Matches 1,451 to 1,500 of 1,538
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
1451 |
The Flagler News 17 Jun 1920: Announcing the death of Stella Cooley: "She also leaves...a sister Mrs. Lucy Shaffer who makes her home with Mr. and Mrs. O.A. Groves just south of Flagler." | Owen, Lucia (I112)
|
1452 |
The following are extractions from various sources, especially from letters received by Hubert Andrew Arnold (HAA) when he hired professional genealogists in the early 1960s to investigate the Seases and Sherwoods of South East, New York
Thomas Sears, Capt Higgins' company, Dutchess Co NY militia - NARA Roll 2145
Thomas Sears was a captain in the Revolutionary Army, and after the peace settled in South East, Putnam [then Dutchess] County, N.Y. on land which he bought of the government, and on which his descendants still live. He was a prominent church member and trustee during many years. - Nelson Sears Journal, 1895
B Book of Wills, page 444, will dated 24 Apr 1804 To wife Deborah, one thid of the increase and profit of real estate and 1/4 from the personal estate, horse, saddle, bridle and all the furniture To son Archibald Sears $250 over and above and to have also an equal share with the rest of my sons; Thomas Baldwin Sears, Samuel Sears, and Isaac; to two grandsons, issue of son Eli, deceased, named Thomas and David, $40 each...his sons to have a double share, daughters (not named) a single share. Sons Thomas and Archibald executors to receive a reasonable compensation for their trouble in settling the estate. - Margaret H. Talbot (MHT) to HAA May 3, 1961 (no son James mentioned)
A letter from Clifford M. Buck to HAA dated April 27, 1960: "Looking over B 444 carefully I find James is there inserted above the line after the name of Thomas Baldwin Sears and before Isaac Sears very similar to the way Baldwin is inserted in third line from bottom...".Why, then, did MHT not find the inserted names when she examined page 444 of the B Book of Wills in May of 1961 about one year later?
In a letter Luedemann to Wasilik (who hired Luedemann in the early 1990s to study the Searses and Sherwoods as did HAA in the 1960s) dated 18 Jun 1991, Luedemann has examined the same book of wills page 444 (as did MHT) and found the following: "I Thomas Sears of Southeast, County of Dutchess...24 April 1804...dear wife Deborah Sears, son Archibald Sears, son Thomas Baldwin Sears, son James Sears, son Isaac Sears..." (what happened to Samuel Sears?) | Sears, Thomas (I476)
|
1453 |
The following is from a newspaper clipping, just the story; no source, no dates. I will make an educated guess it was from the Plainview News, Plainview, Pierce Co, Nebraska, in January 1908.
Death of Mrs. Merton Cooley The sad intelligence was received in our city yesterday, announcing the sudden death of Mrs. Merton Cooley [Jane Elizabeth Holliday] at her home in Crofton [Knox County, Nebraska]. The remains will arrive here [probably Plainview] this afternoon and the funeral services will be conducted from the M.E. Church Friday. The deceased was the daughter of H.S. Holliday, and was well and favorably known by all in Plainview and vicinity. On April 26th, 1905, she was united in marriage to Merton Cooley, to which union were born two children, one son [now] twenty-one months of age [Ronald Delos Cooley] and another but two weeks old [Merton Beth Cooley]. Her death was caused from contracting a severe cold shortly after giving birth to their little son. The bereaved husband and other relatives have the heartfelt sympatthy of all in ths their sad hour of tribulation.
Obituary
Plainview Republican, Plainview, Nebraska, 9 Jan 1908
Jane Elizabeth Holliday was born March 20, 1884, in Hallfield, the country home of her parents in Castle Sowerby Parish, Cumberland county, England, and died at Crofton, Neb., Jan. 1, 1908, of acute peritonitis. While yet a child she was baptized in the Church of England. In 1892 she moved with her parents to Canada, remaining there but one year. During this brief stay the mother died. In 1893 she with her father and family came to Plainview, Nebr., where she resided until her marriage to Herbert Merton Cooley, April 26, 1905, when she with her husband moved to Crofton, Neb.; remaining there until her death. Mrs. Cooley was a true and faithful wife, a loving and solicitous mother, a kind and obliging neighbor. She was highly respected by all, for to know her was to love her. She leaves a devoted husband, two little sons, Ronald aged two years and a babe scarcely four weeks old; a father Hugh S. Holliday; three sisters, Martha who resides in California, Mary who lives at home and Hannah now Mrs. Jack Menret, three brothers, Robert, John and Hugh Jr.; other relatives and a host of friends to mourn her departure. All the near relatives were present at the funeral except her father who was confined at home on account of sickness and the sister in California. Impressive funeral services were held at the Plainview Methodist Episcopal church January 3, conducted by Rev. J. P. Yost, pastor, assisted by Rev. DeWeese of the Congregational church and Rev. Grey of the Baptist church. Her remains were laid to rest in the new cemetery north of town, there to await the "Glorious Resurrection Morn".
When some beloved voice that was to you
Both sound and sweetness faileth and deny
And silence, against which you dare not cry
Aches round you like a strong disease and new
What hope? What help? What music will undo
That silence to your sense! Not friendship's sigh
Not reason's subtle count. Nay none of these
Speak Thou availing Christ and fill this pause.
L.
CARD OF THANKSWe desire to express our heartfelt thanks to all who so kindly and tenderly assisted us in laying away our loved one - H. Merton Cooley and Family | Holliday, Jane Elizabeth (I24)
|
1454 |
The following is from Progenealogists/Barnhouse but I have dropped the "Day" middle name in favor of just the initial "D". There is no source for the Day middle name and it doesn't square with his naming his son Thomsa "Dye".
200. William Day BARNHOUSE (Harvey BARNHOUSE , Jacob BARNHOUSE , George BARNHOUSE , Christopher BARNHOUSE , Georg , Jacob ) was born 22 Jul 1882 in Noble Twp., Noble Co., Ohio. He died 1 Jun 1964 in Zanesville, Muskingum Co., Ohio and was buried in Olive Cemetery, Caldwell, Noble Co., Ohio. [Notes] William married Jessie Pearl ARCHER, daughter of Thomas Lawrence ARCHER and Lucretia CLOWSER, on 20 Feb 1907 in , Noble Co., Ohio. Jessie was born 8 Aug 1888 in Rochester, Noble Twp., Noble Co., Ohio. She died 5 Apr 1962 in Belle Valley, Noble Co., Ohio.
Progenealogists/Barnhouse source:
DEATH: Ancestry.com Online Ohio Death Index, 1958-1969.Information from Death Record: Certificate Number: 45952. Volume Number: 17717 Sex: Male. Race: White. Name: BARNHOUSE, WILLIAM D. County of Death: Muskingum County. City of Death: Zanesville. County of Residence: Noble County. Date of Death: June 01, 1964. Age of Death: 81 Years. Marital Status: Widowed. | Barnhouse, William D (I1884)
|
1455 |
The following is the real story of the supposed 64-mile trek of Gershom Beach Jr to rally volunteers for the assault on Ft Ticonderoga in May of 1775. It was really Gershom Beach's son Samuel and even then the 60 odd miles covered by foot in 24 hours is a gross exaggeration.
From "Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association...The Ticonderoga Expedition Of 1775" pp 300-320:
Major Samuel Beach of Whiting, Vt., was bom in New Jersey, his parents removing to Virginia and finally to Vermont prior to the Revolution.
He was at Castleton with Allen and was sent to rally the Green Mountain Boys. He started on this mission at day-break, going from Castleton to Rutland, to Pittsford, Brandon, Leicester, Salisbury, Middlebury, Cornwall, Whiting, and Shoreham, a distance of 64 miles.
Smith in his history says this was accomplished "between the rising and the setting of the Sun". Others say that the time occupied was 24 hours. Perhaps the expresssion "between the rising and the setting of the sun" might be considered a figurative one. Smith says, "The following day at early dawn he entered the fort by the side of Allen".
His descendants still treasure the silk stockings worn by him on this march and the staff which he carried, and they likewise preserved a silk vest presented him by Washington, which has the general's profile woven in the silk in over 30 different places.
He served throughout the revolution as a recruiting officer and in later years received a pension.
Two daughters survive him. The monument marking his grave at Whiting village bears this inscription: "Major Samuel Beach, died April 10th, 1829, aged 77 years. An officer in the war of the Revolution and one of the few who under Allen surprised and took Ticonderoga. - Smith's History of Addison County, page 728. Statement E. N. Bissell, East Shoreham, Vt.
From "Rutland Historical Society, Quarterly", Volume 39 No. 4 2009, Faces of the Past: A Calendar, Samuel Beach, 1752-1829:
Though born in New Jersey, Samuel Beach had come to Rutland with his family by 1770. During the Revolution he distinguished himself by participating in a number of pivotal battles and events. His pension records state that he was with Ethan Allen at the capture of Fort Ticonderoga in May 1775, was with Montgomery at Quebec, fought in the Battle of Bennington, and was present at Burgoyne's surrender.
Like his father, Gershom, Samuel was a blacksmith by trade. Surveying was another of his talents and he was appointed Rutland County's first surveyor in 1781. He had a farm on the north side of Main Street near Tenney Brook. He sold it in 1784 and moved with his extensive family to Whiting where in 1820 he had a farm of 37 acres. | Beach, Samuel (I1870)
|
1456 |
The gravestone of this child reads as follows
Daughter of
R.B. & C.L Cooley
Jan 23, 1921
A baby girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. R.B. Cooley, Sunday, January 23, 1921. The little body was laid to rest in the Otis Cemetery the same afternoon, a prayer being offered by Rev. J.S. Dapp at the home and a short service at the cemetery. | Cooley, Gwen (I20)
|
1457 |
The John Bagg of Dorsetshire England has not been linked to the John Bagg of Springfield, Massachusetts Bay Colony | Bagg, John (I2003)
|
1458 |
The Kearon Surname DNA Project establishes good probablity that John Kern-Madison Co. NY is the same as John Kearon-Arklow-Co. Wicklow, Ireland
Note: Surname in U.S.spelled Kern or Kearn
Following from: Mindrum Family History
o Arrived in US 2 Jun 1806
o Naturalized 29 Mar 1821 in Madison County, New York John (Kearn) Kern (1751-1841), farmer and owner of fishing smacks; from Ire., 1806, with 8 children to avoid British Army draft for W.I. service; purchased 400 acres timber land at Pine Wood, Eaton, Madison Co., NY; m. Nancy Killen (1760-1858) John Kern and his son George were natives of Ireland. They came to America in 1806. Sailing up the Hudson in a keel-boat to Albany, they there took teams for Madison County, then mostly a forest-covered wilderness with a few scattered inhabitants. Uncleared land was for sale at ten shillings per acre. The family camped in the pine woods while John looked for a farm. He finally secured a tract of timber-covered land in the northeast part of what is now the town of Eaton. He built a log cabin as a temporary home for his wife and children. Like other pioneer farmers, he raised flax, as well as a variety of food products and kept cattle and sheep. His wife cooked and carded, spun and wove, made butter and cheese, and attended to other domestic details.
Sources given:Text: Biographical Review, 1894, Isabell Bracy Material, Madison County Historical Society Date: 3 Nov 2008 Text: The Compendium of American Genealogy, Vol. VII, page 402; Stories, Memories & Histories, www.ancestry.com. Date: 22 Aug 2009 Text: War of 1812 Papers, 1789-1815, www.ancestry.com. Date: 13 May 2013 | Kearon, John (I1879)
|
1459 |
The limits of birth dates are established by the inscription of date of death on her gravestone in Hunt's Corners, Wayne County, New York: "In memory of/Mehitable/wife of James Sears/ who died March 12, 1826 in the 45th/year of her age." That is, with this information, she could have been born as early as 13 Mar 1780 (45 years 364 days old, i.e. her 46th birthday would be the day after her death) or as late as 12 Mar 1781 (died on her 45th birthday). This information coupled with a list of Jehiel Sherwood's children showing birthdates if available (usually from the Greenfield Hill Church Record) coupled with the number of months the child was born after the previous child (average of known birthdates, 24.75 months) indicated a birthdate for Mehitable in late 1780. Even with large families, children wern't produced much more often than 20 months apart. | Source (S310)
|
1460 |
The Missouri State Archives birth record states that the number of (this) child of this Mother was 4
The name and address of the medical attendant and the person making this birth certificate was R.L. Greece, Bancroft, Missouri | Miller, Benjamin H (I733)
|
1461 |
The name Keziah is a Biblical name taken from the Hebrew Bible. It is variously spelled Keziah, Kezia, Kesia, and Kesiah and is variously pronounced k'zye-ah, kee-zha, or k'zee-ah. From the Abarim Publications' Biblical Name Vault: Keziah was the second of three daughters of Job (Job 42:14), the others being Jemimah and Keren-happuch. In Hebrew, the name's meaning derives from the Cassia tree and the spicy sweet-smelling cinnamon powder obtained from that tree.
Worcester County formed in 1731 from Sussex, Middlesex, and Hampshire | Cooley, Keziah (I500)
|
1462 |
The name Natnanael (as it was originally spelled) came from the Hebrew name Netan'el meaning "God has given" or "Gift of God". In the New Testament this is the name of an apostle also known as | Cooley, Nathaniel (I502)
|
1463 |
The only source for Isabel is the 1860 United States census. There is a middle initial there but it is undecipherable. It may be an "S". | Cooley, Isabel S. (I73)
|
1464 |
The records say the 9th month of 1646. Since the year ended the 24th of March at that time, the ninth month would be November.
From MVR: "Nathainell Bliss & Katheryne Chapin were married 9 mon 20 day 1646. | Family: Nathaniel Bliss / Katherine Chapin (F714)
|
1465 |
The Ricks name is a married name; she was the widow of William Ricks | Ricks, Grace (I701)
|
1466 |
The surname "Cole" obtained from apocryphal family trees on ancestry.com | Cole, Betsey (I1816)
|
1467 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Mary Fletcher (I785)
|
1468 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Sarah Naomi (I840)
|
1469 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Isabella (I965)
|
1470 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Grace (I1666)
|
1471 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Naomi (I1668)
|
1472 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Dora (I1669)
|
1473 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the city of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They are all members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home are under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Mary (I1670)
|
1474 |
The Sutherland sisters were born in the town of Cambria NY, on what is known as the Sutherland farm, near the village of Lockport, Niagara County, New York, a few miles east of Niagara Falls. They were members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, having been confirmed by Bishop Cox, of Buffalo, and when at home were under the pastoral care of Doctor Foster Eley, Director of Grace Church, Lockport City. | Sutherland, Victoria (I924)
|
1475 |
The three censuses, 1850, 60, 70 are so badly inconsistent for this family that no accurate data can be drawn from them. In 1860, Addison and Louis are listed as aged 1 indicating they are twins yet Louis doesn't appear in the 1870. What happened? No Ancestry genealogy for Benjamin Cooley Sutherland and Phebe Marble clear this up. Then in the 1860 census, Hannah is listed as 6 years old (5 years short) yet correctly as 21 in the 1870 census. | Marble, Phebe (I2314)
|
1476 |
The U.S. Social Security Applications and Claims Indes 1936-2007 has an incorrect birth place for Maurice. It is listed as Denver, but it was Delta, Delta County, Colorado. His father Seth Kyffin and mother Julia Oram were living in Delta at the time of Maurice's birth.
Social Security Death Index about James M. Kyffin
Name: James M. Kyffin
SSN: 522-44-0736Last Residence: 80215 Lakewood, Jefferson, Colorado, United States of America
Born: 8 Sep 1910
Died: 29 Jun 1996
State (Year) SSN issued: Colorado (1952)
U.S. Public Records Index, Volume 1 about James M Kyffin
Name: James M Kyffin
Birth Date: 8 Sep 1910Address: 10255 W 23rd Ave, Lakewood, CO, 80215-1409 (1988) | Kyffin, James Maurice (I1045)
|
1477 |
The US census of 1920 has father John Costa's birthplace as Portugal, and mother's birthplace as Massachusetts. | Costa, Mary Elizabeth (I2386)
|
1478 |
There are no extant records of this person. Hundrreds of trees on Ancestry list Carol Bush as a wife of Peter Sutherland yet none site a source other than "Ancestry trees", the worst possible source for good data; other peoples GEDCOMs and family trees. | Bush, Carol (I582)
|
1479 |
There are no official documents for this child. Most of this data came from an interview the author had with his Grandma Lou Miller in 1968. She had a Miller-Cooley Bible with genealogical data but the present location of this Bible is unknown. I also had an interview with Orville Dale Cooley in 1993. Dale wrote extensively about the history of this Cooley family and said the greatest loss in his life was the death of his younger brother, Lyle. | Cooley, Carlyle Berton (I17)
|
1480 |
There are serious discrepancies at Ancestry.com concrning Phillip Beach and wife. There is disagreement as to the birth year of Phillip. One site says Phillip is a half-brother to Ruth Beach. No AWT family tree mentions Louisa wife of Phillip Beach. There are several trees that say his wife was Lois Cushnman but NONE have proper sourcing (the U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 is NOT a proper source*) .
*Ancestry: Yates Publishing. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004. Original data: This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie.
Note: Most of this trash was obtained from the LDS Ancestral File and IGI where the LDS would accept any submission by members, no sources required. Now they've disingenuously tried to legitimize these old files by giving them high-sounding names such as this one and calling it a "database on-line".
The gravestone photographs were taken by DBC at Molyneaux Cemetery on Ridge Road, Cambria, Niagara County, New York on 3 Aug 2010 | Beach, Phillip (I1876)
|
1481 |
There is a significant disparity in Rachel Cockley's birth dates and places between Ohio Valley Genealogies (about 1780 in Virginia) and Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935 (28 Mar 1770 in Jefferson County, Ohio and Quaker Short Creek Monthly Meeting p 310 (1769 3 28).
See the short bio of Machael Yost in his notes. | Cockley, Rachel (I1957)
|
1482 |
There is a strange situation with respect to the documentation of Irene's birth in Pittsford. An index card transcription shows her birth date, 27 Aug 1798, as recorded by Benjamin5 Cooley, Town Clerk. Some modern records show Irene to be a twin sister of Asenath yet no index card was prepared for Asenath. How could Asenath be Irene's twin yet there is no record showing that? | Cooley, Irene (I2301)
|
1483 |
There is no Beardsley Prairie in modern Michigan | Tarbox, Hannah (I594)
|
1484 |
There is no solid source for Sarah Whiting's birth. | Whiting, Sarah (I2184)
|
1485 |
There is presently (Dec 2020) no marriage information on this couple. The Dubuque county history has 1849 as the marriage year. | Family: Frederick Cook / Clara Salome Cooley (F215)
|
1486 |
There is virtually nothing in this source concerning Caleb Beach. He could have been added because of the five and one-half year span between Gershom (1697) and Thankful (1702) | Beach, Caleb (I2060)
|
1487 |
There were three Beach brothers from which, currently, 85% of Beaches in America descended. The parents of these brothers have not been found.
1. Richard Beach proprietor of New Haven Plantation/Colony and settler in Elizabeth New Jersey. Richard was married to Katherine, surname unknown, widow of Andrew Hull, . They had four children all born in New Haven: i. Mary b. June 1642; ii. Benjamin b. October 1644; iii. Azariah b. 6 July 1646; and iv. Mercy bap. 21 May 1648. Richard is of interest to this database in that he established the New Jersey connection to the Cooley Family through his great grandniece Ruth Beach b. in Morristown NJ, wife of Benjamin5 Cooley.
On 28 Oct 1664 Elizabethtown (present Elizabeth New Jersey) was first founded upon Lenni Lenape Native American land the Dutch called Albania, a sector of New Netherlands. In that year Richard Beach sold out in Stratford and with his entire family except Benjamin, who was already married and settled in Stratford, moved to Elizabethtown where he purchased a home lot of 13 acres in 1665. He also purchased 50 acres of upland on Beaclie's Brook, 30 acres of upland on Crane's Brook, and several other smaller holdings, in all 102 acres. He resided in Elizabethtown until 31 Mar 1688 when he sold all of his land to the Widow Agatha White. Richard is thought to have removed to Morris County, New Jersey, but at this point he is lost sight of.
2. Thomas Beach 1st of New Haven; removed to Milford. He m. Sarah Platt. They had five children, the first child was born in New Haven Colony, the remaining four in Milford: i. Sarah b. 1 Mar 1653/4; ii. John b. 19 Oct 1655; iii. Mary b. 27 Dec 1657; iv. Samuel b. 5 Jun 1660; and v. Zophar b. 27 May 1662.
Note: From Beach in America: Zopher Beach married and moved very early into New Jersey where he has many descendants. Zopher left Milford as "a protest against the half-way Covenant of Milford".
3. John Beach was not a proprietor of New Haven Colony but of Wallingford. He came to town about four years after it was established and appears a number of times in the record. He lived in New Haven Colony till 1650, when he married Mary, and settled in Wallingford, about seven miles north of New Haven. John was a proprietor and member of the company that settled Wallingford. He lived in Wallingford ten years, and his four older children were born there. In 1660 he removed to Stratford, some eight miles southwest of New Haven. | Beach, John (I2061)
|
1488 |
Theresa's parents were German immigrants. | Doleschal, Theressa Marie (I1937)
|
1489 |
These are copies of typed sheets that were in possession of Hubert Arnold. After Hubert's death his family history material was shipped to the Aurora, Nebraska library. I have only a partial copy of the totality of these sheets. I don't know the author but I suspect it was George E. Tarbox of Denver, Colorado. I have a letter from George to Hubert dated March 25, 1961 but it contains little Tarbox information. Hubert was in contact with George as late as 1992. Apparently George had re-commenced his genealogy work and there was an unpublished Tarbox manuscript. I do not know where this manuscript is, or, indeed, whether there is such a manuscript. - DBC 2/10/2006 | Source (S418)
|
1490 |
These notes from p46 Families of Ancient New Haven, Vol I: (By 1): i Nathan, b 12 July 1714 WV, bp 2 May 1725 CC, d 20 July 1756 WV; m (1) 20 Jan 1733 WV-Esther [da. Daniel & Susanna (Bradley)] Hotchkiss, who d Apr 1734 CC; m (2) Ruth da. Gershom & Deliverance (How) Beach, b 21 Aug 1722 WV. d 21 May 1784 CC; she m (2) Hezekiah Parmelee and (3) 18 Mar 1779 CC-Amos Bristol. FAM. 21. | Beach, Ruth (I2042)
|
1491 |
They lived in Noble and Morgan Counties | Barnhouse, Sampson (I567)
|
1492 |
This book contains information transcribed from "The Shamrock or Hibenian Chronicle" (an Irish newspaper in New York) | Source (S447)
|
1493 |
This database is a collection of historical parish registers from Staffordshire, England. The records in this collection can range in date from the early 1500s to the mid- to late-1800s. Parish records--primarily baptisms, marriages, and burials--provide the best sources of vital record information in the centuries before civil registration. Baptismal records generally list the date of the baptism, the name of the child being baptized, and the name of the father. Marriage records generally include the date of the marriage and the names of the bride and groom. Burial records generally list the date of the burial and the name of the deceased individual. | Source (S682)
|
1494 |
This entry because of the 1840 US Iowa census entry Female Age 5-10. She could have been older than Stephen W. or Andrew L. (both 5-10) but I put her in 1834 because of the gap between Stephen W. (b. 1832) & Thomas W. (b. 1836). | Cooley, Michigan Census Child 1 (I72)
|
1495 |
This James Albin is a brother to Mary Francis Albin (our direct line). Their parents are William Slater Albin and Elizabeth Ann Tribby. | Albin, James F. (I197)
|
1496 |
This last child of Noah and Jane is a mystery. His given name could be Franklin or it could be Benjamin or both. In the History of Pittsford, Appendix p697 author Caverly lists a Benjamin F. Cooley b. 1825. In the Hillsdale County Michigan US 1850 census there is a "Franklin", age 25, living with Samuel T Cooley. In the Burr Oak, St Joseph County, Michigan US census of 1860 a Benjamin F Cooley was living with the N.M. Ellis household (Milton P Cooley was also a resident of Burr Oak). | Cooley, Benjamin F (I83)
|
1497 |
This Margaret Butler is not related to the other Butlers in this tree as far as I know. | Butler, Margaret (I1861)
|
1498 |
This needs a big reworking. Sarah Evans, dau of James and Jane Kearn was married to a William Baskerville. She's NOT the wife of Wm John Evans.
This name was taken from my grandfather Nelson Sears' journal but online searches make it a highly unlikely.
17 Nov 2021 new info, from Findagrave James Evans site going to William John Evans then Sarah Baskerville there is a gravestone picture that purports to be the grave site of a | Evans, Sarah (I178)
|
1499 |
This record is not a marriage certificate. According to Iowa State Dept of Health it is a "Return of Marriage to Clerk of District Court" dated 1 Jun 1939. William H.M. Clurg, the pastor of the Church of Christ, Oelwein, signed the document as "a correct return of a marriage solemnized by me on the June day of 1st 1939 at Oelwein, Ia". | Family: Robert Delbert Butler / Clara Maude Cooley (F864)
|
1500 |
Thomas Beach married first Ruth Peck, who died, after which he married second Phoebe Wilcoxson, daughter of Timothy Wilcoxson. Thomas had a large family and his sons all settled in Wallingford. Thomas died and isburied at Meriden, Conn.
Meriden was originally a part of the neighboring town of Wallingford. It was granted a separate meetinghouse in 1727, became a town in 1806 with over 1000 residents, and incorporated as a city in 1867 with just under 9000 residents. It was once proposed as the Connecticut state capital. It was named for the village of Meriden, West Midlands, England, near Birmingham. - Wikipedia | Beach, Thomas (I2041)
|
This site powered by v. 14.0.2, written by Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2024.
Maintained by .
|