Matches 1,151 to 1,200 of 1,623
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1151 | From his Find a grave page: From the World War I Mower County Honor Roll: Johnson, Alfred Julius. Born May 13, 1893, Bollin, Iowa. Son of Mrs. Carl S. Johnson, Austin. Occupation, furniture business. Residence, Minneapolis. Entered service April 26, 1918, at Austin, in the army. Assigned to Sales Commissary Unit 309, 1st Division. Trained at Camp Dodge. Promoted to first class private. Embarked from Newport News, Aug. 6, 1918, and arrived at Brest, Aug. 19. Participated in the St. Mihiel offensive and the Meuse-Argonne. Arrived at New York, Aug. 23, 1919. Discharged Aug. 31, 1919, at Camp Dodge. | Johnson, Alfred Julius (I3525)
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1152 | FROM http://www.usgennet.org/usa/in/county/grant/Biographies/leach_william.htm ---------------------- Son of Esom and Lucinda (Corn) Leach, is a native of Fairmount Township, where he was born on February 2, 1840. Esom Leach, the father, as a native of Franklin County, Indiana. Esom came with his father, William Leach to Fairmount Township in the early day. William Leach stopped the first night in the new country at the McCormick Tavern. From this friendly cabin he went forth with a compass and blazed his way through the forest to the location where he afterwards made his home. On August 24, 1838, Esom was married to Miss Lucinda Corn, who was born in Kentucky, December 15, 1823. She was a daughter of Joseph and Nancy (Said) Corn, pioneers of Fairmount Township. Joseph Corn lived to be eighty-three years of age. His wife died at fifty-four. Bred to farming and stock raising, William J. Leach has never been permanently engaged in any other occupation. In 1865 he married Miss Sarah E. Havens, the daughter of Jonathan and Gabrille (Clark) Havens. Mrs. Leach, like her husband, was a native of this county, where she was born April 23, 1843. Four children were born to this union, namely: Lucinda A., Anna J., Charles E. and Martha C. The wife and mother died April 17, 1888. March 16, 1890, Mr. Leach was again married to Miss Jennie Wood, of Bluffton, who is a native of Ripley County. --- -- | Leach, William Jasper (I4603)
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1153 | From https://www.venividiscripto.com/nathaniel-scudder-revolutionary-war/ --------------------------------------------------- Nathaniel married Isabella Anderson, the only daughter of Colonel Kenneth Anderson, the year after his college graduation, and following a charming and whirlwind romance. The History of NJ Medicine records the courtship and romance as told a century later by Dr. Scudder’s granddaughter, Maria. Seems the beautiful Isabella, a member of an old Scottish family that came to the colonies during the Scottish troubles of 1715, came to church services on horseback, and was quickly seen and appreciated by a young college graduate, Nathaniel Scudder. She alighted from her horse and fastened him to a tree before walking up to and into the church. The daring young medical student went up to the horse, disarranged the equipment and entangled the bridle before he, too, went into church. When service was over, and young Isabella went back to her horse, only to be chagrined by the entanglement, Nathaniel suddenly appeared, quite dignified and graceful, and offered to come to her assistance. He righted all the reins he had entangled, then assisted the young lady into the saddle. He mentioned to her that since they were both traveling in the same direction, a distance of some four miles or more, he felt the need to travel with her and offer her protection. She acquiesced to his gallantry, Nathaniel mounted his own horse, and the two rode off together, the beginning of a courtship that culminated in a marriage in 1752 and ultimately the birth of three sons and two daughters. | Scudder, Col. Nathaniel M.D. (I1046)
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1154 | From notes at Findagrave site: Benjamin Clarke, second child of Joseph Clarke (1), was born in Dedham, Massachusetts, February 9, 1644. He married; 1665, Dorcas Morse. He had a grant of land in Medfield, "near the way as you go to Nantasket." His house was on Main street, opposite Pound street. The original well is said to be still in use. His house was burned by the Indians in 1676, and he built again on the same spot. What is known as the Peak House in Medfield is an addition subsequently made to his second house in or about 1762. After the old part decayed and was torn down, the present structure was moved to its present location. Its unique shape has attracted much attention and is even believed to be one of the houses left from the burning in King Philip's war. Benjamin Clarke was a very prominent citizen. He was for seventeen years selectman of the town and two years deputy to the general court. He died in 1724 and his widow in 1725. | Clarke, Benjamin (I30)
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1155 | From official Bio ----------------- In 1924, he met an American nurse, Catherine “Kay” Newbold Barstow of Philadelphia, who was vacationing in Bermuda. That fall he followed her to Manhattan, where he found employment more to his liking. He worked for a trust company while taking night courses at the American Institute of Banking. In 1926, he joined a brokerage firm, but he lost all his savings in the 1929 stock market crash and the firm went belly-up. Several lean years followed. In 1930, he founded a brokerage company with two other partners, but it failed to take off. It was a time, he said, in a Bermuda Sun interview, “when it became common place to see people committing suicide by jumping off skyscrapers because they had lost everything in the stock market crash.” Bank of Bermuda He had re-established his career at Standard Statistics Company, managing investment accounts, when the Bank of Bermuda came calling. In January 1934, he took up the number two post of secretary. He returned home with Catherine, whom he married on August 17, 1925. ----------------------------- | Tucker, Henry James (I1715)
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1156 | From posting on find A Grave: George Alonzo Shields was the oldest son of Henry Harrison Shields and Mary Sutton Shields. Born in Plumville, Indiana County, PA. Siblings include Harry Alta, Frankie, Elmer A., Edward Preston, Frank Vernon, Dessie Edna, Lisle Hamilton. According to an obituary in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, George worked for the Southern Railroad for 25 years. He married Crecie Woodman Wetzel in 1898. They had two children Helen born in VA and Harry born in Tennessee. George died while living in Richmond. He was buried at Riverview Cemetery on Jan 16 1919. On Oct 28 of that same year he was re-interred in a larger family plot. After a lengthy search I found he was buried with Crecie and his son. His gravestone is pictured here. | Shields, George Alonzo (I4702)
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1157 | From Robin Richmond (www.robinrichmond.com) Elizabeth Fitzrandolph was born as Elizabeth Blossom in Leiden, Netherlands (not in England), and was the widow of Edward Fitzrandolph. She and Edward are the subjects of numerous books and articles, as is her father, Thomas Blossom. My profile for her is at www.robinrichmond.com/family/getperson.php?personID=I21970 | Blossom, Elizabeth (I1488)
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1158 | From THE ENGLISH ANCESTRAL HOMES OF THE FOUNDERS OF CAMBRIDGE BY J. GARDNER BARTLETT Let us first consider the ten original founders of 1631, beginning with Gov. John Winthrop, who did not actually settle here although he erected a house, which he soon took down and removed to Boston. The Winthrop family probably derived their name from one of two parishes, Winthorpe, co. Nottingham, or Winthorpe, co. Lincoln. Gov. John Winthrop, lord of the manor of Groton in Suffolk, was born 12 Jan. 1587/8, son of Adam Winthrop, a lawyer of distinction, and grandson of another Adam Winthrop, the founder of the family fortunes, who was born in 1498, amassed wealth as a clothmaker in London, and in 1544 bought from the Crown the manor of Groton, where he settled. This manor had been seized by Henry VIII in 1539 from the Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds; thousands of mercantile families, like the Winthrops, became landed gentry about this time by purchasing from the Crown the vast estates sequestered all over England at the dissolution of the monasteries in 1539. In 1630 John Winthrop emigrated to New England as governor of the Massachusetts Colony, selling the manor of Groton that year. Groton Church is a small but fine stone structure, part of which was built in the thirteenth century. In the chancel is a memorial brass to the Adam Winthrop who bought the manor and died 9 Nov. 1562; and about forty years ago Gov. Winthrop's distinguished descendant, Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, installed in the chancel a large and beautiful stained glass window in memory of the governor. In the churchyard and against the corner formed by the outside walls of the chancel and south aisle may still be seen an altar tomb over the grave of Adam Winthrop, father of the governor. The Groton manor house occupied by the Winthrops was destroyed by fire soon after it was sold by the governor, but its location near a very ancient mulberry tree is still discernible. I recall with much pleasure the cordial hospitality I received on three visits to Groton from Rev. Mr. Wayman, who has been rector of the parish since 1872. Groton, Mass., and Groton, Conn., were named for the old English parish. | Winthrop, Gov. John (I1356)
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1159 | From U H Reamer Bible | Kapp, Maria Elizabeth (I72)
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1160 | From U H Reamer Bible | Reamer, Upton Henry (I73)
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1161 | from U H Reamer Bible | Reamer, William Frederick (I74)
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1162 | From website http://www.ksgenweb.org/archives/statewide/military/civilwar/adjutant/9/h.html Private Coffield James C. Iola Nov. 18, '61 Jan. 16, '62 Mustered out Jan. 16, '65, DeVall's Bluff, Ark. | Coffield, James Clark (I4544)
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1163 | From Wikipedia: ------------- Scudder was born in Monmouth Court House, Province of New Jersey, which later became Freehold Borough, New Jersey. He attended the College Of New Jersey (now Princeton University) and graduated in 1751. He then studied medicine before setting up a practice in Monmouth County, New Jersey. Dr. Scudder was active in civic and militia affairs. When the revolution split the colonies, he supported the rebel cause. He was a member of the county's committee of safety and represented it in the Provincial Congress held in 1774. That same year he was named lieutenant colonel in the county's first regiment of militia. In 1776 he was elected to a one-year term as Monmouth County's first member of the newly constituted New Jersey Legislative Council, and in 1780 he was elected to the New Jersey General Assembly.[2] In 1777, Scudder became the colonel of his militia regiment and was sent as a delegate to the Continental Congress. During the summer of 1778, he was particularly busy and abandoned his medical practice. He split his time between the Congress and militia activities. He led his regiment in the Battle of Monmouth in June. He wrote a series of impassioned letters to local and state leaders urging the adoption of the Articles of Confederation, and when New Jersey's legislature approved them in November, he endorsed them for the state at the Congress. Scudder continued both forms of service for several years. On October 17, 1781, he led a part of his regiment to offer resistance to a British Army foraging party and was killed in a skirmish near Shrewsbury, New Jersey. He is buried in the Tennent Church Graveyard in Manalapan Township. Dr. Scudder was the only member of the Continental Congress to die in battle during the Revolutionary War and the last colonel to die in battle. | Scudder, Col. Nathaniel M.D. (I1046)
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1164 | Funeral Home Obituary: Osie Marie Duke, 93, of Sidney, passed away on Tuesday, December 6, 2005 at Sharp Nursing Home in Sidney. She was born October 12, 1912 in Stuttgart, Arkansas and was the daughter of John Bailey and Della (Murphy) Bailey. Osie was a member of the Evening Shade First Baptist Church and attended the Sidney Baptist Church. She was a homemaker and was a very loving and kind person to all. Osie was family oriented and raised ten children and all of them could talk to her about anything that was on their minds. She loved to garden and can food; she loved to cook, quilt and loved to watch soap operas; she also had beautiful house plants and �owers. And later in life she did babysitting for others. Osie always kept the family Bible in the living room. She is survived by �ve sons: W.O. Duke of Batesville, Cleo Duke of Cave City, Harley Duke of Batesville, Jack Duke of Sidney, Boyce Duke of Sidney; and four daughters: Elsie Harrington of Ward, Bonnie Maxwell of Evening Shade, Patsy Malone of Cave City, and Kathleen Koob of Sidney. Twenty-seven grandchildren, forty-six great-grandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren also survive her. Other than her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Otto Duke and one son, Coy Duke. Pallbearers will be Steve Duke, Kenny Malone, Billy Headstream, Dwayne Headstream, Tony Williams, Burton Duke and Brian Landers. Funeral services will be at 2:00 p.m. on Friday, December 9, 2005 at the Roller-Crouch-McGee Funeral Home Chapel with Reverend Daniel Duke o�ciating. Visitation will be from 5:00 to 8:00 PM on Thursday. Interment will be at Williams Cemetery, west of Sidney, under the direction of Roller-Crouch-McGee Funeral Home of Cave City. (870) 283-6602. | Bailey, Osie (I4578)
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1165 | Furnace Fells | Sandys, Edwin Edward Baines (I3207)
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1166 | Furnesse Fells | Sandys, Sir Henry (I3189)
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1167 | Genealogical and Personal History of Bucks County says Jan. 2, 1830. | Hart, Colonel William (I2924)
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1168 | Genealogical Card File. Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. | Source (S136)
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1169 | Genealogical Society of Utah. British Isles Vital Records Index, 2nd Edition. Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, copyright 2002. Used by permission. | Source (S149)
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1170 | Genealogical Society of Utah. British Isles Vital Records Index, 2nd Edition. Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, copyright 2002. Used by permission. | Source (S150)
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1171 | general debility | Patchett, Samuel (I1805)
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1172 | General Notes: Immigrated Aboard the "Increase" England Apr >Boston Massachusetts Jul, Rem to Dedham MA Bef 1638. Named After older sister Died childhood. BOOKS Planters of the Commonwealth 1620-1640, Charles Edward Banks, Riverside Press, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1930, p149: "Increase of London, Robert Lea, Master. She left England the latter part of April and arrived Boston the end of July... "Samuel Marse 50 husbandman Dedham, Mrs Elizabeth Morse 48, Joseph Morse 20, Elizabeth Daniell 2...(See Public Record Office MSS, and Drake: 'Founders' p20, 22, 24, 26.)" 17th Century Colonial Ancestors of Members of the National Society of Colonial Dames XVII Century 1915-1975, Mary Louise Marshall Hutton, Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company Inc, 1987, p178: "Samuel Morse (1587-1654) MA, m. Elizabeth Jasper, Proprietor." INTERNET http://www.winthropsociety.org/shipndx4.htm "Winthrop Society "Index of Some Passengers to New England, 1633 - 1635 "...Elizabeth Morse 48yo 'Increase' 1635 Roll #42..." ANCESTRY.COM 13 Aug 2000 Database: THE PIONEERS OF MASSACHUSETTS Samuel, husbandman, ae. 50, with wife Elizabeth, ae. 48, and (son) Joseph, ae. 20, came in the Increase April 15, 1635. Settled at Dedham. Propr. 1636. Frm. Oct. 8, 1640. Town officer. Rem. to Medfield. He d. April 5, 1654. Will prob. 30 (11) 1654. To wife Elizabeth; to sons John and Daniel, and to Ann, wife of son Joseph, dec.; to dau. Mary Bullen. Inv. taken 10 (5) 1654. [Reg. V, 299, and IX, 141.] The widow d. June 20, 1654. ANCESTRAL FILE Ancestral File Ver 4.13 9QGH-56 Samuel MORSE Born/Chr 12 Jun 1576 Boxted Essex England, Mar 29 Jun 1602 Elizabeth JASPER (AFN:9QGH-6C) Redgrave Suffolk England, Ver 4.19 3G4C-4N Elizabeth JASPER Born/Chr 8 Oct 1578 Pedgrove/Redgrave Suffolk England Died 20 Jun 1655 Redgrave Suffolk England Bur Jun 1655. | Jasper, Elizabeth (I600)
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1173 | General Register Office: Society of Friends' Registers, Notes and Certificates of Births, Marriages and Burials. Records of the General Register Office, Government Social Survey Department, and Office of Population Censuses and Surveys, RG 6. The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, England. | Source (S160)
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1174 | Gloucestershire Anglican Parish Registers. Gloucestershire Archives, Gloucestershire, England. | Source (S142)
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1175 | Godfrey Memorial Library. American Genealogical-Biographical Index. Middletown, CT, USA: Godfrey Memorial Library. | Source (S60)
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1176 | Graduated 1917 from Williamsport Hospital School of Nursing | Rathmell, Ruth Naomi (I44)
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1177 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I4411)
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1178 | Grandson of Ebenezer P Clark. Mother was daughter of E P Clark. Death Cert says he worked as a crossing watchman for The Detroit, Lansing and Lake Michigan (DL&LM) 18 years. Died on the job. | Kilmer, Albert L. (I4443)
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1179 | Gravesite Details James Clement Reeve born Oct 14 1832 Bradford County Pennsylvania died May 30, 1900 Nelson Nuckolls co. Nebraska. Son of Abraham Reeve and Elizabeth Clark, married 1st Amanda Olive Litter. Married second Nov 7 1867 Mary Ann Milligan | Reeve, James Clement (I4450)
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1180 | Gravesite Details wife of Charles .J. Capper,aged 22y.2m.16d. | Reeve, Abigail Melissa (I4451)
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1181 | Gravestone Inscription: "...A useful member of the Church, A faithful Friend, not many such, A tender Parent, Husband dear, And served his Country well Whilst here. Yet, notwithstanding all that's said, Beneath this stone his head is laid." [Note: The BOWMAN Family Crest is elaborately carved above the inscription] The "History of Thyatira Church", compiled by Rev. Thomas W. Lingle, Ph.D., contains a brief accounting of William Bowman's death. Upon the occasion of the Church's Centennial Celebration in 1855, Rev. S. C. Alexander, pastor of Thyatira, related the following about William Bowman, one of the earliest Ruling Elders of the Church. "...On the 11th of March, 1795, Mr. Bowman was killed while coming from Salisbury with his wagon [thrown from the wagon]. From the fact of two of his sons being ministers of the Gospel, we might reasonably suppose that he ordered his family aright, and set before them a Godly example." [SOURCE: McCubbins Collection, Rowan Co. Public Library, Salisbury, NC] William Bowman first married Elisabeth HART, 23 March 1756 in Bucks Co., PA. It is believed the following children of Wm & Elisabeth Bowman survived infancy: Samuel, b. 18 October 1758; John, b. 22 February 1763; James, b. 08 February 1765; Ann, b 09 August; Joseph, b. 04 December 1769; Mary, b. 07 March 1772; and Elisabeth, b. 20 December 1775 [SOURCE: Family Bible, published by the 'Central Illinois Genealogical Quarterly', Vol. XXV, No. 1, Winter 1989, Page 10, by Mary Karl] Elisabeth HART Bowman died before 1785 [unknown place]. On 14 May 1785, Adlai Osborne witnessed a Marriage Bond for William Bowman and Elizabeth McPHERSON of [Old] Rowan County, NC. Elizabeth's brother, John McPherson, served as Bondsman. Elizabeth McPherson was a daughter of Robert and Elizabeth RUSSEL McPherson. [Robert McPherson was the first proprietor of McPherson's Mill on Davidson's Creek in 1779.] It is not known if any children were born from the union of Wm. and Eizabeth McPherson Bowman. Three years after William Bowman's death, the Iredell Co. Court [August 1798 Session] "Ordered that letters of administration issue to Elizabeth Bowman and John McPherson on the estate of Will Bowman, deceased, who gave bond of 500 [pound sterling] with Samuel Fleming and James Bowman, securities; also,ordered that John Huggins, George L. Davidson, Ephraim Davidson and Robert McKneely [sic] lay off 1 years maintenance for Elizabeth Bowman and children from the estate of Will Bowman, deceased." | Hart, Elizabeth (I2933)
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1182 | Gravestone Inscription: "...A useful member of the Church, A faithful Friend, not many such, A tender Parent, Husband dear, And served his Country well Whilst here. Yet, notwithstanding all that's said, Beneath this stone his head is laid." [Note: The BOWMAN Family Crest is elaborately carved above the inscription] The "History of Thyatira Church", compiled by Rev. Thomas W. Lingle, Ph.D., contains a brief accounting of William Bowman's death. Upon the occasion of the Church's Centennial Celebration in 1855, Rev. S. C. Alexander, pastor of Thyatira, related the following about William Bowman, one of the earliest Ruling Elders of the Church. "...On the 11th of March, 1795, Mr. Bowman was killed while coming from Salisbury with his wagon [thrown from the wagon]. From the fact of two of his sons being ministers of the Gospel, we might reasonably suppose that he ordered his family aright, and set before them a Godly example." [SOURCE: McCubbins Collection, Rowan Co. Public Library, Salisbury, NC] William Bowman first married Elisabeth HART, 23 March 1756 in Bucks Co., PA. It is believed the following children of Wm & Elisabeth Bowman survived infancy: Samuel, b. 18 October 1758; John, b. 22 February 1763; James, b. 08 February 1765; Ann, b 09 August; Joseph, b. 04 December 1769; Mary, b. 07 March 1772; and Elisabeth, b. 20 December 1775 [SOURCE: Family Bible, published by the 'Central Illinois Genealogical Quarterly', Vol. XXV, No. 1, Winter 1989, Page 10, by Mary Karl] Elisabeth HART Bowman died before 1785 [unknown place]. On 14 May 1785, Adlai Osborne witnessed a Marriage Bond for William Bowman and Elizabeth McPHERSON of [Old] Rowan County, NC. Elizabeth's brother, John McPherson, served as Bondsman. Elizabeth McPherson was a daughter of Robert and Elizabeth RUSSEL McPherson. [Robert McPherson was the first proprietor of McPherson's Mill on Davidson's Creek in 1779.] It is not known if any children were born from the union of Wm. and Eizabeth McPherson Bowman. Three years after William Bowman's death, the Iredell Co. Court [August 1798 Session] "Ordered that letters of administration issue to Elizabeth Bowman and John McPherson on the estate of Will Bowman, deceased, who gave bond of 500 [pound sterling] with Samuel Fleming and James Bowman, securities; also,ordered that John Huggins, George L. Davidson, Ephraim Davidson and Robert McKneely [sic] lay off 1 years maintenance for Elizabeth Bowman and children from the estate of Will Bowman, deceased." | Bowman, William (I4755)
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1183 | Greenwood Farm | Heckscher, Stevens (I4172)
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1184 | Groton Manor/ | Fones, Elizabeth (I2765)
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1185 | guilford news item in norwich sun 6/15/1916 | Clark, Ella Jane (I2359)
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1186 | Had a grandson named Ebenezer Pemberton Stranger (1837 - 1862) | Clark, Ebenezer Pemberton (I14)
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1187 | Hale Collection - Cleveland Cemetery Records. Town of Canterbury CT ****************************************\ CLARK, Bethiah, wife of Theophilus, died Sept. 16, 1791, age 56. ****************************************** link = http://www.hale-collection.com/503-2-windham-canterbury-cleveland.htm | Billings, Bethiah (I25)
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1188 | Hambridge | Coate, William Henry (I3228)
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1189 | Hankinson Cemetery | Hankinson, Joseph (I3306)
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1190 | Hankinson Vorris Graveyard S245] William C. Armstrong, Pioneer Families of Northwestern New Jersey ((Lambertville, New Jersey, Hunterdon House, 1979)), 42. 2nd source: Find a Grave: Hankinson Cemetery, Readington, Hunterdon Co., NJ 1707- 3/28/1784 | Mattison, Rachel (I1461)
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1191 | Harry Spalding died May 23 1821 Lemira Saterlee re-married to William Myer | Clark, Harry Spalding (I12)
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1192 | Has Clark Family Bible (from her mother) - great grandaughter of Harry Spalding Clark & Clarissa Tupper Lathrop Living @ 12/10/1991 - 1221 Corvet Ave., Morgantown, WV 26505 | Ecton, Phyllis Margurite (I122)
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1193 | He is listed as living in Newark, NJ on Harry S Clark's death Certificate. We also see his name listed for a Newark company in 1911 (American Aluminum Ware Co. 374 Jellif Avenue, Newark, NJ - Incorporated 1911 | Clark, Frederick Mott (I9)
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1194 | He is mentioned as deceased in his mother's will as of 6/4/1756 + proved 2/2/1758 His heirs are mentioned to receive his 1/5th part of their fathers estate - but no names are given | Cutler, Nathaniel (I586)
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1195 | He was confirmed in 1688 in Altengronau. He emgirated to America i n 1710. The records of Altengronau were searched from the earliest r ecords to 1800. The family of Georg Killmer is last mentioned is not listed in Germany after Jun 1709. Proof that it is the right famil y besides the names and dates fitting perfectly comes from the New York subsisterary rolls. From 4 August 1710-25March 1712 the family is listed in these rolls as 4 people over the age of 10, 3 children under the age of 10. The next roll dated 24 Jun 1712 the family is listed as 6 over 10, 1 under ten. In other words, two of the children in the family turned ten years old between March and June of 1712. This fits exactly to be the twin sons Simon and Michael whose birthday to turn 10 was 18 Jun. This exact connection and all other connections show this is the same family. Some concern may be made by Kilmer descendants that the family name was Johann Georg Killmer or Georg Kilmer in Germany rather than the earlier supposed Johannes Jurrian Kuhlmann. The latter name is the Dutch equivallent to the German Johann Georg. Kuhlmann is also a Dutch confusion. The name in Germany was actually Georg Killmer and thus the family name was not changed to Kilmer from Kuhlmann as earlier supposed, but was Killmer originally in Germany. It is interesting that the alternate spellings found in the Altengronau Parish are Kulmer in the earliest records, Killner, and Kilmer, all variations al so found in New York records. Jun 14 , 1710 New York's new Royal governor Robert Hunter arrives in New York City, bringing 3,000 Palatine Germans from Europe to produce naval stores. They will move up the Hudson to the Schoharie region later in the year. Immigration: About 1710 from Germany Naturalization: Jan. 17, 1715/16 Annotation: Date and port of arrival or date and place of mention in the New World. A few are date of intent to emigrate. Number on the Hunter Lists, birth dates, family relationships, and places of origin may also be provided. Exhaustive information on more than 500 of the 847 immigrant families who left Germany in 1709 to come to America. Contains surname index, and index to communities in Germany. Letters following page numbers refer to names appearing in the introductory section of the source. Source Bibliography: JONES, HENRY Z., JR. The Palatine Families of New York: A Study of the German Immigrants Who Arrived in Colonial New York in 1710, Volume I. Universal City, CA: Author, PO Box 8341, Universal City, CA, 1985. 624p. Page: 487 | Killmer, Georg (I11347)
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1196 | He was married October 26, 1862, to Miss Sarah E. Haven, a lady whose natural endowment of head and heart made her universally loved and respected. Her death, on April 17, 1888, occasioned acute sorrow in the entire neighborhood as well as in the home circle. She was the mother of two sons and four daughters, two of whom preceded her to the spirit land. Those surviving her as follows: Lucinda, who married John Scott, a farmer of Jefferson township, by whom she had four children; Anna, wife of Chalmer Kerr, an agriculturist of Delaware county, and the mother of one child; Charles E., who is an agriculturist and grain dealer of Fowlerton, is married to Miss Minnie Payne and has two children; and Martha C., who was educated in the common schools and received a musical education. She lives at home. On March 16, 1890, Mr. Leach led to the alter Miss Jennie Wood, whose kindly nature and womanly qualities have made her an ideal wife and mother. She is a daughter of John and Mary (Smith) Wood and was born in Ripley county, this state, January 12, 1851, but during her infancy her parents moved to Allen county, thence to Bluffton, where she was educated and lived for twenty-two years. She is a devout member of the Harmony Baptist church, as are her husband and daughter Martha. Mr. Leach worked zealously for the erection of the pretty structure in which they now worship, and has been foremost in all movements which are conducive to public good. He stands high in the community and will leave to his children a heritage far preferable to lands and gold-- a good name. He is a Democrat and cast his first vote for George B. McClellan. ----------------------------- ----------------------------- | Leach, William Jasper (I4603)
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1197 | He was the son of Charles G. and Joanna Truesdell Swan He proudly served in the Civil War with Co. C. 2 NY Calvary. | Swan, Orange (I4399)
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1198 | Headstone Inscription: Inscription age 67y 5m 21d "Our Father and Mother. The parents of 12 children - 6 boys and 6 girls." | Merrit, Martha (I4590)
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1199 | Headstone moved to Harmony Grove Cemetery at Peabody, MA | Gardner, Lieut Abel (I2552)
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1200 | Hearse Hill Cemetery | Otis, James (I1600)
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