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Matches 6,701 to 6,750 of 8,913

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6701 Died, April 25, 1893, Laura Z. Sears, age 46 yrs., 11 months and 17 days, born May 8, 1846, was married to Peter F. Potts Sept. 10, 1868. SEARS, Laura Z. (I17395)
 
6702 Dies intestate, no record of his estate has been found. BILLINGSLEY, Francis (I588)
 
6703 Disowned from Quaker faith, Contentnea Monthly Meeting for marrying out of faith. PEARSON, Sarah (I3383)
 
6704 Divorce records indicate this is Evalyn's second marriage which still doesn't explain the last name Larson upon marrying Kaldor. Family: Glenn D. KALDOR / Evalyn Maxine COLE (F6254)
 
6705 DNA evidence shows a connection between another researcher who claims Robert, b. 1736 (married Rachel Taylor) as son of Henry. Records do not show Henry had a son named Robert. Given the DNA evidence perhaps the connection is further back. LAMB, Henry (I6261)
 
6706 DNA Match Source (S1080)
 
6707 DNA Match Source (S1081)
 
6708 DNA Match Source (S1083)
 
6709 DNA Match Source (S1085)
 
6710 DNA Match Source (S1087)
 
6711 DNA Match Source (S1088)
 
6712 DNA match Source (S1100)
 
6713 DNA match Source (S1101)
 
6714 DNA match Source (S1102)
 
6715 DNA match Source (S1103)
 
6716 DNA match Source (S1105)
 
6717 DNA match Source (S1111)
 
6718 DNA match Source (S1113)
 
6719 DNA match Source (S1114)
 
6720 DNA Match Source (S1128)
 
6721 DNA Match Source (S1130)
 
6722 DNA match Source (S1272)
 
6723 Domenico Leonetti is listed as a passenger aboard the "Campania" which arrived in the port of New York on February 23, 1909 having departed Napoli, Italy. He is listed as age 19 and born in Ascob. LEONETTI, Domenico R. (I24678)
 
6724 Donald suffered from hydrocephalus from birth and died from acute nephritis at the age of 3 yrs, 4 mo. and 20 days. LARKIN, Donald Anthony (I22832)
 
6725 Downloaded from Taylor County, Iowa GenWeb site, also availabe to be seen and searched at Ancestry . com Source (S298)
 
6726 Downloaded from Taylor County, Iowa GenWeb site. Source (S733)
 
6727 Dr Ney Churchman was a prominent dentist in Portland and yet his obituary states only that he was the "only brother of Mrs. Nina Larowe." CHURCHMAN, Dr. Dr. Ney (I26296)
 
6728 Dr. Churchill was a distinguished physician and surgeon, fond of horses, a versatile musician, interested in physical science,especially geology and mineralogy, in greenhouse plants, birds, a collector of curios, etc. At the time of his death he had a cactus plant 38 years old and 10 feet high. CHURCHILL, Dr. Dr. Julius C. (I1415)
 
6729 Drowned in Hampton Harbor SHAW, Caleb (I8317)
 
6730 Drowned in the Connecticut River BALL, Francis (I2839)
 
6731 Dumfries "was the administrative seat of three of the old counties of southwestern Scotland, and the most important center of that entire region. It was very strongly, indeed almost exclusively, Presbyterian-Protestant. In the wake of the religious wars of the earlier part of the seventeenth century, this was a factor of great importance.

The town seems to have included no aristocratic or patrician families in the accepted European usage of those terms. Dominant in the town council of the early eighteenth century were the merchants, the local clergy, and the remaining members of the old medieval handicraft guilds. The leading officials were the burgess (the mayor), the "bailie" (or bailiff, who served as town executive and chief of police), and the magistrates of the local court, who presumably had primarily a juridical function. The burgesses, appointed by the Town Council, served for a term of only one year.

Our patriarchal James Kennan was plainly a prominent man about town. He served at one time or another both as burgess and as bailie. In the later years of his life he represented the town, and indeed the entire region, as commissioner to the Scottish parliament in Edinburgh. But beyond that, I know nothing of his person. He was referred to, in a history of Dumfries written in 1746, as "an old Cromwellian," which presumably meant that he had, in the confused religious wars of then recent memory, fought alongside the Cromwellian forces. But if he did, it is reasonable to suspect that it was for restricted and specifically Scottish goals rather than for those of the English Cromwell that he fought.

The "lawful son and heir" of James Kennan was one John of that name. He was born, we must assume, somewhere around 1670. He, too, seems to have had a prominent place in the Dumfries community, occupying at some point the position of bailie. And he seems to have had a number of sons, the first of whom, another James, dutifully named after his grandfather, was born in 1693, the remaining births stringing along until 1709. Is it permissible to suspect that this second James was the father of a third one who, born somewhere around the years 1715-1720, emigrated to New England and became the first of the American Kennans?" 
KENNAN, James (I24041)
 
6732 Dutton, George Henry, b 08 Aug 1843 Wyoming Co., NY; d 28 May 1925 nr Grav; w 18 Jun 1867 Mary J. Cole at Kewanee, Ill., 10 children; in Co H 9 Ill Cav in Civil War; i Grav. BTR 11 Jun 1925, BFP 04 Jun 1925 (2), BFP 25 Jun 1925

He married Mary Jane Cole, 18 June 1867, in Toulon,Stark Co., Illinois. To this union 10 children were born: Ezekiel L., Clara Etta, William E., Hettie M., Henry E., Mary Edith, John Elmer, Zula Artie, Mora A. and Virt Bonnie Dutton. 
DUTTON, George Henry (I692)
 
6733 dward & Katherine were 1st cousins. Family: Edward SPICER / Katherine STONE (F4476)
 
6734 Earl and Elizabeth had no known children. Family: Earl FILLMORE / Elizabeth MC HEAGUE (F673)
 
6735 Ed and Eliza, ages 77 and 70 respectively are living with their son on his farm. SAVAGE, Eliza Jane (I27344)
 
6736 Ed and Eliza, ages 77 and 70 respectively are living with their son on his farm. PRATT, Edwin Amos (I27343)
 
6737 Edith Geneva McElfish, second daughter of Joseph A. and Mary Geneva McElfish, died Sept. 11, 1955 at St. Francis Hospital, Maryville. She was born at Gravity, Iowa, Feb. 21, 1893 and died at the age of 62 years, six months, 18 days. Both parents preceded her in death. In May 1918 she was married to Claude Hamilton of Bedford. To them two children were born, one son, Harlan Hamilton of Palmer, Alaska, and one daughter, Helen Louise Dowis of Bedford. Four grandsons and three granddaughters also survive. Claude passed away in March 1943. In 1947 Edith was married to C. E. Ackley of Bedford, he also preceded her in death. She leaves to mourn her death three sisters, Mrs. Stella Marley of Bedford, Mrs. Nora Loy of Pittsburg, Kans., and Mrs Helen Smith of Lincoln, Nebraska. She was a life long member Bedford Methodist Church. Mrs. Ackley was well known in business circles here. She began her work at an early age and became skilled in her knowledge of Lands and Titles of Taylor county. She served this county as Deputy Treasurer, Deputy Clerk and Deputy Auditor, as well as having worked for the firms of G. B. Haddock, Crum & Dinges Investment Bankers, and Jones Abstract company. In 1953 she retired from public life and assisted her sister Stella in the care of their mother for many months, until their mother passed away in February 1955. Funeral services were held at the Wetmore Funeral Home, Sept. 15, conducted by Rev. Fred H. Cowles. Burial in Fairview cemetery. MCELFISH, Edith Geneva (I412)
 
6738 Edith lists as a reference:
"Mass. Soldiers and Sailors" Vol III, p. 315
"Desc. of Dea. Samuel Chapin by Gilbert Warren Chapin, Vol. 1
"Descendants of Samuel Chapin" by Orange Chapin. 
Source (S11)
 
6739 Edith lists as a reference:
"Mass. Soldiers and Sailors" Vol III, p. 315
"Desc. of Dea. Samuel Chapin by Gilbert Warren Chapin, Vol. 1
"Descendants of Samuel Chapin" by Orange Chapin. 
Source (S780)
 
6740 Edith was accepted as a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Francis (illegible) Chapter in Anamosa, Iowa. She claimed descendancy from Levi Chapin of Chicopee, MA. KENNON, Edith Amelia (I91)
 
6741 Edna was generally known as Mary Creamer, this is how she signed her paintings. She gave lessons and conducted showings as Mary Creamer.

I have 5 paintings done by Mary, 4 oils and 1 appears to be chalk or pencil. One hung in our family home for most of my life and I acquired the others after her death. 
KING, Edna Pearl (I9790)
 
6742 Edward and his brother, John jointly inherited 'Talbotts Ridge.' TALBOTT, Edward (I654)
 
6743 Edward Bangs was a fellow passenter on the Ann in 1623. Family: Edward BANGS / Lydia HICKS (F2575)
 
6744 Edward Bosworth, along with his wife, Mary, left England in the spring of 1634, sailing from the port of Gravesend, near the mouth of the Thames, in the ship Elizabeth Dorcas. They had with them their sons, Benjamin and Nathaniel, possibly a son Edward, a daughter Mary and her husband, William Buckland, and there may have been younger children, but no record has been found. An older son Jonathan, had come to America a year or more before and settled in Cambridge, then called "Newe Towne." UNKNOWN, Mary (I1829)
 
6745 Edward Bosworth, along with his wife, Mary, left England in the spring of 1634, sailing from the port of Gravesend, near the mouth of the Thames, in the ship Elizabeth Dorcas. They had with them their sons, Benjamin and Nathaniel, possibly a son Edward, a daughter Mary and her husband, William Buckland, and there may have been younger children, but no record has been found. An older son Jonathan, had come to America a year or more before and settled in Cambridge, then called "Newe Towne." BOSWORTH, Edward (I1828)
 
6746 Edward came to America in 1635 at the age of 60. Edward Howe with his wife and five children embarked on the "Truelove" for New England on the19th of September, 1635. The names as they appeared on the list are as follows: Edward How, husbandman, aged 60, Elizabeth, aged 56, Jeremie,aged 21, Sara, aged 12, Ephraim, aged 9, Isaac, aged 7, William, aged 6.
On reaching this country, they settled in what is now known as Lynn,Mass. He was admitted freeman December 8, 1636. He was a man of much ability, of good report, and a highly respected citizen. He was chosen deputy to the General Court in 1638, and in the same year, his name appeared on the list of land-owners in Lynn, as having 210 acres. He died very suddenly in April 1639, and his widow was appointed by the General Court to administer his estate on May 22, 1639.
Of Edwards ancestry we have little information. It has been a longstanding tradition in the family that he came from London, England, and there seems to be strong support in the foundation of this tradition.There may have been other Howes in Lynn prior to 1635 but little is known of them. Much of the information concerning the Howe families of Lynn are surrounded in vague traditions and suppositions, and it is largely owing to the fact that the records of Lynn, for the first sixty years are missing. 
HOWE, Lieutenant Lieutenant Edward (I18525)
 
6747 Edward Howe was a farmer, and was admitted a freeman in 1636. He was a representative in seven sessions of the General Court, and a member of the Quarterly Court in 1637. He died suddenly in April, 1639. After the court was ended at Boston, having dined in his usual health, he went to the river side, to pass over to Charlestown, and while waiting for the ferry boat, fell dead on shore. He is said to have been "a Godly man." (History of Lynn) HOWE, Lieutenant Lieutenant Edward (I18525)
 
6748 Edwin departed Glasgow, Scotland on March 25, 1911 aboard the Furnessia, he gives his home as Stavanger and his final destination as Minneapolis, Minn. EGLAND, Edwin Randolph (I10336)
 
6749 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I21765)
 
6750 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I21766)
 

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