Matches 1,201 to 1,250 of 1,538
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1201 |
In the Wilkes-Barre City Directory of 1905 "Cressler Caroline, wid Alonzo L, h 248 River". | Heller, Caroline (I2246)
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Inconsistent information online about Isaac Crawford husband of Susan M. Sutherland. | Crawford, Isaac (I2303)
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Issue of Solomon Stoddard, seventh child, Anthony Stoddard, b. 9 Aug 1678, d. 6 Sep 1760; graduated at Harvard 1697; settled as minister in Woodbury, Conn., where he continued sixty years. He married first by Rev Stephen Mix 20 Oct 1700, Prudence Wells, of Wethersfield who died May 1714. Married second 31 Jan 1715 Mary Sherman, who died 12 Jan 1720.
Rev. Anthony Stoddard of Woodbury, Connecticut, Colonial Clergyman
by Mark H. Welchley June 2010
(Extracted in part) Anthony Stoddard was one of the many children of Rev. Solomon Stoddard, pastor at Northampton, Massachusetts church. Anthony graduated at Harvard in 1697 with an A.B. degree. In 1715 he obtained his A.M. Degree, also from Harvard. He acted as a supply minister at Woodbury, Connecticut, beginning in 1700. He was ordained 27 May 1702 as the minister of the First Congregational Church in Woodbury, Litchfield, Connecticut, where he continued sixty years. His first wife was Prudence Welles of Wethersfield, Connecticut, great granddaughter of Governor Thomas Welles of Connecticut. She was a member of the church at Wethersfield in 1696. Rev. Stephen Mix, Anthony Stoddard's brother-in-law conducted the wedding 20 Oct 1700. Anthony and Prudence Stoddard had eight children. Rev. Stoddard's wife Prudence Welles Stoddard died in1714, aged 32, after giving birth to her son Gideon. Soon afterwards 31 Jan 1715/16 he married Mary Sherman of Woodbury. Anthony Stoddard and his second wife Mary Sherman had three additional children. She died at the age of 29 in 1721, reportedly during childbirth. If so, the child did not live. His third wife was named Hannah. In those times widowers with young children usually quickly remarried in order to provide a mother for their children. | Stoddard, Anthony (I1356)
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It is perplexing that both William Sr and Emily disappear after the 1850 Garnavillo Iowa census when they were residing in Emily's father's household, Andrew S. Cooley. In the 1860 census William and Emily's daughter is still residing with the Andrew S. Cooley household, the census noting that she is attending school. Could both William and Emily both met their demise at the same time? There is absolutely no information about them beyond 1850 (online in late 2020). See research notes: There is another William R Gladden who could be tied in with later research.
William's younger sister, Ruth, married Emily's elder brother, Noah | Gladden, William R. (I424)
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It is said Hugh S Holliday Sr and at least his son Robert William crossed the US-Canadian border in 1893 however, Canadian National Archives records begin in 1895. They eventually came to Verdigris Twp, Holt County, Nebraska.
The State of Nebraska does not have the exact date of death of Hugh Sutton Holliday, Sr who died in year 1937.
ObituaryThe Orchard News, Orchard, Nebraska, 25 Jun 1937, Page 1
HUGH HOLLIDAY SR. . After several weeks illness, death claimed Hugh S. Holliday, of this city Wednesday night about midnight [23 Jun 1937]. Mr. Holliday has lived in Antelope county for over thirty-six years; and for the past many years has made his home at this nlace with his daughier, Miss Mary. The deceased would have been 92 years of age the 26th of July [1937]. He is survived by three sons, John and Robert of Orchard. Hugh, Jr of Page [Holt County, Nebraska]; three daughters, Miss Mary, Orchard; Mrs. Vollertsen, Battle Creek, Iowa; and another daughter. Miss Martha. Beverly Hills, California. Funeral - services will be held at the home Saturday morning at ten oclock conducted by Rev. Paul H. Riggs. Interment will be made in the Plainview cemetery beside a daughter who passed away a number of years ago. | Holliday, Hugh Sutton (I1831)
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Jacob found in the Minnesota Couty History Name Index. The book is Dodge County Plat, year 1905, town Ellington p18 sec 321 | Martig, Jacob John (I1082)
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Jacobus p851: Distribution of Stephen's estate, 1837: widow, Oran Sherwood, Eliza Sherwood, Betsey wife of Uriah Banks, Norman Sherwood, William Sherwood, Ann wife of Frederick Wakeman, Sarah Sherwood, Emily Sherwood, Mary-Jane Sherwood, Wilson Sherwood, Frances Sherwood | Sherwood, Stephen (I268)
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Job and Margaret lived in Greenwich and their children were born there. One son, Thomas, came to Pittsford Vermont about 1802 but he left in 1818. Another son, Job Jr, came to Pittsford in 1809 and bought land from his stepfather, Peter Rice.
After Job Winslow Jr's untimely death in 1785 aged 31, Margaret was remarried to Peter Rice in Greenwich in 1786. | Cooley, Margaret (I495)
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John Diggins was prepared for college under Rev. Timothy Edwards and graduated Yale in 1740. He was called "Captain". | Diggins, John (I2037)
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John Dumbleton was born abt 1625 in England, son of Jonathan Dumbleton and Mercy ______ who had ten children in toto.
"John Dumbleton, Springfield, 1649, came in the serv of William Whiting of Hartford..." Savage Vol 2. p79.
John Dumbleton was granted several parcels of land in Springfield. At that time Springfield lay on both sides of the Conn River and it appears Dumbleton was granted land mostly on the west side of the river though Chickepey was on the east side. *Springfield Pynchon
22 Jan 1651 4 acres16 Feb 1652 14 acres next to John Lambe at Chickepey (present Chicopee on the east side of the Conn River) 21 Nov 1654 3 acres of wet meadow on the other side of Paucatuck Brooke (about 5 km west of the Conn River) 19 Feb 1661 3 acres of the land between Agawam River and the 3rd division 01 Feb 1665 30 acres of upland and swamp at Paucatuck on the north side of Theo Miller's 11 Jan 1668 6 acres above the common fence on the west side of the River.
John also served as a selectman for many years from 1655 through 1691 (with some interruptions). In 1654 he was appointed fence viewer for "ye upper end of town from the meeting house upwards" which would indicate his service was on the east side of the river. | Dumbleton, John (I2019)
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John Owen came to New Haven in 1641 or '42. The family came first to Massachusetts. | Owen, John (I447)
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John Tribby's 2nd wife of four | Davis, Anna (I330)
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John William Sutherland had extensive land holdings in Dutchess County, New York in 1766. In 1767 he removed to Sutherland Falls (present Proctor), Rutland County, Vermont and took up a claim at the falls under the New York charter of Socialborough. (In 1767 Gideon Cooley was the first settler in the area just northeast of Sutherland Falls that later became Pittsford).
From a SAR application nr 77058 by Francis Sutherland Gombar Jr, accepted 5 Dec 1953: John Sutherland served as a private and lieutenant in Simon Wright's Company; Thomas Bull's Company and Israel Hurlburt's Company. He was a member of the state committee from Vermont. In 1779 he was given 199 acres of land and in 1786, 116 acres [place not specified].
DAR member Jessie Sutherland Weirich nr 149302 states: "John Sutherland (1735-1817) served as private and lieutenant under Capt Simeon Wright and Col Gideon Warren, Vermont militia; also a delegate to the General Convention, Vermont. He was born at Nine Partners, Dutchess County, New York, died at Otter Creek, Rutland County, Vermont.
From the History of Rutland
Although some reports state that John William Sutherland, a carpenter by trade, had settled in Rutland prior to 1771, no records have been found to substantiate these claims. He was in Rutland by the spring of 1775 when he purchased over three hundred acres surrounding the Great Falls on Otter Creek, which afterwards bore his name. He built a gristmill and sawmill on the west side of the creek. The gristmill, likely constructed prior to the sawmill, was located northwest of where a carding machine (a machine for the mechanical process that disentangles, cleans and intermixes fibres of wool, cotton, or other fiber consisting of cylinders having intermeshing wire teeth and revolving at different speeds or in opposite directions) later stood. The sawmill was located a little farther upstream. After the lumber was sawn it was slid over the rocks to the pond below. At this point it was made into rafts and floated down the stream to the customers.
Accusations
John William Sutherland, was suspected of being a Tory. During the summer of 1777, when most inhabitants fled the town, he remained behind, unmolested by the British. When the people left, many hurriedly turned their pigs loose to fend for themselves; some men were angered to find their branded pigs in Sutherland's pen upon their return. Perhaps if John, who has been described as selfish and grasping, had willingly given up the pigs, he would have escaped criticism but he didn't. However, he did serve in 1778, 1780, and 1781 in the Revolution, as did three of his sons, so possibly the rumors had more to do with his personality traits than his actual political affiliation.
Rebuttal
From NEHGR vol. 61 page 203: Regarding the loyalty to Congress, during the Revolutionary war, of John Sutherland then living at Sutherland's Falls, Rutland Co., Vermont, the records of the Adjutant and Inspector General of the State of Vermont show that he served several terms as a private and leutenant in the Vermont troops during the Revolution; and his name appears on the Records of the Council of Safety (and of the Governor and Council) as a member in 1788. The accusation appears in a lengthy article contained in a history of Rutland county published in 1886, which is utterly false and contradicted by official records. The writer of this reply is a great-grandson of John Sutherland, and familiar with the history of the Sutherland family from the first Immigrant from Scotland to the present time. He was personally acquainted with four of the sons of John Sutherland, and frequently visited them and their familles in Green County, Wis.
Aaron Randall
Boston, Mass.
Yorkers
In the part of Rutland County that became Pittsford, the Cooley brothers, Benjamin and Gideon were the first. John Sutherland came by 1767 and took up a claim at the falls under the New York charter of Socialborough. He was acquainted with the British officers at Whitehall. When in 1771, William Cockburn came to survey the area for New York, he was told to leave by those with New Hampshire grants, and he did. When it became known that Sutherland was friendly with Cockburn, he was forced to rebuy his land from those with New Hampshire grants. Because of his grist and saw mills that the other settlers were dependent upon, he was not driven off by the Green Mountain Boys who had as their objective to drive off "Yorkers" who had muscled in that area then known as New Hampshire Grants. Interestingly, the Cooley half brothers bought their land in present Pittsford from the Province of New York, taking over land formerly granted others by New Hamphire Governor Benning Wentworth.
In 1778 John William sold 175 acres to his sons, Peter and John Jr for 380 pounds.By 1793 he had disposed of all of his property at the Falls and had moved Wallingford.The holdings consisted of a saw and gristmill, iron works, four houses, barn, orchard and twenty tons of hay. | Sutherland, John William (I583)
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John Wolcott, b. 1607, was baptized at Lydiard St. Lawrence in 1607. John remained in England when his family emigrated to America. A letter to Henry Wolcott, Jr., from his cousin in England dated 1631 says: "Your Brother John continues in his old course of living", whatever that means. Henry Wolcott, John's father, in a deed dated 1642 refers to his second son, Henry, as his oldest son. | Wolcott, John (I1990)
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1215 |
Jonathan Coomer purchased land in the Holland Land Purchase in Niagara County, Twp 15, Range 7 as follows: 11 Jul 1821, Lot 16, Original purchase. His brother Benjamin bought land nearby also in July 1821 | Coomer, Jonathan (I1849)
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1216 |
Joseph Newcomb removed with his parents to Salem, Cumberland Co, New Jersey in 1732; he lived in Down township, near the line of Fairfield and head of Newport Creek, at a place called "New England town". He was a mille by occupation. Hew was an officer in the War of the Revolution and following his return to civil life was justiced of the peace. On 4 May 1766, he with his son, Bayes, was admitted to the church. On 13 May 1781 he was admitted to full communion in the church. | Newcomb, Joseph (I691)
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1217 |
KBS spelt her name Pearson.
On Ancestry.com, Harry Selsor added this on 1 Jan 2011Name: Anna Martha Barnhouse Titles & Terms: Death Date: 25 Jan 1930 Death Place: Belle Valley, Noble, Ohio Birth Date: 25 Sep 1854 Estimated Birth Year: Birthplace: Muskingum, Ohio Death Age: 75 years 4 months 6 days Gender: Female Marital Status: Widowed Race or Color: Caucasian Street Address: Occupation: Housekeeper Residence: Burial Date: 27 Jan 1930 Burial Place: Hoskinsville Cemetery Name: Spouse's Name: Harvey Barnhouse Father's Name: Jay Pierson Father's Title & Terms: Father's Birthplace: Ohio Mother's Name: Mary Jane Boyd Mother's Titles & Terms: Mother's Birthplace: Ohio Film Number: 1992083 Digital Folder Number: 4000536 Image Number: 2398 Certificate Number: fn 5041 | Pierson, Anna Martha (I1883)
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1218 |
Kenneth Duane Barnhouse Obituary Funeral services for Kenneth Duane Barnhouse, 23, a young Walker, Missouri man who died at Springfield Hospital Thursday, July 13, 1967, of a gunshot wound to the head, will be conducted at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the Isbell-Carrothers Funeral Chapel in El Dorado Springs, Missouri. Neldon Watson, minister of the Church of Christ, will officiate and interment will be in the Clintonville Cemetery. He was born February 14, 1944 at Brush, Colorado the son of Robert and Maxine Barnhouse. He was a high school graduate and made his home at Walker, Missouri. For the past several weeks he had been employed in Nevada by Ages Refrigeration and Sales Company. Survivors include his mother, Mrs. Maxine Barnhouse, 103 East Hunter, Nevada; his father, Robert Barnhouse of Colorado Springs, Colorado; two sisters, Mrs. Darlene Shotwell, San Antonio, Texas and Mrs. Charlene Gardner of El Dorado Springs; a brother, Danny Lee Barnhouse of Nevada; grandmothers, Mrs. Laura Edkins of Akron, Colorado and Mrs. Mamie Barnhouse of Nampa, Idaho. | Barnhouse, Kenneth Duane (I1518)
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1219 |
Known to be living 1377 and 1383. Bulkeley has his title as "Lord of Warkworth" | de Lyons, John (I678)
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1220 |
Land patents document the transfer of land ownership from the federal government to individuals. Our land patent records include the information recorded when ownership was transferred.
The term public land means any lands and interest which title is still vested in the Federal Government. The Secretary of the Interior through the BLM administers those lands within the several states. | Source (S531)
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1221 |
Last address of record: Burlington NJ - SSDI
Enlisted in the US Air Force in 1942. Served in France and Germany in World War II. He was honorably discharged from service November 1945. - Mainetti | Elliott, Daniel W. (I1500)
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Last address of record: Burlington NJ - SSDI | Wright, Marilyn Lucille (I1499)
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1223 |
Last benefits residence | Miller, Charles Henry (I979)
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1224 |
LE Skinner was of Clarence, Shelby County, Missouri and Ethel Powell was of Bevier, Macon County, Missouri. The marriage took place in the bride's home. | Family: Leonard E Skinner / Ethel Campbell Powell (F161)
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1225 |
Lee F Cook and his wife Malinda M. Lee appear in the Dubuque City Directory of 1911 on p159. He was a conductor on the C.G.W. Line (Chicago, Great Western Railroad) most of his working life. His mother Clara S. (Cooley) also resided with them at 2729 Pine St.
Obituary
Lee F. Cook, Retired Railroad Conductor, Dies Jan 24 1963 - Lee F. Cook, 89, a resident of the Masonic Sanitarium for, the last six months and formerly of Oelwein, died in the sanitarium Wednesday evening [23 Jan 1963]. Born in Garnavillo, Iowa, he married the former Malinda Musefeldt in 1900 and she preceded him in death in 1914. In 1920, he married Bessie Meehan, who preceded him in death in 1950. Mr. Cook was a retired railroad conductor. Among his survivors are a son Fred H. Cook, of Oelwein; and a grandson, Marlin Cook, of Davenport. The body will be sent from the McGinnis Funeral Home, Bettendorf, to the Brant Funeral Home, Oelwein, for funeral .services and burial there.
- The Daily Times, Davenport, Iowa; 24 Jan 1963, Thu; Page 8 | Cook, Lee Fred (I1095)
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1226 |
Leonard Dozier I was a French Huguenot, born in France, date and location unknown. Parents also unknown. He was in Westmorelnad Co, Virginia by 1673 at which time he bought land. He was naturalized in Virginia in 1683. | Dozier, Leonard (I551)
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1227 |
Leonard was a Railroad Agent and Operater for the CB&Q Railroad.
At the 1880 census he lived in Independence, Macon Co, Missouri At the 1900 census he lived in Denver, Arapahoe Co, Colorado and was a servant At the 1920 census he lived in Otis, Washington Co, Colorado and ran a general store At the 1940 census he lived in Platner, Washington Co, Colorado and was a helper | Skinner, Leonard E (I467)
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1228 |
Lets expand our view to include Cambria - after all, Andrew Sutherland and wife Naomi Cooley were there, buried there. Then review Holland Purchase locality - forget the 13 miles - it suffices to say they lived close to the Falls | Cooley, Noah (I77)
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1229 |
Letter from E.K. Skelley to Mr. C.F. Bissell dated June 7, 1914: "Dear Cousin: Capt David T Carver was an illegitimate child of our gt grandfather Aldric Carver and Lucy Taylor who named him David Taylor Carver. She never married but lived the last years of her life with her son David T. who owned the old place on top of the hill above Esq. Strong's. She died there at an old age." This letter was found amongst the papers of F. Clarence Bissell by professional genealogist Margaret H. Talbot who had been hired by Hubert Andrew Arnold in December of 1959.
Note: Aldric Carver's lawful wife was Asenath Tarbox. Aldric and Lucy Taylor's son, David Taylor Carver, married Sharley Tarbox, daughter of Asenath's brother, Godfrey Tarbox. | Taylor, Lucy (I419)
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1230 |
Letter from Frances Davenport, Head, History & Genealogy Section, State of Connecticut, Connecticut State Library, Capial Avenue, Hartford 15, Connecticut to Hubert Andrew Arnold | Source (S342)
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1231 |
Letter in possession of Kathie Butler, Mulvane KS | Source (S97)
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1232 |
Letter to Niagara County Historian from Anna Sutherland, Metamora, Mich. Oct 29, 1964: "This Mrs Andrew Sutherland [Naomi Cooley] was my great grandmother. My father was Lewis Cass Sutherland, son of Dr. Benjamin C. Sutherland. I remember my father telling that his father visited at Lockport NY and brought his mother back with him but do not know how long she lived with them.* Now, his father [Benj C Sutherland] died in 1867 so I do not know if she continued to live with them or eve if she did live them all the time previous to his death. She might have lived part time with her son Byron as I remember my father [Lewis Cass Sutherland] telling about this Uncle Byron somewhere near them. Now as to the cemetery, I think it would be the Armada (Macomb County) cemetery but I do not know anyother name. My father's [Lewis Cass Sutherland] old home, about 10 miles from Romeo. This was in Ray Townmship of Macomb County; he was bogn on January 25, 1859. My father lived untio March 24, 1946".
*According to the US Census, Naomi was living with her son Benjamin Cooley Sutherland in 1850.
Note to clarify: Naomi was buried in Procter Cemetery Michigan, not Proctor Cemetery, Vermont. | Cooley, Naomi (I220)
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1233 |
List of Jehiel Sherwood's children transcribed by Talbot in letter to Arnold | Source (S149)
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Litchfield county was not erected until 1750. The two parent counties were Fairfield and Hartford. | Sherman, Mary (I2339)
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1235 |
Lived in Ballston Spa NY | Tarbox, Triphena (I590)
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1236 |
Lived in Ballston Spa NY | Mann, James (I591)
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1237 |
Lived in Ballston Spa NY | Tarbox, Anna-Bernice (I598)
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1238 |
Lived in Noble County | Barnhouse, Abner (I565)
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1239 |
Lived in Noble County, Ohio | Barnhouse, Jacob (I564)
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1240 |
Lived in Tuscarauwas Co, Ohio | Eberhart, Thomas (I569)
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1241 |
Lived near Sharon, Noble Co, Ohio | Barnhouse, Benjamin (I559)
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1242 |
Living 1346 and 1370 | Lyons, Elizabeth (I1156)
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1243 |
Living 1347-1357
Chetwode, a parish in the district and county of Buckingham; on the verge of the county, 3 | Chetwode, Nicholas (I1155)
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1244 |
Lots of confusing data on ancestry.com. Most trees have an Ephraim Pratt married to Eunice Powers but Eunice Cooley would have been a Garfield at that time. Her elder sister Elizabeth was married to Jeremiah Powers. Only a 1921 SAR application has the Ephraim Pratt-Eunice Garfield right. We do know from the Cooley Genealogy that their first child was a David Pratt b.15 May 1757 so Ephraim and Eunice would have been married before that. | Pratt, Ephraim (I1952)
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1245 |
Mackenzie spells her first name "Tamma", Jacobus spells it "Tamar" | Banks, Tamma (I410)
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1246 |
Many official documents wrongly listed Hersey Churchill Cooley's given name as "Hershey" as well as his son, Hersey Blake Cooley whose gravestone in Rose Hill Cemtery, Spearfish, SD reads "Hershey B".
Note: Hersey Blake Cooley not in 1905 South Dakota state census
Obituary
H.B. Cooley Rites Conducted Tuesday (12 Apr 1966) Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon at the Fidler Funeral Chapel for Hershey (sic) B. Cooley who died Saturday, April 9, at the Dorsett home where he had been a resident for the past two weeks. The Rev. L. Don Veglahn officiated at the services with burial in Rosehill cemetery. Music was furnished by Mrs. Ray Fidler, organist Mr Cooley was born at Clayton, Iowa, Oct 16, 1880, the son of the late N.C. and Elvira Cooley. On Dec. 22, 1905, he was married to Theresa M. Doleshaul at Clairmont, Iowa. The family homesteaded near Kadoka in 1919 and in 1932 moved to Custer. In 1933 they moved to Spearfish where, in later years, Mr. Cooley operated a nursery at 1430 N. Third St. Mrs. Cooley died on May 26, 1951. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Ann Cross of Pendleton, Ore, and Mrs. Oma Rothmeyer of Spearfish; four sons, Don Cooley of Belle Fourche, Clyde of Spearfish, Harry of Tillamook, Ore, and Robert of Roseburg, Ore; 13 grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and one sister, Mrs Clara Butler of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. In addition to his wife and parents, he was preceded in death by one son, Joe, one brother, and one sister. - The Rapid City Daily Journal, April 13, 1966 | Cooley, Hersey Blake (I1936)
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1247 |
Many official documents wrongly listed Hersey Churchill Cooley's given name as "Hershey" as well as his son, Hersey Blake Cooley whose gravestone in Rose Hill Cemtery, Spearfish, SD reads "Hershey B".
The name Hersey is very likely a Hebrew variant of the name Hershel which is a is a given name and a surname of German and Jewish origins. The meaning of Herschel is deer or stag deriving from the Yiddish form of the Hebrew Zvi/Tzvi. The stag is the symbol of the Israelite Tribe of Naphtali. | Cooley, Hersey Churchill (I69)
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1248 |
Margaret de Beaumont is a descendant of Charlemagne and Alfred the Great | de Beaumont, Margaret (I1231)
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1249 |
Margaret Stanley was a descendant of Sir John Ferrers who was a descendant of Margaret de Quincy who was a descendant of Roger de Quincy who was a descendant of Saier de Quincy, a Magna Charta Surety and a Crusader who died in Palestine 3 Nov 1219 | Stanley, Margaret (I1863)
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1250 |
Maria Wentworth can be found in the "The Wentworth Genealogy: English and American", Little Brown & Company, Boston, 1878. Her parents were John Wentworth (1795-1879) and Ann Dennis b. 1802.
ObituaryGrandma Cooley mother of Mrs R.C. Miles and Mrs Wilcox and Mrs Moody of Dakota City, died Tuesday morning at the Miles home in this city, of old age and general debility. She was 77 years of age. Funeral services Thursday morning at 9:30 at the house, the remains being taken to Emerick for burial. She leaves an aged husband and three daughters as her immediate family, besides son-in-law and grandchildren and one great grandchild. - Norfolk Weekly News-Journal, 21 Dec 1900, p2, Norfolk, Madison Co, Nebraska | Wentworth, Maria (I1688)
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