Notes


Matches 1,001 to 1,050 of 1,971

      «Prev «1 ... 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 ... 40» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
1001 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I402)
 
1002 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I432)
 
1003 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I299)
 
1004 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1)
 
1005 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I8)
 
1006 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I12)
 
1007 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I496)
 
1008 PostalCode: 93552-3219; StreetAddress: 38140 53rd St E; PostalCode: 90404-3421 (1992); StreetAddress: 1524 17th St Apt 6; PostalCode: 92835 (1994); StreetAddress: 632 E Imperial C Hy; Age: 56 Banks, Peter Allen (I15)
 
1009 Presbyterian Church Records Family: Horton, Deacon Jonathan A / Goldsmith, Mary (F655)
 
1010 preserved in the Museum, it appears that. in the time of Henry II. the Bayntun*were knights of St. John of Jerusalem. Sir Henry Bayntun was knight marshal to tar king, an office of high authority in those dsi#. and his second son, Henry, a knight of Sl John, was slain in Bretagne in 1201. Trmj> Henry IV. Sir Henry Bayntun taking par; with the Earl of Northumberland, was beheaded at Berwick; and in 1471, Sir Robert Bayntun fought against the king il Tewkesbury, was made prisoner, and attainted. The Bay ntuns were long sealed it Falston, in Wiltshire; but upon thedenuw of Richard Beauchamp, Lord St. Amaad. John Bayntun, esq. (son of the attaiatH Sir Robert Bayntun*), who was his coan and heir, removed to Brombam, anciently tar seat of the Roches. This John Baynnrs who was restored in blood 19 Henry VU Bayntun, Sir Ralph III (I863)
 
1011 PRINCES of NORTHERN POWYS GRUFFYDD ap Madog Maelor, son of MADOG ap Maredudd Prince of Powys & his wife Susanna of Gwynedd (-1191, bur Meivod). The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Gruffudd Maelor king of Powys" died in 1191 and was buried "in Meivod" [689]. Prince of Northern Powys (Fadog). Married ANGHARAD of Gwynedd, illegitimate daughter of OWAIN Gwynedd King of Gwynedd & his mistress ---. Gruffydd & his wife had two children: 1. MADOG (-1236, bur Llanegwestl). He succeeded his father in 1191 as Prince of Northern Powys. The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Madog son of Gruffudd Maelor died and was…buried in the monastery of Llanegwestl which he had previously founded" in 1236 [690]. m ISOTA, daughter of ---. Madog & his wife had six children: a) GRUFFYDD Maelor [II] (-1269, bur Llanegwestl). He succeeded his father in 1236 as Prince of Northern Powys. The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Gruffudd son of Madog lord of Maelor and Madog the Little his brother" died in 1269 "and were buried at Llanegwestl" [691]. m as her second husband, EMMA de Audley, widow of HENRY Touchet, daughter of HENRY de Audley & his wife Bertred Mainwaring. Gruffydd & his wife had five children: i) MADOG (-1277). ii) LLYWELYN . iii) OWAIN . iv) GRUFFYDD Fychan/junior (-1289). m ---. The name of Gruffydd´s wife is not known. Gruffydd & his wife had one child: (a) MADOG Crippil (-[1304]). - see below. v) ANGHARAD . 1308. m (after 1261) WILLIAM Le Botiler of Wem, Shropshire (-1283). b) GRUFFYDD . c) MAREDUDD . d) HYWEL . e) MADOG (-1269, bur Llanegwestl). The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Gruffudd son of Madog lord of Maelor and Madog the Little his brother" died in 1269 "and were buried at Llanegwestl" [692]. f) ANGHARAD . A letter from "W. de Lascy" to Hubert de Burgh, Justiciar, dated to [1226] urges him to bring forward the marriage of "Angaretham filiam Maddoci filii Griffini neptem meam" and "Fulconem filium Fulconis filii Warini" [693]. The precise relationship between Angharad and Walter de Lacy Lord of Meath has not yet been ascertained. The primary source which confirms that the marriage took place has not yet been identified. Betrothed ([1226]) to FULK Fitzwarin, son of FULK FitzWarin [II] & his wife Hawise de Dinan (-[Oct 1250/1251]). 2. OWAIN (-1197). The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Owain son of Gruffudd Maelor" died in 1197 [694]. From: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/WALES.htm#_Toc111998309 Gruffudd, Angharad Verch (I905)
 
1012 priv. in 10th Conn. Volunteers, Civil War; wounded at Roanoke NC Foote, Samuel Edmund (I1343)
 
1013 probably stayed with Robinsons (with sister, Patience) when parents & youngest brothers left for America Brewster, Fear (I999)
 
1014 Record Number 278287 Family: Shroder, Ralph Sigmond / Ackerman, Emmaline (F823)
 
1015 REGIMENT NAME: 194th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry (100 days, 1864)
SIDE: Union:
COMPANY: A
SOLDIER'S RANK IN: Private
SOLDIER'S RANK OUT: Private
ALTERNATE NAME: Simon P./Myers
FILM NUMBER: M554 roll 84
NOTES: Original filed under Simon P./Myers
PLAQUE NUMBER

UNION PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS
194th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry (100 days, 1864)

OVERVIEW: Organized at Harrisburg for 100 days July 22, 1864. Moved to Baltimore, Md., July 22, and provost duty there till November. Attached to 3rd Separate Brigade, 8th Corps, Middle Department. Mustered out November 6, 1864.

Regiment lost 2 by disease.
SOLDIERS:View Regiment's Soldiers »

Bio of MEYERS, Simon (b.1862), Hennepin Co., MN
Made available to The USGenWeb Archives by: Laura Pruden
Submitted: June 2003
========================================================
EXTRACTED FROM: History of Minneapolis, Gateway to the Northwest;
Chicago-Minneapolis, The S J Clarke Publishing Co, 1923; Edited by: Rev.
Marion Daniel Shutter, D.D., LL.D.; Volume I - Shutter (Historical);
volume II - Biographical; volume III - Biographical
========================================================
Vol II, pg 277-278
SIMON MEYERS
Simon Meyers, who has been an active representative of the Minneapolis bar for almost four decades, is widely recognized as one of the able and learned lawyers of the city and has long enjoyed an enviable reputation among his professional colleagues and contemporaries. His birth occurred in Syracuse, New York, on the 14th of May, 1862, his parents being Henry and Fannie (Hamburger) Meyers, both of whom were natives of Germany. It was in the early '40s that they crossed the Atlantic to the United States, first settling in New York City and later in Syracuse, where the father engaged in the tanning business. In 1870 they removed to Albany, New York, where Mr. Meyers passed away in 1878, while his wife, who survived him for two decades, was called to her final rest in 1898. Simon Meyers obtained his education in the public schools of Syracuse and of Albany, New York, and then took up the study of law in the office of Newcomb & Bailey in the latter city. On attaining his majority he took the state bar examination and was admitted to practice at Binghamton, New York, in 1883.

Feeling that the west offered greater opportunities to the young lawyer, he came to Minneapolis in the same year, was admitted to the Minnesota bar on motion and has engaged in practice here throughout the intervening period of thirty-nine years, during which he has built up an extensive and important clientage. His knowledge of the principles of jurisprudence is comprehensive and exact and the court records bear testimony to the many favorable verdicts he has won. He has also become identified with the business interests of this city as vice president of the Cedar Lake Ice Company. In 1892, in Minneapolis, Mr. Meyers was united in marriage to Miss Minnie Ditten-hoefer, a daughter of one of the old and honored families of New York State, her mother and family having taken up their abode in Minneapolis after the father's death.

Mr. and Mrs. Meyers are the parents of a son and a daughter. Henry L., who enlisted for service in the World war with the Eighty-eighth Division, attended the Officers Training School at Camp Lee and was commissioned a second lieutenant. He is still a member of the Reserves. Ruth V., the daughter, was actively engaged in Red Cross work, in which her mother also took a helpful part, being a director of the local organization. Mr. Meyers acted as one of the Four-Minute speakers in connection with the Liberty Loan and Red Cross campaigns, so that the family may be said to have rendered one hundred per cent service to the government in the country's critical hour. In politics Mr. Meyers is a staunch republican and in 1897 was sent to the state legislature, where he made a most creditable record, giving thoughtful and earnest consideration to all the vital questions which came up for settlement. In 1913 he served as a member of the charter commission and he has long been numbered among the public-spirited and enterprising citizens of Minneapolis whose influence is ever found on the side of progress, improvement and up building. Golf and fishing afford him pleasurable recreation when opportunity permits, but the demands of his practice leave him comparatively little leisure. 
Meyers, Simon P (I255)
 
1016 Registration Number - 58879 Family: Greenblatt, Henry Garyjoel / Mastey, Jacqueline Josiane (F737)
 
1017 Registration Number: 557 Family: Hallock, Sherwood Harrison / Hubbard, Harriet (F59)
 
1018 Registration Number: 1882 Family: Tuthill, Harry Edward / Tuttle, Laura May (F840)
 
1019 Reported to be one of the founders of Newark. Newark deputy to the General Court of the Province of New Jersey. Huntington, Thomas (I780)
 
1020 Research has showin that Isaac was born Abraham. Bank, Abraham (I1762)
 
1021 Rev. John John Eliot, pastor of the church at Roxbury, Mass.: "Margaret Huntington, widow, came in 1633. Her husband [Simon Huntington I] died by the way of smallpox. Shrought children with her." She married (1) Simon Huntington in England on May 11, 1623, and (2) Thomas Stoughton of Dorchester in 1635-6 and removed to Windsor, Conn. where he was prominent in public affairs. "New England families, genealogical and memorial: a record of the..." Vol. 3 by Cutter.
The Rev. John Eliot, pastor of the church at Roxbury, Massachusetts, recorded as follows: "Margaret Huntington, widow, came in 1633. Her husband died by the way of smallpox. She brought children with her." She married, 1635-36, Thomas Stoughton, of Dorchester, Massachusetts, and removed to Windsor, Connecticut, where her husband was a deputy several times from that town to the general court, and prominent in all public affairs. Children of Simon and Margaret (Baret) Huntington: William, Thomas, Christopher, Simon, Ann. Margaret Barrett was daughter of Christopher Barrett, mayor of Norwich in 1634. In 1649 her brother Peter Barrett wrote to her son Christopher regarding a legacy due to "yourself [Christopher], Symon, Thomas and Ann" from their grandfather. In 1671 another of her brothers, Thomas Barrett, spoke of his sister "Margaret who married to one Symond Huntington who carried her to New England & had several children by her; but we can give no account of her or them, yet think that she & several of her children are living there" [Hale, House 648, citing Joseph James Muskett, Suffolk Manorial Families, 3 vols. (Exeter 1900-1914), 2:153-60]. (This information and much more, including the known Barrett pedigree and a dismissal of the proposed Huntington English pedigree, were published by Jacobus in 1952, the best account available of the immigrant family, lacking only the Norwich parish register entries [Hale, House 647-51].) In December 1634 James Cudworth wrote to his stepfather Dr. John Stoughton to report that "my uncles [Thomas and Israel Stoughton] ... are both in good health, and my uncle Thomas is to be married shortly, to a widow that has good means and has five children" [NEHGR 14:104]. Was there a fifth child who made the voyage in 1633, or was Cudworth somehow counting the deceased Henry, or was he simply wrong about the number of children the widow would bring with her at marriage? The latter seems the most likely solution, since, barring multiple births, there hardly seems room for another child born between 1623 and 1633, unless perhaps Margaret was pregnant in 1633 and bore a child after arrival in New England. The chronology is already squeezed, since Christopher must be the eldest child, and placing two children in the five year gap between Christopher and Simon does not allow the usual two year span between surviving children. Whatever the solution, we know from the 1649 letter of Margaret's brother that only four children were alive in that year. 
Barrett, Margaret (I773)
 
1022 Rev. John Moore, the founder of this branch of the family, was of English birth Moore, John (I257)
 
1023 Revolutionary War, Civil Service, Patriotic Service, DAR Ancestor #A014183 (Signed Articles of Association, 1775) Brewster, John (I39)
 
1024 Richard was the 3rd of 4 children born to Joseph Blydenburgh (1664-1740) and Mary Smith (Abt 1674-1699). He married Mary Brewster (1708-1767) abt 1727 in Smithtown, New York. They had 9 children: William, Benjamin, Mary, Samuel, Abigail, Alma, Richard, another Samuel and John. Blydenburgh, Richard (I951)
 
1025 Rio de Janeiro Brazil, Immigration Cards, 1900-1965". FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2013. Index entries derived from digital copies of original and compiled records. Source (S104)
 
1026 Role:  Schifferes, Charlotte Elsa (I2327)
 
1027 Role: Boarder Meyers, Henry Louis (I262)
 
1028 Role: Boarder Rosen, Charles (I2413)
 
1029 Role: Brother Meyers, Simon P (I255)
 
1030 Role: Brother Porter, Corporal Finley Robertson Jr (I1870)
 
1031 Role: Cousin Bank, Goodman (I2287)
 
1032 Role: Cousin Bank, Max Allen (I2288)
 
1033 Role: Daughter Banks, Phyllis Elaine (I16)
 
1034 Role: Daughter Banks, Joan Ellen (I13)
 
1035 Role: Daughter Banks, Phyllis Elaine (I16)
 
1036 Role: Daughter Banks, Phyllis Elaine (I16)
 
1037 Role: Daughter Banks, Joan Ellen (I13)
 
1038 Role: Daughter Bank, Barbara Ann (I1523)
 
1039 Role: Daughter Bank, Betty (I1524)
 
1040 Role: Daughter Brewster, Mary Eliza (I44)
 
1041 Role: Daughter Brewster, Harriet Millicent (I36)
 
1042 Role: Daughter Brewster, Lydia Halsey (I1868)
 
1043 Role: Daughter Brewster, Mary Eliza (I44)
 
1044 Role: Daughter Brewster, Harriet Millicent (I36)
 
1045 Role: Daughter Brewster, Lydia Halsey (I1868)
 
1046 Role: Daughter Brewster, Mary Eliza (I44)
 
1047 Role: Daughter Halsey, Elizabeth (I2285)
 
1048 Role: Daughter Halsey, Mary Cornelia (I2284)
 
1049 Role: Daughter Halsey, Annie Millicent (I168)
 
1050 Role: Daughter Halsey, Mary Cynthia (I184)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 ... 40» Next»