Matches 1,001 to 1,050 of 1,538
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1001 |
Copies in back of SEARS binder | Kellogg, Lydia Ann (I451)
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1002 |
Crofton, Knox Co., Nebraska by the Nebraska Historical Society
RICHARD AND JOSEPHINE JONES
Richard Thomas Jones was born shortly after the family immigrated from Wales and landed at Ellis Island. Their first home in America was in Wisconsin: they later moved to northeast IA (this would be Howard Co., IA). In 1881 Richard Jones and his wife Josephine (Hurley) moved to Knox Co., NE. They and their three children, Edith, Wilbur and Libbie, homesteaded one mile south and one half mile west of Crofton. The farm is now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Kohles and their son Kevin and family (at the time of printing anyway...not sure about now) Mr. Jones loved singing which is characteristic of the Welsh people. Even though times were hard and material things were hard to come by, the home was filled with music, games and other forms of creative entertainment. The closest town in the area was Hartington, where they took wheat to be ground into flour. Mrs. Jones churned butter which they exchanged for things they couldn't raise. Mr. Jones passed away in his early 50's. After his death, Mrs. Jones moved into Crofton where she lived in the house located on the lot where Larry Crosley built his home. Edith Jones married Merton Cooley, editor of the Crofton Journal, who later was drowned in the Missouri River following an accident on the pontoon bridge. They had one daughter, Dixie. Edith Jones Cooley passed away when Dixie was three years old. Following her mother's death, Dixie went to live with her grandmother Jones. Libbie Jones was a country school teacher. She passed away at the age of 16 of diphtheria and was buried in the family plot with her father and sister, Edith. Wilbur Jones stayed on the farm and married Laura Rissler. Their family consisted of seven children: Elizabeth, Richard, Wellington, Bob, Bill, Mary Jo and Laurie. Wilbur's mother passed away in 1922 and was buried beside her husband and two daughters, Edith and Libbie. At this time, Dixie Cooley came and made her home with Wilbur and Laura and their family. Wilbur passed away in 1948 and his ashes were scattered on the hills of the farm where he played as a boy. | Jones, Edith (I84)
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1003 |
Cutter looks like he got the list that had deleted Hezekiah in favor of Mabel | Sherwood, Mehitable (I138)
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1004 |
Dan Desmond was the Sports Editor of the Sioux City Journal until he moved to Chicago in 1942. He then joined the Chicago Herald American as a sportswriter covering boxing, baseball, college football and hockey. He eventually joined the Chicago Bears Football team as their Public Relations Director. | Desmond, Daniel Thomas (I86)
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1005 |
Daniel is buried in the Springfield Cemetery in Springfield Massachusetts. The original burial grounds were at the river front behind the Old First Church. In 1849, to make way for the railroad, 2024 bodies were moved to the cemetery on the hill. They were placed in a mass grave. The main entrance to the cemtery is on Maple St but the graves are at the Pine Street entrance. Most of this information is found in the Cooley genealogy book by Mortimer E. Cooley published in 1941. | Cooley, Daniel (I507)
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1006 |
Danny Lee Barnhouse was 56 and he died of a heart attack Sunday evening, 5 Feb 2017. He worked the grave yard shift at Papettis Sanitation Company near Bedford, Iowa. They handled egg products, egg muffins, omelets and cream cheese for Starbucks, Swanson, Burger King, Hellman's Mayonnaise, NY School System and Jimmy Dean. I saw him the last time in 2010 while in Clinton, Missouri where my nephew Darrel Lee lives. Danny and I have been texting one another over many years. When he was born December 18, 1960, Mama had to prove he was hers when we moved to Montana. I loved him so much, I held him every chance I could. I can't tell you how much I miss him!!!!! - Darlene M. Crilley
Used to live in Clinton MO, Rich Hill MO, Nevada MO, Pleasanton KS
Related to Ross C Miller
Related to Charlene Chatley
Danny Barnhouse
312 Dodge St
Bedford, IA 50833
(712) 523-3132
Charlene A Chatley, 71, Bedford, IA
Savannah, MO
Lufkin, TX
Independence, MO
Related to
Danny Barnhouse
Vance Chatley
Leonard Mosser | Barnhouse, Daniel Lee (I1520)
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1007 |
Daughter of Joseph Finch and Elizabeth Close. | Finch, Abigail (I2354)
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1008 |
Daughter of Paul and Martha Peck | Peck, Ruth (I2048)
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1009 |
David Taylor Carver born 14 Oct 1784 almost two years after Joseph but just about a year before John | Carver, Joseph (I1583)
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1010 |
David Taylor Carver born 19 Oct 1784 just about a year before John and a little less than a two years after Joseph | Carver, John (I1584)
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1011 |
David Taylor Carver lived and died on place at [the] top of [the] hill North of Esq. Strong, [now] Raymond place. His mother, Lucy Taylor, lived with him to her death.
Record of My Ancestry - Bissell Family
compiled by F. Clarence Bissell.
David Taylor Carver was married to Sharley Tarbox daughter of Asenath Tarbox\\\'s brother, Godfrey Tarbox. Asenath Tarbox was Aldric Carver\\\'s wife.
Hebron was in Hartford County prior to 1785 so David was born in Hebron, Hartford Co. but died in Hebron, Tolland Co.
Hebron was incorporated May 26, 1708 but Tolland County was not formed until 1786 when it was formed from the original counties of Hartford (1666) and New London (1666).
As established in 1666, Hartford County consisted of the towns of Windsor, Wethersfield, Hartford, Farmington, and Middletown. The \"Thirty Miles Island\" referred to in the constituting Act was incorporated as the town of Haddam in 1668.
In 1670, the town of Simsbury was established, extending Hartford County to the Massachusetts border. | Carver, David Taylor (I352)
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1012 |
David was a Revolutionary War Colonel, R.W. Sixth Reg. Charlotte Precinct DAR #111119.
In the 1790 census his surname was spelled Southerland.
From Family History of William Collins Buel V; Ancestors of Sarah Amelia Follett "Sutherland-Buell Lineage; Sara Sutherland": "...David Sutherland (Col David) moved to Great Nine Partners, which was called "Crum Elbow" and "Charlotte Precinct" at various times, shortly before 1743, aged 21, when he appears on the Tax List for the first time. His father, William, then about 53 years of age, never appears on the Tax List and must have lived with his son". | Sutherland, David (I681)
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1013 |
Deacon Samuel Chapin of Springfield was bapt at Paignton, Devonshire England 8 Oct 1598, d Springfield Mas 11 Nov 1675, m. at Paignton England 9 Feb 1623/24, Cicely Penney, dau of Henry Penney of Paignton. He sailed to America in 1635 and settled in Roxbury MBC where he bacame a citizen and landholder between 1636 and 1640; he took the Freeman's oath in 1641 and in the next year moved to Springfield MBC where he becamse a Deacon and sometimes preached; he served on a Town Committee in 1642; became Constable in 1645, and Selectman from 1644 to 1651. [In 1648 he served as a Selectman along with Benjamin Cooley]. He also served in 1660, 1663, and 1664. He was Commissioner in 1652, 1654, 1662, and 1664, and in 1659 had a commission to administer justice. | Chapin, Samuel (I2027)
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1014 |
DEATH: Ancestry.com Online Social Security Death Index.Information from Death Record: FLORENCE BARNHOUSE 21 Jan 1908 30 Jan 1992 (No Location Given) (No Location Given) 273-36-3619 Ohio (Between 1956 and 1958) | King, Florence Mabel (I1887)
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1015 |
Deerfield was in Hampshire County untill 1811 when Franklin was formed from part of Hampshire. | Nims, Lucinda (I1347)
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1016 |
Denver, CO | Family: Lawrence Eugene Anderson / Virginia Lee Wright (F474)
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1017 |
Descendant of Magna Charta Sureties Saher de Quincy and John de Lacy. | FitzAlan, Mary (I1217)
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1018 |
Descendant of Magna Charta Sureties Saher de Quincy and John de Lacy. | le Despenser, Isabel (I1219)
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1019 |
Descendant of Magna Charta Sureties Saher de Quincy and John de Lacy. | de Clare, Alianore (I1221)
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1020 |
Descendant of Magna Charta Sureties Saher de Quincy and John de Lacy. | de Lacy, Maud (I1225)
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1021 |
Descendant of Magna Charta Surety Robert de Vere. | FitzAlan, Richard (I1218)
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1022 |
Descendant of the House of Capet, Kings of France | Beauchamp, Elizabeth (I1233)
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1023 |
Despite this marriage date, Lydia Cooley is found in the 1850 US census, MI, Hillsdale Co, Pittsford, aged 36. The date of enumeration was the 13th day of August 1850. | Family: Byron Cooley / Sarah Elizabeth Collins (F571)
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1024 |
DEVORE (Devose) NICHOLAS - Brown CoB 2-22-1732, France; d 3 ? 1815 at Red Oak, O. bur in Devore Cem, near Ripley, O - Union Twp, Brown Co. Pvt in Van Swearengen's Company, Col Morgan's Rifle Regt, Contl Trps. 59th N S D A R Report. | Devore, Nicholas (I535)
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1025 |
Died ae 4 months 5 days
John Wagner & His 12 Children of Harrison County, Ohio and Surrounding Counties 1776-1984 Ref #929.273 A1 #4652 JSMB Fam Hist Book copies 8/25/2000
"Springfield Township, Jefferson CountyGeroge Wm. BARNHOUSE -- son of Drucilla (WAGNER) & C.C. BARNHOUSE age 4 mo. died October 21, 1843. Buried in old cemetery "among the strip mines" southwest of Amsterdam believed to be locatd on a farm once owned by Geroge & Susan (FOX) BARNHOUSE who are also buried there. Cemetery contains about 10 graves."
Gravestone Epitaph: Our life is ever on the wing And death is ever nigh The moment when our life begins We all begin to die | Barnhouse, George William (I1005)
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1026 |
Died as a resident in the long meddowe of Springfield. | Stebbins, Sarah (I684)
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1027 |
Died in infancy | Barnhouse, William (I560)
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1028 |
Died in infancy | Owen, Alvin (I2034)
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1029 |
Discrepancy between Mainetti (b. Maryliand) and Lemmon database (b. Woodbury, Blair Co, PA) - I checked his database and it is rife with errors (e.g. Huber/Hoover) | Hoover, Barbara (I300)
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1030 |
Distinguished Service Cross
AWARDED FOR ACTIONS DURING Vietnam War
Service: Army
Rank: Sergeant First Class
Battalion: Vietnam
Division: 1st Special ForcesHeadquarters, U.S. Army, Vietnam, General Orders No. 541 (February 6, 1968)
The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918 (amended by act of July 25, 1963), takes pride in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross (Posthumously) to Sergeant First Class Paul Herman Villarosa (ASN: RA-19707581), United States Army, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations involving conflict with an armed hostile force in the Republic of Vietnam, while serving with Command and Control (North), FOB 4 (Marble Mountain), 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne), 1st Special Forces. Sergeant First Class Villarosa distinguished himself by exceptionally valorous actions on 4 January 1968 while leading a Special Forces long range reconnaissance patrol on a mission in enemy-controlled territory. As his team moved through the jungle, it became apparent to him that an enemy force was attempting to flank his unit. Sergeant First Class Villarosa halted his team and was preparing to establish communications with his headquarters when the hidden hostile force ordered his men to throw down their weapons and surrender. Acting quickly, he directed his men to withdraw to more defensible positions while he remained behind to cover their movement. The enemy launched a vicious assault using automatic weapons, grenades and a flamethrower, but Sergeant First Class Villarosa stood his ground despite the savage fusillade and delivered withering fire on the advancing insurgents which slowed their progress and allowed his men to set up a secure defensive perimeter. He was mortally wounded while gallantly and selflessly defending his fellow soldiers in the heat of battle. Sergeant First Class Villarosa's extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty, at the cost of his life, were in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the United States Army.
The Wall of Faces
https://www.vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/53740/PAUL-H-VILLAROSA/
Honored On Panel 33e, Line 43 Of The Wall
Paul Herman Villarosa
Wall Name: Paul H Villarosa
Panel / Line: 33e/43
Date Of Birth: 09/07/1928
Casualty Province: Pr & Mr Unknown
Date Of Casualty: 01/04/1968
Home Of Record: Lake Tahoe
County Of Record: El Dorado County
State: Ca
Branch Of Service: Army
Rank: SFC | Villarosa, Paul Herman (I1118)
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1031 |
Divorced 1959 | Family: Paul Hunter Johnston / Faye Eleanor Sears (F51)
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1032 |
Douglas Merritt did not metion second wife Martha Smith with whom Wiilliam Jr had six children according to 1000-half. | Sutherland, William (I1504)
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1033 |
Downloaded Cindarella Petteys info in Sears\Betts | Betts, Cinderella (I1543)
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1034 |
E:\\Genealogy\\Family-Biographies\\DixieCooley.txt | Cooley, Edith Dixie (I85)
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1035 |
Edward Griswold of Killingworth, Connecticut | Griswold, Edward Griswold (I612)
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1036 |
Edward Stebbins was of Hartford. | Stebbins, Edward (I1370)
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1037 |
Edwin died of the 1918 influenza pandemic that originated in Haskell County, Kansas. Duration of the illness was only eight days.
His obituary in Wilkes-Barre Times Leader is confusing with errors. The brother is probably John Webster Cressler who was stationed in France during WWI. Mrs. Herman Mailander could be Mary Arabella whose first husband was Herman Mailander.
EDWIN S. CRESSLEREdwin Stiles Cressler, eldest son of Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Cressler, died at the family home, 250 South River street Sunday after a few days' illness of influenza. Besides his parents he is survived by one brother. Dr John Crssler in France, and one sister, Mrs. Herman Mailander of this city. The funeral was held from the family horn thla afternoon and.was private. Services were conducted by Ensign and Mrs. Cook of the Salvation Army. The pall bearers were: William Hughes, Daniel Parry, Jacob and Peter Strltzinger. Interment was in Hollenback cemetery. | Cressler, Edwin Stiles (I2357)
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1038 |
Either He or his son James had a land grant in Nelson Co, Kentucky in 1785. James Ingo appears on a Madison Co, Kentucky tax list in 1789. He was a Revolutionary War veteran and he mentions his great grandaughter Sarah Montgomery in his will.
A Huguenot is a member of a French Protestant group descended from 16th and 17th century Protestant Reformed Church of France. Historically they were inspired by the writings of John Calvin (Jean Calvin in French) in the 1530s, who became known by that originally derisive designation by the end of the 16th century.
Huguenot numbers peaked near an estimated two million by 1562, concentrated mainly in the southern and central parts of France. As they gained influence and more openly displayed their faith, Roman Catholic hostility grew despite increasingly liberal political concessions and edicts of toleration from the French crown, most notably the Edict of Nantes.
A series of religious persecutions followed, culminating in the Edict of Fontainebleau revoking the Edict of Nantes and pressuring Huguenots to convert. While nearly three-quarters eventually submitted, roughly 500,000 Huguenots fled France by the late 17th and early 18th centuries. - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia | Dozier, James Ingo (I544)
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1039 |
Eliakim Cooley took the oath of allegiance (to the King) in 1678 in the year of his marriage. He took the Freeman's Oath 19 Dec 1690.
In 1711 a Frenchman by the name of John Mallefuild was traveling through Springfield when a severe snowstorm made it impossible for him to keep on, forcing him to stop at Eliakim Cooley's home. He was quite ill and expired 10 days later on 26 Nov 1711. Afterward a portion of his estate was left to Cooley for "tending him" ( | Cooley, Eliakim (I519)
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1040 |
Elias Cooley Sr, an old pioneer, died at Augusta recently. He was brother of Antony Cooley of Kalamazoo deceased and of Caleb Cooley now living in Galesburg. He built the Cooley Flouring Mlls south of Kalamazoo and also the Pavilion Mills south of Galesburg. He was father of Rev E Cooley Jr now of Ionia. - Kalamazoo Daily Telegraph, May 3 1879, page 3 | Cooley, Elias J. (I2202)
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1041 |
Elizabeth is buried in the Springfield Cemetery in Springfield Massachusetts. The original burial grounds was at the riverfront behind the Old First Church. To make way for a railroad, 2024 bodies were moved to the cemetery on the hill in 1849 and placed in a mass grave. The main entrance to the cemtery is on Maple St but the graves are at the Pine Street entrance. Most of this information is found in the Cooley Genealogy by Mortimer E. Cooley published in 1941. | Wolcott, Elizabeth (I508)
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1042 |
Emily's elder brother, Noah, was married to Ruth Gladden, a sister of William Gladden | Cooley, Emily E. (I151)
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1043 |
Emma's husband John M Cressler signed her death certificate 1 Nov 1921. | Stiles, Emma Arabella "Belle" (I1103)
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1044 |
Emphysema, severe Cor-pulmonic; Interval between onset and death: 12 years | Cooley, Hersey Blake (I1936)
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1045 |
Englewooad Colo his residence of last benefit.
His parents were:Joseph Raymond Gump b. 24 Nov 1901 in Covington, Miami Co, Ohio and d. 28 Mar 1982 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co, Utah, and Helen Ballinger b. 13 Apr 1901, d. abt 1964 buried alongside her son Joseph Roger Gump in Section 115, Faairmount Cemetery, Denver, Colorado. They were married in on 9 Jun 1925 in Denver Colorado. | Gump, Joseph Roger (I106)
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1046 |
Enlistment date 28 Jan 1944; discharge date 22 Jun 1945. | Guerreiro, Manuel Santos (I669)
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1047 |
Epitaph "That worthy woman". She died in childbirth.
In 1625, William Pitkin paid for "Mrs. Mason's grave" (possibly his mother in law). Note: Another datum is her burial date: 8 Apr 1628. | Mason, Jane (I1988)
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1048 |
Ethan Newcomb was a farmer. He was a hero in the War of the Revolution, volunteering at the age of sixteen in the militia service, and serving at various periods, nearly two years. He served one tour of ten months, and another of two months in the company...under his uncle, Gen. Silas Newcomb, guarding the banks of the Delaware River. He received no compensation from the state for his services in the Revolution but had his share of prize money in capturing a boat. He was a pensioner under Act of Congress, 1832. Ethan and his wife Mille resided at Down until 1808 when they removed to Brookfield, Trumbull Co, Ohio. | Newcomb, Ethan (I689)
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1049 |
Ethel notes herself as a "Spinster" | Henning, Ethel Alice (I409)
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1050 |
Etta's surname is unknown. A Findagrave memorial has it as Owen but it is presented without a source as is true of almost all memorials in Findagrave. Sources are not required at Findagrave so it is riddled with apocryphal data.
In City Directory of Port Angeles 1920 "Cooley Etta A (wid Lewis) h 309 E 6th" | Wife of Lewis T Cooley, Etta A (I1748)
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