finwell Campbell et. al||1777||Land in Peters Twp|| |- |4||46||Patrick [[Campbell-63732|'''Campbell''']]||John Hawkins||1776||Lot in the town of Chambersburg|| |- |4||99|| John and Elizabeth Campbell||Robert and Rosanna Sterrett||1797||150 1/2 acres of Samuel McCune dec. land (Samuel is the father to Elizabeth and Rosanna)|| |- |4||161||Samuel Campbell||Thomas Paxton||1770||300 acres in Lurgan Twp|| |- |4||214||John Campbell (eldest son of Andrew)||Thomas Wilson||1797||358 acres of his fathers land|| |- |4||219||James Campbell and John Brown||Robert Harper||1795||Lot in the town of Chambersburg|| |- |4||283||James and Phanuel Campbell||Thomas McAfee||1794||324 acres of "Scotland" in Peters Twp.|| |- |4||327||Sheriff||Francis, Elizabeth, and Ebenezer Campbell (heirs to Francis Campbell dec)||1798||80 acres in Southampton Twp|| |- |4||385||William Hosack||Hugh Campbell||1799||Lot No. 6 in the town of Chambersburg|| |- |4||516||Charles and Margaret Campbell||John Wilson||1800||Land belonging to Margaret Campbell dec. former husband: James Brotherton|| |- |4||519||Terrance [[Campbell-63723|'''Campbell''']]||James Gailey||1797||Part of Lots No. 93, 94, and 95 in Chambersburg|| |-

Franklin County Pennsylvania Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Pennsylvania|The Campbells of Franklin County Pennsylvania]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Probate Records for the years 1807 and prior'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Probate Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Franklin County Probate'''
'''Campbell Records'''
'''Will Books A & B (1785-1807)''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Book||Page||Deceased||Executor||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |A||26||William Campbell||||1785||Letters of Administration|| |- |A||77||William Gamel||Samuel Gamel (brother) and William Paul||Mar 20, 1786||Brother:Samuel; Sister: Mary; Sons: William and Samuel; Daughter: Ann and Margaret|| |- |A||108||William Campbell||John McCleland and James McFarlane||Aug 16, 1786||Sons: James, William, Andrew, Dougall; Daughter: Margaret Bradner, Jane Rankin, Ann, Sarah, and Mary McFarlane; Grandsons: Edward Campbell and William Spear; granddaughter: Francis Spear|| |- |A||141||Andrew Campbell||William Campbell (brother) and Robert Anderson||Mar 3, 1788||Wife: Esther; Sons: John, Joseph, Andrew, Alexander, Mark, and David; Daughter: Catharine Armstrong, Jane, Margaret, and Esther|| |- |A||337||Patrick Campbell||||Jun 15, 1795||Wife: Eleanor; Sons: William, John, Robert, Samuel, Patrick, and David; Daughter: Jenny (Caleb) Stockton|| |- |B||22||David Campbell||Elizabeth Campbell and David Elder||Oct 6, 1790||Wife: Elizabeth; Sons: David and John; Daughter: Agness; Granddaughter: Ann|| |- |B||23||Robert Campbell||James and Thomas Campbell (sons)||Jul 22, 1796||Wife: Margaret; Sons: James, Thomas, Andrew, Alexander, and John|| |- |B||29||Samuel Gammel||Samuel and William (sons)||Sep 5, 1796||Wife: Elizabeth; Sons: Samuel, William, and James; Daughter: Jean Kennedy, Polly Morton, Susannah Elder, and Peggy Elder|| |- |B||57||Henry Campbell||||1798||Letters of Administration|| |- |B||65||John Campbell||Patrick Campbell (brother) and James Irwin||May 15, 1798||Sister: Jean Stockton; Brother: William|| |- |B||156||William Campbell||James and Charles Campbell (sons)||Jan 25, 1803||Sons: James, Charles, and William; Wife: Jane; Daughter: Martha Campbell and Margaret Guthrey|| |- |B||244||Hugh Campbell||John Thompson and William Hosack||Dec 17, 1804||Sisters: Mary Hosack, Margaret Robinson, Sarah Cook, and Elizabeth McBrayer|| |- |B||287||William Campbell||William and Mark (his sons)||Nov 14, 1803||Wife: Hannah; Sons: John, William, Mark, Andrew, and James; Daughter: Catherine, Elizabeth, and Hannah|| |- |B||333||John Campbell||||1807||Letters of Admininstration|| |-

Franklin County Tennessee Deeds (Grantee)-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Franklin County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the year 1820-1824'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Land (Grantee)-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Franklin County'''
'''Land Records (Grantees)'''
'''1820-1824'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !From !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1820 | |Campbell |James (of Winchester, TN) |Thomas Young |A,B,C,G, and H |365 |71 1/2 acres on Cove Spring Creek; 200 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-17SN-J?i=220&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1820 | |Campbell |James |Samuel Hanly |A,B,C,G, and H |418 |57 acres on Beames Creek, joining the town of Salem |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-17SL-9?i=247&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1817 | |Campbell |Margaret |Andrew Erwin |J |259 |100 acres on the Boiling Fork of the Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-17MX-4?i=476&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1824 | |Campbell |Argyle |Alexander Young |J |466 |2 mules until debt is paid |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-1Q11-P?i=581&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1825 | |Campbell |James |Abram Tolls and Ranseller Wells |J |631 |Part of Lot No. 26 in Winchester |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-173L-3?i=663&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1826 | |Campbell |James |Matthew Dixon |J |640 |A mulatto slave and her 2 children |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-173N-W?i=668&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1826 | |Campbell |James |John H. Lee |J |645 |100 acres on Dry Creek; 14 acres joining on the Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-17Q7-Z?i=670&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1826 | |Campbell |Robert |Allen McCord |F and K |304 |60 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13X3-3?i=184&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1826 | |Campbell |James |William Starnes |F and K |343 |101 acres of the Taylor Tract |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13X9-8?i=204&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1828 | |Campbell |James |Joseph Hill |F and K |391 |2 acres on the Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13X9-M?i=228&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1828 | |Campbell |James |James Farris |F and K |402 |100 acres in said county |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XN-M?i=234&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1827 | |Campbell |James |James Hill |F and K |435 |1 acre on the Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XF-J?i=250&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1823 | |Campbell |James |Nashville Bank |D |160 |Appointment as attorney |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XD-1?i=361&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1824 | |Campbell |James |Alexander Young |D |349 |200 acres and 60 acres on Boiling Fork of Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XW-Q?i=458&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1824 | |Campbell |James |Abram Twigg |D |361 |440 acres on the Boiling Fork of Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XW-Z?i=464&cat=149412 Doc Image] |}

Franklin County Tennessee Deeds (Grantor)-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Franklin County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the year 1815-1823'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Land (Grantor)-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Franklin County'''
'''Land Records (Grantors)'''
'''1815-1823'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !To !Book !Page !Comments !Doc_Image |- !1815 | |Campbell |Michael (of Davidson Co., TN) |Nathaniel Newman and William Thompson |J |117 |640 acres on Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-17M2-H?i=405&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1824 | |Campbell |John and John White |John Keith |F and K |405 |91 acres on the Boiling Fork of the Elk River |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XN-Y?i=235&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1822 | | |James |Thomas Young |D |12 |Payment for land in Deed Book A, pp. 365 |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XX-K?i=286&cat=149412 Doc Image] |- !1823 | | |Jane B. (admin of Ann Campbell dec.) |Hugh Blackwood |D |172 |Appointment as POA (Ann's children named: Arthur, Margaret, Jane, and Elizabeth) |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS5W-13XD-W?i=367&cat=149412 Doc Image] |}

Franklin County Tennessee Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Tennessee|The Campbells of Franklin County Tennessee]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin’' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Probate Records for the year 1812'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Probate-Campbell== {| border="1" class="sortable" |+'''Franklin County'''
'''Probate Records'''
'''1812'''
'''Updated: 23 Mar 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" !Date !__WikiTree_ID__ !Last Name !First Name !Instrument !Book !Page !Comment !Doc_Image |- !1812 | |Campbell |Joseph |Will |1 |5 |Wife: Margareth; Daughter: Juny and Nancy; Sons: John, Joseph, David, and James; Executors: Andrew Campbell and David Martin |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:2:77TV-YM6P?i=412&cc=1619127&cat=211321 Doc Image] |}

Franklin County Virginia Land Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Franklin County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Land Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Franklin County Land'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Grantor||Grantee||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |2||29||Archibald Gordon||Archibald Campbell||1788||Selling slaves|| |- |2||363||Hugh Jones (Sheriff)||William Campbell||1791||Land on Stoney Creek|| |- |2||375||Moses Grease||William Campbell and Luke Stannifer||1792||190 acres on both sides of Stoney Creek|| |- |3||72||John Campbell||Henry Stowver||1793||156 acres on Elliott's Creek|| |- |3||333||William Campbell||James Standifer||1796||26 acres on Stoney Creek|| |- |3||458||William Campbell||Col. James Calloway and Co||1797||150 acres on both sides of Coles Run|| |- |3||693||Swinfield Hill et. al||William Campbell||1799||161 acres on the branches of Stoney Creek|| |- |3||704||William Campbell||Swinfield Hill et. al||1799||114 1/4 acres on the branches of Stoney Creek|| |-

Franklin County Virginia Marriage Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Franklin County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Marriage Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Franklin County Virginia Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Franklin_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Franklin County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Franklin'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Franklin'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Franklin County. This page has the '''Campbell Probate Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Franklin'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Franklin'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Franklin County Probate Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Franklin County Probate'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Deceased||Executor||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |2||11||Thomas Campbell||Charity his wife||1812||Wife: Charity; Daughter: Patsy; Brother: William and Robert; Sister: Sally Ashinghurst|| |- |2||17||Thomas Campbell||||1812||Inventory of Estate|| |- |2||242||Thomas Campbell||||1813||Sale of Account|| |-

Franklin Delbert Rouse Census Records

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[[Space:Benjamin Rouse Family b. 1788|Benjamin Rouse Family b. 1788]]
His childhood census records are located here: [[Space:Schuyler Davis Rouse Census Records|Schuyler Davis Rouse Census Records]] ----

Franklin Family FY02 DNA Research Group

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Franklin_Family_FY02_DNA_Research_Group.jpg
FY02 group of the [http://FranklinGenetics.org Franklin Y DNA Project] YDNA testing for Franklin males recommended through [http://familytreedna.com FDNA] At this time I am recommending 12 markers for men who are documented in a branch of the FY02 group as shown in the project website's (link above) participant's patriarch list with future upgrading to the Big Y test to place them positively on the Franklin FY02 family [https://www.ytree.net/DisplayTree.php?blockID=5 SNP tree]. Autosomal DNA testing for all Franklin descendants, both male and female, recommended through [http://familytreedna.com FTDNA] and uploading to the free site, [http://gedmatch.com GedMatch] in order to have the tools for analysis required to utilize the science behind the DNA, i.e. genetic genealogy.

Franklin Family of Campbell County, Virginia

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Franklin_Family_of_Campbell_County_Virginia-3.jpg
Franklin_Family_of_Campbell_County_Virginia.jpg
Franklin_Family_of_Campbell_County_Virginia.pdf
Franklin_Family_of_Campbell_County_Virginia-2.jpg
The purpose of this page is to collect published genealogies, oral traditions and other literature related to this family to assist in clarification of this family line as research has suffered from the sharing of ill-formed internet trees which has led to widespread misinformation and confusion regarding this family. == Genealogies == === The Family of Lewis Franklin of Bedford & Campbell Counties, Virginia (FFRU #1, 1992) === ''Submitted by [[Evans-11072|Dr. Joseph W. Evans]], 6676 Olde Stage Rd., Boulder, CO 80302; phone 303-443-0050 or 303-443-7011. Dr. Evans has more information on collateral lines not included here. Edited for sake of space.'' There is no certain record of [[Franklin-1003|Lewis Franklin]] before he appeared in Bedford County, VA circa 1735. He may have come from Henrico County, VA or more likely, Chester County, PA. Lewis Franklin patented at least three parcels of land in Bedford County, VA; in 1749 850 acres including the head branches of Falling River adjoining Edward Nix’s line; in 1756, 118 acres on Callaway’s Rd. between the two ridges [map coordinates of this property are [https://goo.gl/maps/vKGWu N 37° 17’ 54” W 78° 59’ 57”] in present day Campbell County, VA]; in 1759, 215 acres on the south side of Dixon’s Creek. This land adjoined the Dixon land grant and was located some three miles southwest of Concord, VA on highway 658 and was owned by the Franklin family until 1945, Charles D. Franklin being the last family owner. On 1 Oct 1751 Lewis Franklin conveyed some of his land to Edmund Franklin, “Jr.” by “Deed of Bargain.” Lewis and his sons amassed large tracts of land in the area, but as of 1988, all of it has been sold. Lewis Franklin married Jane __? [family tradition says her name was Lewis] She died in 1774 and he died in 1770. They both died and are buried in Bedford County, VA, location unknown. [Reference Bedford County, VA Will Book 1, pages 95-96 for the inventory of his estate and Will Book 1, pages 217-218 for his will]. They had at least seven children, as listed below. The children of [[Franklin-1003|Lewis Franklin]] and [[UNKNOWN-61000|Jane ___?]]: # [[Franklin-1179|Owen Franklin]] (born ca 1740 died 12 Aug 1794 Campbell County, VA) married [[Unknown-285314|Elizabeth “Betsy or Betty” Steele]] of Concord, VA. He was an ensign in the Revolutionary War; a Captain in the Bedford County Militia, (joining in 24 Feb 1778) and served as deputy sheriff of Campbell County, VA. In 1773 he patented 49 acres of land on both sides of Morton’s Creek, a fork of the Big Falling River. In 1778 he bought from Pleasant Branch 182 acres on the south side of Morton’s Creek along the line of his brother, Thomas Franklin, from Hall’s corner to Harris’ corner. [Reference- Campbell County, VA Will Book 1, pages 274-5, dated 5 Apr 1795]. Even though some dates conflict, it is probable that his widow married 12 Apr 1794 in Campbell County, VA, Alexander Steele, Sr., because when her daughter Mary Franklin married William North, Campbell County, VA, 2 Jul 1795, consent was given by Elizabeth and Alexander Steele. The children of Owen Franklin and Elizabeth Steele: order unknown: ## [[Franklin-4311|Robert Franklin]] [Colonel] (born ca 1760 died Jun 1854) married by Rev. Henry Brown in Campbell County, VA 22 Dec 1800 [[Perrow-101|Mary Perrow]] (born ca 1780) daughter of Daniel Battersby Perrow (born 1756 died 21 Jul 1839) and Elizabeth Perrow (died 21 Jul 1839) (Daniel and Elizabeth were first cousins). Robert was a Colonel in the county militia and owned a large estate in Campbell County, VA which included Pilot Mountain. The map coordinates for Pilot Mountain are [https://www.google.com/maps/place/37%C2%B019'28.0%22N+78%C2%B058'07.8%22W/@37.3244514,-78.9710109,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x0 N 37° 19’ 28.01” W 78° 58’ 7.76”]. He was active in Old Concord Presbyterian Church, a ruling elder for almost half a century and a clerk in 1826. The children of Robert Franklin and Mary Perrow: ### [[Franklin-1234|Daniel Franklin]] (born 1803 died 25 Jun 1866) married 4 Feb 1852 Campbell County, VA his cousin, [[Franklin-5560|Martha Jane Franklin]] (born 3 Feb 1824 died Dec 1889) They were both members of Old Concord Presbyterian Church, Appomattox County, VA, he joining 26 Sep 1831 and she joining 22 Oct 1833. They are listed in the 1850 census of Campbell County, VA as living in Concord Depot (now Concord) as a farmer worth $7000. Children of Daniel Franklin and Martha Jane Franklin: #### [[Franklin-5565|Lillian Vernon “Cousin Pug” Franklin]] (born 7 Jan 1854 died 20 May 1933) married 17 Oct 1871 in Campbell County, VA, [[Evans-10829|Daniel James “Major Jim” Evans]] (born 25 Jul 1838 died 19 Feb 1934) Both are buried in the Franklin family cemetery near Concord, Campbell County, VA. The map coordinates for the cemetery are: [https://www.google.com/maps/place/37%C2%B019'38.9%22N+78%C2%B058'22.6%22W/@37.3274792,-78.9751415,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x0 N 37° 19’ 38.91” W 78° 58’ 22.63”]. #### unnamed daughter Franklin died at age of 3 weeks of whooping cough and buried under a rosebush in the front yard. #### [[Franklin-5566|David Luther Franklin]] (born 10 Jul 1856 died 12 Aug 1917) married Campbell County, VA, [[Rector-748|Mary Virginia Rector]] (born 8 Apr 1860 died 13 Feb 1908) Both are buried in the Dixon family cemetery. They farmed near Concord, VA. Children of David Luther Franklin and Mary Virginia Rector: ##### [[Franklin-5571|John D. Franklin]] born 5 Oct 1883 Never married. No issue. Lived in Tulsa, OK. ##### [[Franklin-5572|Lawson Baylis Franklin]] (born 18 Mar 1885 died 8 Feb 1948) married [[Cross-3393|Grace Cross]] of Concord, Campbell County, VA. He ran a store at Concord and worked for the railroad. ###### [[Franklin-5582|Dolly Virginia Franklin]] married Dr. Peter Wallenbaum. They lived in Roanoke, VA and had six children. ##### [[Franklin-5573|Nannie Nathan Franklin]] (born 5 Sep 1886 died 2 Jun 1967) married [[Foster-8988|Douglas Baxter Foster]] (born circa 1883 died 19 Jan 1968) the son of Peter B. Foster and Anna Mattox. They farmed near Concord, VA. ##### [[Franklin-5574|Robert William Franklin]] (born 18 Mar 1888 died 8 Apr 1960) born at Concord, VA married [[Chick-191|Mabel Chick]]. He was a butcher and lived in Lynchburg, VA at 1015 Rivermont Avenue. He is buried Fort Hill. ###### [[Franklin-5583|Robert William Franklin]], Jr. lived in San Antonio, TX. ###### [[Franklin-5584|Melvin B. Franklin]] lived in Leeksville, NC. ###### [[Franklin-5585|Ann Franklin]] married Morris L. Pollock and they lived in Durham, NC. ##### [[Franklin-5579|Thomas F. Franklin]] (born 14 Jun 1889 died 28 Jan 1920) Never married. No issue. ##### [[Franklin-5575|David Luther Franklin, Jr.]] born 18 Feb 1890 ''Died in infancy''. '''[False]''' ##### [[Franklin-5576|George Frost Franklin]] born 30 Oct 1892 died ''6 Jul 1937'' '''[False]''' married [[Jones-32611|Marie Jones]] and they lived in Concord, VA. ###### [[Franklin-5586|George David Franklin]] born circa 1935 ###### Malcolm Franklin - twin to Douglas. ###### Douglas Franklin - twin to Malcolm. ###### Jane Dell Franklin born 1936, married Melvin Lyons. ##### [[Franklin-5577|Mary Gladys Franklin]] (born 2 Oct 1893 died 23 Jan 1908) ##### [[Franklin-5578|Lucy E. Franklin]] born 14 Mar 1897, married [[Wright-15229|William Thomas Wright]]. ##### [[Franklin-5580|Nellie Mae Franklin]] born 14 Feb 1902, married at the Presbyterian Manse at Sherwill, VA 17 Oct 1925 [[Harvey-5136|William Hunter Harvey, Jr. “Will”]] (10 Jul 1902 died 2 May 1961) Will and Nellie lived near Spring Mills and were members of New Concord Presbyterian Church as were many of his brothers, sisters and children. He is buried at NCC. ##### [[Franklin-5581|Joseph D. Franklin]] (born 30 May 1904 died 30 Sep 1961) married Naomi Mamie Wright. He was a district supervisor for Armour and Company (meats). They lived in Sandusky, OH and Tulsa, OK. He is buried Fort Hill Presbyterian Cemetery, Lynchburg, VA. No issue. #### [[Franklin-5567|Kate Daniel Franklin]] (born 3 Oct 1858 died 2 Aug 1939) married 27 Nov 1878 [[Caldwell-2812|Watson Caldwell, Jr.]] and had issue. They lived in a one-level house he built for her because she had had several miscarriages and her physician, Doctor Thomas Washington Evans [grandfather of the author, Doctor Joseph Washington Evans] had told him to do it that way. The home was built at the west foot of Pilot Mountain near Concord, Campbell County, VA and is now (1988) owned by David Evans. #### [[Franklin-5568|Robert Lewis Franklin]] (born 15 Jul 1860 died 28 Dec 1933) married [[Blackford-200|Dora Blackford]] of Johnstown, PA. ##### [[Franklin-5590|Alta Franklin]] married [[Cox-10891|John Cox]] ##### [[Franklin-5591|Edwin Franklin]] married 1) [[Rankin-1962|Nell Rankin]] and 2) [[Paxton-437|Margaret Paxton]] #### [[Franklin-5569|Rosa Wyatt Franklin]] (born Mar 1862 died Jun 1887) married James Berkley of Charlotte County, VA. #### [[Franklin-5570|Edwin Thomas Franklin]] (born Jun 1864 died 1925) Never married. No issue. ### [[Franklin-1235|Joel Franklin]] born circa 1810, Never married. No issue. ### [[Franklin-5593|Elizabeth Franklin]] married [[Mitchell-10347|James Mitchell]]. She was a member of Old Concord Presbyterian Church and was dismissed on 4 Aug 1844 to join the Diamond Hill Presbyterian Church. ### [[Franklin-5564|Mary “Polly” Franklin]] married Dr. Walker. No issue. ### [[Franklin-1237|Martha Franklin]] born circa 1815, Never married. No issue. ### [[Franklin-5610|Nancy Franklin]] married [[Woodson-891|Obadiah Woodson]] of Appomattox County, VA. His first wife was Mary Martin whom he married 7 Nov 1805. ### [[Franklin-1236|William “Blue Billy” Franklin]] born circa 1820, Never married. No issue. and he lived near Appomattox Courthouse, Appomattox County, VA. ## [[Franklin-1226|Elizabeth Franklin]] married 22 Sep 1791 in Campbell County, VA [[Tweedy-23|Joseph Tweedy, Jr.]] Consent for the marriage was given by Elizabeth Franklin, mother of the bride. Bonds for the marriage were given by Joseph Tweedy, Jr. and Robert Franklin. ## [[Franklin-4204|Jane Franklin]] married 15 Mar 1788 in Campbell County, VA, [[Wood-3495|Edmund Wood]] (born ca 1768 died 26 Jun 1822) They were married by Rev. James Kinney. Edmund’s will is recorded at Rustburg, Campbell County, VA Courthouse, Book 4, page 524. ## [[Franklin-1227|James M. Franklin]] born 1779, Never married. No issue. Listed in the 1850 census of Campbell County, VA as a farmer worth $150. He lived near Henry R. Franklin ## [[Franklin-1177|Mary “Polly” Franklin]] married 25 Jul 1795 Campbell County, VA, [[North-359|William North]]. Consent was given by Elizabeth and Alexander Steele. ## [[Franklin-1225|Benjamin Franklin]] born 1791, married 23 Apr 1830 Campbell County, VA, [[Litchford-12|Sarah Litchford Ferguson]] 1800, the widow of William Ferguson. William Ferguson had married Sarah in Campbell County, VA 4 Dec 1819. Children of Benjamin Franklin and Sarah Litchford Ferguson: ### Sarah Franklin born 1833, Died young. ### [[Franklin-6672|Letitia Franklin]] born ca 1837, married Sam Paris '''[Elijah Paris]''', a contractor who lived in Lynchburg, VA. ### [[Franklin-1228|Samuel Thurman Franklin]] (born 15 Feb 1841 died 20 Apr 1937) married Campbell County, VA, [[North-358|Martha Susan North]] (born 5 Mar 1846 died 25 Aug 1927) She is buried in the cemetery at New Concord Presbyterian Church and he served in the Confederacy. #### [[Franklin-1229|Sallie Fenton Franklin]] ( born 12 Jan 1876 died 28 Aug 1962 ) married 1896 in Campbell County, VA, [[Cheatham-125|Walter Beverly Cheatham]] (born 25 Feb 1870 died 29 Dec 1918). They were both members of New Concord Presbyterian Church. Walter had a small farm called Maple Valley Farm just south of New Concord Presbyterian Church and he was very active in the church. He died in the influenza epidemic of 1918 and Sallie moved to Lynchburg, VA and she died there. They are both buried at New Concord Presbyterian Church cemetery. She attended Averett [or Averill] College at Danville, VA. ## [[UNKNOWN-87987|Isaac M. Franklin]] ## [[Franklin-4312|Nancy Franklin]] (born 1785 died 24 Nov 1844) married Campbell County, VA 23 Apr 1802 [[Robertson-5288|John Robertson]] (born 23 Dec 1769 died 27 Nov 1814) They were married by Rev. Henry Brown and lived on their farm in Appomattox County, VA and are buried there. ## [[Franklin-4313|Kesiah Franklin]] married in Campbell County, VA 12 Apr 1793 [[Wood-11843|John Wood]]. # [[Franklin-1007|Robert Franklin]] (born ca 1741 died 9 Dec 1831) Bedford County, VA and died in Campbell County, VA. He married ca 1767 [[Lewis-3622|Jane “Jennie” Lewis]] (born 1756 died 1831) when she was 11 years old. Jane was evidently born in Ireland. He owned a large estate near Concord, VA and was a Colonel in the county militia. His sons Lewis and Benjamin were the executors of his estate [Reference: Campbell County, VA will book 7, page 6, will dated 19 Apr 1825 and probated 11 Jul 1831]. The children of Robert Franklin and Jane Lewis: ## [[Franklin-1204|Owen Franklin]] (born 1770 died 21 Feb 1831) married 25 Dec 1798 in Chesterfield County, VA, [[Roper-184|Elizabeth “Mary” Roper]] '''[aka Rosser]''' (died 22 Nov 1852) of Richmond, VA. They settled in McMinn County, TN near Chattanooga circa 1800 and are both buried at Dandridge, TN. They had one son, [[Franklin-5694|Lawson Franklin]]. ## [[Franklin-1208|John M. Franklin]] (born 1778 died 7 Jan 1857) married 14 Dec 1801 in Campbell County, VA, [[Dinwiddie-71|Nancy Ann Dinwiddie]] (born 27 Oct 1777 died 4 Sep 1864) She was born in Bedford County, VA and lived near the Franklin families. They lived in TN and are buried at Mt. Horeb, Jefferson County. ## [[Franklin-1213|Margaret “Peggy” Franklin]] (born 11 May 1786 died 23 Oct 1861) married 8 Mar 1803 in Campbell County, VA, Col. [[Roper-600|John Roper [or Rosser]]] of Campbell County, VA and both are buried in Dandridge, TN. They had one daughter, Mary Roper, who married George Brassner? and had issue. ## [[Franklin-1211|Thomas Franklin]] married 1) [[Story-663|___ Story]] and 2) ? and settled in TN. ### [[Franklin-6548|Valentine Franklin]] ### [[Franklin-6515|Campbell Franklin]] married [[Jacobs-5084|Rebecca Jacobs]]. ### [[Franklin-6516|Thomas Franklin]] married [[Bradshaw-1975|Lydia Bradshaw]]. ## [[Franklin-1209|Nancy Franklin]] married [[Stern-68|Lawrence B. Stearns]]. They may have moved to Georgia or Missouri in the early 1800’s. ## [[Franklin-1212|Mary “Polly” Franklin]] married [[Jennings-3246|Thomas Jennings]] and they lived in VA. ## [[Franklin-1210|Sarah “Sally” Franklin]] married 1) 19 Dec 1805 in Campbell County, VA, [[North-356|Thomas North]] and 2) in 1810 [[Leonard-745|Daniel S. Leonard]]. ## [[Franklin-1206|Elizabeth Franklin]] born 1786, married 4 Feb 1802 in Campbell County, VA, [[North-357|Peter North]] 1782, and they moved to Dandridge, TN and then to Illinois. ## [[Franklin-1207|Robert Franklin, Jr.]] 1792, Never married. No issue. Lived in TN with his brother, Benjamin, who was his trustee. ## [[Franklin-1205|Lewis Franklin III]] 1781, married (Marriage bond 24 Oct 1817) in Campbell County, VA, [[Wood-11830|Elizabeth Wood Jones]] 1788, the widow of Thomas Jones born 1788 died before 1816. She had married him in Campbell County, VA Marriage Bond 25 Dec 1804. Lewis is listed in the 1850 census of Campbell County, VA as a farmer worth $5000, a large sum at that time. The map coordinates for his farm are: [https://www.google.com/maps/place/37%C2%B019'41.0%22N+78%C2%B058'57.0%22W/@37.3280598,-78.9846887,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x0 N 37° 19’ 41” W 78° 58’ 57”]. She had issue by both husbands. The children of Lewis Franklin III and Elizabeth Wood Jones: ### [[Franklin-6558|Joel W. Franklin]] born 1820, married 1) [[Depriest-104|Calista Depriest]] 1820, and 2) [[Wood-16083|Nancy Wood Depriest]] 20 Sep 1825, widow of Horatio Depriest 1819, whom she had married in Campbell County, VA 27 Jun 1842. #### [[Franklin-6559|Owen W. Franklin]] born ca 1846 #### [[Franklin-6560|Morgiana Franklin]] born ca 1848, married Henry Jones. #### [[Franklin-6561|Ida Franklin]] born ca 1855 Never married. No issue. #### [[Franklin-6563|Paxton S. Franklin]] born ca 1859, married [[Puckette-20|Lizzie Puckett]]. #### [[Franklin-6562|Elizabeth Franklin]] born ca 1857, Blind Never married. No issue. ### [[Franklin-5559|Edmund Lewis Franklin]] born 1822, married [[Jennings-4235|Susan Jennings]] 1830. He is listed in the 1850 census of Campbell County, VA at Brookneal as a farmer worth $6000. #### [[Franklin-6599|Louelle Franklin]] born ca 1855, married __ Moore. #### [[Franklin-6600|Nancy “Nannie” Franklin]] born ca 1857, married Edwin “Bunn” Tweedy born 1849 #### [[Franklin-6601|Kieffer Franklin]] #### [[Franklin-6575|Tipton Franklin]] #### [[Franklin-6602|Susan Franklin]] #### [[Franklin-6603|Warner Richardson Franklin]] born 17 Jul 1870, married [[Cheatham-410|Bridget Anne Cheatham]] 17 Aug 1879. She was his second wife, the first being [[Perdue-661|__ Perdue]]. [Issue three]. Warner and Bridget are buried at New Concord Presbyterian Church. ####* by wife 1) __ Perdue: ##### [[Franklin-6613|Lawson Franklin]] ##### [[Franklin-6612|Hattie Franklin]] married __ Cyrus. ##### Franklin ? ####* by wife 2) Bridget Anne Cheatham: ##### [[Franklin-6620|Nannie Elizabeth Franklin]] born 31 Aug 1910, married Lyle Carrol- [issue three]. ##### [[Franklin-6618|Bessie Christian Franklin]] born 15 Apr 1912, married Edward Thurman- [issue three]. ##### [[Franklin-6621|Emma Jennings Franklin]] born 16 Apr 1914, married Jimmy Neighbors [issue three]. ##### William Clifton Franklin born 28 Nov 1915, married ? and lived in New York City, NY. ###### Patricia Jean Franklin ###### William Thomas Franklin ###### Bruce Alvin Franklin ##### [[Franklin-6619|Edward Davis Franklin]] born 20 Jul 1917, married Nancy Woodall. lived Route 2, Rustburg, VA. ###### Irene Franklin married Aubrey Rosser. ###### Kenneth Franklin married ? ###### Robert Franklin married ? ###### Franklin? ##### Berta Davis Franklin born 26 Oct 1918, married 22 Jun 1939 Elbert Fitzland Cheatham 12 Oct 1915, and they divorced. ##### Albert Richardson Franklin born 26 Jan 1920, married 21 Dec 1940 Mary Naomi Blanks born 30 Jul 1920 ###### Carolyn Naomi Franklin born 26 May 1943 ###### Sandra Kay Franklin born 2 Jul 1949 ###### Patricia Anne Franklin ##### [[Franklin-6622|Estelle Bridget Franklin]] born 29 Jan 1922, married 25 Dec 1943 Thomas Franklin Adcock born 16 Apr 1914, and they lived in Texas. ##### Benjamin Alexander Franklin born 18 Jun 1924, married Hazel Lawrence. ###### Benjamin Franklin ###### child Franklin ### [[Franklin-5560|Martha Jane Franklin]] (born 3 Feb 1824 died Dec 1889) married 4 Feb 1852 Campbell County, VA, her cousin, [[Franklin-1234|Daniel Franklin]]. ### [[Franklin-5561|William Jones “Deaf Billy” Franklin]] born 1828, married 1) [[Wood-16098|Anne V. Wood]] born 3 Aug 1838 died 16 Jul 1863 and ca 1863 2) [[Jones-39092|Laura Jones]] born 8 Mar 1843. He was totally deaf and lived on the top of Spring Mills Hill near Springs Mills in Campbell County, VA. ###* Children of William Jones Franklin and 1) Anne Wood: #### [[Franklin-6588|Lillian Virginia “Lelia” Franklin]] ( born 30 May 1860 ), married 3 Aug 1879 in Campbell County, VA, John Isaac “Ike” Rucker born ca 1856. [she was an orphan and taken in and raised by William Franklin and Anne Wood] Both are buried at New Concord Presbyterian Church. He inherited the home Rucker farm. Ike was a cobbler and farmer. #### [[Franklin-6587|Elizabeth “Lizzie” Franklin]] married 1 Jan 1879 [[Hendrick-331|James Luther Hendricks]] born ca 1857. ###* Children by wife 2) Laura Jones: #### [[Franklin-6589|Willie Franklin]] (f) married Laban Ford. #### [[Franklin-6591|Emma Franklin]] #### [[Franklin-6592|Florence Franklin]] Died young. #### [[Franklin-6590|Thomas Franklin]] Never married. No issue. #### [[Franklin-6593|Pearl Franklin]] married Massie Nash 30 Oct 1882 ### [[Franklin-5562|Nancy Elizabeth Franklin]] (born 1830), married LaFayette Depriest (born 1830) [first cousins] and they moved to Georgia. ### [[Franklin-5563|Thomas W. Franklin]] (born 1832) Never married. No issue. Killed while serving as a Confederate soldier. ## [[Franklin-1203|Benjamin Franklin]] (born 1794 died May 1855) married [[Sweeney-1490|Nancy __?]] settled in McMinn County, TN near Chattanooga. All of their children were born in VA. The children of Benjamin Franklin and Nancy __? ### [[Franklin-6598|Mary Franklin]] (born ca 1816 died 1851/55) married 8 May 1839 in Campbell County, VA John D. Hughes and had issue. She died in McMinn County, TN. ### [[Franklin-6594|Jane Franklin]] born circa 1826 ### [[Franklin-6595|Lucinda Franklin]] born ca 1829, married 29 Dec 1852 in McMinn County, TN to Joseph H. Walker. ### [[Franklin-6596|Martha Susan Franklin]] born ca 1836, married 10 Oct 1855 in McMinn County, TN to William H. Staples. ### [[Franklin-6597|John A. Franklin]] born ca 1838 # [[Franklin-1190|Thomas Edward Franklin]] (born Sep 1757 died 23 Mar 1841) married twice: 1) Marriage Bond 6 Jul 1779 in Bedford County, VA [[Campbell-10980|Margaret “Peggy” Campbell]], daughter of Thomas Campbell and 2) 24 Mar 1796 Campbell County, VA, [[Evans-2137|Letitia “Letty” Evans]] (born 8 Dec 1769 died 28 Jul 1862), born in Chester County, PA and died in Campbell County, VA, daughter of Thomas Rees Evans. They were married by Rev. William Mahon. She was called “Little Old Aunt Letty.“ She was small of stature and always wore a black silk bonnet. On Sunday, the bonnet was trimmed with white lace. Thomas was a private in the Revolutionary War and a major in the county militia. He owned a large tract of land (must have been several thousand acres) near his father and he built a fine brick home on it. This home was near present day Naked Creek (some say Aker’s Creek), a branch of the Big Falling River. In 1973 the house was still standing at map coordinates N 79° 00’ 30” W 37° 17’ 45”. '''[[https://www.google.com/maps/place/37%C2%B017'45.0%22N+79%C2%B000'30.0%22W/@37.2958333,-79.010522,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x0 N 37° 17’ 45” W 79° 00’ 30”]]''' Thomas and Letty are buried in a family plot near their home. A cabin on the estate has long since gone to dust; but around it in the fields, flowers that she imported from England still grow. [Reference-Campbell County, VA Order Book #9, page 30 shows an order setting aside her dowry, 237+ acres, taken from the estate of her husband and it was set aside from the land belonging to her son, Henry R. Franklin. Order book #23 speaks of the pension of her husband and that it to be given to her. She made her will 1 Dec 1859 and bequeathed all that was hers to her daughter, Bridget Carson and her two granddaughters, Martha Campbell and Jane Campbell. #* Children of Thomas Edward Franklin and 1) Margaret Campbell: ## Campbell Franklin Never married. No issue. ## [[Franklin-1232|Judy B. Franklin]] married 21 Aug 1799 in Campbell County, VA, [[Moore-5129|Predum Moore]]. ## [[Franklin-4305|Nancy C. Franklin]] married 19 Nov 1807 in Campbell County, VA, [[Thompson-16949|William Thompson]]. William lived at one time in Floyd County, VA. ## [[Franklin-1219|Elizabeth Franklin]] married 14 Jan 1805 in Campbell County, VA, [[Fleming-1010|David Fleming]]. ## [[Franklin-1230|Janet “Jane” Franklin]] married 15 Mar 1804 in Campbell County, VA, [[Fleming-1011|John Fleming]]. She granted power of attorney to Thomas Franklin [probably her father] 15 Nov 1806, Campbell County Deed Book 7, page 592. #* Children by wife 2), Letitia Evans: ## [[Franklin-1233|Margaret Franklin]] born 1797, married 10 Mar 1823 in Campbell County, VA, [[Campbell-2477|James Campbell]]. ## [[Franklin-4310|Bridget Evans “Biddy” Franklin]] ( born 10 Jan 1798 died 15 Mar 1862 ) married 20 Mar 1816, in Campbell County, VA, [[Carson-2214|Moses Helm Carson]]. They were members of Old Concord Presbyterian Church, Appomattox County, VA and all their children were born on the home farm. ## [[Franklin-4179|Thomas Edward (or Henry) Franklin]] born 1804, married 8 Nov 1824 in Campbell County, VA, [[Arrington-313|Judith W. Arrington]], daughter of Adler Arrington of Concord, Campbell County, VA. In 1844 Thomas was a major in the 117th Regiment of the Virginia Militia. The children of Thomas Edward Franklin and Judith Arrington: ### [[Franklin-5274|Martha L. Franklin]] born 1828 ### [[Franklin-5275|Angeline Franklin]] born 1833, married 1) [[Jones-31069|Fayette Jones]]; 2) [[Clay-1663|Charles Clay]], his third wife. Fayette Jones lived in Campbell County, VA. ### [[Franklin-5276|John Henry Franklin]] born 1829, married 20 Feb 1861 [[Evans-10917|Isabella “Belle” Robertson Evans]] (born 9 May 1840 died 15 Apr 1902) ''daughter of Dr. Daniel Septimus Evans''. '''[False]''' No issue. He was a Confederate soldier and was killed at the Battle of Seven Pines. After he died, she married 24 Nov 1868 in Campbell County, VA, Thomas William Milton Thompson and had issue. ### [[Franklin-5277|Jane A. Franklin]] born 1835 ### [[Franklin-5278|Littleton Franklin]] born 1837 ### [[Franklin-5279|Marisa Franklin]] born 1839, married [[Jones-31070|John Thomas Jones]] born 1832, as his third wife. ### [[Franklin-4157|Victoria Franklin]] born 1840 '''[Arrington]''' ### [[Franklin-5280|Ellen Evans Franklin]] born 1842 ### [[Franklin-5281|Evaline Franklin]] born 1844 ### [[Franklin-5282|Dolly Franklin]] born 1846 ### [[Franklin-5283|George Franklin]] born 1848 married the widow Ould, mother of Dr. Lyle Ould. ### [[Franklin-5288|Margaret Franklin]] married 1) [[Jordan-5213|___ Jordan]] and in Campbell County, VA 2) [[Davis-27528|John Davis, Jr.]] (born 11 Mar 1799 died 24 May 1878) and had issue. She had three children by Jordan and one child by John Davis, Jr. ### [[Franklin-5284|Bridget Franklin]] (born 1851 died 1915) married as his second wife, [[Woodson-878|Edwin R. Woodson]] (born 1842 died 1891) Both are buried at New Concord Presbyterian Church [May be buried at Concord Cemetery]. His first wife was __ Hill. ### [[Franklin-5285|Fletcher Franklin]] ### [[Franklin-5286|Thomas Ed Franklin]] ### William Franklin '''[1854-24 October 1854?]''' ## [[Franklin-6475|Henry R. Franklin]] (called Capt. Henry) (born 1805 died 1898) He married 1) [[Watkins-4046|Rhoda G. “Mary” Watkins]] (born 1816 died 1878), born in Buckingham County, VA and raised in Campbell County, VA near Six Mile Bridge on the James River [issue four] and 2) ? an infidel atheist who was born in Ireland. No issue. Henry always wore a hat with the string tied under his neck. He built in 1847 the fine brick home now (1988) occupied by the author’s sister, Mrs. Harvey Eliot Henderson near Plum Branch, Campbell County, VA. The bricks were made on the farm by slaves and the rock was quarried on Blue Hill about a mile away. An interesting story on the atheist wife was told to the author by Mrs. Pearl Thompson. The atheist had died ca 1889 and had been “laid out” (prepared for burial) by several friends. While the body was in the parlor, it (the body), sat straight up and gave a loud moan. The exit from the parlor was very quick - the corpse had an involuntary muscular reaction and was really quite dead, but because she was an atheist [in that day and time, not a very nice person], the shock on these religious people was severe! About 1870 Capt. Henry signed a note for a friend who wanted to buy a farm and the friend absconded and Henry lost his farm, which had been debt-free. After he lost his farm, he moved to Lynchburg and lived with his niece, Pearl Franklin ? on Church Street between 10th and 11th Streets. He would sit on the porch and rock and he kept a cane under his chair and if he saw any passerby who had the same name as his friend who has ruined him, he would pound on the porch railing with his cane and call out to the person in a loud voice and tell them that they were descended from a scoundrel. Socrates Haden bought the farm. The children of Henry Franklin were: ### [[Franklin-6582|Dr. Joel W. Franklin]] (born 1836 died 1866) lived in Pamplin, VA. He served in the Confederacy as a surgeon and was in the siege of Vicksburg. He died of diphtheria. Never married. No issue. ### [[Franklin-6583|Cornelia “Puss” Franklin]] born 1838 married John Thomas Jones 1832 of Campbell County, VA. She was his first wife. ### [[Franklin-6584|Jo Anna Franklin]] born 1840 married Frank Nelson. They moved to Alta, TX and had three children. ### [[Franklin-6476|Philip Henry Franklin]] (born 4 Jul 1841 died 13 Aug 1936) He was a druggist (pharmacist); moved to Missouri in 1868 and in 1872 married [[Gilliam-690|Mary Eva Gilliam]] of Marshall, Saline County, MO. He served in the Confederacy for the entire period of the war with the Lynchburg, VA Home Guard and was its last surviving member. He is said to have planted the large holly tree still standing (1990) at the Brick House Place (home of Mrs. Harvey E. Henderson in 1990). #### [[Franklin-6586|Phillip Henry Franklin, Jr.]] died age 17. #### [[Franklin-6585|Daisey Franklin]] married Rev. A. A. McGeachy and she died at Sherman, TX. # [[Franklin-1006|Lewis Franklin II]] married Michael “Mickey” Ferguson. In 1793 he patented 215 acres on the south side of Dixon’s Fork. ''He is said to have served in the Revolutionary War.'' '''[False]''' Family tradition states that they had 21 children. All but two of them died when young. Children of Lewis Franklin II and Mickey Ferguson: ## [[Franklin-669|John Franklin]] (born 1776 died 1862) married 14 Nov 1796 in Bedford County, VA, [[Booth-1459|Nancy Booth]] born 14 Feb 1776 died 1860, William Booth, surety. Children of John Franklin and Nancy Booth: ### [[Franklin-4299|William Lewis Franklin]] (born 6 Nov 1797 died 10 Nov 1826) married 18 Mar 1818 in Campbell County, VA, [[Evans-9052|Letitia Demarus Evans]] (born 16 Dec 1789 died 19 May 1877) In 1850 she was living with her son, Daniel Evans Franklin. The children of William Lewis Franklin and Letitia Demarus Evans: #### [[Franklin-5612|Daniel Evans Franklin]] born circa 1824, married 25 Jan 1844 [[Booth-3121|Letitia Jane Davis Booth Martin]] born circa 1822, and widow of Charles C. Martin whom she had married 20 Aug 1835. They lived near Plum Branch, VA where he farmed. Listed in the 1850 census as a farmer worth $2385 at residence 1208. The children of Daniel Evans Franklin and Letitia Jane Davis Booth Martin: ##### [[Franklin-5613|Jane Christian Franklin]] (born 4 Nov 1844 died 8 May 1896) married 26 Oct 1869 [[Cheatham-406|Alexander Thomas Cheatham]] (born 9 Jun 1833 died 5 Nov 1913) She was his second wife, his first being Betty P. Harvey (born 24 Oct 1843 died 1868) ##### [[Franklin-5614|Judith Ann Franklin]] born ca 1847, Never married. No issue. ##### [[Franklin-5615|Matilda L. Franklin]] born circa 1848, Never married. No issue. ##### [[Franklin-5616|William Anderson Franklin]] born circa 1849, married [[Davis-29180|Mary “Molly” Davis]] (we called her cousin Molly Bill) No issue. Farmed near Plum Branch, Campbell County, VA. ##### [[Franklin-5617|Thomas Lafayette Franklin]] (born 30 Oct 1852 died 23 Apr 1925) married 23 Nov 1892 [[Torrence-141|Leonora Zephna “Leah” Torrence]] (born 27 Jul 1862 died 29 Jun 1928) He was a farmer near Plum Branch, Campbell County, VA. Children of Thomas Lafayette Franklin and Leonora Zephna Torrence: ###### [[Franklin-5622|Carl Burton Franklin]] (born 3 Oct 1893 died 5 Nov 1964) Never married. No issue. He worked for Tawsey Rucker at the feed mill at Concord, Campbell County, VA; was a veteran of WWI; a member of the Early’s Chapel Methodist church and a Mason. He died at Keysville, VA and is buried at Early’s Chapel. ###### [[Franklin-5623|Eunice May Franklin]] born 11 May 1897, married 24 Nov 1920 Samuel Arthur Caldwell (born 20 May 1893 died 22 Sep 1976) They lived near New Chapel Church, Rustburg, Campbell County, VA. He is buried at Bethany Church. ###### [[Franklin-5624|Daniel Thomas Franklin]] born 31 Oct 1901, Never married. No issue. He was an expert beekeeper and raised bees near Plum Branch. He was in WW II. He was highly eccentric and walked from Plum Branch to Oroville, California ca 1955 and he worked for Andrew Hunter Land in the lumber mill there for a time. He died in a Veteran’s Home in Salem, Oregon. ###### [[Franklin-5625|Jesse William Franklin]] 5 Feb 1905, married 14 Dec 1934 Mary Josephine Carwile 22 Feb 1907. He farmed in Campbell County, VA near Rustburg on Route 2. They were, at the time the author knew them, poor tenant farmers and hard workers. Farmed in Campbell County, VA near the author’s home, Red Acres Farm, circa 1942. ####### Lenora Kate Franklin born 1 Sep 1935, married Robert Mark Clark born 15 Jun 1937. They lived in Phenix, VA. ####### Elizabeth Ann Franklin born 10 Oct 1940, married 11 Jul 1963 Paulus Elson Bryant II born 7 Jan 1931, of Big Island, VA. ##### [[Franklin-5618|Flora Belle Franklin]] born ca 1854, Never married. No issue. ##### [[Franklin-5619|Stephen (or Steven) M. Franklin]] born ca 1856 ##### [[Franklin-5620|Reese Evans Franklin]] born ca 1858, Never married. No issue. ##### [[Franklin-5621|Bridget Letitia Franklin]] born ca 1859, Never married. No issue. #### [[Franklin-5692|John William Franklin]] (born 11 Apr 1825 died 11 Aug 1892) married 9 Dec 1847 [[Evans-11258|Mary Isabelle Evans]] ( born 8 Oct 1823 died 10 Jan 1906 ) They lived near Spring Mills, Campbell County, VA. Listed in the 1850 census as a farmer worth $1500 at residence 1207. They together with several of their children are buried in the Dixon family graveyard. The children of John William Franklin and Mary Isabelle Evans: ##### [[Franklin-6576|William Edward “Willie” Franklin]] born 2 Oct 1848, Never married. No issue. He went west for some 25 years and then returned to near Concord and raised bees. ##### [[Franklin-6577|Sarah Ann “Sallie” Franklin]] ( born 12 Mar 1851 died 15 Dec 1890 ) Never married. No issue. ##### [[Franklin-6578|Emma Virginia Franklin]] ( born 5 May 1853 died 18 Jun 1855 ) She is buried in the Dixon family cemetery and her grace is marked with a rock. ##### [[Franklin-6579|Susanna Grace Franklin]] (born 25 Dec 1855 died 8 Apr 1862) She is buried in the Dixon family cemetery and her grace is marked with a rock. ##### [[Franklin-5693|Mary Robertson “Molly” Franklin]] (born 31 Mar 1859 died 18 Jun 1915) married 22 Feb 1882 [[Jones-33455|Bolling Jones]] (born 16 Jan 1857 died 9 Sep 1928) They farmed near Spring Mills, Campbell County, VA on the Falling River and are both buried at New Concord Presbyterian Church, Campbell County, VA. ##### [[Franklin-6580|Charles Daniel “Charley” Franklin]] born 17 Oct 1861 died 1935 '''[False 1941]''' Never married. No issue. Farmed the home farm near Plum Branch. He was an elder in New Concord Presbyterian Church. In their old age, Charley, Willie and Resa lived together and they told their niece, Mary Saunder Jones, that if she would take care of them, she could have the farm. She did until they all died and then she lived there by herself. When Harvey E. Henderson came back from World War II, his wife, Sarah Agnes Evans Henderson asked Mary Saunders Jones if she wanted to sell them some land: she said “No, I want to keep it in the family.” About 1947 she sold it to her nephew, Jones Rucker, and he built a large dairy on the farm and after four years, he sold it while Mary was in the hospital with sciatica and it nearly broke her heart. ##### [[Franklin-6581|Theresa “Resa” I. Franklin]] born 17 Aug 1866, married ca 1916 Edward G. Peerman. No issue. #### William Lewis Franklin, Jr. ### [[Franklin-1175|Robert H. “One-Eyed Bob” Franklin]] (born 21 Jun 1800 died 24 Dec 1872) married 1) 9 Oct 1824 in Campbell County, VA, [[North-355|Elizabeth North]] and 2) [[Johnson-7115|Millicent ''Apperson'' Johnson]] '''[Haragrave]''' 1803. He was a farmer and lived at Concord Depot and is listed in the 1860 census of Campbell County, VA as a farmer worth $5000. ###* The children of Robert “One-Eyed Bob” Franklin and 1) Elizabeth North: #### [[Franklin-1182|Judith Ann Franklin]] born circa 1825, married [[May-797|William May]], a lawyer and they possibly lived in Franklin County, MO. #### [[Franklin-1181|Mary Franklin]] born circa 1827, married [[Jasper-40|___ Jasper]] in MO. #### [[Franklin-1185|Absolem T. Franklin]] born 30 Jul 1831, moved to MO in the spring of 1850 and located in Danville, Montgomery County, where he worked as a mercantile clerk until 1861. He then moved to New Florence in the same county, opened his own store which he kept until 1864. In December 1864, he was appointed the railroad agent at Old Allen on the North Missouri Railroad. Three years later the station was moved to Moberly, MO and he continued as agent until 1872. He was then appointed messenger for the United States Express and he ran on the road between Moberly and Ottumwa for two years. In 1874 he was appointed deputy sheriff of Randolph County and was elected constable of Moberly Township which he held for four years. In 1879 he worked as a carpenter and he took charge of the railroad water tank and engine. On 4 Mar 1864 he was married in Montgomery County to [[Pew-27|Elizabeth P. “Bettie” Pew]], daughter of A.D. Pew. They had one daughter, [[Franklin-1231|Clara May Franklin]]. They lived in Moberly and he was a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South and his wife and daughter were members of the Cumberland Presbyterian church. [Reference- History of Howard and Chariton Counties, MO, page 877. Pub. 1883 by National Historical Company.] #### [[Franklin-1174|Dorothy “Dollie” Ming Franklin]] (born 26 Aug 1832 died 1913) married 5 Feb 1854 [[Cardwell-98|Charles Wesley Cardwell]] (born 1825 died 1885) They moved to MO ca 1874. Charles Wesley was listed in the 1860 census at Concord Depot as a mechanic worth $100. He lost his home, property and iron foundry at Concord for the debt incurred when he signed a bond for a wayward CSA officer who skipped out on the note. Broke and discouraged, he moved his family to New Florence, MO ca 1870 and there he eked out a meager living for his family of 9 children by farming and making sorghum molasses. Dolly, with her energy, good judgement and perserverance kept her growing family together. All who wished went to college and all turned out well by helping each other - a remarkable heritage! Both are buried at the New Florence Cemetery. #### [[Franklin-1186|John A. (or S.) Franklin]] born ca 1834, may have gone to TX. #### [[Franklin-1187|Robert A. Franklin]] born ca 1836 #### [[Franklin-1188|Thomas L. Franklin]] born ca 1839 '''[Thomas was the son of Robert's second wife, Millicent]''' ###* Children by wife 2) Millicent Apperson Johnson: #### [[Franklin-1191|Samuel (or Lafayette) Franklin]] born ca 1840, Never married. No issue. Served in the Confederacy and ''killed in action''. '''[False, probably confused with [[Franklin-1188|Thomas]] or [[Franklin-1183|William]]]''' #### [[Franklin-1192|Elizabeth M. “Bettie” Franklin]] born ca 1843, married [[Arrington-53|Albert Arrington]]. #### [[Franklin-1193|Martha E. “Mattie” Franklin]] born ca 1845, married [[Loyd-77|James Loyd]]. ## [[Franklin-4302|Thomas Franklin]] ''Died young''. '''[False]''' “Afflicted”. ## [[Franklin-4304|Mildred “Milly” Franklin]] married 13 Mar 1794 in Campbell County, VA, [[Litchford-13|Arthur Litchford]]. His will is recorded at the Campbell County, VA Courthouse at Rustburg, VA Will book 9, page 100. 11 Sep 1838. ## [[Franklin-4303|Kesiah “or Heziah” Franklin]] married 10 Nov 1796 in Campbell County, VA, [[Thompson-16941|John Thompson]]. They moved to Williamson County, TN ca 1817 and he is buried there. # [[Franklin-4203|Henry Edmund ( or Edwin ) Franklin]] married Marriage Bond Campbell County, VA 4 Jun 1788 [[Davis-28898|Sally Davis]], daughter of John Davis. # [[Franklin-4201|Elizabeth Franklin]] # [[Franklin-4202|Jane Franklin]] === Campbell Chronicles and Family Sketches: Franklin (1927) === ''The family of Franklin emigrated from Ecton village, Northamptonshire, England, in 1685; John, founder of the Virginia branch, is supposed to have been a brother of Benjamin Franklin. The name is found among Orange and Culpeper county records about the middle of the 18th century.'' '''[This part appears to be fantasy as no record of this John has been found and this branch is definitely not related, at least immediately, to the Franklin family of Orange County, Virginia. This branch was residing in Lunenburg County early in the 18th century.]''' [[Franklin-1179|Owen Franklin]] in 1773 patented 49 acres on both sides of Morton's creek, a fork of Falling river, and in 1788 bought of Pleasant Branch 182 acres on the south side of Morton's creek, along [[Franklin-1190|Thos. Franklin's]] line, and from Hall's corner to Harris' corner. In 1749 [[Franklin-1003|Lewis Franklin]] patented 850 acres including head branches of Falling river adjoining Edward Nix's line; in 1756 Lewis Franklin patented 118 acres on Callaway's road, between two ridges. In 1793 he patented 215 acres on the south side of Dixon's fork, a head branch of the south fork of Falling river. In 1780 [[Franklin-5991|Edmund Franklin]] patented 252 acres lying upon a branch of Cub creek and Falling river; Edmund and Owen Franklin were ensigns of the Revolutionary army in 1778; Thomas and Thomas P. Franklin '''[Thomas P. isn't placed yet]''' were pensioners 75 and 71 in 1835. Owens' will, recorded in 1795, mentions sons, [[Franklin-1225|Benjamin]] and [[UNKNOWN-87987|Isaac M.]] and daughter, [[Franklin-4312|Nancy]]. Robert Franklin '''[Unclear if this is Owen's brother or son]''' administered upon Owens' estate and in 1811 he made complaint that Owen (deceased) who served as deputy sheriff of Campbell had delinquent taxes charged against him for which he was not responsible; he asked that the commonwealth's claims be relinquished. [[Franklin-1007|Colonel Robert Franklin]] owned an estate near Concord which included Pilot Mountain. '''[This appears to be a conflation of Robert Jr., son of Owen, and Robert Sr., son of Lewis.]''' He married a [[Lewis-3622|Miss Lewis]], of Irish birth, who was only eleven years of age. His will recorded in 1831 appointed his sons, [[Franklin-1203|Benjamin]] and [[Franklin-1205|Lewis]] executors, and was witnessed by Robert Franklin, Jr. '''[Not his son Robert, who was a trustee]''', David Robertson and John Shannon. Children: :—[[Franklin-1203|Benjamin]]. :—[[Franklin-1213|Margaret]], m. [[Roper-600|John Rosser]] in 1805. :—[[Franklin-4311|Robert, Jr.]], m. [[Perrow-101|Mary]], the dau. of Daniel Perrow. '''[This is Owen's son, not Robert's; Robert's son never married.]''' :—[[Franklin-1204|Owen]]. :—[[Franklin-1212|Mary]], m. [[Jennings-3246|Jennings]]. :—[[Franklin-1208|John M.]] m. [[Dinwiddie-71|Ann Dinwiddie]]; had 11 children. :—[[Franklin-1205|Lewis]], m. [[Wood-11830|Eliza Wood]]; his daughter, [[Franklin-5560|Martha J.]], m. [[Franklin-1234|Daniel Franklin]], of Appomattox, and their dau., [[Franklin-5565|Lillian]], m. [[Evans-10829|Major Daniel J. Evans]], near Concord. :—[[Franklin-1206|Elizabeth]], m. [[North-357|Peter North]] in 1801. :—[[Franklin-1211|Thomas]] ... :—[[Franklin-1209|Nancy]], m. [[Stern-68|_____ Stern]]. :—[[Franklin-1210|Sallie]], 1806, m., 1st, [[North-356|Thomas North]]; m. 2nd, [[Leonard-745|_____ Leonard]]. Col. Ro. Franklin's will mentioned sons, Owen, John, Lewis, Thomas, Robert and Benjamin, and daughters, Margaret Rosser, Elizabeth North, Sally Leonard, Mary Jennings and Nancy Stern. Lewis Franklin remained in Campbell; other sons seem to have moved away. Other Franklin marriages: 1794, [[Unknown-285314|Elizabeth Franklin]] m. [[Steele-429|Alexander Steele]];—1794, [[Franklin-4304|Milly Franklin]] m. [[Litchford-13|Arthur Litchford]]; —1795, [[Franklin-4303|Keziah Franklin]] m. [[Thompson-16941|John Thompson]]; -1805, [[Franklin-1219|Elizabeth Franklin]] m. [[Fleming-1010|David Fleming]];-1805, [[Franklin-1230|Jane Franklin]] m. [[Fleming-1011|John Fleming]];—1802, Thomas Franklin, and, 1805, Capt. John Franklin, sons of Edward and Eliza Cook-Franklin, of Appomattox county, married, respectively, Judith E. and Martha J., daughters of William and Sarah C. Anderson of Campbell county. In 1844 Thomas H. Franklin was major of the 117th Va. Mil. Reg. === Milicent Schmacher's Arrington-Franklin genealogy (1960) === {{Image|file=Franklin_Family_of_Campbell_County_Virginia.jpg |align=r |size=s }} [[Franklin-1175|Robert Franklin]] was the son of [[Franklin-669|John Franklin]], born 1778, died 1849, and his wife, [[Booth-1459|Nancy Boothe]], born February 14, 1776, married 1797 and died 1860. John Franklin was the son of [[Franklin-1006|Lewis Franklin]], born ''1758'', married 1778, died ''April 11, 1842''. His wife was Polly Ann Lewis, born 1762, died 1843. Robert's grandfather, Lewis Franklin, ''fought in the American Revolutionary War and thereby gave his descendants the privilege of becoming Daughters or Sons of the American Revolution''. '''[False]''' ''This mistake has had a lasting impact on this branch. Back long ago when records were much harder to come by, [[Jasper-243|Grace Jasper]] acquired the Revolutionary War record of '''a''' Lewis Franklin of Virginia. It was assumed that the record belonged to this branch, but the locations, dates and children's names all mismatch this family. '''That''' [[Franklin-411|Lewis Franklin's]] family has been sorted but this family's research was stalled due to the mistake. The mistake was carried forward by other family researchers, like [[Shumacher-8|Milicent Schumacher]] (author of the above) and [[Cardwell-531|Marilyn Cardwell Larson]], and can be found in numerous trees at Ancestry.com.'' == Family connections == [[Franklin-1006|Lewis]] was a surety for [[Franklin-1190|Thomas']] marriage to Margaret Campbell. [[Franklin-1003|Lewis Sr.]] had died by this point and it was too early to be [[Franklin-1205|Lewis]], the son of Robert. * Thomas Franklin and Margaret Campbell, July 6, 1779. Lewis Franklin, surety. Consent of James Campbell, father of Margaret. Earle S. Dennis and Jane E. Smith. ''Marriage Bonds of Bedford County, Virginia, 1755-1800''. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub., 1975. == See also == * [https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=zjb-8rgPTvbI.koRY93cKvfcY&usp=sharing Google map locations relating to the Franklins of Campbell County, Virginia] * [[Space:Edmund_Franklins_of_Lunenburg%2C_Virginia|The Edmund Franklins of Lunenburg, Virginia]] * [[Space:Campbell_County%2C_Virginia|Campbell County, Virginia]] == Sources == * The collective works of [[Evans-11072|Dr. Joseph W. Evans]] * Chilton, Harriett A., and Mitzi Chilton Wilkerson. [https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/254276?availability=Family%20History%20Library Register of Old Concord Presbyterian Church, Appomattox County, Virginia - 1826-1878; Baptism 1826-1876, Membership 1826-1878, Obituary 1829-1854]. 1973. * Early, R. H. [http://files.usgwarchives.net/va/campbell/history/chronicles-families-franklin.txt Campbell Chronicles and Family Sketches, Embracing the History of Campbell County, Virginia, 1782-1926,]. Lynchburg, Va.: J.P. Bell, 1927. * [https://books.google.com/books/about/History_of_Chariton_and_Howard_Counties.html?id=BtIyAQAAMAAJ History of Howard and Chariton Counties, Missouri]: ''Written and Compiled from the Most Official Authentic and Private Sources, including a History of Its Townships, Towns, and Villages, Together with a Condensed History of Missouri'' ... St. Louis: National Historical, 1883. * Lane, Annabel Wishart. [https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/124563?availability=Family%20History%20Library The Roots and Fruit of the Bryant Family Tree: A Genealogical Study]. Kansas City, Missouri: A.W. Lane, 1954. * Mathis, Gay. "Obion Co TN Branches & Twigs." Accessed November 02, 2015. http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=lgmathis&id=I49635

Franklin Hudson Family Mysteries

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Franklin Augustine Hudson lived from 1827 to 1871, primarily in Louisiana. He married Henrietta Benham Webster in New York, and had a child with her in 1850, Mary, but soon thereafter left them, returning to Louisiana where he co-owned a sugar cane plantation. After the death of his first wife, from whom he was separated, he married Maria Hutches in Galveston, Texas. They had one son, named Franklin Alden Hudson, who was born shortly after his father Franklin Augustine Hudson died, around 1871.

'Franklin Park Tragedy': An NJ community expelled its African American residents — twice

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"FRANKLIN – Today Franklin Park is a suburban model of diversity where residents of different races and ethnic groups live together in harmony...The community, a rural outpost in the late 19th century, expelled its African American residents after a pregnant white woman and her 15-month-old child were murdered, supposedly by two African American men. Author Brian Armstrong takes a look at this tragic anomaly in his book, "The Franklin Park Tragedy," published in August by Arcadia Publishing."'Franklin Park Tragedy': An NJ community expelled its African American residents — twice Cheryl Makin Courier News and Home News Tribune https://www.mycentraljersey.com/story/news/history/2019/10/10/nj-history-franklin-park-tragedy-expelled-african-american-residents/3819260002/ The wife and child of Moore Baker were brutally murdered in their home, apparently by two intruders well known to the family. The book by Armstrong and other news articles detail the histories of Black and white families in the area and that the murder caused the resurection of a semi-vigilante group in Franklin Park which ordered the expulsion of Black residents. The borders of Franklin Park were somewhat fluid, determined to be in Somerset or Middlesex County. The village rambled along the main road, Kings Highway (which would become the first transcontinental highway, the Lincoln Highway). The county line was in the middle of the road and residents on both sides claimed Franklin Park residence. Contemporarily, the Franklin Park/Kendall Park (villiage within South Brunswick) US post office is on the South Brunswick, Middlesex County side. Aside from the murder, the author examined the exodus of resident Black families after 1894 and the influx of Southern Blacks around 1900-1910. The population shift, noted in census records between 1880 and 1930, also coincided with industrialization and opportunities away from the agricultural area and the improvements in transportation to cities such as New Brunswick in Middlesex and Newark in Essex County. Other articles still available online about the murders and information on resident and attitudes at the time: The NJ State Library ; on line video of a presentation By Brian Armstrong https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISJF_wuvhCE Newspaper.com copy of one of the news articles https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-daily-news-times-lucretia-baker-1894/43691464/

FRANKLIN ROOTS

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Blackwell-2295|Geoff Blackwell]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help Philip Franklin was a grocer, born in St. Pancras Workhouse in 131. He married Harriett Lockyer in 1864. He died in Sopley Hants. in 1898. The Parish of Saint Pancras register of baptisms lists his mother's name as Mary Ann Franklin. I can find no record of her or Philip's father Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=14669300 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Franks Family Bible

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Transcription of the Fontice Piece pages from the Franks Family Bible listing births, deaths, cause of death and marriages. From Personal Papers and notes of Frances T. Gaulden. ---- {| ||||Births||||||Deaths|||| |- |Nehemiah Franks||December 3||1776||March 23||1852||of Cancer|| |- |Jane Simmons Franks||February 25,||1783|||||| |} === Children === {| ||||Births||||||Deaths|||| |- |Nancy Franks||March 11||1802|||||| |- |Henry Franks||March 24||1803||Nov 8||1888||Cancer|| |- |Charles Franks||June 20||1806||Jan 24||1880|| |- |Robert Franks||May 14||1808||Dec 20||1894|| |- |Eppy Franks||Oct 23||1810||Jan 10||1892||Puraly|| |- |Samuel Franks||May 2||1814||Jan 7||1896||andde|| |- |Benjamin Franks||December 10||1816|||||| |- |Pamela Franks||July 1||1818|||||| |- |Jane Franks||July 30||1823|||||| |} ---- {| ||||Births||||||Deaths|||| |- |Robert Franks||May 14||1808||Dec 20||1894|||| |- |Lucy Gordon (Crisp) Franks||Dec 6||1813||died May 3||1897|||| |} === Children === {| ||||Births||||||Deaths|||| |- |Charles Mancil Franks||Feb 28||1838|||||| |- |Sarah Jane Franks||Feb 21||1835||died Nov 25||1894|||| |- |Nathaniel Day Franks||Feb 2||1837||(illegible)|||| |- |Susan Melissa Franks||July 11||1839|||||| |- |Pamela Sophia Carolina Franks||July 10||1841|||||| |- |Lucy Adeline Franks||Sep 1||1843||Oct 15||1881|| |- |Samuel Allen & Nancy Margaret Franks||Dec 4||1849|||||| |- |(Samuel Allen)||||||May 23||1916|| |}

Frank's Family Think Tank.

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Pulling together a whole Family History!

FrankScott Images

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Photos related to [[Scott-58176|Frank B. Scott (1869-1937)]]

Frans and Arie Take Family Belongings by River from De Lier to Veenhuizen

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The Story of an Around-the-World Trip It was around the middle of November 1924, when a telegram was delivered to the family of Jacob VanStaalduinen, Bommelweg, De Lier. The family had 11 people in it, five boys and four girls of various ages ranging from 17 to 2 years of age; so a growing family. And because all Jacob Van Staalduinen’s brothers and their wives had farms, it was normal that there had to be found a farm so this big family would have a place to work -- their own place. The little farm, De Bommel, was only 7 hectares (18 acres), so way too small for a farm. It was very good for greenhouses and vegetables, but that was not good enough; it had to be a big farm. So our father, Jacob Van Staalduinen, and his dad went everywhere to find a big farm. Two of them I still remember; one was in Werkendam. Looking at it from behind, that would have been a better choice. And one was between Wateringen and Kwintsheul. They also looked at three farms in Drenthe. These were in Veenhuizen on the sixth waterway (or canal). It had good sandy ground, but not clay, like they had in De Bommel. Still, they put a bid on the farm, Hoeve II, Veenhuizen 3, for 70 guilders per hectare; not cheap if you figure it was 1924. And now, about the middle of November, the telegram came. This was an enormous experience. All the message said was, “HOEVE, VEENHUIZEN, GRANTED,” nothing else. There was much enthusiasm and rejoicing that we had gotten it. We, the two oldest, Frans and I, had to go right away to tell all the relatives and dad’s parents. Then the time of preparation came and talking and getting ready. I, Arie, was 15; Frans, 17; Cor, 13; and Maartje, 11. All four of us were done with school. (There were five younger children.) The farm we were going to was a dairy farm, so Frans and I had to learn to milk the cows. We figured we would have around 40 cows there. Frans and I could milk a cow, but not good enough. To learn it well, I had to go for a month to my uncle Wim, my father’s brother. He sure could use me, and I learned to milk a cow in a hurry; leave it up to Uncle Wim. Regarding the time I was there I’ll be brief, I learned a lot, but I sure knew that it would not be what I wanted to do in life. At home, things moved right along. There were only three months to get ready, because March 2, 1925, we would leave. It excited me, but I also knew that we had to leave a lot behind. I had grown up there and was 16 when we left. When that second day of March came, and the little motor boat lay in front of the house, I could not believe we would fit everything in it. The boat was 52 ton with a diesel motor and a steep hull. It had to hold all the furniture of 11 people, three cows, and about 80 chickens, plus 5 people; that was two skippers, one passenger, Frans, and me. Early that morning we started loading. First the cows. They only had a small corner. Then all the furniture and all the farm equipment; a wagon, plow, a rototiller, and a lot of small tools. It soon hit us that the small boat would be very full. At three-o-clock, everything was in, and we closed the hatch. For the crates with the chickens, there was no more room, but oh well, they could stay on deck. I don’t think they were sweating, but then who did have a good place on that small ship? When they loosened the ropes to leave, it sure hit me hard, but oh well, we were going to a big farm! That night, we motored via DeLee and Het Schie (two bodies of water) to Rotterdam. Until there, we did not see much. We had to milk the cows and feed them, feed the chickens, and get the eggs they had laid. When the boat was moored, we went to eat. That sure was strange for us. In a very small space in the back of the boat with 5 people where you could just sit, everything had to be prepared. One of the skippers was the cook for all of us four men. The food, we as farmers, sure had to get used to, but you could not let it get you down. We ate what there was. And then we had to go to bed because we had to leave Rotterdam the next day. We had to reach Westervoort going all upstream. I still now can remember that we were brought to the front of the boat, and someone opened the trap door to go down a little stairway. All kinds of things were laying there, ropes, an anchor, etc., and in front in that steep place, two beds, if you could call them that. In the narrowest part lay our two heads, with our legs farther out going in the shape of the boat. Then they closed the trap door. I don’t know if any air could come in. I do know that I was lying there and said the little prayer of, “Het is weer avond, het word weer nacht. Goede Gott, will ons bewaren…” (It is evening again; it is becoming night again; the good Lord will guard us.) When that was done, the whole long day came back to me, and I thought about that Sunday in church, how the minister prayed for the family which was going on such a long trip. That made me feel better, and I forgot about that trap door, and I felt happy at that time; and later in my life, I did worry during the day, but when I was in bed, I could give over and go to sleep. That night, however, was not a long one. Very early, while it was very dark, I woke up because of a terrible noise and the groaning of the boat. The skippers amongst themselves had decided to leave very early without telling us. You cannot imagine how much noise and stamping there was to get the motor going again. What was more, the cows helped along when they were so rudely awakened. Anyway, we were up and still alive. This was nice to know for the following nights. The skippers did not tell us because they were afraid that going all upstream and the strong winds on the Lek and the Ryn (rivers) would make it too hard to reach Westervoord by that night. When we came on deck, we had already passed Rotterdam, so I cannot tell you in which haven we had spent the night. It was not important; the little boat had much to do to keep going with everything against it. We then had to get to work again. The cows had to be fed hay that was in little bundles and watered with water scooped from the Lek (with a rope and pail). Then we had to milk them. I don’t know how many liters we had, but enough for the five of us to drink. Those days we drank a lot of chocolate milk. When that was done, we had to feed the chickens. They were in 5 big crates on the back deck. When that was all done, we could look around to the river’s edge. I can still remember that Frans and I were sitting behind the steerhouse nicely in the sun and out of the wind. The wind came from the east and we were traveling east. My brother did most of the talking. He then already had a lot of fantasies, and I was a willing listener, but it did not go very deep. Vianen, Wyk-by-Duurstede, big stories, and then on to Amerongen (villages). Then it was time again to start feeding the animals, which was nice because it kept us busy. We had some more problems though. Slowly on, the cow manure and urine started to pile up, and we had to think of something to do about it. So we did. All that stuff we shoveled overboard. The chickens gave us less trouble, and they even gave us some eggs. I remember that while we collected the eggs, about 10 chickens flew out of the crates, and we all thought they would fall right into the river. One skipper said, “Wow, what a consternation.” I had never heard that word before. But all is well that ends well. All the chickens were in their crates again after awhile. I guess they didn’t like the looks of all that water. Then we passed Arnhem. I cannot remember it because it was dark again already. I do remember that we reached Westervoord. When the motor stopped, all of a sudden it was so quiet that even the cows noticed. I don’t know how long the motor had worked that day, but at least 16 hours; at least the first long day was over. When all of us talked for a while in that little room, the chocolate milk came on the table again, and after that, we went back to bed. The next morning was our third day. We did not leave as early and there was much to see. We were going much faster too because now we were going downstream. Dieren, Brummen, Zutphen, Deventer, all those places we could tell something about, but I was getting sick of it and wanted to get to our destination. But that would take a while yet. That day again, we were in the cabin with the steering wheel and they let us steer sometimes. I didn’t think much of the Yssel (canal). It was the crookedest, so that sometimes you felt you were going backwards. Olds, Wyhe, Zwolle, then it was evening again. Before they let us go the next morning, we had to wait a long time to go through the locks at Zwarte Water ( a waterway bigger than a river), but we came through that too. When we were there, we had to feed the cows and chickens again. Also, the cows had to drink, and up til now that had not been a problem; we took water out of the river. But in the Zwarte Water, the water was brown. We did not dare give that to the cows… so they didn’t get anything. Frans was going to milk that night of March 4. We traveled until just past Hasselt. That’s where we slept again. Just like other nights, we made chocolate milk again. And because we were about out of bread, all we had was one slice of bread, an egg, and chocolate milk. But when we started drinking the chocolate milk, it had a terrible taste; how could that be? Everybody was guessing except Frans. He did not say a word, did not drink any either. We all noticed, and finally, he told us that he had been milking when the cow put her foot in the pail with milk. Her foot was not very clean but there was no way to wash it, so he had pulled her foot out and strained the milk through a towel. Nobody was very happy with him. We had no milk for the next morning either, but we didn’t think long about it. That night, I remember one of the skippers saying, “And tomorrow, we reach Veenhuizen but we have to pass a lot of bridges and locks.” With that, I fell asleep. I would be glad to get it over with and have ground under my feet again. And so it was Thursday, March 5, and we were traveling to Zwartsluis; but before we went through the locks, we had to buy bread, and luckily there was a bakery close by. I know we passed Meppel. (Sara Hessels noted that later in life she would live in Meppel and would visit that same store). After Frans’ incident with the milk, I did all the milking. Also, the locks in Havelte I remember. There too, we bought some things. After that, we came to Smilde, lock in and lock out. When I for the first time saw heather, I was very disappointed. What a dark field! That was not the last disappointment, I later found out. At Norger Brug we had to wait for another ship going up to Veenhuizen. We were getting close. Just before Veenhuizen, we slept the last night in the boat, next to a small woods. There, for the first time, I heard the sound of rustling pine trees because there was a strong wind. I loved the rustling they made, and I still to this day, love them. That night, the chocolate milk was good, also the bread we bought in Zwartsluis. The slices were so much smaller than we were used to in De Lier, but it tasted good. Then, again to bed. We did not have to start too early as long as we would be on the sixth wyk (canal) by 10 a.m. That’s when the family would arrive. And so it was finally Friday, March 6. We finally would see the wonderful big farm. When we were traveling again, we saw a big group of people marching on the road all dressed in the same brown suits with a policeman next to them. They all had a dark band on the right side of their legs, calf-high, as dark as I had found the heather, so dark I thought this was. We later heard they were prisoners who were on their way to work. As we traveled, we saw many more. We even saw them on wagons pulled by two horses. So we came to the lock that would bring us to the sixth wyk where our farm was. We had seen quite a bit of Veenhuizen, but I did not like all those people in their brown uniforms. After we went through the locks there, we had to go under a drawbridge that had to be opened to go through. Mr. Zwiers was the name of the man who had to open the bridge; later a very important person in our life, because all us kids would walk to his place to buy honey. But today, he had to open the bridge. The fact is that Frans and I had found two bottles of wine, and we decided that we had to have some of that now to celebrate. In front of the farm, we finished them off because the family was not there yet. And now, I do not know much anymore of the rest of that morning. I think both Frans and I were quite drunk. I did see the family arrive, walking toward the farm. I still see Jaap coming, only two years old. How the boat got emptied, I do not know, nor how the cows got out. I do know when I was laying in bed that night, I did not feel very happy in that big house, and all those prisoners had made a deep impression on me. At first, I was very afraid of them. We were in Veenhuizen; and everyone who thinks we had won the lottery, I have to disappoint, because things started to happen that day and none of them very good. But that would be a story by itself. Six years in Veenhuizen. Arie VanStaalduinen, Meppel, 1981 [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:mypagename|Pages that link here]]

Fran's Connecting How-To-1

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__NOTOC__ '''Ahhhh.....connecting.....you either love it, or you hate it!''' But connecting can be fun and also very rewarding, especially once you click on that last "save changes" button and realize you've just connected a tree with over 100 profiles! Okay...first things first. Everyone has a different method of connecting, and I am here to share mine. There is not any right or wrong way - it's whatever works for you. I'm trying to show that it is '''not''' necessary to create hundreds of profiles to make a connection, and that [https://plus.wikitree.com/default.htm WikiTree+] can be your best friend (I can't stress that enough!). First, just a quick word about identifying connected or unconnected profiles. If a profile is '''''connected''''', you will see the connections to Henry VIII at the bottom of the profile, like this:
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots.jpg|500px]]
If you do '''not''' see King Henry's name, then that means the profile is '''''unconnected'''''. You can also identify the unconnected by a yellow puzzle piece next to the name, ''but only those with the Connector badge can see these''. ===='''So let's do this, are you ready? Good! (again, this is only "my" way of doing things.)'''====
===={{red|First, go to your desired unconnected list (you can find the links to individual counties [[Space:England%2C_Regional_and_County_Statistics_Page|HERE]]). I am using Lincolnshire as an example, but there are unconnected lists for every county, as well as the whole of England, or anywhere else on the planet, for that matter.}}==== ===={{red|Here we have the main unconnected list page. You can work from anywhere you'd like:}}====
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==== {{red|If you click on any of the top numbers, you will see a list of unconnected profiles for that county only (the "unlinked" are unconnected, single profiles with nobody attached). But I'm going to see what the 1800-1899 profiles look like:}} ====
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===={{red|You can see the individual profiles, as well as the trees they are connected to. If you are connecting county-specific profiles, this is the best list to use:}}====
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===={{red|I've gone back to the main page to see what the other trees look like. These trees that are listed on the left side are not county-specific, and are often inaccurate due to tree numbers changing. But I spotted an easy one - so for demonstration purposes ''only'', let's see what Parfitt-181 looks like. You can see that the tree size is 118 profiles:}}====
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===={{red|Once I click on the "S" (at the end of the "T S"), this brings up a list of every profile in that tree (again, this is often inaccurate. You will know right away if you see a bunch of profiles for Russia or Poland lol). (Please note: this particular PM did not add any locations (grrr). It took me a while to narrow down where these people were from):}}====
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===={{red|Sometimes it's best to go for the less-common surnames, so you won't have to sort through hundreds of profiles. I am choosing Charles Thomas Panther:}}====
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===={{red|Here we can see that Charles was born in Warkton, Northampton, England in 1839:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_Connecting_How-To-3.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|Now - ''in another window'', open up WikiTree+ (this is the fun part). Click on "search" in the lower left side:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-4.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|Type in what you would like to look for in the text box. In this case, I have typed in "connected panther Northamptonshire" (it doesn't have to be case-sensitive). This will bring up all of the connected profiles for that surname/location. If too many results pop up, the search could be narrowed down to "connected panther warkton northampshire". After you've done that, click on "Get profiles":}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-7.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|Hmmmm.....the first name I see is David Frederick Panther, born about 2 years earlier than our original Charles, and in the same location. Let's check him out, shall we?:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-8.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|Well, this certainly looks promising! But first I'll have to do a quick search to see if my suspicions are correct. Fingers crossed!......:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-9.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|After doing a quick FamilySearch, look what I've found! David shares the same parents as Charles, so we have a connection! (I actually found more sources, but am using just this one as an example) :}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-10.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|Now let's go back to our unconnected Charles and click on his father George:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-11.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|We will click on "edit" and add the connected David Frederick Panther as a son for George:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-12.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|And voila! We have just connected 118 profiles to the Big Tree, and George has gained another son!:}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-13.jpg|1000px]]
===={{red|It usually takes about 24 hours (or until the next update) for the changes to take effect. But the next day, we can see that the puzzle piece is gone and this Panther family is now neatly connected :) :}}====
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-14.jpg|1000px]]
''' {{red|Wasn't that FUN?}}'''
====Tips and Tricks and Do's and Don'ts==== *The above example was a stroke of luck, connections are not always this easy but they do happen! *ALWAYS make sure any profiles you connect/create are properly sourced :) *Do your searching ''before'' creating a ton of profiles that may end up going nowhere. Look for not-yet-known spouses, siblings, parents, etc. Check the surnames and locations. Use WikiTree+ to your best advantage. *You don't need to work off a list. You can open up WikiTree+ and do a search for unconnected XXXX (whatever you are searching for) and in another tab, open up WikiTree+ again and do a search for connected XXXX. It's all about comparing the unconnected to the connected :) *Keep in mind that everyone works differently. Some people work solely with locations, and others work with just surnames. As long as everything is sourced properly and relationships are established, the outcome will be the same. So it's all good :) *Look for merges. Occasionally you may come across an unconnected profile for John Doe and find a duplicate who is already connected. *One thing I find very useful are the FamilySearch Trees. Use them for clues. It can be helpful to see all of the family members at a glance. If you come across a record and you see that it's attached to someone, go ahead and click on it - it may save you hours of searching, and if the tree is well-sourced and goes back in time far enough, you will often see that there are already early family members who have (connected) WikiTree profiles!:
[[Image:Fran_s_screenshots-17.jpg|400px]]
*Above all, don't give up! Once you get the hang of it, you will find yourself dealing with a fun new addiction - I promise!
''' {{red|Now - Let's get England Connected!!}}'''

Fran's screenshots

PageID: 27372110
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Created: 3 Dec 2019
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Images: 75
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__NOTOC__

Frans Wernicksson in för rätta

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Frans_Wernicksson_in_for_ratta.png
==Anno 1700 d 8 Augusti== höllts Extraordinarie Laga Ting uti Skinnskatteberg Sochnestuga, närvarande Cronans Läns Man wäll:de Erich Johansson Hammar, och fölljande af Häradets edsvurna Nembd: Erich Hansson i Allmenningbo, Anders Matsson i Emthyttan, Gabriel Andersson på Heeden, Hindrich Ersson i Wetterskoga, Oluf Andersson i Fagersta, Anders Persson i Mortorpet, Lars Gabrielsson i Kärbo. Ställdes för Rätta Hammarsmeden [[Wernicksson-2|Frans Wernicksson]] här på Skinnskattebergs backa boende, och angafs för drååp, som han förleden Torsdag eller d 2 Aug. om Morgonen klåckan 10 wid pass, härsammastädes begådt uppå en Ung dräng [[Eriksson-3542|Petter Erichsson]] wid Nampn, om sina 20 åhr, hwilken warit lagd till Knecht för Uttersberg Hammar; Och är detta dråpet af en sådan händelse och på detta sätt, som fölljer tijmat, hwilcket wittnen Hans Getting, och hustru Sara Johansdotter på Born, Simon Andersson i Brooby, Hans Bengtsson i Skinnskatteberg, Daniel Hansson Grijsnäs Soldat, Lars Swensson och Pijgorna Annika Ohlsdotter, sampt Chirstin Larsdotter, enhälleligen berätta; Sedan denne Frantz Wernicksson och drängen eller nystadde Knechten Petter Erichsson om aftonen tillförende warit tillsamman hoos Lars Sommers Änkia och druckit, hwaraf de wijst sig mycket, såte åt hwar annan, hafwa de om Natten skildts åt, då Wernicksson gifwit höö åt Erichssons och hans Cammerats hästar, som stådt hoos Wernicksson nästa gården in till, och sedan lagt sig att sofwa, men om Morgonen bittida kom Erichsson och wäckte up Wernicksson och tog honom med sig till Sommer Änkians, att pläga honom för det han gifwit hans häst höö, och efter Wernicksson hade denne Erichssons Moster till hustru, hoos hwilka 10 daler Kmt uti arf efter Erichssons Moder honom och 5 hans Syskon tillfallit, innestår, tahlte de sinsemellan derom, och begynte något däröfwer uti dryckesmåhlet osämjas, hwilket tahl de dock straxt öfwergåfwo; men när Erichsson begynte olåtas på gatan med Kyrkioherdens Dragoun och wille rycka honom af hästen, bad Wernicksson Petter passa på sådant, då han swarade hwad Kommer det dig wid, och sköt derwed Frantz ifrån sig, hafwandes Frantz yttermehra sig utlåtit, då Petter Erichsson fölgt Dragounen ut för backen: lijkwähl kläder du blodig skiorta idag, warandes rädd att Dragounen, som warit tystlåtig, skulle omsijder under wägen giöra honom något illa, det dock intet skiedde, utan Petter kom straxt tillbaka, då de åter tahltes wid om arfwet, och Petter sade åt Frans att han intet gifwit hans Syskon, en betta bröd när de kommo till honom, utan häfwet dem ut, där lijkwäl det warit deras Moders gård, som Frans bebor; Hwarpå Frans swarade: jag har mycket kostat på den sedan, och bad att en skrifware Ifwar wid Nampn wille komma in, så skulle han få see huru stor desse barnens fordran war, men Skrifwaren nekade, hwarföre Petter sade: tack för det monsieur Ifwar, i sköten intet den Grijn Frans, hwilket förtröt Frans, så att han tog Petter i bröstet och sköt honom emot Porten, som gick up, att de båda föllo i kull, men Petter, som blef den andra öfwermächtig, slog honom Näsa och mun heel blodig, hade och welat spierna honom, der andra det icke afwärjat och skildt dem åt, hwar effter Frans ingen ting mehra sade, eller lät sig märkia, utan gick i sitt huus, som är straxt brede wid, dock kom han om en lijten stund tillbaka med en Lija och högg efter Petter i Porten, men träffade emot Rännan, så att Lijan sprang twärt af, och då Simon Andersson och Hans Bengtsson nappade i lijaskaftet med honom, sachtade Frans sig, och utlät sig intet willja giöra illa; Imedler tijd kom Petter med en lijten Stöör, och slog Simon ett slag öfwer hufwudet och armen, så att stören gick sunder, bediandes om ursächt, att han träffade galit, sedan gick han efter en större, och då Frans wille gå bortt, kom Petter igen och slog efter honom med stöören, då Frans satt före med lijan, gick baaklänges, badh Petter wända igen, och sade F: Petter pass på jag har intet ondt till dig, jag kan och slåås om iag will, men Petter fahrit fort och äntelig träffat Frans öfwer buken, hwaröfwer han blef ond och sade: tag mig fahn skall iag icke slå dig igen, och högg dermed Petter twenne huugg i hufwudet, hwarigenom det ena tog en kiöttlap med håren uppå af, och det andra träffade långt neder i hufwudet, så att hiernan satt qvar på Lijastumpen och Petter föll straxt död neder. Frans tillstod allt detta som wittnen intygat, lade och sielf detta till, att då han gick hem efter lijan tänkte han wid sig, effter han war blodig slagen af Petter, det han wäl skulle så råå med honom, men sedan han högg lyan sönder och Simon tog i med honom, gick ijfweren bortt, och tänkte så ingen att skada, dock råkade han drucken och uti hastighet i denna olyckan, som han nu med bittra tåhrar in för Rätten beklagade. Nembden betygade, att denne Frans Wernicksson warit en stilla och sachtmodig Karl, och att eij något owäsende eller buller af honom tllförende försports. Om den afledne Petter Erichsson, skall eij heller för detta annat hördts, än att han fördt ett stilla lefwerne utan förargelse. Resolutio, Såsom af wittnens berättelse och den angifnes egit tillstående uti Ransakningen är i Sanning befunnit, det hammarsmeden Frans Werniksson, det för det den afledne Petter Erichsson kallat honom Grijnfrants, tagit berörde Petter i bröstet och skutit honom öfwer ända genom Porten, så och att då han fådt något hugg igen han sprungit i wredesmod hem efter en Lija och huggit dermed efter Petter i Porten, så att Lijan gådt sunder, och ändtel. Sedan åter fått hugg af Stören, Nembl. ett slag öfwer buken, uti ijfwer och bitterheet huggit Petter Erichsson twenne hugg med Lijan, att han straxt deraf döden lutit; Alltderföre och emädan detta drååp således utan alla lijfs råd(?) är giord, dy bör och skall Frantz Wernicksson Så wähl efter Guds befallning Gen: 9 som Sweriges Lag, det 2 Cap: Drååp (..) gifwa Lijf för Lijf. Hwilken domb till föllje af Processen underkastas Höglof. Kongl. Hoff. Rättens högrättwysa förklaring. Och alldenstund det tillkommer werdslig Rätt att ransaka och döma öfwer deras begrafning som på sådant sätt, Som Petter Erichsson ankomma; fördenskull ehuruwäl denne Petter Erichsson ey till förende warit berycktad för någon ogudachtighet i sitt lefwerne; Så finner dock Ting Rätten i anledning af Kongl. Maijts. Kyrkiolag, efter han i en grof synd dödt, Som och till en warnagel för de öfwerdådige, hwilka här på Skinnskattebergs Backa ett omenskligt lefwerne föra, hwaröfwer stundel. klagas, skiähligt och rättwijst, det Petter Erichssons döda Kropp, skall utan Ceremonier i Kyrkiogården begrafwas." *Svea Hovrätt - Advokatfiskalen Västmanlands län (U) EXIe:2302 (1700) sid 595 till 599 (AID: v420704.b6060.s595, NAD: SE/RA/42042202)

Franschhoek Baptisms

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These are links to baptism registry entries for the Franschhoek Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa from 1844 to 1877, kept on FamilySearch. For similar pages of other Parishes see [[Space:South_African_Quick_Links|South African Quick Links]] [https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/008039077?i=276&cat=1156490 '''1844-1877''' (G28/10/1)] - Original Registers
'''Index''': [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K1-1?i=278&cat=1156490 A], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KW-D?i=279&cat=1156490 B], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KC-2?i=281&cat=1156490 C], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K1-W?i=282&cat=1156490 D], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KC-H?i=284&cat=1156490 E], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KB-5?i=286&cat=1156490 F], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KV-L?i=288&cat=1156490 G], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KN-L?i=291&cat=1156490 H], I, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K4-B?i=294&cat=1156490 J], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K4-H?i=298&cat=1156490 K], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KC-M?i=300&cat=1156490 L], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KW-T?i=303&cat=1156490 M], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KK-K?i=308&cat=1156490 N], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KH-6?i=309&cat=1156490 O], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KB-3?i=310&cat=1156490 P], Q, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K7-7?i=313&cat=1156490 R1], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K3-V?i=327&cat=1156490 R2] [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KB-S?i=317&cat=1156490 S], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KW-K?i=320&cat=1156490 T], U, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KW-F?i=323&cat=1156490 V], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KW-C?i=326&cat=1156490 W], X, Y, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KW-Q?i=329&cat=1156490 Z]
'''Records''': p.1 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KK-D?i=331&cat=1156490 '''1844.9'''], p.5 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KY-H?i=334&cat=1156490 '''1845'''], p.15 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K7-T?i=344&cat=1156490 '''1846'''], p.26 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KD-4?i=357&cat=1156490 '''1847'''], p.37 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KQ-6?i=367&cat=1156490 '''1848'''], p.52 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KS-8?i=383&cat=1156490 '''1849'''], p.64 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KB-H?i=395&cat=1156490 '''1850'''], p.78 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KB-Q?i=410&cat=1156490 '''1851'''], p.89 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KR-5?i=420&cat=1156490 '''1852'''], p.104 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KT-2?i=437&cat=1156490 '''1853'''], p.117 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KY-G?i=449&cat=1156490 '''1854'''], p.133 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KQ-C?i=466&cat=1156490 '''1855'''], p.147 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KT-D?i=480&cat=1156490 '''1856'''], p.165 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KR-Q?i=498&cat=1156490 '''1857'''], p.182 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KG-Z?i=516&cat=1156490 '''1858'''], p.193 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KS-R?i=525&cat=1156490 '''1859'''], p.203 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KP-V?i=536&cat=1156490 '''1860'''], p.213 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KN-3?i=546&cat=1156490 '''1861'''], p.221 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KM-V?i=554&cat=1156490 '''1862'''], p.230 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KS-1?i=564&cat=1156490 '''1863'''], p.238 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KV-R?i=574&cat=1156490 '''1864'''], p.249 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KG-2?i=584&cat=1156490 '''1865'''], p.253 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KJ-B?i=588&cat=1156490 '''1866'''], p.257 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KP-9?i=592&cat=1156490 '''1867'''], p.263 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KG-D?i=597&cat=1156490 '''1868'''], p.268 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KK-G?i=603&cat=1156490 '''1869'''], p.275 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KX-N?i=609&cat=1156490 '''1870'''], p.280 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KG-Q?i=615&cat=1156490 '''1871'''], p.287 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9K9-1?i=622&cat=1156490 '''1872'''], p.293 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KT-X?i=628&cat=1156490 '''1873'''], p.301 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S92S-M?i=635&cat=1156490 '''1874'''], p.309b [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S9KL-C?i=645&cat=1156490 '''1875'''], p.319 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S923-Z?i=655&cat=1156490 '''1876'''], p.327 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSFQ-S923-7?i=662&cat=1156490 '''1877'''] ==Source== * https://southafrica.mypeoplepuzzle.net/NGK_Cape.html#G28

Franschhoek Marriages

PageID: 35920160
Inbound links: 1
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Created: 4 Dec 2021
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These are links to marriage registry entries for the Franschhoek Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa from 1876 to 1955, kept on FamilySearch. For similar pages of other Parishes see [[Space:South_African_Quick_Links|South African Quick Links]] '''1838-1923''' () - Not online yet. Film 008039076
[https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/008039077?cat=1156490;i=3 '''1876-1923''' (G28/6/3 Part 2)]
[https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/008039077?cat=1156490;i=48 '''1924-1955''' (G28/6/4)] ==Sources== * https://southafrica.mypeoplepuzzle.net/NGK_Cape.html#G28

František Dohnálek (1858) - Geburts- und Taufschein

PageID: 20933293
Inbound links: 1
Stars: 🟊🟊🟊🟊🟊 260 views
Created: 29 Mar 2018
Saved: 1 Jun 2018
Touched: 1 Jun 2018
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Dohnalek-5.jpg
== [[:Image:Dohnalek-5.jpg|František Dohnálek (1858) - Geburts- und Taufschein]] == {| |- | Protektorat Böhmen und Mähren. | G.-Zahl: ''562.'' |- | Land: ''Mähren-Schlesien.'' | Erzdiözese: ''Olmütz.'' |- | Polit. Bezirk: ''Mähr. Weiskirchen.'' | Dekanat: ''Leipnik a/d. B.'' |- |Gerichtsbezirk: ''Leipnik a/d. B.'' |R.-k. Pfarrei: ''Sobiechleb.'' |} '''Geburts- und Taufschein.''' Aus Im hiesigen Geburts- und Taufbuche, Band: IV., Seite: 63. wird hiemit amtlich
bezeugt, dass in (Ort, Strasse, Nr.) Unter Netschitz N. 11.
am (in Buchstaben) dritten September (3./9.) Eintausend
acht hundert achtundfünfzig (in Ziffern) 1858
geboren und am (Datum und Jahr) 3. September 1858 vom hochw.
Herrn Joh. Stonisch, Kooperator in der Pfarr
Kirche ad Sct. Mariä Himmelfahrt nach römisch-katholischem ritus
getauft wurde ein ehelicher Sohn:
Vor- u. Zuname: Dohnálek Franz Vater:* Dohnálek Anton, r. k., Bauer in unter Net-
schitz, Sohn des Franz Dohnálek, Ausgedingers
in Unter Netschitz u. der Rosalia Sobek. Mutter*: Katharina, r. k., Tochter des † Franz Čech,
Bauers in Radotein u. der. Petronilla Zawadil. Paten: Karl Hanak aus Opatowitz.
Franziska, seine Gattin Geburtsassistentin: Agnes Paral, Sobiechleb.
Anmerkung: Mit eigenhändiger Unterschrift des Unterzeichneten und beigedrucktem Amtssiegel bestätigt: Röm. kathol. Pfarramt in Sobiechleb, am. 3./5. 1943. Röm.-kath. Pfarramt in Sobiechleb - Ř. k. farní úřad Soběchleby Fr. Géla, Pfarrer. * Vor- und Zuname, Religion, Datum der Geburt etc., wie in der Matrik. Lag. Nr. 75. 383 41 Volksdruckerei und Verlagsgesellschaft m. b. H. in Olmütz

Franz Urbach's bio in German

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This is the biography for Franz Urbach in German ===Geburt=== Franz Urbach wurde am 28. Juni 1902 in Wien, Österreich, geboren '''Geburt''': "Österreich, Wien, jüdische Geburts-, Heirats- und Sterberegister, 1784-1911"
unter Berufung auf S. , Geburt, Wien, Österreich, Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien Stadt- und Landesarchiv Wien, Österreich; FHL-Mikrofilm .
{{FamilySearch Record|DD1V-Q4ZM}} (abgerufen am 10. Januar 2023)
{{FamilySearch Image|33S7-9B27-LFF}} Bildnummer 00616
Franz Urbach geb 28.06.1902, Sohn von Julius Urbach & Rosa Fischer, in Wien, Österreich.
. Seine Eltern waren [[Urbach-16|Julius Urbach]] (1866 - 1942) und [[Fischer-2596|Rosa Fischer]] (1875 - ). ==Ehe und Kinder== Franz heiratete [[Federn-1|Anna Federn]] (1905 - 1993) am 27. Juni 1931 in Wien, Österreich. Ihre Kinder waren: #[[Urbach-14|John Charles Urbach]] (1934 - 2002) 1935 lebte Franz mit seiner Frau Anna in Wien, Österreich '''1938 schickten Franz und Anna ihren Sohn Karl zu ihrer amerikanischen Freundin Muriel Morris Gardiner Buttinger (1901-1985) nach Schweden, wo sie wohnen würden, bevor sie in die Vereinigten Staaten kamen.''' Urbach, Maria. Persönliche Erinnerung, am 10.01.2023 [[Urbach-13|Kathy (Urbach) Nava]] telefonisch mitgeteilt. Notizen im Besitz von Kathy Nava ===Wien, Österreich=== 1921 begann er ein Studium der Physik an der Universität Wien bei Karl Przibramon. Er promovierte 1926 mit seiner Dissertation „Über Lumineszenz und Absorption insbesondere von mit Bequerelstrahlen behandeltem Sylvin“. Urbach forschte ab 1923 im Rahmen seines Dissertationsvorhabens am Institut für Radiumforschung. Nach seiner Promotion setzte er seine Arbeit in der Forschungsgruppe von Karl Przibram bis 1931 weitgehend unbezahlt fort. Von 1927 bis 1930 lehrte Urbach auch an einer Wiener Volkshochschule. Bemühungen um eine Assistenzstelle an der Universität Wien und an der Technischen Universität blieben erfolglos. 1929/30 erhielt er ein Stipendium der Notgemeinschaft der Deutschen Wissenschaft. 1930/31 fungierte er auf Anregung von Stefan Meyer als Berater der Gemeinde Wien beim Aufbau einer Radiumstation im Krankenhaus Lainz, dem auf seine Initiative hin ein physikalisches Laboratorium angegliedert wurde. 1932 übernahm er die Leitung dieses Laboratoriums, 1933 mit Festanstellung. Nach den Februarkämpfen 1934 wurde Franz Urbach, der Mitglied der Sozialdemokratischen Partei war, fristlos von diesem Amt entlassen. Von 1934 bis 1938 forschte Urbach am Institut für Radiumforschung der Akademie der Wissenschaften unter sehr begrenzten Bedingungen an infrarotempfindlichen Phosphorteleskopen. Im Juli 1936 meldete er ein „Verfahren zum Sichtbarmachen von Gegenständen im Dunkeln oder von Nebel bedeckt im Infrarotlicht“ zum Patent an. Aufgrund seiner jüdischen Herkunft konnte Franz Urbach nach dem „Anschluss“ seine Forschungstätigkeit an der Akademie der Wissenschaften nicht mehr fortsetzen. Im Almanach der Akademie für 1938 erscheint sein Name in der Liste der Personen, die „im Institut oder mit Mitteln des Instituts tätig waren“ '''Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften'''." [https: //www.oeaw.ac.at/gedenkbuch/personen/q-z/franz-urbach Gedenkbuch für die Opfer des Nationalsozialismus]. ÖAW . Zugriff am 4. Januar 2023. '''Der Anschluss, auch als Anschluss Österreichs bekannt, war der Anschluss des Bundesstaates Österreich an das Deutsche Reich am 13. März 1938.''' Wikipedia-Mitarbeiter, „'''Anschluss,' ''" Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anschluss&oldid=1132100389 Anschluss] (abgerufen am 11. Januar 2023). Nach kurzer Mitarbeit im Fotografischen Labor des Technologischen Instituts in Stockholm Im Herbst 1939 emigrierte Franz mit seiner Familie in die Vereinigten Staaten. ===Einwanderung=== {{Migrierender Vorfahre|origin=Wien, Österreich|destination=Vereinigte Staaten|origin-flag= Austrian_Flags-22.png|destination-flag=50star.gif}} 1939 emigrierte Franz Urbach zusammen mit seiner Frau Anna Urbach und seinem Sohn '''über Schweden''' in die USA. Am 14. Dezember 1939 verließen sie Oslo, Norwegen, auf dem Schiff „Bergensfjord“, das in die Vereinigten Staaten '''segelte.''' Sie kamen am 23. Dezember 1939 in New York, New York, Vereinigte Staaten an. '''Immigration''': "New York, New York Passenger and Crew Lists, 1909, 1925-1957"
unter Berufung auf die Einwanderung , New York, New York, Vereinigte Staaten, NARA-Mikrofilmveröffentlichung T715 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, ohne Datum).
{{FamilySearch Record|242Y-J36}} (Zugriff am 10. Januar 2023)
{{FamilySearch Bild|33SQ-G5NZ-Z87}} Bildnummer 00269
Name: Karl Johannes Urbach; Einwanderungsdaten: 1939; Einwanderungsort: New York, New York, Vereinigte Staaten; Geburtsdatum: 1934; Geburtsort: Deutschland; Alter: 5; Schiffsname: Bergensfjord.
Franz fand eine Stelle am Physikalischen Institut der Universität Rochester in New York. Auf der '''Absichtserklärung''' von Franz ist er als arbeitslos aufgeführt. Er wurde als weiß und mit heller Hautfarbe aufgeführt. Er hatte braune Augen und schwarzgraues Haar. Er war 5 Fuß 7 Zoll groß und 136 Pfund schwer. Er sagte, er sei auf dem Schiff „Bergensfjord“ in New York, New York, Vereinigte Staaten angekommen. Franz gab die Informationen am 8. März 1940 '''Erklärung''': "New York, U.S., State and Federal Naturalization Records, 1794-1943"
The National Archives at Philadelphia; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; NAI-Titel: Absichtserklärungen zur Staatsbürgerschaft, 19.01.1842 - 29.10.1959; NAI-Nummer: 4713410; Titel der Datensatzgruppe: Aufzeichnungen der Bezirksgerichte der Vereinigten Staaten, 1685-2009; Datensatzgruppennummer: 21
{{Ancestry Sharing|26632733|5a6dd6}} - {{Ancestry Record|2280|6729921}} (abgerufen am 29. November 2021)
Name: Franz Urbach; Geschlecht männlich; Meldealter: 37; Datensatztyp: Deklaration; Geburtsdatum: 28. Juni 1902; Geburtsort: Wien Österreich; Ankunftsdatum: 23. Dezember 1939; Ankunftsort: New York, New York, USA; Erklärungsdatum: 8. März 1940; Erklärungsort: New York; Gericht: USA Bezirksgericht für den südlichen Bezirk von New York; Ehepartner: Anna; Deklarationsnummer: 455562; Boxnummer: 325.
Am 23. April 1940 lebte Franz (37), Physiker, mit seiner Frau Anna (34), Hausfrau, '''und nebenan bei Onkel und Tante seiner Frau, Blanka (60) und [[Federn-11|Walther Federn (1869-1949)]] (70) , im Versammlungsbezirk 9,''' Manhattan, New York City, New York, New York, USA.'''1940 Census''': "United States Census, 1940"
unter Berufung auf den Zählbezirk (ED) 31-774, Blatt 25B, Zeile 52, Familie 679, sechzehnte Volkszählung der Vereinigten Staaten, 1940, digitale NARA-Veröffentlichung T627. Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790–2007, RG 29. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2012, roll 2642.
{{FamilySearch Record|K7MC-Q5Y}} (abgerufen am 10. Januar 2023)
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Franz Urbach (37), verheirateter Haushaltsvorstand in New York City, New York County, New York, USA. Geboren in Österreich. :: Franz Urbach M 37 Verheirateter Kopf Österreich :: Anna Urbach W 34 Verheiratete Ehefrau Österreich
'''Franz war am 14. Februar 1942 in Rochester, Monroe, New York, in den US World War II Draft Card Records'''
National Archives in St. Louis; St. Louis, Missouri; WWII Draft Registration Cards für den Staat New York, 16.10.1940 - 31.03.1947; Record Group: Records of the Selective Service System, 147
{{Ancestry Sharing|26632731|284318}} – {{Ancestry Record|2238|303984027}} (abgerufen am 29. November 2021)
Name: Franz Urbach; Rasse: Weiß; Alter: 39; Geburtsdatum: 28. Juni 1902; Geburtsort: Wien, Österreich; Wohnort: Rochester, Monroe, New York; Registrierungsdatum: 14. Februar 1942; Registrierungsort: Rochester, New York, USA; Arbeitgeber: Die Universität Rochester; Größe: 5'' 6"; Gewicht: 150; Teint: fahl; Haarfarbe: grau; Augenfarbe: braun; Angehörige: Frau Annie Urbach;
Haushaltsmitglieder:
Franz Urbach.
Im 1944er Adressbuch von Rochester wurde Franz als Forschungsmitarbeiter an der University of Rochester aufgeführt. „'''U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995'''“, Datenbank mit Bildern, {{Ancestry Sharing|998742| fda43beb65559bb2bee550fe283a881d9f0dc6c6742a35066541f932feb94905}} – ({{Ancestry Record|2469|66718566}} : abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023), Name Franz D. Urbach, Geschlecht männlich, Wohnjahr 1944, Straßenadresse 1170, Ehegatte W. Urbach, Forschungsstelle New York , Titel der Veröffentlichung Rochester, New York, City Directory, 1944; Zitieren von Originalquellen variiert je nach Verzeichnis. Der Titel des angezeigten spezifischen Verzeichnisses wird oben auf der Bildbetrachterseite aufgeführt. Überprüfen Sie das Titelseitenbild des Verzeichnisses auf vollständige Titel- und Veröffentlichungsinformationen. Franz war 1948 in Monroe, New York, in einem Grundbuch eingetragen '''New York Land Records, 1630-1975''': "Vereinigte Staaten, New York Land Records, 1630-1975"
unter Berufung auf Seite: 29; Einträge: 2495; Datensatznummer: 23;
{{FamilySearch Record|6D9T-BMLB}} (abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023)
{{FamilySearch Image|3QS7-L9WT-RVGF}} Bildnummer 00370
Name: Franz Urbach; Grundstücksschätzungsdaten: 1948; Grundstücksbewertungsort: Monroe, New York, Vereinigte Staaten.
In der Volkszählung von 1950 war Franz (47), ein Physiker, der verheiratete Haushaltsvorstand, der mit seiner Frau Annie (44 Jahre) und seinen beiden Kindern (2 und 16 Jahre) in Irondequoit, Monroe, New York, USA, lebte. '''Volkszählung 1950''': "United States 1950 Census"
unter Berufung auf Seite: 82; Linie: 7;
{{FamilySearch Record|6X58-PVTR}} (abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023)
{{FamilySearch Image|3QHJ-5QHW-9HTS}}
Franz Urbach (47), verheiratet, Physiker, Haushaltsvorstand in Irondequoit, Monroe, New York, USA. Geboren in Österreich. :: Franz Urbach M 47 Jahre Verheiratet Chefphysiker Österreich :: Annie Urbach W 44 Jahre verheiratet Ehefrau Österreich :: John C Urbach M 16 Jahre Nie verheiratet Sohn Österreich
'''In the 1951, 1952 and the 1954 Rochester City Dircetory Franz was listed with his wife Anna''' "'''U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995'''," database with images, {{Ancestry Sharing|998975|c5c834950bc822bdf88a255cf848d8216f2edb179a5aba0259f045aba0259dcf048d8216f2edb179a5aba0259dcf }} - ({{Ancestry Record|2469|104061599}} : abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023), Name Franz Urbach, Geschlecht Männlich, Wohnjahr 1951, Straßenadresse 41 Beimeade rd Roch 17 [152 East Parkway], Wohnort Rochester, New York, USA [Irondequoit New York USA Monroe], Ehefrau Anna Urbach, Publikationstitel Rochester, New York, City Directory, 1951; Zitieren von Originalquellen variiert je nach Verzeichnis. Der Titel des angezeigten spezifischen Verzeichnisses wird oben auf der Bildbetrachterseite aufgeführt. Überprüfen Sie das Titelseitenbild des Verzeichnisses auf vollständige Titel- und Veröffentlichungsinformationen. "'''U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995'''", Datenbank mit Bildern, {{Ancestry Sharing|998743|ee564e81fa5d156eeb043ebb8ac4d1cbd364c339c192272720f48788422f118d}} - ({{Ancestry Record|2469|104122479}} : accessed 4 January 2023), Name Franz Urbach, Gender Male, Residence Year 1952, Street Address 153 East pkwy Roch 17 Irond, Residence Ort Rochester, New York, USA, Ehefrau Anna Urbach, Publikationstitel Rochester, New York, City Directory, 1952; Zitieren von Originalquellen variiert je nach Verzeichnis. Der Titel des angezeigten spezifischen Verzeichnisses wird oben auf der Bildbetrachterseite aufgeführt. Überprüfen Sie das Titelseitenbild des Verzeichnisses auf vollständige Titel- und Veröffentlichungsinformationen. "'''U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995'''," database with images, {{Ancestry Sharing|998747|5d74f731b6584c8b8e4f4ffc95939d3390de6f485b8ee49c285d4b2b363b56f3}} -|3390de6f485b8ee49c285d4b2b363b56f3}} -|3{2926}3681 } Datensatz: abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023), Name Franz Urbach, Geschlecht männlich, Wohnjahr 1954, Straße 153 East pkwy Roch 17 Irond, Wohnort Rochester, New York, USA, Ehefrau Anna Urbach, Veröffentlichungstitel Rochester, New York, City Verzeichnis, 1954; Zitieren von Originalquellen variiert je nach Verzeichnis. Der Titel des angezeigten spezifischen Verzeichnisses wird oben auf der Bildbetrachterseite aufgeführt. Überprüfen Sie das Titelseitenbild des Verzeichnisses auf vollständige Titel- und Veröffentlichungsinformationen. und arbeiten im Kodak Park, der jetzt der Eastman Business Park ist Wikipedia-Mitwirkende, "'''Eastman Business Park'''", Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/ w/index.php?title=Eastman_Business_Park&oldid=1125203380 (abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023). Im Rochester City Directory von 1959 und 1960 war Franz mit seiner Frau Annie aufgeführt und er ist jetzt als Physiker aufgeführt. "'''U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995'''", Datenbank mit Bildern, {{Ancestry Sharing|998751|2b238169ffcdf52ebf018264277efb6c08aada125c681ea05bb7eb7b479c6ce3}} - ({{Ancestry Recorded|2469|1379c6ce3}) Urbach, Geschlecht Männlich, Wohnjahr 1959, Hausanschrift 53 East pkwy, Wohnort Rochester, New York, USA, Beruf Physiker, Ehefrau Annie Urbach, Publikationstitel Rochester, New York, City Directory, 1959; Zitieren von Originalquellen variiert je nach Verzeichnis. Der Titel des angezeigten spezifischen Verzeichnisses wird oben auf der Bildbetrachterseite aufgeführt. Überprüfen Sie das Titelseitenbild des Verzeichnisses auf vollständige Titel- und Veröffentlichungsinformationen. "'''U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995,'''" Datenbank mit Bildern, {{Ancestry Sharing|998753|0312c8ebeeb9435a61b6256ce60c28ecbaa565d13dde7ed1d653b0a845a590de}} - ({{Ancestry|Record|81}}} : abgerufen am 4. Januar 2023), Name Franz D. Urbach, Geschlecht männlich, Wohnjahr 1960, Straße 53 East, Wohnort Rochester, New York, USA, Beruf Physiker, Ehefrau Annie Urbach, Veröffentlichungstitel Rochester, New York, Stadtverzeichnis, 1960; Zitieren von Originalquellen variiert je nach Verzeichnis. Der Titel des angezeigten spezifischen Verzeichnisses wird oben auf der Bildbetrachterseite aufgeführt. Überprüfen Sie das Titelseitenbild des Verzeichnisses auf vollständige Titel- und Veröffentlichungsinformationen. ===Tod und Begräbnis=== Franz starb im April 1969 im Alter von 67 Jahren in Monroe. '''Tod'': "United States Social Security Death Index"
unter Berufung auf US-amerikanische Social Security Administration, Death Master File, Datenbank (Alexandria, Virginia: National Technical Information Service, fortlaufend).
{{FamilySearch Record|VM2N-M62}} (aufgerufen am 4. Januar 2023)< br/> Franz Urbach Tod April 1969 (geboren am 28. Juni 1902) wohnhaft in Monroe, New York.
. Er wurde auf einem Denkmal auf dem Falls Cemetery, Griechenland, Monroe County, New York, USA, mit einem Todesdatum von April 1969 erwähnt.Find a Grave, Datenbank und Bilder (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial /119090337/franz-urbach: aufgerufen am 11. Januar 2023), Gedenkseite für Dr. Franz Urbach (28. Juni 1902–Apr. 1969), {{FindAGrave|119090337}}, unter Berufung auf Falls Cemetery, Griechenland, Monroe County, New York, USA; Verwaltet von Jane Teague Urbach (Beitrag 48847767) ===Patente=== Franz erhielt ein weltweites Patent, während er in Wien arbeitete, und viele weitere Patente, während er bei Eastman Kodak in Rochester, New York, USA, arbeitete. VERFAHREN UND VORRICHTUNG ZUM WIEDERGEBEN VON OBJEKTEN IN INFRAROTSTRAHLEN SICHTBAR - Josef Kunz und Franz Urbach, Wien, Österreich: besagter Zessionar von Urbach an besagten Kunz Anmeldung 2. Mai 1936, Seriennummer 81.090 In Deutschland 18. Mai 1935 [https://patents.google.com/patent/US2074226A Patent US2074226A] FOTOGRAFISCHE SILBERBROMIDEMULSION MIT CYSTEIN SENSIBILISIERT - Franz Urbach, Rochester, N. Y. Keine Zeichnung. Anmeldung 3. April 1944, Seriennummer 529.414 [https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/c1/49/94/59651b97225027/US2449153.pdf Patent 2.449.153] FOTOAUFNAHME – Franz Urbach, Rochester, N.Y., Abtretungsempfänger der Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N.Y., einer Gesellschaft von New Jersey Anmeldung vom 26. März 1946, Seriennummer 657.135 [https://patents.google.com/patent/ US2482813A/en Patent US2482813A] MESSUNG DER TEMPERATURVERTEILUNG AUF DER OBERFLÄCHE FESTER KÖRPER – Franz Urbach, Rochester, N. Y., Zessionar an Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N. Y., eine Gesellschaft aus New Jersey Anmeldung 11. Februar 1949, Seriennummer 75.823 [https:/ /patents.google.com/patent/US2551650A/en Patent US2551650A] THERMISCHE RADIOGRAPHIE UNTER VERWENDUNG VON PHOSPHOREN – Franz Urbach, Rochester, N. Y., abgetreten an Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, N. Y., eine Gesellschaft von New Jersey, Anmeldung vom 11. Februar 1949, Seriennummer 75,822. [https://patents.google.com/patent/US2642538 Patent US2642538A] ==Forschungsnotizen== '''Urbach Rule in Solid State Physics wurde in Scientific & Academic Publishing gedruckt''' '''Abstrakt''' Das Blatt ist dem 60. Jahrestag der Urbacher Herrschaft gewidmet. Das mittels optischer Absorptionsspektroskopie gemessene Urbach-Kantenverhalten wird für verschiedene Festkörper analysiert. Die in kristallinen und amorphen Festkörpern aufgedeckten allgemeinen Gesetzmäßigkeiten der Urbach-Regel sowie das Temperaturverhalten ihrer Hauptparameter werden diskutiert. Das Hauptaugenmerk wird auf die Untersuchung der Anwendungsmöglichkeiten der Urbach-Regelparameter zur Untersuchung von Unordnungsprozessen in Festkörpern, kurz- und mittelreichweitiger Ordnung in amorphen Materialien, Besonderheiten des Urbach-„Bündels“ in Nanosystemen und seiner Variation gelegt in der Nähe von Phasenübergängen. Es wird gezeigt, dass die aus der Urbach-Regel erhaltenen Parameter wichtige Informationen über dynamische Eigenschaften elementarer Anregungen in kondensierter Materie sowie über die Wechselwirkung elektronischer Anregungen mit Phononen geben. '''Schlussfolgerungen''' Die Arbeit befasst sich mit den charakteristischen Merkmalen der Manifestation der Urbach-Regel in kristallinen, nicht-kristallinen Verbindungen und Nanosystemen sowie mit dem Einfluss von ungeordneten Prozessen und Phasenübergängen auf die Parameter der Urbach-Absorptionskante. Es wird gezeigt, dass es durch Anwendung der Urbach-Regel möglich ist, wichtige Informationen über die Dynamik elektronischer Anregungen des kondensierten Zustands zu erhalten, wenn der Beitrag verschiedener Gitterschwingungen zu den Absorptionsprozessen beträchtlich ist. Die Urbach-Regel erlaubt es, ziemlich einfach den Grad der Lokalisierung von Zuständen im Gitter zu finden und den Effekt der Gitterstörung auf die Lokalisierung elektronischer Anregungen zu bestimmen. Heute kann man sagen, dass F. Urbach 1953 ein wichtiges Instrument zur Untersuchung der optischen Absorption in verschiedenen nichtmetallischen Materialien etabliert hat, die sich in Strukturmerkmalen, Aggregatzustand, Dimensionalität des Kristallgitters, Phasenübergangsarten und anderen physikalischen Eigenschaften unterscheiden. Seine Vorteile sind die Einfachheit und Universalität für verschiedene Materialien und Systeme. Es ist wahrscheinlich, dass die Urbach-Regel in Zukunft erfolgreich in der Medizin und Biologie bei der Untersuchung weicher Materie, einschließlich Nanobiosystemen, angewendet wird. Ihor Studenyak, Mladen Kranjec, Mykhailo Kurik, '''Urbach Rule in Solid State Physics''', International Journal of Optics and Applications, Band 4, Nr. 3, 2014, S. 76-83. doi: 10.5923/j.optics.20140403.02. [http://article.sapub.org/10.5923.j.optics.20140403.02.html Urbach-Regel in der Festkörperphysik] Franz war Mitglied der American Physical Society, des American Institute of Physics und der American Optical Society. Seine grundlegenden Beiträge zur Thermolumineszenz sind in der Namensgebung „Urbacher Regeln“ Wikipedia-Mitwirkende, „'''Urbach tail,'''“ Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Urbach_tail&oldid=1053495964 (abgerufen am 11. Januar 2023 ). == Sources ==

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The goal of this project is to pool sources and resources for the history of dairy farming and dairy farming co-operative societies in the Illawarra District, southern New South Wales, Australia. Family tree profiles I'm building with dairy farming history include Dunster, Fraser, McGill, and Sharpe, though of course there many other influential dairy farmers in this area, and I welcome the addition of information related to those people. Townships in the area include Wollongong, Shellharbour, Albion Park, Kiama, and Gerringong. Right now this project just has one member, me, [[Fraser-10494|John Fraser]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and welcome your help. * Google Illawarra and southern New South Wales Dairy farming cooperatives * Research family groups in Shellharbour history * Add information on what is now Killallea State Park and Reserve, and the beach called "The Farm" by surfers. For many years this was my uncle's dairy farm. Will you join me and contribute? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=31368447 send me a private message]. Thanks! https://www.visitnsw.com/destinations/south-coast/shellharbour-area/shellharbour/accommodation/reflections-killalea-reserve https://www.visitshellharbour.com.au/killalea-beach-the-farm https://www.smh.com.au/environment/conservation/pristine-illawarra-coastal-reserve-given-protected-status-20211203-p59ekr.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Shellharbour https://museum.shellharbour.nsw.gov.au/people/ https://www.facebook.com/shellharbourhistoryinphotos/ "Shepherds: and the Tale of the Gander, the Pheasants, and the Hats. A compulsive Search, a Compelling Journey. Investigating the branches of the Dunster, Stratford, and Thornbury Families, and their Associates." Robyn J. Musgrave. Self Published, National Library of Australia, ISBN 978-0-9803066-1-3 https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=4010&context=lhapapers (PDF) https://museum.shellharbour.nsw.gov.au/dairying-illawarra-cooperative-central-dairy/ Look for Albion Park Dairy Co-operative Factory, believed to be the very first dairy farmers co-op in the region

Fraserburg Baptisms

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These are links to baptism registry entries for the Fraserburg Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa from 1852 to 1897, kept on FamilySearch. For similar pages of other Parishes see [[Space:South_African_Quick_Links|South African Quick Links]] [https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/004182642?i=3&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1852-1897 Index''']: [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3NL?i=3&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 A], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3JX?i=4&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 B], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3ND?i=8&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 C], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3L6?i=10&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 D], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3K1?i=15&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 E], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3V5?i=18&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 F], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3V5?i=18&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 G], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3FL?i=20&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 H], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3JJ?i=23&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 I], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3X2?i=24&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 J], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-32C?i=26&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 K], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3X8?i=29&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 L], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3FX?i=33&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 M], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-324?i=39&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 N], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3VD?i=41&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 O], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3FG?i=43&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 P], Q, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3XH?i=45&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 R], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3DX?i=46&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 S], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-328?i=52&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 T], U, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3VL?i=56&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 V], [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-36D?i=64&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 W], X, Y, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-61C3-3NP?i=65&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 Z]
''Beware, entries are not always strictly chronological''
[https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/004182646?cat=2357484;i=3 '''1852-1897''' (xxx)] - Original Registers p.1 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-K7X?i=3&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1852.6'''], p.3 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KQP?i=5&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1853'''], p.8 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V2Q?i=11&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1854'''], p.18 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KMY?i=20&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1855'''], p.25 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VBF?i=27&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1856'''], p.36 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VP9?i=38&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1857'''], p.44 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VG4?i=46&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1858'''], p.51 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V2D?i=53&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1859'''], p.61 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VBV?i=59&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1860'''], p.70 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KWZ?i=63&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1861'''], p.80 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-K75?i=70&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1862'''], p.94 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VVF?i=75&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1863'''], p.105 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V5G?i=81&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1864'''], p.116 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-K9S?i=86&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1865'''], p.127 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VPC?i=92&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1866'''], p.140 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VPG?i=98&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1867'''], p.152 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VP5?i=104&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1868'''], p.165 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VXF?i=111&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1869'''], p.178 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VPS?i=117&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1870'''], p.189 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KWF?i=123&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1871'''], p.202 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KMF?i=129&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1872'''], p.213 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-K7Z?i=135&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1873'''], p.225 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VRS?i=141&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1874'''], p.238 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KW9?i=147&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1875'''], p.250 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VF4?i=153&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1876'''], p.262 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V19?i=159&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1877'''], p.273 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VT1?i=165&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1878'''], p.285 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VL7?i=171&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1879'''], p.298 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V59?i=177&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1880'''], p.309 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VY7?i=183&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1881'''], p.322 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KW4?i=189&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1882'''], p.335 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VNP?i=196&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1883'''], p.356 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V28?i=206&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1884'''], p.376 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KSJ?i=216&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1885'''], p.391 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V1S?i=224&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1886'''], p.408 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VG8?i=232&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1887'''], p.427 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VRY?i=242&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1888'''], p.443 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KMP?i=250&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1889'''], p.461 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VTS?i=259&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1890'''], p.478 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-V55?i=267&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1891'''], p.497 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VK9?i=277&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1892'''], p.515 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VGZ?i=286&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1893'''], p.534 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-K34?i=295&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1894'''], p.551 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VVS?i=304&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1895'''], p.572 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-VPF?i=314&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1896'''], p.589 [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-61D9-KMN?i=323&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''1897''']
[https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/004182646?i=333&cc=1392488&cat=2357484 '''Addenda'''] ''This is a duplicate (same document, different scan) of the above where overlap''
[https://www.familysearch.org/search/film/008148247?i=5&cat=959223 '''1852-1897''' (G68/3/1)] - Original Registers
==Source== * https://southafrica.mypeoplepuzzle.net/NGK_Cape.html#G68

Fraserburg Kerkregisters

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{{Image|file=Olivier-1248.jpg |caption=Roggeveld Berge }} '''Fraserburg val onder die Middel Roggeveld''' Lank voor die Stigting van die Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk op Fraserburg (1851) het daar reeds Oliviers in die gebiede, Klein, Groot en Middel Roggeveld gewoon. Ons vestig ons aandag op hierdie Oliviers wat hul heimat in die streek gevind het. Die boere in die middel Roggeveld het wintertyd na die Karoo getrek. As gevolg van die heen en weer trekkery is navorsing taamlik bemoeilik en elke familielid se insette en betrokkenheid is baie belangrik. As hierdie Oliviers dus in jou stamboom voorkom is julle baie welkom om insette te lewer in die vorm van stories en ander inligting. My innige dank by voorbaat. [[Van_Heerden-335|Ronel Olivier]] {{Image|file=Olivier-1876.jpg |caption='''Fraserburg District : Home to a large group of Oliviers''' }} ===Hendrik Olivier=== [[Olivier-1242|Hendrik Olivier]] word op 18 November 1736 gedoop in die Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk, Kaap de goede Hoop, hy trou 24 Maart 1765 te Tulbagh met [[Van_der_Wald-2|Rensche van der Wal]]t en hulle het sover bekend 8 kinders. Gedurende 1769 word na hom verwys as Veldcornet van Middel Roggeveld [https://books.google.co.za/books?id=1wG_oQXlL-gC&pg=PA67&lpg=PA67&dq=Middel+roggeveld&source=bl&ots=k-89LD66rn&sig=ACfU3U0BN_b8rA0gHa9ZKAutfmVea7bTPw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiP--fwkuvgAhWCyIUKHTHUCf8Q6AEwB3oECAMQAQ#v=onepage&q=Middel%20roggeveld&f=false Dr Philip se geskrifte] Bygevoeg deur [[Van_Heerden-335|Ronel Olivier]] Maart, 2019. Hy en sy gesin woon te '''Uitkyk''' (Staatsargief Kaapstad RLR 20/1 p 53):20-04-1768 [[Olivier-1242|Hendrik Olivier]] betaal 24 riksdaalders per jaar vir Uitkkyk se huur''. Hy huur later (11 Maart 1777) Quachafontein van sy skoonvader. Hy sterf 08-10-1790 te Roggeveld, toe geleë in die Sutherland Distrik ===Hendrik Olivier=== [[Olivier-1614 |Hendrik Olivier]] Gebore circa Oktober 1797 in die Middel Roggeveld, Fraserburg volgens sy sterfte kennis en gedoop op 21 November 1799 {{Image|file=Olivier-1877-6.jpg |align=c |size=m |caption='''Fraserburg (Rossouw Street) Main Street during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries''' }} {{Image|file=Olivier-1877-4.jpg |align=c |size=m |caption='''Fraserburg Kerk''' }} == Sources ==

Fraserfield

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= '''FRASERFIELD = == GLENGARRY COUNTY, ONTARIO, CANADA''' == Among the historic places of interest, and beauty in Glengarry, is the house built by [[Fraser-2788 |Colonel Alexander Fraser]], who commanded the Glengarry Militia during the rebellion of 1837 - 38, and which had much to do with its suppression. [[Fraser-2788 | Col. Fraser]] belonged to a family that had come to Canada from Scotland and had settled in the Township of Charlottenburgh. While out in the war of 1812-14, he served as a Quartermaster in the Canadian Fencibles. When that period of hostilities was ended and it seemed safe to do so, Fraser settled on a very large farm at McGillivray's Bridge and built the house known as Fraserfield. It is a beautiful home and the house was built of hewn limestone which was transported from Kingston. Add to its beauty the historic interest and one understands why Fraserfield is so well known. The present owners of this outstanding landmark are Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Bougie, who have had a fine understanding of the history and architectural background of their home and while so far as modern comforts are concerned, the house is modern, all improvements have been carefully and well done. Mrs. Bougie has many times been a gracious hostess to the visitors who so often unexpectedly call. This is the fourth in a series prepared for the Glengarry News by Miss Llewella Dunlop of Williamstown. Source: [http://www.glengarrycounty.com/frafield.html Fraserfield] from www.glengarrycounty.com == Sources == * [http://www.glengarrycounty.com/frafield.html Fraserfield] from www.glengarrycounty.com * [http://library.cornwall.on.ca/New_DP/docs/Glengarry.pdf Fraserfield] from www.library.cornwall.on.ca * [http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~onglenga/Fraserfield__Glengarry.htm Fraserfield] from www.rootsweb.ancestry.com * [http://ontarioplaques.com/Plaques/Plaque_Stormont19.html Fraserfield plaque] from www.ontarioplaques.com * [http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WME726_FRASERFIELD_Williamstown Fraserfield plaque] from www.waymarking.com * [http://langviewfarms.com/ Langview Farms at Fraserfield] from www.langviewfarms.com

FRASERs

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The goal of this project is to find the descendants of Simon Fraser of Lovatt. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Clarke-2995|Steve Clarke]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Identifying the Frasers who are descended from Simon Fraser of Lovatt. * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=5589198 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Frazier family saga: From Scotland to Gettysburg to Muskingum Township

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''The following article appeared in the 22 July 1994 edition of Dresden's Post-Transcript. Article is shared here with permission.'' ''' === Frazier family saga: From Scotland to Gettysburg to Muskingum Township === ''' by Rich Wooding It's been over 250 years since David Frazier, a young Scot, lifted his kilt and peered down at the future battlefield known as Gettysburg. In 1993, some 60 of her descendants gathered in those fields to celebrate their strongly Presbyterian roots. In 1994, offspring numbering in the nineties will amass in the Frazeysburg and Zanesville area for a historical reunion/tour. The group will tour over 20 sites in the Zanesville, Shannon Valley Road and Frazeysburg area which were once or still are a part of the Frazier family. Masterminded by Carolyn Frazier Green of Frazeysburg and her brother Jerry Frazier of Nashport, the reunion officially kids off Friday, July 22 when the family members will converge on the Fairfield Inn in Zanesville. From there, the Scots will board buses for a Longaberger plant tour and will meet the following day at the Samuel Frazier House in Shannon in Muskingum Township for a family photo. The Samuel Frazier Home, just off Stagecoach Road, is being restored by owner Dr. Chaffee, a professor at Muskingum College. It took the descendants of David Frazier almost a century to make their way west from Gettysburg to the Zanesville area. Driven from Scotland by religious persecution from the Church of England, the Fraziers were ousted from Pennsylvania by the Quakers. Stops in-between included Roney's Point, West Virginia and Belmont County, Ohio. Highlander Samuel Frazier finally lay down his bagpipes in the Shannon Valley area in 1837 when he purchased 61 acres and a house for $400. Samuel had six sons. As each left home he was given a farm, all of which surrounded the original Frazier land. One of those sons was Stockton. He was named after his mother's father, who signed the Declaration of Independence for the state of New Jersey. Stockton is the direct ancestor of Carolyn and Jerry and 50 other Muskingum countians. He married a local gal by the name of Elizabeth McCann and built a grand mansion on the farm in Shannon. The mansion was built in 1870 by John and George Henke, builders o the Muskingum Presbyterian Church. Ninety years later, in 1960, the original house was remodeled into a one-story ranch-style home by the Herman E. Thomas family. The ranch house was purchased and still owned by the Williams family (he's a manager at Dutro Ford in Zanesville). The house burned to the ground in 1990 and the Williams rebuilt a Victorian-style home there in 1993. Stockton and Elizabeth had Maxwell, the great-grandfather of Carolyn and Jerry. He too farmed on one of the Shannon Valley tracts. On Dec. 31, 1884 he married Angie Lemert of Frazeysburg. The couple had Myrle Stockton Frazier, their grandfather.

Frazier Name Study Info

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Frazier Surname Generator

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=== My Surnames === :Legend: :Surname (''alternate spellings'') : First Person with surname in tree → EKA - Earliest Known Ancestor :( # ) = number of generations from Primary person to EKA :https://www.wikitree.com/images/icons/pedigree.gif

Frech Tire

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Frech tire was a filling station and garage in Carrollton. See added reference.{{Image|file=Frech_Tire.jpg |align=r |size=l |caption=Here's an image. }}

Freckles the Cat

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Freckles_the_Cat-1.jpg
Freckles_the_Cat.jpg
Freckles was picked out by [[Callis-74|Sarah]] in March of 2001 from a litter of kittens that was just born by a family friend. As Sarah was young she picked out the cat who looked like the mother, a tabby, but he was the runt of the litter. When the kittens were old enough, Sarah's mother had to decide to take the runt that Sarah chose and the possibility of it dying, or pick another one. She chose to stick with the one that Sarah choose. For about a year he was perfectly fine. One day Sarah noticed that he was acting strangely and he was taken to the vet. He had a urinary tract problem and needed surgery, and after that he needed a special diet to keep him healthy as it could happen again. He lived a full, happy life with his family. They eventually got a dog named Ginger, whom Freckles was uninterested in for the most part.

Fred and Elsie Moyer Wedding Anniversaries

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Mementos from Fred and Elsie Moyer's 50th, 60th, and 70th Wedding Anniversaries.

Fred John Ackley Photos

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Ackley-1539-4.jpg
Ackley-1539-3.jpg
Ackley-1539-6.jpg
Ackley-1539-5.jpg
Frederick John Ackley, born in Massachusetts in 1886, traveled across the US to find his father in Nevada, married Muriel Pinnell in California in 1912, moved to Idaho, and died in 1976. Passed on the wanderlust gene to his descendants!

Fred Keltz Accident in 1911

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Fred_Keltz_Accident_in_1911-2.pdf
Fred_Keltz_Accident_in_1911-1.pdf
'Transcript of article from The Courier Journal (Louisville, Kentucky) 12 May 1911 p. 12' EXPRESSMAN SAVED FROM DEATH UNDER WHEELS Fred Keltz, an expressman, was saved from probable death yesterday morning by the prompt action of James Dolan of 1816 High Street, when Keltz' wagon was struck by a westbound Portland-avenue car at Ninth and Market Streets. Keltz was knocked from his seat on the wagon and the front wheels passed over his body. As a rear wheel was about to pass over his neck, Dolan clutched the bridle and succeeded in bringing the horse to a stop. It is feared that Keltz was injured internally. He was removed to his home, 2123 Dumesnil Street, where he received medical attention. 'Transcript of another article from the Courier-Journal (Louisville Kentucky) 20 Jun 1911 p. 4' -Fred Keltz sued the Louisville Railway Company for $5000 damages, alleging that through the carelessness of the company's employee he was hurled from a wagon at Eighth and Market Streets, May 11, 1911, in a collision and permanently injured.

Fred L Ross - known information

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Alleged DOB: February 1878
Parents:
Harriet Myra (Lee) Ross (1857-1926) Findagrave memorial with no family members listed (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/79247529/harriet-ross)
William Ross, born 30 June 1854, died 16 August 1939 (source?), born in Coon Hollow, El Dorado, CA
Wife: Gladys E Ayer/Ayres
1903 marriage: https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZ3Y-M4R
s: 1910 census: Living in Sebastopol, married to Gladys, no children listed. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MVG1-7X9 1920 census lists a Fred L Ross, right birth year, married to Anna Bell Ross, age 32, and 2 children under age 5, living in Riverside, CA
CA death index has a Fred L Ross with the right birth year dying in 1925. No listed spouse or children.
Lots of newspaper citations found in this search:
[https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=q&hs=1&r=1&results=1&txf=txIN&txq=%22Fred+L+Ross%22&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------]
Of interest, Gladys divorced him in Jan 1914; took him to court for failure to pay alimony in June 1915.
There's a Fred Losson Ross floating around out there; cannot conclusively verify that it's the same guy, but it looks pretty suspicious. [https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=SRPD19250828.1.6&srpos=2&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN-%22Fred+Losson+Ross%22-------] Transcript follows:
Press Democrat, Volume 51, Number 208, 28 August 1925 In San Francisco, August 26, 1925, Fred Losson Ross, dearly beloved husband of Belle Ross, loving father of William D and Robert Beverly Ross, son of William D Ross and Mrs. H M Ross, loving brother of Mrs. W A Close of Santa Rosa and Sydney Ross of Graton. A native of California, aged 47 years, 6 months and 11 days. Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend the funeral Friday, August 28 at 2 PM from the chapel at Welti Bros Christian Science services. Interment I O O F Lawn cemetery .
I O O F Lawn cemetery is Odd Fellows Lawn in Sacramento. Findagrave has no record of a Fred Ross buried in that cemetery.
According to Intelius, there is a Robert Beverly Ross, age 62, living in Mandeville, LA.
Familysearch has a 1987 obituary for a Robert Beverly Ross, age 68 (and thus born around 1919), native of Los Angeles but had moved to Stockton and died there. One listed survivor is William Ross of Santa Rosa; another is a son, Michael Robert. Perhaps the Louisiana Robert Beverly Ross is unrelated.
An obituary for a Cora Ross in 1962 (in the Press Democrat) listed her surviving husband, Robert B Ross, and her funeral service was Christian Science (same as Fred Losson Ross). However... her Findagrave memorial links to that of her husband Robert Byron Ross with his father listed as John David Ross (1837-1898). [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87652099/robert-byron-ross] If true, this is the wrong Robert B Ross.

Frederick Clifton Pierce on Woodbury (1898)

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[[Woodbury-117|Peter Woodbury (1640-1704)]]
[[Batchelder-872|Abigail Batchelder (1643-bef.1667)]]
[[Woodbury-148|John Woodbury (abt.1579-aft.1641)]]
----- Frederick Clifton Pierce, ''Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy ...'' (Chicago, W.B. Conkey company, 1898), 348-349 (#17, iii. Abigail Bachelor); digital images, [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/dul1.ark:/13960/t8x990m3d?urlappend=%3Bseq=352 ''Hathi Trust'']. ----- Passage below was moved here from profile of [[Woodbury-148|John Woodbury (abt.1579-aft.1641)]] ::John and Agnes, the emigrants who came from Somersetshire, Eng. and landed at Gloucester, Mass. in 1624; settled at Salem 1628. William brother of John, came over with Endicott in 1628, and settled at Salem; married Elizabeth Patch, of Petherton, Eng. Both brothers had quite a no. of children. Some of both families were born and baptized in England; it is thought all the Woodburys in this country sprang from these brothers. In 1630 both families moved to Beverly. Wm. settled on the seashore at what is now called Woodbury Point, built a garrison house which stood until 50 years ago. John Conant surveyed 1,000 acres at the head of Bass river. The General Court gave him a grant of 200 acres from this tract on which he settled. In the history of Beverly it is stated that John was a member of the General Court in 1635, and again in 1638. It is stated that he died in 1641. His age is not given, but probably about 85 years. He was called "Father Woodbury," a title it is thought might have been given him as one on whom many leaned for counsel and advice. He was regarded as standing next to Conant in intelligence and usefulness to the colony. His descendants are numerous, and many still live around the spot that witnessed his trials.

Frederick County, Maryland Firestones

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Frederick_County_Maryland_Firestones.jpg
[[Firestone-17|Mary (Firestone) Carle (1789-1869)]]
[[Firestone-148|George W. Firestone (1784-1851)]]
[[Firestone-166|Johannes F. Firestone (1782-1849)]]
[[Firestone-314|Solomon Firestone (1786-bef.1841)]] EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Frederick, Maryland: Web Form Submitted--Firestone Response 18DEC2018 Marcia Hahn -- hahnm1120@comcast.net Summary of Research Results-Firestone Request Ancestor Name(s): Mathias and Anna Maria Bieber Firestone Pertinent Information (Known Dates - Baptism, Wedding, Death): Last name can also go by Feuerstein Looking for baptisms of children of Mathias and Anna Maria Firestone. " Johannes Firestone, baptized 25DEC1782 " George Firestone, born 22APR1784, baptism? " Solomon Firestone, baptized 4JUN1786 " Anna Mary Firestone, baptized 18OCT1789 Research Findings from ELC Parish Record Books General Information: Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELC) has custody of our original parish record books dating back to the 1700s. These have been scanned so we are able to provide family researchers with a copy of the scanned image of the original page of a particular record. Any reference below to "Vol. # page #" refers to the scanned image of the original ELC parish record book. Searches were done on all parish records-baptisms, marriages, deaths/burials, confirmation and communion. The level of detail recorded for each event varies greatly through the years. What is provided below is all that is available for that event. These earlier records were recorded in German and Latin. Translations are provided below. Baptisms " Child Johannes. Parents: Matthis and Anna Maria Feuerstein. Born May 16, 1782; baptized December 25, 1782. Sponsors: Jacob Biber and wife Catharina. Recorded in Vol. II, pg. 133, # 102. " Child Solomon. Parents: Matthias and Anna Maria Feuerstein. Born May 4, 1786; baptized June 4, 1786. Sponsors: Jacob Medart and wife Magdalena. Recorded in Vol. II, pg. 156, #67. " Child Anna Mary. Parents: Mathes and Anna Mary Feuerstein. Born October 9, 1789; baptized October 18, 1789. Sponsors: John & Louisa Lieblich. Recorded in Vol. II, pg. 32. No baptism was found for child George. No images are provided at this time. However, if one of these children is your ancestor, that image is available upon request.

Frederick County Land Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the [[Space:Campbells_of_Frederick_County_Maryland|'''Campbells of Frederick County Maryland''']] is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through Frederick County, Maryland. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of Frederick County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Frederick County. This page has the 'Campbell Land Records for the years prior to 1773. If your Frederick County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your Frederick County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Frederick County Land Records == {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Frederick County Land'''
'''Records'''
'''1759-1773''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Grantor||Grantee||Date of Record||Comments| |- |G||199||William Campbell and Ann his wife||John Row||1761||375 acres of "Montroffs" |- |G||510||William Digges||John Campbell||1762||21 acres of "Digge's Lot" |- |H||31||John Hammingriff||John Campbell||1762||74 acres of "Dispatch" |- |J||255||John Campbell||William Smith||1764||74 acres of "Dispatch" |- |J||866||William Campbell||Thomas Price||1764|| A bay mare |- |M||224||James Frazier||John Campbell||1769||Household furniture and goods |- |N||36||Aneas Campbell||Andrew Hugh||1770||Slaves |- |O||213||Charles Beaty||William Campbell||1771||"Kaver's Disappointment" and Lot No. 52 in Frederick Town |- |O||531||Mary Elmindoth||Aneas Campbell||1771||Tracts of "Concord", "New Esipus", "Frozen Levels", and "Fair Forest" |- |O||562||John Campbell||||1771||Cattle Marks Recorded |- |P||448||John Campbell Sr. (of Anne Arundel County)||James Frazier (his nephew, son of John's sister Margaret)||1772||Tract of "Partner's Lip" on the waters of Lingamore |- |P||572||John Campbell Sr. (of Anne Arundel County)||John Campbell Jr.||1773||Lands that John Campbell Jr. now lives on called "John's Good Luck" |- |U||203||Joseph Sparrow||John Campbell||1773||2 red cows and other farm animals.. |- |

Frederick County Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the [[Space:Campbells_of_Frederick_County_Maryland|'''Campbells of Frederick County Maryland''']] is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through Frederick County, Maryland. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of Frederick County Maryland we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Frederick County. This page has the Campbell Probate records for the years prior to 1790. If your Frederick County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your Frederick County ancestors profile does not have a''' Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Frederick County Probate-Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Wills'''
'''Campbell Records'''
'''1770 -1790''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Folio||No||Page||Testator||Executor||Date_of_Probate||Comments||Record |- |A||1||491||William Campbell||Ann (Wife) and John (Son)||Mar 31, 1770||Wife: Ann, Sons: John and Alexander, Daughter: Lizzy, Granddaughter: Ann (Daughter of John Campbell)||[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9T1P-9YFM?i=264&cc=1803986&cat=13610 Doc Image] |- |GM||2||129||Leonard Campbell||Anna Campbell (his wife)||Nov 1, 1784||Wife: Anna, Daughters: Susannah Wickam, Elizabeth, Anna, and Sarah Campbell Sons: Samuel, James, Jacob, Matthew, and John||[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9T1P-9TC3?i=572&cc=1803986&cat=13610 Doc Image] |- |GM||3||300||John Campbell||Janet Campbell (wife) and John Naill (friend)||Mar 15, 1790||Wife: Janet, Daughters: Polly, Elizabeth, Jannet, and Martha, Sons: John and Andrew||[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GT15-9DZZ?i=165&cc=1803986&cat=13610 Doc Image] |-

Frederick County Virginia Land Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Frederick_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Frederick County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Frederick'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Frederick'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Frederick County. This page has the '''Campbell Land Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Frederick'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Frederick'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks! ==Frederick County Land Records -Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" |+'''Frederick County Land'''
'''Campbell Records''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Liber||Folio||Grantor||Grantee||Date_of_Record||Comments||Record |- |1||77||William George||Andrew Campbell||1744||300 acres on the Western Side of the Shenandoah River|| |- |1||277||George Park||Andrew Campbell||1746||123 acres on the Potomac River and some farm animals|| |- |1||359||Thomas Gray||Andrew Campbell||1747||400 acres joining the county line|| |- |1||462||Andrew Campbell||William Maxwell||1748||300 acres on the W. side of the Shenandoah River|| |- |1||488||Andrew Campbell||King George III||1784||Firmly bound|| |- |2||397||Robert Brooke||Maj. Andrew Campbell||1749||Power of attorney|| |- |7||232||James Wright||Dougall Campbell||1762|| 270 acres near the North Mountain|| |- |9||249||Eleanor McGinnis (Mother to Francis)||Francis Campbell||1764||Apprenticeship|| |- |10||160||Robert Dixon||John Campbell (of PA)||1755||Lot 90 in town of McLanburg|| |- |10||411||Andrew Campbell||Jacob Hite||1765||362 acres in Frederick Co)|| |- |12||458||Richard Campbell||John Glick||1768||150 acres on the waters of the N. River Shenandoah|| |- |12||572||George Nichols||Richard Campbell||1768||150 acres in said county|| |- |12||594||John Hayes||Thomas Campbell||1768||103 acres on Opeckon Creek|| |- |13||21||James Brown||Wm Campbell||1769||150 acres in the W. drains of the Opeckon|| |- |13||88||Thomas Campbell (of Winchester Town)||Achilles Foster||1769||360 acres granted by George Henry in 1766|| |- |13||208||Thomas Ellis||Dougall Campbell||1769||414 acres on both side of Middle Creek|| |- |13||543||Thomas Campbell (of Winchester Town)||David Houseman||1770||103 acres on the W. side of the Opeckon|| |- |14||32||Luke Collins||Wm Campbell (of Winchester Town)||1770|| Lot on the E. side of Loudon Street in town of Winchester|| |- |14||339||Isaac Parkins||Thomas Campbell||1771|| Lot in town of Winchester and 5 acres adjoining|| |- |15||23||Richard Merchant||Thomas Campbell||1771||187 acres on a branch of the Opeckon|| |- |15||92||George McKenney||Thomas Campbell||1771||194 acres joining Handleys Dunken & Merchants land|| |- |16||335||Thomas and Elizabeth Campbell||Philip Woolwine||1774||Lot in town of Winchester granted to Thomas in 1771|| |- |17||1||George Mercer||Collin Campbell||1774||235 acres in said county|| |- |17||286||Thomas and Elizabeth Campbell (now of Berkeley Co, WV)||Meshack Sexton||1777||Lot No. 15 in Winchester Town on Loudon St.|| |- |18||39||Harry Campbell||Samuel Price||1778||Bond to serve Samuel Price|| |- |18||98||Wm Gowdy||Robert Campbell||1778||272 acres in said county|| |- |18||395||Robert Campbell||David Nisewonger||1778||272 acres joining Jacob Chrisman|| |- |19||71||William Gowdy||Robert Campbell||1779||Releasement of 272 acres|| |- |20||39||Robert and Elizabeth Campbell||John Gilkerson and Wm Vance||1783||272 acres joining Jacob Chrisman|| |- |20||326||Samuel Griffith||Thomas Campbell||1784||100 acres on the drains of the Opeckon|| |- |20||339||William Campbell||John Kean||1784||Lot in town of Winchester on W. side of Loudon St.|| |- |22||288||Thomas Campbell||Samuel Griffith||1786||23 acres and 100 acres contingent to each other in said county|| |- |24-B||47||Rocbert McMinn||Joseph Campbell||1794||Lot on E. side of Loudon St. in town of Winchester|| |- |24-B||431||Daniel Hock||Thomas Campbell||1796||Land lying in Frederick (VA) and Berkeley Co (WV)|| |- |25||268||John and Elizabeth Campbell||George Lanch||1798||Land on the E. side of the Opeckon|| |- |25||382||Caleb Seal||Thomas Campbell Sr.||1798||261 acres on the W. side of the Opeckon|| |-

Frederick County Virginia Marriage Records-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Frederick_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Frederick County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Frederick'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Frederick'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Frederick County. This page has the '''Campbell Marriage Records for the years 1800 and prior'''. If your ''Frederick'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Frederick'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Frederick County Virginia Probate-Campbell

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==Purpose== The purpose of the '''[[Space:Campbells_of_Frederick_County_Virginia|The Campbells of Frederick County Virginia]]''' is to identify the various Campbell families that settled or passed through ''Frederick'' County. The long-term goal of this project is to collect male '''Y-DNA''' from Campbell male descendants of these Campbell male settlers. In an effort to untangle the genealogies of the Campbells of ''Frederick'' County we are collecting marriage, land and probate records of the Campbells of Frederick County. This page has the '''Campbell Probate Records for the years 1749 to 1824'''. If your ''Frederick'' County Campbell ancestors WikiTree profile has not been attached in the table, please post a comment or send us a private message with the WikiTree ID number and we'll attach it. If your ''Frederick'' County ancestors profile does not have a '''Y-DNA''' test attached we encourage a descendant to take a '''Y-DNA''' test so we can properly document the line for posterity. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/wiki/Campbell-56889#PM-26788510 send me a private message]. Thanks ==Frederick County Probate-Campbell== {| border="3" cellpadding="4" class="sortable" |+'''Frederick County Probate'''
'''Campbell Records'''
'''1749 -1824'''
'''Updated: 11 Mar 2024''' |-bgcolor="#cccccc" |Year |Surname |Given_Name |Instrument |Book |Page |Comments |Doc Image |- |1749 |Campbell |John |Will |1 |340 |Wife Sarah. Unto Margaret Clave the daughter of Ester Vance dec'd that being her mothers maiden name |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-KWY3 Doc Image] |- |1749 |Campbell |John |Exec Bond |1 |341 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-KWY3 Doc Image] |- |1749 |Campbell |John |Inv & App |1 |354 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-K445 Doc Image] |- |1804 |Campbell |John |Will |8 |323 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-K79J Doc Image] |- |1808 |Campbell |John |App |8 |354 |Elizabeth Campbell |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-KQ19 Doc Image] |- |1808 |Campbell |Collin |Will |8 |398 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-KQG8 Doc Image] |- |1809 |Campbell |John |Sales |8 |499 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-KQLV? Doc Image] |- |1809 |Campbell |Elizabeth |App |8 |500 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-K7MR Doc Image] |- |1810 |Campbell |Thomas |Will |9 |1 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-KQG2 Doc Image] |- |1810 |Campbell |Elizabeth |Adm |9 |20 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89PC-KQL5 Doc Image] |- |1819 |Campbell |John |Will |10 |406 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-KH89 Doc Image] |- |1819 |Campbell |John |Inv & App |11 |170 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-KHCL Doc Image] |- |1823 |Campbell |Thomas |Inv & App |11 |346 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9PC-KH33 Doc Image] |- |1824 |Campbell |John |Sales |12 |122 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9P6-949G Doc Image] |- |1824 |Campbell |John |Acct |12 |139 | |[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9P6-94M2 Doc Image] |}

Frederick Houston McCune Family LIne

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This page is part of the [[Space:McCune Name Study|McCune Name Study]]. This is a research page for the Frederick Houston McCune family line. Plans are to make sure we have all descendants listed including spouses for this line and then try to take it backwards from Frederick to his ancestors. If you are interested in sourcing or writing the biographies for this family line please join us. 1 - Frederick Houston McCune, (23 Aug 1877 - Oct 1967) m. Ethel Goodin (5 Nov 1877 - 24 Apr 1975) on 5 May 190 : 2 - Jesse Goodin McCune ancestors (05 Jul 1908 - 20 Mar 1993) : 2 - Celia Janice (McCune) Wichman ancestors (13 Dec 1911 - 13 Jan 2002) : 2 - Rachel F. (McCune) Rakestraw ancestors descendants (13 Dec 1911 - 21 Jun 1993) m. Dale Algar Hoopes (05 Jul 1915 - 30 Mar 1982) on 3 May 1938. :: 3 - Gareth Algar Hoopes ancestors (26 Oct 1938 - 25 Mar 2015) [no children]

Frederick J Gottfredsen House

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https://www.flickr.com/photos/teemu08/9069864585/

Frederick Phillips Estate notice, 1913

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:[[Phillips-15371|Frederick Phillips]] Estate :An administrator de bonis non of the estate of [[Phillips-15371|Frederick Phillips]], I am anxious to obtain the names and post office address of the lineal descendants of [[Phillips-5469|Lydia Phillips-Peters]] who was a sister of [[Phillips-5467|John Phillips]]; [[Peters-1799|John Peters]], [[Peters-1913|Jackson Peters]], [[Peters-1705|Betsy Peters- Myers]], and [[Peters-1174|Polly Peters-Jones]], and the post office addresses of lineal descendants of [[Phillips-5466|Rachel Phillips-Thornhill]] who formerly lived near Lock, Knox County, Ohio. [[Peters-1799|John Peters]], [[Peters-1913|Jackson Peters]], [[Peters-1705|Betsy Peters-Myers]], and [[Peters-1774|Polly Peters-Jones]] are children of [[Phillips-5469|Lydia Phillips-Peters]] who lived and died near Homer, Licking, Ohio and [[Phillips-5466|Rachel Phillips-Thornhill]] was another sister of [[Phillips-5467|John Phillips]]. :Anybody having any information concerning the above matters, please communicate at once with me by letter or telephone. [[Peters-1705|Betsy Peters-Myers]] had four children, one of whom is [[Myers-2091|Permelia Myers-Wilkins]], supposed to live somewhere near Columbus, Ohio. [[Peters-1774|Polly Peters-Jones]] had four children all of whom are supposed to be dead: one [[ Jones-13377|Caroline]] was married and left children, the names and post office address her children and the children of [[Peters-1705|Betsy Peters-Myers]] is desired. :Carl Norpell Administrator de bonis non of the [[Phillips-15371|Frederick Phillips]]' estate"Frederick Phillips Estate," The Newark Advocate, 9/23/1913, p. 4, col. 5; digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 19 Oct 2013), Historic Newspapers; ==Sources==

Frederick Richard Rouse Census Records

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Frederick_Richard_Rouse_Census_Records.jpg
[[Space:Benjamin Rouse Family b. 1788|Benjamin Rouse Family b. 1788]]
1930 Census details can be found here:#[[Space:James_Floyd_Rouse_Census_Records|James Floyd Rouse Jr. Census Records]] ---- In the 1930 census Floyd (age 35), Farmer, was the married head of household on Mc Carn Road, Canandaigua, Ontario, New York, United States. '''1930 Census''': "1930 United States Federal Census", database with images
Year: 1930; Census Place: Canandaigua, Ontario, New York; Page: 11A; Enumeration District: 0012; FHL microfilm: 2341365
{{Ancestry Sharing|13300292|7b22746f6b656e223a22427a72415242533362614d467251395041713855416e4f707563686d77496c534c4b66414665745573614d3d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d}} - {{Ancestry Record|6224|44048721}} (accessed 26 April 2024)
Floyd Rouse (35), married, Farmer, head of household on Mc Carn Road, Canandaigua, Ontario, New York, USA. Born in New York.
{| border="1" cellpadding="4" width="100%" |+ 1930 United States Federal Census: Canandaigua, Ontario, New York, USA |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 | Name || Sex || Race || Age || Status || Relation || Occupation || Birth Place |- |[[Rouse-2052|James Floyd Rouse Jr. (1895-1950)]]|| '''M''' || '''White''' || '''35''' || '''Married''' || '''Head''' || '''Farmer''' || '''New York''' |- | [[Carey-4296|Mary Adela (Carey) Ackley (1899-1988)]]|| F || White || 30 || Married || Wife || || New York |- | [[Rouse-2298|Edna Mary (Rouse) Zeliff (1917-1976)]]|| F || White || 12 || Single || Daughter || || Wisconsin |- |[[Rouse-2290|Gordon Arthur Rouse]] (1924–1971) || M || White || 6 || Single || Son || || New York |- | [[Rouse-2050|Frederick Richard Rouse]] (1926–2008)|| M || White || 3 || Single || Son || || New York |- |[[Rouse-3026|Rose Elayne Rouse]] (1927–2002) || F || White || 2 || Single || Daughter || || New York |} ---- {{Image |file= Frederick_Richard_Rouse_Census_Records.jpg |align= l; |size= m |caption= [[Rouse-2052|James Floyd Rouse Jr. (1895-1950)]] and [[Carey-4296|Mary Adela (Carey) Ackley (1899-1988)]]seperated in Dec. 1932. }} ---- Richard, Rose, and Donald Rouse moved in with their Uncle due to the split of Floyd and Mary Rouse. The fall of a prominent farmer can be found here: [[Space:Norman Clare Richmond Census|Norman Clare Richmond Census]] In the 1940 census Richard (age 14) was the nephew of Norman C Richmond in West Bloomfield, Ontario, New York. '''1940 Census''': "1940 United States Federal Census", database with images
Year: 1940; Census Place: West Bloomfield, Ontario, New York; Roll: m-t0627-02707; Page: 6A; Enumeration District: 35-68
{{Ancestry Sharing|13388510|7b22746f6b656e223a222b4c5339526f524645326c445770544a6c41584e71506a6a667a6a34442b5a5a74313035353158304775733d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d}} - {{Ancestry Record|2442|5497430}} (accessed 27 April 2024)
Richard F Rouse (14), single nephew, in household of Norman C Richmond (43) in West Bloomfield, Ontario, New York. Born in New York.
{| border="1" cellpadding="4" width="100%" |+ 1940 United States Federal Census: West Bloomfield, Ontario, New York |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 | Name || Sex || Race || Age || Status || Relation || Occupation || Birth Place |- | [[Richmond-3555|Norman Clare Richmond (1897-1984)]] || M || White || 43 || Married || Head || Farmer || New York |- | [[Carey-4852|Anna Belle (Carey) Richmond (1904-1980)]] || F || White || 36 || Married || Wife || || New York |- | [[Rouse-2050|Frederick Richard Rouse]]|| '''M''' || '''White''' || '''14''' || '''Single''' || '''Nephew''' || || '''New York''' |- |[[Rouse-3026|Rose Elayne Rouse]] (1927–2002) || F || White || 12 || Single || Niece || || New York |- | [[Rouse-2291|Donald J. Rouse (1933-1981)]]|| M || White || 6 || Single || Nephew || || New York |- | [[Richmond-3943|Eben Roscoe Richmond (1907-1982)]]|| M || White || 40 || Single || Brother || Farm Laborer || New York |}

Frederick Shelton Will

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Will of [[Shelton-449|Frederick Shelton]] :Will Dated: 11 June 1836 :Proved in Greensville County Court: September 1838. :Greensville County Virginia; Will books, 1781-1864; general index to wills, 1781-1904 [1928]; img 705-707/770; :Link to Original: [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9TC-HS4J-D FamilySearch] : Transcribed by [[Torres-2380]], 10 Sept 2022. In the name of God, amen I [[Shelton-449|Frederick Shelton]] of Greensville County and state of Virginia, being of sound mind and disposing memory and calling to mind the mortality of my body do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following and first my will and desire is that all my just debts, funeral expenses &? to be paid out of my estate. My will and desire is that theland I bought of '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/about/LB24-8ZB Simon B Sykes]''' with his negroes '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN9Q-GWR Sterling]''' and '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN97-N8J Turner]''' all of my stock of every kind, crop, household and kitchen furniture, farming utencils, etc and all other perishable estate be sold by my executors for the purpose of paying all my debts.
'''Item1:''' I give and bequeath to my daughter '''[[Shelton-448|Eliza Sherrod]]''' five negroes to wit: '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN97-NDV Jim], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN97-FY3 Lesmore], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN97-CDJ Charles], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN97-4P9 John] and [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/GN97-LTG Harriet]''' to her, her heirs and on condition that she make to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' infer simple her interest in all the land I have which came by her Mother, one other negro by name '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN97-PNX Peter]''', but should she refuse then in that case I give and bequeath said negro '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN97-PNX Peter]''' to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' to her, her heirs and assigns forever.
'''Item2:''' I give and bequeath to my daughter '''Mary M Shelton''' six negroes to wit: '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-S9R Jack], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-4XK Nancy], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-686 Susan], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-S26 Lucy], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-S21 Woodley] and [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-HS4 Amanda]''' also all my land whereas I now live below a line to be described beginning at the line which formerly was the line between '''Robert Murrell''' and myself on Lynch branch, thence pursuing that line a straight course until it strikes what was once called Peebles line which is intended to be marked by myself to her, her heirs and assigns forever. And on condition she make to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' in fee simple her interest in all the land I have in possession which came by her Mother, my first wife, then I give and bequeath to my daughter Mary one other negro namely '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-JP2 Fanny]''', but should she refuse or fail to do so then I give the said '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-JP2 Fanny]''' to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' to her, her heirs and assigns forever.
'''Item3:''' I give and bequeath to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' the following slaves to wit: '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-3RR Will], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-W9R Sanga], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-JRG Cosby], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-QZB Andrew], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-WJ9 Chocolate], [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-FL8 Big Hannah] and [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-CC9 Charlotte]''', also all the other land I have in possession which is intended to embrace that which came by my first wife to her, her heirs and assigns forever.
'''Item4:''' I give to my granddaughter '''Mary A Massey''' two negroes, '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-23H Little Hannah]''' and '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-JYT Freeman]''' in lieu of her interest in the land I have in possession which came by my first wife to her, her heirs and assigns forever, but on condition that she execute to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' her interest in said land and in default of her making such right my will and desire is that '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-JYT Freeman]''' be given to my said daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' to her, her heirs and assigns forever. '''Item5:''' I give to my granddaughter '''[[Massey-6641|Rebecca Massey]]''', '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-ZXK Cherry]''' and '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-X2L Tom]''' in lieu of her interest in the land named in the forgoing clause, to her, her heirs and assigns forever. '''Item6:''' I give and bequeath to my granddaughter '''[[Massey-6642|Sarah Massey]]''', '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-H4J Wright]''' and '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-PYR Louisa]''' in lieu of her interest in the land of her grandmother which I have in possession to her, her heirs and assigns, forever, but on the same conditions and default of making over her right then I give to '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' the above named negro '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-PYR Louisa]''' to her, her heirs and assigns forever.
'''Item7:''' I give and bequeath to my grandson '''[[Massey-5985|Frederick Massey]] ''' two negroes '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN93-BR7 Cato]''' and '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9Q-3KM Willis]''' in lieu of his interest in the above named land, to him, his heirs and assigns forever, but on condition that he release to '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' his interest in said land and default of his making such right, then and in that case I give & bequeath to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' the negro '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9Q-3KM Willis]''' to her and her heirs and assigns forever.
'''Item8:''' I give to my granddaughter '''[[Mitchell-2499|Margaret Mitchell]]''' to negroes '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-6KT Sylvester]''' and '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-631 Joe]''' in lieu of her interest in the land I hold which came by her grandmother, my first wife, to her, her heirs and assigns forever, but on conditions that she relinquish all claim to said land to my daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' and in default of doing so, I give and bequeath to my said daughter '''[[Shelton-8187|Martha Harris Shelton]]''' the above named '''[https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/GN9W-631 Joe]''' to her, her heirs and assigns forever.
'''Item9:''' My will and desire is that should there be any surplus of money left after all debts are paid remaining, I give and bequeath the same to all my children and grandchildren to be equally divided among them, share and share alike.
Lastly, I nominate and appoint Henry Wyche my whole and sole executor to this my last will and testament herby revoking and disannulling all other wills by me heretofore made. In testimony whereof I have herunto set my hand and affix my seal the 11th day of June in the year of our lord 1836. Signed Sealed & Published as and for the last will & testament of[[Shelton-449|Frederick Shelton]] in the presence of Teste '''Jos Wyche, John T Moore, Martha C Moore''' - '''[[Shelton-449|Frederick Shelton]]''' {seal}
? Court held for the county of Greensville the day of September 1838. The last will and testament of [[Shelton-449|Frederick Shelton]], decd was proved by the oath, according to Law, of John J Moore one of the subscribing witnesses thereto and continue for further proof and at October Court following it was proved according to Law by the oath of '''Jos Wyche''' another subscribing witness thereto and ordered to be recorded and on the motion of Henry Wyche, the executor therein named who made oath thereto and together with ''' James W Cook''' and ''' Richard R Moss''' his securities entered into and acknowledged a bond in the penalty of $60000 conditioned as the law directs certificate is granted in the said ''' Henry Wyche''' for his ?aining ??? at thereof in do form. Testo ''' William Plom''' , CC

Frederick Wilhelm Schultz and Christina Sophia Dorothea Brockman Story

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This short history was written about [[Schultz-6157|Frederick Schultz]] and his wife, '''Christina Sophia Dorothea Brockman.''' It reportedly was written by their daughter-in-law, '''Fredericka (Miller) Schultz'''. It was taken from an original handwritten document, which was not always legible, and shared publicly on Ancestry by Jilyn Schultz in 2011. "Mother Schultz (née Brockman) was born in Germany on Februay 11,1847 in Beckendorf Mecklenberg Schwerine. "Father was born in Grossritznow Mecklenberg Schwerine on Sept. second- 1842. "In 1867 Father and Mother, together with his Sisters left Germany and came to this country. They came across the Ocean in a Sail Boat which was a long and tiresome Journey. they was on the Ocean thirteen weeks. They left Germany the latter part of September and landed in New York on the twenty fifth of December. They stayed at the home of an Uncle, Carl Picher. "On January first 1868, they were Married and lived near Buffalo New York where Father worked. Oct. 10, 1868 they came to Dundee [Michigan] and Father work for Cap. Ingersoll by the year. They lived in a Little lodge on the Farm and in Dec.12th there [sic] son Henry was born , the same year 1868. Then in April 18th 1871 another son William was born, they lived on the Dick Clark Farm. in 1872 Father bought a Farm of 40 acres which they called the Bear swamp [near Rea.] hH then build a Log cabin on the Farm. There the rest of us were born, Charley Em Herman Albert and Fred -- those were the happiest days of our life we did not know what trouble meant. those days were happy days. Then in 1892 they build a new home which is still on the old Farm. The new home did not mean so much to us for we left it one by one, but we Loved it just the same as long as Mother and Father was there. In 1900 our family circle was broken Herman was taken searsley [sic] ill with Typhus Pneumonia and passed on March 1, 1900. Then Father's health began to fail,he had two operations for cancer. Two years latter dropsy of the heart set in. He past [sic] on November 23, 1907. Mother and Fred lived on the Farm two years then Fred was Married - in 1909. Mother sold the Farm to Mr. Shiple. She went to live with Brother Will and family where she Lived for nineteen years. Then in 1922, Albert was stricken with Infection of the lungs in spite of all the most skilled medical and surgical attention could do he past [sic] on May 2nd, 1923. In the year 1929 Mother was stricken searsley [sic] ill with the Flu. On January 8th she too past [sic]on to the grate [sic] beyond. Mother had a good home and good care when the infirmities of old age came on. the Children are all Married and have homes and Families. [At the time of this writing} there are 19 grand Children and grate [sec] grandchildren 21. '''Further Notes from Jilyn Schultz''' The town of Gross Ridsenow is in northeastern Germany in an area that was known as Mecklenburg-Schwerin in the mid-1800's. The church records from the parish of Polchow includ the births, baptisms, confirmations, marriages, and deaths of th persons from Gross Ridsenow and other nearby towns. These church records confirm that the passengers named Christian, Sophia, Wilhelmina, Maria, Frederick, and Fredericka "Schult" on the ship Humboldt in 1867 were brothers and sisters. The records give their complete names, exact dates of birth, birthplace, and the names of their parents. Their father was Johann Friedrich Schult, who died on 31 January 1854 in Gross Ridsenow at the age of 45 (birth about 1809 in the nearby town of Stierow.) His father was Friedrich Schult, a day laborer from Stierow and his mother was Sabine Stube. Their mother was Sophia Dorothea Petschow who died on 8 October 1865 in Gross Ridsenow at the age of 65 (born about 1810 in Jahmen). Her father was Joachim Petschow, a day laborer from Jahmen. Her mother's name was Dorothea. Johann Friedrich and Sophia Dorothea were living in Jahmen when their first child was born. All others were born in Gross Ridsenow. Variation on the Petschow name may be: Petsch, Petscher, Picher. When Frederick Schultz and Christina Brockman emigrated in 1867, with them on the ship was every living member of Frederick's family from Gross Ridsenow... his brother and four sisters. Christina's entire family would follow in 1870 and would also settle in Dundee, Michigan. :U.S., Selected Federal Census Non-Population Schedules, 1850-1880 :1900 United States Federal Census Information taken from a family genealogy compiled by Burt and Karen Bordine and transcribed by Jillyn Schultz.

Frederick William Browne

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Fderick William Browne1890 in Missouri Lived in Brooklyn New York from Abt 1920 to I belive that his death was in 1941 Bronx New York I think he was marred in new York to Clara C O'Madden, Browne they had two children Olivia Lee Brown & Frederick William Browne Jr I have been trying to find some kind information on Fredick and Clara and just get dead ends any one have a new idea ??

Frederick-Godfrey Henry-Johann Gottfriedt Miller Evidence Chain

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'''Evidence Thread for G. Frederick-Godfrey Henry-Johann Gottfriedt Miller Lineage''' [[Miller-107458|G Frederick Miller (1797-1886)]] [[Miller-107528|Godfrey Henry Miller (1753-1831)]] [[Miller-61552|Johann Gottfriedt Miller (abt.1730-abt.1753)]] There are multiple Frederick and Godfrey Millers in Pennsylvania/New York during the 17-1800’s. Why is this particular Frederick the son of this particular Godfrey’s son the son of this particular Gottfriedt? The pertinent source records are as follows: 1) ''Obituary of Frederick Miller, Northumberland County Democrat, 25 June 1886'':'''Obituary:''' ''Obituary of Frederick Miller'': Northumberland County Democrat, 25 June 1886; Newspapers.com by Ancestry; https://www.newspapers.com/image/511705191 Besides some important vital information, Frederick’s obituary contains some stories about his father, unnamed, and his grandfather, Henry, that are clearly erroneous or difficult to verify. Clearly erroneous is the story of grandfather Henry immigrating from Germany to New Amsterdam during the early part of the 16th century, e.g. the 1500’s. Given that Frederick was born in 1797, there would have to be more generations in there to cover a span of 175+ years. Difficult to verify would be the story about Frederick’s unnamed father’s friendship with George Washington and escape from the British soldiers. However, there are several bits of information that will prove to be invaluable: :a. The unnamed father, was living in Northampton County at the time of his death. :b. The unnamed father died from a fall from a pear tree. :c. The unnamed father was born AFTER the death of his own father, whoever that was. :d. The unnamed father spent some amount of his early life in Philadelphia, disregarding how he got there. :e. The unnamed father was a Revolutionary War veteran. :f. Frederick was born in Northampton County in 1797. 2) ''The 1880 US Census'': '''1880 Census''': "United States Census, 1880"
citing enumeration district , sheet , NARA microfilm publication T9 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), FHL microfilm .
{{FamilySearch Record|MWNP-53L}} (accessed 2 June 2023)
{{FamilySearch Image|33S7-9YBF-L7H}} Image number 00252
Frederick Miller (83), married, Retired Farmer, head of household in Liberty Township, Montour, Pennsylvania, United States. Born in Pennsylvania, United States.
This shows the place of birth for Frederick’s father to be New York. 3) ''"Guide to the Old Moravian Cemetery of Bethlehem, PA, 1742-1910"; Schultze, Augustus; Lancaster, PA; 1912'': '''Book''': "Guide to the old Moravian cemetery of Bethlehem, Pa., 1742-1910"
https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/552492-guide-to-the-old-moravian-cemetery-of-bethlehem-pa-1742-1910 (accessed 2 June 2023)
Identifier: 2544928; Creator: Schultze, Augustus, 1840-1918; Language: English; Subject: United States, Pennsylvania, Northampton, Bethlehem - Cemeteries; Page Count: 222; Owning Institution: Houston Public Library; Publisher Digital: FamilySearch International; Access Level: Public.
This reference lists all the people buried in this cemetery and provides some biographical information for many. Among them is a Godfrey Henry Mueller (headstone still exists) and among the information provided is: :a. Born in March 1753. :b. Born in New York City. This ties into item 2 above. :c. Farmed at Nockamixon. :d. Died (or at least is buried) in Northampton County. Ties into 1a. :e. Died falling from a pear tree. This ties into 1b and is far too unique to be coincidental. :f. Was married to Julia S. Krause. Julia is also buried her and her bio says: ::i. Name Juliana Salome Krause. ::ii. From Nockamixon, Bucks County, PA. ::iii. After the death of her husband, she lived with her (unnamed) son at Saucon (Lower Saucon is a township of Northampton County). 4) ''Obituary Esther Miller Warner, Allentown Democrat, 18 Jan 1882'':'''Obituary:''' ''Obituary of Esther Miller Warner'': Allentown Democrat, 18 Jan 1882; Newspapers.com by Ancestry; https://www.newspapers.com/image/74765511 This obit provides a critical link between Esther, her parents Godfrey Miller and (Juliana) Salome Krause, her brother Frederick Miller, and sister Mrs. (Anna Catherine) Weil in Allentown. Important data: :a. Esther’s parents were Godfried and Salimona (nee Krause) Miller. This ties into 3. :b. Born in Northampton County in 1791. Ties into 1e, 3b and 3fiii. :c. Brother Frederick and sister “Mrs. Weil” (aka Anna Catherine Miller Weil, 1801-1887) were between 80 and 90 years of age at in 1882. This is accurate for both the Frederick above and Anna Catherine. :d. Frederick was “from Pottsgrove, Northumberland County” at the time of Esther’s death in 1882. Two years earlier during the 1880 census, Frederick’s home was in Montour County, however, he had lived in Northumberland County at the time of the 1850 census. Also, Frederick’s daughter was living in Potts Grove and at his age, by 1882 his health may have been deteriorating and he may have been staying with her; certainly we know from her death certificate that Frederick’s wife, Julia, was living with this daughter as she approached the end of her life and died at her daughter’s home in Potts Grove. So I’m confident we have the correct Frederick-Esther-Godfrey connection. 5) ''"New York Births and Christenings, 1640-1962", Baptisms from Kirchenbuch of German Lutheran Church of New York City''. '''Baptism''': "U.S., Dutch Reformed Church Records in Selected States, 1639-1989"
Holland Society of New York; New York, New York; Baptisms NY Lutherans, Vol 2, Book 86
{{Ancestry Sharing|2572608|7b22746f6b656e223a22745a7458463553713965747346794e7073546f68537179555a5447413150584f632f46776b4a324f6268733d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d}} - {{Ancestry Record|6961|227622}} (accessed 2 June 2023)
Gottfried Henrich Miller baptism (born 3 Mar), child of Gottfriedt Miller & Maria, in New York City, All Boroughs, New York, USA.
Listing on p. 3 shows: :a. Child Gottfried Henrich Miller. Anglicized version, Godfrey Henry Miller, born 3 March :1753 in New York City. Ties into 3a and b. :b. Parents Gottfriedt and Maria Miller. :c. Father died 6 months prior to birth of son. This ties into 1c and is too unusual to be coincidental. It further strengthens this father-son-grandson chain. :d. Witnesses Leonhard Riegler and wife Catharina, Catharina wife of Andreas Riegler. :e. Listing on p. 1 shows Johann Friderich Miller, born 1751 in New York City: ::i. Parents Johann Gottfriedt Miller and Anna Maria Remelin. Ties into 5b. ::ii. Witnesses Johann Friedrich Ries, Mathias Knecht and wife Maria Magdalena, Catharine the wife of Leonhard Riegler. Parents match as do one of the witnesses for each child. Catharine Riegler, wife of Leonhard, ties in to 5d. 6) ''Will of Godfrey Miller, died 1752.'' '''Probate''': "New York, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1659-1999"
Record of Wills, 1665-1916; Index to Wills, 1662-1923 (New York County); Author: New York. Surrogate's Court (New York County); Probate Place: New York, New York
{{Ancestry Sharing|4044808|7b22746f6b656e223a225647395138313556464e634a7876614c494a38795a67577670516b6571494d456470676a7a7257477175633d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d}} - {{Ancestry Record|8800|865934}} (accessed 2 June 2023)
Godfrey Miller probate on 21 Jan 1753 in New York, New York, USA.
:a. References wife Mary which ties into 5b and 5ei. :b. References son John which ties into 5e. :c. References “my child which is at present unborn” which ties into 5c and 1c. :d. Executor Philip Henry Rapp. :e. Executor Mathias Knecht which ties into 5eii. 7) ''Dutch Reformed Church Records in Selected States, 1639-1989, New York Marriages, 1686-1980'':'''Marriage Record:''' ''Dutch Reformed Church Records from New York and New Jersey. Holland Society of New York, New York, New York.''
U.S., Dutch Reformed Church Records in Selected States, 1639-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.; https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6961/images/42037_1521003239_0797-00060
Records the marriage of Maria Miller, “born Remelin and widow of Johann Gottfriedt Miller” to Reverend Philipp Henrich Rapp at Christ Lutheran Church, New York, New York, New York on 31 March 1753. This ties into Maria in item 5 and Philip in 6d. 8) ''The Pennsylvania Archives, Series 2, Vol XIV, pp 166-167, Muster Rolls and Papers Relating to the Associators and Militia of the County of Bucks'':'''Book:''' The Pennsylvania Archives, Series 2, Vol XIV, pp 166-167, Muster Rolls and Papers Relating to the Associators and Militia of the County of Bucks Lists Godfrey Miller as a Corporal in the Nockamixon Company of Bucks County. This ties into 1a, 3c and by association, 3fii. 9) ''The Pennsylvania-German Society, vol XXXI, “Ministry of Rev. Philip Henry Rapp, 1765-1772”.'''''Book:''' Proceeding and Addresses of The Pennsylvania-German Society; Vol XXI; “Ministry of Rev. Philip Henry Rapp, 1765-1772”; pp 345-350
HathiTrust Digital Library; https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3505717&view=1up&seq=481
:a. Biographical information places Rapp in New York from 1751 to the end of 1753. This ties in with 6d and 7. :b. Married to Anna Maria and with her two sons by Johann Gottfriedt and a couple daughters of their own, the bio places them in Germantown (a part of Philadelphia) from 1 Jan 1754 to 1762. This ties into 1d. :c. After that, the bio has him serving in Bucks County and residing until his death in Nockamixon township. This location ties into 3c, 3fii and 8. :d. A transcript of Rapp’s will shows it witnessed by Godfrey Miller. His step-son? Ties into 3c and 8. == Sources ==

Free Black Men Who Received Seamen Protection Certificates, 1792 to 1798

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=Date= ==1795== March - Cole, Thomas, has free liberty to engage in what work or business he pleases he being manumitted by Mr. Caleb Boyer 16 Jan 1791, Talbot County, Maryland. (image 45) Sep. 23 - Anderson, Moses, description: 5 feet, 4 inches, Black woolly hair, about 29 years old, born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was employed as a Steward on-board the American Vessel ''Eagle'', belonging to Philadelphia. (images 39, 40) ==1796== May 19 - Moore, John, description: free man of a dark complexion, five feet, five inches high, twenty five years and ten months old. (image 219) August 27 - Ellis, Peter, description: an American Seaman aged thirty years or thereabouts, height: 5 feet 61/2 inches, a free Mulatto, has a scar on his right foot, is by trade a cooper, He was born in the State of Massachusetts. (image 146) Nov 17 - Hall, John: description: 5 feet, 7 inches, Black woolly hair, short, about forty years of age, born at Charles County, Maryland, employed as a steward on board the American vessel ''Mars''. (image 172, 173) ==1797== July 20 - Anderson, Charles, description: a free Black man, five feet and eight inches high, and has a scar on his left hand and hath also the Second finger of his right hand crooked. He is twenty eight years old. That he was born in Queen Ann County, Maryland. He was a Slave to Richard Small of Queen Ann County. Richard became a Methodist and set all his Slaves free. That is how Charles became free. (image 313) ==1798== February 24 - Brown, John, seaman aboard the Brig ''Happy Return'', from Port of Philadelphia to Martinique and back to this Port. He was born at Chester Park, Lancaster County, in the State of Virginia, by oath of George Smith a person of Credit. John Brown is five feet five inches high, thirty nine years of age, has a scar on the second finger of his right hand as also o his right knee. He is a Black man. His Mark. (image 542) March 3 - James, Aaron, seaman and cook, a native of Providence, Rhode Island, he is twenty five years of Age, five feet three inches and an half high, has a large scar on his right foot, is a free black man. His Mark. (image 807) March 9 - Clarkson, Jack, native of Carolina County, Maryland. Description: Twenty- four years or thereabouts, five feet, 7 1/2 inches, a free Black man, marked with the Small Pox in his face, a scar on his left arm. His Mark (image 606) March 9 - Jenkins, James - a native of the City of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Description: forty four years or thereabouts, five feet four, Blackman free, marked with the small pox, the little finger of his left hand crooked. His Mark. (image 811) March 9 - Ludlum, Adam, (Negroe), born in Deer Field, Cumberland County, West Jersey. Signed his name. (image 864) March 19 - Giles, Andrew - A Black man, Description: about 5 feet eleven inches high, has a small wart on his right cheek near the nose, twenty one years old the son of Jacob Giles late of Kent County, Delaware, deceased. The Deponent was born (free) in Kent County and hath not as yet resided in any place other than the States of Delaware and Pennsylvania. His Mark. (image 720) March 22 - Jackson, Jacob, cook on board the Brig Lydia, John Nilkins from Port of Philadelphia for Antigua and back to this Port. He was born in the City of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Description: he is about five feet four and a half inches, nineteen years of age has a scar over his left eye, he is a Blackman. His Mark. (image 803) March 23 - Johnston, Reuben, is a native of Somerset County, New Jersey, a free Mulatto Man, twenty eight years or thereabouts, Height of five feet seven inches, has a scar on the calf of his left leg, & a scar above his right Eye. His Mark (image 816) March 28 - Brown, John, Mulatto, to the best of his knowledge he was born in the city (Philadelphia). His Mark. (image 549) March 28 - Murray, Samuel, (Negro) to the best of his knowledge John Brown was born at the Place aforesaid (Philadelphia). His Mark. (image 549) March 30 - Jinkins, Philip - a native of Reading Pennsylvania. Description: 21 years or thereabouts. Height: five foot 2 inches, is a free black Man, has a small scar on the outside of his right eye, and a little marked with the small pox. Signed his name. (image 809) April 14 - Calwell, Daniel, was born in Jones Hundred in Kent County, Delaware. Description: a Black man, five feet ten inches High, between twenty four & twenty five of ages. (image 577) April 19 - Knox, Ceaser, a Cook & Steward on board the Schooner Sally, Gilbert Sherer is commander, now bound on a journey from Port of Philadelphia for St. Thomas and back to this Port. He was born in the City of New York. Description: he is five feet four inches high, Twenty three years of age, he is a Black Man. His Mark. (image 844) April 25 - Bray, Henry, mariner, description: a free Black man, five feet and five inches High, and hath a scar on his nose, he is twenty eight years old, he is the son of James Bray (also a free Black man) late of Boston, Massachusetts, mariner, deceased. Henry was born at Boston. Signed his name. (image 532) April 25 - Gray, George, description: a free Black man, born at New York City, resided in Boston, Massachusetts, acquainted with Henry Bray and his parents. His Mark. (image 533) April 26 - Ludley, Aaron, was born in Cohansey, New Jersey. Description: about twenty four years of age, about six feet one inch and a half with his shoes on, said Aron is a Black Man, of the race the Africans, well made. (image 862, 864) April 26 - Lugg, Thomas,(Thomas Rawlins deposition describing Thomas Lugg) was born on the Island of Nantucket, Massachusetts Bay. Description: Thomas is a Black man, one of the Descendants of the Africans. Upwards of six feet high, a mark on his left Cheek Bone as large as an eight of a Dollar, likeness of a small pox, a mark (said to be ocationed by having a Ring Worm) . A large scar on the Outside of his right thigh, near his knee, about twenty three years of age. (image 866) May 1 - Grove, Philas, is a free Black Man, a native of Philadelphia, Description: thirty six years or thereabouts, Height of five feet two inches. Signed his name. (image 741) May 11 - Brown, John, description: A Black man, about five feet, six inches high, born in Chester County, Pennsylvania. His Mark. (image 540) ==Source== *Record Group 36: Records of the U.S. Customs Service, 1745 - 1997Series: Proofs of Citizenship Used to Apply for Seamen's Protection Certificates for the Port of Philadelphia, 1792 - 1861File Unit: 1792 - 1798 (P) [https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118882714]

Free e-Book Sources

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The is a list of sources with links to free e-books or other links. The list is arranged alphabetically by surname. It is most useful to use the edit tab so that you can copy and paste the source' code into your profile. === - C - === Ebenezer Clapp, compiler. [https://books.google.com/books?id=TLZi3eMwLzcC&source=gbs_navlinks_s/ ''The Clapp Memorial'']: Record of the Clapp Family in America : Containing Sketches of the Original Six Emigrants, and a Genealogy of Their Descendants Bearing the Name : with a Supplement and the Proceedings at Two Family Meetings, Boston: David Clapp & Son, 1876 (436 pages). === - D - === Francis Y. Davis, compiler. [https://books.google.com/books?id=L1RGAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=genealogy&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiJoLbkvPzSAhXF5YMKHV6ECccQ6AEIJzAC#v=onepage&q=genealogy&f=false/ Genealogy of the Ancestry and Descendants of Captain Francis Davis, Founder of Davisville, New Hampshire, and of Some of the Posterity of His Brother, Gideon Davis: With Records of Many Other Descendants of Francis Davis, the Emigrant from Wales to America], Dayton, Ohio: The Otterbein Press, 1910. === - S - === George Rich. [https://books.google.com/books?id=BhxPAAAAMAAJ&dq=genealogy&source=gbs_navlinks_s/ ''Genealogy: Ancestors and Descendants of John Sanders, Fort Covington, N.Y.''], Cleveland, Ohio: n.p., 1922.

Free Genealogy Courses Online - links, descriptions

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FREE* Genealogy Courses Online from WikiTree, Family Search, NEHGS, Legacy Family Tree, U-Tube, Brigham Young University Online, University of Strathclyde at Glasgow, The Nation Archives (UK), other. Many specialized courses on ethnic and/or religious genealogical research listed at * main links. * Only free courses are listed, (no membership fee$ required for 'free' courses). * [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/495210/did-you-see-this-youtube-introduction-to-wikitree ''Introduction to WikiTree on UTube''] * [https://isreg.byu.edu/site/courses/free.cfm# ''Free Online Genealogy Courses from Brigham Young University''] - Listed below, a sample of online free courses available at this link :: Family History / Genealogy — Record Type ::: FHREC 071 — Family Records ::: FHREC 073 — Vital Records ::: FHREC 076 — Military Records ::: Family History / Genealogy — Regional and Ethnic ::: FHFRA 071 — French Research ::: FHGER 071 — Germany Research ::: FHHUG 071 — Huguenot Research ::: FHSCA 073 — Scandinavia Research * [https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=genealogy+how-to Genealogy How-To at UTube] - Too many offerings to list them all (over 200,000). Brief sample lists, from basic to expert below: :: Beginning Genealogy :: How To Make a Family Tree :: Family History - made simple :: How to Bust Through Your Brick Wall :: Using Excel Tables for Genealogy :: Genealogy Research Tools: Pre-1800 British Research * [https://www.americanancestors.org/education/learning-resources/watch ''Archived Webinars, How-To Videos and Interviews from American Ancestors by NEHGS''] - Free courses general to genealogy, and some specific to NEHGS records, a sample list below: :: Sharing Your Family History: Ideas from NEHGS (beginner) :: Hosting an Online Family Reunion (beginner) :: Introduction to Heraldry in America (beginner) :: How to Apply to Lineage Societies: Tips from NEHGS (beginner) :: Using the U.S. Federal Census (intermediate) :: Choosing a Genealogical Software Program (beginner to intermediate) * [http://media.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php/category/family-history/ ''Free Family History Courses at Great Britain's National Archives''] - selected samples below :: [http://media.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php/webinar-introduction-medieval-early-modern-sources-family-historians/ ''An introduction to medieval and early modern sources for family historians''] :: [http://media.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php/immigrant-ancestors-project-indexed-collections-from-the-national-archives/ ''Immigrant Ancestors Project: indexed collections from The National Archives''] ::: "Family history majors at Brigham Young University intern at various repositories of European countries and obtain copies of emigration registers, passport applications, and other records that contain hometown information for each emigrant. These records are indexed in the Immigrant Ancestors Project (IAP). After ten years of consistent work, students have created a database containing over 480,000 entries. A significant number of the indexed records are located at The National Archives." :: [http://media.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php/tracing-your-merchant-seamen-ancestors-through-crew-lists-and-agreements/ ''Tracing Your Merchant Seamen Ancestors Through Crew Lists and Agreements'''] * [https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/genealogy ''Genealogy: Researching Your Family Tree''], from FutureLearn: a free six week course from the University of Strathclyde at Glasgow, Scotland; 4 hours per week. "Develop an understanding of genealogy – how to research your family tree and communicate the results". This course has received high praise in our G2G Forum from WikiTreers who have had the course. * [https://familytreewebinars.com/upcoming-webinars.php ''Upcoming 2018 Webinars from Legacy Family Tree''], free the first week of release, one per week - see link for 2018 list. (There is a small cost for viewing webinars once they are archived .) * [https://www.familysearch.org/ ''FamilySearch''], one of the largest databases on genealogy in the world, has over 140 free online courses. To access them, '''first be sure to sign in''' to FamilySearch.org. Then use the drop-down menu "Get Help" at the upper far right of your screen, and click on "Learning Center". Because of their security protocols, I couldn't find a way to provide a direct link to the list of courses. FamilySearch.org is FREE, and signing up is FREE.

Free Jackie!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Jackie is my step sister and she is 15 years old and she ran away from her aunt linda and got locked up for 4 years.

Free space

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http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Family_Album

FREE SPACE

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The goal of this project is to ...separate the #[[Grant-3767 | Leander Ulysses Stanley Grant]]'s son's Name [[Grant-3768 | Lysle Robert Grant]] and wife is [[Danner-219 | Maud Danner]] "Mother was Fannie Grant b:1822 Connect.....'''COLORADO''' 1885 census... and the marriage record, gives "Father: John Grant" FOUND Maud/ kids in Indiana living with her mother, Louisa M Anderson. #[[Grant-13817 | Ulysses Sherman Grant]] b: 24 Nov 1864, to John Williams Grant, 1830–1903 & Luthera Quimby, 1834–1876, in Concord, Vermont. D:1946 Vermont.............. # [[Grant-3763 | Levi Grant]] He is the father to ??????????? #[[Grant-13825 | Ulysses S Grant]] mar: [[Hooper-6218 | Cora Hooper-Grant]] b:1866 Maine, They also lived/died in '''COLORADO''' there is no f-a-g found on them. #[[Grant-13827 | Ulysses S Grant]] '''born 1867 DIED 1919''' buried-Crown Hill Cemetery, Wheat Ridge, Jefferson Co., '''Colorado''' buried with [[Bogle-896 | Ada Laura Bogle]] b:1881 Indiana..son Melvin B Grant # Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Taylor-25258|Carole Taylor]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * finding Leander Ulysses Stanley Grant's parents/ sources * NOW to separate the Leander Ulyssies Stanley Grant from Levi/ Lucinda Grant I believe we have sufficient PROOF that proves Leander's parents were John Grant and Fannie Grant, also born Wisconsin. * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10102058 send me a private message]. Thanks! :1)[[Grant-3767 | Leander Ulysses Stanley GRANT]] ??? {{citation needed}} Born about 22 May 1864 in Lake Geneva, Walworth, Wisconsin, :BELIEVE this is proven WRONG parents.........son of Levi Grant and Lucinda Octavia (Tryon) Grant :Brother of Frances (Grant) Gibberson, Harvey N. Grant and Luda Alma (Grant) Sayers :2) [[Grant-new profile Leander Ulysses Stanley Grant, father to Lysle Robert Grant, husband to Maud Danner :::O My GOsh......... this may NOT be the right one, may have to make a 3rd.... :"Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," :'''Name L. U. S. Grant''' :'''Birth Date 1864''' :Age 26 :Spouse's Name Maud W. Danner :Spouse's Birth Date 1871 :Spouse's Age 19 :Event Date 08 Jul 1890 :Event Place Ireland, Dubois Indiana :'''Father's Name John Grant''' :Spouse's Father's Name T. J. Danner :Spouse's Mother's Name Lou M. Hopkins :Citing this Record: "Indiana Marriages, 1780-1992," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFZZ-QQQ : 10 February 2018), L. U. S. Grant and Maud W. Danner, 08 Jul 1890; citing reference p 200/1; FHL microfilm 434,836. :Found a birth record for [[Grant-13817 | Ulysses S Grant]] 1864 son of John Grant/Luthera (mother's name) Vermont --------------------------- :'''1900 Wellington township, Monroe, Wisconsin''' :Age 27 :Marital Status Married : children 0 / Number of Living Children 0 :Years Married 2--Marriage Year (Estimated) 1898 :Birth Date Apr 1873 :Birthplace Wisconsin :Father's Birthplace England---Mother's Birthplace England :Charles H Grant Head M 68 New York :Sarah E Grant Wife F 66 Ohio :'''Ulysses Grant Son M 29 Wisconsin''' (born 1871) :Ida M Grant Wife F 27 Wisconsin :Wilbur W Sunday Grandson M 12 Wisconsin :Citing this Record "United States Census, 1900," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MMKT-KH3 : accessed 27 April 2019), Ida M Grant in household of Charles H Grant, Wellington township, Monroe, Wisconsin, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 111, sheet 4A, family 65, NARA microfilm publication T623 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1972.); FHL microfilm 1,241,808. ------------------ ::SAME location, same name, age is good... :'''1880 Geneva, Walworth, Wisconsin''' :Age 15 :Marital Status Single :Occupation Laborer :Birth Year (Estimated) 1865 :Birthplace Wisconsin, United States :Father's Birthplace New York,---Mother's Birthplace New York, United States :Sheet Letter D---Sheet Number 102---Person Number 3---Volume 2 :Francis Gibberson Self F 35 Ohio, United States :Ida M Gibberson Daughter F 17 Kentucky, United States :L Grant Sister F 18 Wisconsin, United States :'''Levi U Grant Brother M 15 Wisconsin''' Citing this Record: "United States Census, 1880," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MNH2-13F : 14 September 2017), Levi U Grant in entry for Francis Gibberson, 1880; citing enumeration district ED 227, sheet 102D, NARA microfilm publication T9 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d), roll 1449; FHL microfilm 1,255,449. -------------- == Marriage == :"Colorado Statewide Marriage Index, 1853-2006," :Name Ulysses S Grant :Event Date 14 May 1888 :Event Place Alma, Park, Colorado, United States :Spouse's Name Cora A Hooper :Citing this Record: "Colorado Statewide Marriage Index, 1853-2006," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KNQ7-RYR : 16 February 2018), Ulysses S Grant and Cora A Hooper, 14 May 1888, Alma, Park, Colorado, United States; citing no. , State Archives, Denver; FHL microfilm 1,690,082. :'''1900 Berkeley Precinct Berkeley town, Arapahoe, Colorado''' :Image: #10 :Age 38 :Marital Status Married :Years Married 12---Marriage Year (Estimated) 1888 :Birth Date Jun 1862 :Birthplace Wisconsin :Father's Birthplace Canada Eng---Mother's Birthplace Connecticut :'''Ulysses S Grant Head M 38 Wisconsin''' :Cora H Grant Wife F 34 Maine :Ruth A Grant Daughter F 11 Colorado :Mabel A Grant Daughter F 10 Colorado :Neal G Grant Son M 7 Colorado :Hazel Grant Daughter F 4 Colorado :Image: #8 page are: :Grant, Charles/wife/kids :Grant, William B/wife/kids :Citing this Record: "United States Census, 1900," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MQMW-PYM : accessed 27 April 2019), Ulysses S Grant, Berkeley Precinct Berkeley town, Arapahoe, Colorado, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 133, sheet 5B, family 113, NARA microfilm publication T623 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1972.); FHL microfilm 1,240,122. :'''1910 Denver Ward 16, Denver, Colorado''' :Age 46 :Marital Status Married :Birth Year (Estimated) 1864 :Birthplace Wisconsin :Father's Birthplace Canada French--Mother's Birthplace Connecticut :Sheet Letter B---Sheet Number 9 :Ulysses G Grant Head M 46 Wisconsin :Occupation: Contractor painting :Cora Adelle Grant Wife F 43 Maine :children: 5 / 4 living :Ruth Adelle Grant Daughter F 21 Colorado :Mabel Agnes Grant Daughter F 19 Colorado :Neil Garland Grant Son M 16 Colorado :Hazel Grant Daughter F 13 Colorado :Citing this Record: "United States Census, 1910," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MK49-PH7 : accessed 27 April 2019), Ulysses G Grant, Denver Ward 16, Denver, Colorado, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 205, sheet 9B, family 190, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 117; FHL microfilm 1,374,130. :1920 can not find them................. :His Widow, Cora Adelle living with their daughter. :'''1930 Denver, Denver, Colorado''' :Age 64 :Marital Status Widowed :Birth Year (Estimated) 1866 :Birthplace Maine :Father's Birthplace Maine---Mother's Birthplace Maine :Sheet Letter A---Sheet Number 11 :Paul M Clark Head M 37 Illinois :Hazel Clark Wife F 33 Colorado :R Douglas Clark Son M 11 California :Richard G Clark Son M 10 Colorado :Margaret Clark Daughter F 5 Colorado :'''Cora E Grant Mother-in-law F 64 Maine''' :Citing this Record: "United States Census, 1930," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7WR-J9S : accessed 29 April 2019), Cora E Grant in household of Paul M Clark, Denver, Denver, Colorado, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 66, sheet 11A, line 25, family 229, NARA microfilm publication T626 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2002), roll 235; FHL microfilm 2,339,970. :1940 Tract 29, Denver, Election District G, Denver, Colorado :Name Cora Grant :Age 74 :Marital Status Widowed

Free Space for geneology (Lord William Ruthven X-DNA Tree).

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Lajiness-24-8.jpg
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space page to use as a respository for image files and make its privacy public or open {{Image|file=Lajiness-24-8.jpg |align=r |size=L |caption=6 to abt 11 of my x-DNA }} {{Image|file=Lajiness-24-16.png |align=r |size=L |caption=Lord William Ruthven X-DNA Tree

FREE SPACE for my DUVCW Research

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The goal of this project is to ...find, research, add to this list, and submit to DUVCW for our 2013 Project NOW going forward to the COMPLETED stage. by Carole Morton Right now this project just has 2 members, # Carole Morton #me. I am [[Taylor-25258|Carole Taylor]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * I personally will be adding the 40+ Soldiers I have "Submitted" here for safe keeping * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=10102058 send me a private message]. Thanks! '''previously not submitted''' I think. #[[Adams-20375 | Absalom Adams]] 27th MO. Mounted Inf. Warrensburg, 4th of July 1861. He was made 5th Sgt. Oct.25/61 of Co. C --Muster card states, "Oct. 25 1861 when he deserted. But he was "Killed by Bushwachers at his home. "Adams - Tackett, Warrensburg, Missouri #[[Allen-45003 | Eli P. Allen]] age:31 NY - Co.A 7th Regiment, Missouri State Militia Cavalry, D:1901 Kansas, never married nor kids. buried:Green Lawn Cemetery, Grenola, Elk County, Kansas, #[[Allen-44920 | William H Allen]] age 18: Company B, Regiment, 12th State: Missouri Cavalry..Died April 20 1864 Missouri, disease. #[[Allen-44924 | William H Allen]] age 23, born Mo. Co. C Regiment, 8th State: Missouri - Infantry-- "died in the general hospital at Paducah of Typhoid Fever." Nov 1861, 5 months after he joined. #[[Allender-205 | ALLENDER, William H.]] Born about 1843 to Richard B. and Elmira Allender in Iowa. Entered service as a Private in Company B, 3rd Regiment Iowa Infantry, also served in Company H, 5th Regiment Iowa Infantry as a Corporal. '''Died of wounds'''16 August 1863 at Lemay, St. Louis, Missouri. Burial in Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery-Lemay, St. Louis, Missouri. " submitted by Carole L. Taylor #[[Bradley-6563 | Nimrod P Bradley]] Co A 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/Co. 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry, D: 15 Aug 1884 in Johnson County, Missouri, '''Married-No Children''' # [[Conner-4791 | John D. Conner]] age 16 Co.I 4th Regiment, Missouri State Militia Cavalry Died Jan 1871 never married. #[[Daly-1178 | Lt Ambrose C Daly]] Born 11 Aug 1827 in Limerick, Ireland D: 16 Sep 1869 in Warrensburg, Johnson, Missouri served- Co C 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry #[[Davis-76582 | John M Davis]] 22 B: Missouri 32nd Missouri Infantry (old) D: 22 Dec 1862 in Memphis, Shelby, Tennessee--Typhoid --Memphis National Cemetery, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee #[[Divers-108 | Corp Christopher G. Divers]] B:22 Dec 1832 in Franklin, Virginia-Served with: Pettis County, Missouri Home Guard, 27th Regiment, Missouri Mounted Infantry, 45th Regiment, Missouri Infantry, 50th Regiment, Missouri Infantry. He and 3 others of his family joined the 27th Missouri together. Oak Hill Cemetery, Butler, Missouri #[[Doescher-45 | Diedrich Doescher]] Germany 1842 -served with 4 different Regiments. D: 1932 Union-Williams Cemetery, Cole Camp, Benton County, Missouri #[[Duncan-8143 | Pvt. Joseph Lee Duncan]] B: 16 Jul 1839-Kentucky in 07/04/1861--Johnson, Missouri - OUT: 01/27/1862 --Regiment name: Co H 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/ Johnson County Regiment Home Guard Infantry, D:1921 #[[Estis-4 | William Estis]] or Estes B;Unk Mustered in- 08/04/1861 in Johnson County, MO. mustered = 09/30/1861 POW / WIA / '''"Died of wounds received in Battle of Lexington Sept. 30, 1861" ''' #[[Filloon-4 | Abington J Filloon]] 20 10th Infantry, Iowa --'''"Died from wounds''' on July 25, 1863 at Milliken's Bend, LA." Vicksburg National Cemetery, Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi, #[[Greer-5480 | Ezekiel Greer aka: John Wasson]] Co. C 6th Regiment, Missouri Cavalry, Pvt. Ezekiel - Enlisted: June 21 1861 in Georgetown, Missouri/Mustered out: 12/29/1862 '''KIA Siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi''' --Side: USA Burial: Vicksburg National Cemetery, Vicksburg, Warren County, Mississippi, a Cuz' of mine. #[[Greer-5484 | John A. Greer]] age 18 Co.A 7th Regiment, Missouri Cavalry, '''KIA "skirmish near Warrensburg"''' Mar 1862 '''NEEDS a new military headstone- So DOES his father [[Greer-5485 | George W. Greer]] who also served in the 7th''' discharged July 1865 and died Nov 1 1865. #[[Heath-3957 | Joshua R Heath]] Pvt. B: 1845 in Hannibal, Ralls County, Missouri, Co C 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry--Heath was a Prisoner of War twice during the United States Civil War.D:18 Oct 1898 in Tacoma, Pierce County, Washington Single.......letter from his father who also served in the 27th. #[[Helms-1013 | Cornelius G Helms]] age:20 Co D 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry, was POW /1st Missouri Light Artillery POW 2nd time- D: 19 Jun 1862 -Corinth, Tishomingo County, Mississippi. In POW CAMP... of disease. His 2 brothers served with him. "Died a Prisoner of War CAMP" Burial: Unknown but probably in a grave nearby #[[Hicks-8322 | Jacob O. Hicks]] actually found and married with kids.............. #[[Jackson-38172 | William Jackson]] age 16 (?) --1861 24th Missouri Infantry -- Died of fever- 6 Jan 1862 Rolla Cemetery, Phelps, Missouri #[[Lee-17136 | George Lee]] B;1834 Ohio 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/ 23rd Infantry--D: 1 Mar 1863- Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, of disease burial: Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, St. Louis County, Missouri #[[Kirkpatrick-2380 | William Kirkpatrick]] Born 1833 in Hamilton County, Ohio -- Co A 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry --"Struck by lightning/ died burial: Antioch Cemetery, Saline County, Missouri #[[McAllister-1814 | Pvt. Hugh McAllister]] B: 1837 [uncertain]-Pennsylvania, Co A 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry Died of Measles Nov 17 1861 in Sedalia, Missouri. :Burial: Buried by the Army out in the prairie. Same as [[Lee-12708 | Morrison M Lee]] #[[McCubbin-141 | Granville McCubbin]] 1825 Kentucky- Co K 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/ 7th Missouri Volunteer Cavalry --D: 24 May 1914 in Leavenworth, Leavenworth, Kansas #[[Nunn-1348 | John w. Nunn]] B: 1841 Germany--Co C 27th Missouri Infantry Mounted -- "Died of the fever, in Georgetown, on Nov. 2, 1861" Buried by the Army out in the prairie. Same as [[Lee-12708 | Morrison M Lee]] #[[Merryfield-36 | Omar H. Merryfield]] 27th Regiment, Missouri Mounted Infantry D:1916 --East Lawn Cemetery, Salem, Illinois #[[O'Shea-485 | Patrick O'Shea]] 7th Regiment, Missouri Mounted Infantry D:1919 Danville National Cemetery, Danville, Illinois #[[Puntenney-55 | James Puntenney]] 3rd Sq. Co. D 24th Ohio, Regiment Infantry "Volunteered May 24, 1861/ '''fell at the Battle of Stones River''', Dec. 31, 1862, brought home by his Father Mar. 19, 1863, and Buried, where he now layes." Puntenney Cemetery in Rome, Ohio --a Cuz' of mine. #[[Rank-149 | Jacov Rank]] D:1964 '''KIA Lone Jack''' Co K 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry #[[Ray-5463 | Samuel Ray]] D;1863 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry Jefferson City National Cem. Jefferson City, Cole County, Missouri Disease #[[Robertson-11068 | Francis H Robertson]] B:1840 Va. --Co H 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry - 12/05/1861 Died of the fever on the prairie of Sedalia-- Buried by the Army out in the prairie. Same as [[Lee-12708 | Morrison M Lee]] Francis is a Cuz' of mine. #[[Shea-1349 | Michael Shea]] 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry - D: 1899 Queen of Peace Cemetery Ewing, Lewis County, Missouri #[[Shea-2196 | Michael Shea]] 6th Regiment, Missouri Infantry, -Died of Disease, Memphis National Cemetery, Memphis, Tennessee #[[Shipley-1435 | Thomas Shipley]] Eng. 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/12th Cavalry --D:19 Feb 1910 in Buffalo, Johnson, Wyoming (wife/child but appears both died) #[[Sparks-3278 | Sgt. William L Sparks]] B:1842 in Missouri D: 28 Jan 1863 in Benton Barracks, St. Louis, Missouri, may have left a minor child?? #[[Vigus-16 | 1st Sgt William Sanford Vigus]] Johnson County Home guard (Oct 1861)/Co. K, 40th Regt. E.M.M./Pvt Co. C 27th Missouri Mounted Inf./ 1st Sgt Co M 12th Missouri Calvary D:15 Dec 1864 Nashville National Cemetery, Madison, Davidson County, Tennessee #[[Wallace-16713 | Matthew G Wallace]] B: 22 Oct 1842 Anderson, Tenn --6th Regiment, Missouri State Militia Cavalry D:1864 Springfield National Cemetery, Springfield, Greene County, Missouri, His brother also served. #[[Warren-16977 | Cyrus M. Warren]]] age:18 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry D:1863 cause Unk.: Rolla Cemetery, Rolla, Phelps County, Missouri, #[[Westhoff-63 | Gustavuz Westhoff]] B;1826 Prussia- 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry D: 1863 Disease- Jefferson City National Cemetery, Jefferson City, Missouri #[[Wheeler-13466 | John H Wheeler]] B:1842 Ill. John/ his brother Renseler 2 years old and their father Austin King Wheeler, B:1813 all joined the 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry John & Resenler both died of disease just 2 weeks of each other... Renseler left a wife/baby. Blackwater Chapel Cemetery, Houstonia, Missouri #[[Wiley-2097 | Isaac Wiley]] 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/7th State Militia/7th Cavalry Isaac Wiley age 36 who joined the 27th MO. in Warrensburg July 4 1861 same day his brother Enoch Evert joined and also William Wiley. There are 2 FAMILIES with same names.......... #[[Wiley-2098 | William Wiley]] 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry/7th State Militia/7th Cavalry #[[Wright-26239 | John L Wright]] B: 1843 Virginia --D:1861 Saline Missouri FEVER ,27th Missouri Mounted Infantry "died at home" buried near mother--Oak Grove Cemetery, Sweet Springs, Missouri #[[Zahringer-4 | Otto Zahringer]] Company H- 27th Missouri Mounted Infantry [[Lee-12708 | Morrison M Lee]] was in/they both died in the Field Hospital on the prairie of Sedalia, Pettis Co. Missouri. So they both were buried in a mass grave as UNKNOWN

Free Space Pages for the Tartan Trail

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I am keeping a link to all the wills that were created as FSP's for the Tartan Trail and as an Scotland Project member. Which James Donald is Betsy's Father - https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Which_James_Donald_is_Betsy%27s_Father ==Sources==

Free Will Baptists

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William E. Whitney was a Free Will Baptist Minister in Michigan

Freedman's Bank Records

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This page is an informational page on the Freedman's Bank Records, and has links to spreadsheets to create new profiles using the records, which often had detailed family information on them. == Sources ==

Freedman's Bureau 1965 Documents

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Freedman's Bureau April of 1965 Documents. *Contract of Employment between Marcus C Elcan and Freedman's Bureau.U.S., Freedmen's Bureau Records, 1865-1878, NARA Series Number:: M1913; NARA Reel Number:: 62; NARA Record Group Number:: 105; NARA - https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/546294:62309?tid=&pid=&queryId=55d6f948eae2457bd5cfd1a560cddc78&_phsrc=uHH2778&_phstart=successSource Know all men by these present That I M.C. Elcan and the undersign laborers, both of the county of Buckingham County do mutually agree and find ourselves to be required by the following writings. It is being the following between Mr. M.C. Elcan and laborers they are to work for him from the fourth day of April eighteen hundred sixty five to the twenty fifth day of December eighteen hundred sixty five upon the following terms named. for one third of the wheat that are made after reserving seed which was sixty three bushels, one third of oats that are made after reserving seed which was one hundred thirty five bushels, one third of the corn, one third of the [?] seven crops, one half of the sweet potatoes, one half of the peas, one half of the watermelons, one half of the corn, & fodder I get from [?]. signed: [[Elcan-18|M.C. Elcan]] {| class="wikitable" | ''First Name'' || ''Age'' || ''Birth Year'' || ''Sex'' || ''Residence'' |- | Issac Brown || || || Male || Buckingham, Virginia. Samuel, Father's Will |- | [[Davenport-7865|Collins Davenport]]|| 46 || 1824 || Male || Buckingham, Virginia |- | [[Davenport-7865|David Davenport]] || 50 || 1815 || Male || Buckingham, Virginia |- | Harrison Brumley || || || Male || Buckingham, Virginia |- | [[Brown-133162|Archer Brown]] || || || Male || Buckingham, Virginia. |- | Peter Brown || || || Male || Buckingham, Virginia |- | Patience Brown || || || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |- | [[Smith-258820|Caroline Smith]] || 40 ||1825 || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |- | Callie Young || || || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |- | Lucy Washington || || || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |- | Lucy Ann Langhorn || || || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |- | [[Smith-259023|Annie Smith]] ||15 ||1850 || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |- | [[Haskins-1960|Mary Haskins]] ||27 ||1838 || Female || Buckingham, Virginia |} ==Notes== == Sources ==

Freedmens Land Certificates Edisto Island, South Carolina

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[[Space:South_Carolina_Plantations|South Carolina Plantations]] [[Space:Plantations_of_Edisto_Island_by_Owner_Family|Plantations of Edisto Island]] ==Background== {{One Place Study|place=Edisto Island, South Carolina|category=Edisto Island, South Carolina One Place Study}} In 1865 the following Free Persons had a certificate for a plot of land on the following plantations on Edisto Island. '''United States, Freedmen's...t Commissioner, 1865-1872''': "United States, Freedmen's...t Commissioner, 1865-1872"
Catalog: [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/588833 Records of the Assistant Commissioner for the state of South Carolina, Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1865-1870] Personnel rosters 1868. Requests for transportation 1865-1866. Register of signed transportation, orders given to officers 1866-1867. Registers of orders authorizing transportation 1866-1867. Transportation requests received 1866. Transportation orders issued 1866. Monthly transportation reports 1866-1868. Other records 1865-1867. (NARA Series M869, Roll 44)
Image path: United States, Freedmen's Bureau, Records of the Assistant Commissioner, 1865-1872 > South Carolina > Roll 44, Other records, 1865-1867 > image 22 of 70; citing multiple NARA microfilm publications; Records of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1861 - 1880, RG 105; (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1969-1980).
{{FamilySearch Image|3Q9M-C9TZ-D98D-B}} (accessed 15 May 2023)
Although they have the land certificates, eventually a lot of this land was returned to the former plantation owners. 3 Aug 1865 {| class="wikitable" | Page || Date || No. || Name || Owner || Location |- | 1 || 3 Aug 1865 || 1 || James Hutchinson || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 2 || Primus Morrison || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 3 || Samuel Miller || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || 4-Aug || 4 || Cyrus Jenkins || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 5 || John Major || Const Bailey || Palmetto |- | || || 6 || James Gibbs || Const Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 7 || Wm Howard || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 8 || Robert Holmes || Constantine Bailey || Palmetto |- | || || 9 || Moses Jenkins || Constantine Bailey || Palmetto |- | || || 10 || Edwin Hutchinston || Evens Eddings || North Edisto |- | || 5-Aug || 11 || Abraham Fraser || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 12 || Toney Gettes || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 13 || Ned Wilconson || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 14 || Ishmael Block || E Baynon (Baynard) || Palmetto |- | || || 15 || Jonas Rasael || J. J. Mikell || Fullers |- | || || 16 || Aleck Bryan || Constantine Bailey || Palmetto |- | || || 17 || George Burkhorn || Constantine Bailey || Palmetto |- | || 7-Aug || 18 || Dick Richards || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 19 || George Spisel || Tom Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 20 || Peter Bright || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | || || 21 || Sampson Simmons || Tho Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 22 || James Scott || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 23 || Guy Manning? || Jos Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 24 || Richard Bowles || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | || || 25 || Horry Walker || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | || || 26 || Straphton Gibbs || Const Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 27 || Mrs Peggy Gibbs || Const Bailey || Blue House |- | 2 || 7-Aug || 28 || Liberty Bagnon || E Baynon's (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 29 || Caroline Bugnon || E Baynon's (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 30 || Jennette Baynard || E Baynon's (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 31 || July Gillion || Joseph Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 32 || July Gilliord Sr || Joseph Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 33 || James Walker || J. J. Mikell || Fullers |- | || || 34 || Paddy Johnson || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 35 || Louis Baun || Townsend || Public Landing |- | || 8-Aug || 36 || George Simmonds || Thomas Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || 9-Aug || 37 || Wm Manigault || Jabez Westcott || The Plantation |- | || || 38 || Isaac Manego || Jabez Westcott || The Plantation |- | || || 39 || Scipio Polilt || Jabez Westcott || The Plantation |- | || || 40 || Benj Manego || Jabez Westcott || The Plantation |- | || || 41 || David Drayton || Jas Murray || Public Landing |- | || || 42 || London Lewis || Jabez Westcott || Bleak Hall |- | || || 43 || Cyrus Johnson || Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 44 || Crelious Miller || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || 10-Aug || 45 || Colonel Scott || Evens Eddings || North Edisto |- | || || 46 || Samuel Murray || E Baynords (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 47 || July Becket || T. A. Beckets || Bachelor's Retreat |- | || || 48 || Rente Mikell || E Baynon (Baynard) || Little Edisto |- | || || 49 || Mrs James Delesten || E Baynon (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 50 || Titus Baynard || E Bayorum (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 51 || Jerry Puall || Jabez Westcott || Dill Farm |- | || 11-Aug || 52 || London Eddings || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 53 || York Flood || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 54 || Frederick Armstrong || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || 10-Aug || 55 || Aleck Pinckney || Tho Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 56 || Anthony Hoyte || Tho Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || 14-Aug || 57 || John Williams || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 58 || Hager Jenkins || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 59 || Tho Williams || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 60 || Plenty Green || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 61 || Peter Campbell || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 62 || Peter Bennet || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 63 || Tilus Bailey || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 64 || Ben Maxwell || Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 65 || Edwin Bailey || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 66 || August Days || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 67 || Moses Bailey || Joseph Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 68 || Mrs Amelia Whaley || Joseph Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 69 || Ned Whaley || John Seabrook || Seabrooks Neck |- | || || 70 || Josiah Brown || John Seabrook || Seabrooks Neck |- | || || 71 || Kit Perry || Jabez Westcott || Bleak Hall |- | || || 72 || Prince Heywood || Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 73 || Wm Seabrook || Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 74 || Frank Mikell || Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 75 || James Waits || Jabez Westcott || Bleak Hall |- | || || 76 || James Bailey || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 77 || Richard Hutchman || Wm Murray's || Public Landing |- | || || 78 || Ephraim Fraser || Tho Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 79 || Stephen Commodore || E Baynard || Sea Side |- | || || 80 || Joe Edwards || Gehosa Island || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 81 || Daniel Spearing || Gehosa Island || Jehosee Isld |- | 4 || 14-Aug || 82 || Jack Cartwright || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 83 || Joe Bryant || Jabez Westcott || Plantations |- | || || 84 || Major Ladsen || Evens Eddings || North Edisto |- | || || 85 || April Eddings || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 86 || Limas Mike || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 87 || Taffy Wright || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || 15-Aug || 88 || Scipio Grimble || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 89 || Sam Fraser || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 90 || Jas Whaley || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 91 || Morris Watson || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 92 || Morris Steplight || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 93 || Anthony Whaley || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 94 || Raphael Robinson || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 95 || Cololina Watson || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 96 || Stanley Simmons || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 97 || Philip Gadsen || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 98 || Cooper Judge || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 99 || Andrew Washington || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 100 || Adam Mike || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 101 || Robert Richons || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 102 || Sire Grimball || Joe Whaley || Sea Cloud |- | || || 103 || Will Days || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 104 || Andrew Multrie || Jabez Westcott || Plantations |- | || || 105 || Jacob Multrie || Jabez Westcott || Plantations |- | || || 106 || Sam Gasden || Jabez Westcott || Plantations |- | || || 107 || Joe Brown || Joe Whaley || Pine Barren |- | || || 108 || Robert Fraser || T Becket || Bachelor's Retreat |- | 5 || 15-Aug || 109 || Mrs. Hettie Small || Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 110 || Scipio Becket || T Becket || Bachelor's Retreat |- | || || 111 || George Owens || T Becket || Bachelor's Retreat |- | || || 112 || Jack Becket || T Becket || Bachelor's Retreat |- | || || 113 || Jerry Richardson || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 114 || London Richardson || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 115 || Andrew Brightman || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 116 || Joe Bennett || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 117 || Toby Richardson || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 118 || Morris Judge || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 119 || David White || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 120 || Billy Hurtley || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 121 || Horry Davison || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 122 || Jack Whaley || J. J. Mikell || Fullers Place |- | || 16-Aug || 123 || Boston John Jenkins || E Baynon (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 124 || August Parker || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 125 || Sancho Eddings || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 126 || Prince L. Seabrook || Henry Seabrook || Brookland |- | || || 127 || John King || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 128 || Chas Williams || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || 17-Aug || 129 || Peter Bailey || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || 17-Aug || 130 || Manual Blessing || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 131 || Horry Freerson || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 132 || Jerry Dallis || Jehosn Island || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 133 || Mrs. Diana Richardson || Jos Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 134 || March Prime || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 135 || Toney Jenkins || Mary Seabrook || Sea Side |- | 6 || 17-Aug || 136 || Ben Steward || T Becket || Bachelor's Retreat |- | || || 137 || Horry Moultrie || W Whaley || Seabrooks Neck |- | || 19-Aug || 138 || Peter Black || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 139 || Prince Maxwell || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 140 || Thomas Shearing || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 141 || Simon Baggs || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || 21-Aug || 142 || Ben Rivers || Murray's || Public Landing |- | || || 143 || Ceasar Brown || Jas Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 144 || Bob Brown || Jas Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 145 || Erving Thompson || Jas Whaley || Crawfords |- | || || 146 || Wm Smith || W. Jas Whaley || Seabrooks Neck |- | || || 147 || Jeffrey Bunkam || Evans Eddy || Sea Side |- | || || 148 || Adam Mack || Evans Eddy || Sea Side |- | || || 149 || Peter Brown || Evans Eddy || Sea Side |- | || || 150 || Joe Williams || Evans Eddy || Sea Side |- | || || 151 || Sib Eddings || Evans Eddy || Sea Side |- | || || 152 || Jacob White || Evans Eddy || Sea Side |- | || || 153 || Ned Wright || Evens Eddings || North Edisto |- | || || 154 || Wm Wright || Evens Eddings || North Edisto |- | || || 155 || Dick Bowman || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || 22-Aug || 156 || Robert Lance || Dr. Jenkins || |- | || || 157 || Richard Campbell || Joe Jenkins || Brick House |- | || || 158 || Catharine Brown || Joe Jenkins || Brick House |- | || 23-Aug || 159 || Joe Seabrook || Wm Seabrook || Oak Island |- | || || 160 || Paul Gilliard || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 161 || Ishmail Moultrie || Jas Clark || |- | || || 162 || Wm Clark || Jas Clark || |- | 7 || 23-Aug || 163 || Joe Hamilton || Jas Clark || |- | || || 164 || Isaac McDaniel || Jas Clark || |- | || || 165 || Wrento Gerdon || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 166 || Stephen Fraser || Chas Bailey || |- | || || 167 || Abram Brown || Joe Jenkins || Brick House |- | || || 168 || David Bailey || Wm M Whaley || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 169 || Ben Bailey || Wm M Whaley || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 170 || James Brown || Trescott || |- | || || 171 || Kit Washington || Constantine Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 172 || Rachel Crofford || Constantine Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 173 || Huckey Coles || Constantine Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 174 || Tom Simmons || Constantine Bailey || Blue House |- | || 24-Aug || 175 || Josiah Grant || Lagure || Seabrook Landing |- | || || 176 || Albert Brown || Mike Whaley || Little Edisto |- | || || 177 || Jacob Baynard || E Baynon (Baynard) || Little Edisto |- | || || 178 || Philip Brown || E Baynon (Baynard) || Little Edisto |- | || || 179 || Kit Brown || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 180 || Front Lester || Tom Baynon (Baynard) || |- | || || 181 || Henry Chapman || Mary Seabrook || North Edisto |- | || || 182 || Joe Chapman || Mary Seabrook || North Edisto |- | || || 183 || Cyrus Grant || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 184 || Sam Singleton || Wm Aiken || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 185 || Joe Lambert || Wm Seabrook || Sea Side |- | || || 186 || Corolina King || E Baynard || Rabbit Point |- | || || 187 || Wrents Wright || John Seabrook || Sea Brooks Neck |- | || || 188 || Ben Whaley || John Seabrook || Seabrooks Neck |- | || 25-Aug || 189 || Tom Bailey || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | 8 || 25-Aug || 190 || Jack Wering || Bailey's Isld || |- | || || 191 || Peter Lockwood || Peter Honton || |- | || || 192 || Rente Hanahan || Peter Honton || |- | || || 193 || Moses Hanahan || Peter Honton || |- | || || 194 || Henry Bram || John Jas Hanahan || |- | || || 195 || T. C. Derveney || Joe Whaley || |- | || || 196 || Lagere || Clarks || |- | || || || Chas Simmons || John's Island || |- | || || || Abram Madden || John's Island || |- | || 26-Aug || 197 || Sam Simmons || E Baynon's (Baynard) || Palmetto |- | || || 198 || Stephen April || Townsend || |- | || || 199 || Tom Jones || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 200 || Neptune Scott || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 201 || Cain Ford || Ret Forolt || Peter Point |- | || || 202 || Pompey Edmonds || Ret Forolt || Peter Point |- | || || 203 || Scipio Mikell || Bailey's Isld || |- | || || 204 || James Brown || E Baynon (Baynard) || |- | || 28-Aug || 205 || Hamlet Jenkins || Vinegar Hill || Vinegar Hill |- | || || 206 || Toney Jenkins || Vinegar Hill || Vinegar Hill |- | || || 207 || William Legare || Vinegar Hill || Vinegar Hill |- | || || 208 || Aleck Chisholm || Mary Seabrook || North Edisto |- | || || 209 || Amos Legare || E Baynon's (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 210 || Jonnily Townsend || J Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 211 || Mrs. Tenah legare || E Baynon (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 212 || June Whaley || Wm Whaley || Tom Seabrook Place |- | || || 213 || Peter Williams || Michael Whaley || Little Edisto |- | || || 214 || Wm Wright || Michael Whaley || |- | 9 || 28-Aug || 215 || Stephen Whaley || Mikell Whaley || Little Edisto |- | || || 216 || Mrs Eliza Whaley || Wm Whaley || Tom Seabrook Place |- | || || 217 || Tom Jones || Edw Whaley || |- | || || 218 || Abram Brown || John F. Townsend || Sea Cloud |- | || || 219 || Jacob Holmes || John F. Townsend || Sea Cloud |- | || || 220 || Billy Williams || John F. Townsend || Sea Cloud |- | || || 221 || Shem Butler || Wm B Whaley || Tom Seabrook Place |- | || || 222 || Elijah Blijing || Wm B Whaley || Tom Seabrook Place |- | || || 223 || Wm Green || Hopkins || |- | || || 224 || London Major || E Baynon (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 225 || Daniel Baynard || E Baynon (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 226 || Ferry Blake || E Baynon (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 227 || Jack Baynon (Baynard?) || E Baynon (Baynard) || Rabbit Point |- | || || 228 || Rachel White || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || 1-Sep || 237/239 || Cyrus Sumter || Michael Seabrook || |- | || || 240 || Benj Gadsen || Michael Seabrook || |- | || || 241 || Jas M Daniel || Michael Seabrook || |- | || || 242 || Andrew Mang || || |- | || 31-Aug || 229 || Sam Small || E Baynon (Baynard) || |- | || || 230 || Edward Brown || E Baynon (Baynard) || |- | || || 231 || Chas Thompson || E Baynon (Baynard) || |- | || || 232 || Raif Hopkins || Hopkins Jenkins Farm || Brick House |- | || || 233 || Ben Hopkins || Hopkins Jenkins Farm || Brick House |- | || || 234 || Lonely Hopkins || Hopkins Jenkins Farm || Brick House |- | || || 235 || Sampson Gadsen || Chas Bailey || |- | || || 236 || Joe Bailey || Chas Bailey || |- | || || 237 || Hector King || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | 10 || || 238 || Chas L. Bradwell || E. Parsonage || |- | || 1-Sep || 239 || Cyrus Sumter || Michael Seabrook || Sea Cloud |- | || || 240 || Benjamin Gadson || Michael Seabrook || Sea Cloud |- | || || 241 || Jas McDaniel || Michael Seabrook || Sea Cloud |- | || || 242 || Andrew Manigault || Michael Seabrook || Sea Cloud |- | || || 243 || Dick Richards || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 244 || Jock Mickell || Tom Mikell || |- | || || 245 || Ceasar Nelson || Jas Whaley || Seabrook Neck |- | || || 246 || Mingo Simmons || Jas Whaley || Seabrook Neck |- | || || 247 || Chas Gadsen || Major Murray || Fenwick Isld |- | || || 248 || Paul White || Lagore || |- | || || 249 || Isaac Sumter || Michael Seabrook || Sea Cloud |- | || || 250 || Francis Weathers || Michael Seabrook || Sea Cloud |- | || || 251 || Clainda Eddings || Evens Eddings || Sea Cloud |- | || || 252 || Walt Brown || E Baynords (Baynard) || |- | || || 253 || Joe Brown || E Baynords (Baynard) || |- | || || 254 || Sibey Green || E Baynords (Baynard) || Little Edisto |- | || || 255 || Brister Brown || Joe Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || 256 || John Hutchins || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 257 || Richard Fraser || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 258 || Patrick Watson || Betsey Seabrook || |- | || || 159 || Lymus Brown || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 260 || Joe Flood || T Price Mikell || Plantation |- | || || 261 || Toney Flood || Jenkins Mikell || |- | || || 262 || Henry Bailey || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | || || 263 || Frank Butter || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | || || 264 || Peter Bright || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | 11 || 5-Sep || 265 || Abram Hornes || Jenkins Mikell || Peter Point |- | || || 266 || Isaac Bailey || Jenkins Mikell || |- | || 6-Sep || 267 || Breter Hamlinton || E Baynords (Baynard) || |- | || || 268 || Bob Robinson || E Baynords (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 269 || Primus Simmons || E Baynords (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 270 || Stephens Stetlight || E Baynords (Baynard) || Sea Side |- | || || 271 || Dick Richards || Evens Eddings || North Edisto |- | || || 272 || Stephen Mack || John Jenkins || Vinegar Hill |- | || || 273 || Joe Williams || John Jenkins || |- | || 7-Sep || 274 || Jack From || Jno Jenkins || |- | || || 275 || Isaac Simmons || Dr. Jenkins || |- | || || 276 || Mrs Lizzie Flood || E Baynard || Rabbit Point |- | || || 277 || Hettie Pinckney || John Jenkins || |- | || || 278 || Tom Gadson || John Jenkins || |- | || || 279 || Willie Burkan || Murray's || Public Landing |- | || || 280 || April Reny || J. J. Mikell || Bailey's Isl |- | || 8-Sep || 281 || Jas Baynon (Baynard) || E Baynard || |- | || || 282 || David Fraser || E Baynard || |- | || || 283 || Caser Small || Wm Seabrook || Oak Island |- | || || 284 || Betsy Coles || Constantine Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 285 || Jas McEllery || Wm Seabrook || |- | || || 286 || Celia Brown || Const Bailey || Blue House |- | || || 287 || Smart Mannway || Bailey's Isld || |- | || || 288 || Anthony M. Farlin || Bailey's Isld || |- | || || 289 || Andrew Yonge || Bailey's Isld || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 290 || Andrew Bull || Bailey's Isld || |- | 12 || 12-Sep || 291 || Jim Scott || Tom Baynon (Baynard) || Ravenswood |- | || || 292 || Aleck Ford || Tom Seabrook || Tom Seabrook Place |- | || || 293 || July Street || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 294 || Jonas Black || W B Whaley || Tom Seabrook Place |- | || || 295 || Dick Richardson || Ep Baynard || Little Edisto |- | || || 296 || Gage Williams || Evens Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 297 || Titus Gibbs || Eph Baynard || |- | || || 298 || Mosias Johnson || Jno Townsend || Bleak Hall |- | || || || 1/2 Henry Johnson || Jno Townsend || |- | || || 299 || Chas Bailey || Dr Bailey || Old Dominion |- | || || 300 || Richard Bailey || Dr. Bailey || Old Dominion |- | || || 301 || Sam Crawford || Dr. Wm M Bailey || Maxey Place |- | || || 302 || Wm Manigault || John Jenkins || Black's House |- | || || 303 || John Sumtors || Ed Seabrook || |- | || || 304 || Abram Morgan || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 305 || David White || Jehosee Isld || |- | || || 306 || Gabriel Sanders || Jno Jenkins || |- | || || 307 || Aaron Sumpter || Wm Baynard || |- | || 21-Sep || 308 || Tobey Ben || Jas Eddings || Gun Bluff |- | || || 309 || Jeffrey Jenkins || Ed Jenkins || |- | || || 310 || Powell Providence || Jas Eddings || |- | || || 311 || Aaron Stuart || Jas Eddings || |- | || 25-Sep || 312 || Solomon Jones || Jas Eddings || Gun Bluff |- | || || 313 || Hardtimes Smith || Jas Eddings || |- | || || 314 || Tom Jones || Tom Mikell || |- | || 25-Sep || 315 || Tobey Freor || Tom Mikell || |- | || || 316 || Jerry Seabrook || Tom Mikell || |- | || || 317 || Ceyrus Bailey || Wm Bailey || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 318 || Quash Bailey || Wm Bailey || Bailey's Isl |- | 13 || 25-Sep || 319 || Simon Bailey || Dr. Bailey || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 320 || Larry Bailey || Dr Wm Bailey || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 321 || Billy Bailey || Dr. Wm Bailey || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 322 || Bram Bailey || Dr. Wm Bailey || Bailey's Isl |- | || || 323 || Sam Wright || Jas Eddings || Gun Bluff |- | || || 324 || Tom Judge || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 325 || Stephen Richardson || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 326 || Rennie Bennett || Jehosee Isld || Jehosee Isld |- | || || 327 || Jack Willerton || Baynard || |- | || || 328 || John Miller || Baynard || |- | || || 329 || Chas Miller || Baynard || |- | || || 330 || James Bradley || Dr Bailey || Old Dominion |- | || || 331 || Langworth Wright || Dr. Bailey || Old Dominion |- | || || 332 || Abram Brown || Tom Mikell || |- | || || 333 || Katie Seabrook || Tom Mikell || |- | || || 334 || Dennis Bailey || Dr Wm Bailey || Maxey Place |- | || || 335 || Mike Wright || Dr Wm Bailey || Maxey Place |- | || || 336 || William Wright || Wm Seabrook || Oak Island |- | || || 337 || Gilbert Stroman || E Bailey || River Side |- | || || 338 || Cuffee Bailey || E Bailey || River Side |- | || || 339 || Sam Bailey || E Bailey || River Side |- | || || 340 || Jimmy Clark || Andy Clark || |- | || || 341 || Virgin Clark || Andy Clark || |- | || 30-Sep || 342 || Henry Brown || E Baynard || Sea Side |- | || || 343 || Sam Eddings || Vinegar Hill || |- | || 2-Oct || 344 || Harry Ankum || J. J. Mikell || Fullers Place |- | || || 345 || John Scott || J Townsend || |- | 14 || Oct || 346 || Patrick Stephens || Jos Eddings || |- | || 4-Oct || 347 || Georg Harris || J. J. Mikell || Fullers Place |- | || || 348 || Roland Brisbone || Wm Eddings || Sea Side |- | || || 349 || Tobey Jenkins || Jos Eddings || Gun Bluff |- | || || 350 || Peter Small || Mary Seabrook || |- | || || 351 || Henry Smith || Evens Eddings || |- | || || 352 || Peter Smosh || Chas Bailey || |- | || || 353 || Sam Blinging || Tom Baynard || Ravenswood |- | || || 354 || Aflred Geddes || Tom Baynard || |- | || || 355 || George Managoult || Chas Bailey || |- | || || 356 || Henry Mack || Major Murray || Public Landing |- | || || 357 || Adam Mack || Major Murray || Public Landing |- | || || 358 || Moses Knight || Jehosee Isld || |- | || || 359 || Adam Nials || Chas Bailey || Point of Pines |- | || || 360 || Elias Jenkins || Chompy Gordon || Champions Gardens |- | || 17-Oct || 361 || Abel Small || Chompy Gordon || Champions Gardens |- | || || 362 || Peter Loggnes || Chompy Gordon || Champions Gardens |- | || || 363 || Israil Parker || Ed Baynard || |- | || || 364 || John White || Mike Whaley || Little Edisto |- | || || 365 || Wm Howard || Mike Whaley || Little Edisto |- | || || 366 || Quash Campbell || Mike Whaley || |- | || 19-Oct || 367 || Jack Murray || Major Murray || Public Landing |} ==Sources==

Freedom of speech in China

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Some information on the issue of "Freedom of speech in China".

Freeman Battershell Interest Group

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The goal of this project is to bring descendants of Freeman Battershell together. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Johnson-61137|Nicole Johnson]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Bring family together * To find information on his actual burial spot * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=17252935 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Freeman Brick Wall

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==Purpose== I have two Freeman brick walls. One is beyond my GGGF on my mother's side [[Freeman-9742|Robert S. Freeman]]. My second Freeman brick wall is a tree that I adopted because it was Freeman and I am trying to connect it to mine. [[Freeman-7041|Holman Freeman, Sr]] and [[Freeman-6994|John Walton Freeman]]. ==Family Members== * [[Freeman-9742|Robert S. Freeman]](1828-1901) born in Oglethorpe County, Georgia. I have no information about siblings or ancestors. *[[Bowles-1881|Martha Lavinia Bowles]](1827-1880) married Robert Freeman in1850. *[[Freeman-9817|Cleo Freeman Bacon]](1853-1939) daughter of Robert and Martha. >married Richard Bacon. Some sources have her first name as Clio. *[[Freeman-9818|John E Freeman]](b.1859) son of Robert and Martha. Little information on him. *[[Freeman-9737|James E. Freeman]](1859-1893)Son of Robert and Martha. Married Annie Nathan Hunter in 1883. *[[Bacon-4484|Joel F Bacon]](b.1885) son of Cleo Freeman and Richard Bacon *[[Bacon-4483|Jno Gypson Bacon]](b.1890)son of Cleo Freeman and Richard Bacon *[[Bacon-4486|Annie R Bacon]] (b.1894) She may be a match to [[Rothell-24|Annie Rothell]]. Daughter of Cleo Freeman and Richard Bacon. *[[Freeman-9841|Mae O'Neal Freeman]](1885-1953) daughter of James E Freeman and Annie Nathan Hunter. She married ? Hargrove. Died in Tennessee. *[[Freeman-9815|Lizzie Howard Freeman]](1887-aft 1920) *[[Freeman-9813|Hugh Hunter Freeman]](1889-1914). Died in Garland, Arkansas. *[[Freeman-9701|James Lewis Freeman]](1891-1945). Married Martha Emily McWhorter. ==Other Freemans== *[[Freeman-7041|Holman Freeman, Sr]] (1730-bef.1784) born in Goochland, Virginia. Married Sally Cox. *[[Freeman-9934|Frances Freeman]](b. 1756) Dtr of Holman Freeman and Sally Cox. *[[Freeman-7038|Holman Freeman, Jr]](1758-1817) Married Peninah Walton. *[[Freeman-5809|Mary Ann Freeman]] (1788-1856) Married William Wyatt Bibb. Dtr of Holman Freeman and Peninah Walton. *[[Freeman-6388|Fleming Freeman]](1791-1875). Married Martha Dandridge. Died in Alabama. *[[Freeman-6994|John Walton Freeman]](1793-1858) Married Ann Calloway in Georgia. Died in Mississippi.

Freeman Family Lines

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Post a compact tree for your Freeman line on this page. Include comments about areas you need assistance. [[Freeman-9700|Martha Emily Freeman]] ,[https://www.wikitree.com/treewidget/Freeman-9700/5 Compact Tree] [[Freeman-108|Webster Clay Freeman]], [https://www.wikitree.com/treewidget/Freeman-108/5 Compact Tree]

Freeman's Oaths in Colonial New England

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== Background on Oaths of Freemen == : page 10, [https://books.google.com/books?id=TLATAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43&dq=Oath+of+a+Freeman+of+Connecticut&source=bl&ots=ZnBZ1PAjsv&sig=x3nCloy0qfzwMYMn1-VVEQthC58&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CEEQ6AEwBmoVChMIrf6xytH6yAIVEKeICh2KlAyP#v=onepage&q=Oath%20of%20a%20Freeman&f=false Oaths of Allegiance in Colonial New England], by Charles Evans. page 46 Windsor; page 47 New Haven etc. === Definition of Freeman's Oath === :: Initially, all persons seeking to be free needed to take the Oath of a Freeman, in which they vowed to defend the Commonwealth and not to conspire to overthrow the government. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeman_%28Colonial%29 ''Freeman (Colonial)], Wikipedia''] == [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Oath_of_a_Freeman "Oath of a Freeman"] == : (Massachusetts Bay Colony 1631 and 1634) : There are two forms of this oath according to: Lucius R. Paige, Lists of Freemen of Massachusetts, 1631–1691 (1849, 1988 edition). The first and original was from 1631, and the second was a revised version that was placed into effect on May 14, 1634. This revised version represented the first ever document printed at Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1639, by Stephen Daye under the direction of Nathaniel Eaton, the first schoolmaster of Harvard. : 1631: The oath of a Freeman, or of a man to be made Free :: "I, A. B. &c. being by the Almighty's most wise dispostion become a member of this body, consisting of the Governor, Deputy Governor, Assistants and Commonalty of the Massachusetts in New England, do freely and sincerely acknowledge that I am justly and lawfully subject to the Government of the same, and do accordingly submit my person and estate to be protected, ordered and governed by the laws and constitutions thereof, and do faithfully promise to be from time to time obedient and conformable thereunto, and to the authority of the said Governor and Assistants, and their successors, and to all such laws, orders, sentences and decrees as shall be lawfully made and published by them or their successors. And I will always endeavor (as in duty I am bound) to advance the peace and welfare of this body or commonwealth, to my utmost skill and ability. And I will, to my best power and means, seek to divert and prevent whatsoever may tend to ruin or damage thereof, or of any the said Governor, Deputy Governor, or Assistants, or any of them, or their successors, and will give speedy notice to them, or some of them, of any sedition, violence, treachery, or other hurt or evil, which I shall know, hear, or vehemently suspect, to be plotted or intended against the said commonwealth, or the said Government established. And I will not, at any time, suffer or give consent to any counsel or attempt, that shall be offered, given, or attempted, for the impeachment of the said Government, or making any change or alteration of the same, contrary the laws and ordinances thereof; but shall do my utmost endeavor to discover, oppose and hinder all and every such counsel and attempt. So help me God." :: Quoted from: Massachusetts Colonial Records, Vol I, p. 1 Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License at Wikisource : 1634: Freeman's Oath :: The second, "Stephen Daye" version is as follows ... :: "I (A.B.) being by Gods providence, an Inhabitant, and Freeman, within the jurisdiction of this Commonwealth; do freely acknowledge my self to be subject to the Government thereof: And therefore do here swear by the great and dreadful Name of the Ever-living God, that I will be true and faithfull to the same, and will accordingly yield assistance & support thereunto, with my person and estate, as in equity I am bound; and will also truly endeavor to maintain and preserve all the liberties and priviledges thereof, submitting my self to the wholesome Lawes & Orders made and established by the same. And further, that I will not plot or practice any and reveal the same to lawfull Authority now here established, for the speedy preventing thereof. :: "Moreover, I doe solemnly bind my self in the sight of God, that when I shal be called to give my voyce touching any matter of this State, in which Freemen are to deal, I will give my vote and suffrage as I shall judge in mine own conscience may best conduce and tend to the publike weal of the body, So help me God in the Lord Jesus Christ." ''The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut'', page 62 - 63 == Sources == : See also: * [http://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44817342.pdf ''Oaths of Allegiance''], by Charles Evans, Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, Oct 1921, page 377 - 438. History of Freeman's oaths 378 - * [https://archive.org/stream/cu31924028814304#page/n7/mode/1up ''List of freemen, Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1630 to 1691 : with freeman's oath, the first paper printed in New England''], by Andrews, H. Franklin, (Exira, Iowa, Exira Print Co., 1906), database, Internet Archive * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeman_%28Colonial%29 Freeman (Colonial)], Wikipedia, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; * [https://books.google.com/books?id=Xbk-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA427&lpg=PA427&dq=Oath+of+a+Freeman+of+Connecticut&source=bl&ots=Lfyaogirgn&sig=7vn2sJY3zSbm_fyV1jze7tfcYuc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CD8Q6AEwBWoVChMIrf6xytH6yAIVEKeICh2KlAyP#v=onepage&q=Oath%20of%20a%20Freeman&f=false ''The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut''], Google Books, Editors: James Hammond Trumbull, Charles Jeremy Hoadly, (Princeton, Brown & Parsons, 1850)

Free-Market.Net

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'''Free-Market.Net''' (FMN) was started by [[Whitten-1|Chris Whitten]] in 1995 as free-market.com. The idea was to have a central clearinghouse on the newly burgeoning World-Wide Web for libertarian ideas, organizations, and people. FMN worked to encourage libertarian organizations such as the Cato Institute, Reason magazine, Laissez Faire Books, Independent Institute, and the Competitive Enterprise Institute to create websites and distribute information. On the other side, FMN worked to connect website visitors to the organizations, local events, books, articles, and other individuals who might interest them. In 1997, the [[Space:Henry Hazlitt Foundation|Henry Hazlitt Foundation]] was established as a 501(c)3 non-profit organization to host Free-Market.Net. As the organization grew, other "sister sites" for FMN were created, including libertarian.org (for people new to libertarian ideas), ifeminists.com (for individualist feminists), and Bureaucrash (for students). FMN had over 250 paying partner organizations and over 5,000 paying members. There were a half-dozen full-time employees and more than a dozen part-time employees. In 2001, Chris Whitten left his work at FMN in order to start a for-profit business, which became [[Space:WikiAnswers|WikiAnswers]]. Louis James took over as president of the Henry Hazlitt Foundation. In 2002, FMN and the Henry Hazlitt Foundation folded. The Institute for Humane Studies bought libertarian.org, the Independent Institute took over ifeminists.com, Bureaucrash spun off into a new organization, and Free-Market.Net went to the International Society for Individual Liberty (ISIL). ISIL eventually let FMN disappear as a separate website.

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Jbmartin's links and useful stuff * [[Space:J._B._Martin_To-Do_List| My 15 of 15 challenges checklist]] * [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:Connect-a-Thon January 2023 Connect-a-Thon]

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== County Pages == [[Space:County_Durham_and_Tyne_and_Wear_Team| Northumberland and Durham]] [[Space:Norfolk_Team | Norfolk]] [[Space:Suffolk_Team | Suffolk]] [[Space:Lincolnshire_Team | Lincolnshire]]

Freespace of all the Bennetts info I could find for Wm Bennett of Northumberland County

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http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~knorthup/Webpage2/Ruth/Reid/Notes/WilliamBennett.htmSearch billions of records on Ancestry.com Revolutionary War Military Abstract Card File Items Between Bennet, Mathew and Benor, John Card 19 http://www.digitalarchives.state.pa.us/archive.asp?view=ArchiveItems&ArchiveID=13&FID=429865&LID=429964&FL=B&Page=1 '''Notes for William Bennett:''' Born 1711 in PA? 1731-1770 - son John born 1731-1770- son James born 1731-1770 - son William born 1765 - 1774 - daughter Nancy born abt 1773 - son Robert born March 30, 1877 - son Anthony born May 1778 - William Bennett is listed on Tax list for Bald Eagle Twp, Northumberland Co., PA. abt 1778 - son Henry born January 16, 1783 - son Samuel born abt 1784 - daughter Marjery born 1785 William is listed on tax records for Nippinose Twp, Northumberland (now Lycoming) Co., PA along with James & John Bennett. abt 1786 - daughter Elizabeth born 1786 - James, William & John Bennett (single man) listed as residents of Bald Eagle, Northumberland Co., PA 1787 William listed on tax records for Nippinose Twp, Northumberland (now Lycoming) Co., PA along with James, William Jr & John Bennett. Nippenose is about 15 mile from Bald Eagle, along the river. They could have owned or rented land in both places in order to secure lumber. In 1787, William & James Bennett owned a grist mill. June 21, 1787 - daughter Margaret born 1790 census Northumberland, PA Wm Bennitt 2-3-4 2 males age 16 & older (William, age 79 & Robert, age 17) 3 males under age 16 (Anthony, age 13, Henry, age 12, Samuel, age 7) 4 females (Ann, age 53, Margery, age 6, Elizabeth, age 4, Margaret, age 3) Next to Robt Bridgens, and near William Reed, James Bennitt, Henry Thompson, Benjamin Thompson. Where is William Bennett, Jr, age 20 or John Bennett? 1798 - William & his sons Henry & Anthony moved to what is now Crawford Co., PA (Crawford Co., PA formed March 12, 1800 from Alleghany Co., PA) 1800 - settled in North Shenango, Crawford Co., PA 1800 census - ?? Daughter Margaret married Isaac Collins in 1802 1810 census Shenango, Crawford Co., PA :Henry Bennett page 423 10010-30010 :Anthony Bennett page 423 20010-20100 :William Bennett page 423 (Henry & Anthony's father) 00001-00101 1 male over 45 (William, age 99) 1 female over 45 (Ann, age 73) 1 female 16-26 (Elizabeth, age 26?) :On same page as Andrew Thompson, George Espey, William Reid :Robert Bennitt, page 420 20010-40010 March 25, 1812 - William Bennett died at age 101 at the home of his son Robert. USA SURNAMES 1600-1940 :Entries: 14992 Updated: Tue Nov 25 20:19:06 2003 Contact: Linda Hansen :ID: I03999 Name: WILLIAM BENNETT, Sex: M, Title: Major :Birth: 1711 in Of Susquehanna River Settlements, CT :Death: JAN 1812 in Shenango Twp., Crawford Co., PA :Occupation: Iron Master _FA2: 1785 lived in Bald Eagle Twp.,Northumberland Co., PA _FA3: 1787 with James owned a Grist Mill _FA4: 1798 Moved with Anthony & Henry to Crawford Co. _FA6: Died at home of son Robert _FA1: 1819 Bur. Presbyterian Cemetery, S. Shenango, Crawford Co., PA. :Burial: South Shenango Cemetery Row IX #19, Crawford Co., PA _FA5: Among 1st settlers of N. & S. Shenango Townships. Note: Given William's age it would seem most likely that William had a wife that preceded Ann and that they likely had a family as the children that are believed to be Ann's were born late in William's life. Below you will see that Jame's and John are not proven as William's sons, they could possibly be sons by a previous marriage. I believe them to be Williams sons as the names James and John are carried down through the family in a traditional way. There were so few early settlers in the area that it seems doubtful that at this early stage in the area's development there would have been two unrelated Bennett families using the same names. This is the only reason why "I" have chose to list James and John as sons of William. Father: WILLIAM BENNETT b: in Of Susquehanna River Settlements, CT :Marriage 1 ANN b: ABT. 1737 Children #James BENNETT #John BENNETT #William BENNETT b: ABT. 1770 #Nancy BENNETT b: ABT. 1772 #Robert S. BENNETT b: 1773 #Samuel BENNETT b: ABT. 1775 #ANTHONY BENNETT b: 30 MAR 1777 in Crawford Co., PA #Henry BENNETT b: ABT. 1778 #Margery BENNETT b: ABT. 1782 #Elizabeth BENNETT b: ABT. 1784 #Margaret BENNETT b: 21 JUN 1787 in Bald Eagle Twp., Northumberland, Co., PA Crawford County, Pennsylvania History & Biography 1885 "Township Histories." CHAPTER XIII. [http://www.crawfordcopa.com/history/1885/NShenango.html] NORTH SHENANGO TOWNSHIP. Anthony and Henry Bennett, came from the Susquehanna about 1798. The former settled on Tract 42, the latter on Tract 46. They were Seceders and life-long residents of the township. Their aged father, William Bennett, said to have built the first keel boat on the Susquehanna, also immigrated to the township and died in 1812, aged one hundred and one years. Anthony Bennett erected the first grist and saw-mills in the township in 1800 or 1801, on Bennetts Run, and both were operated for many years. ...... James and William Reed, brothers, came from the Susquehanna about 1800. William proceeded as far as Franklin in a canoe, his wife following along the river upon horse-back, and driving two cows. They stopped at first in the eastern part of the township, but subsequently removed to the southwest part, in the vicinity of a spring discovered by Mrs. Reed while lost in the woods. She and Mrs. Bennett, the latter with a babe in her arms, started through the forest to carry the mid-day meal to their husbands, but lost their way and rambled through the woods till evening, then took refuge in a small tree. They passed the night in terror, beholding a panther for a long time crouched beneath them. Descending in the morning they were attracted by the sound of chopping and soon found two men by whom they were guided homeward, where they learned that the neighborhood was aroused and searching for them. "Descendants of William Bennett" [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~bakerfamilylines/DescendantsofWilliamBennett.html] GENERATION 1 1. WILLIAM BENNETT :More About WILLIAM BENNETT: Not much is known about William Bennett, some say that he is the William of Stonington, Ct. and other's believe that this is not so. William lived to be 104 years old. He served in King Philip's War. :Known Children of WILLIAM BENNETT are: i. REBECCA BENNETT, b. November 22, 1678. ii. JOHN BENNETT, b. August 11, 1683. 2. iii. MAJOR WILLIAM BENNETT, b. 1711 iv. HENRY BENNETT, b. Abt. 1713. v. JAMES BENNETT, b. Abt. 1715. GENERATION 2 2. MAJOR WILLIAM BENNETT (WILLIAM1) was born 1711 and was of the Susquehanna River Settlements, and died January 1812 in Shenango Twp., Crawford Co., PA. He married ANN. She was born Abt. 1737, and died 1819 in Shenango Twp., Crawford Co., PA. Notes for MAJOR WILLIAM BENNETT: It would seem probable that William had at least one wife that preceeded Ann and that they most likely had a sizable family as the children that are believed to be Ann's were born late in William's life. Below you will see that James and John are not proven as William's sons, or they could possibly be sons by a previous marriage. I believe them to be Williams sons as the names James and John are carried down through the family in the traditional way. There were so few families that were early settlers in the Espyville, Shenango area that it seems doubtful that at this early stage in development there would have been two unrelated Bennett families using the same names. This is why "I" have chosen to list James and John as sons of William. A William Bennett is listed in 1775 the Buffalo Valley Numeration as owning a grist mill on land belonging to William Blythe. He had 1 horse and 1 cow. :A William Bennett Jr. is listed in the same enumeration he had 17 acres, 1 horse, 3 sheep on William Blythe's land. :Source: Annals of Buffalo Valley by Linn p. 75 This passed on by Pauline Brown from her cousin Dale Collins; :"William Bennett probably not from Stonington, CT., but perhaps Old Philadelpia Co., PA. First official location; Bald Eagle Twp., Northumberland Co., PA. in May 1778. Taxed 1787 Nipponose Twp. recorded in Sunbury. He is buried in S. Shenango Cemetery 1711-March 25, 1812. They were Seceders* from the Susquehanna area. :Children : possibly James, John, William - Northumberland." * Seceders or Covenanters came to be known as “Reformed Presbyterians and in the mid-1800’s, they united with some of the factions from which they had split earlier in the century becoming known as members of the United Presbyterian Church. Bennett Family history: :William Bennett was born in 1711, died in 1812, 101 years old. It is said he built the first keel boat on the Susquehanna, before emigrating to North Shenango Twp. It is likely that William was one of the first settlers on the Susquehanna perhaps around the years 1753-1754. William Bennett was a First Lieutenant* in Capt. Somme Dale's Company formed in Upper Div. of Northumberland Co. was among the body of soldiers present at Ft. Augusta on 25 June 1777. Col. Bennett erected the first grist and saw mill in the township in 1800 or 1801 on Bennett's Run, and both were operated for many years. He was a Major in the 133rd Regiment under Col. Samuel Goudy in the War of 1812--promoted to Colonel." :Source: The Espy-Espey Genealogy Book *Wm#2, if he was a 1st Lt in 1777, he would have been 66 yrs old. Those over 60 wer not expected to serve. It has been reported to us that the Espy book may contain many errors, check carefully. 7.8.05 email sent by Dale Collins: :William Bennett lived in Bald Eagle Twp, Northumberland Co., PA, May 1778, according to Linn's "History of Centre and Clinton County". In the original tax records in Sunbury, Northumberland Co., PA entitled "Northumberland, Muncy, and Others 1778-1796" is found the following information concerning Bennetts. Bald Eagle Twp. :Taxes: William Bennett - Exonerated 36 19s 9p :William Bennett Jr. - collected 11s In 1785 listed in Washington township, now partly Lycoming and a subdivision of White Deer are the 1st inhabitants and among them are the following: Ephraim, Justice, Thaddeus, Abraham and William Bennett. At Sunbury, 1785 Nippinose Twp., then Northumberland, now Lycoming Co., across the Susquehanna River from Jersey Shore: :William Bennett, 1 horse, 1 cow, 400 acres :James Bennett, 2 horses, 1 cow, 200 acres :John Bennett, 3 horses, 1 cow Linn's History stated: :Residents of Bald Eagle Twp., in 1786: :James Bennett, William Bennett, and John Bennett-single man. Nippenose Twp., 1787: :William Bennett, James Bennett, William Bennett, John Bennett. Nippenose is about 15 mile from Bald Eagle, along the river. They could have owned or rented land in both places in order to secure lumber. Linn's History contains the following (pp 595,586) :"YoungWomanstown (now North Bend), also called William Reed's Improvement, was on the shore of the west branch of the Susquehanna now Chapman Twp., Clinton, Co. It was occupied before 1780 by William Reed who had no title. Reed sold his improvements to Stuart Campbell. Campbell sold to Thomas Robison who obtained a pre-emption warrant 1 Oct. 1785 for 307 acres on the north side of the west branch of the Susquehanna beginning at upper end of the narrows in the lower ends of sides and extending up the river to the head wing of a fish-dam and adjoining John Fleming's improvement. This included nearly all the flat land adjacent to the mouth of Young Womans's creek. Robison sold to Andrew Epple of Philadelphia 10 Jan. 1787. William Bennett rented it from Epple for 56. He built a tub-mill at the mouth of YoungWoman's creek for which he was allowed 33, which was deducted from his rent bill." YoungWomanstown, Jan. 19th 1798 :"Sir I take this opportunity to let you know that I am going to Move of your place in the spring: my son has been out at French Creek and they have a Mind to Move out their in the spring And I would be glade you would take this place of my hands and send some Man to it a Cording to your Mind that you can be shoure of paying the rent I can get men a-nauf here that would take it But I would rather you would satisfy you Self. I have a very good fall crop in the ground thir is 20 acres of Wheat and 11 of Ry and land fit for a prime Crop corn oats or flax all fit for the plough and they can have all the grane if them and me can agree there is men anof her that would Be glad of it but I would be glad you would Send Some Man to it that would pay you the Rent and give me no more trouble a Bout it Sir please to Send me an ancer by Frances Fargy for I would be glad to know as quick as possible and so I Remain your Hum Ser't." :William Bennett :To Andrew Epple :Source: "Bennett Family" by Dale W. & Florence H. Collins p 85-86 The Collins, Henry, David, Isaac, and Elijah were in Conniut Twp., Crawford County and were counted in the 1800 census. William Reed and his family were settled here, as did the Barrackman s and Linn's. The Bennetts came about 1801 and the Espy's about 1802. William Bennett was born in 1711 and died at the home of his son, Robert in South Shenango Twp., Crawford Co., PA. He and his wife have a common marker in South Shenango Cemetery. Row IX, #19. The gravestone reads: died Jan. 1812. The Crawford Co. Atlas says he died March 25, 1812 and Warner's History of Crawford County says he lived to be 101. William's wife, ANN, died 1819, age 82 years. She may have been a second wife. Crawford County Genealogy. Source: "Bennett Family" by Dale W. & Florence H. Collins pp 86-87 :1787: with James Bennett owned a Grist Mill :1798, moved with son's Anthony & Henry to Crawford Co. :He died at home of son Robert. :Occupation: Iron Master William was probably married two or more times. There is a long standing family tradition that William, James, and John were first cousins of General Anthony Wayne. Dale and Florence Collins have done some research, that so far has been unsuccessful in connecting the Wayne family to the Bennett’s through the Iddings line. Iddings was Gen. Wayne’s mother’s maiden name. (Ann may or may not be the mother of all of eight of William’s children) GENERATION 2 Cont. ABOUT WILLIAM'S CHILDREN: :Samuel Bennett shown as deceased on the 1803 tax roll, whose land was assessed to Anthony. Letters of administration on his estate were issued to Anthony Bennett on 17 Nov. 1803; bondsmen were Anthony and Henry Bennett and Moses Scott. The appointment of Anthony as administrator suggests that he was closely related to Samuel. Deed records provide confirmation. David McKee and Anthony Bennett, from Susquehanna County, moved to Crawford County in 1798, the former near Espyville, the latter farther north. Anthony, Henry, and Samuel had settled in a part of Conneaut Twp., which was attached to Shenango Twp in 1804, and to North Shenango Twp in 1829; Robert located a short distance south along the eventual boundary between North and South Shenango Townships. The process of land acquisition there was governed by a 1792 statute, which provided for the purchase of a warrant, i.e., an order to have a tract of land surveyed. Once the survey was completed, and certain settlement conditions had been met, the Commonwealth granted a deed (the "patent") to the purchaser. By the time the Bennetts arrived, most of the land had already been surveyed on warrants taken out by the Pennsylvania Population and North American Land Companies. Anthony had settled upon what was numbered Tract 42 on the latter's registers (warranted in the name of Thomas Sinn), Henry on tract 46 (John Sinn, warrantee). The North American Land Company later disbanded, and its 625 warrants in northwestern PA, were assigned to Stephen Barlow and Henry Baldwin (later Justice Baldwin of the U.S. Supreme Court, and builder of the Baldwin-Reynolds House in Meadville). In May of 1817, Baldwin and Barlow reached an agreement with the Bennetts and several other Shenango Twp., residents who had "adverse to the original warrantee, taken possession" of the surveyed tracts. In return for their "settlement residence and improvements" the settlers were to receive, gratis, 150 acres from the tract each had settled. Baldwin and Barlow would purchase the patents, and could sell the residue of the tracts free from the settlers' claims of adverse possession. Some of the patents were obtained as early as Oct. 1817. In June of 1818, Baldwin and Barlow deed Henry Bennett about 305 acres from Tract 46 for $389.15; 150 acres were for his settlement and the additional land was sold to him for two and a half dollars an acre. Anthony Bennett was similarly conveyed about 170 acres from Tract 42 in 1822 for $60.43. SAMUEL BENNETT'S HEIRS :Other land titles were more complicated. In drafting the 1817 agreement, to indicate which tract had been settled, the name of the original warrantee (rather than the tract number) was listed opposite the settler's name. "Thomas Sinn" thus appears opposite the name of Anthony Bennett, and "John Sinn" opposite Henry. Matthew Gamble was also a party to the agreement, and opposite his name is that of Joseph Sherrett. The tract warranted in the name of Joseph Sherrett was numbered 45, adjoining Henry Bennett's land. Isaac Wright Collins also had some claim to this property, for on the same day he executed the agreement with Baldwin and Barlow, he gave a "Deed of Release" quitclaiming to Matthew Gamble all of his interest in the tract "warranted in the name of Joseph Serritt." This was recited to be "the same tract of land on which the said Matthew Gamble now lives." :Some of the settlers, such as Henry Bennett, had previously had their tracts re-surveyed on new warrants. Tract 45, where Matthew lived, had again been warranted on 4 April 1804 in the name of "Anthony Bennett Adm. In trust for the heirs of Samuel Bennett dec. The Bennett interests there also needed to be extinguished if Matthew was to obtain clear title. On 26 June 1817, a month after execution of the Baldwin and Barlow agreement, Matthew Gamble was deeded this 400 acres by Robert Bennett, Anthony Bennett, Henry Bennett, Isaac Wright Collins and Margaret Collin, his wife, and James Mason, all of Crawford County. The deed recites that the land had been "warranted in the name of Joseph Sherrit, settled by Samuel Bennett, and by said Samuel surveyed on a vacating warrant, and at his death descended to us by heirship, the said Samuel having died intestate, we being the heirs at law of the said Samuel." Gamble had probably been paying the taxes on Tract 45 since at least 1813, when Anthony was no longer assessed as agent for the heirs of Samuel Bennett. :How were the grantors Samuel's heirs at law"? They were not his children, since he had been assessed as single only sixteen years earlier. Under Pennsylvania intestacy laws at the time, the real estate of a man who died without issue went to his siblings, with his widow receiving a life estate in one-half of the property. If he was unmarried, his land went to his parents (if they survived him) during their lifetimes, then to his siblings or to their issue by representation. The three Bennetts, the Collins’, and James Mason were all roughly the same age, and evidently Samuel's contemporaries, hence they had to have been his siblings, or their spouses. This confirms the assertion in the county history that Anthony and Henry had been brothers. It also agrees with a biographical sketch of Robert B. Collins (1825-1892), which states that his mother, Margaret, "was a daughter of William Bennett and sister of Robert, Anthony and Henry Bennett, who were among the first settlers of North and South Shenango Twp. James Mason's wife Margery had died the previous year, and adding her to the list of siblings explains why Anthony Bennett is referred to as James's brother-in-law in a descendants' account. This Samuel Bennett had thus been the brother of Robert, Anthony, Henry, Margaret, and Margery. Other deeds suggest that there were also two other sisters. :The 1817 deed was not recorded until 1828, after the death of the grantee, Matthew Gamble. Matthew, who had served as Constable of Shenango Twp. (as well as owning a distillery), testified in February of 1822 that he had been assaulted there in the execution of his duties. His exact date of death is unknown, but it occurred by the following January (as a result of his injuries?) Anthony Bennett, and Thomas Elliott, James Mason and Robert McKee served as additional bondsmen. Baldwin and Barlow finally obtained the patent to Tract 45 in 1825, and on 31 October 1827, deeded part of the tract "warranted to Joseph Sherrit" to the unnamed "heirs and legal representatives of Matthew Gamble, late of the township of Shenango, County of Crawford, Pennsylvania, dec'd. The purchase price for this 161 acres was stated to be $300. . . . . ELIZABETH GILLILAN'S [GUILLAND] HEIRS: :On the same day that Baldwin and Barlow conveyed land to Matthew Gamble's heirs, they also deeded an adjoining nine acres from the same 400-acre tract to "Elizabeth Gilliland wife of Hugh Gulliland, of Coniatt twp, of Crawford County, Pennsylvania, late Elizabeth Bennett." The Gillilands lived in that part of Summerhill Twp., which in 1843 became Summit Twp/, but Hugh continued to be taxed on this 9 ½ acres in South Shenango Twp, until his death in 1848. In 1849 and 1850, the 9 ½ acres were assessed to Gilliland, Elizabeth (heirs). Elizabeth was still alive in 1847, when she signed a deed, so evidently she died shortly before or after Hugh. In 1851,"one half of the undivided…nine acres" which had belonged to Elizabeth Gilliland were sold to John Collins by Henry Bennett, Anthony Bennett, and Margaret Collins of North Shenango Twp. Henry, Anthony, and Margaret were thus three of Elizabeth's heirs. As for the other half-interest, four and a half acres purportedly belonging to Elizabeth Gilliland were sold to the same John P. Collins at a tax sale held in 1852. :Only if Elizabeth had died without surviving issue could the three Bennett siblings have been her heirs. Her husband, however, was survived by several children, as shown by deeds acknowledged 25 October 1848 in which "Hugh Gillilands"s heirs" divided up his land in Summit Twp. Consequently, Hugh must have had a previous wife. This leaves open the possibility that Elizabeth had been Matthew Gamble's widow, since Hugh's youngest known child (by that previous wife) was born about the time of Matthew's death. NANCY BRIDGENS'S HEIRS :On the same day in 1827 when Baldwin and Barlow conveyed land to Matthew Gamble's heirs and Elizabeth Gilliland, they sold another adjoining nine acre parcel from Tract 45 to the "heirs or legal representatives of Nancy Bridgen's, dec'd, late Nancy Bennett, of Shenango twp., Crawford County, Pennsylvania." This land was thereafter assessed in the name of Bridgens' Heirs, sometimes with Anthony Bennett as agent. It was finally sold to John P. Collins at the same tax sale at which he bought Elizabeth Gilliland's acreage. :Nothing more concerning Nancy (Bennett) Bridgens has been discovered in Shenango Twp. A Bridgens family reportedly settled in the vicinity of YoungWomanstown, where the Bennetts originated, and a Robert Bridgens's household follows that of William Bennett in the 1790 census returns for Northumberland County. No other Brigden is in fact listed in federal census returns for Pennsylvania from 1790 to 1810. A Robert Brigden, Esq., born at YoungWomanstown in 1796, named his (eldest?) daughter Nancy. Considering William Bennett's advanced age at death, it may be significant that this Robert's biography notes that he "belonged to a family of old settlers, nearly all of whom lived to reach an age far beyond the usual number of years accorded to men." :Nancy Bridgens was thus almost certainly another of the Bennett siblings, married before the others moved to Crawford County. She left descendants, and her heirs were evidently allotted part of the tract settled by Samuel Bennett - of whom they were also heirs - because they had not quit-claimed their interest to Matthew Gamble. Nancy's descendants also account for the other half interest in Elizabeth Gilliland's land: In 1851, Robert Bennett and Margery (Bennett) Mason had living children and other descendants. Henry, Anthony, and Margaret were thus able to convey only a one-half (three-sixths) interest in Elizabeth's estate because their three deceased siblings - Nancy, Robert , and Margery - each had surviving issue, entitled to their respective one-sixth share. THE OTHER CHILDREN :The published Bennett account included three additional, elder sons of William named William (Jr.), James, and John. Their placement here appears to be based solely upon their appearance in tax rolls for Northumberland County to the dating from 1778 and 1785. Finally, we must dispose of William's alleged son Samuel Bennett who died 15 May 1874, late of South Shenango Twp. His tombstone in the South Shenango Cemetery reportedly give his age as 67 years and 4 months, placing the date of his birth in about January of 1807. This is consistent with his age as given in every census: between 30 and 39 in 1840, 45 (or 43? in 1850, 53 in 1860, and 63 in 1870. It also explains why he does not appear on the tax rolls until 1830. His true identity is suggested by the Bennett article, which notes that Robert Bennett (ca 1774-1842) had a son Samuel who was devised part of his father's real estate, and who was mentioned in his brother William's 1854 will. This Samuel is placed in Robert's family between daughters born in 1805 and 1809 - suggesting that he was born in 1807. The 1874 county directory, under South Shenango Twp., notes that Samuel Bennett was occupying his father Robert's land; and indeed, the 1865 county map shows "S. Bennett" in the part of Tract 58 where Robert's farm was located. The Samuel who died in 1874 divided his land between his eldest son Robert and his second son James D. Bennett. When James sold his inheritance in 1876, it was a part of Tract 58 which had been deeded to Robert Bennett. James, in other words, was selling land devised to him in 1874 by his father Samuel, land which Samuel had been devised in 1842 by his father Robert. The Samuel who died in 1874 was thus Robert's and not William's son. Source: "Crawford County Genealogy" (Aug. 1998) p 132-142 :The Crawford Weekly Messenger: 25 March 1812 reported his death having "lately" occurred. He left no probate record identifying his family. :Historical accounts of the Bennett family appear in the "Gazetteer of Townships" section of the 1874 county directory. :Dale Collins sent me this information about Shenango: Crawford Co. erected 1800 with Shenango Twp. In 1830 Shenango split into North and South Shenango. Children of WILLIAM BENNETT and ANN are: #i. JOHN BENNETT. ::Notes for JOHN BENNETT: Single in 1786. A John Bennett ran the first stage line from Franklin to Meadville. It ran weekly; fare was a half a dollar per trip. #ii. WILLIAM BENNETT, b. Abt. 1770. ::Notes for WILLIAM BENNETT: William stayed in Northumberland Co. (Northumberland Co. Letters of Administration Book 5, p. 534 or 543: William A. Bennett, Dec. 6, 1868 to Oct. 4, 1871 for Mary T. Bennett; $5000.) Single in 1786. I think he was most likely to have been the oldest son being named after his father and grandfather. He was probably dead by Nov. 1803 as Anthony not he was administrator of Samuel's estate. As the older brother he would probably have been named the administrator, Anthony and Henry along with a Moses Scott were bondsmen for the estate. May 01, 1778, Taxed Bald Eagle twp. Northumberland Co., PA. 1785, might be the Wm. Single freeman Bedford Co., Archives p 85 #iii. NANCY BENNETT, b. Abt. 1772. #iv. ROBERT S. BENNETT, b. 1773. #v. COL. ANTHONY BENNETT, b. March 30, 1777. #vi. HENRY BENNETT, b. Abt. 1778. #vii. MARGERY BENNETT, b. Abt. 1783. #viii. SAMUEL T. BENNETT, b. January 16, 1783; d. May 15, 1874. ::Notes for SAMUEL T. BENNETT: Owned 400 acres of land in No. Shenago Twp., east of brother Henry's and south of the 400 acres of Henry and Elijah Collins. Original Plots #92. His will is Reg. WB D, p. 458,11 April 1874. Burial: S. Shanango Twp. Cemetery Crawford Co., PA #ix. ELIZABETH BENNETT, b. Abt. 1784; d. Bet. March 23, 1847 - October 1848; m. HIGH GILLILAND, Bef. 1827, Summerhill Twp., Crawford Co., Pa. #x. MARGARET BENNETT, b. June 21, 1787, Bald Eagle Twp., Northumberland, Co., PA. #xi. JAMES BENNETT. ::More About JAMES BENNETT: Not proven a son of William Bennett. Census Records | Vital Records | Family Trees & Communities | Immigration Records | Military Records Directories & Member Lists | Family & Local Histories | Newspapers & Periodicals | Court, Land & Probate | Finding Aids Preferences English

Free-Space PRSmit Research

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This page contains some of the information that [[Smit-1891|Pierre Smit]] gathered over the course of pursuing his hobby of researching his family roots. He started with it while living in Malawi and stopped shortly before his death in 1984. [[Smit-641|Riël Smit]] inherited his files. All of his research was via writing letters, and visiting people and archives. While he had been meticulous in his work, unfortunately he did not always record the source of his information and some of the correspondence has been lost. # [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research Rossouw ancestors] of [[Smit-1891|Pierre Smit]] (maternal side) # [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research-1 Nieuwoudt ancestors] of [[Smit-1891|Pierre Smit]] ] (maternal side) # Letter from [[Smit-7088|Mattie Kirsten]] to [[Smit-1891|Pierre Smit]] with annotations by the latter, 1973, providing information about her Smit and Maritz ancestors and siblings.: #* [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research Front page] #* [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research-1 Page 1]: [[Smit-1819|Christiaan Smit]] and [[Greeff-104|Johanna Greeff]] ([[Smit-7088|Mattie Kirsten]]'s paternal grandparents) and their children. #* Page 2 [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research-2 (top)] [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research-3 (bottom)] : [[Maritz-88|Hendrik Gideon Maritz]] and [[De_Villiers-3675|Gerharda Johanna de Villiers]] ([[Smit-7088|Mattie Kirsten]]'s maternal grandparents) and their children. #* [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research-4 Page 3] [[Smit-1894|Hendrik Zarlus Johannes Smit]] and [[Marits-3|Beatrix Hendrika Maritz]] ([[Smit-7088|Mattie Kirsten]]'s parents) and their children. #* [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/png/Free-Space_PRSmit_Research-5 Page 4]: Siblings of [[Smit-7088|Mattie Kirsten]] and their children.

Free-Space Vaughan-1155

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=== YOU TUBE VIDEOS === '''TMCC Library Open Genealogy Lab Guest Speakers''' https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhcWk1BcihnIj1wCTdNUU4uR-C1TP8uVZ '''Genealogy TV''' https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcvpi8XvOScBogIxmarmADw '''Roots Tech 2023''' https://www.familysearch.org/rootstech/library === GREAT GENERAL SITES === '''Truckee Meadows Research Site''' - go to Student Resources, then to Library, then to Databases, then to ebook collections. For some collections you have to get a new password from Suzanne. https://www.tmcc.edu/ '''DAR - Daughters of the American Revolution Database''' https://services.dar.org/Public/DAR_Research/search/ '''Family Search Wiki''' https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Main_Page '''Library of Congress Digital Collections''' https://www.loc.gov/collections/ '''BLM Land Records''' all states except Texas https://glorecords.blm.gov/default.aspx '''U.S. GenWeb Project''' https://www.usgenweb.org/ '''Google by Using Your Family Tree''' https://www.genealogy-search-help.com/ '''Google Books/Newspapers''' https://news.google.com/newspapers '''Newspapers.com''' https://go.newspapers.com/ '''Allen County Public Library''' Customer ID: 1352025Username: lvrowntree Temporary card number: 2X835575669850 https://acpl.lib.in.us/ FOLD - sign in with Ancestry https://www.fold3.com/search?view=BROWSE&columnStates=!((facetType:general.title.id)) === MAPS === '''My Maps - Google''' https://www.google.com/maps/d/ '''Family Search Migration Routes''' https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/US_Migration_Trails_and_Roads '''United States Digital Map Library''' http://usgwarchives.net/maps/maps.html '''TopoView Maps''' https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/topoview/viewer/#4/39.98/-100.06 '''Map Geeks - Free Maps of Most States''' https://mapgeeks.org/ '''Township and Range search by Description''' 'https://www.earthpoint.us/TownshipsSearchByDescription.aspx ''Alabama Maps - shows changing boundaries''' http://alabamamaps.ua.edu/contemporarymaps/alabama/historical/index.html '''Alabama Maps and Blueprints Collection''' https://digital.archives.alabama.gov/digital/collection/maps '''South Carolina Roots and Recall (maps by county)''' https://www.rootsandrecall.com/blog/buildings/pattern-book-links/ '''South Carolina State Historical Maps''' https://www.sciway.net/hist/maps/mapsstate.html '''Genealogy Trails - the National Site - some states may be "worth it"''' http://genealogytrails.com/ === TEXAS, OUR TEXAS === '''Texas Cattle Drives''' '''http://genealogytrails.com/tex/state/cattledrives.html '''The Portal to Texas History''' https://texashistory.unt.edu/ https://texashistory.unt.edu/explore/collections/GLOHCM/ - Historic Map Section '''Texas State Library and Archives Collection''' https://www.tsl.texas.gov/ '''Texas Gen Project - Although some counties are in need of a volunteer some have great info" http://www.txgenweb.org/tx/txmap.htm '''Texas Escapes''' http://www.texasescapes.com/default.htm '''Genealogy Trails - I have JESSE's bio here''' http://genealogytrails.com/tex/prairieslakes/rains/bios.html '''The Texas General Land Office - you only have to fill in the last name''' https://s3.glo.texas.gov/glo/history/archives/land-grants/index.cfm?sa=z '''Red River Historian - Red River Historian - see blog as well as presentations tabs for AMAZING stories''' https://www.redriverhistorian.com/ '''Warriors of the Lone Star - quirky site has great list of other quirky Texas sites''' http://warriorsofthelonestar.blogspot.com/p/about.html '''Texas Postcards - some good photos''' http://www.txgenweb.org/postcards/ '''Genealogy Trails Texas (not doing so good, but leave no stone unturned)''' http://genealogytrails.com/tex/ ' '''LDS Genealogy - Rains County''' https://ldsgenealogy.com/TX/Rains-County.htm ''Rusk County - Jesse's Bio'' https://www.txrusk.com/bios/rowntreejh.htm '''Texas Digital Archive''' https://tsl.access.preservica.com/ === TENNESSEE === '''TLC Search''' https://tslaindexes.tn.gov/ '''Tennessee Library and Archives''' https://sos.tn.gov/tsla '''TLC Genealogical "Fact Sheets" About Tennessee Counties''' https://sos.tn.gov/tsla/guides/genealogical-fact-sheets-about-tennessee-counties '''TLC for Genealogists''' https://sos.tn.gov/tsla/researchers-genealogists '''Tennesseeans at War''' https://ezproxy.tmcc.edu/login?url=https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=e000xna&AN=759553&site=ehost-live&scope=site '''Tennessee Virtual Archive''' https://teva.contentdm.oclc.org/customizations/global/pages/index.html === OTHER STATES === '''South Carolina Record Search''' (Jesse, James, and Turner) great site https://www.archivesindex.sc.gov/ '''Carolana - this site covers BOTH North and South Carolina. Lots of info, oddly arranged.''' https://www.carolana.com/ '''Georgia Digital Library''' https://gahistoricnewspapers.galileo.usg.edu/ '''Southern Appalachia Digital Collections''' https://southernappalachiandigitalcollections.org/browse/collections '''Louisiana State Library - death, disease, and mournin'''g https://www.crt.state.la.us/louisiana-state-museum/online-exhibits/the-cabildo/antebellum-louisiana-disease-death-and-mourning/index '''North Carolina Ancestral Trackers''' https://www.ancestraltrackers.net/nc/counties.htm '''North Carolina Research Sources''' really not a great site but.... https://www.dncr.nc.gov/programs-services/family-history-genealogy === FAMILIES === '''MONTGOMERY''' '''MONTGOMERY Wiki '''https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/MONTGOMERY '''Difference in JMMM and JMMF''' https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Finley-1796 '''Jesse J. Montgomery''' http://genealogy.montyhistnotes.com/genealogy/familygroup.php?familyID=F12040&tree=MontyHistNotes_II '''CMSI Genealogy Database''' http://clanmontgomery.org/Genealogy/index.php '''MontyHisNotes (both Montgomery and Rowntree)''' http://www.montyhistnotes.com/genealogy/index.php '''FamilyTreeDNA Group Project - Montgomery''' https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/montgomery '''FamilyTreeDNA Group Project J-Z35794 - Montgomery Founder''' https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/j-z35794 '''John Montgomery who died in Red River County''' http://www.montyhistnotes.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I62540&tree=Rountree '''Stewart Rowan Montgomery (brother of Jesse J.?)''' http://genealogy.montyhistnotes.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I15448&tree=MontyHistNotes_II '''John Montgomery and Martha Finley Montgomery or John and Martha Montgomery''' https://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/montgomery/6778/ '''Genealogical Study of Montgomerys''' https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=2E06AAAAMAAJ&pg=GBS.PA52-IA2&%3Bprintsec=frontcover&%3Boutput=reader&%3Bhl=en&%3Bpg=GBS.PA397+***** '''ROWNTREE''' '''ROWNTREE Wiki''' https://www.wikitree.com/genealogy/ROWNTREE '''MontyHisNotes (both Montgomery and Rowntree)''' http://www.montyhistnotes.com/genealogy/index.php '''Bob's Filing Cabinet''' https://genfiles.com/rountree/ '''Richardson Rowntree''' http://www.montyhistnotes.com/MorePages/RichardsonRountree_files/RountreeRichardson_FGS.pdf '''GOOD TO KNOW''' '''Legal Age''' https://genfiles.com/articles/legal-age/ '''Processioning''' https://genfiles.com/articles/processioning/ '''Deeds''' https://genfiles.com/articles/deeds/ '''Naming Patterns''' https://genfiles.com/articles/comments-on-naming-patterns/ === PHOTOS === '''Digital Public Library of America''' https://dp.la/ === GENETICS === '''DNA Portal''' this is pretty worthless now. ADD info like Kassie Knight did. Maybe someday. Auto signin https://www.yourdnaportal.com/user/sign-in '''How to Understand One-to-Many Results on Gedmatch''' https://whoareyoumadeof.com/blog/understand-one-many-results-gedmatch/ NEW CM and Segment Predictor https://dna-sci.com/tools/SegcM/ DNA Painter - Shared cM Project https://dnapainter.com/tools/sharedcmv4 JMMF vs JMMM https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/182342190/person/302451217541/hints?Hints.hintStatus=pending&successSource=Hint&_phtarg=rdu38 Family Tree Help Center (just basic info) https://help.familytreedna.com/hc/en-us?s=family+finder Family Tree Results and Tools https://help.familytreedna.com/hc/en-us?s=family+finder Montgomery Project J-Z35794 ScotClans Project

Fregin Surname Distribution

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==Origin of the Fregin Surname== The Fregin surname is most commonly found in Germany, the highest incidence being found in the Lower Saxony area. It is also commonly found in the United States and Canada, respectively. It has also been found in Poland, Crimea, Israel, India, Scotland, the Netherlands, Australia, and Thailand. ==Distribution== As of 2014 {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" | Place || Incidence ||Ratio || Rank |- | Germany || 360 || 1:1:223,626 || 25,044 |- | United States||168||1:2,157,494||136,287 |- | Canada||48||1:767,616||60,775 |- | Poland||32||1:1,187,773||77,523 |- | Russia||5||1:28,824,611||530,332 |- | Israel||4||1:2,139,408||95,907 |- | India||3||1:255,688,461||1,306,352 |- | Australia||1||1:26,995,701|| 270,794 |- | Netherlands ||1||1:16,887,176||156,465 |- | Scotland||1||1:5,353,817||63,002 |}

Fregins in Germany

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[[Fregien-3|Matthias Fregien (abt.1766-)]]: Born in Prussia in about 1766. He married [[Klatt-258|Christina (Klatt) Fregien (abt.1772-)]] 23 Nov 1794 in Berent, West Prussia. Matthias died date unknown in Prussia. He had 3 children: *[[Fregien-4|Michael Fregien (abt.1796-1802)]] *[[Fregien-5|Anna Catharina Fregien (abt.1798-1803)]] *[[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]] ---- [[Fregien-4|Michael Fregien (abt.1796-1802)]]: Son of [[Fregien-3|Matthias Fregien (abt.1766-)]] and [[Klatt-258|Christina (Klatt) Fregien (abt.1772-)]]. Born about 1796 in Pussia. Michael died young in 1802 at the age of six in Prussia. ---- [[Fregien-5|Anna Catharina Fregien (abt.1798-1803)]]: Daughter of [[Fregien-3|Matthias Fregien (abt.1766-)]] and [[Klatt-258|Christina (Klatt) Fregien (abt.1772-)]]. She was born about 1798 in Berent, West Prussia. Anna died young in 1803 at the age of 5 in Berent. ---- [[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]]: Son of [[Fregien-3|Matthias Fregien (abt.1766-)]] and [[Klatt-258|Christina (Klatt) Fregien (abt.1772-)]]. He was born in Danzig, West Prussia on 26 Sep 1800. He married [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]] on 29 Nov 1818 in Danzig. Gottlieb died on 12 Oct 1854 in Danzing. They had 4 Children: *[[Fregin-36|Louise Fregin (1819-)]] *[[Fregin-37|Henriette Justine Fregin (1828-1850)]] *[[Fregin-35|Carl August Fregin (1831-)]] *[[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] ---- [[Fregin-36|Louise Fregin (1819-)]]: Daughter of [[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]] and [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]]. Louise was 04 Jan 1819 in Danzig, West Prussia. So far, no marriage, children, or death date have been found. ---- [[Fregin-37|Henriette Justine Fregin (1828-1850)]]: Daughter of [[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]] and [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]]. She was born in Danzig, West Prussia on 26 Jul 1828. Henriette died on 09 Jul 1850 in Danzig. So far, no marriage or children have been found. ---- [[Fregin-35|Carl August Fregin (1831-)]]: Son of Daughter of [[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]] and [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]]. He was born in Danzig, West Prussia on 28 Oct 1831. So far, no marriage, children, or death date have been found. ---- [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]]: Son of [[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]] and [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]]. He was born in Berent, West Prussia on 30 Sep 1834. He married [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]] in Berent on 08 Jan 1861. The family immigrated to the US on 01 Aug 1869. They Settled in Canton, Wisconsin. He died in Buffalo County, WI on 20 May 1905. The following children were born in Prussia: *[[Fregin-49|Herman Fregin (abt.1862-abt.1862)]] *[[Fregin-8|Emilie Juliane Auguste (Fregin) Bonewald (1863-1917)]] *[[Fregin-9|Caroline Elizabeth (Fregin) Bahr (1867-1960)]] *[[Fregin-10|Friedrich Wilhelm Fregin (1869-1945)]] ---- [[Fregin-49|Herman Fregin (abt.1862-abt.1862)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]]. He was born in 1862 in Prussia and died young in 1862.

Fregins in The US

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'''Fregins In Wisconsin''' [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]]: Son of [[Fregien-2|Gottlieb (Fregien) Fregin (1800-1854)]] and [[Ortmann-71|Florentine (Ortmann) Fregin (1791-1857)]]. He was born in Berent, West Prussia on 30 Sep 1834. He married [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]] in Berent on 08 Jan 1861. The family immigrated to the US on 01 Aug 1869. They Settled in Canton, Wisconsin. He died in Buffalo County, WI on 20 May 1905. They had the following children: *[[Fregin-49|Herman Fregin (abt.1862-abt.1862)]] (died young) *[[Fregin-8|Emilie Juliane Auguste (Fregin) Bonewald (1863-1917)]] *[[Fregin-9|Caroline Elizabeth (Fregin) Bahr (1867-1960)]] *[[Fregin-10|Friedrich Wilhelm Fregin (1869-1945)]] *[[Fregin-11|Gustave Adolph Fregin (1871-1899)]] *[[Fregine-1|Theodore Julius Fregine (1872-1962)]] *[[Fregin-12|Charles William Fregin (1874-1939)]] *[[Fregin-13|Julius Emil Fregin (1877-1957)]] *[[Fregin-14|Florentine Fregin (1879-1880)]] *[[Fregin-15|Adolph Martin Fregin (1881-1973)]] ---- [[Fregin-8|Emilie Juliane Auguste (Fregin) Bonewald (1863-1917)]]: Daughter of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. She was born on 18 Oct 1863 in Stoffershütte, West Prussia. Her family immigrated to the US on 01 Aug 1869. She married [[Bonewald-1|Fredrick Gottfried Bonewald (1859-1943)]] on 19 Apr 1884 in Albany, WI. She died on 05 Nov 1917 in Fall Creek, WI. They had the following children: *[[Bonewald-2|Carl Frederick William Bonewald (1885-1973)]] *[[Bonewald-3|Magdalena Caroline (Bonewald) Moessner (1887-1972)]] *[[Bonewald-4|Louise Bonewald (1888-1889)]] *[[Bonewald-5|Caroline Bonewald (1888-1889)]] *[[Bonewald-6|Reinhold Elver Bonewald (1890-1967)]] *[[Bonewald-7|Otillie Hulda Bonewald (1892-1938)]] ---- [[Fregin-11|Gustave Adolph Fregin (1871-1899)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. He was born on 15 May 1871 in Wisconsin. He married [[Lange-2241|Emma Henriette Amalie (Lange) Dinnies (abt.1860-abt.1936)]] on 07 Nov 1897 in Wisconsin. He died of a lightning strike while haying on 31 July 1899 in Buffalo County, WI. They had one son: *[[Fregin-17|Edward Adolph Fregin (1898-1967)]] ---- [[Fregine-1|Theodore Julius Fregine (1872-1962)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. He was born on 01 Sep 1872 in Canton, WI. He married [[Mattwig-1|Wilhelmine Augusta (Mattwig) Fregine (1872-1942)]] on 14 May 1891 Dunn County, WI. He died 07 Oct 1962 in Menomonie, WI. They had the following children: *[[Fregin-3|Lillian Elsie Elizabeth (Fregin) Dodge (1899-1993)]] *[[Fregin-4|Arnold George Waldemar Fregin (1901-1968)]] *[[Fregine-2|Herbert Theodore Fregine (1903-1986)]] *[[Fregine-3|William Frederick Fregine (1909-1983)]] ---- '''Fregins In Minnesota''' [[Fregin-9|Caroline Elizabeth (Fregin) Bahr (1867-1960)]]: Daughter of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. She was born on 07 Jan 1867 in West Prussia. Her family immigrated to the US on 01 Aug 1869. She was first married to [[Trapp-400|Albert Julius Trapp (1866-1904)]] on 13 Jan 1895 in Canton, WI. After his death she married [[Bahr-383|Rudolph August Bahr (1878-1955)]] on 14 Nov 1907 in Randall, MN. She had one son: *[[Trapp-401|Albert Julius Friedrich Trapp (1899-1982)]] ---- [[Fregin-10|Friedrich Wilhelm Fregin (1869-1945)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. He was born on 27 Mar 1869 in Stoffershütte, West Prussia. His family immigrated to the US on 01 Aug 1869. He married [[Beck-7786|Christina Maria Magdalena (Beck) Fregin (1871-1951)]] in about 1906 in Wisconsin. He died on 31 Dec 1945 in Randall, MN. He had one daughter: *[[Fregin-16|Rosalina Margaretha Adelheid (Fregin) Rolfs (1911-1998)]] ---- [[Fregin-12|Charles William Fregin (1874-1939)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. He was born on 13 Dec 1874 in Mondovi, WI. He married [[Petrich-67|Emilia Wilhelmina (Petrich) Fregin (1878-1957)]] on 14 Mar 1903 in Dunn County, WI. He died on 27 Nov 1939 in Darling, MN. He had 8 children: *[[Fregin-18|Ernest A Fregin (1904-1959)]] *[[Fregin-19|Ella Elizabeth (Fregin) Swanson (1905-1995)]] *[[Fregin-20|Reinhold Carl Fregin (1908-1996)]] *[[Fregin-21|Elmer Frederick Fregin (1909-1989)]] *[[Fregin-22|Lawrence Martin Fregin (1914-2002)]] *[[Fregin-23|Nelda (Fregin) Kinney (1916-1986)]] *[[Fregin-24|Bernice E (Fregin) Schultz (1918-1976)]] *[[Fregin-25|Esther Wilhelmina (Fregin) Betts (1920-1958)]] ---- [[Fregin-13|Julius Emil Fregin (1877-1957)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. He was born on 06 Mar 1877 in Mondovi, WI. He married [[Petrich-68|Alvina Pauline (Petrich) Fregin (1883-1964)]] on 24 May 1906 in Randall, MN. He died on 20 Dec 1957 in Little Falls, MN. He had 3 children: *[[Fregin-26|Emil Julius Fregin (1908-1972)]] *[[Fregin-27|Frieda Alvina Pauline (Fregin) Kunz (1909-2013)]] *[[Fregin-28|Irma Agatha (Fregin) Hanfler (1915-1988)]] ---- [[Fregin-15|Adolph Martin Fregin (1881-1973)]]: Son of [[Fregin-7|Johann Ferdinand Fregin (1834-1905)]] and [[Knorr-319|Christine Anna Maria (Knorr) Fregin (1834-1915)]]. He was born on 26 Nov 1881 in Mondovi, WI. He married [[Heck-1037|Martha Mathilda (Heck) Fregin (1885-1978)]] on 07 Jun 1906 in Mondovi, WI. He died on 27 Feb 1973 in Little Falls, MN. He had 3 children: *[[Fregin-29|Florence Bertha Emilia (Fregin) Peter (1908-1999)]] *[[Fregin-30|Erwin Julius Rudolph Fregin (1910-1910)]] *[[Fregin-31|Armin Adolph Martin Fregin (1913-1970)]]

Frei Family Bibliography

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The following is a list of works consulted in preparing the Frei Family Tree and recommendations for further reading or reference. ==Key== 1. All United States federal census records cited are population schedules unless otherwise identified. 2. Enumeration districts in U.S. census records are abbreviated e.d. 3. The United States National Archives and Records Administration in Washington D.C. will be shortened to National Archives or NARA. 4. The Family History Library in Salt Lake City is abbreviated as FHL. 5. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is abbreviated as LDS. ==Sources== Jones, Philip. ''Descendants of Henry Straight.'' Information on the Straight and Jones family trees. Compiled 2004, in Oakdale Twp., Monroe Co., WI.

Freiburghaus Name Study Research

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This is the Research Page for the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Freiburghaus_Name_Study Freibughaus Name Study]. === Name origins === The surname Freiburghaus derivates from the small hamlet Freiburghaus in the Swiss municipality of Neuenegg. === Name variations === Today, the surname is written as "Freiburghaus". But in earlier documents, when there were no spelling rules, the surname was also written Fryburghus (as is would be said in Swiss German dialect). === Location origin === According to legend, the surname Freiburghaus comes from the municipality Neuenegg in Canton of Berne, Switzerland (see "Name origins" above). The [https://hls-dhs-dss.ch/famn/index.php "Familiennamenbuch der Schweiz"] lists the surnames with Swiss citizenship in 1962. There, the surname Freiburghaus is listed only for the "Heimatorte" Neuenegg and Mühleberg in whole Switzerland before the year 1800. F. Freiburghaus (see "Research" below) found that the Freiburghaus with Heimatort Mühleberg earlier came from Neuenegg. See also: * Hamlet Freiburghaus in [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freiburghaus Wikipedia (German)] * Neuenegg in Canton Bern, Switzerland in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuenegg Wikipedia (English)] * Mühleberg in Canton Bern, Switzerland in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%BChleberg Wikipedia (English)] If you found Freiburghaus that origin from another location, please add them here. === Distribution of the surname === See distribution of the Freiburghaus surname at [https://forebears.io/surnames/freiburghaus forebears.io]. === Others === ==== Coat of Arms ==== There are 4 coat of arms noted at the Staatsarchiv Bern: * [https://www.query.sta.be.ch/detail.aspx?id=449105 Freiburghaus, Heimatort Rüeggisberg, ca 1479] * [https://www.query.sta.be.ch/detail.aspx?ID=449106 Freiburghaus, Heimatort Mühleberg, 1808] * [https://www.query.sta.be.ch/detail.aspx?ID=449107 Freiburghaus, Heimatort Neuenegg, 1844] * [https://www.query.sta.be.ch/detail.aspx?ID=449108 Freiburghaus, Heimatort Neuenegg, 1803] About coat of arms in Switzerland: in Switzerland, there were and are no laws for family coat of arms, so everyone who wanted could have one. In early 19th century it was common for people working in administration to seal documents with their coat of arms. Because of this, there are many coat of arms that first show up in this time (the years in the list above are the years of sources in which coat of arms was found, eg. as a seal, a "Schliffscheibe" (sort of a small glass to hang on the window or put in as part of a window) or somewhere else). As with any genealogical research in Switzerland, the "Heimatort" needs to be considered and also who exactly was the first person (usually men) who used the coat of arms. Usually only descandants who have this surname are allowed to use the coat of arms. ==== Notables ==== * Freiburghaus, Erwin (1914-1991), see: [https://hls-dhs-dss.ch/de/articles/006298/2005-03-03/ HLS] * Freiburghaus, Jakob (1854-1927), see: [https://hls-dhs-dss.ch/de/articles/004494/2000-12-18/ HLS], [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakob_Freiburghaus Wikipedia (German)] * Freiburghaus, Peter (died 1653), see: [https://hls-dhs-dss.ch/de/articles/018841/2005-03-03/ HLS] See [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freiburghaus_(Begriffskl%C3%A4rung) List of Freiburghaus in Wikipedia (German)] === Research on the Freiburghaus surname === Currently, I'm not doing much research on the Freiburghaus family. But I would like to add more of my Freiburghaus relatives to WikiTree. And I would like to connect the existing profiles of other members to other Freiburghaus relatives. [[Caruso-344|Caruso-344]] 14:25, 24 April 2023 (UTC) F. Freiburghaus researched all Freiburghaus relatives from Neuenegg and Mühleberg in Switzerland. He can be contacted through his website [https://freiburghaus-roots.ch/familienarchiv.shtml freiburghaus-roots.ch]. If you are researching the surname Freiburghaus, feel free to add your research here or contact me. [[Caruso-344|Caruso-344]] 14:25, 24 April 2023 (UTC)

Freimaurer und Aufklärung im Russischen Reich

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* '''Part of [[Space:Heering_Digital_Library | Heering Digital Library]]''' === Wistinghausen, von. H. Freimaurer und Aufklärung im Russischen Reich: Die Revaler Logen 1773–1820. Mit einem biographischen Lexikon. Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar, 2016. === Die Geschichte der Freimaurer in Reval/Tallinn, der Hauptstadt von Estland, das bis zu seiner Gründung als eigener Staat zum Russischen Reich gehörte, wird in diesem Werk erstmals umfassend dargestellt. Da die Logen in Reval organisatorisch Teil der russischen Freimaurerei waren, ist auch ihre Geschichte unter Verwendung bisher unbekannten Archivmaterials behandelt worden. Außer der Logengeschichte im engeren Sinn wird das gesellschaftliche und politische Umfeld, in dem die Revaler Freimaurer in dieser von den Ideen der Aufklärung geprägten Zeit lebten und wirkten, als ein Beitrag zur Landes- und Kulturgeschichte Estlands ausführlich betrachtet. Ein biographisches Lexikon erfasst abschließend über 400 Mitglieder aller vier Revaler Logen, darunter neben zahlreichen Revalensern auch andere Est- und auch Livländer sowie in St. Petersburg lebende Logenbrüder. === Available online at these locations: === * Freimaurer und Aufklärung im Russischen Reich: Die Revaler Logen 1773–1820. ::* https://books.google.ru/books?id=oqIfDAAAQBAJ&source=gbs_navlinks_s

French/Flemish Names Among the European Settlers of Pennsylvania (and Maryland)

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French_Flemish_Names_Among_the_European_Settlers_of_Pennsylvania_and_Maryland.jpg
This is a collection of Wikitree profiles for settlers to Pennsylvania and Maryland with French last names, who lived in the part of the Holy Roman Empire that is now Germany before emigrating to America in the early to mid-1700’s. The hope is that by grouping these people together, maybe clues will emerge regarding the original homelands of the various families, the general time frames for their moves to Germany, the places where they lived there, and their eventual homes in the Middle Colonies. These families were Protestant, primarily Calvinist (Reformed). Some of them came from Artois and Flanders, areas that started to see an exodus to "Germany" as early as the 1540’s, when those places were part of the Spanish Netherlands. Liste von wallonischen Kirchen und Gemeinden (List of Walloon Churches and Parishes) on Wikipedia at https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_von_wallonischen_Kirchen_und_Gemeinden. (See also: [[Space:Netherlands_Seventeen_Provinces|Netherlands Seventeen Provinces & the birth of the Federated Dutch Provinces]]). Note the distinction between the Huguenots and the Protestants of Artois and Flanders - two of the Seventeen Provinces. Artois and the southern portion of Flanders (the area roughly centered around Lille and Douai) were French speaking, but were part of the Spanish Netherlands until they were ceded to France by the Treaty of the Pyrenees in 1659 (and later in some areas). Before then, it was the iconoclastic crisis (Beeldenstorm) of 1565-68 that caused Protestants to flee, most notably because of the prosecutions of the “Council of Troubles” starting in 1567. See Council of Troubles in Wikipedia at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Troubles. Another exodus, beginning in about 1625, occurred when French-speaking Protestants from Flanders were lured by the promises of German rulers such as Friedrich Ludwig (Frederick Louis), Count Palatine of Zweibrücken, and Karl I. Ludwig (Charles I Louis), Elector Palatine, who were eager to rebuild their ravaged territories following the Thirty Years War. Huguenots, on the other hand, were Protestants living in the Kingdom of France, who were persecuted by the Catholic majority there in the 16th and 17th Centuries. (See [[Space:Persecution_of_Huguenots|Persecution of Huguenots]].) The map of French Flanders (including Walloon Flanders) at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Map_of_French_Flanders.png shows the boundary between Artois and Flanders. The towns that were the homelands of some of the people listed below were right on the boundary between the two: Sailly-sur-la-lys, Fleurbaix, Laventie and Lestrem were in Artois (they are the towns in and around the "bump" in the middle of the northern boundary of Artois). The nearby towns of La Gorgue, Erquinghem-lys and Wicres were in Flanders. Also see this map of Walloon Flanders (the six former districts of the chatellenie of Lille) in 1690: https://www.gennpdc.net/lesforums/lofiversion/index.php?t22.html. One of the first, and most successful, colonies in Germany was started by 58 Flemish and Dutch families (many from what is today northwestern France) in Frankenthal in 1562, led by pastor Pieter (Petrus) Dathenus. Beginn einer lebendigen Gemeinde Ankunft hugenottischer Glaubensflüchtlinge in Frankenthal vor 450 Jahren – Gründungsväter der Stadt (Beginning of a vibrant community; Arrival of Huguenot religious refugees in Frankenthal 450 years ago – founding fathers of the city) at http://evpfalz.de/kirchenbote/index.php?id=46&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=764&cHash=0597c9ef94137e899c9db6c979d6650c A description of the community in Frankenthal is also in Schilling, Heinz. Innovation through Migration: The Settlements of Calvinistic Netherlanders in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Central and Western Europe, at https://hssh.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/hssh/article/download/38252/34652/45205 .The names of the first settlers of Frankenthal can be found in two articles from Monatsschrift des Frankenthaler Altertums Vereins (a monthly publication of the Frankenthal Antiquity Association). Die Ersten 300 Burger Frankenthals, aufgenommen 1562-1580 (The First 300 Burgers of Frankenthal, recorded 1562-1580). Monatsschrift des Frankenthaler Altertumsvereines 2. Jahrgang Hildenbrand, Kgl. Gymnasiallehrer: Published by Louis Göhring, Frankenthal. Witzel, Georg. "Beitrage zur Kenntuis der ersten Frankenthaler Burger" ("Contributions to the Knowledge of the first Frankenthaler Burgers"), Monatsschrift des Frankenthaler Altertumsvereines 2. Jahrgang Hildenbrand, Kgl. Gymnasiallehrer:Published by Louis Göhring, Frankenthal. May 1908.The earliest French church books for Frankenthal start in 1569. https://archive.org/details/ldpd_13046493_000/page/n5/mode/2up. Later records start in 1622. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSCV-P9FD-P?i=103&cc=3015626&cat=93148. Records in the Dutch church book start in 1565, and include people who came from towns in today’s northwestern France. https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/61229/images/1123002-00001?pId=12510654. Some ancestral families of the people listed here may have left their homelands starting around 1650, at the end of the Thirty Years War. French-speaking people helped to rebuild Otterberg (although it was a refugee city much earlier, starting in 1581). “…numerous refugee-cities were established toward the end of the seventeenth century for Huguenots and Waldensians. These later examples were modelled on older refugee-cities, some of which dated as far back as the sixteenth century. Among the earliest were Frankenthal (1577 municipal privileges), Otterberg (1581), Freudenstadt (1597), Mannheim (1607), Glückstadt (1616), and Friedrichstadt an der Eider (1620). In total, more than forty refugee-cities were founded, most of them in the Holy Roman Empire. The settlers of these planned cities were extended robust packages of personal, economic, civil, and religious rights. Kaplan, Benjamin J. The Legal Rights of Religious Refugees in the ‘Refugee-Cities’ of Early Modern Germany. https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10043318/1/Kaplan_Legal_Rights_Religious_Refugees.pdf. The French church books begin in Otterberg in 1657. Familysearch at https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G923-MWBW?i=6. Mannheim was also rebuilt, in part, by French-speaking workers, starting in about 1650. “In 1622, during the Thirty Years' War, the city [of Mannheim] and fortress were destroyed. Reconstruction occurred under Prince-Elector Karl I Ludwig, a grandson of the city's founder. Quick completion of the construction was accomplished through an immigration of workers from France, who were specifically drawn to the city by the special privileges offered by the prince-elector, a kind of 17th-century Marshall Plan that turned Mannheim into a successful trading town.” State Palaces and Gardens of Baden-Wuerttemberg at https://www.schloss-mannheim.de/en/interesting-amusing/collections/the-planned-city-of-mannheim The baptism records of the French church of Mannheim start in 1651. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSWN-M9D8-R?i=488&cc=3015626&cat=274438. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSWN-M9DV-Q?cc=3015626&cat=274438. . The French marriage records start in 1652. https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSWN-M98X-F?i=628&cc=3015626&cat=274438. Further south, starting in 1664, Billigheim and surrounding towns were populated by French people from the [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pays_de_l%27Alleu Pays de l’Alleu] (which is made up of the towns of la Gorgue, Laventie, Lestrem, Fleurbaix and Sailly), as well as some of the surrounding towns. “The Pays de l’Alleu was a small district comprising the villages of la Gorgue, Laventie, Lestrem, Fleurbaix and Sailly.” Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London, by Huguenot Society of London, Publication date 1886, p.136. https://archive.org/details/proceedingsofhug1619hugu/page/136/mode/2up. Gumbel, Theodor. Foreign Colony in Billigheim and the Surrounding Area. Published in Geschichtsblatter des Deutschen Hugenotten-Vereins (Historical newsletter of the German Huguenot Association), Magdeburg: Heinrichshofen’ sche Buchhandlung, 1894. Translated by Barbel Johnson, typed and edited by Gary Horlacher, prepared for Kenneth Craft, September 1995) (1894). Translated by: Barbel Johnson (1995). https://www.goancestry.com/forums/topic/17976-the-foreign-colony-in-billigheim-and-the-surrounding-area-by-theodor-gumbel/. See [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pays_de_l%27Alleu map]. (Background: It had been a center for Calvinists going back to before the Beeldenstorm. In 1566, the Pays de L’Alloeu was a land without a lord (or Seigneur) because the bourgeois of Laventie, La Gorgue and Lestrem had purchased their freedom. The Calvinist leaders there met regularly in Laventie in the “Aigle d'Or” (Golden Eagle) tavern. On September 20, 1566, Catholics and Protestants of the area met to try to negotiate terms. As an outcome of the meeting, the Calvinists agreed not to construct temples in Laventie, Richebourg and Sailly; to return churches they were occupying; and to retain only a piece of land in Laventie. Le ruisseau aux iris; blog sur l'histoire d'Escobecques at https://escobecques.wordpress.com/2017/07/28/jean-le-sauvage/.) The French colonies Friedrichstal and Welschneureut, in Baden-Durlach, were founded by people from Billigheim and Mörlheim in 1699-1700. On December 10, 1699, in Carlsburg zu Durlach, the Markgraf Friedrich VII Magnus granted them a “letter of freedom,” in which they received the right to free exercise of religion in French, permanent exemption from serfdom, exemptions from taxes, etc. The founders and first colonists of these new communities included the leader [[Gorenflo-88|Jacques Gorenflo (abt.1655-1710)]], his son-in-law [[Herlan-3|Abraham Herlan (1675-1735)]], and Abraham's brother Isaac Herlan 1678-1770 (father of South Carolina immigrant [[Herlong-41|Jacob Herlong (1717-)]]). Collum, Wolfgang H. Hugenotten in Baden-Durlach. 1974 at https://badische-heimat.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/1974_3_hugenotten.pdf. “Den 25 Febr. 1770 verstarb alhier Isaak Herlang alhiesiger Burger. Er ward gebohren in Billichheim im Churpfalzischen den 6 9bre. 1678 und begraben den 26 Febr. 1770.” Translation: “February 25th. Isaak Herlang died here in 1770 as a local citizen. He was born in Billichheim in Churpfalzische the 6 9bre. 1678 and buried 26 Feb 1770.” Dippo, Cathryn S. Friedrichstal Church Records 1698-1812. Heritage Books. 2005. p. 328. Die Geschichte des Stutenseer Stadtteils Friedrichstal (The history of the Friedrichstal district of Stutensee) in Badische Neueste Nachrichten, at https://bnn.de/karlsruhe/karlsruher-norden/stutensee/die-geschichte-des-stutenseer-stadtteils-friedrichstal A phrase written on a stained glass window in the Walloon church of Mannheim (in 1675) conveys a sense of the many years of journeying, and sometimes multiple homes, of these people: “Je suis voyageur et forain chez toi comme l’ont été tous nos pères” (I am a traveler and a foreigner in your house, as were all our fathers). DeVos, Francis, La colonie wallonne de Frédéricia, 2007, at http://huguenots.picards.free.fr/documents/Fredericia.pdf. For some of them, the journey would end in America. "From the Southern Netherlands to America, the Long Exodus of the Huguenot Flemings and Walloons," by Francis Devos, is a good summary of their wanderings, starting about 1555 (with maps). Devos, Francis, "From The Southern Netherlands to America, The Long Exodus of the Huguenot Flemings and Walloons," at http://huguenots.picards.free.fr/documents/Exodus.pdf. Many of the American families appear to have been affluent in Germany, because they became substantial landowners shortly after arriving in their new homeland. The person listed is the earliest known American immigrant of each nuclear family. If known (or suspected), the name of the earliest ancestor who can be traced to what is now northern France is also noted. People whose families originally came from Alsace are not included, because the goal is to find possible relationships among families from today’s northwestern France (Nord and Pas-de-Calais). I hope people will suggest corrections and additions. [[Beyer-64|Johan Heinrich Beyer (1708-1757)]] - b. Frankenthal, d. Tulpehocken, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. [[Bonnet-62|Jean Jacques Bonnet (abt.1702-abt.1757)]] - b. Rheinland-Pfalz, lived in Friedrichstal, d. Monocacy Valley, Frederick Co., Maryland (probably). [[Bößhaar-11|Johann Georg (Bößhaar) Boshaar (1694-1734)]] - b. Zweibrucken, Pfalz, d. Leacock, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. [[Boudemont-6|Andreas (Boudemont) Putman (1716-1777)]] - b. Rohrbach-Steinweiler, d. Eakles Mills, Washington Co., Maryland. [[Boudemont-7|Philip Boudemont (1711-1792)]] - b. Teuschneureut, near Friedrichstal, d. Frederick Co., Maryland. [[Bouquet-147|Mattheus Bouquet (abt.1727-1794)]] - b. Minfeld, d. Frederick Co., Maryland. His earliest known ancestor was his great grandfather Philippe Bouquet, born about 1615 in Sainghin-en-Weppes, Pays-bas, died 10 May 1687 in Minfeld. [[Crepell-2|Peter Crepell (abt.1725-bef.1791)]] - b. Billigheim or Rohrbach-Steinweiler (probably), d. Frederick Co., Maryland. [[Delong-391|Abraham Delong (abt.1702-abt.1756)]] - b. Magdeburg, d. Lynn Township, Northampton Co., Pennsylvania. His grandfather, [[DeLong-415|Charles DeLong (abt.1645-abt.1708)]] was b. near la Bassee, Pays-bas and d. in Mannheim, Germany. [[Delangh-5|Pyeter Delangh (1707-1760)]] - b. Freisenheim, d. Maxatawny, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. His grandfather, [[DeLong-415|Charles DeLong (abt.1645-abt.1708)]] was b. near la Bassee and d. in Mannheim, Germany. [[DeLattre-2|David (DeLattre) Delauder (abt.1698-bef.1767)]] - b. Schifferstadt, d. Frederick Co., Maryland. His earliest known ancestor was his father, [[DeLattre-1|David DeLattre (abt.1655-1726)]], b. La Bassée, d. Schifferstadt. [[DeTurk-8|Isaac DeTurk (bef.1685-bef.1727)]] – b. Frankenthal, d. Oley, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. [[Du_Bois-265|Leya (du Bois) Ferree (abt.1687-1758)]] – b. New Paltz, Ulster Co., New York, d. Paradise, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. Her father [[Du_Bois-10|Abraham (Du Bois) DuBois (1657-1731)]] was born in Mannheim, her mother [[Deyo-20|Margaret (Deyo) DuBois (abt.1662-1731)]] was born in Calais, France and her husband [[Ferree-9|Philip Ferree Sr. (1686-1753)]] was born in Steinweiler); Her ancestors [[Du_Bois-203|Antoine du Bois (abt.1570-abt.1617)]] and his wife [[Cousin-105|Anne (Cousin) du Bois (abt.1570-aft.1647)]] lived in Wicres (today in Nord, France). [[Du_Chastel-2|Edmond (Du Chastel) Du Castel I (abt.1668-bef.1714)]] - b. Brakel, Duchy of Guelders (maybe), d. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He may have descended from the Du Chastel de Blangerval family, centered around Lille, in northern France. Jacob Dundore (aka Thontheur/Tondeur other), father of [[Dundore-18|Susanna (Dundore) Gerhard (1747-1830)]] and [[Dundore-6|Catharina Elisabeth (Dundore) Schauer (1752-aft.1800)]] - b. Rhine area of Germany, d. Bern, Berks Co. Pennsylvania. [[Ferree-48|Daniel Ferree (1676-1762)]] – b. Landau in der Pfalz, d. Paradise, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. [[Ferree-45|John (Ferree) Fiere Sr. (1685-1769)]] – b. Landau in der Pfalz, d. Strasburg, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. [[Ferree-9|Philip Ferree Sr. (1686-1753)]] – b. Steinweiler, d. Paradise, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. [[Gomber-12|Jean Gomber (1722-1801)]] - b. Steinweiler. d. Frederick, Maryland. [[Gorenflo-63|Georg Adam Gorenflo (1720-1801)]] - b. Spock, d. Hagerstown, Washington County, Maryland. His grandfather [[Gorenflo-88|Jacques Gorenflo (abt.1655-1710)]] probably came from what is today northern France, but not necessarily from the town of Gorenflos 80690 France. [[DeHarcourt-45|Susanna (DeHarcourt) Bertolet (1687-1755)]] – b. Muhlhofen, d. Oley, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. [[Heÿ-235|Johann Carle (Heÿ) Hoy (abt.1710-abt.1780)]] – b. Rohrbach, d. Tulpehocken, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. [[Lebo-26|Johannes Lebo (abt.1680-abt.1759)]] – b. Crupilly, now in Aisne, Hauts-de-France, France, d. Alsace, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. le Dee, Jean – b. Eppstein (near Frankenthal), d. Oley, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. [[Lefevre-333|Abraham Lefevre (abt.1659-abt.1733)]] – b. Eppstein (maybe), d. Skippack, Montgomery Co., Pennsylvania. There is evidence that his father was Theodore Le Fevre (born c. 1625) a grain worker, native of Steger, Vlaenderen (aka Estaires, Flanders, very near the Pays de l'Alleu - see map), who emigrated to Leiden by 1644 and to Frankenthal by 1656. [[LeFevre-1421|Anne Marie (LeFevre) Weimer (1671-1768)]] – b. Mannheim (maybe), d. Oley, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. There is evidence that her father was [[LeFevre-1420|Philippe LeFevre (abt.1640-aft.1705)]] and that Philippe was born in or near Fleurbaix, in the Pays de l’Alleu. More research needed. [[LeFevre-57|Isaac LeFevre (1669-1751)]] – Possibly actually born February 26, 1675 in Mannheim, d.1751 Strasbourg, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. There is evidence that his father was also [[LeFevre-1420|Philippe LeFevre (abt.1640-aft.1705)]]. More research needed. [[Le_Roux-6048|Jonas le Roux (abt.1680-abt.1760)]] - b, Oggersheim (near Mannheim), d. East Lampeter, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. [[Lehman-1475|Peter (Lehman) Leman (abt.1680-1741)]] - b. ?, died East Lampeter, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. He may have been Swiss and his last name may have been Lehman. [[Lesher-51|Nicholaus Lesher (abt.1675-1749)]] – b. Lambsheim, d. Oley, Berks County, Pennsylvania. [[Levan-9|Daniel Levan (1705-1777)]] – b. Amsterdam or Hockenheim (?), d. Maxatawny, Berks County, Pennsylvania. [[Massa-75|Anna Margaretha (Massa) Gebhart (1710-1783)]] - b. Otterberg, d. Berks Co., Pennsylvania. [[Petillion-5|Abraham Petillion (abt.1721-bef.1800)]] - b. Winden, d. Germantown, Philadelphia Co., Pennsylvania. His earliest confirmed ancestor, [[Petilion-4|Andre (Petilion) Petillon (abt.1616-1692)]], was probably from Estaires. [[Petillion-7|Philipp Petillion (1730-abt.1802)]] - b. Winden, d. Londonderry, Dauphin Co., Pennsylvania. His earliest confirmed ancestor, [[Petilion-4|Andre (Petilion) Petillon (abt.1616-1692)]], was probably from Estaires. [[Shuey-80|Daniel Shuey Jr. (1704-1777)]] - b. Oggersheim, d. Bethel, Lancaster Co., Pennsylvania. [[Van_Sintern-24|Isaac Van Sintern (1662-1737)]] - b. Altona, near Hamburg (probably), d. Skippack, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. One of his maternal great grandfathers, [[De_Vos-782|Jan de Vos (abt.1520-abt.1630)]], was the burgermeister (mayor) of Hondschoote (today in Nord, France); his other maternal great grandfather, [[Van_Meres-1|Michael van Meres (abt.1555-abt.1610)]], was the burgermeister of Bailleul (today also in Nord, France). [[Warenbuer-1|Marie Warenbuer (abt.1653-bef.1716)]] - b. Laventie, Pays de l'Alleu (possibly), d. Chester County, Pennsylvania. [[Weimer-59|Catherine (Weimer) Levan (1706-1768)]] - b. Muhlhofen or Oggersheim, d. Oley, Berks Co., Pennsylvania. == Sources == See also: *Hugenotten in der Pfalz. Herausgegeben von Helmut Kimmei unter Mitarbeit von Wilhelm Beuleke, Friedrich Binder, Heinrich Eyselein, Alfred H. Kuby, Anna Maus, Franz Rink, Theo Schaller und Heinrich Schwarz, at https://slaegtsbibliotek.dk/921010.pdf *Peters, John. A Family from Flanders. Collins. 1985.

French / Adams Research

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=== Related Profiles === *[[Adams-253|John Adams]], maternal grandfather of Steven French *[[Stone-83|Agnes Stone]], maternal grandmother of Steven French *[[French-41|Richard French (abt.1573-)]] *[[Adams-256|Mary (Adams) French (abt.1579-aft.1603)]], his first wife (will become Lucy) **[[French-333|Steven French (bef.1600-bef.1679)]] (PGM) ***[[Unknown-197391|Mary (Unknown) French (abt.1605-1655)]] Steven's wife **[[French-332|John French (1599-)]] **[[French-330|Mary (French) Randall (abt.1603-bef.1691)]] ***[[Randall-404|Robert Randall (abt.1608-1691)]] Mary's husband *[[Sale-19|Edward Sale Jr (1609-bef.1692)]] *?? [[Unknown-210611|Margaret (Unknown) Sale (abt.1609-abt.1664)]], Edward's wife. *[[Rogers-70|Deacon John Rogers (1614-1661)]] of Weymouth *[[Unknown-408222|Judith (Unknown) Rogers (abt.1615-1661)]] Deacon John's wife **[[Rogers-1757|Mary (Rogers) Raines (1637-1661)]] their daughter **[[Rogers-1758|John Rogers Jr. (1638-1709)]] their son Profiles to be created: :Richard's brother William, wife Johan and 4 children from William's will === Progress to date === *Added all of Richard French's children, baptisms sourced with Ancestry's Misterton church registers. [[Madison-125|Madison-125]] 05:00, 18 August 2023 (UTC) *"Mary Adams" now refashioned into Lucy Adams, and a merge proposed [[Adams-328|Judith Lucy Adams (1579-1605)]] into [[Adams-256|Lucy (Adams) French (abt.1574-aft.1603)]] to remove imaginary "Judith Lucy". [[Madison-125|Madison-125]] 03:55, 19 August 2023 (UTC) Need to remove PPP after merge is complete. *[[French-16245|Jacob French]] complete. Arrival estimate based on first land record. Is there an earlier record? (None found using AmericanAncestors databases.) [[Madison-125|Madison-125]] 03:33, 25 August 2023 (UTC) * Richard's 2nd wife's profile created [[Tomsin-2|Alice (Tomsin) French (abt.1580-bef.1628)]] * Steven French profile updated. [[Madison-125|Madison-125]] 03:46, 2 September 2023 (UTC) * Mother Lucy [was Judith Lucy or Mary] (Adams) French merged & updated. [[Madison-125|Madison-125]] 03:46, 2 September 2023 (UTC) *Richard French's profile updated. [[Madison-125|Madison-125]] 03:47, 2 September 2023 (UTC) === Richard French & wives & children === Richard French was born "say" 1569 (based on the estimated year of his first marriage) and was buried in either Misterton"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9S-9DLR : 25 February 2022), Richard French, 1638. Cites Somerset Archives reference: D/P/MIS 2/1/1. (his residence) or adjacent Crewkerne, Somerset, England"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D99-FK5X : 25 February 2022), Richard Frenche, 1638. on 30 or 31 May 1638. A burial was recorded in both parishes. He first married about 1594 (first known child, John, was baptized 7 June 1595 [not 1599]) in Misterton (where all eight of Richard's known children were christened), Lucy Adams, born "say" 1574 (again based on the estimated marriage year) and buried in either Misterton or Crewkerne 29 March 1605 (“Luce, wife of Richard French”)."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9S-37CD : 25 February 2022), Luce Frenche, 1605. About four months after Lucy's death, Richard French married in Misterton 2 (banns?) or 14 August 1605,"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6DMG-CZW1 : 10 August 2022), Richard Frenche, 1605. Spouse's Name: ___ Tomson. Cites Somerset Archives Reference: D/P/MIS 2/1/1. as his second wife, Alice Thompson ("Tomson"), who was buried in Crewkerne 1 December 1628 ("wife of Richard French")."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D99-L6GX : 25 February 2022), Alice Frenche, 1628, Wife of Richard Frenche. Among their children was Mary French, baptized Misterton 26 December 1611; it was she who married Robert Randall about 1641 (not before 1640, as now stated at Randall-404) and died in Weymouth, Mass., after 17 March 1678/9 (when named in brother Stephen's will as "my sister Mary Randal") and before 27 March 1691 (when her husband's will failed to mention her). The will of John Adams of Barton [St.] David, Somersetshire, dated 19 March 1603/4, bequeathed 20s. to be divided equally among John French [bp. 7 June 1595], Stephen French [bp. 26 Dec. 1600], and "Mary" [_recte_ Margery] French [bp. 18 May 1603], children of Richard French of Misterton. The relationship to the testator is not stated, nor is the name of Richard French's wife, but it is assumed that French was John Adams’s son-in-law. J. Gardner Bartlett's Adams genealogy was consequently able to identify their mother only as “a daughter” of John and Agnes (Stone?) Adams and wife of Richard French (Bartlett, _Henry Adams of Somersetshire, England, and Braintree, Mass._ [New York, 1927], 41, 46). That her forename was Lucy is revealed in her burial record. === Wills & Probate === The will of '''Richard French''' of Misterton: [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSH6-QQWX-D?i=81&cat=1212414 Probate records for manors in the Archdeaconry of Taunton, Richard French, husbandman, Misterton 2 ...mber, 1638] ... Last will and ... Richard French of Mistert.. ... the second day of ...mber [1638 calendar] ... ... of body but ... ... ... and my body... ... I give unto '''Samuel ffrench''' my grandchild my best brass ... ....... my ... and [Seven?] pounde of [?currant English money?] ... shall remaine in my son .... Item. I give unto''' John ffrench''' my grand child ffower pound of currant English money and ... pewter ... best [potensen?] & one ... ... and my ... ... ... Item. I give unto '''Hester ffrench''' my grand childe ffower pound of currant English money and ... two pairs of lennen sheets and one brasse pan two pl..e [plate?] of pewter with all ... ...st pewter dishes and salts & pewter cupps. Item. All the rest of my goods & chattells moveable & unmoveable I give & bequeath unto '''John French''' my son whome I make my full & whole executor of this my last will & testament. Item my will is that all those goods and moneys which I have given unto my Grandchildren before mentioned shall remaine in the use and custodyie come to be of the age of one & twenty yeares in the presans of us - William [?]man Richard ffrench [his + mark] [?] Mason The will of one''' William French of Misterton,''' husbandman, in 1610 mentions his brother Richard French of Misterton (as owing his estate a small sum). There's also a Tomson mentioned. 1610 ... '''William Frenche''' of Mistertonne in Somerset... husbandman, [https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/864870:5111?tid=&pid=&queryId=9991aa269bfa27477453a0b6b6f152ca&_phsrc=ZHP25802&_phstart=successSource England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384-1858 for Willmi Frenche, PROB 11: Will Registers 1599-1623; Piece 116: Wingfield, Quire Numbers 57-110 (1610)] I give unto the church of Misterton the somme of 3s 4p. To the poore of the parish 3s 4p. It. to my fower children that is to saye To my daughter Agnes Frenche : to my sonne John Frenche to my daughter Grace and to my sonne William Frenche borne of the body of my wife Johane ffrenche the somme of 11 pounds a peece.... Item. I give unto eache of my three godchildren (unnamed) wife Johane Frenche named as sole executrix. Debts listed [next page] One from Tristram Lanley £3. From my brother Richard French of Misterton 19s 4p. From [Chubb?] Bragg 40s. From Cuthbert Tomson of Kingston 46s 8p. From John ?? of Misterton 7s 10p. From Roger Turner 4s. From William Barnett of Croscombe 45s 8p. Witnesses Richard Baylie clerke, John Norris william Norris Richard Frenche Chubb Bragg. Probably the same William French who was buried Misterton in 1610."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9S-QV2S : 25 February 2022), Willielmus French, 1610. '''Robert Randall’s''' will, which fails to mention his wife (thus providing the latter end of the date range of '''Mary (French) Randall’s''' death), is recorded in Suffolk County Probate, 8(new series):41–42 [FHL 594175]; it is abstracted in William L. Chaffin, A Biographical History of Robert Randall and His Descendants 1608–1909 (New York, 1909), 4. That Mary French married Robert Randall about 1641 and not “before 1640” is a based on the Weymouth burial of Robert’s first wife, Mary _____, 3 (7) [September] 1640 (“Early Records of Boston,” NEHGR 8[1854]:345 [“wife of Robt Randall”]; these records include those submitted to Boston by the various Bay Colony towns). === Land, Deeds & Grants === ==== Land & property ==== ''''Stephen French:''' *1632/3, 16 Jan: Granted 16 acre Great Lot at Dorchester [DTR 1] [Register, 21: 166, 276]Chamberlain, George Walter, ''History of Weymouth, Mass.,'' 4 vols. ([Boston: Wright & Potter], 1923), [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b000844550&seq=238 Vol. 3, pages 234-5.] *1634, 01 Dec: Granted 8 acre Great Lot at Dorchester [DTR 9] *xxxx: Granted Lot #13, 4 acres in meadow beyond Naponset [DTR 321] *1636: Grant at Weymouth, 21 acresChamberlain, George Walter, ''History of Weymouth, Mass.,'' 4 vols. ([Boston: Wright & Potter], 1923), [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.c065188950&seq=206&q1=French Vol. 1:199-204]. *ca. 1643: In an inventory of Weymouth land, he held 3 parcels: 10 acres in East Field (grant); 14 acres in Great Lots (first given to John Upham); 3 acres marsh (first given to John Upham) [Weym Hist 1:196-7]. *1658, 13 Nov: Bought of Hugh Roe of Weymouth, currier, and wife, 12 acres of upland in Weymouth by John Guppy's land [SLR 13:242-3] *1671, 11 Dec: Bought of John Tower Sr. of Hingham, planter, and his wife Margaret, 3 lots of land in Hingham, 6 acres per lot [SLR 13:300-01 *1875, 18 Nov: Stephen French, Sr., of Weymouth, yeoman sold a parcel of land at Boston of 100x20 feet, (bounded by the sea and Robert Marshall) to Roger Rose of Boston [SLR 10:260-61] *1678, 31 May: Bought Samuel Torrey's interest in a parcel of swamp at Great Swamp, 3 acres. [SLR 13:303] *1685, May: Other deeds between Stephen French and his Weymouth neighbors were brought to Boston and recorded, most did not specify Jr. or Sr., but were executed during Stephen Sr.'s lifetime. Some, not designated as "Sr." may pertain to him. [SLR 13:294 to Sam Torrey 1685, Weymouth Highway 15 acres.] '''Jacob French''' in Weymouth, 03 Feb 1651, great lots ordered to be laid out, rec'd 27 acres; 1663 rec'd 4 acres in lot 45, and 12 in lot 45.Chamberlain, George Walter, ''History of Weymouth, Mass.,'' 4 vols. ([Boston: Wright & Potter], 1923), [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.c065188950&seq=208&q1=French Vol. 1:200]. === Public offices held === Anderson notes that '''Stephen French's''' public career is unusual. "In a two-year period from early 1637 to early 1639 he was entrusted by the town of Weymouth with a number of offices representing the town at the colony level, and then these honors were abruptly cut off, so that for the last forty years of his life he was almost invisible in the public records. Perhaps he was involved in scandal; perhaps he did not represent his town well. No evidence survives to explain this truncated career; but his son did reverse the family fortunes with a vengeance, and amassed both land and titles beyond most of his contemporaries." *Weymouth Fenceviewer Feb 1645/6 [WeyTR 1:14] *Deputy for Weymouth to General Court, 12 Mar 1637/8,Shurtleff, ''MBCR'' [https://archive.org/details/cu31924026109789/page/220/mode/1up?q=french Vol. 1:220]. 6 Sep 1638,Shurtleff, ''MBCR'' [https://archive.org/details/cu31924026109789/page/235/mode/1up Vol. 1:235]. 13 Mar 1638/9/Shurtleff, ''MBCR''[https://archive.org/details/cu31924026109789/page/250/mode/1up Vol 1:250] *Commissioner to end small causes at Weymouth, 06 Sep 1638Shurtleff, ''MBCR'' [https://archive.org/details/cu31924026109789/page/239/mode/1up Vol. 1:239]. *One of three Weymouth members on Colony committee to value livestock, 13 May 1640 Shurtleff, ''MBCR'' [https://archive.org/details/cu31924026109789/page/295/mode/1up Vol. 1:295.] === Vital Records === Children of '''Richard French at Misterton''': #John Frenche, bp. 07 Jun 1595"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-7SQ6 : 25 February 2022), John Frenche, 1595, Father Rychard Frenche. #Margery French, bp. 28 July 1600,"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, {{FamilySearch|6D9X-1MPJ}} (25 February 2022), Margerye Frenche, 1600.[https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/3331303:60856?_phsrc=Tnb16&_phstart=successSource&gsln=French&ml_rpos=47&queryId=f9e807b2cb919b2dba26485b81756071&lang=en-US Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812, Misterton 1558-1761, image 57 of 178] "Mary" [_recte_ Margerye] bur. 27 Jun 1620 Misterton."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D99-LLVM : 25 February 2022), Margeria French, 1620. "Filia Rici French." #A male child, bp. 26 Dec 1600."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-SB9B : 25 February 2022), Frenche, 1600.[https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/3331303:60856?_phsrc=Tnb16&_phstart=successSource&gsln=French&ml_rpos=47&queryId=f9e807b2cb919b2dba26485b81756071&lang=en-US Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1531-1812, Misterton 1558-1761, image 57 of 178] #Margerie Frenche, bp. 18 May 1603;"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9X-B472 : 25 February 2022), Margerie Frenche, 1603, Father's name: Richard Frenche. bur.17 Jun 1623 Misterton, dau. of Richard."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D99-YR9K : 25 February 2022), Margerie French, 1623. "Filia Richardi French." #Judithe Frenche, bp. Feb 1605."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9J-NXPJ : 25 February 2022), Judithe Frenche, 1605, Father's name: Richard Frenche. #Hugo French, bp. 26 Mar 1608."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-7D46 : 25 February 2022), Hugo French, 1608, Father's name: Richardi French. #Mary/Marie French, bp. 26 Dec 1611."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-DLGL : 25 February 2022), Mary French, 1611, Father's name: Richard French."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-9NXK : 25 February 2022), Marie French, 1611, father's name: Richi French. #Jacob French, bp. 22 Aug 1615"England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-QCLT : 25 February 2022), Jacob French, 1615, Father's Name: Richi French. Misc: *Alcie French, wife of Richard, bur. 01 Dec 1628 Misterton."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9S-Q47K : 25 February 2022), Alcie French, 1628. *Widow Joane French, bur. 1627 Misterton."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9S-3YQ6 : 25 February 2022), Joane French, 1627. *Agneta French, bur. 02 Sep 1621 Misterton."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9S-3792 : 25 February 2022), Agneta French, 1621. *Margerie French, dau. of Richardi French, bur. 17 Jun 1623 Misterton."England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D99-YR9K : 25 February 2022), Margerie French, 1623. === Other profile updates: === [[Sale-19|Edward Sealle/Sale]] of Weymouth (see research notes): *[https://www.americanancestors.org/DB397/i/12124/141/147525891 GM 2:6:141-5] *[https://archive.org/details/newenglandhistor65wate/page/65/mode/1up NEHGR 65(1911):65] Children & grandchildren of Stephen(2) French: See Chamberlain. Robert Randall’s will, which fails to mention his wife (thus providing the latter end of the date range of Mary (French) Randall’s death), is recorded in Suffolk County Probate, 8(new series):41–42 [FHL 594175]; it is abstracted in William L. Chaffin, A Biographical History of Robert Randall and His Descendants 1608–1909 (New York, 1909), 4. That Mary French married Robert Randall about 1641 and not “before 1640” is a based on the Weymouth burial of Robert’s first wife, Mary _____, 3 (7) [September] 1640 (“Early Records of Boston,” NEHGR 8[1854]:345 [“wife of Robt Randall”]; these records include those submitted to Boston by the various Bay Colony towns). Updates to Mary (French) Randall: Reg. 46:187, 63:98; Weymouth 4:559; Bridgewater 107 == Research notes == *Is there an additional sister to be identified? His will mentions his 'brother Searle,' probably [[Sale-19|Edward S(e)ale]] who had a wife [[Unknown-210611|Margaret Unknown]]. Regarding records in Crewkerne vs. Misterton: these parish churches are only 1.5 miles apart. *[[Sale-19|Edward Sealle/Sale]] and relatives in the will of Christopher Gibson of Boston.French, Elizabeth, "Genealogical Research in England," ''NEHGR'' Vol. 65(1911)63-67, [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/i/11647/63/23502108 (Link on AmericanAncestors.org)] and on [https://archive.org/details/newenglandhistor65wate/page/63/mode/1up Archive.org]. === Research Questions === ==== Needs from English records ==== *A purported will in 1638 of Richard French. Anderson cites "Abstract of Taunton Archdeaconry Court Wills," by H. R. Phipps [Phipps, Henry Ramsay], 1937. 125* 1638, Richard, Misterton Calendar of Wills in Bundles 1597-1799. (Asterisk denotes that the Will is not now in existence, though the name appears in the old Caledars.) 85* 1621 Agnes, Misterton (Asterisk denotes that the Will is not now in existence, though the name appears in the old Caledars.) 1592, Vol. 8 Fol. 1835 William, Misterton Will in Registers 1537-1593. Resolved. Will located. *A Calendar of Wills & Administrations, printed in 1912 by the British Record Society, (Calendar of wills and administrations in the court of the Archdeacon of Taunton : parts I and II, wills only, 1537-1799) states the will was not in existence. What is the source for Phipps's Abstract in 1937? Resolved. Will located. *Does this record have no given name, or is it illegible? ("England, Somerset, Church Records, 1501-1999", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6D9F-SB9B : 25 February 2022), Frenche, 1600.) Resolved! "Steeven". == Sources == :See also: *Chamberlain, George Walter, ''History of Weymouth, Mass.,'' 4 vols. ([Boston: Wright & Potter], 1923), [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.c065188950&seq=206&q1=French Vol. 1:199], [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b000844550&seq=238 Vol. 3, pages 234-5.] *"Early Records of Boston, Weymouth Deaths," ''NEHGR'' [https://archive.org/details/newenglandhistor1218unse/page/350/mode/1up?q=french Vol. 12(1847):350] (Deaths of Stephen's wife Mary, son Sia.) *Weymouth historical society, "Weymouth in its First Twenty Years, a Paper Read before the Society November, 1882 by Gilbert Nash," ''Weymouth Historical Society Publication #3'', 1905, [https://archive.org/details/publications00massgoog/page/n103/mode/1up page 98. (Link on Archive.org)]. * Barclay, Mrs. John E., "Samuel French and Wife Silence Torrey," ''The American Genealogist,'' [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB283/i/11883/23/134811520 Vol. 25(1949):25- (Link on AmericanAncestors.org by $ubscription.)] *Farnam, Charles Henry, ''History of the Descendants of John Whitman of Weymouth, Mass.'' (New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, 1889) [https://archive.org/details/historyofdescenda00farn/page/n42/mode/1up page 25]. (Details desc. of Capt. Stephen French who m. Hannah Whitman 1660 and had 5 ch. - unsourced) *Bixby, A. B., ''Genealogical Lines of Salome E. Bixby Ross...'' (Poultney, Vt., 1902), [https://archive.org/details/genealogicalline00bixb/page/n43/mode/2up French Line - No. 38.] (Unsourced; says John French b. 1612 England, d. 6 Aug 1692 Braintree was son of Stephen. Mar. Grace who d. 26 Feb 1680 at Braintree. John moved from Weymouth to Braintree 1638, name on a petition to court to beg. settlement at Shawmut 1645, and was a grantor of Braintree, 1638.) ((( Barclay's article covers 3 generations Stephen(1), (2), (3) and brother Samuel, which were the grandson's mentioned in Stephen(2)'s will. Covers a nephew/uncle pair named Samuel who m. Silence Torrey. :Additional research: *British History online, [https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol4/pp62-68 Parishes: Misterton] *[https://somerset-cat.swheritage.org.uk/search/all:records/0_50/all/score_desc/Misterton%20French SOUTH WEST HERITAGE TRUST: Somerset Archive Catalogue, Misterton]

FRENCH ARIST

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Ackerman-1207|Karen Knight]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12125532 send me a private message]. Thanks!

French Canadian Lumberjacks

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Between 1860 and 1870, Chippewa Falls Wisconsin grew from 674 to 2,507; a population gain seven times the rate of the state at large. Why? Jobs, largely. The city of Chippewa Falls was platted as a milling center which at its peak included the world's largest sawmill under one roof, finished 1887 at the junction of Chippewa River and Duncan Creek.The lumber businesses were launched by Voyageurs, the French Canadians previously in the fur trade. The rough and ready demands of logging forests and guiding logs down the river were a good match for their skills. Many of their countrymen who emigrated to the area readily joined, since the language was their own. The native Chippewa also worked there; they had supported the French in wars so they often shared language. When Nazaire Lachance's family arrived in 1868 he and his brothers worked as lumberjacks and he continued as a 'woodman' after his marriage to Marie-Zoe Barnier in March 1883 at Notre Dame Catholic Church. His nephew, Charles Victor, worked at the Chippewa Lumber and Boom Co in 1887 in Chippewa Falls, Wi. It was a logging and sawmill company started by Jean Brunet in 1836. Lachance listed in the city directory in 1887-1888: Charles, his sons Charles and Eugene are here. Charles Lachance3 lives at 11 N State and he's a laborer. Charles Victor 4 works for the Chippewa Lumber & Boom company, a sawmill and logging business and he boards at 424 Church. Eugene is a clerk and boards at the Railroad Hotel. Charles3's brother Nazaire is a farmer and lives at 112 S State. Joseph also boards at 424 Church. Maybe this is brother Joseph Jude? James Lachance is a woodman who boards at 24 Bay--don't know who this is. == Sources == Lucy Rhodes, Elizabeth McBride, Anita Matcha "Walking Tours of Wisconsin's Historic Towns" [Link] [https://books.google.com/books?id=Lgk4cOQitHYC&lpg=PA23&ots=gFtHV2R7Hm&dq=french%20canadian%20lumberjack%20in%20chippewa%20falls%2C%20wi&pg=PA23#v=onepage&q=french%20canadian%20lumberjack%20in%20chippewa%20falls,%20wi&f=false] *Randall, Thomas E "History of Chippewa Valley" 1875[ Link]http://wigenweb.org/barron/communities/hoc.pdf

French Canadian Roots

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Forcey-58|Roberta Forcey]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Jacques Forcier born 1791. Looking for spouse name. Rosetta Rasche spouse married in 1848 with one son Bazile. Possibly married previous? Born in Sorel, Richelieu, Quebec, Canada. * *Guillaume Forcier born 1623 married to Sebasetienne Gaultier. No information on parents of Guillaume. Born in St Aubin, France. Also looking for information on Maxime Olive born 1840 in New York, NY ancestors. Married to Lizzie Suprin (no known ancestors) or birthdate. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=17705774 send me a private message]. Thanks!

French Cochoit-Rondot Sources and Notes

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:Résultats de la recherche :Recherche de : :cochoit est le patronyme de la personne intéressée :Actes de naissances, décès, mariages, types divers :84 actes trouvés : Type Date Intéressé(e) Commune/Paroisse :1. Mariage 09/07/1670 ROBARDEY Jacque x COCHOIT Barbe Saulx :2. Naissance 25/07/1686 COCHOIT Jean Claude Mollans :3. Naissance 17/07/1687 COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Mollans :4. Naissance 14/01/1690 COCHOIT Jean Pierre Mollans :5. Naissance 24/02/1730 COCHOIT Nicolas Mollans :6. Naissance 18/01/1733 COCHOIT Jeanne Francoise Mollans :7. Naissance 09/03/1733 COCHOIT Jean Ou Jeanne Mollans :8. Naissance 01/11/1734 COCHOIT Jeanne Francoise Mollans :9. Naissance 05/08/1735 COCHOIT Pierre Francois Mollans :10. Naissance 03/10/1735 COCHOIT Jean Mollans :11. Naissance 18/11/1736 COCHOIT Jean Baptiste Mollans :12. Naissance 18/07/1737 COCHOIT Jeanne Marguerite Mollans :13. Naissance 13/01/1739 COCHOIT Jean Pierre Mollans :14. Naissance 16/06/1739 COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Mollans :15. Mariage 27/01/1761 BRESSON Etienne x COCHOIT Marguerite Mollans :16. Mariage 07/12/1772 BURTEY Jean Nicolas x COCHOIT Jeanne Mollans :17. Mariage 22/02/1773 FAVERET François x COCHOIT Jeanne Baptiste Mollans :18. Mariage 26/03/1796 CARDINAUX François x COCHOIT Jeanne Genevreuille :19. Promesse de Mariage 27/01/1800 GENTY Bonaventure x COCHOIT Jeanne Baptiste Genevreuille :20. Mariage 30/01/1800 GENTY Bonaventure x COCHOIT Jeanne Baptiste Genevreuille :21. Naissance 23/02/1806 COCHOIT Claude François Genevreuille :22. Mariage 06/04/1807 COCHOIT Claude François x VIGNERON Françoise Genevreuille :23. Naissance 07/04/1808 COCHOIT Bénigne Genevreuille :24. Naissance 05/11/1808 COCHOIT Jeanne Françoise Genevreuille :25. Décès 15/09/1809 COCHOIT Bénigne Genevreuille :26. Naissance 08/11/1809 COCHOIT Françoise Genevreuille :27. Mariage 04/02/1811 LOYEZ Etienne x COCHOIT Jeann Baptiste Genevreuille :28. Naissance 05/07/1811 COCHOIT Nicolas Genevreuille :29. Décès 17/06/1812 COCHOIT Etienne Genevreuille :30. Naissance 12/08/1813 COCHOIT Marguerite Genevreuille :31. Naissance 17/02/1814 COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Genevreuille :32. Décès 19/05/1814 COCHOIT Jean Claude Genevreuille :33. Décès 25/08/1814 COCHOIT Jeanne Baptiste Genevreuille :34. Rectification décès 19/05/1816 COCHOIT Françoise x CAGNET Jean Claude Et Françoise Genevreuille :35. Naissance 10/01/1818 COCHOIT Anne Louise Genevreuille :36. Décès 02/03/1819 COCHOIT Françoise Genevreuille :37. Naissance 31/08/1820 COCHOIT Jeanne Françoise Genevreuille :38. Décès 25/12/1821 COCHOIT Jean Pierre Genevreuille :39. Naissance 28/01/1823 COCHOIT Françoise Mélanie Genevreuille :40. Naissance 02/11/1826 COCHOIT Joseph Genevreuille :41. Mariage 22/04/1828 BONVALOT Louis x COCHOIT Françoise Genevreuille :42. Mariage 19/01/1830 COCHOIT Claude François x GIRARDOT Marguerite Genevreuille :43. Naissance 17/10/1830 COCHOIT Marguerite Clariche Genevreuille :44. Décès 01/10/1831 COCHOIT Marguerite Genevreuille :45. Naissance 07/11/1831 COCHOIT Mélanie Adèle Genevreuille :46. Décès 09/02/1832 COCHOIT Marguerite Clarisse Genevreuille :47. Naissance 16/02/1834 COCHOIT Françoise Julie Genevreuille :48. Mariage 01/07/1834 CAGNET Claude Joseph Adolphe x COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Genevreuille :49. Mariage 17/05/1836 COCHOIT Nicolas x LONIER Anne Louise Genevreuille :50. Naissance 31/08/1836 COCHOIT François Honoré Genevreuille :51. Naissance 31/08/1837 COCHOIT Joseph Théodore Genevreuille :52. Décès 24/11/1837 COCHOIT Joseph Théodore Genevreuille :53. Mariage 06/01/1838 MONIN François x COCHOIT Anne Louise Genevreuille :54. Naissance 11/11/1838 COCHOIT Pierre Paul Genevreuille :55. Décès 25/11/1839 COCHOIT François Honoré Genevreuille :56. Naissance 07/04/1840 COCHOIT Marie Mélanie Genevreuille :57. Naissance 22/10/1841 COCHOIT Jean Claude Ferdinand Genevreuille :58. Mariage 08/11/1841 JEANMOUGIN Pierre x COCHOIT Jeanne Françoise Genevreuille :59. Décès 18/04/1843 COCHOIT Jean Claude Ferdinand Genevreuille :60. Naissance 02/07/1843 COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Genevreuille :61. Naissance 31/05/1844 COCHOIT Claude Auguste Genevreuille :62. Décès 25/12/1844 COCHOIT Claude Auguste Genevreuille :63. Naissance 20/08/1845 COCHOIT Marie Emilie Genevreuille :64. Décès 12/04/1846 COCHOIT Claude François Genevreuille :65. Décès 01/02/1848 COCHOIT Marie Emilie Genevreuille :66. Naissance 21/05/1848 COCHOIT Pierre Charles Genevreuille :67. Mariage 13/06/1848 JEANMOUGIN Gabriel x COCHOIT Françoise Mélanie Genevreuille :68. Décès 12/09/1848 COCHOIT Claude François Genevreuille :69. Décès 11/10/1850 COCHOIT Jeanne Genevreuille :70. Naissance 17/11/1850 COCHOIT François Eugène Genevreuille :71. Décès 04/08/1851 COCHOIT François Eugène Genevreuille :72. Naissance 04/06/1852 COCHOIT Marie Philippine Célina Genevreuille :73. Décès 23/08/1855 COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Genevreuille :74. Décès 08/05/1856 COCHOIT Marie Mélanie Genevreuille :75. Mariage 13/11/1856 COCHOIT Nicolas x LÉVÊQUE Marie Genevreuille :76. Mariage 14/03/1857 LAVRILLET Jean Alexandre Barthélémy x COCHOIT Françoise Julie Genevreuille :77. Décès 06/04/1857 COCHOIT Jeanne Baptiste Genevreuille :78. Décès 23/11/1862 COCHOIT Nicolas Genevreuille :79. Décès 24/07/1865 COCHOIT Jeanne Claude Genevreuille :80. Mariage 04/04/1866 COCHOIT Pierre Paul x QUINEY Adolphine Virginie Genevreuille :81. Naissance 09/02/1867 COCHOIT Louis Abel Genevreuille :82. Naissance 09/02/1867 COCHOIT Charles Constant Genevreuille :83. Décès 11/09/1867 COCHOIT Pierre Paul Genevreuille :84. Décès 07/12/1892 COCHOIT Jeanne Françoise Genevreuille

French Family Research

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__TOC__ ==Bibliographic Review== What do sources say about the first wife of William French? ===Related WikiTree Profiles=== *[[French-20|William French (abt.1604-1681)]] *[[Unknown-202689|Elizabeth (Unknown) French (abt.1604-1668)]] ===Torrey NE Marriages=== '''Summary''' of Sources below: No publications provide sources for a last name. Only ''The Ancestry of Samuel, Freda and John Warner'' (1949) includes both Godfrey and Symmes, but with question marks. ''The History of Peter Parker and Sarah Ruggles of Roxbury, Mass.'' calls her Elizabeth (Symmes?) and only ''The genealogies of Dwight Stone and Olive Evans'' (1907) uses Elizabeth Symmes. ====Third Supplement==== Melinda Lutz Sanborn (2003) p. 104.
French, William (c1604-1681) & 1/wf Elizabeth ____ ( -1668); m by 1625 Billerica. [GM 2:591]. Anderson, Robert Charles. Great Migration, Vol 2, (2008) page 591. Digital images:'' [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB115/i/7373/591/22175037 American Ancestors (subscription)]''
''Comments: Assuming that Francis was a child and that Elizabeth was his first wife, m by about 1625'' ====Volume 1==== Clarence Almon Torrey (2015) Page 582 [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB1568/i/21174/582/426886478 AmericanAncestors (subscription)]
[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSM4-K37Q-7?i=213&cat=290345 Manuscript image] '''Entry''' FRENCH, William (1603-1681) & 1/wf Elizabeth GODFREY?/ [SYMMES?] (1603-1668); in Eng, by 1625?, by 1624?, by 1629; Cambridge/Billerica {Warner-Harrington 218, 351; Backus Anc. 59, 82; McIntire Anc. 274; Reg. 44:367, 88:75, 89:182; Parker (,9) 207; Scott (1919) 195; Dillon Anc. 24; Cram 35; Stone-Evans 40; Stratford Hist 2:1204; Parker-Ruggles 325; Paine (#5) 120; Manning 141?; Marks-Platt 25; Morris-Convers 30} [[Space:Sources-Torrey|Key]] '''Warner-Harrington 218, 351''' Warner-Harrington: Warner, Frederick Chester, The Ancestry of Samuel, Freda and John Warner, typescript, 5 vols. (Boston, 1949, 1955) Internet Archive borrow: [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofsamuel02warn/page/n33/mode/2up p 218] [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofsamuel02warn/page/n299/mode/2up p 351]
''Comments: William's wife Elizabeth (Godfrey?) (Symmes?) (p 218)'' '''Backus Anc. 59, 82:''' Backus, Mary. ''[[Space:The New England Ancestry of Dana Converse Backus|The New England Ancestry of Dana Converse Backus]]'' (Salem, Mass., 1949) p 59. Digital images: ''HathiTrust'' [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89062943196?urlappend=%3Bseq=73%3Bownerid=13510798885260839-77 p 59] [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89062943196?urlappend=%3Bseq=96%3Bownerid=13510798885264037-100 p 82]
''Comments: William's wife Elizabeth _______ m. of daughter Hannah French to John Brackett.'' '''McIntire Anc. 274:''' McIntire Anc.: McIntire, Robert Harry, Ancestry of Robert Harry McIntire and of Helen Annette McIntire, His Wife (Norfolk, Va., 1950). p 274. Digital images: [https://archive.org/details/ancestryofrobert00mcin/page/n541/mode/2up Internet Archive]
''Comments: William and Elizabeth French. (Marriage of son Samuel to Sarah Cummings (disproven)'' '''Reg. 44:367:''' French, John M. ''Liuet. William French and His Descendants'', [[Space:NEHGR|The New England Historical and Genealogical Register]] (NEHGS, Boston, 1890) Vol. 44, Page 367. Digital images: ''[https://archive.org/details/newenglandhisto16unkngoog/page/367/mode/2up Internet Archive].''
''Comments: William's first wife only named as Elizabeth ________'' '''Reg 88:75, 89:182:''' "Memoirs" (i.e. Memorials for NEHGS members) vol 88 (1934) [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/14319/75/0 American Ancestors (subscription)]; vol 89 (1934) [https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/14320/182/0 American Ancestors (subscription)]
''Comments: No mention of William's wife.'' '''Parker (,9) 207:''' Linzee, John William. The History of Peter Parker and Sarah Ruggles of Roxbury, Mass. (Boston: [S. Usher], 1913. Page 207. Digital images: ''[https://archive.org/details/historyofpeterpa00linz/page/n473/mode/2up Internet Archive]''
''Comments: William French and wife 1st Elizabeth (Symmes?) French'' '''Scott (1919) 195:''' Holman, Mary Lovering, The Scott Genealogy (Boston, 1919) Page 195; Digital images: ''[https://archive.org/details/scottgenealogyde00holm/page/194/mode/2up Internet Archive]''
''Comments: William and Elizabeth ________'' '''Dillon Anc. 24:''' The ancestors of Arthur Orison Dillon and his poems (1927) p 24 Digital images: ''[https://archive.org/details/ancestorsofarthu00dill/page/24/mode/2up Internet Archive]''
''Comments: William and Elizabeth. Essex origins from customs house.'' '''Cram 3:''' Cram, Charles. ''[[Space:Genealogical Outline of the Cram, Walker, and Weekes Families|Genealogical Outline of the Cram, Walker, and Weekes Families]]'' (Boston, 1934) p 3. Digital images: ''[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89062868021?urlappend=%3Bseq=73%3Bownerid=13510798886624007-73 HathiTrust]''
''Comments: Wife not mentioned'' '''Stone-Evans 40:''' Neil, Julia Evans Stone.''[[Space:Genealogy_of_Dwight_Stone_and_Olive_Evans|From generation to generation. The genealogies of Dwight Stone and Olive Evans]]'' (Champlin Press, Columbus, Ohio, 1907) Page 40. Digital Image: ''[https://archive.org/details/fromgenerationto00lcneil/page/40/mode/1up Internet Archive]''
''Comments: Names wife as Elizabeth Symmes, without providing a source or further comment.'' '''Stratford Hist 2:1204:''' Orcutt, Samuel. ''[[Space:A History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of Bridgeport, Connecticut|A History of the Old Town of Stratford and the City of Bridgeport, Connecticut]]'' (Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, New Haven, Conn., 1886) Vol. 2, Page 1204. Digital Image: ''[https://archive.org/details/ahistoryoldtown01conngoog/page/1204/mode/2up Internet Archive]''
''Comments: Wife is only referred to as Elizabeth. Lists Francis of Derby, CT as a son.'' '''Parker-Ruggles 325:''' Linzee, John William. ''[[Space:The History of Peter Parker and Sarah Ruggles of Roxbury, Mass.|The History of Peter Parker and Sarah Ruggles of Roxbury, Mass.]]'' (Samuel Usher, Boston, Mass., 1913) Page 325. Digital image: ''[https://archive.org/details/historyofpeterpa00linz/page/n731/mode/2up Internet Archive]''.
''Comments: Does not mention William's wife. References court testimony in which he gives his age as about 50 in 1652.'' '''Paine (#5) 120:''' Paine, Lyman May. ''[[Space:My Ancestors, A Memorial of John Paine and Mary Ann May of East Woodstock, Conn.|My Ancestors, A Memorial of John Paine and Mary Ann May of East Woodstock, Conn.]]'' (Chicago, Ill., 1914) Page 120. Digital image: ''[https://archive.org/details/myancestorsmemor00byupain/page/120/mode/2up Internet Archive]''.
''Comments: Wife is only mentioned as Elizabeth. Uses the 15 March 1603 bp in Halstead [Disproven in 1911]'' '''Manning 141?:''' Manning, William H. ''[[Space:The Genealogical and Biographical History of the Manning Families of New England|The Genealogical and Biographical History of the Manning Families of New England]]'' (Salem Press Co., Salem, Mass., 1902) Page 141. Digital image: ''[https://archive.org/details/genealogicalbiog00mann/page/140/mode/2up Internet Archive]''.
''Comments: Wife only mentioned as Elizabeth'' '''Marks-Platt 25:''' Lines, Eliza J., ''[[Space:Marks-Platt Ancestry|Marks-Platt Ancestry]]'' (Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Press, 1902) Page 25. Digital image: ''[https://archive.org/details/marksplattances00linegoog/page/n39/mode/2up Internet Archive]''.
''Comments: Wife not mentioned. Cites History of Derby, and assigns Francis French of Derby as son (disproven).'' '''Morris-Convers 30:''' Morris, Tyler Seymour. ''[[Space:Ephraim and Pamela (Converse) Morris - Their Ancestors and Descendants|Ephraim and Pamela (Converse) Morris - Their Ancestors and Descendants]]'' (T.S. Morris, Chicago, 1894) Page 30. Digital image: ''[https://archive.org/details/ephraimpamelacon00morr/page/n51/mode/2up Internet Archive]''.
''Comments: Wife is only mentioned as Elizabeth. Uses the 15 March 1603 bp in Halstead [Disproven in 1911]''

French Family Reunion Records

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French_Family_Reunion_Records.png
=== Minutes of the French Family Reunions === {{Image|file=French-4241-1.jpg |size=170px 66px |align=l }} : In 1908, Rhoena Aurelia (French) Cater organized the first French Family Reunion in order to honor the lives of Charles Freedom French and Aurelia White (Horton) French, her parents. Those attending the reunion elected a reunion president, vice president, secretary, and reporter, hoping to keep the group well informed and give the group a reason to look forward to meeting in the next year. : The site for each of the Reunions was chosen during the 'business' portion of the previous year's gathering. In some cases, a member would offer their home for the next reunion. Sometimes, the group decided on a space, especially as the French Family grew larger. It was considered to be quite an honor to be the venue for the year. : Elections were held each year for the positions listed above. Records of the election results, entertainment provided, special remarks, births, deaths, and marriages for the previous year were handwritten in a notebook. This notebook was kept by the family reunion secretary and passed along. All in all, there were three notebooks covering the years 1908 through about 1970. : The tradition of holding an annual French Family Reunion continues to this day. : These are the links to the transcriptions of two of the three known notebooks containing the handwritten records of the annual meetings, AKA the French Family Reunion. The whereabouts of Book #1, covering the years 1908 through 1933 are unknown. : '''From Book 2 of the Reunion Records''' * [[Space:French_Family_Reunion%2C_September_1%2C_1934|French Family Reunion, September 1, 1934]] * [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:French_Family_Reunion%2C_September_1935 French Family Reunion, September 1935] * [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:French_Family_Reunion_Records-1 French Family Reunion, September 7, 1936] * [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:French_Family_Reunion French Family Reunion, September 4, 1937]

French Protestants in England

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Part of: [[Project:Huguenot_Migration|Huguenot Migration Project]] ===Introduction=== The Fens must have been a very special place for hundreds of years. A place largely flooded and marshy, the native people used to scraping a living from the consequential environment. {{Image|file= Morton-13802-5.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption= Morton’s Leam. Nr Peterborough.
Early drainage scheme still in use today. }} Attempts over previous centuries met with varying degrees of success, one the more notable was constructed by [[Morton-13802|John Morton (c1430-1500)]] a large scale project to drain part of the fens involving an artificial course of the River Nene from the Back River to Wisbech. It ran for a distance of 20km and is still known as Morton's Leam. It was surely a cultural shock when the French started arriving in droves more than a century later and it is no wonder they were referred to as ‘Strangers’ The migration was not concentrated but driven by external events and the needs of the various families, over many years. Sometimes welcomed, mostly not. Epworth was a royal manor containing until 1628 the Isle of Axholme, (c 51,000 acres) The low-lying fenland flooded in the winter and drained in spring, providing common grazing land, peat resources, fishing and fowling. Most parishes were large and contained a number of settlements, in close proximity. Originally the manor of Crowle, comprising the northern quarter of the Isle of Axholme, was a member of Epworth manor and remained so until leased to the Corporation of the City of London by Charles I in 1628. The drainage of Hatfield Chase was commenced in 1626 and by 1628, 80 or so families from Walloon Flanders fled to England and settled in the Great Level. By 1635 there was another large influx of artisans and agriculturists from Normandy and the Walloon country. Register of baptisms of the French Protestant refugees settled at Thorney, Cambridgeshire, 1654-1727 by Huguenot Society of London; Peet, Henry, 1856-1938 [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis17hugu/page/n23/mode/1up Page 1ff] Despite acclamation from Dugdale (History of embarking and draining) and others that waste land had been turned into profitable arable land, it has been later strongly argued that the project in Hatfield chase simply replaced one kind of economy for another, pastoral for arable, bringing in its wake years of discontent and rioting. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/40272714 The Isle of Axholme before Vermuyden] Joan Thirsk The Agricultural History Review Vol. 1, No. 1 (1953), pp. 16-28 (13 pages) Published By: British Agricultural History Society ===Political, Religious and Economic background.=== In 1360 [[Mowbray-4|John de Mowbray (1340-1368)]] deeded common land rights in Axholme to its freeholders and other tenants providing a constant supply of wildfowl, foraging rights and grazing rights. This deed caused repercussions centuries later when Vermuyden drained the land, taking away that way of life and leading to vandalism, rioting and anti royalist sentiment. A topographical account of the isle of Axholme by William R. Peck [https://archive.org/details/atopographicala00peckgoog/page/n82/mode/1up Page 60] : [https://archive.org/details/atopographicala00peckgoog/page/n304/mode/1up Copy of deed Appendix 1] 1562 to 1598 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Wars_of_Religion The French Wars of Religion] brought civil war between French Catholics and Protestants (who followed the teachings of John Calvin and were commonly known as Huguenots). The wars were punctuated by the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Bartholomew's_Day_massacre St. Bartholomew's Day massacre] in 1572 and ended by Henry IV who issued the Edict of Nantes. 1567 Some of the earliest French-speaking Protestants to arrive in England were Walloon refugees who arrived in England from the Spanish Netherlands (now Belgium and the Netherlands), due to persecution by King Philip of Spain. They shared common beliefs and living space with the Huguenots making them often indistinguishable from todays perspective.FamilySearch Wiki contributors, "England History of Huguenots, Walloons, Flemish Religions (National Institute)," FamilySearch Wiki, , https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=England_History_of_Huguenots,_Walloo ns,_Flemish_Religions_(National_Institute)&oldid=2475213 (accessed August 15, 2022). 1598 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edict_of_Nantes Edict of Nantes] marked the end of the French Wars of Religion giving Protestants of France substantial rights. 1610 Assassination of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_IV_of_France Henry IV] of France caused new [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huguenot_rebellions Huguenot rebellions] in the 1620s under Louis XIV. 1642-1646 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_English_Civil_War The First English Civil War] caused equal uncertainty in England, where there was civil war and disruption lasting until 1653, collectively known as the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wars_of_the_Three_Kingdoms Wars of the Three Kingdoms] 1672 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_Indulgence The Declaration of Indulgence] Granted broad religious freedom in England by suspending penal laws enforcing conformity to the Church of England and allowing people to worship in their homes or chapels. 1685 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edict_of_Fontainebleau Revocation of the Edict of Nantes] in France, ordered the destruction of Huguenot churches as well as the closing of Protestant schools. 1688 the future [[Oranje-Nassau-20|William III of Orange]] landed in Brixham in Devon and was joined by most of the army of (Catholic) King James II who defected en masse as he marched to London. Known as the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glorious_Revolution Glorious Revolution], William and Mary became joint monarchs of England and Ireland. William was a protestant who counted Huguenots among his ranks and following this, French Protestants in Britain could rest easy over their faith. Wikipedia contributors, "Glorious Revolution," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Glorious_Revolution&oldid=1125104198 (accessed December 3, 2022). Glozier, Matthew. The Huguenot soldiers of William of Orange and the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688 : the lions of Judah. United Kingdom: Sussex Academic Press, 2002. During this long period it is estimated that 20% of disaffected Huguenots (over 40,000) settled in England, starting from as early as 1520 and increasing/decreasing with the state of politics and attendant violence in France and how favourable the opportunity in England might be. The Huguenot Society of Great Britain & Ireland [https://www.history.com/topics/france/huguenots Huguenot History] The Huguenot Society of Great Britain & Ireland [https://www.huguenotsociety.org.uk/blog/the-royal-bounty-archive-unveiled The Royal Bounty Archive unveiled] ===Arrival in England=== The fluctuation of politics and persecution over a very long period meant that arrivals happened from Flanders and France in small bursts. Two greater influxes occurred after the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in 1572 and after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. Many of the early refugees settled in Canterbury, where a local weaving industry soon thrived. Many later left for London. By the mid-1630s there were Huguenot workshops in Southwark and Westminster. An estimated 25,000 Huguenots arrived between 1685 and 1700. About one third of those arriving in England settled in areas around London but outside of the jurisdiction of the City and the Livery Companies. The largest concentration was at Spitalfields and Bethnal Green.The History of London [https://www.thehistoryoflondon.co.uk/huguenots/ Huguenots] Others settled in Plymouth, Exeter, Barnstaple, Dover and Southampton. These towns gave easy access to home and provided opportunities for continuation of trade The Huguenots of Spitalfields [https://www.huguenotsofspitalfields.org/huguenot-places/ Huguenot Places] ===Economic Migrants on the Fens=== {{Image|file= MCC-3.png |align=r |size=m |caption= Drainage Projects }} Settlers on the Fens were not necessarily driven by persecution but rather enticed by Vermuyden and others to leave the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Netherlands Spanish Netherlands] where they had been for around 60 years. They lived in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guînes Guisnes] area and were experienced draining the marshes in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_of_Calais Pale of Calais], some of them wealthy landowners. Register of baptisms of the French Protestant refugees settled at Thorney, Cambridgeshire, 1654-1727 by Huguenot Society of London; Peet, Henry, 1856-1938 [https://archive.org/details/registerofbaptis17hugu/page/n23/mode/1up Introduction, Page xiv] The '''Hatfield levels''' in North Lincolnshire/South Yorkshire, a hunting ground for [[Stuart-1|Charles I]] was subject to frequent flooding. Locals survived by fishing and fowling. In 1626 the King agreed A topographical account of the isle of Axholme by William R. Peck [https://archive.org/details/atopographicala00peckgoog/page/n319/mode/1up Royal Grant] to divide the land equally between the Crown, those who would drain the land (led by [[Vermuyden-3|Cornelius Vermuyden]]) and the remainder for those locals who had existing interests in the land. The scheme was funded by the sale of Vermuyden's land to a number of (mainly Dutch Walloon) partners, known as Participants. This land (called Scotted Land) was subject to the payment of scots, or taxes, to pay for the the works and its maintenance. [https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/manuscriptsandspecialcollections/collectionsindepth/water/hatfieldchase.aspx Hatfield Chase Corporation, 1538-1973] University of Nottingham Drainage of the Level of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatfield_Chase Hatfield Chase] extending over a portion of the Isle of Axholme took place from 1626 and families working on the project eventually settled at Sandtoft. The work was ‘substantially completed’ by 1628. Wikipedia contributors, "Hatfield Chase," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hatfield_Chase&oldid=1110684461 (accessed November 18, 2022). Hatfield Chase could be seen as two parts, the western part had limited rights such as peat cutting and wood chopping and fell under the jurisdiction of the Council of the North. Its chairman, the Viscount of Wentworth, was critical of the policy pursued by the King to realize reclaimed land. In 1630 he managed to conclude an agreement with Vermuyden in which the interests of the local population were protected. As a result, the resistance there ended. In the eastern part, on the other hand, the Isle of Axholme, the inhabitants had extensive grazing rights. They would lose more than half of the ground, making grazing unviable. CORNELIUS VERMUYDEN, THOOLSE WATERBOUWKUNDIGE IN ENGELAND door Peter Lindhoud [https://heemkundetholen.nl/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Cornelis-Vermuyden.pdf pdf download] The '''Great Level''' in Lincolnshire/Cambridgeshire is the largest region of fen in eastern England, also once permanently flooded. It is also known as the Bedford Level, after [[Russell-6057|Francis Russell, 4th Earl of Bedford]], who motivated the drainage of this area and also employed Vermuyden as engineer. There was fierce opposition and sabotage from locals who were losing their livelihoods. Wikipedia contributors, "The Fens," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Fens&oldid=1118594404 (accessed November 18, 2022). Although work commenced on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedford_Level_Corporation Great “Bedford” Level] within the Isle of Ely in the 1630’s it faltered and 1640 Vermuyden was invited to take over. Interrupted by The Civil War it resumed in1649. In 1651 and for the next few years, it was Dutch and Scottish prisoners of war, more than 1000 of them, drafted in by the efforts of [[Thurloe-1|John Thurloe (1616-1668)]] secretary to the council of state of the Protectorate, that toiled with most of the heavy drainage work. This gave significant impetus to bringing some 4,000 acres under cultivation by 1653 Prisoners of the Fens, subtitled 'A true story of Scottish and Dutch prisoners of war brought to the Fens to work on the drainage scheme Booklet published privately by Trevor Bevis in 2003, 14 pages. A5 size booklet (N5906X2) [https://www.heritagesouthholland.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/AOS-D-0167-Prisoners-of-the-Fen.pdf Download] [https://www.thewordgarden.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/1.33MB_origins.pdf Origins] The Scottish Soldiers, the Ouse Washes; the Origins of Landscape Change in the Fens 2019. Word Garden, Babylon ARTS, Lottery Heritage Fund] ===Hatfield Levels=== The General Drainage Act of 1600 required permission of the majority of commoners and the contract of 1626 stipulated that the king was responsible for gaining their consent. Although royal commissioners were appointed they did not reach an agreement with the majority of the commoners, Vermuyden was permitted to start draining the Level in 1627. This turned out to be a major point of contention, leading to riots and ongoing legal disputes. [https://www.bahs.org.uk/AGHR/ARTICLES/64_1_vanCruyningen.pdf Dutch investors and the drainage of Hatfield Chase, 1626 to 1656*] by Piet van Cruyningen {{Image|file= MCC-32.jpg |align=m |size=l |caption= Fen men about to lose an old way of life. }} {{clear}} Vermuyden promised investors they could start reclaiming their lands in Hatfield by 1628. However between the years 1628 and 1631 there were fourteen outbursts of violence from the locals, unhappy not only about loss of privileges but aggrieved that the drainage scheme simply moved the flooding elsewhere. In 1630 the Participants paid £16.800 into the Exchequer, and a fee farm rent of £1228pa. They spent £176,000 on drainage works and became entitled to 24,000 acres of land, 7400 of which were within the manor of Epworth. By Letters patent and by decree in the Exchequer they enjoyed relatively quiet possession until 1642. A deeper analysis of the financial outcome has recently been undertaken. Partial success by straightening of the river Don and outlet into the Aire caused flooding in Fishlake, Sykehouse and Snaith. As a result of a lawsuit in 1633, Vermuyden had to dig the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Don,_Yorkshire Dutch River], which provided a direct route from the Don to the River Ouse at Goole. Wikipedia contributors, "Cornelius Vermuyden," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cornelius_Vermuyden&oldid=1120052908 (accessed December 10, 2022). There were at least 1000 people employed in the drainage works by 1634 mostly French and Dutch Protestants. Many of these returned home during the course of the project either because of resistance from the locals or due to drainage works coming to natural completion. They were replaced by those looking to invest in or farm the land. They were said to have used a barn or perhaps an Anglican Church for worship under the pastoral care of [[Bontemps-29|Peter Bontemps]] appointed by French ministers at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leiden Leiden]. This despite Vermuyden having obtained a licence to build a church. Nothing appears to have been done until Jan 1634, when Sir Philibert Vernatti, Henry Kinston, Luke Valkenburgh, Matthew Valkenburgh, John Corsellis and Michael Corsellis, went before a notary, to declare the intent in behalf of the Participants to appoint a minister. Following this certain rental lands in Hatfield Chase and the neighbourhood were granted to Sir [[Courteen-2|William Curteine]], merchant, [[Cambell-233|Robert Cambell]], Alderman of the City of London, [[Harbord-62|Charles Harbord]], the King's Surveyor-General, [[Brinley-49|Thomas Brinley]], one of the Auditors of the King's Reversions ; [[La_Motte-155|John Lamote]], merchant ; and [[Van_Vleteren-1|Timothy Vanvleteren]], clerk (Preacher of the Dutch Church in London), for that purpose. This with much resistance from [[Laud-3|William Laud (1573-1645)]] Archbishop of Canterbury who opposed any form of Protestantism. Peter Bontemps who remained from 1636-38 left 2 years before the building of Sandtoft, during which time there was no minister. Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London by Huguenot Society of London. Huguenots in the Isle of Axholme. H Le Moine [https://archive.org/details/proceedingshugu02londgoog/page/265/mode/1up P 266ff] Vermuyden sold his share of land as a participant to John Gibbon who in 1637 with partner Robert Long left Axholme with some of the workers in an attempt to drain nearby. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_of_Galtres Forest of Galtres], recently deforested. ====Denization of Strangers==== Once drainage had commenced reclaimed lands could be distributed amongst the partners but English law would not permit ownership by foreigners. Vermuyden, petitioned the King for a grant of denization to the following persons, 'all strangers borne '. Granted 1 Jun 1630 Letters of denization and acts of naturalization for aliens in England and Ireland by Shaw, William Arthur, 1865-1943 [https://archive.org/details/lettersofdenizat01shaw/page/45/mode/1up Page 45] :Lucas van Valckenburgh [1] :[[Van_Valkenburg-454|Marcus van Valckenburgh]] [1] :Matheo van Valckenburgh [1] :William van Weely (Of Amsterdam, brother-in-law to the Valckenburgh‘s) :Fabian de Vliett (Ulliet in the Patent Roll) [2] :Leonard Catts (Sir James Cuttes on Patent roll, or possibly similar name) [3] :Tymon Jacobs Hinloopen [4] :Peter [ ]upenninck (Crupenninicke in Patent Roll) :Johan van Baerle : John Lyens (Denization not on Roll) [5] : [[Vernatti-4| Sir Filibert Vernatty (1590-1643)]] :John Kugsten (Kynston on Roll) :Marcellus van Dueren (Marcellus van Deurne) :Abraham van Beueren (Van Beveren on Roll) :Jacob de Witte (Denization not on Roll) :Dingman de Vries (Denization not on Roll) :Andru Boccaert (Denization not on Roll) :Abraham Vernatt #Sons of [[Van_Valkenburgh-45|Jan Jansz van Valkenburgh (1538-1603)]] #Husband and guardian of Susanna van Valckenburgh #[[Cats-58|Jacob Cats (1577-1660)]] married [[Van_Valckenburg-7|Elisabeth van Valckenburg (abt.1579-1631)]] #[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thijmen_Jacobsz_Hinlopen Thijmen Jacobsz Hinlopen] #Johan Liens, Vermuyden’s cousin. ====Church at Sandtoft==== [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Farmery John Farmery] chancellor of the diocese of Lincoln wrote, probably in 1638 that the strangers, Mostly French but also Dutch consisted of 200 families who until now had lived in the parish of Belton for 3 years. The last 2 years without a minister, he therefore sent [[Cursoll-1|Stephen Cursoll]] to administer in consecrated churches, Belton or Epworth, and not in the ‘new built wooden house’ where [[Bontemps-29|Bontemps]] officiated in his time. [[Laud-3|Laud’s]] influence was much reduced by 1640 when on Dec 10th James de Con (de Cou) John de Houg (Houcq) and Gilley Rey petitioned the House of Lords for redress (subsequently given) against Farmery, as Cursol, accused of being a Franciscan Friar, was said to be in collusion with Farmery, extorting cash in exchange for ensuring any new Church was ‘properly consecrated’. The matter dragged on until at least 1642, when [[D'Espagne-7|John d'Espagne]] (or Despagne), Minister of Sandtoft, and James Des Camps presented another petition to the Lords, asserting that Cursoll had not yet returned some of the cash and was ‘vexing poor strangers with lawsuits’. The French and Dutch nevertheless gradually settled in Sandtoft as tenants of the Participants and in 1639 members of the drainage company’s board contracted with Isaac Bedloe to build a church there (He never had proper compensation for this). Registrations of births, marriages and deaths started in 1643 suggesting that the ‘Strangers’ arrived mainly to farm after much of the drainage scheme was complete. They also erected homes around the church and managed 24,500 Acres of land. ===== 1642-45 Early Riots ===== Despite all agreements and assurances concerning their future, in about Jun 1642, the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Civil_War English Civil War] imminent, some of the disgruntled locals “arose in tumults, brake down the fences and inclosures of four thousand Acres, destroyed all the Corn grow∣ing, and demolished the Houses built thereon.”. They followed by letting in the tides from the River Trent, which drowned a great part of Hatfield Chase “divers persons standing there with Muskets; and saying, that there they would stay till the whole levell were drowned, and the Inhabitants forced to swim away like Ducks” Then in Michaelmasse 1645 threw down a great part of the Banks, and filled up the Ditches.The history of imbanking and drayning of divers fenns and marshes, both in forein parts and in this kingdom, and of the improvements thereby extracted from records, manuscripts, and other authentick testimonies by Sir William Dugdale 1605-1686. London: Printed by Alice Warren, 1662. [https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A36795.0001.001?view=toc Page 145] [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Proceedings_of_the_Huguenot_Society_of_L/aSIXAAAAYAAJ?hl=en Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London. United Kingdom: Huguenot Society of London. Vol 2 1887]. Huguenots in the Isle of Axholme H.G.B le Moine. Page 265ff ===== 1643 Raiding by Vernatti ===== August 1643 John Van Haesdonck to [[Cavendish-6|William Earl of Newcastle]], against Captain Antonio Vernatts or Vernatti, his agents and soldiers. Van Haesdonck had tenants by lease in the Level of Hatfield Chase, viz., [[Le_Roy-1248|Hubert Le Roy]], [[Wantié-27|John Wantier]], [[Waterlow-145|Charles Waterlow]], [[Le_Haire-25|John Le Haire]], [[Oughtibridge-118|Edward Outibrigg]], and others all of them in quiet possession. Vernatti escaped debtors prison, and forcibly pulled down one of their houses, four children being therein, took most of their last year's corn and some cattle, threatening to return with troops.. The tenants on May 16 last at Sheffield, petitioned Newcastle which was referred to [[Savile-192|Sir William Savile]] and [[Hansby-12|Sir Ralph Hansby]], in the meantime Newcastle gave them protection which Vernatti ignored. He and his soldiers, broke open Le Roy's house, took out household goods, and carried Le Roy prisoner to his house, where he detained him till he paid 10l, and kept his wife a prisoner also. He also , *August 1, forcibly enter Wantier's house, and turned him, his wife and children out. *July 5 terrified Waterlow at his house, with pistols cocked, to take Waterlow, threatening to burn his house, and look away his beasts. He had already took 2 mares by force from Waterlow and on July 17 his soldiers assaulted Waterlow near his house. *About July 5 , came to Le Haire's house, and threatened to take away all his goods and burn his house. His soldiers, a little before July 5, took a nag and a mare with which he was ploughing. *Vernatti, August 5 last, with Christopher Stubbs and soldiers, broke into Le Haire's house, and turned his wife and children out of doors. *Despite the demand of [[Widdrington-82|Sir Wm. Widdrington]] to desist he then took rape-seed from Waterlow, Le Roy and Le Haire. *On August 9 entered Le Roy's house, turned him and his family out of doors. [https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~stanier/family/VanH/Aug43.html State Papers, Domestic - Charles I, CCCCXCVII]August 1643 Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I 1641 - 1643 Publication date 1641 - 1643 [https://archive.org/details/sim_great-britain-public-record-1625-1649-domestic-series_1641-1643/page/480/mode/1up Page 481] =====1645 Petition===== Petition from [[Berchet-4|Peter Berchett]] Minister, [[Beharelle-2|John Barrell]], and [[Amory-529|John Amorye]], and for the French and Dutch Inhabitants of the new-improved Grounds, lying in the Level of Hatfeild Chace who argued that due to their labour the previously flooded land is now very fruitful, yielding great Quantities of Corn and Rapeseed. They have Houses, and a Church; and have a settled French Congregation over 1000 strong, and that the Participants have, allowed their minister £70pa But the Inhabitants have been riotous thrown down Fences and destroyed Corn and Rape-seed and other great Outrages, daily threatening to pull down their Houses, and Church., They asked to enjoy the result of their Labours, without disturbance and to be compensated, their Minister may have his promised Allowance paid, which is detained by the Participants. "John Barrell. John Amory." 'House of Lords Journal Volume 7: 15 November 1645', in Journal of the House of Lords: Volume 7, 1644 (London, 1767-1830), pp. 705-707. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/lords-jrnl/vol7/pp705-707 [accessed 9 December 2022]. ===== 1647 Incorporation ===== The Sandtoft Church was formally united to and incorporated with the other French Churches at the 28th colloquy held in London, 9 Sept 1647, where [[Berchet-4|Pierre Berchet]], Pastor, and [[Le_Conte-144|David le Conte]], Elder, represented ''the brethren of the Church of Sandtoft and Isle of Axholme'', agreeing to submit to the discipline and order of the French Churches. The same deputies represented this church at the Synod September 20, 1647, to February 7, 1648, to settle the differences in the French Churches of Norwich and Canterbury. =====1650-51 Demolition ===== Ongoing violence, no doubt led to disillusionment and some movement away from the area. The violence culminated in riots of 1650, when the chapel at Sandtoft was defaced, the village demolished, the floodgates pulled up and the waters of the Trent once more allowed to overflow the Level. The ringleaders in these disturbances were Daniel Noddell, Lieut.-Colonel John Lilborne, and Major Wyldeman in what they did they had the sympathy of Mr Monkton a resident justice of the peace. Houses were regularly pulled down in Sandtoft. Of particular note was the complete removal of all timber from the premises of Anthony Mazengarb. They removed 34 loads of timber, suggesting that he may have been a timber merchant. Mazengarb testified that they arrived all summer with 40 carts to remove timber from demolished houses. =====1653 Noddell Declaration to Parliament===== THE DECLARATION OF DANIEL NODDEL Solicitor for the Freeholders and Commoners within the Mannor of Epworth, in the Isle of Axholm, in number about 1200 besides new erected Cottages, on the behalf of himself and all the said Commoners: discovering the plot and design of Master John Gibbon and his fellow-projectors to gain a possession of the said Freeholders ancient inheritance in their commonable grounds there, contrary to law. [https://ota.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/repository/xmlui/bitstream/handle/20.500.12024/A52385/A52385.html?sequence=5&isAllowed=y The Declaration of Daniel Noddel Solicitor for the Freeholders and Commoners within the Mannor of Epworth] Oxford Text Archive Refutation against John Gibbon, Solicitor, on the behalf of all the Freeholders and Commoners, for the re­covery of their ancient right to 7400 acres of commonable grounds, dispossessed 20 years ago and lately ‘ erroneous report of Master Say and Master Henry Darley’ about rioting. About 100 commoners were charged with rioting. Noddell claimed to have been their solicitor for almost 8 years. He summarised after citing Mowbray *In Hillary Term, 1645. the Freeholders commenced their suites at law against the Participants, to try their title to the said lands. *In Trinity Term following, viz. 1646. (and not in 1642. as the Participants in their Petition to the late Parliament falsly suggest) the participants exhibited an English Bill in the Ex­chequer to stay those suites at law, and to have the possession of the whole seven thousand four hundred acres in controversie established with them. * In Michaelmas Term, 1650. that Bill came to full hearing, and the Decree then made doth establish the possession no o­therwise with them, then it was when that Bill was ex­hibited. *That they took away the Commoners livelihood and left them with the poorest of the land. Specific names mentioned as being owed by John Gibbon : George Shires Esquire, Sir John Littcott, Thomas Squire, Richard Read, William Willett, William Denton, and Katherin his wife, Executors of John Bert, Richard Lane Gentleman, William Brown Esquire, James le Roy, Jessenben Sabbatt, James Leonards for thirty pounds, [[Cromwell-363|Henry Cromwell]], and [[Ferrers-502|Dame Elizabeth]] his wife, late named Elizabeth Lucy, Thomas Drinkwater, Edward Dixon Esquire, Lady Katherin Dyer widow, John Curson, Barthol. Hall, Iohn Marsham and Ferdinando Marsham, [[Chavatte-3|Isanbar Savatt]], Sir Edward Fish Baro­net, Humphrey Schalcross, Sir Francis Williamson, Benjamin Thornton Esquire, Sir Iohn Lucas, Sir Thomas Dawes for a thousand pounds, [[Cromwell-363|Henry Williams]] alias Cromwell Esquire, and [[Ferrers-502|Dame Elizabeth Ferrys]], lately called Elizabeth Lucy his wife, Thomas Lyng Gentleman, Sir Thomas Dawes, Rachel Cambell widdow, James Cambell, Michael Fawkes, Thomas Squire, Iohn Alkins, Robert Iohnson. =====1656 Petition to the Protector===== 15 Apr 1656 A petition was raised to Cromwell to be protected from violence and persecution. The rioting was led by Daniel Noddell. It was signed by 54 people (3 by Mark). Nathaniel Reading was the Strangers solicitor. Calendar of state papers, Domestic series [of the Commonwealth] 1649-1660 by Great Britain. Public Record Office[https://archive.org/details/cu31924091770432/page/269/mode/1up page 269] The Genealogy of the DeCou Family: Showing the Descent of the Members of this Family in America from Leuren Des Cou .... United States: Franklin Printing Company, 1910. [https://www.seekingmyroots.com/members/files/G001793.pdf The Geneaology of the Decou Fami pdf] , [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Genealogy_of_the_DeCou_Family/yGVGAAAAMAAJ?hl=en Google Books] The signatories in alphabetical order :[[Amory-517|Isaac Amory]] (Temp note… see here for sample text) :[[Amory-529|John Amory]] :John Amory Ju :[[Amory-514|Michee Amory]] :James Becue :[[Beharelle-2|John Beharel]] :Jacque du Bois, :Vincent Caillet, :Peeter Castell (X) :John Cuuelie :Jan Dauerow :Joel Delespiere :[[Descamps-81|Jacob Descamps]] :[[Descou-30|Leuren Descou]] :[[Egar-23|Jean Egar]] :[[Egar-19|Pierre Egar]] :Alisander Foster :[[Goglar-20|Jacque Goglaer]] :[[Goglar-13|Jan Gokelaer]] :Abscalon le Gran :[[Le_Grand-724|Osee le Grand]] :[[Scribo-1|Charle Gribau]] :John le Haier :[[Hancar-10|Isaac Hancar]] (X) :James Hancar :Anthoine Hapio, :Phillipe Hennoc (X) :[[Hernu-21|Jaques Hernue]] :[[Hernu-10|Jaques Hernu]] Ju, :[[Le_Houcq-15|Jehan le Houcgh]], :[[Le_Houcq-17|John le Hooke]] Ju, :Jean De Kerhuel [The word Pasteur crossed out] :Charle de Lanoy :Isaac de Lannoy :Lieuin Manié :André Maniez :Jehan du Mollin :[[Morillon-4|Dauid Morillion]] :Samuel Morillion :Sidrac Morillion :James Pinchon :[[Pinchon-38|Jean Pinchon]] :[[Pinchon-43|Somuel Pinchon]] :[[De_La_Pryme-18|Kaerel Pryem]] :[[Du_Quenne-5|Pierre Du Quenne]] :[[Le_Roy-1195|Jaques le Roy]] :[[Chavatte-4|Isanbaer Savatt]] :Christienne Smaghues :[[Le_Talle-32|Dauid le Talle]] :Samuel le Talle :John le Talle :[[Waterlow-145|Charle Vaterlo]] :Jacob Venneille :Danniel du Verliez =====Sandtoft Legacy===== The register of Sandtoft Chapel is sadly lost, but the names of 88 persons, belonging to 71 families have been preserved by [[Stovin-34|George Stovin (1695-1780)]]. The Yorkshire archaeological journal by Yorkshire Archaeological Society Publication date 1893 [https://archive.org/details/yorkshirearchae16socigoog/page/194/mode/2up Page 194ff The Stovin Manucript] Fifteen of these persons, of as many different families, appear to have removed to Thorney : and members of twenty-two of the remaining fifty-six families are also shown by the register to have made their way to the Bedford Level and joined the French congregation at Thorney Abbey. The names of the fifteen are : [[Benitland-1|Thomas Benitland]], [[Blancart-2|Anthony Blancart]], [[Descamps-80|Peter Descamps]], [[Egar-19|Peter Egar]], [[Flahau-4|James Flahau]], [[Le_Haire-1|Simon le Haire]], [[Hardick-38|George Hardick]], [[Harlay-6|Josias Harlay]], [[De_la_Haye-210|Peter de la Haye]], [[De_Lanoy-67|Jean de Lannoy]], [[De_Lanoy-62|Isaac de Lanoy]], [[De_Lespiere-5|Joel de Lespierre]], [[Mazengarb-81|Anthony Massingarbe]], [[Du_Quenne-5|Peter du Quenne]], [[Tafin-1|Hosea Tafin]]. The names of the twenty-two are : Amory, Beharelle, Blique, du Bois, Clais, le Conte, Coquelar, Desbiens, Desquien, le Flour, Fontaine, Frouchart, Gouy, Hancar, le Leu, Marquilier, Renard, Ramery, le Roux, le Roy, le Talle and Vennin. The other sixteen names are : Becue, Caillet, Castell, Descou, Foster, Hennoc, Hernu, le Houcq, le Grand, Manié, Morillon, Pinchon, Smaque, Vermeil, du Verlier and Wantier. It is known that in 1681 there remained in Sandtoft at least the following : Abraham Beharel, Matthew Bruynee, Abraham Egarr, Peter le Leu, David Morillion, Tafin Tafinder and John Tyssen. who complained to the Court of Sewers, at Turnbridge of the need for a minister. The church was in ruins by 1686. =====Ministers at Sandtoft===== Sandtoft, partly Flemish, partly French, was in close alliance with the Low Countries and looked to Holland for its ministers. On 13 Nov 1637 The Dutch Congregation of Hatfield Chase wrote to the London-Dutch Congregation asking for help and advice in appointing a Minister as the Participants had taken no interest. Signatories were Jooris de Raet, Philippe Lhermitte, Jacop Blyck, Jaeques de Witt. They wrote again on 26 Oct 1642 when they sent 2 elders complaining that [[D'Espagne-7|Pastor Despaigne]] had only preached a few times then disappeared. They asked for M Becude minister of the Flemish Church in Calais offering £60 pa stipend. The church at Sandtoft was said to be built consisting of French and Flemings, with [[D'Espagne-7|Jean d’Espagne]] the minister. Ecclesiae londino-batavae archivum by Austin Friars (Church : London, England); Hessels, Jan Hendrik, 1836-1907 Vol 3 Pt 2 [https://archive.org/details/ecclesiaelondino32austuoft/page/1760/mode/1up Page 1760 & 1900] The ministers were successively Messieurs :[[Bontemps-29|Peter Bontemps]] (1634-36), :No minister 1637-1638 :[[Cursoll-1|Etienne (Stephen) Cursoll]]/ Dr John de Cursoll. Crusol/Cursol (1640), :[[D'Espagne-7|Jean Despagne]] (1640-1642). :[[Berchet-4|Pierre Berchet]] (died 8 Aug 1655 and buried at Crowle). :[[Castile-277|Philip Castell]] (Castile) of Nantes, ‘Nautices, Franc in Gallia, buried at Hatfield 5 Sept 1655 :Jean de Deckerhuel (or Rerkuet or Riquet) died 1659, :Delaprix (or de la Prix) :Samuel Lambert 1664-68, returned to Holland. Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London by Huguenot Society of London Vol. 13, No. 1-6 William Minet FSA [https://archive.org/details/proceedingsofhug1316hugu/page/n423/mode/1up Page 408] :Jaques De la Porte died 1676, :John Conrad de Werneley (or Werndley) died 1681 :Le Vanely, last minister The marriage, baptismal and burial registers, 1571-1874, and monumental inscriptions of the Dutch Reformed Church, Austin Friars, London : with a short account of the strangers and their churches by Austin Friars (Church: London, England); Moens, William John Charles [https://archive.org/details/marriagebaptism00moengoog/page/n45/mode/1up?q=vermuyden Page XXXV] =====Sandtoft Registers===== The extracts of the Sandtoft Church made by Stovin consist of 41 marriages (1643-1671), 147 baptisms (1642-1685) and only 2 deaths; these registers were in existence until 1828, when Mr. Hunter wrote his South Yorkshire but are now lost. [[Space:Baptisms%2C_Sandtoft_French_Protestants|BMD at Sandtoft]] ====Diary of Abraham de la Pryme==== [[De_la_Pryme-22|Abraham de la Pryme (1671-1704)]] was born in Hatfield and baptised in the Sandtoft Church. He maintained a diary which also contains letters and details of his historical manuscripts.[https://archive.org/details/diaryofabrahamde00dela/page/n6/mode/1up The diary of Abraham De la Pryme]], the Yorkshire antiquary by De la Pryme, Abraham, b. 1677, author; Jackson, Charles, 1809-1882, editor; De la Pryme, Charles, editor; Surtees Society ===Great Level=== ====Church at Thorney==== {{Image|file= Ris-45.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption= Thorney Abbey 1908 }} Initially meeting at a Tollgate towards Wisbech, some early arrivals from Hatfield congregated at Whittlesey, more central to the drainage works drainage than Thorney. In this parish there were two tracts of fenland “ Willow Hall Land ”, near the village of Eye and “ The Commons,” which appear to have been set out and offered for sale in lots of fifteen acres. The colony of French Protestant refugees settled mostly at Thorney Abbey in Cambridgeshire. An inscription in the Church at Thorney indicates more formal gatherings at that place from 1652. Historical and architectural notes on the parish churches in and around Peterborough by Sweeting, Walter Debenham, 1839-; Ball, William. ill[https://archive.org/details/historicalarchit00swee/page/n160/mode/1up Page 115] The foreign Church at Thomey Abbey was established in 1652, and at the 29th Colloquy of the Churches in England, held in London, 7 Sept 1654, Ezechiel Daunois, Pastor, and David le Conte represented it as deputies. Some arrived from Sandtoft, others from the Low Countries, and some from existing English Huguenot communities. Their expertise in maintaining drained land, for cultivation and farming convinced Oliver Cromwell to give them special rights and exemptions. They purchased plots around common land at Willow Hall. In addition to the art of drainage, farmers and those who had capital, became users and purchasers of the newly drained lands. The families of Bailleul, le Conte, Egar, la Pla, Ris (Ry), Milleville, Vennin and Wantié were landowners. The intermarriages of members of these families were numerous. They worshiped in the ruins of Thorney Abbey. In about 1685, the French Church in London moved a group of Huguenots into the Thorney area to strengthen the French Church as there were no significant arrivals after the initial influx. Some, such as the Bailleul family were there long term. [https://archive.org/details/bailleulsflande00baylgoog/page/n9/mode/1up The Bailleuls of Flanders, and the Bayleys of Willow Hall] by Francis Bayley 1881 =====Ministers at Thorney Abbey===== 1653-1675 '''[[Danois-1|Ezekiel Danois]]''' from Compiegne in France appears to have been the first recognised minister. He was present with David le Conte representing the Thorney congregation at the conference held in London in the year 1654. 1668 '''Jean Memard''', Minister officiated in the baptism of [[Du_Chessoy-7|Jean du Chessoy (bef.1668-)]], probably a visiting Minister. '''[[Mequilly-1|Marc Mequilly]]''' , probably acted as assistant to Danois prior to his decease , but it is not certain that he became minister. He officiated in 4 baptisms between 1672-1678 c1680-84 '''[[David-4066|Michael David]]''' of Geneva “a person of learning and great zeal” , was the next known minister His name appears in the baptism record [[Descamps-96|David Descamps (bef.1680-)]]. He was named in Leti’s 1684 account of Thorney Abbey and moved from there to Ireland. Leti, Gregorio. Il Teatro britannico, o vero Historia della Grande Brettagna... scritta da Gregorio Leti. Netherlands: A. Wolfgang, 1684 [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Il_Teatro_britannico_o_vero_Historia_del/M8tLGO9-AmcC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=%22michael+david+di+geneva%22&pg=PA403&printsec=frontcover Pages 400-403]] '''[[Jembelin-1|Jean Jembelin]]''' (M. Du Mesnil - Jemblin) officiated occasinally from 1689 but was Minister of the French Protestants at Spittlefields, London. 1691-1715 '''[[Cairon-4| Jacques Cairon]]''' was minister at Falaise in Normandy in the year 1684 he was jailed for his protestant beliefs but subsequently fled to England where he became Minister at Thorney for 24 years. 1715-1727 '''[[Le_Sueur-325|Louis Charles Le Sueur]]''' was the last of the French ministers at Thorney The history of the French, Walloon, Dutch and other foreign Protestant refugees settled in England from the reign of Henry VIII to the revocation of the Edict of Nantes; with notices of their trade and commerce, copious extracts from the registers, lists of the early settlers, ministers, &c., and an appendix containing copies of the charter of Edward VI, &c by Burn, John Southerden, 1798-1870 [https://archive.org/details/historyfrenchwa00burngoog/page/n116/mode/2up Page 100] [https://books.google.co.ls/books?id=E_sGAAAAQAAJ&printsec=copyright#v=onepage&q&f=false The history of Thorney abbey], together with some notice of the modern parish By Richard Hyett Warner [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=E_sGAAAAQAAJ&pg=GBS.PA232&hl=en_GB Chapter XI] =====Naturalisation Bill No 65 1662===== Introduced into the Commons on the 2 May, 1662, passed the Lords 14 May 1662. :[[Le_Pla-63|Marke le Pla]], of the age of 40 yeares, :[[Le_Pla-33|James le Pla]], of the age of 35 yeares, both born in Bouire, in the County of Callais in the Province of Picardy in the Kingdome of France. :[[Descou-21|Peter de Cou]], the elder, of the age of 55 yeares, born in Dau in the County of Lille in Flanders. :[[Descou-7|Peter de Cou]], the younger, of the age of 32 yeares, born in Bosnerd in the County of Bulloign in the Province of Picardy in the Kingdome of France. :[[Le_Houcq-17|John le Houcq]] [Houcque], of the age of 29 years, born in Oye in the County of Callais and Province of Picardy in the Kingdome of France. :[[Du_Bois-4517|Daniel Du-bo]], of the age of 30 years, born in Bullengen in the County of Callais in the Province of Picardy in the Kingdome of France. :[[De_Beaucarne-1|John de Beavecarne]], of the age of 40 yeares and upwards, born in Ettinpins in Flanders. :[[Le_Conte-144|David Le Conte]], of the age of 50 yeares, born in Guisne in the County of Callais in the Province of Picardy. Within Thorny Fenns and Ramsey Fenns in the Isle of Ely and Counties of Cambridge and Huntington they have peaceably settled themselves and dwelt for divers yeares past, being husbandmen and farmers of divers grounds in the same Fenns. Letters of denization and acts of naturalization for aliens in England and Ireland by Shaw, William Arthur, 1865-1943 [https://archive.org/details/lettersofdenizat01shaw/page/83/mode/2up Page 83] =====Manorial Court 1748===== During the incumbency of [[Ris-45|James Ris (bef.1713-1758)]], a manorial court was held at Thorney, before Robert Butcher there appeared as follows : The Jury .''' [[Ris-40|Jeremia Ris]]''', John Manby, '''[[Sly-771|Walter Sly]]''', '''[[Le_Fevre-1308|John Lefever]]''', '''[[Ris-53|Benjamin Ris]]''', '''[[Salmon-3141|John Solomon]]''' ,'''[[Le_Conte-132|Jacob Lecount]]''' . John Morton, '''[[Harley-1906|Daniel Harley]]''', Job Rouning, '''[[Le_Talle-22|Stephen Letalle]]''', '''[[Milleville-18|Peter Milfield]]''', Thomas Hawkins, Jeffery Emmet, Henry Haddon, Abraham Debson, '''[[Egar-33|Daniel Egar]]''', '''[[Fauvergue-30|Zecharias Fovargue]]''', Joseph Rolls,''' [[Le_Haire-20|Abraham Lehair]]''', Daniel Plummer, James King, '''[[Scribo-6|James Scribeau]]''', John Stimson, William Addy, Thomas Morton, John Mears, Robert Mallett. The history of Thorney abbey, together with some notice of the modern parish Richard Hyett Warner [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=E_sGAAAAQAAJ&pg=GBS.PA250&hl=en_GB Page 250] Attendees (in bold) have French Protestant ancestry and show the extent to which the communities had become integrated in Thorney, less than 100 years after formally arriving. Some name changes may also yield further (Manby = Manié, King = Roi ?) =====Thorney Registers===== The French Registers of Marriages and Burials are missing. Thankfully the Baptismal Register contains extensive valuable information. Married women retain maiden names, with a few exceptions, later in the record and names of Witnesses are invariably recorded, sometimes with relationships added. Wikitree profiles for each baptism can be found on the following page :- [[Space:Baptisms%2C_Thorney_French_Protestants|Baptisms, Thorney]] =====Non French Protestant Contemporaries at Thorney Abbey===== :[[Smith-204859|George Smith (d1651)]] Steward to [[Russell-10612|William Russell, 5th Earl of Bedford]] : [[Girdlestone-171|John Girdlestone MA (abt.1745-1821)]] Was Vicar of Thorney for 50 years until his death : [[Wing-3675|John Wing (bef.1752-bef.1812)]]. Succeeded his father as agent to the Duke of Bedford ===Names=== Naming is confounded by the variability in the record, probably mostly due to the difficulty in communicating a French sound to the ear of an English Cleric. Even the French themselves incorporated more Anglicised versions of their own family into formal documents. For example [[Flahau-7|Jean Flahau (bef.1639-bef.1689)]] in his Will refers to his granddaughter [[Bailleul-30|Susanne Bailleul (1686-)]] as Susan Bailey. She was baptised Bailleu. It is sometimes unclear where names overlap but often a person of interest appears in different parts of the record, perhaps as a witness or parent to reduce the uncertainty. Names which have only one mention are generally not in the list below. Below is a list of names which have been used in the baptism and other records. Where families clearly belong within a grouping of names (Often identifiable individuals having various spellings), the '''emboldened''' version is used in Wikitree profiles to provide consistency. Sometimes there has been a definite generational change from one spelling to another and where this has occurred more than one name is emboldened. An example is Harlé where the original French was used only once, so this is not used, instead the more common (Angicised) Harlay which later changed to Harley. Wantié is more commonly used, even though the spelling appears original for whatever reason so this is retained Likewise, prefixes such as du, de la, le, la etc can be equally random. Some may need to be adjusted later, should the need be compelling. There are also oddities which appear to be abbreviations such as Provo for Provost and du Bo is certainly the Clerks abbreviation for du Bois. A later Clerk uses only du Bois. No doubt there could be much discussion on the choices. Some of the names appear to have an English origin but have been given a French flavour in some of the records eg Howard > Haueurd, Sherwood > Cherwood. Francis Bayley looking for the origins of settlers at Thorney, found they could mostly be traced to Flanders, Artois and the Pays Conquis a conclusion indirectly supported by Coussemaker, a Roman Catholic writer, who researched state papers in the archives of France and Belgium. In several instances the place of birth of the refugees forms part of the entry, and where this occurs (chiefly in the Canterbury register) it invariably agrees with the information furnished by Coussemaker. Amongst the names thus recorded will be found those of Bailleul, Brune, Becue, Becque, Brunyee, Behague, Cocq, Chavatte, Descamps, de Laurens, du Bois, Desbiens, du Quesne, de la Haye, de Secq, Didier, de l’Escluse, de Houck, Despiez, Faucquenbergue, Fleurbaix, Hancquart, Le Talle, Lecluse, Lefevre, Lestienne, Lannoy, le Roy, le Roux, le Conte, Mannier, Manié, Oudart, Preuvost, Priem, Pacquette, Revel, Six, Saie, Saye, Sénéchal, Taffin, Tassell, Van Beveren, Vennin, Vermeille, Wantier and Zwarte. Troubles Religieux du XVF siècle dans la, Flandre Maritime, 1560-1570, par Ed. de Coussemaker : '''Accart''', Accar, Achart :'''Albert''' :'''Allis''', Alis :'''Allo''', Hallo, Halo, Hallot :'''Amory''', Amaury, Amaurry :Ancar, see Hancar : de l’Annoy See de Lanoy : '''Arnauld''', Arnau :'''Asdell''' :'''Bacquelet''' :'''de Bacy''', Deburge :'''Bailleul''', Bailleu, de Bailleux, Bailey :'''Bakley''' :'''Baldwin''', Baldin :'''Batten''', Battin :'''Baurudet''', Banderete, Banruedt :'''de Beaucarne''' : '''Beaumont''', Beaumon :'''Beaussart''' : '''de Becq''' Becque de Bek :'''Becue''' : '''Behague''', Behaghen : '''Beharelle''', Beharel :'''Bentley''', Benten :'''Bernard''', Bernar :'''de Bevre''', Bevre :de Bien see Desbiens : '''Blancart''', Blancar :'''Blique''', bliq, blick :'''Bonduel''' :'''Bonfort''', Banfort :'''du Bois''', du Bo :'''Boros''', Bourough, Bourous, Borres, Burros :'''Bouchereau''', Boucherou, Boucherow :'''Boussemar''' :'''Buckingham''', Beckingham : '''Borbeck''' :'''Bradfor''' :'''Burbish''', Burbisch, Borbish : '''Burette''', Buret :'''Cardue''', Cardoy :'''Cass''', Cas : '''Caillet''', Cailiet, Caliet, Calieux : '''Cateau''' Cattieaux, Catteau, Cattiau, Quatiaux, (Couteau probably a distinctly different name) :'''de la Chasse''' :'''du Chattelet''' :'''Chavatte''', Chavatt, Savatt, Scavat :'''du Chemin''' Chemin :'''du Chessoy''', Chessoy :'''Chiroutie''', Cisrout, Chiroutié :'''Clais''', Clays :'''le Cler''', le Clerq, Cler :'''Clerbau''', Clerbaut, Clerbaux. :Coquelard, Coclard see Goglar :'''le Conte''', Conte : '''Cooley''', Coolay, Cowley :'''le Coq''', le Cocq, le Colcq, Coq :'''Cosseau''' , Cosiau : '''Couteau''', Coutiau, Coutieaux, Cousteau :'''de le Croix''', Croix :'''Cugny''', Cugnie, Cunny, Conny :'''Cuvelier''', Cuvillié :'''Delahaye''' see de la Haye :'''Delahoy''', de la Hoy, Dolahoy, Delahoy, de Lehoy (Possibly the same as de la Haye) :'''Deltur''' : Delpierre see de Lespiere :'''Derique''' de Rique, Derick : '''Desbiens''', Desbien, de Bien :'''Descamps''', de Camp, Descam, Descan, Décan :'''Descou''', Descous : '''Destienville''', Estienville : '''Destrié''' :'''Desquien''' Desquire, (Desquien and Desbiens are listed separately in the 22 who arrived from Sandtoft) :'''Didier''' :'''Domsen''' :'''Doné''' :'''Dornelle''', Dournelle, Dournel :'''Dumoulin''' du Moulin : '''Duriez''' :'''Egar''', Egard :'''Elam''' :'''Elis''', Ellis : Escluse see de Lescluse :'''Fauquenbergue''' :'''Fauvergue''', Fovergue, Fovargue : '''Fellingam'''’ Feallingam, :'''Ferré''', Ferre, Ferez :'''Fichaut''', Ficeux :'''Flahau''', Flahaut, Flahow, Floehoe, Flahaw : '''Fleurbay''', Fleurbaye, Fleurbaie, Fleurbois, Flourbois, Flourboy :'''de Fleuren''', Fleuren :'''Flotte''' :'''Flour''', le Flour :'''Fontaine''', Fontain :'''Fournier''', Fournié, :'''Fouree''' :'''de le Frette''', de le Fret, Frette, Fret :'''Fruchar''', Fruchard, Fruchart, Frouchar, Frouchard, Frushart :'''Gante''', Ganté, Gant, Gaunt :'''Garbaut''' (Later Anglicised Gerbow) :'''Gautier''' :'''Gibson''', Gypton :'''Giraud''' :'''Goglar''', Coquelard, Coquelar, Coclard, Gogælar, Goglard, Goguelar : '''Gouy''', Guouy, Guoy :'''Grain''' le Grain :'''le Grand''', Grand :'''Grebault''', Geubau :'''Haffringue''' Hafreinge, Hafrein :'''Hagnerez''', Hagneray, Hangneray, Hannere : Hallyday, see Holiday :Halo , Hallo, Hallot see Allo :'''Hancar''', Hanquar, Ancar :'''Hanot''', Hannot, Hannotte, Annote (Possibly Hennot,see Henoc) :'''Hardick''', Hardicq :'''Harlay''', '''Harley''', Harlé :'''Hardy''', Hardeley :'''Hartford''', Harfit :'''Haudegampe''', Haudegamp :'''de la Haye''', de la Haie, Delahaye : '''Hecklin''', Hickling :'''Hennin''' :'''Hennegrave''', Henegrave :'''Henoc''', Hennoc, Hanock, (Possibly Hennot,see Hanot) : '''Hernu''', Hergnu :L’Hermite see Lermitte : '''Hersin''', Hersem, Hersain, Hersein : '''Hinson''', Huison :'''Hochedé''', Haudaye (Later Houseday) : '''Holiday''', Hallyday : '''Holmes''', Homes :'''Howard''', Haueurd, Howarth : Hoy, see Delahoy :'''le Houcq''', Houq, Hook, van Houcq, vanhouq :'''Huglo''', Huguelo :'''Judd''', Judge : '''de Lanoy''', de la Noy, de Lannoy de l’Annoy :'''Laty''', Latté :'''Laurens''', Lorran, Leuren, de Leuren , Laurene : '''Leacke''', Laek, Leick :'''Lermitte''', Lermite, L’Hermite, Lernut. :'''de Lescluse''', Escluse :'''de Lespiere''', de Lepiere, Delpierre, Depier : ''' le Leu''', loue :'''Lion''', Leon :'''Lisy''', Lizy :'''de Lo''', Lo :'''le Mahieu''' Mahieu. :'''Manié''', Manie, Manier, Monier, Monie, Money, Maney :'''de la Mare''', Mare, Maire : '''Marquillier''', Marquilier, Merquillier, Merquilier Markiller, Markelly, Merkillier :'''Mazengarb''', Mazengarbe, Masengarbe, Masingarbe, Massingarbe, Massingard, Masingarb :'''Meers''', Meares :'''Meuris''' :'''Milleville''', Milville, Milvil (Later Millfield/Milfield) :'''Mily''' :'''Minet''' :'''Morfin''' :'''Morelle''' :'''Morillon''', Morrilon, Morrillion :'''de le Motte''', Motte :du Moulin see Dumoulin :'''Mouquet''', Mouquay :'''Neuville''' : '''Notteau''', Noteau : de la Noy, See de Lanoy :'''Obeson''' : '''Oudar''', Oudart, Audar , Houdare :'''Paren ''', Parent, Parens, Parrein : '''Peirson''', Person :'''Pesquen''' : '''Petillon''' : '''Pinchon''', Pinçon :'''du Pont''', du Pon :'''de le Porte''', Porte :'''Provost''', Provo :'''du Puy''', Dupuy, du Puis : Quatiaux, see Cateau :'''du Quenne''', du Quesne, du Quen, Desquien, le Quenne :'''Quoy''' :'''Ramery''', Rammery :'''Renaud''', Renauld , Renau, Renow, Renoe : '''de Raedt''', de Raet, de Rett, la Ret, Ret :'''Ritchisson''' :'''du Rieu''', Rieu, Duriez. :'''Ris''', Rys, Ry : '''de Riviere''', Riviere. : '''de Rique''', Rique :'''Rondebergue''' :'''Roseau''', Rosiau :'''de Roubay''', de Roubaie, de Roubaye :'''Rousy''' :'''le Roux''', le Rue :'''de la Rue''', de le Rue, de Rue, de le Roue :'''Ruff''', Roof :'''le Safre''', Safre, de le Safre : '''de Sain''', Saint, de Saint, Sain, de Sein, Dessein, de Saigne, de Signe. : '''Salmon''', Salomon :Savatt see Chavatte :'''Sauvage''' : '''Scanfair''', Scanfaire, Scanflair : Scavat see Chavatte : '''Schonart''' Sconar Skonart :'''Scribo''', Scribau, Scribaut :'''le Sec''', Sec, Secq :'''Senlec''', Senlecq :'''Sherwood''', Cherwood : '''Sigé''', Sigée, Sigie, Sigié, Sisie, Sigies, de Signe :'''Sly''', Slye : '''Smaque, Smack''' Smacq, Smagg, Semeque, Smasque :'''Sprie''' :'''Stecye''', Stecey : '''le Sueur''', le Suer, le Sur : '''Sy, later Six''', Sye, See, Sie :'''Tafin''', Taffin :'''Tegredin''', Tegredein, Tesgredin,Thegardin, Tegardin, Desgardins : '''Théry''', Terry, Thery, Tery :'''Thurlby''', Thurlsby :'''Treffet''' :'''Tourquoin''', Turquine, Teurqoin :'''Tyssen''', Tissen : '''Ugille''', Ugil, Usille, Uzil. :'''Vailland''' :'''de Valier''', Vallier, Valher :'''Vanplue''' (Vanplus in Guînes register) : '''Vennin''' Venin Venins Vené, Veneins, le Venin : '''du Verlié''', du Verlier, Dumerlye, Duvertier :'''Vermeil''' :'''Wantié''', Wantier, Wattey, Wantey, Wanty, Wattie (Originally de Vantier) :'''Waram''' :'''Wettin''' :'''Winkley''', Wintley :'''Yserby''', Isserby, Iserby, Iserbie :'''de Zombre''', Dezombre ===Wills=== Bracketed occupations are implied. Bracketed names are maiden names or the previous name where an Anglicised version has been formally adopted. {| border="0" class="wikitable sortable" | '''Name''' || '''Occupation'''. I ||'''Location'''. I||'''Date'''. I||'''≈Age'''. |- |[[Bailleul-38|Bailleul, Abraham (Bayly) (abt.1638-bef.1695)]] ||Yeoman||Crowland ||1695||57 |- |[[Bailleul-39|Bailleul, Philipe (Bayley) (abt.1629-bef.1706)]] ||Yeoman||Whittlesey||1706||77 |- |[[Bailleul-33|Bailleul, Jean (Bayley) (abt.1646-bef.1717)]] ||Yeoman||Crowland ||1717||71 |- |[[Brimble-149|Brimble, William (abt.1700-1754)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1754||54 |- |[[Du_Bois-4523|Bois, du, Anthoine (Dubois) (abt.1600-bef.1661)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1661||61 |- |[[Du_Bois-4521|Bois, du, Isaac (Dubois) (abt.1635-bef.1717)]] ||Husbandman ||Thorney ||1717||82 |- |[[Clerbau-5|Clerbau André (abt.1614-bef.1658)]] ||Husbandman ||Hatfield ||1658||44 |- |[[Bailleul-53|Bayley, Daniel (Bailleul) (bef.1672-1729)]] ||Gentleman ||Whittlesey ||1729||56 |- |[[Bayley-1615|Bayley, Daniel (Bailleul) (bef.1732-bef.1774)]] ||Esquire ||Whittlesey ||1774||41 |- |[[Vandebeck-30|Holmes (Vandebeck), Marie (abt.1625-aft.1696)]] ||Widow ||Parson Drove ||1696||71 |- |[[Garbaut-3|Gerbow, Jean (Garbaut) (abt.1666-bef.1712)]] ||(Landowner) ||Parson Drove ||1712||46 |- |[[Garbaut-1|Gerbow, Charles (Garbaut) (abt.1660-bef.1710)]] ||(Landowner) ||Parson Drove ||1710||50 |- |[[Berchet-4|Berchet, Pierre (abt.1610-1655)]] ||Minister||Thorne ||1655||45 |- |[[Le_Conte-107|Conte, le, Samuel (bef.1660-bef.1689)]] ||Grocer ||Isle of Ely ||1689||29 |- |[[Descamps-123|Descamps, Jaques (Descampes) (abt.1595-bef.1652)]] ||Yeoman ||Belton ||1652||57 |- |[[Desbiens-377 |Desbiens, Lawrence (Debien) (abt.1620-bef.1655)]] ||Husbandman ||Wroot ||1655||35 |- |[[Descou-21 |Descou, Piere (Descoe) (abt.1600-bef.1681)]] ||Gentleman ||Thorney ||1681||81 |- |[[Fauvergue-3|Fauvergue, Jean (Fovergue) (abt.1630-bef.1710)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1710||80 |- |[[Flahau-15|Flahau, Isaac (bef.1643-bef.1694)]] ||Husbandman||Thorney ||1694||51 |- |[[Flahau-4|Flahau, Jaques (Floehoe) (abt.1610-bef.1669)]] ||Senior||Thorney ||1669||59 |- |[[Flahau-7|Flahau, Jean (bef.1639-bef.1689)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1689||50 |- |[[Flour-3|Flour, Noé (bef.1663-bef.1711)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1711||58 |- |[[Goglar-6|Goglar, Jean (Gogler) (abt.1658-bef.1711)]] ||Yeoman||Crowland ||1711||55 |- |[[Harlay-7|Harlay, Isaac (Harley) (1647-bef.1682)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1682||35 |- |[[Holmes-20525|Manié, Catherine (Holmes) (Manee) (bef.1657-bef.1714)]] ||Widow||Thorney ||1714||57 |- |[[Jembelin-3|Jembelin, Peter (abt.1650-1715)]] ||Doctor in Physic ||Thorney ||1715||65 |- |[[Manié-20|Manié, Luc (Maney) (bef.1666-bef.1720)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1720||54 |- |[[Mazengarb-81|Mazengarb, Anthoine (Massingard) (1615-bef.1676)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1676||61 |- |[[Mazengarb-8|Mazengarb, Isaac (1680-bef.1730)]] ||Farmer||Little Wigborough||1730||50 |- |[[Mazengarb-95|Mazengarb, Jean (Masengarb) (abt.1654-1710)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1710||56 |- |[[Peirson-185|Peirson, Ralph (abt.1650-bef.1711)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1711||61 |- |[[Le_Pla-63|Le Pla, Marc (abt.1622-1697)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1697||75 |- |[[De_La_Pryme-18|Pryme de la, Charles (Prime) (abt.1610-1669)]] ||Yeoman||Hatfield Chase ||1669||59 |- |[[Ris-77|Ris, Abraham (bef.1663-1718)]] || Gentleman || Bare Paster ||1718||55 |- |[[Ris-45|Ris, James (bef.1713-1758)]] ||Clerk||Thorney ||1758||45 |- |[[Ris-40|Ris, Jeremie (1703-1753)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1753||50 |- |[[Sy-47|Sy, Jaques (James See) (abt.1650-bef.1686)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1686||36 |- |[[Sy-57|Sy, Nicholas (Nicholas See) (abt.1620-bef.1655)]] ||(Landowner) ||Thorney ||1655||35 |- |[[Le_Talle-34|Tall, le, Jean (Letalle) (abt.1615-bef.1658)]] ||Husbandman||Hatfield ||1658||43 |- |[[Beaumont-3190|Pryme, de la, Marie (Beaumont)(Prym) (abt.1647-bef.1672)]] ||Widow||Hatfield ||1672||25 |- |[[Vandebeck-20|Vandebeck, Isaac (bef.1685-bef.1719)]] ||Husbandman||Thorney ||1719||34 |- |[[Vandebeck-19|Vandebeck, Jean (bef.1682-bef.1719)]] || (Landowner) ||Thorney ||1719||31 |- |[[Wantié-27|Wantié, John (Watters) (abt.1615-1660)]] || (Landowner) ||Thorney ||1660||45 |- | [[Wantié-1|Wantié, Isaac (Wanty) (abt.1661-bef.1706)]] || (Landowner) ||Thorney ||1706||45 |- | [[Wantié-5|Wantié, Jean (Wanty) (1676-1750)]] ||Yeoman||Thorney ||1750||74 |} == Sources == See also *Canterbury Register **[https://archive.org/details/registersofwallo00egli/page/n13/mode/2up Part 1] **[https://archive.org/details/registersofwallo05egli/page/n11/mode/2up Part 2] * Ecclesiae londino-batavae archivum by Austin Friars (Church : London, England); Hessels, Jan Hendrik, 1836-1907 **[https://archive.org/details/ecclesiaelondino02austuoft/page/n5/mode/1up Vol 2] **[https://archive.org/details/ecclesiaelondino31austuoft/page/xvii/mode/1up Vol 3 Pt1] **[https://archive.org/details/ecclesiaelondino32austuoft/page/n5/mode/1up Vol 3 Pt2] * Fenland Notes and Queries **[https://archive.org/details/sim_fenland-notes-and-queries_1891-10-01_1/page/3/mode/1up Vol 1] Ed Saunders Pub 1891 **[https://archive.org/details/fenlandnotesquer2189pete/page/3/mode/1up Vol 2] by Peterborough [Eng.]G.C.Caster; Saunders, W. H. Bernard, ed; Sweeting, W. D. (Walter Debenham), 1839-1913, Pub 1898 **[https://archive.org/details/sim_fenland-notes-and-queries_1897-10_3/page/3/mode/2up Vol 3] Edited Sweeting, W. D. Pub 1897-10 **[https://archive.org/details/sim_fenland-notes-and-queries_1900-10_4/mode/2up? Vol 4] Edited Sweeting, W. D. Pub 1900-10 **[https://archive.org/details/sim_fenland-notes-and-queries_1903-10_5 Vol 5] Edited Sweeting, W. D. Pub 1903-10 **[https://archive.org/details/sim_fenland-notes-and-queries_1906-10_6 Vol 6] Edited Sweeting, W. D. Pub 1906-10 **[https://archive.org/details/sim_fenland-notes-and-queries_1909-10_7 Vol 7] Edited Sweeting, W. D. Pub 1909-10 * La France protestante: ou, Vies des protestants français qui se sont fait un nom dans l'histoire by Eugène Haag, Émile Haag **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest04haaggoog/page/n6/mode/2up Vol 1 A-BAS] **[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_w0kjhT2_DEMC/page/n3/mode/2up Vol 2 BAS-BRO] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest15haaggoog/page/n7/mode/2up Vol 3 BRO-COL] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest07haaggoog/page/n7/mode/2up Vol 4 COL-ESS] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest00unkngoog/page/n6/mode/2up Vol 5 EST-HUA] **[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_OyteAAAAIAAJ/page/n3/mode/2up Vol 6 HUB-LES] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest02haaggoog/page/n7/mode/2up Vol 7 LES -M] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest01haaggoog/page/n7/mode/2up Vol 8 N-ROS] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest00haaggoog/page/n7/mode/2up Vol 9 R-Z] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest06haaggoog/page/n7/mode/2up pièces justificatives] **[https://archive.org/details/lafranceprotest01unkngoog/page/n11/mode/2up pièces justificatives] **[https://archive.org/details/la-france-protestante-mm-eugene-emile-haag-1879.-tome-2/page/n9/mode/1up Second Edition] * Bulletin historique et littéraire by Société de l'histoire du protestantisme français (France) **[https://archive.org/details/bulletindelasoci114soci/page/n5/mode/2up Index, Vol. 1-14] **[https://www.jstor.org/journal/bullhistlitt Listing] *[https://archive.org/details/protestantexiles01agne/page/n1 Protestant exiles from France], chiefly in the reign of Louis XIV; or, The Huguenot refugees and their descendants in Great Britain and Ireland by Agnew, David C. A. (David Carnegie Andrew), 1821-1887 *[https://sites.rootsweb.com/~engcam/HuguenotsandWalloons.htm Huguenots and Walloons] Rootsweb * Transcript of the registers of the Protestant church at Guisnes, from 1668 to 1685 by Eglise prétendue reformée (Guînes, France); Minet, William, 1851-; Waller, William Chapman, 1850-1917; Huguenot Society of London [https://archive.org/details/transcriptofregi3166egli/page/184/mode/1up?q=mazengarbe Volume 3] * https://www.historytoday.com/archive/englands-first-refugees * University of Nottingham [https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/ManuscriptsandSpecialCollections/CollectionsInDepth/Water/HatfieldChase.aspx Hatfield Chase Corporation, 1538-1973] * The history of the French, Walloon, Dutch and other foreign Protestant refugees settled in England from the reign of Henry VIII to the revocation of the Edict of Nantes; with notices of their trade and commerce, copious extracts from the registers, lists of the early settlers, ministers, &c., and an appendix containing copies of the charter of Edward VI, &c by Burn, John Southerden, 1798-1870 https://archive.org/details/historyfrenchwa00burngoog/page/n1/mode/1up * The countryside commission [https://www.northlincs.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Isle-of-Axholme-HLC-Report4909KB.pdf The Isle of Axholme Historic Landscape Characterisation Project] Keith Miller Nov 1997 *Utopia Britannica [http://www.utopia-britannica.org.uk/pages/Strangers%20in%20the%20East.htm Strangers in the East] * The number of Huguenot immigrants in England in the late seventeenth century. Robin Gwynn 1983, [https://www.academia.edu/77251010/The_number_of_Huguenot_immigrants_in_England_in_the_late_seventeenth_century Journal of Historical Geography]. * The National Archives [https://media.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php/tracing-huguenot-ancestors/ Tracing Huguenot ancestors] Dr Kathleen Chater * [https://archive.org/details/greatagricultura00bedfuoft/page/n7/mode/2up A great agricultural estate], being the story of the origin and administration of Woburn and Thorney by Bedford, Herbrand Arthur Russell, 11th Duke of * [[https://archive.org/details/fenlandnotesquer3189pete/page/n397/mode/2up The French Colony at Thorney] Fenland notes & queries by Peterborough [Eng.]G.C.Caster; Saunders, W. H. Bernard, ed; Sweeting, W. D. (Walter Debenham), 1839-1913, ed *[https://books.google.co.ls/books?id=E_sGAAAAQAAJ&printsec=copyright#v=onepage&q&f=false The history of Thorney abbey], together with some notice of the modern parish By Richard Hyett Warner [https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=E_sGAAAAQAAJ&pg=GBS.PA232&hl=en_GB Chapter XI] * Protestant exiles from France, chiefly in the reign of Louis XIV; or, The Huguenot refugees and their descendants in Great Britain and Ireland by Agnew, David C. A. (David Carnegie Andrew), 1821-1887 [https://archive.org/details/protestantexiles01agne/page/n1 Vol 1] * Protestant Exiles from France in the Reign of Louis XIV].Or the Huguenot Refugees and Their Descendants in Great Britain and Ireland · Volume 2 By David C. Agnew · 1871 [https://archive.org/details/protestantexiles02agne_0 Vol 2] * [https://sites.rootsweb.com/~engcam/HuguenotsandWalloons.htm Cambridgeshire - Huguenots and Walloons] rootsweb * [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Huguenots/TWsBAAAAQAAJ?hl=en The Huguenots Their Settlements, Churches, & Industries in England and Ireland]]. Samuel Smiles · 1867 * Journal of the British Archaeological Association. United Kingdom: British Archaeological Association., 1878. [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Journal_of_the_British_Archaeological_As/zTUNAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1 Notes on Thorney Abbey Church Page 290] * [https://archive.org/details/lesglisesduref03schi/page/n10/mode/1up Les églises du refuge en Angleterre] by Schickler, F. de (Fernand de), baron, 1835-1909 Publication date 1892. * [[Space:The_Publications_of_The_Huguenot_Society_of_London|The Publications of The Huguenot Society of London]] * [https://www.huguenotsociety.org.uk/publications/quarto.html Quarto, New Series and Indexes] Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland. * [https://archive.org/details/diaryofabrahamde00dela/page/n5/mode/1up The diary of Abraham De la Pryme, the Yorkshire antiquary] by De la Pryme, Abraham, b. 1677, author; Jackson, Charles, 1809-1882, editor; De la Pryme, Charles, editor; Surtees Society *[https://www.drdavidwright.co.uk/uploads/7/2/1/2/7212594/consolidated_canterbury_probates__status_.pdf List of Canterbury Wills] * [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_history_and_antiquities_of_Thorne/g7YHAAAAQAAJ?hl=en The history and antiquities of Thorne]. United Kingdom: n.p., 1829.] * [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Lists_of_Foreign_Protestants_and_Aliens/_KcUAAAAQAAJ?hl=en Lists of Foreign Protestants and Aliens, Resident in England 1618-1688] From Returns in the State Paper Office By William Durrant Cooper · 1862 * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/260668?availability=Family%20History%20Library History of the French protestant refugees, from the revocation of the edit of Nantes to our days] : with an American appendix by a descendant of the Huguenots by M. Charles Weiss * [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_Draining_of_the_Fens/Db0tvq686BcC?hl=en The Draining of the Fens] By H. C. Darby · 2011 * [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/The_history_and_topography_of_the_Isle_o/s98HAAAAQAAJ?hl=en The history and topography of the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire] By William Brocklehurst Stonehouse · 1839 * Peck, William. A topographical account of the isle of Axholme. United Kingdom: The author, 1815. **[https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/A_topographical_account_of_the_isle_of_A/-OY-AAAAYAAJ?hl=en Vol 1] * [https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/12820/1/544226_vol1.pdf Agricultural change in the lowlands of south yorkshire with special reference to the manor of hatfield] 1600 - e.1875 by Daniel Byford PhD History Department March 2005 * Genealogical memoranda relating to the Huguenot family of de Vantier, anglais Wanty by Henry Peet. Pub 1902 [https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/263390/?offset=508630#page=1&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= Link]. [https://www.seekingmyroots.com/members/files/G001952.pdf pdf (p33 text missing) ] * Huguenot pedigrees by Charles Edmund Lart. (Main Author) [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog/241188?availability=Family%20History%20Library familysearch links] * [https://www.theses.fr/2016ARTO0014.pdf Les Réfugiés protestants de la Châtellenie de Lille en Hollande (milieu XVIème- début XVIIIème siècles) ] Alain Desrousseax 7 Dec 2016. * [https://crowle.org/?p=4536 Old Manuscript Concerning the Drainage] – from Epworth Bells. * Bruges et le Franc ou leur magistrature et leur noblesse avec des données historiques et généalogiques sur chaque famille ·[https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/_/XY5AAAAAcAAJ?hl=en Volume 1], [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/_/KFVbAAAAQAAJ?hl=en Volume 2], [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/_/NFRbAAAAQAAJ?hl=en Volume 3], [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/_/QlRbAAAAQAAJ?hl=en Volume 4], [https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Bruges_et_le_Franc_ou_leur_magistrature/A5BAAAAAcAAJ?hl=en Volume 5] By Jean J. Gailliard · 1862 * [https://archive.org/details/historicalaccoun00wats An Historical Account of the Ancient Town and Port of Wisbech, in the Isle of Ely, in the County of Cambridge] by Watson, William, F.A.S. [from old catalog] Publication date 1827 *PhD Dissertation [https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/77023008.pdf The communities of the Manor of epworth in the seventeenth Century]. Joy Lloyd Published Sept 1998

French Revolution

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Prosjekt om Den Franske Revolusjonen.

French Revolutionary Wars Timeline - 1792

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''' Quick links ⚜ [[Space:Napoleonic_Wars|Napoleonic Wars Team Page]] ⚜.[[Space:French_Revolutionary_Wars_Timeline_-_1792|French_Revolutionary_Wars_Timeline_-_1792]] ⚜ ''' {{Red | Under construction. Contact [[Devlin-670|Rich Devlin]] if you have any questions. Feel free to make any changes or additions to this page}} :This is part of the [[Project:Military_and_War|Military_and_War Project]], the ⚜ [[Project:France|France Project]] and the (enter project link here). :Also working with the [[Project:Categorization|Categorization Project]]. [[Project:Europe|Europe Project]], [[Project:European_Aristocrats|Project:European_Aristocrats Project]] The goal of this project is to build a time line of events, with links to Profiles, Categories and Pages. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Devlin-670|Richard Devlin]]. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=15369838 send me a private message]. Thanks! == the lead up == February 7, 1792 Holy Roman emperor '''Leopold II''' and Prussia's king '''Frederick William II''' sign a treaty of alliance. March 1, 1792 Holy Roman Emperor [[Habsburg-Lothringen-7|Leopold II]] dies at Vienna. Leopold's son Francis becomes the new Holy Roman Emperor [[Habsburg-Lothringen-9|Francis II]]. March 9, 1792 The new French Defense Minister is '''Pierre-Marie de Grave'''. He succeeds '''Louis-Marie-Jacques-Almaric de Narbonne'''. April 13, 1792 Creation of the Army of the Midi. Commander: '''Anne Pierre, marquis de Montesquiou-Fezensac'''. == The French Revolutionary Wars and the War of the First Coalition begins == April 20, 1792 France declares war on Austria, who then allies with Prussia. April 29, 1792 '''Battle of Mons, also called the Battle of Quiévrain''' France invades the Austrian Netherlands (Belgium) with two armies, and then retreats. '''Armand-Louis de Gontaut''', aka the Duke de Biron, leads the first army of 10,000 men to capture Mons, where Austrian '''General Beaulieu''' was stationed. '''first Battle of Tournai''' A second army, led by General '''Théobald Dillon'', was ordered by General Dumouriez to capture Tournai to avoid confrontation. They march on Tournai but meet Austrian troops between Lamain and Marquoin. Skirmish ensues. Following orders, Dillon commands his men to retreat. His soldiers thought Dillon had betrayed them and killed him back at Lille. May 9, 1792 ''' Joseph Servan''' is appointed French Defense Minister replacing '''Pierre-Marie de Grave'''. June 12, 1792 The new French Defense Minister is Charles-Francois Dumouriez. He succeeds Joseph Servan. June 16, 1792 The new French Defense Minister is Pierre-Auguste Lajard. He succeeds Charles-Francois Dumouriez, who goes to war as commander of the Army of the North. July 12, 1792 Lafayette, formerly commander of the Army of the Center, becomes the new commander of the Army of the North. New commander of the Army of the Center is Luckner. July 21, 1792 Luckner transfers to the Army of the North because Rochambeau had resigned. Armand-Louis de Gontaut, duke de Biron is the new commander of the Army of the Rhine. July 23, 1792 The new French Defense Minister is Charles-Xavier-Joseph Franquetot d'Abancourt. He succeeds Pierre-Auguste Lajard. July 25, 1792 The Brunswick Manifesto (Manifeste de Brunswick) is a threatening message from the Prussian General '''Charles William Ferdinand''' Duke of Brunswick (Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand von Braunschweig) to the French, advising them to leave King Louis XVI and his family unharmed. August 11, 1792 The new French Defense Minister is Joseph Servan. He succeeds Charles-Xavier-Joseph Franquetot d'Abancourt. August 18, 1792 Lafayette is declared a traitor. Dumouriez is the new commander of the Army of the North (Armée du Nord). September 2, 1792 The Prussians take Verdun. Moreton-Chabrillant is the new commander of the Army of the North. His post is temporary. September 20, 1792 French victory at the Battle of Valmy led by Charles-François Dumouriez and François-Christophe Kellermann, fight against invading Prussians and Austrians. September 21, 1792 The Legislative Assembly is replaced by the National Convention. == the new Republic == September 22, 1792 Proclamation of the Republic. September 28, 1792 La Bourdonnaye is the new commander of the Army of the North. September 30, 1792 '''Battle of Spires''' also spelled Speyer, French victory, led by General Custine. 20,000 French troops against 12,000 Austrians. The French take 2,900 prisoners. The Austrians surrender. October 1, 1792 The right wing of the Army of the North becomes the Army of the Ardennes. Commander: '''Dumouriez'''. Formerly, it had been the right wing of the Army of the North. The left wing of the Army of the Rhine becomes the Army of the Moselle. Commander: Kellermann. Creation of the Army of the Interior. Commander: Berruyer. Creation of the Army of the Pyrenees. Commander: Servan. Creation of the Army of the Vosges. Commander: Custine. October 4, 1792 The French, led by General Custine march on Worms and the city immediately surrenders. October 18, 1792 The new French Defense Minister is Jean-Nicolas Pache. He succeeds Joseph Servan. October 19, 1792 The French besiege Mainz (Mayence). October 21, 1792 Having been besieged since October 19, 1792, the city of Mayence (Mainz) surrenders to the French, led by General Custine. October 22, 1792 The French, led by General Custine take Frankfurt. November 3, 1792 The French, led by General Dumouriez invade the Austrian Netherlands. November 13, 1792 The French take Brussels. November 16, 1792 A French warship enters Ostend (Oostende, Ostende) without resistance. November 27, 1792 The French take Liège (Luik, Lüttich.) December 2, 1792 Namur surrenders to the French. Battle of Frankfurt. The Prussians and Hessians recapture Frankfurt from French General Custine and his men. The Army of the Midi (Army of the South) is split into the Army of the Alps (Commander: Kellermann) and the Army of Italy (Commander: Anselme). D'Anselme and his " Army of the Var" (officially the right wing of the Army of the Midi) become the Army of Italy. December 10, 1792 General Dumouriez is again the commander of the Army of the North. He also has the command over the Army of the Ardennes. December 15, 1792 The French take Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle.) December 27, 1792 New commander of the Army of Italy: Brunet (temp) December 30, 1792 Valence is the new commander of the Army of the Ardennes, but still under General Dumouriez (Army of the North} == Sources == * http://www.emersonkent.com/history/timelines/french_revolutionary_wars_timeline_1792.htm

French roots:ancestors and nobles

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list of french ancestors and nobles (1)Walter "First High Steward of Scotland"Fitzalan.27th g-grandfather.My Shaw/Ross side. (2)AzzoVI(Azzolino VI)"ARCO"Marqus d'este . 26th g-grandfather.My Shaw/Ross side (3)AzzoV"Marchese di Ancona e conte di Loreta"d'este.27th g-grandfather.My Shaw/Ross side. (4)Azzo the 7th(este)di Ferrara"Novella,Marchese d'Este,Signore de Ferrara".1st cousin,27 T R.My Shaw/Ross side

French to English Translation for dates and numbers

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This really helps when trying to figure out dates written in French.
0 zero
1 un
2 deux
3 trois
4 quatre
5 cinq
6 six
7 sept
8 huit
9 neuf
10 dix
11 onze
12 douze
13 treize
14 quatorze
15 quinze
16 seize
17 dix-sept
18 dix-huit
19 dix-neuf
20 vingt
21 vingt et un
22 vingt-deux
23 vingt-trois
24 vingt-quatre
25 vingt-cinq
26 vingt-six
27 vingt-sept
28 vingt-huit
29 vingt-neuf
30 trente
40 quarante
50 cinquante
60 soixante
70 soixante-dix
80 quatre-vingts
90 quatre-vingt-dix
100 cent
1000 Mille

French-Bayless 1869

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This is an album containing photos and other memorabilia of the family created by the 1886 marriage of [[French-12609|Frederick Earle French]] and [[Bayless-621|Esther Shepard Bayless]], including, during their childhoods, their children, [[French-12608|Katharine Earle (French) Knight]] and [[French-12797|Bayless Wood French]]. Frederick Earle "Fred" French and Esther Shepard Bayless were married at Saint Paul's Episcopal Church, then at the corner of 6th and Walnut in Louisville, Kentucky, 1 Jun 1886.Sources: '''(1)''' [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/3/3e/French-12609-2.jpg 1886 Marriage Record]: "[[French-12609|Frederick Earle French]]" married "[[Bayless-621|Esther Shepard Bayless]]" at "St. Pauls," 1 Jun 1886. Record of Marriages. Saint Pauls Episcopal Church, Louisville, Jefferson, Kentucky, United States. "Kentucky Marriages, 1785-1979", database, ''FamilySearch'' (available online [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F477-N4V here] : 23 February 2021), Fred Earle French, 1886. Actual page online [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9ZP-K32F here]. Accessed 22 May 2021. '''(2)''' [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/f/fd/French-12609-5.jpg Marriage Bond]. "Kentucky, County Marriages, 1797-1954," database with images, ''FamilySearch'' (available online [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9SQ-7XGZ?cc=1804888&wc=QD3Q-WGM%3A1300530801 here]: 17 May 2018), 005557678 > image 615 of 628; citing multiple county clerks, county courts, and historical societies, Kentucky. Specific page is online [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9SQ-7XGZ?i=614&cc=1804888 here]. Accessed 22 May 2021. '''(3)''' [https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/8/8c/French-12609-6.jpg 1886 Wedding Invitation]. Scan of original 1886 wedding invitation in the possession of descendant, [[Mitchell-27075|Julie (Mitchell) Smart]]. {{Image|file= Bayless-621.jpg|align=l|size=l|caption=Esther}}{{Image|file=French-12609-6.jpg|size=m|caption=InvitationScan of original 1886 wedding invitation in the possession of descendant, [[Mitchell-27075|Julie (Mitchell) Smart]].}}{{Image|file=French-12609-3.jpg|size=m|caption=St. Paul'sSt. Paul's Church (1839-1894, as enlarged in 1872 and then at the corner of 6th and Walnut in Louisville, Kentucky. Source: Durrett, Reuben T. 1889. ''An Historical Sketch of St. Paul's Church, Louisville, Ky''. Louisville: J. P. Morton & Co, printers. Available without restriction courtesy of Hathitrust [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.hx4ty9?urlappend=%3Bseq=97 here]. As originally constructed in 1839, the church looked like [https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/French-12609-1 this] (available at same source without restriction courtesy of Hathitrust [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.hx4ty9?urlappend=%3Bseq=14 here]). Accessed 22 May 2021.}} {{Image|file=French-12609-4.jpg|size=m|caption=SanctuarySt. Paul's Episcopal Church (1839-1894). Photo of Sanctuary as it existed in 1886. Date and photographer unknown (though taken before 1894 and likely after renovation of 1872). Record of Marriages. Saint Pauls Episcopal Church, Louisville, Jefferson, Kentucky, United States. "Kentucky Marriages, 1785-1979", database, ''FamilySearch'' (available online [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F477-N4V here] : 23 February 2021), Fred Earle French, 1886. Actual page online [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89ZP-K3SP?i=12 here]. Accessed 22 May 2021.}} {{Image|file= French-12608-4.jpg|size=l |caption=L-R: Katharine Earle (French) Knight; her daughter, Virginia Bayless Knight; and her mother, Esther Shepard (Bayless) French c1914}}{{Image|file=French-12609-13.jpg|align=r|size=l|caption=Fred French with granddaughter Virginia Knight in Evanston c1918Scan of photo in the possession of descendant, [[Mitchell-27075|Julie (Mitchell) Smart]].}}{{Image|file=French-12608-5.jpg|size=l|caption= Katharine Earle French at 8 mos., 1890Scan of photo in the possession of descendant, [[Mitchell-27075|Julie (Mitchell) Smart]].}} = Sources =

Frentel/Ziv Families of Darbėnai

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This page was created to analyze records from Lithuania that seem to connect to the Frentel and Ziv Families of Darbėnai. It was created during the [[Cuban-1|Mark Cuban]] challenge specifically to see if these records might include his great-grandparents [[Freyntel-2|Samuel (Freyntel) Freintel (bef.1870-1915)]] and [[Giose-1|Sylvia Giose (bef.1892-)]] with sufficient evidence to connect them on WikiTree. This is the Freyntel/Frantel family as assembled from the Records found: # Leyb [A2] ## Movsha Freyntel, In 1881. Box tax payers. Innkeeper, 2 males. [A1, A2] ### Mordukh Freyntel (b. ~1852). Age 29 in 1881. Unable to pay box tax. Missing since 1872. [A1] ## Iosel Frontel == Records Found == The following records were found on 2022-12-22 from a [https://www.jewishgen.org/databases/all/ Unified Search on JewishGen] Searches A, B, and C were Searching for Surname (phonetically like) : FREINTEL AND Town (phonetically like) : DARBENAI Search A. [https://www.litvaksig.org/information-and-tools/archives-and-repositories/tax-lists Lithuania Taxpayers and Voters] - 13 matching records found: *[A1] Freyntel, Mordukh son of Movsha, age 29 in 1881. Unable to pay box tax. Missing since 1872. *[A2] Freyntel, Movsha, son of Leyb, in 1881. Box tax payers. Innkeeper, 2 males. *[A3] Frantel, Shmuel, son of Movsha, in 1892. Box Taxpayers. Peddler; 1 male in family. *[A4] Freyntel, Movsha, son of Leyb, in 1877. Box Taxpayers. House owner. *[A5] Freyntel, Mordukh, son of Movsha, age 25 in 1877. Box Taxpayers - unable to pay. Left the community.

Frequently Cited Sources

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== Alt/Ault == *'''Reecer, Nellie Wallace,''' ''Valentin Alt: His Children and His Grandchildren,'' (York?, Pa., 1950, c1949).
[Viewable online at https://archive.org/details/valentinalthisch00rees/page/n11/mode/2up] *'''Kincaid, Bill,''' ''Valentin Alt: Four Generations of Ault Descendants,'' (B. Kincaid, c2000). [Viewable online at http://www.familysearch.org/library/books/idurl/1/154291] == Census == *'''1840 Census:''' ''Sixth Census of the United States, 1840;'' US Census Bureau, National Archives and Records Administration, Washinton, D.C.; Publication M704, _____ Township, ______ County, _____ State, p ___ (or p __). Record for______________. ::*'''FamilySearch,''' ''United States Federal Census, 1840;'' Database with images, (ADD RECORD LINK AND DATE ACCESSED) Image ___ of ___.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1786457 *'''1850 Census:''' ''Seventh Census of the United States, 1850;'' US Census Bureau, National Archives and Records Administration, Washinton, D.C.; Publication M432, _____ Township, ______ County, _____ State, p ___ (or p __). Record for______________. ::*'''FamilySearch,''' ''United States Federal Census, 1850;'' Database with images, (ADD RECORD LINK AND DATE ACCESSED) Image ___ of ___.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1401638 *'''1860 Census:''' ''Eighth Census of the United States, 1860;'' US Census Bureau, National Archives and Records Administration, Washinton, D.C.; Publication M653, _____ Township, ______ County, _____ State, p ___ (or p __). Record for______________. ::*'''FamilySearch,''' ''United States Federal Census, 1860;'' Database with images, (ADD RECORD LINK AND DATE ACCESSED) Image ___ of ___.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1473181 *'''1870 Census:''' ''Nineth Census of the United States, 1870;'' US Census Bureau, National Archives and Records Administration, Washinton, D.C.; Publication M593, _____ Township, ______ County, _____ State, p ___ (or p __). Record for______________. ::*'''FamilySearch,''' ''United States Federal Census, 1870;'' Database with images, (ADD RECORD LINK AND DATE ACCESSED) Image ___ of ___.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1438024 *'''1880 Census:''' ''Tenth Census of the United States, 1880;'' US Census Bureau, National Archives and Records Administration, Washinton, D.C.; Publication T9, _____ Township, ______ County, _____ State, p ___ (or p __). Record for______________. ::*'''FamilySearch,''' ''United States Federal Census, 1880;'' Database with images, (ADD RECORD LINK AND DATE ACCESSED) Image ___ of ___.
https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1417683

Friday Night Bingo Details

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{{Image|file=Friday_Night_Bingo.png |align=r |size=m |caption=Join the Fun! }}
Bingo Details for Guests
Back to [[Space:Friday_Night_Bingo|Friday Night Bingo Schedule]]
---- Every other Friday (opposite from [[Space:WikiTree_Friday_Date_Night|WikiTree Friday Date Night]]), join us for a couple of Bingo games. Each week we have a special guest from a [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:Projects project] AND chances to win a prize (a WikiTree t-shirt or mug!). '''Each Friday Night Bingo has two events, with two Bingo games per time slot:''' #Noon EST / 5pm UTC #6pm EST / 11pm UTC ---- ==What is involved== :Each Bingo showcases a Project or SubProject within WikiTree. We invite a Project Guest to join us live on YouTube. WikiTree'ers from across the globe watch and join in on the fun. This gives them a chance to learn about a Project and it's requirements and expectations as well as ask questions. :There are two Bingo card games per Project's session. We request 50 words from the Project that helps describe it. We create two Bingo Cards from those words. Viewers that watch this live are able to play for WikiTree branded prizes. It is a lot of educational fun! :The Bingo is separated into two sections: Before the First Bingo Card and Before the Second Bingo Card. ===Before the first Bingo Card=== :We introduce the Project and show the Project's main WikiTree page in full. This allows us to show how to join the Project and the requirements. We also show a few of the Project's sample profiles so viewers get an understanding of the detail and work that goes into them. Then we play the first Bingo game. :''The Bingo words relate directly to the Project so it gives the Project's Guest an opportunity to discuss and inform other misc details about the Project in a fun educational way.'' ===Before the second Bingo Card=== :Now that viewers know how to join and have seen sample profiles, we start to discuss the importance of the Project also with details on how to research, tips and tricks for Project Profiles, pertinent information that the Project wants use to know, etc. :The second Bingo game is played. ===Wrapup=== :After the second Bingo game, this is a great time to answer any questions, discuss profile stickers, show additional sample profiles, etc. ==Required from the Project== :The entire hour goes by quickly. All the Project Guests are required to do is: # Provide the 50 Bingo words #Suggest sample profiles #Provide a PL or PC to appear in-person to discuss the Project (If camera shy, we can accommodate! No Worries!) # Answer questions : All the mechanics and introductions and games are handled by the co-hosts of Bingo. ==Example Bingo Games== *Project Level: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0OMz5oF20s Italy Project] *SubProject Level: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyNQS4Rw8uE Titanic SubProject] ==Bingo Schedule Page== * [[Space:Friday_Night_Bingo|'''Friday Night Bingo''']]

Friday the 13th Harvest Moon

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Friday_the_13th_Harvest_Moon.jpg
== Harvest Moon 2019 == === A Note For Friday the 13th === September 2019 blessed us with the most ominous date of the monthly calendar, Friday the 13th. September's full moon is known as a “Harvest Moon,” as well as a "Mini Moon" because the moon is at it's furthest point from away Earth in its orbit, so at which time the moon appears to look smaller than any other full moon. The full moon, of course, always appears full for about three days, and this month we we're lucky enough for the full moon to appear to us on Friday the 13th. A full moon on Friday the 13th is an pretty rare occurrence. But, for a person to witness one in their lifetime it is a more extremely rare occurrence, given they happen on average every 20 years or so. This was the first full moon visible across the U.S. on Friday the 13th since Friday, October 13, 2000, the year I graduated high school. When I was 18 years old. Today, I am 37, and was lucky enough to get some really good, awesome pictures of this Friday the 13th full moon. It just so happens that the next Friday the 13th full moon to illuminate the US won't be for another 30 years, in August 2049. I got my girls out to look at it with me, which I find very special. They of course didn't get as excited as I did about it, but they did see the significance in it because they took their own pictures of it with their smartphones! == Sources == *Time.com Science article: [https://www.google.com/amp/s/time.com/5673236/full-harvest-moon-friday-13th/%3famp=true ''There's a Full Moon Due on Friday the 13th for Most of the U.S. The Next One Isn't for Another 30 Years''] by Gina Martinez September 13, 2019.

Fridlevstad Household Examinations

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Shortcuts to find towns and villages in the Fridlevstad Household Examinations from the Riksarkivet archive. If you find any errors, incorrectly spelled place-names, or if I missed any, please feel free to edit this page. thanks! == Place names and references == ::Fridlevstad place names [https://www.blekingesf.se/blekinge/fridlevstad-socken-medelstads-harad-blekinge-lan/ Fridlevstad link] == 1733-1771 Fridlevstad (in progress) == :'''1733 (in progress)''' :'''1751 (in progress)''' :'''1753 (in progress)''' :'''[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057142_00178 1771 (in progress)]''' ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057142_00184 Höryda] Bild 184, Sida 6 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057142_00189 Perstorp] Bild 189, Sida 11 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057142_00219 Baggetanga] Bild 219 / Sida 38 == 1786-1800 Fridlevstad (in progress) == :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00007 '''1786 (in progress)'''] ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00008 Fridlevstad] Bild 8, Sida 2 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00011 Poorhouse and Mummelycke] Bild 11, Sida 5 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00014 Höryda] Bild 14, Sida 8 :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00087 '''1793 (in progress)'''] ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00088 Fridlevstad] Bild 88, Sida 2 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00091 Poorhouse and Mummelycke] Bild 91, Sida 5 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00093 Höryda] Bild 93, Sida 7 :: [https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00097 Perstorp] Bild 97, Sida 11 :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00087 '''1800 (in progress)'''] ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00088 Fridlevstad] Bild 88 / Sida 2 == 1807-1812 Fridlevstad (in progress) == :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057145_00004 '''1807'''] :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057145_00099 '''1812'''] == 1815-1824 Fridlevstad (in progress) == :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00001#?c=&m=&s=&cv=&xywh=-177%2C1102%2C5488%2C2755 '''1815 complete'''] ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00009 Klockaregarden] Bild 9 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00010 Fridlevstad (Forte Roten)] Bild 10 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00013 Fattighus (poor-house) & Mummelycke] Bild 13 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00015 Höryda] Bild 15 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00019 Andre Roten] Bild 19 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00021 Perstorp (Parstorp)] Bild 21 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00023 Båtsmanstorp & Askunga] Bild 23 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00025 Loppetorp] Bild 25 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00026 Hinsemåla] Bild 26 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00027 Ryd (Rỹ)] Bild27 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00029 Skrävsmåla] Bild 29 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00030 Sällemåla] Bild 30 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00031 Allaboda] Bild 31 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00033 Södra Stensjö] Bild 33 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00034 Norra Stensjö (Tredic Roten)] Bild 34 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00035 Västra Stensjö] Bild 35 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00036 Stickeboda] Bild 36 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00037 Pukaberg] Bild 37 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00038 Bakareboda] Bild 38 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00040 Sillhövda] Bild 40 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00041 Husgöl] Bild 41 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00044 Holmsjö] Bild 44 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00047 Juvansmåla] Bild 47 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00048 Spetsamåla] Bild 48 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00051 Buskahult] Bild 51 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00052 Sjunnamåla] Bild 52 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00053 Älmtamåla (Eltemåla)] Bild 53 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00055 Vastansmåla] Bild 55 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00056 Saleboda] Bild 56 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00058 Fur (Fuhr)] Bild 58 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00062 Baggetånga (later Åbyholm)] Bild 62 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00066 Hoggemåla (later Höjemåla)] Bild 66 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00068 Dunkamåla] Bild 68 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00069 Ärkelsmåla] Bild 69 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00071 Sillemåla (was previously Säldemåla/Selemåla)] Bild 71 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00072 Nävragöl] Bild 72 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00074 Staffansbygd] Bild 74 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00074 Beseboda] Bild 74 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00075 Nävrasjö] Bild 75 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00077 Kvarngården] Bild 77 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00079 Kuleryd] Bild 79 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00080 Tvingelshed] Bild 80 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00081 Buskaboda] Bild 81 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00082 Onansbygd] Bild 82 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00083 Bostorp (Femte Roten] Bild 83 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00087 Bjälkatorp] Bild 87 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00088 Uddabygd] Bild 88 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00089 Mållegarden(?)] Bild 89 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00090 Emmeryd] Bild 90 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00094 Pålycke] Bild 94 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00096 Harstorp] Bild 96 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00098 Bränteknuva] Bild 98 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00101 Målatorp] Bild 101 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00102 Karsabäck] Bild 102 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00102 Larum] Bild 102 ::[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00104 Björkeryd] Bild 104 :[https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057147_00108 '''1822 (in progress)'''] To sort: :'''Baggetanga''' :: ::'''1793''' (Bild 124 / Sida 37) [https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00124#?c=&m=&s=&cv=123&xywh=-69%2C2089%2C2269%2C1298 link] ::'''1800''' (Bild 211 / Sida 47 microfilm version) [https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/C0057143_00211#?c=&m=&s=&cv=210&xywh=827%2C3923%2C1784%2C896 link]

Fridman Land Patents in Jackson County, Indiana

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Fridman_Land_Patents_in_Jackson_County_Indiana-1.png
Between 1837 and 1839 Leonard, Franklin, and Mathias Fridman patented a collective total of 280 acres of land in Jackson County, Indiana. A map at [https://drive.google.com/open?id=11ro5d5zOgNBtn9-NQbt3VYXd1dN71w1a&usp=sharing Google MyMaps] shows the location of these patents. The approximate location of the aliquots making up each patent was calculated using township data from [http://www.earthpoint.us/townshipssearchbydescription.aspx earthpoint.us]. This [https://nationalmap.gov/small_scale/a_plss.html description of the Public Land Survey System] explains what the PLSS is and how it works. A detail of the Google Map with each patent marked is below. {{Image|file=Fridman_Land_Patents_in_Jackson_County_Indiana-1.png |align=c |size=m }} ==Patent Details== All of the Fridman patents are in Indiana, Jackson County, Second Principle Meridian, Township 6N, Range 6E. They are: {| | Patentee || Date || Document || Section || Aliquot || Label |- |Leonard || 8/10/1837 || [https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=IN2640__.342&docClass=STA&sid=oltab03b.qnr 8378] || 13 || SE¼NW¼ || D |- |Leonard || 8/15/1838 || [https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=IN2700__.274&docClass=STA&sid=oltab03b.qnr 11305] || 13 || NE¼SW¼ || E |- |Franklin || 8/15/1838 || [https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=IN2710__.384&docClass=STA&sid=oltab03b.qnr 11915] || 13 || NW¼SW¼ || C |- |Mathias || 8/1/1839 || [https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=IN2760__.495&docClass=STA&sid=oltab03b.qnr 14533] || 13 || NW¼SE¼ || F |- |Franklin || 8/15/1838 ||[https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=IN2710__.385&docClass=STA&sid=oeqhwfn3.1ok 11916] || 11 || W½SE¼ || A |- | " " || " " || " " || " " || SW¼SW¼ || A |- |Leonard || 8/1/1839 || [https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=IN2760__.492&docClass=STA&sid=oeqhwfn3.1ok 14530] || 11 || SE¼SW¼ || B |} Not mapped: Leonard Freetman 5/10/1848 Document 20682 Section 23 SW¼NW¼ The document image was unavailable, so it was impossible to verify that Leonard Freetman is Leonard Fridman. The aliquot itself is an outlier not connected to other Fridman lands. ==Comparison to 1878's [http://cdm16066.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p15078coll8/id/1935 ''An illustrated historical atlas of Jackson County, Indiana'']== The maps of [http://cdm16066.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15078coll8/id/1916 Jackson] and [http://cdm16066.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15078coll8/id/1896 Redding] Townships in Jackson County have sections numbered, making it fairly easy to identify individual allotments. The four aliquots patented by the Fridman brothers in section 13 (in Jackson Township) remained whole and were all owned by Leonard in 1878. The land in section 11 (in Redding Township) apparently had been sold. Leonard owned an additional 280 or so acres in sections 14,15, and 16. None of this land was part of the initial Fridman brothers patents. ==Joseph Ebaugh's Land== Joseph Ebaugh's land had passed to his son George by 1878. It is well marked on the map of Jackson Township; observation reveals it to be the 40 acres of section 14 SE¼NE¼. There is no recorded patent for this aliquot. ==Sources== * ''An illustrated historical atlas of Jackson County, Indiana''. 1878. Map Collection, Indiana Division, Indiana State Library. Digital images. [http://cdm16066.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15078coll8/id/1935 http://cdm16066.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15078coll8/id/1935] : 2015. * Bureau of Land Management. “Land Patent Search.” Database and images. ''General Land Office Records''. [http://glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch http://glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch] : 2020.

Friebelin Research Notes

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== Research notes == I have three known Andreas Friebelins and there appear to be others in the area by the same name but with different wives or parents. Gaps in the early records have made it difficult to verify identities. This page is where I park interim findings. *There is an Andreas Friebelin with wife Anna Maria Elsässer, based on these death records of children in Unterwössingen, 1757: http://www.archion.de/p/bdebe7186c/ (image 97, two deaths); and 1768 http://www.archion.de/p/d2446df634/ (image 104). Here is the parents' marriage record (1752): http://www.archion.de/p/bd628eb027/. This Andreas is the son of Gotthardt, but which one? [[Friebelin-8|Gotthardus Friebelin]] born in 1733 died young, and his brother [[Friebelin-8|Gotthardus]] was too young to have married in 1752 But a cooper of the same name was one of his godparents. That suggests that he is a descendant of [[Friebelin-2|Gotthardt Friebelin]] ( managed by Paul Campbell) who was likely a brother of my earliest [[Friebelin-4|Andreas Friebelin]]. I accidentally created a profile for a child of this couple: [[Friebelin-25|Andreas Friebelin]], and is now an orphan, until someone creates profiles for his parents. He lived only 3 hours. :-( ==Sources== *All links above are to original records from the Landeskirchliches Archiv Karlsruhe, online at Archion.de.

Friederich August Oltmanns Ancestry

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The goal of this project is to discover more about his parents. Tiart Eden and Gerthe Janssen, and his siblings and their genealogies. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Oltmanns-4|Douglas Oltmanns]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * More information on the goal * Updating the latest few generations around the country * Correcting any errors and adding to the individuals personal histories and burial info. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=3820595 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Friedrich Pumpa, Pumpa Name Study

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There have been a lot of people in South Australia with the name Friedrich Pumpa. After proposing a merge between two profiles who shared a death record but had different parents, we realised that more careful analysis was required. My analysis spread from these two to cover five profiles: *[[Pumpa-29|Friederich Pumpa (1852-1938)]] - Pumpa-29 *[[Pumpa-83|Friedrich Pumpa (bef.1848-)]] - Pumpa-83 *[[Pumpa-89|Friedrich Pumpa (bef.1845-1921)]] - Pumpa-89 *[[Pumpa-145|Johann Friedrich Pumpa (1853-1935)]] - Pumpa-145 *[[Pumpa-259|Friedrich Pumpa (1844-1921)]] - Pumpa-259 ==Genealogy SA== ===Deaths=== * Burra 448/212, Friederich Pumpa died 7 August 1921 age 76 at Emu Downs, relative C.E. Kotz [SS]; this implies birth around 1845. Pumpa-89, based on surname of informant * Adelaide 605/3591, Friedrich Pumpa died 21 August 1938 age 85, widowed, residence Fullarton Estate, Died Adelaide symbol=H, no relative recorded; implies birth around 1853 Pumpa-29 * Frome 568/1271, Johann Frederick Pumpa died 28 March 1935 at Hawker, married, age 81, son H M Pumpa; implies birth ~1854 Pumpa-145 ===Passenger arrivals === * on ship Heinrich 19 Sep 1856: Age 3 born Tauer, BRA PRE (birth ~1853) Pumpa-29 * on ship Heinrich 19 Sep 1856: Age 8 born Tauer, BRA PRE (birth ~1848) Pumpa-83 * on ship Sophie 25 Aug 1866, age 21 born Drewitz, POM PR (birth ~1845) Pumpa-89 === Cemetery=== * 7 August 1921 age 76, Emu Downs St John’s Lutheran Pumpa-89 ===Birth=== 1 in 1905, not relevant to current study, parents Carl Wilhelm Pumpa and Anna Elizabeth Schuppan ===Marriage=== * 9 Aug 1882, Kapunda 130/589 at Robertstown, FP to Johanne Auguste Kotz, groom age 36 father Johann Georg Pumpa, bride age 30 father Gottfried Rudiger, both widowed. Implies groom born ~1846 Pumpa-89 * 2 Feb 1874, Burra 98/270 at Emu Downs, Johann Friedrich Pumpa (age 20, father Johann Pumpa) m Anna Schuppan (age 19, father Johann Schuppan) implies groom born ~1854 Pumpa-145 * 21 Nov 1873, Angaston 97/484 at Gnadenberg, Frederick Pumpa (age 28, father Johann Georg Pumpa) m Caroline Fischer (age 22, father Christian Fischer) implies groom born ~1845 Pumpa-89 * 7 Feb 1893, Angaston 174/435, Johann Friedrich Pampa (39, father Johann Pampa) m Johanne Auguste Lawke (33, father Friedrich Kockrick) – note variant spellings – both widowed Pumpa-145 ==Other sources== ===The Ships List=== * http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/australia/alicebrooks1855.shtml ** Alice Brooks 1855 passengers include Hans Pumpa 22, Catharina (Groch), 27 and Johann Friedrich (2) – he seems to be Pumpa-145 ==Conclusions== ===Pumpa-29=== * Born 1852-1853 * Linked in passenger list of Heinrich as 3-year-old son of Christian and Anna * He married in New South Wales near Albury and lived at Murtoa in Victoria for many years until his wife died in 1914 (references now in his profile) * Died Adelaide 21 Aug 1938 (widowed) * Buried West Terrace - https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/161813052/friedrich-pumpa ===Pumpa-83=== * linked in passenger list for Heinrich as the 8 year old, eldest child of Martin and Marie * '''missing''' what did he do or where did he go? ===Pumpa-89=== * Born 1845-1846 * Father Johann Georg Pumpa (from 1873 and 1882 marriage record) * Immigration 25 August 1866 on Sophie aged 21 * 1st marriage 21 Nov 1873 to Caroline Fischer * 2nd marriage 9 Aug 1882 to Johanne Auguste nee Rudiger aka Kotz * Died Emu Downs 7 Aug 1921 age 76 * Buried Emu Downs ===Pumpa-145=== * Johann Friedrich Pumpa * Immigrated on Alice Brooks in 1855 aged 2 with parents Hans Pumpa 22, Catharina (Groch), 27 * Married Anna Schuppan 2 Feb 1874 * Anna died 14 Feb 1892 age 37 at Hawker, wife of Johann Frederick Pumpa, Frome 200/401, symbol=V * Remarried 7 Feb 1893 to Johanne Auguste Lawke (nee Kockrick) * Died 28 March 1935 at Hawker * Son H M Pumpa ===Pumpa-259=== * Did NOT marry Caroline Fischer) as that was Pumpa-89 * Did NOT marry Johanne Auguste Rudiger/Kotz) as that was Pumpa-89 * Did NOT die on 7 Aug 1921 (if he existed at all) as that was Pumpa-89 *I have '''not found''' any evidence that he lived or died in South Australia ==Missing info so far== * Anything concrete about Pumpa-259 arriving or living in Australia * Life, (marriage) death of Pumpa-83 other than his immigration in 1856 aged 8

Friendly Grove School, 1910/11

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Photo from newspaper cliipping, including Francis Bucher Cleve Bucher https://handley.pastperfectonline.com/photo/71592C99-78E4-4524-BE4C-151628110213

Friends, Associates, Neighbors, & Enemies of James Randolph of Caswell County, North Carolina

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This space is to identify the people in the life and death of [[Randolph-2274|James Randolph]] (born c1725- died about Oct 1797 Caswell County, North Carolina. Goals: 1. Citation of birth date and location 2. Citation of his first wife- her name, birth, death, and locations {| class="wikitable sortable" width="100%" |+ '''People in the Life of James Randolph''' |- ! Name !! WT ID !! Date !! Relationship !! Source !! Other |- | James Randolph, Jr || Randolph-1464 || 20 Dec 1781 || son || Caswell Co, NC, deed || |- | Abraham Randolph || Randolph-203 || 20 Dec 1781 || son || Caswell Co, NC, Deed || recorded as Abram |- | Robert Randolph || Randolph-1469 || 20 Dec 1781 || son || Caswell Co., NC Deed || |- | William Randolph || Randolph-1468 || 20 Dec 1781 || son || Caswell Co., NC Deed || |- | Mary Dye || Dye-411 || 1781 || wife || Caswell marriage || |- | John Randolph || Randolph-657 || Jun 1797 || son || will of J. R, Sr || |- | Jeremiah Randolph || Randolph-699 || Jun 1797 || Son || Will of J. R. Sr || |- | Rebecca Randolph || Randolph-193 || Jun 1797 || daughter || will of J. R. Sr || |- | Nimrod Randolph || Randolph-600 || Jun 1797 || daughter || will of J. R. Sr || |- | Mary Randolph || Dye-411 || Jun 1797 || wife || Will of J. R. Sr || |- | James Shelton || || Dec 1781 || Bondsman || marriage of J. R and Mary Dye || |- | David Shelton || || Dec 1781 || Bondsman || marriage of J. R. and M. Dye || |- | James Randolph, Jr || || Jun 1797 || son, Executor || Will of J. R. || |- | William Dye || || Jun 1797 || son-in-law, executor || Will of J. R. || |- | James Randolph, Jr || || 1 Nov 1797 || Executor || Estate Sale of J. R, sen || |- | William Dye || || 1 Nov 1797 || Executor || Estate Sale of J. R. sen || |- | Abram Dunaway || || 20 Dec 1781 || adjacent Land owner || deed from J. R. to James, Jun || Country Line |- | Abram Dunaway || || 20 Dec 1781 || adjacent Land Owner || deed from J. R to son, Abram || |} === People=== # [[Dye-411|Mary Dye]]- '''2nd wife,''' *married 12 December 1781 in Caswell County, North Carolina, when James and David Shelton posted £50 bond, and James obtained a license to marry. . Register of Deeds, Caswell County, North Carolina, ''Marriage bonds, 1780-1868, Marriage bonds, v. M-R 1780-1868''; database with images, ''FamilySearch'' ([https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DCQ3-1CD image 1204]). * Mary is named in her '''husband [[Randolph-2274|James Randolph Sr]]'s Will''' executed 15 June 1797 in Caswell County, North Carolina. Superior Court, Caswell County, North Carolina, ''Will records, with some inventories, estates and settlements, 1777- 1963, Vol. A-C, 1777-1800.''; database with images, ''FamilySearch'' ([https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939L-JX3V-JN images 531-532]). # James Shelton- posted bond for James Randolph to obtain a marriage license to Mary Dye, in Caswell County, North Carolina. # David Shelton- posted bond for James Randolph to obtain a marriage license to Mary Dye, in Caswell County, North Carolina # [[Randolph-1464|James Randolph, Jr]], son, * James Randolph, Sr, 20 Dec 1781- deeded 90 acres on the Caswell County line. *Executors of This my last Will and Testament, along with son-in-law, William Dye * James Randolph, Sr, Dec'd , Estate Sale 1 Nov 1797; attested open Court Jan Term 1798, Caswell County, North Carolina; signed with his mark X # ''' POSSIBLY''' [[Dunaway-677|Abram Dunaway]], * Adjacent Land Owner to deed from J. R, Sr to [[Randolph-1464| James Randolph, Jr]], 90 acres on the County line. 20 Dec 1781 *Adjacent land owner to 90 acres James Randolph, Sr deeded to son, Abram Randolph. # William Hall- Adjacent Land owner to the deed from J. R, Sr to James Randolph, Jr, 90 acres on the County line. 20 Dec 1781 # [[Randolph-1468|William Randolph]]- son *Adjacent Landowner to the deed from J. R, Sr to James Randolph, Jr, 90 acres on the County line. 20 Dec 1781 *Adjacent land owner, Caswell County, North Carolina, 20 Dec 1781 to land James Randolph, Sr deed to his son, Abram Randolph *William Randolph (his son) *of CC, for love & regard to his son, 90 acres in CC, on both sides Ann Merrits Mill Cr, bounded as follows: adj Reubin Taylor, Ann Smith, Mereweather's Fork on Dan R, along the road to lines of Robert & James Randolph. Wit: A'd Murphy, H. Harralson, Benj'n Debow *Will of James Randolph, Sr, If wife dies before Nimrod is of age, William should Take Nimrod and raise him to age - # A'd Murphy (Archibald Murphy), *witness to James' Deed to son, James Randolph, Jr, 20 Dec 1781 *witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and son, Robert 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. *witness to a deed between James Randolph, Sr and his son, Abram 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina * witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and his son, William Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell Co., NC #H. Harralson. *Witness to James' Deed to son, James Randolph Jr. -20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina *witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and son, Robert 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. *witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and son, Abram Randolph 20 Dec 1781, Caswell Co., NC *Witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr. and his son, William Randolph 20 Dec 1781, Caswell Co., NC #[[Randolph-1469| Robert Randolph]] (his son) *of CC, for 100 lbs, 90 acres in CC, on Country Line Cr, bounded as follows: adj [[Randolph-1464|James Randolph Jun'r,]] on the main road. *Adjacent land owner, Caswell County, North Carolina, 20 Dec 1781 to land James Randolph, Sr deed to his son, Abram Randolph * James Randolph, Sr Will Jun 1797- Robert to Take brother, John and raise him if Mary dies before John is of age. #Ann Smith - adjacent land *Adjacent Land from James Randolph, Sr to Robert Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. *Adjacent Land from James Randolph, Sr to son, William Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. *3 Oct 1805- Adjacent land owner to Thomas Read selling to Gatewood and Company; also adjacent to William Moore, William Rainey, James Randolph, Jr; James Randolph orphans, James Randolph, dec'd. #William Ragsdale. adjacent land from James Randolph, Sr to Robert Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. # Benj'n Debow witness *3rd witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and son, Robert 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. *3rd witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and son, Abram Randolph, 20 Dec 1781 Caswell County, NC *3rd witness to a deed between James Randolph Sr and his son, William Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell Co., NC [[Randolph-203| Abram Randolph]](his son) of CC, for love of his son, 90 acres in CC, on Branches of North Fork of Smiths Mill Cr, bounded as follows: adj Abrum Dunaway, Reuben Taylor, Wm. Randolph, Robert Randolph. Wit.: A'd Murphy, H. Harralson, Benj'n Debow. #Reuben Taylor- Adjacent land owner, *Adjacent Land Owner, Caswell County, North Carolina, 20 Dec 1781 to land James Randolph, Sr deed to his son, Abram Randolph. *Adjacent Land Owner, Deed between James Randolph, Sr and his son, William Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. # Ann Merritt's Mill Creek (Is Ann Merritt a person or is the name of the creek??_ *adjacent land/Bounded to deed between James Randolph, Sr and his son, William Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. #Mereweather's Fork on Dan R (who is Mereweather who has a fork on the Dan River) *adjacent land owner to a deed between James Randolph, Sr and son, William Randolph, 20 Dec 1781, Caswell County, North Carolina. #[[Randolph-657|John Randolph]], son: 15 June 1797 Will of James Randolph- leaves him the plantation, 141 acres, when he becomes of age, so he is not 21 years of age in Jun 1797. Caswell County, North Carolina. #[[Randolph-600 |Nimrod Randolph]] son, 15 Jun 1797, Will of James Randolph- leaves him the plantation if son, John dies before he becomes of age, plus 5 pounds of Virginia money and a bed. #[[Randolph-656|Rebecca Randolph]] Will of James Randolph 15 Jun 1797: one feather Bed and furniture, Called her bed, and one Half of the pewter belonging to the House and one Cow to her and her Heirs forever -- # [[ Randolph-699| Jerremiah Randolph]], son, if wife, Marry dies, that then the estate hereby lent to her shall be equally divided between my son Jeremiah Randolph and my son Nimrod - #[[Dye-59|William Dye]]- son-in-law (recorded as such in Will of James Randolph, Sr Jun 1797, Caswell County, North Carolina. *Executors of This My Last Will and Testament with James Randolph, Jr * James Randolph, Sr, Dec'd , Estate Sale 1 Nov 1797; attested open Court Jan Term 1798, Caswell County, North Carolina; signed with his mark X #A.E. Murphey (Jurat)- witness to will of James Randolph, Jun 1797, Caswell Co., NC. IS this Archibald Murphy or another Murphy in the County? He appears he might be the Caswell County Clerk. #Wm. Gordon (Jurat)- Witness of will of James Randolph, Jun 1797, Caswell County, NC # John Carter, x his mark- Witness to will of James Randolph, Jun 1797, Caswell County, North Carolina # Abner Robinson * 1 Nov 1797. Purchased 1st, 3rd, and last lots of hogs and a cow at the estate sale of James Randolph, Sr, Dec,'d, Caswell Co, NC"North Carolina Estate Files, 1663-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DTG?cc=1911121&wc=Q6WY-8PZ%3A183208301%2C183381101%2C193167701 : 21 May 2014), Caswell County > R > Randolph, James (1798) > image 2 of 3; State Archives, Raleigh. Images 165-167. . [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DY7?i=164&cc=1911121&cat=456833| James Randolph Estate 1798, Caswell County, North Carolina]. #John Hall * Purchased the 2nd lot of hogs, Estate sale of James Randolph, Sr, dec'd. 1 Nov 1797, Caswell Co., NC"North Carolina Estate Files, 1663-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DTG?cc=1911121&wc=Q6WY-8PZ%3A183208301%2C183381101%2C193167701 : 21 May 2014), Caswell County > R > Randolph, James (1798) > image 2 of 3; State Archives, Raleigh. Images 165-167. . [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DY7?i=164&cc=1911121&cat=456833| James Randolph Estate 1798, Caswell County, North Carolina]. #John Robinson- Purchased the 4th lot of hogs, Estate sale of James Randolph, Sr, dec'd. 1 Nov 1797, Caswell Co., NC"North Carolina Estate Files, 1663-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DTG?cc=1911121&wc=Q6WY-8PZ%3A183208301%2C183381101%2C193167701 : 21 May 2014), Caswell County > R > Randolph, James (1798) > image 2 of 3; State Archives, Raleigh. Images 165-167. . [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DY7?i=164&cc=1911121&cat=456833| James Randolph Estate 1798, Caswell County, North Carolina]. # Thomas Fisher. Purchased 2 steers Estate sale of James Randolph, Sr, dec'd. 1 Nov 1797, Caswell Co., NC"North Carolina Estate Files, 1663-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DTG?cc=1911121&wc=Q6WY-8PZ%3A183208301%2C183381101%2C193167701 : 21 May 2014), Caswell County > R > Randolph, James (1798) > image 2 of 3; State Archives, Raleigh. Images 165-167. . [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9RVX-DY7?i=164&cc=1911121&cat=456833| James Randolph Estate 1798, Caswell County, North Carolina]. # Thomas Read, Caswell County, NC, 3 Oct 1805 sold to Thomas Gatewood and Company, of Milton, North Carolina. Land was lying and being in the County of Caswell and on '''Randolph Spring branch''' and of Country line Creek and bounded by William Moore, Ann Smith, James Randolph, Jr; James Randolph Orphans; James Randolph, Dec'd; William Rainey, Signed Sealed and Delivered In presence of Jos Samuell Durrell Richards Jno Stanfeild State of North Carolina Caswell County July Court 1806 The Execution of this deed was duly proved in open court by the oath of Josiah Samuel one the Subscribing Witnesses thereto and on motion ordered to be Registered Test Ad Murphey CC # William Moore- Adjacent land owner to Thomas Read, 1806 #William Rainey- Adjacent land owner to Thomas Read, 1806 #Thomas Robinson, Dec'd 1784; Estate owed or Paid to James Randolph [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRKS-N9G?i=3&wc=Q6WY-ZSK%3A183208301%2C183381101%2C193426401&cc=1911121| Estate of Thomas Robinson]. other names are Colonel William Moore, James Williams, William Huse, James Montgomery, James Robinson, Robert Moore, Henry Black, William Rainey, Arch Samuel?, James Bradley, Edmond Allen?, page 7 mentions James Shelton, David Shelton, William Rainey- can't tell if they are witnesses or receipts,?? page 9 Summons for William Hall and Pinna Hall...Page 10: Open Court Jan Term 1787: Proved by Pinna Hall. Page 11 People who purchased at Estate sale: Robt Moore, Col Wm Moore, James Bradley, Wm Hall, John Low, signed Pinnah Hall, Executrix; 13 Jul 1786, Archibald Murphey is Clerk of Court. signed at bottom: A. E. Murphey, CC; Page 14: summons William Hall and his wife, Pennia, guardians for the orphans of Thomas Robertson, dec'd, 22 Apr 1788 signed by A. E. Murphey, CC.

Friends family

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Friends family, Trying to help a friend find her relations through dna this is what I have.

Friers

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The goal of this project to work on family for niece Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Barnwell-185|Lee Barnwell]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=16246486 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Frisco

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Frisco was my red betta fish. In 2015 I had to give him away.

Frisco Rail Road Workers in Springfield, Missouri

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Frisco_Rail_Road_Workers_in_Springfield_Missouri.jpg
People who worked for the Frisco Rail Road in or around Springfield, Missouri: * [[Dailey-3220|Charles Joseph Dailey (1865-1937)]] * [[Dailey-3217|Charles Joseph Dailey (1903-1970)]] * [[Scanlan-660|Francis Dailey Scanlan (1895-1948)]]

Frisky my Pomeranium

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Sable color large Pomeranium My best friend was a gift from Bryan and Amanda Sherrill, neighbors. Frisky is an excellent watchdog and friend.

Froehlich name project

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Froehlich-397|Rita Marie Froehlich]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=30150128 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Froggett Name Study Info

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Froidl Family Tree

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Froidl Family Tree The goal of this project is to expand and connect all the Froidls in the US and Europe into one tree. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Froidl-1|Tom Froidl]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Identify members of the Froidl Family tree back to Europe * Identify members of the Froidl Family tree in the US after John Froidl moved here *Create/Link existing trees for all of John Froidl Jr's children. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=22133147 send me a private message]. Thanks!

From Cornwall to Canterbury, The Story of George and Dorcas Keast and their family

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Authored and published by Audrey Ansell

From D. S. Walker to Joseph Watson, February 25, 1827

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Letter from [[Walker-50937|D. S. Walker]] to [[Watson-29647|Joseph Watson]], February 25, 1827 Published in *The African Observer. United States: I. Ashmead, printer, 1827. ---- ::''Natchez, Feb. 25, 1827. Dear Sir,— I have the pleasure of acknowledging [[Space:From_Joseph_Watson_to_Duncan_S._Walker%2C_January_24%2C_1827|yours of the 24th ult.]] [24 Jan 1827] received yesterday. That the citizens of Philadelphia would feel aggrieved at this outrage, and that her active and intelligent police would use every means of redress, was expected. Here, if humanity could sleep, our own safety would prompt to action. There will be no want of either proper feeling or exertion among our citizens on this subject. When my respected friends, [[Holmes-6106|Gov. Holmes]] and [[Davis-25358|Mr. Davis]], mentioned this subject to me as one requiring professional aid, I offered my services, but without requiring or intending to receive a fee. Your letter contained the first intimation I had received of such an offer, which I would have declined accepting from them; and as I do from you. I cannot agree in such a case, to receive any pecuniary compensation from any quarter. It was thought advisable not to give publicity to this subject, until the necessary steps were taken, to ascertain the residence of all these kidnapped blacks, and to prevent their further removal. This, as far as practicable, has been done. Our laws require these suits to be instituted in the Counties where the persons claiming the negroes reside, and the jurisdiction of the United States' Court in such cases, was at least doubtful. Five suits have been brought for eight of them — one in Pike County, for [[Hook-2102|Peter Hook]], [[Miller-86584|William Miller]], [[Jacobs-13574|John Jacobs]], and [[Bayard-297|James Bayard]] — three suits in Lawrence County, for [[Cox-32179|Clem]], [[Lawrence-15986|Ephraim]] and [[Unknown-561813|Henry]] — and one in Adams County, for [[Smith-236722|Lydia]]. — My brother and partner, [[Walker-51081|Robert J. Walker]], is now at the Supreme Court, at Monticello, and will make all possible inquiry into the situation of the remaining six, not yet accurately ascertained, although an inquiry was instantly set on foot. [[Trusty-373|Milton Trusty]] and [[Chase-9058|William Chase]], are believed to be in Wayne County. Every man, woman and child, of these unfortunates in our State, must be hunted out and as at present advised, we expect to account for twelve of them. Staten and Constant were sold to one Wood, near Milledgeville, Georgia; so says [[Smith-236722|Lydia]], who adds another to this dark catalogue of crime, [[Unknown-559584|Hannah]], a small yellow woman, stolen from Philadelphia. These poor creatures have been so scattered over our sparsely peopled County, that we have been obliged to ask the aid of some of the members of the bar who practice in those Circuits, which neither my [[Walker-51081|brother]] or self attend, and which has been very promptIy afforded by [[Gaines-2392|R. M. Gaines]] and [[Case-6424|William Case]], Esqs. The documents forwarded to the late [[Stockton-2501|Richard Stockton]], I have not yet been able to see, in the absence of his Administrator. In his death, the cause of humanity has lost an able advocate. I can appreciate the difficulty you anticipate, of identifying black children, by the evidence of white persons. But however onerous it may be on all hands, we must do our duty. Written evidence; of course, is admissible; but it cannot be taken under the act of Congress. Interrogatories must be filed, and copies served on defendants, with 15 days' notice, before commission can issue. This will be done as soon as possible; but not in time for trial at the Spring Term in March and April. If, however, you will send on satisfactory testimony in any of the cases, I do not despair of inducing the defendants to waive formal exceptions. I enclose [[Smith-236722|Lydia]]'s [[Space:Narrative_of_Lydia_Smith|statement]]. In her case, commissions, &c. will be waived, if the testimony is taken under the act of Congress. Testimony will be required from Delaware or Maryland, as well as from Philadelphia, in her case. I know you "will leave no stone unturned,” to procure the necessary testimony, and we will leave no bayou unsearched for the restoration of the captives to their homes. Our soil affords no stone for building Penitentiaries, but our forests supply gallows for the kidnapper; and while our laws protect slave property, they will restore the free. The defendants, in these cases, have been imposed on, and trials must be had to enable them to regain their money. We need no stimulus to exertion in this cause ; public opinion is with us. The Philadelphians may rely on the hearty co-operation of our citizens in the pursuit and punishment of these audacious and infamous aggressors on all laws, human and divine. Forward the testimony, stating it to be “taken on the petition of ——, for his or their discharge from illegal confinement.” and I hope to render a favourable account of these kidnapped blacks. :Very respectfully, ::Your obedient servant, :::[[Walker-50937|D. S. Walker]]. ''Hon. [[Watson-29647|Joseph Watson]]

From Épernon/Espernon/Epecon to Epperson/Apperson

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[http://josfamilyhistory.com/htm/nickel/burch/epperson-families/epernon-england.htm] [http://josfamilyhistory.com/htm/nickel/burch/epperson-families/french-american-transition.htm] === From Épernon/Espernon/Epecon to Epperson/Apperson === === France-England-America Conflicts, Contrasts, and Comparisons Regarding the Transition Generations === -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Metamorphosis of a Family Name''' Few details are known about the transitional period in our family's genealogy, from about 1638 to the family arriving on America's colonial shores. Many events can only be speculated. However, these generations are some of the most important in the family genealogy. These generations would see a change in their surname and bring the genealogy to America. Whereas Bernard de Nogaret fled France as the duc de la Valette, and left England as the duc d'Épernon, one of his sons and grandsons would leave England (and arrive in America) as an Epecon* or Epperson. * The decision was made to Anglicize the French Épernon to Epperson, somewhere and at some point in time. French speakers pronouncing Epperson would easily pronounce the name with a French accent. Most English-speakers hearing the name pronounced in that way, whether in England or in the colonies, would write it as they hear it: Epecon (with a soft-C), unless informed otherwise. Some documentation shows the surname as "Epecon". Consider "Epecon" as Epperson with a French accent. Vera Apperson English (The Apperson Family in America) states that Edmund Apperson arrived from Wales in 1736 (parish records of New Kent County, Virginia). This was, for her, strong evidence that Bernard initiated the name change upon his arrival in Wales in order for them to be invisible to the French Crown. I am not convinced that Vera Apperson's reasoning is logical. Just because William left Wales in 1736 cannot automatically imply that his father initiated a name change upon his arrival in Wales. I suggest the possibility that it was not Bernard who changed the name. It may have been Antoinette, or John Sr. himself, who changed it, in England or Wales, after Bernard returned to France. And so, the French name Épernon became the English name Epperson ("pp" and the suffix "son" are common for English names). In the melting pot that America is, we consider our ancestry as both English and French. Bernard's son, John, and his first wife were both French, married on the Channel Isle of Jersey; but John’s 2d wife, Elizabeth Beard, was born in Cornwall, England; and they married in Saint Andrew, England. Thus, the family that migrated to Virginia was a combination of both the French and the English. Children from both marriages fathered the Eppersons/Appersons in America. '''The Mysterious Exile''' There is a great deal of fuzziness as to (1) Bernard's route to exile and his stay in any one place; (2) if he had a woman with him or had a liaison or marriage with a woman while in exile; (3) what child or children he may have had while in exile; and (4) what became of them. In order for our Epperson lineage to descend from Jean-Louis de Nogaret de la Valette (duc d'Épernon) and his son, Bernard (duc de la Valette), there had to have been a child by another woman - either a marriage or a liaison. Web lineages have Bernard marrying a third time, variously in France, in the Netherlands, or at sea between the Netherlands and England, or between The Netherlands and the Channel Islands. I have found nothing about any of this in any French sources -- at least not yet. '''The Mystery of Ann Faudoas''' Many genealogy websites make the claim that Bernard married Anne while he was in exile. Research does turn up a distinguished family of Faudoas, but no reference to Ann (or Antoinnette) has turned up which fall within acceptable dates for this marriage. It is unknown where Antoinette and Bernard would have met and married, nor is it know if they actually married as nothing concrete has yet been found. Two resources cite widely disparate birth years for Antoinette Faudoas: (1) the Rootsweb lineage of the Huber & Taylor Families states Antoinette (Anne) Faudoas was born in 1597; Carolyn S. Kimbrell states Antoinette (Anne/Alice) Barbazan-Faudoas was born in 1618. I present Kimbrell's lineage for Anne Faudoas as it gives quite a few names, dates, and locations from which further research might prove beneficial. Antoinette (Anne or Alice) Barbazan-Faudoas, was born in Sérillac, Gaure, France, in 1618 at Sérillac, France. She was the daughter of Jean Faudoas II (twin), baron de Sérillac, and Brandelise Bouzet. He was born around 1540, the son of Olivier de Faudoas, baron de Sérillac, who married in 1540, Marguerite de Sérillac. Brandelise was born in 1547, at Roquepine, Gers, France (the daughter of Pons du Bouzet and Marguerite de Madirac), and died 20 Dec 1617 in Sérillac, Gaure, France. '''Lineage Resources''' Web-based lineages are invariably citing the "family group sheets" or "IGI" records, solicited, collected, and disseminated by the largest genealogy library in the world. Even the library, however, advises researchers to do their own research as they do not question or research any of the group sheets. Source citations are desired and requested, but are often lacking. Data might originate over Grandma Griffin's kitchen table or it could come from a reputable published source with footnotes. Mentioned here are a few of the more prominent resources and some of the conflicts presented. In one online lineage (on genealogy.com), I found the following: "We have nominal documentation for most of this tree. Much of it was constructed from other internet trees; and where connective data lacks, reasoned suppositions have been made." The conclusion was that all this gave very little confidence in the data. Many, if not all, of the following online databases draw their information from the same sources. Many of the web lineages give careless concern to correct spelling and correct presentation of titles; e.g., Angoulême becomes Angoulsine; and Nogaret de la Valette becomes Nogaret De Vallette, de la Valette de Nogaret, Nogaret De Vallette, DeLa Vallete, or Nogaret De Duke d'Epernon. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Edna Epperson Brinkman''' On page 4 of her book, Brinkman passes on the traditional story from earlier generations that Bernard escaped from France with a brother. The story states that he and his brother boarded ships for Virginia shortly after arriving in England and taking a loyalty oath to the English Crown. The problem here is timing. Later evidence indicates that it was not Bernard's generation that emigrated to America. Bernard did not flee France, or emigrate to America, with one or more of his brothers. His two brothers remained in France and died shortly thereafter. There is significant published documentation to this fact. It was not Bernard who emigrated to America. He returned to France in 1642, was pardoned, and served France many more years in many different roles. There is significant documentation regarding this fact, as well. See Brinkman, Edna Epperson. The Story of David Epperson & His Family of Albemarle County Virginia (Hinsdale IL: 1933) pp. 15-19, 20-23. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Lisa Fillers''' [Bernard] had fled in the middle of the night, first to Wales, and then to England where he was found to have lived some 30 years in the fields of London with a woman by whom he had a son, John Epernon. There was no marriage record found in England for Bernard and the woman, and in my opinion no marriage could have taken place since he was still married to Marie du Cambout when he fled France. What does Fillers mean by "30 years in the fields of London"? For starters, Bernard was only away from France from 1637 through 1642 after his father died - five years. And what is the source for her claim that no marriage could have taken place "since he was still married to Marie du Cambout"? Where is the proof that they were still married; and not divorced? See Hillers article: Jean-Louis de Nogaret de la Valette - duc d'Épernon, on Helium. This is not a lineage, but is a good enough article with lots of advertisements. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Peter's Heritage''' The text at Peter's Heritage is the same as (perhaps copied from) Bob Epperson's genealogy and the footnote numbers are identical. But unlike Bob Epperson's pages, Peter's Heritage gives absolutely no sources for his footnote numbers. Peter presents on his family history site a PDF file with biographical information about Bernard d'Épernon. There are a few nice portraits on the two-page file, which include Bernard on horseback with some angels overhead. The caption (difficult to read) states he was a peer and colonel général de France. There is a ducal crown near the bottom. Another portrait of Bernard in fine clothing with a sword in a scabbard is attributed to Louis Testelin. See Peter's Heritage site: Bernard d'Épernon, a PEF file. Email: ralph@petersheritage.com. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ '''Huber & Taylor Families''' Huber & Taylor present us with inconsistencies that are difficult to surmount. Sloppy spelling doesn’t help us to view this site as hugely creditable. The lineage is all over the map with the “de” and “de la”s. They write Jean de la Valette de Nogaret one place and Jean de Nogaret de la Valette in another. Regarding Bernard, they put “Jean Louis Bernard Nogaret De Vallette” (b. 1592), where it should be Bernard. They misspell Angoulême, as Angoulsine. They have Bernard marrying Antoinette Faudoas in France in 1637. I searched for documentation, but found none. If Jean d’Epernon (b. 1638) married in 1653, he would have been fifteen at the time. They purport that he married Sara Fondan-Remon in 1653, and not producing her first child (William) until 1680, 27 years later. This all seems out of whack. Huber & Taylor list the following descendancy from Bernard, as follows: Jean Louis Bernard Nogaret De Vallette (b. 1592); m. 1637 Antoinette Barbazan-Faudoas in France Jean d'Epernon DeLa Vallete Epperson (1638-1709); m. 1653 Sara Fondan-Remon at Island of Jersey William Francis Epperson (b. 1680); m. Ann John Epperson (b. 1703); m. Elizabeth Montgomery David Epperson (b. 1734); m. Hannah Thompson David Epperson (b. 1753); m. Judith Maupin See Huber & Taylor Families, on Rootsweb. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Elaine Hensley''' Elaine Hensley says our ancestor’s name was Jean Louis Bernard Nogaret De Duke d'Epernon. The name "Jean Louis Bernard" is not supported in any published record I have found. In addition, “De Duke d’Epernon” means “of duke of Epernon” and is incorrect. Hensley states first, in one place, that Bernard's son, John, was born about 1638 "at sea or in the Netherlands", and in another place, "at sea between Netherlands and Jersey while father was fleeing France going to England". She also states that John "finally settled with father in Glamorganshire, Wales." It is unlikely that Bernard settled with his new family in Glamorganshire, Wales. He left France in 1638 and returned in 1643, only five years later. Though not impossible, five years is a very short time to spend in the Netherlands, the British Channel Islands, Wales, and London, and “settle down” with a family. Regarding Bernard's son, John, she writes: "Apparently he was raised in Jersey by surrogate parents". I have no quarrels with the assumption that John was raised by surrogate parents, but in Jersey? I thought Hensley just told us that Bernard settled with his family in Glamorganshire, Wales. And in regards to what Bernard did when he returned to France, Hensley gives us two opinions: (1) Bernard returned to France in 1643 and recanted his Protestant beliefs; and (2) he returned to France in 1643 and was rehabilitated and lived in his estate Louches where he died. Firstly, Bernard did not recant his Protestant beliefs nor was he ever rehabilitated. Who does Hensley think rehabilitated him? Bernard was actually pardoned and lived to fill many other roles under French kings before he died. Secondly, there is a Louches, France, right across from Dover, England, by Calais, France, but the d'Épernons have never been known to live there or anywhere near there. Bernard died in 1661 in a “hôtel” in Paris. The Paris hôtel was most likely his own and is discussed on my page on Bernard. '''Epperson French Generations''' There also is a city of Loches, however, which is where Bernard's father died (not Bernard). One wonders if Hensley was confused as there were multiple other misspellings or misstatements in her website. And lastly, under Bernard's father's bio, Hensley states (regarding Bernard), that accusations were rumored that he had poisoned his first wife, Richelieu's niece. But Richelieu's niece was Marie du Cambout and she was Bernard's second wife (not first). Just sayin'. Hensley lists the following descendancy from Bernard, as follows: Jean Louis Bernard Nogaret De Duke d'Épernon (1592-1661); m. Antoinette Barbazan-Faudoas. John d’Epernon (1638 at sea-1709); m. 1656 (1) Sara Fondan-Remon in Jersey; and (2) m. in 1671 Elizabeth Beard. By Wife #1 Sara Fondan-Remon Jean-Louis d’Epernon (b. 1657) John d’Epernon (b. 1659, Glamorganshire, Wales) Charles d’Epernon (b. 1662) By Wife #2 Elizabeth Beard William Francis Epperson/Apperson (1673 or 1675 at sea-1727); m. Ann Perrault Richard Epperson (b. 1680) Thomas Epperson (b. 1685) John Epperson/Apperson Sr. (b. 1703); m. Elizabeth Montgomery. John Epperson Jr. (b. 1737); m. Elizabeth Lambert. Littleberry Epperson (b. 1755); m. Nancy (-). See Hensley Database: All of our Roots and Branches, on familytreemaker. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Bob Epperson''' Bob Epperson's lineages draw his Epperson data from the group records of Vaughn Epperson on file at the LDS Library in Salt Lake City, Utah. Referring the reader to the group records of Vaughn Epperson is fine, but I want to know from whence Vaughn draws his facts. A few of the statements found in his website cannot stand without discussion: '''[1]''' Epperson makes the statement that "Marie was divorced from Bernard de la Valette Defoix Nogaret". He also states that, "when Bernard fled France, he was married to Marie Du Cambout, niece of Cardinal Richlieu". Also, "Records indicate that he escaped from France with thirteen servants, leaving his wife and children in France". And then, "Bernard later married Anne Faudoas". '''[1]''' If Bernard "was married to Marie Du Cambout when he fled France" and he fled "leaving his wife", and he "later married Ann Faudoas", then the question begs an answer: when and where did Bernard divorce Marie? - when he was in France or in exile? I have not researched Vaughn Epperson's family group records, but hope to do so soon, and have personally seen no other statement that Bernard and Marie were divorced, but I know of other divorces of the time and it would not surprise me. I would want to see records indicating a divorce from Marie and/or a marriage to Ann Faudoas. It may be, instead, that there was no divorce but instead a liaison with Ann Faudoas. '''[2]''' We also know that Bernard and Anne traveled from the Netherlands to Glamorganshire, Wales because she died there in 1648. Bernard's son, John, was ten years old when his mother died. When John was five years old in 1643, Bernard returned to France. '''[2]''' Do we really know that Bernard went to Wales with Ann and their son, John, "because she died there in 1648"? Because she died there, is that proof that Bernard went to Wales with them? I do not think so. '''[3]''' John's first child was born in 1657 when he was nineteen years old. He named his son Jean-Louis for his father, Bernard, the Duc d' la Vallette. '''[3]''' If Bernard named his son, John, after himself his name would be Bernard. I think if he named him “Jean-Louis” it would have been for the grandfather, Jean-Louis de Nogaret, le duc d'Épernon. Bernard's name was never Jean-Louis Bernard, it was always Bernard. Bob Epperson shows the descendancy from Bernard, as follows: Bernard de la Valette Defoix Nogaret (1592-1661); m. Antoinette (Anne) Faudoas. John (alias Epecon) Epernon (1638-1689); m. (1) Sara Fondan-Remon; (2) Elizabeth Beard. By Wife #1 Sarah Fondan-Remon Jean-Louis (b. 1655) JOHN (b. 1659); m. Eliz. Alexander Charles (b. 1660) By Wife #2 Elizabeth Beard WILLIAM b. 1675 (at sea); m. Ann Richard (b. 1680) Francis (b. 1681) Thomas (b. 1685) Children of John & Eliz. Alexander Susanna (b. 1688) JOHN (b. 1694); m. Eliz. Michaux* Pall (b. 1699) Francis (b. 1706) Eliabeth (b. 1708) Anne (b. 1710) John (b. 1712) Mary (b. 1714) Peter (b. 1718) Children of William & Ann [Perrault?] John (b. 1703) Henry (b. 1713) Elizabeth (b. 1715) Sarah (b. 1717) Francis (b. 1718) Children of John & Eliz. Michaux* Child #3 - DAVID EPPERSON. See Edna Epperson Brinkman’s book, The Story of David Epperson & His Family of Albemarle County Virginia (Hinsdale IL: 1933) pp. 15-19, 20-23. I question the surname Michaux. I have not personally viewed Vaughan’s research to see where he got this surname, and will update this as soon as this surname can be verified. See Database of Bob Epperson. This link leads to John Epernon/Epecon/Epperson (b. about 1659) and his descendants. Scrolling to the top will lead to the top of the "Descendants of the Duc d' Epernon" section of this website. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''Carolyn S. Kimbrell''' It is unknown where Bernard met and married his 3rd wife, Antoinette (Anne or Alice) Barbazan-Faudoas. They were in the Netherlands because their son, John, was born there in 1638. We also know that Bernard and Anne traveled from the Netherlands to Glamorganshire, Wales because she died there in 1648 when her son was ten. We actually do not have proof that Bernard was in Wales. He returned to France in 1643, was pardoned by the king of France, and given new responsibilities in the king's government. How can anyone say as fact that we "know" that Bernard and Anne traveled from the Netherlands to Wales because she died there five years after he left? Who has proof that he ever went there with Anne? Perhaps she and her son went there without him? Kimbrell lists the following descendancy from Bernard, as follows: Jean Louis Bernard Nogaret De Vallette (b. 1592); m. 1637 Antoinette Barbazan-Faudoas in France Jean d'Epernon DeLa Vallete Epperson (1638-1709); m. 1656 (1653 see Huber) Sara Fondan-Remon on Island of Jersey John (b. 1669 in Wales-1709); m. Elizabeth Alexander John (b. 1703); m. Elizabeth Michaux David (b. 1734); m. Hannah Thompson Charles (b. 1766) See Carolyn S. Kimbrell's genealogy website, on genealogy.com. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- '''OTHER RESOURCES''' British Huguenot Society of London: Vols. 25 (pp. 1, 4); 26 (pp. 40, 55); 27 (p. 107); and Vol. 29 (pp. 4, 34), regarding Faudoas. Epperson, John, death, 1689: See Vestry Book, St. Peters pp. 19, 20. John Epernon/Epecon/Epperson. Epperson, John: married Sara Fondan Remon, 1656, Channel Isles: See LDS Film B0394724, p. 86. Epperson, John: married Elizabeth Beard, 1671, Devon, England: See Batch M001832, Source 823684 F. [Is this at the LDS Library in Salt Lake City, Utah?]. Epperson, Vaughn Elmo. Descendancy Chart and Family Group Records. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Library, Salt Lake City, Utah (1996 and 1997). Généalogie de la maison de Faudoas; this source does not mention Antoinette (Anne/Alice) Faudoas. [http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/bec_0373-6237_1909_num_70_1_461119_t1_0562_0000_2] La maison de Faudoas (Gascogne, Maine et Normandie), par l'abbé Ambroise Ledru, chanoine honoraire du Mans, et Eugène Vallée. Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes. (Paris: A. Lemerre), Vol. 70 (1909) pp. 562-64. On the website of Persee Scientific Journals. Maugier, George. "Kin", who emigrated in 1675 (from the Channel Isle of Jersey and also of Hampshire, old England) to Newbury, America. He sold property to Peter Valett in 1674/5). This is most likely about John Epecon (Epperson). Check this at the LDS Family History Library, Salt Lake City, UT. British Film #0394727, pp. 96ff. There are other sources but the above web lineages are the usual I find when I search the internet.

FROM GREECE TO NORTH AMERICA

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My mothers family was from Greece and my fathers from England. This information is in their memory.

From Greg Welker to Mary (Glendinning) Gillespie through Nancy (Gillespie) Owens

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Greg Welker and [[Moyer-780|Amanda (Moyer) Torrey]] are 3d Cousins are both descendants of [[Hubler-31|Nancy (Lansberry) Hubler (1833-1899).]] [[Welker-621|Greg Welker]] b. 1960s : Greg's Father [[Welker-622|David Basil Welker 3 Apr 1936 - 30 Apr 1990]] David Basil Welker remembered by Greg [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/G7N2-629] Family Search :David's Father: [[Welker-623|Loren Basil Welker (1903-1985)]] Loren Basil Welker 6 Sources [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/9V31-45T] Family Search :Loren's mother: [[Hubler-402|Henrietta Dora (Hubler) Welker]] Henrietta (Hubler) Welker 10 Sources [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/KNWX-V5S] Family Search :Henrietta's mother [[Lansberry-31|Nancy (Lansberry) Hubler]] Nancy (Lansberry) Hubler 6 Sources [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LZJC-ZKZ] Family Search Nancy (Lansberry) Huber's mother was [[Owens-1891|Anna (Owens) Lansberry]] Anna Owens Lansberry 4 Sources [https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LZFP-2SN] Family Search Anna Owens mother was [[Gillespie-559|Nancy (Gillespie) Owens]] 0 August 1800 – 23 August 1886

From Johnston to Janson

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Jansson-1388.jpg
By [[Van_Munster-10|Peter van Munster]] This article seeks to explain how I traced back the surname of 'Janson' to 'Johnston', or reversely, how 'Johnston' became 'Janson' over time. And that in such a way that it can be referenced from all profiles that require that explanation. While researching my own ancestry, I came across [[Van_Munster-65|Arij van Munster]] (1774 - 1817). We share the same ancestors: his father [[Van_Munster-16|Pieter van Munster]] is my fourth great grandfather. This Arij married [[Johnston-15623|Hendrina Janson]] on 6 May 1798 '''Marriage Arij van Munster - Hendrina Janson 1798''': Stadsarchief Rotterdam [https://hdl.handle.net/21.12133/C1EA9C0B6AC549E58A4EAB3E1BA9C8E4 marriage]. Of course Arie's ancestry was obvious to me; finding Hendrina's proved to be quite a challenge. I had the following leads: * The registrations of their intended marriage, both in Overschie '''intended marriage Overschie 1798''': FamilySearch [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89QV-986J?i=397&wc=SMMP-927%3A1292923701%2C346013801%2C347804601&cc=2037907 intended marriage Overschie] and Rotterdam '''intended marriage Rotterdam 1798''': FamilySearch [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89QV-W1BD?i=296&wc=SMM5-92C%3A345830501%2C345829402%2C345874801%3Fcc%3D2037907&cc=2037907&cat=122730 intended marriage Rotterdam], show that Hendrina was born in Sprang, * The document that registers Hendrina's death in 1811 '''Death Hendrina 1811''': FamilySearch [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9QV-MYM3?i=300&wc=SMMG-16F%3A345830501%2C346013801%2C347554702&cc=2037907 death Hendrina] shows that she was 40 years old then, which yields a birth year of about 1771, * It is rather sure that Hendrina was of the Protestant religion. Her marriage with Arij was solemnised, and all five of their children ([[Van_Munster-67|Maria]] in 1800, [[Van_Munster-68|Pieter]] in 1802, [[Van_Munster-69|Conira]] in 1804, [[Van_Munster-70|Kaarel]] in 1807 and [[Van_Munster-64|Cornelia]] 1809) were baptised in the 'Nederduits Gereformeerde' church in Overschie. The only entry in the baptism registers of the church of the same denomination in Sprang that comes close, is the one of a Hendrina baptised on 9 December 1770 '''Birth Hendrina 1770''' Streekarchief Langstraat Heusden Altena (SALHA) [https://salha.nl/bronnen/genealogy/personen/deeds/9cf2b579-eb09-7873-5872-13d4ac679421 birth Hendrina 1770]. She is a daughter of Cunira Romme and Charles Johnston. This is hopeful. This first name 'Cunira'/'Conira' is fairly rare. If Cunira Romme were Hendrina's mother, Hendrina's daughter [[Van_Munster-69|Conira]] could well have been named after her. The obvious problem: the name of the father, 'Johnston' and not 'Janson' as hoped for. Still: there is some similarity between 'Johnston' and 'Janson', if not in sound then by "meaning": 'son of John/Jan'. As there is similarity between the names of "Karel" (as in Arij and Hendrina's son [[Van_Munster-70|Kaarel]]) and "Charles" (the English version of "Karel"). Arij has no "Karel" (or any of its variations) in his ancestry. This may indicate a possible link in Hendrina's ancestry, being ''Charles'' Johnston the "prime suspect". {{Image|file=Jansson-1388.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption=Alphabetical list of Jansons born in Sprang }} The wonderfully helpful and knowledgable people at 'Streekarchief Langstraat Heusden Altena' '''Streekarchief Langstraat Heusden Altena''': homepage [https://salha.nl/ SALHA] where these records are kept, drew my attention to the fact that Charles and Cunera had 3 more children: [[Johnston-15634|Joris Frans Johnston]] (* 1769), [[Johnston-15635|Magiel Johnston]] (* 1772) and [[Johnston-15636|William Johnston]] (* 1774). Even more importantly: that they have in their reading room a handwritten register (of unknown origin) of baptisms in Sprang, sorted alphabetically by surname and first name. This document shows these 4 children with their correct names and years of birth yet with (again) the surname of 'Janson' [[#Research Notes|*)]]. The definitive clue came when I found the registration of the death of Cunera Romme '''Death Cunera''' SALHA [https://salha.nl/bronnen/genealogy/personen/deeds/c30cedfd-59c7-c776-9e42-382f596da7fc death Cunera Romme]. The registration reads (roughly translated) "[...] the corpse of Cuijnira Romme, when alive widow of Carel Janson, registered by her son Michiel Jansson [...]". The combination of the three first names "Cuijnira", "Carel" and "Michiel" and their relationship (mother/father/son) seems too unique and the similarity with "Cunera", "Charles" and "Magiel" [[#Research Notes|**)]] in that same combination is too great to be coincidental. There can be no doubt that these are the same people, irrespective of the difference in last name. For good measure I checked for a registration of a death of any 'Charles Johnston'. None could be found. There is however a registration of the burial of 'Carel Janson' on 12 October 1805 '''Burial Carel Janson''': SALHA [https://salha.nl/bronnen/genealogy/personen/deeds/aacd9575-bf43-6efc-fa17-a42d3d3c52df burial Carel Janson] again in Sprang. Which concurs with the fact that his wife Cunera was a widow when she died 2 months later . How or why the Scottish soldier Charles Johnston ended up in Sprang remains a mystery for the moment. Sprang was a village and certainly no garrison was stationed there. Why he chose 'Janson' to be his new surname may be explained as an attempt to "blend in with the locals": people with the surname 'Janson' (or similar) were already living in Sprang (c.f. the baptism of Johannes Jakobus Janszon '''Birth Johannes Jabobus''': SALHA [https://salha.nl/bronnen/genealogy/personen/deeds/b361bb54-8d8f-7d3b-49ba-7c56a0ada8e9 baptism Johannes Jakobus] in 1754). And of course it is quite similar to his original name. Fact is though that all four of his children were baptised with the surname "Johnston" and that [[Johnston-15634|Joris Frans]], [[Johnston-15623|Hendrina]] and [[Johnston-15635|Magiel]] used "Janson" as surname when they married (respectively in 1798, 1798 and 1805). == Research Notes == '''*)''' The other (unmarked) names in the image can be identified as children of [[Johnston-15634|Joris Frans (Johnston) Janson]] and [[Bogers-24|Anna Bogers]] (in order of appearance): * Carolina 1801: [[Janson-580|Carolina Janson]], * Cunira 1810: [[Janson-585|Ceunira Janson]], * Govert 1803: [[Janson-582|Govert Janson]], * Govert 1805: [[Janson-583|Goovert Janson]], * Karel 1807: [[Janson-584|Carel Janson]], * Maria 1800: [[Janson-581|Maria Janson]], The only exception is Johannes Jakobus 1754. This almost certainly is Johannes Jakobus Janszon, baptised 24 February 1754 in Sprang .
[[#Biography|Return to Biography]] '''**)''' Although it may not look like that, 'Magiel' and 'Michiel' are in fact the same names. Spelling rules did not exist in those days and how names were put on paper was left to the discretion of the scribe. The profile of [[Johnston-15635|'Magiel']] (once completed) will even show more variations.
[[#Biography|Return to Biography]] == Sources ==

From Joseph Watson to Duncan S. Walker, January 24, 1827

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Letter from [[Watson-29647|Joseph Watson]] to [[Walker-50937|Duncan S. Walker]] Published in *Weekly Natchez Courier, March 2, 1827, Page 5. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/78138278/ https://www.newspapers.com/clip/78138426/ re-published in *The African Observer. United States: I. Ashmead, printer, 1827. ---- To [[Walker-50937|Duncan S. Walker]] ::Mayors Office, ::''Philadelphia, january 24, 1827. Dear Sir.- I had the pleasure to receive a [[Space:Letter_from_Joseph_Watson_to_David_Holmes_and_J.E._Davis%2C_January_20%2C_1827|letter dated, Natchez, 26th December last]], from the [[Holmes-6106|Hon. David Holmes]], and [[Davis-25358|J. E. Davis, Esq.]] with an enclosure from you containing the [[Space:Narrative_of_Peter_Hook|narrative]] of [[Hook-2102|Peter Hook]]. This [[Space:Narrative_of_Peter_Hook|narrative]] of [[Hook-2102|Hook]], I have no doubt is substantially true, and unfolds a scene of iniquity and outrage unexampled within our borders, and deeply injurious to the peace and dignity of our city. Great individual distress and affliction have been produced by these repeated aggressions, and the public feeling is highly aroused and excited in consequence thereof — Messrs. [[Holmes-6106|Holmes]] and [[Davis-25358|Davis]] refer me to you, for further communications, and legal assistance, in order to procure the restoration of these unfortunate blacks, to their friends and homes. I therefore, at the commencement of our correspondence, pray you to leave no stone unturned, no legal or humane effort unessayed, to speedily accomplish this purpose — I shall forward you as I procure it, and I hope before long, a body of documentary evidence, that I trust will at least elucidate the history of this foul transaction, and identify the persons and the loss of most of the children-the great difficulty is to procure even the written evidence of white people, to establish the identity of black children, more particularly, if they have been out of sight for a year or two. I have already found white persons who can identify [[Hook-2102|Peter Hook]], [[Cox-32179|Clement Cox]] and [[Baxter-9002|Benjamin Baxter]]. Before I received the letter of Messrs. [[Holmes-6106|Holmes]] and [[Davis-25358|Davis]], I had received information of [[Hook-2102|Hook]] being at Natchez, and immediately forwarded the description of his parents, [[Hook-2103|Peter]] and [[Unknown-549840|Eliza Hook]], and the depositions of [[Kuhn-3603|Hartman Kuhn]], and [[Hemphill-1436|Judge Hemphill]]; I enclosed these documents to [[Stockton-2501|Mr. Stockton]], your attorney general, to whose zeal and politeness on former occasions, I am greatly indebted; I beg leave to refer you to [[Stockton-2501|Mr. Stockton]], and who will, also, be able to give you full information as to the character of the conspirators engaged in the transaction to which I have alluded. I presume [[Stockton-2501|Mr. Stockton]] has seen the correspondence between Messrs; [[Hamilton-26713|Hamilton]] and [[Henderson-22303|Henderson]], (of Rocky Spring) and myself; these gentlemen, however, if he has it not, will, I know, most willingly, exhibit it to you. I have acknowledged the receipt of the [[Space:Letter_from_David_Holmes_and_J._E._Davis_to_Joseph_Watson%2C_December_23%2C_1826|letter]] of Messrs. [[Holmes-6106|Holmes]] and [[Davis-25358|Davis]], which they will, I presume, exhibit to you —although I have at present, no funds in my possession, to remunerate you for your services in this good work, I will guarantee to you the compensation promised by Messrs. [[Holmes-6106|Holmes]] and [[Davis-25358|Davis]], in their [[Space:Letter_from_David_Holmes_and_J._E._Davis_to_Joseph_Watson%2C_December_23%2C_1826|letter of the 23d of December last]]. Will it be absolutely necessary that white persons should go on to your place, in order to identify these coloured people? might not depositions be taken under the act of congress, or in some way that would be availing before your tribunal? otherwise it operates as a monstrous oppression on these poor blacks, most of whom have very little to spare, and the charitable and humane here, as elsewhere, you know, are taxed up to the eyes, for a hundred matters, in which their feelings are continually interested. I hope to hear from you frequently. I shall not easily forget the subject myself, as the parents and relatives of the sufferers, will be continually inquiring after them. Once more I recommend this work to your unremitted exertions, and remain your obedient servant, ::[[Watson-29647|Joseph Watson]], Mayor.

From Langenfeld to Johnsburg

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Note: The profiles found here are strictly profiles of the people from village of Langenfeld, Mayen, Rhineland who immigrated to the United States and who were Early Settlers in Johnsburg (Est August 1841), McHenry County, Illinois The following are larger and more relevant cities in the wider vicinity of Langenfeld: Arft, Welschenbach, Acht, Virneburg, Langscheid, Hausten, Hohenleimbach, Kempenich, Siebenbach, Luxem, Hirten, Spessart, Weibern, Nachtsheim, Herresbach, Kirchwald, Kaltenborn, Volkesfeld, Weiler, Lind, Nitz, Ditscheid, Anschau, Drees, Heckenbach, Boos, Reudelsterz, Munk, Kirsbach, Bermel [[Bohr-128|Anna Bohr]], [[Klein-4726|Anna Klein]], [[Klein-4358|Wilhelm Klein]], [[Mueller-3747|Maria Mueller]], [[Mueller-3579|Johann Mueller]], [[Mueller-3719|Nikolaus Mueller]], [[Mueller-3746|Peter Mueller]], [[Mueller-3747|Maria Mueller]], [[Mueller-3920|Mathias Mueller]], [[Klein-4726|Anna Klein]], [[Schaefer-2238|Balthasar Schaefer]], [[Schaefer-2239|Jacob Schaefer]]

From Maude Murdoch in Australia back to Culloden!

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The goal of this project is to trace the proud Scottish ancestry of my Grandmother [[Murdoch-28|Maude Murdoch]] :, who had nine children and taught them to think of themselves as Scots, indeed as supporters of Clan Campbell. It would be very exciting to trace Maude's ancestors back to the Jacobite Rebellion Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Turner-1584|Anne Tichborne]] nee Turner. My mother was Maude's daughter. I would love to connect with more of Maude's descendants (and check out how Scottish you are lol) Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done to get us started. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * I have names for Maude's parents who lived in South Australia. I need to confirm these with birth certificates, also those of her grandparents. * Find out all the variants of the name eg Murdock/ Murdough that have been used in the last 400 years, to aid searching * Search for matches to known ancestors on other family trees.. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=1484171 send me a private message]. Thanks!

From One Generation to Another

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'''From One Generation to Another'''
Part I: The Hofheintz/Huffines Family
Part II: Williamson, Wakefield, Underwood, Sikes, Lipscomb, & Paisley Families
by
[[Huffines-85|David Allen Huffines, Jr]]
2001 /br/ Charlotte, North Carolina
FAMILY HISTORY LIBRARY
35 NORTH WEST TEMPLE
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84150
  ''From One Generation to Another''
by [[Huffines-85|David Allen Huffines, Jr]], Charlotte, NC.
This book springs from Johann Jacob Hofheintz who was born in Ebersbach, DU in 1729, migrated to PA in 1751, and to Guilford County NC about 1770. The book follows all his male children, especially the line to the author. In addition, Genealogical Reports with extensive notes follow each line, plus the lines of Jacob's two brothers, Daniel and Adam, who settled in NC and PA, and the following related families: Williamson, Wakefield, Underwood, Sikes, Paisley and Lipscomb. All but the first and last of these families are closely related to Guilford County. Except for Williamson and Sikes who are English and are picked up in the early settlement of this country, all the others go back into Europe.
Soft Cover, comb bound, viii + 442 pages with text, map, pictures and genealogical charts, 8½" x 11", $30 including tax, plus $5 S&H. All genealogical material is fully indexed plus a separate index lists persons in the text materials.
Order from David Huffines,
5100 Sharon Road, Ste,
667, Charlotte, NC 28210.
Inquiries may be sent to dhuffine@bellsouth.net. [NOTE This email address no longer exists.]
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/141969012
Rev [[Huffines-85|David Allen Huffines, Jr]]
Birth 17 Sep 1920
Harnett County, North Carolina, USA
Death 19 May 2013 (aged 92)
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA
Burial Covenant Presbyterian Church Columbarium
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA Added by C Bracey
  Rev[[Huffines-85|David Allen Huffines, Jr]]
Dr. [[Huffines-85|David Allen Huffines, Jr]] (1920) ended his earthly pilgrimage on Sunday, May 19th, 2013 at 2:47 pm. A service in celebration of the Resurrection and in memory of David's life will be held at Covenant Presbyterian Church at 11:00 am. on Wednesday, May 22nd following a private service at the Church's Columbarium.
David was born in Harnett County, NC, the son of D.A. Huffines, Sr. of Guilford County and Clemmie Williamson of Steele Creek in Mecklenburg County. He was a graduate of Davidson College and Union Theological Seminary in Virginia. At Davidson graduation he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant and was awarded the Algernon Sydney Sullivan award for service to the college community. Between college and seminary David served as an officer in the US Army Signal Corps, spending nineteen months in Europe during World War II, which began on Omaha Beach and ended in Munich. After seminary he transferred to the Chaplain Corps. David was ordained as a Presbyterian Minister on April 19, 1949. He served as pastor of the Bethlehem Presbyterian Church in Union County and the Lillington Presbyterian Church in Harnett County. This was followed by forty years in Alabama where he served as the Regional Director of Christian Education for the Presbyterian Board of Christian Education and then as the Presbytery Executive for the Presbyteries of Birmingham (PCUS & UPCUSA). After retirement at the end of 1986 he and Virginia continued to live in Birmingham until 1999 when they moved to Sharon Towers, a Presbyterian Retirement facility in Charlotte. Before and after moving to Charlotte, David served as the Interim Pastor in a number of Presbyterian Churches, including Mulberry and Westover Hills in the Charlotte area. He was a member of the Presbytery of Charlotte. David is survived by Virginia Sikes Huffines, his beloved wife of 66 years (1947) and three children, David William Huffines of Omaha, Nebraska, Ann Huffines Neel and her husband, David of Charlotte, NC and Steven Conway Huffines and his partner Dan McCurdy of San Francisco, CA. David and Virginia have two grandsons, Jonathan Neel and Kevin Neel of Greensboro. David was preceded in death by his parents and his only sister, Laura Lee Huffines White, of Louisville, KY. Though he was the first grandchild of Logan and Mollie Williamson, he outlived all of his cousins by several years. As he often remarked, his "Huffines and Wakefield genes led to a longer life."
David was a member of Rotary for fifty-two years. He served as president of the Lillington and Vestavia Hills (Birmingham) Rotary Clubs and he and Virginia attended the meeting of Rotary International in Tokyo in 1978. His hobbies were golf and photography. He "never shot his age" in golf, but he had much more success with photography.
Memorials may be made to Residents Assistance Fund at Sharon Towers, Davidson College or to Covenant Presbyterian Church. "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, for they rest from their labors and their works do follow them." The Robertson Funeral Service, Lic. is serving the Huffines family, www.throbertson.com.
As published in Charlotte Observer, The (NC) - Tuesday, May 21, 2013
---- My only interest in this book is the Lipscomb Family. Pages 339- 366 I found this book in the Brigham Young University Library Family History collection. It is in pdf format and I downloaded it a few weeks ago. Published in 2001, it is still in copyright. It may be available through a local LDS Family History Library or other libraries around the country.
The Lipscomb section of Part II starts with AMBROSE (ELDER)1 LIPSCOMBE who was born 1581 and died 1622 both in Silverton, Devonshire, England, and continues for 10 generations into the 20th century.
On page 342 is the statement that Anderson Lipscomb (b. Abt 1723; d 1785) is the son of JOHN LIPSCOMB and DINAH MACGHEE. On the next page Huffines states that William Archer “Archibald” Lipscomb and Thomas Lipscomb are the sons of Anderson. He offers no sources for either of those statements. Dorothy Garr Helmer in her book Lipscombs in America for 300 Years specifically states that she cannot find a connection between Anderson and William Archer or Thomas. She does site lots of sources in her work. So there we are, conflict.
Along about generation 5, Mr Huffines gets to William Archer “Archibald” Lipscomb and his wife Mary Power and their 5 children. And Thomas Lipscomb and his wife Dorothy Palmer and their 5 children and goes on to the next generation. Between 1790 and 1807, Mary Power died. Thomas Lipscomb died on 22 July 1807 in Person County, NC. Then Archibald and Dorothy married on 11 Jan 1808 in Person County, North Carolina, USA.
Huffines omits this marriage and their 2 children.
Eveline born 1809 in Person, NC, USA and died unknown time and place. Eveline married Samuel W McMurray, widower of her half sister Matilda. They had 1 child and unknown other descendants.
George born 3 Dec 1813 in Person County, NC, USA and died 8 MAR 1888 in Maury County, TN, USA. George married Mary Clarissa Erwin (1816–1889) on 21 Jun 1838 in Maury County, TN USA. They had 8 children and many descendants of which I am one.
I wonder if there are other mistakes or omissions. 27 March 2018 ~ [[Moffett-249|A Nony Mouse Moffett]]
This book is still in copyright so I won't upload it. The email address provided by the late Mr David Allen Huffines, Jr near the beginning of the book is no longer valid so I don't know how anyone would order their own copy of the book. I did a google search on the title and author and found a copy at the Brigham Young University Library. It came up in pdf format and I down loaded a copy. If anyone is unable to do the same and wants a copy, send me your email address and I will email you a copy. At least as long as I am able.

From Paper To People - PHOTOS!!!

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From_Paper_To_People_-_PHOTOS.jpg
Wherever you are, if you listen to the From Paper To People Podcast, feel free to join the team and start scanning and adding photos to your tree! Go back as far as you can. Ask a friend to join!

From Scotland to Canada and beyond

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The goal of this project is to ...Find a connection Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[MacPhail-185|Tom MacPhail]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Start documenting what we have * Where are our common origins? * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13136046 send me a private message]. Thanks!

From SJ Baty to Ambrose Cobb the Immigrant

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Ambrose is the 11th great grandfather of SJ (Uncertain) :1. [[Baty-260|SJ Baty]] is the son of [private father] DNA confirmed :2. [Private] is the son of [[Ulmer-401|Virgie Ella (Ulmer) Baty]] [confident] :3. Virgie is the daughter of [[Mullins-4138|Laura Elizabeth (Mullins) Ulmer]] [confident] :4. Laura is the daughter of [[Mullins-4139|Anderson Richardson Mullins]] [confident] :5. Anderson is the son of [[Mullins-4144|Thomas Richardson Mullins]] [confident] :6. Thomas is the son of [[Cobb-1043|Frances (Cobb) Mullins]] [confident] :7. Franky is the daughter of [[Cobb-1049|Thomas Cobb]] [confident] :8. Thomas is the son of [[Cobb-1056|Thomas Cobb]] '''[uncertain]''' :9. Thomas is the son of '''[[Cobb-1058|{{Red|Thomas Cobb}}]]''' '''[uncertain]''' :10. Thomas is the son of [[Cobb-6761|Thomas Cobb]] [confident] :11. Thomas is the son of [[Cobbs-29|Ambrose (Cobbs) Cobb]] [confident] :12. Ambrose is the son of [[Cobbs-17|Robert (Cobbs) Cobb Sr.]] [unknown confidence] :13. Robert is the son of [[Cobbs-20|Ambrose (Cobbs) Cobb Jr.]] [unknown confidence] This makes Ambrose the 11th great grandfather of SJ. The lineage from #1 SJ to #8 Thomas Cobb is documented in the profiles. The lineage from #10 Thomas Cobb to #13 Ambrost Cobb is well documented in the article "[https://archive.org/details/jstor-1921421/page/n5 Cobb or Cobbs Family]," originally published in 1910 in ''The William and Mary Quarterly,'' Volume 19. This page is to conserve the documentation efforts to link #8 [[Cobb-1049|Thomas Cobb]], b. 1764 in Virginia, to #10 [[Cobb-1058|Thomas Cobb]], b. 1720 in Goochland, Virginia. More specifically, to find documentation for #9 [[Cobb-1058|Thomas Cobb]] and to find links to his son and father.

From The Livingstons of Livingston Manor, etc. by Edwin Brockholst Livingston 1910:

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From The Livingstons of Livingston Manor, etc. by Edwin Brockholst Livingston 1910: Among the Livingston papers formerly belonging to the Viscounts of Kilsyth, and still preserved in the charter room at Colzium House, Stirlingshire, are some deeds relating to the Scottish ancestors of the American branches of this once noble family, most important bearing date of Mar. 15, 1560 and which had been executed at Callendar House, the principal seat of the Lords Livingston. This deed, which is in Latin, is to the effect that Alexander Livingston, rector of the parish church of Monyabroch, with the consent of his patron and chief, William Lord Livingston feus half his glebe to another William Livingston and Janet Makgowin his spouse, with the armorial seals of both Lord Livingston and the rector who both signed it. The lack of an adequate stipend was apparently the reason why the rector, 'after due deliberation' so runs the charter, had to feu to his 'beloved William Livingston and Janet Makgowin his spouse' and their heirs, the half of his glebe for the low rent of three pounds two shillings. Even in the year 1574, or thirteen years subsequent to the date of this transaction, the Rev. Alexander Livingston only had as stipend, according to the Book of Assignation of Stipends, 'the third of the parsonage and vicarage, extending to three chaldees, five bolls, and one-third boll of meal, and the third of the vicarage pensionary of Monyabroch, three pounds, six shillings and eight pence. (Scots)' Owing to the earlier volumes of the kirk-session Records of Kilsyth having either been lost or destroyed, probably during the civil wars of the 17th Century, little can now be gleaned from contemporary sources concerning the long ministry of the Rev. Alexander Livingston over this parish. But from the fact of his having been appointed by the Scottish Privy Council, Mar. 6, 1589-90-, one of the three clerical commissioners for ';overseeing the maintenance of the Protestant religion in Stirlingshire, it would appear that he must have been favourably known to the government as a man of influence in his district, though his relationship to the head of his family alone, would probably have been sufficient to have got him appointed a member of this important commisssion. There were seven commissioners altogether--three clerical and four lay---and of these, three were members of the Livingston family, who at this period were all powerful in this county. The other Livingston commissioners were, William Lord Livingston, and John Livingston, the younger, of Dunipace. That family influence was the principal cause of his appointment, is borne out by the fact that only two years later 'he was so aged and infirm, that he could neither preach, administer the sacrament, nor exercise discipline,' so that the Presbytery advised him to get a helper, but he doesn't appear to have acted upon this advice as the Presbytery in 1594 applied to the Synod for a helper. The result is not recorded. Rev. Livingston, owing to the fact that he 'was in near realtion to the House of Callendar,' had been specially selected, in spite of his infirmaties, by the Presbytery of Glasgow, to personally wait upon Lady Livingston, though she was not a resident of his parish, but of Falkirk, and summon her to appear before the Presbytery upon April 13, in this same year, to answer as to her religious beliefs, which were the cause of much scandal to the kirk elders, who deemed her 'a malicious papist.' Failing to appear she was summoned for the 2nd time 'to give the confession of her faith under the pain of disobedience and Mr. Livingston was duly admonished as to the personal delivery of this summons. The lady not deigning to take any notice, 'Mr. Alexander Livingston, parson and minister of Monyabroch' was ordered on the 23rd of the above month to summon her for the 3rd time, to attend before the Presbytery upon the 15th day thereafter 'under the pain of excommunication.' And that the said lady 'may be won to God,' the Presybery further ordained that Mr. Patrick Sharp, Principal of the College of Glasgow, and Mr. John Cooper, should confer with her 'touching the grounds of religion.' This attempt to bring Lady Livingston into the right path also failing, and after waiting for nearly 3 years for her to see the error of her ways, the Presbytery finally upon Mar 1, 1596-7, 'ordains every minister within the Presbytery of Glasgow to intimate next Sunday that Dame Helenor Hay, Lady Livingston, is excommunicated, and Rev. Alexander Livingston to do the same, under the pain of disposition.' This Lady Livingston was the wife of Alexander, 7th Lord Livingston, eldest son and successor of Rev. Alexander's patron, soon to be created Earl of Linlithgow. The reason why the Presbytery of Glasgow were so bitter against her religious views, was that her husband had been recently entrusted by King James the 6th with the care of the infant Princess Elizabeth, in after years to become celebrated as the wife of the unfortunate Elector Palatine, and ancestress of His Majesty King Edward VII. The worthy elders even complained to King James himself, who very diplomatically told them in reply that his daughter was placed under the charge of Lord Livingston, 'who was a man known to be of good religion.' and not under that of his wife. This dispute continued for several years for in 1602 Lady Livingston, now the Countess of Linlithgow, had to appeal to the king for protection against further threats of excommunication, this time from the Presbytery of Linlithgow. One of the charges seriously laid against her was having dealings with midsummer fairies. The Rev. Alexander Livingston's conduct in this affair had, apparently, given great offence to the scandalised kirk elders, for under date of Mar. 16, 1596, it is duly recorded in the Glasgow Presbytery Register, that 'as to Monyabroch neither exercise nor discipline is keepit by the minister there.' And upon June 21, in the following year the rector was summoned before the Presbyter 'to hear himself deposed from the ministry at the kirk of Monyabroch for inability to use discipline in the said kirk.' When asked if he had anything to say in his defence he raised no objection and deposition was pronounced. The reason why the rector so readily acquiesced in this sentence, appears to have been owing to the fact that the Presbytery had agreed, at the same time, to take William Livingston, his son, on trial for the living.

'''From the Pen of a She-Rebel

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From_the_Pen_of_a_She-Rebel.gif
Excerpt from the Prologue to ''From the Pen of a She-Rebel: The Civil War Diary of Emilie Riley McKinley,'' edited by Gordon A. Cotton. Published in Columbia, South Carolina, by the University of South Carolina Press. 2001. (Available from many sources, including the [http://www.sc.edu/uscpress/books/2001/3356.html University] and [http://www.amazon.com/Pen-She-Rebel-McKinley-Diaries-Letters/dp/B005Q8L9CE Amazon.com]. ''Note'' - 20 years later, it is no longer found among the University's listings, and Amazon prices are a bit steep. However, it is held by more than 200 libraries, according to [https://www.worldcat.org/title/from-the-pen-of-a-she-rebel-the-civil-war-diary-of-emilie-riley-mckinley/oclc/45493379 its WorldCat entry].) :[[Noland-232|Ellen Batchelor]] and her younger children were among those to remain [at their homes near Vicksburg, Mississippi, in 1863]; her sons were in the Confederate army. . . . A widow of forty-two, Mrs. Batchelor had run the plantation [Hoboken] since the death of her husband, [[Batchelor-502|Napoleon B. Batchelor]], in the fall of 1850. They had married in 1837 in Jefferson County, where her ancestors, the Nolands, were among the earliest settlers. The Batchelors, French Huguenots, had come to the Mississippi Territory from South Carolina, and Napoleon’s father, Thomas, was among those who helped shape the new state’s constitution in 1817. Ellen was the second of eight children born to [[Noland-170|Pearce]] and [[Galtney-1|Elizabeth Galtney Noland]]. Of her six brothers, one married Emily Dent, a relative of Julia Grant, and another married Victoria Morancy, whose grandfather was an adopted child of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence. If you have Noland or Batchelor ancestors, I strongly urge you to get this book! Not only does it include lots of valuable genealogical information along the lines of the snippet above, but it is a look at how our ancestors dealt with living in war-torn Vicksburg. As the blurb from the University Press’ site says, it’s :A personal look at Mississippi's Confederate home front during a turning point of the Civil War :Shortly after she began her diary, Emilie Riley McKinley penned an entry to record the day she believed to be the saddest of her life. The date was July 4, 1863, and federal troops had captured the city of Vicksburg, Mississippi. A teacher on a plantation near the city under siege, McKinley shared with others in her rural community an unwavering allegiance to the Confederate cause. What she did not share with her Southern neighbors was her background: Emilie McKinley was a Yankee. The diary is a fascinating read, regardless of whether the names mean anything to you. And the editor, Gordon A. Cotton (curator of the Old Court House Museum in Vicksburg) adds quite a lot.

From Vacuum Tubes to Microprocessors

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From_Vacuum_Tubes_to_Microprocessors.pdf
A record of the professional life of Richard Saylor

From Winchelsea to Kelvin Grove: A Martin Family History 150 Years in Australia 1838-1988

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This Book came from an idea at a Family Reunion I believe that was help at Nabiac, NSW, Australia. A committee chaired by Ron Martin, undertook the collection of information. The Book Covers in Detail the family of William Martin and his wife Cordelia Sinden who left Winchelsea and travel to Sydney in the Colony of NSW. 2nd October, 1838. The Book provides a Biography of the First 3 Generations of the Martin Family. My Great Grandfather is 2nd Generation, his Children all have a Biography in his chapter, and 3rd Generation is my Grandmother's Profile it also lists her Children as 4th Generation, 5th Generation are the Grandchildren, and 6th Generation are her Great Grandchildren. A number of relatives of William & Cordelia complied the information that went into the Book, I am aware of only a few, my family Chapter was information by Gloria Healy, my Aunt. Others were Doreen (Richardson) Wheller, Marie (Wiseman) Donaldson, Hazel Irene (Bain) Suters. A problem that has concerned some, is that the National Library states the Book is Copyrighted but there is no copy right notice printed at all on the actually book.

Front Page- Children of James and Mary

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'''[[Space:Journal of Mary Rosenberger Hennessey|Back to Journal]]''' ''Front page''
''In margin is written'' Copied 1980 by [[Hennessey-124|GMP]] from original by [[Rosenberger-193|MEH]]

Accounts of birth of the children of [[Hennessey-125|James F.]] & [[Rosenberger-193|Mary H.]] [[Hennessey-122|Edward Joseph]]
February 27, 1887 August 29, 1953 [[Hennessey-126|James Francis]]
October 7, 1888 September 24, 1889 [[Hennessey-133|William Bernard]]
September 21, 1890 February 14, 1948 [[Hennessey-123|George Henry]]
August 19, 1892 September 16, 1962 [[Hennessey-129|Joseph Corneilous]]
December 19, 1894 February 15, 1965 [[Hennessey-132|Mary Louisa]]
October 17, 1896 [[Hennessey-119|Alfred Raymond]]
February 1, 1900 February 18, 1903 [[Hennessey-121|Charles Francis]]
November 11, 1901 November 6, 1978 [[Hennessey-127|John Raymond]]
September 22, 1904 November 12, 1904 [[Hennessey-120|Bernard Aloyisus]]
October 22, 1906 October 27, 1906 '''[[Space:Journal of Mary Rosenberger Hennessey|Back to Journal]]'''

Frost 1912b

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Frost, Josephine C 1912b. ''Inscriptions from 13 old cemeteries in Putnam Co., N.Y.'' A typed manuscript? Original in Library of Congress. Available from: https://archive.org/details/inscriptionsfrom00fro . Inscriptions copied in years 1894, 1897, 1909, 1911.

Frost Family in Textile Manufacturing

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I have almost no information about the Frost family except that my grandmother was Jane Ann Frost born in Bury, Lancs. UK in 1851. At age {18} she came to USA to visit relatives ( unknown to me) and met James Dent Spencer who had come to USA prior to her arrival. Apparently he was known to the Frost family in England and when she wrote them that she was staying and marrying him her family in England was opposed. Other than that the only information I have on the Frost family is a man we called Uncle John and his wife Aunt Jane. They had no children to my knowledge. The Frost and Spencer families were engaged in textile manufacturing and inventing both in England and Massachusetts.

Frost James The history and topography of the county of Clare

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* '''Part of [[Space:Heering_Digital_Library | Heering Digital Library]]''' ===Frost, James. The history and topography of the county of Clare, from the earliest times to the beginning of the 18th century. Dublin: 1893.=== === Available online at these locations: === *Frost, James. The history and topography of the county of Clare, from the earliest times to the beginning of the 18th century. Dublin: 1893. ::* https://archive.org/details/historyandtopog00frosgoog/page/n5/mode/2up

FROW Family Records Transcribed

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This page was created to capture the transcriptions of *the images (if available) or *online database extracts of the records used in the following FROW family profiles '''''It is a work in progress and an experiment''''' - [[Smith-127977|Smith-127977]] 10:27, 2 March 2020 (UTC) ---- '''FROW Family Members:'''
[[Frow-17|John Frow (1797-1867)]] - '''has pm''' *(1841 Census, 1851 Census, 1861 Census)
Ann Towl
''Children:''
#[[Frow-32|Hannah Frow (1818-1870)]] #[[Frow-7|Caroline Frow (Bef 1821-Bef 1899) ]] - '''no pm''' ::*(1841 Census, 1851 Census, 1861 Census, 1871 Census) :#[[Frow-5|Louisa Frow (1856-1906)]] - '''(Orphan Trail)''' ::*(1861 Census, 1871 Census) #[[Frow-31|George Frow]] #[[Frow-30|Morris / Marris? Frow]] #[[Frow-29|Dorcas Frow]] - '''has pm''' ( #[[Frow-28|Ann Frow]] #[[Frow-27|William Frow]] #[[Frow-26|Ellen Frow]] #[[Frow-25|Mary Frow]] #[[Frow-24|Harriet Frow]] #Emma Frow ---- === Census Records === ====1841 Census (Sunday 6th June)==== '''NOTE:''' ''1841 Census does not show relationships, so can't assume any particular relationship between all persons listed. They may not all belong to the same family - viz: may not be husband and wife, maybe brother and sister, or inlaws, relations etc; all the children may not belong in same family. Younger ones could be children of the older daughters etc. Need additional information to clarify relationships, such as later census etc''
=====''Parish of Appleby, Lincolnshire''===== Registration District: Glanford Brigg, Sub-registration District: Winterton
'''Place:''' Parish: Appleby, Enumeration District: 18
..... Reference: HO107 /626 /14 (ie: Piece: 626, Book: 14), Folio 6 (lines 17 to 25), folio 7 (Lines 1 to 4)
'''Name, sex, age'''The general practice for the 1841 census was that ages over 15 years were rounded down to nearest 5 years, and ages younger than 15 years were recorded to the year, '''occupation, birthplace'''y(es) indicates the person was born in the same county of Lincolnshire
[[Frow-17|John Frow]], male, 40 yrs, Ag Lab, y
[[Towl-1|Ann do]], female, 40 yrs, y
Hannah do, female, 25 yrs, y
[[Frow-9|Caroline do]], female, 20 yrs, y
George do, male, 15 yrs, y
MarrisDifficult to read - could be Morris, Harris, Marris - see if can find another record such as a birth or later census do, male, 14 yrs, y
Dorcas do, female, 12 yrs, y
Ann do, female, 10 yrs, y
William do, male, 8 yrs, y
::''continued on Next Page''Family Search shows the following 4 youngest children (Ellen, Mary, Harriet and Emma) with the surname ''Rhodes'' in error in their records. Their citation states that the information came from Find My Past databases and images
Ellen do, female, 6 yrs, y
Mary do, female, 4 yrs, y
Harriet do, female, 1 yrs, y
Emma do, female, 6 momo indicates how many months if baby is less than 1 year, y
'''Description of Enumeration District No 18:''' All that part of the Parish of Appleby which lies to the North of the Beckhave checked the spelling of this watercourse on googlemaps - shows a street called Beck Lane running along what would have been the banks of this watercourse running thru the village of Appleby.
'''Description of Enumeration District No 19:''' All that part of the Parish of Appleby which lies to the South of the Beck running thru the village of Appleby including the hamlet of Raventhorpe . ====1851 Census (Sunday 30th March)==== ====1861 Census (Sunday 7th April) ==== =====1861 Census Wrawby, Lincolnshire, England===== '''Census Year, County, Place, Civil Parish, Ecclesiastical Parish, Piece, Enumeration District, Folio, Page, Schedule, House Number, House or Street Name'''
''1861, Lincolnshire (LIN), Brigg, Wrawby, Wrawby, 2398, 11, 73, 21, 100,-- , Glanford Brigg Union Workhouse''
'''Surname, Forenames, Relationship, Marital Status, Sex, Age, Occupation, Birth County, Birth Place, Disability Notes'''
FROW, Caroline, Pauper, U, F, 40, Charwoman, LIN, Owmby
FROW, George, Pauper, - , M, 12, LIN, Winterton
FROW, Ellen, Pauper, - , F, 10, LIN, Winterton
FROW, Louisa, Pauper, - , F 4, LIN, Winterton
FROW, Ann, Pauper, - , F, 2, LIN Winterton
FROW, Clara, Pauper, - , F, 2m, LIN, Winterton
====1871 Census (Sunday 2nd April)==== =====1871 Census Winterton, Lincolnshire, England===== Census Year: 1871 County: Lincolnshire (LIN) Place: Winterton Civil Parish: Winterton Ecclesiastical Parish: Winterton Piece: 3431 Enumeration District: 1 Folio: 6 Page: 6 Schedule: 40 House Number: 71 House or Street Name: Park St.
'''Surname Forenames Relationship Marital Status Sex Age Occupation Birth County Birth Place Disability Notes'''
HILL George Head M M 48 Carrier LIN Alkborough
HILL Caroline Wife M F 50 LIN Owmby
FROW Louisa Stpdau - F 14 LIN Winterton
FROW Anne Stpdau - F 12 Scholar LIN Winterton
FROW Clara Stpdau - F 9 Scholar LIN Winterton
FROW Harriet Stpdau - F 7 Scholar LIN Winterton
==== 1881 Census (Sunday 3rd April)==== ---- =====1891 Census Glanford Brigg, Lincolnshire, England===== Census Year: 1891 County: Lincolnshire (LIN) Place: Glanford Brigg Civil Parish: Scunthorpe Ecclesiastical Parish: Scunthorpe Piece: 2627 Enumeration District: 12 Folio: 155 Page: 35 Schedule: 206 House Number: House or Street Name:
- '''Surname Forenames Relationship Marital Status Sex Age Occupation Birth County Birth Place Disability Notes''' WISEMAN Anne Head W F 41 Seamstress(Em'ee) LIN Scunthorpe
WISEMAN John Son S M 15 Groom(Em'ee) LND ----
WISEMAN Arthur Son S M 13 Errand Boy(Em'ee) LIN Burringham
COULT Thomas Boardr M M 40 Watch Maker(Em'ee) YKS
COULT Louisa Wife M F 33 LIN Winterton
COULT Ismay Dau S F 13 Nurse Maid(Em'ee) LIN Burton
COULT Clara Dau S F 10 LIN Scunthorpe
COULT George Son S M 8 LIN Scunthorpe
COULT Edith Dau S F 5 LIN Scunthorpe
COULT Charles Son S M 3 LIN Scunthorpe
=== Birth Records === ---- ===Marriage Records=== ---- ===Death Records=== ---- ===Other Records=== ====xxxxxx Records==== ==End Notes==

Frowyk

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==Origins== St Osyth on the East coast of England, in the county of Essex is recorded as Chich in the Domesday Book of 1086, and is said to be the location of a C7th convent founded by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acca_of_Dunwich Acca, Bishop of Dunwich]. Its first Abbess was [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osgyth Osgyth]] (or Osyth; died c700). The circumstances of her death are unclear but as a result, the village was renamed as St Osyth, although it continued to be known also as Chich into the post-medieval period. Historic England [https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1000237 St Osyth's Priory] {{Image|file= MCC-33.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption= Gatehouse at St Osyth's Priory (Late C15th) }} The nearby settlement of Frowick was also noted in Domesday Book. It had a recorded population of 3.8 households in 1086 when Count [[Boulogne-8|Eustace of Boulogne]] was tenant in chief. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Osyth%27s_Priory The priory at St Osyth] which became one of the largest religious houses in Essex, would have been a place of awe to the Frowyks in their small vill. The priory was founded c. 1121 by [[Belmeis-7|Richard Belmeis]], Bishop of London,. The gatehouse is the most significant remnant of the original monastic structures still standing. [https://opendomesday.org/place/TM1218/frowick-hall/ Open Domesday Frowick] Wikipedia contributors, "St Osyth's Priory," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St_Osyth%27s_Priory&oldid=960526755 (accessed December 12, 2020). The name ''Frowyk'', likely to be Scandinavian in origin was recorded as ''Froruuicā'' in 1086 [https://epns.nottingham.ac.uk/browse/Essex/St+Osyth/532858b9b47fc40a980008f3-Frowick+Hall Survey of English Place-Names Frowick Hall] and it’s original pronunciation is probably the reason behind the variety of ways in which the name is spelled. ''Frowyk, Frowyke and Frowick'' are the more common occurrences but ''Frowicke, Frowyck, Frowik, Frowycke, Frowewyk, Frowich, Frodwick, Frodwyke, Frothewyke, Frothewick, Frothewic, Frewyk'' and others are also found.
Frowyk is the most common variant in literature and historical usage so this is used throughout, at least for medieval records. {{Image|file= Frowyk-1-1.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption= St Giles Church. South Mymms }} After settling in Frowick the family gradually established strong trading links in London whilst maintaining a foothold in Frowick and later at Old Fold near Barnet, just north of London, and later still at Gunnersbury. They became a gentry family, one part of which had long association with the parish of St. Giles, South Mymms (Mimms), Middlesex, lasting for some ten generations. It was rare for a merchant family to establish such lengthy association with one parish, their estates passing from father to son (and one grandson) in an unbroken line for nearly three hundred years. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=99V2omf9odQC&printsec=copyright&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=frowyk&f=false The Merchant Class of Medieval London, 1300-1500 By Sylvia L. Thrupp] ==Noteworthy Frowyk’s== Throughout this document the unique identifier is appended to Frowyk profiles eg [[Frowyk-40|Ralph Frowyk]]-40 . Henry and Thomas in particular are well used christian names and it is useful to be able to differentiate. : [[Frowyk-40|Ralph Frowyk]] -40 (abt.1175-aft.1227) and brother [[Frowyk-42|William]]-42 are the earliest recorded Frowyk’s they flourished in the late C12th and probably originated in Frowick but became established in London by 1197. They were goldsmiths, as were a number of early Frowyk’s. Ralph was also warden of the mint. : [[Frowyk-1|Thomas Frowyk]]-1 (abt.1203-aft.1271) The most notable thing about Thomas is that although he heads most on-line pedigrees, he may be mythical. He may also not be a son of Ralph but it is reasonable to connect him until better evidence arrives. It may never, but his presence will at least serve to add caution to this part of the family. If removed, he will get added back at some point! : [[Frowyk-47|John Frowyk]]-47 (abt.1224-aft.1278) was Rector of the church of Great Horkesley. :[[Frowyk-8|Roger Frowyk (abt.1260-abt.1329)]]-8 A goldsmith he was also in public office dealing with currency of the realm. An alderman, warden of the exchequer and controller of the mint. He was commissioned by [[Plantagenet-378|Edward II]] on several occasions to produce silverware and jewellery. : [[Frowyk-16|Thomas Frowyk]]-16 (abt.1264-aft.1310) A talented artisan he was commissioned to make a golden crown for Queen [[Capet-55| Marguerite (Capet) de France]] the wife of [[Plantagenet-2|Edward I]]. : [[Frowyk-4|Henry Frowyk]]-4 (abt.1294-1378) He was unceremoniously abducted and married against his will. He became a tax collector and carried out a number of other public functions. : [[Frowyk-54|John Frowyk]]-54 (abt.1325-aft.1360) Prior of the Irish chapter of the Order of Knights Hospitaller ---- {{Image|file= Frowyk-2.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption= [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peasants'_Revolt Peasants Revolt] 1381 }} : [[Frowyk-2|Henry Frowyk]]-2 (abt.1345-1386) He was an MP and JP and quelled angry rioters over seigniorial oppression by St. Albans Abbey during the peasants revolt. ---- : [[Frowyk-13|Henry Frowyk]]-13 (abt.1380-bef.1460) was a successful merchant with an international reach, He was mayor of London 5 times. : [[Frowyk-22|Henry Frowyk]]-22 (abt.1408-1484) MP for Middlesex : [[Frowyk-5|Thomas Frowyk]]-5 (1423-1485) He was an MP and part of a literary circle, authors of the so called Frowyk’s Chronicle. : [[Frowyk-6|Thomas Frowyk]]-6 (abt.1460-1506) He was an eminent lawyer, a serjeant-at-law and Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. ---- {{Image|file= Frowyk-35.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption= Nameless tomb. South Mymms. Probably [[Frowyk-35|Henry Frowyk]] }} : [[Frowyk-35|Henry Frowyk]]-35 (abt.1478-bef.1527) Henry marked the beginning of the end for the Frowyk’s. Although he married Anne Knolles from another influential family in North Mymms, this branch of the Frowyk’s were already in financial trouble, having sold off many properties to meet debts. ---- ==Properties== ===Manor of Frowick=== Frowick manor was the ancestral home of the Frowyk family, possibly as far back as domesday, though nothing remains of any original structure. 1363 the manor of Frowick along with its Villes was conveyed by John Cavendish and Leo de Bradenham, which they had by feoffment of [[Frowyk-54|John Frowyk ]]-54 to Thomas de St Clare. John therefore ended the ownership of Frowick manor by the Frowyk family. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89062912860?urlappend=%3Bseq=269 The Ancestry of Mary Isaac, c. 1549-1613 Page 197ff] W G Davis 1955. Frowick Hall exists today as a grade II listed building but the earliest parts of it are around C16th. It sits on Frowick Lane.[https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1111484 Historic England, Frowick Hall] ===Manor of Old Fold=== Purchased from Ernulf de Mandeville (Probably a descendant of [[Mandeville-14|Ernulf de Mandeville]]) by the Frowyks, shortly after 1271, it descended in the direct male line of the family until 1527. In 1308 [[Frowyk-4|Henry Frowyk]]-4 was kidnapped by [[Lewknor-76|Thomas Lewknor]], [[Pouns-2|William Pouns]], his son [[Pouns-4|Richard]], and John of Felstead. Henry married William Pouns's daughter, [[Pouns-1|Margaret]] against his will, and died in 1377, having outlived his son [[Frowyk-3|Thomas]]-3. His grandson [[Frowyk-2|Henry]]-2 married [[Cornwall-41|Alice Cornwall]], whose second husband [[Charlton-2040 |Thomas Charlton]] had the manor in 1397, during the minority of [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15 their son. [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15 was the husband of [[Ashe-43|Elizabeth Ashe]], heir to the manor of Weld. His son and heir [[Frowyk-22|Henry]]-22 married [[Lewknor-114|Joan Lewknor]] but was sued for debt by [[Lewknor-25|Roger Lewknor]] and imprisoned. Accordingly [[Frowyk-22|Henry]]-22 sold the manor of Weld and lands in Shenley, Aldenham, and St. Albans (Herts.) in 1473 and sold the manor of Durhams and land in London to his cousin [[Frowyk-5|Thomas]]-5 of Gunnersbury two years later, although he retained Old Fold. In 1501 his grandson [[Frowyk-35|Henry]]-35 who married [[Knolles-29|Anne Knollys]], daughter and coheir of [[Knollys-48|Robert Knollys]] though distrained for the non-payment of Old Fold for many years brought the manor of north Mymms into the Frowyk family through the Knolles. [[Frowyk-35|Henry’s]]-35 son [[Frowyk-36|Thomas]]-36 married [[Sandys-10|Mary]], daughter of Sir William Sandys, and died without issue. By will proved in 1527, [[Frowyk-35|Henry’s]]-35 therefore left his estates to his daughter [[Frowyk-33|Elizabeth]]-33 and the children of her first husband [[Coningsby-70|John Coningsby]]. It was not until 1547, however, that Elizabeth recovered Old Fold from John Palmer and his wife [[Sandys-10|Mary]], whose first husband had been [[Frowyk-36|Thomas]]-36. In 1551 [[Frowyk-33|Elizabeth]]-33 and her husband William Dodd conveyed the manor to Thomas White. A P Baggs, Diane K Bolton, Eileen P Scarff and G C Tyack, 'South Mimms: Manors', in A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5, Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham, ed. T F T Baker and R B Pugh (London, 1976), pp. 282-285. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol5/pp282-285 [accessed 22 November 2020]. ===Manor of Acton=== By 1462 all or part of John Holmes's lands had passed to the Frowyk family. [[Frowyk-13|Henry Frowyk]]-13, and his son [[Frowyk-5|Thomas]]-5 bought various estates in 1446 and 1458 in Acton, Ealing, and Willesden. Land once of John Scorier and formerly of John Holmes may have formed part of them. [[Frowyk-5|Thomas]]-5 bought more property in Acton in 1484. At his death in 1485 he held 6 houses and land in Acton and Willesden. His elder son [[Frowyk-62|Henry]]-62, died in 1505 leaving sons [[Frowyk-64|Thomas]]-64 and [[Frowyk-65|Henry]]-65, (d. 1520), childless, and daughters [[Frowyke-10|Elizabeth]] wife of [[Spelman-4|Sir John Spelman]] and [[Frowyk-63|Margaret]] wife of [[Fisher-22707|Sir Michael Fisher]]. [[Frowyk-5|Thomas’s]]-5 younger son, [[Frowyk-6|Thomas]]-6, held some of the property and was succeeded by his daughter [[Frowyk-38|Frideswide]], first wife of [[Cheney-1434|Sir Thomas Cheyney]]. Frideswide's grandson [[Perrot-1|Thomas Parrott]], the Spelmans' sons [[Spilman-336|Henry]] and [[Spellman-158|Erasmus]] and the Fishers' granddaughter [[Fisher-4212|Agnes]], wife of [[St_John-184|Oliver St. John]], each held portions. Most of the Frowyks' land seems to have passed to two families, the Vincents of Harlesden and the Garraways or Garways. Diane K Bolton, Patricia E C Croot and M A Hicks, 'Acton: Manors and other estates', in A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 7, Acton, Chiswick, Ealing and Brentford, West Twyford, Willesden, ed. T F T Baker and C R Elrington (London, 1982), pp. 16-23. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol7/pp16-23 [accessed 12 December 2020]. ===The Manor of Alkerton=== c. 1448 Alkerton passed to [[Danvers-5|John Danvers]]'s son [[Danvers-49|Sir Robert Danvers]]. In 1473 two of Sir Robert's daughters and coheirs quitclaimed their thirds, probably as part of a settlement on another daughter [[Danvers-50|Joan Danvers]] who married [[Frowyk-62|Henry Frowyk]]-62 of Gunnersbury. Their daughter [[Frowyk-63|Margaret]]-63, wife of [[Fisher-22707|Sir Michael Fisher]] inherited. (The Fisher's son died before them and their grand-daughter [[Fisher-4212|Agnes Fisher]] succeeded to their property. She married [[St_John-184|Oliver St. John]] of Bletsoe (Beds.). 'Parishes: Alkerton', in A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 9, Bloxham Hundred, ed. Mary D Lobel and Alan Crossley (London, 1969), pp. 44-53. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol9/pp44-53 [accessed 11 December 2020]. === All Hallows Honey Lane=== By c. 1284 the property passed from Andrew de Karlton or his successors to [[Frowyk-7|Henry Frowyk]]-7, who in his will proved that year left his houses in Milk Street and Honey Lane to his son [[Frowyk-9|Renald]]-9. Henry's widow [[Durham-127|Isabel]] was seised of the Milk Street tenements when [[Frowyk-9|Renald]]-9 made his will leaving all his lands to his wife [[Unknown-535411|Agnes]] for life. Renald’s heir was his son [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4. [[Unknown-535411|Agnes]], and [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 granted the tenements in Milk Street and Honey Lane to [[Charlton-181|John de Charleton]], by 1332. [[Frowyk-4|Henry Frowyk]]-4 survived his son [[Frowyk-3|Thomas]]-3 (d. 1374-5), but the latter seems to have been in possession of these tenements in 1353. After the deaths of [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 and [[Frowyk-3|Thomas]]-3, the property came to [[Frowyk-2|Henry]]-2, Thomas' son. He died leaving his rents in the parishes of Milk Street and Honey Lane to his wife [[Cornwall-41|Alice for life]], to [[Frowyk-13|Henry]]-13, his son. By this time the Frowyk family seems to have been resident at South Mymms and the tenements probably let or leased. In 1438 [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15, granted to [[Frowyk-13|Henry]]-13 his brother, two tenements, one in St. Mary Magdalen Milk Street and the other in Honey Lane. [[Frowyk-13|Henry]]-13 died before 1460 and his son [[Frowyk-5|Thomas]]-5, died before 1485, and in 1492 the latter's widow [[Sturgeon-12|Dame Jane]] and his son and heir [[Frowyk-62|Henry]]-62 leased the messuage to John Hawe for 30 years. [[Frowyk-62|Henry]]-62 died in 1505, having granted the tenements in Milk Street and Honey Lane to [[Leigh-987|John Legh]] of Stockwell, [[Denny-394|Edmund Denny]], and [[Leigh-720|Ralph Legh]], to hold to the use of himself and his wife [[Leigh-1040|Margaret]] and their heirs. His heir was his son [[Frowyk-64|Thomas Frowyk]]-64, aged 14 in 1508. The tenant at about this time was Robert Imber, mercer. By c. 1518 the tenement had passed to [[Frowyk-65|Henry]]-65 son of [[Frowyk-62|Henry Frowyk]]-62. In 1518-19 he sold his 2 tenements, one in All Hallows Honey Lane and the other in St. Mary Magdalen Milk Street, to Sir Thomas Exmew. D J Keene and Vanessa Harding, 'All Hallows Honey Lane 11/4', in Historical Gazetteer of London Before the Great Fire Cheapside; Parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary Le Bow, St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (London, 1987), pp. 24-29. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/london-gazetteer-pre-fire/pp24-29 [accessed 12 December 2020]. ===Manor of Batchworth=== The manor of Batchworth in the parish of Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, was in 1309/10 conveyed to [[Frowyk-8|Roger Frowyk]] by Isabel, wife of Roger de Oxford. Roger de Frowyk, was called 'le orfeure' or the goldsmith, and [[Unknown-535854|Idonea]] his wife, and John their son. Richard de Bachesworth put in a claim, but in 1311/12 he renounced it to Roger and Idonea. In 1314/15 Roger granted the manor to his son [[Frowyk-60|John]] and Isabel his wife. It would seem that Isabel, or perhaps one of her daughters, married Robert de Ashele, for in 1324/5 the reversion after the death of Isabel, wife of Robert de Ashele, was granted to John de Latimer and his heirs by John Merlyn. 'Parishes: Rickmansworth', in A History of the County of Hertford: Volume 2, ed. William Page (London, 1908), pp. 371-386. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/herts/vol2/pp371-386 [accessed 27 November 2020]. ===Manor of Bencham=== The first mention of the manor appears to be in 1229, when it was conveyed by Peter de Bedenges to John de Kemsing and Idonia his wife, who in 1230 sold it to [[Frowyk-44|Geoffrey Frowyk]]-44. In 1258 it was evidently held by [[Frowyk-49|Walter]] (probably his son), who in that year granted 12 marks rent in Benchesham to Adam de Basings and his wife Joan. 'Croydon: Borough, manors, churches and charities', in A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 4, ed. H E Malden (London, 1912), pp. 217-228. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/surrey/vol4/pp217-228 [accessed 11 December 2020]. ===Manor of Bibbesworth === In 1502 [[Hastings-124|Edward Hastings]], leased it to [[Frowyk-6|Sir Thomas Frowyk]], whom he made steward and bailiff. After Frowyk's death in 1506 the lease was held by his widow [[Carnevyle-1|Elizabeth]], who by 1508 had married [[Jakes-158|Thomas Jakes]]. In 1515 Elizabeth surrendered the lease to [[Hastings-217|Lord Hastings]]. A P Baggs, Diane K Bolton, M A Hicks and R B Pugh, 'Finchley: Manors', in A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 6, Friern Barnet, Finchley, Hornsey With Highgate, ed. T F T Baker and C R Elrington (London, 1980), pp. 55-59. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol6/pp55-59 [accessed 9 December 2020]. === The manor of Durhams=== '''The manor of Durhams''' or Derehams (Now [https://www.dyrhampark.com/club/heritage/ Dyrham Park], a golf club) derives its name from [[Durham-505|John Durham]], who in 1340 acquired part of the estate, the remaining interest granted by [[Unknown-535284|Margery]], wife of [[Pouns-4|Richard Pouns]], in 1341. John's daughter and heir, [[Durham-126|Margaret]], married [[Frowyk-3|Thomas Frowyk]]-3 of Old Fold and after John Durham's death in 1368 the manor descended with Old Fold until its sale in 1473 to [[Frowyk-6|Thomas Frowyk]]-6 of Gunnersbury. ===Manor of Brockham=== Owned in the 13th century by the de Warenne family . Later in its history Thomas Niger left a widow, Agnes, who married John son of Adrian, as in 1242–3 [[Adrian-385|John Adrian]] who after some years held it. John grandson of John Adrian seems to have married [[Frowyk-12|Margaret]]-12 daughter of [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4, and in 1348 a settlement was made by which the manor was to revert to [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 and by 1377 the manor had come into his possession. He made a settlement just before his death in 1377/8 by which the reversion was granted to his grandson [[Frowyk-2|Henry]]-2 son of [[Frowyk-3|Thomas]]-3 who pre-deceased him. [[Frowyk-2|Henry]]-2 the grandson died in 1386, leaving two sons, the elder of whom, [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15, continued the senior branch of the family, holding Oldford in Middlesex, land in Hertfordshire, and then or later South Mimms, while from the [[Frowyk-13 |younger]]-13 descended the Frowyks of Gunnersbury. The manor of Brockham remained in the elder branch of the family, as the will of the elder son [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15, proved in 1448, states that the manors of Oldford and Brockham were to remain in the hands of feoffees for a year, after which Brockham was to remain to his wife [[Ashe-43|Elizabeth]] for her life, reverting to his son [[Frowyk-22|Henry]]-22 who was succeeded by his son [[Frowyk-28|Thomas]]-28, and the latter by his son [[Frowyk-35|Henry]]-35, who married [[Knolles-29|Ann Knolles]] and died in 1527, leaving as sole heir his daughter [[Frowyk-33|Elizabeth]]-33, wife of [[Coningsby-70|John Coningsby]], who held it with her husband in 1530. In 1547 [[Frowyk-33|Elizabeth]]-33 settled an annuity on [[Sandys-10|Mary]], widow of her brother [[Frowyke-5|Thomas]]-5, who had predeceased his father. [[Frowyk-33|Elizabeth Coningsby]]-33 married [[Dodde-1|William Dodd]] as her second husband, but at her death she was succeeded in the lordship of Brockham by [[Coningsby-115|Henry Coningsby]] her son. 'Parishes: Betchworth', in A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 3, ed. H E Malden (London, 1911), pp. 166-173. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/surrey/vol3/pp166-173 [accessed 22 November 2020]. ===Manor of Gunnersbury=== In 1373 [[Salisbury-1154|Alice Perrers]] owned Gunnersbury when it was seized by the crown then held by [[Charlton-2040|Thomas Charlton]] and [[Cornwall-41|Alice]] his wife in 1390. The estate passed to her son [[Frowyk-13|Henry Frowyk]]-13 in 1422 It passed to [[Frowyk-5|Thomas]]-5, who died in 1485, and was buried at Ealing. His second son [[Frowyk-6|Thomas]]-6, was born at Gunnersbury. His elder brother [[Frowyke-11|Henry]]-11 inherited Gunnersbury, which then descended to his daughter and coheir [[Frowyke-10|Elizabeth]]-10, who married [[Spelman-4|John Spelman]], grandfather of [[Spelman-75|Sir Henry]], the celebrated antiquary, and ancestor of [[Spelman-195|Clement Spelman]]?, who died seised of the manor of Gunnersbury in 1607. Daniel Lysons, 'Ealing', in The Environs of London: Volume 2, County of Middlesex (London, 1795), pp. 223-240. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/london-environs/vol2/pp223-240 [accessed 22 November 2020]. ===Muscovy Court=== Around 1303 [[Frowyk-8|Roger Frowyk]]-8 purchased an imposing house adjacent to Muscovy court in central London from Richard Boundy of Tottenham. It’s boundary ran along a route to the Crutched Friars and it fronted on Seething Lane, partly in All Hallows, partly in St. Olave's parish. In 1329 Walter le Hurer granted it to William Curteys, he having purchased it from the executors of [[Frowyk-8|Roger]]-8. 'Muscovy Court', in Survey of London: Volume 15, All Hallows, Barking-By-The-Tower, Pt II, ed. G H Gater and Walter H Godfrey (London, 1934), pp. 4-6. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol15/pt2/pp4-6 [accessed 27 November 2020]. === Manor of Palingswick=== Associated with Gunnersbury, ownership followed the same pattern. Certainly [[Frowyk-62|Henry Frowyk]]-62 inherited Palingswick and died in 1505, seised "in his demesne, as of fee, of the manors . . . of Gonelbury, Palynswyke and Butelers...” [[Frowyk-62|Henry Frowyk]]-62 married twice, his first wife being [[Danvers-50|Jane Danvers]] , and his second [[Leigh-1040|Margaret Leigh]]. By the former he left a daughter, [[Frowyk-63|Margaret]]-63, who married [[Fisher-22707|Sir Michael Fisher]]; and by the latter two sons, [[Frowyk-64|Thomas]]-64 and [[Frowyk-65|Henry]]-65, and two daughters, [[Frowyke-10|Elizabeth]] and [[Frowyk-66|Mary]]-66. [[Frowyk-64|Thomas]]-64 , was 14 at his father's death. [Note that at this point Bird and Norman misquote Cass suggesting that Agnes Strickland married first the elder Brother Thomas, then Henry] The younger son [[Frowyk-65|Henry]]-65 married Agnes one of the daughters of Humphrey (Or Walter) Strickland whose widow Elizabeth remarried to Sir Richard Cholmeley. (This could not be established elsewhere) In 1547 a division of the Frowyk property was made and Palingswick came into the hands of [[Frowyke-10|Elizabeth (Frowyk) Spelman]] who passed it to John Payne, the end of Frowyk ownership. 'Ravenscourt Park (Palingswick)', in Survey of London: Volume 6, Hammersmith, ed. James Bird and Philip Norman (London, 1915), pp. 98-113. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol6/pp98-113 [accessed 8 December 2020]. ===Manor of Shalbourne=== [[Stanhope-102|Maud]] wife of [[Willoughby-62|Robert Willoughby de Eresby]] sold the manor of Shalbourne in 1473/4 to [[Frowyk-5|Thomas Frowyk]]-5 of London and [[Sturgeon-12|Joan]] his wife. Thomas died seised of the manor in 1485, when his heir was his son [[Frowyk-62|Henry]]-62. It is uncertain whether Henry inherited this manor or whether it passed to his brother [[Frowyk-6|Thomas]]-6, who died seised of it in 1506, leaving it to his wife [[Carnevyle-1|Elizabeth]] for life, with remainder to his daughter [[Frowyk-38|Frideswide]]-38. Elizabeth took as her second husband [[Jakes-158|Thomas Jakys]], who died in 1514, and she died about a year later. [[Frowyk-38|Frideswide]]-38 married [[Cheney-1434|Sir Thomas Cheney]]. ===St Mary Colechurch=== In 1271 Hugh de Rokingham granted to [[Frowyk-47|John Frowyk]], son of [[Frowyk-44|Geoffrey]]-44, the right to distrain in his tenements including 5 shops in the parish of St. Mary Colechurch in fronte towards Cheapside. === St. Pancras Soper Lane 145/1A=== In 1425 Walter Cotton and Thomas Aleyn quitclaimed part of the property to brothers [[Frowyk-13|Henry Frowyk]]-13 and [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15. Additionally to [[Fray-2|John Fray]], recorder of London, William Estfeld, mercer, and Robert Warner. [[Frowyk-15|Thomas]]-15 d1449, William Estfeld, and Robert Warner died. [[Fray-2|John Fray]] then quitclaimed in the property to [[Frowyk-13|Henry]]-13, who in 1454 granted it to his son [[Frowyk-5|Thomas]]-5 and his son's wife [[Sturgeon-12|Joan]], daughter of [[Sturgeon-13|Richard Sturgeon]]. In 1472 Thomas and Joan granted the property, described as lands, tenements, and rents with houses, shops, solar(s), and cellar(s), to their son [[Frowyk-62|Henry]]-62, his wife [[Danvers-50|Joan]] daughter of [[Danvers-49|Sir Robert Danvers]]. Joan died in 1487? and the entail on this property was broken in 1493, when [[Denny-394|Edmund Denny]] and Richard Legh recovered possession against [[Frowyk-62|Henry]]-62, esquire, of 3 messuages in the parish of St. Pancras. On his death in 1505, the property passed to his daughter [[Frowyk-63|Margaret]], wife of [[Fisher-22707|Michael Fyssher]]. D J Keene and Vanessa Harding, 'St. Pancras Soper Lane 145/1', in Historical Gazetteer of London Before the Great Fire Cheapside; Parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary Le Bow, St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (London, 1987), pp. 645-656. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/london-gazetteer-pre-fire/pp645-656 [accessed 2 December 2020]. ===Manor of Weld=== Edmund Peacock the manor left his sister, the wife of John de Somersham, his heir. John de Somersham had two daughters, Margery the wife of William Ashe, and Alice the wife of John Swanborne. At the death of Alice without issue the manor went to William and Margery, who left an only daughter, [[Ashe-43|Elizabeth]] the wife of [[Frowyk-15|Thomas Frowyk]]-15 . [[Frowyk-22|Henry]]-22 , their son, was holding the manor in 1476 and left a son [[Frowyk-28|Thomas]]-28 who died in 1485, leaving a son [[Frowyk-35|Henry]]-35, who married [[Knolles-29|Anne Knolles]] and died in 1527, when his daughter Elizabeth, wife of John Coningsby, succeeded to the manor. 'Parishes: Shenley', in A History of the County of Hertford: Volume 2, ed. William Page (London, 1908), pp. 264-273. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/herts/vol2/pp264-273 [accessed 22 November 2020]. ==Other Families== ===Durham=== [[Durham-505|John Durham]] came from an affluent mercantile family, two members of which rose during the late 13th and early 14th centuries to become aldermen of the City of London. Thanks to the financial success of his ancestors, Durham’s father was able to live the life of a country gentleman at the manor of Derehams or Durhams (Now [https://www.dyrhampark.com/club/heritage/ Dyrham Park], a golf club) derives its name from John Durham, who in 1340 acquired part of the estate, the remaining interest granted by [[Unknown-535284|Margery]], wife of [[Pouns-4|Richard Pouns]], in 1341. John's daughter and heir, [[Durham-126|Margaret]], married [[Frowyk-3|Thomas]]-3 of Old Fold and after John Durham's death in 1368 the manor descended with Old Fold until its sale in 1473 to [[Frowyk-6|Thomas]]-6 of Gunnersbury.A P Baggs, Diane K Bolton, Eileen P Scarff and G C Tyack, 'South Mimms: Manors', in A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5, Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham, ed. T F T Baker and R B Pugh (London, 1976), pp. 282-285. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol5/pp282-285 [accessed 12 November 2020]. ===Knolles=== The Frowyks were neighbours of the Knolles, having owned the South Mimms manors of Old Fold (which comprised 132 acres) since 1271, and Durhams (comprising 350 acres) since 1368, and whose memorials are to be found in the church at South Mimms. [https://www.northmymmshistory.uk/2018/03/a-short-history-of-knolles-and-frowick.html A short history of the Knolles and Frowick families, North Mymms History Project. Rosie Bevan] [[Frowyk-35|Henry Frowyk]]-34 married [[Knolles-29 |Anne Knolles]] c1495 ===Gloucester and Cornwall=== [[Frowyk-4|Henry Frowyk]]-4 completed transactions in 1346 and 1347 with the Gloucester and Cornwall families of Middlesex which were possibly a preamble to the eventual marriage of his grandson [[Frowyk-2|Henry]]-2, to [[Cornwall-41|Alice Cornwall]] the heiress of both the Gloucesters and the Cornwalls. In 1346 [[Gloucester-57|John de Gloucester]], son and heir of [[Gloucester-42|Henry de Gloucester]], released to [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 all his right and claim to lands in the parishes of St. Giles without Crepulgate , St. Botolph without Aldrichesgate, and the towns of Soresdich (Shoreditch), Hakyneii (Hackney) and Isildone (Islington), which [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 held by his grant. This document was dated at South Mimms and acknowledged by John de Gloucester in Chancery. In 1347 [[Cornwall-196|John de Cornwall]] recovered these same lands from [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 by a judgment rendered in the king's court, and [[Frowyk-4|Henry]]-4 released them to him. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89062912860?urlappend=%3Bseq=280 The Ancestry of Mary Isaac, c. 1549-1613 Page 208] W G Davis 1955. [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.c3600944?urlappend=%3Bseq=83 Calendar of the close rolls 1346-49 Page 67]. ==Sources== See also * [http://www.pottersbarhistory.uk/pdf/Story%20of%20Potters%20Bar.pdf The Story of Potters Bar and South Mimms]. Published in 1966. Potters Bar and District Historical Society. *[https://books.google.co.uk/books?redir_esc=y&id=UUdJAAAAYAAJ&q=frowyk+#v=snippet&q=frowyk&f=false South Mymms Frederick Charles Cass], London and Middlesex Archaeological SocietyNichols and Sons, 1877] See author [[Cass-1565|Frederick Charles Cass (1824-1896)]] *[https://archive.org/details/middlesexpedigre651914/page/88/mode/1up Middlesex pedigrees, as collected by Richard Mundy] in Harleian ms. no. 1551 by Mundy, Richard; Armytage, George J. (George John), Sir, 1842-1918; British Library. Manuscript. Harley 1551 Page 88 * [https://www.mbs-brasses.co.uk/public/files/2013-transactions-volume-xviii-part-5-1949104609.pdf The Commemorative Strategies of the Frowyks of Medieval London and Middlesex] Jessica Freeman Monumental Brass Society 2013 Transactions (Volume XVIII, Part 5) * [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=99V2omf9odQC&printsec=copyright&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=frowyk&f=false The Merchant Class of Medieval London], 1300-1500 By Sylvia L. Thrupp * [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89062912860?urlappend=%3Bseq=269 The Ancestry of Mary Isaac, c. 1549-1613 Page 197ff] W G Davis 1955. * Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society Volume 41 1990 Medieval buildings and property development in the area of Cheapside John Schofield, Patrick Allen and Colin Taylor [http://www.lamas.org.uk/transactions-archive/Vol%2041.pdf Pages 39-239]

FRPearsonNewspaperReport

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Newspaper report re the deaths and burials of the [[Pearson-13326|Rev Frederick Richard Pearson MA]] and his wife [[Frost-10502|Lucy]], July 1903. ''The following transcription is taken from the Warrington Guardian, published Wednesday, July 22, 1903.'' '''TRAGEDY AT A WARRINGTON VICARAGE'''
'''SUICIDE FOLLOWS BEREAVEMENT''' A gloom was cast over the parish of St James', Latchford, on Sunday, by the death of Mrs. Pearson, wife of the much respected vicar, the Rev. F. R. Pearson, but on Monday the parish was thrown still more deeply into mourning by the suicide, under sentimental circumstances, of the Vicar himself. Mrs. Pearson had for the last few years been in a delicate state of health. She was a native of Manchester, and when living at Sewerby, Bridlington, Yorkshire, where her husband was the vicar, she was advised by her medical attendant to go to live as near Manchester as possible, the doctor thinking her native air might probably restore her to her former strength. Thereupon Mr. Pearson exchanged livings with the Rev. F. E. Powell, who left Warrington in October last, while Mr. Pearson was inducted to St. James' by the Ven. Archdeacon Barber, of Chester, o n November 8th. The change of air apparently did not have the desired effect, and after causing her husband much anxiety, we regret to say that she passed away on Sunday morning. Feelings of profound regret and sorrow were plainly visible among the congregations which assembled at St. James' on Sunday. The eight o'clock celebration of Holy Communion was conducted by the Rev. W. Bracecamp, vicar of St. Paul's, the morning service (10.30) was taken by the Rev. H. A. Lester, of the Training College, and in the evening the Rev. C. A. M. Evans, curate of Stockton Heath, preached. After the morning and evening services the Dead March in "Saul" was played on the organ, the assembled parishioners standing in the meantime. The greatest sympathy was felt for the Vicar, for it was well known that a more affectionate and loving couple it would be almost impossible to find. The terrible blow which Mr. Pearson sustained can best be imagined. The separation distressed him so greatly that the crisis came on Monday morning at about nine o'clock, when the news that he had shot himself caused a sensation throughout the town. Mrs. Pearson's sister (Mrs. Ann Harrison) was staying at the Vicarage. She was greatly alarmed at hearing the report of a firearm, and rushing upstairs she discovered the Vicar, who was fully dressed, lying on the bed with a revolver in his hand. She immediately sent for Dr. Collins, who lives close to, but almost instantly Dr. R. B. Pearson, of London, brother of the Vicar, came in. He had been to Bank Quay Station to arrange for the removal of Mrs. Pearson's remains to Fleetwood for interment. Upon going upstairs he found his brother at the point of death, with a bullet wound in the right temple. The revolver was empty, for there had only been one bullet in it. '''COULD NOT LIVE WITHOUT HER.'''
'''AN AFFECTIONATE LAST MESSAGE.''' Upon the bed close by the deceased gentleman was found a message, in the following terms, written by himself on the back of a large ecclesiastical card:–"I cannot live without my darling. I have tried for 24 hours. I miss her loving ways too much. This is not the act of a coward, but of a broken heart to whom life is a blank. With her I could live; for her I could work all day and all night. Those who know us most will be least surprised at this, for one of us could not live without the other. Please lay me beside her, and find from her mother and others how intense was her love for me. She loved me more than all the things in the world. This was her expression, and those who know us know how we did love and will pray that God will forgive me one sin, for it is a sin, and allow me to meet her. Even if He does not I cannot live in the world without her. Mr. Graham or his mother or anyone who knows us will give corroboration of this." '''THE INQUEST''' The above statement was read at the inquest held on Monday night, when Dr. Reginald Pearson was the only witness called. He told the jury that as his brother felt depressed on Sunday night he gave him a tonic before going to bed. The deceased had a good night's rest and the next morning on rising at six o'clock seemed in good spirits and in his usual health.
Inspector Taylor, who has had charge of the case, produced the revolver.
The jury returned a verdict of suicide during temporary insanity, and expressed their deepest sympathy with the bereaved relatives, as also did the Deputy Coroner (Mr. F. A. Jones). '''THE VICAR'S CAREER''' The deceased gentleman, who was 47 years of age, was the son of the late Rev. Jas. Pearson, M.A., F.R.A.S., at one time vicar of Fleetwood. He was educated at Rossall, and Merton College, Oxford, and was ordained in 1880. His first curacy was at the Church of the Ascensiom, Broughton, Manchester. Subsequently he was appointed to the curacy of St. Frideswide's, Oxford, and then he went to Holy Trinity, Southport. In 1884 he was appointed vicar of Fleetwood, and was afterwards for ten years Rector of St. Alban's, Manchester. Prior to coming to Warrington he was for four years Cicar of Sewerby, where, as in each of the other places named, he won the love and esteem of all his parishioners by his urbanity, tact, and goodness. Mr. Pearson called himself a distinctly High Churchman, but with liberal opinions. He was most genial, and had a happy knack of making himself agreeable to all. His burly figure–for he stood about six feet in height and was probably 18 stone in weight–and cheery disposition were quite familiar in the town, and he was frequently to be seen going about with his wife who was wheeled in a bath chair. Deceased was a prominent Freemason, and was for a long time a member of the Traveller's Lodge in Manchester. He was Past Provincial Chaplain for East Lancashire.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearson leave no children. The unhappy end is to be deeply deplored, and it will be some time before the parish recovers from the shock it has sustained. '''REMOVAL OF THE BODIES''' At about nine o'clock on Tuesday evening the bodies were removed from the Vicarage to the church. Rain was falling heavily at the time, but there was a large attendance of the public, the road near the house being lined with spectators. The coffin containing the remains of the Vicar was first carried into church and placed in the chancel, and shortly afterwards Mrs. Pearson's coffin was placed near that of her husband. There were only a few privileged persons allowed to enter the sacred building.
This morning, at eight o'clock, a solemn communion service, the Rev. A. N. Taylor, a former curate of the parish, being the celebrant, was held in the church, which was filled with a devout and sympathetic congregation, prior to the removal of the bodies by train to Fleetwood, where, at the Parish Church, the funeral will take place this afternoon. ''The above report was reproduced in the next edition of the Warrington Guardian, published on Saturday, July 25, 1903. However, this was followed by a report of the interment. The following transcription is for this latest addition. Unfortunately, some parts were too faint to read, so were supplemented by transcription from an almost identical report published in the Fleetwood Express the same day.'' '''DOUBLE INTERMENT AT FLEETWOOD''' Fleetwood was in mourning on Wednesday. The deceased clergyman's father, the Rev. Jas. Pearson, was vicar of Fleetwood from 1871 to 1885, and he died in 1886, being buried in a brick vault in the Fleetwood Cemetery. Here also, in 1898, the remains of Mrs. James Pearson were buried, and it was in the same vault that the interment took place on Wednesday. The two coffins arrived at Fleetwood railway station at about 12.20 on Wednesday, and they were carried along the platform to the station entrance–where two hearses were in readiness–by a number of local gentlemen, who kindly acted as bearers. The chief mourners, who arrived by the same train, were Dr. Spencer Pearson, of London, the deceased clergyman's brother; The Rev. Birch Jones and Mrs. Jones of North Wales, brother-in-law and sister; Mr. Guy Hughes, Mr. G. J. Frost, the Rev. W. W. firth, vicar of Patricroft; the Rev. J. W. Orton, vicar of St. Stephen's Oldham (formerly a curate at Fleetwood); Dr. Collins of Warrington; Mr. Alderman Wade, mayor of Halifax; the Rev. J. C. Holden and Mrs. Holden of Cossall; the Rev. J. Blow and Mrs. Blow of Lincolnshire; Messrs Hy. Kershaw, J. J. Graham, and R. E. Branthwaite representing the Travellers Lodge of Freemasons, No. 1293 (of Manchester). Amongst the local mourners were Councillors W. Bennett and G. M. Humphrey; Messrs. J. H. Kean (Clerk to the Fleetwood School Board), J. F. Marginson, R. W. Bonny, J. Park, B. Furze, S. Fletcher, J. H. Nicholson, W. Ashton, Dickinson, Pratt, J. Clarkson, W. Gornall, L Hudson, P Williams, and J. Carter.
The funeral cortege went from the station to the Parish Church by way of Queens-terrace, Kent-street, and North Albert-street. On arrival at the church the first portion of the burial service was conducted by the Vicar (Rev. E. J. Reeve), assisted by the Rev. J. H. Goggin, rector of Rufford. The procession was afterwards reformed, and went by way of East-street, West-street, and Poulton-road to the Cemetery, where the concluding portion of the ceremony was conducted by the Rev. J. H. Goggin. The remains of Mr. Pearson were first placed in the vault, the burial service being repeated in connection with the interment of Mrs. Pearson, which took place immediately afterwards. A number of beautiful wreaths were sent from St. James' Church Choir, the organist, secretary and choristers of St. James' Church; the members of St. James' Mothers' Meeting; the clergy, wardens and officials of Holy Trinity Church, Southport; Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Houghton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Head (Grantham), Mrs. and Miss Chester, R. W. Ashcroft, Alice Burgess, C. Sawkins Burgess, and J. Redhead. The coffins were made alike of polished oak with brass fittings, and on the lid of each was a raised cross of lighter coloured oak. The inscriptions were:–"Jesus Mercy. Fredk. Richard Pearson, Priest. Born May 20, 1856; died July 20, 1903." "Jesus Mercy. Lucy Pearson. Born 12th September, 1866; died July 19, 1903."
The funeral arrangements at Warrington were made by Messrs. Maggin Bros., of Warrington, whilst at Fleetwood the arrangements were superintended by Mr Forrest, of the excrs. of the late Mr. Harrison.

FRUIT GROWERS OWE SUCCESS TO WHITNEY

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Walla Walla Union-Bulletin Sunday, January 9, 1983 FRUIT GROWERS OWE SUCCESS TO WHITNEY Charles L. Whitney, who established a nursery here a century ago, has been given much credit for the extensive commercial fruit growing industry of the Walla Walla Valley. His abilities and foresight "pointed the way" to growing of apples and other fruit here and elsewhere in the Northwest. Today. Whitney Road, between South Third Avenue and Plaza Way, and located near where his home once stood, is a memorial to the man and his energy. It was in this section of Walla Walla County that much of the county's pioneer history is located. Here was the first wheat grown commercially in Washington, and here was located pioneer flour mills and basing points for shipments of supplies to the Idaho mines of the 1860s. Historical aspects of the Whitney property were recorded in a Walla Walla "Union" account of 1896. "It was here in 1858 that Captain Jerry Dent and John A. Simms erected the first flouring mill east of the Cascade Mountains, where they manufactured flour for the entire section of country extending from the Cascades east to the Rocky Mountains. On this same piece of land, in the year 1860, was erected a distillery by Overholtzer and Scott. John Picard, now deceased, constructed the building. This place was also used in early days by Overholtzer and Scott as an outfitting point for the miners in this section of the country. The first wheat ever shown in the state was put in the ground on this land, the seed at that time costing $5 per bushel, it having been brought to this valley from The Dalles on mules in 1859. This wheat was sown by that Pioneer, John A. Simms. The old mill and distillery have not been operated for many years, and they have recently been converted into a barn and packing house by Mr. Whitney." An idea of the scope of the Whitney operations can be gained from the same 1896 article. "It consists of 100 acres of the finest and richest bottom land in the county which is nearly all planted in nursery stock of the finest quality. His nursery is stocked with all kinds of fruit and shade trees, small fruits and berries of all kinds, flowers, etc. "On the place he has two large packing houses where his fruits and nursery stocks are prepared for shipment. He has built up an immense trade, and today is supplying the trade throughout the entire northwest, and besides, has made many shipments of large lots of nursery stock to Colorado, Utah and many eastern points. Mr. Whitney is today considered one of the most enterprising and prominent fruit and nursery men in the northwest." Editorials of both the Walla Walla "Union" and the Walla Walla "Bulletin" at the time of Whitney's death lauded the nursery entrepreneur. "The horticultural industry and prosperity of this entire section owes a great deal to Charles Whitney, for it was largely through his foresight & his initiative that the fruit crop of the valley became more than a matter of individual needs for home supply." The "Union," in its lead story of the day, said "his success in the growing of fruit trees determined the possibilities of this region in the : production of fruit." Newspaper accounts at the time of his death indicated Whitney relinquished his business to others about 1907, renting the land but continuing to reside in his fine home near the present entrance to the Walla Walla Country Club. The Whitney home, for many years a landmark of fine homes here, was razed when it was sold in 1929. Claire Mitchell, in her book, "Walla Walla Remembers," includes a drawing of the mansion, while noting: "The Whitney home, no longer standing, topped a promontory on land now belonging to Dr. Thomas Campbell. In its lively years it was the center of hospitality and youthful merrymaking."

FRY LINDAMOOD --JOHN FRY AND MARY LINDAMOOD

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We Find in the clerk's office at Woodstockthat Jacob Fry married Catherine Lindamood on February 16, 1796. Catherine must have been his second wife. Mr. Fry was an extensive land owner and a prosperous farmer. He was a captain in the war of 1812. He was one of the trustees of Zion's Lutheran Church and a trustee of a church school at Zion's Church. Buried in the Foltz graveyard. Mr. Fry was born March 18, 1782 and died May 30, 1872. NOTE: Christena Lindamood the widow of Andrew Lindamood (I) wrote her Will May 7, 1831 and the same was probated May 13, 1831. In her Will she mentions two of her grandchildren. To her granddaughter, Magdalena Fry she gave a large wash kettle and to her grandson, Samuel McWay her prayer book. It would be interesting to know what happened with the iron kettle and the prayer book. John Fry (2) son of Jacob Fry; mar. Mary Lindamood daughter of Andrew and Christena Lindamood on May 12, 1799. Mr. Fry was an extensive land owner and lived near Buck Hill. At his death he owned between 500 and 600 acres of farming land and a large tract of woodland on Buck Hill. A He was one of the trustees of Woodlawn Academy which was incorporated January 5, 1841. Woodlawn Academy was used both for school purposes and church purposes as well. The academy was located on the west side of the Middle Road about mid—way between Rinkerton and Bowman's Crossing. The first building was destroyed by fire and immediately the second one was built. It is said that Mr. Fry was a prosperous farmer and a fine business man and a churchman. They are buried in the Foltz cemetery. Their daughter, Magdalene, married John A. Good. JOHN A. GOOD FAMILIES Magdalene Fry (3) daughter of John Fry and Mary Lindamood Fry b. Nov. 10, 1809; d. April 11, 1882; mar. John A. Good b. Feb. 20, 1809; d. Jan. 12, 1884. He was a son of Abraham Good and Sarah Mohler Good. They were married August 6, 1834. She was born in the Fry homestead about four miles west of Mt. Jackson. He was born near Hudson's Cross Roads about six miles southwest of Mt. Jackson. They lived about one mile northwest of Pleasant View Church.Mr. Good was a farmer and a wagon builder. Members of the Church of the Brethren. Buried in Pleasant View Cemetery. Additional information on this family is available in the Lindamood book. SOURCE LINDAMOOD FAMILY HISTORY BY J WILLIAM HARPINE. PUBLIC USE [[https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/155117-lindamood-family-history?offset=1]]

Fryenmoet's Invalid Baptisms

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The goal of this project is to identify and list all of the children whose baptism was declared invalid due to problems with the ordination of domine [[Freymuth-19|Johannes Caspar Fryenmoet]]. Most of these children were rebaptised several years later, and the duplicate baptisms cause problems such as extra profiles and incorrect birth dates. This list will be an aid to resolving those problems and correctly merging profiles. == Background == [[Freymuth-19|Johannes Casparus Fryenmoet]] lived in the [[Space:Minisink Valley region|Minisink Valley]] in New York/New Jersey/Pennsylvania, where he served four Reformed Dutch churches, located at Minisink, Walpeck, Machackemeck, and Smithfield. He was ordained in early 1741 by Rev. Dorsius who was minister in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Fryenmoet began baptising children in May 1741, but by late 1742 it was discovered that Dorsius did not have authority to ordain ministers, and in 1743 the ordination of Fryenmoet was declared invalid. This made all the baptisms he had performed invalid, and he crossed them out in the registers. Fryenmoet was ordained again in December 1744 in a manner acceptable to the church authorities in the Netherlands, and he served the Minisink churches for a number of years thereafter. Many of these children were later rebaptised. == Children Affected == * The list contains the entries from the Minisink Valley records. {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" | '''LNAB''' || '''Child's Name''' || '''Father's Name''' || '''Mother's Name''' || '''Original Baptism Location''' || '''Original Baptism Date''' || '''Second Baptism Location''' || '''Second Baptism Date''' |- | Broadhead || Luke || [[Brodhead-56|Daniel Broadhead]] || [[Wyngart-1|Hester Wyngaerd]] || Smithfield || 1741-05-22 || || |- | Schoonmaker || [[Schoonmaker-39|Madlena]] || [[Schoonmaker-25|Garret Schoonmaker]] || [[De Pue-215|Catharina Du Puy]] || Smithfield || 1741-05-22 || || |- | Decker || [[Decker-243|Lisabeth]] || [[Dekker-387|Jan Decker Jun.]] || [[Kuykendal-6|Dina Kuyckendal]] || Smithfield || 1741-05-22 || || |- | Sulliscaine || Edward || Florenz Sulliscaine || Catharine Warrin || Smithfield || 1741-05-22 || || |- | Snyder || Jory || Valentyn Snyder || Mary Jar || Smithfield || 1741-05-22 || || |- | Williams || David || William Williams || Mary Richerson || Smithfield || 1741-05-22 || || |- | Brinck || [[Brinck-116|Stephanus]] || [[Brink-69|Gerrit Brinck]] || [[Tietsort-7|Maria Ditsoort]] || Walpeck || 1741-05-31 || || |- | Brinck || [[Brink-1623|Johannes]] || [[Brink-72|Johannes Brinck]] || [[Cool-24|Lena Cool]] || Walpeck || 1741-05-31 || Walpeck || 1747-07-12 |- | Schoonmaker || [[Schoonmaker-34|Lisabeth]] || [[Schoonmaker-27|Jochem Schoonmaker]] || [[Van Garden-100|Rachel van Garden]] || Walpeck || 1741-05-31 || Walpeck || 1745-01-13 |- | Cool || [[Cool-251|Johannes]] || [[Cool-11|Leonard Cool]] || [[Van Gaerden-1|Sara van Garden]] || Walpeck || 1741-05-31 || || |- | Schoonhoven || [[Schoonhoven-37|Benjamin]] || [[Schoonhoven-33|Nicolas Schoonhoven]] || [[Westfaal-4|Pieternella Westfael]] || Walpeck || 1741-07-12 || || |- | van Weyen || John || [[Van Weyen-12|Hendricus van Weyen]] || [[Van Campen-159|Elisabeth van Campen]] || Walpeck || 1741-07-12 || || |- | Devoor || [[Devore-308|Abram]] || [[Devoor-31|Jacobus Devoor]] || [[Dingeman-1|Eva Dingenman]] || Walpeck || 1741-07-12 || || |- | Maxfield || Maria || Anthony Maxfield || Eva Freeland || Walpeck || 1741-07-12 || || |- | Schoonhoven || [[Schoonhoven-154|Roedolfus]] || [[VanSchoonhoven-5|Hendricus Schoonhoven]] || [[Decker-70|Johanna Decker]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | Waert || [[Waert-14|John]] || William Waert || [[Decker-5148|Maria Decker]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | Brinck || [[Brink-1013|Isaac]] || [[Brink-71|Roelof Brinck]] || [[Kuykendaal-22|Antje Kuyckendal]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | Swartwood || [[Swartwood-200|Maria]] || [[Swartwout-30|Bernardus Swartwout]] || [[Decker-113|Margrietje Decker]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || Walpeck || 1747-11-01 |- | van der Lip || Dorothea || Boudewyn van der Lip || Tenty Engeland || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | van Campen || [[Van Campen-114|Lucas]] || [[Van Campen-21|Gysbert van Campen]] || [[Decker-120|Sara Decker]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | Kuyckendal || [[Kuykendall-25|Johannes]] || [[Kuykendall-23|Johannes Kuyckendal]] || [[Brinck-44|Lisabet Brinck]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | van Garden || [[Van Garden-43|Sara]] || [[VanGarden-26|Hannes van Garden]] || [[Quick-38|Margriet Quick]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | Brinck || [[Brinck-51|Rachel]] || [[Brink-80|Thomas Brink]] || [[Kleyn-32|Antje Kleyn]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-18 || || |- | Kortrecht || [[Kortrecht-35|Abraham]] || [[Kortregt-16|Hendrick Kortrecht]] || [[Ennis-80|Janetje Ennist]] || Walpeck || 1741-??-23 || Walpeck || 1747-07-12 |- | Devoor || [[Devoor-33|Lena]] || [[Devoor-32|Cornelis Devoor]] || [[Westfael-8|Lena Westfael]] || Walpeck || 1742-07-05 || || |- | Kortrecht || [[Kortrecht-40|Samuel]] || [[Kortregt-10|Hannes Kortrecht]] || [[Deen-marken-1|Margriet Dennemarken]] || Walpeck || 1742-07-05 || || |- | van Garden || [[Van Garden-101|Catharina]] || [[Van Garden-71|Hendrik van Garden]] || [[Decker-67|Eleonora Decker]] || Walpeck || 1742-07-05 || Walpeck || 1747-07-12 |- | Smith || Catharina || Benjamin Smith || [[Schoonhoven-24|Catharina Schoonhoven]] || Walpeck || 1742-08-01 || || |- | Kuyckendal || [[Kuyckendal-3|Sara]] || [[Kuykendall-332|Jacobus Kuyckendal]] || [[Dingman-114|Alida Dingenman]] || Walpeck || 1742-09-12 || || |- | Quick || [[Quick-43|Rebecca]] || [[Quick-49|Thomas Quick]] || [[Emmins-4|Rachel Emmans]] || Walpeck || 1742-09-26 || || |- | Dingenman || [[Dingman-1|Eva]] || [[Dingman-2|Andrew Dingenman]] || [[Kermer-5|Cornelia Kermer]] || Walpeck || 1742-09-26 || Walpeck || 1747-07-12 |- | Brinck || [[Brinck-41|Hermanus]] || [[Brink-482|Cornelis Brink]] || [[Kool-359|Maria Cool]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Brinck || Jan || [[Petersen-2140|Matheus Brink]] || [[Bel-90|Ebbegken Bel]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | van Garden || [[Van Garden-81|Catharina]] || [[Van Garden-78|Gisbert van Garden]] || [[Cool-353|Maria Cool]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | van Benschoten || [[Van Bunschoten-85|Cornelis]] || [[Van Bunschoten-80|Antony van Benschoten]] || [[Wels-1|Margrita Wels]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || || |- | Enness || [[Ennis-192|Cornelia]] || [[Ennis-10|William Enness]] || [[Quick-31|Lizabeth Quick]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || || |- | Quick || [[Quick-57|Rachel]] || [[Quick-35|Derrick Quick]] || [[Van Garden-29|Plone Van Garden]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || || |- | Nethier (Redier) || Margaritje || [[Lateer-1|Hannes Nethier]] || [[Decker-178|Gertje Decker]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || || |- | Ditschious (Titsoort) || Sara || William Ditschious || [[Dekker-439|Sara Decker]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Westfael || [[Westfael-23|Johannes]] || [[Westfaal-3|Johannes Westfael]] || [[Kortrecht-24|Apollonia Kortregt]] || Machackemeck || 1741-06-28 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Hooghdeylen || [[Houghtaling-178|Jonathan]] || [[Hoogteeling-4|Johannes Hoogteeling]] || [[Hoornbeeck-13|Marritjen Hoornbeeck]] || Machackemeck || 1741-09-06 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Kool || [[Kool-456|Abraham]] || [[Kool-350|Johannes Kool]] || [[VanAken-5|Pieternella van Aken]] || Machackemeck || 1741-10-09 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Kortrecht || [[Kortrecht-44|Josias]] || [[Kortrecht-33|William Kortrecht]] || Margriet Janson || Machackemeck || 1741-11-11 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Bogart || Sara || Jacob Bogart || Pieternella Keukendal || Machackemeck || 1741-11-24 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Middagh || [[Middagh-54|Samuel]] || [[Middagh-57|Abraham Middagh]] || [[Van Aaken-11|Lea Van Aeken]] || Machackemeck || 1741-11-24 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Cuttebeck || [[Cuttebeck-1|Benjamin]] || [[Koddebek-1|Willem Cuttebeck]] || [[Elton-476|Jacomyntje Etten]] || Machackemeck || 1742-01-17 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Cool || [[Cole-3335|Margrietje]] || [[Kool-71|David Cool]] || [[Westvaal-27|Leonora Westfael]] || Machackemeck || 1742-01-17 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | van Garden || [[Van Garden-56|Daniel]] || [[Van Garden-72|Harman van Garden]] || [[Caudebec-1|Elsje Cuttenbeck]] || Machackemeck || 1742-02-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Westfael || Maria || [[Westfael-22|Benjamin Westfael]] || [[Van Aken-118|Annetjen van Aeken]] || Machackemeck || 1742-02-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Kuykendal || [[Kuykendall-26|Hendricus]] || [[Kuykendaal-16|Hendrick Kuykendal]] || [[Kool-357|Elisabeth Cole]] || Machackemeck || 1742-03-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Decker || [[Decker-102|Petrus]] || [[Decker-95|Thomas Decker]] || [[Van Nimmegen-1|Jannetje van Nimwegen]] || Machackemeck || 1742-03-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Rosenkranz || [[Rosenkrans-53|Solomon]] || [[Rosekrans-47|Jacobus Rosenkranz]] || [[Decker-201|Sara Decker]] || Machackemeck || 1742-03-07 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Decker || [[Decker-147|Elias]] || [[Decker-117|Broer Decker]] || [[Van Etten-44|Antje Van Netten]] || Machackemeck || 1742-03-21 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Brinck || [[Brink-87|Daniel]] || [[Brink-83|Lambart Brinck]] || [[Van Garde-3|Rachel van Garden]] || Machackemeck || 1742-03-21 || || |- | Schoonhoven || [[Schoonhoven-56|Debora]] || [[Schoonover-13|Thomas Schoonhoven]] || [[Westfael-5|Maria Westfael]] || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Wildfield || Thomas || Abraham Wildfield || Maria Welsch || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || || |- | van Nimwegen || Jacob || [[Van Nimweeg-1|Gerardus van Nimwegen]] || [[De Wit-641|Jannetje de Witt]] || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Kimber || Petrus || Casparus Kimber || Femmetje Williamse || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || || |- | Krom || [[Krom-110|Maria]] || [[Krom-23|Cornelis Krom]] || [[Schoonhoven-36|Rebecca Schoonhoven]] || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | van Vliet || [[Van Vliet-97|Maria]] || [[Van Vliet-121|Jan van Vliet]] || [[Swartwoud-14|Jesyntje Swartwood]] || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Cole || Wilhelmus || Josias Cole || Maria Kimber || Machackemeck || 1742-04-14 || Machackemeck || 1747-06-21 |- | Decker || Lena || [[Decker-61|Benjamin Decker]] || [[Kortright-4|Lena Kortrecht]] || Machackemeck || 1742-05-16 || || |- | Middagh || [[Middagh-13|Martinus]] || [[Middagh-75|Aart Middagh]] || [[Van Etten-358|Ariantje van Etten]] || Machackemeck || 1742-05-16 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Decker || Cathrina || [[Dekker-819|Jacob Decker]] || [[Hoornbeeck-15|Rachel Hoornbeck]] || Machackemeck || 1742-07-25 || || |- | Hoornbeeck || [[Hoornbeck-8|Maria]] || [[Hoornbeeck-12|Evert Hoornbeeck]] || [[Caudebec-20|Lena Cuttebeck]] || Machackemeck || 1742-08-23 || || |- | Brinck || [[Brink-1842|Jacobus]] || [[Petersen-2140|Matheus Brinck]] || [[Bel-90|Abigail Bel]] || Machackemeck || 1742-10-03 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-205 |- | Kermer || [[Kermer-31|Angontje]] || [[Kermer-4|Abraham Kermer]] || [[Chambers-59|Sarah Schammers]] || Machackemeck || 1742-10-17 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | van Aeken || [[Van_Aeken-2|Blandina]] || [[Van_Aaken-27|Abraham van Aaken]] || [[DeWitt-21|Jannetje DeWitt]] || Machackemeck || 1742-10-25 || Kingston || 1747-07-05 |- | Decker || Jonathan || [[Decker-52|Jacobus Decker]] || [[Tietsort-1|Neeltje Ditsoort]] || Machackemeck || 1742-10-25 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |- | Vredenburgh || [[Vredenburgh-71|Lydia]] || [[Vredenburgh-72|Aaron Vredenburgh]] || [[Rosenkrans-49|Sara Rosenkranz]] || Machackemeck || 1742-10-25 || Machackemeck || 1747-07-05 |}

Frymire/Fremeyer History

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Frymire Immigration Story The Frymire (Freymeyer) family were Palatines from near the Rhine River in Germany. Johann and his wife Anna Margretha and their children lived at the village of 5429 Ackerbach, Germany. Johann was a miller in Berntro. As Protestants, Johan's family suffered the persecution along with other Palatines, from the Roman Catholics of France under King Louis XIV for many years. Many Protestants were jailed, tortured and executed. With this, the stage was set for the Great Palatine Migration. Those who didn't leave on their own were forced out by war and religious persecution. Even many of the Protestants in jails were released and forced to migrate. Almost all of those that left were stripped of their valuables, and many had nothing but the clothing on their backs as they started down the Rhine River to the Netherlands. In 1709, seeking their escape, the Freymeyers alng with thousands of Palatines traveled down the Rhine River to Holland. With their next destination of England, ship owners usually sold the emigrants to England for their passage fees to London. Such was the travels of Johan Michael Freymeyer, his wife, and their 5 children. They left from Holland to England on July 15, 1709 on Jno. Untank's ship along with their neighbors, the Gerhardt Schaffer family and the Christian Streit family. They, along with most of the Palatines, were then put in a refugee camp just outside of London. For many of the other Palatines, when that camp was filled to capaity, a second in Ireland. The camps were really tent cities that were too crowded, too dirty, and too unsanitary for comfort. England saw the Freymeyers and the other German refugees as very valuable for the free labor. England ensureed that the European refugees would not cost too much for upkeep. and did not allow them to become citizens. From the refugee/concentration camps, the English would ship the Palentines to any one of a number of its colonies throughout the world. As soon as a boat became available, it was packed with refugees to capacity and beyond. The voyage to the colonies was miserable. The boats were over-crowded, there was no privacy, the drinking water was polluted, and the food was vermin-ridden. Only enough food and water was supplied to provide for the longest average trip. If a boat was delayed by the weather, the refugees, who were considered as cargo, were in trouble. In 1710, three large groups of Palatines sailed from London. The first group went to Ireland, the second to Carolina and the third, with the Freymeyer family, to New York with the new Governor, Robert Hunter. The Freymeyer's and their neighbors left on the fifth sailing of this group. There were 3,000 Palatines on 10 ships that sailed for New York and approximately 470 died on the voyage or shortly after their arrival. Before boarding the ship, the Germans were made to sign a contract. Since the migration program was essentially an English project, and the destination was an English colony, the contract was in English. Many of our ancestors couldn't have read it even if it were in German. They were just told by mouth that they would be required to a time of service in the colonies at their destination. As it turned out, the contract was for a certain amount of money to be paid at their disembarkation. Even if a man or woman died on board the ship, the spouse was obligated to pay for the passage fees of the deceased. If both parents died, the children were held to the obligation to pay for their parents. The trip usually lasted from 3 to 6 weeks. Many got sick on the way, and in the book, "Erster Teil der Geschichte der Deutschen Gesellschaft von Pennsylvanian" by Oswald Seidensticker, estimates that, in one year, over 2000 died on the way. The English put the Palentines in camps along the Hudson River between New York City and Albany. They were to repay their debt to the Queen of England by making tar and lumber for her Royal Navy. The usual amount of time that a Palatine spent in bond was four years, but even that at times was variable. Some of the bond holders kept the Palatines, and the Irish, who were treated in much the same way, for as long as it took for the immigrants to pay off their debts, with some of the bond holders being very creative in the way they computed the debts. The Freymeyers appear on Governor Hunter's Rations Lists of 1710 and 1712 in the New York colony. In the New York subsistence list of 1710, Michael Freymeyer was listed with 3 adults and 2 children. Unfortunately, this means that two of their children died on the long trip or shortly thereafter. By 1712 two more children were born. In 1712 he was listed with 3 adults and 4 children and Simmender's register lists him as living in what is now Middleberg, NY in 1717 with wife Elizabeth and 6 children. Eventually they moved to Schoharie, New York, where Johan Michael and Anna lived out their days. Michael and Anna died long before the colony's began their fight with the British for independence.

FS LINCS 00

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FS_LINCS_00.png
MARKHAM OF LINCOLNSHIRE
VER. 18.10
NOTES
Pre-1600 primary spelling of the surname is MARKAM. This page contains primary source records. All towns are in Lincolnshire, unless otherwise stated. For any additions, corrections, updates, etc., please send me a 'Private Message'. Thanks - [[Watson-20118|Tom Watson]].

DNA (R1b1b2a1a)
67 Markers. Alleles: 13 24 14 11 11 11 12 12 12 13 13 30 17 9 10 11 11 24 15 19 31 15 15 16 18 11 11 19 22 16 15 16 17 35 36 12 12 11 9 15 16 8 10 10 8 10 10 12 21 23 16 10 12 12 16 8 12 24 20 13 12 11 13 11 11 13 11.FT-DNA Kit No. V2591.

MARKHAM OF LINCOLNSHIRE

1 [[Markham-|? Markham]], bn:c.1520.
2 [[Markham-|? Markham]], bn:c.1540.
. 3 [[Markham-320|James Markham]], bn:c.1560, of St. Bartholomew, Keelby.
.. 4 [[Markham-319|William Markham]] (Markham, Markam), bp:1580-03-04 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JQM2-89T]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. br:1624-02-28 Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-Y97]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1473|Richard Markham]] (Markam), bp:1604-01-22 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3QM-NJG]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. br:1605-08-09 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-RJ4]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1474|John Markham]] (Markam), bp:1604/5-03-11 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NX1D-L87]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1475|Richard Markham]] (Markam), bp:1608/9-03-04 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGJP-3YN]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1485|Robert Markham]] (Markam), bp:1608/9-03-04 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N1SM-J47]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1476|Dorcas Markham]] (Markam), bp:1612-12-31 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGJG-TJV][https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N1SM-JHZ]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. br:1613-09-01 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-RY3]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1477|Robert Markham]], bp:1613-09-12 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3QM-NXR]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-318|Robert Markham]] (Markham, Markam, Marcume), bp:1614-02-02 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NX1D-28L]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. Later of St. Mary, Broughton. m1:1640-05-04 Great Limber,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NX74-WPV]Great Limber. FamilySearch. to Ann Swallow bp:1616-11-27 Great Limber.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N68C-NZG]Great Limber. FamilySearch.
..... 6 [[Markham-7212|Susanna Markham]], bp:1641-09-19 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, Res.: Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NX1D-G3X]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
..... 6 [[Markham-1424|Jone Markham]] (Jonne Markcum-Markam), bp:1642-04-06 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NTHF-T5W]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:1671-06-20 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NVJP-ZBW]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. to Thomas Hobson, of Broughton.
....... 7 Thomas Hobson, bp:1672-03-31 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-786]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1672-04-08 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-786]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 Ann Hobson1?, bp:1673-04-13 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQC-4R8]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:1700 St. Mary, Broughton,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFWL-J4J]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. to Thomas Snowden.
....... 7 Mary Hobson, bp:1675/6-01-21 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMZ5-PBF]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 William Hobson, bp:1676/7-02-03 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW45-C6J]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:28-05-1678 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW45-C6J]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 Elizabeth Hobson, bp:1676/7-02-03 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGZS-KP8]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1. Thomas Major, bp:1679-01-25 Messingham.
......... 8 Mary Major, bp:1707-06-25 Messingham.
......... 8 Thomas Major, bp:1709 Messingham.
......... 8 Mary Major, bp:1712-06-16 Messingham.
....... 7 Thomas Hobson, bp:1680/1-02-05 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JQPB-DXG]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
..... 6 [[Markham-1425|Robert Markham]] (Marcume), bp:1643-06-03 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J7J5-F3P]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
..... 6 [[Markham-1426|John Markham]] (Markam), bp:1644-09-07 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-Q5Q][https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW45-C8R]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1645-09-09 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-Q5Q][https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW45-C8R]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
..... 6 [[--|S?. Markham]] (Markam), bp:1644-11-03 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NX1D-GQM]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. Maybe same person as above [[Markham-1426|John Markham]] (?).
..... 6 [[Markham-1427|Anne Markham]] (Markam), bp:1646-08-27 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JQ97-X47]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:1667-11-08 All Saints, Winteringham,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NKZV-HWY]All Saints, Winteringham. FamilySearch. to Thomas Snowden.
..... 6 [[--|Jacky Markham]] (Markam), bp:1646-10-11 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NYZY-7JT]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. Maybe same person as above [[Markham-1427|Anne Markham]] (?).
..... 6 [[Markham-1428|William Markham]] (Markham-Markcum-Markeham-Marcam), bp:1649-03-27 St. Mary, Broughton. Res.: Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMZ5-5NB]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:1680-11-23 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NVJP-8L6]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. to Mary Remingson, bp:c.1650, dd:Aft.1690 (Remington ?).
....... 7 [[Markham-7207|Ann Markham]] (Markeham-Markcum), bp:1681-10-23 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-7JX]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 [[Markham-1480|Mary Markham]] (Markeham), bp:1683-11-09 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGZS-VQK]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1683-11-12 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGZS-VQK]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. Twin.
....... 7 [[Markham-7208|William Markham]] (Markeham), bp:1683-11-09 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-793]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1683-11-14 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-793]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. Twin.
....... 7 [[Markham-7209|Mary Markham]] (Marcam), bp:1685-08-23 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGZS-VQG]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 [[Markham-7210|Robert Markham]] (Marcam), bp:1687-12-18 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQH-ZDQ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:1720 St. Mary, Broughton to Ursillay Hardey, bp:c.1690.
......... 8 [[Markham-7211|Ann Markham]] (Markam), bp:1722-04-24 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-7JJ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 [[Markham-7117|William Markham]] (Markham-Marcam), bp:1690-05-05 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3S1-79W]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:c.1726[--]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. to Magdalen \\ (Magdalen, Magdalin, Margaret), br:1766-12-03 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QL1L-NWNZ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
......... 8 [[Markham-7104|William Markham]] (Markham), bp:1727-08-00 St. Mary, Broughton. Res.: Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGZS-G8X]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1. Frances \\.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7105|Mary Markham]] (Markham), bp:1755-02-25 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NYVB-9YP]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7106|William Markham]] (Markham), bp:1757-02-21 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMC6-63J]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7107|Robert Markham]] (Markham), bp:1759-03-14 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QL1K-J93P]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7108|John Markham]] (Markham), bp:1760-11-21 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMC6-63G]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1761-02-02 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMC6-63G]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7109|Frances Markham]] (Markham), bp:1762-02-28 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QL1G-SZXY]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7110|John Markham]] (Markham), bp:1763-10-27 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J7J5-NMZ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7111|Thomas Markham]] (Markham), bp:1766-09-14 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N1SP-3BW]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7112|Richard Markham]] (Markham), bp:1768-10-20 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMC6-XM9]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1770-04-03 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JMC6-XM9]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7113|George Markham]] (Markham), bp:1771-04-25 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQC-6ZL]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7114|Richard Markham]] (Markham), bp:1774-09-18 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQC-FGM]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1. Anne \\.
............ 10 [[Markham-7121|Philip Markham]], bp:1807-01-25 Grasby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NRRK-QX4]Grasby. FamilySearch. m1. Anne \\.
............. 11 [[Markham-7122|George Markham]], bp:1840 Grasby.Grasby. FamilySearch. Census (Grasby) 1851. (!Check!).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SGNK-BCC]Census (1851). Grasby. FamilySearch. 1871.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VB8J-1JS]Census (1871). Grasby. FamilySearch. 1881.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q27K-981G]Census (1881). Grasby. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-7123|Phillip Markham]], bn:1864 Grasby.To be added.
............... 12 [[Markham-7124|Cyril P. Markham]], bn:1882 Grasby.To be added.
.................. 13 [[Markham-|George Markham]], bn:1917. dd: New Zealand.To be added.
.................... 14 [[Markham-|Cyril P.B. Markham]], bn:1942. Of New Zealand.To be added.
.................... 14 [[Markham-|Glennis Markham]], bn:1945. dd:<2003 New Zealand.To be added.
.................... 14 [[Markham-|Peter Phillip Markham]], bn: 1951. Of New Zealand.To be added.
.................. 13 [[Markham-|Sylvia Markham]].To be added.
.................. 13 [[Markham-|Henry Markham]].To be added.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7115|Anne Markham]] (), bp:1777-03-16 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGQJ-9YZ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
......... 8 [[Markham-7116|Ann Markham]], bn:1729-03-10 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQC-D26]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
......... 8 [[Markham-7118|Robert Markham]], bn:1734 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGQJ-Q3X]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQH-88N]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1734-11-00 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGQJ-Q3X]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQH-88N]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
......... 8 [[Markham-7119|Thomas Markham]], bn:1736-05-09 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NTHF-B68]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
..... 6 [[Markham-317|John Markham]] (Markam), bp:1654-08-29 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JW45-C8R]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1.To be added. Jane \\.
....... 7 [[Markham-1481|Elizabeth Markham]], bp:1684-03-02 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J7J5-FZZ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1684-03-06 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J85X-3YQ]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 [[Markham-1482|John Markham]], bp:1686-04-25 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQC-ZZK]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
....... 7 [[Markham-316|Thomas Markham]], bp:1689-04-02 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NFQC-68L]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. m1:1719-07-07 St. Mary, Wrawby,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NLHQ-YMP]St. Mary, Wrawby. FamilySearch. to Anne Cooper, bp:1696-08-16 St. Mary, Wrawby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J37Q-TPT]St. Mary, Wrawby. FamilySearch.
......... 8 [[Markham-1429|John Markham]], bp:1721-05-31 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1. Mary Glentworth, bp:1721-04-08 Barrow on Humber. br:1777-10-11 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1430|Ann Markham]], bp:1744-08-28 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-7056|Mary Markham]], bp:1745-01-13 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1431|Sarah Markham]], bp:1748-10-07 Wrawby.[??]St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1432|Frances Markham]], bp:1749-02-27 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1433|John Markham]] (Markam), bp:1750-03-18 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1840-04-20 St. Mary, Wrawby (??).[--]St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1773-06-01 St. Mary, Broughton (Groom's father: [[Markham-1429|John Markham]], Witness: John Hunter Jnr),St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. to Elizabeth Bell, bp:1757 ??.[--]??. br:1830-08-12 St. Mary, Wrawby, Res.: Brigg, (73y=1757).St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1434|William Markham]], bp:1775-01-24 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NTHF-B5R]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
............ 10 [[Markham-7125|John Markham]], bp:1776-10-20 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGQJ-996]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
............ 10 [[Markham-1446|Thomas Markham]], bp:1778-12-06 St. Mary, Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NTHF-1QS]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
............ 10 [[Markham-1447|Elizabeth Markham]], bp:1781-12-16 St. Ethelreda, West Halton.St. Ethelreda, West Halton. FamilySearch.
............ 10 [[Markham-1448|Ann Markham]], bp:1783-09-14 St. Ethelreda, West Halton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3RB-CH9]St. Ethelreda, West Halton. FamilySearch.
......... 8 [[Markham-315|William Markham]], bp:1724-09-29 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1745-04-14 St. Mary, Wrawby,St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. to Thomasin Kendall, of Wrawby. br:1796-12-25 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1449|Elizabeth Markham]], bp:1745-02-05 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1450|Katharine Markham]], bp:1746-01-26 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1451|William Markham]], bp:1748-07-26 St. Mary, Wrawby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NYPJ-6RH]St. Mary, Wrawby. FamilySearch.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1452|Jane Markham]], bp:1749-01-02 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1453|Robert Markham]], bp:1751-05-14 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1456|Thomas Markham]], bp:1755-01-22 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1776-05-13 St. Mary, Wrawby (Witnesses: Robert Snow, William Laming),St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. to Mary Laming of Wrawby, bp:1753-02-17 All Saints, Cadney.All Saints, Cadney. Freereg. Parents: William + Ann Laming.All Saints, Cadney. Freereg. br:1830-09-26 St. Mary, Wrawby (Of Brigg, 77y=1753).St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1457|Ann Markham]], bp:1777-03-23 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1797-05-16 St. Mary, Wrawby, (Witnesses: [[Markham-314|Joseph Markham]], William Henderson; Banns),St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. to William Barr, of Great Limber.
............ 10 [[Markham-1458|Robert Markham]], bp:1781-09-09 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1459|Elizabeth Markham]], bp:1783-05-18 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1784-12-09 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1460|Betty Markham]], bp:1785-10-03 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1461|Hannah Markham]], bp:1787-11-30 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. She has:
............. 11 [[Markham-7074|Robert Clark Markham]], bp:1793-02-06 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1793-02-27 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. On the 1793-02-06 young [[Markham-1461|Hannah Markham]] has her son baptised the exact same day her parents baptise their son [[Markham-1463|John Markham]]. Hannah is about 5 years 2 months and 8 days old from her baptismal date. Hannah is quite likely to have been born in 1787, but not before 1786. Hannah is maybe 4 years 5 months old, to 6 years old, when she got pregnant. No father is mentioned. Hannah's son dies aged 21 days old. At the age of 25 years old, Hannah m1:1813-11/12-13 St. Mary, Wrawby, (Witnesses: [[Markham-314|Joseph Markham]], Mary Mitchell), [[Mundey-|Ann Munday]], [[Markham-1463|John Markham]]),St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. to [[Mundey-27|William Mundey]] of Wrawby.
............ 10 [[Markham-1462|Joseph Markham]], bp:1790-04-04 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1463|John Markham]], bp:1793-02-06 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1814-05-12 St. Mary, Wrawby, (Witnesses: [[Mundey-27|William Mundey]], [[Markham-1461|Hannah Mundey]], Jonathan Brown; Frances Fox/Cox),St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. to Sarah Hall.
............ 10 [[Markham-1464|William Markham]], bp:1795-06-10 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1465|George Markham]], bp:1799-07-21 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-314|Joseph Markham]],5 bp:1756-03-03 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1779-03-01 St. Mary, Wrawby, (Witnesses: [[Stainton-127|Thomas Stainton]], [[Wray-|Mary Wray]], Lic.),St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. to [[Stainton-26|Elizabeth Stainton]] of Wrawby. NOTE: It is from this unison that the name of 'STENTON' arose, being used as a second name in the Markham family, and any other spelling found on internet sources, will be transcript errors. * Sir [[Markham-314|Joseph Markham]]: This comes from a Rhodesian newspaper obituary cutting, and an old 'constructed' family paper which is partially incorrect and misleading. He was never a 'Sir' to my current knowledge. [[Markham-312|Frederick Thomas Markham]] of Hull, England and Westward Ho! S. Rhodesia, died 1908, is correctly identified as [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]]. The Admiral Sir [[Markham-715|John Markham]] is completely misplaced, and from a separate DNA Markham family. See [[Markham-314|Joseph Markham]] (Images). See obituary for [[Markham-659|Mrs. Gwynne]].4 ............ 10 [[Markham-349|Sarah Markham]], bp:1780-10-11 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1781-01-03 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-350|Stainton Markham]], bp:1781-11-14 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1. Eleanor Hughes.
............ 10 [[Markham-1466|Sarah Markham]], bp:1784-01-04 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1784-10-25 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1467|Joseph Markham]], bp:1788-10-24 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1789-04-18 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-313|Thomas Markham]], bp:1790-01-31 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1818-06-21 Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire, to [[Ward-6971|Hannah Ward]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NJ2G-VYZ]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch. [[Ward-6971|Hannah Ward]] bp:1799-03-11 Holy Trinity, Kingston-Upon-Hull, Yorkshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NRQT-JFS]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch. 1855: Thomas Markham, coach builder & house painter, Eastgate and Corn Market, Louth.[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=sOUNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA165]Post Office Directory of Lincolnshire. Pg. 165. Painters (House & Sign): [[Ward-6971|Hannah Markham]], Corn Market.[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=VplQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA265]History, Gazetteer and Directory of Lincolnshire, and the City and Diocese. By William White (of Sheffield). Pg. 265. *Census (1831).England and Wales Census: 1831. FamilySearch. *Census (1841).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MQ1B-HHJ]England and Wales Census: 1841. FamilySearch. ::Couple in Louth both marked as 'N' along with Thomas Ward Markham also 'N'. All the remaining children are 'Y' Children: James aged 11 (1830), no [[Markham-342|Samuel Stenton Markham]]. *Census (1851): Louth.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SGNG-JSF]England and Wales Census 1851: Louth. FamilySearch. ::[[Ward-6971|Hannah Markham]], Wife, 52, Married, Coach Makers Wife, bn:1799 Hull, Yorkshire. ::[[Markham-7054|Mary A. Markham]] (Professor of Music and Drawing), 30, bn: Hull, Yorkshire. ::[[Markham-7051|Jane Markham]], 14y, bn: Louth. ::[[Markham-7052|Emily Markham]], 12y, bn: Louth. ::[[Markham-7053|Elizabeth W. Markham]], 11y, bn: Louth. ::[[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]], 9y, bn: Louth. ::Susan Briggs Servant 17y bn: Grimoldby. ::Son [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] is not in the household, he has gone to South Africa in 1850 on the [[Space:PASSENGER_SHIP_LIST:_THE_'EDWARD'|passenger ship 'Edward']].[[Space:PASSENGER_SHIP_LIST:_THE_'EDWARD'|Passenger Ship List: The 'Edward']]. ::[[Markham-313|Thomas Markham]] not at home, but found in St. Martin in the Fields, Charing Cross, Middlesex, on census night with son [[Markham-342|Samuel Stenton Markham]], Architect, bn: Louth. *Census (1861): Bromley, Kent.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2MP-7WHZ]England and Wales Census: 1861. FamilySearch. ::[[Ward-6971|Hannah Markham]] widow 62y wife of late Coach Builder, (living in Freelands Road, Bromley Kent with 2 daughters and lodger Curate of Bromley [[Carr-|Edward Carr]]), [[Markham-7052|Emily Markham]] 22, [[Markham-7053|Elizabeth Markham]] 21, [[Carr-|Edward Carr]] 32, James Scrutton 30, Sarah C. Scrutton 26, James Herbert Scrutton 2, Margaret J. Holdsworth 10, Emma Randal 20, Mary Ann Hervey 16, Rev. [[Bolton-|Edwin Bolton]] 28, Elizabeth Bolton 31, Edwin John Bolton 1m, [[Foreman-|Elizabeth Foreman]] 55, Mary Emma Berenger 21, Augustus Hampden Smithers 35, Julia Frances Smithers 22, Hampden L. Smithers 4, Arthur Edward Smithers 2, Mary Ethel Smithers 1, Berfard Theodore Althans 29. ............. 11 [[Markham-341|Thomas Ward Markham]], bp:1819-11-25 Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NY3Y-JC3]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch. Link invalid. br:1880-06-00 Municipal Cemetery, Louth, 61y. Municipal Cemetery, Louth. FamilySearch. [[Markham-341|Thos. Ward Markham]], Manager, Nichol Hill, Louth.[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=VplQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA256]History, Gazetteer and Directory of Lincolnshire, and the City and Diocese. By William White (of Sheffield). Pg. 256. [[Markham-341|Thomas Ward Markham]], painter, 134 Eastgate, Louth (Painters & Decorators).[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=VplQAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA408]History, Gazetteer and Directory of Lincolnshire, and the City and Diocese. By William White (of Sheffield.). Pg. 408.
............. m1:1847-01-06 Holy Trinity, Kingston-Upon-Hull, Yorkshire to [[Thornhill-250|Elizabeth Thornhill]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NN7P-TVF]Holy Trinity, Kingston-Upon-Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch.
............. m2:1852-10-21 Cheshire (Intended),[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F7KJ-RZB]Cheshire. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:264R-6RL]Altrincham, Cheshire. FamilySearch. to [[Royle-76|Mary Royle]], bp:1818-07-26 Ringway, Bowdon, Chester,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NJMS-4X5]Ringway, Bowdon, Chester. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-7075|Emily Royle Markham]], bn:1854 Louth (Reg.),[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2XSR-P6G]Louth. FamilySearch. dd:1898-09-30, 20 St. Georges Street (Maud Mfusi Street), Durban, Natal. dd: Entry No. 258, 44y, Daughter of the late [[Markham-341|Thomas Ward Markham]] of England. Accute pneumonia + heart failure.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91W-TSP4-Z?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-7054|Mary Ann Markham]], Professor of Music and Drawing, bp:26-03-1821 Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3KW-JVM]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-342|Samuel Stenton Markham]], Architect, bn:1822-10-09 bp:1823-02-02 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth, F: Painter.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch. dd:1902-12-00 Kensington, London, 80y.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2N58-7FK]Kensington, London. FamilySearch. See: Directory of British Architects, 1834-1914: Vol. 2 (L-Z). Pg. 132.[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=GkThQYLb3ZUC&pg=PA132#v=onepage&q&f=false]Directory of British Architects, 1834-1914: Vol. 2 (L-Z). Edited by Antonia Brodie, British Architectural Library, Royal Institute of British Architects. Pg. 132. *Census (1861): London, Surrey. Place: St. Marys, London, Surrey. Parish: St. Matthews, Lambeth. Residence: Southside Cornwall Road.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2MG-ZVSG]Census (1861). London, Surrey. FamilySearch. ::Name Role Sex Age Birthplace DoB Status Occ. ::[[Markham-342|Samuel S. Markham]] Head Male 38 Louth 1823 Married Architect ::[[Woolley-1512|Louisa J. Markham]] Wife Female 23 Mile End, Middlesex ::Mary Humphreys Servant Female 20 Higford, Northamptonshire *Census (1871): Chipstead, Chevening, Kent.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KD8S-1HJ]Census (1871). Chipstead, Chevening, Kent. FamilySearch. ::Name Role Sex Age Birthplace DoB Status Occ. ::[[Markham-342|Samuel S. Markham]] Head Male 48 Louth 1823 Married Architect and Surveyor ::[[Woolley-1512|Louisa J. Markham]] Wife Female 33 Bow, Middlesex ::[[Markham-7083|Charles S. Markham]] Son Male 9 Brixton, Surrey ::[[Markham-7085|Samuel S. Markham]] Son Male 6 Kingston, Surrey ::[[--|Augusta Tupper]] Governess Female 22 St. Saviours, Guernsey ::Annie Kerslake Servant Female 27 Bridport, Dorsetshire ::Caroline Grey Servant Female 19 Dover, Kent *Census (1881): Ham With Hatch, Kingston, Surrey.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q277-BLQJ]Census (1881). Kingston, Surrey. FamilySearch. ::Name Role Sex Age Birthplace DoB Status Occ. ::[[Markham-342|Samuel L. Markham]] Head Male 59 Louth 1822 Married Architect ::[[Woolley-1512|Louisa J. Markham]] Wife Female 43 Bow, Middlesex ::[[Markham-7083|Charles S. Markham]] Son Male 19 Brixton, Surrey ::[[Markham-7085|Saml S. Markham]] Son Male 16 Kingston, Surrey *Census (1891) St. Matthews, Croydon, Surrey. Residence: Coombe Road, Croydon.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QFBS-Q6Z]Census (1891). Croydon, Surrey. FamilySearch. ::Name Role Sex Age Birthplace DoB Status Occ. ::[[Markham-342|Samuel S. Markham]] Head Male 68 Surrey 1823 Married Architect ::[[Woolley-1512|Louisa J. Markham]] Wife Female 53 Middlesex ::[[Markham-7083|Charles S. Markham]] Son Male 29 Surrey ::[[Markham-7086|Ethel Markham]] Daughter Female 17 Kent ::[[Markham-7144|Kathleen Markham]]3 Daughter Female 14 Surrey ::[[Markham-7087|Margaret Markham]] Daughter Female 12 Surrey ::[[Markham-7075|Emily Markham]] Niece Female 35 Lincolnshire ::Annie Trussell Servant Female 26 Bedfordshire ::Jane Cooper Servant Female 24 Surrey ::George Hooper Servant Male 19 Berkshire *Census (1901-03-31): St. John Stoke, Stoke Next Guildford, Surrey. Residence: Pit Park Road, Guildford.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X9X3-NGD]Census (1891). St. John Stoke, Stoke Next Guildford, Surrey. FamilySearch. ::Name Role Sex Age Birthplace DoB Status Occ. ::[[Markham-342|Samuel S. Markham]] Head Male 78 Louth 1823 Retired Architect ::[[Markham-7086|Ethel M. Markham]] Daughter Female 27 Seven Oaks, Kent ::[[Markham-7144|Maude Markham]]3 Daughter Female 24 Kingston, Surrey ::[[Markham-7087|Margaret E. Markham]] Daughter Female 22 Kingston, Surrey ::[[Markham-7145|Hannah M. Markham]] Niece Female 39 Louth (Parents ??). ::[[Markham-626|Margaret Markham]] Niece Female 22 Natal ::Emma R. Gibbons Servant Female 20 Woolwich, London ::Alice S. Gourgeon Servant Female 26 Lowestoft, Suffolk ::3 Probably the same person. Under review. ............... m1 of [[Markham-342|Samuel Stenton Markham]]: m1:1854-09-05 Holy Trinity, Kingston-Upon-Hull, Yorkshire,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NN7R-DG3]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch. to Mary Desforges, bn:c.1825.
............... 12 [[Markham-7076|Mary Desforges Markham]], bp:1855-09-10 Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NR79-WQ8]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NK78-SRM]Holy Trinity, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-7077|Herbert Stenton Markham]], bp:c.1857 Louth.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2N4D-LRY]Louth. FamilySearch. m1:1883 Lincoln,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2DCX-8WK]Lincoln, Lincolnshire. FamilySearch. to Besty Smith. 1911 Census.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7YP-CJL]England and Wales Census, 1911. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-7078|Gertrude Mary Markham]], bn:1883-04-29 bp:1883-05-17 St. Nicholas, Lincoln.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J7JV-KV6]St. Nicholas, Lincoln. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-7079|Emily Royle Markham]], bp:1885-01-25 Gainsborough.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J76H-YR9]Gainsborough. FamilySearch. Census (1911). Altrincham, Hale, Cheshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XW3S-PN9]Census (1911). Altrincham, Hale, Cheshire. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-7080|George Herbert Markham]], bp:1887-07-16 Gainsborough.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N6ZQ-ZX8]Gainsborough. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-7081|Beatrice Alice Markham]], bp:1889-09-08 Gainsborough.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QL12-2N7Z]Gainsborough. FamilySearch. m1:1924-09-27 Broadheath, Cheshire,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F3PK-9P9]England, Cheshire Parish Registers, 1538-2000. FamilySearch. to Alfred Edwin Travis.
................ 13 [[Markham-7082|Harold Markham]], bp:1890-12-11 Gainsborough.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J76H-YV3]Gainsborough. FamilySearch.
............. m2 of [[Markham-342|Samuel Stenton Markham]], Architect: m2:1860-09-19 St. Dunstan in the West, London, to Louisa Jane Woolley. F: John Thomas Woolley.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NJ71-61L]England Marriages, 1538-1973. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-7083|Charles Stenton Markham]], bn:1861-01-10 Brixton, Surrey, bp:1861-10-27 St. Martin in the Fields, Westminster, London.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J3H7-J2V]St. Martin in the Fields, Westminster, London. FamilySearch. m1:1899-04-09 Kingston, Surrey,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NN1Q-BTT]Kingston, Surrey. FamilySearch. to Josephine Mabel Stephens.
................ 13 [[Markham-7084|Desmond Stenton Markham]], bp:1900-03-12 Lambeth, Surrey.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QGZP-WS7M]Lambeth, Surrey. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-7085|Samuel Stenton Markham]], bp:c.1865 Kingston, Surrey.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2X9Q-M58]Kingston, Surrey. FamilySearch. ??.
............... 12 [[Markham-7086|Ethel Madelaine Markham]], bp:1874-02-28 Sevenoaks, Chevening, Kent.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QJDK-11KL]Sevenoaks, Chevening, Kent. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2XZB-WZJ]Sevenoaks, Chevening, Kent. FamilySearch. dd:Aft.1911. 1911 Census.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XW6W-B11]1911 Census. St. Lawrence Intra, Ramsgate, Kent. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-7087|Margarita Eunice Markham]], bp:1879-06-15 South Hayling, Hampshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JQVQ-D5H]South Hayling, Hampshire. FamilySearch. Birth Registration, Kingston, Surrey, 1879 Q2.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2XN8-268]Kingston, Surrey. Birth Registration. 1879 Q2. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-343|Henry Markham]], bn:1824-06-11 bp:1824-08-20 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. F: Painter.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch. br:1825-01-21 St. James, Louth. Infant.St. James, Louth. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-344|Richard Fielden Markham]], bn:1826-04-15 bp:1826-05-22 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. F: Painter.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch. br:1826-09-05 St. James, Louth. Infant.St. James, Louth. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-345|Rebecca Ward Markham]], bn:1827-06-24 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. (Transcript Error ??).Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-7049|Richard Ward Markham]], bn:1827-06-24 bp:1827-07-22 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. F: Painter.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch. 1834 (M): Free School of King Edward VI, Louth: [[Markham-7049|Richard Ward Markham]].[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=W_0VAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA137#v=onepage&q=Markham&f=false]Louth: Old Corporation Records, Being Extracts from the Accounts, Minutes and Memoranda of the Warden and Six Assistants of the Town of Louth and Free School of King Edward VI in Louth, and Other Ancient Documents Relating to the Town. By J.W. Goulding, 1891. Pg. 137. dd:1849 Hull, Yorkshire.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2J9V-9B6]Hull, Yorkshire. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]], Pioneer of Rhodesia (1895), bn:1829-12-06 bp:1829-12-06 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth (F: Painter).Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch. 1837 (C): Free School of King Edward VI, Louth: [[Markham-312|James Fred. Markham]].[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=W_0VAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA138#v=onepage&q=Markham&f=false]Louth: Old Corporation Records, Being Extracts from the Accounts, Minutes and Memoranda of the Warden and Six Assistants of the Town of Louth and Free School of King Edward VI in Louth, and Other Ancient Documents Relating to the Town. By J.W. Goulding, 1891. Pg. 138. dd:1908-09-04 Westward Ho! Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia. 78y, farmer, bn:England, Widower, Informant: [[Markham-340|C.M. Foreman]], daughter, of Westward Ho!, Melsetter.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-ZQZF-7?i=5&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Melsetter Death Notices 1908, Vol. 5. Entry No. 4. FamilySearch. br:1908 Westward Ho! Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia. m1:1858-11-26 St. John's Anglican Church, Pinetown, Natal, to [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Meek]]1, bp:1841-05-26 St. Andrew, Enfield, London. dd:1877-08-08 Greytown, Natal.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7FF-Y?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch. She died 2 weeks after giving birth to twins [[Markham-7044|Agnes Maud Markham]]1 and [[Markham-7045|Henry Melville Markham]]1, who both died 2 and 3 days respectively, after being baptized. [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] is obviously distraught, and his son [[Markham-337|F.E. Markham]] registers the deaths of his brother, sister, and mother that have just died within 15 days of each other. [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] never remarries. In 1895, he is found on Westward Ho! farm in Melsetter, Rhodesia. * [[Space:The_%27Edward%27|Arrived 2nd May 1850 on the barque 'Edward']]Passenger Ship List: [[Space:The_%27Edward%27|The 'Edward']]. of 680 tons, sailing from London on 09-01-1850 and Plymouth, to this port and Bombay; 250 passengers, including [[Markham-312|James F. Markham]], aged 19; the ship departed from Port Natal on May 31st. Arrived Durban 24-03-1850.The Natal Archives (Pietermaritzburg), South Africa. European Immigration (EI), From Vol. 64, Pg (i) & Vol. 73, Pg. 21. Passenger Ship List: [[Space:The_%27Edward%27|The 'Edward']].Passenger Ship List: [[Space:The_%27Edward%27|The 'Edward']]. * 1855-1855: Clerk Of The Peace, Verulam Requests Instructions Re- The Case Of The Zulu Traders Markham And Reid.To be added. * 1858-08-09. Supplements: Jury List of the County of Victoria. 1858-1859. [[Markham-312|MARKHAM, FREDERICK]] Place of abode: Verulam Title, quailty, calling or business: machinist Nature of qualification: Proprietor 12.08.1858: TO SUGAR PLANTERS AND OTHERS. [[Markham-312|J.F. MARKHAM]], VERULAM, VICTORIA. ENGINEER AND MACHINIST. Respectfully announces that he is prepared to erect Steam Engines, Mills, and machinery in general: on Scientific principles and reasonable terms.Natal Mercury: 09.08.1858. * 1858-11-12. From the Marriage Register of St. John's Church, Parish of Pinetown, Natal, South Africa. No. 8: on 26 November 1858, [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]], full age, bachelor, engineer, resident at Verulam, to [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Meek]], spinster, resident at Pine Town, with the consent of her parents, after banns, by James Walton, Minister of St. John's, in the presence of [[Ward-10378|Josh. Ward]] and [[Cutbush-59|Clarissa Ward]].Marriage Register of St. John's Church, Parish of Pinetown, Natal, South Africa. No. 8. * 1858-12-02. MARRIED On Friday, the 26th November, at St. John's Church, Pinetown, by the Rev. James Walton, Mr. [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]], of Verulam, to Miss [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Meek]], of the former place.Natal Mercury: 02.12.1858. * From the 'Natal Mercury' (NM): :* 1860-08-23. JURY LIST, VICTORIA, 1860-1861. [[Markham-337|MARKHAM. FREDERICK]] Place of Abode: Verulam Title, &c: machinist Qualification: proprietor 12.08.1862.Natal Mercury: 23.08.1860, 12.08.1862. :* 1863-09-30. Supplement. Jury List, Victoria, to 30.09.1863: [[Markham-312|Markham, James F.]] Place of abode: Verulam Title. &c.: engineer Qualification: owner. The same entry was found in NM 02.08.1864, Jury List. Victoria County to 30.09.1865: also NM 01.08.1865, Jury List, Victoria County to 30.09.1866: also NM 02.08.1866, Jury List, Victoria County to 30.09.1867.Natal Mercury: 30.09.1863, 02.08.1864, 30.09.1865, 01.08.1865, 30.09.1866, 02.08.1866, 30.09.1867. :* 1871-09-05: 'The Natal Mercury' of Tuesday 5th September 1871: DIED, Markham -- On the 1st September, at her father's residence, Tongaat, Victoria County, [[Markham-660|Grace Eleanor]], the beloved child of Mr. & Mrs. [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]], after two hours illness, aged thirteen months and two days.The Natal Mercury. 1871-09-05. * 1882: [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]]. Application To Introduce Native Labour.National Archives of South Africa (NASA). * A MISSIONARY TO MASHONALAND. Looking back at the spread of the Truth in South Africa during the late 19th century, one is struck by the total absence of news from the Orange Free State. Bro. D.J.C. Laffnie was said to be as well known in that republic as in his own, so that presumably his defection from the Dutch Reformed Church occasioned some comment west of the Drakensberg, but apart from that there is no evidence that the Boers of the Free State were even aware of the existence of Christadelphians. Perhaps the insularity of the Free Staters, proverbial even today, provided no ground for the seed to germinate. Yet in spite of this, some of them were ''called according to His purpose''. Their conversion came about in a truly remarkable way.[http://salbu.co.za/debora/ChristadelphianDebora.html]Christadelphians - The Scandinavian Connection. Pg. ?? * PREACHING THE GOSPEL: To this area within a couple of years came none other than [[Markham-312|Bro. James Markham]], the one-time Methodist preacher who had encountered the Truth in Greytown and who had introduced it to Bro. D.J.C. Laffnie. Towards the end of 1893, [[Markham-312|Bro. Markham]] and Bro. Rees had left Natal to explore the possibilities of Gazaland, as the Portuguese province in that region was called. The next news from [[Markham-312|Bro. Markham]] appeared early in 1900. He had by then moved west to the Melsetter district, arriving there probably about 1895. He had travelled about the area, visiting the isolated farms and leaving copies of the Declaration. In the middle of 1899 he had made another visit to some of his contacts, having made it a matter of earnest request that the Lord... The work of the Truth in Natal in the years before Union seems to have followed a similar pattern to that in other parts of the country, with small congregations and fluctuating fortunes. (Pages 22 to 26 not included in this narrative). Christadelphian literature and the annotated list of Bible passages known as 'The Declaration' were being distributed by zealous members at their own expense in French, Bulgarian, Cape Dutch (Afrikaans), Zulu, Norwegian and German. There were Christadelphians among the first gold-diggers on the Witwatersrand, with the earliest settlers in Rhodesia.[http://salbu.co.za/debora/ChristadelphianDebora.html]Christadelphians - The Scandinavian Connection. Pg. ?? * 1893-01-03: [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] arrived at Chimanimani, Rhodesia, having travelled from Sheba Mine, Barberton, South Africa, through to Beira by ship, having walked from Beira to Melsetter with his sons [[Markham-339|John Sidney Ronald]] & [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]].Rhodesia Pioneer's Society (Byo). * 1895-07-26: Granted Certificate of Right No.1079 to ownership of Fairview, Willow Grove, Westward Ho! & Thornton Farms in Chimanimani district, Rhodesia, by Cecil John Rhodes.To be added. ::[[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] of Westward Ho! farm. Certificate of Right No. 1079. Date: 1895-07-26. ::[[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]] of Fairview farm. ::[[Markham-339|Sidney John Ronald Markham]] of Thornton farm. Title No. 4773. ::[[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]] of Willowgrove farm. * The Protesters by Alan Eyre: (The original article refers to a Robert Markham, but there was never any Robert Markham pioneer that I know of. This article should refer to [[Markham-312|James Frederick 'Fred' Markham]], and have adjusted the article as such!): * In the Southern Hemisphere mention may be made of D.M. Maartens, Adam Shrosbree, and [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]], who in the 1880's and 90's carried of the Way to Afrikaners, South African gold diggers, Zulus and Scandinavians. D.M. Maartens had been dissatisfied with the Dutch Reformed Church when he stumbled across a copy of Elpis Israel in a little town on the Great Karroo. It confirmed what he had learnt by his own studies, and he appealed for a Christadelphian to visit him. The nearest, 150 miles away by ox-wagon made the trip willingly, but the dry season caused the two to wait weeks before there was sufficient water in the Sundays River for the baptism to take place. The event stirred the Boer community for miles around.[http://www.antipas.org/books/protesters/prot_18.html]The Protesters by Alan Eyre. Pg. 186. * Adam Shrosbree learned of the Truth in Tarkastad, a remote rural outpost at that time, and travelled 600 miles to be baptized. He travelled widely over the Eastern Cape and Natal preaching everywhere and, before chaotic conditions were brought about by the Boer War, was tending several small ecclesial groups over a wide area. [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] was a typical roving pioneer of the period, putting his hand to any kind of job and rarely staying still for very long. He had received literature from a Christadelphian in Pietermaritzburg before going north to the hill country where he entered the employ of a Boer farmer. He could not speak Afrikaans, the farmer could speak no English, but over their meals they traded passages of Scripture on subjects such as the nature of man and baptism. One day the farmer asked [[Markham-312|Markham]] if he had ever been baptized, and received a negative reply. Then the two men baptized each other. Afrikaner and Briton then worked together in proclaiming the Faith. Some local Zulus heard of these things and invited them to give an account of their new found hope, which they did to an audience of over a hundred. The local ministers of religion put a stop to these proceedings; all, that is, except one. A Wesleyan Zulu preacher, Ndokoza Sibisa, was profoundly disturbed, and set about studying his Bible diligently to see 'if these things were so'. Ndokoza was baptized and earned the respect of all for his Christ-like character.[http://www.antipas.org/books/protesters/prot_18.html]The Protesters by Alan Eyre. Pg. 186. * 1895-1895: Surveyor-General Versus [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]] for Quitrent on Erf 1, Block B, Greytown (South Africa).To be added. * [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] joined Cecil Rhodes' band of pioneers who were carving large farms out of what is now Rhodesia. He obtained a farm himself (Some 6000 acres), left it in the hands of a manager, and set off on a missionary tour of the whole new colony. He visited every farm in the country and actually canvassed practically the entire white population in the course of his rounds. Behind him, in farms and lonely homes on the veld he left copies of the Declaration and other books and tracts. Then he returned home and like a good farmer waited for the seed to germinate. After a space he set off again and revisited every home where he had left his books. He found generally greater interest in loaves and fishes than in the bread which endureth; but on arriving at a farm about 55 miles south of his home in a locality which even today cannot boast a road, he found an answer to his prayer. An Afrikaner farmer, influential in his neighbourhood, had become convinced of the Way, and he and two other members of the Dutch Reformed Church were baptized.[http://www.antipas.org/books/protesters/prot_18.html]The Protesters by Alan Eyre. Pg. 186. * Westward Ho! Farm is now owned by Border Timbers Ltd, Mutare, Zimbabwe. * The few Moodie trekkers who were still there disliked the fact that the name Melsetter was being taken from them, but they were outnumbered and their spokesman, Dunbar, had quarrelled with the magistrate. After consideration of various sites on Rocklands, Cecilton, and Fairfield, G.F. Heyns' farm Dunbarton was chosen, and [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]] was employed to build the necessary huts.[https://archive.org/stream/TheStoryOfMelsetter/Melsetter#page/n17/mode/2up/search/Markham]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Pg. 19. * Longden was supplied with 50 rifles and 25 000 rounds, and a volunteer Burgher force was organised and troops were stationed in Umtali, from where the Postmaster kept Longden informed of news from other parts of the country. Martin was worried about reports about the war: losses in the Matopo Hills, murders in Mazoe, rising in Fort Victoria; and he asked Longden whether it would not be advisable, if they were true, that all available forces should be concentrated. On Westward Ho! [[Markham-312|Markham]] built an underground tunnel as an escape route from his house.[https://archive.org/stream/TheStoryOfMelsetter/Melsetter#page/n19/mode/2up/search/Markham]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Pg. 21. * [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] built an underground tunnel near his house on Westward Ho farm as an escape route from the Portuguese. He built huts for a township on G.F. Heyns' Farm - Dunbarton, Melsetter, Rhodesia. [--]. * The centre of the settlement gradually become definitely the Chimanimani area, closely filled by the Martin Trek, and the feeling grew that the township should be established there. The original idea was to move the township only, but somehow the name came with the move, and the townlands to the south, which had been pegged out but not developed, became Chipinga. The few Moodie trekkers who were still there disliked the fact that the name Melsetter was being taken from them, but they were outnumbered and their spokesman, Dunbar, had quarrelled with the magistrate. After consideration of various sites on Rocklands, Cecilton and Fairfield, G.F. Heyns' farm Dunbarton was chosen, and [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]] was employed to build the necessary huts.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap2a.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 2a. * An Anglo-Portuguese Convention was drawn up, but until the survey was completed there was uncertainty regarding the exact position of the border line. Orpen fixed points with a view to facilitating future survey operations and became acquainted with the intolerable state of affairs regarding the molestation of natives by the Portuguese and the preposterous claims made by them, and his large experience in land-surveying and the advantage of personal inspection of the country enabled him to form an accurate interpretation of the terms of the Convention. During 1896 an Italian arbitrator, who had never seen the country he was dividing up, was appointed to define the boundary. In the township the administrative offices were functioning satisfactorily, with Twentyman as C.C.'s clerk and Edgar Hoal clerk to the Magistrate at a salary of £20 a month and rations. Longden's duties apparently included those of storekeeper, as [[Markham-312|Markham]] wrote from Westward Ho! asking for paraffin to be sent and the cost to be deducted from pay due to him. It is interesting to note how payment was made. Longden found that, on account of the scarcity of silver in the cash sent to him, he had the greatest difficulty in paying officials. Silver was exceptionally scarce, hut tax was almost exclusively collected in gold and could not be regularly depended on, and he asked for a large proportion of silver to be sent in future.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap3.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 3. * In the township the administrative offices were functioning satisfactorily, with Twentyman as C.C.'s clerk and Edgar Hoal clerk to the Magistrate at a salary of £20 a month and rations. Longden's duties apparently included those of storekeeper, as [[Markham-312|Markham]] wrote from Westward Ho! asking for paraffin to be sent and the cost to be deducted from pay due to him.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap3.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 3. * Anxiety mounted among the scattered farming populace, and Steyn and others from Cashel moved into laager at Elandspruit on Rocklands. This took Martin by surprise: Steyn said that they had been advised to gather in one spot as danger was near and a rising feared, but when Longden reassured him he said that they would be happy to return to their homes. Longden was supplied with 50 rifles and 25 000 rounds, and a volunteer Burgher force was organised and troops were stationed in Umtali, from where the Postmaster kept Longden informed of news from other parts of the country. Martin was worried about reports about the war: losses in the Matopo Hills, murders in Mazoe, rising in Fort Victoria; and he asked Longden whether it would not be advisable, if they were true, that all available forces should be concentrated. On Westward Ho! [[Markham-312|Markham]] built an underground tunnel as an escape route from his house.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap3a.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 3a. * During the Second World War F. Neale transferred his farm Westward Ho! to his godson Neale Murray, then an S.A.A.F. bomber pilot. When he was demobilised Neale spent a year at Fairview learning about farming and conditions here, and when Peggie joined him in 1946 they started farming on Westward Ho!, sold it later to the B.S.A. Co., and settled on Bokkraal, bought from Katie Cilliers, and concentrated on cattle, maize, orchards and tree plantation.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap17.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 17. * The Nyahode river on Westward Ho!, first crossed by a drift and then by a causeway, was for many years a barrier in travelling when the river was frequenfly too deep for weeks on end for normal passenger cars to get through. One evening a family had an alarming crossing: at the approach the river did not look too bad, and they drove in. When the wave in the middle washed right over the headlights the only thing to do was to drive steadily on. The car stalled, luckily well beyond the middle, and all piled out on the lower side of the car and eventually managed to push it through, but it was an unpleasant experience in the dark with the river swirling madly all round.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap20.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 20. * A few unexpected fires started, including two on Nzuzu and Boskatrand, and on 20th September fires started simultaneously on Westward Ho!, Settler and Silverstream, and during the next two weeks there were reports of fires on most days. The Police Reserve was mobilized, units of the R.L.I. and S.A.S. were stationed in the district, helicopter patrols took place daily, and paratroops were dropped at strategic points.[http://www.barbaragoss.com/melsetter/chap20a.html]The Story of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair (1971). Ch. 20a. * FOREMAN (Letter written Jan 1975 to Rhodesia Pioneer's Society, Bulawayo): [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] and his two sons came up to Melsetter from the Sheba Mine at Barberton, South Africa, in 1893. Sons were [[Markham-337|Fred]], [[Markham-339|Sid]] and [[Markham-311|Herbert]]. [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]], nee Markham, came to Rhodesia in 1903, after the death of her husband at Barberton, to settle with her father [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]] who was farming at 'Westward Ho!' at Melsetter. Her family consisted of [[Foreman-641|Cecil]], [[Foreman-645|Eva]] and [[Foreman-643|Gladys Foreman]]. [[Foreman-645|Eva]] and [[Foreman-643|Gladys]] were eventually sent to school in England, but [[Foreman-641|Cecil]] attended Miss Gilson's School which was once the Meredith's Farm in Melsetter. [[Foreman-643|Gladys]] became [[Foreman-643|Mrs. Lottrell]]. [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]] arrived at Fairview Farm at Melsetter, married [[Moodie-88|Elsie Elizabeth Moodie]], daughter of [[Moodie-131|Thomas Moodie]], [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]]2 died in 1901? or 1902? and subsequently married [[Acutt-59|William Acutt]] in 1902. [[Markham-311|Herbert]] married [[Ferreira-241|Kate Ferreira]]. [[Markham-339|Sid]] married girl from England. [[Foreman-645|Eva]] became [[Foreman-645|Mrs. Chambers]]. After leaving Melsetter, [[Foreman-641|Cecil Foreman]] went to Marandellas to live with his [[Markham-659|Aunt]] and her husband who married [[Wrench-11|Phillip Gwynne]]. [[Wrench-11|Mr. Gwynne]] was first in the Police and then opened a store just outside M. and at the same time recruited African Labour for the farmers. Through Mr. Livingstone in Umtali, [[Wrench-11|Mr. Gwynne]] managed to get [[Foreman-641|Cecil]] onto the Railways in Umtali, when the first World War broke out, [[Foreman-641|Cecil]] joined the 2nd Rhod. Regiment and was sent to East Africa, due to Malaria he was sent to South Africa to recouperate and then went over to France to fight. On returning to Rhodesia, he went back to the Railways in Bulawayo where he was employed until his sight began to fail. He is now a widower and lives with his daughter [[Foreman-642|Jean]], now [[Foreman-642|Mrs. Phillips]]. She and her husband have gone to live in Que Que and have taken [[Foreman-641|Cecil Foreman]] with them. NOTE:2 [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]] dd:1941, buried at Westward Ho! Farm, near escape tunnel, Melsetter, Rhodesia.Rhodesia Pioneer's Society (Byo), letter written 1975. * APPENDIX: List of names of men who did not come with any organized Treks and to whom farms were granted: 01. King, L. 02. Kleyn, L. 03. Ballantyne, J. 04. Wilder, G.A. Rev. 05. Bates, H.W. Rev. 06. Human, J.C. 07. Jensen, J.A. 08. Le Roux, P.L. Rev. 09. Moolman, J.N. 10. Moolman, J.J. 11. Du Preez, L.J. 12. Sweetnim, C. 13. Du Pleyrus, H. 14. Bezuidenhout, W.K. 15. Webster, J.E. 16. [[Markham-312|Markham, James Frederick]] 17. [[Markham-311|Markham, Herbert Richard Allan]] 18. [[Markham-339|Markham, John Sidney Ronald]]...Many Treks Made Rhodesia by S.P. Olivier (1957). Pg. 157. * [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]] of Westward Ho!. He was the father of [[Markham-337|F.E. Markham]] of Fairview and [[Markham-339|J.S.R. Markham]] of Thornton and [[Markham-311|H.R.A. Markham]] of Willow Grove (Melsetter, Rhodesia). ............... 12 [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]], Pioneer of Rhodesia (Moodie Trek 1892), and of Fairview Farm, Melsetter. aka: 'Fred'. bp:1859-12-15 Wesleyan Methodist Church Verulam, bn:1859-09-25 Verulam,Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. dd:1941-01-18 Umtali Hospital, Umtali, Rhodesia. * 1941-01-18:dd: Umtali Hospital, Umtali, Rhodesia. Residence: Odzi, 81yrs, bn: Natal, S.A., widower, four children, Occ.: Gold miner. Intended place of burial: Umtali Cemetery.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CDCF-4?i=7&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Umtali Death Notices 1941, Vol. 64. Entry No. 7/41. FamilySearch. * Zimbabwe Death Record: DR 58/142 (7104). Usual place of residence: Odzi. Will: Yes.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CF9P-BK?i=170&cc=1837900]Zimbabwe Death Record: DR 58/142 (7104). * 1941-02-24: Obituary Rhodesia Herald. 1896: Served in Matabele Rebellion. Owned Fairview farm, Melsetter. His name is on the Trekker Monument plaque, Melsetter, which has since been dismantled, and the plaque now rests in the Umtali museum. * Probably the original owner of 'Markhamville' farm near Odzi, Rhodesia. * Chronological History of Greytown: 1886-07: [[Markham-337|Fred Markham]] starts gold rush to Mfongosi.[http://www.greytown.co.za/chrono.htm]Chronological History of Greytown. * Gold mining in Zululand. Goldrush to Mfongosi. In July 1886 [[Markham-312|Fred Markham]] had panned gold at Mfongosi - the river of rushing noises - a remote tributary of the Tugela River in the Nkandla district. Already on 4 August 1886 the Greytown Syndicate had requested permission to erect a battery on the south-east bank of the Mfongosi River. Within a few months of the discovery a mining camp had been established, consisting of residences of every description from ragged patrol tents to sod built shanties. Optimism was such that a regular Diggers' Committee of fifteen members with A.H. Manning as secretary was elected on 25 October 1886, while from the beginning of November 1886 a weekly mail service was instituted from Greytown to the Mfongosi goldfields. This rush had occurred despite a disappointing report released on 30 August 1886 by W.H. Evans of Durban detailing the results of assays he had done on quartz from the main Mfongosi reef, the so-called Markham Reef, and the Ballarat Extension of this reef. After a time, fresh discoveries in the area were made, more mining syndicates were formed and the digger population continued to increase. These mining syndicates were usually formed by groups of individuals from various towns in the Colony of Natal such as Durban, Pietermaritzburg and Greytown and Vryheid in the South African Republic (ZAR), who agreed to pay £2 or £3 cash per month for up to a year. * Developments elsewhere in Zululand: The apparent success of the Mpapala goldfields encouraged other prospectors to search elsewhere for gold or to restart old mines. At Mfongosi the old Phoenix and Markham's Surprise mines were again being worked by a Messrs Evans with crushing commencing in May 1907. In the Nkandla district a Messrs Weir & Delaney were developing a mine at Ntingwe while on the Nkonisa spruit Alexander Dickson and his partner, a Mr. Gunderson, were developing the Dickson reef. By August 1907 the Konisa mine on the Dickson reef was working day and night shifts. Development work was also being undertaken at a mine at Nkunzana in the Nkandla district.[http://dspace.nwu.ac.za/bitstream/handle/10394/5303/No_51%282006%29_Minnaar_A.pdf.txt?sequence=3] * Following the tracks for the rest of the journey made by Eric Schnurr and reinforced by his own drive to 'Tam', Theron shouted to them the story of Zululand gold. He said that the frenzy for finding deposits of gold went back well before the metal was found on the Reef, and that the first gold in Zululand was discovered by a [[Markham-337|Fred Markham]] on the Mfongosi, a tributary on the Thukela river. It started a gold rush. Soon a shantytown had sprung up to house more than three hundred people, a digger's committee was formed and one enterprising soul started a passenger coach mule-service to Greytown. The gold reefs boasted exotic names like Molly's Luck, The Surprise, New Sheba, with two wood-and-iron hotels. It was said that the Gum Tree Hotel boasted Indian waiters, sold gin at four shillings a bottle, and stocked all the latest newspapers.[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=30EzDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT147]Snake in the Signal Box by William Paterson. Ch. 9, Pg. 147-8. * The Moodie Trek Memorial at Melsetter records 21 names, Ashpute H., Baden E., du Plessis E., Hulley R.A., Knox ?., [[Markham-337|Markham F.]], [[Moodie-131|Moodie Thomas]], and his wife, their sons James (Boyce), Thomas, Charles, Malcolm, Benjamin, George, and Duncan, their daughters Harriet and [[Moodie-88|Elizabeth]], Dunbar Moodie and his wife, Oberholster J., and Stiebel G.RHODESIANA: Publication No. 36, March, 1977. Pg. 16. He m1:1894-01-12 being the first marriage in Melsetter, Rhodesia, to [[Moodie-88|Elsie Elizabeth Moodie]], Pioneer of Rhodesia, bp:1878-01-20 Snymanshoek, Bethlehem, OFS, South Africa. dd:1944-12-31 Govt. Hospital (Memorial Hospital), Bulawayo, Rhodesia. br: 1944 Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia, the daughter of [[Moodie-131|Thomas Moodie]], Moodie Trek Leader (1892), Pioneer of Rhodesia. They divorced by 1901. * The Trekker Monument at Chimanimani was erected in memory of members of the Moodie Trek and has since been dismantled by the Zimbabwe government directive (1982) in the process of de-colominization. The plague from this Monument which bears his name (F. Markham) and other members is now held in the National Museum, Mutare, Zimbabwe. * [[Moodie-88|MRS. W. ACUTT]], 1892: Nee [[Moodie-88|Elsie Moodie]]. Daughter of [[Moodie-131|Thomas Moodie]], leader of the Moodie Trek. An interesting account of this journey, written by [[Moodie-88|Mrs. Acutt]], is to be found on pages 152-157 of "Experiences of Rhodesia's Pioneer Women," by Jeannie M. Boggie. [[Moodie-88|Mrs. Acutt]]'s first husband was [[Markham-337|Frederick Markham]], whom she married on 1/12/94. This was the first marriage in Melsetter. After the death(/divorce) of [[Markham-337|Mr. Markham]] she married William Acutt in 1902. See pp. 156 and 160 of "A Study in Pioneering - the Moodies of Melsetter", by Edmund H. Burrows. [[Moodie-88|Mrs. Acutt]] died in Bulawayo on 13/12/44. Information from Mrs. Czarnikow, Bulawayo. On Roll of Women Pioneers.Rhodesia's Pioneer Women (1859-1896) by Jessie M. Lloyd. Pg. 1. * ('After the death of Mr. Markham'): They divorced by 1901, and he d:1941. * The new year 1894 began with bright days and clear skies, a pleasant change from the heavy rains of November and December. In January of that year there was an occasion of great rejoicing when the first marriage, that of [[Moodie-131|Thomas Moodie]]'s daughter, [[Moodie-88|Elsie]], took place in Melsetter. The Rev. Wilder had come over from the newly established Mt. Silinda Mission to perform the ceremony. There were no less than ten ladies present! A big reception was held, there was target shooting and sport, and the eighteen competitors had a grand time.Many Treks Made Rhodesia by S.P. Olivier. Pg. 103. * [[Moodie-88|Mrs. Acutt]]'s recollections of the Moodie Trek. (To be added).Experiences of Rhodesia's Pioneer Women by Jeannie M. Boggie. Pg. 152-157. ............... m1 of [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]]: m1:1894-01-01, Melsetter, Rhodesia, to [[Moodie-88|Elsie Elizabeth Moodie]]. The first recorded marriage in Melsetter, Rhodesia. Divorced before 1901. Elsie Acutt Avenue in Ilanda Bulawayo probably named after her (or her daughter ?). Occupation: Nurse. 'A big woman'. Blind in left eye. Had 10 (18?) kids & married 3 times. Zimbabwe Death Record (DR).[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVBQ-HTLQ]Zimbabwe Death Notices, Bulawayo Death Notices 1945, Vol. 76. Image 8/649. FamilySearch. Of 99a Grey Street, Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
................ 13 [[Markham-648|Eva Cecillia Markham]], Pioneer of Rhodesia (1894), bp:1894 Waterfall Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia. br:1896 Westward Ho! Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia. Pioneer of Rhodesia. EVA MARKHAM, 1896 or earlier: Eva Cecillia Markham died of malarial fever on 21/3/96 at Westward Ho Farm, Melsetter, aged one year, six months. She was the daughter of Frederick Edmund Markham and Elsie Elizabeth Markham. Information, the Deaths Register, National Archives, Salisbury.Rhodesia's Pioneer Women (1859-1896) by Jessie M. Lloyd. Pg. 62.Deaths Register, National Archives, Salisbury.
................ 13 [[Markham-649|Thomas Duncan Moodie Markham]], bn:c.1895 Salisbury, Rhodesia. 866 PTE. [[Markham-649|T.D.M. MARKHAM]], 2nd Rhodesia Regt. (WW1): 1914-20 British War Medal, 1914-19 Victory Medal. M.I.C.: British East Africa, German East Africa, Rhodesia, Nyasaland and Uganda, 1915-03-15. [[Markham-649|Thomas Duncan Moodie Markham]]. WW1: Attested: 1914-12-15. Wounded: 1916-03-12.[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=7Ua-BAAAQBAJ&pg=PA119&lpg=PA119]The 2nd Rhodesia Regiment in East Africa by Lieut-Col A.E. Capell. Pg. 119. m1. \\.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7088|Duncan Markham]]. Was living in Harare, Zimbabwe.
............... m2 of [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]]: m2:1906 (Q3), Luton, Bedfordshire, England,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2D88-4M7]FamilySearch: England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837-2005. to Florence Jane Buckley, bp:1872-11-03 Luton, Bedfordshire. dd:1926-09-18 Salisbury Hospital, Salisbury, Rhodesia. br:1926 Salisbury Cemetery, Salisbury, Rhodesia. 48y, bn:England, married.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-C81H-Q?i=251&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Salisbury Death Notices 1926, Vol. 28. Entry No. 248. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-651|Myra Edith Markham]], bp:c.1894-98 Rhodesia. br:(P:??), was living in Durban. m1. [[Southey-48|Ernest Robert Southey]], bp:c.1881 Graaff Reniet. dd:1941-08-16 Gatooma, Rhodesia. Residence: Thistle Etna Mine, Eiffel Flats. 60y, bn: Graaff Reniet, South Africa, married, occ.: Surface overseer, br:Gatooma Cemetery, Gatooma, Rhodesia.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CDQW-F?i=130&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Gatooma Death Notices 1941, Vol. 63. Entry No. 129/41. FamilySearch.
.................. 14 [[Southey-458|Ernest Clive Southey]], bp:c.1913. dd:1913-12-26 Salisbury, Rhodesia. Residence: Linnet? Mine, PoD: Linnet? Mine, Informant: [[Southey-48|E.R. Southey]] (Father). 7.5m.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-ZSFF-9?i=14&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Salisbury Death Notices 1914, Vol. 12. Entry No. 12. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-652|Arthur Edmund Markham]], bp:c.1908 Melsetter, Rhodesia. dd:1911-04-18 Imbiza Valley, Penhalonga, Rhodesia. br:1911 Penhalonga Cemetery, Penhalonga, Rhodesia. Drowned aged 2y 5m at Imbiza Valley, Penhalonga, Rhodesia. bn: Melsetter. Informant: [[Markham-337|F.E. Markham]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-ZS9J-69?i=9&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Umtali Death Notices 1911, Vol. 8. Entry No. 8. FamilySearch.
................ 13 [[Markham-653|Florence Eva Markham]], bn:1904. m1. ? Thompson.
.................. 14 Dr. Richard Thompson.
................ 13 [[Markham-654|Frederick George Markham]], bn:1911-11-28 Rhodesia. m1. Beatrice Gertrude van Heerden, bn:c.1925. Note: Beatrice Mines in Rhodesia is named after her (So they say!). Divorced.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7089|Arthur Edmund Markham]], bn:<1953.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7090|Eva Florence 'Inga' Markham]], bn:1953 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. ? De Witt, Anaethetist, Canada.
.................... 15 ? De Witt, bn:1982 Cape Town.
.................... 15 Sammi De Witt, bn:1985 Cape Town.
................ m2 of [[Markham-654|Frederick George Markham]]: Mary-Ann \\. Divorced.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7091|David Markham]].
.................. 14 [[Markham-7092|Angela Markham]].
................ m3 of [[Markham-654|Frederick George Markham]]: Heather Jean Holland, bn:c.1915. br:Living in Calitzdorp, Cape.
................ m2 of [[Moodie-88|Elsie Elizabeth Moodie]]: Walter Frederick Acutt, bn:1874 of Wolverhampton, Enlgand, dd:1922-02-10 Memorial Hospital, Bulawayo, Rhodesia, br:1922 Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
.................... 01 Elsie Elizabeth Acutt, bn:1909-01-24. m1. to L.L. Rickards, bn:c.1905. Note: (Lawrence Lambert Rickards Acutt). They had:
.......................... 01 ? Rickards.
.......................... 02 ? Rickards.
.......................... m2 of Elsie Elizabeth Acutt: ? Hopkins.
.................... 02 Florence Theodora 'Sadie' Acutt, bn:1903-12-06. m1. ? Czarnikow.
.................... 03 Lawrence Lambert Rickards Acutt, bn:1905.
.................... 04 Cecilia Moodie Acutt. bn:c.1905. dd:1944. br: . m1. William John Nielson, bn:c.1905. 3k.
.................... 05 William Walter 'Chummy' Acutt, bn:1907-06-03. m1. Nancy Sinclair, bn:c.1910.
.......................... 01 Dunbar Patrick Acutt, bn:1943-03-03.
.......................... 02 Barry John Acutt, bn:1954-03-10.
.................... 06 Sarah Johanna Magdeline 'Stevie' Acutt, bn:1911-02-18. br:. sp. m1. Arthur Henry Lake, bn:c.1910.
.................... 07 John French Donald 'Bull' Acutt, bn:1915-07-13 Rhodesia. dd:1968-08-16 Salisbury Hospital, Salisbury, Rhodesia. br:Cremated, Warren Hills, Salisbury. m1. Evelyn Marnewick, b:c.1916 Rhodesia. dd:1949-07-17 Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
.......................... 01 William Walter Robin Acutt, bn:1939-03-28.
.......................... 02 Avis Claudine Acutt, bn:1942-08-19. m1. ? Rochester, bn:c.1940.
.......................... m2 of John French Donald Acutt: \\.
.................... 08 Emily Gertrude Acutt, bn:1916-10-03. m1. Robert Kendal Thompson, bn:c.1915.
.......................... 01 ? Thompson b:Aft.1947.
............... 12 [[Markham-338|Annie Elizabeth Markham]], bp:1861-09-11, Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, bn:1861-03-07 Verulam,Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. br:1939 Old Cemetery, Ermelo, Old Cemetery, Ermelo, Mpumalanga, South Africa. Headstone: In Loving Memory of Our Mother Annie Elizabeth Melville Born 7-3-1861 Verulam Died 17-2-1939 Ermelo. The Lord is my Shepherd.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1647400]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in South Africa (Photos).
.................. m1 of [[Markham-338|Annie Elizabeth Markham]]: [[Melville-731|John Allison Melville]], m1:1880-10-04, in the house of [[Wardell-|Isaac Wardell]], Gelukstad, Natal, recorded in St. James Church, Greytown, Natal.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DZR4-HFT?i=734&cc=2063749]South Africa, Natal Province Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. Film #004236411. Image: 735/739.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6P9W-K3K]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DTX9-TDQ]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. FamilySearch., bp:1858-09-21 St. Peter's Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, bn:1854-11-16 (Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, England), son of [[Foley-1211|John]] and [[Allison-1805|Marion Melville]], of Pietermaritzburg, clerk.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9TWY-388?i=30&cc=1468076]South Africa, St. Peter's Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa. Baptisms. FamilySearch. * [[Melville-731|John Allison Melville]] bp:1858-09-21 St. Peter's Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, the same day as his sister [[Melville-1798|Catherine Nelly Melville]], bn:1858-06-21 Pietermaritzburg, Natal.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9TWY-388?i=30&cc=1468076]South Africa, St. Peter's Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa. Baptisms. FamilySearch. * 1902-01-00: Living in Froomberg Terrace, 'Dean's Lane' (possibly Deane Street) in Pietermaritzburg. * Surname is Melville in St. James Church, Greytown, Natal, registers. Saddler of Greytown, Natal. * Headstone: In Loving Memory of [[Melville-731|John Allison Melville]] Born Biggleswade, England 16th Nov. 1854 Died 14th Jan. 1923 R.I.P. (Old Cemetery, Ermelo, Mpumalanga, South Africa).[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1647397]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in South Africa (Photos). ................ 13 [[Melville-|Marion Melville]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Melville-|Grace Elizabeth Melville]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Melville-|John Frederick Melville]], bn:10-1884-10-00 Transvaal, South Africa. dd:1945-03-02 br:1945-03-00 Old Cemetery, Ermelo, South Africa. J.F. Melville MRT 1945.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1645845]EGGSA: Graves. Soldier.
................ 13 [[Melville-|Annie Catherine Melville]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Melville-|Albert Melville]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Melville-|Percy Melville]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Melville-|Clarissa Maud Melville]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Melville-|Florence Gertrude Melville]], bn: South Africa.
............... 12 [[Markham-339|James Sidney Ronald 'Sid' Markham]], Rhodesian Pioneer (1894), and of Thornton Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia (Title No. 4773). bp:1863-18-02 Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal, bn:1862-11-01 Verulam.Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Victoria, Natal. dd:1931-01-16 Amandas, Concession, Rhodesia. 63y, bn: Natal, married, Occ.: Contractor (Building), Informant: [[Markham-649|T. Markham]], nephew causing burial, of Municipal Sanitary Farm, Salisbury. br:1931 Salisbury Cemetery, Salisbury, Rhodesia.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CDN9-7?i=30&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Salisbury Death Notices 1931, Vol. 38. Entry No. 30/1931. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-C69H-TH?i=31&cc=1837900]Zimbabwe Death Registers, 1929-1931, Vol. 38, Pg. 7. Image: 32/280. Zimbabwe Death Record (DR 38/7). Farmer at Rockwood Farm, Mazoe, Rhodesia. As a Stone Mason/Builder, he built the Anglican Church in Greytown, South Africa.To be added. m1:1905(Q1) St. Martin in the Field, Luton, Bedfordshire, to [[Buckley-1132|Emma Maria Buckley]], bn:1879 Luton, Bedfordshire. dd:1952-04-09, General Hospital, Bulawayo, Rhodesia. Residence: 7 Newall Ave, Bulawayo, widow, 4 children, retired.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CNTK-L?i=349&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Bulawayo Death Notices 1952, Vol. 114. Entry No. 346/52. FamilySearch. br:1952 Grave No. 810, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia. Headstone: IN LOVING MEMORY OF, EMMA MARIA MARKHAM, BORN BEDFORDSHIRE, DIED 9TH APRIL 1952.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1773158]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in Zimbabwe (Photos). Her grave is very near the grave of [[Markham-697|Henry Markham]] who dd:1908-05-31, unrelated.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-ZQ6X-L?i=64&cc=1838530]FamilySearch. To be added.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1773154]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in Zimbabwe (Photos). She was a Florist in Luton, Bedfordshire, England. 1905: [[Markham-339|James Sidney Ronald Markham]] and [[Buckley-1132|Emma Maria Buckley]], [[Buckley-1188|Ellen Eliza Buckley]] and [[Hudson-4122|Arthur Hudson]], all registered their marriages on the same day.Freebmd. m. (Lic.).[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:267C-SPW]FamilySearch (m. Lic.).
................ 13 [[Markham-666|Sidney John 'Jack' Markham]], bn:1906-04-07 Umtali, Rhodesia. m1. Daphne Berry, bn:1914-03-24 Selukwe, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7063|Joan Winifred Markham]], bn:1939-11-24 Umtali, Rhodesia. m1. Frank Wehner.
.................... 15 Lauren Susan Wehner.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7064|Judy Anne Markham]], bn:1942-08-06 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Alastair Bruce-Brand.
.................... 15 Paul John Bruce-Brand, bn:1967-06-22 Marandellas, Zimbabwe. m1. Susan Poole.
..................... 16 Jason Bruce-Brand.
..................... 16 Daniel Bruce-Brand.
.................... 15 Robert Alan Bruce-Brand, bn:1969-10-05 Harare, Zimbabwe.
.................... 15 Janet Oriel Bruce-Brand, bn:1971-09-19 Pretoria.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7065|Peter Graham Markham]], bn:1944-10-21 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Helen Botha.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7066|Nicola Markham]].
.................... 15 [[Markham-7067|Michelle Markham]].
.................. 14 [[Markham-7068|John Buckley Markham]], bn:1946-09-06 Rhodesia. m1. Pamela-Ann Scott-Rodger, bn:1948-05-24.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7069|Carol Markham]], of Ballito Bay, South Africa.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7070|Graeme Markham]].
................ 13 [[Markham-675|Alfred Arthur Buckley 'Alf' Markham]], bn:1908-08-12 Luton, Bedfordshire. br:Cemetery and Crematorium, Stellawood, Durban, Natal. m1. Myrtle Parrott, bn:1911-05-13 (sp). br:Cemetery and Crematorium, Stellawood, Durban, Natal. * Immigrants to South Africa. Witty, artistic, gardener. Bought his own farm in Inyanga. Farmed at Juliasdale, Inyanga, Rhodesia. Draughtsman. No known children (sp). * Grave of [[Markham-675|Alfred Markham]] and [[Parrott-527|Myrtle Markham]], Stellawood Cemetery, Durban, Natal, South Africa.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=2758940]eGGSA Library. Gravestones in South Africa (Photos). In Loving Memory of [[Markham-675|Alfred Markham]]. 12.8.1908-23.8.1984. [[Parrott-527|Myrtle Markham]] 13.5.1911-30.12.1989. ................ 13 [[Markham-676|Roland Abbott Markham]], bn:1911-01-07 Luton, Bedfordshire. m1. Ruth Victoria Bulman Webster, bn:1919-07-28 Ladysmith, Natal.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7071|Lorna Joy Markham]], bn:1940-12-12 Fort Victoria, Zimbabwe. m1. Adrian Maytham.
.................... 15 Cheryl Gay Maytham, bn:1964-09-28 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Colleen Tracy Maytham, bn:1967-05-03 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Russell Dold Maytham, bn:1969-01-24 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7072|Hazel Mary Markham]], bn:1943-09-17 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Lynton Delaney, bn:c.1940.
.................... 15 Fern Tracey Delaney, bn:1969-12-10 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Ashley Kim Delaney, bn:1972-05-17 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7073|Valerie Ruth 'Val' Markham]], bn:1947-04-02 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Johannes 'Hans' van der Heiden.
.................... 15 Tammy Ruth van der Heiden, bn:1971-11-06 Umtali, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Craig Anton van der Heiden, bn:1973-02-01 Fort Victoria, Rhodesia.
................ 13 [[Markham-680|Ellen Winifred 'Nellie' Markham]], bn: Umtali, Rhodesia. br:1969 Natal, m1. John Norman 'Pinkie' Symons.
.................. 14 Dorene Symons. Studied music at Trinity College, London. m1. Bruce Gloag. Architect.
.................... 15 ? Gloag.
.................... 15 ? Gloag.
.................... 15 ? Gloag.
............... 12 [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Markham]], aka: 'Evelyn', bp:1865-03-26 Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal, bn:1865-02-26 Tongaat Village.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. * 1895: Staying in Barberton, South Africa. * 1889-05-16: [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Markham]], 22y, spinster, m1:1889-05-16 Inkandhle, Natal, South Africa, [[Foreman-639|Josiah Watson Foreman]], 27, bachelor, Prospector, Residence: Inkunyana, after banns, (Witnesses: [[Markham-659|Emily Markham]]),[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-67C3-QRY]South Africa, Natal Province Civil Marriages, 1845-1955 004236439. FamilySearch.South Africa Civil Registration (Marriages), Natal, 1845-1899. Items 1-2. No. 13675-13738. 1899. Norwegian Mission Stations in Zululand Miscellaneous Nos. 1853-1898. Pg. 92. Image 185/746. * [[Foreman-639|Josiah Watson Foreman]], bn:1862, dd:1898-03-05 br:1898-03-00 Barberton, South Africa. Death Notice: [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]], bn:Durham, England, aged: 36y, Occ.: Mine worker, married. DoD: 5th March 1898, Sheba Mine. Will: Yes. Children: [[Foreman-643|Gladdie Foreman]], [[Foreman-645|Eveline Foreman]], [[Foreman-641|Thistle Foreman]] (Cecil), [[Foreman-644|Josia Foreman]] (Josiah).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS36-W9XN-3]South Africa, Transvaal, Probate Records from the Master of the Supreme Court, 1869-1958. Film#: 007805601. Image: 487/950. [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]] (Death Notice). FamilySearch. Birth Registration.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:26BP-437]England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008. [[Foreman-639|Josiah Foreman]]. FamilySearch. 1871 Census (UK).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VB8W-17T]England and Wales Census, 1871. [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]]. FamilySearch. 1881 Census (UK).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q271-WNT4]England and Wales Census, 1881. [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]]. FamilySearch. 1891 Census (UK).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:WJ1T-PMM]England and Wales Census, 1891. FamilySearch. 1901 Census (UK). [[Foreman-645|Mary E. Foreman]], Grand Child, Female, 8y.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XSHT-865]England and Wales Census, 1901. FamilySearch. 1911 Census (UK).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XWHR-27J]England and Wales Census, 1911. FamilySearch. * This is the last Will and Testament of me [[Foreman-639|Josiah Foreman]] of the De Kaap Gold Fields. I do hereby revoke, annul and make void all wills condicils and other testamentary acts heretofor make and executed by me, and I declare that the same shall henceforth be of no force or effect whatsoever. I hereby nominate, institute and appoint [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]] my true and lawful Wife to be the sole and universal heir of all the estate and effects which shall or may be left by me after my death, whether moveable or unimoveable and of what natural or Kind soever and wherever the same may be in possession eversince? remainder or expectancy, nothing expected. I declare to nominate and appoint the said [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]] to be the executor of this my will and administrator of my estate and effects hereby giving and granting unto her all such power and authority as are required or allowed in law and especially those of assumptions, substitutions, and surrogations. I declare my will to be that the executor of this my Will and Testament shall not be required to lod? with the Orphan Master of this State an inventory of my estate and effects. I reserve to myself the power from time to time, and at all times hereafter to make all such alterations in or additions to this Will, as I shall think be either by a separate act or at the foot be desiring that all such alterations or additions so made under my own signature shall be held valid and effectual as if they had been inserted herein. I declare that this writing contains my last Will and Testament and I desire that it may have effect as such or as condicil or otherwise in such manner as may be found to consist with law. This done and signed by me the testator in the presence of the subscribing witnesses who in my presence and in the presence of each other and being present at the same time have hereunto subscribed their names at the Sheba Gold Mining Company, De Kaap Gold Fields this the First day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety six (1896-11-01). As witnesses: Spencer? Lillow?, Richard James Ravenswood?, [[Foreman-639|Josiah Foreman]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS36-W9NN-5]South Africa, Transvaal, Probate Records from the Master of the Supreme Court, 1869-1958. Film#: 007805601. Image: 488/950. [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]] (Death Notice/Will). FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS36-W9XY-L]South Africa, Transvaal, Probate Records from the Master of the Supreme Court, 1869-1958. Film#: 007805601. Image: 489/950. [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]] (Death Notice/Will). FamilySearch. Also reference to Melsetter, Rhodesia.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS36-W9XY-L]South Africa, Transvaal, Probate Records from the Master of the Supreme Court, 1869-1958. Film#: 007805601. Image: 489/950. [[Foreman-639|Josiah W. Foreman]] (Death Notice/Will). FamilySearch. * 1896-11-01: Will date. It is maybe unlikely [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]] arrived in Melsetter, Rhodesia, before the end of 1896. The cut off date for Pioneers is 1896-12-31. * She ([[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]]) came to Rhodesia to join her father in 1893, [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]], who was farming at Westward Ho!, after the death of her husband at Barberton. Her family consisted of Cecil, Eva & Gladys. Eva & Gladys were eventually sent to school in England, but Cecil went to Miss Gilson's school which was on the Meredith's farm in Melsetter.The Pioneers Society Records (Byo). * 1903-01-03: [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]] arrived in Rhodesia after death of husband at Barberton, South Africa (dd:1898-03-05).The Pioneers Society Records (Byo). ??. * 1909-06-17: Death Record: Registration.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-ZQNB-C]Zimbabwe Death Notices. Melsetter Death Notices, 1909, Vol. 6. Entry No. 2. Image 4/8. FamilySearch. [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]]: Residence: 'Westward Ho' farm, Melsetter. Age: 42y.? White, bn: Greytown (Verulam), Natal. Widowed. dd:1909-06-09, 'Westward Ho', Melsetter. Intended Place of Burial: 'Westward Ho', Melsetter. Cause of Death: Cardiac failure, vascular disease of heart. Doctor: William George Rose. Number of children: 4. Informant: [[Foreman-645|Mary Eveline Foreman]], daughter of 'Westward Ho', Melsetter. * 1909-07-12: Death Record: DR 11/191 (Index).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CN9S-W1]Zimbabwe Death Registers, 1908-1910, Vol. 11. Index. Image 7/295. FamilySearch. Death Record: DR 11/191.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CN9M-52]Zimbabwe Death Registers, 1908-1910, Vol. 11. Image 234/.295. FamilySearch. [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Foreman]], bn: Greytown (Verualm), Natal. Nationality: English. Parents: [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]], deceased, and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], deceased. Age: 42y? 3m. Widow. Pre-deceased spouse: [[Foreman-639|Josiah Watson Foreman]], dd:1898-03-05. dd:1909-06-09 at Westward Ho farm, Melsetter. Children of Deceased: [[Foreman-643|Gladys Maud Foreman]], bn:1890-03-28. [[Foreman-645|Mary Eveline Foreman]], bn:1892-07-28. [[Foreman-641|Cecil Markham Foreman]], bn:1895-04-26. [[Foreman-644|Josiah Frederick Thomas Foreman]], bn:1897-10-06. :: 1909-07-12: Signed by her daughter [[Foreman-645|Mary Eveline Foreman]] at 'The Rockery', Melsetter. :: 1909-07-17: Inventory filed. :: 1909-07-19: [[Luttrell-1298|Sidney P. Luttrell]] of Melsetter, appointed Curator Bonis. :: Edict published in Gazette of 1909-07-23 calling a meeting of Next of Kin, before the Magistrate, Melsetter on 1909-09-01. :: 1909-09-18: [[Wrench-11|Philip Gwynne]] (Marandellas) and [[Luttrell-1298|Sidney Philip Luttrell]] (Melsetter), appointed Joint Executors Dative, and Tutors Dative, to the minor children. :: 1912-10-10: Notice to file account to [[Wrench-11|P. Gwynne]], Marandellas. :: 1913-11-13: Account filed. * 1909-06-00: Buried near escape tunnel of house on Westward Ho! Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia.To be added. ................ 13 [[Foreman-643|Gladys Maud Foreman]], bn:1890-03-28 Queenstown, Cape Province.
................ m1 of [[Foreman-643|Gladys Maud Foreman]]: Roger Harold Aston.
................ m2 of [[Foreman-643|Gladys Maud Foreman]]: [[Luttrell-1298|Sidney Phillip Luttrell]]. * DR: [[Luttrell-1298|Sidney Phillip Luttrell]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CXSC-X5]Zimbabwe Death Notices: Que Que Death Notices 1928, Vol. 31. Entry No. 2. Image 3/10. FamilySearch. Residence: Que Que. Age: 47y. Race: European, India. Married. Occ.: Gold miner. DoD: 1928-03-19 at Que Que. Intended Place of Burial: Que Que Cemetery. Cause of Death: Accidental explosion of detonation of dynamite. Duration: some hours. Medical Man: James Davey. Registered: 1928-03-23 at Que Que. ................ 13 [[Foreman-645|Mary Eveline 'Eva' Foreman]], bn:1892-07-28 Barberton, South Africa. dd:1976-05-21. Residence: Dorothy Duncan Centre, 3 Cecil Rd, Greendale. 83y, bn: South Africa, widow, PoD: Andrew Fleming Hospital, Salisbury, Rhodesia, Wareen Hills Crematorium, Salisbury.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CFJR-Q?i=184&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Salisbury Death Notices 1976, Vol. 865. Entry No. 382/76. FamilySearch. m1. Walter Chambers dd:<1976 Elizabethville, Belgian Congo.
.................. 14 Noel Lawrence Chambers.
.................... 15 Louise Chambers.
.................... 15 Heather Chambers.
.................... 15 Beryl Chambers.
.................... 15 Alister Grant Chambers.
.................. 14 ? Chambers m1. ? Burmeister.
................ 13 [[Foreman-641|Cecil Markham Foreman]], bn:1895-04-26 Barberton, Transvaal (Mother: [[Markham-340|Evelyn Markham]], dd:1975-05-06 26 Marionville Avenue, Que Que, Rhodesia. 80y, retired, West Park Crematorium Bulawayo, Residence: 56 Rhodes Highway, Que Que, Rhodesia.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CN9S-JT?i=154&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Que Que Death Notices 1975, Vol. 774. Entry No. 155/75. FamilySearch. m1:1932-06-04 Bulawayo, Rhodesia, to Lilian Agnes Vincent, bn: East London, South Africa. dd:1970-01-01 Central Hospital, Bulawayo, Residence: 14+15 Ansam Court, Fort Street, Bulawayo, Rhodesia, 66y, married, 1 child, cremated at West Park Crematorium. DR: B6/70.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-8PW4-1?i=1&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Bulawayo Death Notices 1970, Vol. 334. Entry No. 2/70. FamilySearch.
.................. 14 Jeannette Lilian Foreman, bn:1928-06-09 Rhodesia. dd:1999-07-20 Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.
.................. m1 of Jeannette Lilian Foreman: ? Olsen.
.................. m2 of Jeannette Lilian Foreman: Roy George Phillips, bn:1939-07-10 Que Que, Rhodesia. br:[http://www.geni.com/people/Roy-Phillips/6000000025099486331]
................ 13 Josiah Frederick Thomas Foreman, bn:1897-10-06. br:1954-11-19 Grave No. 733, Sec B Anglican, Aylmer May Cemetery, Lusaka, Zambia.
............... 12 [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]], bp:1868-03-15 Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal; bn:1867-09-11 Tongaat Village, Natal.Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal. dd:1937-08-21 Mt. Selinda (Melsetter), Rhodesia. br:1937 Excelsion Farm, Chipinga, Rhodesia. 62y 11m, bn:Natal, divorced, 5 children, retired builder and contractor. Intended place of burial: Mt. Selinda (Melsetter), Rhodesia. Dr. W.H. Willis present at death.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-C69Z-2J?i=116&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Umtali Death Notices 1937, Vol. 52. Entry No. 113/37. FamilySearch. Zimbabwe Death Record (DR 50/139).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CF9J-T9?i=171&cc=1837900]Zimbabwe Death Record (DR 50/139). FamilySearch.
............... m1 of [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]]: [[Dean-|Harriett Louisa Dean]], m1:1896-02-05 Christ Church, Addington, Durban, South Africa. Marriage probably annulled. Archives mispelt her surname as Drau. * Marriage Entry: [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]] and [[Dean-|Harriett Louisa Dean]].[https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-266-11031-146810-16]FamilySearch. (m).[https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-267-12386-100932-59]FamilySearch. (m). * Microfilm #1259217: Marriage Registers: Natal: 1895-1896: Entry #9493 (Archive entry #). Entry #142 (Church registry #). Husband: [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]], Full Age, Bachelor, Fireman, residing Durban. Wife: [[Dean-|Harriet Louisa DRAU (Dean)]], Full, Spinster. Date of Marriage: May 2, 1896. Place: Christ Church, Addington, by me, William Copeland, Incumbent of S. Thomas?. Witnesses: Geo.? Simpkins, [[Williamson-|Rosa Edwina? Williamson]], Percival Grady? Noel. Signed by Alfred Ikin, Rector of Christ Church, Addington. * Family story by [[Markham-|Margaret Elizabeth Markham]] (Daughter). "[[Markham-|H.R.A. Markham]] was in the BSA Police at time, and married a lady whose name was [[Dean-|Dean]]. He had not had sex with her before marriage, and on the wedding night she told him she was already pregnant to another man. The marriage was not consumated, and he commenced divorce proceedings the next day." The marriage was apparently annulled. ............... m2 of [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan Markham]]: [[Ferreira-|Catharina Bartholina Elizabetha 'Kate' Ferreira]], Pioneer of Rhodesia, m2/m1:c.1907; bp:1886-11-26 Cradock, Cape Province. dd:1967-03-07 General Hospital, Bulawayo, Rhodesia. 80y, bn:South Africa, carcinoma of colon. Divorced.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-8LS7-X8?i=104&cc=1838530]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976 Bulawayo Death Notices 1967, Vol. 171. Entry No. 95/67. FamilySearch. br:1967 Grave No. 1852, Pioneer Section, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1773168]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in Zimbabwe (Photos). They did divorce. MRS. MARKHAM, 1895: Nee Katherina Ferreira. Arrived with the Henry-Steyn Trek. A [[Moodie-88|Mrs. Markham]] gave birth to a baby which died in the Umtali laager. P. 124 "Experiences of Rhodesia's Pioneer Women" (Mrs. Boggie). On Roll of Women Pioneers.Rhodesia's Pioneer Women (1859-1896) by Jessie M. Lloyd. Pg. 62.
................ 13 [[Markham-7157|Allan Frederick Markham]], bn:1908-02-25 Umtali, Rhodesia. br:1977 Grave 1420C, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
................ m1 of [[Markham-7157|Allan Frederick Markham]]: m1:c.1937, Nora Helling, bn:1913 of South Africa. br:1940 Grave No. 780, General Two Section, Bulawayo Athlone Cemetery, Rhodesia. Headstone: 'IN LOVING MEMORY OF, NORA MARKHAM, BORN HELLING, DIED July 9 1940, AGED 28 YEARS, GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN, DEAR, TILL WE MEET AGAIN'.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1773158]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in Zimbabwe (Photos).
.................. 14 [[Markham-7158|Faye Nora Markham]], bn:1938-02-13 Umtali, Rhodesia.
.................. m1 of [[Markham-7158|Faye Nora Markham]]: m1:1960-03-26 West Clandon, Surrey, England, to Peter Donald Symington, bn:1935-05-09 London, dd:1982-07-21 Pateley Bridge, North Yorkshire, England.
.................... 15 Nicola Louise Symington, bn:1963-06-07 Durham, England.
.................... 15 Graeme Ross Symington, bn:1965-06-09 Sedgefield, Durham, England. m1. Sue \\.
..................... 16 ? Symington.
.................. m2 of [[Markham-7158|Faye Nora Markham]]: m2:1985-10-05, David Finnemore, bn:1941-05-24. Widower.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7167|? Markham]], bn:1940-07-09. Ectopic pregnancy: Died at birth with mother.
................ m2 of [[Markham-7157|Allan Frederick Markham]]: m2:1947-08-30 Rhodesia, Norma Dulcie Brislin, bn:1920-02-21 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. (Bruce Brislin; June Giles).
.................. 14 [[Markham-331|Allan Norman 'Rusty' Markham]], bn:1960-05-19 Choma, Zambia. m1. Louise Christine Winsmore Beaumont, bn:1956-03-27.
.................... 15 [[Markham-|Lily Anne Winsmore Markham]], bn:1998-05-15 Machynlleth, Wales.
.................... 15 [[Markham-|Lyon Fredrick Markham]], bn:1991-05-23 Machynlleth, Wales. m1. Amy Louise Moore, bn: Of Frome, Wiltshire, England.
..................... 16 [[Markham-|Lily May Louise Markham]], bn:2012-04-12 Bath, England.
................ 13 [[Markham-7159|Maria Alice Louise Markham]], bn:1910-09-12 Chimanimani, Rhodesia. br:Aft. 1980 Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. m1:1931-02-25 to Stephanus Gauche, bn:1898-03-29 Heidelburg, South Africa. br:1981-82 Greendale Cemetery, Harare, Zimbabwe.
.................. 14 Stephanus Allan Gauche, bn:1931-12-15 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Suzanne Joyce Greyling, bn:1939-09-09 Boksburg, South Africa.
.................... 15 Adele Sharlene Gauche, bn:1964-02-21 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Yvette Angela Gauche, bn:1965-11-05 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 Jan Harm Gauche, bn:1933-04-01 Klerksdorp, South Africa. br: DR 33/132. m1. Gillian Rosamund Luffman, bn:1941-06-17 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Sharon Merle Gauche, bn:1962-04-07 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Russell Dunbar Armstrong.
..................... 16 Kerry Lynn Armstrong, bn:1983-11-16 Harare, Zimbabwe.
.................... 15 Graham Nigel Gauche, bn:1963-05-10 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Susan Ann Smith.
.................... 15 Wendy Sylvia Gauche, bn:1965-02-11 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Antony James Spencer.
.................... 15 Stephen Gauche.
.................. 14 Kathleen Louise Gauche, bn:1937-04-02 Gwelo, Rhodesia. m1. Arthur Barrow Abrams, bn:1934-04-19 Kimberley, South Africa.
.................... 15 Quinton Victor Abrams, bn:1968-02-21 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Rene de Beer.
.................... 15 Michael Arthur Abrams, bn:1969-11-13 Pretoria, South Africa. m1. ??.
.................... 15 Kelly Abrams.
................ 13 [[Markham-7160|Margaret Elizabeth Markham]], bn:1912-10-26 Umtali, Rhodesia. m1. William Samuel Fraser Beale, bn:1903-09-12 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. br:1967 Grave No. 345A, General One Section, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 William Fraser Beale, bn:1933-03-27 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Maureen Claire Hancock, bn:1932-12-23 Durban, South Africa.
.................... 15 William Robert Fraser 'Bob' Beale, bn:1956-03-25 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Gail Colleen van Blerk, bn:1958-11-06 Broken Hill, Zambia.
..................... 16 Dawn Beale, bn:1981-10-01 Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
..................... 16 Theresa Beale, bn:1982-12-18 East London, South Africa.
..................... 16 Jenny Beale.
.................... 15 Helen Claire Beale, bn:1957-09-19 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Clive Richard Ellis, bn:1958-06-17 Broken Hill, Zambia.
..................... 16 Eileen Clara Ellis, bn:1982-12-17 Gwelo, Rhodesia.
..................... 16 Neil Clive Ellis, bn:1984-06-25 Ermelo, South Africa.
.................... 15 Anthony Peter Gerard Beale, bn:1959-01-03 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Sharron Adele Fowler, bn:1962-06-19 Broken Hill, Zambia.
..................... 16 Raymond Dillon Gerard Beale, bn:1980-07-17. m1. Candi Yates.
....................... 17 Melody Rae Beale.
....................... 17 Jasmine Leigh Beale.
..................... 16 Cherylee Adele Beale, bn:1981-11-02. m1. Graeme Gosher.
..................... 16 Daniel Peter Ryan Beale, bn:1984-07-14.
..................... 16 Elmarie Beale.
..................... 16 Matthew Beale.
.................... 15 Christopher Steven Paul 'Tinker' Beale, bn:1960-06-08 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Patricia 'Trish' Borden.
..................... 16 ? Beale.
..................... 16 Justin Beale, bn:1997-03-17 South Africa.
.................... 15 Michael Barry Andrew Beale, bn:1963-07-23 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Patricia Stevens, bn: Durban, South Africa.
..................... 16 ? Beale.
..................... 16 Cathryn Beale, bn:1994-01-00.
..................... 16 Fraser Beale, bn:1995-06-00.
.................. 14 Margaret Louise Beale, bn:1935-10-13 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Eric Arthur, bn:1939-07-12 Birkenhead, England.
.................... 15 Ian Gordon Arthur, bn:1957-07-07 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. br:c.1961-05-00 Chester, Cheshire, England.
.................... 15 Carol Ann Arthur, bn:1958-10-24 Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Stephen Leslie Arthur, bn:1961-07-15 Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 Melody Joy Beale, bn:1946-01-20 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. m1. Michael Keith Kettle, bn:1944-03-18 Stamford.
.................... 15 Michaela Elizabeth Kettle, bn:1969-07-06 Northampton. 2013: Living near Hethersett. m1. John Sellors.
..................... 16 Chloe Sellors.
.................... 15 Neil Kettle, bn:1970-12-02 Northampton, England. m1. ??.
.................... 15 Frank Kettle.
................ m2 of [[Markham-7160|Margaret Elizabeth Markham]]: Harry Leslie Smith, bn:1904-04-06.
................ m3 of [[Markham-710|Margaret Elizabeth Markham]]: Ted Morganti.
................ 13 [[Markham-7161|Thomas Louis Markham]], bn:1915-10-06 Chimanimani, Rhodesia. br:1985 Grave No. 142, General Section 8, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Headstone: IN LOVING MEMORY OF, THOMAS LOUIS MARKHAM, BELOVED HUSBAND OF JOY, AND FATHER OF ANN AND CLIVE, BORN 6-10-1915, DIED 18-4-1985, ALSO OUR MILES, DIED NEWCASTLE 1978, PRESENT WITH THE LORD.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1644385]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in Zimbabwe (Photos). m1. ??. m2. Joy Trenly Miles, bn:1923-01-01 Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 [[Markham-647|Miles Trenly Markham]], bn:1942-11-15 Salisbury, Rhodesia. br:1978 Grave No. 142, General Section 8, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia (?). m1. Beatrice Maher, bn:1944-01-09 Ireland.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7198|Lorraine Joy Markham]], bn:1966-07-07 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7199|Michelle Markham]], bn:1969-03-07 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7162|Ann Elizabeth Louise Markham]], bn:1945-02-21 Salisbury, Rhodesia. Stuart MacPherson, bn:1944-10-03 of Dingwall, Scotland.
.................... 15 Brian Douglas MacPherson, bn:1970-06-11 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................... 15 Diane Lesley MacPherson, bn:1972-10-25 Salisbury, Rhodesia.
.................. m2 of [[Markham-7162|Ann Elizabeth Louise Markham]]: Roland Sturdy of Durban, South Africa.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7163|Clive Herbert Markham]], bn:1949-02-01 Salisbury, Rhodesia. m1. Jessie Jane Ethel Worst, bn:1951-04-13 Cape Town, South Africa.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7200|Mandy Markham]], bn:1971-04-03, Pretoria, South Africa. m1. ??. Has offspring.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7201|Tracy Markham]], bn:1972-07-13, Durban, Natal, South Africa.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7202|Lisa Markham]], bn:1975-07-24, Joburg, South Africa. m1. ? Carroll.
.................. m2 of [[Markham-7163|Clive Herbert Markham]]: m2. Marlene \\, dd:1998. No offspring.
.................. m3 of [[Markham-7163|Clive Herbert Markham]]: Maria Magdalena \\. No offspring.
................ 13 [[Markham-7141|Herbert Kenneth 'Bob' Markham]], Capt., bn:1926-08-24 Umtali, Rhodesia. dd:2004-11-18. br:2005-01-24. Ashes on home property. m1. [[Watson-20787|June Watson]], bn:1931-06-29 Bulawayo, Rhodesia. br:2002: Ashes on home property. She was the daughter of [[Watson-20798|Edwin Ernest Watson]] and [[Rainsford-146|Daisy Lyttleton Rainsford]]. * [[Watson-20798|Edwin Ernest Watson]], bn:1907-05-08 Cross Street, Uitenhage, Cape Province, South Africa, Birth Certificate No. 402/07, dd:1958-07-17 144 Fife Street, Bulawayo, Rhodesia, br:1958-07-00 Grave No. 186, General Five Section, Athlone Cemetery, Bulawayo, Rhodesia. Zimbabwe Death Record (DR 796/58).[--]Zimbabwe Death Record (DR 796/58). Occ.: Roadworker during the Depression. Worked at Turk Mine. Worked at Rhodesian Railways (RR). Worked at United Spring & Forging, Bulawayo, Rhodesia. Springsmith. * [[Rainsford-146|Daisy Lyttleton Rainsford]], bn:1912-12-02 Selukwe, Rhodesia, dd:1983-06-15 Gwelo, Rhodesia, br:1983-06-20 Grave No. 3073, Gweru Cemetery, Zimbabwe. No kids from marriages to ? Schafer of Thomas Bernard Forrester. Zimbabwe ID: 29-007197L 00 Cit. Zimbabwe Death Record (DRB 263/83).[--]Zimbabwe Death Record (DRB 263/83). FUNERALS: 19+20-06-1983, 2 inserts. [[Rainsford-146|D.L. FORRESTER]] (MRS). The Graveside Service for the late [[Rainsford-146|Daisey Littleton FORRESTER]] will take place at the Gweru Cemetery on Monday 20th June 1983. Will those attending assemble at the Cemetery. Oosthuizen Funeral Services, 49, 2nd Street, Gwelo. Ph.: 2083.Draft handwritten newspaper article by her daughter [[Watson-20787|June Markham]]. Estate File: DRB 375/83. .................. 14 [[Markham-7164|Sharon Patricia Markham]], bn:1958-04-10 Kitwe, Zambia. br:2001: Ashes on home property.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7165|Beverley Anne Markham]], bn:1961-12-11 Llewellin Hospital, Kitwe, Northern Rhodesia (Zambia). m1. Francis Wallace Kimble, bn:1960-11-29 Cullinan, South Africa.
.................... 15 Nicholas Daniel Kimble, bn:1987-03-20 Norfolk & Norwich Hospital, Norwich, Norfolk.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7166|Kenneth Allan Markham]], bn:1964-03-08 Lady Rodwell Parternity Ward, General Hospital, Bulawayo, Rhodesia.
............... 12 [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Markham]], Pioneer of Rhodesia,Rhodesia's Pioneer Women (1859-1896) by Jessie M. Lloyd. Pg. 39. bp:1869-08-18, Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal, bn:1869-02-26 Tongaat, Natal.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. * 1896: Rhodesian Pioneer: Arrived from Natal via Beira as [[Markham-659|Mrs. Williamson]] to join her father ([[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]]). She was a pioneer of Rhodesia, entering Umtali, Southern Rhodesia, in August 1896 from Durban, Natal, South Africa, via Beira, Manica and Sofala, Mozambique, in order to to join her father who had settled in Melsetter, Southern Rhodesia in 1894. On Roll of Pioneer Women. * [[Markham-659|MRS. GWYNNE]], 1896: Nee [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Markham]]. Came up to join her father. On Roll of Women Pioneers.Rhodesia's Pioneer Women (1859-1896) by Jessie M. Lloyd. Pg. 39. * 1896-1908: Residence: (Melsetter), Umtali, Rhodesia. * 1909-1936: Residence: Marandellas, Rhodesia. * 1936-1939: Residence: Gatooma, Rhodesia. * 1939-12-12: Zimbabwe Death Notice (Registration).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CX3L-K]Zimbabwe Death Notices: Salisbury Death Notices 1939, Vol. 58. Entry No. 555. Image 559/559. FamilySearch. [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Gwynne]], residing Marandellas. Race: European. Born: South Africa. Widowed. Children: None. Occ.: Retired. dd:1939-12-12 at St. Anne's Hospital, Salisbury. Intended Place of Burial: Salisbury Cemetery. Heart failure. Duration: 1 week. Registered: 1939-12-29. * Obituary:4 [[Markham-659|MRS. GWYNNE]], OF MARANDELLAS: (From Our Marandellas Correspondent): [[Markham-659|Mrs. Gwynne]] died at St. Anne's Hospital, Salisbury, after a short but serious illness. She was the wife of Captain Philip Gwynne, who was a pioneer of the 1890 column. She came to this country about 44 years ago from Natal, where she was born, and lived for some time at Melsetter. Forty years ago she married Captain Gwynne and was with him at Inyanga during the Rebellion. She was one of the oldest inhabitants of Marandellas, having lived there for over 30 years, and was very much loved and respected. She was the (great-)grand-daughter of Sir [[Markham-314|Joseph Markham]]5.Rhodesia Newspaper Obituary. ............... m1 of [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Markham]]: [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward Williamson]]. * bp:1872-03-31, bn:1872-02-20, Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal, [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward]], son of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]].6 * 1894-05-17:m1: In a private house, at Charlestown, near Newcastle, Natal, [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward Williamson]], 22y, bachelor, store keeper, residing Charlestown, to [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Markham]], 24y, spinster, residing Charlestown. Licence.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-67HW-329]South Africa, Natal Province Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. Film #004236421. Entry No. 68. Image No. 162/832. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-67QS-K73]South Africa, Natal Province Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. Film #004236434. Entry No. 68. Image No. 81/641. FamilySearch. * [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward Williamson]], bn:1872-02-00 Verulam, Natal, South Africa. br:1898, Westward Ho!, Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia. Parents: [[Williamson-6173|George Williamson]], full age, bachelor, trader, of Verulam, m1:1871-05-17 at Home of Mr. [[Alder-|Charles Alder]], Verulam, Natal, South Africa, to [[Alder-369|Esther Alder]], 18y, spinster, of Verulam. Banns. Consent by both parents.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-6WJQ-H9J]Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. Entry No. 58. Image 360/796. FamilySearch. * 1895: Residence: Charlestown, Natal, South Africa. * 1898-03-14:dd: [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward Williamson]], bn: Verulam, Natal. Parents: [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]]. 26y 1m. Farmer. Married ([[Markham-659|E.G. Williamson]]). dd:1898-03-14 at Westward Ho, Melsetter. Children: Nil (Surviving). No property. No will. Signed (1899-10-03, Melsetter): [[Markham-659|Emily G. Gwynne]] (Formerly Williamson), relict of deceased.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-CFSD-SQ]Zimbabwe Death Registers 1890-1900, Vol. 6, Pg. 177. Image 93/189. FamilySearch. * 1898: [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Williamson]] buried her husband [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward Williamson]] herself on Westward Ho! Farm, Melsetter, Rhodesia. [--]. ............... m2 of [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Markham]]: Capt. [[Wrench-11|Philip George Wynne Wrench]], aka: '[[Wrench-11|Philip Gwynne]]'. * Religion: Church of England. * 1863-07-30:bn: Mount Terrace, Fleetwood, Lancashire, England. * 1863-08-28:bp: St. Peter, Fleetwood, Lancashire, England.[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N6LV-DJM]England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975. FamilySearch.[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NBTD-9ZZ]England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975. FamilySearch. * 1863 Q3: Birth Registration: Fylde District, Lancashire, England. [https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:261R-NJG] * 1871-04-01 (Census): [[Wrench-11|Philip G.W. Wrench]], Pensarn, Abergele, Denbighshire, Wales, boarder, scholar.[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V5PY-F1F]FamilySearch. * 1876-1880: Repton Secondary School, Repton, Derbyshire, England. * 1881-04-01 (Census): [[Wrench-11|Philip Geo Wrench]], Leeds Road, Thornbury, Calverley cum Farsley, Yorkshire, England; 17y, single, occ.: Engine Fitter At Works, Boarder, b:c.1864 Fleetwood, Lancashire, England.[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKXG-Z63R]England and Wales Census (1881). Calverley With Farsley, Yorkshire,Yorkshire West Riding, England. * 1888: Residence: Middlesex, London, England. * 1891: Rhodesian Pioneer. Arrived with De Beers Party, Mashonaland, Rhodesia. * 1892-1893: Orderly Room Sergeant, Victoria Column. * 1893-1896: Lieutenant, Mashonaland Mounted Police Corps, Southern Rhodesia. * 1893: Staff Sgt. Major with Victoria Column of 1893, served in Matabele Campaign, also serving with Spreckley. Awarded the Victoria Column Medal as a sergeant. * 1896: Served with Mashonaland Mounted Police under Lord Plumer. Awarded Mashonaland Mounted Police Medal clasp as a lieutenant. * Stationed at Inyanga during Rebellion, their rifles stolen from the armory. * 1897-1909: BSAP, Southern Rhodesia. * 1897: Awarded the BSAP clasp as a lieutenant. * 1909 (Nov.): Retired from BSAP with rank of Captain, Rhodesia. * 1915: Lost right leg in railway accident. * Keen sportsman and mathematician, could count 3 columns of figures in a row. * 1935-09-06: Extract from letter to W.A. Carnegie from [[Wrench-11|Philip Gwynne]] dated 6.9.1935: 'My wife was Mrs. [[Markham-659|E.G. Williamson]] (maiden name [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude Markham]]) and arrived in Umtali from Natal about August 1896. [[Williamson-3953|Mr. Williamson]] died in 1897 and she was married to me in March 1899 and is with me here as I write. Yours Faithfully, [[Wrench-11|P. Gwynne]].' * Zimbabwe Death Record: Registration: DR 46/199, 5370.[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKZQ-TQS5]Zimbabwe Death Notices, 1904-1976. Salisbury Death Notices 1936, Vol. 49. Entry No. 40. Image No. 41/567. [[Wrench-11|Philip Gwynne]]. Residence: Marandellas. Race: European, England. Occ.: Retired. DoD: 1936-01-20, (Home) Marandellas. Intended Place of Burial: Salisbury Cemetery. Cause of Death: Heart Attack. Duration: A few minutes. Dated: 1936-01-25. * 1936-01-21:br: Grave 29, Pioneer Section, Harare Cemetery, Harare, Zimbabwe. Details on the cards are as follows:

[[Wrench-11|GWYNNE P.]] Age 73. DoD: 20.01.36. DoBr: 21.01.36. Cause of Death: Not stated. Occupation: Retired. Address: Marandellas. Undertakers: W.L. Mashfords.

[[Markham-659|GWYNNE E.G.]] Age 62. DoD: 12.12.39. DoBr: 13.12.39. Cause of Death: Post Mortem. Occupation: Retired. Address: Gatooma. Undertakers: W.L. Mashfords. * Headstones (Same grave):

SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF / CAPTAIN [[Wrench-11|PHILIP GWYNNE]] / WHO SERVED IN THE CONQUEST / OF MATABELELAND 1893 / AND IN THE B.S.A. POLICE / BORN 1863 / DEPARTED THIS LIFE / 20 JANUARY 1936

ALSO HIS WIFE / [[Markham-659|EMILY GERTRUDE GWYNNE]] / DIED 12th DEC. 1939 / AGED 68 YEARS

* Bulawayo Chronicle (Newspaper Cutting): CAPTAIN [[Wrench-11|PHILIP GEORGE WYNNE WRENCH]], 1891 RHODESIAN PIONEER. (A.K.A. '[[Wrench-11|PHILIP GWYNNE]]'). Picture Taken @1910, Rhodesia. From newspaper article: Mr. [[Wrench-11|P. Gwynn]]: Born in Fleetwood, Lancashire, in July, 1863. An accident in the De Beers Mine prevented him coming up with the Pioneer Column in 1890. Early in 1891 he came north with a De Beers party. Was Staff Sergeant-Major with Victoria Column of 1893, serving with Spreckley. In 1896 he served with Plumer. Joined the M.M.P. on the disbandment of the Columns in December, 1893, accepting a commission in 1896. Served subsequently in Umtali, Salisbury and Victoria districts, retiring in November, 1909. Lost his right leg in 1915. * NOTES: His birth certificate states that his name is [[Wrench-11|Philip Wynne Wrench]], but his baptismal record states that it is [[Wrench-11|Philip George Wynne Wrench]], and he used the latter name until sometime before he went to Africa in 1890, when he assumed the name '[[Wrench-11|Philip Gwynne]]', a name by which he was known for the rest of his life. After he and his two sisters were orphaned, they almost surely were raised by their uncle and aunt Archibald and Mary Constable, in Edinburgh, Scotland. An accident in the De Beers Mine prevented his coming up with the Pioneer Column in 1890; he instead arrived in early 1891 with a De Beers party in Mashonaland, Southern Rhodesia. He had a brief but distinguished career in the Mashonaland Mounted Police, which replaced the British South Africa Company Police. The latter group had been formed in late 1889 with approximately 850 men, accompanied the Pioneer Force to occupy Rhodesia, and disbanded in 1892. In December 1893, he joined the Mashonaland Mounted Police upon the disbandment of the Columns, and served as staff sergeant-major of Victoria Column.

He served in the Matabeleland Campaign, where he probably knew Robert Baden-Powell, the future founder of the Boy Scouts, and later with Spreckley. In 1896, he accepted a commission as lieutenant and served under Lord Plumer. As lieutenant, he served in Umtali, Salisbury, and Victoria Districts of Southern Rhodesia. He might have served also in the Rhodesian Mounted Police, which military organization was formed in 1896 as a replacement to the Mashonaland Mounted Police and the Matabeleland Mounted Police, but never really got off the ground and disbanded late that year. He definitely served in the British South Africa Police, which military organization replaced the Rhodesian Mounted Police with 2000 men in 1896 and lasted until the end of the Boer War of 1899-1902. The BSAP's principal mission was to escort the settlers who Cecil Rhodes had sent to Rhodesia. In the BSAP, he served as an infantry officer of a line regiment. In November 1909, he retired from the military with the rank of captain. Together with his wife, he was at Inyanga during the Rebellion. On August 6, 1935, he wrote a letter to W.A. Carnegie, the scion of one of the earliest families to settle in Rhodesia. He was buried by W.L. Mashfords, Undertakers. * Information also given by [[Wrench-|Peter Yorke Wrench]] of Houston, Texas, author of 'The Wrench Tribes: A Comprehensive History of the Wrench Family', and 'All the Presidents' Trivia', and other books. * No offspring at time of death. * Sizeable Estate: A house in Highlands, three houses in Marandellas, a store, and the farm 'Tipperary'. The first pages of the will were not signed and witnessed, so the estate was divided amongst fifty or so family members to the value of about £250 which was enough to buy a car. * BSAP: British South Africa Police. * See: [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary Markham/Foreman]]. ............... 12 [[Markham-660|Grace Eleanor Markham]], bp:1870-00-00 Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal, bn:1870-08-30 Victoria Village, Tongaat, Natal.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. dd:1871-09-01 Tongaat Village, Natal, 13m2d.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7ND-4?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. Image: 89/359. FamilySearch. 1871-09-05: 'The Natal Mercury' of Tuesday 5th September 1871: DIED, Markham -- On the 1st September, at her father's residence, Tongaat, Victoria County, [[Markham-660|Grace Eleanor]], the beloved child of Mr. & Mrs. [[Markham-312|J.F. Markham]], after two hours illness, aged thirteen months and two days.The Natal Mercury. 1871-09-05.
............... 12 [[Markham-7217|Percy Douglas Markham]], bp:1873-01-24 Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam, Natal, bn:1872-05-00 Tongaat Village, Natal.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Natal. dd:1873-02-07 Tongaat Village, Natal, 9m. Informants: Caroline Bule, Nurse, Verulam; Inflamation on the brain.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7NC-N?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch.
............... 12 [[Markham-661|Grace Florence Markham]], bp:187?-00-00, bn:1874-05-24 Tongaat Village, Natal.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. dd:1944-10-01 Dundee, Natal. br:1944-10-00 Old Main Cemetery, Dundee, Natal.
............. m1 of [[Markham-661|Grace Florence Markham]]: m1:1892-03-14 Nqutu, Natal, to [[Jones-29200|William James Calverley]], [https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-267-11858-165301-54?cc=2063749]To be added. bp:1865-01-30 Durban, Natal, bn:1864-08-11 Amanzimtoti River, Durban, Natal; As [[Jones-29200|William James Jones]], Father: [[Jones-|John William Jones]], Mother: [[Calverley-|Jane Jones]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-6YN9-XTD?i=46&cc=1463648]Digital Folder Number: 004467374 Image: 47. South Africa, Methodist Parish Registers, 1822-1996. FamilySearch. dd:1938-01-01 Dundee, Natal, br:1938-01-16 Old Main Cemetery, Dundee, Natal.[--]To be added.[--]Grave to be added. * [[Jones-29200|William James Jones]]: He is born Jones, but he kept his maternal surname of Calverley. * 1895: Staying in Nkandhla, Natal. * By 'Camberley', [[--|Chelmsford]] means [[Jones-29200|William Calverley]], a white trader.To be added. ................ 13 Frederick William Calverley, bn:1893-03-05 South Africa. br:1974 Melmoth, Main Cemetery, Durban, Natal. m1. Anne Augustus May Pitcairn, bn:1898-05-12.
.................. 14 Doreen Calverley, bn:1922-05-24. m1. Jacques Vivier.
.................... 15 Clive Vivier, bn:1948-04-15. m1. Kathleen Burger.
..................... 16 Quinton Vivier, bn:1972-07-29.
..................... 16 Wayne Vivier, bn:1974-08-08. m1. Nicolette Fisher.
....................... 17 Mathew Vivier, bn:2003-07-09 Durban, Natal.
....................... 17 Thomas Vivier, bn:2003-07-09 Durban, Natal.
..................... 16 Ryan Vivier, bn:1978-06-27.
.................... 15 Dawn Vivier, bn:1951-02-05. m1. Stephen Frederick Wakeling.
..................... 16 Gaynor Wakeling, bn:1975-05-12.
..................... 16 Tanya-Lee Wakeling, bn:1981-01-07.
.................. 14 Beryl Jessie Florence Calverley, bn:1925-04-15. m1. Ernest Samual Paddock.
.................... 15 Sheryl Jean Paddock, bn:1950-03-28.
.................... 15 Graham John Paddock, bn:1952-10-24. m1. Amanda Claire English.
..................... 16 Edward Samual Paddock, bn:1981-10-09 Cape Town, South Africa.
..................... 16 Robert James Paddock, bn:1983-07-23 Cape Town, South Africa.
..................... 16 Jennifer Claire Paddock, bn:1984-10-18 Cape Town, South Africa.
.................. 14 Wiltshire Leslie William Calverley, bn:1927-02-08.
.................... 15 Gaynor Elise Calverley, bn:1962-06-04 Eshowe, Natal. br:Melmoth, Main Cemetery, Durban, Natal.
.................... 15 Sharon Calverley, bn:1964-07-31 Eshowe, Natal. m1: Peter Edward Bradford.
..................... 16 Tessa Claire Bradford, bn:1995-11-02 Pietermaritzburg, Natal.
.................. m2 of Wiltshire Leslie William Calverley: Joan Maureen Nossiter, bn:1934-11-28.
.................... 15 Gavin James Calverley, bn:1954-05-16 Eshowe, Natal, m1. Sandra Ward.
..................... 16 Hayley Calverley, bn:1982-01-28 Eshowe, Natal.
..................... 16 Tracey Calverley, bn:1984-03-21 Eshowe, Natal.
..................... 16 Dustin Calverley, bn:1988-01-27 Empangeni, Natal.
.................. 14 Denis Calverley, bn:1929-01-18 South Africa. br:1968 Melmoth, Main Cemetery, Durban, Natal. m1. Shirley Helen Maytom.
.................... 15 Roger Bruce Calverley, bn:1956-11-02. m1. Maryann Davies.
..................... 16 Kelly Calverley.
.................... m1 of Roger Bruce Calverley: Mary Doreen van Aswegen.
.................... 15 Brenda Rae Calverley, bn:1959-04-09.
................ 13 Frank Douglas Calverley, bn:1895-07-09 South Africa. br:1969 Melmoth, Main Cemetery, Durban, Natal.
................ 13 Cecil Rorke Calverley, bn:1896-08-05 South Africa.
................ 13 Leslie Herbert Calverley, bn:1898-07-10.
................ 13 Florence Hilda Calverley, bn:1901-09-27 South Africa.
................ 13 Louis Alexander Markham Calverley, bn:1903-04-13 Nkandhla District, Zululand, Natal. m1. Margaret Esther Harriet (Sutton ??).
.................. 14 Markham Calverley (??). Maybe same person as Louis Alexander Markham Calverley (??). Markham Calverley: Proprietor of the Mazabeko Trading Store, Dundee South Africa.
................ 13 Margaret Calverley, bn:1909-09-27.
................ 13 Arthur Wilfred Calverley, bn:1911-04-21. br:Melmoth, Main Cemetery, Durban, Natal.
............... 12 [[Markham-7044|Agnes Maud Markham]], bp:1877-07-221 Greytown, Natal. dd:1877-07-24 Greytown, Natal. Entry No. 7: 2d, infant, convulsions; Informant: [[Markham-337|F.E. Markham]] brother of deceased; Registered: 1877-08-06. She is named for ??.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7FF-Y?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch. Twin.
............... 12 [[Markham-7045|Henry Melville Markham]], bp:1877-07-221 Greytown, Natal. dd:1877-07-25 Greytown, Natal.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7FF-Y?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch. Twin.
............. 11 [[Markham-346|Hannah Eliza Markham]], bn:1831-09-29 bp:1832-01-22 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. F:Coach Maker & Painter.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-347|Ebenezer Markham]], bn:1832-12-08 bp:1833-01-20 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. F: Painter.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. (1891C: Hull, Yorkshire ?).
............. 11 [[Markham-7050|Jabez Markham]], bn:1834-07-08 bp:1834-08-24 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth (F: House Painter & Coachmaker).Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. br:1835-02-06 St. James, Louth (Infant). St. James, Louth.
............. 11 [[Markham-7051|Jane Elizabeth Markham]], bn:1836-05-14 bp:1836-09-04 Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth. F: Coach Maker.Wesleyan Chapel Register, Louth.
............. 11 [[Markham-7052|Emily Markham]], bp:1838 Q3 Louth.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2NH5-VPX]England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008. FamilySearch.
............. 11 [[Markham-7053|Elizabeth Ward Markham]], bp:1839 Q4 Louth.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2NS2-4DD]England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008. FamilySearch. m:1871 Sevenoaks, Kent, to [[Beavan-54|James Beavan]].
............. 11 Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]], (Clerk In Holy Orders), bp:1841-04-01 Louth Lincolnshire, dd:1908-10-21 'Benrae', Bulwer, Polela, Natal, aged 67 years 7 months. br:1908 Trinity Yellowwood Church Graveyard, Bulwer, Natal.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=3220755]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in South Africa (Photos). Headstone: In Loving Memory of, My dear Husband, THE REV. [[Markham-348|B. MARKHAM]], BORN APRIL 1ST 1841, DIED OCT. 21ST 1908. "BLESSED ARE THE DEAD WHICH DIE IN THE LORD". Will: 1903-05-09.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-F98P-W?cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch. * Benjamin was the youngest son of thirteen children - 6 sons and 7 daughters. Benjamin Markham attended Louth Grammar School and the Priory at Louth. In 1856, at the age of 15, he landed in Durban to join his brother Fred (James Frederick 'Fred' Markham) who had come out earlier. The two brothers went farming in 1857/8 on the north coast of Natal.Anglican Archives, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. From the notes written by a grand-daughter of Rev. Benjamin Markham. (??). * 1848 (C): Free School of King Edward VI, Louth: [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]] (With [[Chadwick-|Richard Chadwick]]).[https://books.google.co.za/books?id=W_0VAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA139#v=onepage&q=Markham&f=false]Louth: Old Corporation Records, Being Extracts from the Accounts, Minutes and Memoranda of the Warden and Six Assistants of the Town of Louth and Free School of King Edward VI in Louth, and Other Ancient Documents Relating to the Town. By J.W. Goulding, 1891. Pg. 139. * 1851 (Census): Louth, Lincolnshire.[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SGNG-JSF]England Census (1851): Louth, Lincolnshire. * 1856: "Arrived at Durban, aged 15 years to join his brother Fred who had come out earlier". * 1857-8: Went farming with his brother James Frederick Markham on North coast of Durban. * 1871: He married Elizabeth Susan Chadwick Kelly, but she died 1873 only 5 months after giving birth to their son Benjamin Thomas Kelly Markham. * 1874: Deacon.Crockford's. * 1875: Married Rachel Tanner Ray. * 1875-08-11: Marriage Notice: Pall Mall Gazette (Ancestry.com). * Maritz means Pietermaritzburg. * 1878: Ordained, his first posting was to Springvale Mission where as Priest in charge he assisted the Bishop in translating the Bible into the Zulu language. * 1879: Priest, by Bishop of Maritz, formerly c of Maritz.Crockford's. * 1882: A missionary Benjamin Markham in Springvale, Natal, in charge of Highflats, Springvale, in the Diocese of Maritz.Crockford's. * 1884: Posted to Polela. * 1888: Ipolela, Ixopo, Natal, c of Polela.Crockford's. 1890: C. of Ipolela.Crockford's. * He (?) bought 1100 acres on the Lurane River near Bulwer and the property was named Ashtonvale in honour of his wife Rachel Tanner Ray's birthplace back in England. Benjamin built a small private family chapel at Ashtonvale which remains to this day. * 2015: The homestead property is now known as Ashtonvale Guest Farm, Bulwer, Natal. * While at Ashtonvale, Benjamin built the Holy Trinity Church (Yellowwood Church) on land bought and donated by his wife's brother in law, [[Fenwick-363|Mr. Pascoe Fenwick]] of England. * 1902: His eyesight failing, Benjamin sold Ashtonvale and moved to Benrae nearby in Bulwer. Benrae is named after his own first name and his wife's surname (Benjamin-Ray). * 1908: He passed away and is buried in the graveyard inside the property of the Churchyard of Holy Trinity Church, Bulwer. * The original St. Saviour's Church in Pietermaritzburg was demolished and sold for one Rand. Parts of this original St. Saviour's Church in Pietermaritzburg were relocated and are now part of new church near Johannesburg, now being the St. Saviour's Presbyterian Church at 18 King Willow Crescent, Randjesfontein, Midrand, near Johannesburg. * There seems to be third brother who came out to South Africa, but he has not been identified, as per photograph (The Three Brothers ?). * Polela (Google Maps: -29.820330, 29.777305). * Yellowwood Church, Bulwer, Natal. (S 29" 49.887 E 29" 46.698).[https://www.google.co.za/maps/place/Yellowwood+Church/@-29.8100175,29.7712425,13.75z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x1ef46ac00e97dcb5:0x2b689b5e87d86ae7!8m2!3d-29.8122805!4d29.7717161?hl=en]Yellowwood Church, Bulwer, Natal. Google Maps. * [[Space:Rev. Benjamin Markham|Rev. Benjamin Markham.]]FS: Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]]. * [[Space:Descendants of Benjamin Markham, Rev. (Clerk In Holy Orders)|Descendants of Benjamin Markham]], Rev. (Clerk In Holy Orders)]]FS: Descendants of [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]], Rev. (Clerk In Holy Orders). ............. m1 Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]]: m1:1871-08-22 St. Saviours Church, Pietermaritzburg, to [[Kelly-6140|Elizabeth Susan Chadwick Kelly]],[https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1951-23607-20799-85]1871-08-22: Marriage Entry No. 34, St. Saviours Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa.1871-08-22:m1: [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]], full age, bachelor, (Proffesion), of Pietermaritzburg, to [[Kelly-6140|Elizabeth Susan Chadwick Kelly]], 20 years, spinster, ---, of Pietermaritzburg. Banns. bn:1850-08-23, dd:1873-01-31 Natal, br:1873 Pioneer Section, Cnr. Chapel/Church Streets, Pietermaritzburg. She was the sister of [[Kelly-15474|Thomasina Mary Kelly]] bn:1851-09-06, and the daughter of [[Kelly-15473|T.T. Kelly]], + [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan McDowell/Kelly]], bn:1819 Dinepore (Danapur), India, bp:1819-06-02 Dum Dum, Bengal, India, dd:1868-08-24 Schaap Plaats, Klip River, Natal. [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan McDowell/Kelly]]'s (Estate File).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-T3XZ-N?cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch. * [[Kelly-15473|T.T. Kelly]], Resident Magistrate of Klip River, Natal. :* 1857-12-00: Resident Magistrate of Klip River, Natal. :* Acting Resident magistrate in 1854-02 was Dr. Benjamin Blaine; 1857-12 was [[Kelly-15473|T.T. Kelly]]; 1859 was [[Kelly-|Dr. Kelly]]; 1861-08-01 was G.A. Lucas who built a house next to the Jail, he left Ladysmith for Colenso in 1860-11. 1854-01.[http://www.ladysmithhistory.com/]Ladysmith History. :* 1859-06-07: [[Kelly-15473|T.T. Kelly]] Esquire, Resident Magistrate, Klip River. :* 1862-01-02: NATAL NEWS: Her Majesty has been pleased to appoint [[Moodie-86|William James Dunbar Moodie]], to be resident magistrate of Klip River District, in the colony of Natal, and Frederick Simon Berning, to be Registrar of Deeds and Distributor of Stamps for the colony of Natal.[https://www.eggsa.org/newspapers/index.php/cape-and-natal-news/559-cape-and-natal-news-1862-1-january-june]Natal News: 1862-01-02. :* 1868-08-24:dd: Schaap Plaats, Klip River, Natal, South Africa, [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], aged 41y, low fever, informant: Charles Gordon, reported 1868-10-10, G.H. Lucas.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7NM-3?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955, Film #007746183. FamilySearch.[http://www.national.archsrch.gov.za/sm300cv/smws/sm30ddf0?201806081451039AC4166A&DN=00000002]NASA. [[McDowell-3326|Kelly, Mary Susan]]. Born McDowell. :* [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan McDowell/Kelly]]. bn:1819 Dinepore (Danapur), India. cr:1819-06-02 Dum Dum, Bengal, India, Mary Susan Mcdowell. P: John + Eliza Mcdowell.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FGD6-XLS]India Births and Baptisms, 1786-1947. FamilySearch. :* 1868-08-24:dd: Schaap Plaats, Klip River, Natal, South Africa, [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], aged 41y, low fever, informant: Charles Gordon, reported 10-08-1868, G.A. Lucas.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7NM-3?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955, Film #007746183. FamilySearch.[http://www.national.archsrch.gov.za/sm300cv/smws/sm30ddf0?201806081451039AC4166A&DN=00000002]NASA. [[McDowell-3326|Kelly, Mary Susan]]. Born McDowell. :* 1869-02-18: [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], nee McDowell, gentlewoman, widow of the late [[Kelly-15473|T.T. Kelly]], Resident Magistrate at Ladysmith, Klip River, Natal. Residence. Schaap Plaats, Klip River. bn: Dinepore (Danapur), India. 49?y (1820). dd:1868-08-24. Her parents: [[McDowell-3327|John]] + [[Unknown-426784|Elizabeth McDowell]]. Her daughters: [[Kelly-6140|Elizabeth Susan Chadwick Kelly]] bn:1850-08-23, [[Kelly-15474|Thomasina Mary Kelly]] bn:1851-09-06. Probate.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-T3XZ-N?cc=2573604]NASA. South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950: [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], nee McDowell. ............... 12 [[Markham-627|Benjamin Thomas Kelly Markham]], bp:1872-08-29 Church Street, Pietermaritzburg,To be added. dd:1950-12-14 Rockhurst, Camperdown,To be added. br:1950 Anglican Church of the Resurrection Cemetery, Camperdown,[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=1496038]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in South Africa (Photos). Headstone: In Loving Memory Of, [[Markham-627|Benjamin Thomas Kelly Markham]], DEARLY LOVED HUSBAND OF IRENE, passed peacefully away at Camperdown, 14th December 1950, Aged 78 Years, His Life? nobly done... Jessie Irene Markham, passed peacefully away on, 27th June 1982 - Aged 89 Years, FONDLY REMEBERED BY HAZEL AND, JESS AND THEIR FAMILIES, REST IN PEACE. m1:1913-02-04 Pietermaritzburg,To be added. Jessie Irene Edmondson, bp:c.1893,To be added. dd:1982-06-27 Rockhurst, Camperdown,To be added. br:1982 Anglican Church of the Resurrection Cemetery, Camperdown.To be added. * 1872-08-29: On 29th August 1872 at Church Street, Pietermaritzburg, Benjamin Thomas Kelly, son of Benjamin Markham, catechrist at St. Marks, & Elizabeth Susan Chadwick (nee Kelly) Markham.Pietermaritzburg Birth Register (Pietermaritzburg Archives Repository). ................ 13 [[Markham-644|Margaret Hazel Irene 'Hazel' Markham]], bn:1914 South Africa, m1:1939-08-26 St. Peters Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal,[https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-267-11694-216187-55]St. Peters Church, Pietermaritzburg, Natal. to Thomas Frederick Blake Massingham.
.................. 14 Peter Massingham.
................ 13 [[Markham-7093|Jesse Evelyn Markham]]. m1. Reginald Wallace.
............. m2 of Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]]: m2:1875-07-01 St. Matthias Church, Umgeni, Durban, to Rachel Tanner Ray,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DHRS-TQ4?i=337&cc=2063749]South Africa, Natal Province Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. 004236410. Image 338/759. bp:1842-06-13 Bideford, Devonshire.To be added. dd:1916-09-09 Grey's Hospital, Pietermaritzburg, br:1916 Trinity Yellowwood Church Graveyard, Bulwer.To be added. * Markham, Ray, 1-July-1875, 6-July-1875, At St. Mathias in the parish of Durban, by the Rev. James H. Taylor, The Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]] assistant Curate of St. Saviours Cathedral, PMBurg to - Rachel T. Ray fifth daughter of the late Rev. Richard Ray of Ashton Villa, Elgin Park, Redland, Bristol, England.Natal Witness Marriages 1875. ............... 12 [[Markham-628|Evelyn Hannah Ray 'Evie' Markham]], bn:1876-05-02 Loop Street, Pietermaritzburg, Natal,To be added. dd:1968, m1:01-07-1896-07-01 Holy Trinity Church, Bulwer, Natal,[https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-267-12386-97868-18]To be added. to Edward Graham, bn:1865-01-24 Greenwood Park, Boston, Natal,To be added. of Melrose, Boston, Natal, dd:1917-09-13 Umlaas Rd., Winterskloof, Pietermaritzburg, Natal. * On 2nd May 1876 at Loop Street, Pietermaritzburg, Evelyn Hannah Ray, daughter of Benjamin Markham, Clerk in Holy Orders, & Rachel Tanner Markham (nee Ray).Pietermaritzburg Birth Register (Pietermaritzburg Archives Repository). ................ 13 Edward Rowland Graham.
................ 13 Kathleen Rae Graham.
................ 13 Violet Ellen Graham.
................ 13 [[Graham-|Phyllis Evelyn Graham]].
............... 12 [[Markham-629|Wilfred Lawrence Ward Markham]], bn:1877-06-12 Loop Street, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, dd:1952-10-25 Porirua, Wellington, New Zealand. m1. Elsie Lillian Greenwood, bn:1885 Westport, New Zealand. dd:05-01-1947 Napier, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. Strangled by her husband. * On 12th June 1877 at Loop Street, Pietermaritzburg, Wilfred Lawrence Ward, son of Benjamin Markham, Clerk in Holy Orders, & Rachel Tanner Markham (nee Ray).Pietermaritzburg Birth Register (Pietermaritzburg Archives Repository). ................ 13 [[Markham-638|Wilfred Ray Greenwood Markham]], bn:c.1912 South Africa, dd:1936-09-02 Brakpan, m1:1936-06-29 St. Peter Anglican Church, Brakpan, to Aimee Jean Rush-Munro, bn:1915-11-26 Auckland, New Zealand, dd:1942, br:1942. Rush Munro's Famous Ice-Cream Garden.
................ 13 [[Markham-1389|Margaret Rachel Markham]], bp:1918-02-23 New Zealand. m1. Rev. Keith Elliott, VC, bn:1916-04-25 Apiti, New Zealand. br:1989 Paraparaumu Cemetery, North Island, New Zealand. (5k).
............... 12 [[Markham-626|Margaret Rachel Ray Markham]], bp:1878-12-12 Loop Street, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, dd:1902-11-15 Ashtonvale, Bulwer, br:1902 Trinity Yellowwood Church Graveyard, Bulwer, Natal. Never Married. * Probate: No. 32, Vol. XV. Intestate Estate of [[Markham-626|Margaret Rachel Ray Markham]] of Ashton Vale, Bulwer, Polela Division. Spinster. 1902. dd:1902-11-15 Ashtonvale, Bulwer, 24y, English, spinster, bn:Pietermaritzburg, unmarried. Images.(388/1286).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-2962-H?i=387&cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch.(389/1286).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-29HY-G?i=388&cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch.(390/1286).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-29CQ-7?i=389&cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch.(391/1286).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-29CS-1?i=390&cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch.(392/1286).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-29CW-N?i=391&cc=2573604]South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950. FamilySearch. * On 12th December 1878 at Loop Street, Pietermaritzburg, [[Markham-626|Margaret Rachel Ray]], daughter of Benjamin Markham, Clerk in Holy Orders, & Rachel Tanner Markham (nee Ray).Pietermaritzburg Birth Register (Pietermaritzburg Archives Repository). * Headstone: In Loving Memory of, [[Markham-626|MARGARET R.R. MARKHAM]], Daughter of REV. BENJ. & RACHEL T. MARKHAM, BORN DECR 12TH 1878, FELL ASLEEP IN JESUS, NOVR 15TH 1902. "Them also which sleep in Jesus, will God bring with him" I THES. IV-14.[http://www.graves-at-eggsa.org/main.php?g2_itemId=3220758]eGGSA Library: Gravestones in South Africa (Photos). ............... 12 [[Markham-630|Richard Albert Clement 'Bert' Markham]], bn:1880-10-10 Commercial Road, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, dd:1959, br: (Mary Ray) (??), m1. Elizabeth Hermina Bullot. * On 10th October 1880 at Commercial Road, Pietermaritzburg, Richard Albert Clements, son of Benjamin Markham, Clerk in Holy Orders, & Rachel Tanner Markham (nee Ray).Pietermaritzburg Birth Register (Pietermaritzburg Archives Repository). ................ 13 [[Markham-993|Benjamin Albert Stenton Markham]], bn:1910-07-17 OFS, South Africa.
................ 13 [[Markham-637|Elsebe Susannah 'Eslie' Markham]], bn:1913-07-08 Ficksburg, OFS, South Africa.
............... 12 [[Markham-631|Reginald Cecil Stenton 'Cecil' Markham]], bn:1883-03-19 Bulwer, Natal, dd:1951-02-07 Grey's Hospital, Pietermaritzburg, m1:1919-12-19 St. John's Church, Malvern, Durban, Natal,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DTN7-T6X?i=547&cc=2063749]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Marriages, 1845-1955. FamilySearch. to Lilian Erskine Grieve, bn:1889 Portabello, Edinburgh, Scotland. br:1954.
................ 13 [[Markham-7094|Reginald Ray Erskine 'Ray' Markham]], bn:1923-04-11 South Africa, dd:2016-05-06 South Africa, m1. Mollie Campbell.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7095|Judy Markham]], bn: South Africa.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7096|Robert Markham]], bn: South Africa.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7097|Desley Markham]], bn: South Africa.
................ 13 [[Markham-636|Lawrence Anderson 'Fish' Markham]], Cricketer, bn:1924-09-12 Mbabane, Swaziland, dd:2000-08-05 Pietermaritzburg, br:2000 Holy Trinity Yellowwood Church Graveyard, Bulwer, Natal, m1. Velma Theresa Olivier.
.................. 14 A?. Markham (F).
................ 13 [[Markham-635|Neville Evelyn Markham]], Cricketer, bn:1926-02-01 Mbabane, Swaziland, dd:2000-04-26 (Of 88 Tanner Road, Wembley, Pietermaritzburg, KZN), br:Cremated, m1. Daphne E. Hind.
.................. 14 [[Markham-7098|Alan Stenton Markham]].
.................. 14 Dr. [[Markham-7099|Michelle Elizabeth Markham]].
.................. 14 [[Markham-7100|Craig Baring Markham]].
.................. 14 [[Markham-7101|Grant Erskine Markham]] m1. Dolores Fouche, bn:1953-05-31 South Africa.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7102|Brett Damon Markham]], bn:1981-11-10 Pretoria.
.................... 15 [[Markham-7103|Lauren Janine Markham]], bn:1983-12-09 Durban, Natal.
............... 12 [[Markham-632|Phyllis Markham]]. (Taken from Bulwer Markham Chapel chart). (Position ??).
............ 10 [[Markham-1468|Jane Markham]], bp:1792-07-25 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1792-09-03 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1469|Joe Markham]], bp:1793-07-29 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1793-09-28 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1470|William Markham]], bp:22-08-1794 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1837-09-07 Brigg.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............ 10 [[Markham-1471|Elizabeth Markham]], bp:03-06-1798 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. m1:1816-03-11 St. Mary, Wrawby, (Witnesses: Mary Sosell?, John Parker),St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. Edward Waddingham, bp:18-08-1791 St. Mary, Wrawby.[--]St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
............. 11 Charles Waddingham, bp:1830. 1859: Went to New Zealand. m1. Ann Seaton.
............... 12 Frank Markham Waddingham, bn:1868. From NZ migrated to Fiji. m1. Henrietta \\.
................ 13 Richard Waddingham.
.................. 14 William 'Bill' Waddingham.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1454|John Markham]], bp:1758-05-19 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1772-02-03 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
.......... 9 [[Markham-1455|Ann Markham]], bp:1762-01-13 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg. br:1763-01-10 St. Mary, Wrawby.St. Mary, Wrawby. Freereg.
....... 7 [[Markham-1483|Ann Markham]], bp:1691-01-01 Broughton.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JQ97-D5T]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch. br:1691-01-16.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J85X-Q4Z]St. Mary, Broughton. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1478|Susanna Markham]] (Markam), bp:1617-12-21 Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NGJP-MQR]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.
.... 5 [[Markham-1486|William Markham]] (Marckham), bn:c.1618, dd:1618-12-13 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-TX7]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. (Position ??).
.... 5 [[Markham-1479|Martha Markham]] (Markham), bp:1621-07-08 Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NT44-SPY]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.

WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH REGISTER, VERULAM, VICTORIA COUNTY, NATAL.
A copy of the original register is kept at the Killie Campbell Africana Library, Durban, South Africa. See full register [[--|HERE]].Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *BAPTISM - BIRTH - CHILD - PARENTS - ABODE *bp:1859-12-15, bn:1859-09-25 Verulam, [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund]], son of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Verulam.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1861-09-11, bn:1861-03-07 Verulam, [[Markham-338|Anne Elizabeth]], daughter of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Verulam.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1863-02-18, bn:1862-11-01 Verulam, [[Markham-339|James Sidney Ronald]], son of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Verulam.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1865-03-26, bn:1865-02-26 Tongaat Village, [[Markham-340|Clarissa Mary]], daughter of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Tongaat Victoria County.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1868-03-15, bn:1867-09-11 Tongaat Village, [[Markham-311|Herbert Richard Allan]], son of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Victoria County.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1869-08-18, bn:1869-02-26 Tongaat Village, [[Markham-659|Emily Gertrude]], daughter of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Victoria County.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1870-00-00, bn:1870-08-30, Tongaat Village, [[Markham-660|Grace Eleanor Markham]], daughter of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Tongaat.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. dd:1871-09-01 Tongaat, Victoria County.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1873-01-24, bn:1872-05-00 Tongaat Village, [[Markham-7217|Percy Douglas Markham]],Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. dd:1873-02-07 Tongaat Village, Victoria County, Natal, 9m. Informants: Caroline Bule, Nurse Verulam; Inflamation on the brain.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7NC-N?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch. *bp:187?-00-00, bn:1874-05-24 Tongaat Village, [[Markham-661|Grace Florence]], daughter of [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Markham]], of Tongaat Victoria County.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. *bp:1872-03-31, bn:1872-02-20 Verulam, [[Williamson-3953|Charles Edward]], son of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]].6 *bp:1873-07-23, bn:1873-05-31 Verulam, [[Williamson-10185|George Henry]], son of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]], of Verulam. *bp:1877-09-02, Verulam Chapel, bn:1877-02-22 Verulam, [[Williamson-10186|Bertram James]], son of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]], of Verulam. *bp:1879-07-13, Tongaat, bn:1879-05-06 Tongaat, [[Williamson-10187|George Ernest]], son of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]], of Fair Breeze, near Victoria. *bp:1885-03-26, bn:1883-02-26 Tongaat, [[Williamson-10188|Laura Annie]], daughter of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]], of Fair Breeze, Tongaat. *bp:1885-03-26, bn:1885-02-03 Tongaat, [[Williamson-10189|Rupert Arthur]], son of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]], of Fair Breeze, Tongaat. *bp:1887-03-21, bn:1887-02-12 Tongaat, [[Williamson-10190|Katie Esther]], daughter of [[Williamson-6173|George]] and [[Alder-369|Esther Williamson]], of Tongaat. *bp:1868-05-24, bn:1866-07-27, [[Buckley-|Julia Joanna]], daughter of [[Buckley-|James]] and [[--|Joanna Buckley]]. Sinquazi.Wesleyan Methodist Church Register, Verulam, Victoria County, Natal. * Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam. Google Maps (-29.643546, 31.048910).[https://www.google.co.za/maps/place/29%C2%B038'36.8%22S+31%C2%B002'56.1%22E/@-29.6440845,31.0463761,16z/data=!4m14!1m7!3m6!1s0x1ef11ccce1762e41:0x9d841eced93cc6dd!2sMfongosi!3b1!8m2!3d-28.7113435!4d30.8355378!3m5!1s0x1ef71ae9c4779753:0xf1b50ad6f111e33d!7e2!8m2!3d-29.6435456!4d31.0489096?hl=en]Google Maps: Wesleyan Methodist Church, Verulam. (-29.643546, 31.048910). * Methodist Church, 31 Groom Street, Verulam, Natal, South Africa. (Co-ordinates: S29 38.607 E31 02.947).[http://www.genza.org.za/bonus/main.php?g2_itemId=14428] * The Wesleyan Church at Verulam, Natal: In the 1840s William Josiah Irons set up a scheme whereby Wesleyans from England would be able to emigrate to Natal. Known as the Christian Emigration and Colonization Society, and initially under the patronage of the Earl of Verulam, the Society sent approximately four hundred settlers to the Colony of Natal. The first group sailed on the King William and reached Durban on 23 January 1850. These settlers were sent to the Mdloti River area, where the nucleus of a town soon emerged, named Verulam. The first Wesleyan service held at Verulam was a prayer meeting on the first Sunday evening after the settlers' arrival, held in a marquee. A year later the first church outside Durban and Pietermaritzburg was built at Verulam of wattle with a thatched roof. This was replaced in 1855 by a brick-built church roofed with slate. On 14 October 1862 the foundation stone of the present church was laid during the Synod meeting at Verulam. The building was completed at a cost of £1425, and opened and dedicated by the Revd. T. Guard on 18 March 1864. In 1872 Verulam was described as 'the most flourishing centre of Wesleyanism in the Colony and a great many of the original settlers were still living in the town.' The Natal Almanac and Register of 1905 had this to say of the church at Verulam: If ever the history of Verulam is written, it will be shown that the Wesleyans of Verulam supplied the County of Victoria with religious services regularly on Sunday for many years, and Wesleyanism has thus the claim to be the established religion of the district hence its cathedral-like church, forming one of the most interesting objects. At the centenary celebrations in 1964, the church was described as 'the oldest standing church in Natal and a church that has often been described as the Cathedral of country Methodism'. On its walls were a number of memorial tablets, including one placed there in 1931 by the descendants of the early settlers. Today, not even fifty years later, the remaining small congregation meets in a church hall for services. The historic church is virtually roofless and abandoned to the elements. The pulpit, organ and altar rails still stand, and the few stained glass windows are intact, but the carpeted floor is littered with debris and fallen roof timbers, plants have sprung up in the body of the church, and a bible covered with mould lies near the pulpit. OTHER * THE MISSING BROTHER: There is apparently a [[Markham-|third brother Markham]] that came out to South Africa, sibling to [[Markham-312|James Frederick]] and the Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]]. He is apparently mentioned in some book, possibly blowing himself up making moonshine, or something along those lines, which I will only believe when I see the reference. Feel free to let me know who he might be. See the Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]] profile for the apparent photo of 'The Three Markham Brothers'. Photo: Rev. [[Markham-348|Benjamin Markham]] & Brothers.[https://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/Markham-348]Photo: The Three Markham Brothers. Markham Chapel, Ashtonvale, Bulwer, Natal, South Africa. * [[Markham-|Sidney John Markham]], Constable. bn/bp:1880-04-25 Natal?, South Africa. Who is he ?. Let me know. * [[Markham-7216|Stanley Evelyn Markham]], dd:1899-10-05 Zeederburg Street, Pietermaritzburg, Natal, South Africa, 3m, son of [[Markham-|Henry E. Markham]], Meningitis. dd:[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91W-TSB7-3?cc=2721608]South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955. FamilySearch. He is the brother of [[Markham-|Leslie Redvers Markham]], sons of [[Markham-|Henry Edmund 'Harry' Markham]] and Jessie Lucinda Peak. * Westward Ho is on the Atlantic Coast of North Devon in an area famous for smugglers in days gone by.
SPECIAL NOTES * [[Foley-3020|John Melville Foley]] m. [[Allison-1805|Marion Phillis Rix Allison]], (Parents of [[Melville-731|John Allison Melville]] m. [[Markham-338|Annie Elizabeth Markham]]), whose brother Capt. [[Allison-1922|Albert Bidden Allison]]'s dg. [[Allison-4920|Rose Allison]] m. [[Taylor-52862|John David Taylor]], his parents [[Taylor-52861|David Taylor]], Esq. m. [[Moodie-307|Sophia Eliza Moodie]], her father [[Moodie-106|Donald Moodie]]'s* brother [[Moodie-86|William James Dunbar Moodie]], (Magistrate) m1. [[Meek-562|Clarissa Meek]], sister of [[Meek-357|Elizabeth Meek]] m. [[Markham-312|James Frederick Markham]], whose dg [[Markham-338|Annie Elizabeth Markham]] m. [[Melville-731|John Allison Melville]], her brother [[Markham-337|Frederick Edmund Markham]] m. [[Moodie-88|Elsie Elizabeth Moodie]], dg of [[Moodie-131|Thomas Moodie (Moodie Trek Leader), son of [[Moodie-99|James Benjamin Donald Moodie]], (11th Laird of Melsetter), son of Capt. [[Moodie-91|Benjamin Moodie]], (10th Laird of Melsetter), brother of [[Moodie-106|Donald Moodie]]*. * 1862-01-02: Natal News: Her Majesty has been pleased to appoint [[Moodie-86|William James Dunbar Moodie]], to be resident magistrate of Klip River District, in the colony of Natal, and Frederick Simon Berning, to be Registrar of Deeds and Distributor of Stamps for the colony of Natal.[https://www.eggsa.org/newspapers/index.php/cape-and-natal-news/559-cape-and-natal-news-1862-1-january-june]Natal News: 1862-01-02. * 1868-08-24:dd: Schaap Plaats, Klip River, Natal, South Africa, [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], aged 41y, low fever, informant: Charles Gordon, reported 1868-10-10, [[Lucas-|G.A. Lucas]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C91X-Y7NM-3?cc=2721608]FamilySearch: South Africa, Natal Province, Civil Deaths, 1863-1955, Film # 007746183.[http://www.national.archsrch.gov.za/sm300cv/smws/sm30ddf0?201806081451039AC4166A&DN=00000002]NASA. [[McDowell-3326|Kelly, Mary Susan]]. Born McDowell. * 1869-02-18: [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], nee McDowell, gentlewoman, widow of the late [[Kelly-15473|T.T. Kelly]], Resident Magistrate at Ladysmith, Klip River, Natal. Residence. Schaap Plaats, Klip River. bn: Dinepore, India. 49?y (1820). dd:1868-08-24. Her parents: [[McDowell-3327|John]] + [[Unknown-426784|Elizabeth McDowell]]. Her daughters: [[Kelly-6140|Elizabeth Susan Chadwick Kelly]] bn:1850-08-23, [[Kelly-15474|Thomasina Mary Kelly]] bn:1851-09-06.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS7P-T3XZ-N?cc=2573604]FamilySearch: South Africa, Pietermaritzburg Estate Files 1846-1950: [[McDowell-3326|Mary Susan Kelly]], nee McDowell. ABBREVIATIONS * Circa (c.), Born (bn:), Marriage (m1:), Date of Death (dd:), Place of Death (PoD), Christened (cr:), Baptized (bp:), Buried (br:), Grave Photo (gp:), Date Format: YYYY-MM-DD, Orange Free State (OFS). REFERENCES * Compiled and Researched by [[Watson-20118|Tom Watson]].
REFERENCES (BUSY) * Back in Umtali a week afterwards, I heard the Mashonas had risen, and all outsiders were called into the town. As I was the only one with a horse, I placed it at the disposal of Mrs. Markham, whose husband had started making bricks in readiness for the new town of Umtali. On our way in we picked up Bob Fisher, Gass Burnett and several others.The PIONEER Volume 3. Pg. 37. * Photo - [[Markham-|J.F. Markham]] with grandchildren Gladys. Cecil and Eva Foreman at Westward Ho. (Photograph taken by Mr Markham's daughter, [[Markham-|Mrs Foreman]]).[--]The Story Of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair. Pg. . * Elsie Elizabeth Moodie, born at Snymanshoek, dist. Bethlehem, 20th January 1878; married, first, [[Markham-|(Frederick Edmund) Markham]], from whom she was divorced; secondly, at Melsetter, Rhodesia, 17th October 1901, Walter Frederick Acutt, Esq., of Melsetter, aforesaid, son of of the Rev. [ ] Acutt, of Wolverhampton.[--]The Story Of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair. Pg. . * MEMBERS OF THE MOODIE TREK - 1892: Thomas and Cecilia Jacomina Moodie and their children: Martin, Thomas, Harriet, James, Boyce, Charles, Malcolm, George, Sarah Moodie and her husband. George Benjamin Dunbar Moodie. Ernest du Plessis. Henry Ashpute. Ernest Baden. [[Hulley-|Richard Dick Hulley]]. ? Knox. [[Markham-337|Frederick Markham]]. Jn Oberholster. Gustav Stiebel.[--]The Story Of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair. Pg. ??. * 156 APPENDIX: List of names of men who did not come with any organised Treks and to whom farms were granted: 1. King, L. 2. Kleyn, L. 3. Ballantyne, J. 4. Wilder, G.A. Rev. 5. Bates, H.W. Rev. 6. Human, J.C. 7. Jensen, J.A. 8. Le Roux, P.L. Rev. 9. Moolman, J.N. 10. Moolman, J.J. 11. Du Preez, L.J. 12. Sweetnim, C. 13. Du Pleyrus, H. 14. Bezuidenhout, W.K. 15. Webster, J.E. 16. [[Markham-312|Markham, James Frederick]]. 17. [[Markham-311|Markham, Herbert Richard Allan]]. 18. [[Markham-339|Markham, John Sidney Ronald]].[--]The Story Of Melsetter by Shirley Sinclair. Pg. ??.

* [[Markham-|Anna Markam]] (Anna-Annas-Agnes-Markam-Marcom), m:1569-01-15 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to Thomas Robinson (Robbinson-Robinson).[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-Q8F]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-69J]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NV5P-X2J]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Elizabeth Markam]], m:1573-01-06 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to Edward Rockliffe.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-7W1]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Joan Markam]], br:1580-04-08 St. Bartholomew, Keelby,[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCM2-SQW]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Thomas Markam]] m:1583-11-22 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to [[Mason-|Grace Mason]].[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-4YQ]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|John Markam]], br:1584-09-07 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCM2-Q9V]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Willim Markam]] br:1591-06-17 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-5ZL]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Robert Markam]] br:1592-12-30 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-5L9]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Mason-|Grace Markam]] m:1594-05-14 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to Thomas Stevenson.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-DM6]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Eliz: Markam]] br:1594-01-03 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-526]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|John Markam]] br:1598-08-26 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-R3F]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|John Markam]]* m:1600-05-18 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to Margaret Wardall.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-NCG]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|James Markam]]* m:1600-05-18 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to Margareta Wardall.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NV5P-NLV]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|William Marckham]] br:1618-12-13 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-TX7]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Bridget Markham]] m:1636-06-19 St. Bartholomew, Keelby, to John Roweson.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NF3Y-798]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Ann Markem]], Widowed, br:1648-02-19 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-193]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Robert Markham]] br:1650-03-8 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCMK-183]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Elizabeth Marchem]] br:1661-09-02 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCM2-M29]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-|Edward Markham]] br:1685-09-10 St. Bartholomew, Keelby.[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JCM2-3PL]St. Bartholomew, Keelby. FamilySearch. * [[Markham-321|William Markham]], bp:c.1520, of Habrough. * HABROUGH, LINCOLNSHIREHabrough. * cr:1539-02-15: Ric Athalle. P: --.Habrough. * m:1541-06-11: Wyllm Markam - Elsabeth Athalle.Habrough. * cr:1542-02-11: Robert Markam. P: --.Habrough. * m:1542-05-06: Allic Athalle - John Hoge.Habrough. * cr:1544-11-21: Agnes Markam. P: --.Habrough. * cr:1551-02-20: Margret Kirmon.Habrough. * m:1552-11-06: James Athall - Elsabeth Milsey.Habrough. * cr:1557-02-19: Isabell Kirmond.Habrough. * cr:1540-10-31: Thomas Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1553-05-06: Antony Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1554-11-16: Elinor Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1556-12-18: Margret Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1558-09-10: John Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1562-04-04: John Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1564-05-19: Ellen Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1566-08-10: Marie Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1583-01-03: Samuell Wardall.Habrough. * cr:1586-06-19: Edward Wardall.Habrough. * m:1561-02-03: Allison Benet - Thomas Stanton.Habrough. * m:1592-01-21: Allis Popple - Thomas Mylson.Habrough. * m:1594-01-20: Ysabell Harrison - John Stainton.Habrough. * m:1594-11-18: Marmaduke Carrocke - Grace Milson.Habrough. * m:1599-05-21: George Carrocke - Margret Pearson.Habrough. * m:1686: Rosamond Markham - Samuel Milson.Habrough. * m:1703-07-26: Symeon Markham - Eliz Richardson.Habrough. * m:1734-05-14: Ricd Markam - An Lyell.Habrough. * m:1760-12-15: William Markham - Hannah Millson.Habrough. * m:1768: Jervse Markam - Ann Claton.Habrough. * m:1769: Ann Markham - Edward Newton.Habrough. * cr:1771: Elizabeth Markham. P: Garvis Markam + Ann.Habrough. * cr:1773-01-31: Richard Markam. P: William Markam + Hannah.Habrough. * cr:1775: Jane Markam. P: William Markam + Hannah.Habrough. * m:1781-08-13: Cattern Markham - William Simson.Habrough. * m:1800-02-05: Susannah England - John Towl.Habrough. * m:1808-08-16: Sarah Chapman - John Milson.Habrough. * m:1811-04-15: Maria Bower - Robert Dannitt.Habrough. * m:1824: Ann Markham - Thomas Bell.Habrough.

FS-IMG-BILL-ROSS

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Inbound links: 1
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Created: 2 Mar 2022
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Images: 1
FS-IMG-BILL-ROSS.png
{{Image|file=FS-IMG-BILL-ROSS.png |align=l |size=l |caption=''FIG. 1 - [[Ross-17006|Bill Ross]] (1928-2021) on BC Ferry, about 2010'' }} ---- == Index == # one # two # three # four

FTDNA Historical Sales Prices

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Lewis_Name_Study_-_Y_Haplogroup_I-L1272-2.jpg
FTDNA_Historical_Sales_Prices.jpg
This is an area where people can post current and prior FTDNA Y-DNA test sales prices (for comparison). Unlike many other vendors, most FTDNA regular and sale prices are available world-wide, in U.S. dollars. Shipping price for new kits is $9.95 worldwide (in 2024); there is no shipping needed for upgrades. U.S. customers receive a pre-paid shipping envelop to return their sample. Customers outside of the U.S. must arrange and pay for their sample return shipping. == FamilyTreeDNA (FTDNA) == Purchase kits and upgrades at https://www.familytreedna.com/. === Expected Sales Periods === FTDNA holds Y-DNA test sales multiple times each year. While their schedules and pricing are subject to change, expect medium-level sales: * DNA Days: mid-late April * Father's Day: mid-late Jun * Summer Sale: mid-late Aug FTDNA has varied its holiday sales, so it's unclear how they will handle future ones. In the past, they gave deep sales through most of Nov and Dec. However, in 2023, they had two medium-level sales in Nov and Dec, plus a deep sale for about a week for Black Friday/Cyber Monday. Deep sales give an extra $20 off for new test kits (beyond the medium-level sales). Some of the upgrade prices are the same as the medium-level sales and some are better. FTDNA historically offers a deep sale during March during the RootsTech conference. Buyers need to provide a coupon code to receive the discounted price. === Medium-level Sales Prices === Although prices and dates can vary, here's an example from a typical medium-level sale. One goal of researchers is to get as many Big Y-700 tests as possible, so the chart also includes examples of buying a lower-level test first, then upgrading (also during a sale) to Big Y-700 at a later date. {{Image|file=FTDNA_Historical_Sales_Prices.jpg |align=c |size=xl }} === Deep Sales Prices === "Deep" sales are usually pretty similar to the private RootsTech conference pricing. It's unclear how often FTDNA will hold deep sales in the future. Generally, new kits are reduced an extra $20 from the medium-level sales pricing. Upgrade pricing has varied over time by sale. Expired private sale with RootsTech coupon codes (Feb to Apr 2021): {{Image|file=Lewis_Name_Study_-_Y_Haplogroup_I-L1272-2.jpg |size=xl }}

Fuente de Cantos, Badajoz, Spain

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[[Biological family found/Familia biológica encontrada.]] ENGLISH:The goal of this project, connect with biological family members from Fuente de Cantos Badajoz and locate a few that are still missing. My dad and his sister were orphaned during the Civil war of Spain of 1936. In the year 2001, we located biological first cousins, paternal and maternal. The reunion was amazing, decades lost. And, with help of a priest, a large family tree. But, there are still siblings missing. SPANISH: El objetivo de este proyecto es conectar con familiares biológicos de Fuente de Cantos Badajoz y localizar a algunos que aún faltan. Mi papá y su hermana quedaron huérfanos durante la Guerra Civil de España de 1936. En el año de 2001, localizamos primos hermanos biológicos, paternos y maternos. El reencuentro fue asombroso, décadas perdidas. Y, con la ayuda de un sacerdote, un gran árbol genealógico. Pero todavía faltan hermanos. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Garcia-Corrales-1|Maria Garcia-Corrales]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Locate on Family Search, ANY people on my tree * Locate Spanish websites, any people searching for family members from Fuente de Cantos, Badajoz * Ask My Heritage or Ancestry.com if tests can be purchased in USA but mailed to Spain Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=31512408 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fuerza aérea de Chile (FACH)

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Fuerza_aerea_de_Chile_FACH.png
La fuerza aerea de chile es una institucion cuya funcion es defender a la República de Chile por medio del control y explotación del espacio aéreo, participar en la batalla de superficie apoyando a fuerzas propias y amigas, con el propósito de contribuir al logro de los objetivos estratégicos que la política nacional le fija a las Fuerzas Armadas.

Fueston Family Sources

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Fueston-31.pdf
Fueston-5.pdf
Fueston-28.pdf
Fueston-32.pdf
Smith-120654.pdf
Perdue-951.jpg
Fueston_Family_Sources-1.jpg
Fueston-4.jpg
Fueston-31.jpg
Fueston-29.pdf
Fueston_Family_Sources.jpg
Perdue-951-1.jpg
Fueston_Family_Sources.png
Fuston-68.jpg
Fueston-30.jpg
Perdue-951-2.jpg
This is a repository for all sources used in the profiles of all the members of the Wayne County Kentucky Fueston (aka Fuston , Fewston, and Feuston) Family . - '''Work in Progress''' *[[Space:Fueston_Name_Study | Fuston & Fueston Name Study and DNA Project]] *[[Space:Fueston_Family_Sources | Fueston Family Sources Repository]] *[http://www.worldfamilies.net/surnames/fuston/ Fuston & Fueston DNA Project] - World Families ===The Fueston Line of Wayne County Kentucky=== *[[Fuston-59 | Thomas Fuston in 1802 sold Greene Co. TN land (to Jonathan Fuston) m. Elizabeth Perdue]] **[[Fuston-68 | John M. Fuston b. 1818 in Wayne County, Kentucky m. Malinda Clemmons]] ***[[Fueston-5 | Ezekiel C. Fueston b. 1838 in Wayne County, Kentucky m. Ursley Smith]] ****[[Fueston-4 | Gaines T. Fueston b. 1875 in Clinton County Kentucky m. Edna O. Belcher]] *****[[Fueston-3 | Loyd L. Fueston b. 1930 Welch Graig Oklahoma m. Dorothy M. Milroy]] ******[[Fueston-1| Charles Fueston]] ==Citations and Sources== ===Fueston Family - for use in multiple profiles=== ====United States Census 1850, Wayne County Kentucky==== * Source: US1850 "United States Census, 1850", database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M65P-HDG : 9 November 2014), Elizabeth Fenston, Wayne county, Wayne, Kentucky, United States; citing family 405, NARA microfilm publication M432 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). View the Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DZ1B-34?mode=g&i=140&cc=1401638 ====Nebraska State Census 1885==== https://www.fold3.com/search/#query=Fueston&t=650 * Source: NE1885 "Nebraska State Census, 1885," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-822M-2?mode=g&i=11&cc=1810728); citing NARA microfilm publication M352 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 499,540. ====United States Census 1900 - Tebo, Missouri==== *"United States Census, 1900," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M3C5-MHB : accessed 27 March 2017), Wesley Fueston, Tobo Township Calhoun city, Henry, Missouri, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 90, sheet 7A, family 140, NARA microfilm publication T623 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1972.); FHL microfilm 1,240,858. *View original: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DHW7-67S?mode=g&i=12&cc=1325221 ====United States Census 1940 Graig, Oklahoma==== *"United States Census, 1940," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VBJR-W2R : accessed 27 March 2017), Edna Fueston, Welch, Welch Town, Craig, Oklahoma, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 18-25, sheet 2A, line 7, family 26, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, NARA digital publication T627. Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790 - 2007, RG 29. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2012, roll 3287. *View original: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89MR-GQYS?mode=g&i=2&cc=2000219 ====Township 011N - Range 041W==== *'''Survey Plat, Township 011N - Range 041W''' Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/survey/default.aspx?dm_id=382035&sid=vks2irpl.wpy) Repository: [[#BLM GLO]] * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ====Township 011N - Range 041W==== *'''Survey Plat, Township 012N - Range 041W''' Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/survey/default.aspx?dm_id=382037&sid=rguacr14.md2 ) Repository: [[#BLM GLO]] * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===Richard Fuston=== *Richard Fuston was transported to the Virginia Colony sometime before 1652.Source: [[#Greer]] *Richard Fuston's bond was registered in 1652, and Henry Fleete received land in Lancaster County, Virginia for paying the bond.Source: [[#Greer]] * Source: GreerGreer, George Cabel. Early Virginia Immigrants 1623-1666. Richmond, VA, USA: W. C. Hill Printing Co., 1912, Description: Early Virginia immigrants and their sponsors, Transcription: http://www.evmedia.com/virginia/ ===Richard Fuston=== ===Robert Fuston=== ===Thomas Fuston=== ===Elizabeth (Perdue) Fuston=== * Repository: R1 [[Space:Fueston_Family_Sources|Fueston]] *Source: US1820"United States Census, 1820," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLR-T1D : accessed 26 March 2017), Mrs Betsey Fuston, Wayne, Kentucky, United States; citing p. 104, NARA microfilm publication M33, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 28; FHL microfilm 186,188. View the Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YYK-3SZK?mode=g&i=27&cc=1803955 * Source: JilsonJillson, Willard Rouse, 1890-. ... The Kentucky Land Grants: a Systematic Index to All of the Land Grants Recorded In the State Land Office At Frankfort, Kentucky, 1782-1924. Louisville, Ky.: The Standard printing company, incorporated, 1925. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=inu.30000011374059;view=1up;seq=337 *Source: US1830"United States Census, 1830," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHPZ-3YX : 18 August 2015), Betsey Fuston, Wayne, Kentucky, United States; citing 258, NARA microfilm publication M19, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 42; FHL microfilm 7,821. View the Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YBQ-PWF?mode=g&i=85&cc=1803958 *Source: US1840"United States Census, 1840," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHTP-V7K : 24 August 2015), Elizabeth Furton, Wayne, Kentucky, United States; citing p. 155, NARA microfilm publication M704, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 126; FHL microfilm 7,832. View the Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YB7-27C?mode=g&i=24&cc=1786457 *Source: US1850 "United States Census, 1850", database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M65P-HDG : 9 November 2014), Elizabeth Fenston, Wayne county, Wayne, Kentucky, United States; citing family 405, NARA microfilm publication M432 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). View the Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DZ1B-34?mode=g&i=140&cc=1401638 *Johnson, Augusta Phillips. ''[[Space:A_Century_of_Wayne_County_Kentucky%2C_1800-1900 | A Century of Wayne County Kentucky, 1800-1900]]'' (The Standard Printing Company Incorporated, Louisville, Kentucky Publishers, 1939) ===Ezekiel French Fuston=== *https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000011374059?urlappend=%3Bseq=1268 *https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000011374059?urlappend=%3Bseq=1283 ===John M. Fuston=== *https://hdl.handle.net/2027/inu.30000011374059?urlappend=%3Bseq=1283 ===Ezekiel Clemmons Fueston=== *Source: US1850"United States Census, 1850," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M65P-LT7 : 9 November 2014), E C Fueston in household of John Fueston, Wayne county, Wayne, Kentucky, United States; citing family 436, NARA microfilm publication M432 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.). Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DZ1B-MC?mode=g&i=144&cc=1401638 *Source: US1860"United States Census, 1860", database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZB1-8TV : 30 December 2015), Ezekiel Feuston, 1860. Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9B9J-S1D9?mode=g&i=13&cc=1473181 *Source: US1870"United States Census, 1870," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MX7T-G91 : 17 October 2014), Ezekiel C Fenston, Kentucky, United States; citing p. 15, family 99, NARA microfilm publication M593 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 545,956. Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HT-DHL7-VF1?mode=g&i=14&cc=1438024 *Source: NE1885"Nebraska State Census, 1885," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X3X2-MD9 : 2 April 2016), Edward Hueston, 1885; citing NARA microfilm publication M352 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 499,540. Original Document: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:939N-822M-2?mode=g&cc=1810728 '''Homestead''' “Patent of Fueston, Ezekiel C., 5 May 1891,” Sidney, Nebraska Land Office, Survey: 160 acres, Document Number: 281, Accession Nr: NE2530_.223, Authority: May 20, 1862: Homestead entry Orginal (12 Stat. 392). Land Description: State: NE, Meridian: 6th PM, Township - Range: 012N – 041W, Aliquots: SE1/4, Section: 26, Survey #:382037 , County: Perkins.Source:[[#DOC281]] Page * Source: DOC281Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=NE2530__.223&docClass=STA&sid=xyck2cbq.bsy#patentDetailsTabIndex=0 ) Repository: [[#BLM GLO]] * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===Ursley Smith Fueston=== '''Homestead''' “Patent of Fueston, Ursley (Smith)., 9 Sep1895,” Sidney, Nebraska Land Office, Survey: 160 acres, Document Number: 2470, Accession Nr: NE2540_.333, Authority: May 20, 1862: Homestead Entry Orginal (12 Stat. 392). Land Description: State: NE, Meridian: 6th PM, Township - Range: 012N – 041W, Aliquots: SE1/4, Section: 10, Survey #:382037, County: Keith.Source:[[#DOC2470]] Page * Source: DOC2470Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=NE2540__.333&docClass=STA&sid=xyck2cbq.bsy Repository: [[#BLM GLO]] Page * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===John William Fueston=== "Kentucky Births and Christenings, 1839-1960," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FWJ8-LLV : 4 December 2014), J. W. Fewston, 03 Apr 1857; citing Wayne, Wayne, Kentucky, reference 2:P40FSW; FHL microfilm 216,842. '''Homestead''' “Patent of Fueston, John W.,., 21 Jun 1892,” Sidney, Nebraska Land Office, Survey: 160 acres, Document Number: 1169, Accession Nr: NE2560_.144, Authority: May 20, 1862: Homestead Entry Orginal (12 Stat. 392). Land Description: State: NE, Meridian: 6th PM, Township - Range: 012N – 041W, Aliquots: SE1/4, Section: 26, Survey #:382037, County: Keith.Source:[[#DOC1169]] Page * Source: DOC1169Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=NE2560__.144&docClass=STA&sid=dkgraezd.k1n#patentDetailsTabIndex=0 ) Repository: [[#BLM]] Page * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===Robert Clemmons Fueston=== '''Homestead''' “Patent of Fueston, Robert C., 9 Nov 1891,” Sidney, Nebraska Land Office, Survey: 160 acres, Document Number: 3276, Accession Nr: NE2100_.180, Authority: May 20, 1862: Homestead Entry Orginal (12 Stat. 392). Land Description: State: NE, Meridian: 6th PM, Township - Range: 011N – 041W, Aliquots: SE1/4, Section: 26, Survey #:382035, County: Perkins.Source:[[#DOC3276]] Page * Source: DOC3276Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=NE2100__.180&docClass=STA&sid=f5satnwr.s2h ) Repository: [[#BLM]] Page * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===Henry Irvin Fueston=== ===Sarah (Fueston) Francis=== ===Charles Lafayette Fueston=== '''Homestead''' “Patent of Fueston, Charles L.,., 14 Aug 1893,” Sidney, Nebraska Land Office, Survey: 160 acres, Document Number: 1501, Accession Nr: NE2560_.442, Authority: May 20, 1862: Homestead Entry Orginal (12 Stat. 392). Land Description: State: NE, Meridian: 6th PM, Township - Range: 012N – 041W, Aliquots: SE1/4, Section: 10, Survey #:382037, County: Keith.Source:[[#DOC1501]] Page * Source: DOC1501Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=NE2560__.442&docClass=STA&sid=qajwv04g.tmx ) Repository: [[#BLM]] Page * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===James W. Fueston=== '''Homestead''' “Patent of Fueston, James W.,., 14 Aug 1893,” Sidney, Nebraska Land Office, Survey: 160 acres, Document Number: 1498, Accession Nr: NE2560_.439, Authority: May 20, 1862: Homestead Entry Orginal (12 Stat. 392). Land Description: State: NE, Meridian: 6th PM, Township - Range: 012N – 041W, Aliquots: SE1/4, Section: 14, Survey #:382037, County: Keith.Source:[[#DOC1498]] Page * Source: DOC1498Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, (Internet website: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=NE2560__.439&docClass=STA&sid=dkgraezd.k1n ) Repository: [[#BLM GLO]] Page * Repository: BLM GLO https://glorecords.blm.gov/reference/default.aspx ===Marshall Fueston=== ===Jethro Franklin Fueston=== ===Gaines Travis Fueston Family=== *"United States Census, 1900," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M3CP-GQK : accessed 27 March 2017), Gaines Faston, Tobo Township Calhoun city, Henry, Missouri, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 90, sheet 19A, family 379, NARA microfilm publication T623 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1972.); FHL microfilm 1,240,858. *View original: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:S3HY-DHW7-663?mode=g&i=36&cc=1325221 *"United States Census, 1910," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGJ5-4WP : accessed 27 March 2017), Goimer T Fueston, Spokane Ward 1, Spokane, Washington, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 147, sheet 3A, family 54, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 1670; FHL microfilm 1,375,683. *View original: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYY5-2ZH?mode=g&i=4&cc=1727033 *"United States World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KZDB-NLW : 12 December 2014), Gaines Travis Fueston, 1917-1918; citing Ottawa County, Oklahoma, United States, NARA microfilm publication M1509 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 1,852,066. *https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33S7-9YTC-3D8F?mode=g&i=3069&cc=1968530 *View original: "United States Census, 1930," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XC7C-396 : accessed 27 March 2017), James T Feuston Or Fenston, Township 01, Craig, Oklahoma, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 2, sheet 3B, line 77, family 64, NARA microfilm publication T626 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2002), roll 1899; FHL microfilm 2,341,633. *View original: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GRZP-9G8?mode=g&i=5&cc=1810731 *"United States Census, 1940," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VBJR-W2R : accessed 27 March 2017), Edna Fueston, Welch, Welch Town, Craig, Oklahoma, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 18-25, sheet 2A, line 7, family 26, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, NARA digital publication T627. Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790 - 2007, RG 29. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2012, roll 3287. *View original: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89MR-GQYS?mode=g&i=2&cc=2000219 ===George Mcclure Fueston=== ==Research Notes== ===Phillip Fewston Family=== *Source Citation: Year: 1870; Census Place: Monticello, Wayne, Kentucky; Roll: M593_503; Page: 7B; Image: 205672; Family History Library Film: 552002 *Source Information: Ancestry.com. 1870 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch. ($ Must purchase subscription to view) *Original data: 1870 U.S. census, population schedules. NARA microfilm publication M593, 1,761 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d. ===Gabriel Fewston=== Lucas, Marion B. "Berea College in the 1870s and 1880s: Student Life at a Racially Integrated Kentucky College." The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 98, no. 1 (2000): 1-22. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23385446. (can be viewed with free basic account) ===John Fuston Land Grant 1795=== *http://lva-linux-temp.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com:8991/F/Q5DX7995VYQST8HRJB9DD9R5B23P2JXJI4RTDBL3RV9H3N2M4X-05024?func=full-set-set&set_number=005134&set_entry=000003&format=999 URL (Click on link) http://image.lva.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/GetLONN.pl?first=220&last=&g_p=G33&collection=LO Grant Author LinkFuston, John. grantee. Title LinkLand grant 18 August 1795. Summary Location: Montgomery County. Description: 275 acres on the waters of Big Reed Island a branch of New River beginning by the side of a Spring Branch known by the name of Clearing Spring Branch. Source: Land Office Grants No. 33, 1795-1796, p. 220 (Reel 99). Part of the index to the recorded copies of grants issued by the Virginia Land Office. The collection is housed in the Archives at the Library of Virginia. Other Format Available on microfilm. Virginia State Land Office. Grants A-Z, 1-124, reels 42-190; Virginia State Land Office. Grants 125- , reels 369-. Subject - Personal LinkFuston, John. grantee. Subject - Topical LinkLand titles -- Registration and transfer -- Virginia -- Montgomery County. Subject -Geographic LinkMontgomery County (Va.) -- History -- 18th century. Genre/Form LinkLand grants -- Virginia -- Montgomery County. Added Entry LinkVirginia. Land Office. Register. Land grants, 1779- LinkLibrary of Virginia. Archives. System Number 000756682 Previous Record ===John Fuson land grant 1779=== URL (Click on link) http://image.lva.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/GetLONN.pl?first=11&last=&g_p=GB&collection=LO Grant Author LinkFuson, John. grantee. Title LinkLand grant 10 November 1779. Summary Location: Pittsylvania County. Description: 329 acres on Story Creek. Source: Land Office Patents B, 1779-1780, p. 11 (Reel 43). Part of the index to the recorded copies of grants issued by the Virginia Land Office. The collection is housed in the Archives at the Library of Virginia. Other Format Available on microfilm. Virginia State Land Office. Grants A-Z, 1-124, reels 42-190; Virginia State Land Office. Grants 125- , reels 369-. Subject - Personal LinkFuson, John. grantee. Subject - Topical LinkLand titles -- Registration and transfer -- Virginia -- Pittsylvania County. Subject -Geographic LinkPittsylvania County (Va.) -- History -- 18th century. Genre/Form LinkLand grants -- Virginia -- Pittsylvania County. Added Entry LinkVirginia. Land Office. Register. Land grants, 1779- LinkLibrary of Virginia. Archives. System Number 000756677 Previous Record ===John Fuson Land Grant 1781=== URL (Click on link) http://image.lva.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/GetLONN.pl?first=902&last=&g_p=PE&collection=LO Grant Author LinkFuson, John. grantee. Title LinkLand grant 1 February 1781. Summary Location: Henry County. Description: 235 acres on the North fork of Story Creek and adjoining James Smiths land. Source: Land Office Patents E, 1775-1776, 1780-1781 (v.2 p.463-930), p. 902 (Reel 46). Part of the index to the recorded copies of grants issued by the Virginia Land Office. The collection is housed in the Archives at the Library of Virginia. Other Format Available on microfilm. Virginia State Land Office. Grants A-Z, 1-124, reels 42-190; Virginia State Land Office. Grants 125- , reels 369-. Subject - Personal LinkFuson, John. grantee. LinkSmith, James. Subject - Topical LinkLand titles -- Registration and transfer -- Virginia -- Henry County. Subject -Geographic LinkHenry County (Va.) -- History -- 18th century. Genre/Form LinkLand grants -- Virginia -- Henry County. Added Entry LinkVirginia. Land Office. Register. Land grants, 1779- LinkLibrary of Virginia. Archives. System Number 000756676 Previous Record ===Ancestors and descendants of Katie Hale Barnes === *https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/1265986?availability=Family%20History%20Library *Katie Hale was born 25 August 1904 in Luna, New Mexico. Her parents were John Johnston Hale (1844-1919) and Minta Caldona Fuston (1862-1948) *http://lva-linux-temp.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com:8991/F/Q5DX7995VYQST8HRJB9DD9R5B23P2JXJI4RTDBL3RV9H3N2M4X-11270?func=full-set-set&set_number=005262&set_entry=000001&format=999 Full View of Record: LVA Catalogs Choose format: Standard format Catalog card Name tags MARC tags Record 1 out of 3 No Previous Record Next Record Call Number CS71.B28 2005 Author LinkLeary, Kathryn Barnes, 1937- Title LinkBarnes roots, Hale heritage / by Kathryn Barnes Leary. Other Title LinkAncestors and descendants of Robert Olen Barnes LinkAncestors and descendants of Katie Hale Barnes LinkAncestors of Robert Olen Barnes LinkAncestors of Katie Hale Barnes Publication Wilbraham, Mass. : K.B. Leary, 2005. Material vii, 211, 168 p. : ill. (some col.), map, ports. ; 28 cm. Gen. note Cover title. Note Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Contents Contents: [Pt. 1]. Ancestors and descendants of Robert Olen Barnes -- paternal line, Barnes, Huston, Collett, Whitaker, Chamberlain, Mason : maternal line, Newland, Bush, Campbell, Wilson, Bennett, and other allied families -- [pt. 2]. Ancestors and descendants of Katie Hale Barnes -- paternal line, Hale, Bourne, Burwell, Johnstone, Jones : maternal line, Fuston, Jones, VanMetre, Bayless and other allied families. Subject - Personal LinkBarnes family holdings (1) All items System Number 001539212 No Previous Record

Fulcher Grendon & Henry Russell at Seige of Nottingham Castle

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The Siege of Nottingham Castle by John in 1194 Essentially, John wanted the castles which he had not received with their honors, such as Nottingham. The last years of King Henry II’s reign were troubled by fierce family squabbles between him and his sons, Henry, Richard, Geoffrey and John. When King Richard left on the Crusade, his brother John decided to claim Nottingham Castle. Serlo de Grendon also had a son name Fouchier (Fulcher) who helped break up the siege of Nottingham Castle by John when King Richard was away at the Crusades.. Richard, Arriving finally at the scene had these events: the besieged] sent a knight, Sir Fouchier de Grendon, and Henry Russell with him. They both came to the king; they were both in the king’s presence. They looked at him closely and knew him from his bearing and from his face. ‘Am I him? What do you think?’, said the king. They said, ‘Yes.’ ‘You may go back freely’, he said. ‘That is right; do the best that you can’. They took leave and went away and reported what they had found. Fulcher de Grendon was a local man but of little consequence, a younger son of Serlo I de Grendon, lord of Bradley and Sturston in Derbyshire.(39) His father, and brother William, had extensive connections locally but it is difficult to understand how Fulcher would have personally recognised King Richard. Nevertheless their report was accepted by the besieged and there is no reason to doubt the veracity of the Histoire as to their names. Indeed, as two named nonentities its accuracy is vindicated. Those besieging Nottingham Castle considered their situation and surrendered themselves to the king’s mercy; they were wise [for] they greatly reduced their penal in this way. King Richard had captured the castle [and] this was very pleasing to all his men”.(37) This episode from the Histoire accords extremely well with Howden’s version. Two men were sent out by the besieged to inspect the king’s person to determine if it was Richard and the Histoire names the two men. Now the besieged had little choice but to surrender. After being apprised of the news, to continue their defiance of the king would be foolish given the king’s renowned military skill and consummate ability in reducing castles. They risked being attainted as traitors, losing their lives and having their families disinherited; no quarter would have been given once Richard had entered the castle by storm.

Fulham- Fullam Family History site

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Fulham-Fullam family history site: FREE to all our long lost relatives. We do our best to protect our unique family history and our female and children from any bad people. I've created a web site(s) called “Fulham Familysite media” to share pictures with friends and family. I'd like you to be a member of the site. Contact me via this site which will redirect your inquiry to my e-mail address, . Our site is a private family history site and is "FREE" to all of our long lost international and generational cousins. The privacy protects our present family members over 40 + internationally and our unique 800 years of family history since our Norman ancestors of England and Ireland in the 1200's. We only wish our family members to know there personal history and we wish to protect our family so our site is very private. Our ancestors were Norwegian Vikings and their grandchildren were from Normandy prior to the Invasion of England in 1066 by Duke William the Conqueror. We were given Land in the ancient village of Fullanhamme in Middlesex hence our surname was le Blund de Foleham literally the "Blonde of Fulham" so of our kin-folk took the surname Whyte to show the Anglicized version of le Blund. We took the surname from the ancient village, these are also are DNA Genetic family Follom, Follum Fullom Fullem surname spellings. Do join us here and read of our family over the past 800 years, in good faith , our site is not a public site but strictly for our DNA Genetic relatives only. This is to protect our members and our family history for our children of tomorrow.  The intention of our site is to honour our forebears of yesterday and for grandmothers in a hundred years to tell their grandchildren of our unique family history. John Fulham, Liverpool, Merseyside, England. *All of our forebears and to include all their descendants who claim Irish origin are descendant from the family who who held Land in Swords since John de Fulham was recorded as the resident in Swords in 1294 AD. We are an extremely rare family and are all generational extended  family in England, Ireland, Canada, USA, Australia, New Zealand, and the Irish Colony of Argentina post 1870's.

Full Tree

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The goal of this project is to outline an entire family tree. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Flanagan-1897|Jacob Flanagan]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=21817199 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fullagar House on 8th Ave

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The home where William A. Fullagar and Evelyn L. Hoyt Fullagar lived roughly 1948-1956, with Paul D. Fullagar, Joan L. Fullagar, Lois G. Fullagar, and beginning 1952, Neil S. Fullagar.

Fuller Family Mystery

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Family Mysteries I have lost track of both my great-grandparents Florence May (Lake) Fuller and her spouse Henry (Harry) Fuller after the 1920 United States Census. I know that they were married on 26 October 1897 in Cohasset, Plymouth, Massachusetts but were residents of Nova Scotia until emmigrated to the US in around 1909. I cannot find any records of them, just of their children after the 1920 census, I am especially looking for their death records. I think that it's funny that one can trace her genealogy to the Mayflower but cannot find 20th century documents! Please help!

Fuller Letters and Papers

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{{One Name Study|name=Fuller}} * [[Special:Whatlinkshere/Space:Fuller_Letters_and_Papers|'''WikiTree Profiles that reference ''Fuller_Letters_and_Papers'' source''']] == 1954 Letter from [[Keller-6324|Ruth Mathews (Keller) Chatterton]] Comment by [[roos-1405|Carey Roos]]: The original letter had been in the possession of [[Keller-6324|Ruth Mathews (Keller) Chatterton]], and upon her death possession went to [[Roos-1414|Carolyn (Roos) Steepy]]. The photocopies were made by my Gr Aunt Ruth [[Keller-6324|Ruth (Keller Chatterton]], and Aunt Carolyn [[Roos-1414|Carolyn Roos Steepy]] as were the annotations on the photocopies. == === Introduction === In January 1954 [[Keller-6324|Ruth Mathews (Keller) Chatterton]] wrote this letter to the children of [[Keller-6272|Frieda (Keller) Roos]]. The letter describes the Family Records, The Lovisa Dawley Spread, and her recollections of Zeruah Fuller Hyde, as well as letters that [[fuller-190|Ashbel Fuller]] wrote to Grand Children and letters they wrote back.

:#Transcribers Note: When Great Aunt Ruth wrote this letter she was 86 years old. I discovered some errors in dates or omission of dates or information so she left a space so she could look it up and fill in later, or put down a wrong date. In transcribing this material I have put those instances in '''((double parenthesis the correct information))'''. '''Page 1:'''
This book '''((papers))''' is concerned with the history of Ashbil Fuller and his descendants. The material was given to me by Mrs. Zeruah Fuller Hyde, granddaughter of Ashbel Fuller also spelled Ashbil.
A brief history of Ashbil Fuller. He was the son of Abraham Fuller born in 1766 '''((1765))''' in Conn. He moved to Vermont about 1790 and lived in Vergennes and Ferrisburg. Three sons Heman, Sheldon, and Ashbil in 1820 moved to St. Lawrence Co. N.Y where they founded the town of Fullerville and began a business called Fullerville Iron Works. Heman Fuller married Amelia Dawley and there were 5 children Issac whom I can remember Lovisa '''((Louise))''' and Andrew both of whom died in their 20's. '''Page 2:'''
Lorain who married Stillman E Matthews my grandfather and grandmother Lorain died in _______ '''((Lorain died in 1874. Stillman died in 1896))''' and my mother Minnie Matthews and sister Lephe nicknamed "Pay" were brought up in the home of [[Dawley-127|Amelia Dawley Fuller]] their grandmother. [[Fuller-11682|Zeruah Fuller Hyde]] lived to be 94 ((93)) dying Gouverneur, N.Y in 1934. From Aunt "Rue" I learned many bits of information. Once she took me to see the site of her childhood home in Fullerville. The chimney and outside brick oven ruins were visible. She described "Baking Day" when the oven was filled with beans, as much as 50 loaves of bread and 30 pies. The summer kitchen became a "deep freeze" in the N.Y's cold winters and food so frozen was warmed in fireplace ovens as needed. Other information I shall place in the captions under the articles. It is my hope that the children of [[Keller-6272|Frieda Keller Roos]] will add to this with '''((the))''' history of their families. '''Page 3:'''
These letters were written by Ashbil Fuller to his sons ((and Grandchildren)) in Fullerville about 1812 to 1849 '''((1850))''' when he died. Stout old Puritan he was. Letter No. ______ is of special interest. This material concerns the Dawley family. Lovisa mother of Amelia spun and carded the wool for the Lovisa Dawley spread now in my possession and which is supposed to be given to the oldest granddaughter of succeeding generations. I will give it to Katherine Roos Dekay. These pages, have some notes about the Matthews family. I also have the Mathews Family Bible, Letters signed Lorain were written by my grandmother. '''((Lorain Fuller) Mathews))''' Those signed Sarah Mathews by Stillman Mathews mother. ::: Ruth Keller Chatterton ::: Jan. 1, 1954 ===Births Bible Page - Mathews Family Page 1=== {| border="1" |BIRTHS || |- |Ethen Mathews || November 12th 1791 |- |Sarah Mathews || March 6th 1794 |- |Norman Smith Mathews || March 26th 1815 |- |Lephe Cummings Mathews || January 29th 1817 |- |Chas. Cummings Mathews || January 17th 1819 |- |Mary Aluuira Mathews || June 20th 1823 |- |Samuel Winslow Mathews || November 3rd 1825 |- | Lucia Winslow Mathews || November 3rd 1825 |- | Lydia Eliza Mathews || February 1st 1828 |- | James Brutnall Mathews ||August 9th 1830 |- |Stillman Ethen Mathews || August 21st 1832 |- |Albert Allen Mathews || October 20th 1835 |- |Gardner Keyes Mathews || January 11th 1837 |} ===Deaths Bible Page - Mathews Family Page 2=== {|border="1" |- |DEATHS || |- | Charles Cummings Mathews || March 26th 1819 - Age 2 months 7 days |- | Samuel Winslow Mathews || May 3rd 1826 - Age 6 months |- |Lucia Winslow Mathews || Oct 18th 1827 - Age 1 year 11 months and 15 days |- | |- | Mary Aluuira Mathews || June 22nd 1828 - Age 5 years w months |- | Norman Smith Mathews ||August 22 1840 Age - 25 years 2 months |- | Lephe Cummings Tripp || April 22nd 1856 Age - 39 years 3 months |- | Ethen Mathews || January 1st 1870 Age - 78 years |- | Lorain Mathews || April 5th 1874 |- | Minnie Mathews Keller || July 9 1932 |- | Frieda Keller Roos || July 25th 1951 |- | Rex Keller || Aug 5th 1963 |- | Ruth Chatterton || May 11 1974 |- | Otto Keller || unknown approximately 1913 |} ===Births Bible Page - Mathews Family Page 3=== {|border="1" |- |BIRTHS || |- | Minnie Mathews || August 5th 1860 |- | Karl Keller || July 29th 1860 |- | |- | Ruth Keller || March 2nd 1888 |- |Frieda Keller ||March 1st 1890 |- |Karl Ottogar Keller || February 9th 1892 |- |Rex Carlton Keller || December 30th 1899 |- |Katherine Roos || August 24th 1914 |- | Carolyn Roos || January 3rd 1916 |- | Karl Roos || November 14th 1917 |- |Margery Ann Roos || May ''''''((2))'''''' 1920 |} ===Marriages Bible Page - Mathews Family Page 4=== {|border="1" | Ethen Mathews to Sarah Mathews || February 13th 1814 |- | Stillman Ethen Mathews to Loraine Fuller || ((October 22 1857)) |- | Karl Keller to Minnie Mathews || May 4th 1887 |- |Ruth Keller to Herbert W Chatterton || June 15th 1916 |- |Frieda Keller to John P. Roos Jr || '''((September 2nd 1912))''' |- |Karolina Keller to Algy McKenzie || October 28th 1923 |- | Katherine Roos to Edwin DeKay || '''((14 Jun 1940))''' |- | Carolyn Roos to Charles Steepy || May 24 1942 |- | Karl Roos to Christina '''((Davidson))''' || December 11 1943 |- | Margery Roos to Richard Krier || November 12 1944 |} ===Births Bible Page - Fuller Family Page 1=== {|border="1" |- | BIRTHS || BIRTHS |- | || Andrew J Kinney was born November 20 1848 |- | || Frank Kinney was born September 2 1851 |- | Amelia Fuller was born August 27th 1805 || |- | Lovisa Fuller was born on Friday Sept 16th 1831 || |- | Andrew I Fuller was born on Tuesday Aug 16th 1836 || |- |Issac M. Fuller was born tuesday Aug 16th 1836 || |- |Zeruah P Fuller was born Aug 25th 1821 Wednesday || |} ===Deaths Bible Page - Fuller Family Page 2=== {|border="1" |- | DEATHS || DEATHS |- | Heman Fuller Died Sept 24 1872 Aged - 79 || Lorain Millard Fuller Died Jan-16th 1841 |- | Amilia Fuller 1883 || Ashbil Fuller Died June--1850 |- | Andrew Fuller Died March 1st 1844 Aged 19 years & 6 months || |- | Lovisa Fuller Kinney Died 1854 aged 22 years 6 months 15 days || |- | Lorain M Fuller Matthews- Died April 5- 1874 Aged 35 years & 8 months || |- |Stella Matthews Died Aug- '''((No other information))''' || |} ===Marriages Bible Page - Fuller Family Page 3=== {|border="1" |- | MARRIAGES || MARRIAGES |- | || Zeruah A Fuller to Abram V Hyde Jan-14-1867 |- | || Issac M Fuller to Marrie L. Parker Feb-17-1867 |- | || |- | Lovisa Fuller To Orrin Kenney '''((June 1846))'''|| |- | Lorain M Fuller To Stillman E Matthews Oct 22nd 1857 || |} '''((Written in August 1931 Watertown, NY Daily Times))''' ==MRS. HYDE 90 YEARS OF AGE== West Side Resident Observed Anniversary on Tuesday -- Was Native of Fullerville
Mrs. Zeruah Fuller Hyde of 258 West Main street observed her 90th birthday on Tuesday, August 25, being the guest on that day of Mr. and Mrs. Geoge Bartholomew. She received a number of callers, including Mr. and Mrs. Chase of Oxford, Mass. Mrs. Chase, formerly Miss Florence Gear of Fullerville, and Mrs. Hyde were girls together. Mrs. Everett Peck and Mrs. Hannah Pickett called, bringing flowers, candy, and handkerchiefs. Letters were received from a niece on Portland, Idaho, and Mrs. Lottie Kirkbride of Natural Bridge, a former pupil of Mrs. Hyde; a card and candy from Mrs. Carlos Baum of Boston, Mass., and several cards from other friends and relatives, the youngest being Miss Joan Finley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Finley. Mrs. Hyde has made her home with Mrs. Etta Whalen since October, 1930. She was born in Fullerville, August 25, 1841, a daughter of Herman '''((Heman))''' and Amelia Dawley Fuller, natives of Oneida county, who were the among the early settlers of Fullerville. They settled in Fullerville when they were first married. Mrs. Hyde married A. V. Hyde in 1865, shortly after his return from the Civil War. Mr. Hyde who died in June 1922, served in Company C, 50th Regiment, New York Engineers, throughout the entire War. He was about 78 years of age at the time of his death. Following their marriage, Mr. Hyde for many years acted as a bookkeeper at the various talc mills in Fowler. He was considered an expert penman and many documents which he wrote by hand are still retained by his widow. In discussing the days when she taught school at Fullerville, Mrs. Hyde said: : "I attended the rural school in Fullerville and when I was 18 years of age I taught in the same school. It was indeed a luxury for drawn carriage in those days and after I began to teach at Little York, about three miles from Fullerville, I would have to get up at an early morning hour, pack my lunch and walk to school in both winter and summer, At night I would walk home. It was usually very dark, especially in the winter, when I made my trip home. The roads at that time, with the exception of the roads used to haul iron from the mills, were scarcely more than a trail. I often think of the modern school teacher, with her salary and excellent living conditions compared to myself and the salary that I was drawing. A school teacher in those days, however, had this much advantage over the modern school teacher. They were much more of a distinguished figure than at the present time. The impression prevailed in those days that a school teacher was just about as high a pinnacle as a woman could reach in life. Despite the hardships and disadvantages that both myself and my pupils had to contend with in those days I cannot truthfully say that I did not enjoy every moment of it." Mrs. Hyde says that she can recall very clearly when war was declared by the north against the south. : "Those were exciting days in Fullerville as well as elsewhere, " she said "and men would gather in stores and other places and after discussion many of them would go and join the colors. News from the front was scarce and most of it was obtained from soldiers who had returned home for various reasons. Such a soldier would be the subject of attraction for many days and whatever he said fell on anxious and believing ears. "Fullerville has certainly changed since my time," Mrs. Hyde said. "If it was not for my old home and other familiar landmarks I certainly would never recognize the place. Fullerville used to be a real prosperous community when I was there, with the Fuller Iron Works, which was considered one of the biggest industries in this section, running to capacity. The Fullers who were the owners of the iron works, were my father's brothers. The people of Fullerville considered they were living in an extremely prosperous community at the time and indeed they were if I am any judge. Talc and pulp mills were also running to capacity near Fullerville in those days. My parents lived in a house that is still occupied and stands at the top of the hill beyond the old bridge toward Edwards." '''((Mainly a re-hash of the 1931 article from above, but published in 1932))''' OWN DAILY TIMES ==MRS. ZERUAH F. HYDE 91 TODAY== INVALID, ONCE SCHOOL FORMER SCHOOL TEACHER LIVES AT GOUVERNEUR -------- IS INTERESTED IN POLITICS -------- Is Ardent Admirer of President Hoover and Wants to See Him Re-elected---She recalls Other Depressions and thinks Some Were Worse Than the Present. Gouverneur, Aug. 25. - Today is the 91st birthday of Mrs. Zeruah Fuller Hyde of this village, a former country school teacher, whose family was among the original settlers of Fullerville. Mrs. Hyde, who for the past two years has lived at the Whalen hospital on West Main street, is in fair health, though her eyesight is failing and she is largely confined to a chair as the result of a broken hip sustained in a fall two years ago. Mrs. Hyde follows politics and she has a considerable knowledge of governmental affairs. For years she has subscribed to a weekly newspaper published in Washington, D. C. in order to keep in close touch with the affairs in the capital. Mrs. Hyde is an ardent admirer of President Hoover and says she would like to see him re-elected. Commenting upon the depression, Mrs. Hyde remarked that she had seen times when conditions were worse than now, and she felt that just as surely as we emerged from those slumps we would come out of this one. She recalled a time when cheese dropped to as low as 5 cents per pound, and other farm products were priced accordingly. Mrs. Hyde was born at Fullerville Aug. 25, 1841, daughter of Heman and Amelia Dawley Fuller, early settlers who came from Florence, Oneida county. Mrs. Hydes girlhood home is still standing in Fullerville at the top of the hill beyond the bridge toward Edwards. At the time she lived there Fullerville was a prosperous community, the seat of the Fuller iron works, which were owned by her uncles. At the age of 18, Mrs. Hyde became a school teacher in the rural school in Fullerville where she had herself been a pupil a few years earlier. She also taught in Little York, a village three miles from Fullerville, and would cover the distance between the two towns on foot. While she was teaching at Little York she would get up early and take her lunch, returning home on foot often after dark. The roads were hardly more than rude trails, except in places where they were used by the teams carrying iron from the mills. A few memories of the Civil War period are still retained by Mrs. Hyde. She spoke in particular of the excitement which even the slightest scrap of news caused in the little village. A soldier or any person who had been near the fighting war was regarded as with awe by the villagers, and made to repeat his story of the war over and over again. Mrs. Hyde herself married A. V. Hyde, a Civil War Soldier, in 1865, just after the war. Mr. Hyde server with Company C 5oth Regiment throughout the war. He died in June, 1922, aged about 78. He was for many years a bookkeeper for the talc mills in Fowler. Mrs. Hyde never complains about her semi-invalid condition, although she says that she does miss being able to walk. She is a supporter of the present day young people, favoring in particular the freer aspects of modern dress.

Fuller Name Study Info

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Fuller-5853 Screenshots and More

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Personal Collection of Screenshots and More

FULMER/FULMOR/FULMORE/FILLMORE

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Identify all the descendants of Andreas VOLLMAR Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Barnes-8199|Bruce Barnes]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Add individuals that are Andreas' descendants. * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=11513820 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Fulton County, PA photos

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{{Image|file=Wilson-26641.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption=The historic Burnt Cabins Gristmill (built 1840) in the town of Burnt Cabins on Allen's Valley Rd., within Dublin Township, Fulton County, Pennsylvania. On the National Register of Historic Places listings in Fulton County since November 28, 1980. }}

Fulton Families in Muskingum County, Ohio

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Place to store the Fultons mentioned in the early Ohio histories while I try to determine the parents of Robert Fulton who was born about 1841. === Dennis === *Page 222 mentioned as member of The Eagle Fire Company organized May, 1852. === Elizabeth === *Page 486 mentioned as daughter of Lyle married to Phillip Kennedy. Her birth was in Loundon County, Virginia and Phillip was born in Ireland. They were parents of Dr. John F. Kennedy born August 31, 1844 in Fultonham (later known as Uniontown), Ohio. Also includes Dr. John's marriage and children plus Civil War service. Page 487 lists the children of Elizabeth Fulton and Phillip Kennedy.''Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Muskingum County, Ohio, Embracing an Authentic and Comprehensive Account of the Chief Events in the History of the County and a Record of the Lives of Many of the Most Worthy Families and Individuals'',The Goodspeed Publishing Co., Chicago, 1892 *Page 151 mentioned as a assistant teacher at Putnam Classical Institute for 1854-1858 and 1858-1859 *Page 668 mentioned as mother of Dr. Kennedy and daughter of Lisle Fulton. Birth in Fultonham in 1822, death in 1868. Member of Lutheran church. Siblings mentioned are listed under Lyle. Also lists another son, Dr. Gilbert Kennedy === Felix === *Page 222 mentioned as member of The Eagle Fire Company organized May, 1852. === Henry === *Page 303 mentioned as pastor for six years for Duncan Falls Presbyterian Church (estimated 1872). *Page 370 mentioned as pastor of Chandlersville Presbyterian Church sometime after 1834. *Page 318 notes service with Company K of One Hundred and Twenty-Second Regiment O.V.I. === James M. === *Page 173 mentioned as a teacher in the early period. *Page 360 mentioned as owner of a distillery which later passed to Joseph Belknap. *Page 332 mentioned as distillery owner. *Page 202 mentioned as distillery owner. === Jesse === *Page 76 on March 15, 1804 appointed Associate Judge of Common Pleas and elected to such office on February 7, 1805. *Pages 192 and 199 again mentioned as Judge in 1804 and 1805. *Page 199 notes he served in this capacity from 1804-1815. *Pages 50-51 notes Associate Judge of Common Pleas.''History of Muskingum County, Ohio With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Prominent Men And Pioneers'', J.F. Everhart & Co., 1882 but only shows term from 1804-1805. *Page 23 noted as Associate Judge of Common Pleas.''Past and Present of the City of Zanesville and Muskingum County, Ohio'', J. Hope Sutor, 1904. *Page 24 notes service as Association Judge from 1804-1815. === J.W. === *Page 477 mentioned as pastor for six months ending August, 1880 for Frazeysburgh Presbyterian Church. === Laura === *Page 153 listed as class of 1868 graduate of Putnam Classical Institute. === Lyle (Lisle) === *Page 77 served as County Commissioner from November, 1831 to October, 1838. *Page 64 notes County Commissioner for same time period. *Page 253 as Commissioner purchases land for a county poor house. *Page 25 notes service as County Commissioner from November, 1831 to October, 1838. === Children of Lyle (Lisle) === *Page 668 notes:
In the family were ten children. nine of whom reached manhood and womanhood: William H., who was a member of the Seventy-eighth Ohio Volunteer Infantry and is now deceased: John S.. who served as first lieutenant in Company K of the Seventy-eighth Ohio Volunteer Infantry and afterward practiced medicine in Zanesville until his death ; Edwin M., who was a member of the First Ohio Heavy Artillery and is now practicing law in McConnelsville, while at this time he is judge of the court of common pleas for this district; Gilbert L.; Elizabeth, the wife of Edgar W. Gray, a harness maker of Deavertown. Ohio; Mary. deceased; Tillie, living at Deavertown; Charles W.. who is county recorder and living at McConnellsville; and Howard P., who died in California in 1893.
2 daughters named Elizabeth? One married to Gray; other married to Kennedy??? === Mary G. === *Page 151 mentioned as assistant teacher at Putnam Classical Institute for 1875-1876. === Mary S. === *Page 152 mentioned as 1848 graduate of Putnam Classical Institute. Married name Guthrie. === Robert === *Page 59 mentioned as road reviewer on June 4, 1811. *Page 66 seeking remuneration for court house on December 7, 1814 and also on Page 74. *Page 70 pledges to lend county money to build the court house and again on Page 72. *Page 186 mentioned as a voting stockholder in the library association in December, 1828. *Page 226 mentioned as a partner in the building of a mill in 1817. *Page 52 as bond issuer for building of court house. Also as treasurer of "The Court House and County Office Stock Company" *Page 86 mentioned as mill builder. *Page 90 mentioned as merchant paying internal revenue taxes of $44.37 in 1815. *Page 240 mentioned as voting stockholder of the library association, Zanesville Atheneum, organized in December, 1827. *Page 218 listed on board of directors for Muskingum Bank. *Page 32 notes the binding contract for building of court house and Treasurer of Zanesville Court House Company. *Page 116 mentioned as a stockholder of Muskingum Bank around 1812. === Robert II === Because of the date, I think this may be my Robert born in 1841. *Page 254 mentioned as secretary and treasurer of Zanesville Woolen Mill incorporated in 1870. *Page 311 listed as a private in Company K of One Hundred and Fifty-Ninth O.N.G. enrolled May, 1864. *Page 238 mentioned as a director for Muskingum Building Association in 1881. *Page 237 served as president of The Young Men's Christian Association sometime after 1867. *Page 237 served as president of Sabbath School in 1880. *Page 167 listed as Superintendent of Mission Sunday School. *Page 84 mentioned as secretary and treasurer of Zanesville Woolen Mill. *Page 120 mentioned as a director of Homestead Building and Savings Company organized in 1884. === Mrs. Robert === *Page 259 mentioned on Board of Managers for McIntire Children's Home around 1880. === William A. === *Page 299 listed as private in Company C of Seventy-Eighth Regiment O.V.I. organized January 11, 1862. === Zerieth === *Page 77 listed as a boy living in Zanesville during 1820-21. A female, S. Fulton, is noted for attendance at a Temperance League on Page 229. == Sources ==

Fulton Fire Insurance Company

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Fulton_Fire_Insurance_Company.jpg
Fulton_Fire_Insurance_Company-1.jpg
Fulton_Fire_Insurance_Company-3.jpg
Fulton_Fire_Insurance_Company-2.jpg
== [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1819-04-17/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=2&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=3 New-York Evening Post April 17, 1819, Page 3] == FULTON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Books for receiving Subscriptions to the Capital Stock of this company, will be opened at 10 o'clock on Tuesday next, at the Fulton Hotel, No. 136 Fulton street. 5 per cent to be paid at the time of Subscribing DIRECTORS: A.L. Underhill, Ferdinand Suydam, Jacob Drake, John Morse, Stephen Allen, Wm. H. Ireland, David Cargill, Peter Lorillard, Thos. R. Smith, Peter Stagg, Alex. L. Stewart, Corns Dubois, Thos. T. Woodruff, Geo. B. Thorpe, Stephen P. Brittan, Jas Palmer / ap 12 1w == [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1819-11-01/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=3&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=3 New-York Evening Post November 1, 1819, Page 3] == FULTON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY in the city of New-York, (33 Park, near Beekman-street) insure against loss or damage by fire, dwelling houses, warehouses, and buildings in general; also, on merchandize, household furniture, and other personal property, on terms as favorable as any similar institution in this city. This company is incorporated solely for the purpose of insuring against losses by fire, with a capital stock of 500,000 dollars. Parties who may please to favour this company with their business may rest assured that any losses or damages sustained will be settled with promptness and liberality. A.L. UNDERHILL, President. O. H. HICKS, Secretary. ''Directors'': A.L. Underhill, William H. Ireland, John Morss, Cornelius Dubois, David Cargill, Peter Stagg, Jacob Drake, Thomas R. Smith, A.L. Stewart, Stephen P. Brittain, Ferdinand Suydam, Henry M'Farlan, Thomas T. Woodruff, John Targee, George B. Thorp, Stephen Allen Seen here also: [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1819-12-09/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=4&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=3 December 9, 1819], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1819-12-10/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=5&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=3 December 10, 1819], 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[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-06-15/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=10&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 June 15, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-06-16/ed-1/seq-6/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=11&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 June 16, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-06-22/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=12&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 June 22, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-06-23/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=13&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargil&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 June 23, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-06-24/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=14&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 June 24, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-06-29/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=15&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 June 29, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-07-01/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=16&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 July 1, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-07-07/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=17&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 July 7, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-07-18/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=18&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 July 18, 1820], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1820-07-27/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=19&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=5 July 27, 1820], etc etc. == [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1823-01-27/ed-1/seq-2/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=8&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=25 New-York Evening Post.,January 27, 1823, Page 2] == The following gentlemen were elected this forenoon, directors of the Fulton Fire Insurance Company: --Anthony L. Underhill, Stephen Allen, Peter Stagg, Richard I. Tucker, Cornelius Du Bois, David Cargill, William H. Ireland, Jacob Drake, Thomas R. Smith, John McComb, Henry McFarlane, James Benedict, John Morss, John Lang, Ferdinand Suydam, Thomas T. Woodruff, George B. Thorp, Augustus Wynkoop, Reuben Munson, Peter Sharpe, Nathaniel Weed, Isaac Amerman, Robert Euloid, Peter I. Nevins, George Gallagher. ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1825-06-10/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=1&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=28 Kinderhook Herald., June 10, 1825, Page 3]== Fulton Fire Insurance Company, Wall Street, New-York. CAPITAL, $500,000 Insurance against loss or damage by FIRE! on Dwelling Houses, Stores, Merchandize, and Furniture, at the lowest rate of Premium. The affairs of the Company will be conducted with such fairness, candor and liberality, as they trust will insure them public confidence and patronage. A.L. UNDERHILL, ''President''. OLIVER H. HICKS, ''Secretary''. : :DIRECTORS. :Stephen Allen || John Lang, [dam, :Peter Stagg, || Ferdinand Suy- :Richard R. Tucker, || Thos. T. Woodruff, :Cornelius Dubois, || Geo. B. Thorp, :David Cargill, || Aug. Wynkoop, :Jacob Drake, || Peter S. Nevius, :Thos. R. Smith, || Geo. Gallagher, :John M'Comb, || Reuben Munson, :Henry M'Farlan, || Peter Sharpe, :James Benedict, || Nathaniel Weed, :John Morss, || Isaac Amerman, : Wm. H. Ireland, || Robert Buloid. :The subscriber has been appointed AGENT and SURVEYOR for this Company, for ''Kinderhook and its vicinity'', and will promptly attend to the duties of his office when called upon. :POLICIES, :signed by the President and Secretary, will be delivered to the insured, without any charge beyond the premium. :L. VAN DYCK, JR. :''At the Post-Office''. :Kinderhook, June 10, 1825. Seen also here: [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1825-06-23/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=2&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=28 June 23, 1825], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1825-06-30/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=3&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=28 June 30, 1825], etc etc ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1827-01-31/ed-1/seq-3/ New-York Evening Post., January 31, 1827, Page 3]== FULTON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY At a meeting of the Directors of the Fulton Fire Insurance Company held at their office on the 29th January, the following gentlemen were elected Directors for the ensuing year: :A.L. Underhill, | John M'Combe :Isaac Amerman, | John Morse :Robert Buloid, | Peter I. Nevius, :James Benedict, | Peter Stagg, :David Cargill, | Peter Sharpe, :John Drake, | Thomas R. Smith :Cornelius Dubois, | Ferdinand Suydam, :George Galagher, | Richard I. Tucker, :William Howard, | George B. Thorp, :William H. Ireland, | Thos. T. Woodruff, :John Lang, | Augustus Wynkoop, :Henry M'Farlan, | Nathaniel Weed, :Stephan Allen. At a subsequent meeting of the Board, A.L. Underhill was elected President. j31 1 w ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1827-12-27/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=10&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=36 Kinderhook Herald., December 27, 1827, Page 4 ]== Fulton Fire Insurance Company, Wall Street, New-York. CAPITAL, $500,000 Insurance against loss or damage by FIRE! on Dwelling Houses, Stores, Merchandize, and Furniture, at the lowest rate of Premium. The affairs of the Company will be conducted with such fairness, candor and liberality, as they trust will insure them public confidence and patronage. A.L. UNDERHILL, ''Pres't''. OLIVER H. HICKS, ''Sec''. Directors. -Stephen Allen, Peter Stagg, Richard R. Tucker, Cornelius Dubois, D. Cargill, Jacob Drake, Thomas R. Smith, John M'Comb, Henry M'Farlan, Jas Benedict, John Morss, Wm. H. Ireland, John Lang, Ferdinand Suydam, Thos. T. Woodruff, Geo. B. Thorp, Augustus Wynkoop, Peter S. Nevius, George Gallagher, Reuben Munson, Peter Sharpe, Nath'l Weed, Isaac Amerman, Robert Buloid. :The subscriber has been appointed AGENT and SURVEYOR for this Company, for ''Kinderhook and its vicinity'', and will promptly attend to the duties of his office when called upon. --POLICIES, signed by the President and Secretary, will be delivered to the insured, without any charge beyond the premium. :L. VAN DYCK, JR. :June 10--53tf ''At the Post-Office''. Seen here also: [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1828-01-03/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=11&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=36 January 03, 1828, Page 4], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1828-03-06/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=10&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=37 March 06, 1828, Page 4], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1828-04-03/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=0&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=38 Kinderhook Herald., April 03, 1828, Page 4], [http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1828-08-21/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=19&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=38 Kinderhook Herald., August 21, 1828, Page 3] ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1829-06-04/ed-1/seq-4/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=3&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=42 Kinderhook Herald., June 04, 1829, Page 4]== FULTON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, of New-York. -Persons wishing to insure their property against loss or damage by fire, are respectfully informed, that the subscriber, who is an agent and surveyor for the above company, with ample power to effect insurance, will promptly attend to all applications made to him by residents in this town and vicinity. All losses will be promptly and honorably settled. The large capital of the Company, ($500,000,) and the wealth and integrity of the Directors, are a sufficient guarantee to the public for a faithful performance of all their contracts. :L. VAN DYCK, Ja. ''Surveyor''. :''Directors''. -Stephen Allen, Cornelius Dubois, Thomas R. Smith, James Benedict, John Lang, George Gallagher, Geo. B. Thorpe, Nathaniel Weed, Peter Stagg, David Cargill, John Moras, John McComb, Ferdinand Suydam, Augustus Wynkoop, Reuben Monson, Isaac Amerman, Richard I. Tucker, Jacob Drake, Henry McFarlan, William H. Ireland, Thomas T. Woodruff, Peter i. Nevius, Peter Sharp, Robert Buloid. :A.L. UNDERHILL, ''Pres't''. C. Zabriskie, ''Sec'y''. ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1830-10-28/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=17&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=47 Kinderhook Herald., October 28, 1830, Page 3]== Fulton Fire Insurance Company. CAPITAL $500,000 The subscriber begs leave to inform the inhabitants of this town and its vicinity, that he continues to act as an agent and surveyor for the above Company, with full power to effect insurance on dwelling houses, furniture, barns, an hther outhouses; stores, merchandise, &c. All applications made to him by persons residing at any reasonable distance from this village, will be punctually attended to. All losses sustained by the company will be promptly and honorably settled. The large Capital of the Company, and the wealth and integrity of the Directors, are a sufficient guarantee to the public for a faithful performance of all their contracts. LAWRENCE VAN DYCK, Jr. ''Agent and Surveyor'' DIRECTORS. -Stephen Allen, Cornelius Dubois, Thomas R. Smith, James Benedict, John Lang, George Gallaher, Geo. B. Thorpe, Nathaniel Weed, Peter Stagg, David Cargill, John Morss, John McComb, Ferdinand Suydam, Augustus Wynkoop, Reuben Monson, Isaac Amerman, Richard I. Tucker, Jacob Drake, Henry, McFarland, Wm. H. Ireland, Thomas T. Woodruff, Peter I. Nervius, Peter Sharp, R. Bulcia. A. L. UNDERHILL, Pres't. C. ZABRISKIE, Sec'y. [Oct. 28, 1830. ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030385/1831-02-03/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=1&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=49 New-York Evening Post., February 03, 1831, Page 3]== At the annual election for twenty-five directors of the Fulton Fire Insurance Company, held at their office No. 33 Wall street, on Monday, the 31st January, the following gentlemen were elected directors of said Company:- Stephen Allen, Robert Buloid, James Benedict, David Cargill, Cornelius Dubois, John Drake, George Gallagher, William Howard, John Lang, Peter I. Nevius, Peter Stagg, Thomas R. SMith, Ferdinand Suydam, Peter Sharpe, Richard I. Tucker, George B. Thorp, Thomas T. Woodruff, Augustus Wynkoop, Nathaniel Weed, Andrew C. Zabriskie, ANthony L. Underhill, John Ferguson, James N. Wells, John Mason, Moses H. Grinnell. And at a subsequent meeting of the Board, Anthony L. Esq was unanimously re-elected President for the ensuing year. 12 3t C. ZABRISKIE, Secretary. ==[http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035781/1831-03-31/ed-1/seq-3/#sequence=0&proxdistance=5&county=&phrasetext=&andtext=&date1=01%2F01%2F1600&city=&date2=12%2F24%2F1949&searchType=advanced&from_year=1600&proxtext=Cargill&dateFilterType=range&sort=date&SearchType=prox5&index=1&to_year=1949&rows=20&words=Cargill&lccn=&am+p=&ortext=&page=50 Kinderhook Herald., March 31, 1831, Page 3]== Fulton Fire Insurance Company. CAPITAL $500,000. The subscriber has been appointed Agents and Surveyor for the above company, for the town of Kinderhook, and its vicinity, with full power to effect insurance on Dwelling Houses, Furniture and other personal property, also Stores, Merchandize, Barns and other Out-houses, against loss or damage by Fire. : Applications for insurance may be made to the subscriber, at the office of Wilcoxson & Van Schaack, in the village of Kinderhook, which will be promptly attended to. The large capital of the Company, and the wealth and integrity of the Directors, are a sufficient guarantee to the public that all losses will be promptly adjusted. : [[Van_Schaack-39|DAVID VAN SCHAACK]] ''Agent and Surveyor''. : DIRECTORS. - Stephen Allen, Cornelius Dubois, Thomas R. Smith, James Benedict, John Lang, George Gallaher, Geo. B. Thorpe, Nathaniel Weed, Peter Stagg, David Cargill, John Morss, John McComb, Ferdinand Suydam, Augustus Wynkoop, Reuben Menson, Isaac Amerman, Richard I. Tucker, Jacob Drake, Henry McFarland, Wm. H. Ireland, Thomas T. Woodruff, Peter I. Nervius, Peter Sharp, R. Bulcia. : A.L.UNDERHILL, Pres't. C. ZABRISKIE, Sec'y. [Oct. 28, 1830. Those persons who have heretofore obtained policies from L. Van Dyck, Jr. late agent for the above company, can have the same renewed, on application to the subscriber. :March 31, 1831.] [[Van_Schaack-39|D. VAN SCHAACK]].

Fundos YSAM Inc.

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Yegua-Capucino.jpg
'''Fudo de yeguas vacas y ovejas, yegua salvaje alemana montes YSAM.'''

Funeral Notice Elizabeth Crookes Fairman

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Funeral Notice

Funeral of Admiral Lord Nelson 1806

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State Funeral of [[Nelson-39|Admiral Lord Nelson]]. [https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/15881/page/59 The London Gazette Publication date:14 January 1806 Issue:15881 Page:59] Work in Progress. [[Mackinnon-507|C. Mackinnon]] '''Funeral of Lord Nelson 1806'''
London, England {|border="1" |First Name||Last Name||Occupation |- |Joseph||'''[[Hawker-798 |Hawker]]'''||Richmond Herald |- |Nicholas||Tucker||Lieutenant RN |- |Robert||'''[[Moorsom-1| Moorsom]]'''||Captain RN |- |David||Keys||Lieutenant RN |- |George||'''[[Nayler-58 | Nayler]]'''||York Herald |- |John||Atkinson||Somerset Herald |- |Edmund||'''[[Lodge-1335|Lodge]]'''||Lancaster Herald |- |George Martin||Leake||Chester Herald |- |Ralph||'''[[Owen-8891| Bigland]]'''||Norroy King of Arms |- |John||'''[[Pasco-207|Pasco]]'''||Captain RN, of Victory |- |William Henry||'''[[Douglas-11223 |Douglas]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |James||'''[[Hawkins-11302|Hawkins-Whitshed]]'''||Vice Admiral RN |- |John||'''[[Orde-35|Orde]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Thomas||'''[[Drury-2319|Drury]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |Edward||Williams||Captain RN of Victory |- |John||Yule||Captain RN of Victory |- |Isaac||'''[[Coffin-1759|Coffin]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |Thomas||'''[[Wells-19470|Wells]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |George||Browne||Lieutenant RN of Victory |- |Thomas||'''[[Atkinson-8652|Atkinson]]'''||Master of Victory |- |William||'''[[Domett-8|Domett]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |Eliab||'''[[Harvey-7744|Harvey]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |John||'''[[Aylmer-121 |Aylmer]]'''||Rear Admiral RN |- |James Goodwin||'''[[Peake-819 |Peake]]'''||Lieutenant RM of Victory |- |Isaac||'''[[Heard-1516|Heard]]'''||Garter Principal King of Arms |- |William||'''[[Waldegrave-112|Waldegrave]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Peter||'''[[Parker-22250 |Parker]]'''||Admiral RN. Chief Mourner |- |Samuel||'''[[Hood-766|Hood]]'''||Admiral RN Viscount Hood |- |Roger||'''[[Curtis-8912|Curtis]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Benjamin||'''[[Caldwell-7693 |Caldwell]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Charles||'''[[Pole-280|Pole]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Richard Rodney||'''[[Bligh-87 |Bligh]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Charles Powell||'''[[Hamilton-12250|Hamilton]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Charles Edmund||'''[[Nugent-1211|Nugent]]'''||Admiral RN |- |Francis||Townsend||Windsor Herald |- |George Miller||'''[[Bligh-86|Bligh]]'''||Lieutenant RN Supporter of the Banner |- |Thomas Masterman||'''[[Hardy-3651|Hardy]]'''||Captain RN Bearer of the Banner |- |Henry William||'''[[Bayntum-1|Bayntum]]'''||Captain RN Bearer of the Banner |- |Andrew||'''[[King-32428|King]]'''||Lieutenant RN of Victory Supporter of the Banner |- |Horatio||'''[[Nelson-8341|Nelson]]'''||Nephew |- |William||'''[[Nelson-8336 |Nelson]]'''||Earl Nelson sole brother and heir |- |George||'''[[Matcham-18| Matcham]]'''||Nephew |- |Thomas||'''[[Bolton-1310 |Bolton]]'''||Nephew |- |George||'''[[Matcham-17 | Matcham]]'''||Brother-in-law |- |Thomas||'''[[Bolton-1309|Bolton]]'''||Brother-in-law |- |Robert||'''[[Rolfe-1464|Rolfe]]'''|| Cousin |- |Thomas Trench||'''[[Berney-74 |Berney]]'''||Cousin |- |Horatio||Walpole||Cousin '''There are 2 possibles Horatio Walpoles for this person''' |- |George||'''[[Walpole-221|Walpole]]'''||Cousin |} ==Sources==

Funeral of Edwin Richardson

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''Transcript of a report of the funeral of [[Richardson-40706|Edwin Richardson JP DL (1834-1902)]] from the Sunderland Daily Echo on the day of the funeral 26 September 1902.'' ''Notes on the connections of people named in the article are included in square brackets [ ] where known.'' ==Funeral of Mr Edwin Richardson== The Funeral of Mr Edwin Richardson, who died on Tuesday at his residence, 5, The Cedars, took place this afternoon, the processions leaving the house at noon for the Sunderland Cemetery, Ryhope Road, where the burial service was conducted by the Rev. C. G. Hopkinson. The procession consisted of nearly thirty carriages, and behind the mourning coaches also walked a number of gentleman, including county magistrates, members of the River Wear Commissioners, Aldermen and Town Councillors, employees at the Bishopwearmouth Flour Mills, and a posse of county constabulary, accompanied by Supt. Webster (acting Chief Constable), and Supt. Snaith. The chaise was occupied by the Revs. C. G. Hopkinson and C. H. Coates and Dr Welford. Then followed the hearse containing the coffin, which was of polished oak and bore a brass plate with the following inscription:-
EDWIN RICHARDSON.
Born Aug. 29th, 1854.
Died Sept. 23rd, 1902.
The principal mourners were: :1st carriage, Miss Walker [Alice Mary, god-daughter] and Mr John Stringer [John Stafford Stringer] (Mrs Edwin Richardson's private carriage) ; :2nd, Mr and Mrs S. Richardson [Stansfield, brother] and Mr S. P. Richardson [Stansfield, nephew]; :3rd, Mr R. H. Gayner [Robert Heydon, brother-in-law], Misses E. S. and E. H. Gayner ; :4th, Messrs E. B. Richardson and A. E. Kitching ; :5th, Messrs C.W. Littleboy [Charles, nephew] and F. Littleboy [Frederic nephew & Executor]; :6th, Mr and Mrs F. H. Richardson [Frederick, nephew]; :7th, Mr R. H. Gayner, jun. [Robert Heydon, nephew], and Mrs W. H. Richardson ; :8th, Messrs T. E. Pumphrey and T.G. Hutton ; :9th, Mr Moore ; :10th, Messrs R. Simey and G. I. Simey [solicitor & Executor]; :11th, servants and Nurse McLaren ; :12th, Mr and Mrs Thomas Cornforth and Mr W. Armstrong ; Next came a landau completely filled with beauthiful wreaths and other floral tributes, and this was followed by about 60 employees of the Bishopwearmouth Steam Flour Mills, of which the deceased was part owner, including the following officials:- Messrs T. P. Pybus, G. Hudson, S. Mudd, F. Scott, J. Cramp, H. Palliser, R. Wilson, M, Thompson, W, Clark, S. Baker, Herring. Andrew Watson, T. Hugall, J. Curry, J. Sawyers, and G. Rouston. The members of the Corporation who attended assembled at the Town Hall, and then walked to the Cedars to join the procession. They included Ald. Burns (who represented the Mayor), Aldermen Johnston, Bruce, Smith, Thompson, Gibson, Harrison, Coates, and Ranken, Councillors Ritson, Bartram, Wilkinson, Challoner, Roche, Turnball, and Richardson; Messrs T.W Bolam, Cemeteries Superintendent; Haswell Brown, Borough Accountant; J.S. Waton, representing the Health Department; and W Hall (head park gardener). There were also present Doctors Lang, Maling, and Hopgood, Cols. T.C. McKenzie and Gregson; Messrs R. Brydon, G.W. Bain, H. M. Potts, C. Wright, J. Meikle, J. C. Moor, C. W. P. Barker, C.E. Thompson, T. Elliot, C. F. dePledge, E.W. Gibson, A. R. Gales, J. G. Addison, J. H. W. Culliford, J.S. Barwick, and C. H. Dodds. Carriages sent by Major Bolam, Mrs J. Y. Short, Sir Theodore Doxford, Mr Jenneson Taylor, Mr A. G. McKenzie, Col. Vaux, Mr Chas Doxford, Coun. St John and Mr R. Thompson (west Hall) also joined the cortege. The wreaths &c., were sent by the following:- Mrs E. Richardson [Widow], Dr and Mrs Welford, Mrs Joseph Thompson and Miss Thompson, Miss Scotney, Mr and Mrs Dodds, Col. and Mrs Eminson (London), Mrs John White and Misses White, Mrs Fred Richardson and Allie Richardson (Torquay), Mr and Mrs F. H. Richardson, Mr F. Longford, Mr and Mrs Hew Crawford (London), Mr Gayner and family, Mr and Mrs D. Haggie, Committee of Sunderland Infirmary, Mr and Mrs Fred Dickenson, Mr and Mrs Stephen Robson, Mr and Mrs W. Bell, Mr and Mrs E.B Richardson, Mr and Mrs Kitching, Mr and Mrs Hope, Mr and Mrs Fred Walker (London), Mr and Mrs Hiram Craven, Mrs Richardson (Potto Hall) [sister-in-law - Joseph's widow], Mr and Mrs Webster, Mr and Mrs A. G. McKenzie, Mr and Mrs A. C. Thompson, Mr and Mrs H. Clark, Mr and Mrs Stringer, Miss Grace Douglas, Miss Walker, Col. and Mrs Vaux, Mr and Mrs Hunt Hedley, Mrs Gordon McKenzie, servantmen at The Cedars, Mr and Miss Hutton, Mr & Mrs T. B. Briggs, Mr and Mrs W. M Roche, Mr and Mrs R. Thompson, Mr and Mrs Chas. D. Doxford, Mr and Mrs J. S. Barwick, officials of the Bishopwearmouth Steam Mills, horsekeeper and rolleymen at the mills, workmen of the Bishopwearmouth Steam Mills, Mrs John Craven, Mr J. Stafford, Miss M. Helen Stringer, Mr and Mrs Frederick Gordon, Mr and Mrs Bowey (Town Clerk), Mr G. Davidson, Corporation of Sunderland, Misses Tone, Mr and Mrs Ralph Simey, maids at The Cedars, Dr Neville Williamson, Captain and Mrs Hugh Streatfeild, Mrs Charles Wright, Mr and Mrs Ernest Doxford, Mr and Mrs George Iliff Simey, Sir Theodore and Lady Doxford, Mr and Mrs A. Hedley, Mr and Mrs J. E. Thompson and Miss Thompson, Mr and Mrs Harold Byers, Col. and Mrs McKenzie, and Mr and Mrs Boothe. Mr Samuel Storey has sent the following telegram from Berwick-on-Tweed :- "Deeply regret that unavoidable engagement prevents me from attending funeral today." Letters stating they were unable to attend had also been received from:- The Mayor (Councillor Kirtley), the Town Clerk (Mr Francis M. Bowey), Alderman Fairless, Councillors Walker and Bentham, the Medical Officer of Health (Dr Renney), auditor (Mr Henry Rawlings), and the Borough Surveyor (Mr J. W. Moncur.) ==Death of Brother Joseph== ''Just below this report is another reporting on the death of Edwin's brother Joseph who had died the previous day.'' ==Notables== * '''BARWICK''': [https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/2020/08/427-barwick-of-thimbleby-hall-baronets.html Sir John Storey Barwick, Bt] (1840-1915), a prominent industrialist. The eldest son of a Sunderland butcher, employed as a clerk in the Ryhope Coal Co. where he eventually became its managing director. His wife was the sister of the four Short Brothers whose family firm became one of the leading shipbuilding businesses in the country, and his marriage firmly enmeshed him in the network of leading industrial families in and around Sunderland. By the 1880s he was a principal representative of the Marquess of Londonderry in his mining and other business dealings in the north-east, and had invested his spare capital in the shipping industry. Barwick progressed his career by joining forces with other northern industrial entrepreneurs, notably Sir Christopher Furness, (later 1st Baron Furness) and Sir Walter Scott, 1st bt. Barwick was also involved in Furness-led shipping ventures, such as the Northumberland Shipbuilding Company, which pioneered the construction of standardised general cargo vessels. Eventually Barwick would become one of the largest shareholders of Furness Withy & Company, founded in 1891 with eighteen ships operating between New York and Newcastle. In 1899, Furness and Barwick joined forces to form the Easington Coal Co. [[Barwick-1243|WikiTree: Barwick-1243]] * '''BYERS''': Harold Byers could be the son (or brother?) of [https://www.searlecanada.org/sunderland/sunderland212.html William Lumsdon Byers] who was a ship owner and anchor manufacturer. * '''CRAVEN''': Hiram Craven went into partnership with his two Speeding brother in-laws to establish the '''[https://speedingsltd.com/history/ rope making]''' firm of Craven & Speeding Brothers. The factory eventually dominated the junction of Roker Avenue and Fulwell Road, Sunderland. * '''DOXFORD''': [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Doxford Sir William '''Theodore''' Doxford DL] (1 February 1841 – 1 October 1916) was a British shipbuilder and politician. Doxford became the first Conservative in forty years to be elected for the two-seat constituency of Sunderland, when he became a Unionist '''Member of Parliament''' in 1895. Doxford had also been involved in local affairs, serving on Sunderland town council, as a '''River Wear commissioner''' and as a '''magistrate''' for Sunderland and County Durham. He was also a '''Deputy Lieutenant''' for County Durham from 1896. [[Doxford-41| WikiTree: Doxford-41]] * '''DOXFORD''': [[Doxford-65|Charles David Doxford (1856-1935)]] younger brother of Theodore. * '''HEDLEY''': [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/188724261/john_hunt-hedley John Hunt Hedley (1858-1914)] * '''McKENZIE''': Uncertain as no link to Sunderland but could be [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Mackenzie_%28British_Army_officer%29 Major-General Sir Colin John Mackenzie KCB (26 November 1861 – 7 July 1956)] * '''RENNEY''': Dr H. Renney had several [https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=25957044000 articles] published in The Lancet and Public Health Journals about infectious diseases including [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0033350604801410 Diptheria] and maternity and child welfare. * '''STOREY''': [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Storey_(Liberal_politician) Samuel Storey] (1841–1925) was a British politician born in County Durham. He became a '''Member of Parliament for Sunderland''' and the '''main founder of the Sunderland Echo''' newspaper. * '''STREATFEILD''': [https://www.dmm.org.uk/whoswho/s036.htm Major Hugh Sidney Streatfeild] Managing Director of Ryhope Coal Co. Ltd., and of the Backworth Collieries Ltd. Director, Washington Coal Co. Ltd., and Association Companies, Sheaf Steam Shipping Co. Ltd. Local Director, General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corporation Ltd. * '''VAUX''': [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Vaux Col. Vaux] - Lieutenant-Colonel Ernest Vaux, CMG DSO VD DL (5 March 1865 – 21 November 1925) was a business man from County Durham and a distinguished officer in the Volunteer Force and Territorial Force during the Second Boer War and World War I. A member of the '''Vaux Breweries''' family, his grandfather Cuthbert Vaux (1779–1850) established the brewery in 1806. ==Family and Friends== * '''STRINGER''': '''John Stafford Stringer''', son of John Stringer & Helen Stringer, was baptised on 24 January 1879 in St Mark, St Marylebone, Westminster, England. In 1901 was living with his parents in Sandbach, Cheshire. On the same census is a sister-in-law Jerson Walker, which links him to Alice Mary Walker with whom he shared a carriage. He and his sister Mary Helen Stringer were left money in Edwin's will. Flowers were sent by Mr & Mrs Stringer (probably his parents) and his sister Mary. '''Baptism''': "London, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1923"
London Metropolitan Archives; "London, England, UK" ; London Church of England Parish Registers; Reference Number: P89/Mrk2/003
{{Ancestry Sharing|13890901|7b22746f6b656e223a2237336d67424e34457a7139344c61622f34352f63532f354377646174376c4e7758624f6f6e787a474e57553d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d}} - {{Ancestry Record|1558|998022|uk}} (accessed 6 May 2024)
John Stafford Stringer baptism on 24 Jan 1879, son of John Stringer & Helen Stringer, in St Mark, St Marylebone, Westminster, England.
'''1901 Census''': "1901 England Census"
Class: RG13; Piece: 3352; Folio: 58; Page: 1; ED, institution, or vessel: 11; Household schedule number: 3
{{Ancestry Sharing|13890977|7b22746f6b656e223a2248506b69717a3839624b3953624b2f73554d50746635506d356a4c7256326868746e726349626d797a55673d222c22746f6b656e5f76657273696f6e223a225632227d}} - {{Ancestry Record|7814|19890086|uk}} (accessed 6 May 2024)
John Stafford Strenger (22) son in household of John Strenger (57) in Sandbach in Congleton registration district in Cheshire, England. Born in Sandbach, Cheshire, England.
==Sources== * '''Sunderland Daily Echo''': "26 September 1902, p3 col 4 - Funeral of Mr Edwin Richardson"
[ https://www.findmypast.co.uk/image-viewer?issue=BL%2F0000289%2F19020926&page=3&article=014 FindMyPast] (accessed 04/05/2024)

Funeral of Ernest Bailey of Melton Mowbray

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List of people attending funeral of Ernest Bailey https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bailey-22128 and who they were if known Family: Ethel Mary Bailey(wife) # [[James-16250|Ethel (James) Bailey]] Frank Ernest Bailey(son) #[[Bailey-22204|Frank Bailey]] Margaret Bailey(daughter in law) #[[Bush-6492|Margaret Bush (1921-2002)]] Olive Mary Bailey(daughter) Janet Myrtle Bailey(daughter) Ted Bailey(brother) Maude Bailey(sister in law) Annie Helen Thompson(sister) Edward Thompson(brother in law) John William Bailey(brother) Mr H Brown (Mansfield Woodhouse)(brother in law) Mr J E Thompson (nephew) Mrs Woodcock (niece) Mr W James(father in law) Miss L James(sister in law) Clergy: Vicar Rev CMS Clarke assisted by Rev A Willcock 2 former curates: Rev JH Hughes Rev HB Holderness Organist: Mr HL Barnes Midland Woodworking Company Ltd: Messers AF & CJ Clarke A F Trefton Mr & Mrs Postlethwaite Messers W Neve N Butler G Chambers L Saddington C Paling R Pepper H Chapman B Chambers W Evans T Merry L Ottewell R McKay J R South B Cops T Templeton F Dawson Miss E Foster Mrs K Goodwin Mrs P Newton Miss C Robinson Mr S G Barber (representing Messers E Clarke and Sons) Church Life Messers T R Stockdale H E Clark (Churchwardens) Mrs C M S Clark Friends Miss V Robinson

Funeral of J. P. Little in The Charlotte Observer 29 May 1905

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The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina) ▪️29 May 1905, Mon▪️Page 4 FUNERAL OF MR. J. P. LITTLE ———— Burial Attended With Masonic Honors — The Deceased One of the Best Known and Most Substantial of Richmond County’s Citizens. Special to The Observer Wadesboro, May 23. — A large concourse of relatives and friends asdembled in the Methodist church this afternoon at four o’clock to do Honor to the remains of Mr. John Phillips Little, who died at his home in Richmond County yesterday. A large representation came from Richmond, driving the long distance of 20 miles or more to show their respect and love for him who had been one of their noblest citizens, while beautiful flowers attested the esteem of many absent friends. Very touching was the attendance of old servants - darkies who had probably been his slaves in the old days. Mr. Little was born on the place which has always been his home in September, 1827. He was twice married, his first wife being Miss Covington, of Richmond county. His last wife, who, with nine sons and daughters, survives him, was Miss Fanny Myers. The end came peacefully in the presence of all the members of his immediate family. The funeral services were conducted by the Rev. Mr. Smith, of the Methodist church, assisted by Rev. Mr. Stafford and Rev. Mr. Moyle, of Richmond county. The pall-bearers were Messrs. J. S. Myers, Rufus Little, Julius Little, J. P. Leak, Horner Baldwin and W. C. Harrison. The Masonic lodge of this place of which Mr. Little was a loved and honored member, together with Masons from Rockingham and other lodges, attended the funeral in a body and interred the body with Masonic ceremonies. Mr. Little belonged to a family whose forefathers came from Carlilse, England, and settled in this and Richmond counties. They soon became prominent and valued citizens, handing down to their descendants the heritage of a good name and a prosperous estate. Mr. Little’s example and influence will be sorely missed by all who came in contact with his strong personality and sterling character. Among those present from other towns to attend the funeral were Mr. and Mrs. William Everett, Mrs. H. C. Dockery, Mr. J. Y. Everett, Mr. Walter Scales and Messrs. J. P. and W. C. Leak, of Rockingham; Mrs. Walter Myers, Mr. J. S. Myers, Mr. C. L. Hunter, of Charlotte.

Funeral of Maria Jane Burtenshaw

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On 08 March 1927, [[Burtenshaw-479|Maria Jane Holmes]] (Born Burtenshaw) died from Bronchitis. '''The following is an excerpt from the Fulham Chonicle dated 18 March 1927 detailing the events of her funeral''': Neighbours' Bereavement Late Mrs. M. J. Holmes The sympathy of many friends was shown with the husband and family of Mrs. Maria Jane Holmes, aged 69, of 54 Marville-road, on the occasion of her death, whi6h took place on March 8th from bronchitis and heart failure, following a brief illness. She was taken seriously ill only the previous Thursday. She was an esteemed member of the ladies' club at Cornwall-street. She leaves a husband, five sons and four daughters to mourn their loss. The mourners at the interment, which took place at Fulham Cemetery, North Sheen, on Monday, included the following :- Mr. Holmes (husband), Mrs. Benn (daughter), Mr. and Mrs. George Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Holmes, Mrs. Frank Homes, Mrs. Terry, and Mr. and Mrs. Bowden (daughter and son-in-law). Mr. and Mrs. A. Holmes, Mr and Mrs. C. Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. H. Holmes, Mrs. Bromley (niece), Mr and Mrs. H. Holmes (brother-in-law and sister-in-law), and Mr. and Mrs. J. Burtenshaw. In addition to wreaths from the above, floral tokens were sent by Aunt Alice and family, Aunt Sue and family, Nell and Alice Gubbins, neighbours, Mrs. Kelly and family, Mrs. Lake and family, Miss Curry, few friends at 22 Belgrave square, Rawlings Bros. employees, Mrs. Priddale, Mr. Bowde, senior and family, Mr. and Mrs. Wyatt, Mrs. Marshall, Mrs. Marsh and others. Mr. Holmes and family desire to thank friends and neighbours for messages of condolence and floral tributes received in their sad bereavement. The undertaker was Mr. R. Brain, 13 High-street. '''Newspaper Article''': “[https://www.findmypast.co.uk/image-share/774d3d4d-68ad-4e66-9dda-98bb72b8a105 NEIGHBOURS' BEREAVEMENT - LATE MRS. M. J. HOLMES.],” Fulham Chronicle (London, England), 18 March 1927, p. 7; digital images, Findmypast (https://findmypast.co.uk: 22 August 2023). '''Confirmable Attendees at the Funeral in Order of Appearance''': *[[Holmes-23755|John Holmes]] (Husband) *William Frederick Bowden (Son-in-Law) *[[Holmes-23756|Margaret Ethel Bowden]] (Daughter) *[[Brainwood-21|Raymond Brain]] (Undertaker) == Sources ==

Funeral of Mr Geo. H. Strutt

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'''FUNERAL OF [[Strutt-154|MR. GEO. H. STRUTT, J.P., D.L.]], AT BELPER''' The funeral of Mr. George H. Strutt, J.P., D.L., took place at Belper Cemetery at the early hour of 10.30 on Wednesday morning, the unusual time being fixed according to the desires of the family and the deceased so that the obsequies should be as simple and quiet as possible. It was especially the wish of the deceased there should be no assemblage of people out of curiosity, but notwithstanding this some hundreds attended to pay respectful homage to the memory of Mr. Strutt. The morning was cold, and rain descended heavily shortly before the procession to the cemetery. While in the chapel an improvement was noticeable, and the last rites were performed under more favourable conditions. About six o'clock on Tuesday night the body was removed from Bridge Hill to the cemetery. The procession comprised the hearse and several coaches, and at the entrance to the ground was met by the Revs. E. A. Hillyard and J. E. Hatton, the vicar and curate of Christ Church, which the deceased attended regularly. There were only immediate relatives and friends present, including Mr. [[Strutt-209|Herbert Strutt]] and his son, Master [[Strutt-216|George A. Strutt]], [[Irwin-1609|Major]] and [[Strutt-103|Mrs. Irwin]], [[Irwin-4383|Miss Irwin]] and [[Irwin-1610|Master Irwin]], Mr. John Hunter, Mr. John Borough, Dr. R. A. Johnson (the medical attendant), Mr. Frank J. Jackson (solicitor), Mr. A. Percival Heywood (president of the Derbyshire Royal Infirmary), Col. Noel, of the Outwoods: and Mr. Vernon Mellor, of Idridgehay. A short service was conducted, and the coffin remained in the chapel all night. Sisters of Mercy were in attendance until the following morning, being relieved every two hours. The general public was allowed to file through the chapel to the time of closing of the cemetery, and many hundreds availed themselves of the opportunity of paying a last tribute to the deceased. There was no methodical arrangement for the interment, as it was impossible to foresee what the attendance would reach. In the chapel as short service was held, this being conducted by the Revs. E. A. Hillyard, J. E. Hatton, and F. A. Friend. The coffin was placed in front of the altar, and was surrounded by the choir of Christ Church. As the cortège moved slowly out of the chapel the order was as follows :-- The four churchwardens of Christ Church and St. Peter's, viz., Mr. J. M. Pym, Mr. W. S. Fowler, Mr. H. Cartwright, and Mr. W. Loverock ; next came the choir, followed by the three clergymen mentioned, and attending the priest were two acolytes with a cross : then the Lord Bishop of Southwell, and next the coffin, which was not covered except with the most beautiful floral decorations in the offerings of many friends and relatives. Next came Mr. Herbert Strutt and Master George Strutt, [[Strutt-198|Miss Strutt]], Major and Mrs. Irwin, and several children from Makeney and Lynehow. Immediately behind were [[Strutt-229|Lord Belper]], the [[Strutt-291|Hon. F. Strutt]], [[Abney-1328|Captain W. de W. Abney, C.B., R.E., F.R.S.]], who is President of the Royal Astronomical Society, and a nephew of the late [[Abney-1330|Canon Abney]] ; [[Fox-16002|Mr. Arthur Douglas Fox, M.Inst.C.E.]], nephew of the deceased, son of the late Mr. Douglas Fox, of Derby, and of the only surviving sister, [[Strutt-293|Mrs. Douglas Fox]], now of Brighton ; [[Sandys-272|Captain H. Stair Sandys, R.N.]], who married a niece - daughter of the late Canon Abney ; the Bishop of Derby ; Mr. C. H. Burbidge-Hambley, who represented the Weekly Board of the Derbyshire Infirmary ; Sisters of Mercy from the St. Lawrence Convent, Belper ; Mr. John Hunter, Mr. Frank J. Jackson, Dr. R. A. Johnson, the servants at Bridge Hill and Makeney, the nurses, representatives of the firm, and then the general public. The first part of the service at the grave was conducted by the Rev. E. A. Hillyard, after which a hymn (499, A. and M.) was sung in a very impressive manner by the choir, under Mr. C. B. Bint and Mr. F. W. Kirkland. The Bishop of Southwell concluded the burial service. The grave is entirely new, and adjoins that in which [[Strutt-281|Miss Strutt]] was laid to rest last May. It is within the family vault, in which there lies [[Strutt-280|Mr. Jedediah Strutt]] and his wife with the [[Strutt-294|infant daughter]] of the deceased, together with other members of the family. The coffin was of oak, with elm shell and brass furniture, and bore the following inscription :-- "George Henry Strutt. Born Sept. 14th. 1826 ; died April 14th. 1895." ''Derby Daily Telegraph'', Thursday 18 April 1895, page 3 The article continues with a list of members of the public in attendance, including employees of the mills, tenants of the estate, Belper UDC members etc.

Funeral of Piet Beukes

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The funeral of [[Beukes-655|Piet Beukes]] took place on 10 March 2023 in Warden, Free State, South Africa. She passed away on their farm, Bethandrie in Warden on 5 March 2023. She left behind her husband, four children, a brother and five sisters. {{Image|file=Funeral_of_Piet_Beukes-3.jpg |caption=''Elbie (Beukes) Heymans'' }} {{Image|file=Funeral_of_Piet_Beukes-4.jpg |align=l |size=m |caption=''Petronella Johanna Beukes'' }} {{Image|file=Funeral_of_Piet_Beukes-5.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption=''Cascet being laid to rest'' }} {{Image|file=Funeral_of_Piet_Beukes-6.jpg |caption=Family }} {{Image|file=Funeral_of_Piet_Beukes-8.jpg |align=r |size=m |caption=Flip Beukes }}

Furbank Family Bilble

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This bible first belonged to Ernest George Furbank [[furbank-5|Ernest Furbank]], son of Charles Hunt Furbank and his wife Jane(Missing)Furbank who had travelled to Australia from England on the Bussorah Merchant in 1853. Between the Old and New Testaments Ernest lists Charles and Jane's children (including himself), grandchildren and some of their great grandchildren, along with some marriages and deaths in the family. The date of Publication is not noted in the bible, however it can be dated between 1861 and 1880, from the years the publisher was licenced to print bibles and the preface which states photos were taken for this edition in 1860. It was printed in either London or Glasgow and exported to Australia. From Ernest George Furbank, thie bible was passed to his namesake and youngest son, Ernest George. Sometime in the late 1970's or early 1980's it was given to Betty Anne Ewers (Furbank) as she had an interest in Family history from this time. Betty, my grandmother has given the safekeeping of the Bible to me [[kelly-1255|Leisa Kelly]], as I share a love of family history. I would like to share this peice of family history with anyone who has an interest and have linked it to many relevant profiles on WikiTree. Its pretty amazing to see and touch this link to our past and wonder things like - why is there a pressed pansy in Daniel XI - XII? Why didn't Ernest write his parents in the family pages? Whose hand writing is it that took over from Ernest's? Did the family gather around this bible, were they devout or was it more to do with Ernest personally? If you are a descendent of anyone listed below I would be happy to show you. These are copied from the middle pages between the Old and New testaments. '''Parents Names''' - left blank '''Childrens Names''' William Charles Furbank born Nov 27 1851, Mary Ann Furbank Dec 30 1854, Pheby Elizabeth Furbank Jul 14 1859, Emily Furbank Nov 26 1858 [[Furbank-15|Emily Furbank]], Joseph Furbank Oct 29 1861 [[Furbank-16|Joseph Furbank]], Ester Ann Furbank Jun 29 1864 [[Furbank-17|Esther Furbank]], Mary Ann Furbank Jan 9 1867 [[Furbank-18|Polly Furbank]], Ernest Furbank Aug 14 1869 [[Furbank-5|Ernest Furbank]], Thomas Furbank May 26 1872 [[Furbank-22|Thomas Furbank]], Jane Furbank Jul 3 1876 [[Furbank-19|Jane Furbank]], Frederick Furbank Mar 3 1878. '''Grandchildren''' Mary Irene Furbank born Feb 15 1900 [[Furbank-9|Irene Furbank]], Florence Nellie Furbank Jun 23 1900 [[Furbank-10|Florence Furbank]], Elsie Mary Furbank May 13 1903 [[Furbank-11|Elsie Furbank]], Doris male Furbank Aug 8 1904 [[Furbank-13|Doris Furbank]], Alice Missing Furbank Aug 8 1904 [[Furbank-12|Alice Furbank]], Ernest George Furbank Jun 10 1906 [[Furbank-2|Ernest Furbank]]. '''Marriages''' Charles Furbank and Elizabeth Lodge, Emily Furbank and Charles Chapman, Joseph furbank and Emily Kenny Dec 26 1888, Ester Ann Furbank and William McLennan, Jane Furbank and William Elliot May 3 1889, Ernest Furbank and Mary Ellinor Nottle [[Nottle-7|Mary Ellinor Nottle]] Jun 28 1899, Mary Ann Furbank and George Besley. '''Grand Children Marriages''' Mary Irene Furbank and Alfred Bragg Sep 23 1922, Florence Nellie Furbank and Les Lennox Oct 17 1925, Gwendoline Stratford and Ernest George Furbank Apr 25 1927. '''Great Grandchildren''' Ronald Ernest Bragg born Aug 21 1923, Gordon Alfred Bragg Mar 21 1925, Kenneth Roy Bragg Aug 14 1926, Elloner Lennox Sep 25 1926, Roy James Lennox Sep 25 1926, Rose Marie Furbank Oct 25 1927, Betty Anne Furbank Nov 4 1931 [[Furbank-1|Betty Ewers]] '''Deaths''' Pheby Elizabeth died Oct 1 1859, Mary Ann Furbank Oct 1 1861, Thomas Furbank Jul 3 1875, Charles Hunt Furbank Mar 16 1885, Jane Furbank Feb 9 1901, Alice Missing Furbank Dec 21 1904, Doris Male Furbank Dec 10 1904, Mary Ellener Furbank Feb 23 1908, William Charles Furbank Jun 11 1926, George Besley 1928. The condition of the leather is not good- I need to get advise on how to protect it from further deterioration - does anyone know who could talk with me about this?

Furbank unconnected info

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'''Alice''' Henry Thomas TOMPSETT Private, C4693, 2nd East Kent, killed in action in France 3rd May 1915. Husband of Mrs Alice Tompsett (nee Furbank, daughter of Josiah Furbank of the 'Wheatsheaf'), son of Mr and Mrs Henry Tompsett of London. Commemorated on the Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing, Ypres, Belgium http://www.roll-of-honour.com/Cambridgeshire/Cottenham.html '''C W Furbank''' ELLIOTT;—On- May 29, at the residence of his brother-in-law (Mr. C. W. Furbank), St. Peters, William Elliott, late of Wellington - and Penrith Railway .Department; agea ~29 years. http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/100916084?searchTerm=furbank&searchLimits=l-title=350#pstart10723956 1903. Death of a Popular Railway Man. Mr W Elliott, who for many years occu pied the position of shunter in the Penrith railway yard, and who some little time ago went to Wellington to take up the position of guard, died at the residence of his brother-in-law (Mr C W Furbank) near | Sydney, on Friday morning last, from hemorrhage of the lungs. He had been unwell for some time, and the shift to Wellington did not improve his condition. Ten days ago he oame to Sydney to get special medical advice, but there was no hope from the first http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/100916067?searchTerm=furbank&searchLimits=l-title=350#pstart10723956 '''Edward Furbank''' Ten year old James Mullineux is apprenticed to Edward Furbank of Cambridge, until the age of 21, in the 'Trade, Art or Mistery of a Gardiner'. (Cambridgeshire Archives: P158/14/2) http://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/leisure/archives/online/parish/Overseers+of+the+poor.htm '''Eliza''' Furbank Eliza (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker Post office directory 1865 http://historyofsuffolk.co.uk/Withersfield/index.shtml '''James Furbank''' •Furbank James, St. John's street Attorney Leeds Pigots Directory of Trades and professions 1829. http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/WRY/Leeds/Leeds29Dry.html '''John''' 1819 - Marriage Licence 1 Feb P21/1/15 John FURBANK of Cambridge, St Andrew the Great bac aged above 21 years Esther WENTWORTH of Cambridge, Holy Sepulchre sp aged above 20 years at Holy Sepulchre Consent of Daniell WENTWORTH father of Esther Wentworth Registrar: Robert GEE Surrogate: R. DUFFIELD http://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/16515F6D-61B9-4923-BBCC-EE838E0BC43B/0/CambridgeshireMarriageLicences.pdf '''Richard Joseph Furbank''' Remembered with Honour Port Moresby Memorial In Memory of Radio Officer M.V. Mamutu (Hong Kong), Merchant Navy who died on 07 August 1942 Son of William and Mary Ann Furbank, of Lidcombe, New South Wales. http://ww2talk.com/forums/topic/45265-info-required-australians-and-crew-allied-unit-mv-mamutu-sunk-7th-august-1942-loss-of-114-lives/ '''Thomas Furbank''' •Furbank Rev. Thomas, Kirkgate Leeds Pigots Directory of Trades and professions 1829. http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/WRY/Leeds/Leeds29Dry.html '''St Stephen's Sunday School''' 1903 - A Miss furbank was a teacher. C, G and E Furbank all won prizes. 1898 - Prizes to Amy Charlie and George. http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/101310525?searchTerm=furbank&searchLimits=l-title=350

Furlong/gaffney

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My Grandmother was florence furlong.Her step sister was louisa may gaffney. Currently searching for any living relatives who remembers them. My mother & her sister were both born out of wedlock & were adopted & raised by louisa & her husband James Robson.

Further reading on Sir John Hart

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*"1582 London Subsidy Roll: Walbrook Ward," in ''Two Tudor Subsidy Rolls for the City of London, 1541 and 1582'', ed. R G Lang (London: London Record Society, 1993), 293-297. British History Online, accessed March 13, 2022, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/london-record-soc/vol29/pp293-297. *Allen, Brian, and Irina Zagarodnaya. 2006. ''Britannia & Muscovy: English Silver at the Court of the Tsars''. Edited by Olga Dmitrieva, Natalya Abramova, and Yale Center for British Art. Unabridged. Yale University Press. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=miIc_u3JuKwC&dq. *"Britain, Marriage Licences". Archive: College of Arms; Page: 68. [https://search.findmypast.com.au/record?id=S2%2FGBOR%2FCOA%2FMAR-WL-BISHOP-OF-LONDON-MARRIAGE-LICENCES-VOL-1-1520-1610%2F0041&parentid=GBPRS%2FCOA%2FMARRLICENCE%2F00097974%2F1 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.com.au/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FCOA%2FMARRLICENCE%2F00097974%2F1 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 12 March 2022). Anthony Cage marriage to Anne Hudson in London, England. *"Britain, Marriage Licences". Archive: College of Arms; Page: 76. [https://search.findmypast.com.au/record?id=S2%2FGBOR%2FCOA%2FMAR-WL-BISHOP-OF-LONDON-MARRIAGE-LICENCES-VOL-1-1520-1610%2F0045&parentid=GBPRS%2FCOA%2FMARRLICENCE%2F00098192%2F1 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.com.au/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FCOA%2FMARRLICENCE%2F00098192%2F1 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 12 March 2022). German Gates marriage to Johanna Harte in St Bartholomew by the Exchange, London, England. *"Britain, Marriage Licences". Archive: College of Arms. [https://search.findmypast.com.au/record?id=S2%2FGBOR%2FCOA%2FMAR-WL-BISHOP-OF-LONDON-MARRIAGE-LICENCES-VOL-1-1520-1610%2F0062&parentid=GBPRS%2FCOA%2FMARRLICENCE%2F00099187%2F2 FindMyPast Image] - [https://www.findmypast.com.au/transcript?id=GBPRS%2FCOA%2FMARRLICENCE%2F00099187%2F2 FindMyPast Transcription] (accessed 12 March 2022). Judith Harte marriage to Edward Cage in London, England. *Burke, John Bernard. 1838. ''A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England''. Page 69. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=K1kBAAAAQAAJ&vq=george%20bolles%20sheriff&pg=PA69#v=snippet&q=george%20bolles%20sheriff&f=false. *“College History.” n.d. Sidney Sussex College. Accessed March 7, 2022. https://www.sid.cam.ac.uk/about-sidney/college-history. *“DRUNGEWICK MANOR Official List Entry.” n.d. Historic England. Accessed March 13, 2022. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1239800. *Edwards, Gerald Maclean. 1899. ''Sidney Sussex College''. London: F.E. Robinson and co. https://archive.org/details/sidneysussexcoll00edwarich/mode/2up. *Epstein, M. 1908. ''The Early History of the Levant Company''. London: George Rutledge & Sons Limited. http://www.levantineheritage.com/pdf/earlyhistoryoftheLevantcompany.pdf. *Fisher, Eden. 1888. ''A Short History of the Lord Mayors’ Pageants: Together with a Chronological Table of the Mayors, Lord Mayors and Sheriffs of the City of London, from A.D. 1189 to 1896''. Pages 49-50. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=jKqNAAAAMAAJ&vq=%22john%20allot%22%20lord%20mayor%20london&pg=PA49#v=snippet&q=%22john%20hart%22%20lord%20mayor%20london&f=false. *Fuller, Thomas. 1840. ''The History of the Worthies of England''. Edited by J. Fuller. Vol. 1. Thomas Tegg. Page 440. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=9caYkksKnggC&lpg=PA440&dq=hart%20of%20sproston%20court%20yorkshire&pg=PA440#v=onepage&q=john%20hart&f=false. *Gibbons, Alfred W. 1898. ''Notes on the Visitation of Lincolnshire, 1634''. Lincoln: J. Williamson, printer. Page 40. https://archive.org/details/cu31924029785635/page/n53/mode/2up. *Green, Mary Anne Everett. (1867) 2022. ''Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Elizabeth, 1591-1594: Preserved in Her Majesty’s Public Record Office''. 1st Edition. Frankfurt, Germany: Salwasser Verlag. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=DaleEAAAQBAJ&dq. Reprint of the original. First published in 1867. *Green, Nina. 2006. oxford-shakepspeare.com: ''TNA PROB 11/60/296 Last will and testament, dated 30 April 1578, of Sir Ambrose Nicholas, Lord Mayor of London, who purchased Oxford's mansion at London Stone, and whose son, Daniel Nicholas, is recorded in the Belott v Mountjoy lawsuit as having had a conversation with William Shakespeare of Stratford upon Avon.'' http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/Probate/PROB_11-60_ff_165-7.pdf [accessed 13 Mar 2022] *Green, Nina. 2010. oxford-shakepspeare.com: ''TNA C 54/922, Part 27 Recognizance in the amount of £2000 which Oxford acknowledged in Chancery to Ambrose Nicholas on 12 June 1573 in connection with the latter's purchase of Oxford's 'great messuage' at London Stone.'' http://oxford-shakespeare.com/Chancery/C_54-922_Part_27_Ni.pdf [accessed 13 Mar 2022] *Hakluyt, Richard. 2014. ''The Principal Navigations Voyages Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation''. Cambridge University Press. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=414HAwAAQBAJ&dq. *Kerr, Robert. 1811-1820s. ''GENERAL HISTORY and COLLECTION of VOYAGES and TRAVELS, ARRANGED in SYSTEMATIC ORDER: Forming a Complete History of the Origin and Progress of Navigation, Discovery, and Commerce, by Sea and Land, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time'''. Part 2, Book 3, Vol. 8, Chapter 10. Accessed March 7, 2022. http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00generallinks/kerr/vol08chap10sect01.html. *LaPorte, Tom. 2020. “Sir George Bolles of London’s Family Tree.” RootsWeb. January 18, 2020. http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~bowlesfamily/genealogy/sir_george_bolles_of_london’s_family_tree.htm [accessed 13 Mar 2022] *"Orphanage," in ''Analytical Index to the Series of Records Known as the Remembrancia 1579-1664'', ed. W H Overall and H C Overall (London: EJ Francis, 1878), 307-320. British History Online, accessed March 6, 2022, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/index-remembrancia/1579-1664/pp307-320. *Raven, Charles E. 2010. ''English Naturalists from Neckam to Ray: A Study of the Making of the Modern World''. Cambridge University Press. https://books.google.com.au/books?id=kzcfhNPLFSAC&lpg=PA210&dq=%22sproston%20court%22&pg=PA210#v=onepage&q=%22sir%20john%20hart%22&f=false, pg. 210. *Reference: PROB 11/145/391, Will of Dame Anne Hart, Widow of Saint Swithin, City of London, Date: 15 March 1625, [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D887893 The National Archives online]. *Reference: PROB 11/66/91, Description: Will of Anthonye Cage, Salter of All Hallows Honey Lane, City of London, Date: 31 October 1583. [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D966451 The National Archives online]. *Reference: SP 46/141/fo7, Description: Documents concerning Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge: Acquittance of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, to Sir George Bolles, Lord Mayor of London, for £200 to make the value of the two fellowships given by Sir John Hart equal to those of the Foundation;1618. Copy., Date: 1618, [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C7712243 The National Archives online]. *“Saint Swithin London Stone Churchyard.” n.d. FindAGrave. Accessed March 13, 2022. https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2154369/saint-swithin-london-stone-churchyard. *“SILTON HALL Official List Entry.” n.d. Historic England. Accessed March 13, 2022. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1315096?section=official-list-entry. *“Sir John Hart.” Map of Early Modern London. 2018. https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/old/6.3/HART7.htm. [accessed 12 Mar 2022] *Soame, Stephen, John Hart, and William Sebright. 1598. ''Signature and Seal of Sir Stephen Soame''. https://www.worldcat.org/title/signature-and-seal-of-sir-stephen-soame-1598/oclc/430231048. Also includes signature and seal of Sir John Hart and the signature of William Sebright. *"The colleges and halls: Sidney Sussex," in ''A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely: Volume 3, the City and University of Cambridge'', ed. J P C Roach (London: Victoria County History, 1959), 481-487. British History Online, accessed March 12, 2022, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/cambs/vol3/pp481-487. *University of Pennsylvania, Armand J. Gerson, Earnest V. Vaughn, and Neva Ruth Deardorff. 1912. ''Studies in the History of English Commerce in the Tudor Period''. New York: D. Appleton & Company. https://archive.org/details/studiesinhistory00gersuoft. *Urquhart, Margaret. 1987. “Sir Robert Bolles Bt. Of Scampton.” ''The Journal of the Viola Da Gamba Society'' Vol. 16: pg. 16-29. https://vdgs.org.uk/chelys/16chelys1987.pdf. *Wilson, James. 2009. “First History of Sidney Sussex Published.” Varsity, December 17, 2009. https://www.varsity.co.uk/news/1701.

Further Research needed

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Nothing yet !

Fusco

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Buckley-1241|Janine Pumyea]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=9664951 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Futbol!!

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Fut.jpg
Una pequeña explicacion sobre un deporte que es el futbol! para un trabajo de tic´s II

Fyke Family Mysteries

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Darlene Fyke born 1942 in Newport KY to a Luella (or Louella) Crawford and William Fyke. He then moved and was never heard from again. Luella died shortly after leaving Darlene an orphan. No William Fyke families I have contacted have even considered it is their relative, but it has to be one of them. Darlene wants nothing. Just a face to put with the name.

G.W. Dodson Letter

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Letter written by G. W. Dodson To Mr. John W. Taylor, of Summerville, Georgia. Source: Dodson file, Herman Brown Free Library ************** 2103 Oldham Street Austin, Texas October 19, 1915 ____ including records copied from the Dodson Family Bible ________________________________________________________________________________________ ***** Dear Nephew, I have just received your letter of recent date, and will do the best that I can to give you the information that you ask for. I think that it was in 1876 that I visited my Uncles, William and Isaiah Dodson, in Henry and DeKalb Counties and copied some records that I found with them in an old Bible, and learned some other things about the Dodson family that I did not know; also I have lately seen a book belonging to a minister here (Mr. Minter), which is intended to be a genealogy of the Dodsons. I also remember a few things that my Father and Mother told me, but it is more difficult to trace the Mother's than the Father's line -- in fact I cannot go beyond my maternal grandfather. I learn from the book that I mentioned that there were three families of Dodsons, who all came from England at a very early date, and seemingly from the same place. One family settled in Maryland, one in Pennsylvania, and one in Virginia. We are descended from the Virginia branch, and there is mentioned in the Colonial Records in 1632 a Dodson farm on the James River, which was only 25 years after the first settlement at Jamestown. This all agrees with the traditions that I have, and the book says that the Virginia Dodsons Claim that they were there from the first..... My name is English, but we are at least half Irish or Scotch. Uncle Isaiah told me that the English was all gone but the name. I cannot go beyond my great grandfather, Joshua Dodson, who was about contemporary with Washington, and was a Baptist preacher. My Father told me that he remembered him..... Now, from the records, my grandfather, Joshua, was born in 1764, and was the fourth son of Joshua, Sr. The older brothers were Charles, Elijah and Elisha. I think all these went to Kentucky soon after the Revolutionary War. The younger brothers were Isaac and Daniel. Joshua Dodson, Jr., and Sarah Warnick (or Wirnick) were married in Virginia and went to Georgia previous to November 1785, and Daniel also went to Georgia. I do not know as to Isaac, but Joshua, Sr., visited Georgia when my Father was a child. ... Two of my grandfather's sisters married Creels, and one a Ballinger, and one a Stamps. If I have been correctly informed, one of Ida Autrey's boys married a Miss Robertson, who is descended from Stamps...... The children of Joshua, Jr., were Elijah, born November 20, 1785; Samuel (my father), November 21, 1788; William, March 22, 1791; Dicy, April 6, 1796; Ruth, December 12, 1801; Isaiah, June 9, 1804; Daniel, December 9, 1806. Of these brothers of my father, Elijah married a Miss Rowden, and raised a large family, but I know very little about them. My father was the second son. William, the next one, lived and died in Henry County. Only one of his sons raised a family. This one was named Newton. Frank was a Captain, I think in Gobbs Legion, and was killed at Fredericksburg. The others, Marion and Green, died unmarried. I know scarcely anything about Uncle William's daughters. One of them married a man who owned a mill on South river, but I have forgotten his name. I heard once that she was a widow living in Atlanta. Uncle Isaiah married a Miss Brabin, and had one son, Jasper, who was living about Gadsen, Alabama the last that I ever heard of him. Uncle Daniel was a Captain in some of the Indian Wars. He was never married. Aunt Dicy married Mr. Hulsey. She lived at Lithonia and raised one son and two daughters. Marion was killed, I think, and left a widow, but no child, in Atlanta. Aunt Dicy had a daughter who lived at Lithonia, but I have forgotten who she married. Another one married Dr. Clark, and came to Texas before the war. Aunt Ruth married Mr. Hollis, died young, and left one son, Andrew D. This is about all I can inform you about my father's family and I will turn to my mother's side of the house. My grandfather, Christopher Gardner, was born in Ireland in 1754. He came to America when a boy, served in Washington's army from Pennsylvania, was twice wounded, married after the war and moved with a colony to Georgia. His wife died, leaving him a daughter, who afterwards married Dick Saye, and lived in Cherokee County. Some of the grandchildren may be there yet. Grandfather afterwards married Sarah Simmons, from whom we descended. I know nothing of her except the name. I think she was Irish. She was the mother of three sons and six or seven daughters, but I don't remember their names. I know who most of them married. The sons, Asa and John, moved to Mississippi and I presume their descendants are there yet. Thomas lived and died in Henry or DeKalb County, and I am sure that some of his children are still there. Mother's sisters married men of the following names: Rowden, Underwood, Caruthers, Drumners, Trisar, and Gillespie. The last named lived in Banks County, and the Drumners went to Mississippi, and the Caruthers did live near Chicamauga. None of them ever married except Jack, and they are all dead except Julie, I mean of my Aunt's children, but Jack left a family, and I am now going to write of my own family. I hope you will preserve the main facts for the younger generation. I like to see people pay some attention to the history of their ancestry. In looking over this, I find that I might say more about my father's mother. She was an Irish Presbyterian, as was also my mother's father, and whom, I suppose, were Scotch Irish. My parents were married, I think, in 1816. their children were: James Warnick, born January 3, 1818, died 1894 Jefferson Monroe, Don't know when born, died 1882 Areissa Wilshire, your mother, born Oct. 10, 1894, died 1914 Sarah Ann, born in 1827, died 1890 Caroline Margaret, born Feb. 1889--still living Samuel Putnam, born 1832, died 1853 [date not clear] Elijah Mosely, born 1835, died 1904 John Lafayette, born 1837, died 1911 George Washington, born January 26, 1840 [died 1916] Columbus (?) and Sarah never married, and Putnam left no children; neither did John. James married Miss ____ and came to Texas in 1840. They are both dead. They left two sons and five daughters, and many grandchildren. Monroe married Miss Clem Flint in Texas--both dead. They left one son and four daughters. The girls all married well--the son is in California, not married. I leave out your mother, and ask you to get Bernard to tell you about the Beatty family. Areissa married John Taylor, and lived and died at Summerville. I think he, John Jr., is doing well. Sallie (Taylor) Hassell lives at Fredericksburg, Virginia. She has two sons missionaries in Japan. Areissa had a son, Samuel Fleming, who died in Atlanta, and left a widow and one son. I don't know whether they are still living or not...... Brother Mosely married Miss Fannie Germany. They are both dead--left two sons and four daughters. The boys went off before Mosely died. I don't think it is known where they are. Two of the daughters lived in Chattanooga--one is a widow, and I expect a good woman--her name is Samuels. One of the other girls, I think, lives in Savannah, and the other somewhere in the North. I know but little about them--not even their names..... We have five girls and three boys. the girls are Mattie, Mary, Amy, Sarah, and Carrie; and the boys are Edwin, Sam and William. Mattie and Sarah are teaching here--have a home--and wife and I live with them. Mary and Samuel are missionaries in Korea. Edwin is a lawyer at Rosebud, Texas. Amy is married to Dr. Garrett, and lives at Bertram, Texas. Carrie is teaching at Port Arthur, William at Llano, Texas...... (signed) G.W. Dodson [some of the paragraphs were added [[Billups-130|Billups-130]] 12:18, 25 November 2014 (EST)] ************* Records copied from the Dodson Family Bible BIRTHS: Samuel Putnam Dodson, Jr., son of Samuel Putnam and Martha J. Dodson, was born March 3,1854. MARRIAGES: R. G. Dodson was married May 17, 1854 Elijah Mosely Dodson and Frances Germany were married June 21st 1856 George W. Dodson and Sallie J. Huie were married December 20, 1870 George Washington Dodson and Naomi S. Kendrick were married Feb ruary 12, 1879. DEATHS: Samuel Putnam Dodson, son of Samuel and Rebecca Dodson, died 6th of September 1853 in Anderson County Texas. Rebecca Dodson, wife of Samuel Dodson, died January 4th, 1872, aged 76 years, 9 months and 26 days. Sallie Jane Dodson, wife of George W. Dodson, died February 22nd, 1872, aged twenty years, three months and eight days. Samuel Dodson died September 4th, 1879, aged 83 years, 9 months and 17 days. George Washington Dodson, youngest son of Samuel and Rebecca Dodson, died July 21, 1916. ************** Originally posted to the profile for Joshua Dodson, Jr. (WikiTree profile Dodson-350), born 1725, died 1793, by [[Dotson-155 | Betty Dotson]], valued Wikitree member, now departed.

G F Knight to Clara Firestone 5 May 1900

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[[Firestone-347|Solomon Beaver Firestone (1832-1900)]]
[[Firestone-340|Judy Ann (Firestone) Perkey (1815-1849)]]
[[Firestone-342|John C. Firestone (1819-1848)]]
[[Firestone-343|Harriet (Firestone) Knight (1820-1909)]]
[[Firestone-345|Eleanor (Firestone) Sturges (1825-1899)]]
[[Firestone-207|George Lee Firestone (abt.1831-1873)]]
[[Firestone-148|George W. Firestone (1784-1851)]]
[[Carle-2304|Rebecca (Carle) Firestone (1786-1869)]] ----- [[Knight-23096|G. F. Knight]], Canton, Ohio, to [[Firestone-359|Clara Firestone]], Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, letter of 5 May 1900 regarding death of "your Uncle [[Firestone-347|Solomon Firestone]]," 5 pp; Family Collection of Martha Shoup, Martha Shoup to GJ, 1998, scanned as img779.jpg-img783.jpg; digital images, [https://archive.org/details/knight-to-firestone-1900-letter/Knight%20to%20Firestone%201900-pg%200.png ''InternetArchive'']. See also related source, Solomon B. Firestone estate, case 10123, Wayne County (Ohio) Probate; digital images, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-91FX?i=2052&cat=700648 ''FamilySearch''], FHL film 2033515, Digital Collection 7648513, images [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-91FX?i=2052&cat=700648 2053]-[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-9R9S?i=2224&cat=700648 2225] of 6504. ----- ::Knight Manufacturing Co.
::Canton, Ohio Miss Clara Firestone
Oklahoma City
Oklahoma My Dear Cousin it is with regret
that I am called upon in this my
first letter to you to advise you
of the death and burial of your uncle
Solomon Firestone. he died on April
22 after an illness of several weeks
and was buried on tuesday the 24th.
I was not certain of your address
or would have written you sooner
I wrote to Melissa Shoup at Cimarron
Kas. requesting her to send me your
address also that of your brother but have
had no reply to my letter on looking
through R G Dun & Co Commercial report
I found your address and hope I hear
from you and get the address of your
brother and sister. Uncle Sol left no will
and his property will be divided among
the heirs provided a promise that was made
to a young couple recently married that
was keeping house for him does not get
[page 1]
[page 2]
it. in order that you will understand
the situation I will briefly relate the circum-
stances. After his wife died in June of last
year, my mother went to live with him
and stayed there and kept house for
him until October then she died and
left Uncle Sol alone. After that one of Knight
Sturgis girls, Sadie, worked for him. She
had a young fellow by the name of Franks
that was waiting on her. Uncle Sol wanted
them to get married and keep house for him
but as they was both poor, Franks told him
he couldn't get married as he had no
money. Uncle Sol said that did not make
any difference as they could use his
Household goods and farm his place.
the girls parents was opposed to their
getting married but uncle Sol sent for them and
finaly got their consent to their getting
married from the information I have he
told them if they got married and kept house
for him they could use the household goods
and when he was through with them they could
have them as well as the land. on the next
[?day] after the funeral Knight Sturgis and I went to Wooster to
[page 2]
[page 3]
have an administer appointed. I
related the circumstances to the probate
Judge and he advised me in the absence
of a will they could not hold either the
Household goods or the land. I then
requested the Judge to appoint Knight Sturgis
the girls father as the administrator as
felt that the young couple was certainly
entitled to Something and and to turn them out
would be a very unpleasant duty and I
thought her Father would be the proper party
as they would have confidence that what
he would do was the requirement of the
law and nothing more with nobody to blame
the appointment was not made on that date
and it have written the Judge to defer the
appointment for this reason. after I came home
for a few days I received a letter from
Knight Sturgis stating that Mr Franke
had been to see an attorney and was
advised that he could hold both the house-
hold goods and the land. I then submitted
the case to my attorney here and he
looked to matter up and he advises me
if it can be proven that he made these
promises to this young couple they can
[hold] all his property after his debts are
[page 3]
[page 4]
paid. In lieu of the above circumstances
I thought the wisest thing to do was to Call
a meeting of the Heirs and adjust the
matter with Franks if possible without
any litigation and have notified all the heirs
except yourself and Brother and Sister to meet
me in Wooster on next Wednesday May 9th
[struck] as the interests of all the Heirs are Mutal
you can rest assured that whatever agreement
we come to your interests as well as that
of your Brother and Sister will be taken
care of. The names of the Heirs are as follows
commencing with the children of his oldest
sister and following according to Their respective ages
Irene Pomerine
Sarah Keller
[above are] child of Judeanne Firestone
Nancy Jane Hunt
[above are] children of John Firestone
Harriet Knight
[above is] his only living sister
G. F. Knight
Knight Sturgis
Carl Sturgis
[above are] children of Eleanor Firestone
Melissa Shoup
Clara Firestone
Hod Firestone
[above are] children of George Firestone
[page 4]
[page 5]
I would like very much if you could be there
with us but so far as your property interests
are concerned it will make no difference
Kindly advise me regarding the address of
your Brother and Sister that I may have
them entered in the probate Judges office as
heirs of the estate. I do not know whether
you remember me or not but I remember
you very well as I used to live with your
Father and Mother when you was a
very little girl. Trusting this will find you
well as it leaves myself and family
and with Kindest regards to Brother and
Sister. I remain very truly
:::Your Cousin
:::G. F. Knight
==Research Notes== '''Receipts from Heirs.''' *Mrs Nancy Jane Hunt, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-99M9-3?i=2180&cat=700648 ''FamilySearch''], FHL film 2033515, Digital Collection 7648513, image 2180 of 6504. *Scott Chaffin, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-9GD2?i=2181&cat=700648 ''FamilySearch''], image 2182 of 6504. *Irene Pomerene, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-911C?i=2182&cat=700648 ''FamilySearch''], image 2183 of 6504. '''Registered Letter Returns.''' These filmed images appear in the estate file, [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9P5-99SH-5?i=2104&cat=700648 ''Family Search''], images 2105-2108 of 6504.

G2G and no-repeat pics - Sarah Jenkins

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Payton-820.jpg
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G2G_and_no-repeat_pics_-_Sarah_Jenkins-4.png
G2G_and_no-repeat_pics_-_Sarah_Jenkins-1.png
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G2G_and_no-repeat_pics_-_Sarah_Jenkins-17.jpg
Photo's for G2G following Betsy Ko's tip of the week - Thanks Betsy.

G2G Levels

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DBE_nnn-2.gif
::

Titles based on scores

{|border=1 |             '''G2G Score'''             ||                    '''Title'''                     |- |||
G2G Rookie
|- |
300
||
G2G Crew
|- |
1,000
||
G2G1
|- |
2,000
||
G2G2
|- |
3,000
||
G2G3
|- |
4,000
||
G2G4
|- |
5,000
||
G2G5
|- |
6,000
||
G2G6
|- |
10,000
||
G2G6 Mach 1
|- |
20,000
||
G2G6 Mach 2
|- |
30,000
||
G2G6 Mach 3
|- |
40,000
||
G2G6 Mach 4
|- |
50,000
||
G2G6 Mach 5
|- |
60,000
||
G2G6 Mach 6
|- |
70,000
||
G2G6 Mach 7
|- |
80,000
||
G2G6 Mach 8
|- |
90,000
||
G2G6 Mach 9
|- |
100,000
||
G2G6 Pilot
|- |
1,000,000
||
G2G Astronaut
|}

G2G Photo Upload

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G2G_Photo_Upload-6.png
Possible solution to the G2G question: "Is it possible to include a jpeg image in a G2G question?" [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g/68013/is-it-possible-to-include-a-jpeg-image-in-a-g2g-question?show=68022#a68022] This profile is a storage location for photos/illustrations in G2G questions. When asking a G2G question, and you wish to illustrate a point, upload a copy of the illustration to this page. Then copy the URL of the ''image'' (http://www.wikitree.com/photo/jpg/G2G_Photo_Upload-'''XX''', where '''XX''' is the image number). Return to the G2G question page, click the photo icon, and paste in the image URL.

G2G Post Prep Page

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G2G_Post_Prep_Page.jpg
''Note: This was intended to be the full [https://www.wikitree.com/g2g/1738081/dna-confirmation-updates-the-app-whats-new-whats-confusing G2G post]. That had to be shortened somewhat due to maximum # of characters reached. Here is the full meal deal, for your viewing pleasure.'' '''DNA Confirmation - Updates on the App / What's New / What's Confusing''' This G2G post will likely be a longer than average read, but for those interested in DNA Confirmation, I would ask that you to take the time to read through it. Thank you, in advance. First off, as the author of the [https://apps.wikitree.com/apps/clarke11007/DNAconf.php DNA Confirmation app] that many use to add DNA confirmation source citations to their profiles, thank you for your continued support. AND ... apologies for the long time in between updates. The good news is that I am actively working on a series of updates (and have been for months), but, they are interrelated, and involved, and require LOTS of testing (in which I break a lot of things!) ... and I've got my hands in a few other pies, both in and out of WikiTree. At the end of this post, I'll give you a sneak preview of what I've got planned and what is already working (and you could see in my beta version). BUT ... BEFORE THAT ... Let me just repeat a few principles about DNA Confirmation as we apply it here on WikiTree, and on which I have built the app - so we are ALL coming from the same place of understanding. ([[Help: DNA Confirmation]]) (1) A DNA match is NOT a PROOF of a relationship. In all but immediate family relationships, the amount of DNA one shares with another person could have multiple meanings. If there is NO OTHER source to verify a relationship, a DNA Match cannot be used to prove anything. (2) However, what a DNA Match CAN do is to CONFIRM a relationship that HAS been proven or supported by a valid genealogical source. IF you have a paper trail that indicates you're related to your DNA Match person via a common ancestor (or couple) - that is : a valid trail that verifies you descend from the common ancestor(s), and a valid paper trail that verifies your match also descends from the same ancestor(s) - then - you can use that DNA Match to CONFIRM that the DNA backs up the Genealogical proof. That is in fact the point of the DNA Confirmation app: to make the creation of these DNA Source Citations that CONFIRM these matches a little bit easier to do. Like crafting any source citation, you need to include a lot of details (where, when, who, how related), and it has to be done in such a way that others can read, understand, and follow the logic to verify, or compare their own connections to the people involved. (3) SO ... if you're with me so far, a DNA Match is not PROOF, but can be used to CONFIRM a relationship, that's great! Excellent. However, now we enter the area where it gets a little bit more nebulous, where we have to balance science and practicality, and come up with some workable guidelines around a process that by its very nature is random. The DNA Confirmation guidelines that we are working from on WikiTree at present indicate that for SIMPLE relationships, of 3rd cousins or closer, a DNA Confirmation can verify that type of relationship between any TWO people. This is assuming - always - that there is a valid genealogically sourced trail to indicate this relationship. (Second cousins, once or twice removed; First cousins, 1x, 2x, 3x , 4x removed, all fit in that range) (4) MORE DISTANT ? Well ... if your relationship is further than 3rd cousin (3rd cousins once removed or more, 4th cousin or more), then the amount you share will be relatively small ''(more about that later)'' - and - open to so many possible relationships. It also means you have to look pretty far back in your ancestry to come up with a common ancestor. To truly CONFIRM a relationship that distant, the standard is to find matches that can demonstrate that you share actual segments of DNA with on a common chromosome. And, for a match this distant, you need 3 to TRIANGULATE your DNA Match, just to be sure. (Yes - you'll need to use a Chromosome Browser to illustrate this - and - for your Ancestry DNA matches, you'll have to ask them to transfer to another site, like GEDmatch, so you can compare). To avoid going off in all directions, let me just say two things about this: :(A) This is the [https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:Triangulation current policy], which has been in place for a number of years, and has been debated in other places on G2G, but is the foundation with which we are working (and my app is based on). Some people suggest this is in fact too loose, others too stringent, which suggests it's about right, since it upsets people from both sides! :(B) The current restriction in my DNA confirmation app, about only allowing 3 people for a triangulation, is one of the new features I'm building into the next version ... the newer version will allow you to add a 4th or 5th person to the mix after the initial three are triangulated ... which as you read on, will be helpful in some specific scenarios. (5) TRICKY TRIANGULATION: OK ... this is where it gets more difficult to apply. BECAUSE of the way that DNA is passed on randomly from parent to child, except for the direct mother/father to son/daughter, where you KNOW you have 50% of each parent's DNA, all other ancestral relationships are variable. You MAY if you're super lucky and mathematically gifted have exactly 25% of each of your four grandparents' DNA - but - it's more likely a range close to but not exactly that amount for each one. And, the further and further back you go, likewise, it varies. Some ancestors, will have randomly gifted you with larger than expected amounts, and some of your ancestors may get shut out completely from your personal DNA lottery. To validly compare three (or more) DNA descendants of a Common Ancestor (or couple), they must all come from a different Child of that Common Ancestor - or - possibly a Grandchild. The analogy of a 3-legged stool is often used - think of the legs of the stool as the paths from the DNA Test Takers up to the Common Ancestor(s) - if one leg is too short, or too long compared to the others, the stool tips over, as does our Confirmation evidence. (Think of looking at the tool from the top, where it connects to the common ancestor(s).) {{Image|file=G2G_Post_Prep_Page.jpg|caption=''Image courtesy of Mags Gaulden, used with permission''}} * Corollary: If an ancestor only has one child, you cannot do a DNA Confirmation by Triangulation to that ancestor, only to their child. (6) UNIQUENESS IS KEY: Remember that the purpose of the DNA Confirmation is to CONFIRM that which is already verified with a genealogical paper trail. HOWEVER, that Confirmation has to be UNIQUE - you have to be able to say, that persons A, B, and C all descend from ancestor(s) X (and Y), and that they overlap on this ONE SEGMENT of DNA on THIS SPECIFIC Chromosome - and that there is NO OTHER WAY this could happen, because they share no other ancestors in common. * Oh oh ... Aye, there's the rub ... NO OTHER WAY ... that phrase is important, because if there are multiple ancestors that test takers A, B, and C share, then there is no way of KNOWING that THIS segment belongs to ancestors X and Y ... could belong to ancestors M and N ... or Z ??? * Corollary 1: This also implies that you have a fleshed out tree of ancestors for all DNA test takers at this ancestor's level, so that you know the common ancestor(s) is/are the only ones possible * Corollary 2: If you have multiple relationships at different levels (a 4th cousin triangulation vs a 6th cousin triangulation), the closer one would always be the one you focus on. SO.. in the case of endogamy, or pedigree collapse, where people are related to others in multiple ways, you CANNOT do a DNA confirmation IF there is more than one possible route from DNA tester to common ancestors , or if there are multiple ancestors to choose from. WHY? Because - you cannot be sure which path of parents / grandparents / etc... up to the common ancestors to follow. You know that ONE SEGMENT IN COMMON had to come from ONE ANCESTOR or ANCESTRAL COUPLE - but unless there's a unique path, you can't say that the link is ''CONFIRMED'' by DNA. HOWEVER ... IF adding a 4th or a 5th DNA Test Taker into the mix can then further narrow down the Common Ancestor(s), and eliminate other possibilities - so that there is only one that remains - THEN we could in fact use that combo to confirm with DNA. That is why I'm adding that new option into the next upgrade of the DNA Confirmation app. (7) THERE ARE LIMITS .... and in the case of Triangulating DNA, specifically autosomal DNA, the type you get with most standard DNA tests, that DNA can only take you back around six generations, more or less. That would take you to 4th great grandparents in common, that you share with 5th cousins. POSSIBLY 6th cousins ... but ... certainly not much more. The reason for this is that at every generation, the amount of DNA that gets passed down from any specific ancestor can be sliced and diced, or discarded completely until the segments, if any, are so small it’s impossible to tell them from statistical accidents, and thus, unreliable to use as proof. The current lower limit is 7 cM, and in endogamous populations, it should be higher. (8) TO DREAM THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM… it would be so nice to use DNA confirmation to take you back 10 generations, but our technology CANNOT do that yet. If you are looking at your pure paternal line, or direct maternal line, then yes, a Y DNA or mitochondrial DNA test match CAN be used to confirm those connections back that far. But any other path, via autosomal DNA, sorry. (9) A FINAL MEA CULPA. There are some deficiencies in the current version of the app. My apologies to those who have been led astray by those failings. Specifically, if there are multiple relationships between test takers, the current version of the app doesn’t detect or warn about that. In fact, the algorithm is set to the find the CLOSEST MOST RECENT COMMON ANCESTOR for Test Taker # 1, and once it finds that, it goes from there. It does not look to see if there are other common ancestors and warn you about that or advise on what to do (YET ... coming soon ...). If two (or more) test takers do have multiple relationships, then reversing the order in which you enter them in the app may give you different results (and it should give you a warning, but doesn't, yet ...). That SHOULD be a red flag ... which it isn't yet, but soon will be. '''WHAT’S NEW ?''' Well, here are some things that I do have working that are new in the [https://apps.wikitree.com/apps/clarke11007/DNAconf2.php development version] of the app: * Add DNApainter links to compare relationship predictions and cM values * Add option to link to Relationship Finder (between DNA test takers) in the source citations (Turned ON by default) * Add option to embed Compare link to GEDmatch, when both IDs defined. (Turned ON by default) * Autosaves last used options for Cousin format, and new link options (via a cookie in browser). * Revised drawing of MiniTrees from Simple Confirmation. * Search for multiple relationship paths in Simple Confirmation. '''WHAT’S NEXT ?''' Before publishing this current update of the DNA Confirmation app, I want to finish testing all the scenarios in the Simple Confirmation (3rd cousin or less), including how to properly deal with multiple relationships, and proper wording for advice / next steps in those cases. Once that testing is complete (soon I hope), then I will update the app to include these changes, and move onto the even larger updates: * Add a check to confirm that parental relationships marked "uncertain" are flagged and that double-check that those marked "non-biological" are not used for DNA confirmation * Add a Bio-Check (thanks Kay!) to check profiles, and warn if some in the chain are unsourced. * Adding search for multiple relationships to the DNA Triangulation section * Ability to add a 4th and a 5th DNA test taker to further refine the common ancestor * Similar functionality added to X Chromosome matches * Add Big Y test as an option for Y DNA matches Anything I've left out? As always - please do keep me informed of bugs you've found, or things that don't quite seem right (or in the new features especially, any wording that seems awkward or confusing) FINALLY .. I must give a huge shout-out to the WikiTreers who volunteer their time to the time-consuming and often thankless job of checking recently added to profiles. They do this to ensure the health of the tree, and are there to help. Thanks folks! :([[Help:DNA_Confirmation]]) P.S. Final thanks to Chris Whitten, Peter Roberts and Mags Gaulden who helped me with suggestions to ensure the accuracy of this post, that it was in line with the current policy, and reflects the latest thinking on the topic.

G2G post prep place

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This Free Space page is a place where I can put together thoughts to go into a G2G post in advance of actually posting it. == DRAFT: Future 'thons and GEDcoms - Discuss == The use of GEDcoms in various WikiTree community events, such as the Connect-a-thon, or the most recent amazingly organized first ever WikiGames, has been discussed in the past, but there has never been an official ruling about it. The purpose of this G2G post, and the ensuing responses that I hope members of the WikiTree community will provide, will help shape a decision that echoes the community's goals and be what is best for the Tree. '''BACKGROUND''' Before going any further, though, let me be clear that there has never been an official rule against using GEDcoms during a 'thon, just as there is no rule against using them to load ancestors into the tree itself during any other time. There is a process in place that has developed over time, and while not easy, or perfect, it can work. People who have found that using GEDcoms was the most efficient way to add people have not bent the rules, or cheated, and should NOT be the targets for derogatory comments or harassment. However, despite that, there have been some negative reactions and, even if not directed at individuals, there have been some community members who have been left with a feeling of unfairness that the high scorers did "pull a fast one" and got away with doing something the easy way. This is a common type of reaction after a competition, even a friendly one, and very natural to have. But, as mentioned above, there has been no rule against this method, and to use GEDcoms is in fact far from easy. '''PRO argument - in favour of allowing GEDcoms''' * To use GEDcoms in a 'thon requires quite a bit of planning and organization. This level of detail should result in good news for the Tree. Someone has to export the names and dates and places from a tree they have elsewhere on the web, or home computer, and then import it into WikiTree. Following the import process, they then have to go through the GEDcompare process to validate each person in the file. This is not a process for the weak of heart! * Why do this? The primary reason that using GEDcoms during a 'thon is attractive is that this allows users to add a person quickly with the names, dates, and places already entered. The data is entered automatically and without typos (assuming the original database was correct). * Sources still need to be added - at least one per profile * Many people who use GEDcoms spend a good deal of time preparing for the 'thons in advance to ensure high quality as well as quantity for their contributions during the weekend. * Some have also indicated that they spend time after each 'thon to revisit their profiles created during the event to further clean up and enhance them. * This process can be an efficient way of adding to the tree and the quality of the profiles can be consistent with WikiTree standards. WikiTreers who are PRO use of GEDcoms would suggest you vote YES to this proposal. Register your vote by hitting REPLY to the Answer below that says YES and leaving a note there. '''NAY argument - against the use of GEDcoms''' * Albeit the time and preparation required to use a GEDcom in a 'thon, there is much room for abuse and sub-standard profiles as a result. * There are already many profiles on WikiTree that have GEDcom junk in them, and an army of WikiTree volunteers are constantly working their way through those to clean them up. We don't need more of those created during a 'thon. * With the advent of and latest features of the WikiTree Sourcer extension, you can quickly and easily create a WikiTree profile based on an existing FamilySearch profile or Ancestry person profile. * As well, you can also copy over any or all of the valid sources from either of those existing profiles - OR - from a myriad of other supported sites. * The WikiTree Browser Extension also has many features that help you speed up the data entry / editing of profiles including the Auto Bio / Auto Categories features, the Bio Check logic built into it, the Notepad for storing commonly used text, and more. * It is arguable that you could be as quick and efficient using these extensions as with importing GEDcoms, without the hassle of the prep work, and the headache of the cleanup needed afterwards. WikiTreers who are NAY use of GEDcoms would suggest you vote NO to this proposal. Register your vote by hitting REPLY to the Answer below that says NO and leaving a note there. ''Register your vote by hitting REPLY to one of the Answers below - YES / NO / MAYBE if you're not sure. Do NOT click the comment button immediately underneath this post. This post will close on September 30th, 2023.''

Gabbards

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gabbard-363|Donna Gabbard]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=18454547 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Gabbitas- New Zealand, USA and Canada lines

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The goal of this project is to take the information I have at this point and add it to the Gabbitas Tree Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gabbitas-27|Michael Gabbitas]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. Transfer information from Excel file I have of 5 generations of Gabbitas Scan and upload images of doc's I have in my possession * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12732768 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Gabriel Legate 1657 will comparison

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Gabriel_Legate_1657_will_comparison.png
[[Leggett-1199|James Leggett of NY]] [[Leggett-847|Gabriel Leggett Sr]] Re Cambridgeshire Lineage discussed on this page. A supporting source referred to on the page of [[Leggett-847|Gabriel Leggett Sr]] includes a transcript of his will. https://xpda.com/family/ Families of Webster, Bachman, Van Valkenburg, McCall, etc.]. Bob Webster, compiler. xpda.com, 2019. (sourced). See also: https://xpda.com/family/Leggett-Gabriel-ind00464.htm Headed : Will of Gabriell Leggate, 1657 Chancery Records Office, Chancery Lane "house aforesaid. Also I give and bequeath unto my loving son Willam Leggate twenty shillings of the lawful money of England to be paid to him by my Executor within one year next after my decease. I give him also the one year old filly which came of the mare which was fair's first.''' I give and bequeath unto my loving son Gabriell Leggate twenty pounds of the lawful money of England to be paid to him by my Executor within one year alter my decease.''' All the residue of my movable goods corn, money, cattle and chattels whatsoever I give the same wholly unto my loving son John Leggat whom I appoint and make me sole executor of this my last will and testament The copy of the will from the National Archives '''does not contain a bequest to a son Gabriell. The only sons mentioned are John and William'''. Note the will registers were held at the Public Records office in Chancery Lane were moved to the National Archives in 2003. The transcript above would therefore appear to relate to the same copy. It would have been created before 2003. {{Image|file=Gabriel_Legate_1657_will_comparison.png |caption=manuscript. |size=l }} :house as aforesaid ALsoe I give and bequeath unto my loveing sonne William Leggate twenty shillings of lawfull money of England to be paid to him by my Executo’ within one yeare next after my decease I give him alsoe one yeare old filley which came of the mare which was faires [C ] :All the residue of my moveable goods Corne Monies Cattells & Chattells whatsoever I give the same wholly unto my loveing sonne John Leggat National Archives Kew, PROB 11/271/53 Will of Gabriell Leggate, Yeoman of Ely within the Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire, 18 November, 1657 [https://www.ancestry.co.uk/sharing/23734750?h=e435ab&utm_campaign=bandido-webparts&utm_source=post-share-modal&utm_medium=copy-url sharing link Ancestry] :National Archives, Kew, Surrey, England : PROB 11/271/52 :Will of Gabriell Leggate, Yeoman of Ely within the Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire : Probate Date: 18 November 1657 Transcribed by Helen M Ford :In the name of God Amen I Gabriel Leggate of Ely wth’[within] the Isle of Ely in the County of Cambridge Yeoman calling to mind my owne frailtie and mortallitie doe for my better preparac’on for death and whilst I am in health and pfect understanding memory (blessed be the Lord for the same) Institute and make this my last will and testament in manner and forme following :First of all I surrender my soule into the hands of Almighty God my Creator trusting in his free grace and abundant Goodness to receive the [Free?] remission of all my sinns and eternall life through Jesus Christ my onely Saviour and Redeemer and my body I commit to the earth to bee buried in convenient place and decent manner according to the good pleasure of God at the discetion of my Executo’ hereafter named in hope of a joyfull Resurection att the last and great day : And as touching that temporall estate w’ch the Lord hath lent mee to use in this world I thus dispose thereof in manner as followeth :First of all I give and bequeath to Susan my beloved wife All those my household stuffe or moveable goods furniture utensils and implements which are now within my dwelling house (except my wheate and [Meslyn?]) as for my other corne and mault and other things whatsoever now in my house I give that same wholly to her my said wife and her heires and assignes forever Also I give to my said wife one (oombe? of wheate for her bread (o---- and all my butter cheesess bacon and my fireing Also my linnen and bedding and whatsoever else is within my house as aforesaid. :Alsoe I give and bequeath unto my loveing sonne William Leggate twenty shillings of lawfull money of England to be paid to him by my Executo’ within one yeare next after my decease I give him alsoe one yeare old filley which came of the mare which was fairs c[ ] :All the residue of my moveable goods Corne Monies Cattells & Chattells whatsoever I give the same wholly unto my loveing sonne John Leggat whom I appoint and make the sole executor of this my last will and testament to pay my debts and legacies to discharge my funerall expences and to see my body decently interred and buried and to performe and fulfill this my last will and testament. :In witness wherof I have sett my hand and seale unto this [pu’te] writing conteyning my last will and testament the sixth day of May in the yeare of our Lord one thousand six hundred fifty and seaven :Gabriell Leggate his marke Sealed subscribed published and declared to bee the last will and testament of the above named Gabriell Leggate in the p’cence of us Thomas Tye, his mark, William Waddylowe his mark Rob Browne :This will was proved at London before the judges for probate of wills and granting administracons lawfully author’sed the eighteenth day of November in the year ore our Lord god according to the computacon of the Church of England one Thousand one hundred fiftie and Seaven by the oath of John Leggate the sonne sole executot of the deceased to whome Administrac’n of all the goods and chattles of the said deceased was comitted he being first sworn by comission truly to administer the same.

Gadd's Store, Claudelands

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Bernard Gadd - Gadd’s grocery shop was the largest of a block of shops on the corner of Heaphy Terrace (now Grey St) and Te Aroha St. The main entrance was on a diagonal across the corner. At the corner was a green painted horse hitching post (still there in a new position) Down the Te Aroha St side next to the shop was a barber’s and at least one other shop, at one time the Misses Rowe’s' home cookery. The other small shop on the Heaphy Terrace frontage was a butcher. Next to the butcher was a metal driveway. At a short distance down it was one (I think) petrol pump and the drive-way ended at the provisions store, a large wood building on concrete base raised about a metre so that vans and trucks could unload onto a small loading dock. In this place were kept the foodstuffs awaiting transfer to the shop- the large cheese wheels in cloth, the sacks of flour and bags of grain, the compacted mass of dates and so on. It was heaven for rats. On entering the shop there was usually a small display of seeds and garden or maybe also hardware items immediately to the left, then beyond that along the wall to the left a counter where bread was sold, usually white loaves, always unwrapped. Beyond it was a small doorway onto Heaphy Terrace. On the left hand side of the shop was the office where Frank often worked on accounts and orders and so on. Where that wall and the one facing the bread counter met was a doorway into the storeroom behind the shop. Between the office and that doorway was a customer filing system comprising a flip down set of hardboard panels to which accounts were attached with clips, and often Frank was seen dolefully examining the overdue accounts. A long counter ran in front of the longest wall attached to which were long rows of shelves reaching to ceiling. A moveable ladder on a runner like a librarian’s ladder could be moved along the shelves. The trick was to remember where the different kinds of goods were shelved. At the end of the counter was a huge refrigerator for butter and cheese and perhaps eggs, and in a recess at the top of that the shop's 'takings’ were kept and the Gladstone bag for Grandpa Herbert Gadd to take to the bank each day. The fourth wall also had a counter in front of it and on this counter were the bacon slicer machine and a simple wire with toggle which was the cheese slicer, and beside them a weighing machine. The shop stocked an amazing array of things from gardening tools and seeds to tea - at one stage anyway Frank and David packed their own blend of leaves; tinned foods, fresh foods, kerosene, cleaning products, biscuits, lawn mowers, rakes, spades, household products of all kinds probably including simple china, tilly lamps, long cakes of taniwha soap that had to be cut into shorter lengths. David used to talk of how they’d tried to persuade Pearson to leave out the carbolic acid in his Pearson's sandsoap and how the factory (now a wool scourers) eventually had to close down because people no longer wanted the strong carbolic. In short, it was very much a general store which for much of its life delivered boxes of orders by van as far as Newstead or by bike. David was the sign writer and prided himself on his blue backgrounds and fancy lettering and figures. The staff were Frank, Dad [David] and in later years Doris plus usually a man or boy. Behind the main shop was the large, dim and odour-filled provisions store with its small upper deck. Here was the row of grain bins for wheat, barley, flour, probably sago, rice, dried peas, and lentils. The bags of flour, the tins of kerosene, paraffin or turps, the boxes of tea, and all products too bulky, dusty or smelly to keep in the main shop. Weevils were a scourge, getting into flour, dates, porridge and so on. Grocery was a labour intensive, physically tough trade. Goods were usually bulk supplied and had to be put into the smaller quantities that customers wanted by the grocers. The cheese wheels were rolled into the backroom, the outer cloth cut away and the inner muslin torn off, the wheels cut into chunks to store in the fridge to await the customer, smaller hunks resting on a wooden square on the counter. There were two main varieties, tasty and mild cheddar. Grain and flour had to be brought in by the little wheeled trolley and emptied into the bins. Dates had to be cut into smaller blocks, kerosene and other fuels that came in bulk transferred into bottles or kept ready to decant into the customer's own container. And shelves had to be restocked which involved carrying quantities up the ladder. Annual stocktaking was a nightmare of constant moving up and down ladders and calling down quantities. During the Second World War rationing made things tougher. I remember the dining room table at home heaped with the ration slips pulled out of ration books, mum and dad counting away. The ration totals had to square with the amounts sold. Petrol was also rationed and that brought a court fine when it was found that the ration slips didn’t quite square with the sales, though dad was always angry about that and the judge’s unfavourable remarks, saying that in fact the discrepancy was on the side of the state not the shop so if there was as the judge claimed signs of dishonesty it certainly wasn't by the Gadds! The cardboard cartons of orders customers left at the shop or phoned in were piled up in corners then sent out in the van or bicycle. They had to be delivered to the back door or housewives were displeased. Since the variety of goods sold was so extensive – sometimes even stocked for a single customer wanting out-dated products - there was always considerable stock in hand. This must have been a strain on the shop’s finances. However, the shop survived the Depression. As time went on rival groceries opened up, including a small member of the Marriott’s chain almost opposite, which eventually went out of business. The next largest grocer was probably at the Five Cross Roads, and those in Hamilton East. As the customer base shrank, there were fewer deliveries and only the three Gadds as staff. Southwell school students came to buy a penn'th of broken biscuits, some of which were broken by the staff in order to keep the kids happy because too few biscuits actually got broken to meet the demand. (I suspect they made a loss on those transactions.) Counters had to be scrubbed down with sandsoap, the floors were bare timber, the light bulbs dim. Many goods were sold in brown paper bags ... I remember a flour bag ripping and me running back to a displeased parent in the shop with a white trail dribbling behind me. Shop hours were long, about 8-5 on weekdays, late night Friday plus Saturday mornings for many years. I have no idea how they continued to work so many years since none of them were in first class health. My father had to resign in the early 1950s unable to stand the pain any longer of climbing the ladders and being on his feet all day. The Gadds were such honest business people that few people could believe they also weren't into over-charging, under-weighing etc. But they paid themselves low wages - I think dad got about $8 a week – and kept profit margins low, and tried to accommodate the quirks of long-standing customers. The values dear to the three Gadds were different from many other businesspeople in the city who assumed that they too must be ardent National Party supporters and I recall one election day (held before a law change on weekdays) women running into the shop to pass on the bad news that they feared National wasn’t doing well. The war years were tough, with not only shortages of things like biscuits but many products were unavailable such as chocolate, lollies and rice and basics like butter and sugar and tea were rationed. The shop belonged to the Four Square group, individually owned grocer shops sharing in a wholesaling arrangement run, I think, by Burgess Fraser. After the shop was sold it was torn down and a more modern style supermarket built. Celia Reed – The hardest thing I found when working in the shop was adding up the prices of goods bought – sometimes up to 20 items e.g. 1/3 ½ d and 15/6 etc in front of a customer; sometimes the lady would be talking to you while you tried to add up or else watching carefully in case you made a mistake! Frank and David could add up so quickly (and I expect accurately too) and made it look easy. Rosalie Williams – The family store was an exciting place for me as a child. I remember the long counters and how busy the shop was. Aunty Dorrie worked there then with her brothers David and Frank. I remember the big tins of loose biscuits in Gadd’s Store and the happy childhood memory of Aunty Dorrie letting me tuck in to the tin of broken biscuits kept under the counter.

Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona

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The goal of this project is to recover as far a possible the genealogy of Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona branch of the Gaetani/Caetani family... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Baracchi-1|Gino Baracchi]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Starting from my maternal great-grandmother Maria Gaetani and my paternal uncle Francesco Gaetani, going back to the origins of the family. * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=11600739 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Gaige family tree papers

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older document of unknown origin (possibly N.Y. Genalogical and Biographical Record-- April, July, October 1901) showing line from Stephen Hopkins to Deleslie Gaige Jr.

Gail Barbara Reed-Kogel Tribute Page

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In Memory of Gail Reed- Kogel. Daughter, Sister, Wife, Mother and Friend! Gail was an unassuming woman who believed deeply in God. She lived her life for her family. Love You Forever.

Gail Photos

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==Explanation== The images below are common elements in some profiles I manage. I believe it adds to a quick understanding of my ancestor by using visual clues in the biography section of their profile. If you would like to know how to do this on your own pages, with your own images, just message me and I would be happy to try and help you. ==Common Photos or Images== 1. [[Image:Gail_Photos-1.jpg|100px|Immigrant Profile]] This photo is given to immigrant ancestors. 2. [[Image:Gail_Photos.gif|100px|Revolution Patriot]] This flag is put on the profile of a American Revolution soldier or Patriot. 3. [[Image:Gail_Photos-4.jpg|100px|Quaker Ancestor]] To be used on profiles when the ancestor was a quaker. 4. [[Image:Gail_Photos-3.jpg|100px|Pennsylvania Ancestor]] Given to profiles where the primary history was in Pennsylvania 5. [[Image:Gail_Photos-5.jpg|100px|New York Ancestor]] Used on profiles where the primary history was in New York

Gail's Goodies

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[[Haller-149|Gail's]] collection of favorite recipes, from years of feeding her family the best and most delicious dishes. ---- == Recipes == === Gail's Meat Loaf === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/39/Gail_s_Goodies.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies.jpg I can attest that this meatloaf is moist and yummy! This particular recipe is Gail's, but is written down by her Grandma Irene. * 1 1/2 pounds ground beef * 1/2 cup ketchup * 1/2 cup milk * 3/4 cup oatmeal * 1/2 cup chopped onion and/or green pepper * 1 egg * 1 teaspoon salt * 1/2 teaspoon pepper Combine all and shape into a loaf. Bake at 350 degrees for one hour. Topping: * 1/3 cup ketchup * 1 tablespoon brown sugar * 1 tablespoon prepared mustard Spoon over meatloaf and bake a few minutes longer. === Pineapple Cheese Ball === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/39/Gail_s_Goodies-1.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-1.jpg One of my favorites! So delicious. * 1 pound cream cheese * 8 1/2 ounces crushed pineapple, drained * 1/4 cup finely chopped green bell pepper * 2 tablespoons onion Mix and form into ball. Coat with chopped nuts (pecans are delicious!). === Microwave Peanut Brittle === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/5/52/Gail_s_Goodies-2.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-2.jpg * 1 cup raw peanuts * 1 cup white sugar * 1/2 cup corn syrup * dash of salt In 1 1/2 or 2 quart dish, mix and cook on high for 4 minutes, stir and cook 4 more minutes. Add 1 teaspoon butter and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Cook 2 more minutes on high. Take out, stir in 1 teaspoon baking soda. Pour out on greased cookie sheet. === Mary P's Veggie Salsa === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/f/f5/Gail_s_Goodies-3.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-3.jpg In a large colander drain and rinse: * 2 cans black beans * 1 can dark red kidney beans * 1 can garbanzo beans Drain the following items: * 2 cans whole kernel corn * 1 3.8 ounce can sliced black olives * 1 can drained diced tomatoes Finely chop 3 bunches of green onions. In a large bowl combine all ingredients and add 1 bottle italian salad dressing (8 ounces). Add one cup of pace medium picante sauce and 2 teaspoons black pepper. Stir, cover, and refrigerate overnight. Stir every time you walk by the fridge. Serve with tortilla chips. Serves a large party or gathering. === Lemon Bars === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/3/3f/Gail_s_Goodies-4.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-4.jpg * 2 cups flour * 1/2 cup powdered sugar * 1 cup butter * 4 eggs, beaten * 2 cups granulated sugar * 1/3 cup lemon juice * 1/4 cup flour * 1/2 teaspoon baking powder Sift together flour and powdered sugar. Cut in butter till mixture clings together. Press into 13X9X2 inch pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 20-25 minutes or until brown. Beat together eggs, granulated sugar, and lemon juice. Sift flour and baking powder, tir into egg mixture. Pour over baked crust. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes. Sprinkle with powdered sugar. Cool, cut in squares. Makes 20. === Nacho Cheese Soup === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/4/45/Gail_s_Goodies-6.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-6.jpg * 1 package (5.25 ounces) dry au gratin potatoes * 1 can whole kernel corn, undrained * 1 cup picante sauce * 2 cups water * 2 cups milk * 1 1/2 cups shredded cheese for tacos * 1 can sliced ripe olives, drained * tortilla chips In a large sauce pan, combine potatoes, corn, picante sauce, and water. Bring to a boil; reduce heat. Cover and simmer 25 minutes or until potatoes are tender, stirring occasionally. Add milk, taco cheese, and olives. Cook until cheese is melted and soup is heated through, stirring occasionally. Serve with tortilla chips. Makes 6 servings. === Caramel Puff Corn === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/7/77/Gail_s_Goodies-7.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-7.jpg * 1 package Puff corn * 1 cup butter * 1 1/4 cups brown sugar * 2/3 cup light corn syrup * 1 teaspoon baking soda Preheat oven to 250 degrees. Combine butter, brown sugar, and light corn syrup in a 2 quart sauce pan, cook on medium heat until mixture had melted. Once it has melted, add the baking soda. This will cause the mixture to color. Pour puff corn into a large roasting pan. Pour caramel mixture over the puff corn and stir to cover. Place in 250 degree oven for 45 minutes, stirring every 10-15 minutes. Pay close attention. Remove from oven, pour on wax paper, and break apart. Let cool and enjoy. Optionally drizzle with melted chocolate after you remove it from the oven. === Barb's Carrot Casserole === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/e/ec/Gail_s_Goodies-8.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-8.jpg * 3 cups sliced carrots * 1/4 cup chopped green peppers * 1/4 cup chopped onion * 1/2 cup water Cook until tender Sauce: * 2 tablespoons butter * 2 tablespoons flour * 1 cup milk * 1 cup cubed velveeta Put in casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. === Cherry Mash Bars === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/1/14/Gail_s_Goodies-9.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-9.jpg * 2 cups sugar * 2/3 cup evaporated milk * 16 large marshmallows * 1 teaspoon vanilla * 2-5 ounce packages of cherry chips * 12 ounce package of chocolate chips * 3/4 cup peanut butter * 1 pound salted nuts Mi the sugar and milk together in a heavy saucepan. Boil for five minutes, being careful not to burn. Add marshmallows, vanilla, and cherry chips. Mix well and pour into a butter 9X11 pan. Cool. Melt chocolate chips. Mix the peanut butter and nuts and pour over the cherry layer. Cool and cut into small pieces. === South of the Border Egg Dish === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/9/97/Gail_s_Goodies-10.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-10.jpg * 10 eggs * 1 pound Monterey Jack cheese, shredded * 2 small cans green chiles, chopped * 1 t. baking powder * 1/2 cup melted butter * 2 cups small curd cottage cheese * 1/2 cup flour * 1/2 t. salt * real bacon bits Mix all ingredients together, except bacon bits. Pour into a 9X13 inch greased pan. Top with bacon bits. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes. Cut into squares. Serve with warmed salsa. Yields 15 servings. === Pumpkin Bread === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/8/8d/Gail_s_Goodies-11.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-11.jpg This recipe is from Runnells Elementary, and was brought home by Kari and Daniel. Cream together: * 2 eggs, beaten * 1 1/2 cups sugar Add: * 1 cup pumpkin * 1/2 cup oil * 4 T. water Sift together: * 1/4 t. baking powder * 1/2 t. salt * 1/2 t. cloves * 1/2 t cinnamon * 1 t. baking soda * 1 2/3 cups flour Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients. Grease a bread pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. You can optionally add 1/3 cup nuts. === Cheesy Tuna 'n Rice Muffinlettes === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/8/83/Gail_s_Goodies-12.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-12.jpg * 2 cups cooked rice * 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese * 1 6 1/2 ounce can tuna, drained and flaked * 3/4 cup black olives, sliced into thirds * 1 T. dried chopped onion * 1 T parsley flakes * 1 t. seasoned salt * 2 eggs, beaten * 2 T milk * cooking spray Combine rice, cheese, tuna, olives, onion, parsley, and seasoned salt. Stir in eggs and milk, mixing thoroughly. Spray six muffin cups with oil spray. Divide rice mixture evenly among cups. Bake in 375 degree oven for 15 minutes or until lightly browned. Loosen with spatula and arrange on a serving place. Makes 6 servings. === Happy Hour Caviar === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/8/84/Gail_s_Goodies-13.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-13.jpg * 1 15 1/2 ounce can black eyed peas, drained * 1 14 1/2 ounce can white hominy, drained * 2 tomatoes, chopped * 5 green onions, sliced * 2 garlic cloves, minced * 1 green bell pepper, chopped * 1 small onion, chopped * 1/2 cup parsley, chopped * 1 8 ounce package shredded mozzarella cheese * 1 3 1/2 ounce package pepperoni, cut into slivers * 1 24 ounce jar of medium salsa Mix together in a large bowl. Refrigerate until chilled. Serve with tortilla chips. === Cheesy Corn Chowder === http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/thumb/b/bf/Gail_s_Goodies-14.jpg/500px-Gail_s_Goodies-14.jpg * 2 cans (17 ounces each) yellow cream-style corn * 1 can (10 3/4 oz) cream of potato soup, undiluted * 1 can (10 3/4 oz) cheddar cheese soup * 1/2 cup real bacon bits * 2 cups milk * 2 t. dried chopped onion * 1 t. dried parsley flakes * 1/4 t red pepper flake Combine in a large pan. Stir occasionally and cook on medium high until heated through. Makes 8 cups.

Gainsborough Flax Works

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The Gainsborough Flax Works was a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flax_mill flax mill] on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Trent River Trent], which operated from 1859 to 1862 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gainsborough,_Lincolnshire Gainsborough, Lincolnshire]. It was also known locally as the Trent Flax Works or simply the Flax Works. At its peak in 1860, it employed about 70 workers. == History == === Establishment === In late 1858, John Watson Burton, [[Manning-4557|James Manning]], and Alfred Piper established the firm Burton, Manning and Co. for the purposes of establishing a flax works at GainsboroughA Gainsborough County Court report, from a trial on 11 Feb 1861 (Rd. Sheard v. John W. Barton, Jas. Manning, and Alfred Piper), confirms the existence of the firm in late 1858 (i.e. that Burton was not acting alone in his 1858 advertising): "For the plaintiff a letter, bearing date Oct. 18, 1858, was put in, proving the agency. In this letter Mr. Barton, on behalf of the firm [of Barton, Manning, and Co.], wrote as follows..." (The reference to Barton instead of Burton is almost certainly a mistake.) Source: Page 6 News Column 3, Stamford Mercury, 15 February 1861, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18610215/013/0006. Burton had been a flax manufacturer in Eye, Suffolk for several yearsLondon Gazette, 31 May 1853, issue 21444, page 1531, available online: https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/21444/page/1531/"Applications for Patents and Protection Allowed" in Journal of the Society of Arts, vol. 4, no. 177 (11 Apr 1856), page 372, entry 666, available online: https://www.jstor.org/stable/41323595, and Manning had extensive manufacturing experience including over ten years at the "Steam Factory", a specialist steam engineering works at the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolwich_Dockyard Woolwich Dockyard]. In September 1858, the Stamford Mercury announced that Burton was considering establishing a flax works at Gainsborough, and intended to "employ a large amount of labour, chiefly female" provided he could purchase suitable premises on the banks of the TrentPage 5 News Column 6, Stamford Mercury, 10 September 1858, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18580910/006/0005. By October this land had been purchasedPage 5 News Column 3, Stamford Mercury, 22 October 1858, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18581022/004/0005, by January 1859 building had commencedPage 6 News Column 6, Lincolnshire Chronicle, 7 January 1859, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/BL/0000354/18590107/018/0006, and by April the flax works were complete - the ''Stamford Mercury'' introduced the announcement with the statement that "[the] good old town of Gainsboro' is evidently looking up"!Page 5 News Column 3, Stamford Mercury, 22 April 1859, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18590422/009/0005 === Role in Gainsborough economy === The flax works quickly became part of the Gainsborough economy, although Burton left the partnership in January 1860Page 6 News Column 6, York Herald, 3 March 1860, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000499/18600303/002/0012. Several incidents of varying severity were reported in the local newspapers over the next few years:
  • In December 1859, two builders were fined 5s each for assaulting the foreman of the flax works, and another labourer, in a late-night altercation involving several young employees at the works. The report noted that it "would appear there is a feeling of hostility against some of the male workers at the above works"Page 6 News, Stamford Mercury, 16 December 1859, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18591216/000/0006.
  • In February 1860, two girls were seriously injured in an incident believed to be the result of deliberate sabotage by envious coworkers. The newspaper reports stated that "the proprietors of the works, Messrs. Burton, Manning, and Co., are behaving with great and praiseworthy generosity to the poor sufferers"Page 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 17 February 1860, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18600217/000/0005.
  • In April 1860, a young man had his clothing caught in the machinery of the engine and was seriously injuredPage 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 6 April 1860, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18600406/000/0005.
  • In November 1860, a girl employed at the works had her left hand seriously crushed by machineryPage 6 News, Lincolnshire Chronicle, 2 November 1860, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000354/18601102/000/0006.
=== Serious fires === The flax works were heavily affected by several serious fires. The first, in early December 1860, totally destroyed multiple buildings, which were made of wood, as well as the highly-flammable stockpiles of flax in the yard. The newspaper report was scathing of the disorganisation involved in managing the fire, and noted that it was "quite time an effort was made to establish a fire brigade in this town"Page 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 21 December 1860, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18601221/000/0005. The same report also noted that Manning was fully insured in Suffolk Alliance Office, but that a newly-built drying shed on the premises had been registered too recently to be insured; it also claimed that "70 if not more hands will be thrown out of employment" due to the catastrophe. The flax works were rebuilt again in brick, and in April 1861, Manning listed his profession on the census as "flax dresser, employing 30 Men 6 Boys 18 Women & Girls""England and Wales Census, 1861," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M7CZ-Y7R : 2 September 2017), James Manning, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, England; from "1861 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO RG 9, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey.. However, in June 1861, another serious fire broke out while Manning was away from home, having left for Lancashire just that morningPage 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 21 June 1861. The damage was later determined to be about £1250Page 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 28 June 1861, which was again covered by insurance. === Closure === In May 1862, the ''Lincolnshire Chronicle'' announced that Manning was about to leave town, but that the works would stay open under new management (presumably having been rebuilt after the second fire)Page 8 News, Lincolnshire Chronicle, 30 May 1862. He spent some time winding up his affairs in Gainsborough. A meeting of his creditors was reported in the papers, at which they determined the assets of the business to be £5042, and the liabilities £4078; the report added that the creditors, "with an unanimity and cordiality of feeling seldom witnessed on such occasions, expressed themselves perfectly satisfied with Mr. Manning's conduct, and with the statement that he had submitted to them"Page 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 13 June 1862Page 5 News, Stamford Mercury, 20 June 1862. The creditors additionally expressed a hope that the works would continue operating after Manning's departure, instead of being dismantled, but it was not to be. In July 1862, the an advertisement in the ''Stamford Mercury'' offered the premises up for sale by private contract to "manufacturers, merchants and others". Apparently there was insufficient interest, because a general auction was advertised in October 1862, to "flax dressers, machine brokers, engineers, builders, farmers, &c, &c"Page 8 Advertisements Column 4, Stamford Mercury, 17 October 1862, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000237/18621017/046/0008. The auction was held over two days, with the machinery auctioned off on the 23rd and the buildings on the 24th; however, the sale of the buildings was unsuccessfulDistrict Intelligence, Page 7, Column 4, Lincolnshire Chronicle, 31 October 1862, available online (subscription required): http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000354/18621031/052/0007. The assignees were "T. A. Farmer, Esq., iron merchant; Messrs. Marshall and Son, engineers; [and] Wm. Plaskitt, Esq., solicitor, Gainsborough"; the auctioneer was John Wilkinson of Carr-lane and 1 High-street, Hull. == Sources == === Acknowledgements === The newspaper sources listed here are courtesy of the [http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/content/terms_and_conditions British Newspaper Archive], all © THE BRITISH LIBRARY BOARD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Galbraith Family

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The goal of this project is to Trace the Galbraith Family . Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Mckenzie-9373|Lori Mckenzie]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=31914168 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Galbraith Family Tree According to The Peerages

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The goal of this project is to list the descendants of Gilchrist Galbraith. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gilbreath-460|Jonathan Gilbreath]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * Tracing the lines through The Peerages to see who is descended from Gilchrist * List in narrative format the descendants * Add, if possible, descendants to this list who are not mentioned in The Peerages Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=24974643 send me a private message]. Thanks! '''Descendants of Gilchrist "Bretnacht" Galbraith''' Gilchrist "Bretnacht" Galbraith married N. N. MacMureadach and begat Gillespic and Ridderch (Roderick). Gillespic Galbraith married N. N. and begat Arthur and Maurice. '''''Descendants of Arthur, son of Gillespic''''' Arthur married N. N. and begat William, 1st of Buthernock. William, 1st of Buthernock, married N. N. Comyn and begat William, 2nd of Buthernock. William, 2nd of Buthernock, married Willelma Douglas and begat Joan. Joan married N. N. de Keith. '''''Descendants of Maurice, son of Gillespic''''' Maurice married Catherine Mac Maelbride and begat Arthur. Arthur married N. N. and begat Donald, Patrick, and Maurice.

Galbraith in Uphall

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A place to store items related to Galbraiths in Uphall ==Profiles== :[[Galbraith-3067|Jane (Galbraith) Stewart (abt.1843-)]] :[[Galbraith-1855|Catherine (Galbraith) Mulvenna (abt.1855-1927)]] ==Other Census Entries== In the 1881 census Neil Galbraith (age 53), Mason, was the boarder of Mary Bulloch in Broxburn, Uphall, West Lothian. '''1881 Census''': "1881 Scotland Census"
Parish: Uphall; ED: 1; Page: 5; Line: 12; Roll: cssct1881_274; Registration Number: 672; Household schedule number: 21
{{Ancestry Record|1119|2340055|uk}} (accessed 10 August 2023)
Neil Galbraith (53) boarder, Mason, in household of Mary Bulloch (64) in Broxburn in Uphall registration district. Born in Ireland.
:: Mary Bulloch Widow F 64 Dullserf, Lanarkshire :: Mary McMillan Grandaughter (granddaughter) F 15 Larkhall, Lanarkshire :: Robert Hunie Boarder M 36 Mason (British Subject), America :: Neil Galbraith Boarder M 53 Mason Ireland == Scottish Paternity Index== Sheriff Court Extracted Decrees :Pursuer Catherine Thomson, Dalaruan, Campbeltown :Defender Neil Galbraith, Mason, Campbeltown :Child's Date of Birth 27 December 1870 :Sex F :Year Extract Issued 1871 :Sheriff Court Campbeltown :County Argyll & Bute https://www.scottishindexes.com/courtentry.aspx?courtid=50003038 NRS Reference SC50/12/3 p. 541 ==Sources==

Gale Dean Youtsey

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n Loving Memory of Gale Dean Youtsey who was born in Burlington, Colorado on Thursday 8/27/1936 to Lucian Oliver and Hazel May Brammeier Youtsey. He died on Monday 4/9/2018 at the New Mexico VA Hospital in Albuquerque New Mexico after a long battle of pneumonia. Gale was the third child out of four. His first sibling was Ralph Ervin Youtsey born on March 17, 1925 in Burlington, Colorado He married Ruby Udell Cole 2/18/ 1946 in Goodland Kanas, Betty Louise Youtsey born on July 28, 1929 in Kit Carson, Colorado. She married Emil Robert Armstrong on 8/3/1946 in Goodland Kanas, and Virginia Lee Youtsey born on Aug 1, 1945 in Burlington Colorado. She married Hoyt Eugene Sims on 11/12/1964 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Betty Youtsey Armstrong shared stories about how their parents Lucian and Hazel Brammeier Youtsey owned a farm in Yoder Colorado. Gale had lots of chores to doThey had a horse, pigs, chickens and cattle. Gale had to feed all the animals and milk the cows. Gale went to school in Yoder. Gale's friends Chuck Collins and the Parker's were in the 4-H Club with Gale. He showed calves that he had raised. On Saturdays the Youtsey's got together with the Collins and Parkers. They would play cards. Gale enjoyed playing cards and dominos with the kids. When Gale's sister Virginia Lee Youtsey was born he went and stayed with his sister Betty while his mother was in the hospital. Gale loved being around his sister. Gale's brother Ralph was Enlisted into the military on 15 Jul 1943. during WWll when Virginia was born. Gale Youtsey loved to play on the trains. He was around 14 at the time. He pretended that he was a Hobo. The engineers knew he was jumping into cars but acted as though they hadn't seen him. One day he jumped into a train car which had flour in it. The train ended up derailing. The crew went to the car that they knew Gale was in and started pulling flour sacks off of him. Had they not known that Gale was in the car he would have lost his life that day. Gale was in the US Navy from 2/15/1955 - 1/29/1959 1955 AD Youtsey Gale Memphis TN He was on the USS Shangra LA ( CV-38 ) He was staioned out of San Diego CA. The USS Shangr LA ( CV-38 ) was used for training. Gale was a machanic on the ship for the air crafts. They did go out on training missions. In 1957 Gale married Barbara Ann Davis. She was born on March 27, 1942 in Prentiss, Adams County Mississippi. They were married on 2/9/1957 in Memphis Tenn. Their first child Gary Dean Youtsey was born Nov 18, 1957 in Albany, GA while Gale was still in the military. Gary married Christine Runion on May 31, 1979 in Elmhurst Ill. Michael Sheridan Youtsey born Nov 8, 1961 in Burlington Colorando, Danna Kay Youtsey born on Nov 6, 1962 in Cheyenne Wells Colorado. She married Daniel Lorrin Knapp-Smith on Nov 8, 1986 in Lake Tahoe and Mark Steven Youtsey born on Jan 25, 1964 in Denver CO. When Gale got out of the military He went to work at a sevice station in Boulder CO. In or about 1961 Hazel Youtsey leased a cafe and service station in Kanorado, Kansas. The cafe was called Stateline Cafe. Gale ran the service station while Hazel ran the cafe. Through out Gale's life he was a hard worker all is life he was always working in Service Stations as an attendant and a Machanic. In May 1969 Gale divorced Barbara Ann Youtsey and married Loretta J. Forrest Jarvis on Aug 29 1970 in Reno Nevada. Loretta had three children from her previous marriage. Steven Ray Jarvis born on April 7, 1959 in Wichita, Kanas , Darril Dean Jarvis born on Aug 17, 1960 in Wichita, Kansas. He married Tracey Mc Gowen and Kathryn Diane Jarvis born Nov 5 1961 in Los Angeles California. She married Dale Curtis Briggs on May 2, 1981 in Arlington, Virginia. Gale was a loving husband to Loretta Youtsey for 48 years. This Aug would have been 49 years. He did anything she wanted, moved where ever she wanted because he loved her so much. They went to swap meets, antique shops, Loretta loved collectibles. In the last part of Gale's life they went to Sizzler Club to listen to music every Saturday night Gale Dean Youtsey was predeceased in death by his father Lucian Oliver Youtsey, great nephew Mathew Speltz, Step-son Steven Ray Jarvis, Niece Carin Sue Armstrong Oneill, mother Hazel Brammeier Youtsey, ex wife Barbara Ann Davis, son Michael Sheridian Youtsey, brother in law Emil Robert Armstrong amd brother Ralph Ervin Youtsey and Peggy Ann Youtsey Soll. Gale Dean Youtsey is servived by his wife of 48 years Loretta Forrest Youtsey of Truth or Consequences New Mexico, son Gary Dean Youtsey of Halton TX, step-son Darril Dean Jarvis and Tracy McGovern of Truth or Consequences NM step- daughter Kathryn Diane Jarvis of ID, daughter Danna Kay ( Larry ) Youtsey Griner of Hampton GA. and son Mark Steven Youtsey of Salinas CA. Grandchildren: Sally A. Stebbins of Chico CA, Erin Marie ( Randy ) Youtsey Ray, James Dean (Ashley) Dattomo of Ill., Stephanie Briggs Perez of Copertino, CA Jennifer ( Daniel ) French - Garcia, Daniel Lorrin Knapp-Smith Jr. of Afton OK, Mariah Cathryn Youtsey, Krystal Marie Youtsey of Riverside CA. Amanda Lynn (Justin ) Dodge-Day of Norman OK. Great- Grandchildren: Julie Stebbins of San Jose, Ca. Jayden Stebbins of Chico CA, Tessa Leah and Ricky Perez , Stormy Kay Thomas of Norman OK, Rex Dodge and Noah Thomas Day of Norman OK, Sullivan Luis Walter Del Rosario of Chico CA. and Raelynn Marie Youtsey. Gale is also survived by his sisters Betty Louise Armstrong of Watkins CO and Virgina Lee Youtsey Furry of Watkins Co. Sister-in-law Ruby Udell Cole Youtsey of Appling, Ga. Nephews and Nieces: Richard Soll husband of Peggy Ann Youtsey Soll of Colorado, Nancy J (Michael ) Youtsey Spelts, of Medesto CA. Ralph Gary ( Sue ) Youtsey, of Augusta GA, George W. Youtsey, Keneth G (Patricia ) Armstrong of Watkins CO, Connie Louise ( Larry ) Armstrong Zimmerman of New Newburg OR, Debra Lynn ( Michael ) Armstrong Parmly of Hotsprings SD, John E (Annette ) Armstrong of Littleton CO, Ri Robert ( Laura ) Armstrong, Lorelie A. ( Dave ) Armstrong Elwess of Thornton CO, Lisa Gaye ( Jeff ) Sims Godsey of Jacksonville NC, and Lana Dee ( Ken ) Sims Roiser of Augusta GA. Gale Youtsey has many Great Nephews and Nieces and Great-Great Nephew and Nieces. He will be missed greatly by them.

GALE-COOK RESEARCH

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The Goal of this project is to verify/document a family connection with the descendants of Elisha Cooke and his wife, Susannah Atwood, late of Provincetown, Barnstable, Massachusetts. I have established a line for Elisha, husband of Susannah, that goes back to Stephen Hopkins and Francis Cooke, both Mayflower passengers. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * I need to establish a marriage for Elisha and Susannah's son, Elisha. * I also need to find children for Elisha, the son of Elisha and Susannah. * I need to document these children. I'm doing this work for a friend who shares the Mayflower connection with me. Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=5456353 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Galicia, Spain Resources

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[[Project:Spain|Spain Project]] | [[Space:Spain_Teams|Spain Project Teams]] | [[Space:Spain:_Autonomous_Communities_Team|Spain Autonomous Communties Team]]|[[Space:Spain:_Galicia_Team|Galicia Team]]|'''Galicia Resources''' == Galicia Resources == * Esquelas de Galicia: http://esquelas.de-galicia.com/index.asp * Galegos ilustres: http://galegos.galiciadigital.com/ * Estudos históricos de Galicia: https://www.estudioshistoricos.com/?page_id=18 * Galiciana, arquivo dixital de Galicia: http://arquivo.galiciana.gal/arpadweb/gl/consulta_archivos/busqueda.do * Arquivo Dixital da Universidade de Santiago de Compostela: https://arquivo.usc.es/ahus2/index * Xenealoxía de Galicia: https://xenealoxia.org/ === Pontevedra Resources === * [https://www.familysearch.org/search/image/index?owc=7989-TRM%3A1292084604%2C1591912307%2C1292083301%2C1591912335%3Fcc%3D1583608 San Pedro, Baiña, Pontevedra parish records] ''Available at a Family History Center * [https://www.pngegg.com/en/png-wwmuj Pontevedra Counties] ''A map of the counties and smaller counties (municipalities) within them. * [https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Pontevedra,_Spain_Genealogy Pontevedra, Spain Resources] ''On FamilySearch.org

GALICIA by Walter Dublanica

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''The following article was written by Walter Dublanica:'' ''Published to Wikitree with his permission.'' '''GALICIA; The region in western Ukraine called Galicia gives insight to Poland’s relations with its eastern neighbors ,Ukraine, Russia, Byelorussia.''' Galicia was part of Kiev RUS dating back to the year 1,000. For almost 700 years it was under the control of Poland or Austro-Hungry. A migration to the United States took place from there in the late 1890’s and up to the onset of WWI in 1914. At that time Galicia was part of the Austro-Hungarian empire from 1773 to 1918. The Austro-Hungarian empire took over Galicia from Poland in 1773 as part of the portioning of Poland by Russia, Germany and the Austro-Hungarian empire. At the end of WWI in 1918 the Austro-Hungarian empire was broken up. The Curzon line was established by Lord Curzon to accurately demark the boundaries between Polish and Ukrainian populations. During the Russian revolution in 1918, Poland attacked and moved their border east of the Curzon line by about 130 miles thereby enslaving 6,000,000 Ukrainians/Russians/Byelorussians for a period of about 20 years until the onset of WWII. A small but influential group of people contributed to the conflicts over the centuries. They were the SZLACHTA and their Jewish financiers. SZLACHTA were the wealthy Polish landlords whose actions and life style contributed to much of the turmoil in the 16th century until 1939. When the Red Army moved into Galicia in 1939, the SZLACHTA were eliminated for good. This happened when the local Ukrainian population took revenge against the SZLACHTA, some were executed by the KGB and others shipped off to Siberia.The Jewish population perished in WWII at the hand of the Nazi’s. The SZLACHTA and their Jewish financiers and their actions had much to do with what happened to Poland in what has been described as the “Paradise of Nobility & Jews” period. This period came to an abrupt end in 1939 when the Szlachta was wiped out by Red Army and soon afterward the Jews by the German army. The peasants of all nationalities (including Poles) lived in POVERTY. The SZLACHTA actually regarded themselves as being biologically unique. This was the Sarmatism theory that the Szlachta were special descendants of Sarmatians This happened 4 centuries before the Nazi’s took up the idea. The Jewish alliance with the SZLACHTA remained constant. The Ukrainians denounced the Jews as the selected accomplices of the SZLACHTA. This was long before the Nazi Holocaust. This information comes from a noted historian who wrote a 2 volume book about the history of Poland. The Ukrainian conflict with Poles and Jews is centuries old. An example of Ukrainian rage was the Cossack led Koliyivshchyna battles in 1768/1769 against the szlachta and Jews in which over 100,000 were killed. Poland came back into existence in 1918 after being divided between Russia, Germany, and Austro-Hungry starting in the 1700’s for about 150 years. In the 1600’s Poland was militarily aggressive having invaded Moscow twice. The first time being 1610. In addition the Polish forces starting in the 1500’s controlled a large part of the Ukraine up to the area of Kiev which has been the capital of the Ukraine back to the start of the Kiev RUS in about the year 990. The dismemberment of Poland in the 1700’s was a result of Poland’s aggressive behavior in the previous centuries. There were 3 divisions of Poland in the 1700’s The first 2 involved taking back Russian, Ukrainian and Byelorussians territory that Poland had occupied. It is only the last partition in 1795 that the Russians took over truly Polish lands. The repressions by the Russians were less than the Poles inflected on Russians, Ukrainians and Byelorussians when they occupied their lands. While Poland held the upper hand, in 1596, they imposed the Uniate Catholic religion on the Ukrainians. You can still have your Slavonic Orthodox liturgy , your priests can be married ,but you must accept the Pope as your supreme leader. The same dictate was imposed on the Galician’s when under the Austro-Hungarian rule. What the Poles inflicted on others in their heydays of the 1500’s and mid 1600’s ,resulted in their being partitioned in the 1700’s for a period of about 150 years . When I speak of the Poles, I do NOT include the masses of the Polish population, they are just like any other population . I speak ONLY of the Polish Szlachta (landowner gentry). These are the landowner Polish gentry that lorded over as many as they could ,for as long as they could. Their unraveling started in 1648 when the Cossack Bohdan Khmelnitsky led his forces against the Polish szlachta and their Jewish financiers and inflicted heavy casualties on these 2 groups. During WWII, there was a Khmelnitsky medal for valor issued by the Red Army . Jews refused this medal. One needs to know that in the 19th century 80% of the world’s Jews lived in the Pale of Settlement that included Poland, western Ukraine and Belarus and surrounding areas. They were not biblical Jews but simply a tribe of Khazar Turks that converted to Judaism about 1,000 years ago. Orthodox Christians had to pay rent to Jewish merchants to attend their own churches. What happened to the Szlachta also happened to the Polish nation. Khmelnitsky aligned his forces with Orthodox Russia from which he and the Ukrainian people gained support to this day. When Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812, a significant number of Poles joined his army. He was defeated and Poland suffered many casualties . The Austro-Hungarian empire lasted for several hundred years until it fell apart in 1918 and the end of WWI. During that time the majority Slavic population were treated as second class citizens. Vienna was a happy city. Most of the Ukrainians ( many call themselves Russian or made no distinction between Russian or Ukrainian and the term Halychyna Rus was common). were happy to move on to America and seek a new life. In so doing they avoided the tragedies that befell those who remained in Europe during the 2 World Wars . Between WWI and WWII, the Galician’s were ruled by a Polish fascist military dictatorship. This dictatorship was in negotiations with the Japanese in the early 1930’s with plans to invade the Soviet Union. Japan invaded China in 1931. Japan fought a war with the Soviet Union in 1938 on the border between Manchuria and Mongolia. The Japanese were defeated. Simply, the Ukrainians were oppressed to the point that they killed the Polish Interior minister and other Polish officials. In the years between 1918 to 1939, the Poles sent in hundreds of thousands of Polish “settlers” with the intent of eventually getting rid of the Ukrainians from lands they have lived on for a thousand years. The Polish leaders spoke openly of expelling every Ukrainian from Polish occupied Galicia. Ethnic cleansing in todays terminology. In September 1939 Galicia was liberated by the Red Army and remains part of the Ukraine to this day. What happened in Galicia from the time of their liberation from Polish rule in September 1939 and the onset of WWII when the Germans attacked the Soviet Union in June 1941 and their eventual liberation from the Nazi’s in 1944 needs clarification and quantification . From mid September 1939 when the Soviet army liberated Galicia to mid June 1941 when Germany invaded the Soviet Union, corrections had to be made to the Polish rule. In this 21 month period , the wrongs inflicted on the Galician population from 1921 till 1939 had to be and were corrected. Sentences were carried out and some 200,000 Poles were deported to Siberia. The Soviets encouraged revenge against the Polish landlords and state officials. Between 1939 and 1941,tens of thousands of Poles fled West Ukraine to the Nazi General Government. War with Germany was on the horizon and getting rid of potential collaborators had to be done. No doubt there were errors in the sentences, but when the Germans attacked in June of 1941, the Germans found few collaborators. So the purges carried out from September 1939 to June 1941 were effective. The Soviets won World War II in Europe almost single handed. Much has been made of the massacre at Katyn where 4500 Polish officers were executed by the Soviets. The Russians took 400,000 Polish soldiers captive . 380,000 continued to fight for the Allied cause in WWII ,some under the command of General Anders and General Berling. Six Polish divisions were part of the Red Army that took Berlin. The 20,000 “unaccounted for” were reserve officers who in civilian life were public officials, police and other professional people the Russians had good reason not to trust. All were sworn enemies of Soviet authorities and full of hatred of the Soviet system. They had to be eliminated. The Soviet system won WWII in Europe almost singlehandedly. No one speaks of what happened to the Polish army that the Germans captured. WHY? Nor the 5,000,000 citizens that were killed in WWII. 3,000,000 Jews killed is well known. But the 2,000,000 Poles killed by the Germans is given little or no acknowledgement. In the 3 year period from June 1941 when the Germans invaded the Soviet Union to June 1944 when they were driven out there was much turmoil in Galicia among various factions of Ukrainians, Poles and Jews. The German army moved through Galicia quickly in 1941 and were expelled from there quickly in 1944. During the war, there were 3 Slavic countries in which small segments of the population collaborated with the Nazi’s. Complicit in this activity was the Catholic Church and clergy. The Ustashe in Croatia ( cardinal Stepanic and the Franciscan order), Monsignor Tiso in Slovakia who was executed after the war and Ukrainians. The leaders of the Ukrainian collaborators were children of Ukrainian Catholic priests. There were about 30,000 collaborators and several hundred thousand sympathizers out of a population of 5,000,000. The reasons why some Ukrainian people collaborated vary. Some were forced to do so or face death, others looked upon this as an opportunity to rid themselves of Polish rule and some did it out of anti- Semitic feelings. The leaders of the collaborationists looked upon this as an opportunity to assert themselves and gain control which they never had under Polish rule. That was understandable. Germany would help them achieve their aspirations. Simply put, the collaborators were WRONG. As the war turned against Germany, they had to change their outlook. Neither Poland or Germany had any good intentions for the people of Galicia or the Ukraine. The turbulence experienced by the Galician’s during this period were horrific. When liberated by the Red Army in 1944, for the first time in about 700 years the people of Galicia were reunited with the entire Ukraine as they had been in the times of Kiev Rus. Foreign domination ended! HOWEVER, west of the Polish/Ukrainian border established at the end of WWII the Ukrainian population continued to suffer under Polish rule . Ukrainians were being driven off the lands they have occupied for a thousand years. Ukrainians were a demographic majority in many areas in southeast Poland west of the border established after World War II from a depth of 20 to 30 miles and a stretch of about 120 miles .Cities currently west of the border such as Yaroslav , Peremyshl, Przeworsk,Sienawa and Sanok were ancient towns that were part of Kiev Rus. For centuries these cities and towns were populated by Ukrainians /Russians. The Carpatho-Russians ( sometimes called Rusyns) always had a strong feeling for Russia as their protector. In the spring of 1945,many of these Ukrainians had no choice but to be repatriated to the Soviet Ukraine. Soviet authorities took the necessary steps to relocate these people into villages inside the Ukraine. Ukrainians were forced to leave their native cities and villages and went into the Ukraine . During the entire period of “ repatriations” from October 1944 to June ,1946 , 482,000 Ukrainians departed to the Soviet Union from areas west of the border. These numbers are from a recent book. The Polish state murdered & criminalized the Ukrainian population and set about redistributing the properties it had taken from resettled Ukrainians in southeast Poland which included churches. So ended the one thousand years of continuous Ukrainian settlement in ancient Kiev Rus cities and towns that are now under Polish rule. '''REFERENCES''' *GODS Playground ,History of Poland (2 volumes) by Norman Davies Columbia University Press *SHTETL by Eva Hoffman Houghton Mifflin Co. 1997 New York,N.Y. *Curzon Line, from Bing Web Search or Wikipedia * Operation Vistula from Bing Web Search

Galicia-1

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A project to connect profiles and researchers linked to Galicia: the region in Spain also called Galiza in local language (so as to not mix it up with the one in Poland). Ideally this should become a sub-project of Spain.

Galician Roots

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Galicia is an historical kingdom with centuries of history, normally linked with the Spanish history. The galicians are a concrete group very specific and easy to study for that reason. Many people in South America is descendant of galicians, for that reason is interesting this project because can link in someway family trees of South America and Europe.

Galilee Church, Virginia Beach, Virginia

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Galilee Episcopal Church on Pacific Avenue at 39th Street in Virginia Beach, Virginia

Galileo

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== Galileo's Scientific Career == === Beggining Of His Scientific Career === :He created the thermoscope, which was the forerunner to the thermometer. In 1586, he also published a brief book detailing the design of a hydrostatic balance he had built, which brought him to the attention of the scholarly world. Galileo applied for a chair of mathematics at the University of Bologna in 1588, but his application was turned down. However, his reputation grew, and later that year he was invited to give two lectures to the Florentine Academy, a prestigious literary club, on the layout of the world in Dante's Inferno. He also discovered several remarkable theorems on centers of gravity which were delivered in a manuscript, earning him the respect of mathematicians and the support of Guidobaldo del Monte (1545–1607), a nobleman and author of several major works on mechanics. In 1589, he was appointed chairman of mathematics at Pisa. === The University Of Padua === :When his father died in 1591, he was left in charge of the family's financial burdens. In 1592, he went to the University of Padua, where he taught geometry, mechanics, and astronomy until 1610. He'd later consider these to be his best years. During this time, Galileo made important discoveries in both pure fundamental science and practical applied science. Between 1595 and 1598, Galileo created and improved a geometric and military compass for gunners and surveyors. This built on the previous work of Niccol Tartaglia and Guidobaldo del Monte, who designed instruments. It gave gunners a new and safer way of accurately elevating cannons, as well as a quick method of calculating the charge of gunpowder for cannonballs of various sizes and materials. As a geometric instrument, it could construct any regular polygon, compute the area of any polygon or circular sector, and perform a variety of other calculations. Under Galileo's direction, instrument maker Marc'Antonio Mazzoleni produced more than 100 of these compasses, which he sold for 50 lire and offered a course of instruction in their use for 120 lire. His varied interests included the study of astrology, which was a discipline linked to mathematics and astronomy at the time. Tycho Brahe and others observed the supernova of 1572. Ottavio Brenzoni, in a letter dated 15 January 1605, brought the 1572 supernova and the less bright nova of 1601 to Galileo's attention. Galileo witnessed and discussed Kepler's Supernova in 1604. Galileo deduced that these new stars were distant because they lacked detectable diurnal parallax, thereby disproving Aristotle's belief in the immutability of the heavens. === Galileo's Telescope === :Galileo built a telescope with about 3x magnification the following year based solely on hazy descriptions of the first practical telescope, which Hans Lippershey attempted to patent in the Netherlands in 1608, Later, he improved the models so that they could magnify up to 30 times. A Galilean telescope, also known as a terrestrial telescope or a spyglass, allowed the observer to see magnified, upright images of the Earth. He could also use it to observe the sky; for a time, he was one of the few people who could build such telescopes. Galileo used his refracting telescope to discover that the Moon's surface is not smooth in late 1609. On August 25, 1609, he demonstrated one of his early telescopes, which had a magnification of about 8 or 9, to Venetian politicians. Galileo's telescopes were also a profitable sideline for him, as he sold them to merchants who found them useful at sea as well as as trade items. A Greek mathematician named Giovanni Demisiani coined the term "telescope" for Galileo's instrument at a banquet held in 1611 by Prince Federico Cesi to make Galileo a member of his Accademia dei Lincei. Galileo published his first telescopic astronomical observations in a brief treatise titled Sidereus Nuncius in March 1610. (Starry Messenger). In it, he stated: :''"On the 7th day of January in the present year, 1610, in the first hour of the following night, when I was viewing the constellations of the heavens through a telescope, the planet Jupiter presented itself to my view, and as I had prepared for myself a very excellent instrument, I noticed a circumstance which I had never been able to notice before, namely that three little stars, small but very bright, were near the planet; and although I believed them to belong to a number of the fixed stars, yet they made me somewhat wonder, because they seemed to be arranged exactly in a straight line, parallel to the ecliptic, and to be brighter than the rest of the stars, equal to them in magnitude . . . When on January 8th, led by some fatality, I turned again to look at the same part of the heavens, I found a very different state of things, for there were three little stars all west of Jupiter, and nearer together than on the previous night. I therefore concluded, and decided unhesitatingly, that there are three stars in the heavens moving about Jupiter, as Venus and Mercury around the Sun; which was at length established as clear as daylight by numerous other subsequent observations. These observations also established that there are not only three, but four, erratic sidereal bodies performing their revolutions around Jupiter."'' :On November 30, 1609, Galileo pointed his telescope at the Moon. While Galileo was not the first to use a telescope to observe the Moon, he was the first to attribute the uneven waning to light occlusion caused by lunar mountains and craters. In his study, he also made topographical charts to estimate the heights of the mountains. The Moon was not a translucent and perfect sphere, as Aristotle claimed, and it was certainly not the first "planet," a "eternal pearl to magnificently ascend into the heavenly empyrian," as Dante claimed. Galileo is sometimes credited with discovering the lunar libration in latitude in 1632, though it is possible that Thomas Harriot or William Gilbert did so first. Galileo's friend, the painter Cigoli, included a realistic depiction of the Moon in one of his paintings, though he most likely observed it with his own telescope. === Jupiter And Its Moons === :On January 7, 1610, Galileo used his telescope to observe "three fixed stars, totally invisible due to their smallness," all close to Jupiter and lying on a straight line through it. The observations the following nights revealed that the positions of these "stars" in relation to Jupiter were shifting in ways that would have been impossible to explain if they had been fixed stars. On January 10th, Galileo noticed that one of them had vanished, which he attributed to it being hidden behind Jupiter. After only a few days, he realized they were orbiting Jupiter: he had discovered three of Jupiter's four largest moons. He discovered the fourth on January 13th. Galileo named the Medicean stars after his future patron, Cosimo II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Cosimo's three brothers. However, they were later renamed Galilean satellites after their discoverer. Galileo was appointed Grand Duke of Tuscany's mathematician and philosopher, and he triumphantly returned to his homeland in the fall of 1610. Galileo was now a courtier and lived the life of a gentleman. Galileo's observations of Jupiter's satellites sparked an astronomical revolution: a planet with smaller planets orbiting it contradicted Aristotelian cosmological principles, which stated that all heavenly bodies should revolve around the Earth, and many astronomers and philosophers initially refused to believe Galileo could have discovered such a thing. When he visited Rome in 1611, Christopher Clavius' observatory confirmed his observations, and he was greeted as a hero. The Collegio Romano held a grand dinner with speeches to honor Galileo's remarkable discoveries. Galileo was also chosen as the sixth member of the Accademia dei Lincei, an honor that meant a lot to him, and he began signing himself 'Galileo Galilei Linceo' from then on. Galileo continued to observe the satellites for the next eighteen months, and by mid-1611, he had obtained remarkably accurate estimates for their periods—a feat that Johannes Kepler had thought impossible. === The Tides === :Cardinal Bellarmine had written in 1615 that the Copernican system could not be defended without "a true physical demonstration that the sun does not circle the earth but the earth circles the sun". Galileo considered his theory of the tides to provide such evidence. This theory was so important to him that he originally intended to call his Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems the Dialogue on the Ebb and Flow of the Sea. The reference to tides was removed from the title by order of the Inquisition. For Galileo, the tides were caused by the sloshing back and forth of water in the seas as a point on the Earth's surface sped up and slowed down because of the Earth's rotation on its axis and revolution around the Sun. He circulated his first account of the tides in 1616, addressed to Cardinal Orsini. His theory gave the first insight into the importance of the shapes of ocean basins in the size and timing of tides; he correctly accounted, for instance, for the negligible tides halfway along the Adriatic Sea compared to those at the ends. As a general account of the cause of tides, however, his theory was a failure. If this theory were correct, there would be only one high tide per day. Galileo and his contemporaries were aware of this inadequacy because there are two daily high tides at Venice instead of one, about 12 hours apart. Galileo dismissed this anomaly as the result of several secondary causes including the shape of the sea, its depth, and other factors. Albert Einstein later expressed the opinion that Galileo developed his "fascinating arguments" and accepted them uncritically out of a desire for physical proof of the motion of the Earth. Galileo also dismissed the idea, known from antiquity and by his contemporary Johannes Kepler, that the Moon caused the tides—Galileo also took no interest in Kepler's elliptical orbits of the planets. Galileo continued to argue in favour of his theory of tides, considering it the ultimate proof of Earth's motion. Wikipedia Editors. “Galileo Galilei.” Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galileo_Galilei : 10 June 2021) Van Helden, Albert. “Galileo.” Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. (https://www.britannica.com/biography/Galileo-Galilei : 10 June 2021) Boltz, C. L. “Galileo Galilei.” New Scientist. New Scientist, April 7, 1983. (https://www.newscientist.com/people/galileo-galilei/ : 10 June 2021) History.com Editors. “Galileo Galilei.” History.com. A&E Television Networks, July 23, 2010. (https://www.history.com/topics/inventions/galileo-galilei : 10 June 2021) Redd, Nola Taylor. “Galileo Galilei: Biography, Inventions & Other Facts.” Space.com. Space, November 14, 2017. (https://www.space.com/15589-galileo-galilei.html : 20 June 2021) Sheehan, William. “Happy 455th Birthday Galileo.” Astronomy.com, February 15, 2019. (https://astronomy.com/news/2019/02/experience-galileos-italy-for-his-455th-birthday : 20 June 2021) O'Connor, J. J., and E. F. Robertson. “Galileo Galilei - Biography.” Maths History. Maths History, 2002. (https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Galileo/ : 20 June 2021) == Sources ==

Galileo - Contrevery Over Heliocentrism

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=== Controversy over heliocentrism === :At the time of Galileo's conflict with the Church, the majority of educated people subscribed to the Aristotelian geocentric view that the Earth is the centre of the Universe and the orbit of all heavenly bodies, or Tycho Brahe's new system blending geocentrism with heliocentrism. Opposition to heliocentrism and Galileo's writings on it combined religious and scientific objections. Religious opposition to heliocentrism arose from biblical passages implying the fixed nature of the Earth. Scientific opposition came from Brahe, who argued that if heliocentrism were true, an annual stellar parallax should be observed, though none was at the time. Aristarchus and Copernicus had correctly postulated that parallax was negligible because the stars were so distant. However, Tycho countered that since stars appear to have measurable angular size, if the stars were that distant and their apparent size is due to their physical size, they would be far larger than the Sun. In fact, it is not possible to observe the physical size of distant stars without modern telescopes. Galileo defended heliocentrism based on his astronomical observations of 1609. In December 1613, the Grand Duchess Christina of Florence confronted one of Galileo's friends and followers, Benedetto Castelli, with biblical objections to the motion of the Earth. Prompted by this incident, Galileo wrote a letter to Castelli in which he argued that heliocentrism was actually not contrary to biblical texts and that the Bible was an authority on faith and morals, not science. This letter was not published but circulated widely. Two years later, Galileo wrote a letter to Christina that expanded his arguments previously made in eight pages to forty pages. Part of which said: :“I hold that the Sun is located at the centre of the revolutions of the heavenly orbs and does not change place and that the Earth rotates on itself and moves around it. Moreover … I confirm this view not only by refuting Ptolemy’s and Aristotle’s arguments, but also by producing many for the other side, especially some pertaining to physical effects whose causes perhaps cannot be determined in any other way, and other astronomical discoveries; these discoveries clearly confute the Ptolemaic system, and they agree admirably with this other position and confirm it." :By 1615, Galileo's writings on heliocentrism had been submitted to the Roman Inquisition by Father Niccolò Lorini, who claimed that Galileo and his followers were attempting to reinterpret the Bible, which was seen as a violation of the Council of Trent and looked dangerously like Protestantism. Lorini specifically cited Galileo's letter to Castelli. Galileo went to Rome to defend himself and his ideas. At the start of 1616, Monsignor Francesco Ingoli initiated a debate with Galileo, sending him an essay disputing the Copernican system. Galileo later stated that he believed this essay to have been instrumental in the action against Copernicanism that followed. Ingoli may have been commissioned by the Inquisition to write an expert opinion on the controversy, with the essay providing the basis for the Inquisition's actions. The essay focused on eighteen physical and mathematical arguments against heliocentrism. It borrowed primarily from Tycho Brahe's arguments, notably that heliocentrism would require the stars as they appeared to be much larger than the Sun. The essay also included four theological arguments, but Ingoli suggested Galileo focus on the physical and mathematical arguments, and he did not mention Galileo's biblical ideas. In February 1616, an Inquisitorial commission declared heliocentrism to be ''"foolish and absurd in philosophy, and formally heretical since it explicitly contradicts in many places the sense of Holy Scripture"''. The Inquisition found that the idea of the Earth's movement ''"receives the same judgement in philosophy and ... in regard to theological truth it is at least erroneous in faith"''. Pope Paul V instructed Cardinal Bellarmine to deliver this finding to Galileo and to order him to abandon heliocentrism. On 26 February, Galileo was called to Bellarmine's residence and ordered ''"to abandon completely ... the opinion that the sun stands still at the centre of the world and the Earth moves, and henceforth not to hold, teach, or defend it in any way whatever, either orally or in writing.”'' The decree of the Congregation of the Index banned Copernicus's De Revolutionibus and other heliocentric works until correction. For the next decade, Galileo stayed well away from the controversy. He revived his project of writing a book on the subject, encouraged by the election of Cardinal Maffeo Barberini as Pope Urban VIII in 1623. Barberini was a friend and admirer of Galileo and had opposed the admonition of Galileo in 1616. In 1631, Galileo moved to the Villa Il Gioiello to be closer to his daughters. The villa was set on a hill south of Arcetri. Galileo's resulting book, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, was published in 1632, with formal authorization from the Inquisition and papal permission. Earlier, Pope Urban VIII had personally asked Galileo to give arguments for and against heliocentrism in the book and to be careful not to advocate heliocentrism. Whether unknowingly or deliberately, Simplicio, the defender of the Aristotelian geocentric view in Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, was often caught in his own errors and sometimes came across as a fool. Indeed, although Galileo states in the preface of his book that the character is named after a famous Aristotelian philosopher (Simplicius in Latin, "Simplicio" in Italian), the name "Simplicio" in Italian also has the connotation of "simpleton". This portrayal of Simplicio made Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems appear as an advocacy book: an attack on Aristotelian geocentrism and defence of the Copernican theory. Most historians agree Galileo did not act out of malice and felt blindsided by the reaction to his book. However, the Pope did not take the suspected public ridicule lightly, nor the Copernican advocacy.

Galileo's Burial (And Reburial)

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=== Burial === :His will indicated that he wished to be buried beside his father in the family tomb in the Basilica of Santa Croce but his relatives feared, quite rightly, that this would provoke opposition from the Church. The Grand Duke of Tuscany, too, Ferdinando II, wished to bury him in the main body of the Basilica of Santa Croce, next to the tombs of his father and other ancestors, and to erect a marble mausoleum in his honour. These plans were also dropped, however, after Pope Urban VIII and his nephew, Cardinal Francesco Barberini, protested because Galileo had been condemned by the Catholic Church for ''"vehement suspicion of heresy"''. He was instead buried in a small room next to the novices' chapel at the end of a corridor from the southern transept of the basilica to the sacristy. He was reburied in the main body of the basilica in 1737 after a monument had been erected there in his honour; during this move, three fingers and a tooth were removed from his remains. These fingers are currently on exhibition at the Museo Galileo in Florence, Italy.

Galileo's House Arrest

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=== House Arrest === :Though ill, old and partially blind, he went, having been offered a horse-drawn “litter” by the Duke of Tuscany, though Venice had offered sanctuary. In Rome, he was housed comfortably and on 13 April at the first hearing, he pleaded ignorance of the unsigned document and promised to produce that signed by Bellarmine in 1616. He almost won the day. There followed considerable activity behind the scenes — the Cardinals probably detested the Scheiners — and Francesco Barberini, the Pope’s brother, who remained a loyal and admiring friend to Galileo throughout, was very active. He appeared once more and was then kept in suspense for months. The Pope eventually decided on life imprisonment. Of the 10 cardinals, three had refused to sign the verdict, Francesco had demanded a pardon and when it was refused he persuaded his brother to make life “imprisonment” that of house arrest in the home of a sympathetic bishop. To pay for this, Galileo was made to kneel and admit to being vain and ambitious and to renounce the Copernican doctrine as being wrong. ''“I Galileo Galilei, being in my seventieth year having before my eyes the Holy Gospel, which I touch with my hands, abjure [renounce], curse and detest the error and heresy of the movement of the Earth.”'' :According to popular legend, after recanting his theory that the Earth moved around the Sun, Galileo allegedly muttered the rebellious phrase "And yet it moves". A 1640s painting by the Spanish painter Bartolomé Esteban Murillo or an artist of his school, in which the words were hidden until restoration work in 1911, depicts an imprisoned Galileo apparently gazing at the words "E pur si muove" written on the wall of his dungeon. The earliest known written account of the legend dates to a century after his death, but Stillman Drake writes "there is no doubt now that the famous words were already attributed to Galileo before his death". After a period with the friendly Ascanio Piccolomini (the Archbishop of Siena), Galileo was allowed to return to his villa at Arcetri near Florence in 1634, where he spent part of his life under house arrest. At Il Gioiello, Galileo watched the candle burn out of his last days. Galileo was ordered to read the Seven Penitential Psalms once a week for the next three years. However, his daughter Virginia, now Sister Maria Celeste relieved him of the burden after securing ecclesiastical permission to take it upon herself, she was a great comfort to her father. The untimely death of his favourite daughter in 1634, a blow from which Galileo never really recovered came the year after his prosecution in Rome. The same year, suffering from a painful hernia, he applied to the Inquisition to be allowed to move to Florence to be closer to his doctors. The church officials refused his petition and warned him that any further requests would land him in prison. Alone, depressed, and in constant ill health, he worked to complete his masterpiece, Discourse on the Two New Sciences, which laid the foundations of modern physics. The book was smuggled out of Italy and published in 1636 in the Netherlands. In the book, he summarized work he had done some forty years earlier, on the two sciences now called kinematics and strength of materials. This book was highly praised by Albert Einstein. As a result of this work, Galileo is often called the "father of modern physics". Galileo made his last astronomical discovery, the Moon’s slight wobble, or “libration” in July 1637. At the time he was able to see only a bit with his left eye. Months later, he went completely blind. At last, in 1638, the Roman authorities showed mercy to Galileo. He received permission to move for several months to his house in Florence so that he could more easily visit his doctors. After this brief interlude, he was back at Il Gioiello in September 1638 when John Milton, a 30-year-old poet from England, visited him there, “in darkness, and with dangers compassed round.” Dava Sobel argues that before Galileo's 1633 trial and judgement for heresy, Pope Urban VIII had become preoccupied with court intrigue and problems of state, and began to fear persecution or threats to his own life. In this context, Sobel argues that the problem of Galileo was presented to the pope by court insiders and enemies of Galileo. Having been accused of weakness in defending the church, Urban reacted against Galileo out of anger and fear. Late in his life, when totally blind, Galileo designed an escapement mechanism for a pendulum clock (called Galileo's escapement), although no clock using this was built until after the first fully operational pendulum clock was made by Christiaan Huygens in the 1650s.

Galileo's Legacy

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== Legacy == :The Inquisition's ban on reprinting Galileo's works was lifted in 1718 when permission was granted to publish an edition of his works (excluding the condemned Dialogue) in Florence. In 1741, Pope Benedict XIV authorised the publication of an edition of Galileo's complete scientific works which included a mildly censored version of the Dialogue. In 1758, the general prohibition against works advocating heliocentrism was removed from the Index of prohibited books, although the specific ban on uncensored versions of the Dialogue and Copernicus's De Revolutionibus remained. All traces of official opposition to heliocentrism by the church disappeared in 1835 when these works were finally dropped from the Index. Interest in the Galileo affair was revived in the early 19th century when Protestant polemicists used it (and other events such as the Spanish Inquisition and the myth of the flat Earth) to attack Roman Catholicism. Interest in it has waxed and waned ever since. In 1939, Pope Pius XII, in his first speech to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, within a few months of his election to the papacy, described Galileo as being among the ''"most audacious heroes of research... not afraid of the stumbling blocks and the risks on the way, nor fearful of the funereal monuments"''. His close advisor of 40 years, Professor Robert Leiber, wrote: ''"Pius XII was very careful not to close any doors (to science) prematurely. He was energetic on this point and regretted that in the case of Galileo.”'' On 15 February 1990, in a speech delivered at the Sapienza University of Rome, Cardinal Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) cited some current views on the Galileo affair as forming what he called ''"a symptomatic case that permits us to see how deep the self-doubt of the modern age, of science and technology, goes today"''. Some of the views he cited were those of the philosopher Paul Feyerabend, whom he quoted as saying: ''"The Church at the time of Galileo kept much more closely to reason than did Galileo himself, and she took into consideration the ethical and social consequences of Galileo's teaching too. Her verdict against Galileo was rational and just and the revision of this verdict can be justified only on the grounds of what is politically opportune.”'' The Cardinal did not clearly indicate whether he agreed or disagreed with Feyerabend's assertions. He did, however, say: ''"It would be foolish to construct an impulsive apologetic on the basis of such views.”'' On 31 October 1992, Pope John Paul II acknowledged that the Church had erred in condemning Galileo for asserting that the Earth revolves around the Sun. ''"John Paul said the theologians who condemned Galileo did not recognize the formal distinction between the Bible and its interpretation.”'' In March 2008, the head of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, Nicola Cabibbo, announced a plan to honour Galileo by erecting a statue of him inside the Vatican walls. In December of the same year, during events to mark the 400th anniversary of Galileo's earliest telescopic observations, Pope Benedict XVI praised his contributions to astronomy. A month later, however, the head of the Pontifical Council for Culture, Gianfranco Ravasi, revealed that the plan to erect a statue of Galileo on the grounds of the Vatican had been suspended. :According to Stephen Hawking, Galileo probably bears more of the responsibility for the birth of modern science than anybody else, and Albert Einstein called him the father of modern science. Galileo's astronomical discoveries and investigations into the Copernican theory have led to a lasting legacy which includes the categorisation of the four large moons of Jupiter discovered by Galileo (Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto) as the Galilean moons. Other scientific endeavours and principles are named after Galileo including the Galileo spacecraft, the first spacecraft to enter orbit around Jupiter, the proposed Galileo global satellite navigation system, the transformation between inertial systems in classical mechanics denoted Galilean transformation and the Gal (unit), sometimes known as the Galileo, which is a non-SI unit of acceleration. Partly because the year 2009 was the fourth centenary of Galileo's first recorded astronomical observations with the telescope, the United Nations scheduled it to be the International Year of Astronomy. A global scheme was laid out by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), also endorsed by UNESCO—the UN body responsible for educational, scientific and cultural matters. The International Year of Astronomy 2009 was intended to be a global celebration of astronomy and its contributions to society and culture, stimulating worldwide interest not only in astronomy but science in general, with a particular slant towards young people. Planet Galileo and asteroid 697 Galilea are named in his honour.

Galileo's Name

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=== Name === :Galileo tended to refer to himself only by his given name. At the time, surnames were optional in Italy, and his given name had the same origin as his sometimes-family name, Galilei. Both his given and family name ultimately derives from an ancestor, Galileo Bonaiuti, an important physician, professor, and politician in Florence in the 15th century. Galileo Bonaiuti was buried in the same church, the Basilica of Santa Croce in Florence, where about 200 years later, Galileo Galilei was also buried. When he did refer to himself with more than one name, it was sometimes as Galileo Galilei Linceo, a reference to his being a member of the Accademia dei Lincei, an elite pro-science organization in Italy. It was common for mid-sixteenth-century Tuscan families to name the eldest son after the parents' surname. Hence, Galileo Galilei was not necessarily named after his ancestor Galileo Bonaiuti. The Italian male given name "Galileo" (and thence the surname "Galilei") derives from the Latin "Galilaeus", meaning "of Galilee", a biblically significant region in Northern Israel. Because of that region, the adjective galilaios (Greek Γαλιλαῖος, Latin Galilaeus, Italian Galileo), which means "Galilean", has been used in antiquity (particularly by emperor Julian) to refer to Christ and his followers. The biblical roots of Galileo's name and surname were to become the subject of a famous pun. In 1614, during the Galileo affair, one of Galileo's opponents, the Dominican priest Tommaso Caccini, delivered against Galileo a controversial and influential sermon. In it he made a point of quoting Acts 1:11: :''"Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?"'' or ''"Viri Galilaei, quid statis aspicientes in caelum?"''

Galka

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First Settlers List: Village of GALKA [Ust-Kulalinka] The following surnames are mentioned: Albrecht, Arndt, Bauer, Baum, Beichel, Bender, Berg, Bernhard / Bernhart / Bernhardt, Betz, Bikkart ?, Bloch / Block, Born / Bornn, Braun, Brunner, Busch, Dalinger / Dahlinger, Deiner, Denner, Ebel, Eichman / Eichmann, Eiflender, Elsasser, Engel, Ernst, Fisher / Fischer, Flath, Flor / Flohr, Frank, Freidenberger, Fuchs, Gackel, Gebel, Geen ?, Geier, Gelbach, Gelhorn?, Gelwer ?, Gemsemer ?, Gras / Grass, Gutschmidt / Guthschmidt, Hartwig, Heck/Keck, Hein, Heinz / Heintz, Hellebach, Helmer, Holstein, Just, Kaiser, Keil, Kerbs, Klein, Kloss / Klosz, Kober, Krug, Ladner?, Lehman / Lehmannn, Leonhardt, Lorenz, Lundgrun, Lutz, Martin, Meier, Meierhofer, Meininger, Meng, Muller, Nagel, Nickel / Nikkel, Pikart ?, Quint / Quindt, Reich, Reis / Reiss / Reisse, Rexius, Riffel, Ritter, Ruf / Ruff, Schanzenbach, Schenk, Schick, Schimpf, Schmidt, Schneider, Schwab, Schwemmer, Schwind / Schwindt, Sinner, Stadler, Steinbrecher, Steinert, Steinwein, Sturtz, Thaut, Tiel / Thiel / Thiele , Volker, Walz/ Waltz, Weber, Wegert, Weigand / Weigandt, Weisheim, Weisner / Weismer, Wolf / Wolff, Wollert, Wunsch, Ziegler, Zisch, Zulauf Movement of the colonists to or from the following villages is mentioned: Buidakov Buyerak [Schwab], Golii Karamish [Balzer], Gololobovka [Donhof], Gryaznukha [Kraft], Klushchi [Moor], Lesnoi-Karamish [Grimm], Krestowoi Buyerak [Muller], Makarovka [Merkel], Nizhnaya Dobrinka [Dobrinka], Oleshna [Dietel], Shcherbakovka, Ust-Gryaznukha [Gobel], Ust-Solicha [Messer], Verkhnaya Dobrinka [Dreispitz], Verkhnaya Gryaznukha [Kraft], Verkhnaya Kulalinka [Holstein], Vodyanoi Buyerak [Stephan] In 1909 the height of fashion in women's wear was rubber galoshes worn as a protective covering over one's shoes. It did not rain in Galka. Galoshes were superfluous in the extreme. They were not sold locally in stores in which purchases could be made on credit. So, Galoshes were purely decorative; a cash only purchase in a store in a much larger town. A hausfrau with superfluous Galoshes was flaunting her husband's status. Galoshes were only worn on Sunday and only to attend church. They must not have a speck of dirt on them!! My aunt said the women folk of our family had none. In fact in the winter the family didn't even have enough shoes for everyone to go out of doors at the same time!! ---------------- Galka, in 1904, was the first Volga colony to vote for private land ownership. A student at the University of Leipzig, Maximilian Julius Pretorius, wrote a well researched thesis for his doctoral degree in economics. A relative was living in Saratov, who had previously lived in Galka. This gave him an entry to the village. He lived there for a period in 1904. He made a careful study, firsthand, of all aspects of the village economics and wrote the definative discourse on economics of the Volga German colonies. It was his intention to write a follow up study after a few years of private ownership of the village lands. Unfortunately he died in World War I. His thesis was published in the original German in 1912. Both the German and an adequate English translation are available from Jayne Wunsch Dye (father born in Galka), at Jaynedye@me.com . The exodus of Volga Germans had begun about 1875 but few had the money to relocate. Their sources of cash were sale of crops and work at trades. Owning land of your own allowed rental or sale of that land. Voila, passage money for your whole family. As an aside, in Galka in 1904, the most ostentatious fashion statement was galoshes for the wife. These could only be purchased in a large city and, unlike as in Galka,, had to be a cash purchase. It DID NOT RAIN in Galka. Galoshes were quite redundant, worn only to Church on Sunday, and never allowed to have a speck of dust on them.

Gallebo, Norra Vi

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__NOTOC__ = Gallebo, Norra Vi = Gården [https://tora.entryscape.net/tora/17760 Gallebo] ligger i Sörskaten i Norra Vi sn, Ydre hd i södra Östergötland. Gården ligger på en hög platå 231 meter över havet omgiven av stora åkrar, som i sin tur omges av milsvida skogar. Numera är markerna omkring gården naturreservat. Gården omnämns redan 1418. Väpnaren Magnus Filipsson Bonde skänker gården ”Gallabode” (Gallebo) i Norra Vi socken, Ydre härad, till Linköpings domkyrka 1491. [https://sok.riksarkivet.se/sdhk?SDHK=32593 Svenskt Diplomatariums huvudkartotek över medeltidsbreven : SDHK: 32593 : 1491-06-02] År 1545 skrivs gården Galliboda. [https://sok.riksarkivet.se/bildvisning/A0048427_00067 Landskapshandlingar, Landskapshandlingar Östergötlands handlingar, SE/RA/5121/5121.04/1545: 18 (1545), bildid: A0048427_00067] Av allt att döma så omfattade Gallebo vid sekelskiftet 1600/1700 dels ett kronohemman dels en utgjord som var frälse samt obebodd och omfattade 1 mantal. Den 14 januari 1723 utfärdadades ett skatteköpsbrev på 1 mantal Gallebo till två av Olof Mickelssons söner. De uppförde troligen huvudbyggnaden på den plats där mangårdsbyggnaden fortfarande står. Gården beboddes av släkten i mer än 200 år. Christian Lovén : Det medeltida Sverige, Band 4 SMÅLAND : 6 Ydre härad : Riksarkivet : Stockholm 2015 Karin Johansson : Sörskaten i mitt hjärta (2 uppl) : Atremi AB : 2012 (s.79-82) {{Image|file=Gallebo_Norra_Vi.jpg |caption=Gallebo, Norra Vi, 2023 }} {{Image|file=Gallebo_Norra_Vi-1.jpg |caption=Gallebo, Norra Vi enkifte 1817 }} == Källor ==

Galleries, Collections etc which deny general permission to use images on WikiTree

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==List of Galleries, Collections and Organisations which deny general permission to use images on WikiTree== '''For a list of galleries, collections etc which have given permission, see [[Space:Galleries_and_Collections_which_have_given_Permission_for_use_of_Images|this free space page]]''' This is a list of websites of galleries, collections etc. where either the proprietors have been asked to give permission for use of images on WikiTree and have refused it, or the website explicitly prohibits use elsewhere on the web. Please give suggestions of additions to this list to [[Cayley-55|Michael Cayley]]. Images from these sites should not be uploaded to WikiTree, but you can give a weblink to images on them in the biography section of profiles. Sometimes proprietors of websites change their mind. If any WikiTree member manages to secure permission from any of these sites, please let [[Cayley-55|Michael Cayley]] know, with details of any conditions that are attached and any instructions on accreditation or copyright notices. * [https://www.genealogybank.com/ Genealogy Bank] which has a large collection of newspaper images * [https://historicengland.org.uk/ Historic England], approached in November 2021 * [https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/ The National Trust for England, Wales and Northern Ireland], approached in July 2021 * [https://www.sainsburycentre.ac.uk/ The Sainsbury Centre, Norwich, England]

Galusha

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Richardson-12257|Wendy Richardson]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=13567145 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Galusha Demography

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__NOTOC__ '''NAVIGATION:'''
[[Space:Galusha_Name_Study|Galusha Name Study Home]]
[[Space:Galusha_Origins|Galusha Origins]]
[[Space:Galusha_Genetics|Galusha Genetics]]
[[Space:Galusha_Demography|Galusha Demography]]
[[Space:Galusha_Sociology|Galusha Sociology]]
==Distributions== ===Date & Place Distributions=== *Births, Marriages, and Deaths *Residences *Migrations ===Date Distributions=== *Natural Increase or Decrease ==Frequencies== ===Name Study Size=== {|border="1" |- |rowspan="2"|
REPOSITORY
||colspan="8"|
SURNAME RECORDS OR 2000 US CENSUS COUNT
|- ||
Galluchat (Fr)
||
Galuchat (Fr)
||
Galuchet (Fr)
||
Galeucia (En)
||
Gallutia (En)
||
Galucia (En)
||
Galusha (En)
||
Galutia (En)
|- |
WikiTree
||
14
||
0
||
0
||
50
||
7
||
5
||
337
||
13
|- |
FamilySearch
||
48,409
||
48,409
||
48,409
||
759,039
||
64,688
||
64,688
||
156,754
||
759,039
|- |
Ancestry
||
403
||
123
||
0
||
7,301
||
797
||
2,976
||
89,291
||
4,585
|- |
Find a Grave
||
15
||
0
||
0
||
141
||
12
||
28
||
1,816
||
128
|- |
MyHeritage
||
1,554
||
1,191
||
1,693
||
6,340
||
499
||
3,272
||
145,169
||
5,105
|- |
FindMyPast
||
132
||
11
||
0
||
512
||
87
||
729
||
11,077
||
765
|- |
US Census Bureau
||
0
||
0
||
0
||
0
||
0
||
0
||
1,662
||
0
|}
Given that most Galushas have lived in the United States, the best measure of Galusha Name Study size will likely be:
1) Based on data from the 2000 Decennial US Census.
2) Relative to other surnames used in America.
'''Population & Records'''Technical Documentation: Demographic Aspects of Surname - Census 2000. https://www.census.gov/topics/population/genealogy/data/2000_surnames.html
2000 US Resident Population: 281,421,906
Total Valid Person Records: 279,132,770
Analysis Records: 269,762,087
'''Galusha Data'''File B: Surnames Occurring 100 or More Times. https://www.census.gov/topics/population/genealogy/data/2000_surnames.html
Galusha Rank: 16,028
Galusha Count: 1,662
Galusha Proportion/100K: 0.62
Galusha Cumulative Proportion/100K, %: 73,008.76
'''Dataset Value Ranges''' (most frequent to least frequent)
Rank: 1 to 150,436
Count: 2,376,206 to 100
Proportion/100K: 880.9 to 0.04
Cumulative Proportion/100K, %: 880.9 to 89,753.56
Qualitative descriptions of Name Study Size are arbitrary, because they require assigning quantitative limits to qualitative terms (e.g., small, medium, large, etc).
===Illegitimacy=== ===Adoption=== ===Divorce=== ===Multiple Births=== ===Multiple Marriages=== ===Longevity=== ===Crime=== ==Sources==

Galusha Genetics

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__NOTOC__ '''NAVIGATION:'''
[[Space:Galusha_Name_Study|Galusha Name Study Home]]
[[Space:Galusha_Origins|Galusha Origins]]
[[Space:Galusha_Genetics|Galusha Genetics]]
[[Space:Galusha_Demography|Galusha Demography]]
[[Space:Galusha_Sociology|Galusha Sociology]]
===DNA Project Websites=== *[https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/galusha Galusha DNA Project] *[https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/galusha-all-others Galusha-AllOthers DNA Project] ===Y-DNA SNP Analysis=== *Y-DNA Haplogroup Determination & Distribution ===Y-DNA STR Analysis=== *Y Chromosome STR Marker Comparison ===Autosomal DNA Analysis=== *Simple DNA Match *Autosome Segment Comparison *Triangulation *Ethinic Admixture Determination ==Conclusions== ===Non-Matching=== *Non-Paternity Events *Different Origins ===Matching=== *Single Origin *Variant Surname Bonding *DNA-Confirmed Genealogies

Galusha Name Study Info

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{{#switch: {{{1}}} |image=One_Name_Study_Images-21.png }}

Galusha Origins

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__NOTOC__ '''NAVIGATION:'''
[[Space:Galusha_Name_Study|Galusha Name Study Home]]
[[Space:Galusha_Origins|Galusha Origins]]
[[Space:Galusha_Genetics|Galusha Genetics]]
[[Space:Galusha_Demography|Galusha Demography]]
[[Space:Galusha_Sociology|Galusha Sociology]]
==Earliest Known Ancestors== === North America=== :[[Galusha-14|'''Daniel Galusha (1652-1706)''']]
:Daniel Galusha and his son, Jacob, are referred to as Dutchmen by Rev. John Pike, a contemporaneous writer, and Daniel was designated as such in the Court Records of Massachusetts.''[[Space:Early Generations of the Founders of Old Dunstable|Early Generations of the Founders of Old Dunstable]]'' [https://archive.org/details/earlygenerations00stea_0/page/22/mode/2up Stearns, Ezra S. 1911. Early Generations of the Founders of Old Dunstable, Thirty Families. George E. Littlefield, Boston.]
:His Jersey birth, French surname, Dutch heritage, and circumstances of his death in Montreal, place Daniel within the historical context of the Huguenot Migrations.
:[[Galluchat-8|'''Eustache Louis Galluchat (1750-)''']]
:[[Galluchat-1|'''Marie Francoise (Galluchat) Lamarlere (1775-1859)''']]
:[[Galusha-234|'''Elijah Galusha (1778-1862)''']]
===Europe=== ==Surname Meaning== The surname, Galusha, is of French derivation. The original French spelling was likely Galuchat, or Galuchet.Helgemoe, Janet Galeucia. 1968. Galusha-Galeucia Family. Bow, NH.
Galuchat is the French word for fine sharkskin leatherWiktionary contributors, "galuchat," Wiktionary, The Free Dictionary, https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=galuchat&oldid=65160166 (accessed September 20, 2022). (a type of shagreen), popularised in Europe by Jean-Claude Galluchat (1689-1774), a master leatherworker in the court of Louis XV of France.Wikipedia contributors, "Shagreen," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shagreen&oldid=1102477136 (accessed September 20, 2022).
So, Galuchat is likely an occupational surname which refers to leather crafting.
==Surname Origins== Galusha is an English language variant of the French surnames, Galluchat, Galuchat, Galuchet, etc. It originates in France, and was first used in the Colony of Massachusetts Bay as a result of the arrival of Daniel Galusha from the Isle of Jersey in 1676Gale Research. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2010.Original data - Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2010.Original data: Filby, P. William, ed. Passeng)., and his subsequent involvement in the life of Middlesex County.
His surname would have sounded unfamiliar to those responsible for recording it in official documents.
And since his native languages were likely French and Dutch, he may have been dependent upon officials to provide a phonetically similar English language spelling of his surname. Hence, the proliferation of Galusha deviants during Daniel's lifetime (Generation 1), and the lifetimes of his children (Generation 2).
During the lifetimes of Daniel's grandchildren (Generation 3), this family's surname was consistently recorded in official documents as: Galusha.
==Sources==

Galusha Sociology

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__NOTOC__ '''NAVIGATION:'''
[[Space:Galusha_Name_Study|Galusha Name Study Home]]
[[Space:Galusha_Origins|Galusha Origins]]
[[Space:Galusha_Genetics|Galusha Genetics]]
[[Space:Galusha_Demography|Galusha Demography]]
[[Space:Galusha_Sociology|Galusha Sociology]]
==Occupations== ====Accounts Clerks==== :[[Galusha-329|Delbert A. Galusha (1915-1992)]] ====Attorneys==== :[[Galluchat-4|Joseph Galluchat (1847-1887)]] ====Bricklayers==== :[[Galusha-248|Richard Galusha (1843-1905)]] ====Carpenters==== :[[Galusha-16|Daniel Galusha (1688-bef.1748)]] :[[Galusha-221|Jacob Galusha (1757-1836)]] :[[Galutia-7|Ezra Galutia (1815-aft.1880)]] :[[Galutia-6|John Wesley Galutia (1845-1922)]] :[[Galutia-13|Marion Eugene Galutia (1894-1970)]] ====Carriage Painters==== :[[Galutia-12|Irvin John Galutia (1867-1947)]] ====Christian Church Ministers==== :[[Galusha-188|William Galusha (1775-1856)]] :[[Galusha-156|George Hanford Galusha (1812-1892)]] :[[Galusha-140|Myron Henry Galusha (1830-1863)]] ====Coopers==== :[[Galusha-334|Joseph Galusha (abt.1821-aft.1867)]] ====Engineers==== :[[Galusha-348|Albert Leet Galusha (1877-1961)]] :[[Galusha-349|Albert Ranney Galusha (1907-1983)]] ====Farmers==== :'''Illinois'''
::[[Galusha-81|Jacob Andrus Galusha (1802-1889)]] :'''Indiana'''
::[[Gallutia-6|David Gallutia (abt.1839-1890)]] :'''Kansas'''
::[[Galutia-10|Timothy Galutia (1840-1913)]] :'''Kentucky'''
::[[Galusha-173|John Roe Galusha (1855-1938)]] :'''Massachusetts'''
::[[Galusha-16|Daniel Galusha (1688-bef.1748)]] ::[[Galusha-291|Daniel Galusha (1791-1871)]] :'''Michigan'''
::[[Galusha-112|Giles Galusha (abt.1826-1865)]] ::[[Galusha-5|Edwin Amos Galusha (1853-1935)]] :'''Minnesota'''
::[[Galusha-220|Jacob Galusha (1793-1885)]] ::[[Galusha-302|Jacob Galusha (abt.1833-abt.1910)]] :'''Nebraska'''
::[[Galusha-99|John Galusha (1845-1897)]] :'''New York'''
::[[Galusha-116|Abiram Galusha (1763-1851)]] ::[[Galusha-177|John Galusha (1782-1864)]] ::[[Galusha-361|Samuel Galusha (1786-1866)]] ::[[Galusha-320|Reuben Galusha (abt.1791-1873)]] ::[[Galusha-129|Orman Galusha (1793-1875)]] ::[[Galusha-115|Daniel Galusha (abt.1800-1878)]] ::[[Galusha-289|Oliver H. Galusha (abt.1802-1882)]] ::[[Galusha-249|George Galusha (abt.1808-1869)]] ::[[Galusha-362|George Galusha (abt.1810-1888)]] ::[[Galusha-265|Asel Galusha (1831-1911)]] ::[[Galusha-203|Asa Galusha (1834-)]] ::[[Galusha-217|George E. Galusha (abt.1843-aft.1920)]] ::[[Galusha-311|George W. Galusha (1856-1937)]] :'''Ohio'''
::[[Gallutia-7|Milo Gallutia (1841-1897)]] ::[[Gallutia-5|Charles Gallutia (1865-1946)]] ::[[Gallutia-2|Charles Ellery Gallutia (1894-1985)]] :'''Pennsylvania'''
::[[Galusha-303|Lyman Galusha (abt.1789-abt.1870)]] ::[[Galusha-252|Oliver Galusha (1795-1873)]] ::[[Galusha-323|Timothy Abiram (Galusha) Galutia (1812-1890)]] :'''Texas'''
::[[Galusha-172|Frances M. Galusha (1853-aft.1900)]] :'''Vermont'''
::[[Galusha-187|David Galusha (1765-1854)]] ::[[Galusha-208|Elijah Galusha (1797-1866)]] ::[[Galusha-186|Jonas Galusha (abt.1803-1871)]] ::[[Galusha-340|Truman Chittenden Galusha (1810-1894)]] ::[[Galusha-185|Richmond F. Galusha (1830-1898)]] ::[[Galusha-308|Seymour Galusha (1841-1895)]] ::[[Galusha-338|Lyman D. Galusha (1841-1906)]] :'''Wisconsin'''
::[[Galusha-149|David Henry Galusha (1849-1919)]] ====Farm Laborers==== :[[Galusha-255|John Galusha (abt.1800-1861)]] :[[Galusha-301|Jonathan R. Galusha (abt.1831-abt.1911)]] :[[Galusha-314|Daniel Galusha (abt.1835-aft.1892)]] :[[Galusha-49|Warren Albert Galusha (1848-aft.1894)]] :[[Galusha-347|Albert L. Galusha (1850-1879)]] ====Insurance Underwriters==== :[[Galusha-237|James Irving Galusha (1933-2015)]] ====Laborers==== :[[Galusha-250|Richard Galusha (1784-abt.1850)]] :[[Galusha-321|Abiram Galusha (1787-1837)]] :[[Galusha-352|David Galusha (1795-1880)]] :[[Galusha-253|David Harris Galusha (abt.1802-)]] :[[Galusha-335|Abiram Galusha (1820-1907)]] :[[Galucia-6|Squire Price (Galucia) Galutia (1828-1898)]] :[[Galusha-28|Charles Seward Galusha (1856-1905)]] :[[Galusha-123|William Galusha (abt.1866-aft.1925)]] ====Land Owners==== :[[Galusha-16|Daniel Galusha (1688-bef.1748)]] ====Mat Weavers==== :[[Galusha-263|Adelbert Richard Galusha (abt.1870-1916)]] ====Newspaper Editors==== :[[Galusha-244|Irving Galusha (1877-1959)]] ====Paper Mill Labourers==== :[[Galusha-89|George Galusha (1867-1940)]] ====Raftsmen==== :[[Galusha-317|James D. Galusha (1815-1890)]] ====Real Estate Agents==== :[[Galluchat-11|Minor Clinton Galluchat (1856-1921)]] ====Sales Managers==== :[[Galusha-258|William Galusha]] ====School Teachers==== :[[Galusha-107|Elijah G. Galusha (1780-aft.1850)]] ====Shoemakers==== :[[Galusha-33|Edwin Dyer Galusha (1819-1859)]] ====Soldiers==== :[[Galusha-318|Reuben Clark Galusha (abt.1843-1863)]] :[[Galusha-319|George M. Galusha (1845-1862)]] ====Stone Cutters==== :[[Galeucia-3|Benjamin Smothers Galeucia (1799-1862)]] ====Truck Drivers==== :[[Galusha-326|Merle Paul Galusha (1893-1969)]] ==Military Service== ====King Philip's War==== :[[Galusha-14|Daniel Galusha (1652-1706)]]
====Queen Anne's War==== :[[Galusha-14|Daniel Galusha (1652-1706)]]
:[[Galeucia-10|Jacob (Galeucia) Galusha (1680-)]]
:[[Galusha-16|Daniel Galusha (1688-bef.1748)]]
====Revolutionary War==== :[[Galusha-116|Abiram Galusha (1763-1851)]]
:[[Galusha-109|Amos Galusha (1755-1839)]]
:[[Galusha-256|Daniel Galusha (abt.1751-1808)]]
:[[Galusha-187|David Galusha (1765-1854)]]
:[[Galusha-3|David Galusha (1748-1804)]]
:[[Galusha-221|Jacob Galusha (1757-1836)]]
:[[Galusha-58|Jonas Galusha (1723-1804)]]
:[[Galusha-60|Jonas Galusha (1753-1834)]]
:[[Galusha-20|Samuel Galusha (abt.1754-1841)]]
:[[Galusha-178|Thomas Galusha (1756-1844)]]
====War of 1812==== :[[Galusha-321|Abiram Galusha (1787-1837)]]
:[[Galusha-253|David Harris Galusha (abt.1802-)]]
:[[Galusha-252|Oliver Galusha (1795-1873)]]
:[[Galusha-320|Reuben Galusha (abt.1791-1873)]]
:[[Galusha-250|Richard Galusha (1784-abt.1850)]]
====Mexican War==== ====Civil War==== :[[Galusha-265|Asel Galusha (1831-1911)]]
:[[Galusha-387|Charles Galusha (1834-1886)]]
:[[Galucia-5|Daniel Galucia (1831-1896)]]
:[[Galusha-217|George E. Galusha (abt.1843-aft.1920)]]
:[[Galusha-319|George M. Galusha (1845-1862)]]
:[[Galusha-112|Giles Galusha (abt.1826-1865)]]
:[[Galusha-372|James Galusha (1828-1893)]] :[[Galusha-359|James Galusha (abt.1841-aft.1864)]]
:[[Galusha-370|James A. Galusha (1827-1910)]] :[[Galusha-99|John Galusha (1845-1897)]]
:[[Galusha-374|Jonas Galusha (1829-1897)]]
:[[Galusha-318|Reuben Clark Galusha (abt.1843-1863)]]
:[[Galusha-371|Reuben M. Galusha (abt.1822-aft.1890)]]
:[[Galusha-248|Richard Galusha (1843-1905)]]
:[[Galusha-389|Samuel Galusha (abt.1841-1898)]]
:[[Galusha-375|Silas Galusha (1830-1897)]]
:[[Galusha-390|Simon S. Galusha (1850-1909)]]
:[[Galutia-10|Timothy Galutia (1840-1913)]]
:[[Galusha-182|Waterman Galusha (1819-1864)]]
====Spanish American War==== :[[Galusha-263|Adelbert Richard Galusha (abt.1870-1916)]]
====World War I==== :[[Galusha-326|Merle Paul Galusha (1893-1969)]]
:[[Galutia-13|Marion Eugene Galutia (1894-1970)]]
====World War II==== :[[Galusha-151|James Edward Galusha (1922-2005)]]
==Notable Persons== :Jean Claude Galluchat (1689-1774)
: Denis Claude Galluchat
:[[Galusha-60|'''Jonas Galusha (1753-1834)''']]
:Governor of Vermont
:(1809-1813, 1815-1820)
:[[Galusha-427|'''Elon Galusha (1791-1856)''']]
:Lawyer, Baptist Minister, Abolitionist : [[Galusha-600|'''Gene Galusha (1941-2008)''']]
: Part-Time Actor and Full-Time Narrator

Gambo, Newfoundland

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Modern day Gambo consists of three separate communities: Middle Brook, Dark Cove, and Gambo. They were incorporated as Dark Cove-Middle Brook-Gambo in 1964, but renamed as Gambo in 1980.

Gamelin

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== Introduction == The emergence of the Glasgow surname in medieval Scotland is a fascinating story that weaves together the lives of influential clergymen, powerful political families, and the complex religious and social landscape of the time. At the heart of this narrative is Gamelin, a prominent figure whose career and connections provide a compelling lens through which to explore the origins and early development of the Glasgow name. By delving into Gamelin's life, his political allegiances, and the wider context of 13th-century Scotland, we can gain valuable insights into the world in which the Glasgow surname first appeared and the factors that shaped its evolution over the centuries. == Gamelin: A Life in the Church and Politics == === Early Career and Rise to Prominence === Gamelin's path to power began in the early 13th century when he emerged as a prominent clerk under the reign of Alexander II. By 1245, he had already attained the position of papal chaplain, a role that brought him into close contact with the highest echelons of the church hierarchy. Around this time, he also held the church of Kilbucho in Peeblesshire, a benefice that would later prove significant in connecting him to important political families. As Gamelin's career progressed, he continued to accumulate offices and responsibilities. In April 1245, he was recorded as a canon of Glasgow, and by the early 1250s, he had become the royal chancellor, succeeding Robert, abbot of Dunfermline. His influence extended beyond the realm of secular politics, as he also served as the chancellor of Moray from around 1250 to 1257. === Bishop of St Andrews and Political Upheaval === Gamelin's rise reached its apex in 1255 when he was elected bishop of St Andrews, a position that made him one of the most powerful clergymen in Scotland. He was consecrated at St Andrews on 26 December of that year, but his tenure was not without controversy. During the minority reign of Alexander III, Gamelin found himself embroiled in the political turmoil that engulfed the kingdom. At this time, Scotland was divided between two main factions: the Comyns, a powerful family with extensive landholdings and political influence, and their rivals, led by Alan Durward. Gamelin's allegiance lay firmly with the Comyns, a connection that likely stemmed from his grandmother's lineagehttps://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-10325. This alignment put him at odds with the Durward faction, and he soon found himself exiled at the Curia, the papal court. Despite this setback, Gamelin's fortunes were revived in 1258 when the Scottish government once again came under Comyn control. He returned to Scotland and resumed his duties as bishop of St Andrews, a position he held until his death at Inchmurdo, near St Andrews, on 29 April 1271. === The Comyn Connection === Gamelin's close ties to the Comyn family were a defining feature of his political career. The Comyns were one of the most powerful noble families in 13th-century Scotland, with vast estates and a strong influence over the government. Gamelin's association with this family was multifaceted, as evidenced by his links to the church of Kilbucho and his connections to key figures like Gilbert, son of Richer, and Adam Fitz Gilbert. The church of Kilbucho, which Gamelin held during the 1240s, was a key piece in the puzzle of his political allegiances. Records from this period hint at Gamelin's position as parson of Kilbucho and his ties to the families of Adam Fitz Gilbert and the Grahams, as well as the Comyns(see Watt, Dictionary, 209-10. 2 Buchanan, History of Scotland, 240)https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BZkgAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA189&dq=Kelbechoc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwib_PnksNnqAhWhVBUIHbOqBbkQ6AEwAHoECAUQAg#v=onepage&q=Kelbechoc&f=false. This web of connections suggests that Gamelin's early career was closely intertwined with the interests of these influential families, particularly the Comyns. Gamelin's staunch support for the Comyns during the minority of Alexander III underscores the depth of his commitment to this family. The Comyns were locked in a bitter struggle with the Durward faction for control of the young king and the governance of the realm. Gamelin's unwavering loyalty to the Comyns, even in the face of exile, demonstrates the strength of his political convictions and the importance of these familial bonds. It is worth noting that the Comyns' political dominance in 13th-century Scotland was not always accurately represented in later historical accounts. Anti-Comyn chroniclers like John Fordun and literary historians writing during the Stewart dynasty often portrayed the family in a negative light, seeking to bolster the reputations of rival figures like Robert the Bruce and William Wallace. However, the historical record makes it clear that the Comyns were a formidable force in Scottish politics, and Gamelin's alignment with this family was a key factor in his own rise to powerhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/25529300. == The House of Walter == === Walter Capellanus and the Glasgow Diocese === The early history of the Glasgow surname is inextricably linked to the influence of Walter Capellanus, who served as bishop of Glasgow from 1208 to 1232. Walter was a pivotal figure in the development of the diocese, and his tenure saw significant growth in the church's power and prestige. As bishop, he would have had a substantial household, comprising clergymen, officials, and other members of his entourage. It is within this context that we find the first documented appearance of the Glasgow surname. In 1258, Master John de Glasgu is recorded as a chaplain of Bishop Gamelin and a member of the household of Walter, who is referred to as the cardinal of Glasgow. This connection suggests that the Glasgow name originated among individuals associated with the religious establishment in Glasgow, particularly those in the orbit of Walter Capellanus and his successors. === Legacy and Influence === The influence of Walter Capellanus and his household extended well beyond his own lifetime. The recurrence of the name "Walter" and its variants in association with individuals bearing the Glasgow surname hints at an ongoing connection to the bishop's legacy. For example, William de Glasgu, who was gifted by the abbot and convent of Kilwinning and Kelso in the late 14th century, may have been named in honor of the earlier Walter. Moreover, the frequent appearance of Glasgow surname holders in clerical positions, particularly within the dioceses of Glasgow, Kilwinning, and Kelso, further underscores the idea that the "House of Walter" refers to the ecclesiastical establishment shaped by Walter Capellanus's influence. These institutions had ties to the Tironensian order, a reformed branch of the Benedictines that played a significant role in the religious life of medieval Scotland. The Capallanus surname itself, derived from the Latin word for "chaplain," is another indication of the close association between the Glasgow name and the clerical world of the 13th century. The four notable individuals bearing this name, including Walter Capellanus himself, were all prominent figures in the Scottish church, highlighting the intertwining of religious and political power during this period. While the precise nature of the "House of Walter" may remain somewhat speculative, the available evidence points to a strong connection between the Glasgow surname and the powerful ecclesiastical circle associated with Walter Capellanus and his lasting influence on the diocese of Glasgow. This interpretation offers a compelling framework for understanding the origins and early development of the Glasgow name, firmly rooting it in the religious and political landscape of medieval Scotland. === Notable Walters === The prevalence of the name "Walter" among individuals associated with the Glasgow surname and the broader clerical world of 13th-century Scotland is striking. In addition to Walter Capellanus himself, we find references to several other notable Walters who may have had connections to the early Glasgow lineage: * Walter Fitzalan (d. 1177): The High Steward of Scotland, whose charter to the monks of Melrose in the year of his death hints at the intertwining of religious patronage and political power in the 12th century. * Walter Comyn: A member of the influential Comyn family, which had close ties to Gamelin and the church of Kilbucho. * Walter of Glasgow (1291): A master, possibly associated with the diocese of Glasgowhttps://www.poms.ac.uk/record/person/16434/. * Walter Wardlaw (14th century): A member of the powerful Wardlaw family, who served as bishop of Glasgow and pseudocardinalhttp://www.gcatholic.org/hierarchy/data/cardZC07-1.htm#27035. The connection between Master John de Glasgow and the Wardlaws in 1380 suggests a possible link between the Glasgow surname and this influential clerical dynastyhttp://theses.gla.ac.uk/80001/1/13905452.pdf. These examples demonstrate the recurring presence of the name "Walter" in the social and religious networks that gave rise to the Glasgow surname. While the specific nature of these connections remains unclear, the pattern suggests that the Glasgow name emerged within a milieu shaped by the influence of powerful clergymen and their associated families, many of whom bore the name "Walter." == Flemish Origins and Continental Connections == === The Comyn Family === The Comyn family, which played such a crucial role in Gamelin's career and the politics of 13th-century Scotland, may provide a link to the Flemish roots of the Glasgow surname. The Comyns were descended from a Flemish nobleman, Robert de Comines, who came to England during the Norman Conquest. The family later established itself in Scotland, where they became one of the most powerful noble houses. The Comyns' association with other Flemish-descended families, such as the FitzAlans, and their patronage of religious houses like Melrose Abbey, which had strong continental connections, suggest that they may have maintained ties to their Flemish heritage. Given Gamelin's close relationship with the Comyns, it is possible that the Glasgow surname emerged within a milieu influenced by Flemish culture and networks. === Adam Fitz Gilbert and Gilbert Son of Richer === Another potential avenue for exploring the Flemish origins of the Glasgow surname lies in the figures of Adam Fitz Gilbert and his father, Gilbert son of Richer. Adam Fitz Gilbert was the lord of Kilbucho, the church which Gamelin held in the 1240s, and the family had connections to the Comyns and the Grahams. The use of the "Fitz" prefix in Adam's name, denoting "son of," is a Norman naming convention, which may hint at a continental background for the family. Gilbert son of Richer, Adam's father, also bears a name that suggests possible Norman or Flemish roots. Further research into the origins and connections of this family could shed light on the potential Flemish influences in the area where the Glasgow surname first emerged. === Continental Religious Orders === The presence of continental religious orders, such as the Tironensians, in the monasteries and churches associated with the early Glasgow surname is another indication of possible Flemish connections. The Tironensians, a reformed branch of the Benedictines, originated in France but had a significant presence in Scotland, particularly in the diocese of Glasgow. The abbeys of Kilwinning and Kelso, which had ties to individuals bearing the Glasgow name, such as William de Glasgu in the late 14th century, were both associated with the Tironensian order. The movement of clergymen and ideas between these institutions and their continental counterparts may have facilitated the exchange of cultural influences, including naming practices and family networks. While the evidence for the Flemish origins of the Glasgow surname remains circumstantial, the confluence of factors – the Comyn family's Flemish roots, the potential continental connections of families like that of Adam Fitz Gilbert, and the presence of European religious orders in the Glasgow diocese – suggests that the name may have emerged within a context shaped by Flemish influence. Further research into these connections could yield valuable insights into the early history of the Glasgow surname and its place within the broader cultural landscape of medieval Scotland. == The Hawick Connection == === Early References to "de Hawick" === One of the most intriguing aspects of the Glasgow surname's early history is its apparent connection to the town of Hawick in Roxburghshire. From the 12th to the 15th centuries, there are numerous references to clergymen and landholders bearing the appellation "de Hawick," suggesting a strong link between this locality and the emergence of the Glasgow name. Among the notable individuals with this designation are Adam de Hawick (1220-1243), Alexander de Hawick (c. 1200), and John de Hawick (1355-1365). The latter, who was presented to the church of Hawick by Edward III of England, may be the same person as John Fleming, who held the church until 1363. The use of the "de Hawick" surname by both clergymen and secular figures hints at the intertwining of religious and political power in the region. === The Significance of Hawick === The town of Hawick itself has a long and rich history, with evidence of human settlement dating back to the Mesolithic period. By the Middle Ages, Hawick had become an important center for the textile industry, particularly the production of knitwear and woolen goods. The town's strategic location on the River Teviot, along with its proximity to the English border, made it a significant hub for trade and communication. The connection between the Glasgow surname and Hawick raises interesting questions about the origins and early development of the name. It is possible that the "de Hawick" appellation was used by individuals who had ties to the town, either through birth, residency, or landholding. The prominence of clergymen among those bearing the name suggests that the church in Hawick may have played a role in the emergence of the Glasgow surname. === Implications for the Glasgow Surname === The Hawick connection offers a compelling line of inquiry for further research into the early history of the Glasgow surname. By exploring the lives and networks of individuals like Adam de Hawick, Alexander de Hawick, and John de Hawick, we may gain valuable insights into the social, religious, and political contexts that gave rise to the Glasgow name. Moreover, the association with Hawick highlights the importance of regional identity and local connections in the development of surnames during the medieval period. The use of the "de Hawick" designation suggests that the Glasgow name may have originated as a locative surname, denoting an individual's association with a particular place. The Hawick connection also underscores the complex interplay between religious and secular power in medieval Scotland. The presence of clergymen bearing the "de Hawick" appellation, alongside landholders and other secular figures, hints at the close ties between the church and the ruling elite in the Border region. Further research into the Hawick connection could shed light on the early history of the Glasgow surname and its place within the broader cultural and political landscape of medieval Scotland. By tracing the lives and networks of individuals associated with Hawick and the "de Hawick" designation, we may gain a clearer understanding of the factors that shaped the emergence and evolution of the Glasgow name. == Conclusion == The early history of the Glasgow surname is a complex tapestry woven from the lives of influential clergymen, powerful noble families, and the shifting political and religious landscape of medieval Scotland. At the heart of this story is the figure of Gamelin, whose career and connections offer a fascinating glimpse into the world in which the Glasgow name first emerged. Through his close ties to the Comyn family, his role in the church and government, and his associations with key religious establishments like the diocese of Glasgow and the abbey of Kelso, Gamelin embodies the intricate web of relationships that shaped the development of the Glasgow surname. His story also highlights the importance of regional identities and local connections, as evidenced by the links between the Glasgow name and places like Kilbucho and Hawick. The recurrence of the name "Walter" among individuals associated with the early Glasgow lineage points to the influence of powerful ecclesiastical figures like Walter Capellanus, whose legacy helped to shape the religious and political milieu in which the surname took root. The potential Flemish origins of the name, hinted at by the connections to families like the Comyns and the presence of continental religious orders in Scotland, add another layer of complexity to the story. While many questions remain about the precise origins and evolution of the Glasgow surname, the evidence presented here offers a tantalizing glimpse into the rich and diverse world of medieval Scotland. By situating the name within the broader context of the period's religious, political, and cultural currents, we can begin to unravel the intricate threads that bind together the early history of this fascinating surname. As research into the Glasgow name continues, it is clear that there is much still to be discovered. From the shadowy figure of Walter Capellanus to the intriguing connections with Hawick and the Scottish Borders, the story of the Glasgow surname is one that invites further exploration and analysis.

Games Less Ordinary

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Games Less Ordinary was our games store. It was a very great adventure and very missed.

Gamla Fjälkingevägen 3

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Gamla_Fjalkingevagen_3.jpg
Hose built by [[Olsson-1153|Ola Ludvig Olsson (1902-1962)]] and his father [[Olsson-1098|Per Olsson (1875-1958)]] in 1932-1933.

Gamla Tingsstället, Ljungby

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Gamla_Tingsstallet_Ljungby.jpg
== Gamla Tingsstället, Ljungby == På 1820-talet uppförds det som idag kallas Ljungbys [https://www.domstol.se/vaxjo-tingsratt/om-tingsratten/organisation/ljungby-tingsratt/ Gamla Tingshus] på Ljungby Gamla torg bredvid Gästgivaregården. Ett nytt tingshus uppfördes 1902 och den gamla byggnaden används idag för museiverksamheten. {{Image |file=Tornerefelt-2-1.jpg |caption=Gamla tingsstället i Ljungby }} Ljungby var tingsplats för Sunnerbo härad från 1690-talet till 2005. När Ljungby fick sitt tingsställe hölls först ting i Gästgivaregården i ”en sal öster på gården”. En egen tingshusbyggnad fanns inte då tingsstället flyttades till Ljungby, och det är inte känt exakt när den första tingshusbyggnaden uppfördes men den ska ha legat cirka 30 alnar norr om tingshuset från 1820. År 1754 drabbades detta hus av brand då både tingshus, Gästgivaregård och häradets handlingar brann upp. Det är oklart om byggnaden reparerades eller om nytt tingshus byggdes. Byggnaden revs dock i samband med uppförande av nytt tingshus 1820. Severin Eliasson : Hamneda: Socknens historia, Ljungby 1990, s.57 {{Image|file=Gamla_Tingsstallet_Ljungby.jpg |caption=Ljungby köping 1825 }} == Källor ==

Gångsätra gård / Gångsätra farm

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Gangsatra_gard_Gangsatra_farm.jpg
Gangsatra_gard_Gangsatra_farm-1.jpg
Gångsätra gård was a farm at the island Lidingö. The farm was torn down in March 1981.https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%A5ngs%C3%A4tra http://www.lidingo.se/download/18.58bf72c123e74c2a6e80008362/1394471707176/G%C3%A5ngs%C3%A4tra%2Bg%C3%A5rd.pdf ==Sources==

Gangster Genealogy

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The goal of this project is to create a full and comprehensive tree of notable organized crime figures in the United States of America. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Jobe-473|Christina Jobe]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * creating profiles * sourcing information * linking mafia families with one another Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=19053513 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Gannicliffe

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For Gannicliffe information, please refer to the following: 1, Beryl (Gannicliffe) Oldfield's Family History recollections [[Space:Gannicliffe_-_Some_History_by_Beryl_%28Gannicliffe%29_Oldfield|Space:Gannicliffe_-_Some_History_by_Beryl_%28Gannicliffe%29_Oldfield]] 2. W H Gannicliffe's War Memoir [[Space:W._H._Gannicliffe_1897_-_1979_-_WW1_Memoir|Space:W._H._Gannicliffe_1897_-_1979_-_WW1_Memoir]] His war memorabilia (and memoirs) were sent to the regiment in 1968. http://wellcomelibrary.org/player/b18548234#?asi=0&ai=1&z=0.1568%2C0.314%2C0.8716%2C0.67 3. Joan Varey's Memoir [[Space:Gannicliffe%20-%20Joan%20Varey%201923%20-%202006%20Memoir|Space:Gannicliffe%20-%20Joan%20Varey%201923%20-%202006%20Memoir]] 4. W H Gannicliffe's Family Tree, professionally produced in 1974 [[Space:W_H_Gannicliffe_Family_Tree_%28produced_1974%29|Space:W_H_Gannicliffe_Family_Tree_%28produced_1974%29]] 5. Peter Ganniclift 1970s Family Tree [[Space:Peter_Ganniclifft_1970s_Family_Tree|Space:Peter_Ganniclifft_1970s_Family_Tree]] 6. Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft - Family Tree Issues [[Space:Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft_-_Family_Tree_Issues|Space:Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft_-_Family_Tree_Issues]] 7. Gannicliffes in Australia [[Space:Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft_-_Australia|Space:Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft_-_Australia]] 8. Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe - Dealing with Unattached Records [[Space:Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe_-_Dealing_with_Unattached_Records|Space:Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe_-_Dealing_with_Unattached_Records]] 9. Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe: Joan Varey's Miscellaneous History Notes [[Space:Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe:_Joan_Varey%27s_Miscellaneous_History_Notes|Space:Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe:_Joan_Varey%27s_Miscellaneous_History_Notes]] 10. Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe/Ganniclefft - A Note on the Names https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe/Ganniclefft_-_A_Note_on_the_Names

Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft - Australia

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Two cousins with similar names went to Australia. They were first cousins. First there is there is Henry Gannicliffe-46 born in 1822, son of Joseph Langdon Ganniclifft and Jane Parcell, and brother of my Great Great Grandmother Margaret. Then there is William Henry Ganniclifft-105, born 1818, son of William Broughton Ganniclifft and Sarah Tucker. We start with two marriages in the same year! The first is Henry. * Amelia Smith in the Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950 Name: Amelia Smith Spouse Name: Henry Gannicliff Marriage Date: 1853 Marriage Place: New South Wales Registration Place: Alexandria, Paddington, New South Wales Registration Year: 1853 Then William Henry. However, he is referred to as Henry in the marriage document. * Henry Gannicliffe in the Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950 Name: Henry Gannicliffe Spouse Name: Anna Bell Mcinnes Marriage Place: Victoria Registration Place: Victoria Registration Year: 1853 Registration Number: 3317 And a death record pins the "Victoria" one down as William Henry G-105, b. 1818 * William Henry Ganniclifft in the Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985 Name: William Henry Ganniclifft Birth Year: abt 1819 Age: 56 Death Place: Victoria Father's name: William Mother's name: Sarah Tucker Registration Year: 1875 Registration Place: Victoria Registration Number: 7160 The Rent records show him as living in Victoria, where Annabel comes from (although not living with her!) and her living at the same address but only after his death! First, he on his own: * William Hry Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: William Hry Gannicliff Residence Date: 9 Mar 1874 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia Owner Name: The Crown * Wm Henry Gannecliffe in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Wm Henry Gannecliffe Residence Date: 2 Mar 1875 [year of his death] Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia Owner Name: The Crown Then she on her own, after his death: * Annabella Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Annabella Gannicliff Residence Date: 6 Mar 1877 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia Owner Name: Crown * Anna Biud Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Anna Biud Gannicliff Residence Date: 14 Mar 1876 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia Owner Name: Crown And here interestingly, a record of a passage back from Australia for a Joseph. This is William Henry's brother who went some time after 1861 (no 1871 census record for him that I can find) but he then returns to Exeter in 1876: * Jos Ganniclifft in the Web: Victoria, Australia, Outward Passenger Index, 1852-1915 Name: Jos Ganniclifft Age: 50 Birth Year: abt 1826 Departure Date: Mar 1876 Departure Place: Victoria, Australia Destination: LONDON Ship: TRUE BRITON Ship's Master: MILLER GEORGE M Page: 1 URL: https://www.prov.vic.gov.au/ex... This dovetails as Gt-106, brother of William Henry above (Gt-105) and son of William Broughton Ganniclifft. Thgis Joseph was b. 1825, married Ann Moran in London in 1846, was living as a boarder in Kent in 1861, was absent from the Census records of 1871 and returns from Australia in 1876 the year after the death of his brother, marrying (again) in his old age back in Devon in 1887... with Nancy Howgill. And here is Annabella remarrying: * Annabella Ganniclifft in the Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950 Name: Annabella Ganniclifft Spouse Name: William Long Marriage Place: Victoria Registration Place: Victoria Registration Year: 1876 Registration Number: 1046 ... but then still using the Gannicliffe name afterwards... ? * Annabella Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Annabella Gannicliff Residence Date: 6 Mar 1877 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia Owner Name: Crown * Anna Bella Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Anna Bella Gannicliff Residence Date: 8 Apr 1880 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia So who married Amelia Smith?? Here is a passage record - for Henry G-46 born 1822 *Hy Gannacliff in the New South Wales, Australia, Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930 Name: Hy Gannacliff Birth Year: 1822 Age: 27 Arrival Year: 1849 Arrival Country: Australia Vessel Arrived In: Caldew Date of Admission/Photo: 1849 Gaol: Darlinghurst Gaol Location: Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia Record Type: Description Book So... did he marry Amelia Smith? I can find no record of either of their deaths. The marriage may have beeen anulled... and so perhaps he returned to the UK, but it looks more likely that he, or even both of them, went somewhere else... I had thought that perhaps Henry (Gannicliffe-46) had returned and was the William Henry recorded as living in Kings Norton! But this was always far-fetched and we have ascribed those records to William Henry Jury Gannicliffe-39.

Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft - Family Tree Issues

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Here we define the main uncertainties in the tree, based on work done by Peter Ganniclifft and others. Your attention is drawn to the two trees: '''W H Gannicliffe's Family Tree''', professionally produced in 1974 [[Space:W_H_Gannicliffe_Family_Tree_%28produced_1974%29|Space:W_H_Gannicliffe_Family_Tree_%28produced_1974%29]] '''Peter Ganniclifft 1970s Family Tree''' [[Space:Peter_Ganniclifft_1970s_Family_Tree|Space:Peter_Ganniclifft_1970s_Family_Tree]] In searching, there are lots of spellings in addition to Gannicliffe and Ganniclift, for example Granilift, Ganilift, Gannicleft etc... '''1. Joseph Langdon Ganniclifft''' 1792 - 1852 (Ganniclifft-19) Born in Exeter, he moved to Tenby whereafter there is no mention of Langdon. However, we can be sure that he is the same person because in the 1851 Census his place of birth is Exeter and the ages match. '''2. Joseph's father William''' WH Gannicliffe's researcher in the 1970s had William (b 1737) (Ganniclifft-3) as having been married to both Ann Binford (m 1763, d 1781) and also Mary Handford (m 1784), the latter of whom is shown as Joseph's mother. However, there is a dotted line on the diagram to Joseph indicating a little uncertainty... especially since the implication is that William (1737) would be 55 when Joseph was born (1792). Nevertheless, Peter Ganniclifft's tree dated 1970 had the same: ie that William (1737) married both. In addition, in a letter from Peter Ganniclifft to Joan Varey (Gannicliffe-1) in 1981 he stated that he was "sure, with no reasonable doubt" that... William married both, one after the other... This doesn't make it true, of course, but Ann died in 1781 and Mary's marriage is dated as 1784... all perfectly plausible. In addition, there was a census in 1803 (found by Joan (Gannicliffe) Varey and included in her history notes): * Census for the Napoleonic Wars, St Mary Steps Parish 1803 William G aged 67, very infirm, owns one bullock. Mary, his wife, 70. Robert, his son, a Fuller, is a volunteer. His wife is named Grace, and there are 4 children: Robert, Elizabeth, Henry and George. This "proves" that he married for a second time, and to a Mary. However, it implies a birth date of 1733 which is not compatible with the five (or six) children ascribed to her in the WHG and PG family trees, the first (William Broughton Gt) born when she would be 52 and the last (Elizabeth Broughton Gt) when she would have been 65 or so. Thus, whether she was Mary Handford or another Mary, it does not look as if she had these children... The second possible source of doubt is that William already had had a William, Robert and Ann by Ann Binford. Did he then go on to have another William, Robert and Ann with his second wife Mary? Now some of the trees on Ancestry.com have William, born 1764, son of the above William and Ann, married to Mary Handford and parents of Joseph and the others; ie one William married Ann and their son William married Mary and had Joseph. This is plausible. However, on the Peter Ganniclifft 1970 tree this William b. 1764 (Ganniclifft-70) is not married and there is indicated a death date of 1772 but I cannot find the death record. And this William does not appear at all on the WHG tree and thus was not considered at the time in the equation. The birth dates of William Broughton Gt through to Elizabeth Broughton Gt would be entirely consistent with their father being William b. 1764, and all their birth records specify a Mary as mother. But was she Mary Handford or another? Which William married Mary Handford and which married another? Conclusion: Up until now (2019) the tree here on Wikitree has reflected the historical majority (1970s) view and has William (1737) as the father of William Broughton Gt through to Elizabeth Brought Gt including Joseph, rather than his son William (1764). However, I am now persuaded that these children belong to William b. 1764. In addition, I cannot find a plausible birth in the 1730s for Mary Handford but there is one for 1760, and this inclined me to attach Mary Handford to William the younger and have the elder William as married to an Unknown Mary - a change from the previous view. Then (2019) I found a death record for a Mary for 1808, giving her birth date as 1732 (Devon Burials via Find-My-Past), a perfect fit for William's second wife Mary "Unknown"... '''3. William's parents''' The next issue up the line concerns the parentage of William (b 1737) and how it leads thereafter up the line: WHG has William's parents as Robert, baptised at St Thomas 23 April 1713 (Ganniclifft-12) and "Mary" , with the line going up to William born 1676/7 (Ganniclifft-58) and Susanna Trick, then to Robert b. 1634 (Ganniclifft-56) and "?", then to Richard b. 1604 (Ganniclifft-54) and Joan Hunt, and then William Gannycliff, married 1589 (Ganniclifft-48) and Dunes James (or Jakes). WHG also has another Robert, the above Robert's brother, baptised 20 June 1708 at St. Thomas and "buried there on 10 October 1712". On the PG tree there seems to be confusion: two Roberts appear as the sons of William (1676-7) and Susanna but they both die in childhood (one 1708-1712 and the other 1713-1714) and the line stops there. Instead, the Robert he has as the father of William (Ganniclifft-3 from above) and married to Mary (Smallridge) was born 1708 '''OR''' 1713 and is the son not of William b. 1676-7 (Ganniclifft-58, married to Susanna Trick) but William b. 7 October 1666 (Ganniclifft-23) and married to a Mary Monk, with a completely different line going up before the two lines seem to come together. This William (-23) is the son of Thomas b.1634 (-22) and Elizabeth Baker, son of Thomas b. 1575 (-33) and Agnes Segar, son of the (as at 2017) head of the PG tree, William (-34) who died in 1587 and who, if all the assumptions are correct, was also the father of the head of the WHG tree, William (-48) married to Dunes James (Jakes). So clearly there is some uncertainty as to the correct line up the tree - William (1677) and Susanna Trick or William (1666) and Mary Monk. But there are plenty of permutations... who is to say that one William did not marry both? Indeed, on the WHG tree there is a dotted line to an unnamed second wife for William "Ganicliefe" (b. 1676-7), and children also... On the above basis I decided to go with William b. 1666 (-23) and Mary Monk as the parents of Robert (Ganniclifft-12) born 1713 (and to whom I gave a death record for 1767) and put Robert Ganniclifft-68 (1708-1712) as the son of William b.1676-7 (-58) and Susannah Trick. These choices were arbitrary since I did not know on what further evidence the two family trees were based. However, one factor tipped the balance in favour of William and Mary Monk, namely that the PG tree has a Mary the daughter of William and Mary (1704- ) as marrying a Richard Langdon in 1731. This Mary is depicted on the tree as Joseph Langdon Ganniclifft's Great Aunt and provides a possible reason for the name Langdon as his middle name... (now Great Great Aunt after the change described earlier). Then in 2019 I discovered from the actual manuscript (Devon Burials via Find-My-Past) that the Robert buried on 10 October 1712 was IN FACT buried on 10 October 1714 !! This gave the possibility of eliminating some of the ambiguity! So I decided that the Robert b 1713 could now be treated as having died in 1714 as an infant - the script says "son of William Ganniclifft - Carrer" - and ascribe the other dates to the other Robert making him born 1708 and dying in 1767. But which way round? I decided to go with the previous logic and have the line coming down through William and Mary Monk.

Gannicliffe - Joan Varey 1923 - 2006 Memoir

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A Different Perspective… Joan Varey 1983/2004 CONTENTS. PAGE. 1 Early Life. 1923 - 1947 2. Venezuela. 1949 - 1958 3. U.S.A. 1959 - 1961 4. Egypt. 1961 - 1963 5. Holland. 1964 - 1966 6. Ghana. 1968 - 1972 7. Postscript. EARLY LIFE. May 1999 I began writing my "life" in 1983, sixteen years ago, starting - for no particular reason - with our life in Venezuela. One might have been forgiven for thinking that I sprang into life fully grown and married, aged twenty-five. That is not the case. I was born in 1923, at 40 Rydal Street in Liverpool, and my parents were 26 (my Father) and 23 years old (my Mother). Houses were very difficult to come by at that time, and ours was the only house in the street with a bathroom. It was rented from a friend of my aunt's. My Father worked at James Laver's, a commercial stationers and printers, but at heart he was a countryman, who loved gardening and fishing and outdoor pursuits. We lived in what would now be called the inner city, and much house-building was going on on the outskirts of Liverpool. When I came home from a walk in the park one day clutching a handful of grass and saying "pretty flowers", my Father said enough was enough, and set out to buy a house in West Derby, the very fringes of Liverpool - a village in fact. My Mother had very little education, partly owing to ill-health. She left school at thirteen, as she was thought to have TB. Her sister had just died of it. Notwithstanding, she had a wide general knowledge, and I grew up with constant snippets of information on the IRA and women's suffrage. For example, when my Mother could vote for the first time, in 1928, she took me with her and explained why it was important. We moved to West Derby in 1926. Harry was born in April 1927, and the houses on the other side of the road were still being built. I remember on November 11th. 1927, when I was four, hearing the one o'clock gun being fired down at the Pier Head, four miles away, and the ships on the river sounding their foghorns, and all the bricklayers and labourers outside taking off their caps and bowing their heads for the two minutes' silence at 11 o'clock on Armistice Day. Everyone then observed these moments of remembrance as it was only nine years after the end of the War, and every family had lost someone. My parents had thought that there was a school nearby, but it turned out to be a Catholic school, so from the age of five I had to walk one and a half miles to school in a group with the other children from the neighbourhood. No school dinners. You had to take sandwiches and a bottle of milk, which I broke regularly. No school milk, either. I remember that starting, and we drank it through real straws! I went to Lister Drive School, which had a very good scholastic record. Lots of the children every year won scholarships to the Grammar Schools, of which there were a lot in Liverpool. There were three streams for every age group, and there were about fifty children in each class. I know there were that many as I have the class photos to prove it. Imagine teaching fifty five-year-olds to read, and fifty eight-year-olds to knit! - but they did. We had hardly any equipment. Books were handed out, one between two, and we had homework every night from an early age. We learned to write with pen and ink (not a fountain pen) at six - and what a messy operation that could be. Children used to put blobs of blotting paper in the inkwells. We celebrated Empire Day with dances and May queens, and one important part of the ceremony was the whole school being brought to attention to salute the flag, then we had to face left and a stentorian voice of a ten-year-old told us to salute the War Memorial, whereupon we sang "O Valiant Hearts" and half the parents were in tears, including my Mother whose brother had been killed. (I have written about him elsewhere). I was at Lister Drive for six years and I was a very keen type. I played rounders, I swam, I was a House Captain and I won the spelling bee every week but one. I really enjoyed it at Lister Drive. It was a time of great poverty. There was a Church Hall opposite the school and they provided lunch for poor children. They used to come dancing out after lunch with a big piece of currant bread, which was probably their pudding. I used to be so jealous, because my Mother wouldn't buy currant bread. I think it was regarded as common. At Christmas we had to take toys and clothes for the poor children to school and to Church. I had my eye on a faded red blazer with brass buttons under the Tree, and in January a poor child, Jessie Johnson, a currant bread child, appeared in this blazer. Lucky girl! I went to Sunday School at St. James' Church, and to Brownies, then to Guides and later I was married there. When they appealed for toys they said we mustn't take old rubbish, but things we really cared about. I had a toy gramophone and three records which I loved and I took that. My Mother tried to persuade me not to, but that's what the Sunday School Superintendent had said! I also had a lot of antique records which I gave them, which my aunt had given me. They were not cylinders, which the first ones were, but they were one-sided, with Parlophone (or something) engraved on the back. A big toast-master’s voice used to announce the work being played. "This is 'Handel's Water Music' played by the Columbia Orchestra". When the Church announced later which Church's poor children had been so honoured, my Father was horrified to find that it was his own (fairly recent) old Church. The neighbourhood had gone down. I won a Scholarship in 1934 when I was eleven, and off I went to Holly Lodge High School for Girls, about twenty or twenty-five minutes walk from home - and the object of everyone's ambition. The fees were £4-20p per term, more than my Father was earning per week! Good boys' schools were £5-25p. Holly Lodge was a very lady-like school. We had to wear our school hats out of school and wear gloves ("No lady is ever seen without her gloves"). School jogged along. In 1938 I took School Certificate, aged nearly fifteen, and chose to do French, Spanish, English and Latin for Higher School Certificate. I did an exchange with a French boy in 1939, and that was the highspot of my life. I'm surprised that my parents let me go to France as war was obviously imminent. In 1938, at the time of the "crisis", when Germany invaded Czechoslovakia, my Father had kept me off school to help measure people for gasmasks. I was sent to France in August 1939 with my gasmask, much to the interest of my hosts and their friends. When a non-aggression pact was signed between Germany and Russia, Mme. Jossier took me off to the Town Hall, complete with gasmask, to demand them for themselves. No luck. The gendarmes arrived and changed all the light bulbs in the house for blue ones, for a black out, and as soon as the police had gone, they switched them all back again. I was staying in a little town called Avesnes, right in the Maginot Line, close to the Belgian border. One day we heard a rumbling noise and ran out to see. Tanks rolled through the town all day, and very rickety and old they looked, too. I was whisked back home then, to my chagrin, and was evacuated to Denbigh one week later. Our school was taken in by Howell's School, where Jan spent several years later on. Denbigh was not a very exciting place, then or now. My great-aunt Edith - she of the aquamarine necklace, Andrea - lived in Rhyl, and as I had written all the Christmas cards since I was able to hold a pen, I knew her address and went to visit her, on a borrowed bicycle, with my friend Ifanwy Roberts. Nothing much happened in the war at that time. It was called "the phoney war", but we had the blackout. Rationing started in January 1940, gently at first but it got more severe, and when we went home on leave in 1951, it was still in force! It was very strict and if you lived in a town there was really no opportunity of getting anything extra. Meat was rationed by price - for example, 8p. per person per week! The price of basic foods was subsidised, but in July 1951, this is what you were allowed per person per week: Bacon and ham 3 oz. Cheese 1½ oz. Butter and margarine 7 oz. Cooking fats 2 oz. Sugar 10 oz. Tea 2 oz. Chocolate and sweets 2 oz. Rationing finished in July 1954, when bacon and meat were finally taken off the ration. The school went home by special train for Christmas, as there had been no raids. Then back to Denbigh till February, by which time our school shelters had been built, and since we were not in the inner city area, the school was allowed to come home. The Junior School hall had been taken over by the Auxiliary Fire Service, and these men (several of whom I knew from Church) had a lovely time - for a while! Then in 1940 things really began to happen. First there was the fighting in Norway - lots of frostbitten soldiers - and then there was Dunkirk. The local children's hospital (Alder Hey) was taken over for wounded soldiers and people were asked to go in and help. Lots of them were Frenchmen, so I went in and was useful, and also I was dying to keep my French up. One Saturday morning, on a lovely hot day, I went to the hospital and was told that several of the French soldiers were being repatriated after France had surrendered. They could choose to go home or stay and fight. I, aged seventeen, was shocked that anyone would choose to go home, and this older soldier (28?) said "You are quite right, but you are very young. My wife is expecting a baby and I must go back to France". There was a shortage of soldiers to take two of these men to Lime Street Station to get the train to London, so there was I in my school blazer escorting these men to the station. As we were leaving the hospital, my chap, Roger, said to the guard at the gate "Je garde un très bon souvenir de cet hôpital", whereupon the soldier went through his pockets and produced sixpence, thinking he was asking for a souvenir. We went on the tram to the station, to the RTO (the Rail Transport Officer) who must have been a bit surprised to see me producing their travel warrants. There wasn't a train for hours, so I arranged for them to leave their kit in the office, and took them to my father's office. I think Dad must have been surprised too, but he took us all to the Bear's Paw for lunch - the best restaurant in Liverpool at that time. Dad's company printed the menus for them, and the Manager and his wife were French. They were quite emotional with these two men. One was from Dijon and he lashed into the English mustard with gusto! When we were leaving to go back to the station, the two Frenchmen were given a lovely bag of food for the journey, and cigarettes! Well, school dragged on - Higher School Certificate and everything. My mother worked for the censorship and my father was in the Home Guard, both out of the house much of the time, and life was a bit dull. But in 1941, on the basis of my HSC results, I got an Education Grant to go to Liverpool University, on the understanding that I would subsequently train to be a teacher. Going up to University was absolutely wonderful - so liberating. I used to feel a sense of excitement as the tram approached my stop. I had a ten-minute walk before I took the tram, then half-an-hour on the tram, then a long walk after that! Several of my friends from school were already up, in their second year, and they took Isabel and me round the Union. It was an eye-opener to me. My parents were married in 1922, and by 1941 all their furniture etc. was worn out and shabby and as furniture was rationed to newly-weds only, they couldn't replace anything. The Union had been built in 1938 and all the public rooms were furnished with gorgeous pale grey leather settees. The library had all the most up-to-date novels. There was a Ladies' Lounge with copies of Vogue and other posh magazines - nothing down-market at all. There were several halls for dances and meetings and one of them was decorated like an Egyptian temple, with columns like lotus flowers, closed ones, and painted in coral, turquoise, gold and black. On the top floor was the Round Lounge, exclusively for courting couples. (Now there's an old-fashioned phrase for you!) Although it was round, no-one really looked at anyone else. I don't think any single voyeur would have been tolerated! Every half-hour or so, Turner, the steward, would come in and shout "All feet on the floor!" The cloakrooms were luxurious, with very flatteringly lit mirrors - in the Ladies' anyway - and you'd see the gorgeous girls doing their hair and faces - not me; my hair never got untidy, and I didn't wear make-up. That, of course, was before lectures started, when we were all still impressionable. After a while it was all old hat. Believe me, the Victoria Building, where we had lectures was not like that. It was all Victorian Gothic. Inside it was padded with sandbags in case of air raids and the windows were all criss-crossed with Sellotape. You could hardly see in the hall or on the stairs. It really was a Red Brick University - the phrase was coined by our Spanish Professor, Edgar Allison Peers, who wrote the book Red Brick University under the rather manly nom-de-plume "Bruce Truscot". He made all his students fill in questionnaires about their family circumstances. Somehow I can't see present-day students being so biddable. Life was very formal, both as to dress and address. Jim was Mr. Varey for quite a while and I was Miss Gannicliffe. Needless to say, the most important thing that happened within the first few minutes was that I met Jim. Term started on September 23rd. and we started talking right away. We've never stopped. Jim even went to dancing lessons. It would have been a good idea if I had gone too, but he went with Bob Pain. In the vacs we went hostelling in North Wales and the Lake District, - and were no longer Mr. Varey and Miss Gannicliffe. Most of the men were in their first year as Arts students, and had to go into the Forces when they were called up. Medicals and Engineers were reserved until they took their degrees, when they too had either to join the RAMC (Royal Army Medical Corps) or were directed into reserved occupations. There was no freedom of choice. Isabel's brother was a civil engineer, and his three year course was shortened to two years and one term, whereupon he was sent to Anglesey in 1942, and spent the rest of the war building roads and bridges, with the assistance of Italian prisoners of war (who were very good at it and probably knew more about it that he did!) All the men (boys!) had to be in the Training Corps, either for the Army or the Air Force, and they trained once a week. One chap I knew was Irish and very poor, so he wore his uniform whenever it was cold. The girls had to do lectures on Home Nursing, First Aid and Social Services - like the CAB - and then we had to do voluntary work which was often a bit harrowing. I made beds at a services hostel, where one of the volunteers found a gun under the pillow. Then I worked for the Soldiers', Sailors' and Airmen's Families Association, filing. Then I helped Nan in the Youth Hostel at Llanrwst, for years. I loved that, although it wore me out. I wrote to Jim every other day. He went into the Army on 1st. October 1942. He was helping at a Forestry Camp organised by his old school when his calling-up papers arrived in August 1942. His mother let me know, but refused to let Jim know! I sent him a telegram, and he came home right away, so I was in everybody's black books (except Jim's!). Jim came home on leave for Christmas, and left for India on 4th. January 1943. I didn't see him again until February 1945, for two months compassionate leave, as his mother had just died. Back to Greece he went, and then I didn't see him again till November, when he got early release from the Army - chiefly owing to my going to the University in the vac and talking to the Assistant Registrar, who sent his application in. No-one else got out that promptly, and he was able to go back to the University into his second year. Jim had had a very sad year. His brother Philip was killed just after D-Day in 1944. He was only twenty-one and married. His mother was ill and died in January 1945. Having been bombed out of their house in 1941, they were living in a rented house in Calderstones Road. The war was obviously drawing to close, so the owners of the house went to the Rent Tribunal - yes, even then we had all sorts of bureaucracy and red tape, but very necessary because of profiteers - and asked to have Jim's father and Sheila moved out of the house so that their daughter and husband (a soldier) could live in it. What they really wanted to do (and did) was to sell the house as prices were sky-high, as nothing was built during the whole of the war. Poor Mr. Varey; he'd lost his wife and son and was ill, and he had to find somewhere to live. That's where Edith came on the scene. Mr. Varey and Sheila moved in with her. Soon afterwards, in November 1945, Jim was demobilised, and came to live in our house. I was teaching in Shrewsbury at the time, but not for long - see my account of my father's capabilities! I got my job in Shrewsbury in 1945, and I lived with a nice old couple called Mr. and Mrs. Alldritt. In November I went home for lunch, and there was Mrs. Alldritt, plump and blonde and deaf, all twittery and giggly, and I didn't know why until I saw Jim's gloves on the hall table! Wasn't that wonderful? He went back to the University and I gave in my notice at school, to the great displeasure of the Headmaster. I don't know why, as the two language masters I was replacing had both re-appeared and had to sit in the staffroom twiddling their thumbs in frustration. I had no job to go to, but my father - the original networker - telephoned my old Headmistress and said "I know all you Headmistresses are in cahoots. How about a job for Joan ?" Well, at that point, a friend of mine, a Cambridge graduate, had suddenly had to leave Aigburth Vale High School, suffering from TB, and I just walked into her job. I was there for three years. Once I was back in Liverpool, we decided to get married as soon as we could find somewhere to live. Jim's father and Sheila were living in digs after his mother died, so Jim came to live in Alfriston Road with us. We asked everyone we knew to help us find a flat, as there was a terrible housing shortage after the bombing, and no building going on because of the war. However, with our luck, we got three on one day. Two were awful, but one was fine, and we went to look at it. It was Jim's twenty-second birthday, so it was dark at about four o'clock. The house we looked at had had emergency bomb damage repairs, so half of the sash windows were opaque. Everything was in short supply. One room had an electric light bulb in it, covered with paint, so we could hardly see it. The other rooms we looked at by the light of the owner's matches! It was four rooms (plus a shared bathroom) at the top of a house - attics in fact - and only twenty minutes walk from Aigburth Vale! Also, it was only £1-62 per week, including electricity and the use of a shed for our bicycles. We jumped at it, and off we went home in the fog! We could hardly find our way to the bus stop. When we were on the bus, a man walking along the pavement kept passing us , and we kept passing him. I remember it well because he was carrying a candle! When we got home we were both looking very awe-struck as we thought "We've got to get married now". My father had just had a few teeth out and was sitting by the fire feeling very sorry for himself. My mother had just had a (highly alcoholic) New Year's drink with a friend. She came in and started to laugh and couldn't stop because she thought we all looked so funny. My mother didn't drink and was very sympathetic by nature, and she was so appalled at her behaviour that I don't think she ever had a drink again. She certainly didn't drink our health at our wedding. After that we had to try to get things together. Anything you could embroider, we had. But useful things , we didn't have. We had our names down in all sorts of shops - for a mangle, a sewing machine, an electric iron, carpets - oh carpets! Jim badgered the man in Waring and Gillow so much that I couldn't go with him to the shop. (Just as, later, I couldn't bear to be with him while he haggled over artifacts in Egypt and Ghana.) Eventually we had the flat furnished beautifully. We were married on 13th. April 1946 at St. James’ Church, West Derby. Sheila and Tessy Ryan were my Bridesmaids and Johnny Lowe was the Best Man. We spent our honeymoon in Peebles, and it was jolly cold and austere. As I have mentioned, the rent of our flat, unfurnished, was £1-62 per week, including electricity. Many of our married friends lived in furnished flats at over £3-00 per week, as they had no money for furniture. I started working at a salary of £306 per year and Jim had a Further Education and Training Scheme grant as well as a scholarship, so we were quite well off. Jim went to Spain and Portugal with a University group, and I went to Dinard for two weeks once with Tessy when he was in Portugal. ………………………….. I am conscious that I haven't said much about my brother Harry. Everyone in Jim's age group had wanted to join the Air Force when they were called up, but by the time the war had caught up with Harry, people weren't really needed for the Air Force, and his friends all wanted to be in the Navy. Harry volunteered, and joined up just before VE Day. He was barely eighteen. He was on an Aircraft Carrier, the Glorious, and set sail for the Far East, but just as they were about to fight the Japanese, the war ended - VJ Day - and he went to Australia. I think the Germans and the Japanese must have seen Harry coming and decided to throw in the towel. When he was demobilised in late 1946, broken-hearted at having to leave his Australian girlfriend, he went to work for my father in James Laver's, and remained there all his life. His two sons worked there too, until Clinton decided he wanted to fly, and became a pilot in the States. Harry was nearly four years younger than I was, so we really didn't have much in common when young. Separations didn't help. He was in the Navy when we got married, and we were in Venezuela when he got married. However, we caught up later in life, when the age difference mattered less. VENEZUELA I was teaching French and Spanish at this time at Aigburth Vale High School for Girls in Liverpool. I had been there since January 1946 when Jim came out of the Army and went back to University to complete his Spanish course. In March 1948, he had applied to Shell, in London, for a job, as he was taking his finals that summer. He was called for an interview in London at half-term, as luck would have it, so I was able to go to London with him for a long week-end. It was so exciting. We went to Liberty's, just to have a look at it, and rang the bell for the lift. The lift opened and there stood the history mistress from school! She was so surprised that she forgot to get out. I had only seen her the day before in school! Jim had a horrid interview with a man called Mr. Lovely. I suppose the man was doing his job by pointing out the disadvantages of living in Venezuela. He said, "How will your wife like living in a country where they speak Spanish?" and Jim said "She teaches Spanish". Finally, after all sorts of difficulties of life in Venezuela had been pointed out to him, Jim said "Well, is everybody terribly unhappy out there?" and of course Mr. Lovely had to admit they weren't. He was probably jealous as hell because he wasn't going. Sam Booth also interviewed him, and we still see him and his wife Muriel. We went back to Liverpool, and one day when Jim had one of his final examinations, a letter arrived marked Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Company on the back. I ran down the stairs and picked up the mail and thought “Oh, I'd better read this in case it's bad news, in which case I won't give to him before his exam”. In fact, what it actually said was “In view of your forthcoming departure for Venezuela, will you please go and have a medical exam with Dr. Duncan in Mossley Hill”. Fancy being accepted for a job that way! So I let him have the letter. Later in the day, by the next post, came a huge envelope, full of contracts, insurance forms, clothing lists etc. His Group Basic Salary , for pension purposes, was £700 per year, though in Venezuela you got much more than that (U.S.$ 545 per month) owing to the astronomical cost of living. Even the £700 was a huge salary, more than twice what I was getting as a teacher. So I went out and bought a lovely white hat with flowers on it. I'd always promised myself I would when Jim got a job! I even went to school in it. On the day Jim had his medical, we went and had lunch in the Avenue Restaurant, a favourite of ours. There were only two prices for meals - 5 shillings and 3s. 6p. This was owing to the food shortages which still applied in 1948. We still had rationing. I was wearing a burgundy and white candy-striped skirt and I was so hot that I pulled it up right above my knees underneath the tablecloth. I was sitting there thinking "How on earth am I going to manage to live in the heat of Venezuela, about 7 degrees from the equator, when I can't stand the heat here?" What I didn't realise was that it is very humid in a place like Liverpool on a hot day. Well, Jim had got his job and then we had to deal with the nuts and bolts of the appointment. Clothing was still rationed and Jim had a huge recommended clothing list. Needless to say, we rather regarded this as absolutely essential, like a school uniform list, and we had to set to work to get the stuff together. You could never get really suitable tropical clothes in England anyway, and we hardly had any coupons. My father had a friend who bought mill-ends of cloth and sold them to other mills as cleaning rags. A sort of superior rag-and-bone-man called Bill Jones. He had lovely white cotton fabric in 34" squares - a bit small for most purposes, but perfect for underpants. Jim had been in the Indian Army and his underpants had been tailored for him, so I took one pair to pieces and made 18 pairs! They were like Arrow boxer shorts, I was to find out later. Also he was supposed to have a towelling bathrobe. Once again, the white towelling from Bill Jones was in 34" squares, so I made Jim a towelling bathrobe and then dyed it green. Catastrophe: we should have left it white. Passages anywhere in the world were very difficult to get then, so people were sent out by tanker to Venezuela, via Curaçao. So all my sewing really could have been saved, since Curaçao had all the American clothes for the tropics, duty-free. That was where all the young men bought their Palm-Beach suits - pale pink, pale blue, painted ties with nudes on them, and all their khaki work clothes. Of course, when one is very young and leaving England, one is very much afraid of not having enough money for Curaçao, particularly since there were currency restrictions at that time in England, but then the Company advanced salary to all the young chaps in Curaçao before they flew on to Maracaibo. On my clothes list it said "Numerous belts". I never did understand that, and Lydia Williams, who went out as teacher, accidentally got the nurses' list and finished up with a lot of white stockings. Jim got his degree at the beginning of July, and his fellow students were green with envy as his job was so much better paid than the ones they had got and sounded so much more interesting. He was going out to Venezuela as a Landman. Jim didn't really know what it meant, but he soon found out. One of the other jobs he was offered was as Camp Boss (!) which sounded wonderful for a first job, but it only meant seeing that the houses for the staff were properly maintained and furnished etc. The first time Jim had met my parents in 1941, in the middle of the war, when no-one could go abroad at all, my Mother had asked him what he wanted to do in life. Jim, aged 17, said "Oh, I'm going to get a job in South America", which is exactly what he did, although it was a complete conversation stopper at the time! He knew a chap at University, an engineer called Bill Williams, who was a bit older than us, who told him more or less how to go about applying for jobs. Jim had to give references, and one of his referees was the Ecuadorian Consul in Liverpool, who wrote "In my opinion, Mr. J.F. Varey is eminently suitable for any job you have in mind". Needless to say, Jim couldn't send that off, so he wrote one himself, which Dr. Sanchez then signed. We had a flat at the time - very lucky to get it, too; there was an awful housing shortage - and we had furnished it with great effort. Furniture, sheets and curtain material were all rationed, so it was with a real sense of burning our boats that we disposed of the contents. Jim had come out of the Army with £600, an astronomical sum then, and to get rid of our furniture for very small sums really hurt. Everything was hard to get, so we sold to friends and relatives, and really had to charge just nominal amounts. The worst for me was selling Jim's bicycle. I had bought it for his 21st. birthday, and I had saved the money for it (about £12) by teaching an absolutely poisonous spoilt child. On August 19th. 1948, Jim, all packed up and everything, set off with me for Swansea. I had a lovely pale blue Wetherall battle-dress top and skirt. I'd never been able to afford Wetherall before. Jim signed on the tanker as a supernumerary, which means you're a member of the crew, but you are not paid. There were a couple of other chaps going out too. Then the Captain said that although they had already passed immigration and all that, as they were not sailing until the next day, we could go ashore again. We went to see Carroll Levis' Discoveries. The next day, Sunday, Jim sailed away and I went back on the train to Liverpool. I couldn't bear to spend a single night in our flat, but went back to live with my parents for nine months. Jim and I had a separation of practically three years during the war, when we were engaged, and now we had to wait for a house. Jim went first of all to live in an oilfield called Lagunillas, with a whole lot of wild bachelors. (Well, a few of them were bachelors). It was like being let out of school. There were so many restrictions at that time in England - alcohol was very hard to get and the weather was so frightful, we'd had a shocking winter - and suddenly all these men had a second flowering. Well, I shouldn't say that. Jim, for example, was only 24. They had all had a tough time in the war, so maybe it was their first bit of fun. According to all reports, the parties were very wild. Midnight swimming parties, practical jokes and all that. The Company sent out about twelve schoolteachers, all young and pretty. They lasted about six months and then they were all married. The Company sent out another lot: same thing happened. They sent out a third lot, older and plainer, purposely. The same thing happened, so with the fourth lot they decided to be kind to the bachelors and sent young and pretty ones again. Yes, you guessed it! Meanwhile, back at the ranch, or rather in my Liverpool suburb, I was busily sewing, and I got the most marvellous presents of sugar and nylon stockings from Jim, from the States. I have never had such marvellous stockings, unobtainable in England. By Whit, I had bought some black market clothing coupons in order to have some clothes to take with me when I eventually went to Venezuela, as there was nothing ready-made there, - when overnight they abolished clothes rationing, and I had thrown away about two pounds! I was very glad though. It was so nice to be able to go out and buy about six cotton dresses at a time. The New Look had just come in, from Christian Dior, very long dresses. When we eventually left to come home on leave more than two and a half years later, in the autumn, it was funny to see our fellow passengers disembarking in New York in Utility suits, very short with square shoulders, which had been the wartime fashion. At least my coat, unworn in all the time in Venezuela, was a little bit more up-to-date than that! While Jim was in Venezuela and I was still at home, there was a revolution in Venezuela and , as is the way with revolutions, it made the front page of the Daily Telegraph, but caused scarcely a ripple in Venezuela. Jim had to work as a courier between the Camps, using the back trails, and all Camp services were stopped for a while. Every now and again, I was to learn, there would be a political scare, during which a curfew had to be observed, even in the daytime, and certain known political activists were clapped in gaol for a few days, including a very mild man called Renato who drove the shopping bus into Maracaibo, and did the foreign ladies' shopping (ours). During one of these curfews, a police car drove round our Camp with a chap inside waving a machete and shouting "Adentro, adentro!", meaning stay inside, and he was very peeved by the parrot who lived next door to us, shouting "Afuera, afuera!" - outside! - which is what it shouted when it wanted to go out. I stopped teaching at the end of the Christmas Term, in December 1948, as I had to give a term's notice and I thought that I might have to leave at the drop of a hat. So much for that idea ... Eventually, on May 17th. 1949, after Jim had threatened to resign, the marvellous news came that I could leave on a banana boat in May. Everybody saw me off. Tessie, Harry and Dilys, and my friend Bash - and I have photographs to prove it. There is also one of me at the foot of the gangplank of the s.s. Corrales looking very proprietorial and pleased with myself! Actually, it was the sort of boat you stepped down into, it was so small. It took twelve passengers, some of whom were going back to Costa Rica and worked for the United Fruit Company. One very sad family was German. It was composed of a boy of eleven, his mother, widowed in the war, and her parents, out to start a new life in Colombia. This was very soon after the war and things were bad in Germany. None of the other passengers spoke to them, as we had all had a very tough war. Still, they were a third of the passengers. I had never been on a long sea journey before. Of course, I was sick. It was a very small boat, but as it was so small one could see far more of the sea than from the Queen Mary - flying fish, porpoises, Portuguese Men o' War. Believe me, you could practically trail your fingers in the water! And was it hot! No air-conditioning. One of the passengers had been in the Merchant Navy and he showed another girl and me how to fasten our doors open and have a curtain swinging over the door. The other girl was Margaret Woodman, going out from Chester to get married in Maracaibo. Her parents and my parents came to see us off from Southampton, and we went to see Judy Garland in ''Easter Parade" the night before we left. The ship took nearly three weeks, and we arrived at Cristóbal in Panamá in the evening. There was Jim and Margaret's fiancé waiting on the quay! It was so exciting. From being a ten-stone weakling, or whatever the advertisement said, there was Jim looking like a teddy bear in a pale brown suit, he had gone so much fatter, and with little curranty eyes. You see, life was so different from austerity Britain, where I used to cook five potatoes each every day for dinner, plus the ration of meat, of course. Also, it was so hot that we all drank a lot, and as we were all quite young and had missed out on the fizzy drinks stage because of the war, we all drank loads of Coca Cola. I stepped demurely off the boat clutching a yellow cardigan. "What on earth's that for?" Jim asked. He might well. It was about 90 degrees. I was wearing a very ordinary black and white dress. You see, I was so busy cutting a dash on this boat that I never thought about making an impression on landing, so all my really lovely dresses were dirty! We went to the Washington Hotel in Cristóbal. I thought it was absolutely marvellous - but no air-conditioning, on looking back. The Canal Zone was completely American. I was so impressed by the food and the black waiters. It was the first time in my life that I hadn't been able to finish what was on my plate - Chicken Maryland. The next day I had an omelette, and couldn't finish that either. I said to Jim, "I know its real egg, but " and he said "Shut up. No-one here knows anything about dried eggs", which is what I had been used to in England. They made up like a yellow duster. In Panamá in June it pours with rain in the afternoons, but we still managed to do a little shopping - Maidenform bras, American magazines, white underwear instead of English pink. I always remember the washing strung across the streets, rather high up. That was pink alright. (I mean in Panamá, not in England). I had never seen a palm tree before, nor a screen on the windows to keep the insects out, nor a shower. After about two days we flew on a Pan Am clipper from Colón to Maracaibo, having crossed the Isthmus by train. The ship had to discharge all its passengers at one end of the Canal - the Atlantic side - and pick them up at the other end - the Pacific end - after they had made the journey by train, so as not to pay extra Canal dues as a passenger ship. The train journey was very interesting, following the line of flooded valleys where the Canal had been cut. There were dead trees sticking up out of the water, and I remember saying "Oh, how dangerous for people skating when it freezes". As you can see, it took me a while to accustom myself to tropical conditions! I'm afraid this account is going to be all my impressions, yet I was only there because Jim was there. I can't tell much about his job and his life in the office, needless to say. Well anyway, Jim went out as a Landman to Lagunillas, and his boss was John Walters, still a friend of ours. His job was driving about the country, buying rights of way and properties from local landowners, for the Company to explore. The name of the Department was the Land and Legal Department, so in the course of several years Jim became an expert on Venezuelan land law. Most of the young men who came out to Venezuela then did not speak any Spanish for six months or so, but everybody learned enough for their jobs and ordinary life in about that length of time. For the wives it was just kitchen Spanish, of course, and they couldn't have written anything more than a shopping list. Nevertheless, everybody managed very well, disproving the belief that English people can't learn foreign languages. Jim, however, was useful right from the start. We both had to drop pretty rapidly the Castilian accent we had both been taught, and we also had to forget a good deal of our vocabulary and learn other words. This is true even travelling from one Latin American country to another. I had never cared about Spanish before. I had always been at pains to keep my French on top - but that soon went. Well, we arrived in Maracaibo in June, at the very old and tatty airport - a hut - and there was a dead insect on the floor, as big as a mouse! I was horrified. A lot later, Jim told me he had never seen one of those either. As I remember it, Rafael (the Land and Legal company clerk) came to collect us in Jim's pick-up - a little green truck. The roads in places were deep hot sand. I say hot, because if ever you got stuck in it and you hopped out, it burnt your feet! The countryside was covered with acres of cactus in some parts, and low scrub with very small dusty leaves and long thorns. Somehow I had always thought of tropical landscapes as being colourful, but this was just dusty green. Coming in by plane, it looked like a dusty green puffy eiderdown - Greenmantle. Jim had pointed out to me from the plane little sand tracks with dual wheel marks here and there in the landscape. He said these were caminos. To me, "camino real" meant the King's Highway, but these were just bridle paths. Jim's life was spent at this time driving along these paths, negotiating with people, having lunch at "botiquines" and being out in the sun all day. A "botiquín" was a hut with a roof extending towards the front to give a bit of shade, like a verandah, and they sold drinks and tins of food, and always had a big juke-box. In front of the botiquín there was usually a tall thin chap, with a straw hat on, his eyes closed, his hand on his stomach, dreamily dancing to the music - Latin American, of course. We arrived at La Concepción, where we were going to live for the next two years and three months, in three different houses. The camp was a square cut out of the monte - the jungle - surrounded by high, diamond-patterned fences, with lights. We drove through a gate, over a cattle grid, past the Club (no pool then, too soon) to the little junior staff house we were going to live in. No wonder one of the Dutch wives hated it. She said it reminded her of a Japanese concentration camp - and she should know. All the houses were white with corrugated asbestos roofs, and the window frames and doors were green, inside and out. Really it was all very institutional looking, but I didn't mind, as this was my very first house. We had had a flat before. The rooms in junior staff houses had huge metal hooks, one in each corner of the room, high up. This was because Venezuelans slept in hammocks. You could hook three in one corner and spread them out to the other corners! They even had double hammocks. These houses were not really intended for senior staff. If you put two single beds in the room, and a dressing table, you could hardly get out. The dressing table reached the end of the beds. In the fields (i.e. not in Maracaibo) they provided curtain rails, but not in Maracaibo. In fact, in the fields a man used to come round and replace your light bulbs when one went out! The house had a big screened-in porch where people usually sat for coolness. Then there was quite a big dining room (big for the size of the house), two bedrooms, a bathroom with a shower, but no bath, and a wash-place outside. It was very basic, I now realise. Outside we had a big corrugated asbestos bleach board at the back of the house, and a corrugated iron roof with clothes lines underneath it. The laundress used to wash the clothes, spread them on the bleach board, and dash water over them periodically all morning. The clothes used to dry in a flash. One was allowed to eat in the mess-hall the first few days, but Jim had got a big stock of food in from the Commissary. The Commissary was the Company shop, which was a little building inside the Camp to begin with, but later moved into a bigger place on the other side of the main road. Little boys with home-made barrows would take your shopping home for you, while you walked alongside. None of the wives had cars in those days - only Margaret Faulkner, who had an older husband! We eventually had one meal in the mess-hall, and there I met Eric Nuttall, whose father-in-law worked in South Castle Street, and knew my father. I had been asked to look out for him, and there he was, the first person I met! After about a week, Jim asked me when we were going to eat all the lovely tins of things he had bought before my arrival, but I was so used to keeping things for a special occasion that I said "Oh, we can't eat that food - someone might come for a meal" Whereupon, Jim said "Then we'll buy some more!" It took a while to get used to such lavishness! I must say that having been disappointed in the natural vegetation of Venezuela, I was thrilled with plants that grew in people's gardens (not mine). Many of the women were enthusiastic gardeners, but we had no fences and flocks of goats would descend and eat the lot. Dutch women usually grew their plants in pots, so that when they moved house (and we all moved a lot) they could take them all with them. There were lots of lovely flowering shrubs, frangipani, hibiscus, bougainvillea, crêpe myrtle, alamanda, ixora and oleander. The smaller plants were plumbago, amaryllis and cannas. Morning glory, cypress vine and a creeper called bellísima with little pink bells all over it grew everywhere. Many people grew varieties of cacti in the garden and mother-in-law's tongues. Papaya, called lechoza, grew everywhere, but it was a long time before I could eat it - too tropical altogether - but they were enormous in Venezuela. There were all sorts of bananas - plantains were one of the staple foods, and huge pineapples and green oranges were very cheap. Somehow, though, the fruit never looked commercially acceptable, not pretty enough. I had had a view of American food and products from magazines, and at that time they made English women green with envy. The only plastic we had seen by then were tablecloths, macs, and inflammable ashtrays - well, a little more than that perhaps. And we had no electrical appliances. The house had a huge frig. supplied by the Company, but Jim had bought me a lovely feather-weight sewing machine, a mixmaster (with a light!), an electric toaster, General Electric, which I am now sorry I ditched in 1972, when we went back to the States to live for the second time, and a set of four coloured basins, which are still with me after all their world travel. All the houses, big and small, had the same issue of furniture. That was one of the things that made life difficult. It really was wall-to-wall large furniture and all of us who lived in junior staff houses had barked shins through moving it about in order to clean. It was large and heavy and was dark oak (or perhaps not oak; it was too smooth - beech, perhaps) or light in colour. The easy chairs and the settee had loose cushions on rubber-covered springs, to discourage insects in the upholstery. Some of the chairs had magazine racks attached to the sides, but they were God's gift to homeless cockroaches. The furniture had wooden arms, and many were the glasses that were broken through people balancing them on slightly wet wooden arms. We were then all introduced to coasters, something we had never seen in England, to stand our glasses on. The house I had really belonged to the Chief Engineer, John Pryde, a widower, who had gone home to England for four months on leave. In fact he had gone to Dunbabin Road, in Childwall, in Liverpool, a couple of miles from my home, which didn't strike me as a coincidence at all, as everyone knows (or did know) that Liverpool is the hub of the universe. This house had two very special features - maybe three. It had no cockroaches, as John Pryde didn't eat there, being a bachelor; it had marvellously polished floors - nobody in the house much; and best of all, it had a rather wonky air-conditioner - a beautiful, temperamental machine, made of solid walnut. It was a Philco. Well, I managed to keep the house cockroach-free, as I had a phobia about them at the time, and we went out jolly quickly and bought a floor polisher, as John Pryde was coming back to that house. And we enjoyed the air-conditioner. There were only two others in the Camp, both belonging to really old Shell-men. One was the Superintendent of the Camp. That means the boss. Jim had the big frig. full of soft drinks and it took me a long time to remember to replace any cokes I drank. The kitchen was so small that the frig. was kept in the spare bedroom, along with the crates of drink. I arrived on a Friday night, and the next morning the teachers came to visit me - Rita O'Callaghan and Joyce Theakston, with what they imagined would be a pleasant surprise. In a fit of euphoria after a lunch-time party on a distant farm, Jim had come home with a little untrained puppy. The teachers had been looking after it until I came, and now they had come to present me with it. I was absolutely horrified. Venezuela was sufficient of a shock. There was so much to learn, and really find out about life there. Also, there were these marvellous floors. The first morning, I kept the puppy outside most of the time, hoping to train it, and it howled miserably, making me feel cruel. Even so it managed to make twenty-seven puddles on these shining red floors. I was a bit short of things to wipe it up with, too. Jim worked on a Saturday morning, and on Sunday he took me into Maracaibo to the Club, where there was a pool, and there we met a group of teachers from Las Delicias School in Maracaibo. Among them was a very young one who knew Jim, called Mary Heal. Jim had a sudden flash of inspiration, and said "Oh Mary! I was out in the monte the other day, and there I saw the very thing for you. I've got it at home". "What is it?" she said. "A lovely little puppy!", said Jim, whereupon she clapped her hands and squealed! She got it a few days later. It grew up into a very funny looking dog, with long hind legs, and when she went on leave, she left it with some other friends in Maracaibo, who put up with it under protest, until the day before she was due back, when it walked out and got run over. Ah well! In 1949 very few people had air-conditioning and all the children had dreadful prickly heat. Lots of the children in the Maracaibo pool were Dutch, and they looked really weird as they were bright pink with prickly heat and had green hair from the chlorine in the water in the pool. After a while the Company used a different chemical, and so their hair was no longer green. I had no children at the time, and believe me I looked long and hard at these children and thought maybe I wouldn't bother. It was very interesting being thrown into a community of people, knowing only Jim. We were all in the same boat, of course. The people who came out three months before you did were real old stagers. People were able to put on such airs for a time, until someone would remember that their Auntie Fanny lived in that village etc. People changed their names - women, that is. One of our friends who later worked in the American Consulate, in the visa section, was able to tell us that Dixie, Sally, Edwina and Nicky were not their real names - and told us what they really were. One girl had an article written about her in "Woman" magazine, about her forthcoming departure for Venezuela. Of course, "Woman" got there before she did, and everyone was waiting to meet someone called Kay Lindo, which of course sounded like que lindo! Somebody else's mother sent out a long newspaper article headed "The £28 a week schoolteacher!", and yet another girl, a secretary, had been a beauty queen in an obscure part of Wales. People didn't realise what a very enclosed society we were, even though there were a lot of us. People who particularly didn't realise this were the ones who had shipboard romances on the way out, under the cold eyes of someone who might turn out to be their next-door neighbour. There were some quite colourful characters about, but most of them were the men, of various nationalities, who had just come through a war. Needless to say, there were no Germans amongst them, although later in Maracaibo there were all sorts of Germans and displaced persons who had got out of Europe to start a new life. We became aware of these people much later on, when the Maracaibo Club - Bella Vista - stopped being a Shell club, and was open to anyone. The first morning I was in La Concepción Jim went to the office, and a girl who lived opposite called Helen van der Laan came to ask me to go to coffee with her neighbour Noella Riddell. The men had to be in the office by 6.30 a.m., then most of them came back for breakfast at 8.30 a.m. Not Jim though, as his job took him out of the Camp and far away. He drove practically as much as a long-distance lorry driver. Coffee parties therefore were at 9.30 a.m. A big Dutch woman was there too, called Henny van Zeil. All Dutch women's names sounded funny to me then, and old-fashioned. Helen van der Laan was English, married to a Dutchman, and determined to be Dutch. She had a big Alsatian, and could be heard at all hours calling "Komm hier, Flexy", which somehow didn't sound like "Come here". Noella Riddell was a very beautiful, short-sighted girl with lovely red hair and big blue eyes. She was the first person I ever knew who wore contact lenses. In England they were so expensive that no-one used them - and they were probably unobtainable. On the day we went there for coffee, her husband had just presented her with an electric corn-popper. I thought popcorn was very exotic and the height of sophistication. I soon grew out of that, though. Years went by - thirty, to be exact -and we had a telephone call in Chile. It was the Riddells. Her husband was a Chilean, and as they were passing through, they came to dinner. She was still able to surprise me though. We had stood up, ready to go into the dining room, where we were about to eat roast pork, when Noella said, "You do know we're vegetarians, don't you?" When I went home from the coffee party, I found I hadn't got a door key. No-one had given me one and masterful Helen had slammed the door. However, Henny, the powerful Dutch woman, just gave the shutters a bash and they sprang open and I got in through the window! At that time, all newcomers were in these small junior staff houses. As time went on, and they became available, we were gradually promoted to senior staff houses, which were much bigger and had their own maid's room. There were no junior staff houses in Maracaibo, so wives who went there first felt vastly superior, as they started off in big houses, and then were very deflated when transferred to the fields and had to join the queue for a decent house. On the whole, it was a very egalitarian society. Everyone was paid so very much that there was really no difference in our standard of living. That was limited by what was available. There was very little feeling of deference to people higher up in the Company, which seems to have been more obvious in places that were all Dutch or wholly English - where the Management had the front row reserved for them at the movie and all that. We had none of that, maybe because of the presence of gorilla-like American drillers. Rivalry and jockeying for position was limited among the wives by how many clothes lines you had, and who had just had new cushion covers. If you sat back and didn't make a fuss, you got your new covers in due course anyway. To begin with, everyone told me how lucky I was to have a house with an air conditioner, and it was some time before I realised there was no luck about it. We had bought it. When I had left England, Jim had not really told me what to bring out with me. You could buy very good things, purchase-tax free, if it was for export - Wedgwood china etc. - but at that time it seemed out of our price range, and what we had was very ordinary. Also, the information we bad received was really not correct. Twenty-five books, it said, so I gave all our books away and just kept twenty-five. Years later (about 25 or so) my friend Isabel returned all the works of Spanish literature that I had passed on to her, and I must say it was nice to get them back. The first weekend I was in Venezuela we went into Maracaibo. All the shops were closed but we drove around, and Jim introduced me to odd friends - Doug and Joan Dennis, who had looked after him and fed him from time to time, and Vic and Ann Seymour. Vic had gone out with Jim on a tanker, and Ann had arrived just about when I did. She had said she wouldn't come, and Vic had flown home to persuade her. That was unheard of in those days, as it was very difficult and expensive to get passages by air. We visited them in their flat, and she had bought lamps and china at the Botica Nueva. But just then she was deep into the Sears Roebuck Catalogue, and it didn't take five minutes for me to be converted to it too. This was before the days when import duty was sky-high, so we all had a lovely time. My entire heavy baggage consisted of three square boxes not much bigger than tea chests. How times changed! We all kept our boxes under the car-ports beside the house, as people were moved rapidly from one field to another. We got a copy of Sears Roebuck and I simply couldn't believe my eyes. It was like Aladdin's Cave. We ordered sheets and pale grey candlewick bedspreads and cake tins, which I still have, and things I'd never seen before, like mechanical flour sifters and hem-markers, and a fishing rod for my Father's birthday. The stuff used to arrive pretty quickly, too. There were layettes for babies, and if by any chance you had twins, they would send you a second layette free! There was music everywhere in Venezuela. You could always hear juke-boxes, or people playing guitars, or even motor horns programmed to play a popular song. Programmed? What an anachronism. The word wasn't used that way then. There was a song at the time with a very catchy tune called La Múcura, which is a water jug, and a few months later we were in the Andes, without another human being in sight, and we could hear the tune echoing round the mountains, being played on the horn of a big truck. When I first arrived I was full of English energy and decided that I didn't need a maid as the house was about the size of our flat in England. Soon after I arrived, Jim's boss's wife said "You know Venezuela has got to you when you see something on the floor and you don't pick it up!" I have never ever done that. The idea of having a maid seemed rather posh and extravagant, but after a while I got round to it. We could afford it, and actually it was quite hard work to keep a house clean and to cook. We always had a laundress, and we wore our clothes only once. The best maids were from Colombia or from the Andes. Very few of them could read or write, and they had no tradition of service such as there was in the Far East. They could push a wet mop or a pram, and cook their own food, and that was about it. We had a very good maid for a while, Berta, and her beautiful daughter, Argelia, was the laundress. She used to do the ironing, smoking thin black cigars, and I couldn't bear to be in the room with the clothes until the smell of smoke had worn off. I had Tony in Maracaibo Hospital, and I went to Curaçao and bought all his beautiful little embroidered jackets there. I ordered all the equipment from Sears. There was no ante-natal advice - or post-natal either, come to that - and the Hospital was thirty miles away. No-one else in the Camp had a small baby at that time, but I was advised to buy a book called "Infants and Children", and Tony grew and developed page by page, just as the book said! We took him home to England, via New York, dressed in Altona Grow's twins' clothes, and three years later we took Jan and Tony home, again wearing the twins' clothes! Everyone was delighted to see Tony for the first time, aged fifteen months. I stayed at home to have Jan in March 1952, and she had pyloric stenosis! Thank goodness for "Infants and Children". At least I knew what it was, and her operation was a success, but I was so sad that Jim had never seen her perfect, as he was back in Venezuela by then. At the movie when Tony was born, in Venezuela when Jan was born, and in a safari park in Africa when Pippa was born. When did they start this togetherness in childbirth? We had moved to Maracaibo by then, and we lived in Calle Ecuador. All our friends by then had children, and that's when we made our close friends, as we had no family close at hand. We had six happy years in Maracaibo, with holidays in Barbados and the Andes, children's parties, school plays, carnivals and grown-ups' parties too. We all had a wonderful time. The last three years we had a lovely house in the Bella Vista Colony, near the Club and the swimming pool. Then we were transferred to the States. I was very sorry to leave, but everyone else was green with envy, and when we lived in the States all our friends came and visited us as they passed through on their way home on leave. When I left England the Cold War was just beginning. The Berlin airlift was in operation - the Russians had tried to close Berlin off to the West, although the city was divided into Russian, British and American Sectors, so everything was flown in to the Western Sectors. We all thought the war was about to start up again. I remember Avice, with a young baby, expecting Jim (her husband) to be called up and put back into the Navy. The news was dreadful. Off I sailed into the wide blue yonder, to a country that seemed to be asleep. Foreign news was of no interest in Venezuela. The local paper, Panorama, was full of reports of witches being hauled before the courts (no-one ever said that there weren't any witches!), people hitting their mothers with bottles, (propinándole a su anciana madre, autora de sus días, un soberbio botellazo!) road accidents, and people committing suicide by drinking creolina - all very earth-shattering to the people involved, but quite removed from reality for us, the foreigners. One of my friends, Miriam Holdaway, didn't even know the Korean War had taken place until it was over. The Daily Telegraph was too expensive to buy, (that is, the air-mail edition) so the nine years I spent in Venezuela remain in my memory as a period of relaxation and removal from the harsh realities of life in Europe - displaced persons camps, and rationing in England until 1954, and above all, rumours of war. When I look back on the last seven years in Venezuela, I really just see family life. A family of four (sorry, Pippa!) with two picture -book children, and a series of parties and carnivals. Tony was born in Maracaibo, Janice in England. Tony spoke to me on the telephone, aged twenty months and said ''Ha-oo Boddy". I wasn't too pleased at that as I felt rather large, as you may imagine, but not bad for "Hello, Mummy" on the phone. Jan had pyloric stenosis, as mentioned before, and Jim was in Venezuela. He had to go to the hospital to find out what it was. Once the operation was performed, she was fine. In spite of having help in the house, life was exhausting because of the heat - with two small children - but once Jan was about two and a quarter it became much easier. Tony went to the Bella Vista nursery school, which was very nice. The first time we had a carnival they went as an angel and a devil. I noticed that groups did better than couples, so the next carnival they went as a clown and a leopard, with Jacqui Porter and Richard Pollock as a Ring-master. Jacqui wore a tutu and paraded round with a covered hoop and a very unathletic dachshund with a ruff round his neck, pretending he could jump through it! They got second prize. The first prize was a chain-gang with a lacklustre four convicts dragging ballcocks attached by chains to their ankles, being chivvied along by a big guard with a whip - mostly the Grow family. Tony went to Las Delicias School and Jan stayed at home, aged three and a half, determined to cook. She used to make Coca Cola jelly, quite nice, and then I showed her how to make a sponge cake -very small. This was fine until she insisted on branching out on her own and incorporating sweet cigarettes in the mixture! Tony made his name in the Maracaibo Herald as a golly in the Christmas play, and Jan was the star of the Nursery School Nativity Play. He also made his name when we were home on leave (he was four) by looking at my Mother's next door neighbour's Mother (old and wrinkled) and saying to me quietly "Does she speak English?". When I said yes, he roared "Are you the maid?" All sorts of incidents crowd into my mind. I could go on for ever about the children: Tony aged five saying "When we die we'll be history, won't we?", and also "We're like remote control for God, aren't we?" - which caused a Barbadian taxi driver almost to run off the road. On re-reading this, I don't seem to have written much about Tony and Jan's lives. Believe me, they are chronicled in every detail in the letters I wrote to my parents, which we still have, as that was absolutely all I had to write about. Nothing happened, but we enjoyed it. Many of our life-long friends date from Venezuela - the Wetherells, the Walters, Porters, Suttills, Lemons, Bells, and we have happy memories of many more - the Facers, the Spinks, the Holdaways, and the Macartneys - I could go on but I'll stop. I hope Tony and Jan have the happy memories that I have of Venezuela, because from then on life was different - not as settled, and not four of us together, but nevertheless interesting and varied. Just what I had always wanted. U.S.A. We left Venezuela in June 1958 in the usual flurry of despedidas - farewell parties - and I was very sad to go. We had made such good friends there. We took off, first, for Jamaica, where we spent a few days in the Jamaica Inn at Ocho Rios, which was lovely, then a few days in Miami where we visited the Seaquarium. We then went home and stayed with my parents in Wales, until we went to live in a rented house in Ewell. It was very badly built - the original Jerry must have built it. To get out of the house I used to have to put Tony out through a window so that he could push the front door from the outside while I pulled from the inside. Jim missed all the fun. He spent his time first in Holland and Germany, then Libya and Turkey, and then, after Christmas all the Central and South American countries, finishing up in Canada and the U.S.A., while I dealt with a recalcitrant boiler. In May 1959 Tony went to Mostyn House. He was so good, never a backward glance. I felt terrible and when I wrote to him I consciously didn't say how much we were missing him, as I didn't want to upset him. Jim took off for the States to do quite a different sort of job. He found us a house in Darien, Connecticut, an inspired choice of location, and Jan and I followed, arriving there on July 5th. We went on the Britannic and got special treatment from the Maitre d', who was a friend of a friend. It was a Saturday when we arrived, so on the Sunday we went out to Darien to see our house (through the window, as Jim had forgotten the key). We looked at the beaches, and everything looked gorgeous. Our stuff was delivered the following Friday - the one day of the week when Jim wasn't able to be at home to help, and it poured with rain. A little girl invited Jan to lunch, so although it was the holidays Jan was never lonely. I was, though. Everyone was on holiday, but as soon as they came back, the parties started, and they didn't finish for two years! Tony came out for the summer in 1960, and for Christmas, and the Welches found a bicycle for him in the roof of their garage. All our friends in Sunset Road are still our friends - no divorces, just the odd death. Life was like the cover of the Saturday Evening Post, a perfect New England setting. We visited Niagara and Canada and my parents came out in 1960 for three months, and overnight my Father - rather stiff-necked about America - was transformed from a bowler-hatted English gentleman into a person having cocktails on the lawn, wearing bleeding-madras shorts, while people used his bowler hat as a comic accessory! It is difficult for me to write about being in the States. It was all too perfect - just what the magazines promised - white clapboard houses, streets lined with dogwood, beautiful autumn leaves! Oh, how I missed it when we left! Every day for weeks after we got to Egypt I said "Oh, how I wish I was in Darien". My friend Genevieve introduced me to all sorts of things. I went to sewing classes with her, and we used to go to a restaurant in Westport where we could have a large cocktail, a hamburger, and coffee, plus re-fills, for about $1.50. She also introduced me to Old Macdonald's Farm - a children's venue which was a rather fancy farm and had a baby elephant, donated by someone in India! Christmas was wonderful. We lived in a long road, - Sunset Road - which was a cul de sac with a round island at the end, just near our house. At Christmas all the parents had to give a present for their child to Mrs. Hughes (Bambam was what her grandchildren - and everybody else - called her) who lived in a big house at the turn around. People collected big brown bags from the supermarket and half filled them with sand, and put candles in them, so the whole road was lined with lights. A Father Christmassy-looking man was acting Father Christmas, and came up the road sitting on the hood of an open red sports car, shouting "Ho, Ho, Ho!". Unfortunately, just before Christmas his wife divorced him, so he no longer lived in Sunset Road, but his place was taken, in the same car, by our friend Peter Dalton, who in fact had no children! But as John Montgomery (another friend) said, hitting the nail on the head, "Not so much of the Ho,Ho,Ho, as the Hee, Hee, Hee! The children got their presents, all gathered in the circle at the end of the road, and drinks and cookies . (The parents got drinks, too. Different ones!) Jan, aged seven, was very worried in case Father Christmas didn't know that Tony had come out for Christmas. Everyone's house was beautifully decorated, and the parties were marvellous. At Hallowe'en, everyone had pumpkins in their porch and the children went round in costume, trick-or-treating. What we missed out on was Thanksgiving. We had no Indians to thank, so the first year we three went into New York and visited the Cloisters, on the river, opposite the Palisades in New Jersey. All the statues and the church stonework had been imported from Europe. The only people there on Thanksgiving were foreigners like ourselves who had no family to celebrate with. It's a big family occasion in the States, rather more so than Christmas. The next year, our friends the Montgomerys invited us for Thanksgiving, absolutely mortified that no-one had welcomed us into their home the year before. We had lots of snow in the winter, and went sledding (not sledging) with the Bells. All the children and grownups skated on the frozen ponds. It was so colourful, with a beautiful blue sky. Jim wanted to buy a sledge for Jan (which I think she still has). He went into a hardware store and asked for a sledge. "What weight?" asked the man in the shop, and Jim said, "Oh, it's for a seven-year old girl". Consternation! A sledge in the States is a sledgehammer! It passed all too soon. We were transferred to Egypt very suddenly, and I felt as if I was being dragged away from the party before it had finished. Jim's Father and Stepmother had come to stay just as we got the news of our transfer, and they stayed with us a month in all. We took them to the airport for a late night flight home, rather disgruntled at having their three months cut down to one, and at 8 a.m. the following morning (all too soon) the packers arrived to remove all our stuff. Before we went to the States, we had bought a whole houseful of furniture in England, including curtain material, from England - mostly from the Furniture Exhibition in Earl's Court - without having seen the house, or even having a furnished house in view! Talk about luck. All the furniture moved into place and fitted! This was surprising as it was just as "contemporary" furniture became fashionable, so the sizes were all rather odd - a very long sideboard, for example. It all looked quite different from American furniture, which I didn't like at the time, and I had just got used to it two years later, when my eye was in, a factor which was to prove very useful when we moved back to Darien eleven years later. We went home on the Queen Mary - champagne in the cabin at 9 a.m. with all our friends from Sunset Road. What a departure! As we sailed away I could see Genevieve waving to me, wearing a red dress, long black gloves, and dark glasses to hide her eyes, red with crying at our leaving. EGYPT February 1999 I am now in hospital overnight having an arthroscopy on my knee, so it seems a good time to start again. I am inspired by the fact that Jim is writing his life and has just finished Egypt, so I'll pick up there. We were in the States from 1959 to 1961, very happily installed in Darien. We were suddenly transferred to Cairo, with only three weeks at home in between. The contrast was shattering. Everything in Darien was clean and new and wooded. Everything in Cairo was dusty, old and barren - but none the worse for that. Tony had been at Mostyn House for some time, so Jan and I went alone to Cairo. We arrived on July 5th. 1961, in the evening, to a newly decorated first-floor flat which hadn't been lived in for ages, situated on the banks of the Nile. It was alive with cockroaches, all sizes, and somehow they looked worse by electric light. Jan burst into tears and said she wanted to go back to Darien. I felt rather the same way myself. Needless to say, we got that under control, but it was a bad first impression. As it was summer, all the foreigners were on leave, so Jan and I sat on our verandah and did our embroidery. There was nothing else to do. Food was so difficult to come by that I had to leave it all to the cook - and I think he bought it at the back doors of Embassies. All the Embassies had huge staffs as they were all trying to further their interests in Egypt, so there were lots of low-paid staff who could import food and then sell it. I couldn't even order the meals. When the suffragi opened the bedroom door in the morning with the tea. I could smell whether the milk was goat's milk or buffalo's! Tony came out for the holidays after a while and we used to ride in the desert early in the morning and have breakfast in the Mena House Hotel - bacon and tomatoes (all tinned) and hot chocolate! It seems funny now, but we enjoyed it then. We belonged to the Gezira Club, not far from home, and we used to swim there. Once September came the expats came back, and that is when we met the Goldies. Rosemary and Jan went to school together and played together. I played bridge with Eileen. We used to play in the morning, as everyone worked a very long morning and we had lunch at around three. The wives lived a very different life from the husbands. We really had nothing to do. I played bridge quite a lot with Americans and a few Egyptian ladies, and with the rather strange people floating on the surface of Egyptian society. We knew a couple called Menczer, who were refugees from Hungary, whose daughter had been sent to Oxford to marry well. And she did: she married a title in Malpas in Cheshire, not too far from where my parents lived. So one time when Tony was going back to England, she - Vera Menczer - asked if he would take a little present to her new grandson. She said her husband was such an old softie that he couldn't resist this stuffed toy. I was a bit surprised at this, as her husband was a real curmudgeon, and when I saw the life-sized wire-haired terrier I was even more surprised! My parents had to deliver this to her daughter. Then, when I was going home, she asked me to take a present to her daughter, which turned out to be an ancient violet suede belt which had been very badly repaired. Later, Jim made me refuse to take a fur coat out, as it was illegal to remove your luxuries from Egypt, so Vera sent it to Vienna with an Austrian diplomat's wife, and her daughter went to Vienna to collect it. Only then did I realise that I had probably been smuggling gold and diamonds out of Egypt, and so had Tony! Life was very hard for these foreigners in Egypt. They couldn't leave the country without getting an exit permit, which was almost impossible to get. I had one Polish friend who succeeded in getting the permit, and the Customs people cut their table legs into one-inch slices to make sure they hadn't hollowed them out and hidden their valuables inside. Ordinary Egyptians were very nice. A wicked-looking old man with a cast in his eye used to come and do about a dozen vases and baskets of flowers in the house. If I wasn't in, he would come in and do them and I would pay him later. A man with a hurdy-gurdy used to come and play "Never on Sunday" and other tunes outside the flats, and we used to throw money from the verandah. We were right on the banks of the Nile. A boy used to come along with a cart, selling salted roasted peanuts which for some reason were deep pink. We never got ill from eating them. I wonder why? Our block of flats was separated from a park called The Fish Garden by a narrow road. All the suffragis from round about used to play football there with the hem of their galabiyas (or dish-dash) in their mouths, and in their bare feet! There was always a row of taxis outside - never any problem with taxis - but when we went back in about 1983, you simply couldn't get a taxi and there was far too much traffic for football! Sometimes you would get a telephone call from a friend who would say "The bagman is here" and you would rush round. He would be selling lovely evening bags with gold frames and handles, all set with turquoises. He always said they were real turquoises, but I think they were plastic. Really cheap, too. After a few months we moved into a much bigger flat - thirteen rooms and five verandahs! Sitting up in bed we could see the pyramids - every stone! - and from my sewing room I could see the Mohammed Ali mosque. I got involved in the Cathedral Ladies' Working Party, and after that I worked jolly hard. One old lady had come to Cairo in 1900 with her parents. Her name was Nona, and her sister's name was Octavia. There had been nine of them! Other old ladies couldn't afford to go back to England to live. They really were left behind by the tide. I rather scorned their labour-intensive work for their Christmas sale, and I embarked upon a Christmas stall - stockings, Christmas-tree skirts, bottle covers etc, - and I was pretty well worn out. Jim said "Why not just give them the money?" It was lovely in the evening to be able to drive out to the pyramids. It always felt cooler there, and of course it was almost always cool at night - no air-conditioning - and the stars were wonderful. One afternoon when Tony was home for the summer holidays, we thought we would go to visit the Step-Pyramid at Sakkara. Not much had been excavated then, and there were no people about -miles from Cairo. We looked at the Pyramids and got back into the car - and it wouldn't start! With that it went dark. It was about six p.m. Just then a man came along with a donkey. It was the caretaker from the Pyramids and he said he would help us. He put Jan and me onto the poor donkey and off we set. We kept meeting people with strings of water-buffaloes going home who gave us some very funny looks. Particularly as I was getting very upset because the wretched donkey man kept patting my bottom. Donkeys and buffaloes are very obstinate. They won't get out of one another's way. They just walk straight into one another unless steered. After a long while we could see some lights in the distance, and the man said it was his village and that's where we were going. It was right off the road, in the dunes. Just at that moment a car came along with about five people in it. Jim stopped it (to the chagrin of our rescuer) and the driver made all his family move up, and gave us plenty of room! It was like that riddle about how many elephants can you get into a mini. Anyway, the man drove us all the way home and Jim sent a mechanic out the next day to pick up our car. The funny thing was, after all that nerve-wracking excitement, we got home about seven-thirty, just at the normal time for dinner, as if nothing had happened! All the time we were in Egypt the political situation was very dodgy. It wasn't all that long after the Suez crisis when all the British and French were expelled from Egypt for supporting the Israelis in the 1956 war. As soon as I got there the Company was nationalised - nothing to do with my arrival - but we felt that we could be sent home at any moment. We had a lot of money in a safe in the flat, right by the kitchen door, in case we had to leave suddenly with no money and just the clothes we stood up in. (Jim had to go back to England soon after we had got there, to discuss the situation). He was pretty well under house arrest, and when he was allowed back into the office he brought back loads of paper to be destroyed. It was tough paper, and I had an awful job tearing it up and putting down the loo. After a while, I put loads of it into the loo basin and threw a match in to burn it. Then I got frightened in case the basin cracked! Strangely enough, in spite of our telephone being tapped, and our servants being questioned about our visitors, I never felt nervous. When Jim was in London he told me to go to the Mousky - the bazaar - in a taxi and buy a black and silver plate (which we still have) in case we didn't get another chance to buy one. I was able to do this quite safely, although it was dark when I went there. The Mousky was closed during the heat of the day and didn't re-open until four o'clock. There were no tourists in Egypt, so we were positively welcomed into the jewellery shops and glass shops etc., and were given glasses of mint tea. Jan was always given little presents - little glass vases or little silver spoons. The Egyptians in the Company were a bit nervous of mixing with us at first, but later the atmosphere was less chilly and we enjoyed one another's company. Shell had two companies in Egypt and only one of them was nationalised (along with Stella Beer, Bata Shoes etc. etc.). The result was that we mixed almost entirely with diplomats and United Nations officials. Jan went to the Gezira Preparatory School, which had an English style school uniform. The teachers were very good, and let her do English arithmetic - pounds, shillings and pence and English weights and measures - as she was about to take the entrance exam for Howell's School in Denbigh, where I had been evacuated during the war. We went on a lovely holiday to Greece, and had a culture-bash, then a beach holiday in Corfu. We visited the winery in Klaus, near Patras, where Jim had been in the war, too. Then we went to Wales, and Jan went away to school. I felt awful going back to Cairo. Our flat was so big and so empty - Jim and me, Hassan the cook, and Mahmoud the suffragi. I felt as though the children were in their rooms with their doors shut. They came out for Christmas, though, which we spent with the Goldies. About this time, Jim and Donald Goldie both thought we should all buy houses when we went home. Prices were rising even then. Donald and I studied the Houses for Sale in the Daily Telegraph every weekend, and thought that about £8,500 would do it. I suddenly discovered that I was pregnant with Pippa (who was going to be called either Cleo or Darien. I was howled down on that). It was a terrible winter in England, January 1963, and Jim got a telephone call from John Douglas to say his father had died. Calls to and from England were unheard of. It had to be a matter of extreme urgency before it was permitted - and had to be in English. Hard luck on Dutch people whose children were in Holland and didn't speak English. It was a Friday afternoon and everything was closed - Banks, Travel Agents - for the Moslem Holy Day. All strings were pulled, however, and Jim was able to go home. His father had died at Sheila's house in the Midlands, and after the funeral Jim borrowed one of John's cars and drove to Wales to see my parents and Edith. He got to Wrexham, after which the road was single track between high walls of compacted snow, with passing places. My father's car stayed at the top of the drive until March! I went home in April and Jim came home in June, and we set about house-hunting right away. We started looking in Cobham, and of course £8,500 was nothing like enough for a house there, so we went further out, to Guildford. We only looked at about three or four, and decided on Links Road. The house had started out at £11,000 - with no takers. By the time we saw it, it was down to £9,250, but with central heating it came to £10,000. At this point I said that either the house or the baby was to be called Darien - so I got part of my own way. (See what a narrow escape you had, Pippa). I made all the curtains, staying with my mother and father, and we moved in on a terribly hot day, on my fortieth birthday. We were in the house for a week, clearing up, painting and making wardrobes, and then we had a week in Devon, and arrived back to disturb a burglary! Jim immediately left for South Africa for four months, leaving me in a strange place, with the house being painted, the central heating being installed, three insurance claims pending, and a rather cross Tony - not his idea of a holiday - nor mine. My parents stayed with me until I had Pippa. (I don't know what happened to Cleo!) Then Maria, a Spanish maid arrived. Jim came back from South Africa just before Christmas, and before we knew it we were transferred to Holland! I'm quite worn out, just thinking about it. HOLLAND 31st. March 2005 Well, it made me so tired just thinking of writing about Holland that it took me several years to buck up again. I disliked living in Holland so much that I have never really wanted to think about it. The intention, after leaving Egypt had been to go to Cyprus, so I bought a little book - "Teach Yourself Greek" -and what a waste of money that was! Going to Holland was a considerable promotion for Jim, but not for me. We had bought our lovely house and garden in Links Road, and instead of going to some gorgeous villa and garden in Cyprus we went to a very inferior dwelling in The Hague - and was it cold! Before I had taken my fur coat off (yes, those were the days) Jehovah's Witnesses were at the door. The only place they never managed to find me was Cairo. Life isn't easy with a new baby, although I had a Spanish maid. Housing was very difficult in Holland, and the house we had was divided into two flats, on two floors, with a total of four bedrooms. Our difficulty was that we really needed five bedrooms - the maid's, ours, one for Pippa and one each for Tony and Jan. When they were with us for the holidays we spent our time shuffling Pippa about in her cot from one room to another. She spent the day in our bedroom, so that Jan could be in her room, then at night we wheeled her into Jan's room, as I couldn't sleep with a baby in the room. Jim was away a good deal of the time - mostly on Copenhagen airport, as he was dealing with Shell's Scandinavian companies. Life was very dull. The first time I went out I bought a sort of tweed hat - a queuing hat - as I didn't feel respectable without one. When in Rome ….. Lots of people from Venezuela were in The Hague at that time, mostly ones we hadn't been friends with in Maracaibo - as they were all Exploration and Production people. Strange to say, we were rather hard up in Holland. The cost of living for the Dutch was low, so they couldn't pay us enormous salaries, because of the comparison, though English staff had children in England to support, and perhaps houses to buy. It was a big change from Egypt - and nobody was very friendly. I could say "good morning'' to the woman next door while standing at the baker's van buying bread, and get no reply. Some things were nice little vignettes. The fishmonger used to come along pushing his barrow, closely followed by an assortment of cats, streaming after him with their tails in the air, and when he stopped to fillet the fish for a customer, he used to throw bits to his retinue of cats! Life was so humdrum and bourgeois! If I wanted to buy a joint of meat weighing 31bs. I had to order it in advance. Meat came in very small quantities. There were lovely fruit and vegetable markets, and the restaurants were good (so Jim says!) Of course, everyone knows how marvellous the museums and art galleries are, but that's where you go when you're a tourist. One snag was that everywhere was cultivated - no little lanes, just big roads. No cosy countryside such as we are used to. We went twice to Switzerland while we were in Holland, as Nan Kinna had a chalet there. Jim and I indulged in our one and only venture into ski-ing, and I remember it with great pleasure. In the summer of 1965, just before Pippa was two, we took a chalet for a month, and Jim Dennitts and Avice came with Paul and Claire. Avice drove all the way with the children. Wasn't she brave? Two weeks later, Jim drove down with Jim Dennitts to join us. In fact we had quite a few visitors. Jim and Avice came twice. My parents came twice. My cousin Wilf and Maureen came and we had lots of Company visitors - John Porter, John Stoddart, Jim Pollock, the Popes - so that brightened it up a bit. Another thing that brightened it up was the ducks. When the canals were frozen, they used to fly along and land on their webbed feet, sliding along at great speed as they landed. Also, in the Spring, all the traffic would come to a halt to allow a mother duck with a great trail of ducklings to cross the road. Tony and Jan had quite a good time in the holidays as there were a lot of Shell children there, and it was then that they developed a taste for chips with mayonnaise, which you could buy in the street. Of course, you could also buy chunks of hot sausage in the winter and new raw herring in the spring. We didn't get home leave from Holland until after two years, and as we were so near to England I felt quite homesick. In the spring of 1965 Jan was going to be confirmed and I said to Jim that I really wanted to be there, so off I went on an overnight ferry from the Hook of Holland to Harwich, and from there to Ruthin - rather a cross-country drive, and no Sat-Nav in those days. There was a rehearsal the evening before, and when the girls turned round to walk out of the chapel, Jan got the shock of her life to see me there, and I was equally thrilled! It was quite fun to see that the Bishop of St. Asaph's car number plate was SOB 1. I went to see Harry and Dilys and she gave me an enormous Mallorcan straw donkey for Pippa, and my father gave me a wooden compositor's case (or a compositor's wooden case - better!) to put on the wall for little ornaments. On my way back to Harwich I had lunch with Sheila, who measured the back seat and door of the car to see if she could put a spare fridge in there! (She couldn't, but she sent it to us in Holland afterwards.) I think I saw Tony as well, either in Wales or in Oundle as it was around half-term. It was a very wet, foggy day in February or March, and I had a horrid journey to East Anglia. The roads were so muddy, and the headlights were covered in mud and it was dark. I was so relieved to see the lights of the ferry ahead of me, after wandering around Cambridge for ages. This was before drive-on ferries, so the car was put into a sort of hammock, and a crane swung it onto the ferry-boat. I was quite glad that Sheila hadn't succeeded in getting the refrigerator in. Just as we were leaving Holland, the Essons and the Walters were transferred to The Hague, and Vee really got the children's holidays organised, but it was too late for us. Pippa, aged nearly two, helped me pack the linen into big boxes. You can see where Edward gets this helpfulness from. I was so glad to leave Holland, and to leave the house, which had the same furniture as the launderette. Jim came home later, having asked for a transfer. We felt we should be at home while Tony and Jan were doing O-levels and A-levels. In fact we were waiting for results five summers in a row! We spent two years at home before leaving for Ghana - which was certainly a contrast to Holland! GHANA. July 1993. It's now July 1993, and it's ten years since I put pen to paper. I was writing then because my Mother had just died, and I didn't want to think about it. Yesterday was my seventieth birthday and I thought that I couldn't wait another ten years, could I? Either my memory might have gone or I might! My thoughts had been turning to Ghana. Jim went out there in April 1968 and we followed in July. I had felt sick at the thought of Africa, but in fact needlessly. We were there for four years. I insisted on going by sea. Travel by sea was rapidly becoming an anachronism, so I thought it would be nice to have one last fling. Also, I could take all our belongings with us, cat, car and children, and would not have to wait for the heavy baggage. Also, I had had my appendix and thyroid out, and had had to pack up the house and let it, and we all needed a therapeutic sea voyage. We left in a dreadful rainstorm, and I laddered my tights trying to catch the cat and put it in its basket. It was quite right to try to escape. I had to find more tights in the baggage while the taxi waited! We went by train from Euston to Liverpool, and there we had a farewell party with my parents, and Avice and Jim, and Isabel and Hilaire - drinks and snacks. The cat was shut in the bathroom pro tem., and hated it. Also quite right, because in a little while it was put in the care of the butcher and removed to the bowels of the ship. I had been given a plan of the decks and I said I would go by the s.s. Aureole if I could have this cabin. This cabin was the largest on the ship, underneath the Captain's cabin, and on top of that was the control room with the steering wheel and all that. It was enormous, and Pippa and I shared it. You couldn't feel sick as you could look straight ahead. I don't remember what Tony's and Jan's cabins were like, but certainly nothing like so grand. In the dining room I had the place of honour, on the Captain's right. Pippa ate earlier with the younger children on the boat and Tony and Jan sat at a teen-ager's table - there were ten or twelve of them. The passengers were all going to Sierra Leone, Ghana or Nigeria. As the ship sailed from Liverpool, I think all the crew was from Merseyside. Tony's eighteenth birthday came during the voyage, so I asked to see the pastry-cook about a cake. I was escorted through the crew's quarters to his cabin, and all these sailors came to the doors of their cabins and leered at me. Well, people were rather well-dressed for dinner in those days, and I was all accoutred to be the General Manager's wife in Accra. When we reached his cabin he was icing his daughter's wedding cake - three tiers and square. How nice for him to be able to do it at sea. His walls were covered with his hankies, drying. Apparently, they flattened their wet washing on the walls, and their things didn't need ironing. (I must try it!) Also, he had wide-necked bottles standing round, with avocado stones resting on them, supported by four toothpicks in the sides to hold them in place - and they grew. I obviously cast a glance around this lot, because he said, in an accent I recognised, "Don't look at me place. Me Ma's nor'in" (or "not in" for the pedantic). So Tony had a birthday cake. We went ashore at Las Palmas and everybody who had been sick for the first five days appeared. We went on a coach trip to the town - a museum, a market-place - and I bought Tony a tape recorder for his birthday. A Ghanaian girl, who later turned out to be a Shell secretary, accidentally bought two right shoes! I was talking to the guide in Spanish before we were all decanted, and when we got back to our assembly point before going back to the ship, he was nowhere to be seen, and the coach had been parked miles away. However, there was a very harassed-looking driver scurrying about, and he greeted me with relief. The guide had had a heart attack and had been taken to hospital, and the poor driver couldn't speak English and couldn't round up his group. I didn't think I could either, as half of them were black and there were other cruise ship people wandering about as well. However, we all got back, and arrived eventually in Tema. The Shell house and garden were lovely. We had ten different varieties of hibiscus and porcelain roses, plumbago, stephanotis and gardenias, as well as the more usual things like African marigolds. The servants' quarters were separated from the house by a trellis covered with jasmine and the perfume was lovely. At night the crickets chirped - I think to keep the Watchnight company. We had eight servants, four indoor and four outdoor. We had Johnson, the steward or major-domo, who was an Ibo from Nigeria - and very upright and dignified (except when he'd been at the brandy). Jim sometimes said to him "Johnson, if you do steal the brandy, please don't fill the bottle up with water!" and he would bow slightly and say "Yes, master, I speak to Moussa" Moussa was a Moslem and didn't drink! Moussa was the boy, or second steward. He and Johnson cleaned the house wearing khaki shirts and shorts. He brought the tea in the morning and served tea in the afternoon. At lunch time they changed into dazzlingly white uniforms with shiny brass buttons, and really did the job of waiting at table properly. The napkins were never folded the same way twice in a row. Black people look rather odd when their hair goes white, and you don't often see them with white hair. A beard looks even worse, so they dye their hair. With what? you may ask. Well, in Johnson's case with black shoe polish, and it sometimes came off onto the back of the neck of his beautiful white uniform. The servant who - to me - was the most important was Kofi, the cook. He was very nice and used to explain aspects of African life to me. He often used to say that Africans and whites were quite different. He could cook exactly as I cook, as he could read and write, and yet when we had food left over and I offered it to him to take home, he always said that he and his family didn't like our food! He wore khaki shirts and shorts and a khaki apron and no shoes. When I first arrived he gave us a lovely blanquette de veau, only with chicken, and a nice coconut cream. The next day I was packing and sorting out, but he wanted me to order the meals. In Egypt we had had a very good cook, but as there was no food in the shops I couldn't order our food, so every meal was a surprise. He was really into the black market and I asked no questions. However, things were not quite like that in Ghana. There were times when some items were impossible to get - like when the supermarket was full of whisky-flavoured toothpaste and chocolate biscuits and nothing else - so I was soon got into line by Kofi. He was from Togo, or at least his father was. I spent part of every morning in the kitchen with Kofi for about the first six months, with my cookery books, and after that I could say "Banana bread, Kofi, page 444", and sail out of the house. The fourth indoor servant was Mary. She was Pippa's nanny and spoke beautiful quiet English and was very nice. She was Togolese too. The reason that the servants were from different tribes and countries was due first of all to the fact that tribal boundaries were not the same as the country's boundaries imposed by the Colonial Powers - Togo had been French - and also because certain tribes traditionally did different jobs. Coastal tribes didn't look after cattle, for example. Office workers up and down the West Coast of Africa were Ghanaians. Nightwatchmen - called Watchnight - were always from Mali, to the north of Ghana, and were always Muslims. Ours was very tall and thin, a very nice man called Adam. All the gates were closed and locked at night and ours - according to Jan and Tony - was the only watchnight who was awake when they came home from a party - not all that late either. The watchnight carried a bow and arrows! The gardener was called Kofi too, and he was from Togo. If I spoke to him in English, he answered me in French and if I answered him in French he was lost! We had a large driver called Henry, whom Tony christened Odd Job (and he was right!) and we had a man who did the washing. I forgot to say that Moussa was from Upper Volta, and the only way our servants could communicate with one another was in English! The cat, a pale ginger called Simon jumped out of his basket as soon as he was able - it was a travelling basket - and disappeared. He was terrified and no wonder. Kofi found him later and brought him into the house. The poor cat had been in a cage for nearly two weeks, with other cats in other cages, locked in the bowels of the ship. One afternoon Pippa had been to a fancy dress party on the ship dressed as a leopard - yes, in Jan's old leopard costume she had had when she was four. Pippa was four and down we went to the hold. This was after we had left Sierra Leone, where we had picked up hundreds of deck passengers. If you were travelling first class, of course, you were unaware of their existence, but this was in the rainy season, so they were all lying down on the deck, or even between decks, practically in the dark where the cats were kept. There were cook-stoves in operation up and down the deck, and the bread rolls and food left from our meals was being sold to them. They all looked at Pippa, dressed as a leopard, with great big eyes with the whites showing, and in silence. It looked just like pictures of a slave ship. I had never seen anything like it - and neither had they! The reason the animals were locked in this big cage like a school cloakroom, was that otherwise they would have disappeared into a cookpot. When I returned the key to the butcher, he said "Have you been down there through all those deck passengers?", and when I said we had, he said "Well, I wouldn't dare"! Kofi (cook) was very fond of Simon and used to say "Simon not like these local cats. They have no respect. Simon not come in kitchen. He wait for his food outside." Snobbery even extended to white people's cats! When he was killed by a snake, the servants buried him and decorated his grave with marigolds. The first day I was there, I was given a great bunch of keys. One was for the kitchen door, one for the side gate, one for the outside pantry and one for the deepfreeze. It felt really Victorian. I couldn't bear to lock the pantry and the deepfreeze, which was in the kitchen. It seemed so rude to lock up right in front of the servants, but the first time I left them open, Kofi ran after me with terror in his eyes and shouted "Madam, you no lock him proper!", so when I said I thought it was awful to lock everything, he said that he was responsible and would be blamed if anything was stolen! We had mango trees and avocados, limes and pomegranates growing in the garden, and we never got to eat any of them in four years, so he probably was right. The servants didn't eat our food and bought their own. Every morning a procession of women and children used to walk through our gate, round the back of the house, out to the front again, and out the other gate, walking very erect and dressed in their cloth, with a big basket or a big enamel bowl on their heads, covered with a cloth. These people sold the food and bread to the servants (and pinched my mangoes, too). Pippa used to say "Oh, here's the fine bread lady" because she used to call out "Fine bread!" They wore a cloth, which was six yards of fabric. It was a tight blouse top without sleeves, and the rest of the cloth was wrapped tightly round from the waist to the feet - a long skirt - and what was left of the fabric was used as a stole sometimes, and they wore a scarf tied round their heads. The patterns in the cloth all meant something, and a lot of it came from the Far East. Tie-dye was popular and lots of the cloths were a very dirty, muddy red. It was made especially that colour because people washed their clothes in the rivers, and everything turned out a dirty red. The women were usually very fat and had huge bottoms, but they looked stately and dignified in national dress, which was very tight round their bottoms and legs (with a split for walking), but they looked awkward and not right at all in European dress. Also, they wore wigs. It was very fashionable to have a beehive wig, which was a hair style at the time, and the wigs were not black or frizzy, so if you ever saw one of the Company wives without a wig, you didn't recognise her. The men in the street - not men in offices - wore national dress, which was a cloth draped round them rather like a toga, and Pippa one day started to laugh as we were driving along, and said "Oh, look at that man in a woman's cloth!" She knew far more about it than we did. Pippa was four when we arrived and we enrolled her in the Army School, organised by the BJSTT (the British Joint Services Training Team) - an Air Force, an Army and a Naval representative from England, who were training Ghana's Armed Forces. All the teachers were English, but after a year or two they were withdrawn and two Ghanaian Army sergeants took over the teaching, entertaining themselves by squirting Fairy Liquid over one another! With that, we put Pippa into the International School until we left Ghana. Jan was still at school and Tony had just started working for Shell, so Jan came out every holiday, and Tony came out for the first summer holiday, and then at Christmas. We entertained a lot, but it wasn't difficult with such a good cook. When people came out from England, they usually stayed in our two-bedroomed guest house, and all the Company entertaining was done at home as the local hotels were not really up to it then. I spent my time working for the British Women's Association Christmas Fair, for Ghanaian charities, and I worked like a black, and it was so hot! I was Chairman of the Association too, and it was quite a fulfilling task in a country where there was so little to do. We went to the beach pretty well every weekend, and to the cinema sometimes. It's not often that you can go to an open-air cinema in a capital city and have rats running round, and goats grazing in front of the screen. We had a big Christmas party for the children of the staff. I had the opportunity, long wished for, of decorating the entire ceiling of a hall with hanging streamers of crepe paper. The children always wanted to take their cakes and cookies home to the family, so we gave them a plastic bag - and had to forbid them from putting their ice cream inside too. Father Christmas used to arrive, rather perilously, through a second floor window, having reached it by getting out of a very small window in the ladies' loo, and in at the next window, to the children's great delight. Ghana, or the Gold Coast as it used to be called, was often described as the White Man's Grave, and children were always sent home to school at about the age of five. When we were there the health care had improved a lot, and of course air travel meant that people could come and go more easily. However, everybody felt ill with one thing or another quite a lot of the time. I was ill about two of the four years we spent there. We all took anti-malarial drugs all the time; it was very difficult making Pippa take hers, and in spite of the drugs, we all suffered from malaria from time to time. I hated Paludrin, the commonest of the anti-malarial drugs. It gave me a funny taste in my mouth all the time, and funny noises in my head! In other West African countries different drugs were prescribed. If you got an ulcer in your mouth, it was quite big and lasted about three weeks. A Shell man came out to stay, and I was raving about how happy I had been in Darien, and I must have gone on quite a bit, because he said "If you were so happy there, you will certainly go back!", and I said "No, we can't. Jim isn't in that line any more". Well, shortly afterwards we were transferred back to New York! (Nothing to do with Rudi Jaeckli, the head office visitor!) We left Accra in the middle of March 1972, and we were back in the U.S. on April 28th. Hurray!!. Postscript. These reminiscences were never finished. The writing was spread over some twenty years - from 1983 to 2004 - not in chronological order, and just as the mood took her. The narrative covering our peripatetic career ends with Ghana, which we left in 1972. Not covered are our second posting to the States, the periods we spent in England and, of course, our last assignment in Chile. Sadly, the story will now never he completed. Joan died on 9th. January 2006, but she has left a moving testament to her happy and fruitful life, surrounded by a much loved and loving family. Her intelligence and enormous competence, her humour, friendliness and capacity to inspire affection, shine through the narrative, as does the perceptiveness she brought to bear on the wide variety of people and places she experienced. In later years, she often said that her life had been exactly what she would have wanted. There can be no better memorial.

Gannicliffe - Some History by Beryl (Gannicliffe) Oldfield

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GANNICLIFFE. (written by Beryl Gannicliffe Oldfield in the late 1990s) After a meeting of the Gannicliffe cousins at Daresbury on October 2nd 1995, I decided that it was time to write down what I have found out about our family. Most of my information is in letters from relatives and contacts made through Family History Societies but much of it comes from family stories related by mother and father and his brother, Harry. Although my father, Robert Edward Gannicliffe, died aged 50 in 1942 when I was 10 years of age I can remember several stories he told of the family. Because I was young when he died my mother kept his memory alive with stories she knew of his life and his family. She, of course, had known grandmother and some of her Shropshire relatives and had visited Bishop's Castle many times so had much to tell about the Addis branch of the tree. As I grew up I had quite a lot to do with Uncle Harry and I stayed with him and Aunt Edith many times in Llanbedr when he regaled me with family stories and tales of his youth! He also verified what my mother had told me which was important. Now if any stories are misleading, incorrect or incomplete it must be the fault of my memory and not of theirs. In 1990 just before we set off on a family holiday to Pentrehyling on the border between Wales and Shropshire, I contacted Joan and told her I was going to try to find out more about the family in Shropshire. Much to my surprise she had done the same thing about twelve months before and so she was able to supply me with a fairly comprehensive Tree of the Addis family. I was able to verify most of what she had written but since then through other sources I have been able to add much to this tree. As far as the Gannicliffe tree is concerned, the basis for any research has been the Tree that Uncle Harry had a researcher draw up in the 1970's, a copy of which most of us possess. Grandmother Gannicliffe's mother, who is buried in one of the family graves in Everton Cemetery, was Susannah Whittingham before she married Thomas Addis. I have a very comprehensive history of the Whittinghams from a friend in Surrey whose mother was a Whittingham. We haven't found the connection yet but I 'm sure we will ! She had a good Family Tree of the Whittinghams in Chirbury from the last Earl of Powis and I had some help from him too. Grandmother's grandmother, also married to a Thomas Addis, had been Sarah Venables and I have made contact with our 4th cousins Joyce and Wynne who farm in Sarn near Newtown. Joyce has a pretty comprehensive history and tree of the Venables, too. If any one else has any memories or stories of the family I hope he or she will write them down and send them to me to be added to my efforts. If you find anything inconsistent with what you know, or incorrect at all, please tell me so that I can put it right. There is much to be found out I am sure. I have used information from Record Offices with a little from Census and Civil Register sources. All birth, marriage and death certificates can be read ( after 1837) or copies purchased but as this is a very expensive source, I have - for the Shropshire families - used the Mainstone and Bishop's Castle parish registers and my information is by no means complete. I should be delighted to have a more complete Family History if anyone else would like to do some more research. In the autumn of 1996 there was on Ceefax, one Sunday morning, a report of a 23 year old, Mark Gannicliffe, having died in a surfing accident in Newquay, Cornwall. Having telephoned to make sure he was not one of our family, I rang Liz Carter in Huntingdon and found that it was her half-brother ie the son of David Ganniclifft, who lives in Devon, I think. I have mislaid his address at the moment. Mark was the son of David by his marriage to Lilli, who I think was German; he had been born with a faulty heart and had collapsed on a school sports field when a teenager. The consequent investigations had revealed that he did not have "correct" veins/arteries in or to the heart. Having had several patching up operations he had decided to ignore his "handicap" and had continued with all the sports he loved. He had been a lifeguard on beaches in Australia for some time and was surfing with friends when he said he was stopping because he felt cold but collapsed before he reached the beach and was taken dead out of the water. Ceefax had the name wrong but had hit on our spelling. David is the half-brother of Peter Ganniclifft of Clevedon.   Gravestones in Everton Cemetery, Liverpool. Church of England Section No 5. (Plot 161) (One) In loving memory of my dear husband John Tomlins who died April 8th 1890 aged 28 years. Also John Edward son of the above and Ellen Susannah Tomlins who died April 19th 1886 aged 2 years 6 months. A bitter grief, a shock severe, To part with them we loved so dear. In loving memory of Henery Addis, brother-in-law of the above who died December 16th 1882 aged 27 years. Also of Emma Venables who died March 10th 1894 aged 37 years. Also Susannah Addis who died October 5th 1907 in her 82nd year. Peace, perfect Peace. (Two) In loving memory of Joseph Henry, the beloved husband of Ellen Gannicliffe who died 24th January 1908 aged 52years. Also our beloved mother Ellen Susannah Gannicliffe wife of the above who died 14th March 1928 aged 65 years. Also Fannie Whitehurst, sister of the above who died 6th September 1930 aged 62 years. Also Edith Sherry dearly beloved daughter of E. S. Gannicliffe who died 25th March 1937 aged 49 years. (Three) W. Henry Gannicliffe died 1st September 1979 aged 82 years. Edith Gannicliffe died 23rd February 1984 aged 84 years. (Plot 132) (Four) Robert Edward Gannicliffe born 25th July 1892 died 25t h December 1942. Martha Elizabeth Gannicliffe born 2 1 s t September 18^3 died 2nd October 1957. (Five) An unmarked grave nearby for Lester Sherry born 1923 died 1946. All these graves are very near to each other: one, two and three in line with each other and four to the left of three.   Our grandparents Joseph Henry Gannicliffe and Ellen Susannah Tomlins (née Addis) were married at Christ Church, Kensington, Liverpool on 28th April 1891. They both gave their address as 14 Kemble Street, (Kensington). In the Census for 1891, taken in April, Ellen S. Tomlins age 28 a widow is given as head of the household with a daughter Edith Ellen aged 3, born Liverpool. Ellen Susannah's birthplace is given as Mainstone, Shropshire. Also in the household was Emma Venables. a visitor, aged 34, a domestic housekeeper, born Colebatch, Shropshire and Joseph Henry Gannicliffe, aged 35, a boarder, Police Constable, born in Pembrokeshire. John Tomlins, grandmother's first husband, had died the previous April (1890). He, too, had been a Police Constable in the Liverpool Force. They had come from Shropshire to Liverpool when he joined the force. Emma Venables was his half-sister and they were both cousins of our grandmother. Their mother Ruth Addis had been the sister of our great grandfather, Thomas Addis. She had been married, first, to Thomas Venables and, after his death in 1856 to Edward Tomlins. According to the inscription on the Tomlins / Addis family tombstone in Everton Cemetery there had been another child of grandmother's first marriage: - Edward John (or John Edward) who had died in 1886 aged 2 and a half years. At the moment I know no more of this child other than this inscription there so I don't know whether he was born in Bishop's Castle or Liverpool but if I do find his date and place of birth I shall be able to make a guess at when the family arrived in Liverpool. When " Auntie" Fannie Addis, grandmother's younger sister, married in 1889 in Bishop's Castle she married a Railway Clerk, Henry Teece Whitehurst (NB his name was John) from "Everton, Nr Liverpool" so she must have visited or lived with her sister long enough to become acquainted with him. This together with Auntie Nellie's birth in Liverpool in 1888 seems to point to their arriving here certainly in, or before 1888. Joan found that in 1884 John Tomlins had extracted a copy of his birth certificate. It is stamped "Liverpool Police", so they must have come to Liverpool sometime between 1884 and 1888. I think the baby Edward John, must have been born in October 1883. As John Tomlins did not buy the grave until 1888, Edward John cannot have been buried in it. Joseph Henry Gannicliffe was, as far as I understand, a friend of John Tomlins while in the police force. He also had a friend whose surname was Ross who lived somewhere near Kemble Street and who was, I think, Scottish. After grandfather's death grandmother took in policemen lodgers, so grandfather may have lodged at Kemble Street before John Tomlins died, or may have lived there prior to their marriage, later the same month, after the census, or he may have lived at the same address, as many couples seem to have done in order to live in the same parish as the bride and so make the church fees cheaper. When he married, Grandfather Gannicliffe was single and unmarried, aged 35 years. By the time of his death in 1908 he had, I think, been a policeman for 29 years in the Liverpool Police Force. He was P.C.292 stationed, I think, for some time at Rose Vale Police Station. Although the family lived at several addresses, they were all in the Kensington or North End of the city so I presume his work was there. He had at some time been on the Pier Head / under Overhead Railway / Docks beat. Their final address, which I should think, was their own property, as grandmother stayed there for twenty years after his death, was 28 Newlands Street, off Whitefield Road, off Breck Road, Everton. When I was about 13 years old an elderly woman customer of my mother said, as I passed through the shop, as my mother was attending to her hair, that I was "The image of Joe Gannicliffe"! Mother and I were taken aback as not even my father had spoken of his father's looks! She explained that he had lodged with her parents when he first came to Liverpool. We felt that, as a teenager she had quite fancied him. Their house was in Eaton Place, off Breck Road, and my father was born in Baines Place, which was the next street. Neither mother nor I believed that I looked like him but thought this was her way of introducing the subject of "Joe Gannicliffe". This seems to bear out the assumption that he had settled in Liverpool about 1880, joining the police force then. He must have joined in 1879. Most of my information about father's family comes from my mother who often talked of what my father had told her and from what she knew of the Bishop's Castle family from visits to them. I can, however, remember some of the things my father told me about both his parents. I also had many, many talks with Uncle Harry about the family. As he would have been 10-11 years old when his father died most of his anecdotes were of his mother's family. Joseph Henry had gone to sea before he joined the Police Force so I have presumed that he had visited Liverpool on his travels, and at some point decided that after a life in a thriving city was preferable to one being buffeted about on the "rolling main" in a sailing ship. At the age of 14 he stowed away on a sailing ship and after that trip was taken back to his mother by the captain who advised her to let him go to sea "properly". He told his sons he had sailed around Cape Horn to Valparaiso. When he married the certificate stated that his father been (or was) "William Gannicliffe, Shipwright". This was not true, as his mother was unmarried when he was born and his birth certificate shows no name in the "Father" column. He had an uncle William who may have been a shipwright as the men of the family seem to have had connections with the sea, but we will never know why he told this lie. I should think he must have known by 1891 that he was illegitimate. He must, like John Tomlins, have had to present a birth certificate to the Liverpool Police. It must have been hard to state on a marriage certificate that he did not know his father's name. He may, like the rest of us, have been very proud of the name Gannicliffe and not have wanted to cast any doubt on his right to have it. Joseph Henry Gannicliffe was born in Tenby, Pembrokeshire on 15th July 1855 at Sergeants Lane. His mother was Margaret Ganniclifft of Sergeants Lane, Tenby. As Uncle Harry did not know of his father's illegitimacy in 1971 when the researcher who drew up the Family Tree for him wrote to him with the news. I am sure that Joseph Henry never disclosed the fact to any of his children and perhaps his wife. Perhaps, after all, he did not know himself. As far as I know his sons had been told that his mother was an only child who had married an only child so there were no Gannicliffe relatives about in Tenby and his father had died young, soon after his birth, and Margaret had remarried. This must have been his own version of his life history as his mother was by no means an only child and my father had been taken more than once to visit his paternal (??) grandmother or her family, in Tenby. Margaret Ganniclifft married in 1859 and as far as I understand Joseph Henry was taken into her new family and lived with them until he came to Liverpool. He must still have been on good terms with them when my father was 7 or 8 years old, that is until 1900 at least. Margaret married John Davies, a bachelor; boatman, aged 20 years on 9 October 1859. His father was Benjamin, a hatter and his address was Quay Hill, Tenby. Margaret Ganniclifft was described on the certificate as Cranniclifft but signed it as Margaret Ganniclifft. She had a sister Charlotte who seems to have signed as witness with a signature that looks like Charleie Ganniclifft. Margaret's address was Crackwell Street, Tenby; her age 23 years and her father Joseph Ganniclifft a seaman. There is some difficulty over her age as in the 1851 Census Margaret was said to be 18 years of age, which would make her 26 when married. Perhaps she did not want to have it officially stated that she was 6 years older than her husband. They were married at the Tabernacle, Tenby "by the rites and ceremonies of the Independents". John Davies and Margaret went on to produce five sons and a daughter. One son was named Robert as was my father and many other Gannicliffes in both Tenby and Exeter. When Joseph Henry ran away to sea (if he really did) and was brought back to his mother, he had been offered a job in the shop of the local Wine Merchant. When he decided to become a seaman he asked the proprietor to take on, in his place, his eldest half-brother Benjamin. Ben Davies stayed in this job and when the proprietor died he left the shop to Ben and although I think the family were "bought out" of the business some years ago there was still (in 1985) a Ben Davies, Wine Merchant's shop very near the Church in the High Street. Considering how young John Davies was, when he married, and that he married a woman 6 years older than himself who already had a four year old child whom he must have brought up, if not as his own, certainly in his own household, I have often wondered whether he was J.H.G's father but had been thought too young to marry before he was approaching his majority. Perhaps we should all be called Davies! I 'm certainly glad that we are not - there are so many of them in Wales. My father was once taken out with his mother in a boat rowed by his father but his mother, who seemed frightened of nothing on dry land, screamed so much that they had to turn back before they had gone further than the harbour itself. I suppose a life in the hills of Shropshire/Wales would not have included many trips on a small boat on the open sea! Margaret Ganniclifft was one of twelve children born to Joseph Ganniclifft / Gannicliffe / Ganniclift /Ganiclift / Ganicliffe / Gannicliffe / Ganicliff (take your pick) who was a seaman who had been born in Exeter in 1792 and married in St Mary's Tenby on 19th September 1815 to Jane Parcell born Tenby in 1791 or 92. They appear to have had two sons, William and Henry who were baptised in 1822, and a son Robert born 1825. In 1851 the family Graniclift with Joseph, a mariner at its head lived at 29 St. George Street, Tenby with Jane his wife, a fish dealer, aged 60 and Elizabeth, 21 , Charlotte, 19, Margrott, 18, and Jane, 16, all unmarried. In the same property, but living as a separate household was a family called John. (Augustus John, painter, came from Tenby). At 22 Quay Street a Jane Purcell, a widower aged 91 and a pauper lived with her daughter, Charlotte, and her son-in-law. This could be G.G. Grandmother Jane's mother. In 1851, before J.H.G's birth, there were two households in Sergeants Lane of Parcells at 195 and 200. (There was a Davies family at 196 but no John although the father was a mariner). I wonder if Margaret stayed with relatives there when Joseph was born or perhaps the whole family had moved there by that date. At No.200 the head of the household was a widow with a son Thomas, 16, a mariner, Martha, 16, a servant, Henry, 14, a mariner and Charlotte, 12, a scholar. By the use of the same family names I guess that this family was related to Jane Parcell. Robert Grunicliffe aged 25, a fisherman, whom I take to be Margaret's brother was a lodger at the Brig Inn in St. Julian's Street. I think St. Julian's Street leads down to the harbour from the church in the high street so I suppose he was there for the convenience of being near the boats. His Mother, I suppose, sold the fish he caught! I have a copy of Robert's will made about three months before he died. He left everything he possessed to his late wife's niece, Elizabeth, the wife of James John, a mason of Tenby. Robert died in 1886. He is named as Robert Gannicliff but signed it as Robert Ganncliff. He was a boatman formerly of Tenby, Pembrokeshire but "late of No.41 Upper Meyrick Street in Pembroke Dock". Present at the time the will was made and witnessing it at his request were an auctioneer from Tenby and Anthony Mathias of St. George Street, Tenby, a boot maker. The Gannicliffts had lived in St. George Street in 1851 and Anthony Mathias had witnessed the marriage certificate of John Davies and Margaret. I wonder if he married Charlotte as both were witnesses. That seems to happen quite often - best man and bridesmaid marrying and sometimes having the married pair as witnesses for their wedding. Robert's wife Harriet had died in 1884. They had children but I do not know what had happened to them. I once wrote to a man from Carshalton in Surrey who was researching "Pembroke Mariners". Although he had about 5,000 on an index he had not come across the name before but did supply me information on two names he had found at the Public Records Office at Kew where the Register of Tickets of Seamen is kept. Robert Ganniclift born 25th October 1825 at Exeter was aboard H.M.S. America in 1847. He gave Plymouth as his address when unemployed. I think this Robert may have been a grandson of the following Joseph's half-brother:- Joseph Gandicliff: Ticket number 539211. He may have been ticketed at Swansea. In 1853 he sailed on a vessel registered at Swansea. The vessel's number was 309. I haven't had anyone look at the Crew Agreements of this vessel but we should be able to find out his age, place of birth and previous voyages. I am sure this must be Joseph Henry's grandfather even if it is only because none of the Tenby G's seemed to be able to spell the name! Of course most of them may not have been able to read or write and perhaps their Welsh accent made it hard for others to understand such a difficult name. Even when they could sign their own names they didn't seem able to come up with the same spelling as anyone else! Once we get further up the Family Tree from Joseph I know very little about the family in Exeter. I know Uncle Harry had more information from a researcher and I had some of it from Peter Ganniclifft of Clevedon but I have not researched any further back than Tenby. I have written to Peter Ganniclifft's (half-) niece and she has told me quite a lot about the Clevedon Gannicliffts. They are related to us through the Robert G. who married Grace Saunders in 1794. That Robert was son of William G. by his first wife Ann Binford and Joseph, our G.G.Grandfather, was William (born 1737)'s son by his second wife Mary Handford. Joseph Langdon G was baptised in May 1792 at Holy Trinity Exeter. I was told that the early Gannicliffes were cordwainers and fullers in Exeter and that many of them were seamen or mariners. We have seen in the church in Marlborough in Devon, (Nr. Salcombe) the names of two Gannicliffes who were rectors or vicars of the church in the 15th or 16th centuries. Their names were spelt as we spell ours and not one of the many variations with "y" for " i " or one " n " or " f '' and a " t " at the end. As many of us have been told, or have found out for ourselves, the name means GANNET + CLIFF. As the bird we know as a Gannet is a seabird one would expect the name to have originated somewhere by the sea where there are cliffs that gannets would nest in. This seems to point to Devon or Cornwall although my Professor of English Language who wrote a book about surnames, told me he did not associate it with any particular area in England / Britain. I cannot understand why not as it is likely that there were gannets nesting in the middle of Lancashire or, on the Fens! Grandfather G. told my father when they were in Tenby " Of course we are not Welsh, you know. We don't come from here. We come from the other side of the Bristol Channel". My father took this to mean that we came from Devon or Cornwall although I suppose he could have been pointing towards Swansea, but that is still Wales. It must have been at least 75 years after this that Peter Ganniclifft pointed us in the right direction, as he knew the family came from Exeter. He also said that every generation had an eldest son called Robert - not always the eldest I don't think - and that there had been several hairdressers through the generations. My father, Robert Edward, was apprenticed to a barber called Davies a few years before his father died. The following history of the Clevedon Gannicliffts comes from Liz Carter who lives in Huntingdon in Cambs. My father once saw, in a "Hairdressers' Journal" something about a woman called Gannicliff(or t) from Clevedon and was so delighted and amazed that he wrote to her at once. She wrote back a very abrupt and impolite letter to him which he, according to my mother, immediately threw on the fire. She apparently said that there was absolutely no family connection so there was no need for him to write again. According to Uncle Harry she also said that there was no money in the family so he need not try again to get any from her and that was why he had, quite rightly, thrown the letter on the fire! Peter G. said that it was probably his aunt, or great aunt, who was a bit strange but surprisingly she had told him there were Gannicliffes in the north and family in Tenby! It seems that Reginald, Peter's father, had remarried shortly after his wife's death in childbirth and Peter has a half-brother, David. The two brothers apparently lived next-door to each other without knowing that they were related! Peter Ganniclifft is married to Eileen and they have two sons, Richard and David ['''she meant Michael''']. Richard is the T.V. photographer who works on wildlife films with David Attenborough and others. David, Peter's half-brother has a daughter. Liz Carter who has children the same age as her father's sons by a second marriage. I don't think either of Peter's sons has children but some of the family live in the Clevedon-Bristol area. In 1891 there were two Gannicliff(e or t)s living in Exeter. They were a mother and daughter who kept a boarding house. The mother was a widow and had been born in Bristol. I am not sure where the daughter had been born. In September 1929 a Laura E. Ganniclifft married in Camberwell as did Samuel G. Ganniclifft in June 1935, and in September 1937 a Constance Gannicliffe married in Lambeth. (The dates are from St. Catherine's House registers so are for a quarter of the year and not the exact date). Also in September 1937 Clara Ganniclifft aged 66 years died in Bridgend, and in March 1946 a Lilla Ganniclifft aged 53 years died in Wells. Again these dates are from the civil register index and I have no other details. It does seem strange to think of all these other Gannicliffes, alive in our lifetime, that we all knew nothing about. Liz Carter, who has a family research business, has promised, several times, to do a complete research of the family but so far has not done so. She has told me that her grandfather, Reginald ran away to Swansea to marry Peter G's mother so perhaps there has been a family connection further round the Welsh Coast from Tenby. He had also had a hairdresser’s shop in Cheddar. Several of us, I know, have learned from various sources that in the 17th Century some of the Exeter Gannicliffes became Quakers and that John Gannicliffe was imprisoned for being a Quaker at one time and others had witnessed Quakers' marriage certificates and that is about everything I can bring to mind about my father's family before the birth of my father, Robert Edward on 25th July 1892 in 33, Baines Place, Everton, Liverpool. I don't know when grandfather became Gannicliffe. I presume it was when he came to Liverpool. (Added later by hand): In 1851 a Purcell family was living in the Abercrombie ward of Liverpool, somewhere towards Crown Street. They were Henry, a shipwright, Mary, a dressmaker and William, an apprentice shipwright, all born in Tenby.

Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe/Ganniclefft - A Note on the Names

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May 2017 I was asked By Richard Ganniclifft-45 for an explanation as to the different spellings and how different parts of the family then adopted different spellings. Here are some notes on the subject. First I have to confess that I gave up paying much attention to the spellings because I found that there was so much variation. However, two main groupings on our trees developed - GANNICLIFFT and GANNICLIFFE – and so I started drawing a distinction as I built up the Wikitree tree. However, I have always assumed that this division was a “random” event coinciding with people paying more attention to spellings… combined with moving away from Exeter. But Richard pointed out that in modern times there’s a significant grouping spelling their names GANNICLEFFT. So this adds to the question. Let us start with Robert Saunders Ganniclifft (1796-1878). His birth record is spelt Ganniclift. His marriage record to Mary Ford is spelt Ganniclefft. The 1841 census is Ganniclifft. 1851 and 1871 : Ganniclift. Death record: Ganniclefft. Now his offspring: Harriet Pinkham’s birth is Ganniclefft. Marriage is Ganniclifft. Robert Pinkham: Birth: Ganniclifft. 1841 Census: Ganniclifft. 1861: Ganniclefft. Marriage: Gannicleft. Same story with William Pinkham: Select Births 1538-1975: Gannicleft. Free BMD 1837-1915: Gannicliffe. 1861 Census: Gunniclifft. 1871 Census: Gaunicliffe. Let's skip to John Ford Ganniclifft: 1841 Census: Ganniclift. !861: Ganicliff. Marriage Cert: Ganniclifft. 1881 Census: Gannicleft. Death: Ganniclift. In the case of his son Samuel it becomes more consistent: either Ganniclefft or Gannicleft. And in the case of the next son down (Samuel George G) it is all Ganniclefft (with only one aberration of Canniclefft!) Bear in mind that apart from real variations there is also a margin of error in the transcribing/digitising, where people are reading hand-written documents… All I can suggest is that there came a point in time where either the type writer was invented or handwriting improved to enable clearer distinctions between t's and e's and f's… or people got literate enough to start spelling their names in a consistent manner. For my part, because of so much variation in spelling, I had to adopt some sort of “policy” for myself on the Wikitree family tree, and so I have called everyone Ganniclifft until into the 1800s. To take any other approach would have made for a myriad of slightly differing Last Names on Wikitree which served no purpose, and would have made for a searching challenge within Wikitree itself. From about the mid-1800s the family starts to diverge and as they move away, a greater level of consistency seems to emerge, but with divergence of names also (Ganniclifft, Gannicliffe and now Ganniclefft also). And during the periods of transition towards the consistent use of one spelling or another, I have adopted an approach of giving all siblings the same spelling for their Last Name at Birth. Thus: All the descendants of Joseph Langdon Ganniclifft (who went to Tenby) are all Gannicliffes with an e and... All descendants of John Albert Ganniclifft (who went to Clevedon) are all Gannicliffts with a t. And now what of the Gannicleffts? John Ford Ganniclifft (b. 1840) is a good starting point because the birth records of all his children are Ganniclefft! And all their descendants also, it seems, so the Wikitree family tree reflects this. But NB I’ve left John Ford as Ganniclifft, for consistency with his siblings. His son Samuel Ganniclefft b. 1877 became a Policeman in London d.1924 And his son Samuel George Ganniclefft b. 1909 d. 1965 married Violet Keeble in 1935 and stayed in London. The "Surname Database" has the following to say: Last name: Ganniclifft: This unusual locational name derives from a now "lost" medieval place believed to have been in Devonshire. It is found recorded in a wide variety of spellings, including Ganiclef, Gannicleffe, Ganniclief, Gannicleff, and Ganicleft, and the epicentre of the name from the earliest times is the City of Exeter. The translation is apparently "the gannets cliff", and given that the gannet is a marine bird, and that the "soft" redstone cliffs of South Devon are continuously subjected to coastal erosion, this would be logical. However, the name does not appear in the recent lists of lost medieval villages prepared by the Royal Commission on Historical Monuments. The recordings include: William Geniclif, who married Dorothie Smyth on June 7th 1604, at St. Dunstan's, Stepney, London; Thomas Ganniclift, of St. Thomas the Apostle, Exeter, christened on April 3rd 1659; and Richard, son of Thomas Ganiclift, christened on June 14th 1668, in London. Later, on October 17th 1784, William Ganniclifft married Mary Handford at St. Mary Major, Exeter, Devonshire, in the reign of George 111 (1760 - 1820). The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Hugh Gannicliff, which was dated January 1st 1591, a witness at the christening of his daughter, Agnes, at St. Thomas the Apostle, Exeter, Devonshire, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth 1, known as "Good Queen Bess", 1558 - 1603. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling. Read more: http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/Ganniclifft#ixzz4iqARUH7q

Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe: Joan Varey's Miscellaneous History Notes

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Many of the notes below were taken from a letter from (I assume) Peter Ganniclifft to Harry Gannicliffe (Gannicliffe-2) dated 11 May 1970 from 10, The Triangle, Clevedon, Somerset. Not too sure as to all the sources... * The Devon Subsidy Rolls 1524-7 John Ganniclyff's goods were assessed at £3 [Ganniclifft-142] There is also a mention of a Richard Gannaclyff whose goods were assessed at £4 [possible father, not put on tree] * Visit to Malborough 14 June 1981: 1540 William G was a monastery almoner employed at Huish in Woodleigh (reign of Henry VIII - the dissolution of small monasteries began around 1536). 1554 24 May William Ganniclift presented clerk to the Perpetual Vicarage at West Alvington with Parishes at Malborough, South Huish and Milton. 1561 Bishop Alley's Report William Ganniclifft, Magister, Vicar of West Alvington, not a graduate, unmarried priest, does not preach, has another living... So he carried on through the Reformation and the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth. [NB not on tree - no connection at time of writing] * Devon Muster Rolls 1569 John and Michael Ganeclif were Archers in St Thomas Parish [Ganniclifft-157 and -144] * Hookes's History 1588 ?? Ganniclifft holds a tenement in Exwick * ?? 1590 Edward G of Clyffe dies and leaves a will. He was a tenant in the St Thomas Parish. [Here it is] [NB not on tree at time of writing - not sure who his father is] * Ganyclyffe, Edward in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Ganyclyffe, Edward Dates: 1591 Place: Devonshire, England Book: Burials. (Burial) Collection: Devon and Cornwall: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Bishop of Exeter, 1559-1799 Volume: Court of the Archdeaconry of Exeter. Chapter: 1591. Text: Ganyclyffe, Edward, - m.t. 1591 1600 Thomas G, a cordwainer or currier was made a Freeman of Exeter. [Ganniclift-33?] 1634 Humphrey Gannicliffe of St Thomas left a will. [Ganniclifft-152... Here it is] * Gannicliffe, Humphry in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Gannicliffe, Humphry Dates: 1634 Place: St. Thomas Exeter, Devonshire, England Book: Burials. (Burial) Collection: Devon and Cornwall: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Bishop of Exeter, 1559-1799 Volume: Here begins the Alphabetical Calendar of Original Wills. Chapter: 1634. Text: Gannicliffe, Humphry, St. Thomas nigh Exeter W. 1634 * Archdeaconry Court of Exeter 1640 The account of Peter Hamlyn, Guardian to the children of Nicholas Brimcliffe, alias Gannicliffe, viz John, Elizabeth and Mary. 1 Jan 1640 [This is Nicholas is Ganniclifft-130 who we have as having 10 children. Peter Hamlyn must be a relative of John's wife Marie. Her father was we believe a John, so... perhaps a brother or uncle. As will be seen, John was a major influence in the Quakers.] * Devon Protestation Returns (Reign of Charles I) 1641 There was unrest in 1641 during the passage of the Bill of Attainder [allowing people to be punished without trial] against the Earl of Strafford. He was thought to be plotting the overthrow of the English Government with an Irish Army. He was against Parliamentary government and was executed. Following this, all men had to sign a protestation vowing to uphold the Protestant Church against all Popery, and in St Leonard's Parish John Ganniclifft and Richard Ganniclifft signed it. (The St Thomas returns are missing.) [Ganniclifft-53 and -54?] * Other sources? 1656 (October) Nicholas G (see note on 1640 above) who belonged to the Quaker Branch was taken on his way to visit Fox at Launceston. He was imprisoned in Exeter Jail. Earlier in the year Nicholas G brought James Nayler from Bristol (Sidcot) to Exeter. This was during the Commonwealth (1649-1660). Oliver Cromwell allowed people a certain amount of political freedom, but freedom of conscience did not extend to Roman Catholics or Quakers, hundreds of whom he threw into prison. This was due less to religious prejudice than to fear of civil disruption, as he opened the gates of England to the Jews, which had been closed to them 400 years before by Edward I. 1657 Fox stays with John G when the first meeting of Quakers in Devon and Cornwall takes place at the Seven Stars Inn, near Exe Bridge, Exeter. [Ganniclifft-134] * ''Friends' Quarterly Journal'' pp 101-102 19 Feb 1986 Ann Gannicliffe from the ''Thimbeck Manuscript''... [Ganniclifft-114] 1655 Ann had accompanied Sarah Goldsmith on her peregrination through Bristol "clad in a garment of sackcloth, reaching to the ground, with her head uncovered and and earth or ashes laid thereon, and her hair hanging down about her... as a sign against Pride." Both women were committed to the Bridewell. Tony Varey (Varey-8) in 2017 adds another source for the 1655 peregrination: * ''Women's Worlds in Seventeenth-Century England: A Sourcebook'' edited by Patricia Crawford. Laura Gowing POLITICS AND PROTESTS 9.13 Going naked for a sign: Sarah Goldsmith, 1655, and Katherine Hearne, 1666 In the 1650s, Quakers were spreading their message all over England. Quaker women engaged in a number of dramatic public actions which were highly effective in publishing the truths they sought to witness, including 'going naked for a sign'. To go naked was not the modern equivalent of ‘streaking’. Goldsmith undid her hair and wore it uncovered, and was dressed in a coat of sackcloth and shoes. Even so, her action so outraged contemporary views of female modesty that she attracted a crowd. Later Quakers regarded ‘going naked for a sign’ as immodest and denied that it ever occurred... To the Quakers, the form of government - Protectorate in 1655 or monarchy in 1666 - made little difference; their task was to bear witness to the Lord. ''Abstract of the Sufferings'', Friends House copy, vol. 1, p. 15; The Great Book of Sufferings (MS). Friends House Library, London, i. 548. On the 3d of the 3d month [May], 1635, Sarah Goldsmith, being moved to put on a coat of sackcloth of hair next her, to uncover her head, and put earth thereon, with her hair hanging down about her, and without any other clothes upon her, excepting shoes on her feet, and in that manner to go to every gate, and through every street within the walls of the city, and afterward to stand at the High-Cross in the view of the town and market, as a sign against the pride of Bristol, and to abide so in that habit seven days, in obedience thereto, though in great self-denial, and in a cross to her natural inclinations, she cheerfully prepar’d her garment, being long and reaching to the ground; and on the 5th of the 3rd month early in the morning, two friends accompanying her, passed through the streets to the several gates, some people following them, but doing no harm: then she return’d home: and about the ninth hour came to the High-Cross, and one friend with her, a great multitude of people following; there she stood about half an hour, till the tumult grew so violent, that some bystanders, in compassion, forced them into a shop, out of which the multitude call’d to have them thrown, that they might abuse them; but by the intervention of the chamberlain kept out of their hands, and carried to the Tolzey. The Mayor came thither, and ask’d her, why she appear’d in the city in that habit? She answered, in obedience to the light in my conscience. What if you, said the Mayor, in your obedience had been kill’d by the rude multitude? She replied, I am in the hands of Him that ruleth all things. 1 have harm’d none, yet have I been harm’d; neither have I broken any law by which 1 can be brought under just censure; if I had appeared in gay clothing you would [not?] have been troubled. In conclusion, the Mayor, at the instigation of Joseph Jackson one of the aldermen sent her to Bridewell, and with her Anne Gunnicliffe and Margaret Wood, for owning and accompanying her. [p. 256] * Mention of Nicholas Ganniclifft (from ''Bristol Manuscript''): 1656 (30 June) Camsgill [Cumbria] John Camm to D. Hollister and others Reports a safe return home though in much weakness. Not been out of the house since arrival, but has had meetings at home. Sends messages of love from self, wife and little Thomas to... and Nicholas Ganniclifft and wife. * Certificate of Marriage of George Fox and Margaret Fell. 1669 Ann was a signatory to the marriage. [Unfortunately not all the signatures appeared on the scanned document accompanying the on-line marriage record. At the bottom of the sheet it just says "... and many more."] * Bristol, Burial Registers 1673 Ann Ganniclifft (Gunnicliffe) is described as "An antient friend". * Sources? 1692 John G published ''"The Sauciness of a Seducer"'' in collaboration with George Trosse. John G and Joseph Nott, Quakers of Exeter, published Gospel truths Asserted in Answer to Joseph Hallett's 27 Queries. Printed and sold by T. Sowle at the Crooked Billet in Holywell Lane, Shoreditch, London. Tony Varey-8 adds in 2017: * University of Michigan The sauciness of a seducer rebuked, or, The pride and folly of an ignorant scribbler made manifest in some remarks upon a scurrilous libel written by Joseph Nott ... against a book of the Reverend Mr. George Tross in vindication of the Lord's Day : together with a confutation of some errors of the Quakers, in a book call'd ... Gospel-truths scripturally asserted, written by John Gannacliff and Joseph Nott. Trosse, George, 1631-1713. London: Printed for J. Salisbury ... 1693. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan, Digital Library Production Service 2012 November (TCP phase 2) * Source? 1701 John G, a cordwainer, of St Thomas Parish, leader of the Society of Friends in Exeter, dies,aged 80. For nearly 50 years he was a faithful member and is the outstanding figure of the early days. His children did not retain their membership of the Society. [This is Ganniclifft-134] 1719 John G of St Thomas Parish is the schoolmaster. [This must be Ganniclifft-117] * St Thomas Parish Papers - Overseers Accounts - Poor Surcharge Book 1734-38 1738 5 July Thos. Gannicliff was on the Parish Council. "His signature is on the accounts - not illiterate or anything like" (see scanned image - Joan Varey History Notes) Also 4 August 1748, and 1753 and 1754... [Must be Ganniclifft-120] 1771 Thomas Gannicliff of Stoke Demerel, left a will. [Here it is] NB not on tree at time of writing - no connection established] * Gannacliff, Tho. in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Gannacliff, Tho. Dates: 1771 Place: Stoke Damerell, Devonshire, England Book: Burials. (Burial) Collection: Devon and Cornwall: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Bishop of Exeter, 1559-1799 Volume: Here begins the Alphabetical Calendar of Original Wills. Chapter: 1771. Text: Gannacliff, Tho., Stoke Damerell W. 1771 1780 William G comes into possession of a lease of Lucking Mills near and below Cricklepit Mills in St Mary's Parish (£600 lease of 70 years). [Ganniclifft-3] 1802 Robert G admitted Freeman of the City of Exeter. Fuller and Parish Clerk, Improvement Place, City Road, Shilhay [Exeter] [Ganniclifft-2] * Census for the Napoleonic Wars, St Mary Steps Parish 1803 William G aged 67, very infirm, owns one bullock. Mary, his wife, 70. Robert, his son, a Fuller, is a volunteer. His wife is named Grace, and there are 4 children: Robert, Elizabeth, Henry and George. 1806 William G dies. Abstract of title of the Mills passed to Robert G. * Apprentices with their Masters 1810 Apprentice: Robert Saunders Ganniclifft [Ganniclifft-1] Master: Robert Ganniclifft Tucker's Hall, Exeter, by Joyce Youens Varey-8 adds: Tuckers Hall, Exeter: The History of a Provincial City Company Through Five Centuries (South-West Studies) Hardcover – 1 Jun 1968 by Joyce Youings (Author) 1825 William G is a Fuller in Frog Lane, Exeter. [Ganniclifft-17] 1826 4 November Robert Saunders Ganniclifft admitted to the freedom of the Company of Weavers, Tuckers and Shearmen 1850 Robert Saunders Ganniclifft applied for post of Beadle. [Ganniclifft-1] 1859 Robert Pinkham Ganniclifft applied as Freeman His Master, a Tailor, died before he could complete his apprenticeship and subsequently he joined the Royal Navy. [And here is his record reference with a scanned copy of the manuscript on his person profile page] * Robert Gameclift in the UK, Naval Officer and Rating Service Records, 1802-1919 Name: Robert Gameclift Birth Date: abt 1825 Gender: Male Age at Start of Service: 16 First Service Date: 11 Nov 1841 First Ship Served On: Belleisle Last Service Date: 17 Oct 1854 Last Ship Served On: Resolute Record Type: Entry Books of Certificates Date Range: 1858 Jun - Jul [Ganniclifft-89] 1885 Emma Evans, widow, applied for a gratuity from the Freemen's Charitable Trust, being the eldest unmarried daughter of Robert Sa(u)nders Ganniclifft, the company's Beadle from 1850 until his death in 1878. "The Ganniclefts had been fullers in Exeter for many generations." When Emma died she was succeeded by her spinster sister Laura Ford Gannicleft aged 45 who enjoyed the gratuities till her death in 1898. [Ganniclifft-6 and Ganniclifft-8] * ''The Benn Diaries'' by Tony Benn Tuesday 27 June [1944] We did PT this morning and the first lecture was meteorology. Gannicliffe brought the mail in and there was a telegram for me. I don’t like telegrams as a rule so I didn’t open it immediately, and when I did it was quite unhurried.... Tony Varey writes in 2014: We never found out who this Gannicliffe was, so... I looked in Tony Benn's diary and it seemed that he was in Africa as a trainee pilot or some such. So Googles "Gannicliffe Rhodesia" and up popped this news article (''www.thislocallondon.co.uk'') A world war enthusiast who is putting together the life story of a Sanderstead soldier is appealing for members of his family to come forward. Ian Miller is writing about Walter Hook’s experiences as a sergeant in Africa during World War II... In a glowing reference from a '''Major Gannicliffe''', Sgt Hook is described as “willing and painstaking at all times and carried out deputy duties in the absence of more senior officers”. He died in 1995 at the age of 81. And all I have from an Ancestry search are references to Albert Leslie Ganniclifft (1894- ), Ganniclifft-164 on Wikitree. Could it be him? Looks a bit doubtful... it is Gannicliffe with an e....

Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe - Dealing with Unattached Records

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Tony Varey (Varey-8) is writing this in 2017-2019. I have conducted an exercise of trawling for computerised records and identifying those not included in the original Ganniclifft/Gannicliffe Family Trees prepared in the 1970s and 1980s, and the result is the "Descendant List" shown in the attached pdf file. This is a work-in-progress - and a living document - and below I describe how I have treated many of the records I have managed to incorporate into the tree (especially where there is uncertainty), and I detail here also those individuals as yet unattached to the tree... the challenge then being to research and guess (deduce) how (and indeed if) they could be connected to the main strands of the tree. Thus to an extent it is an "issues" list... as well as a summary of (recent) connections made (right or wrong). Almost by definition it is all about those from Exeter and those who migrated to Clevedon, Tenby, Liverpool, London and elsewhere. I should mention that in the earlier years the variations in spelling are enormous and I have not paid much attention to the exact spellings in creating "person profiles" on the tree, limiting the names to Ganniclifft as a default for the early records, and Gannicliffe for Joseph Langton Gannicliffe who migrated to Tenby and his descendants many of whom settled in Liverpool, plus a small enclave of Gannicleffts based mainly in London. In later years the different names in the records become better defined. This seems simply more sensible than faithfully reproducing every guessed spelling and slip of the nib of every transcriber of the 1500s and 1600s records and, given the rarity of the name, and accepting the many spelling variations, the chances of ambiguity, attributable to different spellings, as to whether people are duplicates, is very small... tending to zero. So, as will be seen, there is some family history work yet to be done by future generations. And more records will most probably emerge to enable them to do it! In effect I am building upon earlier research by Peter Ganniclifft-42 and William Henry Gannicliffe-2 in the 1970s, and in the 1980s by my parents Jim Varey-9 and Joan Gannicliffe-1 on the very top of the tree, and perhaps this is the best place to start. '''DEALING WITH THE TOP OF THE TREE''' With a view to extending the work carried out by PG and WHG, my parents annotated all (?) BMD Ganniclifft(e) entries in the Exeter Parish Records and Bishops' Transcripts (held by the Devon and Cornwall Records Society) from 1500 to 1628, before which there are no proper systematic records. So that virtually defines the starting point in practical terms, and (supposedly) provides the "universe" of Exeter Gannicliffts (indeed virtually ALL Gannicliffts) of the period. Of course the Gannicliffts started before that, and they are not ignored here, but there are no proper records... Now it is a bit tentative, but the earliest entries do provide hooks from which to hang much of what happens after, and so (with an unusual name like Ganniclifft) we can make a working assumption that the top levels of the tree are closely related to each other. This then enables us to proceed. However, there are groupings of people (records) whose links to the main Exeter family are not clear, which means they either branched off before the earliest records started, or branched off later but whose linkage we cannot see... Now the tree my grandfather William Henry Gannicliffe-2 had professionally prepared in the 1970s had William [[Ganniclifft-48|Ganniclifft-48]] as top of the tree (who married Dunes Jakes/James in 1589 and presumed b 1571 d 1613. Peter Ganniclifft-42 went one level higher on his 1970s tree, to William [[Ganniclifft-34|Ganniclifft-34]] who died in 1587. However, in 1986 my parents' work on the parish records offered the possibility of going higher still. My father observed (4 November 1986) that the Register proper begins only in 1554 with the baptism of Edward, son of ? on 9 November 1554 (now [[Ganniclifft-143|Ganniclifft-143]] on Wikitree), a record which is now available on-line, as are most but not all of the other records he faithfully noted. (The Devon burial records seemed to be inaccessible via Ancestry.com at the time of researching, but I now (2019) find they are there on "Find My Past"). But the first burial is of John on 5 September 1560 (on-line record not yet found) and my father James Varey-9 considered it logical to take him to be the head of the tree and be father of Edward above and William [[Ganniclifft-34|Ganniclifft-34]] who headed up the Peter Ganniclifft tree, as well as other candidate sons (see later). So a new John [[Ganniclifft-142|Ganniclifft-142]] has been created for the children to be attached to. Just to summarise the 1986 work done by my parents in Exeter: * St Thomas the Apostle: All the BMDs (1554-1628) were logged. So we have the supposed "universe" either now incorporated into the tree, with or without on-line record, or NOT incorporated but listed here below (again, either with or without on-line record). * St Mary Major 1560 to 1620: no Gannicliffs. * St Mary Steps: parish records did not begin until 1654/55 and the Bishop Transcripts 1610 - too late for early Gannicliffs but one marriage picked up (Nicholas and Elizabeth 1611). * St Edmunds 1571-1632: no Gannicliffs (... but there were some: Nicholas Ganniclifft-130's marriage to Prescilla and their children...) * This work was backed up by a 1978 computer print-out of births and marriages for the "Ganns" of every conceivable spelling for Devon and Wales from the late 1500s to the mid 1800s. I then continued to build the tree on this basis with the additional candidate sons for John, namely John (son of John), but also Michael and Hugh, and their descendants as applicable. However, the third entry in the registers was for the death of a Christopher, on 5 June 1564, son of an Edward Gannicliff "of Clyffe". Clearly Christopher could not be the son of the Edward mentioned above (b. 1554 and referred to in his death record as "of the Streate")... so we were dealing with another Edward. And indeed there are two death records for "wife of Edward" with one being "of Clyffe". Could he also be the son of John? ...with a brother called Edward? Seemed unlikely, as a result of which he was left off the tree, pro tem. An earlier record was found in the Devon Subsidy Rolls (Joan Varey's Gannicliffe History Notes): In 1524-7 John Ganniclyff's goods were assessed at £3, and a mention of a Richard Gannaclyff whose goods were assessed at £4. But this was the only reference found for Richard, and so, given the uncertainty, he got left off the tree as well, again pro tem. So... was Richard John's father? His death does not appear, so he must have died pre- 1554 (the first entry in the parish registers). But could he not just as easily have been his brother? Either way, could he have been the father of the second Edward, Edward of Clyffe. It would seem very plausible. Let us analyse: Edward of the Streate was born in 1554 and died in 1586 at the age of 32. Edward of Clyffe died in 1590, at the age of (having been born at the latest say 1545, assuming that Christopher was born as well as dying in 1564) at least 45. On this basis they appear to be of the same generation, and therefore I concluded that we treat Richard as the elder brother of John with an "Unknown Ganniclifft" father as the new head of the tree. With John and Richard mentioned in the 1524-27 Subsidy Roll, they would have to have been born abt 1500, with their Unknown father b abt 1480... So I have done this on the tree, creating Richard [[Ganniclifft-192|Ganniclifft-192]] and Unknown[[Ganniclifft-191|Ganniclifft-191]]. I now deal with the putative sons of John and Richard, namely John, Michael, Hugh, the two Edwards, William Ganniclifft-34 mentioned above, and also an additional William... plus another John (died 1588) '''(For brevity here I am now using Gt- to signify Ganniclifft.)''' '''John''' John [[Ganniclifft-157|Ganniclifft-157]] is the son of John, Cordwainer, according to the parish record of his death and having been mentioned in the Muster Rolls of 1569 along with Michael, means he was born at the latest in 1500 or so, No descendants identified. '''Michael''' Michael [[Ganniclifft-144|Ganniclifft-144]] has been created (died 1626) and 3 plausible children added. Based on the mention in the Muster Rolls along with John, we have assumed that he was a brother, and therefore also a son of John. His wife (Honor U-368869 according to Varey-9 transcript in 1986) died 21 March 1619. Here are three children who are less plausible for Michael. Yes, they are born before he dies, but he was getting old when they were born. And they are from a different Parish... Far more likely is that they are the children of a Michael who would have been born about 1595, the son of... either Michael himself, or Hugh, or William Gt-48 (son of their brother William Gt-34). However, there is no birth record for this Michael. However, of the options available, Michael Gt-144 is the best candidate for his father, and his profile is now Michael [[Ganniclifft-212|Ganniclifft-212]], with these three children following on... * Marie Ganniclis in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Marie Ganniclis Gender: Female Baptism Date: 20 Feb 1616 Baptism Place: Saint Paul,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Michaell Ganniclis FHL Film Number: 547185 * Phillipp Ganniclisse in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Phillipp Ganniclisse Gender: Male Baptism Date: 5 Nov 1617 Baptism Place: Saint Paul,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Michaell Ganniclisse FHL Film Number: 547185 * Thomas Ganniclise in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Thomas Ganniclise Gender: Male Baptism Date: 4 Nov 1620 Baptism Place: Saint Paul,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Michaell Ganniclise FHL Film Number: 547185 This record below could well be for Michael Gt-212 and has been adopted as such: * Michael Ganicleffe John Barons in the Devon, England, Extracted Church of England Parish Records Text: Sept. 16 1611 Michael Ganicleffe, apprentice of John Barons, tucker Book: 1670 Collection: Devon: Exeter - Freemen 1266-1967 '''Hugh''' A Hugh [[Ganniclifft-149|Ganniclifft-149]] has been created and six children attached. However, we have no wife or even any record of birth or death. And we are treating him as son of John... although he could be the son of Richard. We know him only from his children's records. '''The Edwards''' Edward Gt-143 we have incorporated as the son of John, and Varey-9 has him as married to Alice (U-368787) and dying 11 May 1586 and he is referred to in the records as "of the Streate". And we have ascribed Thomas [[Ganniclifft-145|Ganniclifft-145]] to him as his son (albeit not a perfect fit - see notes on his profile). Now let us turn to the Edward referred to as "of Clyffe" who died 1 Oct 1590 and was married to a Dewnes (died 3 July 1579). As mentioned earlier, they had a son Christoffer (died 5 June 1564). This Edward we are attaching to Richard Gt-192, on the basis that we cannot have two Edwards as sons of John... Now there was a third Edward who, based on the birth dates of the children and a possible marriage for him below, would (like Michael Gt-212 above) have been born abt 1595-1600, and again possibly have been the son of Michael or Hugh... or William Gt-48. And again, he has been attached to Michael Gt-144. He is Edward [[Ganniclifft-216|Ganniclifft-216]] with wife and children following on... * Margarett Ganaclyffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Margarett Ganaclyffe Gender: Female Baptism Date: 21 Jun 1621 Baptism Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Edward Ganaclyffe FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 * Marie Ganaclyffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Marie Ganaclyffe Gender: Female Baptism Date: 21 Jun 1621 Baptism Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Death Date: 6 Jul 1621 Father: Edward Ganaclyffe FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 The Parish Record mentions a Michael who died at the same time as Marie. And who could this unnamed person be? * Ganacliffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Ganacliffe Gender: Male Baptism Date: 11 Aug 1622 Baptism Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Edward Ganacliffe FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 * Edward Gannaclyffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Edward Gannaclyffe Gender: Male Baptism Date: 22 Apr 1626 Baptism Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Edward Gannaclyffe FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 And here's a marriage that would fit (in a Parish less than 5 km from Exeter): * Edward Ganecley in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Edward Ganecley Gender: Male Marriage Date: 20 Aug 1620 Marriage Place: Whitestone,Devon,England Spouse: Thomasine Huswief FHL Film Number: 917554 And this could be a record of his death? * Gannicleiffe, Edward in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 No Image Name: Gannicleiffe, Edward Dates: 1628 Place: St. Thomas Exeter, Cornwall, England Collection: Devon and Cornwall: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Bishop of Exeter, 1559-1799 Volume: Court of the Archdeaconry of Exeter. Chapter: 1628. Text: Gannicleiffe, Edward, St. Thomas Exeter A. 1628 The Parish Record gives his death date as 3 October 1628. So we have adopted both marriage and death as being for him. '''The Williams''' William Gt-34, "... labourer, d. 14 March 1587, St Thomas the Apostle" was the top of the PG tree and assumed to be the son of John d.1560, being the only older person on the Parish Records. However, we have assumed that a Richard mentioned alongside John in the Devon Subsidy Rolls is John's brother, and it is conceivable therefore that this William could be Richard's son instead. However, in a letter from William Henry Gannicliffe to Peter Ganniclifft dated 13 5 1970 he says that the "first of the ilk" on Peter Ganniclifft's tree is a William GANACLYFF, a monastery almoner at HUISH in Woodleigh, in 1540. But this is not true. The William referred to in the letter is William Gannyclyff the Vicar of West Alvington who died in 1572 (as opposed to 1587) and whose connection with the Exeter Gannicliffts is not clear (West Alvington being some 65 km from Exeter). But, as with William Gt-34, he could also be the son of John or Richard. Or he could be a brother. On balance he is more likely to be a son and therefore I have TENTATIVELY attached him as a son of Richard (the other William already being attached to John) as William [[Ganniclifft-206|Ganniclifft-206]]. Here below are his details. William Gannyclyff is listed as the Vicar of "Malborough with South Huish" (near Salcombe), from 1554 to 1572. However, before 1877 it was the Parish of "West Alvington". And here is his death record for 1572: * Gannycliffe, William in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Gannycliffe, William Dates: 1572 Place: W. Alvington, Devonshire, England Book: Burials. (Burial) Collection: Devon, Cornwall and Gloucester: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Consistory Court of the Bishop of Exeter, 1532 to 1800 Volume: Calendar of Wills and Administrations In the Consistory Court of the Bishop of Exeter, 1532 to 1800. Chapter: 1572 Text: 1572 Gannycliffe, William, W. Alvington 225 My parents visited Malborough on 14 June 1981 and wrote the following: 1540 William was a monastery almoner employed at Huish in Woodleigh (reign of Henry VIII - the dissolution of small monasteries began around 1536). 1554 24 May William Ganniclift presented clerk to the Perpetual Vicarage at West Alvington with Parishes at Malborough, South Huish and Milton. 1561 Bishop Alley's Report William Ganniclifft, Magister, Vicar of West Alvington, not a graduate, unmarried priest, does not preach, has another living... So he carried on through the Reformation and the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth. That brings us to the end of the main issues right at the "Top-of-Tree". '''EXETER/DEVON PEOPLE''' '''Descendants of Thomas''' I found quite a group of people who did not yet appear on the tree. After analysis I attached them all to Thomas [[Ganniclifft-36|Ganniclifft-36]] (born 1660). He is the strongest candidate. They comprise wife Mary Morgan, eight children and six grandchildren. There are precious few (if any) other options, and they do all seem to fit fairly neatly together in terms of ages, birth intervals etc. Nevertheless, this area may merit further research... '''Descendants of Nicholas''' There is a collection of on-line records for the offspring of Nicholas who hitherto had not been on the Family Tree, plus a birth for him (1588) and his father is named as John. Now John Gt-47 (1567-90) is the best candidate for this and so we have attached Nicholas [[Ganniclifft-130|Ganniclifft-130]] , Elizabeth Robyns and their children, and also a putative brother William, to him. It dovetails well, and it is the conclusion my father Jim Varey-9 also came to in his 1986 work on the tree. Interesting character, Nicholas (Gt-130), being a prominent Quaker (see profile). However, there is another Nicholas marriage, to Priscilla, plus five children. They seemed to dovetail nicely with the above, but Varey-9 was unsure since the children of Priscilla were all baptised at St. Edmund (where Nicholas and Priscilla were married) and not St. Thomas... Could it be that there was another Nicholas? Yes... not least because actually there is an overlap - a Thomas baptised in St Thomas in May 1626 and a Jane in St Edmund in the same month. But I cannot find this second Nicholas. Nevertheless he now has a profile [[Ganniclifft-197|Ganniclifft-197]] to which Priscilla and children are attached. And, with some TREPIDATION, I have added him to the children of Michael Gt-144, with the proviso that his father could be one of the others (Hugh or William Gt-48). In 2017 I discovered on the internet a pdf of some early parish records for Trusham which hitherto had not come up in any digital search and (2019) still don't. They consisted of a family headed by a Steven, who must (?) be Stephen Gt-139, son of Nicholas and Priscilla above. There are no other candidates, the dates dovetail, and Trusham is only some 10 km or less from Exeter. The Trusham pdf shows Stephen Gannicliffe marrying Elizabeth Francis 25 May 1659. He died 22 Oct 1676 and she 22 Nov 1686. And their children: Stephen b 30/10 1659 d 23/12 1659; Edward b 9/12 1660 d 18/11 1679; Stephen b 26/5 1662; Nathaniel b 25/3 1664 d 11/2 1673; John b 20/6 1665; Elizabeth b 26/11 1667 d 15/3 1676; William b 1/3 1669; Ambrose b 3/3 1673. These records have now been created. Source: http://www.trusham.com/trusham%20fanilyhistory/ '''Thomas and Agnes''' In the Parish Record of St Thomas the Apostle (Exeter): * Thomas, son of Agnes Gannycliff, widow, b. 3/12 1595, d. 20/4 1596 Who's wife was Agnes? We are now ascribing her to John Gt-47 d 1590 and creating a Thomas Gt-196 for her (with unknown father, which means he does not appear on the "Descendants lists"). However, another Thomas has been given to her, mentioned in her (supposed) son William's will, but for whom there are no records - Gt-256. '''Marye''' Marrying in 1588, she would be born in about 1568. William Gt-34 would be a candidate father but he already has a Marye, born 1583, so that's no good. The only other logical candidate is Edward of Clyffe Gt-194. His son Christopher died in 1564, and we are assuming that's when he was born as well. If so, he married Dewnes when he was about 20. this would be a good fit. Marye's marriage is on the parish records but her birth not: * Marye Gannicliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Marye Gannicliff Gender: Female Marriage Date: 13 Jan 1588 Marriage Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: Robart Hellyer FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 We have therefore ascribed her to Edward of Clyffe Gt-194 as Gt-207. '''Thomasine''' Here the candidate fathers are William Gt-34 and Edward of Clyffe Gt-194. * Thomasine Gannycliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Thomasine Gannycliff Gender: Female Marriage Date: 10 Nov 1586 Marriage Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: John Thomas FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 On the balance of probability, we have therefore TENTATIVELY allocated her to Edward of Clyffe Gt-194 as Gt-208. '''Two Alices''' This first Alice could be the daughter of William Gt-34, Michael Gt-144, Edward of the Streate Gt-143 (whose wife was an Alice), or at a pinch Hugh Gt-149 or again Edward of Clyffe Gt-194. Looking at the date range for their children, Edward "of the Streate" Gt-143 seems to offer the best fit, and so we have allocated Alice to him as Gt-209, albeit TENTATIVELY . * Alice Gannycliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Alice Gannycliff Gender: Female Marriage Date: 30 Oct 1598 Marriage Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: William Delve FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 Here's the husband: William Delve in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: William Delve Gender: Male Baptism Date: 23 Feb 1571 Baptism Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Father: William Delve FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 This second Alice could be the daughter of Michael or Hugh, or also of William Gt-48 (the next generation down) who married Dunes Jakes. However, the marriage was at St Olave's which adds an additional unknown to the equation. Thus we have (again) TENTATIVELY added her to the children of Michael Gt-144. She is on Wikitree as Alice [[Ganniclifft-222|Ganniclifft-222]]. * Alice Ganicley in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Alice Ganicley Gender: Female Marriage Date: 3 Aug 1616 Marriage Place: Saint Olave,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: Daniell Barker FHL Film Number: 916838 I had thought it might be a second marriage, but there are no candidates. '''Two Dartington Marriages''' A couple of records which '''cannot yet be linked to the tree'''. Dartington is some 40 km from Exeter. This Elizabeth surely cannot be Ganniclifft-133, marrying at 59 years old... (there's another possibility for her further down). Then what about a second marriage for Elizabeth Francis who married Steven in Trusham (Steven died in 1676)? No. He died 22 Oct 1676 and she 22 Nov 1686. Her death was recorded in Trusham. So, a stray '''unattached''' daughter then, or widow... but whose? Profile Elizabeth [[Ganniclifft-224|Ganniclifft-224]] created. * Elizabeth Gannaclay in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Elizabeth Gannaclay Gender: Female Marriage Date: 12 Sep 1676 Marriage Place: Dartington,Devon,England Spouse: James Webber FHL Film Number: 917188 Next Mary: good candidate parents are Ganniclifft-37 and Frances Vinnicombe. But why Dartington - 40 km from Exeter? Frances was born in Crediton by the look of it, 15 km in the other direction... '''Unattached''' profile Mary [[Ganniclifft-225|Ganniclifft-225]] created. * Mary Ganneclay in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Mary Ganneclay Gender: Female Marriage Date: 1 Jan 1704 Marriage Place: Dartington,Devon,England Spouse: John Blackallar FHL Film Number: 917188 '''Three more Marys''' Logical parents for either of the next two would be William [[Ganniclifft-23|Ganniclifft-23]] and Mary Monk. However, as the tree stands at the moment, they already have a Mary marrying a Richard Langdon. Or indeed his brother Thomas Gt-36 and Mary Morgan. The first Mary's marriage location (below) creates some uncertainty, and so, rather than attach her to the above, we have merged her with Gt-260 b. 1682 Little Hempston. The script says she is of Cockington, which fits... * Mary Gannicliffe in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Mary Gannicliffe Gender: Female Marriage Date: 7 Apr 1716 Marriage Place: West Teignmouth,Devon,England Spouse: Richard Shale FHL Film Number: 917538 However, the second Mary is married in Exeter and although it is St Mary Arches, let us tentatively attach her to Thomas [[Ganniclifft-36|Ganniclifft-36]] and Mary Morgan as Mary [[Ganniclifft-227|Ganniclifft-227]]: * Mary Ganickley in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Mary Ganickley Gender: Female Marriage Date: 18 Jan 1720 Marriage Place: Saint Mary Arches,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: John Palmer FHL Film Number: 917102 Now, as for this one, the script says she’s from Exon and a John Ganniclifft is a witness. Her father must be (?) John Ganniclifft-134 born 1621. the famous Quaker, and so we have adopted her (Gt-198). * Mary Ganniclife in the England & Wales, Quaker Birth, Marriage, and Death Registers, 1578-1837 Name: Mary Ganniclife Event Type: Marriage Gender: Female Spouse: Manasses Orchard Marriage Date: 21 Oct 1675 Marriage Place: Cullompton, Devon, England Meeting: Monthly Meeting of East Div of Devon (Exeter, Barnstaple, Collumpton) Piece Description: Piece 1033: Monthly Meeting of East Div of Devon (Exeter, Barnstaple, Collumpton) (1664-1790) '''Elizabeth (St Mary Steps)''' Could this be Elizabeth Ganniclifft-133 born 1617, daughter of Nicholas and Elizabeth Robyns (they married in St Mary Steps)... marrying at 47? There are no other candidates in the records. And the parishes do match, and there are not many Gannicliffts from St Mary Steps. Therefore, WITH A BIT OF TREPIDATION, let us adopt this record as Gt-133. * Elizabeth Gannicley in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Elizabeth Gannicley Gender: Female Marriage Date: 6 Feb 1664 Marriage Place: Saint Mary Steps,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: William How FHL Film Number: 917105 '''Thomas''' Logically this Thomas below b. 1635 should be the son of Thomas Gt-33 and Agnes Segar, but they already have a Thomas (Gt-22) born 1634... Problem... How confident are we of Thomas Gt-22? But Edward of the Streate had (we think) a Thomas born 1582 (now put on the tree as Gt-145), as did Hugh, again born 1582 (now put on the tree as Gt-151) , neither with an identified wife or death date. So they are possible fathers for this Thomas below... albeit having this Thomas when of an age of 53 or so... or having Gt-22 at 54? * Thomas Ganicliff in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Thomas Ganicliff Gender: Male Baptism Date: 8 May 1635 Baptism Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Father: Thomas Ganicliff FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 This last thought is potentially important: which Thomas did Agnes Segar actually marry? Gt-33, 145 or 151? And who was the Thomas the father of Sidwell and Johan, both born before Agnes married her Thomas... and baptised at St Georges... And is this Thomas the same as the above? Or is it a record for Gt-145 or Gt-151? * Record Transcription: Devon Burials First name(s) Thomas Last name Ganicliff Age - Birth year - Death year 1663 Burial year 1663 Burial date 31 Mar 1663 Burial place Exeter, St Thomas Denomination Anglican County Devon Country England Archive reference 4781A/PR/1/1 Archive South West Heritage Trust Record set Devon Burials Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, Great Britain Meanwhile, Agnes remains the mother of three and married to Gt-33. And the above two Thomas records have been TENTATIVELY attached to Gt-151 as Gt-228. '''Johan (f)''' Is this Johan Ganniclifft-136, sister of Sidwell (above), born 1614 to Thomas Gt-33 and a wife that preceded Agnes Segar? Looks likely, and so we had adopted this for both. But then in 2020 we switched them daughters of Thomas Gt-145. * Jone Ganicliffe in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Jone Ganicliffe Gender: Female Marriage Date: 9 Jul 1638 Marriage Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: John David FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 '''The Worthylakes''' Here are a couple of events that could be linked - the Worthylake double... We cannot identify the father of this Joan below, but it could be Thomas Gt-22 above (and the problematic Gt-228 would be a perfect fit also). She has been created as Gt-229 and TENTATIVELY attached to Thomas [[Ganniclifft-22|Ganniclifft-22]]. This feels right given what follows... * Joan Ganniclieffe in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Joan Ganniclieffe Gender: Female Marriage Date: 23 Jul 1674 Marriage Place: Saint Thomas The Apostle,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: Nicholas Worthylake FHL Film Number: 916843, 916844 Now virtually the only plausible candidate for this William below seems to be Gt-118. And I have managed to connect them via the Worthylakes and created profiles accordingly. But it is logical that these two are fairly closely related on the Ganniclifft side, and as things stand William is Joan's nephew. And here below he is marrying his first cousin's daughter in law... * William Gannicliff in the London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812 Name: William Gannicliff Marriage Date: 28 Jun 1741 Parish: St Sepulchre, Holborn County: London Borough: City of London Spouse: Catharine Worthylalke Record Type: Marriage Register Type: Parish Register '''Elianore''' The below could conceivably be a daughter of Thomas Gt-22 and Marjorie Coles. but there's no birth record. And why marry in the Cathedral? This adds an uncertainty. But then (2020) we decided TENTATIVELY add her to John Gt-134 and Marie Hamlin. * Elianore Ganneclef in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Elianore Ganneclef Gender: Female Marriage Date: 25 Oct 1692 Marriage Place: Saint Peter Cathedral,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: Biniaman Bradshal FHL Film Number: 476912, 917198 Mentioned also in the Devon and Cornwall Records Society publication of 1910, Volume 1 - the Cathedral Register... page 124 https://archive.org/details/publications51devo/page/n8 '''Ann (Oxford)''' Now this could be Ganniclifft-123 born 1720. Or Ann Williams-50698 who married Joseph Ganniclifft-27 1738 who himself died 1762. But let us adopt the record as the death of Gt-123, daughter of the schoolmaster and a spinster (the manuscript would have said widow if she was). * Ann Gannycliff in the Oxfordshire, England, Church of England Baptism, Marriages, and Burials, 1538-1812 Name: Ann Gannycliff Event Type: Burial Burial Date: 31 Dec 1779 Burial Place: Oxford, St Mary Magdalen, Oxfordshire, England '''A Probate for a John''' Could this be the belated probate for John [[Ganniclifft-134|Ganniclifft-134]] the Quaker d. 1701? If not, then who? No other candidates, so let us assume so. * Gannicliffe, John in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Gannicliffe, John Dates: 1708 Place: St. Thomas, Cornwall, England Collection: Devon and Cornwall: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Bishop of Exeter, 1559-1799 Volume: Court of the Archdeaconry of Exeter. Chapter: 1708. Text: Gannicliffe, John, St. Thomas W. 1708 '''Rachael''' Could she be the daughter of William [[Ganniclifft-30|Ganniclifft-30]] , and wife Deborah Sanders who we believe died in 1725? Plausible. Or why not daughter of Joseph Gt-27 and Jane Matthews? This is a parallel case to Mary below. I am TENTATIVELY attaching her (and Mary) to Gt-30. * Rachael Gannicliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Rachael Gannicliff Gender: Female Marriage Date: 6 Nov 1750 Marriage Place: St. Thomas The Apostle'S, Exter, Devon, England Spouse: Tristram Bealy FHL Film Number: 916844 Reference ID: yr 1743-1773 p 4 Could this be the husband? Only candidate (Bailie) and the location is over 60 km from Exeter... * Tristram Bailie in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Tristram Bailie Gender: Male Baptism Date: 21 Mar 1724 Baptism Place: Black Torrington,Devon,England Father: John Bailie FHL Film Number: 916816 '''Mary, Mary, Mary and Joseph''' Could the first Mary below be the daughter of William Gt-30, and wife Deborah Sanders who we believe died in 1725? Plausible. Or why not daughter of Joseph Gt-27 and Jane Matthews? This is a parallel case to Rachael above. I am TENTATIVELY attaching her (and Rachael) to Gt-30. * Mary Gannicliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Mary Gannicliff Gender: Female Marriage Date: 26 Jun 1750 Marriage Place: St. Thomas The Apostle'S, Exter, Devon, England Spouse: Thomas Richards FHL Film Number: 916844 Reference ID: yr 1743-1773 p 4 I can identify no obvious candidates for the Mary below. Mary Handford-37 who (as of 2019) we have as married William Gt-70 b 1764 has now got a sourced death of 1807. And on the PG tree there was a daughter Mary (Gt-15) with unsourced dates: b. 1795 d. 1806. But now we have a source. So this record below remain '''unattached''' as Gt-250. * Mary Ganniclafft in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Mary Ganniclafft Gender: Female Marriage Date: 6 Apr 1809 Marriage Place: Saint David,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: William Baker FHL Film Number: 917097 Here's a death which could just possibly match with Mary Ganniclifft-107 born 1816. However, in 2019 we found a marriage for her (to a Vinnicombe) with a death date for her married name, and also a marriage for her brother Joseph to a Mary, for whom this death fits perfectly, so let us adopt this record as hers (Mary Wills Luxton Ganniclifft, Wills-3640): * Mary Ganniclift in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915 Name: Mary Ganniclift Estimated birth year: abt 1822 Registration Year: 1887 Registration Quarter: Jan-Feb-Mar Age at Death: 65 Registration district: St Thomas Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District Inferred County: Devonshire Volume: 5b Page: 51 With regard to the marriage below, we had attached it to the above Mary's brother Joseph Ganniclifft-106 born 1825 before marrying a Nancy later in life back in Devon. This was very tentative, but we thought it was probably him, given limited options. However, the marriage document said FATHER: JOSEPH... who is actually listed as a witness... We took this to be an error since there were no Josephs son of Joseph. But in 2019 we found a Joseph, son of Joseph and Jane (Langdon Gannicliffe?) but being born in 1817 not in Tenby but in Kent! (His parents visiting brother Robert in Chatham?) So this marriage must be his (profile created as [[Gannicliffe-67|Gt-67]]) and not this Joseph's. * Joseph Ganiclift in the London, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1921 Name: Joseph Ganiclift Spouse: Ann Moran Record Type: Marriage Event Date: 30 May 1846 Parish: St Paul, Shadwell Borough: Tower Hamlets Father Name: Joseph Ganiclift Spouse Father: William Moran Register Type: Parish Register In addition, in 2019 we found another first marriage for this Joseph, to Mary (Willis) Luxton. '''Malborough/South Huish/West Alvington''' Apart from William the Vicar mentioned earlier, in the Varey-9 Exeter transcripts are also noted some events in Malborough: * David Ganniclife in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: David Ganniclife Gender: Male Marriage Date: 3 May 1570 Marriage Place: Malborough,Devon,England Spouse: Alse Luckum FHL Film Number: 916856 ... plus for which no digital records found: * Alice Gannycleife, wife of David, d. 28/12 1574 * David Gannicleife d. 9/3 1578 My mother noted that there was a Luckhams Lane in Malborough! Could this David have been a son of John or Richard at the top of the tree? We are told that William was an unmarried priest, so let's discount him as a possible father. But with similar dates and living in the same location in isolation of all other Gannicliffts, they could be brothers. Let us adopt him TENTATIVELY as another son of Richard. Gt-231. '''Totnes''' A collection of records with a wide variety of spellings which do not seem to have a natural link to the Exeter people... However, could their father be John Gt-53 b. 1603 ? Yes... Let us hang them there with "uncertain" flags. One of the supposed daughters below is a Dewnes (the name of his mother). Gt-232: * Anne Gannecle in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Anne Gannecle Gender: Female Marriage Date: 1 Feb 1641 Marriage Place: Totnes,Devon,England Spouse: Richard Goodall FHL Film Number: 917545 Gt-233: * John Ganniclef in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: John Ganniclef Gender: Male Baptism Date: 29 Dec 1625 Baptism Place: Totnes,Devon,England Father: John Ganniclef FHL Film Number: 914545, 917546 Could these two be John's daughters? Let us treat them as such. Gt-234: * Agnes Ganickly in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Agnes Ganickly Gender: Female Baptism Date: 26 Sep 1650 Baptism Place: Totnes,Devon,England Father: Jno Ganickly FHL Film Number: 914545, 917546 Gt-235: * Ruth Gannecley in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Ruth Gannecley Gender: Female Baptism Date: 13 Sep 1653 Baptism Place: Totnes,Devon,England Father: John Gannecley FHL Film Number: 914545, 917546 Gt-236: * Dewnes Ganacley in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Dewnes Ganacley Gender: Female Baptism Date: 18 Mar 1631 Baptism Place: Totnes,Devon,England Father: John Ganacley FHL Film Number: 914545, 917546 But is this the same person? Could be - Dewnes is an uncommon name. Back in Exeter? Her supposed father was from Exeter. And his mother was Dunes Jakes. And why the Cathedral? Let us treat her as such. (This one also appears in the Devon and Cornwall Records Society publication Vol 1 Cathedral records page 43.) * Dweene Gannacle in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Dweene Gannacle Gender: Female Marriage Date: 22 Nov 1656 Marriage Place: Saint Peter Cathedral,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: John Owen FHL Film Number: 476912, 917198 '''Some Ganacles''' Are these Gannicliffts? Given the rarity of the name and their concentration in Devon, it is fair to assume that there is a connection... and therefore we will treat them as part of the Ganniclifft family. But can we join them up? Here is a John Ganacle in Totnes (1629-1629). We already have a John son of John, b. 1625 and so it is only with GREAT TREPIDATION that we attach him to the other Totnes people above, as Gt-251. * Jno Ganacle in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Jno Ganacle Gender: Male Baptism Date: 22 Nov 1629 Baptism Place: Totnes,Devon,England Death Date: 27 Nov 1629 Father: Jno Ganacle FHL Film Number: 914545, 917546 There is a Ganacle family in Littlehempston, close by Totnes, with a father John, wife Agnes and three daughters Anne (1674-1674), Agnes (1676-) and Mary (1682). And I found a marriage for them in 1672 (the digitial record says Gunasle but the script clearly says Ganacle). Given the proximity to Totnes I am attaching this John Gt-257 (b abt 1652) as a son of the Totnes John Gt-233 (b 1625). There are no other logical candidate connections for him. But it is a pity that we cannot find a birth. And another Ganacle family in Chudleigh, not far from Exeter, who might very possibly be headed by William Gt-189 from Trusham, which is a stone's throw from Chudleigh. Let us treat them as such. '''Stoke Damerel''' There is a collection Gannicliffts here who may be linkable back to the main tree. First here are the offspring from Jane and Edward, but who was Edward's father? * Edward Ganniskell in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Edward Ganniskell Gender: Male Baptism Date: 19 Feb 1764 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Ganniskell Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 I believe that this record (see Edward's profile for the document) refers to this Edward AND his father: * Edward Gannicliff in the Web: UK, Wills of Royal Naval Seamen Index, 1786-1882 Name: Edward Gannicliff Date: 9 Dec 1795 Rank/Rating: Carpenter's Mate Ship Name: Glory URL: http://discovery.nationalarchi... According to this, Edward was in the Navy and named his father, who lived in Clapham, as beneficiary to his will. Bear in mind that Stoke Damerel is actually a part of the city of Plymouth today. The above are the only father and son Edward Gannicliffts on record for the period. * Robert Gannicleff in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Robert Gannicleff Gender: Male Baptism Date: 27 Dec 1766 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Gannicleff Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 * Robert Gannicliff in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Robert Gannicliff Gender: Male Baptism Date: 25 Mar 1767 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Gannicliff Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 * Elizabeth Gannicliff in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Elizabeth Gannicliff Gender: Female Baptism Date: 4 May 1770 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Gannicliff Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 (See later for another possible link) * Thomas Gannicliff in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Thomas Gannicliff Gender: Male Baptism Date: 2 Nov 1773 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Gannicliff Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 * John Gannicliff in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: John Gannicliff Gender: Male Baptism Date: 12 Oct 1775 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Gannicliff Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 * James Ganniclift in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: James Ganniclift Gender: Male Baptism Date: 15 Oct 1780 Baptism Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Father: Edward Ganniclift Mother: Jane FHL Film Number: 916919 Peter Ganniclifft thought that "Edward might be the son of QUAKER THOMAS who died in Stoke Demerel in 1771 and left a will" (see below) but that he did not have any record that he had a son Edward... (and I cannot find one either...). * Gannacliff, Tho. in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Gannacliff, Tho. Dates: 1771 Place: Stoke Damerell, Devonshire, England Book: Burials. (Burial) Collection: Devon and Cornwall: - Wills and Administrations proved in the Bishop of Exeter, 1559-1799 Volume: Here begins the Alphabetical Calendar of Original Wills. Chapter: 1771. Text: Gannacliff, Tho., Stoke Damerell W. 1771 However, he did mention Thomas's other children John, Hannah, Mary, Ann and Elizabeth. A number of things: firstly I can find no references to Thomas a Quaker. Second, what is Quaker about the above record? Third, Thomas's children mentioned by Peter we have attached to [[Ganniclifft-120|Thomas Gt-120]] who was born 1700 (that's a good fit with 1771) but who we have as the only candidate as member of the St Thomas the Apostle Parish Council (1738-1754) - see accounts record signed by him on his profile. Could he have been a Quaker as well? But he could have had a son Edward around 1740 who could then have migrated to Stoke Damerel. (Shame there's no record...) And here's more: a couple more Stoke Damerel references, for a Hannah who could well be the Hannah born 1730 to Thomas. * Hannah Gannacliff in the UK, Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices' Indentures, 1710-1811 Master's Name: Hannah Gannacliff Apprentice Name: Anthony Palmer Collens Residence Location: Stoke Damerel Payment Date: 10 Jun 1768 * Hannah Gannicliffe in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Hannah Gannicliffe Gender: Female Marriage Date: 16 Jan 1769 Marriage Place: Stoke Damerel,Devon,England Spouse: Thomas Medell FHL Film Number: 916921 ... albeit marrying at 39... Although we have no records for an Edward as a son of Thomas, this Hannah adds a bit of weight to the possibility of the link since candidates in the record are sparse (and Hannahs sparser). So let us join them up by creating an [[Ganniclifft-237|Edward Gt-237]]... and profiles for his children. Here's an interesting reference which, given the date, appears to refer to the Stoke Demerel Gannicliffts: * John Gennecliff in the Dorset, England, Vagrant Passes, 1739-1791 Name: John Gennecliff Departure Place: Devonshire Destination Place: St Mary Avery Event Date: 22 Nov 1782 Record Type: Vagrant Pass Archive Description: Vagrants' Passes etc. Oct 1782 - Jan 1783 (Vagrant Carrier) Persons on Form: Name Jane Gennecliff John Gennecliff [her son] However, the full text is as follows, and implies a London connection. "Whereas by a pass granted by Edward Bridges Blackett LLD, one of His Majesty’s Justices of the Peace for the County of Devon dated 15th of November 1782, Jane Gennecliff and John her child ordered to be conveyed in the direct way to the Parish of St Mary Overy in the Borough of Southwark as the place of their last legal settlement. I do hereby order and direct the Constable or other officer of the Parish of Charmouth in the County of Dorset to convey the said Jane Ganniclifft and John her child on __________ to the Parish of Martin in the County of Wilts in the way to such Parish of St Mary Overy in 3 days time, for which he is allowed the sum of 3d per mile and no more. Given under my hand this 22nd Day of November in the Year of our Lord 1782 – John Drewe" This refers to Southwark Cathedral or "The Cathedral and Collegiate Church of St Saviour and St Mary Overie" according to ''Wikipedia''. Could this be the Stoke Demerel Jane? Yes, it could... Her children were born as follows: Robert 1766, Robert 1767, Elizabeth 1770, John 1775 and James 1780. If James died young then perhaps she was having to travel with her youngest but left the others with someone. Why go to London? Perhaps her son Edward was based there (in the Navy). And perhaps husband Edward had moved there too (he lived in Clapham in 1795, the time of son Edward's will. And finally, to add to the idea of some London connection, here is a marriage which looks too good a fit to be true: * Edward Gannikel in the London, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1932 Name: Edward Gannikel Gender: Male Record Type: Marriage Marriage Date: 8 Mar 1763 Marriage Place: St Saviour, Southwark, Southwark, England Spouse: Jane Quin Register Type: Parish Register The spelling is almost exactly the same as was used for the registration of their first son Edward, the date is perfect, and the marriage took place in Southwark, where she was travelling to in 1782! Shall we believe this? Yes. '''Topsham''' There is a group of Topsham records which hitherto have not been linked up... children of John. There are no obvious John candidates on the tree unless John Gt-134 the Quaker 1621-1701 went to Topsham. The marriage banns of his first daughter Mary were read at a Quaker meeting in Topsham, and his last child Hannah's death (below) is recorded in the Quaker register. * Jone Ganiclefe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Jone Ganiclefe Gender: Female Birth Date: 28 Sep 1657 Birth Place: Topsham,Devon,England Father: John Ganiclefe FHL Film Number: 962976 * Nicholas Ganiclefe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Nicholas Ganiclefe Gender: Male Birth Date: 24 Oct 1660 Birth Place: Topsham,Devon,England Father: John Ganiclefe FHL Film Number: 962976 * Thomas Ganiclefe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Thomas Ganiclefe Gender: Male Birth Date: 8 Sep 1663 Birth Place: Topsham,Devon,England Father: John Ganiclefe And could this be him, marrying in the nearby Shillingford St. George? * Thomas Gannacle in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Thomas Gannacle Gender: Male Marriage Date: 18 Apr 1689 Marriage Place: Shillingford St George ,Devon,England Spouse: Mary March FHL Film Number: 916933 * Hannah Ganiclefe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Hannah Ganiclefe Gender: Female Birth Date: 2 Mar 1669 Birth Place: Topsham,Devon,England Father: John Ganiclefe FHL Film Number: 962976 Is this the same person? Looks like it: * Hannah Williams in the England, Select Deaths and Burials, 1538-1991 Name: Hannah Williams [Hannah Ganicliff] Gender: Female Death Date: 28 Sep 1725 Death Place: Devonshire, England Father: John Ganicliff FHL Film Number: 813522 Reference ID: p 77 * Hannah Williams in the England & Wales, Quaker Birth, Marriage, and Death Registers, 1578-1837 Name: Hannah Williams [Hannah Ganicliff] Event Type: Burial Gender: Female Father: John Ganicliff Death Date: abt 1725 Burial Date: 28 Sep 1725 Burial Place: Devon, England Meeting: Monthly Meeting of East Div of Devon Piece Description: Piece 1399: Monthly Meeting of East Div of Devon (Exeter, Barnstaple, Collumpton) (1694-1782) The text says Hannah Williams, a daughter of John Ganicliff…. Script says 28 7 - does this refer to September? '''London Janes''' These two Janes are somewhat isolated and we cannot find solid links. * Jane Ganniclift in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Jane Ganniclift Gender: Female Marriage Date: 15 Sep 1734 Marriage Place: Fleet Prison and Rules of The Fleet, London, England Spouse: Wm. Stradling FHL Film Number: 0813822 RG7 V. 121-7 * Jane Ganniclift in the London, England, Clandestine Marriage and Baptism Registers, 1667-1754 Name: Jane Ganniclift Gender: Female Event Type: Marriage Marriage Date: 15 Sep 1734 Marriage Place: London, England Residence: Shoreditch Spittlefields Spouse: Wm Stradling Spouse Residence: Shoreditch Spittlefields Piece Description: 1733 Jul - 1735 May The script says she was a widow… (but was she?) And this one: * Jane Ganiclift in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Jane Ganiclift Gender: Female Marriage Date: 4 Dec 1737 Marriage Place: Westminster, Middlesex, England Spouse: Edwd Forster FHL Film Number: 813832 Reference ID: 33 The text says she was a spinster... The only candidate from the family tree (for either of these marriages) is Jane Matthews-7423 who married Joseph Ganniclifft-27 in 1723. He remarried in 1738. So she could have divorced or deserted him and gone to London... which may explain why the 1734 marriage took place "clandestinely" - see notes below copied from ''Ancestry.com''. But if she was prepared to marry once (illegally?) by running off, then why not a second time? Thus both events are now attached (albeit TENTATIVELY) to Matthews-7423. About London, England, Clandestine Marriage and Baptism Registers, 1667-1754 Rules of Marriages: Ecclesiastic laws governing marriage have changed during England’s history, and during this period (1667–1754), marriage within the church came with certain restrictions. Banns required a couple to post an announcement of the intended union for three weeks prior to the marriage. Banns could be waived by obtaining a license, but church officials could also dictate where and when a couple could marry. Residency requirements, although at times loose, had to be met, and there were certain times during the ecclesiastic calendar when marriages were not to be performed. There were also age restrictions: parental consent was required if either party was under 21. Most couples were married at the family church, but a significant portion of the population, for various reasons, chose to skirt these regulations and get married outside the church. Here, requirements were much looser. Grooms could be as young as 14, and brides 12. The bride and groom needed only to give their consent to the union for it to be recognized. Clergy and witnesses were not necessary, though they were often present to provide proof that the marriage had taken place. These marriages are commonly referred to as “irregular” or “clandestine.” Who Performed Clandestine Marriages? The demand for clandestine marriages was met by institutions that considered themselves exempt from church canon and in some cases, like that of May Fair chapel, by a cleric who simply flouted the regulations. Prisons like the Fleet and the King’s Bench Prison became popular destinations for couples interested in quick, no-questions-asked nuptials because of the number of clerics imprisoned for debt who had nothing to lose and welcomed the income. Many of them lived in the “Rules” or “Liberties,” which were areas around the prison where prisoners could pay for the privilege of living outside the gates. In an effort to crack down on clandestine marriages, legislation in 1711 attempted to coerce prison keepers to require banns or licenses before performing marriages. That legislation only succeeded in pushing more marriages outside the prison walls into the Rules, or in the case of King’s Bench Prison into the area known as “the Mint,” until the passage of Hardwicke’s Act of 1753, which went into effect March 24, 1754, and required formal ceremonies, thus shutting down the marriage centers. '''MISCELLANEOUS INDIVIDUAL RECORDS''' Here is an unattached marriage record... Could it be Gt-214 born in 1617, marrying at 62? * Phillip Ganacley Rebecca Salter in the Devon, England, Extracted Church of England Parish Records Text: Phillip Ganacley & Rebecca Salter 23 Sep 1679 Book: 1670 Collection: Devon: - Registers of Marriages, 1538-1837 But the only decent record for Rebecca Salter is this one, so it's not beyond the realms... * Rebecca Salter in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Rebecca Salter Gender: Female Baptism Date: 13 Sep 1616 Baptism Place: Feniton,Devon,England Father: Willm Salter FHL Film Number: 916846 I have incorporated these records into their profiles, albeit tentatively. '''Philip and Mary''' Two isolated records for Mary and Philip from Find My Past for Ipplepen. * Devon Burials First name(s) Mary Last name Gannicliff Age - Birth year - Death year 1711 Burial year 1711 Burial date 12 Feb 1711 Burial place Ipplepen Denomination Anglican County Devon Country England Archive reference 608A/PR/1/2 Archive South West Heritage Trust Record set Devon Burials Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, Great Britain" * Devon Burials First name(s) Philip Last name Gannicliff Age - Birth year - Death year 1711 Burial year 1711 Burial date 16 Jan 1711 Burial place Ipplepen Denomination Anglican County Devon Country England Archive reference 608A/PR/1/2 Archive South West Heritage Trust Record set Devon Burials Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, Great Britain" Surely they are not the same Philip above, and his sister Marie, children of Michael, born 1616 and 1617... !! No, I have found a birth for a Rachel, dau of Philip and Mary in Ipplepen in 1697. New profiles have therefore been created (Gt-267-268), but they are '''unattached''' to the main tree. '''Another Eleanor''' An isolated record... who is she? A possible additional daughter for Joseph and Jane in Tenby? It would fit and there do not seem to be any other possibilities, so TENTATIVELY we have attached her... as Gannicliffe-66 * Record Transcription: National Burial Index For England & Wales First name(s) Eleanor Last name Genecliff Age 30 Birth year 1826 Death year 1856 Burial year 1856 Burial date 02 May 1856 Church St Mary Denomination Anglican Place Aberavon County Glamorganshire Country Wales Record set National Burial Index For England & Wales Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from Great Britain, Wales And Aberavon is of course not very far from Tenby. '''Eliza''' This must be Gt-103, Eliza Saunders Ganniclifft b 1798 but who appears on the PG Tree as Elizabeth. * Eliza Ganicliffe in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Eliza Ganicliffe Gender: Female Marriage Date: 26 Oct 1823 Marriage Place: Holy Trinity,Exeter,Devon,England Spouse: John Bennett FHL Film Number: 917095 '''A Naval Record''' * Joseph Ganniclifft in the UK, Royal Navy Registers of Seamen's Services, 1848-1939 Name: Joseph Ganniclifft Gender: Male First Service Date: 24 Apr 1857 [text below says 1855. 24 April is his birthday] First Ship Served On: Re William His first service date is written in the "Boys" column so he must have been born post 1840 or so... And indeed a record turns up: * Joseph Gannicliff in the Web: UK, Royal Naval Seamen Index, 1853 -1872 Name: Joseph Gannicliff Birth Date: 24 Apr 1839 Birth Place: Exeter, Devon Service Number: 19624 Reference: ADM 139/197/19624 text ADM 139/197/19624 Description: Name Gannicliff, Joseph Place of Birth: Exeter, Devon Continuous Service Number: 19624 Date of Volunteering: 22 March 1855 Date of Birth: 24 April 1839 There is a possibility that he was the only unrecorded child (of 12) of Robert Saunders Gt-1 but it looks like a long shot. However, Robert Pinkham Gt-89 (son of Robert Saunders above) went into the Navy, so did George, supposed son of John Ford Ganniclifft... There is nowhere else for him... Gt-249. '''Australia''' Here is a record of a passage back from Australia for a Joseph: * Jos Ganniclifft in the Web: Victoria, Australia, Outward Passenger Index, 1852-1915 Name: Jos Ganniclifft Age: 50 Birth Year: abt 1826 Departure Date: Mar 1876 Departure Place: Victoria, Australia Destination: LONDON Ship: TRUE BRITON Ship's Master: MILLER GEORGE M Page: 1 URL: https://www.prov.vic.gov.au/ex... This is almost certainly Gt-106, son of William Broughton Ganniclifft, b. 1825, married Ann Moran in London in 1846, was living as a boarder in Kent in 1861, was absent from the Census records of 1871 and, if it's him, returns from Australia in 1876, and marrying in his old age back in Devon in 1887... with Nancy Howgill (the dates match so it must (?) be him rather than the Naval person above for example). And his brother went to Australia... so let us assume this is him - Gt-106. Then who is this? * Annabella Ganniclifft in the Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950 Name: Annabella Ganniclifft Spouse Name: William Long Marriage Place: Victoria Registration Place: Victoria Registration Year: 1876 Registration Number: 1046 * Annabella Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Annabella Gannicliff Residence Date: 6 Mar 1877 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia Owner Name: Crown * Anna Bella Gannicliff in the Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 Occupier Name: Anna Bella Gannicliff Residence Date: 8 Apr 1880 Residence Place: Wimmera, Victoria, Australia This is McInnes-474, wife of Joseph's brother William Henry Gt-105 who died in 1875. In fact two William Gannicliffts go to Australia (one of them as a prisoner) and both marry in 1853 if the records are to be believed! One dies and one... disappears... They are Gannicliffe-46 and Ganniclifft-105 These are written up in a separate free space profile: [[Space:Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft_-_Australia|Space:Gannicliffe/Ganniclifft_-_Australia]] '''Kings Norton''' We have ascribed the records for a William Henry Gannicliffe in Kings Norton to William Henry Jury Gannicliffe-39 (born 1854). He seems to have traveled round and married twice, but it all looks solid. '''Swansea''' We have ascribed the couple of records popping up for a William in Swansea to William Gannicliffe-48 (born 1822) . He did time for larceny! '''The Chatham Connection''' Out of nowhere a Robert appears in Chatham, marrying a Sarah Record in 1819 and dying there in 1840. I have decided to treat him as Ganniclift-16, born 1789 and to attach Sarah. It is possible that it's not him since his estimated age at time of death was 10 years younger than he really was at the time. So... he married Sarah when she was 17 and he was 30. Still, who's to know, if he's born in Exeter! But he is the best candidate. Here below is an interesting military reference: * Robert Ganniclefft in the Canada, British Regimental Registers of Service, 1756-1900 Name: Robert Ganniclefft Military Date: 16 Jun 1819 [recruitment date] Unit: 46th Foot Soldiers The script of this military record says he was "discharged" on 13 August 1840 !!! (So he must have been terminally ill... having died on 30 August.) ''Wikipedia'' says the following about a barracks at Chatham: "Chatham Infantry Barracks was opened in 1757 to house troops manning the fortifications which had recently been built to defend the Dockyard. Within... 20 years it had taken on the additional role of national recruitment centre for the British Army, providing basic training for all new recruits. This role ceased in 1803, but the barracks went on to serve as a home depot for numerous regiments stationed around the globe. The Clincher: the 46th Foot Soldiers were from Devon: '''Rootsweb:''' 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot Formed in 1741..., ... Leaving its light company behind in America, the 46th went from New York to the West Indies in November 1778, and was present at the capture of St. Lucia. On its return home it was stationed at Plymouth... I found a "new" person in 2019, now attached as [[Ganniclefft-25|George Ganniclefft-25]] as a son of John Ford Ganniclifft, but not certain: * George Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915 Name: George Ganniclifft Registration Year: 1882 Registration Quarter: Oct-Nov-Dec Registration district: Exeter Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District Inferred County: Devon Volume: 5b Page: 112 * George Ganniclefft in the UK, Royal Navy Registers of Seamen's Services, 1848-1939 Name: George Ganniclefft Gender: Male Birth Date: 16 Nov 1881 Birth Place: Exeter, Devon First Service Date: 17 Oct 1900 First Ship Served On: Vivid II Last Service Date: 22 Jan 1902 Last Ship Served On: Arrogant Service Number: 343748 ..and the reason? * Geo. Ganniclefft in the UK, British Army and Navy Birth, Marriage and Death Records, 1730-1960 Name: Geo. Ganniclefft Event: Death Birth Date: abt 1882 Death Date: 22 Jan 1902 Death Age: 20 Death Place: Exeter Ship: Arrogant * George Ganniclefft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915 Name: George Ganniclefft Estimated birth year: abt 1883 Registration Year: 1902 Registration Quarter: Jan-Feb-Mar Age at Death: 19 Registration district: Exeter Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District Inferred County: Devonshire Volume: 5b Page: 63 '''Final (?) Remnants from On-line Searches...''' Who is this? * Elizabeth Gannicliff Solly in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Elizabeth Gannicliff Solly Gender: Female Marriage Date: 16 May 1805 Marriage Place: Margate, Kent, England Spouse: Harry Dawe FHL Film Number: 1886164 Reference ID: item 695 p 175 * Harry Dawe Eliz Gannicliff Solly in the Kent, England, Extracted Parish Records Text: Harry Dawe of St John Thanet gent wid & Eliz Gannicliff Solly of the s sp. 15 May 1805. Book: Volume 34 Collection: Kent, Surrey, London: - Canterbury Marriage Licences, 1781-1809 (Marriage) But then... we can see her maiden name... * Eliz Gannicliff in the Kent, England, Extracted Parish Records, 1539-1876 Name: Eliz Gannicliff Maiden Name: Solly Record Type: Marriage Marriage Date: 15 May 1805 Marriage Place: Canterbury, Kent, England Spouse: Harry Dawe And a possible birth for her... * Elizabeth Solly in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Elizabeth Solly Gender: Female Baptism Date: 23 Jun 1776 Baptism Place: St. John the Baptist Church, Margate, Kent, England Father: Daniel Solly Mother: Armavel Solly FHL Film Number: 1866678 However,her birth was found on Find My Past and we were able to connect her as the daughter of Anne Ganniclifft-124 (Solly-413). We have assumed the following records to belong to William Gt-129 b 1585 Exeter. A record from London, mentioned in the "Surnames Database" (surnamedb.com): * William Geniclif, who married Dorothie Smyth on June 7th 1604, at St. Dunstan's, Stepney, London Here is a digital record from Find My Past: * Record Transcription: England, Boyd's Marriage Indexes, 1538-1850 First name(s) William Last name Geniclif Birth year - Marriage year 1604 Spouse's first name(s) Dorothy Spouse's last name Smith Place Stepney St Dunstan County London Country England Source Boyd's marriage index, 1538-1850 Record set England, Boyd's Marriage Indexes, 1538-1850 Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Marriages Then a Probate record: * Geneclef, William in the UK, Extracted Probate Records, 1269-1975 Name: Geneclef, William Dates: 1611 Place: General, England Book: Wills Proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, and now Preserved in the Principal Probate Registry. 1605 to 1619. (Will) Collection: England: Canterbury - Wills Proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, 1605-1619 Text: 1611 Geneclef, William, [P.A.B. Limehouse, Stepney, Middx.] 5 Wood * William Geneclef in the England & Wales, Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384-1858 Name: William Geneclef [Willmi Geneclef] Probate Date: 30 Jan 1610 The original document, partly in Latin and very difficult to read, seems to mention a daughter Pricilla and a brother Thomas... Found her !! Gt-255. * Prycilla Geinclist in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Prycilla Geinclist Gender: Female Baptism Date: 3 Mar 1604 Baptism Place: Saint Dunstan,Stepney,London,England Father: Wm Geinclist FHL Film Number: 595417 But where is he? William had a half brother (we think) Thomas but who died young. Nevertheless, we have created a Thomas born abt 1586 but for whom I can find no birth or death records. Gt-256. More work needed. According to Richard Ganniclifft-45 the William D Ganniclifft below could be the brother of Mark Ganniclifft (1973 - 1996), son of David Stewart Ganniclifft (1929 - ) and Lilly Oehlert. Richard says he had a brother called William who was born in 1975, and although we cannot find a birth record, the two electoral records below support the 1975 birth date. However, there is also a son David William R Ganniclifft-176, born in 1978 (?), son of David S Ganniclifft-169 and Lilli Oehlert. Is he the same as this Willam D Ganniclifft? Why should he be? David was their father's name. Richard Ganniclifft-45 has no information on this person. So on that basis, and although David S and Lilli did not marry til 1978 (but that's irrelevant - Mark b. 1973 was Lilli's son) it would make sense to adopt this William D Ganniclifft as their son, now Ganniclifft-199. However, some room for confusion remains - see the respective profiles. * William D Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916-2005 Name: William D Ganniclifft Date of Registration: Jun 2004 Registration district: Birmingham Inferred County: Warwickshire Spouse: Kay R Barton Volume Number: 61 Page Number: 316 * Mr William D Ganniclifft in the UK, Electoral Registers, 2003-2010 Name: Mr William D Ganniclifft Birth Date: 1975-1977 Residence Date: 2007-2010 Address: 25, Albert Road, B68 0NA Residence Place: Oldbury, West Midlands, England * Mr William D Ganniclifft in the UK, Electoral Registers, 2003-2010 Name: Mr William D Ganniclifft Birth Date: 1975-1977 Residence Date: 2003-2006 Address: 41, Parsons Hill, B68 9BS Residence Place: Oldbury, West Midlands, England Plus one offspring (Gt-200): * Mitchell Jerry Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: Mitchell Jerry Ganniclifft Mother's Maiden Surname: Barton Date of Registration: Sep 2003 Registration district: Birmingham Inferred County: Warwickshire Register Number: B36B District and Subdistrict: 061/1B Entry Number: 182 The Simon Ganniclifft below is confirmed by Richard Gt-45 as a son of Brian Scott Ganniclifft-166 and Molly. I cannot find a birth record for Simon, but Richard confirms he was born in Kenya in 1961. Simon is Gt-201 *Simon D S Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916-2005 Name: Simon D S Ganniclifft Date of Registration: Feb 1991 Registration district: South East Hampshire Inferred County: Hampshire Spouse: Margaret R Brown Volume Number: 20 Page Number: 868 Offspring (Gt-202, 203, 204): * Oliver Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 No Image Name: Oliver Ganniclifft Mother's Maiden Surname: Brown Date of Registration: Sep 1995 Registration district: Surrey South Western Inferred County: Surrey Register Number: C7A District and Subdistrict: 7612C Entry Number: 255 * William Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: William Ganniclifft Mother's Maiden Surname: Brown Date of Registration: Sep 1993 Registration district: Surrey South Western Inferred County: Surrey Register Number: B12E District and Subdistrict: 7613B Entry Number: 193 * Joshua James Ganniclifft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: Joshua James Ganniclifft Mother's Maiden Surname: Brown Date of Registration: May 2003 Registration district: Cheltenham Inferred County: Gloucestershire Register Number: A74D District and Subdistrict: 479/1A Entry Number: 146 * Mr Simon D Ganniclifft in the UK, Electoral Registers, 2003-2010 Name: Mr Simon D Ganniclifft Birth Date: 1960-1962 Residence Date: 2003-2010 Address: 75, Naunton Park Road, GL53 7DG Residence Place: Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England The Michael Fawssett below seems to have only one candidate mother in the records, and that is Heather Ganniclifft-165, sister of Brian Scott Ganniclifft above. * Michael A Fawssett in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: Michael A Fawssett Mother's Maiden Surname: Ganniclifft Date of Registration: Jan-Feb-Mar 1948 Registration district: Ware Inferred County: Norfolk Volume Number: 4b Page Number: 384 And indeed Richard Gt-45 confirms as follows: "Heather (or possibly aka Eileen) Ganniclifft married Tony Fawssett (don't know when) but possibly in UK. They had 2 children, Michael & Clare (now Fawssett-8 and 9. [I cannot find them] This must be the Michael A Fawssett born 1948. She died in South Africa 2015/2016. For some reason Heather was always known as "Poo" (Don't ask me why!) Michael Fawssett and (?) had 2 sons, Mathew and Adam all living in Australia." [I cannot find them.] We a talking Ware in Hertfordshire… [yes, correct, and indeed they lived in Hertford.] Molly Ellen Ganniclefft-18 b. 1912 I had originally attached as a daughter to Samuel Ganniclefft-3 on the basis of plausibility and an error on her birth record. However, the fact that the record states that her mother's maiden name was Ganniclefft, implies clearly that she was illegitimate: * Molly E Ganniclefft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915 Name: Molly E Ganniclefft Mother's Maiden Name: Ganniclefft Registration Year: 1912 Registration Quarter: Oct-Nov-Dec Registration district: Steyning Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District Inferred County: Sussex Volume: 2b Page: 430 There is one candidate "Ganniclefft" mother and that is Mary (Ganniclefft-5) McGregor, b. 1889 and married in 1916. In 1911 she was working at the Rolle Hotel in Budleigh Salterton, and calling herself Molly !! (It must be her - age and birthplace match.) Then, assuming we are right here, Mary then goes to Steyning of all places to give birth (was there a special place there for giving birth or looking after children?). Thus I have decided to attach Molly to this Ganniclefft-5. We can trace Molly through her life and she died unmarried in 1975 in London after a period in Ripon. Perhaps she became a nurse - she left £6000 in 1975. Molly is [[Ganniclefft-18|Ganniclefft-18]]. Now this Maureen below (b. 1927) could be the illegitimate child of any one of the three daughters of Samuel Ganniclefft: Laura Evelyn m. 1929, Constance Agnes m. 1928 or Mary Olive m. 1939... or even Molly Ellen Ganniclefft-18 above (at age 15). But we do not hear any more of this Maureen. She seems to disappear so it seems likely that she was adopted, or possibly took the surname of her mother's (future) husband . I have (ARBITRARILY) attached her to Laura Ganniclefft-6. She is now Ganniclefft-22. * Maureen Ganniclefft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: Maureen Ganniclefft Mother's Maiden Surname: Ganniclefft Date of Registration: Oct-Nov-Dec 1927 Registration district: Marylebone Inferred County: London Volume Number: 1a Page Number: 635 There is only one possible candidate mother in the records for these two below (Ganniclefft-11) and so we have attached them to her as Ganniclefft-21 and -22). * Sherlon Lakisha C Ganniclefft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: Sherlon Lakisha C Ganniclefft Mother's Maiden Surname: Ganniclefft Date of Registration: Feb 1996 Registration district: Croydon Inferred County: London, Surrey Register Number: B98B District and Subdistrict: 2251B Entry Number: 178 * Sheniece Nakiesha Ganniclefft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: Sheniece Nakiesha Ganniclefft Mother's Maiden Surname: Ganniclefft Date of Registration: May 1997 Registration district: Croydon Inferred County: London, Surrey Register Number: C80B District and Subdistrict: 2251C Entry Number: 073 There's only one possible candidate father in the records for this one (Ganniclefft-12) and so we have attached her to him as Ganniclefft-19. * April Ganniclefft in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2005 Name: April Ganniclefft Mother's Maiden Surname: Palmer Date of Registration: Jun 2002 Registration district: Bromley Inferred County: Kent Register Number: B49 District and Subdistrict: 2221B Entry Number: 122 '''MISCELLANEOUS NON-BMD REFERENCES''' Seems to be John Gt-134, the Quaker, since he is mentioned in Humphrey Bawden's will (see profile). * Exeter, Devon Gannacliffe, John in the England, Extracted Parish and Court Records Text: Exeter, Devon, Poor of Quakers of, re land of Humph. Bawden, dec. Gannacliffe, John - 399 22 Book: Attorney-General's Suits Collection: England: - Index of Chancery Proceedings (Reynardson's Division), 1649-1714, (A-K) This appears to be Ganniclifft-36. I don't think it necessarily means 1670 itself... would he be apprenticed at 10 years old? * Thomas Gannyclyff John Street in the Devon, England, Extracted Church of England Parish Records Text: Thomas Gannyclyff, apprentice of John Street, cordwainer Book: 1670 Collection: Devon: Exeter - Freemen 1266-1967 This is Robert Gt-2 * Robert Gannicliffe in the Devon, England, Extracted Church of England Parish Records Text: Robert Gannicliffe Fuller - - - 1 Volunteer Book: 1670 Collection: Devon: Exeter - Militia List for 1803 This looks like Gt-90 in London aged 25 (he died at 27): * Wm Ganniclifft in the British Postal Service Appointment Books, 1737-1969 Name: Wm Ganniclifft Date Appointed: Apr 1877 Place Appointed: Cd This we have taken as William Gt-3 * William Ganniclefft in the U.K. and U.S. Directories, 1680-1830 Name: William Ganniclefft Dates: 1776-1800 Location: Exeter Gender: Male Address(es): Exeter Source Date: 1780 '''NON-FAMILY - TRANSCRIPTION ERRORS''' Some of these records have been checked on-line against the hand-written document texts and were found to have been wrongly transcribed. Others could not be checked (not on-line), but are very isolated and very likely not to be Gannicliffes. An isolated one from Cheshire... Could it be Marie Ganniclifft-141 daughter of Nicholas marrying at 50? Very doubtful. * Mary Gannicliffe in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: Mary Gannicliffe Gender: Female Marriage Date: 23 Aug 1672 Marriage Place: Mottram In Longdendale,Cheshire,England Spouse: Hugh Lawton FHL Film Number: 424859, 424961 * John Gunnicliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: John Gunnicliff Gender: Male Marriage Date: 3 Feb 1747 Marriage Place: Doveridge,Derby,England Spouse: Rachael Buxton FHL Film Number: 422209, 498070 * John Gunnicliff in the Derbyshire, England, Select Church of England Parish Registers, 1538-1910 Name: John Gunnicliff Burial Date: 14 Jan 1754 Burial Place: Doveridge, Doveridge, Derbyshire, England FHL Film Number: 1042043 * John Gunnicliff in the England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973 Name: John Gunnicliff Gender: Male Marriage Date: 14 Dec 1750 Marriage Place: Westminster, Middlesex, England Spouse: Alice More FHL Film Number: 814115 Reference ID: 109 * Maria Ganckcliffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Maria Ganckcliffe Gender: Female Baptism Date: 7 Jan 1720 Baptism Place: Ripendenia, England Father: Tho Ganckcliffe FHL Film Number: 1542243 Where is Ripendenia?!! The nearest is Ripponden (Halifax). This does not help us... This is '''NOT''' a Gannicliffe. The script clearly says something else (Gliffraft or something): * Gorge Ganniclifft in the Liverpool, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1659-1812 Name: Gorge Ganniclifft Baptism Date: 10 Aug 1663 Baptism Parish: Liverpool, St Nicholas Father's name: Richard Ganniclifft [barely legible but not Gannicliffe] Reference Number: 283 NIC/1/1 Nor is this (more like Hynchliffe): * Thomas Gymhcliffe in the West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1512-1812 Name: Thomas Gymhcliffe Event Type: Baptism Baptism Date: 23 Dec 1596 Baptism Place: Almondbury, All Hallows, Yorkshire, England Parish: Almondbury, All Hallows Father: Willmi Gymhcliffe Mother: Jana Bond Nor these... they are Tunnicliffes: Hannah Gannicliff Name: Hannah Gannicliff Gender: Female Marriage Banns Date: 5 Jan 1755 Marriage Banns Place: Kirk Ireton, Derbyshire, England Search Photos: Search for 'Kirk Ireton' in the UK City, Town and Village Photos collection Phillimore Ecclesiastical Parish Map: View this parish Spouse: John Wilcockson 1911 England Census NAME: Willer Gannicliffe BIRTH: abt 1864 - Halton, Lancashire, England West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1910 NAME: Matilde Gannicliffe West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1910 NAME: Joseph Gannicliffe West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1910 NAME: Annie Gannicliffe West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813-1910 NAME: Sam Gannicliffe West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1813-1935 NAME: William Arthur Gannicliffe * Jean Gannicliff in the Warwickshire, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1910 Name: Jean Gannicliff Event Type: Marriage Marriage or Bann Date: 31 Jan 1847 Marriage or Bann Place: Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England Spouse: John Cooper Father: William Wright * George Henry Gannicliffe in the West Yorkshire, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1813-1935 Name: George Henry Gannicliffe Event Type: Marriage Marriage Date: 21 Jul 1934 Marriage Place: Bramley, St Peter, West Yorkshire, England Parish as it Appears: Bramley, St Peter Search Photos: Search for 'Bramley, St Peter' in the UK City, Town and Village Photos collection Father: William Arthur Gannicliffe Spouse: Edna Fletches This one one is probably not a Gannicliffe (see below)... and there are no obvious linkages for her father either... * Caroline Gannicliffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Caroline Gannicliffe Gender: Female Birth Date: 10 Jun 1871 Birth Place: Everton Baptism Date: 10 Aug 1871 Baptism Place: St. Peter, Liverpool, Lancashire, England Father: Michael Gannicliffe Mother: Sarah Ann FHL Film Number: 1656565 * Caroline Gunnicliffe in the England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 Name: Caroline Gunnicliffe Gender: Female Birth Date: 10 Jun 1871 Baptism Date: 10 Aug 1871 Baptism Place: Saint Peter,Liverpool,Lancashire,England Father: Michael Gunnicliffe Mother: Sarah Ann * Caroline Tunnicliffe in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837-1915 Name: Caroline Tunnicliffe Registration Year: 1871 Registration Quarter: Apr-May-Jun Registration district: Liverpool Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District Inferred County: Lancashire Volume: 8b Page: 166 * Caroline Tunnicliffe in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915 Name: Caroline Tunnicliffe Estimated birth year: abt 1872 Registration Year: 1872 Registration Quarter: Jan-Feb-Mar Age at Death: 0 Registration district: Liverpool Parishes for this Registration District: View Ecclesiastical Parishes associated with this Registration District Inferred County: Lancashire Volume: 8b Page: 177

Ganster Street in Etna

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Several generations of families grew up on Ganster Street in Etna, just outside of Pittsburgh. In the 1920s and 1930s, men in these families worked at the nearby Spang's steel mill.

Gapes from Essex mainly around Saffron Walden England

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This is a One Name Study to collect in one place all that is known about the surname Gapes

Garbade Family Mysteries

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Are there any Garbade's here?!?!

Gård nr. 1, Hjelm, Damsholte Sogn

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'''Gård nr. 1 i Hjelm By, Damsholte Sogn. Nuværende adresse''' '''1. ejer af gården:''' Jens Andersen Staal købte samtidig med de øvrige bymænd sin fæstegård til selveje - med københavneren Nicolaj Jacobsen som mellemmand. Han får sit skøde i 1781. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_1_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-2.png |caption= }} Gårdmændene er skrevet i rækkefølge efter gårdnummer. Jens Andersen står først, fordi han har Gård nr. 1. https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144709,23339870 I 1795 kommer der en deklaration i Møns Herred skøde- og panteprotokol. Ifølge denne bytter han gården bort og får i stedet en mindre ejendom i Hjelms Kobbel - Hus nr. 1, beboet af Christopher Reifenberg. Link til deklarationen fra 1795: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144709,23339870 2. ejer af gården: Christopher Christiansen Reiffenberg. Ifølge ovennævnte deklaration byttede Christopher Reiffenberg sig til Gård nr. 1. Han var allerede ved at være en ældre mand. 3. ejer af gården: Hans Christophersen bliver gift 1776 og må antages at overtage Gård nr.1 efter faren på dette tidspunkt. 4. ejer af gården: Jens Jensen, som var blevet gift året før, køber i 1808 af sin svigerfar, Hans Christophersen. https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144711,23340607 Hans Christophersen skriver "min svoger", men det kunne dengang også betyde svigersøn. 5. ejer af gården: Christian Larsen får adkomst til gården 1828 gennem giftermål med enken Kirsten Hemmingsdatter. https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144718,23342963 Vi ser af følgende link til Møns Herred skøde- og panteprotokol, at Christian Larsen sælger tidligere Gård Nr. 1 i Hjelm til sin søn: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#145673,23686143 i 1857. Gården har fået matr.nr. 21a og ligger lige nord for landsbyen på matrikelkortet gældende fra 1809-60. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_1_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-1.png |caption= }} Fra Historiskekort.dk Styrelsen for Dataforsyning og Infrastruktur. 6. ejer af gården: Sønnen hedder Jens Peder Christiansen. Det er stadigvæk en helgård på over 5 tønder hartkorn. Jens Peder udstykker og sælger et par mindre parceller, men driver gården i mange år herefter, inden han 1893 sælger til sin søn Lars Peter. Vi kan følge gården i Møns Herred realregister 2. sæt, Damsholte: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17008329#124720,18390915 7. ejer af gården: Lars Peter Christiansen overtager de 4 tønderhartkorn 6 Skæpper for 20.362 kr. og forpligter sig endvidere til at sikre farens alderdom på alle måder i en 4-fags lejlighed. Skødet ses her: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#145688,23694950 8. ejer af gården: Ove Hjelm Petersen køber gården i 1933 og sælger igen 1938. 9. ejer af gården: Axel Petersen. Af hensyn til evt. nulevende personer stopper listen indtil videre her.

Gård nr. 2, Hjelm, Damsholte Sogn

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'''Gård nr. 2 i Hjelm By, Damsholte Sogn.''' '''Nuværende adresse Jættestuevej 2.''' En lille slægtsgård på Møn. En øvelse i ejendomshistorie af NH Bach-Lauritsen. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn.png |caption=''Det kgl. Bibliotek, fotograf Sylvest Jensen ca. 1936'' }} ''Kildeangivelser Udsnit af matrikelkort, sognekort og sogneprotokoller er gengivet fra Geodatastyrelsen “Historiske kort på nettet”. Udsnit af centimeterkort og målebordsblade er gengivet med tilladelse fra Styrelsen for Dataforsyning og Effektivisering. " '''1. ejer af gården:'''Fæstebonden på Gård nr. 2, Morten Rasmussen, køber ejendommen til selveje i samarbejde med byens øvrige bønder. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-1.png |caption= }} ''År 1775 september 15de læst Morten Rasmussen i Hjelm med øvrige bymænd og Nicolaj Jacobsen i Kbh. indbyrdes forening om byens køb …'' {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-2.png |caption= }} I 1781 havde gårdmændene afviklet halvdelen af købesummen og modtog kongeligt skøde på ejendommen. De kunne nu kalde sig selvejere! Ganske som i dag var en nyslået gårdejer omkring år 1800 også kun med visse modifikationer “ejer” af sin bedrift. Han havde måttet stifte gæld. Vi ser i skøde- og panteprotokollen i 1782, at Morten Rasmussen låner 55 rigsdaler af sin bror Lars. Omtrent samme beløb skylder han kautionisten Nicolaj Jacobsen fra København. Morten Rasmussen når ikke at nyde gårdejerværdigheden længe. I Møns Amts skifte fra 15. februar 1786 efter hans død får vi et billede af økonomien. Herunder et klip fra gældsposterne: {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-3.png |caption= }} '''2. ejer af gården:''' Men gården er trods alt solvent nok til, at familien kan blive på den, da enken Anne Jensdatter, som det var helt almindeligt dengang, hurtigt gifter sig igen. Den ny husbond, Peder Jørgensen, skynder sig at betale Anne Jensdatters svoger hans tilgodehavende. For at gøre det optager han selv et lån. Som gårdens overhoved kan han nu kalde sig Hyllebrand. Betegnelsen Gård nr. 2 fulgte stadig stedet, også efter den såkaldte udskiftning, hvor en del af byens tætliggende gårde efter politisk forordning skulle spredes ud i landskabet som led i en modernisering og effektivisering af det danske landbrug. I skøder og andre dokumenter omtales gården stadig som “nr. 2” eller “gl. nr. 2”, selv når den geografisk ikke længere befinder sig inde i selve landsbyen, men er blevet flyttet ud og blevet delt. Derfor vælger jeg her at definere slægtsgården som den samme bedrift eller, om man vil, produktionsenhed - også efter at den er flyttet et stykke væk. Man kunne sammenligne det med en smedevirksomhed, som er startet inde i en by, men grundet zonebestemmelser er rykket ud i industrikvarteret. Det er jo stadigvæk den samme virksomhed. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-4.png |caption= }} Vi ser navnet Hans Hyllebrand midt i landsbyen. Hér lå Gård nr. 2 oprindelig før udskiftningen. Da gården blev rykket nordpå i forhold til landsbyen og efter indførelsen af matrikelnumre kom til at hedde Matr.nr. 26, blev et mindre areal tilbage og kom til at hedde Matr.nr. 38. Der boede Morten Rasmussen og Anne Jensdatters ældste søn Hans så med kone og børn. '''3. ejer af gården''' I 1804 står næste generation, Rasmus Mortensen Hyllebrand, klar til at overtage Gård nr. 2. I navneregistret til skøde- og panteprotokol 1739-1822 ses, at Rasmus’ stedfar - tilsyneladende efter flere udkast - vælger en kontrakt på undertægt (d.v.s. aftægt) for sig og Rasmus’ mor Anne Jensdatter, som lever frem til 1820. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-5.png |caption= }} Navneregistret henviser til Folio 176-177 og 188 i selve protokollen. Her falder det straks i øjnene, at udskiftningen er overstået for Gård nr. 2’s vedkommende. Den er udflyttet fra Hjelm By. Mandag den 25. april 1804 indføres: {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-6.png |caption= }} ''“Kiender ieg underskrevne Peder Jørgensen Hyllebrand, Eiere af gaarden No 2 udfløtet af Hielm, at have solgt og afhændet ligesom ieg og hermed fra mig og mine Arvinger aldeles sælger, skjøder og afhænder til min Stedsøn Rasmus Mortensen Hyllebrand ….” '' Det specificeres, at også gårdens rettigheder og pligter ved den såkaldte “Koppel-Jord” følger med. Peder Jørgensen oplister en række betingelser, bl.a. følgende passage: ''“Da Kiøberen agter at indlade sig i Ægteskab om en kort Tid, da skal han og hans Hustrue blive hos mig i de to første Aar og arbejde for mig imod at ieg giver dem Kost og til Løn hvert Aar 39 Rd aarlig til dem begge …”'' Rasmus skal efter dette skødeudkast give 50 Rigsdaler i udbetaling og til december 1804 betale 200 Rd. Efter de 2 års arbejde for Peder Jørgensen skal han lægge resten, 149 Rd 5 Mark - ialt 399 Rd. 5Mk. Dog med den gulerod, at han eftergives 49 Rd., hvis han og hans kone har passet deres arbejde ordentligt. Han er tilsyneladende noget ærekær i pengesager. Ganske kort tid efter lægger han de 200 Rd. I august skriver Rasmus Mortensen Hyllebrand under på skødet, som nu ikke indeholder et punkt om, at han skal arbejde for stedfaderen i 2 år. Til gengæld træffes der nu aftale om undertægt - altså aftægt - og Rasmus skal lade opføre en beboelse til sin mor og stedfar, forsyne dem med visse naturalier og køre dem til kirke om søndagen. Aftægtskontraktens fulde ordlyd ses i Skøde- og panteprotokollen, tæt skrevet og noget svær at tyde. Den indgår som prioritet i ejendommen. Alt ser egentlig lovende ud, men i 1823 skyder Rasmus Hyllebrand sig selv, efter sigende fordi han har problemer med at betale sin skat til tiden. Vi ser på matrikelkortet herunder nr. 26, hvor navnet på ejeren er blevet ændret efter den ulykkelige hændelse. '''4. ejer af gården:'''Peder Hansen. Enken Karen Jensdatter måtte gifte sig igen for at holde gården i drift. Derfor figurerer Peder Hansen nu på kortet. Det har været i brug fra 1809-60. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-7.png |caption= }} Udskiftningen har betydet en kæmpe forandring. Fra af have ligget samlet i en klump i landsbyen, er adskillige gårde nu flyttet langt ud, hvor de har deres marker liggende lige omkring sig, men hvor samtidig det tætte fællesskab med landsbyens andre beboere i en eller anden udstrækning forsvinder. Matriklen deles. På sognekortet tegnet i 1816 hed ejendommen blot matr.nr. 26 … {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-8.png |caption }} … men på matrikelkortet fra 1860 er der indtegnet nr. 26a og 26b. Den oprindelige gård er delt i to mindre gårde. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_2_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-9.png |caption=Fra Historiskekort.dk }} '''5. ejer af gården (26b):''' Karen Jensdatters søn med Rasmus Mortensen Hyllebrand blev boende på gården, og planen var nok hele tiden, at han engang skulle være gårdejer, når han stiftede familie. I 1848 fik sønnen, Morten Rasmussen, skøde på matr.nr. 26b, og det blev læst i februar 1849. Fra Møns Herred, Realregister 1.sæt (1830-1860), B, nr. 347b: “Skiøde. Jeg underskrevne Peder Hansen, Gaardmand i Hielm, erkender herved, at ligesom jeg med Kiøbecontract af 29de Januar 1847 har solgt, saaledes skiøder og aldeles afhænder jeg herved til min Stedsøn Morten Rasmussen en Parcel af min Gaard, gl. No. 2 af Hielm dens Jorder, af Areal circa 22 Tønder Land, som ved den passerede Udstykning, der under 18 September 1847 af det Kongelige Rentekammer er approberet og betegnet med nyt No. 26b og ansat for Hartkorn 2Td 6Sk 3Fk 2 1/2 Alb …. “ Gården, som Morten Rasmussen skal overtage, er altså skrumpet, men er stadig en del af den virksomhed, som flere generationer før ham har holdt i gang. Aftalen om købet er udfærdiget mere end et år før, end der blev tinglæst skøde. Den anden halvdel, som Peder Hansen og Mortens mor Karen Jensdatter havde beholdt, var Matr.nr. 26a. Hér stod den firlængede gård, som var opført efter udflytningen knap et halvt århundrede tidligere. Peder Hansen og Karen Jensdatter fik en langt yngre plejesøn i huset, som også hed Morten Rasmussen, hvilket i første omgang kan forvirre, når man læser i protokollerne. Denne plejesøn overtog Matr. 26a, men måtte i øvrigt afhænde den til anden side, da han blev separeret. Matr.nr. 26b førtes videre i familien. Det må antages, at Morten Rasmussen og Bodil Katrine Jensen fik næsten nye bygninger, da de overtog parcellen. Nutidens BBR-meddelelse angiver opførelsesåret som 1840. Det er den ejendom, som vi ser på luftfotoet forrest. '''6. ejer af gården (26b):'''Da Morten Rasmussen når 60-årsalderen er tiden inde til at “pensionere” sig og give stafetten videre. Det passer derfor fint, at hans og Bodil Katrines søn Jens Kristian gifter sig i 1880, hvor overtagelsen også lovformeligt finder sted. Møns Herred Realregister: 2. sæt: Damsholte (1860-1939). Her kan man følge handlerne over en periode, begyndende med Peder Hansens skøde til Morten Rasmussen, hvorefter følger Morten Rasmussens skøde til Jens Kristian Mortensen. Vi ser desuden, at Jens Kristian efter nogle år tilkøber nogle rettigheder til tørveskær. Adgang til tørv var særdeles vigtig dengang; nogle steder omtrent den eneste energikilde. https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17008329#124720,18390935 Jens Chr. Mortensen har gården i en årrække, inden han i 1905 overlader den til sønnen Laurits. '''7. ejer af gården (26b):''' Laurits Mortensen får skøde og optager lån: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#332805,67010642 Han driver ikke stedet længe, men udstykker 1923 en lille parcel (26b) til sig selv og sælger resten på ca. 2 1/2 td.hartkorn (matr. 26c) til Anders Hansen. '''8. ejer af gården (nu 26c):''' Anders Hansen. Denne har ikke gården længe. Listen stopper foreløbig her af hensyn til evt. nulevende.

Gård nr. 3, Hjelm, Damsholte Sogn

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'''Gård nr. 3 i Hjelm By, Damsholte Sogn. Nuværense adresse: Rytsebækvej 11.''' 1. ejer af gården: Anders Andersen var allerede en ældre mand, da han sammen med byens øvrige gårdmænd indgik kontrakt om at overtage sin fæstegård til selveje. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_3_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn-1.png |caption=Møns Herred skøde- og panteprotokol . }} 2. ejer af gården: Sønnen Mads Andersen Houmann får kontrakt på sin fødegård i 1776, i virkeligheden før der var kommet skøde på byens gårde. I kontrakten er indført, at Anders Andersen på grund af svaghed og alderdom ikke længere kan varetage gårdens drift. Link til hele kontrakten, som også indeholder en aftægtsforpligtelse: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144708,23339378 Ret svær at læse. Tilsyneladende har Mads ikke heldet med sig. Han mister et barn og bliver enkemand. Ifølge indførsel i skøde- og panteprotokollen fra 1808 skal han have solgt gården 9. sept. 1789 for 500 rigsdaler med et "Kiøbe-brev", hvilket der blev skrevet under på i 1796. https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144711,23340572 I folketælling 1801 er Mads nu jordløs husmand og gift igen. 3. ejer af gården: Hemming Christiansen ser ud til at klare sig godt. Gård nr. 3 er stadig en helgård, og han erhverver sig oven i købet nogle ekstra parceller fra Gård nr. 13. På matrikelkortet gældende fra 1809 ser vi, at gården - nu matr.nr. 36 - har et betydeligt areal såvel nord som syd for landsbyen. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_3_Hjelm_Damsholte_Sogn.png |caption=''Fra Styrelsen for Dataforsyning og Effektivisering'' }} Han sikrer sig en pension som aftægtsfolk for sig og sin hustru, da svigersønnen overtager stedet. 4. ejer af gården: Peder Larsen gifter sig 1834 med Hemming Christiansens datter Anne Kierstine og køber gården nogle år efter. Skødet bliver læst i Møns Herred i 1838: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144722,23344177 5. ejer af gården: Sønnen Lars Pedersen får skøde på Matr.nr. 36 i 1865 ved skifteforretningen efter forældrene. Prisen er sat til 10.400 rigsdaler. Hans søskende skal naturligvis have deres arveandele. https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#145675,23687757 Lars optager i den forbindelse flere lån i ejendommen. 1873 har han udstykket og solgt matr.nr. 36b, et areal på 1 td hartkorn og 7 skæpper syd for landsbyen, så der er noget over 4 td hartkorn tilbage. Han har dog flere mindre parceller ved siden af. Hovedparcellen er matr.nr. 36a, som ligger i den nordlige ende af Hjelm landsby. Bygningerne er tilsyneladende ikke flyttet ud af byen. Lars Pedersen har gården i over 40 år. 6. ejer af gården: Valdemar Viggo Andersen er svigersøn, så gården bliver i familien. Vi ser i skødet af 24. juni 1907, at jordtilliggendet er det samme: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#332806,67011178 Købesummen er 19.000 kr., og sælger kan blive boende som en del af husstanden. Kan de ikke enes, kan Lars Pedersen forlange en bolig opført til sig. Link til realregistret for Møns Herred 2. sæt, som opstiller ejerne i en periode: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17008329#124720,18390963 7. ejer af gården: Karl Nielsen fra Sømark køber gården af Valdemar Viggo Andersen i 1923. Gårdens areal er fortsat det samme, læser vi af købekontrakten: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#145691,23696392

Gård nr. 5, Hjelm By, Damsholte Sogn

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'''Gård nr. 5 i Hjelm, Damsholte Sogn.''' '''Nuværende adresse: Hjelmgårdsvej 2''' {{Image|file=Gard_nr_5_Hjelm_By_Damsholte_Sogn-5.png |caption=''Fra Det kgl. Bibliotek: Danmark set fra luften 1949'' }} Hjelm er navnet på en landsby i Damsholte Sogn på øen Møn i det sydlige Danmark. Oprindelig tilhørte øens landsbyer Kronen, det vil sige kongen. Bønderne var fæstebønder, indtil gårdene i sidste halvdel af 1700-tallet blev solgt til selveje. Gårdene var lige store, ifølge jordebog fra 1769 ca. 5½ tønde hartkorn. '''1. ejer af gården:''' Den første selvejer af Gård nr. 5 var Jørgen Nielsen. Han havde overtaget fæstegården efter Jeppe Pedersen, da han giftede sig med hans enke Margrethe Jensdatter i 1752. Margrethe døde 1778, og Jørgen giftede sig nu med Bodil Hemmingsdatter. Herunder: skøde til Hjelms bønder fra 1781, hvor de hver især havde lagt halvdelen af købesummen. Den anden halvdel skulle forrentes med 4 %. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_5_Hjelm_By_Damsholte_Sogn.png |caption=''Fra skøde- og panteprotokol'' }} Vi ser, at Jørgen Nielsens navn er det femte i listen, svarende til Gård nr. 5. Han fik dog ikke lov at nyde sin nye status længe, idet han døde 1783. '''2. ejer af gården:''' Henrich Pedersen blev selvejer, da han ægtede Jørgens enke. Navneregister til skøde- og panteprotokol for Møns Amt fortæller efter Bodils død i 1803, at hendes børn har tilgodehavende arv stående i Henrichs ejendom, Gård nr. 5. ''https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097850#145079,23447037 Selve skøde- og panteprotokollen oplister børnenes navne og deres arvelod https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#144711,23340302'' Gårdene har oprindelig ligget samlet i Hjelm landsby. På et tidspunkt omkring 1800 er mange af dem blevet flyttet ud (udskiftningen) . På matrikelkortet gældende til 1860 ligger Gård nr. 5's hovedparcel og bygninger dog stadig i landsbyen '''3. ejer af gården:''' Sønnen Jørgen Henrichsen overtager gården. Da faren dør i 1806, er han ikke myndig endnu. Ved det endelige skifte i 1809, er han blevet myndig og bliver selvejergårdmand. På matrikelkortet gældende fra 1809-1860 - Historiskekort.dk, Styrelsen for Dataformidling og Infrastruktur - ses Jørgens jordstykker 34a og 34b. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_5_Hjelm_By_Damsholte_Sogn-4.png |caption= }} Møn Amts Realregister 1. sæt 1830 B Hovedregister - 1860 B viser aktiviter, lån m.m. Vi ser, at ejendommen stadig er Gård nr. 5 i Hjelm. {{Image|file=Gard_nr_5_Hjelm_By_Damsholte_Sogn-3.png |caption= }} ''Link til ovenstående: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097852#145086,23448561'' I 1844 kom der matrikelnumre. Jørgens ejendom fik Matr.nr. 34. Matr.nr. 34a var hovedparcellen, og han udstykkede nogle parceller. Han solgte Matr.nr. 34b og 34c fra og blev boende i Matr.nr. 34a. I 1851 solgte hans enke til svigersøn Lars Hemmingsen. ''Link til realregister Møns Herred 2. sæt Damsholte https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17008329#124720,18390958 Link til skødet i Møns Herred skøde- og panteprotokol: https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17097738#145672,23685118'' '''4. ejer af gården:''' Lars Hemmingsen blev gift med Jørgen & Birthe Maries datter og drev gården videre i mange år. Ifølge Bygnings- og Boligregistret skal stuehuset være opført 1862; altså i Lars Hemmingsens tid. Som vi kan se af Realregister: 2. sæt: Damsholte (1850 - 1939), er selve Matr.nr. 34a af beskeden størrelse, 1 td hartkorn 5 skæpper. ''https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser epid=17008329#124720,18390958'' '''5. ejer af gården:''' Sønnen Jørgen Larsen overtager 1892 ejendommen, som det fremgår af realregistret ovenfor. Han har forinden iflg. Præstø amt, Møns Herred, Realregister: 2. sæt: Damsholte, 1850 - 1939 erhvervet bl.a. Matr.Nr. 20a med mere, således at han får samlet en ganske betydelig gård. Det er ikke helt klart, om han derefter bebor stuehuset til Matr.Nr. 34a. ''Link til realregister, som viser flere ejendomskøb http://ao.salldata.dk/vis1.php?bsid=124720&side=31'' '''Fra La Cour Danske Gaarde, 1910, som må gengives uden ophavsret:''' Hjelmgaard, Damsholte Sogn. Postforb.: Stege, hvortil c. 7 Km., og St.: Kallehave, hvortil c. 12 Km. Tlf. 37u over Damsholte Central. Ejer: Jørgen Larsen, som overtog Gaarden i Foraaret 1886, er født paa Ejendommen 17. Septbr. 1856 og gift med Anna Hansen, født i St. Lind 3. Jan. 1861. Matr.-Nr. 34a m. fl. af Hjelm. Hartkorn 7 Tdr. 1 Skp.'2 Fdkr. 1% Alb^ 1192 Præstø Amt Ejendomsskyld 45,000 Kr. Brandassurance for Bygningerne 23,600 Kr. Areal 63 Tdr. Ld., deraf Ager 62, Have og Gaardsplads 1. Agermarken drives i en 9 Marksdrift med Helbrak, Hvede, Roer, Byg, Græs, Havre, Roer m. m., Byg og Græs. Jordens Bonitet er Lermuld paa Lerunderlag. Der holdes 20 Køer, 17 Stkr. Ungkvæg og Kalve og 3 Tyre af rød dansk Race, 6 Heste samt 2 Plage og Føl. Sidste Aar solgtes c. 70 Fedesvin. Hjelmgaard var oprindelig Krongods, men købtes samtidig med Byens øvrige Gaarde 1775, antagelig af Henrik Pedersen, som fulgtes i Ejet af Sønnen, Jørgen Henriksen, der 1850 overdrog Ejendommen til sin Svigersøn, Lars Hemmingsen, nuværende Ejers Fader. Den smukke, stilfulde Gaard ligger i Sydsiden af Hjelm By venlig omgiven af den smukke Have med herlig Udsigt over Østersøen. Bygningerne er opførte dels i Grundmur, dels i Bindingsværk med Straatage. Der er eget Vandværk. Jorderne ligger samlede ved Gaarden.— Den nuværende Ejer var Sogneraadsformand 1902—07, ligesom han iøvrigt har været tildelt forskellige offentlige Tillidshverv. '''Her stopper fortællingen indtil videre af hensyn til nulevende personer.'''

Gardening

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Our love of home grown organic and heirloom fruits, vegetables, culinary and medicinal herbs, as well as flowers

Gardiner/Gardner Households in 1901 UK Census

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Summary of residence locations of households with the Gardner or Gardiner surname during the 1901 census for England, Wales and Scotland. == Counties of England and Wales == :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''# of Households''' || '''%''' |- | London || 6,030|| 17% |- | Lancashire||4,346||12% |- |Gloucestershire||2,573||7.2% |- |Warwickshire||2,035||5.7% |- |Durham||1,867||5.2% |- |Yorkshire||1,531||4.3% |- |Essex||1,293||3.6% |- |Kent||1,238||3.5% |- |Middlesex||1,175||3.3% |- |Surrey||1,045||2.9% |- |Hampshire||992||2.8% |- |Worcestershire||892||2.5% |- |Oxfordshire||787||2.2% |- |Staffordshire||704||2.0% |- |Glamorgan||688||1.9% |- |Sussex||652||1.8% |- |Suffolk||650||1.8% |- |Northamptonshire||632||1.8% |- |Northumberland||624||1.7% |- |Devon||595||1.7% |- |Somerset||579||1.6% |- |Berkshire||561||1.6% |- |Monmouthshire||462||1.3% |- |Cheshire||430||1.2% |- |Wiltshire||403||1.1% |- |Leicestershire ||330||0.9% |- |Norfolk||266||0.7% |- |Buckinghamshire||233||0.7% |- |Nottinghamshire||222||0.6% |- |Hertfordshire||217||0.6% |- |Herefordshire||211||0.6% |- |Derbyshire||178||0.5% |- |Cumberland||177||0.5% |- |Bedfordshire||172||0.5% |- |Lincolnshire||160||0.4% |- |Shropshire||160||0.4% |- |Cambridgeshire||127||0.4% |- |Dorset ||107||0.3% |- |Westmorland||75||0.2% |- |Channel Islands||67||0.2% |- |Brecknockshire||50||0.1% |- |Montgomeryshire||48 ||0.1% |- |Cornwall||46||0.1% |- |Carmarthenshire||20||0.1% |- |Huntingdon and Rutland||20||0.1% |- |Carnarvonshire||16||0.04% |- |Anglesey||14||0.04% |- |Denbighshire ||13||0.04% |- |Radnorshire||13||0.04% |- |Cardiganshire||12||0.03% |- |Flintshire||9||0.03% |- |Pembrokeshire||9||0.03% |- |Isle of Man||8||0.02% |- |Merionethshire||3||0.01% |- |Total|| 35,805||100% |} == Counties of Scotland == :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''# of Households''' || '''%''' |- |Lanarkshire||2,725||38% |- |Midlothian||620||8.7% |- |Renfrewshire||526||7.3% |- |Ayrshire||419||5.9% |- |Stirlingshire||414||5.8% |- |Forfarshire (Angus)||347||4.8% |- |Fife||304||4.2% |- |Perthshire||292||4.1% |- |Linlithgowshire (West Lothian)||264||3.7% |- |Dunbartonshire||231||3.2% |- |Aberdeenshire||169||2.4% |- |Dumfriesshire||148||2.1% |- |Banffshire||141||2.0% |- |Clackmannanshire||135||1.9% |- |Wigtownshire||60||0.8% |- |Peeblesshire||51||0.7% |- |Argyllshire||45||0.6% |- |Kirkcudbrightshire||34||0.5% |- |Roxburghshire||33||0.5% |- |Haddingtonshire (East Lothian)||31||0.4% |- |Shetland||31||0.4% |- |Selkirkshire||29||0.4% |- |Buteshire||24||0.3% |- |Moray ||21||0.3% |- |Berwickshire||18||0.3% |- |Kincardineshire||16||0.2% |- |Kinrossshire||11||0.2% |- |Invernessshire||10||0.1% |- |Ross and Cromarty||5||0.1% |- |Caithness||4||0.1% |- |Nairn||2||0.03% |- |Orkney||0|| --- |- |Sutherland||0 || --- |- |Total||7,160||100% |} == References == * UK Census Online, https://ukcensusonline.com/ (accessed May 2024). '''See also''' : * [[Space:Gardiner_pedigrees|Gardiner/Gardner Published Pedigrees]] * [[Space:Gardner_Surname_Variations_in_Scottish_Records|Gardner Surname Variations in Scottish Records]] * [[Space:Irish_Surname_Study_-_1890_%26_1990|Irish Surname Study - 1890 & 1990]] * [[Space:GARDNER_R-U106_DNA_Project|GARDNER SURNAME Y-DNA PROJECT]] * [[Space:Gardner_Family_Lines_in_Early_New_England|Gardner Family Lines in Early New England]] * [[Space:Gardner_Surnames_in_the_1790_%26_1800_North_Carolina_U.S._Censuses|Gardner Surnames in the 1790 & 1800 North Carolina U.S. Censuses]]

Gardiner Family Connections

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[[Gardiner Family Connections]] [[Gardiner]] [[Haplogroup I]] This is a One Name Study to collect together in one place everything about one surname and the variants of that name. The hope is that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect. Please contact the project leader, add categories to your profiles, add your questions to the bulletin board, add details of your name research, etc. David L. Gardiner Project Leader

Gardiner Family Reunion

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'''Time: 11am to 8pm'''

Gardner Marriages in Rowan County, North Carolina, 1840 to 1900

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While searching records for Gardner ancestors I came across this document that had associated surnames that came up in marriages in Tennessee. Although I didn't find any direct connections I decided to post it here for future reference. Recorded marriages in Rowan County, NC, with Gardner or Garner listed as groom's surname, with witnesses and officials named between 1840 and 1900. Recorded in "North Carolina, County Marriages, 1762-1979 ," database with images, FamilySearch(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFSX-KJ1 : 4 November 2017), Henry Gardner and Jane Feimster, 04 Sep 1892; citing Rowan, North Carolina, United States, p. , Office of Archives and History, Division of Archives and Records. State Archive of North Carolina and various county Register of Deeds; FHL microfilm 1,760,526. Rowan County est. 1753. '''1843''' Groom: Garner, John.
Bride: Newman, Margaret.
Date of Bond: 30 Aug 1843
See also: Garrdiner, John & Margaret Newman. '''1866''' Groom: Gardner, Charles (colored).
Bride: Henderson, Mary Jane (colored).
Date of Bond: 22 May 1866; Bondsman: Obadiah Woodson, R.D.
Date of Wedding: 24 May 1866.
Witnesses: Alexander & Burrow (col.) '''1867''' Groom: Gardner, William. Son of John & Nancy Gardner.
Bride: Watson, E.A. Daughter of Ferrand & Mary Watson.
Date of Bond: 21 Dec 1867; Bondsman: Obadiah Woodson, clerk.
Date of Wedding: 25 Dec 1867; Officiating: Rev. J. Rumple. :'''1848''' :Groom: Watson, Ferrand.
:Bride: Thompson, Mary M..
:Date of Marriage: 8 Apr 1848.
:N.C. Marriages 1759-1979. '''1876''' Groom: Gardner, William. Age 55 (b. 1821), son of John & Elizabeth Gardner.
Bride: Thomason, Emma Elizabeth. Age 26 (b. 1850), daughter of Jesse & Harriet Thomason.
Date of Bond: 1 Feb 1876; Bondsman: H.N. Woodson, R.D.
Date of Wedding: 2 Feb 1876; Officiating: Rev. Geo. B. Wetmore.
Witnesses: Joseph Berber, B.F. Clampet, James Graham. Groom: Gardner, Edward (colored). Age abt. 40 (b. 1836), son of Benj. & Rhody Moore of Wilmington, NC.
Bride: Feinster, Harriet (colored). Age 25 (b. 1851), daughter of John & Salena Feimster.
Date of Bond: 26 Jun 1876; Bondsman: H.N. Woodson, R.D.
Date of Wedding: 29 Jun 1876; Officiating: R.W. Boyd.
Witnesses: Blanche Boyd, Sallie Dunlap, S.J.B. Boyd.
'''1878''' Groom: Gardner, Richard. Age 23 (b.1855), son of Jackson & Nancy Gardner.
Bride: Morgan, Augusta. Age 18 (b.1860), daughter of Rusher Morgan (mother).
Date of Bond: 1 Jun 1878; Bondsman: H.N. Woodson, R.D.
Date of Wedding: 2 Jun 1878; Officiating: W.F. Watson, J.P.
Witnesses: Jus. F.E. Brown, Elisabeth Gardner, Nancey Gardner. '''1887''' Groom: Gardner, W.T.(D.). Age 21 (b. 1866), son of Wm. & Anjaline Gardner.
Bride: Pinkston, Alice E. Age 21 (b. 1866), daughter of Thos. & Elizabeth Pinkston.
Date of Bond: 3 Sep 1887; Bondsman: H.N. Woodson, R.D.
Date of Wedding: 8 Sep 1887; Officiating: J.F. Robinson, J.P.
Witnesses: W.F. Pinkston, J.L. Pinkston, W.V. Rufty, L.B. Frasier. '''1892''' Groom: Gardner, Henry. Age 38 (b.1854), son of Nelson Davis & Lydia Gardner.
Bride: Feimster, Mrs. Jane. Age 42 (b. 1850), daughter of Wm. Locke.
Date of Bond: 3 Sep 1892; Bondsman: H.N. Woodson, R.D.
Date of Wedding: 4 Sep 1892; Officiating: Wm. Thomason, J.P.
Witnesses: T.S. Lyerly, E.C. Nesbit, L. Faulkner.

Gardner Surname Variations in Scottish Records

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Some interesting spelling variations and statistics for the surname GARDNER in Scottish records. While researching certain locations in Scotland that my Y-DNA haplogroup and matching results suggested a potential location for ancestors, I came across some interesting spelling variations and frequency data that I wanted to document for future reference. The first is a surname database that is available online at the [https://www.oldscottish.com/surnames-g.html Old Scottish Genealogy and Family History] website (link to "G" surnames). This table summarizes the Gardner (and variants) surname frequency in the Scottish Records used in the database : * The common surname “Grant” is used for comparison; * '''Rank''' is based on frequency in all available records and surnames are listed in ranking order; * Columns 3 ('''1841''') and 4 ('''1911''') are the frequency of the surname per 100k based on the census records for those years; * Column 5, '''Concentration''', is a measure of geographic localization of the surname–higher number means more geographic concentration of the surname; * '''County 1-3''' are the top three in surname frequency in the '''1841''' census. :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''Surname'''|| '''Rank''' || '''1841''' || '''1911''' || '''Conc.''' || '''County-1''' || '''County-2''' || '''County-3''' |- | Grant|| 20 || 459 || 688 || 10.7 || Moray || Banffshire || Nairnshire |- | —|| —|| —|| — || — || — || — || — |- | Gardner||237||108||152||4.5||West Lothian||Dunbartonshire||Stirlingshire |- | Gardiner||333||37.6||124.4||3.7||Banffshire ||Kinross||Perthshire |- | Garden||516||21.7||42.8||9.8||Banffshire ||Moray||Aberdeen |- | Gardener||1813||16.3||10.9||6.9||Clackmannanshire ||Stirlingshire|| Dunbartonshire |- | Gairdner||2694||2.47|| 1.74||9.1||Clackmannanshire ||Ayrshire||West Lothian |- | Gardyne||2709||2.12||3.09||15.3||Angus||Dundee City||--- |- | Gairdener||6879||0 || 0.04|| 0||---||---||--- |} :Note: ::1. The tripling of the Gardiner surname frequency between 1841 and 1911. ::2. No Garner or Gartner surnames in the database. Another record I found in the '''''Scottish National Library''''' was a collection of legal papers belonging to the '''Gardiner''' family of Banff. They cover a time period from 1721 to 1804 including wills, promissory notes, deeds, letters, receipts, etc. It illustrates how the spelling of one family's surname changed over the decades. The following is an abbreviated listing of the documents in timeline style. The original document list can be found at: https://digital.nls.uk/catalogues/guide-to-manuscript-collections/inventories/acc7798.pdf : * '''1721''' Deed - George '''Gairden''', Blair Shinnock, Burgess and Freeman of Banff * '''1754''' Marriage contract - James '''Gairden''', eldest son of George '''Gairden''', late of Denhead and now in Backlaw, and Elspeth Wilson, daughter of John Wilson of ?Kowiemuir. * '''1761''' Memorandum- James '''Gairden''', Culbeuchlie, Liferent Tack... * '''1762''' James '''Gairden''', Agreement between James '''Gairden''' in Culbeuchlie & Peter Gray in Warilyn that rent… * '''1782''' James '''Gairden''', admitting James '''Gairden''', Merchant Apprentice to Baillie Aven, Burgess Freeman and Gild Brother of Banff. * '''1783''' James '''Gairden''' Jnr, James '''Gairdiner''' (Sr?)--Receipt from James '''Gairden''' Jnr to James '''Gairdiner'''… * '''1786''' George '''Gairdner''' son of James '''Gairdner'''–Receipt from George Gairdner lawful son of James Gairdner… * '''1791''' George '''Gardener''', James '''Gardener'''–Letter asking for financial payment to Elspeth Wilson, relect of James Gardener, under George Gardener'’ Laterwill, Lord ?Dashford'’ Bond to her husband, and James Gardener'’ Disposition in favour of his son John. * '''1796''' James '''Gardiner''', Planter, in Swanswick, Trelawney, Jamaica, letter to Mrs Alexander Aven, Banff. * '''1804''' James '''Gardiner''', Planter, in Trelawney, Jamaica, letter to Mr. Alexander Aven. The Gardiners were apparently involved with the West Indies trade and likely had connections to the North America plantations. '''See also''' : * [[Space:GARDNER_R-U106_DNA_Project|The Gardner-Surname Y-DNA Project]].

Gardner Surnames in the 1790 & 1800 North Carolina U.S. Censuses

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Gardner_Surnames_in_the_1790_1800_North_Carolina_U_S_Censuses.jpg
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The occurrence and distribution of Gardner (and similar) families enumerated in the first two United States censuses in North Carolina counties. As shown, surname spellings are often at the discretion of the census takers. The maps reveal "clustering" of surnames in certain counties and possible migration. In 1790, only GARDNER, GARNER and GARDENER families were enumerated while in 1800 GARDINER and GARTNER families were added. GARDNER and GARNER were the most commons surnames for both censuses. '''1790 U.S. Census - Gardner Families North Carolina Counties''' :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''GARDNER''' || '''GARNER''' || '''GARDENER''' |- | Beaufort|| 1|| —|| — |- | Bertie|| 4|| —|| 11 |- | Bladen|| —|| —|| — |- | Burke || 1|| —|| — |- | Camden|| 1|| —|| — |- | Carteret|| 4|| 1|| — |- | Caswell|| —|| —|| — |- | Chatham|| —|| —|| — |- | Chowan|| —|| —|| — |- | Craven|| 2|| —|| — |- | Cumberland|| 1|| —|| — |- | Dobbs|| —|| 2|| — |- | Duplin|| —|| —|| — |- | Edenton|| 1|| —|| — |- | Edgecombe|| 7|| 4|| — |- | Guilford|| 6|| 1|| — |- |Halifax|| —|| —|| — |- | Hertford|| —|| 1|| — |- | Johnston|| 3|| —|| — |- | Jones|| 1|| —|| — |- | Lenoir|| —|| —|| — |- | Lincoln|| 1|| 1|| — |- | Martin|| 6|| —|| — |- | Mecklenburg|| 3|| —|| — |- | Montgomery|| —|| —|| — |- | Moore|| 2|| 4|| — |- | Nash|| —|| —|| 4 |- | Northampton|| 1|| 1|| — |- | Orange|| —|| 2|| — |- | Pasquotank|| 1|| —|| — |- | Pitt|| 2|| —|| — |- | Randolph|| —|| 8|| — |- | Richmond|| 1|| 1|| — |- | Rockingham|| —|| 1|| — |- | Rowan|| 3|| 3|| — |- | Rutherford|| 3|| —|| — |- | Sampson|| —|| 1|| — |- | Stokes|| —|| 3|| — |- | Surry|| —|| 3|| — |- | Wake|| —|| 1|| — |- | Warren|| 2|| —|| — |- | Wayne|| 1|| —|| — |- | '''TOTALS'''|| 58|| 38|| 15 |- | '''PERCENT'''|| 52%|| 34%|| 14% |} '''1800 U.S. Census - Gardner Families North Carolina Counties''' :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''GARDNER''' || '''GARNER''' || '''GARDENER'''|| '''GARDINER'''|| '''GARTNER''' |- | Beaufort|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Bertie|| —|| —|| —|| 4|| — |- | Bladen|| 3|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Burke || —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Camden|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Carteret|| —|| 6|| —|| —|| — |- | Caswell|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Chatham|| —|| 2|| —|| —|| — |- | Chowan|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Craven|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Cumberland|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Duplin|| —|| 3|| —|| —|| — |- | Edenton|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Edgecombe|| —|| 4|| —|| 3|| — |- | Granville|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Guilford||10|| —|| —|| —|| — |- |Halifax|| 2|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Hertford|| —|| 2|| —|| —|| — |- | Johnston|| —|| 3|| —|| —|| — |- | Jones|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Lenoir|| —|| 2|| —|| —|| — |- | Lincoln|| 3|| —|| 1|| —|| 4 |- | Martin|| 10|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Mecklenburg|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Montgomery|| —|| 1|| —|| —|| — |- | Moore|| —|| 1|| —|| —|| — |- | Nash|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Northampton|| —|| 3|| —|| —|| — |- | Orange|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Pasquotank|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Pitt|| 3|| —|| 4|| —|| — |- | Randolph|| —|| 3|| —|| —|| — |- | Richmond|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Rockingham|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Rowan|| 7|| 1|| —|| —|| — |- | Rutherford|| —|| 5|| —|| —|| — |- | Sampson|| —|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Stokes|| —|| 2|| —|| —|| — |- | Surry|| 2|| 1|| —|| —|| — |- | Wake|| —|| 1|| —|| —|| — |- | Warren|| 1|| —|| —|| —|| — |- | Wayne|| —|| 1|| —|| —|| — |- | '''TOTALS'''|| 49|| 41|| 5|| 7|| 4 |- | '''PERCENT'''|| 46%|| 41%|| 5%|| 7%|| 4% |} '''GARDNER''' Surname - '''Given Names''' - 1790 & 1800 Censuses :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''1790''' || '''1800''' |- | Beaufort|| Leticia|| Leticia |- | Bertie|| Everite, Martin, Nathaniel, Penelope|| — |- | Bladen|| —|| Elias, James, John |- | Burke || William|| — |- | Camden|| Debby|| — |- | Carteret|| Francis, Sr., Francis, Jr., John, Samuel|| — |- | Caswell|| —|| John |- | Chowan|| —|| Henry |- | Craven|| Francis, William|| William |- | Cumberland|| John|| — |- | Edenton|| Henry|| — |- | Edgecombe|| Jonathan, Joseph, Josiah, Martin, Mary(2), Thomas|| — |- | Granville|| —|| Valentine |- | Guilford|| Caston, Isaac, Richard, Stephen, Sylvenus, William|| Brasilia, Eliab, Isaac, Jonathan, Richard, Sqloanius, Stephen(2), Thaddius, William |- |Halifax|| —|| Josiah, Thomas |- | Johnston|| John, Joseph, William|| — |- | Jones|| William|| William T. |- | Lincoln|| Jere|| George, Jeremiah, John |- | Martin|| Isaac, James, John, Samuel Sr., Samuel, Thomas|| Hardy, Isaac Sr., Isaac Jr., James, John, Richard, Samuel, Sussanah, Thomas, William Sr. |- | Mecklenburg|| James, John, William|| — |- | Moore|| Peter, William|| — |- | Nash|| —|| George |- | Northampton|| Nathan|| — |- | Orange|| —|| John |- | Pasquotank|| Demsey|| — |- | Pitt|| Edward, Isaac|| Edward(2), William Sr. |- | Richmond|| Elias || — |- | Rowan|| John, John Jr., Robert|| David, James, John (3), Mathias, Robert |- | Rutherford|| Jacob, James, William|| — |- | Surry|| —|| Jacob, William |- | Warren|| Mary, Thomas|| Thomas |- | Wayne|| Olive|| — |} '''GARNER''' Surname - '''Given Names''' - 1790 & 1800 Censuses :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''1790''' || '''1800''' |- | Carteret|| William|| Francis Jr.(2), Lucy, Samuel, William (2) |- | Chatham|| —|| Samuel, William |- | Cumberland|| John, Joseph|| — |- | Dobbs|| Simeon, Speedham|| — |- | Duplin|| —|| Simeon, Needham(2) |- | Edgecombe|| Absalom, Ann, Samuel, Vallentine|| Jonathan, Jesse, Sabra(2) |- | Guilford|| William|| — |- |Hertford|| Anthony|| Gioean, Daniel |- | Johnston|| —|| Elisha, William, Willis |- | Lenoir|| —|| Nancy, Miley |- | Lincoln|| John Burn|| — |- | Montgomery|| —|| John |- | Moore|| Bradley, John, Lewis, Peter|| Bradly |- | Northampton|| William|| John, Samuel, William |- | Orange|| Lewis, Parish|| — |- | Randolph|| Bradley, Henry, James(2), Jessee, John F., Perish, Thomas || Henry, James, Jesse |- | Rockingham|| Joseph|| — |- | Rowan|| Henry, Mathias,Philip|| Henry |- | Rutherford|| —|| Daniel, James, Thomas(2), William |- | Sampson|| Thomas|| — |- | Stokes|| Francis, George, John|| John, William |- | Surry|| John, Whiatt, William|| John |- | Wake|| Book|| Book |- | Wayne|| —|| Willis |} '''GARDENER''' Surname - '''Given Names''' - 1790 & 1800 Censuses :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''1790''' || '''1800''' |- | Bertie|| Bryom, Everite, Isaac, Jean, John(2), Mary, Nancy, Salley, Thomas, William|| — |- | Lincoln|| —|| Jacob |- | Nash|| George, James, Pryer, William|| — |- | Pitt|| —|| Jesse, Mary, Sabra |} '''GARDINER''' Surname - '''Given Names''' - 1800 Census :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''1800''' |- | Bertie|| James(2), Jason, William |- | Edgecombe|| Mary, Mathew, William |} '''GARTNER''' Surname - '''Given Names''' - 1800 Census :{|border="1" cellpadding="4" |- bgcolor=#E1F0B4 |'''County'''|| '''1800''' |- | Lincoln|| Marlin, Jacob Sr., Jacob, John |}

Gardners

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The goal of this project is to ...connect as many people who share the same ancestors. Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Bannan-59|Lyn Risby]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=14998078 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Gardner-Smith-Kane-Wallace family photos

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Collection of family photos from the Gardner-Smith-Wallace-Kane families

Gardynik Family

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Gardynik-1|David Gardynik]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [http://www.wikitree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=12908096 send me a private message]. Thanks!

GAREETT FAMILY KILKENNEY IRELAND

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The goal of this project is to ... Right now this project just has one member, me. I am [[Colgan-436|Ciaran Colgan]]. Here are some of the tasks that I think need to be done. I'll be working on them, and could use your help. * * * Will you join me? Please post a comment here on this page, in [https://www.WikiTree.com/g2g G2G] using the project tag, or [https://www.WikiTree.com/index.php?title=Special:PrivateMessage&who=17842278 send me a private message]. Thanks!

Garfield County, Colorado

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:Garfield County is located in northwestern Colorado, and extends to the Utah border. It is largely uninhabited, with the major communities located along the Colorado and Roaring Fork rivers. :The county was formed from Summit County in 1883, and was divided into Rio Blanco and Garfield counties in 1889 ('''Stanwyck'''). The county seat is located at Glenwood Springs. : The major communities in Garfield County are Glenwood Springs, Carbondale, Rifle, Silt, New Castle, and Parachute. == '''Historical census data''' for Garfield County == {| class=wikitable border="1" ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" | Census Year ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" | Garfield County ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" | Carbondale ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" | Glenwood Springs ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" |Grand Valley or Parachute ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" |New Castle ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" |Rifle ! scope="col" style="width: 80px;" |Silt |- | 1890 || 4478 || 166|| 920 || N.A. ||311 ||N.A. ||N.A. |- | 1900 || 5835 || 173 || 1350 || N.A. || 431 || 273 || N.A. |- | 1910|| 10144 || 284 || 2019|| 268 || 493 || 698 || N.A. |- | 1920|| 9304 || 310 || 2073 || 228 || 447 || 885 || 165 |- | 1930|| 9975 || 283 || 1825 || 209 || 470 || 1287 ||264 |- | 1940|| 10560 || 437 || 2253 || 230 || 484||1373 || 359 |- | 1950|| 11625 || 441 || 2412 || 296 || 483 || 1525 || 361 |- | 1960|| 12017 || 612 || 3637|| 245 || 447|| 2135 || 384 |- | 1970|| 14821 || 726 || 4106 || 270 || 499 || 2150 ||434 |- | 1980|| 22514|| 2084 || 4637 || 338 || 563 ||3215 ||923 |- | 1990|| 29974 || 3004 || 6561 || 658 || 679 || 4636 || 1095 |- | 2000|| 43791 || 5196 || 7736 || 1006 || 1984 || 6784 ||1740 |- | 2010|| 56389 || 6427 || 9614 || 1085 || 4518 || 9172 || 2930 |- | 2020||61685|| 6434 || 9963 || 1390 || 4923 || 10437 || 3536 |} == Garfield County, Colorado Historic Newspapers online == {| border="1" class="wikitable sortable" ! scope="col" style="width: 100px;" | Years ! scope="col" style="width: 225px;" | Title of Publication ! scope="col" style="width: 225px;" | Beginning and ending dates ! scope="col" style="width: 125px;" |Number of issues |- | 1889 to 1891 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=TAV Avalanche]|| July 20, 1889 - May 31, 1891|| 198 issues |- | 1891 to 1900 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&sp=AVE&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0- Avalanche Echo] || September 11, 1891 - December 27, 1900|| 406 issues |- | 1898 to 1903|| [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=PWL Glenwood Post] || January 1, 1898 - December 19, 1903 || 312 issues |- | 1897 to 1897 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=PWL Glenwood Post & Weekly Ledger] || January 2, 1897 - December 25, 1897 || 57 issues |- | 1907 to 1911 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=GVC Grand Valley News] || March 13, 1907 - December 28, 1911|| 250 issues |- | 1893 to 1898 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=NCN New Castle News] || April 15, 1893 - April 29, 1898 || 261 issues |- | 1898 to 1905 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=NCP New Castle Nonpareil] || February 10, 1898 - October 7, 1905 || 375 issues |- | 1896 to 1903 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=TRR Rifle Reveille] || February 7, 1896 - February 28, 1903 || 201 issues |- | 1903 to 1916 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=TRT Rifle Telegram]|| January 30, 1903 - April 7, 1916|| 383 issues |- | 1917 to 1920 || [https://www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org/cgi-bin/colorado?a=cl&cl=CL1&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN--------0-&sp=RTR Telegram-Reveille] || January 26, 1917 - September 2, 1920 ||189 issues |} == Garfield County Historical Societies & Museums == :'''Carbondale:''' [http://www.mtsoprishistoricalsociety.com/ Mount Sopris Historical Society & Thompson House Museum] :'''Glenwood Springs:''' [https://www.glenwoodhistory.com/ Glenwood Springs Historical Society] :'''New Castle:''' [https://newcastlecolorado.org/our-community/history-highland-cemetery-museum Museum] :'''Parachute:''' [http://www.battlementmesacolorado.com/grand-valley-historical-society Grand Valley Historical Society] :'''Rifle:''' [https://www.facebook.com/Rifle-Heritage-Center-214154578781035/ Rifle Heritage Center] :'''Silt:''' [https://silthistorical.org/ Silt Historical Park] == Garfield County Government == :[https://www.garfield-county.com/ Garfield County, Colorado] :[https://www.gcpld.org/ Garfield County Public Library District] == Historic place names in Garfield County == :The main source for information about place names is Stanwyck's "Colorado Places by County." Although most of these places did not become major cities or towns and lie in unincorporated Garfield County, many of these names are used today. Latitude and longitude information will be added after the main list is complete. {| class=wikitable border="1" |- |'''Allen.''' ||| Stanwyck lists this as a place in Garfield County, but gives no additional information. |- |'''Antlers.''' || These days, Antlers survives in the name of a county road, but according to Stanwyck, a post office was located at Antlers from 1891 to 1954. Antlers is located approximately half-way between Rifle and Silt. |- |'''Anvil Points.''' || The location of an oil shale facility; of a town during the mid-1960s; and currently one of Garfield County's landfills (personal knowledge [[Crook-641|J. Crook]]) |- |'''Atchee.''' || Stanwyck says there was a post office at Atchee from 1905 to 1940. A Google Maps search shows that it is in the western portion of Garfield County, roughly north of Mack, Colorado. |- |'''Austin.''' || Stanwyck says that Austin was a post office from 1890 to 1896. Austin was located north of Rifle, roughly at the location of the current Rifle Creek Golf Course and Rifle Gap Dam. |- | '''Barlow''' || Now Glenwood Springs. Postoffice established 1883. |- | '''Balzac''' || RR stop; formerly called Morris; postoffice from 1891 to 1903. |- | '''Bennett''' || Railroad Stop on 1899 map |- | '''Blake City''' ||Mining Camp |- | '''Bryant''' ||Railroad stop on 1899 to 1923 map; post office was Satank |- |'''Cardiff.''' || Stanwyck says Cardiff had a post office from 1889 to 1918. Cardiff is located near Glenwood Springs, Colorado. The [http://www.coloradopast.com/index.php?category=ghosttowns&subcategory=northwest&selection=Cardiff coke ovens] at Cardiff are still visible, and are listed on the [https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/96001331 National Register of Historic Places]. |- |'''Chacra.''' ||Chacra was a railroad station in early Garfield County. Chacra was located roughly with the modern unincorporated community of Canyon Creek, located between New Castle and Glenwood Springs. |- |'''Chapman.''' || Stanwyck says that the original name for New Castle was Chapman, but the name was changed in 1888. |- | '''Coalridge.''' || Stanwyck says that Coalridge had a post office from 1889 to 1893, and was a railroad stop into the 1920s. It was also known as Vulcan, and was located at the site of the Vulcan Coal Mine near New Castle. The name lives on in New Castle's high school, named [https://www.garfieldre2.org/CoalRidge Coal Ridge]. |- |'''Defiance''' || The original name for Glenwood Springs. The name is commonly used throughout Glenwood to this day as the name for an avenue, of the local community theater group, and of several stores. |- | '''Dailey'''|| PO 1900-1903 |- | '''Early Spring'''||1883 PO |- | '''Elk Lodge''' || On 1964 map |- | '''Emma''' ||Est 1883 |- |'''Farwell''' ||Postoffice in 1888 |- |'''Fort Defiance''' see Defiance|| 1879 |- |'''Ferguson''' became Silt ||Post office 1883-1891 |- |'''Funston''' || |- |'''Glenwood Springs''' originally Barlow, then Defiance||Est 1883; incorporated 1885 |- |'''Grand Valley''' originally Parachute; now Parachute ||1904-1980; incorporated 1908 |- |'''Gresham'''|| Post office 1883-1884 |- |'''Grizzly''' ||Railroad Stop; now a rest area |- |'''Grubbs''' ||Railroad Stop |- |'''Raven'''|| |- | '''Una'''|| |}