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    Notes


    Tree:  

    Matches 1,801 to 1,850 of 4,783

          «Prev «1 ... 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 ... 96» Next»

     #   Notes   Linked to 
    1801 8. Isaac - 1/20/1806 - 5/2/1876 m. Ann Sipley - 1811-1895 Savercool, Julia Ann or Julianne (I2388)
     
    1802 8. There lies a child to John & Sarah Snover, Born Oct 25 1793 & died Feb 10 1794 age 3 mos & 15 days Snover, Frederick (I6807)
     
    1803 8AGB. Joanna Cornell, daughter of Enoch and Mary (Sipes) Cornell, married Daniel Wintermute (b. 1810, d. 1873, son of Jacob Wintermute and DorothyYoung). Cornell, Joanna (I3830)
     
    1804 9 children THOMAS, Jacob Rutter (I2957)
     
    1805 9 children THOMAS, Joseph Potts (I2960)
     
    1806 ==================================== Kinney, Frederick M. (I10709)
     
    1807 ? MN Death Index #1150923
    Name: Edward Maykowski
    Death Date: 2 Apr 1951
    Death County: Ramsey
    State file number: 025380
    Certificate Number: 025380
    Certificate Year: 1951 
    Maykowsky, Edward George (I3445)
     
    1808 ?1? Jan 181?4? Wintermute, George (I816)
     
    1809 ?A? Wintermute Wintermute, George (I816)
     
    1810 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I13652)
     
    1811 ?Death: 23 June 1985 in Barefoot Bay, Indian River, Florida.
    ? Occupation: Chevrolet Motor Division- General Motors
    ? Military: bet. 07 January 1941 and 17 March 1946 U. S. Army- WWll And Korea
    ? Burial: Great Lakes National Cemetery (Section 4, Site 343), Holly, Oakland, Michigan
     
    DOAN, WESLEY WILLIAM (I13653)
     
    1812 A family Bible indicates George was born in 1883. His death certificate indicates 1882. Dennis, George Nobel (I13429)
     
    1813 A family picture likely taken late 1880's shows Abram and Elizabeth with 7 sons and 2 daughters (Missing one son and 2 daughters.) Kilmer, Elizabeth (I326)
     
    1814 A Johannes Hendricus Hover b. 1705 came to Philadelphia n 1735 and settled in Smithfield, PA before 1742. This was on the west side of the Delaware River in present Monroe County, Pennsylvania and only a few miles from the Huber, Maria Juliana (I1311)
     
    1815 A land petition from him dated 9 July 1795 [W3:137] states that he served in Butler's Rangers as a corporal and that he has a family consisting of five children. No mention was made of a wife. The following certificate of J. Ball, J.P., on
    file with the petition, indicates a second marriage for John. "Newark, 20 March 1797. I do hereby certify that corporal John Wintermute served in Butler's Rangers during the was; that he had a family before the year 1789 consisting of a wife
    and eight children; that his wife is the daughter of a Loyalist Hannah Lybs who came in the year 1778". 
    Wintemute, John\Johannes (I1309)
     
    1816 A letter from Sarah Forsyth to "brother & sister" dtd. 13 April 1873, which states in part "Louisa and family are about the same as usual. John Anthony has not carried on quite so bad since he came out of prison. I suppose you heard that
    Louisa had him sent to jail for abuse to her, he was sent up for 2 months but they took him out at the expiration of one month because his mother took on so about it."  
    Misener, Sarah (I14245)
     
    1817 A newspaper clipping about their 50th wedding anniversery reads: LEWIS, Thomas Jefferson (I171)
     
    1818 A picnic dinner was given at noon for the immediate family on the Argyl Lewis lawn. The Lewises held open house from 3 to 6 p.m. at which time many wellwishers dropped in to visit. LEWIS, Thomas Jefferson (I171)
     
    1819 a widow Hamton, Rachel Moore (I2989)
     
    1820 About Mary's parents: Read, Mary (I16703)
     
    1821 Abraham lived in Middlesex Co, Ont. DOAN, ABRAHAM (I13307)
     
    1822 Abraham petitioned for land in 1844 and received as a free grant the West ½ of Lot 22 Concession 9 Bayham Township Elgin County He must have sold the land shortly thereafter as he purchased from the Crown the South ½ of Lot 23 Concession 12
    Dereham Township Oxford County in April 1846. 
    Wintemute, Abraham (I3854)
     
    1823 Abraham was baptized in the Dutch Reform Church, Kingston, Ulster County, NY on October 29, 1699, Record # 1118. Abraham’s parents were Marinus Van Aken and Pieternelle De Pre who were married in Cadzand, Holland on April 11, 1683. Van Auken, Abraham (I12967)
     
    1824 abstract of will: Snover, Johannes Heinrich "Henry" (I6853)
     
    1825 According to Aunt Mildred Wolfe, " Miles married a Beulah somebody and they had two girls, Doris and Eleanor, one became a missionary. PUCKETT, Miles Jerold (I99)
     
    1826 According to 1901 cenus I find cora J Kennedy in Ridgeway Ontario. Anthony, Cora J (I14250)
     
    1827 According to a letter written by his father, James died of acute alcoho Snover, James Simpson (I10636)
     
    1828 According to Aunt Mildred Wolfe, I remember good stories about Uncle John's skill in psyching out a bargin and making money. 1) He went to visit Leonidas in San Francisco once for about a month. Couldn't find an apartment to rent so bought a house. Sold it a month or so later at a very nice profit. 2) One night after midnight someone came ringing his bell(in Lincoln). It was a farmer with a load of watermellons. He'd tried all day to sell them to some grocery and had to get going.
    He knew Uncle John so came to him. Uncle John bought them and sold them the next day at a roadside stand-at a nice profit again. 3) One day he was riding in a train (from Lincoln to Indianola or something). About Grand Island he looked out the
    window and there dumped along the track was a woole pile of what looked like good lumber. He got off the train at Grand Island, found out that the lumber had been dumped after a wreck or something, bought it for a pittance, and trucked it off
    somewhere and sold it - nice profit again! You can see that I was greatly impressed by "nice profit." 
    PUCKETT, John Campbell (I97)
     
    1829 According to Dona Wilson Johnson, Sally, Richard's stepmother who raised him, left him the family farm when she died in 1900. In 1904, he sold the farm and moved the family to Nebraska. Stella remembered that when Richard moved the family ,he sold all of her grandmother's beautiful Haviland China among other things. Stella always refered to the farm as her grandmother's plantation. She said they had slaves who stayed with them even after they were freed in 1865. YOUNGER, Richard (I303)
     
    1830 According to Dona Wilson Johnson, Ora's neice: " (Ora and Oscar) were on their way to visit old friends, the Gates, in Roberts, ID. They lived in Roberts, ID for about 20 years where Oscar managed the Gates Lumber Yard. They followed Stella
    and Earl Wilson to Martinez, CA , where they lived until Ora died. Oscar had an "Associated" gas station and Ora ran a lunch and breakfast counter next door. (Dona) remembers their house. It was made out of dark brown logs. They had a brisk
    business there during the Second World War. After the war they sold their business and took the trip to Idaho mentioned above. After Ora's death, Oscar remarried and moved to Fresno, CA where he ran a small grocery store until his death in
    1954. He and Ora are buried together in Berkeley, CA. They had no children. 
    YOUNGER, Ora (I319)
     
    1831 According to Dona Wilson Johnson, Oscar was 30 when he married Ora in 1911. JOHNSON, Oscar W. (I320)
     
    1832 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I832)
     
    1833 According to Garry Bryant, John served in the Revolution under Col. Daniel Morgan, 1776-1779. He married Mary Sanders in 1783 and moved to Shelby Co. , Ky in the late 1780's. STRAUGHAN, John (I359)
     
    1834 According to Garry Bryant, Jojn served in the War of 1812. STRAUGHAN, John (I358)
     
    1835 According to his niece, Myrna Speer, Richard died in a B29 crash while testing planes and training to be part of the crew to drop the Atomic Bomb on Japan in 1945. Snow, Richard Oliver (I17168)
     
    1836 According to Ina Wolfe, Allen Puckett was ostracized by his family after he chose to not become a priest. PUCKETT, Allen N. (I27)
     
    1837 According to information received from the Blair Society for Genealogival Research: BLAIR, John (I1631)
     
    1838 According to Laura B. Grover:

    "There was a child, Marcellus Moss living with William Stanley Jones and Cornelia Falconis Westbrok in the 1870 census. According to Laura B. Grover:

    "The child Marcellus was the illegitimate son of my great grandfather, Robert Henry Westbrook. He was not married at the time of the boy’s birth and the Jones family took Marcellus to raise because Cornelia was Robert Henry’s sister. I found documentation to this effect in the probate records of William S. Jones in NC a couple of years ago when I went to the archives to do research. Marcellus apparently only lived with Cornelia and William. I believe his mother was a Morris. There was no bastardy bond required to be filed because the child was not taking money or support from the parish. He eventually married and had children. I looked at his death certificate and it does not give the name of his mother or father. Says unknown in both places."
     
    Morris, Marcellus Scott (I6236)
     
    1839 According to Leta, Charlie and Lizzie adopted Frank at the age of two, after a fire left him and about seven siblings without a mother. RAWSON, Frank Garret (I1130)
     
    1840 According to Mary Adelia's great great niece, Jean Slinghuff: "Aunt Delia (as my Mother called her) was the one killed in an accident when the bridge they were crossing broke. My grandparents were with them huckleberry picking."

    Jean -> her mother,Alta and Uncle Paul Ward -> her grandparents were Willis and Leona Ward. Willis was the brother to Nellie, Nora, Frank, and Mary Adelia Ward. --from an email, February 2009 
    Family F1071
     
    1841 According to Mom (Ina Wolfe Lewis), Mama Deats was so predjuced that she wouldn't even walk past a black person's house. She would go out of her way to walk down another street. YOUNGER, Sarah Lillian (Lillie) (I227)
     
    1842 According to Richard R. Kilmer: Charles Kilmer's first wife, (Estella Francis Ross) and youngest daughter (Elizabeth Lydia Kilmer), were killed in a flash flood in Wyoming. After working in a migrant camp in California, Charles moved to Wisconsin and married Emma Paulina Ottilie Piskey. Family F10302
     
    1843 According to the 1900 Census, his father was born in New York and his mother in Germany. Friedley, Abner M. (I15335)
     
    1844 According to the 1900 Census, Martha was widowed and living with her son William. Her three youngest children were also with them. Martha's parents were listed as born in Virginia Family F2520
     
    1845 According to the census, he was Fred Junior and both parents were born in Germany. His occupation lists "own income," while Scott's occupation is "farm labor" in the 1910 census. HEINZMAN, Fred C. Jr. (I398)
     
    1846 According to the Highland Cemetery records, Carrie's headstone reads, "Carrie W. Lewis b,7 Dec 1873 d. 20 Nov 1967.

    This makes more sense because I have snapshot photos of me (Rebecca Yvonne Lewis) with my family and Grandma Carrie. I also remember visiting her in the nursing home when she was blind and suffering from some sort of dementia. she couldn't remember her child, grandpa Leslie, or her grandchildren. My dad was quite adament about trying to help her remember him. 
    LEWIS, Thomas Jefferson (I171)
     
    1847 According to Uncle John Wolfe, he was killed in a motorcycle accident probably about 1930. His son, Bobby Third he was called, died of disease as a young boy. There were two girls in the family. One visited the Wolfe's in McCook. THOMAS, Jr. Robert H. (I84)
     
    1848 According to Uncle John Wolfe, Lucy died in the flu in the great epidemic of 1918, never married. THOMAS, Lucy H. (I85)
     
    1849 According to Uncle John Wolfe, there were 10 or 12 Thomas graves of children in the cemetery at Indianola, Nebraska. He also says, Grandmother praticed abortion. When dying she asked Mother, "Do you think I will go to heaven? " This would be confirmed by the 1900 census where Kate said that she had 11 births, three living.  DUNNING, Kate (I20)
     
    1850 According to Uncle John Wolfe," Uncle John Puckett was a shrewed businessman but he knew his sons could not handle his estate so Dad (Asa Wolfe) did it. Uncle John was also the village water dowser. " PUCKETT, John Campbell (I97)
     

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