Notes


Matches 601 to 650 of 1,538

      «Prev «1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 ... 31» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
601 (Medical):Duration 2 yrs 8 mos Stiles, Emma Arabella "Belle" (I1103)
 
602 (Medical):Duration [of sickness] unknown other than for several years. Signed Ida M. Nulton, MD, Sept 2, 1920; address Livonia Mo.  Coyle, Caroline (I1043)
 
603 (Medical):Fractured hip Sept 24th 1942 Barnhouse, George Riley (I2348)
 
604 (Medical):General debility is a state of general weakness or feebleness that may be a result or an outcome of one or more medical conditions that produce symptoms such as pain, fatigue, cachexia and physical disability, or deficits in attention, concentration, memory, development and/or learning.  Tribby, Elizabeth Ann (I191)
 
605 (Medical):I attended the deceased from 11/5/72 to 8/10/73 and last saw her alive on 8/10/73 (signed) R.H. Tedrick, D.O., 501 Main, Akron, Colorado 80720 August 11, 1973  Miller, Carrie Louella (I15)
 
606 (Medical):I attended the deceased from November 11, 1962 to December 12, 1962 and last saw him alive on December 12, 1962. Death occurred at 5:25 A.M. on the date stated above. Attendant: Park D. Keller, MD, Akron, Colo. Dec. 13, 1962  Cooley, Robert Berton (I14)
 
607 (Medical):I hereby certify that I attended deceased from 12/26/1913 to 4/4/1914 that I last saw him alive on 4/4/1914 and that death occurred on the date stated above at 4 P.M. (signed) Dr O.A. Johnson MD, April 4, 1914, 1320 Main St, Kansas City, Missouri  Barnhouse, Ira Morgan (I56)
 
608 (Medical):I hereby certify that I attended deceased from April 7, 1921 ro April 8, 1921, that I last saw him alive on April 8, 1921 and that death occurred on the date stated above at 9 p.m.. The Cause of Death was as follows: Uremia, duration 7 months; Contributory (secondary) Bright's Disease, duration 3 months; Did an operation precede death, No; Was there an autopsy, No; What test confirmed diagnosis: Chemical test of urine; (Signed) W. L. Williams, M.D., Flagler, Colo.  Miller, Samuel Jasper (I33)
 
609 (Medical):I hereby certify that I attended deceased from Dec 22, 1917 to Dec 28, 1917, (signed) H.L. Williams MD, 12/28/1917, Flagler Colorado  Cooley, Robert Reed (I21)
 
610 (Medical):I hereby certify that I attended deceased from May 27, 1920 to June 10, 1920, that I last saw her alive on June 9, 1920 and that death occurred on the date stated above. (Signed) E.W. Reis MD, Flagler, Colo.  Owen, Stella Alfresine (I22)
 
611 (Medical):Immediate cause of death: Senility
Interval between onset and death: 1 yearOther significant conditions contributing to death but not related to the terminal disease condition given above: Myocarditis
Was Autopsy performed: NoI attended the deceased from April 22, 1931 to May 26, 1932 and last saw her alive on May 26, 1932; Attendant Albert Black, M.D., Akron Colorado  
Nickerson, Mary Ellen (I34)
 
612 (Medical):Immediate cause Paralysis of heart Miner, Virgil (I2340)
 
613 (Medical):Inflammation of Bowells. 7 days Evans, James (I170)
 
614 (Medical):Jonathan was noted to have died from "Dropsy heart". Dropsy is an old term for the swelling of soft tissues due to the accumulation of excess water. The modern term is "edema" combined with the cause such as "edema due to congestive heart failure".  Cooley, Jonathan (I2272)
 
615 (Medical):Medical Certificate of Death signed by C. M. Braidwood MD resident of Dryden  Smith, Priscilla (I2327)
 
616 (Medical):Medical Certification signed by Eugene Luisman, MD on Sept 7, 1943.  Miller, Odes Bert (I36)
 
617 (Medical):Other significant conditions: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and generalized arteriosclerosis. Physician: Richard H. Tedrick, D.O., 501 Main, Akron, Colorado 80720 Signed 7 Dec 1979  Cooley, Clifford Coyne (I2)
 
618 (Medical):Physician: P.C. Brittain, D.O., 482 Adams, Akron, Colorado 80720  Sears, Margaret May (I3)
 
619 (Medical):Related conditions: Pulmonary edema, pericarditis Cooley, Edith Dixie (I85)
 
620 (Medical):Respiratory disease characterized by inflammation of the lung parenchyma (excluding the bronchi) with congestion caused by inhalation of gastric juices  Kooker, John Kenneth (I430)
 
621 (Medical):See attached sources. Cooley, Clara Salome (I70)
 
622 (Medical):See attached sources. Aldrich, Phebe (I1157)
 
623 (Medical):See attached sources. Anderson, Deborah Lyn (I1487)
 
624 (Medical):See attached sources. Cooley, Samuel (I1819)
 
625 (Medical):See attached sources. Rolfe Hass, Charlotte (I2082)
 
626 (Medical):Senility - H. M. McFadden MD, Thorndale, Ont., Apr 5th 1909  Kearn, Jane (I171)
 
627 (Medical):Sudden death, fell dead on street Cooley, Hersey Churchill (I69)
 
628 (Research): Removed Nelson Sears dob 12 Sep 1812 and "Steubenville" per Kay Barnhouse Stout. This done 3 Mar 2002. Also, death date changed from 20 Nov 1890 to 21 Nov 1890 to concur with Kay.
Kay Barnhouse Stout notes that George Jr was possibly living in younger brother Jacob's household at the time of the 1840 U.S. Census. In that census there are two males age 20-29 in the Jacob Barnhouse household in Noble Twp, Morgan Co, Ohio where one is obviously Jacob. Since George E. Barnhouse Jr does not appear in the federal censuses as head of household until 1850, it is quite possible that the other male in Jacob's household is brother George. However, census data of 1840 and before cannot discern that fact. - Abstract of clippings of items posted in the Unionville Republican from the Rootsweb Putnam County Ohio mailing list, Linda Nixon list manager.  
Barnhouse, George E. (I182)
 
629 (Research): The site for what would become Cambridge was chosen in December 1630, because it was located safely up river from Boston Harbor, which made it easily defensible from attacks by enemy ships. Also, the water from the local spring was so good that the local Native Americans believed it had medicinal properties.[citation needed] The first houses were built in the spring of 1631. The settlement was initially referred to as "the newe towne". Official Massachusetts records show the name capitalized as Newe Towne by 1632. Located at the first convenient Charles River crossing west of Boston, Newe Towne was one of a number of towns (including Boston, Dorchester, Watertown, and Weymouth) founded by the 700 original Puritan colonists of the Massachusetts Bay Colony under governor John Winthrop. The original village site is in the heart of today's Harvard Square. The marketplace where farmers brought in crops from surrounding towns to sell survives today as the small park at the corner of John F. Kennedy (J.F.K.) and Winthrop Streets, then at the edge of a salt marsh, since filled. In 1636, Harvard College was founded by the colony to train ministers and the new town was chosen for its site by Thomas Dudley. By 1638, the name "Newe Towne" had "compacted by usage into 'Newtowne'." In May 1638 the name was changed to Cambridge in honor of the university in Cambridge, England  Crosby, Simon (I1410)
 
630 (Research): Bocking is an area of Braintree, Essex, England, which was a former village and civil parish. In 1934 it became part of the civil parish of Braintree and Bocking which is now within Braintree District. The Deanery Church of St Mary, Bocking, is mainly 15th and 16th century flint and limestone, with 19th century restoration, built on a more ancient church site. St Peter's Parish Church was built in 1896-97 of yellow brick, in a design intended to be extended at a later date, and is still unfinished; its website describes it as "unusual in appearance from the outside". In 1862 Kelly's Directory of Essex already stated that "Braintree and Bocking, although distinct parishes, form one continuous town, extending for a mile on the road between Chelmsford and Halstead, and the rivers Blackwater and Podsbrook, and having a united population in 1861 of 8,186". - Wikipedia  Stebbing, Rowland (I2183)
 
631 (Research): On 13 Jan 1630 (NS) The Council for New England (chartered to establish colonies between 40 degrees and 48 degrees north latitude) issued a new land patent (the "Old Charter") that granted land title and trading rights, but no powers of government, to New Plymouth Colony for the area east of Narragansett Bay and south of a line from the Pawtucket (now Blackstone) River to the mouth of the Cohasset River. New Plymouth Colony included part of present Rhode Island. On 8 Jul 1663 New Plymouth Colony lost territory when King Charles II granted Rhode Island a charter as a self-governing corporate colony. New Plymouth Colony still included part of present Rhode Island. On 02 Jun 1685 New Plymouth Colony created three original counties: Barnstable, Bristol, and Plymouth to cover all non-county area in New Plymouth. On 07 Oct 1691 Barnstable continued under the new Massachusetts Bay provincial charter issued by King William III and Queen Mary II; Massachusetts Bay absorbed New Plymouth Colony.  Sears, Silas (I480)
 
632 (Research): On 13 Jan 1630 (NS) The Council for New England (chartered to establish colonies between 40 degrees and 48 degrees north latitude) issued a new land patent (the "Old Charter") that granted land title and trading rights, but no powers of government, to New Plymouth Colony for the area east of Narragansett Bay and south of a line from the Pawtucket (now Blackstone) River to the mouth of the Cohasset River. New Plymouth Colony included part of present Rhode Island. On 8 Jul 1663 New Plymouth Colony lost territory when King Charles II granted Rhode Island a charter as a self-governing corporate colony. New Plymouth Colony still included part of present Rhode Island. On 02 Jun 1685 New Plymouth Colony created three original counties: Barnstable, Bristol, and Plymouth to cover all non-county area in New Plymouth. On 07 Oct 1691 Barnstable continued under the new Massachusetts Bay provincial charter issued by King William III and Queen Mary II; Massachusetts Bay absorbed New Plymouth Colony.  Sears, Silas (I482)
 
633 (Research): There are two Lewis Cooleys listed in the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War website (SUVCW website: http://www.suvcwdb.org) (1) Lewis Newman Cooley buried Bloomington WI and a (2) Lewis F Cooley, served in the 14th Iowa Inf, GAR Post 615 bur Oakridge Cem, Cook Co, IL. Neither of these Lewises are our Lewis so it can be concluded that, although he was registered in the Civil War draft, he was not a Civil War Veteran as was his brother Peter S. Cooley.  Cooley, Lewis T. (I67)
 
634 (Research):"Ontario Sessional Papers, 1930, No.24A-39"
The report of the Acting Surveyor General bearing date the 21st of September, 1795, relative to the lands between Long Point and the Grand
River was laid before the Council.
Gideon Cooley, Sen. whose son Luther Cooley received a ticket of location from Andrew Pierce for lot No. 1 in the 12th con. on the head waters of Patter- son's Creek on Lake Erie, the said Luther having by the paper annexed to his petition given up his right thereto to the petitioner, who prays that the same may be granted to him. Ordered that 200 acres be granted and referred to
the Surveyor General for location.
Gideon Cooley, Jun.: Has a wife and five children and has never received any land. Prays for three hundred acres in the Long Point Settlement or in the Township of Townsend. Ordered that the petitioner shall have a grant of
two hundred acres.
Brantford Ontario is a city located on the Grand River in southwestern Ontario, Canada. It was incorporated as a city in 1877. This single-tier municipality is part of Brant County. Brantford is sometimes known by the nickname The Telephone City, after one of the city's most famous former residents, Alexander Graham Bell. The Native-American tribe the Attawandaron, or Neutral Nation, lived in the Grand River valley area before the 17th century; their main village and seat of the chief, Kandoucho, was identified by 19th-century historians as having been located on the Grand River where Brantford lies today. This town, like the rest of their settlements, was destroyed when the Iroquois declared war in 1650 and exterminated the Neutral nation. In 1784, Captain Joseph Brant and the Six Nations Indians left New York for Canada. As a reward for their loyalty to the British Crown, they were given a large land grant on the Grand River. The original Mohawk settlement was on the south edge of the present-day city at a location favourable for landing canoes. Brant's crossing of the river gave the original name to the area: Brant's ford. By 1847, European settlers began to settle further up the river at a ford in the Grand River and named the village Brantford. The native settlement was abandoned except for the Mohawk Chapel which remains Ontario's oldest Protestant church.  
Cooley, Gideon (I373)
 
635 (Research):1830 United States Federal Census about Peter Barnhouse Name:Peter Barnhouse
Township:German
County:Harrison
State:Ohio
1840 United States Federal Census about Peter Barnhouse Name:Peter Barnhouse
Township:German
County:Harrison
State:Ohio
1850 United States Federal Census about Peter Barnhouse Name:Peter Barnhouse
Age:50
Estimated Birth Year:abt 1800
Birth Place:Virginia
Gender:Male
Home in 1850(City,County,State):German, Harrison, Ohio
Household Members:NameAge
Peter Barnhouse50
Susannah Barnhouse42
Richard Coolman33
Mary Coolman19
Adam Beckley12
Lorenzo D Coolman0
1860 United States Federal Census about Peter Barnhouse Name:Peter Barnhouse
Age in 1860:59
Birth Year:abt 1801
Birthplace:Virginia
Home in 1860:German, Harrison, Ohio
Gender:Male
Post Office:Germano
Value of real estate:View Image
Household Members:NameAge
Anna M Snyder33
Mary E Snyder14
Susan Snyder9
Lorenzo D Coleman10
William Slates16
Peter Barnhouse59
Susanna Barnhouse5
1870 United States Federal Census about Peter Barnhouse Name:Peter Barnhouse
Estimated Birth Year:abt 1800
Age in 1870:70
Birthplace:Virginia
Home in 1870:German, Harrison, Ohio
Race:White
Gender:Male
Value of real estate:View Image
Post Office:Germano
Household Members:NameAge
Peter Barnhouse70
Susanna Barnhouse62
Levi Beckley9

Name:Peter Barnhouse
Issue Date:10 Apr 1837
State of Record:Ohio
Acres:81.03
Accession Number:OH0500__.496
Metes and Bounds:No
Land Office:Zanesville
Canceled:No
US Reservations:No
Mineral Reservations:No Authority:April 24, 1820: Sale-Cash Entry (3 Stat. 566)
Document Number:8552 Legal Land Description:SectionTwpRangeMeridianCounties
297-N9-WOhio River SurveyNoble

Other: 10 Apr 1837 - 7-N, Noble, Ohio
Other: 24 Apr 1820


U.S. Civil War Soldiers, 1861-1865
Military
PreviewName:Peter Barnhouse
Side:Union
Regiment State/Origin:Ohio
Regiment Name:80 Ohio Infantry
Regiment Name Expanded:80th Regiment, Ohio Infantry
COMPANY:A
Rank In:Private
Rank In Expanded:Private
Rank Out:Private
Rank Out Expanded:Private
Alternate Name:Peter/Burnhouse
Film Number:M552 roll 5
Ohio Land Records about Peter Barnhouse Name:Peter Barnhouse
Land Office:ZANESVILLE
Document Number:8552
Total Acres:81.03
Signature:Yes
Canceled Document:No
Issue Date:1 Apr 1837
Metes and Bounds:No
Statutory Reference:3 Stat. 566
Multiple Warantee Names:No
Act or Treaty:April 24, 1820
Multiple Patentee Names:No
Entry Classification:Sale-Cash Entries Land Description:1
Barnhouse, Peter (I1031)
 
636 (Research):1850 - Hillsdale County MI
Dwelling 143 Family 143
Samuel T. Cooley 43 M Farmer $100 b in VT
Lydia 36 F b in NYByron 17 M Farmer b in MI approx birth year: 1832/3 Rebecca 11 F b in MI approx birth year: 1838/9 William 9 M b in MI approx birth year: 1840/1 Watson 7 M b in MI approx birth year: 1842/3 Eliza F Cooley 16 F b in NY approx birth year: 1833/4 Franklin Cooley 25 M Farmer b in NY approx birth year: 1824/5  
Cooley, Benjamin F (I83)
 
637 (Research):1900 Iowa Census, Decatur, Richland. In this household: Alma Shafftner age 17 and Mendal D. Shafftner age 11. My comment: The 't' in Shafftner unlikely; more likely, Shaffner  Covington, Samuel Homer (I1783)
 
638 (Research):1910 census b. abt 1867 home West Concord, Dodge Co, MN
1930 census b. abt 1873 home West Concord, Dodge Co, MN 
Martig, Jacob John (I1082)
 
639 (Research):1920 Census: Home in 1920, Decatur, Decatur Co, Iowa; father's birthplace, Ohio; mother's birthplace, Iowa  Lee, Opal Elizabeth (I625)
 
640 (Research):Berkhamsted is a historic market town close to the western boundary of Hertfordshire, England. People have been living in the Berkhamsted area for over 5,000 years. There is evidence of flint working in the Neolithic period and metal working in the late Iron Age and Roman periods. The high street is on a pre-Roman route known by its Saxon name Akeman Street. The earliest written reference to Berkhamsted is in 970 AD. Berkhamsted was recorded as a "burbium" (an ancient borough) in the Domesday Book in 1086. The oldest known extant jettied timber-framed building in Great Britain, built 1277-1297, survives as a shop on the town's high street.  Pitkin, Martha (I1970)
 
641 (Research):Boston was founded on September 17, 1630, by Puritan colonists from England. The Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Colony are sometimes confused with the Pilgrims, who founded Plymouth Colony ten years earlier in what is today Bristol County, Plymouth County, and Barnstable County, Massachusetts. The two groups, which differed in religious practice, are historically distinct. The separate colonies were not united until the formation of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in 1691.
On 10 May 1643 Suffolk County was created as one of four original counties in Massachusetts; It included territory in the northeast corner of present Rhode Island. (Mass. Recs., 2:38)  
Crosby, Thomas (I1408)
 
642 (Research):Castle Sowerby, (or Sowerby-Castle), a parish in Leith ward, in the county of Cumberland, 2 miles S.E. of Hesket-Newmarket, 10 S. of Carlisle, and 11 N.W. of Penrith, its post town and railway station, being 295 from London. It lies within the limits of the forest of Inglewood, near the river Caldew, and includes the townships of Bustabeck Bound, How Bound, Row Bound, Southernby Bound, and Stockdalewath Bound. In How Bound formerly stood a castle, of which all traces have disappeared." [Description(s) from The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland (1868)
Cumberland was a historic county of North West England that had an administrative function from the 12th century until 1974. It bordered Northumberland to the east, County Durham to the southeast, Westmorland and Lancashire to the south, and Dumfriesshire in Scotland to the north. It formed an administrative county from 1889 to 1974 (excluding Carlisle from 1914) and now forms, along with Westmorland and parts of historic northern Lancashire, Cumbria.  
Holliday, Jane Elizabeth (I24)
 
643 (Research):Cavite, officially the Province of Cavite, is a province in the Philippines located in the Calabarzon region in Luzon. Located on the southern shores of Manila Bay and southwest of Metro Manila, it is one of the most industrialized and fastest-growing provinces in the Philippines (2020).
Imus, officially the City of Imus (Tagalog: Lungsod ng Imus), is a 3rd class component city and capital of the province of Cavite, Philippines. Like Cavite City (originally called Cavite La Punta) and Noveleta (La Tierra Alta), Imus used to be a part of Cavite el Viejo (now Kawit), whose parish church was built by the Jesuits during the administration of Archdiocese of Manila Archbishop Miguel Garcia Serrano, 1618\endash 1629. On June 11, 1977, then President Ferdinand Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 1163, which transferred the provincial capital of Cavite from Trece Martires City to Imus City. There is no other enabling law after that, that specifies the capital of Cavite.  
Villarosa, Venancio (I1184)
 
644 (Research):Clarence is a town in Shelby County, Missouri, United States. The population was 813 at the 2010 census. Shelby County is located in northeast Missouri in the United States. As of the 2010 U.S. Census, the county's population was 6,373. Its county seat is Shelbyville. The county was organized January 2, 1835 and named for Governor Isaac Shelby of Kentucky.  Skinner, Alice Mildred (I98)
 
645 (Research):County Wicklow (Irish: Contae Chill Mhant Evans, William (I372)
 
646 (Research):Cumberland is a historic county of North West England that had an administrative function from the 12th century until 1974. It was bordered by Northumberland to the east, County Durham to the southeast, Westmorland and Lancashire to the south, and the Scottish counties of Dumfriesshire and Roxburghshire to the north. It formed an administrative county from 1889 to 1974 (excluding Carlisle from 1914) and now forms part of Cumbria.
Cumbria is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in North West England. The county of Cumbria was created in April 1974 through an amalgamation of the administrative counties of Cumberland and Westmorland after the passage of the Local Government Act 1972. Cumbria's county town is Carlisle, in the north of the county, and the only other major urban area is Barrow-in-Furness on the southwestern tip of the county.
Carlisle is a cathedral city in Cumbria in North West England as well as the administrative centre for both Carlisle City Council and Cumbria County Council. It is located at the confluence of the rivers Eden, Caldew and Petteril, 16 km south of the Scottish border. Originally in the historic county of Cumberland, it is now the largest town in the county of Cumbria. The earliest recorded inhabitants were the Carvetii tribe of Britons who made up the main population of ancient Cumbria and North Lancashire. According to Boethius and John of Fordun, Carlisle existed before the arrival of the Romans who built a timber fort at the site of present Carlisle Castle in the winter of 73 BCE.  
Holliday, Hugh Sutton (I1831)
 
647 (Research):Delos - As a given name for boys it is of Greek derivation, and the name Delos means "from Delos" where Delos is a tiny Greek island that was sacred to the ancient Greeks who believed that Apollo and Artemis had been born there. Its usage peaked modestly in 1904 with 0.007% of baby boys being named Delos. - http://www.thinkbabynames.com/meaning/1/Delos  Cooley, Ronald Delos (I25)
 
648 (Research):Early Massachusetts Bay Colony political organization.

The four original counties all formed 10 May 1643 were:
o Middlesex
o Essex
o Suffolk
o Norfolk (now a part of SW Maine)
Formed in addition were
o Non-County Area 1
o Non County Area 2
Agawam Plantation (later Springfield) was founded in 1636 by William Pynchon. At that time it was simply a village in the Connecticut River basin under the jurisdiction of Connecticut Colony. Pynchon changed the name of the village to Springfield in 1641. On 10 May 1643, Non-County Area 1, was formed comprising the western portions of Massachusetts Bay Colony of which Springfield was a part (Winthrop expanding his power base). The area had no western boundary and extended an indefinite distance westward into the ill-defined "Western Country". On 7 May 1662 Hampshire County was formed (towns of Springfield, Northampton, Hadley, and all territory within 30 miles), effectively covering the entire western part of the province. (Mass. Recs., vol. 4, pt. 2:52) On 1 Aug 1812 Hampden County, containing Springfield, was created from Hampshire County (Mass. Acts 1812, ch. 137/p. 291). Springfield remains in Hampden County to this day.  
Cooley, Benjamin1 (I515)
 
649 (Research):Fatal accident occurs at Limon's Parade of Lights
By Will Bublitz
What was meant to be a joyous holiday event was turned into tragedy as a fatal vehicle-pedestrian accident took place in Limon as its annual Parade of Lights was about to begin last Saturday evening, Dec. 18. The accident took place at the downtown area's main intersection of Main Street and E Avenue about 6 p.m. According to an accident investigation by the Colorado State Patrol, a 2018 Ford Focus was headed eastbound on Main Street as it approached the intersection which has a stoplight. "The Ford slowed down for a red light as it approached E Avenue", Trooper Josh Lewis said. The two pedestrians were walking south across Main Street as the light changed to green. Before they had finished crossing the street they were both struck by the car. The pedestrians were Luanne Winkelman, 81, and her 56-year-old son, Joel both of Limon. Immediately following the accident, they were rushed by ambulance to Lincoln Community Hospital in Hugo. "Due to the seriousness of her injuries, the 81-year-old female was later flown by AirLife helicopter to Swedish Hospital in Denver," Trooper Lewis said. "In the early morning hours of December 19 she was declared deceased." Joel Winkelman suffered "moderate injuries" in the accident. He was later released from the hospital in Hugo. The driver of the Ford Focus was 40-year-old Michael Jantz of Limon. He was not injured in the accident. The Colorado State Patrol is in charge of this case. "This is still an open case and the investigation is continuing." Trooper Lewis said. "Alcohol is considered a possible factor. Charges may be pending". Saturday's accident occurred just as the annual Parade of Lights was about to begin. Floats and other vehicles were lined up on E Avenue in preparation to crossing Main Street into Limon's small downtown area where hundreds of spectators were gathered to watch the parade. The Limon Chamber of Commerce sponsors the Parade of Lights which celebrates the Christmas season. Following this tragic incident, the organizers of the parade immediately canceled the event for this year.
- Limon Leader, Dec 23, 2021, vol 110, issue 50

Driver arrested in fatal pedestrian-vehicle accident
By Will Bublitz

Ed: condensed from original story Michael C. Jantz, 40, of Limon was arrested last Thursday, Dec 23, for driving the vechile that struck down two pedestrians on the town's Main Street on Dec 18. As of Monday, Dec 27, Janz was still in custody at the Lincoln County Jail in Hugo. The Colorado State Patrol (CSP) handled the investigation and brought the arrest charges. The four arrest charges are: (1) Vehicular homicide, DUI (Class 3 felony); (2) Careless driving resulting in death (Class 1 traffic offense); (3) Careless driving resulting in injury (Class 2 traffic offense); and (4) Leaving the scene/accident involving death (Class 3 felony).
- Limon Leader, Dec 30, 2021, vol 110, issue 51 
Cooley, Luanne Mildred (I88)
 
650 (Research):History of West Nissouri, Middlesex, Ontario West Nissouri's history began in 1800. The name 'Nissouri' is derived from an Indian word meaning 'running waters' for the region's many streams. West Nissouri Township is in the Thames River of Ontario watershed. The River is 260 kilometres long with two forks, the North Branch and the South Branch. The forks come together right in the middle of London from which the river runs west to Lake St. Clair. Early pioneers found clearing the land to be an immense challenge because the land was thickly covered with vegetation and nearly 50 species of hardwood trees. Although much of the land in West Nissouri has been cleared for agriculture, many small pockets of natural forest remain. Recent trends have encouraged residents to plant windbreaks and reforest untillable areas. In the past, many maple trees were planted along the roads. Some of these large majestic trees remain, but many have fallen victim to storms or age.  Evans, Catherine (I44)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 ... 31» Next»


This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding v. 14.0.2, written by Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2024.

Maintained by Daniel B Cooley.