Matches 4,701 to 4,800 of 5,951
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
4701 |
Military record 20 y 10 m at Dec 1863 enlistment | Shultz, Charles Albert (I6092)
|
4702 |
Milwaukee Public Library. Milwaukee Vital Records. Call Number: 929.3. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. | Source (S613)
|
4703 |
Mining accident | Caruthers, David Franklin (I5785)
|
4704 |
Minnie Diebel on marr record of son Henry | Family (F2116)
|
4705 |
Minnie MacDonald is in Gramma Osborne's death memorial book as a visitor to her funeral.
| Bowyer, Minnie E (I4805)
|
4706 |
Missouri Marriage Records, Jefferson City, MO, USA: Missouri State Archives | Source (S632)
|
4707 |
Montana, Birth Records, 1860-1988. Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, Helena, Montana. | Source (S960)
|
4708 |
Montana, County Marriage Records, 1865-1967. Montana State Historical Society, Helena, Montana. | Source (S961)
|
4709 |
Montana, Marriage Records, 1943-1988. Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, Helena, Montana. | Source (S962)
|
4710 |
MONTOUR COUNTY, PA BIOGRAPHIES
Chapter XXIII
WEST HEMLOCK TOWNSHIP
From "The History of Columbia and Mountour Counties"
Battle, 1887
V. R. SHULTZ, farmer, P. O. Danville, was born January 13, 1820, in this
township, fourth son of Peter SHULTZ. Jacob SHULTZ, grandfather of our subject,
was a very early settler in this county, and was driven away from his home
several times by the Indians, and forced to take refuge in the fort. To Jacob
and his wife were born the following children: Peggy, Polly, Betsey, Peter,
Jacob, Philip and John, all of whom reared families. Peter, the father of our
subject, and a farmer by occupation, was born in 1789, and came to this county
when a small boy. He married Sarah, daughter of Vincent ROBBINS, and by her had
eight sons and one daughter: William, Jonathan, Jacob, V. R., James B., John K.,
B. F., Peter R. and Mary. Vincent R. SHULTZ was born in what is now West
Hemlock, Montour County, and was reared on the farm until he attained his
majority, when he was married to Elizabeth, daughter of John and Mary (LONG)
COX. After his marriage he located on the farm he now owns, which was covered
with timber and which he has since cleared. Mr. and Mrs. SHULTZ have four
children: Melinda M., wife of henry COOPER, of Derry Township; Sarah C., wife
of Hiram TURNER in Madison Township; Jane, wife of John JOHNSON, of Jerseytown,
and Lloyd C., of this county. Mr. SHULTZ has been a member of the Methodist
Episcopal Church for forty-five years; his wife since she was fourteen years of
age; he has served as class leader. Politically Mr. SHULTZ is a Democrat. Has
been justice of the peace for twenty-five consecutive years; and school
director twenty-one years. ("History of Columbia and Montour Counties
Pennsylvania" Battle - 1887 West Hemlock Township pg. 219)
| Shultz, Vincent R (I4174)
|
4711 |
Monument Cemetery | Britt, Susanna (I5825)
|
4712 |
Moreland Cemetery | Irish, Beatrice (I2686)
|
4713 |
Moreland Cemetery | Irish, William W (I5901)
|
4714 |
Moreland Cemetery | Phelps, Henrietta (I5949)
|
4715 |
MORRIS LOUNSBURY, lumber manufacturer, Mount Vernon, was born in Saltfleet Township, Wentworth County, Nov. 23, 1831, and is a son of William B. and Sarah (Corey) Lounsbury. His father, William B., was born in Queen's County, New Brunswick and came to Canada about 1823, settling in wentworth County. He married Sarah, daughter of Thomas Corey. Their children are Charlotte, Susan A., John, Edward, Harriett, Morris and Sarah. Morris Lounsbury received a common school education, was brought up a farmer, and came to Brant County in 1845. He married, February 9th, 1851, Sarah Ann, born March 3, 1831, daughter of Samuel Tapley, of Brant County. They have a family of six children, viz., William R., born April 9th, 1853, who, on the eve of his marriage to an estimable young lady, was killed in what is known as the Dock Street Building accident, St. John, New Brunswick, May 3, 1879; Elmer T., born January 8th, 1855; Amanda J., born August 5th, 1858, died May 7th, 1876; Lydia A., born May 16th, 1861; Clara, born July 28, 1863; Mary, born June 29, 1866, died October 25th, 1876. Mr. Lounsbury built the mill now run on premises owned by him in Brant County, in 1872. His farm here consists of 75 1/2 Acres, with an additional farm in Burford Township of 400 acres recently purchased; of this 80 acres are under a high state of cultivation, and 250 of valuable primeval forest. He is a member of the Freemasons and of the A.O.U.W., is a Justice of the Peace, and a member of the Episcopal Methodist Church. Edward Lounsbury, a brother of Morris, has been for several years a prominent minister of the above church, and has filled all the official positions of that church excepting that of bishop. John Lounsbury, the grandfather of our subject, was a native of Brooklyn, N.Y., where he married Charlotte Dingy, a native of New York. In 1791 they emigrated to St. John, N.B., and afterwards located in Queen's County, N.B., where he died at the age of 59 years. His wife lived to reach the age of 88 years. they had a family of eight children- three boys and five girls.
Page 579 and Part of 580 On-line biography from http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~onbrant/biosbran1.htm:
| Lounsbury, Morris (I2747)
|
4716 |
Most likely 4 Mar 1689/90-see comments p170 | Morse, Joseph (I7290)
|
4717 |
Mother is given as Sarah Davis on death certificate? Some say that his father's mother is Sarah Davis, but I have no citation. | Gibbons, Robert (I6893)
|
4718 |
Mother living with him on 1850 census. | Hutchison, George R (I6621)
|
4719 |
Mountain View Cemetery | Schneider, Johann Georg (I4692)
|
4720 |
Mountain View Cemetery | Felsing, Anna Barbara (I5010)
|
4721 |
Moved to Lebanon in 1696 (Genealogy of the Cowles Family in American, Calvin Cowles)
| Lyman, Richard (I1220)
|
4722 |
Moved to Wersau from Nieder-Kainsbach in 1655 | Friedrich, Leonhard (I3196)
|
4723 |
Mr Ethan L Long, 85
Orlando Sentinel, The (FL) - Thursday, November 19, 1992
ETHAN L. LONG, 85, Chilean Lane, Winter Park, died Tuesday, Nov. 17. Mr. Long was a foreman for Orange State Lumber Company. Born in Midland, Mich., he moved to Central Florida in 1975. He was a member of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Survivors: sons, Everette A., Castro Valley, Calif., Calvin L., Elbert L., both of Bradenton, David E., Blackshear, Ga., Basil N., Sarasota, Nelson E., Manchester, Tenn.; daughter, Arleen S. Olson, Winter Park; sister, Belvah M. Praay, Midland; 20 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren. Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral Home, Goldenrod. | Long, Ethan Leander (I6991)
|
4724 |
Mr Glen R Phelps
FUNERAL NOTICES
Palm Beach Post, The (FL) - Wednesday, August 14, 1996
Glen R. Phelps, former Sarasota developer and commercial real estate broker, died August 7, 1996 after a long and valiant struggle against heart disease. He was stricken in Louisville, Kentucky while returning from a Colorado vacation with his wife, North Palm Beach attorney Dee Phelps, and his brother, David Phelps of Sarasota. Mr. Phelps is also survived by children, Carrie and Bruce Phelps, Shane Wagner and Shana Wagner Wiltbank, his sister, Patty Louchheim, and his former wife, Dottie Phelps.
Mr. Phelps has many dear friends and other relatives who will miss his quick wit and exuberant optimism. A cum laude graduate of the University of Florida, Mr. Phelps was a life-long learner who was a bright, gentle, honest and fun-loving companion and friend.
A celebration of Glen's life will be held at the home of Susan Bradley, 3220 N. Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, Florida (approximately 1 mile North of Good Samaritan Hospital) on August 17, 1996 at 2 p.m. Dress will be dressy casual. In lieu of flowers, the family asks the remembrances be made to the American Heart Association in hopes that others will not suffer the loss to heart disease of such an honorable husband, father, brother and friend.
publication logo
Palm Beach Post, The (FL) - Wednesday, August 14, 1996 | Phelps, Glen Richard (I6741)
|
4725 |
Msg board post see file | Harris, Electa (I937)
|
4726 |
Msg board post see file | Harris, Electa (I937)
|
4727 |
Msg board post see file | Edwards, Lydia (I2543)
|
4728 |
Msg board post see file | Family (F1534)
|
4729 |
Msg board post see file | Family (F1535)
|
4730 |
Mt Hope Cemetery | Osborne, Lida C (I5873)
|
4731 |
Mt Hope Cemetery | Willard, George (I6153)
|
4732 |
Mt Vernon Cemetery | Demain, Margaret (I2678)
|
4733 |
Mt Zion Cemetery | Shultz, John (I6632)
|
4734 |
Mt. Zion Cemetery, Catawissa | Unknown, Anna M (I5503)
|
4735 |
Much of the information on John Phelps Jr comes from the Phelps Family History book (published 1899) and the Dewey Family History book (published 1898). Since their publication new information has emerged, in particular the Barbour Collection of Early Connecticut birth, marriage and death records (origjnal records on file at the Connecticut Public Library, with various indexes available on-line). Unfortunately, this older information permeates the online family trees causing much confusion and contradiction.
We also know he married Desire Dewey and had children with her. We cannot be certain if Deborah Dewey (who is listed in the Phelps book as his spouse) is a different woman from Desire, or was from an earlier marriage (Deborah is listed in the Dewey book as different from Desire, with a different birth date and different parents). But we now know that according to Connecticut Vital Records that he married Desire Dewey on 16 Jan 1755 and that 10 children were born in Hebron, Ct with John and Desire Phelps listed as the parents on each birth record. | Dewey, Desire (I5813)
|
4736 |
Much of the information on John Phelps Jr comes from the Phelps Family History book (published 1899) and the Dewey Family History book (published 1898). Since their publication new information has emerged, in particular the Barbour Collection of Early Connecticut birth, marriage and death records (origjnal records on file at the Connecticut Public Library, with various indexes available on-line). Unfortunately, this older information permeates the online family trees causing much confusion and contradiction.
We now know based on Connecticut Vital Records he was born 07 Sept 1731, not 27 Sept 1730.
We also know he married Desire Dewey and had children with her. We cannot be certain if Deborah Dewey (who is listed in the Phelps book as his spouse) is a different woman from Desire, or was from an earlier marriage (Deborah is listed in the Dewey book as different from Desire, with a different birth date and different parents). But we now know that according to Connecticut Vital Records that he married Desire Dewey on 16 Jan 1755 and that 10 children were born in Hebron, Ct with John and Desire Phelps listed as the parents on each birth record.
From the Phelps Family History book: John Phelps was a farmer and settled in Hebron, CT, where he died(actually died in Marlborough, 5 miles from Hebron). Served in the Revolutionary War, enlisting in the 4th Connecticut regiment, Col John Durkee, Capt. Hinman's Co. Mar.14, 1777, for three years. Promoted to Sergeant Aug. 27, 1778, discharged Mar. 14,1780, and was for a time under General Sullivan at New York. He soon again reenlisted.
| Phelps, John Jr (I5887)
|
4737 |
Murdered during bank robbery in Bay CIty | Debats, Martin L (I6522)
|
4738 |
Name and birthdate from an online tree. I have not been able to verify that this is the same person.
1920 census he is lsited as a nephew to the head of household, Hiram & Julia Overmire. According to oneworldtree Hirams wife is Julia Bills. The Bills are related to Roy's mother, which could explain the relationship. So this is probably the right person on the 1920 census. His other siblings are all with different people in 1920. His father died in 1916, and his mother died in 1918. (on the 1910 census Roy's father William Schultz is in the next household to Hiram Overmeir)
BEARDSLEY, ROY L.
Spouse's Name: ADELINE WALSH
Married: 05/29/1937
Age: 50
Birth Date: 08/25/1909
Birth Place: QUANICASSEE, MI
Death Date: 10/06/1959
Death Place: SAGINAW, MI
Miscellaneous
Cemetery: FOREST LAWN
Church: LATTER-DAY SAINTS
Funeral Home: CHILSON
Quincassee is in Tuscola County. Gilford is also in Tuscola County
| Beardsley, Roy Lavern (I5329)
|
4739 |
Name appears as Enno and Eno in New England records. It is believed that James Enno is the same person as Jacques Hennot who left London for North America. Hennot was baptized 21 Aug 1625 in London at the Threadneedle Street Church. This was a church used by French Protestants or Huegenots who fled France due to religious persecution in the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. Jacques in English is James. One can see how the French pronunciation of Hennot with more or less silent H and T could sound like the same name that the English speakers would spell Enno or Eno. Jacques was the son of Jean (John) Hennot of London.
"THE ENO FAMILY-NEW YORK BRANCH" published 1920 by Henry Lane Eno shows several generations of ancestry for James Eno and gives sources in French and English records.
James is described as a Huguenot by the Windsor Historical Society at https://windsorhistoricalsociety.org/founders-series-james-eno-huguenot-barber-and-religious-rights-advocate/
| Eno, James (I6226)
|
4740 |
Name appears as parent on Jane Atkinson's death certificate | Atkinson, Henry (I2151)
|
4741 |
Name appears as parent on Jane Atkinson's death certificate | Carr, Ester (I2498)
|
4742 |
Name from daughter's marriage record. Place of birth from daughter's census records. Daughter was born in Chicago. | McLaughlin, Michael (I5872)
|
4743 |
name in father's will | Shultz, Anna Magdalena {Lany} (I6033)
|
4744 |
name in father's will | Shultz, Anna Barbara (I6050)
|
4745 |
name in father's will | Shultz, Eve (I6094)
|
4746 |
name in fathers will | Shultz, Elizabeth (I6075)
|
4747 |
name in fathers will | Shultz, Sarah (I6080)
|
4748 |
Name not listed in the many on-line Phelps Genealogies. Name confirmed on paperwork related to Norman Phelps Jr probate records on file with Washington County, New York. She is listed as Evelina Dickenson, an heir to Norman Phelps Jr. In 1850 she and William Brown are next residence on the Federal Census. In 1870 she is living in Queensbury with Norman Jr and Minerva Phelps and her son Norman.
Family Search Pedigree Resource File shows Salmon Dickenson, son of Samuel and Lydia married Eveline Phillips (b. 1812 Washington County), in Fort Ann on 2 Oct 1853.
Another Pedigree Resource File shows Salmon Dickinson, son of Samuel and Lydia, married Emeline, about 1854. | Phelps, Evelina (I4875)
|
4749 |
name provided by Diane Irish Ward | Romaine, Harriet (I401)
|
4750 |
name reused in 1643 | Morse, Jonathon (I8327)
|
4751 |
Name shows as both Philipp and Philippa. Interestingly, Phillipp was a female name used in East Anglia during that time period. | Ward, Philipp(a) (I7925)
|
4752 |
Name: Jency Linthicum
Sex: Female
Father: Thoman Linthicum
Husband: John Hutcherson
Other information in the record of John Hutcherson
from Virginia Marriages, 1785-1940
Event Type:
Marriage
Event Date:
14 Jan 1799
Event Place:
Pittsylvania, Virginia, United States
Name:
John Hutcherson
Gender:
Male
Spouse's Name:
Jency Linthicum
Spouse's Gender:
Female
Spouse's Father's Name:
Thoman Linthicum
Spouse's Father's Gender:
Male | Hutchison, John Hampton (I6084)
|
4753 |
Name: KLEMM, CHRISTIAN
Spouse's Name: ERMA GROSS
Married: 08/21/1948
Child Of: CHRISTIAN & AMELIA FELSING
Age: 88
Birth Date: 04/22/1923
Birth Place: SAGINAW, MI
Death Date: 05/15/2011
Death Place: SAGINAW, MI
Miscellaneous
Military: WWII US ARMY
Cemetery: OAKWOOD MAUSOLEUM
Misc: RESIDED IN SAGINAW TWP, MI, WORKED AS AN ELECTRICIAN FOR DOW CHEM. CO. FOR 39 YRS RETIRING IN 1981
Church: RESURRECTION LUTHERAN
Funeral Home: SNOW
| Klemm, Christian (I5167)
|
4754 |
named as living in husb. will | Stuart, Ellenor (I6411)
|
4755 |
named in fathers will in 1666 | Pope, Enos (I7917)
|
4756 |
nased on marr date | Chase, Elizabeth (I8360)
|
4757 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I16135)
|
4758 |
Nathaniel Greensmith, Rebecca Greensmith and possibly Mary Barnes, Connecticut “witches”
from:http://www.executedtoday.com/2008/01/25/1662-nathaniel-rebecca-greensmith/
On 25 Jan 1663, a husband and wife were hanged for witchcraft in colonial Connecticut.
Salem, Mass. gets the publicity - and the tourism - but it was actually the Constitution State where the colonies’ first witch hangings took place, only a few years after the earliest European settlements were established.
As in the Old World, witch purges in New England took place episodically. It had been nearly a decade since any (documented) witchcraft execution when the witch-hunt erupted in Hartford that would claim this day’s victims.
The persecutions began with the deathbed ravings of an 8-year-old girl, who accused a certain Goodwife of the town, the latter preserving herself only by escaping detention and fleeing the colony with her husband.
A familiar cycle of indictments, denunciations, and extracted confessions ensued.
The reasons for witch persecutions have been extensively and inconclusively debated. As the indispensable Walking the Berkshires blog observes, “Feuds, gossip, and a culture that demanded conformity to rigid social norms certainly played their part, but these secular explanations are easier for us moderns to accept than the sacred, and the two were inextricably linked in 17th-century New England.” It is achingly pitiable to suppose that when Rebecca Greensmith denounced her husband in her confession, she might have been in earnest:
"I speak all of this out of love to my husband’s soul, and it is much against my will that I am now necessitate to speak against my husband. I desire that the Lord would open his heart to own and speak the truth."
Nathaniel Greensmith did not “own and speak the truth,” but he shared his wife’s fate this day. They may have been executed with a third accused witch as well, but the documentary trail for Mary Barnes’ case seems less certain. Though she, and perhaps another woman, may have been hanged after the Greensmiths in this particular spasm of supernatural paranoia, the Hartford witch trials of 1662-63 would mark the last witchcraft executions in Connecticut.
The Greensmiths left behind 15- and 17-year-old daughters, a modest estate, and community lore of the miraculous post-execution recovery of the party they were supposed to have been afflicting.
Noted colonial pietist Increase Mather would subsequently retail this latter point further to the fraying credibility of witch-hunting:
"After the suspected Witches were either executed or fled, Ann Cole was restored to health, and has continued well for many years, approving her self a serious Christian. The instance of the witch executed at Hartford, considering the circumstances of that confession, is as convictive a proof as most single examples that I have met with." | Greensmith, Nathaniel (I6236)
|
4759 |
Nathaniel Greensmith, Rebecca Greensmith and possibly Mary Barnes, Connecticut “witches”
from:http://www.executedtoday.com/2008/01/25/1662-nathaniel-rebecca-greensmith/
On 25 Jan 1663, a husband and wife were hanged for witchcraft in colonial Connecticut.
Salem, Mass. gets the publicity - and the tourism - but it was actually the Constitution State where the colonies’ first witch hangings took place, only a few years after the earliest European settlements were established.
As in the Old World, witch purges in New England took place episodically. It had been nearly a decade since any (documented) witchcraft execution when the witch-hunt erupted in Hartford that would claim this day’s victims.
The persecutions began with the deathbed ravings of an 8-year-old girl, who accused a certain Goodwife of the town, the latter preserving herself only by escaping detention and fleeing the colony with her husband.
A familiar cycle of indictments, denunciations, and extracted confessions ensued.
The reasons for witch persecutions have been extensively and inconclusively debated. As the indispensable Walking the Berkshires blog observes, “Feuds, gossip, and a culture that demanded conformity to rigid social norms certainly played their part, but these secular explanations are easier for us moderns to accept than the sacred, and the two were inextricably linked in 17th-century New England.” It is achingly pitiable to suppose that when Rebecca Greensmith denounced her husband in her confession, she might have been in earnest:
"I speak all of this out of love to my husband’s soul, and it is much against my will that I am now necessitate to speak against my husband. I desire that the Lord would open his heart to own and speak the truth."
Nathaniel Greensmith did not “own and speak the truth,” but he shared his wife’s fate this day. They may have been executed with a third accused witch as well, but the documentary trail for Mary Barnes’ case seems less certain. Though she, and perhaps another woman, may have been hanged after the Greensmiths in this particular spasm of supernatural paranoia, the Hartford witch trials of 1662-63 would mark the last witchcraft executions in Connecticut.
The Greensmiths left behind 15- and 17-year-old daughters, a modest estate, and community lore of the miraculous post-execution recovery of the party they were supposed to have been afflicting.
Noted colonial pietist Increase Mather would subsequently retail this latter point further to the fraying credibility of witch-hunting:
"After the suspected Witches were either executed or fled, Ann Cole was restored to health, and has continued well for many years, approving her self a serious Christian. The instance of the witch executed at Hartford, considering the circumstances of that confession, is as convictive a proof as most single examples that I have met with."
The widow of Abraham Elsen is mentioned in Abraham's probate as "now the wife of Javis Mudge". (http://archive.org/stream/digestofearlycon00manw#page/8/mode/2up) | Unknown, Rebecca (I6543)
|
4760 |
National Archives and Records Administration. <i>Index to the Compiled Military Service Records for the Volunteer Soldiers Who Served During the War of 1812</i>. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. M602, 234 rolls. | Source (S655)
|
4761 |
National Archives and Records Administration. <i>Michigan State Census, 1894</i>. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. Z74, 4 rolls. | Source (S380)
|
4762 |
National Archives and Records Administration. Electronic Army Serial Number Merged File, 1938-1946 [Archival Database]; ARC: <a href="http://research.archives.gov/description/1263923">1263923</a>. World War II Army Enlistment Records; Records of the National Archives and Records Administration, Record Group 64; National Archives at College Park. College Park, Maryland, U.S.A. | Source (S404)
|
4763 |
National Cemetery Administration. <i>Nationwide Gravesite Locator</i>. | Source (S245)
|
4764 |
National Cemetery Administration. Nationwide Gravesite Locator. | Source (S929)
|
4765 |
National Park Service, Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, online <<a href="http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/" target="_blank">http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/</a>>, acquired 2007. | Source (S418)
|
4766 |
near Lake George | Phelps, Jerome (I5128)
|
4767 |
near Zwolle, Overijssel?? | Lansing (Lansinck)(Lansingh), Gerrit (I7881)
|
4768 |
Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services. Birth Ledgers, 1904-1911. Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services. Lincoln, Nebraska.
Birth Index, 1912-1994. Nebraska State Library and Archives Commission, Lincoln, Nebraska. | Source (S988)
|
4769 |
Nebraska, Marriage Records, 1855-1908. State Library and Archives, Nebraska State Historical Society, Lincoln, Nebraska. | Source (S292)
|
4770 |
nee Carle | Reitz, Margaretha (I794)
|
4771 |
nee Huber | Heinz, Catharina Margaretha (I930)
|
4772 |
NEHGR 1943 Vol 97 P331 notes that genealogist Orra E Monnette gives Martha's maiden name as Adams, daughter of Thomas Adams. But there is no citation. | Adams?, Martha (I6216)
|
4773 |
NEHGS Nexus Corrections to Genealogies in Print Vol. 6 no. 2:
ALFORD/GREENE - In The Greene Family of St. Albans, Vermont, together with the origin and history of The Greene Family in England and Rhode Island, by Walter and Ella Greene (1964), p. 40, the author has a question on the parentage of Susan ALFORD, who married Nathan GREENE: Susan ALFORD is the sister of Rebecca ALFORD who married Alfred HATHAWAY, according to Susan’s affidavit in the Revolutionary War pension application files. On March 17, 1840, Susan GREENE states that she is age 66, living in St. Albans, and a sister of Rebecca Hathaway, whose maiden name was Rebecca Alford. The letter is in the file of Rebecca Hathaway, widow of Alfred Hathaway, applying for pension benefits. Another file, that of George ALFORD, has a letter from Rebecca stating that she is his sister. Additionally, brothers Oliver and Benedict have letters in the George ALFORD file. They are all children of Benedict ALFORD, and Rebecca OWEN is the mother of all but Benedict. Other siblings (but not Susan) are listed in R. D. Owen, Descendents of John Owen of Windsor, Connecticut (1622-1699) (1941), p. 75. Regarding the name “Benedict,” I also had difficulty finding Rebecca Hathaway's father because in Hathtaways of America (1970 edition), p. 185, Rebecca is stated as being the dau. of Olaf ALFORD. Evidently he did not like the name Benedict.
For anyone else related La Alfred & Rebecca (ALFORD) HATHAWAY, I have further corrections to the volume above: Alfred & Rebecca moved to Porter, New York, ca. 1822, where Alfred died in 1829, not to St. Albans as the book states. Also, Rebecca made a pension affidavit in 1844 and was still living in 1850 inPorter, New York, age 88, per the 1850 census, where she is listed in the household of her sister, Pauline (HATHAWAY) Fisher.
Submitted June 9, 1988, by Kathy Beals, 601 Madison, Albany. CA 94706 | Alford, Benedict (I1937)
|
4774 |
NEHGS Nexus Corrections to Genealogies in Print Vol. 6 no. 2:
ALFORD/GREENE - In The Greene Family of St. Albans, Vermont, together with the origin and history of The Greene Family in England and Rhode Island, by Walter and Ella Greene (1964), p. 40, the author has a question on the parentage of Susan ALFORD, who married Nathan GREENE: Susan ALFORD is the sister of Rebecca ALFORD who married Alfred HATHAWAY, according to Susan’s affidavit in the Revolutionary War pension application files. On March 17, 1840, Susan GREENE states that she is age 66, living in St. Albans, and a sister of Rebecca Hathaway, whose maiden name was Rebecca Alford. The letter is in the file of Rebecca Hathaway, widow of Alfred Hathaway, applying for pension benefits. Another file, that of George ALFORD, has a letter from Rebecca stating that she is his sister. Additionally, brothers Oliver and Benedict have letters in the George ALFORD file. They are all children of Benedict ALFORD, and Rebecca OWEN is the mother of all but Benedict. Other siblings (but not Susan) are listed in R. D. Owen, Descendents of John Owen of Windsor, Connecticut (1622-1699) (1941), p. 75. Regarding the name “Benedict,” I also had difficulty finding Rebecca Hathaway's father because in Hathtaways of America (1970 edition), p. 185, Rebecca is stated as being the dau. of Olaf ALFORD. Evidently he did not like the name Benedict.
For anyone else related La Alfred & Rebecca (ALFORD) HATHAWAY, I have further corrections to the volume above: Alfred & Rebecca moved to Porter, New York, ca. 1822, where Alfred died in 1829, not to St. Albans as the book states. Also, Rebecca made a pension affidavit in 1844 and was still living in 1850 inPorter, New York, age 88, per the 1850 census, where she is listed in the household of her sister, Pauline (HATHAWAY) Fisher.
Submitted June 9, 1988, by Kathy Beals, 601 Madison, Albany. CA 94706
| Alford, Susan (I2417)
|
4775 |
Neville-178 | Neville, Eleanor (I7866)
|
4776 |
Neville-58 | Neville, 3rd Baron Neville, John (I7994)
|
4777 |
Neville-59 | Neville, 2nd Baron Neville, Ralph (I7993)
|
4778 |
New England Historic Genealogical Society. The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston: The New England Historic Genealogical Society. | Source (S935)
|
4779 |
New England Historic Genealogical Society. The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston: The New England Historic Genealogical Society. | Source (S285)
|
4780 |
New England Marriages Prior to 1700 | Source (S899)
|
4781 |
New Hampshire death record gives his parents names. Birth date comes from familysearch, there is no source. | Van Orman, Jacob (I15595)
|
4782 |
New Hampshire Department of State. New Hampshire Death Records, 1650-1969. Concord, New Hampshire. The original documents may be seen at the New Hampshire Department of State. | Source (S1171)
|
4783 |
New Hampshire, Marriage Records, 1700-1971. New Hampshire Department of Health, Concord, New Hampshire. | Source (S950)
|
4784 |
New Haven Second Church | Family (F1578)
|
4785 |
New Jersey State Archives. New Jersey, Published Archives Series, First Series. Trenton, New Jersey: John L Murphy Publishing Company. | Source (S139)
|
4786 |
New Jersey State Archives. New Jersey, Published Archives Series, First Series. Trenton, New Jersey: John L Murphy Publishing Company. | Source (S528)
|
4787 |
New Providence Church Cemetery | West, Elizabeth (I6624)
|
4788 |
New York (State), Comptroller's Office. Tax Assessment Rolls of Real and Personal Estates, 1799–1804. Series B0950 (26 reels). Microfilm. New York State Archives, Albany, New York. | Source (S770)
|
4789 |
New York (State), Comptroller's Office. Tax Assessment Rolls of Real and Personal Estates, 1799–1804. Series B0950 (26 reels). Microfilm. New York State Archives, Albany, New York. | Source (S1107)
|
4790 |
New York Census, 1790-1890 | Source (S747)
|
4791 |
New York City Department of Records & Information Services. New York City Death Certificates. The City of New York does not warrant or make any representation as to the quality/content/accuracy or completeness of the information/text graphics/links or other items contained on this website. Commercial use of the materials is prohibited without the written permission of the City of New York. | Source (S845)
|
4792 |
New York City Department of Records & Information Services. New York City Death Certificates. The City of New York does not warrant or make any representation as to the quality/content/accuracy or completeness of the information/text graphics/links or other items contained on this website. Commercial use of the materials is prohibited without the written permission of the City of New York. | Source (S1119)
|
4793 |
New York County, District and Probate Courts. | Source (S628)
|
4794 |
New York State Birth Index, New York State Department of Health, Albany, NY. | Source (S1005)
|
4795 |
New York State Department of Health. Genealogical Research Death Index. Albany, New York. | Source (S1027)
|
4796 |
New York State Marriage Index, New York State Department of Health, Albany, NY. | Source (S1003)
|
4797 |
New York, State Census, 1905. Population Schedules . Various County Clerk Offices, New York. | Source (S1083)
|
4798 |
New York. State Board of Charities. Census of Inmates in Almshouses and Poorhouses, 1835–1921. Series A1978. Microfilm, 225 rolls. New York State Archives, Albany, New York. | Source (S682)
|
4799 |
NEWSPAPER ENTRIES:
10 Sep 1906 Glens Falls NY Daily Times-Letters of Administration were filed in the estate of Jonathan Burgess by Minerva Burgess and Daniel L. Rogers.
PROBATE:
Warren County Probate Packet # 3745 (Imag#e 901 online at familysearch.org). Heirs are as follows:
Minerva Burgess 67 Widow
Amariah 69 brother
Libby Merrill Niece
| Burgess, Jonathon (I5816)
|
4800 |
Newspapers and Periodicals. American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts.
The Digitized Content is licensed from the American Antiquarian Society ("AAS") and may not be reproduced, transferred, commercially or otherwise exploited, in whole or in part, outside the terms and conditions of this service without the express written consent of AAS. All rights reserved. | Source (S607)
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