Matches 4,201 to 4,250 of 4,654
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| 4201 |
This person never had a given name. | Gann (I4863)
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| 4202 |
This source renders the surname "Nieborder" in all three entries | Nieporte, Bernard (I2786)
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| 4203 |
This state census page is not dated | Hester, Elijah H (I303)
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| 4204 |
This was also Mr. Hale's second marriage; he married twice more after this | Family F1582
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| 4205 |
This was Brightman's second marriage and Logan's third. | Family F2128
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| 4206 |
This was published in the "Normal Gazette", Carbondale, 1890:
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WITHIN FOUR HOURS
On Sunday, October 26, in Salem, Ill., occurred, within four hours of each other, the deaths of Mrs. Lucy Hull and Hon. Samuel Hull, aged respectively seventy-six and eighty-four years.
- 1890, Vol. 3 "Normal Gazette" Carbondale | Tully, Lucy (I1929)
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| 4207 |
This was the third marriage recorded in the town of Springfield | Family F597
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| 4208 |
This will does not appear to name an executor | Thomas, Rowland (I1350)
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| 4209 |
This will was not recorded with a specific date; it refers to "the seventh year of Emerican Independence" (sic.) | Rea, Joshua (I1700)
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| 4210 |
This will was obtained from the Register of Wills in Greensburg, Westmoreland Co., PA
The Last Will and Testament of Samuel McDowell, Fairfield Twp, Volume 9, page 313, Will #87, 1896
I, Samuel McDowell of the Township of Fairfield, County of Westmoreland and State of Pennsylvania, being of sound mind, memory and understanding do make and publish this my last will and testament hereby revoking and making void all former wills by me at any time heretofore made. First I direct that all my just debts and funeral expenses and the expense of probating this my last will and testament be by my executor hereinafter mentioned fully paid. Item, I give and devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Sarah Anne McDowell, all my estate real and personal and mixed and to hold to her, the said Sarah Anne McDowell, for and during the term of her natural life. And at her death, I direct that the Sum of Five Dollars ($5.00) be paid to my Son Robert McDowell, and a like sum of Five Dollars be paid to my Granddaughter Della McDowell, daughter of my deceased Son William McDowell, and a like Sum ($5.00) to my daughter Mary inter married with Daniel Kelly, and a like Sum ($5.00) to my daughter Annie inter married with Phillip Dell, and a like Sum ($5.00) to my daughter Ellen inter married with Henry Dell, and a like sum of five dollars ($5.00) to my Son Henry McDowell, and a like Sum of five dollars ($5.00) to my Son John McDowell, and a like Sum of ($5.00) to my daughter Emma inter married with John McCartney. Which said sums I hereby give, devise and bequeath unto them to be paid at the death of my said wife. The property in which I now reside together with my personal property, real personal and mixed, to be given to my Son Charles Wesley McDowell. I hereby nominate and appoint Charles M. Johnston Executor of this my last will and testament and that he execute a good deed for the property. In witness whereof the above named testator, Samuel McDowell, have herewith set my hand and seal this 26th day of February in the year of our Lord One thousand Eight Hundred and ninety six.
Samuel (his mark) McDowell
Signed, sealed, published and declared by the above named Samuel McDowell as and for his last will and testament in the presence of us who have hereunto subscribed our names at his request as witnesses thereto in the presence of the said testator and of each other.
Wm. M. C. Hammond
G. M. Hammer
April 2nd 1896 will filed and duly probated and letters of Testamentary were issued to C. M. Johnston who was sworn. Testator died March 24th 1896 at about 9 p.m.
Jno. R. Ourslev, Register | McDowell, Samuel (I2764)
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| 4211 |
Thomas Douglas Nichols (T.D.) passed away Friday. December 7, 2012. Funeral services will be held at 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, December 11th at the Edwards Funeral Home Chapel in Eastland with Rex. Boggs and Randy Beggs officiating. Burial with Masonic Rites will follow at the Eastland City Cemetery.
Mr. Nichols was born on April 6, 1927 to Jay and Nancy (Eaton) Nichols. He was blessed with 61 years of marriage to his wife Betty. He was a veteran of World War II where he was a member of the Seabees in the United States Navy. He was a member of Gunsight Baptist Church and the Masonic Lodge 467 in Eastland. He was a dual member of Masonic Lodge 863 in Moran as well as a member of Eastern Star Lodge 280 in Eastland. He participated with the Eastland senior citizens activities and he loved the outdoors as well as hunting and fishing. He was a loving husband and father as well as a beloved grandfather and uncle. He will be missed by family and friends. He was preceded in death by his parents and 13 siblings.
He is survived by his wife Betty; his daughter, Sherry Beggs-Hayes; two sons, Joe Douglas Nichols and Thomas Jay Nichols; five grandchildren, Jason, Chris, Shane, Justin and Tiffany; seven great-grandchildren and many nieces and nephews. | Nichols, Thomas Douglas (I2411)
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| 4212 |
Thomas probably died unmarried. | Malone, Thomas (I236)
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| 4213 |
Thomas was born in Rattlesden, Suffolk county, England, in 1633, and was one year old when he came to New England with his parents. He later went to Ipswich, and was living in Hampton, New Hampshire, 20 Oct 1653, and was the owner of mill property there on Oyster river. He made his home at that place as late as 1660. He afterwards removed to that portion of Rowley which is included in the present town of Bradford, Massachusetts. Previous to 1675 the section where Thomas and his brother Benjamin lived was within the limits of Rowley, but the locality was called Merrimac when Thomas was elected constable on 20 Feb 1668-9. His house was one of legal places for posting and "publishing any orders or other business of public concernment to the whole town." His house was situated on the Boxford road, and its situation can still be located. At that place he lived and prospered for about ten years. He was a mechanic and a thrifty farmer, owning over four hundred acres of land and a large amount of personal property, as is shown by the inventory of his estate.
At that time skulking Indians continually annoyed the white inhabitants. The Merrimack river was a pathway; the Indians could make rapid sallies upon the settlements and make their escape without penetrating the forests. Haverhill had been attacked with all the cruelty of the savages. On the night of 2 May 1676, three well known "converted" (half civilized) Indians, Peter, Andrew and Symon, were intending to kill some parties in Rowley, but the night being far advanced, they wreaked their vengeance on the Kimballs. Thomas Kimball was killed by Symon, and his wife and five children, namely, Joanna, Thomas, Joseph, Priscilla, and John were taken captive and carried forty miles into the wilderness, where they remained forty-one days, and were freed without ransom by the friendly offices of the chief Wanalancet, of the Penacook Indians. Her own life and that of her infant were threatened, and twice the fires lighted to burn them. They reached their home 13 June 1676.
Great was the anguish of their friends during their captivity, and on 3 May 1676, her pious parents in Ipswich asked prayers on the Sabbath that they might be delivered.
Subsequently she addressed a petition to the Governor and Council that she might be protected from Symon, the Indian, who had threatened to kill her and her children if she returned to her own house. The three Indians were seized and confined in jail, but escaped and pursued their course of blood most mercilessly thereafter, and their subsequent fate is unknown. They were semi-civilized and had worked for and lived a great deal with the white people.
Thomas Kimball married Mary Smith, daughter of Thomas and Joanna Smith of Ipswich, about 1655, as is shown by the following note from the records of Salem: "Nov. 18, 1686 Richard and Benjamin Kimball of Bradford did covenant to and with the Selectmen of Ipswich that they would take Thomas Smith and his wife to Bradford to the house of Mary Kimball, widow of Thomas Kimball and provide their Meate, drink, washing, lodgeing, clothes and attendance with all things necessary for persons in such condition for the space of one year beginning at the date hereof, the price for a year to be £25. Dec. 8, 1687 Agreed with Richard Kimball of Bradfordd to allow unto him further keeping and providing for his grandfather Thomas Smith for the year ensuing £13." According to this Joanna Smith had probably died during the year.
The name of Thomas occurs very frequently on the early records of the town of Merrimac. Until the time of his death he always held some town office, being frequently selectman. | Kimball, Thomas (I2193)
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| 4214 |
Thompson and Elizabeth were of Lunenburg Co., Virginia. | Staples, Thompson (I277)
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| 4215 |
Thought perhaps to have died in the 1830s in McNairy Co., Tennessee. Probate records of McNairy County do not date back to the 1830s due to record loss; deed index of McNairy County from the 1820s through the 1850s shows only one McCaleb entry, a land sale by an Alx McCaleb in the 1840s. Estate records of his brother, Andrew, indicate an attorney was representing him in Stokes County by the mid-1820's, perhaps because he had moved away to Tennessee. (26 Apr 2018) | McKillip, Archibald (I3248)
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| 4216 |
Thought to have been married before 1749 in Carteret Co., North Carolina | Family F1518
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| 4217 |
Three Daniel Hoveys were probated in Worcester Co., Massachusetts by 1800; none can be clearly determined to be this man | Hovey, Daniel (I3543)
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| 4218 |
Three different burial records appear 1716-1720 in Wallenhorst for women named "Anna Feldmuller" (spelling varies). The record cited here gives the name as Anna Margaretha Feldmuller; in Germany at this time it would have been more common to retain her maiden name, so there is room for doubt as to whether this is the correct record. However, of the three possible records, this is the only one with a middle name and it coincides. | Niehuß, Anna Margaret (I4443)
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| 4219 |
Three different burial records appear 1716-1720 in Wallenhorst for women named "Anna Feldmuller" (spelling varies). The burial record cited here gives no middle name and is several months before Stephan vor der Nienporte remarries. | Feldtmöller, Anna Maria (I2836)
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| 4220 |
Three members of one family died recently at Rays Hill, Monday, February 11, son, Charles Ross Swartzwelder, of pneumonia. On Tuesday following his mother, Louisiana Swartzwelder, followed him and on the next Monday the father, Philip Swartzwelder passed over the river. (February 2, 1895) | Swartzwelder, Philip (I2985)
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| 4221 |
Three of his children, Hugh W, Martha A and Mary J Lauderdale, petitioned their brother, Ephraim L Lauderdale to be their guardian on 6 Feb 1857, referring to themselves as "minor heirs of Thomas J Lauderdale and Barbery Lauderdale." | Lauderdale, Thomas Jones (I818)
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| 4222 |
Three sons and three daughters were born to this marriage. | Family F989
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| 4223 |
Timothy Danielson was the son of John Danielson and Margaret Mighill, and the husband of (1) Beulah Winchester and (2) Elizabeth Sykes. He graduated with a theology degree from Yale College in 1756, but chose not to become a minister. He first became a teacher, then a trader, and finally an officer in the army.
When the American Revolution began he immediately joined and was rapidly promoted, reaching the rank of Brigadier General during the war. General Horatio Gates commended him for his energy in recruiting soldiers and forwarding supplies to the army during the war. He was a member of the first and second Provisional Congress, serving as chairman of the military committee.
After the war he was a senior major general of the MA state militia. Although not a lawyer he was also appointed Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas for Hampshire County, MA. Upon his death he left an estate worth 1,658 pounds, including a library of forty volumes.
According to oral family history, Gen. Danielson had a "Herculean frame, combined with Herculean strength."
Timothy's male line died out with the early death of his two sons. His nephews and cousins changed the family surname from "Danielson" to "Donaldson," believing that "Donaldson" was the original family surname back in 1600's Scotland. | Danielson, Honorable General Timothy (I1119)
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| 4224 |
TO DO: Check DeSoto county, Mississippi deeds | Gann, John W (I008)
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| 4225 |
To do: Search Halifax Co., Virginia probates in an attempt to establish her surname | Smith, Hanna (I006)
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| 4226 |
Trotter Cemetery | Downey, Margaret (I483)
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| 4227 |
Trotter Cemetery | Trotter, James Jr (I572)
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| 4228 |
Twelve children born to this couple in Haverhill MA 1731-1752; neither Samuel nor Hannah appear in Haverhill Deaths (30 Apr 2014) | Family F1532
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| 4229 |
Twelve children of this couple appear in Springfield, Hampden, Massachusetts town birth records 1647 - 1671. Seven of them died by the end of 1670. | Family F581
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| 4230 |
Two children born to this couple in Ipswich 1693-7 | Family F1584
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| 4231 |
Two children left death certificates that confirm she was the wife of Samuel Pate | Gann, Margaret (I712)
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| 4232 |
Two children of this couple were baptized in Bristol Parish, Prince George, Virginia; one in 1726, another in 1741 | Family F139
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| 4233 |
Two children recorded born to this couple in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts in 1658 and 1660 | Family F1649
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| 4234 |
Two different birth dates are given in her application for Civil War widow's pension, 15 Jun 1836 and 15 Jun 1837. The later year best ties to other statements of age in her affidavits in the file. | Welch, Mary Ann (I186)
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| 4235 |
Two different James O'Harnetts appear in the index to Clinton Co., Illinois estate files but neither file is available online (24 Mar 2016) | O'Harnett, James (I1925)
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| 4236 |
Two John Hulls are probated in Sussex Co., New Jersey, one in Walpeck Twp. in 1808 and another in Hardwick Twp., 1820-1; the available probate records do not contain enough information to determine whether either is a match for this John Hull | Hull, John (I1955)
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| 4237 |
Two Nathaniel Griffins appear in Bradford, Essex, Massachusetts town death records in the 1820s; however no other records for this family appear in Bradford | Griffin, Nathaniel (I3762)
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| 4238 |
Unable to find in available online Franklin Co., Georgia will records (2 Jan 2014)
Unable to find in available online Franklin Co., Georgia estate files (2 Jan 2014) | Stone, Hillory (I531)
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| 4239 |
Unable to find in available online Maury Co., Tennessee Probate records (19 Dec 2013) | Fleming, William Overton (I3284)
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| 4240 |
Unable to find in available online probate records of De Soto County, Mississippi (9 Sep 2015) | Gann, John W (I008)
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| 4241 |
Unable to find in FamilySearch "Alabama Deaths, 1908-1974" (04 Jan 2020) | Gann, Mary J (I177)
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| 4242 |
Unable to find in FamilySearch "Alabama Deaths, 1908-1974" (04 Jan 2020) | Gann, George Madison (I018)
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| 4243 |
Unable to find in index to Sussex Co., New Jersey probate records (4 Apr 2016) | Hull, Samuel (I1976)
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| 4244 |
Unable to find in the available online Monroe Co., Mississippi probate records (26 Nov 2013) | Malone, John (I073)
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| 4245 |
Unable to find in the available online probate records for Itawamba Co., MS (2013-NOV-05) | Gann, Robert (I007)
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| 4246 |
Unable to find in Wyoming Co., New York probate records because other than wills (not found) they are simply chronological with no index whatsoever -- note records seem complete and could probably be found with extended effort | Nichols, Zadock (I0950)
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| 4247 |
Unable to find probate records in those online for Tishomingo Co., MS (2013-NOV-06) | Gann, Thomas (I019)
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| 4248 |
Unclear whether this is the same man who married Maria Elizabeth Nieporte's sister Anna Maria Bernardina Adelheid Nieporte. | Schwalenberg, Johann Heinrich (I4425)
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| 4249 |
Undated confirmation record mentions Catharina Weckmannin of Somborn as the confirmed with parentage not mentioned | Family F2180
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| 4250 |
Unfortunately, none of the available online Tishomingo Co., Mississippi probate records (which are somewhat complete) appear to be indexed | Lauderdale, Thomas Jones (I818)
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