Matches 3,351 to 3,400 of 4,655
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| 3351 |
Roger de TOKETON IV - b. about 1335, Sileham, Kent.
Son of Roger de TOKETON III. Married about 1365, Kent. | de Toketon, Roger (I653)
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| 3352 |
Roland Benton Hester was born May 20 1840 Franklin County Alabama, the fifth child of Roling Hester and Lucinda Richardson. He died 11 Oct 1900 in Hamilton, Alabama. He married 1st "Welty" (or Wealtha) Ann Malone. They had one son, Arthur McGara Hester (b. June 1 1872). After 1st wife passed away, Roland married Eva Malone, but soon Eva deceased and Roland took yet another wife, Susie Ann Cantrell (1856-1891) of Marion County, Alabama. To this third marriage was born three sons and one daughter: Garland Benton Hester (died as an infant); Rachael Lucretia Hester (1885-1935; married 1904 to Robert Charles Duncan, Jr.); William Chesley Hester (died as infant); and Moorman Sacratus Hester (died as infant).
After 3rd wife, Susie Ann passed away on 28 June 1891, Roland married ( 17 Mar, 1892 Shottsville, AL) Mahala Caroline Stone (b. Mar 18, 1854-d. 1937) also of Marion Co., Alabama (daughter of John Lyle Stone). To this 4th marriage was born two daughters, Huldah Jane Hester (1895-1914; married Phillip Edgar Ritch)and Mary Ann Hester (1897-1976; married George Madison Gann). Roland's widow, Mahala, in July 1908, received a Confederate pension for his faithful service to the Confederacy. Eight years after his death, Mahala owned 40 acres in Marion County, one mare with two colts, a cow with calfs, one hog, a clock, and a horse wagon. Total property value: $227.00. | Hester, Private Roland Benton (I013)
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| 3353 |
Roling Hester was born 23 January 1807 in North Carolina. He was the oldest child of William H. (Buck) Hester Sr. and Amy Malone Hester. In the spring of 1818, the year before Alabama became a state, young Roling, a lad 11 years of age, traveled by ox cart with his father, William H. (Buck) Hester Sr., from North Carolina to northwest Alabama. They settle five or six miles east of Russellville, Alabama, near the Gaines Trace at Tharp Springs. They cleared land, planted a small corn crop and erected a log cabin for themselves. William H. (Buck) Hester Sr. secured a section of land in 1818 in Franklin County from the Bureau of Land Management. Franklin County was created February 4, 1818 by the Alabama Territorial Legislature at St. Stephens.
In the latter part of 1818, Roling and his father returned to North Carolina to bring Roling's mother, Amy Malone Hester, and her six other children to their new home in Alabama. On the trip to Alabama, the Hester family was accompanied by Pumphrey and James Malone, who were brothers of Amy Malone Hester. They traveled in an ox cart caravan from Person County, North Carolina to their new home in the Territory of Alabama. In Alabama, the number of children of William H. (Buck) Hester Sr. and Amy Malone Hester grew to a total of 16.
Subsequently the Hester famly left their first settlement east of Russellville to relocate near the banks of Tollison creek, near Frankfort, Alabama. Descendants think the reason for the move was that the eastern part of Franklin County was becoming too heavily populated. largely as a result of the finalizing of the 1817 Indian treaties. This increase in population lessened the supply of fish and game in east Franklin County. There was a bountiful supply of wild game in the unsettled wilderness and an abundance of fish in Tollison creek. This area was bounded on the western side by the Chickasaw Indian Territory, which followed the course of Cane Creek through what is today Colbert County (created 1867) and continued southward through Franklin County. According to old land records, Roling Hester purchased over 200 acres of land in this area between 1834 and 1855.
At the age of 22, Roling married Lucendy Richardson, a native of Georgia who was 17 at the time. They reared nine children to adulthood. Eight of these children parented large families. Their third child, James Goodloe Hester never married. Much of the seventy five year life span of Roling Hester was spent along Tollison Creek. He and his wife Lucendy Richardson Hester, are buried in that area of Franklin County, Alabama, in the Malone Cemetery. | Hester, Roling (I030)
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| 3354 |
Rose Hills Memorial Park | Nichols, Evelyn Elizabeth Jewel (I0995)
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| 3355 |
Roselawn Cemetery | Buckelew, Thomas Jefferson (I2225)
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| 3356 |
Roselawn Cemetery | Eaton, Margaret Ann (I1674)
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| 3357 |
Row 19 South sec
Saint Peter Cemetery
1901 Cleveland Ave | Nieporte, Joseph H (I2750)
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| 3358 |
Row 19 South sec.
Saint Peter Cemetery
1901 Cleveland Avenue | Weckman, Mary Eleanor (I2751)
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| 3359 |
Rowley Burial Ground | Parrat, Ann (I1179)
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| 3360 |
Rowley Burial Ground | Mighell, Deacon Thomas (I1404)
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| 3361 |
Rowley Burial Ground | Stickney, William (I1935)
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| 3362 |
Rowley Burial Ground | Dawson, Elizabeth (I2092)
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| 3363 |
Rowley Burial Ground | Northend, Edner (I3390)
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| 3364 |
Roxbury was annexed to the city of Boston in 1868; it then switched counties and is part of modern-day Suffolk County. | Family F648
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| 3365 |
Rule Cemetery | Boor, John Albin (I2938)
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| 3366 |
Rule Cemetery | Miller, Sarah Elizabeth (I2935)
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| 3367 |
Ruth Blodgett Danielson was the daughter of Joseph Blodgett and Sarah Stone, and the wife of John Danielson. Ruth's husband and six sons all served in the American Revolution. Ruth moved with her husband John from Brimfield, MA, to Butternuts, Otsego Co, NY, in 1796. Ruth's descendants in the early 1830's changed the family surname from 'Danielson' to 'Donaldson,' believing, according to oral family history, that 'Donaldson' was the original family surname back in 1600's Scotland.
Much of the best research on the Donaldson/Danielson family was done from 1925-1965 by Harriet H. Donaldson Wilkinson. | Blodget, Ruth (I1107)
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| 3368 |
Sadler Chapel Cemetery | Young, Ida (I1090)
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| 3369 |
Sadler Chapel Cemetery | Donison, James (I1031)
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| 3370 |
Sadler Chapel Cemetery | Culbertson, Arminta (I1931)
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| 3371 |
Sadler Chapel Cemetery | Edwards, Jenia A (I1897)
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| 3372 |
Sadler Chapel Cemetery | Hill, James (I1871)
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| 3373 |
Sadler Chapel Cemetery | Hill, Robert (I1904)
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| 3374 |
Said by another researcher to have been born 1666 in York Co., Maine (not sourced) | Wadleigh, Henry (I4273)
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| 3375 |
Said by other researchers to have died in Mobile Co., Alabama but there is no record of him in Mobile Co. probate (17 Jan 2014) | Lyle, Maher (I3306)
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| 3376 |
Said to be daughter of Samuel and Margaret Wright | Wright, Lydia (I1336)
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| 3377 |
Said to have been a major in the Revolutionary War. | Willson, John (I730)
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| 3378 |
Said to have been a Sergeant in the Revolutionary War | Minnis, John (I590)
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| 3379 |
Said to have been a son of Maj. Enoch Ward and Elizabeth Shackleford | Ward, Richard (I3372)
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| 3380 |
Said to have been a son of William Hadnot and Rachel (Whitehurst) Hadnot | Hadnot, William (I3369)
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| 3381 |
Said to have been a son of William Hadnot and Rachel Whitehurst | Hadnot, Whitehurst (I3371)
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| 3382 |
Said to have been a widow "vidua" at the time she was married to Mathias Laubacher. Also said to have been a native of "Landau," the nearest place named Landau being Landau in der Pfalz in modern Germany. | Schneider, Anna Maria (I4782)
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| 3383 |
Said to have been about 1600 in Woolaston, Gloucestershire, England | Roberts, Thomas (I4153)
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| 3384 |
Said to have been born 1609 in Bideford, Devon, England | Haseltine, Robert (I2170)
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| 3385 |
Said to have been born in Deal, Kent, England by some researchers who do not cite sources | Ladd, Daniel (I3455)
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| 3386 |
Said to have been born in Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts based on his parents' residency during the time period | Gage, Josiah (I3467)
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| 3387 |
Said to have been born in Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts in 1641 (no record in Rowley) | Barker, James Jr (I2828)
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| 3388 |
Said to have been born in Salisbury, England. | Hibbert, Robert (I1839)
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| 3389 |
Said to have been born in Somerset Co., Maryland | Willson, John (I730)
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| 3390 |
Said to have been in both the French & Indian and Revolutionary wars | Runnels, John (I3505)
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| 3391 |
Said to have been in New Hampshire in 1635; not yet able to find on ship's passenger lists, though he is said to have been on at least two... (29 Apr 2016) | York, Richard (I2056)
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| 3392 |
Said to have been married in January 1866 in Fayette county, Alabama. Possibly in a Civil War widow's pension record? | Family F199
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| 3393 |
Said to have been near Holdenville, Hughes Co., Oklahoma; best guess is in nearby Okfuskee County on the land of a Creek named Aha-Luck Harjo | Eaton, John (I0910)
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| 3394 |
Said to have been the daughter of Maj. Enoch Ward and Elizabeth Shackleford (supported by Enoch Ward's 1750 will of Carteret NC) | Ward, Mary (I3374)
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| 3395 |
Said to have been the daughter of William Hadnot and Rachel Whitehurst | Hadnot, Ceare (I3376)
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| 3396 |
Said to have been the widow of a Henry Ambrose who d. 1658 | Susanna (I2197)
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| 3397 |
Said to have died 1732 in Rockingham Co., New Hampshire (not sourced) | Wadleigh, Henry (I4273)
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| 3398 |
Said to have died from drinking alkali water | Donaldson, Ruby Ann Frances (I0989)
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| 3399 |
Said to have died in 1707 | Lothrop, Thomas (I4118)
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| 3400 |
Said to have died in 1905 | Flagg, Matilda A (I3242)
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