Matches 1,801 to 1,850 of 4,655
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| 1801 |
Marriage record: "in ædibus sponso decumbente in lecto periculose", at the bridegroom's home as he lay in bed in peril. He apparently survived. | Family F2038
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| 1802 |
Marriage record: "parochio Bramascensis" that is, "of Bramsche parish" | Gudenrath, Maria Anna (I2816)
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| 1803 |
Marriage to Stephan von der Nienporte has just "Margaretha" as her given name. | Borgstiche, Anna Catharina Margaretha (I2838)
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| 1804 |
Marriage was 1929-1930 based on Canton City Directories. | Family F1136
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| 1805 |
Married 1834 to Mary Mellot. Married 1852 to Lydia Correll. | Hockensmith, Obediah (I3254)
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| 1806 |
Married at "Hites" by A H Borders, minister | Family F2166
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| 1807 |
Married at the bride's home by G H Huffman, Minister of the Gospel | Family F1271
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| 1808 |
Married at the house of W. R. West by Nathaniel Miller, JP | Family F109
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| 1809 |
Married Denise, daughter of Thomas ap Llewelyn-vychan. The use of the Morgan surname begins with this generation. | Morgan, Jevan (I1796)
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| 1810 |
Married first Mary Inez Ross, who died 1974. | Martin, Alcus Lafayette (I4142)
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| 1811 |
Married on this date to Jeanne Perrolaz. | Perrolaz, Jean (I4759)
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| 1812 |
Married on this date to Marie Françoise Perrolaz. | Viard, André (I4760)
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| 1813 |
MARRIED.
MILLER-SWARTZWELDER--On the 15th inst., by Elder Abraham Miller, at the residence of the bride's father, Mr. Ephraim B. Miller, of Harrison township, to Miss Amanda Swartzwelder," -- last line of text is cut off. | Family F1303
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| 1814 |
Marshall Co., Illinois probate records not available online (5 Jan 2018) | Hull, Isaac (I1939)
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| 1815 |
Martha was born in Rattlesden, England in 1629. She married Joseph Fowler, the son of Philip and Margery (___) Fowler, who was born in England in 1622, and was killed by the Indians 19 May 1676, near Deerfield, MA. he came to New England on the ship Mary, with his father, in 1634, and resided in Ipswich, MA. He sold his father-in-law, Richard Kimball (1), forty acres of land in 1651. | Kimball, Martha (I2191)
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| 1816 |
Martin Cemetery | Malone, Frances (I305)
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| 1817 |
Martin Cemetery | Hester, Elijah H (I303)
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| 1818 |
Martin Clabaugh not found in Huntingdon Co., Pennsylvania Index to Wills and Administrations (19 Jan 2017)
Margaret Clabaugh found but heirs not named (19 Jan 2017) | Clabaugh, John (I0934)
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| 1819 |
Marvin Hazen died from Black Lung Disease, from working in mines in Silverton NM. He died at his step-daughter's home in Shuqualak MS. | Donaldson, Marvin Hazen (I0895)
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| 1820 |
Mary Bliss and Joseph Parsons married in Hartford in 1646. After several years in Springfield, the Parsons family, which now included three children, moved to Northampton, a brand new settlement some 20 miles up the Connecticut River. Joseph Parsons soon became one of Northampton's leading citizens. A successful merchant, he served as a selectman and on the committee to build the first meetinghouse. Since the Parsons also owned the first tavern in town, they were right in the thick of things.
Another couple, Sarah and James Bridgman, followed a similar route but had a very different experience than the Parsons. They also wed in Hartford, moved to Springfield, and then onto Northampton, where a feud developed between the two families.
Soon after arriving in Northampton, Mary Parsons gave birth to a son, the first English child born in the town. That same month, Sarah Bridgman had a baby boy. When he died two weeks later, she claimed it was the result of Mary's witchcraft. Rumors began to swirl about the town. Joseph Parsons decided to go on the offensive. He charged James Bridgman with slander for spreading rumors about Mary Parsons's alleged witchcraft. Even though juries usually sided with the plaintiff in such cases, Joseph Parsons was taking a risk by bringing rumors to the attention of officials. Authorities might decide there was merit to the accusations, and the plaintiff could suddenly find herself the defendant. The case was heard at the Magistrates' Court in Cambridge in October 1656; 33 depositions were given. Almost half of Northampton's 32 households sent a witness; a few others came from Springfield.
Sarah Bridgman related her tale of how in May 1654 she heard a "great blow on the door" and immediately sensed a change in her newborn. Then she saw "two women pass by the door with white clothes on their heads." The women disappeared, and Bridgman concluded her son would die because "there [was] wickedness in the place." Such testimony was the norm in witch trials. An argument took place, and when something went awry later, people attributed the problem to witchcraft. One Northampton woman testified that the yarn she had spun for Mary Parsons ended up full of knots. Since the yarn the woman spun for others had no knots, she concluded that Mary's witchcraft was the cause. Another woman blamed Mary Parson when her daughter fell ill shortly after she had refused to let the girl work for Parsons. One man stated that the day after "some discontent[ed] words passed" between himself and Mary Parsons, he found his cow in the yard "ready to die," which it did two weeks later.
A number of people testified in Mary Parsons's defense. Three women described Sarah Bridgman's baby as "sick as soon as it was born." A neighbor stated that the cow in question had died of "water in the belly." The court ruled in favor of the Parsons. The Bridgmans were given the choice of paying a fine or making a public apology. They paid the fine.
The feud and Mary Parsons's ordeal resumed 18 years later, in 1674, when the Bridgmans' son-in-law filed a new complaint. He "strongly suspect[ed] that [his wife] died by some unusuall meanes, viz, by means of some evell Instrument." The instrument he had in mind was Mary Bliss Parsons. On January 5, 1675, the county magistrates summoned Mary to appear before them. Women searched her body for "witch's teats," unexplained (to seventeenth-century eyes) protrusions where "imps" were said to suck. The record is silent as to what they did or did not find, but in March the Court of Assistants in Boston sent Mary Parsons to prison to await trial. The records from this trial do not survive, but we know that on May 13, 1675, a jury found her not guilty.
The Parsons returned to Northampton, but in 1679 or 1680, they moved back to Springfield, perhaps to escape the rumors that continued to dog them. Mary Bliss Parsons was in her mid-80s when she died in 1712.
Although Mary Parsons occupied a far more secure social position than almost all of the other women charged with witchcraft in early New England - after all, she was the wife of one of the richest, most respected men in western Massachusetts - her experience fit the norm in other ways. Middle-aged women were the most likely to be accused of witchcraft. The issues of jealousy, personal animosity, and family feuds that were so evident in her case would fuel the Salem witch hysteria of 1692 as well.
Excerpt from http://www.massmoments.org/moment.cfm?mid=142 (Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities website). | Bliss, Mary (I1216)
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| 1821 |
Mary Danielson Anderson was the daughter of John Danielson and Margaret Mighill (Mighell), and the wife of Dr. Thomas Anderson. Her husband practiced medicine in Monson, MA. | Danielson, Mary (I1116)
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| 1822 |
Mary King was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts on 15 Jun 1639. She was the daughter of John and Mary King, both of England. Her father was a planter and a seaman. He was master of the boat of Thomas Applegate of Weymouth in October 1640. He was a selectman of Weymouth in 1669.
On 30 November 1658 she married Josiah Chapin, the son of Deacon Samuel Chapin and Cicely Penny. They were the parents of 11 children.
She was the mother of Seth Chapin, a respected member of the community of Mendon, Massachusetts and a Captain in the militia. She was the grandmother of Lydia Chapin-Taft, the first woman voter in Colonial America. [An important vote regarding funding for the French and Indian Wars took place just after the death of Lydia's husband, Josiah Taft. As the largest taxpayer in Uxbridge, Massachusetts the town voted to allow Lydia the widow of Josiah Taft to vote on 30 Oct 1756. She voted in favor of the funding.]
Many of Josiah and Mary's children went on to be successful members of their communities.
Mary King Chapin died on 30 May 1676; a month before her 37th birthday in Braintree, Massachusetts. | King, Mary (I1356)
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| 1823 |
Mary was born in Rattlesden, England in 1625. She married Robert Dutch of Gloucester and Ipswich, MA.
Mary is wrongly given in many places as the wife of Deacon Thomas Knowlton, historians being misled by her father's will, as he only mentions the first names of his daughters and does not leave anything to the children of Mary. But in an action for trespass against Richard Kimball, Sr., (in taking a heifer by his grandson Robert Dutch of the yard of Obadiah Wood and detaining same March 1662), this is shown to be wrong. Robert Dutch, Sr.'s wife in Mary. Savage's Dictionary is wrong in regard to her name. It says she was Mary Roper, daughter of Walter Roper. Mary Roper was born in 1641; Mary Dutch says in a deposition that she is 36 in 1665, which would give her birth as 1629. Samuel Dutch calls Caleb Kimball (2) "uncle" in deposition in 1664. | Kimball, Mary (I2190)
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| 1824 |
May 15, 1930 -- The Free Press Standard, Carroll Co., OH
Albert L. Laubacher
Albert L. Laubacher, 54, of Akron, died Monday morning, May 12. Besides his widow Lena, he is survived by one son, Richard, of the home; his mother, Mrs. Magdalene Laubacher, of Malvern; six brothers, Rev. Fr. Harold A. Laubacher, of Akron, George, Herman and Walter Laubacher, of Canton, Victor and William of Malvern; three sisters, Mrs. Anna Schrieber and Mrs. Clara Artzner, of Malvern and Mrs. Leona Artzner, of Alliance. Funeral services were held this morning at St. Mary's church in Akron. | Laubacher, Albert Louis (I2471)
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| 1825 |
May also have been married to Michel Saultier, abt. 1756 - 5 Feb 1824. | Perrolaz, Marie Françoise (I4749)
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| 1826 |
May also have been married to Thomas Wadsworth (husband of her sister Nancy Nichols), as he claimed her share of her father Julius Nichols' estate | Nichols, Cynthia (I1883)
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| 1827 |
May have been a daughter of Allen Banks | Banks, Rebecca (I1012)
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| 1828 |
May have been baptized in Malgarten on 26 Nov 1678; the record does not give a name for the child, a child of Franz Culman (sic). | Kuhlman, Gerhard Heinrich (I4467)
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| 1829 |
May have been born in Schoenbourg, nearby to Eschbourg and Graufthal | Chor, Maria Salome (I2549)
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| 1830 |
May have been first married to a Maggie Dennis in White County, Arkansas in 1929 | McCraney, Richard Vernon (I3255)
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| 1831 |
May have been first married to another Kimball | Cochran, Polly (I1023)
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| 1832 |
May have died c. 1838 as husband James Wadsworth is said to have remarried in 1839 | Nichols, Mary (I1881)
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| 1833 |
May have died in England after 1655 | Gould, Jeremy (I3723)
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| 1834 |
May have died in King Philip's War | Steevens, Samuel (I2335)
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| 1835 |
May have first married, 4 Nov 1702 in Neuenkirchen, to Catharina Gertrud Ohnewehr. (2 Dec 2021) | von der Heide, Johann (I4511)
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| 1836 |
May have had a sister, Hilge, who sponsored Herman Heinrich Blumendael for baptism. (26 Dec 2021) | Höpgen, Thaleke (I4540)
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| 1837 |
May have had brothers Arendt and Heinrich, who were married (Johan Simon witnessed Heinrich Blommenthal's wedding) and had children in Neuenkirchen around the same time. (25 Dec 2021) | Blommenthal, Johan Simon (I4536)
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| 1838 |
May have m. 2nd to Johan Henrich Schierbergs in Neuenkirchen on 20 Oct 1710. First husband's burial not record in Neuenkirchen 1700-1710. (1 Jan 2022) | Blumendtaell, Alheid (I4543)
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| 1839 |
May have m. in Neuenkirchen on 18 Jul 1777 to Herman Friderich Bowing of Damme. (22 Dec 2021) | Gründieck, Elisabeth (I4533)
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| 1840 |
May have married 2nd to Arthur Foster in Marion Co., Illinois in Apr 1852 | McCullough, Eliza Ann (I1895)
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| 1841 |
May have married 2nd to Peter Lankert in Mercer Co. about 4 Feb 1822 | Ludwick, Sophia (I3992)
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| 1842 |
May have married in Neuenkirchen, October 1733, to Bernard Greber. Name mismatches and age would be unusual. (14 Dec 2021) | Gieske, Margaretha Aleth (I4516)
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| 1843 |
May have married on 17 Nov 1725 to Heinrich Cramer in Neuenkirchen. | Krähe, Christina (I4496)
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| 1844 |
May in fact have divorced Conrad Smith and remarried to a Stephen Hager | Wardlow, Mary Ann (I3387)
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| 1845 |
McCall Cemetery | Kimball, Phoebe (I2084)
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| 1846 |
McCall Cemetery | McCall, Robert (I155)
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| 1847 |
McCaskill was not her maiden name; she has two daughters whose last names are McCaskill in the 1850 census | McCaskill, Rutha (I573)
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| 1848 |
McConnellsburg Lutheran Cemetery | Conner, John (I3035)
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| 1849 |
McLain Cemetery | Danielson, Dr Lothario (I2241)
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| 1850 |
Mehitable (Lincoln) Russell was Abner Brown's third wife | Brown, Lt Abner (I3917)
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