Notes
Matches 101 to 150 of 1,965
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| 101 | According to a newspaper clipping in Alice Tuthill's notebook Captain James Hallock died and was buried in Barbadoes W.I. Jan 28th after being on a long voyage. He was put ashore for hospital treatment for beriberi, an Afrian disease. | Hallock, Captain James (I115)
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| 102 | According to her obiturary, she died while staying at Al Perlman's home in NY. Records show she was buried in Temple Isralel Memorial Park. | Levin, Leah S (I237)
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| 103 | According to Naturalzation Papers | Perlman, Louis H (I269)
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| 104 | According to the family history, he attended the University of Virginia, 1848-1849. [See Ligon Family & Connections by William D. Ligon, Jr., 1947, p. 459.] | Ligon, Robert S (I1328)
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| 105 | According to Tuthill Lines in America Louise and Washington had the first duck farm in Long Island | Tuthill, Louise (I374)
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| 106 | Acted as Pastor's Robinson assistant despite never ordained as minister. Held position until death 34 yrs. later. Called and chosen by the church, he was principal lay leader. | Brewster, Reverend Elder of the Pilgrim's Church William IV (I942)
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| 107 | Acute heart failure, found dead on bed | Cannon, Louis Templeton Sr (I2480)
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| 108 | Addition 1, Row 2, Grave 3 | Levy, Charles I (I1959)
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| 109 | Addition 1, Row 3, Grave 2 | Levy, Sam (I2396)
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| 110 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I432)
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| 111 | After the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the Suwałki region, including the city of Suwałki, became part of Congress Poland, a state tied to the Russian Empire, and remained under Russian rule for over a century. | Lasker, Samuel L (I2421)
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| 112 | Age in 1910: 40Age in 1910: 40; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Self; Relation to Head of House: Head | Ludder, Christian Johann (I474)
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| 113 | Age: 30Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Son in Law; Relation to Head of House: Son-in-law | Ludder, Christian Johann (I474)
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| 114 | Age: 88; Marital Status: Widowed; Relation to Head of House: Mother in Law; Relation to Head of House: Mother-in-law | Spencer, Elizabeth (I1338)
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| 115 | Alexander Hamilton's Grandaughter. Married both Union Generals Henry Halleck and George W. Cullum. Alexander Hamilton's Grandaughter. Married both Union Generals Henry Halleck and George W. Cullum. | Hamilton, Elizabeth (I598)
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| 116 | Alyce Michelson Rosenblatt, age 99 of Mpls. Preceded in death by husband, Herman Lewis Rosenblatt; son, Fredric T. Rosenblatt; brothers, Max and Laurence Michelson; sister, Lillian Haber; brother-in-law, Woodruff N. Rosenblatt; nephew, Michael Haber; and niece, Sally Michelson & Burt Ross. Survived by grandson, Hart Lewis Rosenblatt; daughter-in-law, Cynthia Rosenblatt Ross; brother-in-law & sisters-in-law, Justin and Phyllis Rosenblatt, Raleigh Glassberg Rosenblatt; niece, Debra (Arnold) Kuznitz; nephews, David (Carol) Rosenblatt, Skip (Kathy) Rosenblatt, Jon (Barbara) Haber, Jimmy (Bonnie) Michelson, and Dr. Richard Michelson; 18 great nieces and nephews; and 10 great great nieces and nephews. Mrs. Rosenblatt graduated from Wayne State University (Detroit) and the University of Wisconsin as an elementary teacher. She was a member of Oak Ridge Country Club, National Council of Jewish Women, Brandis University Women's Auxiliary, Temple Israel Sisterhood, and the League of Women Voters. Alyce volunteered as an assistant teacher and tutor for the Mpls School system for over 20 years. | Michelson, Lena Alyce (I256)
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| 117 | among those from Plymouth who volunteered to serve in the Pequot War, and he was a member of Captain Myles Standish’s Duxbury Company in the military enrollment of 1643. | Brewster, Love (I997)
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| 118 | Amongst the benefactors to the Parish Church of Eccles in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the Booths of Barton occupy perhaps the first place. A few of their benefactions have been mentioned, and in addition to these, it is certain there were many minor ones of which no record has survived. In addition to this, the family played a very important part in the social life of the community, being extensive land holders and occupying the position of lords of the manor. It is, therefore, necessary that something more than a passing reference should be made to them. The family was really a branch of the family of Booth of Boothstown, Worsley, the first Booth of Barton being John del Booth, who married Loretta, who was daughter and sole heiress of Agnes de Barton. Agnes de Barton was descended from Edith de Barton, daughter of Albert Grelle, or Greslet, who was the fourth Baron of Manchester. The first Lord of the Manor of Mamecestre, or Manchester, was also Albert Greslet, who, as a favourite of Roger de Poictou, probably occupied a high position at the Courts of William I. and William II. It is thought that he received the grant of the Barony of Mamecestre about 1086, and, until the death of Thomas, the eighth Baron, in 1310, the Barony continued in the hands of the Greslets. Thomas having no male issue, he left the Barony to his sister Joan, who had married Sir John de Ia Warre, Baron of Wickwar, County Gloucester. Albert Greslet the Younger, as the fourth Baron is often called, died in 1182, and was succeeded by his son, Robert. His daughter Edith married Gilbert, son of William de Notten, of Yorkshire, in 1190. Included amongst the lands paying knights' fees in the County of Lancaster in the opening decade of the thir-teenth century were those of Gilbert de Notten, who held in the right of his wife (Edith de Barton) "fourteen oxgangs of the Lord the King in Thanage, for which he paid 26s. annually." John del Booth, by marrying Loretta de Notten, became Lord of the Manor of Barton, the family becoming known as the Booths of Barton. His son Thomas was the founder of the first chantry in the Eccles Parish Church, and also endowed the chantry of Salford Bridge. Of his three sons, one, John, married Joan Trafford, of Trafford. another, Robert, became Sheriff of Cheshire, died in 1460, and is buried in Wilmslow Churchyard; and his eldest son, Thomas, succeeded to the Barony. Robert del Booth, the Sheriff of Cheshire, married Dorice, daughter and co-heir of Sir William Venables, and their son, Sir William Booth, married Matilda, daughter of John Dutton. Their son George succeeded to the title and estates, which passed to his son William, who married Margaret, daughter and heir of Sir Thomas Assheton, of Ashton-under-Lyne, from whom descended the Earls of Stamford and Warrington, owners of great estates at Ashton-under-Lyne and Dunham Massey. Dunham Park belongs to the family, and Dunham Hall is one of the residences of the present Earl. It will thus be seen that, although the direct male line of the Booths of Barton died out, the name survives in a family notable in the pages of the annals of our English nobility. The direct line of the Booths of Barton may now be traced in brief. The Thomas del Bothe, elder brother of the Sheriff of Cheshire, succeeded to the Barony of Barton. He also married a member of the family notable, among other matters, for having produced the Black Knight, a title of derision applied to Sir Ralph Assheton, whose name and deeds are celebrated annually at Ashton-under-Lyne on Easter Monday by the function of the "Riding of the Black Knight." Their son, Sir John Booth, was killed at the battle of Flodden Field. He was succeeded as Lord of the Manor of Barton by his son John, the last heir in direct descent, who died in 1576. Dying without male issue, his properties and estates were inherited by his two daughters. One of these married George Legh, of High Legh, Cheshire, who succeeded thereby to the Barton estate. The fact is noted in the street list of the borough, and Legh Street, Patricroft, serves to remind that nearly three and a half centuries ago the right of the Lord of the Manor of Barton, held for about two centuries by the Booths in succession to the Bartons of Barton, the male heirs of which family had died out about the middle of the fourteenth century, passed over to a well-known Cheshire family. Another daughter of the last of the Booths of Barton married Sir Edward Trafford, taking with her certain lands which adjoined the Trafford estate; and from the marriage succeeded the direct line of the Traffords of Trafford. The William del Bothe who has been previously mentioned as a benefactor to the Parish Church, and who, amongst many important appointments, held the high position of Lord Chancellor of England, was the third son of Sir Thomas del Bothe; and Laurence del Bothe, who also was a benefactor to the Church and who also became a Lord Chancellor of England, was half-brother to William del Bothe, the father having married firstly Joan, daughter of Sir Henry Trafford, and secondly Maud, daughter of John Savage, of Clifton. There must surely be few parallels to the half-brothers in the holding of one of the highest positions in the State. It may be noted in closing this chapter that Barton Booth, the celebrated actor of a later century, was a member of a branch of the Barton family. 521 John married Joan Trafford, daughter of Sir Henry Trafford and Margery Ince.Adam Booth (or de Booth) was born about 1249 in Barrowford Booth, Lancashire, England. He was the father of William Booth. William Booth, son of Adam Booth, was born about 1275 in Barrowford Booth, Lancashire, England. He married Sybil (or Sebilla) de Brereton (born about 1279 in Brereton, Cheshire, England, daughter of Richard Brereton), and they were the parents of Thomas Booth. Thomas Booth was born in Barton (or in Barrowford Booth), Lancashire, England, and John Booth was his son. John Booth, son of Thomas Booth, was born in 1307 in Barton, Lancashire, England. He married Loretta Barton, who was born in 1333 in Eccles, Lancashire, England, daughter of Sir Gilbert Barton (born in 1307 in Eccles, Lancashire, England) and his wife Agnes (born ca 1309). Children of John Booth and Loretta Barton were Thomas Booth and Mary Booth. Sir Knight Thomas Booth (or Bothe) was born in 1327 in Barton, Lancashire, England. He married Elena de Workesley, daughter of Thomas Workesley. Children of Thomas Booth and Elena de Workesley were: John Booth Henry de Booth Thomas de Booth Alice de Booth William de Booth Katherine de Booth Margaret de Booth Ann de Booth Sir Knight John Booth was born in Barton, Preston, Lancashire, England in 1358, son of Thomas Booth and Loretta Barton. He married Joan Trafford (born in Lancashire, England, ca 1358), and he died in 1422. (As a matter of fact, John Booth married twice, and had a total of eighteen children.) The ancestry of Joan Trafford is as follows: Her parents were Sir Henry Trafford (1324-1386) and Margery Ince (1330-1416, daughter of Robert Ince). Sir Henry Trafford was the son of Henry Trafford (ca 1292-1370) and Agnes Dolerinde (born 1302). Henry Trafford was the son of John de Trafford (born 1264), and John de Trafford was the son of Sir Henry de Trafford and his wife Margaret. Sir Henry de Trafford was the son of another Sir Henry de Trafford (1208-1288) and his wife Loretta. Sir Henry de Trafford was the son of Henry de Trafford (born 1180) and his wife Crhistina, (born in 1184). Henry de Trafford was the son of Richard de Trafford (born in 1152), and Richard de Trafford was the son of Henry de Trafford. Henry de Trafford was the son of Henricus de Trafford (born in 1096), and Henricus de Trafford was the son of Robert de Trafford (born in 1068). Robert de Trafford was the son of Radulph de Trafford (born in 1040), and Radulph de Trafford was the son of Randulph de Trafford. Children of John Booth and Joan Trafford were: Margery Booth Sir Knight Thomas Booth (born in 1378) Sir Robert Booth (1384-September 14, 1460) Joan Booth William Booth (born in 1390, appointed Archbishop of York in 1451) Catherine Booth Alice Booth Richard Booth Roger Booth John Booth (Bishop) Ralph Booth Lucy Booth Sir Robert Booth, son of John Booth and Joan Trafford, married Dulcie Venables, and Sir William Boothe was their son. They had five daughters and nine sons, of whom Sir William Boothe was one. Sir Robert Booth died in 1450, and Dulcie Venables died in 1463. Dulcie Venables was the daughter of Sir William Venables. Sir William Boothe, son of Sir Robert Booth and Dulcie Venables, was Sheriff of Cheshire. He was born about 1420, died about 1476. He married Maude de Dutton (1427-1489), and Sir George Boothe was their son. Maude de Dutton was the daughter of John de Dutton (1403-1445) and Margaret Savage (Born ca 1403, daughter of Sir Kinght John Savage (1370-1450) and Maude de Swynnerton (1385-1415). John Savage fought at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415). Maude de Dutton was the sister of Sir Thomas de Dutton (Born ca 1421). John de Dutton was the son of Sir Peter (Piers) de Dutton (ca 1367-1433) and Elizabeth Butler (born ca 1377). Sir Peter (Piers) de Dutton was the son of Edmund Dutton and Joan Minshull (See Chapter 8). Elizabeth Butler was the daughter of John Boteler, who was born in Bewsey, Lancashire, England, about 1335, and Alicia Plumpton (1332-after 1374). Alicia Plumpton was the daughter of William de Plumpton (ca 1294-1362) of Plumpton, Yorkshire, England, and Christiana Mowbray (ca 1305-December 25, 1362), also of Plumpton. Sir Knight George Boothe, son of Sir William Boothe and Maude de Dutton, married Katherine Monford. He was lord of Massie Manor. He died in 1483. They had three sons and four daughters, and one of their sons was Sir William Boothe. Katherine Monford was the daughter of Robert Martfort, born in 1432. Sir Knight William Boothe, son of Sir George Boothe and Katherine Monford, died in 1519. He married Margaret Ashton and Ellen Montgomery. Children of Sir William Boothe and Margaret Ashton were: Sir William Boothe (See below) Sir George Booth (Born in 1491) Edward Boothe Anne Boothe was a daughter of Sir William Boothe and Ellen Montgomery. Sir William Boothe, son of Sir William Boothe and Margaret Ashton, was born in 1473, and died in 1519 in Dunham, Massie, Cheshire, England. He married Ellen Davenport (daughter of John Davenport), and their children were Edward Booth and Dorothy Booth. Edward Booth, son of Sir William Boothe and Ellen Davenport, was born in England in 1545, and died in England. Edward Booth, son of Edward Booth above, was born in Cheshire, England, in 1681 and died in Twenlow, Cheshire, England, in 1628. He married Marsia -----. Richard Booth, son of Edward Booth, was born in Great Budworth, Cheshire, England, on March 5, 1607. He came to Stamford, Connecticut, sometime between 1620 and 1640, and he married Elizabeth Hawley about 1640. Richard and Elizabeth were one of the founding families of Stratford. By 1670, he had received land in Nichols’ Farms in the Connecticut colony. Richard Booth died in 1687 in Stratford, Connecticut. Elizabeth Hawley was born in Parwich, Derby, England, in 1607, and died in Connecticut in September, 1689. She was a sister of Joseph Hawley , another founder of Stratford, and the daughter of Samuel Hawley. Some say Elizabeth’s parents were Joseph Hawley and Katherine Booth . Children of Richard Booth and Elizabeth Hawley were: Elizabeth Booth (Born September 10, 1641) Ann Booth (Born February 14, 1643 or 1644) Ephriam Booth (Born August 1, 1648) Ebenezer Booth (Born November 19, 1651) Sergeant John Booth (Born November 6, 1653) Joseph Booth (Born March 8, 1657) Bethia Booth (Born August 18, 1658) Jonnah (Joanna) Booth (Born March 21, 1661) Joseph Booth , son of Richard Booth and Elizabeth Hawley , was born March 8, 1657 (or 1656), in Stratford, Connecticut. He married first Mary Wells (born August 29, 1661), second, in 1685, Hannah Wilcox (or Wilcoxson), and third, in 1702, Elizabeth Bostwick . He died August 17, 1702. In 1862, Joseph Booth was considered the ancestor of all the Booths then remaining in Stratford. Hannah Wilcox was the daughter of John Wilcox (or Wilcoxson), who married first Johannah Titherton and second Elizabeth Bourne , who was born in England after 1668. John Wilcox was born in 1633, and died in Killingworth, Connecticut, on March 19, 1690. John Wilcox was the son of William Wilcoxson (born in St. Albans, Derbyshire, England, about 1601, died in Stratford, Connecticut, in 1652) and Margaret Birdsey (Born in St. Albans in 1611, died in Stratford in 1655). Hannah Wilcox died at age 38 on July 10, 1701, in Stratford, Connecticut. William Wilcoxson was a linen weaver and a Puritan who arrived in Massachussetts Bay Colony in the summer of 1635 aboard the good ship Planter, with his son John (See below) and his wife Margaret. William Wilcoxson was the son of another William Wilcoxson (ca 1571-1626) from Wilksworth, Derbyshire, England, and Joanne Grundick (Born ca 1574). Hannah Wilcox was the mother of all of Joseph Booth ’s children. They were: James Booth (ca 1687-August 20, 1765) Joseph Booth (1689-May 2, 1763) Robert Booth (ca 1690-December 17, 1750) Zachariah Booth (See below) Nathan Booth (ca 1695-August 17, 1714) Hannah Booth (ca 1698-1767) David Booth (ca 1700-June 21, 1773) Zachariah Booth , son of Joseph Booth and Hannah Wilcox , was born in Stratford, Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1694. On June 12, 1718, he married Anna Curtis , and he married Sarah Gilbert on January 1, 1734. Anna Curtis (1697-May 18, 1733) was born in Stratford, Fairfield County, Copnnecticut, the daughter of Benjamin Curtis and Esther Judson . Benjamin Curtis and Esther Judson married in 1733, and Benjamin died later the same year. Benjamin Curtis, (born September 30, 1652) was the son of Ensign John Curtis (Born February 26, 1611, Nazeing, Essex, England, died December 2, 1707, Stratford, Connecticut, immigrated in 1635) and Elizabeth Wells , daughter of John Wells and Mary Hollister . John Curtis was the son of another John Curtis (Born September 15, 1577, Nazing, Essex, England, died 1639, Hartford, Connecticut) and Elizabeth Hutchins (ca 1579-June 4, 1658). This John Curtis was the son of William Curtis (died in 1585) and his wife Agnes (also died in 1585). At her death, Elizabeth Hutchins left a mare and “coalt”, house and “lott”, two “cowss”, a hiefer, a bullock, a calf, a Bible, some corn, and some money. Children of Zachariah Booth and Anna Curtis were: Daniel Booth (See below) Nathaniel Booth (Born in 1719) Zachariah Booth (Born in 1721) Children of Zachariah Booth and his second wife, Sarah Gilbert , were: Hezekiah Booth (Born in 1736) Ann Booth (Born in 1737) Helkiah Booth (Born in 1739) Phoebe Booth (Born in 1741) Abel Booth (Born in 1743) Abijah Booth (Born in 1744) Setas (Silas) Booth (Born in 1746) Angus (Augur) Booth (Born in 1749) Daniel Booth was born February 6, 1719, in Stratford, Fairfield County, Connecticut, the son of Zachariah Booth and Anna Curtis . About 1732, he married Ruth Anderson , and he may have married Mary “Polly” Judson later. Some say Daniel Booth died in Caroline County, Virginia, in 1749, while others say he died in Fairfield County, Connecticut. Ruth Anderson was born about 1715 in Orange County, North Carolina, the daughter of Dabney Anderson and Susannah May . After the death of Daniel Booth , Ruth Anderson married (ca. 1750) James Trice, Jr., who raised Dabney’s children. Ruth Anderson died in Orange County, NC, before August, 1763. Dabney Anderson was born Cecember 20, 1687, in New Kent County, Virginia, and died in 1735 in King William County, Virginia. He was the son of William Anderson and Dorothy Dabney , who was the daughter of Cornelius Dabney and Edith Morrison . Children of Daniel Booth and Ruth Anderson were: Daniel Booth (born ca 1729) John Booth (See below) Sarah Booth Susannah Booth Elizabeth “Betsy” Booth Tabitha Booth Mary Booth Gilly Booth (Born in 1747)) Joseph Booth John W. Booth , son of Daniel Booth and Ruth Anderson . Daniel Booth , was born in Caroline County, VA, about 1737, and died in Hancock, Georgia in September (or August 12), 1804. He served three years as a private in the North Carolina Line in Captain Radford’s Company, Colonel Armstrong’s Troop, Eighth Regiment, North Carolina Continental Line, in the Revolution. His wife was named Mary and they were married in 1750. John W. Booth was made guardian of his sister, Gilly, when she was 16. At his death, John W. Booth left 17 slaves, land, and cattle. Children of John W. Booth and Mary were: Edwina “Dicey” Malinda Booth Elizabeth Booth Sara Frances “Fanny” Booth Nancy (Ansy) Booth John W. Booth , Jr. Mary Booth Milly Booth Sarah Booth Edwina “Dicey” Malinda Booth was born October 6, 1751, in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. She married Charles Abercrombie Sources: Seibel, Vicky, Booth Research, on the internet at http://seibelfamily.net/BoothResearchCT.htm Armstrong, Gladys Stovall, Abercrombie and Booth, on the internet at http://members.aol.com/gla529/ACROMandBOOTH.htm Ancestors of Mary Susan Lowry, on the internet at http://www.nadegave.com/lowry/index.htm The Booth Family http://www.carsonjohnson.com/Chapter05-booth.htm WilliamMason78 added this on 18 Oct 2012 jpaway originally submitted this to hall II Family Tree | Booth, Lord John Barton (I879)
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| 119 | Amos Porter, Jr. was one of the 48 pioneers who landed in Marietta, Ohio, on April 7, 1788, opening the Northwest Territory for settlerment. He and his brother-in-law, Allen Putnam, returned to Massachusetts, were Amos married his first wife, Sabra Tolman. Amos returned to Ohio in 1795, after the Ohio Indian Wars, and purchased a farm in Salem Township in Washington County, Ohio. The farm was on the same side of Duck Creek as present day Lower Salem, and directly across the creek from his father and brothers, Jonathan and Simon farms. It is on Amos, Jr.'s farm that the Porter Cemetery lies. After the death of Sabra, he married the widow, Sally Perkins Sutton. Amos and Sabra Porter were the parents of the following children: Amos, who died in early manhood, never married; Rufus and Hiram, who both died in childhood; William, who first married Mary Sutton, then second Polly Stanley, then third Mrs. Betsey Flower Tolman, he died in southern Illinois, where he and six of his ten children had moved; Samuel, who married Mary Palmer, he had three children; Thomas, who first married Rhoda Sutton, then second Polly Stille, he had six children, he was a "conductor on the Underground Railroad"; Lydia, who married S. N. Merriam and lived in Lowell, Ohio; Jerusha, who married Mr. Davis, she had three children and "moved West"; Almer, who married Mary Babson, he had six children and lived on the homestead in Salem Township, Almer and Mary's children were: Analiza, who married Josiah Twiggs; Daniel, who married Harriett Simon; Sally S., who married Willard D. Hall; Marian B., who married William H. Moore; Charles G., who married Sarah F. Magee; and Hosea S., who married Susan Chandler. Amos Porter, Jr. died at age 92 years, 9 months, and 8 days, he was the last of the 48 pioneers who landed at Marietta to die. | Porter, Amos Jr (I1875)
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| 120 | Ancestry.com. Illinois, U.S., Federal Naturalization Records, 1856-1991 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016. | Source (S170)
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| 121 | Ancestry.com. New York, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1659-1999 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015. Original data: New York County, District and Probate Courts. | Source (S134)
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| 122 | Ancestry.com. Web: Connecticut, U.S., Marriage Records, 1897-1968 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2019. Original data: Connecticut Vital Records — Index of Marriages, 1897-1968. Connecticut State Library. https://www.ctatatelibrarydata.org/marriage-records/: accessed 8 May 2019 | Source (S155)
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| 123 | Anna died from a fractured skull as a result of a traffic accident. | Epstein, Anna (I2415)
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| 124 | Anne Huntington, dau. of Christopher Huntington, Sr. & Ruth Rockwell (latter the gr.dau. of the memorialist's ancestors), was b. of record Oct. 25, 1675 at Norwich, Conn. and d. Aug. 20, 1756 at WIndham, Conn., Æ 81. On Oct. 28, 1697 prob. at Norwich, but recorded only at Windham, Conn. (Anne's parents resided at Norwich, and Windham had no minister until after 1700), Anne m. Jonathan Bingham, s. of Dea. Thomas Bingham & Mary Rudd, b. Apr. 15, 1674 at Norwich, Conn. He d. Feb. 28, 1750/1 at Windham, Conn., Æ 77. Regarding Jonathan Bingham in "The Huntington family in America" (1915, p. 78), it states that "He had a family and descendants respectable both in their numbers and for their characters." They had no recorded children. In the will of Jonathan Bingham dated 1745, proved after Feb. 28 1750/1, Jonathan gave to brother Samuel all that was anyway between them except one two-year old steer that was to go to Samuel's son Jonathan. The residual estate was willed to brothers Nathaniel, Samuel, Joseph, Stephen and the children of deceased brothers Thomas and Abel, divided into six equal parts, which was distributed after the death of his wife Anne. | Huntington, Ann (I1865)
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| 125 | Apaucuck Neck is west of Beaverdam Stream, which was called Pocock River in old deeds. | Bowers, Jerusha (I1271)
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| 126 | Apoplectic fit. | Halsey, Warren P. (I194)
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| 127 | Apphia Quicke married Samuel Freeman in 1624 St Ann Blackfriars in London. They divorced approx. 1644. They arrived in Watertown MA in 1630, and she remained in the colony while he returned to London to take care of his mothers estate. When he returned in 1637, they had another child. Apphia married second, Thomas Prence, one of the Govornors of Plymouth. | Quicke, Apphia (I2048)
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| 128 | Archives of Ontario; Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Registrations of Marriages, 1869-1928; Reel: 628 | Source (S202)
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| 129 | Arizona Statesman, Physician: Alexander MacKenzie Tuthill, a distinguished surgeon for 57 years, began his military career in 1903 when he organized and commanded the 2nd Cavalry Troop of the Arizona National Guard. He then served as Colonel commanding the 1st Arizona Infantry, later designated as the 158th Infantry, and was a member of the Arizona Constitutional Convention. As Brigadier General he commanded the 79th Brigade 40th Division A.E.F. Later, as Brigadier General he commanded the 89th Brigade 45th Division. He went on as Major General to command the 45th Infantry Division from 1933 to 1935. After his retirement in 1935, he served as Adjutant General of the Arizona National Guard from February 4, 1936 to June 25 1952. In 1929, the ninth legislature honored his service by the construction of Fort Alexander M. Tuthill, south of Flagstaff, Arizona, as a Guard training site. He was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws by the University of Arizona in 1952. | Tuthill, lieutenant generaL Alexander Mackenzie M.D. (I344)
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| 130 | As least 3 different families, one from Somerset, one from Northamptonshire and one from Worcestershire have been confused. Beauchamp was a not uncommon name at this time. | De Beauchamp, John (I900)
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| 131 | B12 | Heller, Leonard Herbert Jr. (I203)
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| 132 | Bangs, Jeremy Dupertuis, The Seventeenth-Century Town Records of Scituate, Massachusetts, Volume Three, Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001 | Turner, Elisha (I1775)
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| 133 | Barbara spent her childhood in Los Angeles, CA. She married Harold Rose in 1936 and moved to Minnesota where they settled in the town of Mahtomedi on White Bear Lake. Barbara & Harold were residents in Mahtomedi for 36 years. Barbara was preceded in death by her husband, Harold; and her sister, Martha. She is survived by her sister, Jane; daughter, Marcy (Larry); son, Jonathan (Wendy); 14 grandchildren; and 20 great-grandchildren. Barbara owned and operated the Barbara Rose Dress Shop in Mahtomedi for many years. She had a flair for style and a zest for life. | Selig, Barbara S (I1544)
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| 134 | BARNABAS HORTON HAD THREE WIVES: ANNE SMITH, JONE FLETCHER, AND MARY LANGTON. VIEW BIOGRAPHICAL ITEMS IN STORY (MEMORIES) FOR THIS RECORD, LN74-VQZ, although some of the data it contains is likely incorrect or only partially correct.. | Horton, Barnabas (I459)
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| 135 | began publishing books w/ Thomas Brewer from an upper floor (garret) of his house; used the Latin version of his street address, Vicus Chorali! Published 15-20 bks. before Dutch authorities (due to English ambassador) put them out of business. Occupations: abt 1584 - employed by diplomat William Davison "at (Queen Elizabeth's) Court" - meaning Brewster & Davison were part of grp. that moved w/ the Qn. from 1 palace to another | Brewster, Reverend Elder of the Pilgrim's Church William IV (I942)
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| 136 | Biography Father Hamon Belknap, Esq. b. c 1390, d. 4 Jan 1429 Mother Joan Boteler b. b 21 Sep 1398, d. b 1473 Elizabeth Belknap was born circa 1416 at of Seintlyngein St. Mary Cray, Kent, Knell, Sussex, England. She married Sir William Ferrers, 7th Baron Ferrers of Chartley, son of Sir Edmund Ferrers, 6th Baron Chartley and Ellen de la Roche, circa 1437. They had 1 daughter (Anne, wife of Sir Walter Devereux). Elizabeth Belknap died on 28 May 1471. Family Sir William Ferrers, 7th Baron Ferrers of Chartley b. c 1412, d. 9 Jun 1450 Child 1.) Anne Ferrers b. Nov 1438, d. 9 Jan 1469 __________________________________________________ Elizabeth Ferrers, William’s widow gave the rights of the Castle Bromwich to the Archbishop of Canterbury, Cardinal Thomas Bourchier in 1455 - the king was still Henry VI. | Belknap, Baroness of Chartley Elizabeth (I832)
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| 137 | BIOGRAPHY: The Barretts were established in Concord with the arrival of Humphrey Barrett and his wife Mary from England around 1640. His son Humphrey (b. 1630) left two sons, Joseph and Benjamin, at his death in 1715. Joseph’s descendents included a son, John, and a great-grandson, Joel. Benjamin had eight children, including Thomas and James. Thomas (1707-1779) was a farmer who later became a church deacon. Col. James Barrett (1710-1779) served as Concord’s representative to the General Court in Boston from 1768-1777, and was a well-known Revolutionary leader in Concord. Thomas’s son Samuel (1749-1804) continued to acquire land in Concord (while brothers Charles and Amos left Concord for other towns), and Samuel’s son Samuel Barrett (1773-1825) had a gristmill in Concord - hence the present-day "Barretts Mill Road". One of Col. James Barrett’s sons, Nathan (1735-1791), had many children, including Nathan, Ephraim, Susanna and William. Stephen (1750-1829), another of Col. James Barrett’s sons, was the father of Sally and Cyrus Barrett. | Barrett, Richard (I765)
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| 138 | Birth: Dec. 13, 1822 Cherry Valley Otsego County New York, USA Death: 1917 New Lisbon Juneau County Wisconsin, USA Information from her Obituary - taken from Times Argus of 1/11//1917: BREWSTER:-Charlotte Rhines was born in Cherry Valley, N. York, Dec 13, 1822 of English German parentage. In 1835 she came to Chicago with her father's family to join her oldest brother who was one of the town's first business men. August 4, 1839, she was married to John Brewster who came from Pennsylvania. Between 1844 and 1847 , she lived near Green Bay then called Navariono. Feb 23, 1853 she reached the farm near New Lisbon where she lived twenty years. The P.O. address for a time was Mill Haven, Adams County. There for the third time in her life, she faced pioneer conditions and there the Civil War took from her the son Daniel who rests in the Gov't Cemetery at Mound City , Pulaski, Illinois. ( Mound City National Cemetery Find a Grave 22911779) In 1873 she came to live in New Lisbon, until her death. Her life among us has been an open book and needs no reviewing here. She kept her mind and affections fresh and keen, never forgetting a friend or losing interest in the things of the present. For seventeen years she had been the only surviving member of her father's family and for several years the last constituent member of the Baptist Church. A cold resulting in pneumonion brought a close to her earthly career and on the evening of Jan. 5, 1917, she went "Home". Funeral services were held in the Baptist Church last Monday afternoon, Rev. Mr Preston officiating. A large number of friends were present and there were many beautiful floral tributes abou the bier.Out of town relatives who attended the obsequies were her son Judd Brewster of Duluth, his son John of Minneapolis and Jos. Gibson Jr. of Beloit. The New Lisbon Times-Argus extends its sincere sympathy to the family. **************************************** Her children: Daniel, Roxana, Mary Jane, Judson "Judd", Henry Webb, and Lillian Louise. Family links: Parents: Henry W. Rhines (1784 - 1847) Spouse: John Brewster (1807 - 1881) Children: Daniel Brewster (____ - 1864)* Daniel Brewster (1843 - 1864)* Roxanna Brewster Curtis (1846 - 1934)* Mary Jane Brewster (1848 - 1925)* Judd Brewster (1851 - 1942)* Henry Webb Brewster (1853 - 1923)* Lillian L Brewster Gibson (1862 - 1898)* Siblings: Henry W. Rhines (1808 - 1852)* Eliza Ann Rhines Russell (1816 - 1892)* Charlotte Rhines Brewster (1822 - 1917) Dolly Mariah Rhines Coffin (1822 - 1897)* *Calculated relationship Burial: Unknown | Rhines, Charlotte (I982)
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| 139 | Birth: Sep. 2, 1807 Wysox Bradford County Pennsylvania, USA Death: Apr. 8, 1881 New Lisbon Juneau County Wisconsin, USA John Brewster was the son of Daniel Brewster and Roxanna Beeman. He was called Deacon John Brewster. He married Charlotte Rhines . His occupation was farming. They had six children.The children were Daniel, Roxanna, Mary Jane, Judd, Henry W, and Lillian L. Brewster. Family links: Parents: Daniel Brewster (1778 - 1871) Roxania Beeman Brewster (1788 - 1870) Spouse: Charlotte Rhines Brewster (1822 - 1917)* Children: Daniel Brewster (____ - 1864)* Daniel Brewster (1843 - 1864)* Roxanna Brewster Curtis (1846 - 1934)* Mary Jane Brewster (1848 - 1925)* Judd Brewster (1851 - 1942)* Henry Webb Brewster (1853 - 1923)* Lillian L Brewster Gibson (1862 - 1898)* Siblings: John Brewster (1807 - 1881) Horatio Nelson Brewster (1809 - 1877)* Parmela Brewster Coleman (1812 - 1888)* Sally Tanner Brewster Lee (1814 - 1900)* Jane Brewster Woodruff (1817 - 1880)* Eldad Brewster (1822 - 1907)* Philander Stevens Brewster (1830 - 1904)* *Calculated relationship Inscription: On the monument- We have a building of God A house not made with hands Stepping into the heavens. Father footstone Burial: New Lisbon City Cemetery New Lisbon Juneau County Wisconsin, USA | Brewster, Deacon John (I973)
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| 140 | Birth: 1660 Death: Mar. 11, 1723 Family links: Children: George Booth (1696 - 1713)* *Calculated relationship Inscription: Here lyes Ye Body of Cap't William Booth Who Dec'd March ye 11 1723 in ye 63d Year. | Booth, Captain William (I827)
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| 141 | Block 36 | Levin, Gertrude Doris (I2336)
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| 142 | Block 40 | Dim, Jennie (I2372)
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| 143 | Block 61 Section 2 Plot 5 | Dittenhoefer, Louis (I672)
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| 144 | Bond # 118755 | Family: Benton, James Morris / Pierman, Mary Jane (F880)
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| 145 | Book 1296, Page 265 | Family: Lewis, Harold Milton / Berg, Emma (F622)
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| 146 | Book 1654 Page 71 | Family: Hofheimer, Robert Gerst / Selig, Martha S (F618)
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| 147 | Book states that Daniel was the 3rd son of Joseph & Abigail Foster. That he had 9 children all born in Southampton and that all lived there. | Foster, Daniel Sr. (I582)
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| 148 | Brewster family (William is in hiding in England) leave for Delft to board Speedwell for trip to America | Wentworth, Mary Love (I994)
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| 149 | Brian Jay Alschuler, Donald I Alschuler, Donald J Alschuler, Melanie J Alschuler, Trina L Alschuler | Alschuler, Donald Jay (I586)
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| 150 | Brian Jay was born on October 20, 1960 in Los Angeles County, California, USA as Brian Jay Alschuler. He was an actor, known for Girls Just Want to Have Fun (1985), The Finishing Touch (1992) and Diagnosis Murder (1993). He died on July 19, 1995 in Los Angeles, California | Alschuler, Brian Jay (I1012)
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