Matches 2,951 to 3,000 of 4,085
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
2951 |
His father probably had an earlier spouse who was his mother. | Bell, Johannes (I13442)
|
2952 |
His first wife died 1766 or after. The first child with Dorothea born 1767. | Unknown, Dorothea (I2361)
|
2953 |
His mother appears on the transport list next to Jakob Mittelhof, a widower, but on the first settlers list a few months later, Jakob is married to Christina with two children who appear to match with Christina's children, although they are listed as his.
| Fazius, Philip (I2019)
|
2954 |
His mother appears on the transport list next to Jakob Mittelhof, a widower, but on the first settlers list a few months later, Jakob is married to Christina with two children who appear to match with Christina's children, although they are listed as his. | Fazius, Johann Heinrich (I3045)
|
2955 |
his parents names are Unknown per Dr. Pleve. | Krumm, Johann Heinrich (I5271)
|
2956 |
his widow had child in 1791 with Peter Debus | Felsing, Johannes (I1407)
|
2957 |
his widow remarried 1790 | Schaefer, Georg (I2280)
|
2958 |
hospital Aschalad Middle Asia | Krumm, Johannes (I1174)
|
2959 |
Household 1 in 1816 &1834 Kukkus Census | Hergenroeder, Heinrich Johannes (I3151)
|
2960 |
Household 1 in 1816 &1834 Kukkus Census (deceased by 1834) | Hergenroeder, Gottfried (I2292)
|
2961 |
Household 1 in 1834 Kukkus Census | Hergenroeder, Anna Maria (I3153)
|
2962 |
Household 1 in 1834 Kukkus Census | Hergenroeder, Johann Heinrich (I3154)
|
2963 |
Household 1 in 1834 Kukkus Census | Hergenroeder, Johann Philipp (I3158)
|
2964 |
Household 1 in 1834 Kukkus Census--died 1817 per 1834 census. Age 1/4 in 1816 census. | Hergenroeder, Johann Jakob (I3162)
|
2965 |
Household 2 in 1816 &1834 Kukkus Census | Rosenthal, Johann Jakob (I2137)
|
2966 |
Household 2 in 1816 Kukkus Census -died 1816 per 1834 Census | Rosenthal, Johannes (I2136)
|
2967 |
Household 2 in 1834 Kukkus Census | Schmidt, Anna Katharina (I3168)
|
2968 |
Household 2 in 1834 Kukkus Census | Rosenthal, Maria Katharina (I3169)
|
2969 |
http://billingsgazette.com/lifestyles/announcements/obituaries/robert-goodman/article_452eb434-2b1a-11df-ba2d-001cc4c03286.html
March 09, 2010 12:00 am
SHERIDAN, Wyo. - Robert Goodman, 81, of Sheridan, passed away Sunday, Feb. 28, 2010, in Mesa, Ariz.
Robert was born Oct. 11, 1928, in Billings, to Adam and Anna (Kukes) Goodman. When Robert was 9, the family moved to Big Horn, Wyo., where he attended school. In 1949, Adam and Anna purchased the Pony Track Ranch on Lower Prairie Dog Road and the family moved there. Robert lived and worked on the ranch until 1958.
On Sept. 23, 1950, Robert married Norma Louise Neff. They would have celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary in September. Robert and Norma had four children.
In 1959, Robert and Norma purchased the Skelly Gas Station on North Main Street. They operated the gas station until 1972, when they sold it to Robert’s brother Louis. Robert and Norma then purchased the Mobile Home Estates Park and operated it until 1994. He also owned and operated Bob’s Mobile Wash. Robert was also a fuel hauler for Maverick Country Stores for 10 years. Robert retired in 2002, and he and Norma began traveling. They had spent the last eight winters in Arizona.
Robert enjoyed snowmobiling in the Big Horns - he was the first president of the Big Horn Mountain Snomads - and water skiing at Lake DeSmet. He enjoyed time with his family. He was a member of the Sheridan Elk’s Lodge.
He is survived by his wife and four children, Jim, Denver; Russell, Sheridan; Ruth Grevesen (Steve), Greeley, Colo.; and Cindy Pilch (Tom), Sheridan. Also five grandchildren, Richelle Grevesen-O’Neil (Patrick), Plano, Texas; Matt Goodman, Forest Grove, Ore.; Kristina Goodman, Sheridan; Emily Pilch, Billings; and Hilary Pilch, Laramie, Wyo. And a great-granddaughter, Aubrey Goodman, Sheridan. He is also survived by one sister, Sadie Robertson, Sheridan; and several nieces and nephews.
He is preceded in death by his parents; five brothers, George, Louis, Howard, Virgil and Kenneth; one sister, Virginia Bury; and one grandson, Jason Obert.
Cremation has taken place. A celebration of life is planned at a later date. Memorials may be made to the donor’s choice.
Notes from Tanny Goodman:
(The following is a news article interview with my Aunt Sadie. I have made notations in [ ]s of clarification of some of the story from family members at the end of the article.)
Page 22
SHERIDAN PRESS ARTICLE
Saturday, February 1, 2014
By Lois Bell
Sheridan Senior Center
PIONEER DAUGHTERS SHARE POETRY, ART
UNDER PHOTO: Jean Harm, left, illustrated the cover to a book of poetry written by 95-year-old Sadie Robertson. Robertson had approached Harm to design the cover of her latest book of her poetry she had printed in October 2013. The illustration and poems draw on the women’s connection to the outdoors. Both Harm and Robertson are descendents of pioneers who settled in Sheridan County in the later part of the 19th century.
SHERIDAN - She was in her 50s when the poetic muse touched her. Now 95 years old, Sadie Robertson continues to see the world through the eyes of a poet. She published her fourth book of poems in October 2013.
“I write from what I’ve seen and from what I think I’ve learned from what I’ve seen,” Robertson said.
Her inspiration draws often from her experiencing the outdoors. Her Volga German ancestors from Russia connected to the earth when they began farming in Sheridan county in the later part of the 19th century.
“My grandfather, John Goodman, farmed in the area south of Sheridan College,” Robertson said.
Grandfather John may have been Robertson’s inspiration for her poem she titled “The Poet.”
“His gnarled old hands long to hold a
pen to move over a smooth, white paper;
but farming is all he has ever known;”
Robertson’s father also was connected to the outdoors. He worked on ranches and farms in the countryside surround- ing Billings. After the Great Depression and the Billings flood of 1937, her father moved back to Sheridan County where he had grown up. He worked on several farms and eventually bought the Pony Track Ranch on Lower Prairie Dog Creek. The place became known as the Goodman ranch and he operated it under his own brand.
Robertson, then Sadie Goodman, had already married a Montana cowboy and stayed in the Billings area. She divorced and moved to Sheridan. Later she met and married Angus Robertson, an immi- grant from Canada who led exploration crews looking for oil in the area. His career kept the Robertsons on the move and again connected to the outdoors. It was while they were living in Casper when Sadie began writing her first poems.
“My first collection was called “A Far- Away Country of Apples.” It’s in the Library of Congress. Tom Mercer illustrated the cover and encouraged me to publish it for sale,” Robertson said.
She did but did not like the experience of selling her poetry. “I don’t feel right selling my poetry, they are the deepest part of me. I only want to share them with people who know me or who I would like to know me,” she said.
Robertson wrote and printed her latest collection of poems in October 2013 in her book titled “Under a Western Sky” to share with those people.
She approached one of those special people, Jean Harm, to illustrate the cover.
Harm and Robertson share a common bond as descendents of pioneer families to Sheridan County. Harm, born Jean Wilkes, is the daughter of Sheridan pioneers. Her lineage is rooted with great- great grandparents who settled in the 1880s in the Parkman Five Mile Flats area.
Harm, who was kitchen manager of the dining room at Heritage Towers where Robertson lunched, would illustrate the daily menus. Robertson enjoyed Harm’s drawings.
“It was always a delightful little menu board. I always liked to see what (Jean) had done,” Robertson said.
“She (Robertson) told me she was doing one last book and wanted something on the cover that depicted Wyoming skies,” Harm said. “I told her I would do it for the fun of it.”
Harm, like Robertson, drew her inspiration from the outdoors. She went to her
family cabin in the Bighorns to draw in her sketch book. She drew three illustrations in color pencil before settling on the one she felt was the right one for Sadie’s very last book.
Robertson printed 35 copies of her new book locally. She did not sell “Under A Western Sky” reserving it to give as a gift to friends. Robertson retains a passion for the printed word.
“There’s nothing like holding a book in your hand,” Robertson said.
“Of the gifts offered here
if there is one that touches
a special moment in your lives,
then this effort has been successful.”
- Preface to “A Far-Away Country of Apples"
********************
NOTE: Lucille is Pauline's daughter - Pauline is the youngest daughter of John Goodman. Norma was married to Robert - Sadie's brother. My Dad was a brother to Sadie. George is another brother to Sadie. Hank was a son of John Goodman and half-brother to Sadie's dad, Adam.
[Aunt Sadie was only 94 years old. Born in 1919.]
[I spoke with Aunt Norma, Lucille, and Mom - as well as - my memories from Dad. Uncle Hank {Sadie's uncle - John's son} farmed beets where the Sheridan College Ag Center is now. Per Lucille: she remembers visiting Uncle Hank when they lived on the road they now call the Woodland Park Road. Uncle George {Sadie's brother} rented the little house that sat across the road from where the college is now - (just recently the barn last building there was torn down - see photo) with Aunt Guyla and daughter, Pat. I remember my Dad telling about that lone tree out front of the house. How a bunch of cattle gathered around that tree during a lightening storm. Lightening struck the tree and killed about 30 head. Lucille said that Grampa John Goodman and his wife, Anna, lived with her mom and dad (Shorty and Pauline Schuman) but they lived south of the "Y" out by where the big brown barn is - the Powder Horn is now. That was the first year they were married. Shorty (Phil Schuman) worked for the railroad and Aunt Pauline {Sadie's dad's sister} at the laundry in Sheridan.]
[Aunt Norma said in reference to the article Grampa Adam Goodman did not work for others here. He leased the Irwin place then Minnie Martin's place. Both out by Big Horn.]
[Aunt Norma said Uncle Bob remembered his Grampa as always on the screened in porch laying down with a fly swatter in his hand and that he didn't have much to do with the kids. My Dad remembers an old man at Aunt Pauline's but he didn't know he was his Grampa. (My dad was about three at the time.)]
[Aunt Pauline was in the hospital having Lucille in 1934 when Grampa John Goodman died. My dad was 3 years old, Uncle Bob 5 years old, Sadie was 15 years old.]
[Sadie was married to Bill Wegner the Montana Cowboy in the story.]
{Side Note}
[I don't know if my Dad, Kenneth, remembers his maternal grandparents (Kukes). He was very young (just turned 4) when Gramma Goodman took him on the train to Washington when her dad died. At that time, the trains were only for service men and their families. In order to get back for her father's funeral, one of the service men offered to claim she was his mother to be able to ride the train to get back to state of Washington. Gramma Goodman told me that Dad cried all the time because he was homesick, so she cut her trip short.]
| Goodman, Robert {Bob} (I11804)
|
2970 |
http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/local/obituaries/obituaries-for-nov/article_382aedf6-d0cb-5ad8-96ce-c00f96019924.html
Howard Willard 'Swede' Goodman
CASPER, Wyo. - Howard Willard "Swede" Goodman, 82, Casper, died Friday, Nov. 10, 2006, at Wyoming Medical Center in Casper.
He served in the U.S. Army Air Corps from 1944 to 1946.
Survivors include his wife, Norma Jean Goodman, Casper; five children, Steven Goodman, Fargo, N.D., and Cary Goodman, Ardith "Sis" Vicklun, Susan Weakly and Carol Goodman, all of Rapid City; three stepchildren, Walt Goodman, Emigrant, Mont., Marilyn Winner, Big Horn, and Kathleen Taylor, Casper; three siblings, Sadie Robertson, Robert Goodman and Kenneth Goodman, all of Sheridan; and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Services will be at 1 p.m. Monday, Nov. 20, at Oregon Trail State Veterans Cemetery in Evansville, Wyo.
Bustard's Funeral Home of Casper is in charge of arrangements. | Goodman, Howard Willard {Swede} (I11801)
|
2971 |
http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/obituaries/kenneth-goodman/article_e29b0b76-7c1b-5bdb-a495-cf0e0b6ff918.html
Kenneth Goodman Obituary
August 22, 2007 12:00 am
SHERIDAN - Visitation for Kenneth Goodman, 76, will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 23, 2007, at Champion Ferries Funeral Home.
He died Aug. 19, 2007, at Sheridan Manor.
He was born Jan. 28, 1931, in Billings, Mont., to Adam and Anna (Kukes) Goodman.
He moved with his family to the Sheridan area when he was 2 and the family farmed at Big Horn and Ucross.
He married Jeanne McKinney on Sept. 15, 1951, in Sheridan.
He joined the Marines in October 1951 and served in Korea. He was honorably discharged in 1953 with the rank of corporal.
He returned to Sheridan and farmed on Lower Prairie Dog for eight years and then went to work for Germaine's for 15 years. He went to work at the Sheridan VA Center, retiring as a pipefitter in 1992. He then became a ditch-rider for Gerdle Ditch, retiring in 2002.
He enjoyed hunting and fishing, watching his grandchildren play sports and time spent with his family.
Survivors include three sons, Casey Goodman and his wife of Sheridan, Karl Goodman of Story and Willis Goodman of Caledonia, Mich.; one daughter, Tannya Goodman of Sheridan; one brother, Robert Goodman of Sheridan; one sister, Sadie Robinson (should be Robertson) of Sheridan; three grandchildren, one great-grandchild and numerous nieces and nephews.
Arrangements are with Champion Ferries Funeral Home.
Additional info from Tannya Goodman:
NOTE: My brother submitted obituary.
Dad was only on Lower Prairie Dog for 4 years after service.
Also you will note between Robert's (my dad's brother's) obituary and your residence information, my Dad was older than two when they moved here.
Before he worked for Germain's, he worked at Hammer's Chevrolet garage and Northern Seed Company fir several years.
He also loved to read.
Sadie's last name is Robertson not Robinson.
Taped by her granddaughter, Tannya, and typed exactly as she told the story.
My forefathers - you see when Catherine the Great got married, she married a Russian Czar and she promised him she'd take a few of her families over there, you know, settle them there. Where my folks were settled, they used their name for their little town, so it was Kukkes - Kukes we spell it over here. 2-1/2 years old when we come over to the United States.
Married in 1918. It was April Fool's Day. We went to the Courthouse, got married by the Justice of the Peace.
Dances in the kitchen or the bunkerhouse or any place. We didn't have any barn, you know, and things like that.
In '39, the spring of '39, we moved over from Billings to Wyoming. Moved out to Big Horn.
In Portland, Oregon, George had the real small pox. We was under quarantine then. I don't know long. Grampa and Henry Kerbel had to room out. They couldn't come in, you know. We had a sign up. So we had their clothes ready and hand them out to them and they had to find a place to stay.
Side note: Gramma loved to dance. She was popular and it used to make Grampa jealous. They ended up marrying on April 1st because her father was moving the family to Washington the next day and she wanted to stay with Grampa.
| Goodman, Kenneth {Babe} (I11805)
|
2972 |
http://www.fold3.com/ | Source (S307)
|
2973 |
http://www.online-ofb.de/famlist.php?ofb=werdorf&b=A&lang=de | Source (S215)
|
2974 |
http://www.ortsfamilienbuecher.de/namelist.php?nachname=SEIPP&ofb=edingen&modus=&lang=de | Source (S214)
|
2975 |
http://www.russia-colonists.eu | Source (S191)
|
2976 |
Huntley Cemetery | Krumm-Krum, Henry (I15925)
|
2977 |
Huntley Cemetery | Knaub, Catharina (I15926)
|
2978 |
Huntley Cemetery | Krumm-Krum, Jacob (I15931)
|
2979 |
Huntley Cemetery | Pope, Esther (I15932)
|
2980 |
Huntley Cemetery | Krumm, Herman (I15933)
|
2981 |
Huntley Cemetery | Mattson, Mildred Irene (I15934)
|
2982 |
Identified as widower, when children married. | Trinkaus, Leonhard (I11115)
|
2983 |
If she is second spouse, she may not be mother of the earlier children. | Reinike, Ottilie (I4445)
|
2984 |
illegitimate | Reitz, Amalie (I308)
|
2985 |
Illegitimate | Reitz, Johann Georg (I439)
|
2986 |
Illegitimate | Unknown, Andreas (I804)
|
2987 |
Illegitimate | Heinrich, Johann Philipp (I1068)
|
2988 |
illegitimate | Johannes, Heinrich (I3142)
|
2989 |
illegitimate | Otto, Anna Christina (I3429)
|
2990 |
illegitimate | Kuhn, Katharina Elisabeth (I3796)
|
2991 |
illegitimate | Kries, Georg Adam (I3815)
|
2992 |
illegitimate | Gruhl, Sophia Katharina (I3834)
|
2993 |
illegitimate | Hergenroeder, Katharina Elisabeth (I3966)
|
2994 |
illegitimate | Hergenroeder, Katharina Elisabeth (I3968)
|
2995 |
illegitimate | Hergenroeder, Katharina Margaretha (I4010)
|
2996 |
illegitimate | Debus, Georg (I4273)
|
2997 |
illegitimate | Schneider, Johann Friedrich (I4988)
|
2998 |
illegitimate | Isheim, Friedrich (I5127)
|
2999 |
illegitimate | Goeringer, Maria Christina (I11541)
|
3000 |
illegitimate | Hergenroeder, Robert (I12822)
|
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