Notes
Matches 801 to 1,200 of 1,491
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801 | Sampson Eardswicke says this Adam married one of the daughters and heir s o f J o h n C averswall and had the manor of Bishop's Offley as a result. A t t h a t t i me, his father Adam gave him Horsley to better his standing fo r t h i s a d vantageous marriage. Another source says it was that marriage t o J o a n d e E yerton, heiress to the de Cresswalls which was the advantage ou s m a t c h. This marked the return of the family to Staffordshire. He wa s S h e r r iff of Staffordshire and Shropshire in 1341. He had a manor and f l o c k s o f sheep at Himley near Eccleshall. He was killed by enemies Jan. 8 , 1 3 4 6 . T hey justified the murder by claiming falsely that he had been o u t l a w ed and that his property was forfeit to the King.The widow had to f i g h t t h e King's claim in court. This battle continued for many years. | De Peshall, Adam III (I1732)
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802 | Samuel Allen was born in England, probably in Co. Somerset, or Dorset, o r D e v o n b efore 1612 and died at Braintree August 5,1669. He was a first settler in Boston, Massachusetts in 1628. He resided in D u x b u r y, Massachusetts before moving to Braintree where he was made a fr e e m a n 6 M ay 1635. Once in Braintree records he was called Mr. Allen, a t i t l e r e served for the upper class. | Allen of Braintree, Samuel (I9293)
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803 | Samuel was a member of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers.) He was a tanner by trade and in some deeds he was called a weaver. In May 1706 he had leather worth 11 s, 2 d that was taken from him for not training with the military evidently because of his faith. Regarding the land he owned, on March 12, 1712 he sold eight acers to John Mowry and ten acres of Joseph Mowry. He deeded seventy seven acres to his son James on February 28, 1716; 113 acres with a house and orchard to his son Peter on September 9, 1727; and 200 acres, his current homestead, orchard in Smithfield to his son John on September 14, 1733. On October 1, 1716 his nephew Joseph chose Samuel to be his guardian. | Aldrich, Samuel (I374)
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804 | Sancho III of Castile (1134 - 31 August 1158) King of Castile and Toled o f r o m 1 1 57 -1158. ... called el Deseado (the Desired ) due to his pos it i o n a s t he first child of his parents, born after ei ght years of chi l d l e s s marriage. ... Sancho III of Castile (1134 - 31 August 1158) King of Castile and Toled o f r o m 1 1 57 -1158. ... called el Deseado (the Desired ) due to his pos it i o n a s t he first child of his parents, born after ei ght years of chi l d l e s s marriage. ... | De Castilla, King of Castile and Toledo Sancho (I7051)
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805 | SAR Patriot #: P-104411 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A003070 Qualifying Service Description: Member of Committee of Correspondence Aug 1774 Delegate to Provincial Congress in Concord, MA Sep 1774 Additional References: NSDAR RC 432802 ------------------------------------------------ A SAR application (Membership 37384) states that Consider Arms served as a committee member of correspondence and of Treasury 1774-5 and a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1778. Cites DAR approved patriot. Cites The History of Conway page 57. Note: The DAR may have recently ruled that his service is not within dates .. Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed 12 Sep 2021), "Record of Consider Arms", Ancestor # A003070. | Arms, Consider (I27885)
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806 | SAR Patriot #: P-104959 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Major General / Patriotic Service DAR #: A003388 Birth: 1720 / Brunswick / NC Death: 24 Oct 1781 / Sampson / NC Qualifying Service Description: MEM OF PROV. CONGRESS & MEM OF COMM OF SAFETY Additional References: Grave Registry form. National Society Sons of the American Revolution (SAR); The New England Historical & Genealogical Register, 1847-2011; “Biographical History of North Carolina from the colonial times to the present” by Samuel A’Court Ashe (1906)e Spouse: Rebecca Moore Children: Elizabeth Maria; Harriet; | Ashe, Major General John Baptiste (I44139)
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807 | SAR Patriot #: P-114431 Private Michael Bieber served with 3rd Battalion, Northampton County Militia, Pennsylvania Militia during the American Revolution. State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A008241 Qualifying Service Description: Private - CPT Paul Knauss, LTC Nicholas Kern Additional References: Pennsylvania Archieves, Fifth Series, Vol VIII, pg 239-240 Spouse: Anna Maria Fenstermacher Children: Peter; Catharina; Anna Margaret/Margaretta; Regina; | Bieber, Johannes Michael Valentine Sr (I45056)
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808 | SAR Patriot #: P-123191 | Bryan, William (I45138)
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809 | SAR Patriot #: P-123367 State of Service: Qualifying Service: Birth: 1736 Death: 1776 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Browning, Jacob Francis (I27977)
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810 | SAR Patriot #: P-124045 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Civil Service DAR #: A016456 Birth: 24 Mar 1725 New Milford / New Haven / CT Death: 28 Jan 1793 New Milford / Litchfield / CT Qualifying Service Description: NSDAR cites COLLECTOR FOR CLASS RATES OF CONTINENTAL SOLDIERS, 1781 Additional References: NSDAR cites MULLEN, CT TOWN MEETING RECS, Vol 2, pg 66 Spouse: Elizabeth Sherman Children: William Sherman; Hannah; Samuel Beebe; Mehitable; Josiah; Salmon; Asaph; | Buck, James (I2313)
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811 | SAR Patriot #: P-127032 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A018035 Birth: 17 Sep 1715 / New Kent / VA Death: 1783 / Dobbs / NC Qualifying Service Description: Furnished Supplies and Sundries Additional References: Haun, NC Rev Army Accts, Book D, Book 1, Part 16, pg 2314 Haun, NC Rev Army Accts, Vol 10, Part 8, pg 1001 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 DAR Patriot Index (1990), p465 | Cade, Stephen (I25499)
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812 | SAR Patriot #: P-129577 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Captain DAR #: A019960 Birth: 22 Feb 1730 Norwalk / Fairfield / CT Death: 02 Jan 1819 New Canaan / Fairfield / CT Qualifying Service Description: 2LT, 5th Co, Col Smiks Bn, under Gen Gates (Jul 1776) LT, under Capt Daniel Benedict's 9th Co, NY Militia (1776) CAPT, 9th Co, 9th Militia, under Gen Wooster (May 1777) Commanded company of minutemen along coast of Long Island CAPT, under Capt Lockwood, attack on Morriena, NY (Jan 1780) NSDAR cites Also, LT, 9TH REG, Col JOHN MEAD 2Lt, Capt ELIJAH BEACH, Col HEMAN SWIFT'S CT STATE BATT Additional References: "Men of Connecticut in the war of the Revolution", Adj Gen Rpt, pg 391, 458, 459, 484, 485, 554 Hall's Norwalk Records, pg 127 "Narrative of Levi Hanford", pg 58 NSDAR cites: HOADLEY, PUB RECS OF THE STATE OF CT, 1776-1781, Volume 1, pg 263, 267 Spouse: (1) Hannah Benedict; (2) Hannah Bates; Children: Mary/Polly; Ebenezer; Samuel; Deborah; Sally; Elizabeth; Mercy; Landon; Hannah; | Carter, John (I27567)
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813 | SAR Patriot #: P-131647 State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Civil Service / Patriotic Service DAR #: A020979 Birth: 01 Jun 1733 New London / New London / CT Death: 23 Apr 1816 Paupack / Pike / PA Qualifying Service Description: Justice of the Peace, Litchifield and Westmoreland Counties, CT Owner of Gristmill that produce food for soldiers Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Hoadly, Pub Recs of the Colony of CT 1772-1776, Vol 15, pg 279 1776-1781, Volume 3, pg 10, 11 Spouse: Sibel/Sybil Olmstead Cook Children: Moses; Uriah; | Chapman, Uriah Sr (I37537)
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814 | SAR Patriot #: P-137802 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Captain / Patriotic Service DAR #: A025237 Birth: abt 1720 / Isle of Wight / VA Death: bef Sep 1792 / Franklin / NC Qualifying Service Description: Soldier, Franklin Co., NC DAR cites REIMBURSED FOR GOODS OR SERVICES Additional References: Hendricks, Lineage of Herring, Conyers Family, pg 21 Bass, Wilkes Family History and Genealogy of Thomas Wilkes, pg 51-52 National Cyclopedia, Biography of Christopher Conyers, pg 398 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 DAR Patriot Index Book, Vol 1, pg 150 DAR cites NC REV ARMY ACCTS VOL 7, pg 67, FOLIO 4, ROLL #S.115.57.3 VOL 9, pg 88, FOLIO 3, ROLL #S.115.57.4 Spouse: Margaret Arundel/Arrendal Children: Mary; William; Ephraim; Amy Isabel; | Conyers, Captain Richard (I25733)
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815 | SAR Patriot #: P-141455 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A212167 Birth: 06 Mar 1744 Yarmouth / Barnstable / MA Death: 27 Sep 1807 Hawley / Franklin / MA Qualifying Service Description: Private, Capt Micah Chapman's co., Colonel Nathaniel Freeman's regt., service, 13 days on an alarm at Dartmouth and Falmouth, Sept. 1778; also, same company and regiment, service, 2 days guarding prisoners belonging to the British ship "Somerset" cast ashore on Cape Cod, Nov. 1778 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Yarmouth, MA Town Records, Volume 3, pg 101 Yarmouth, MA Vital Records, Book 4, pg 65 MA Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, Vol 4, pg 147 Muster/Payrolls of the Rev War (MA & RI) Volume 35, pg 237; Volume 55, pg N.92 Spouse: Mary Crosby Children: Samuel; Sarah; Judah; Theophilus; Abigail; Ebenezer; Betty; Polly; Joshua; Hannah; | Crosby, Ebenezer (I405)
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816 | SAR Patriot #: P-145021 State of Service: Qualifying Service: Birth: 1744 Death: 1815 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Davis, Thomas (I32850)
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817 | SAR Patriot #: P-147731 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Captain / Patriotic Service DAR #: A033599 Birth: 1749 / Caroline / VA Death: Nov 1802 / Halifax / NC Qualifying Service Description: Militia Sold provisions to the Revolutionary Army in NC Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Vouchers, NC Halifax District, No 3286, 3557, 3976, & 6396; Roll # 68.9 Historical Southern Families, Volume IX, John Bennett Boddie, 1971, pg 66 | Dickens, Joseph (I29205)
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818 | SAR Patriot #: P-152167 State of Service: MD Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A035323 Birth: 1755 on Shenandoah River / / VA Death: 23 Aug 1843 / Franklin / IN Qualifying Service Description: Served as a Private in Kent Co, MD under the command of Captain THOMAS MARSLAND, Colonel BROWN Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Pension Number *S32226 Spouse: Sarah Elizabeth Sailors | Eads, Henry (I24985)
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819 | SAR Patriot #: P-152879 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Eckerson, Thomas Cornelius (I2568)
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820 | SAR Patriot #: P-157398 State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Patritoic Service DAR #: A039056 Qualifying Service Description: Took Oath of Allegiance, Berks County, PA 8 Jul 1778 Additional References: DAR RC # 902849 cites OWEN, PERSONS WHO TOOK THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE IN BERKS CO PA, COLLS OF GEN SOC OF PA, Volume 268, pg 212, FHL ROLL #20824 Spouse: (1) XX XX; (2) XX Koehler Children: Anna Maria; Burial:Neffs Union (aka Unionville) Cemetery (C-0375031) Location:Neffs / Lehigh / PA / USA Find A Grave Cemetery #:1973098 PVT 7 CO 3 BATT PA MILITIA REVOLUTIONARY WAR VETERAN Jacob Fenstermacher, the eldest son of Mathias, was one of the founders of the Longswamp Reformed church. The proprietary return of 1767 shows that he was the owner of one hundred acres of land in that township, and his name appears in the federal census of 1790, indicating that he was then still living. | Fenstermacher, Johann Jakob Bernhard (I45058)
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821 | SAR Patriot #: P-160071 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A040522 Birth: 21 May 1740 Harwinton / Hartford / CT Death: Jun 1778 Qualifying Service Description: CAPT THEODORE WOODBRIDGE, COL HEMAN SWIFT, 1777 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 NARA, M881, COMP MIL SERV RECS, ROLL #314 Spouse: Rebecca Barker | Foote, Ebenezer (I27462)
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822 | SAR Patriot #: P-164652 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Civil Service / Patriotic Service / Private DAR #: A043476 Birth: abt 1726 / / MA Death: 31 Aug 1807 Conway / Hampshire / MA Qualifying Service Description: PVT, CAPTs DICKINSON, CHILDS, DINSMORE, FRENCH, COLs WOODBRIDGE, LEONARD, FIELDS, WELLS MEM COMM OF CORRES, INSPECT, & SAFETY FENCE VIEWER, SURVEYOR OF HIGHWAYS & SELECTMAN Additional References: Grave Registry form. National Society Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) DAR Patriot Index, Vol I, pg 262 Vital Records of Conway, MA, pg 234 Tombstone Inscriptions, Conway, MA pg 31 MA SOLS & SAILS, Volume 6, pg 314 MADAR, TOWN OFFICIALS 1775-1783, GRC S 1, Volume 2, pg 218, 219, 220, 222 | Gates, Ensign Israel N. (I27711)
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823 | SAR Patriot #: P-167367 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Lieutenant DAR #: A046084 Birth: 1761 / Duplin / NC Death: aft 1837 / Madison / FL Qualifying Service Description: MILITIA, WILMINGTON DISTRICT Revolutionary War service as a Lieut., in Capt William Rutledge's company raised for Duplin County (NC) Whig militia Additional References: NC REV WAR PAY VOUCHERS #446, #5501, ROLL #S.115.91 Pension #R4089 Spouse: Sabra Mathis Children: James; Ann; Susannah; Elizabeth; Lewis; He first entered as a volunteer under Captain Lanier of North Carolina who marched him to Fayetteville in said state, then they were met by General Butler who marched them to Atlanta in the State of Georgia. There they met with Gen. Green who marched them to Stone Point in the State of South Carolina at which place they had a battle with the British. After this battle he amongst others were discharged by General Green and returned to North Carolina having been in the service five months and about fifteen days. | Goff, William Sr (I37452)
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824 | SAR Patriot #: P-167779 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Soldier Birth: 1720 Death: 1777 Additional References: Rev War Graves Register. Clovis H. Brakebill, compiler. 672pp. SAR. 1993 SAR Rev War Graves Register CD. Progeny Publishing Co: Buffalo, NY. 1998 | Goodrich, David Sr. (I9183)
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825 | SAR Patriot #: P-172097 State of Service: VA Qualifying Service: Captain DAR #: A048979 Birth: abt 1740 / Goochland / VA Death: bef 27 Nov 1820 / Fluvanna / VA Qualifying Service Description: NSDAR cites CAPT, ALBEMARLE CO & FLUVANNA CO MILITIA Additional References: NSDAR cites GWATHMEY, HIST REG OF VA IN THE REV, pg 336 PALMER & MCRAE, CAL OF VA STATE PAPERS, Vol 5, pg 553-554 Spouse: Mary Patross/Peatross; | Haden, Joseph (I25056)
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826 | SAR Patriot #: P-174220 State of Service: VA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service / Ensign DAR #: A050702 Birth: 1730 / Hanover / VA Death: bef Jul 1788 / Albemarle / VA Qualifying Service Description: Provided supplies such as Bacon 325 Pounds and Rye 20 Bushels 4th Compnay, 1st Battalion, 47th Regiment, Virginia Line NSDAR cites: FURNISHED SUPPLIES Additional References: "VA Publick Claims, Albemarle" by Abercrombie, Janice L. & Slatten, Richard, pg 39-40 DAR Lineage Book Vol 82, pg 92 DAR Patriot Index 1966, pg 299 ENS PS VA, Albermarkel, VA Public Claims, Patriot Certificate 104, Abercrombie & Slatton VA Rev Public Claims vol 1, pg 20, 26 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Henley Children: Turner; Mary/Molly; Susan; Elizabeth; Rebecca; Richardson; Henley; | Hamner, William (I25031)
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827 | SAR Patriot #: P-177070 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Sergeant DAR #: A052462 Birth: 12 Apr 1731 Windsor / Hartford / CT Death: 13 Apr 1819 bur. Fort Ann / Washington / NY Qualifying Service Description: Sgt., Capt David Downs, Col Charles Burrell, 1776 Also Pvt, Capt John Spoor, Col John Ashley, 1780 Additional References: 56th-77th Annual Reports DAR. Senate documents (US Congress, Senate). GPO: Washington, DC Rolls and Lists of CTt Men in the Rev 1775-1783, pg 34 MA Soldiers and Sailors of the Rev War, Volume 8, pg 280 Spouse: (1) XX XX; (2) Rhoda Goodrich Children: Issac H; Benjamin Franklin; Seth; Ira; Martha; John; David | Hoskins, Anthony V. (I246)
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828 | SAR Patriot #: P-177935 State of Service: VT Qualifying Service: Lieutenant DAR #: A053635 Birth: 26 Mar 1744 Farmington / Hartford / CT Death: 02 Apr 1818 Cambridge / Franklin / VT Qualifying Service Description: Capt Benjamin Wait; Col Joab Hoisington Capt Benjamin Wait; Col Joab Hoisington's Cumberland Co. Militia, enlstd 06 Aug 1776 With Capt Ebenezer Allen, VT Militia, at Ticonderoga, Mar 1778, 15 das svc Private, Capt John Marcy's Co., VT Militia, mrchd 16 Mar 1781, 3 das svc Additional References: Grave Registry form. National Society Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Goodrich. Vermont Men in the Rev War, pg 352, 795-796, 819, 825 FERNOW, DOCS REL TO THE COL HIST OF STATE OF NY, “NY IN THE REV,” VOL 15, pg 129 Spouse: (1) Azuba Russell; (2) Hannah Dean Sayles | Hawley, Elisha (I27738)
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829 | SAR Patriot #: P-178113 State of Service: MD Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service / Soldier DAR #: A052596 Birth: 1743 / St Marys / MD Death: 24 Mar 1817 / Washington / KY Qualifying Service Description: Served in the St. Mary's militia and signed an Oath of Allegience in 1778 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Clements & Wright, MD Militia in the Revolution, pg 210 Chronicles of St Mary's, Vol 4, #7, Jul 1956, pg 44 Manuscript Revolutionary Militia List, pg 245 and 254 appears the name of William Hayedn in a return of the militia for St. Mary's County, MD 1789 Certified Data Adair, Sullivan, Putnam and Schuyler CO, MO pg 836 Spouse: (1) Susanna Buckman (2) Margaret Mattingly Children: Sarah/Sallie; John B Anna; Mary; | Hayden, William (I33749)
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830 | SAR Patriot #: P-224973 State of Service: GA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service - Sergeant DAR #: A063046 Birth: abt 1754 / Chester / PA Death: Feb 1850 / Amite / MS Qualifying Service Description: Minuteman that served 2 years under Captain Henry Walker and Colonels Stewart and Elijah Clark, Columbus County, GA Additional References: Pension *S7081 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Johnson, James Caleb (I31686)
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831 | SAR Patriot #: P-240780 State of Service: VA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A079203 Birth: 21 Apr 1720 / New Kent / VA Death: bef 01 Sep 1800 / Albemarle / VA Qualifying Service Description: FURNISHED SUPPLIES, 200 pounds of Beef Additional References: ALBEMARLE CO VA CT ORDERS 1783-1785, pg 11. COPY IN SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION WITH DAR #715990 + 894 Spouse: Elizabeth Martin Children: Lucy; Elizabeth; Richard; Susanna; | Moon, William (I25048)
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832 | SAR Patriot #: P-241347 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Soldier Birth: 1713 New Haven / New Haven / CT Death: 04 Nov 1798 North Haven / New Haven / CT Qualifying Service Description: Militia, Danbury Alarm Apr 1777 Additional References: Johnson; CT Men in the Rev War pg 492 Spouse: Hannah Goodyear Children: Beede; Samuel; Mabel; | Mansfield, Thomas (I2442)
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833 | SAR Patriot #: P-242999 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Private / Patriotic Service / Civil Service DAR #: A075428 Birth: abt 1719 / Isle of Wight Colony / VA Death: bef Oct 1783 / Duplin / NC Qualifying Service Description: Musician, Capt Turner, Col Jethro Sumner, North Carolina Militia, Provided Muster Ground for Militia Paid for Services Rendered, 1781 Assessor, 1780-1781 Additional References: NC Rev War Pay Vouchers, #70, unumbered, roll #s.115.111 NC Historical Commission, Raleigh, NC Book 1, pg 25, Revolutionary Army Accounts NC Land Office, Warrants, plats of surveys, file #1560, roll #s.108.692 Rev War Pension file of Lot Rich S9076 Wilington Dist., NC, Certificate #2198 SAR of Mississippi Directory, 1950, pg 17, 22 NSDAR Patriot Index, pg 444 Cain, Four Centuries on the Pascagoula, Vol 2, pg 192, 193, 2?? Treasurer and Comptrollers Paper, Rev War Pay Vouchers, "Edmunf Mathis" (sic), Duplic Co. assessor, Oct. Term 1780 s115.58, Vol V, pg 43f , 43.r.1 S 115.48, Vol W-1, pg 1, 35 Rev War of Duplin-Sampson Counties, Bizzell, pg 6 Spouse: Mary/Molly Price Children: Sabra; James; Thomas; Zacheus; Lazrus; Olive; John; | Matthis, Edmund Hillery (I31546)
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834 | SAR Patriot #: P-254213 State of Service: Qualifying Service: Birth: 1733 Death: 1802 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Munson, Walter D. (I2244)
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835 | SAR Patriot #: P-269739 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service Birth: 1730 Death: 1806 Qualifying Service Description: alternate burial info: Codding Cem /Ontario/NY Additional References: 56th-77th Annual Reports DAR. Senate documents (United States Congress, Senate). Government Printing Office: Washington, DC Spouse: (1) Ruth Hathaway; (2) Bathsheba Walker Gooding | Phillips, Abiezer (I27380)
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836 | SAR Patriot #: P-270729 State of Service: SC Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A089098 Birth: 07 Mar 1731 Charleston / / SC Death: 22 Sep 1782 Charleston / / SC Qualifying Service Description: DAR - FUTURE APPLICANTS MUST PROVE CORRECT SERVICE - THIS MAN WAS A LOYALIST. SC AMERCED HIS ESTATE IN 1782 SABINE, BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF LOYALISTS IN THE AM REV, VOL 2, P 192 President of Provincial Congress; member of Committee of Safety Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 SC Historical Magazine, Vol II, pg 136-137 Spouse: Frances Brewton Children: Thomas; | Pinckney, Colonel Charles (I44022)
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837 | SAR Patriot #: P-274183 State of Service: VA Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A092028 Birth: abt 1750 / Grayson / VA Death: aft 26 Feb 1805 / Surry / NC Qualifying Service Description: VA Continental Line Additional References: DAR RC 825277 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Puckett, Thomas Hobby (I2676)
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838 | SAR Patriot #: P-291394 State of Service: SC Qualifying Service: Captain / Patriotic Service DAR #: A104530 Birth: 1720 / / VA Death: 01 Jul 1776 / 96 Dist / SC Qualifying Service Description: 1775, served as the Captain of the 3rd Company commanded by Andrew Williamson Died during a skirmish with Native American warriors in 1776 Additional References: McCrady, EdwardThe History of South Carolina in the Revolution, 1775-1780, New York City, The MacMillan Company, 1901, pg 90, 192 Howe, GeorgeHistory of the Presbyterian Church in South Carolina, South Carolina. Columbia: Dufie & Chapman, 1870, pg 429 Spouse: Elizabeth Caraway Children: Ezekial; Thomas Smith Sr; | Smith, Captain Aaron (I24624)
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839 | SAR Patriot #: P-294502 State of Service: Qualifying Service: Birth: 1729 Death: Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Spann, Captain Richard (I25743)
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840 | SAR Patriot #: P-294610 State of Service: CT/VT Qualifying Service: Lieutenant DAR #: A107630 Birth: 30 Sep 1744 Plainfield / Windham / CT Death: 25 Feb 1840 Middletown / Rutland / VT Qualifying Service Description: ALSO PRIVATE, SERGEANT ORDERLY SERGEANT SERGEANT MAJOR ADJUTANT, CAPTs ELLIS, HART, ALLEN,COLs SAGE, ABBOTT, MEAD, LEE Private, Capt Abel Merriman; Colonel Ebenezer Allen's Reg't, VT Militia, tour to Castleton, Oct 1780 Private, Capt Jacob Wood; Colonel Thomas Lee's Reg't, VT Militia, tours to Castleton, Jun & Oct 1781 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Pension: *S22529 Goodrich. Vermont Men in the Rev War, pg 209, 381,468 | Spaulding, Joseph (I241)
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841 | SAR Patriot #: P-322870 State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A126836 Qualifying Service Description: SIGNED OATH OF ALLEGIANCE, BERKS CO Additional References: Applications with burial data. Benjamin Franklin Chapter, OHSSAR NSDAR #856472; NSSAR #136772 OWEN, PERSONS WHO TOOK THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE IN BERKS CO, COLLS OF GEN SOC OF PA, Volume 268, pg 220, FHL ROLL #20824 Isaac was a private in the Revolutionary War under the first Reg. that went out from Burks [sic Berks] Co., Penn., Aug., 1776. (Capt., Thoms. Perrys Co., commanded by Col. Mark Bird). | Wiseman, Isaac N. Jr (I8511)
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842 | SAR Patriot #: P-325994 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A129644 Birth: 13/15 Oct 1730 Stonington / New London / CT Death: 30 Oct 1778 Voluntown / Windham / CT Qualifying Service Description: TAKEN PRISONER TO QUEBEC IN 1778 Prisoner 1778 at Westmoreland Co, PA Additional References: MCHENRY, REBEL PRISONERS AT QUEBEC, 1778-1783, pg 2 Craft, History of Bradford Co, PA, 1878, pg 71 Spouse: Lucretia Miner Children: Lucretia; Hannah; Barentha; Wealthy/Welthea Ann; Manassah Miner/Minor; Keziah; | York, Captain Amos (I5205)
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843 | SAR Patriot #: P-329726 State of Service: NJ Qualifying Service: Corporal Birth: abt 1744 / Sussex / NJ Death: bef 08 Mar 1832 / Clark / OH Qualifying Service Description: Capt Bond Co. 4th Batt Second Establishment. NJ Militia and Continental Army Additional References: Muster and Pay Rolls of the Rev 1776-1783 Colonial NJ 1600s-1800s - Officers & Men in the Rev War, Part I, pg 217 Spouse: Mary Budd Children: Elijah; | Hull, Benjamin (I3043)
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844 | SAR Patriot #: P-332261 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Major / Patriotic Service / Civil Service DAR #: A018136 Birth: 1740 / Edgecombe / NC Death: Feb 1804 / Chatham / NC Qualifying Service Description: Second Major of Minute Men by appointment, Septeber 9, 1775 Signed Test Member of Provincial Congress Additional References: Clark: State Records of North Carolina, Volume 10, pg 204, 207, 505, 522, 523 Spouse: (1) Mary XX; (2) Martha Blake; (3) XX Willis Children: Cynthia/Cinthy; Hardy; William; James; Rebeka; Christin; Absalom; Sarah; | Cain, Member of Provincial Congress Elisha (I29639)
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845 | SAR Patriot #: P-343154 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Private Birth: abt 1759 / St Mary's / MD Death: liv May 1833 / Granville / NC Qualifying Service Description: Militia Capt Banks Company, Colonel Moore's Regt Additional References: Pension # S9108 Spouse: Rebecca Bailey | Bullock, Charles (I28687)
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846 | Sarah Rapelye was the FIRST white girl born in the new American colony..... at Fort Orange (now Albany), New York. In some file, this family's last name may be spelled Rapalje, Raparielliet, Rapelye, Rapariellet, or Raparlier. Sarah Jorissey RAPALJE was born on 9 Jun 1625 in Fort Orange, Albany, NY. A book by Jerome B. Holgate written in 1848 also reports her birthdate as 6/9/1625. She died in 1685 in Brooklyn, NY. Sarah was married two times. Her first marriage was to Hans Hansen BERGEN when she was 14. He died in 1653 leaving her a widow with a number of minor children. At the time she was 28. Sarah’s second marriage (in 1654) was to Theunis Gysbertzen BOGAERT. | Rapalje, Sarah Jorise (I45524)
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847 | See notes for Thedor Polhemus born in 1540 Born in "Brasil" to "Dutch" "missionary" father employed by Dutch West Indies Company in the Americas. | Polhemus, Anna (I45262)
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848 | See notes for Thedor Polhemus born in 1540 Born in "Brasil" to "Dutch" "missionary" father employed by Dutch West Indies Company in the Americas. | Polhemius, Maragarita (I45462)
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849 | Seigneur (Lord) of Beaumont, Pont-Audemer, Brionne, and Vatteville. The s e w e r e c ritically important castles in Normandy. From 1081 he was Com t e ( C o u nt) of Meulan also, which an inheritance through his mother. In England he became the first Anglo-Norman Earl of Leicester (not coun t i n g a n y earls before 1066). His very significant English lands were ce n t r e d t here and in neighbouring Warwickshire. He was at the battle of H a s t i n gs. | De Beaumont, Earl of Leicester Robert I (I6968)
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850 | Settled in Albany in 1642 | Janssen, Albert (I4650)
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851 | SGT US ARMY WORLD WAR I | Carlton, Harrison Raymond (I37541)
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852 | Shanks' wife Abigail is shown by a patent book to be a servant transported in 1650 to Maryland by Robert Brooke, Esq. Another patent book provides the names of Brooke's servants brought by him in 1650, and the only maid servant named Abigail is "Abagail Mountague". Also bolstering this statement is the fact that John Shanks in his 1683 will named an Indian servant boy living in his house that he called "James Monticue." Robert Brooke, Esq. (1602-1655), had ties to Hampshire, Sussex, and London. There was an Abigail Montague christened in London in 1639 who left neither a marriage or death record there. That might be a place to check for the origin of John Shanks' wife. | Mountague, Abigail (I8585)
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853 | She and John Severance were NOT on the passenger list of the Elizabeth in 1634. | Kimball, Abigail (I45627)
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854 | She came to NA with her parents i n 1652. She and her husband became members of the Amersfort DRC where their names are recorded in 1677. They reared 10 children. Some took on the name Abramse and located in Dutchess Co. NY. Among them were Derick, Lambertje and Gerrit. Abraham came from Flushing Holland and was a magistrate and church elder in Flatlands NY. | Stryker, Aeltje Janse (I45259)
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855 | She had been promised to Strongbow by her father who had visited Englan d t o a s k f o r an invasion army. He was not allowed to give his daughter a w ay , a s u n der Early Irish Law Aoife had the choice of whom she married, b u t s h e h a d to agree to an arranged marriage. Under Anglo-Norman law, this gave Strongbow succession rights to the Ki n g d o m o f Leinster. Under Irish Brehon law, the marriage gave her a life i n t e r e st only, after which any land would normally revert to male cousin s ; b u t B r ehon law also recognized a transfer of "swordland" following a c o n q u e st. Aoife conducted battles on behalf of her husband and is someti m e s k n o wn as Red Eva (Irish: Aoife Rua). | MacMurrough, Countess of Ireland, Countess of Pembroke Aoife (I7585)
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856 | She had impeccable etiquette and a royal face to match. She had pale, m i l k y s k in that her dark hair set off even further, and one courtier des c r i b e d her “pretty eyes, nose, and… good complexion.” Her worst featur e w a s s h e h ad terrible teeth whic | De Bourbon, Queen consort of England, Scotland and Ireland Henrietta Maria (I8544)
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857 | She is also known as Willemken Elderinck The Geesteren DRC records show: Marriages, 1652 onwards: 27 March 1653: Harmen Lubberdinck son of Jan Lubberdinck from Geesteren with Willemken Elderinck daughter of Warner Elderinck from Hengelo and married there 11 April. Hengelo, located southwest of Ruurlo and Borculo, is the village where Willemke Warnaers Elderinck was born about 1630. She died in Constable's Hook, N.J., and was the 79th person to be buried with a pall. (Bergen, N.J., Burs. Nos. 148 & 165) The old spelling seems to have been "Constapels Hoeck", N.J. | Elderinck, Willemptje Warnaar (I45371)
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858 | She is wife of Pennsylvania patriot Beaver, Michael (11 Feb 1740 Germany to 26 Oct 1832 Lehigh County, Pennsylvania) DAR Ancestor #: A008241 Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed 30 Nov 2021), "Record of Beaver, Michael", Ancestor # A008241. | Fenstermacher, Anna Maria Barbara (I45057)
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859 | She married her husband sometime between 942, when she appears in a doc u m e n t u nmarried, and 950, and when she appears married. Her husband w a s b o r n a bout 931. Since he would be only 19 in 950, a marriage in the l a t e r p a rt of the time period, say, 949, would appear reasonable. If Adelais was 16 when she was married, and the marriage took place in 9 4 9 , h e r e stimated birth year would be 933. Her father was Giselbert, duke of Burgundy, who died 8 April 956. Her m o t h e r w as Ermengarde, who is known from the charter of 11 December 942. | Chalon, Comtesse de Vermandois Adelaide Werra (I9589)
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860 | She was a twin to Samuel Mayo, Jr., who was baptized at the same time. | Mayo, Mary (I368)
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861 | She was heiress of her mother and father, in the barony of Old Wardon, c o . B e d s ., and the moiety of Buckland which they had held passed to her. | Builly, Idonea (I1839)
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862 | She was Nest, daughter of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn (d. 1063), the first (an d o n l y ) n ative king of all of Wales. Gruffudd did have a daughter named N e s t , w i fe of Osbern FitzRichard , but there is no evidence that she was a l s o m a r ried to Trahaern ap Caradog, and no early source for a second da u g h t e r named Nest. Sources: Title: " Welsh Genealogies AD 300-1400 & AD 1400-1500" [[Category:Rhuddlan cwmwd, Tegeingl]] [[Category: Legendary Scottish Stewart Ancestry]] } ==Biography== This is the biography of Nest [II] the second Nest, daughter of Gruffyd d a p L l e w elyn and his second wife Ealdgyth of Mercia ===Disambiguation=== This is not the Nest I who married Trahaearn ap Caradog. "....Gruffudd a l s o h a d a d aughter, Nest, who married Trahaearn ap Caradog. This man, i n 1 0 7 5 , s ucceeded Bleddyn ap Cynfyn as king of Powys, and probably also k i n g o f G w ynedd. Born c. 1035, Trahaearn had sons Owain and Llywarch (a m o n g o t hers) who were born c. 1065/1070. These dates point to c. 1050 a s t h e b i r thdate of Nest, with the marriage taking place shortly after G ru f f u d d's death in 1063. ===Birth=== Nest II ferch Gruffudd was born about 1056 (Wolcott) D arrell Wolcott, Ancient Wales Studies. [http://www.ancientwales s t u d i es.org/id210.html The Consorts and Children of Gruffudd ap Llewely n ] A c c e ssed July 8, 2015 or in Rhuddlan 1059 (Boyer). Carl Boyer 3rd. Medieval Welsh Ancestors of Certain Amer i c a n s . By the author: Santa Clarita, California, 2004. Gruffudd ap L l y w e l yn is #18 on page 287. Wolcott's dating of the birth of the second Nest places her as a daught e r o f G r u ffudd and Ealdgyth. ===Parents=== Nesta, according to Cawley, daughter of Gruffydd and his second wife. < r e f n a m e="fmg399"> Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealgy. M e d i e v al Lands Database. Wales [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/WALES.h t m # _ f tnref399 Gruffydd ap Llywelyn ap Seisyll] Accessed October 23, 20 1 8 [ [ D a y-1904|jhd]] Orderic Vitalis names "Nest" as the daughter of "Edwinus.et Morcarus co m i t e s , filii Algari.Edgivam sororem eorum" and her first husband "Gritf r i d i . regis Guallorum"[422]. The primary source which confirms her marr i a g e h a s not yet been identified. ===1070 Marriage=== She married OSBERN FitzRichard of Richard's Castle, son of RICHARD Fitz S c r o b & h is wife --- (-after [1087/88]). Nest [II] married about 1070 (possibly) Osbern fitz Richard. Wolcott n o t e s t h at the husband of "this c. 1056 Nest is widely cited by modern a u t h o r s as the Norman man, Osbern fitz Richard. There are, however, no a n c i e n t or even medieval manuscripts which confirm that marriage." Keats-Rohan, however, in Domesday Descendants shows "Nesta filia Grufyd d , " t h e d aughter of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn of Deheubarth (d. 1063) as the w i f e o f O s bern fitz Richard Scrop of Richard's Castle. K. S. B. K e a t s - Rohan, Domesday Descendants, Boydell Press: 2002; p. 846, citing D a r l i n gton, Cartulary of Worcester (Register I) (1962-1963), no. 148 The husband of this c. 1056 Nest is widely cited by modern authors as t h e N o r m an man, Osbern fitz Richard. There are, however, no ancient or e v e n m e d ieval manuscripts which confirm that marriage. The identificati o n i s m a d e by inference alone. ===Binley=== The 1086 Domesday Book for Warwickshire notes that Binley (located just e a s t o f C o ventry) was held by the Cathedral Priory, and that 3 hides of t h a t l a n d had been acquired from Osbern. And before the Conquest, those 3 h i d e s w e re held by Ealdgyth wife of Gruffudd. One assumes, but cannot b e c e r t a in, that Osbern had owned the land "et uxor" as the husband of t he h e i r e ss daughter of Ealdgyth. This assumption is strengthened a bi t b y a c . 1 1 0 0/20 entry in the Cartulary of Worchester Cathedral Priory w h ere in H u g h fitz Osbern confirms a grant made by his father "for the so u l s o f h i s father Osbern and his mother Nest". Accordingly, the wife o f O s b e r n was named Nest ferch "unknown". By assuming such a marrriage, the other sources we mentioned above seem t o d o v e t ail. Ealdgyth (the daughter of Earl Aelfgar) owned some land in B i n l e y , Warwickshire. She married Gruffudd ap Llewelyn and had a daught e r n a m e d Nest, her only child by him. After the death of Ealdgyth (sometime after 1066), this land descended t o h e r d a u ghter Nest. Nest married Osbern c. 1070 and he, likely late in life, gave it to the C a t h e d ral Priory in Coventry. Of course, there are other ways in which O s b e r n m ight have acquired that land and other ladies named Nest he migh t h a v e m a rried. Thus, we label the marriage as quite possible but unpr ov e n . Nest [II] would have been yet a child when her father was killed in 106 3 , a n d l i kely married at age 14 c. 1070 Richard le Scrob/Scrope, born about 1010, built Richard's Castle in Her e f o r d shire about 1048 as a baron of King Edward the Confessor. He was t h e f a t h er of Osbern who married Nest [II] born about 1056. Osbern held Stanage in Herefordshire according to the 1086 Domesday Boo k . N e s t [ II], the wife of Osbern, was probably, but not certainly, a d a ug h t e r of Gruffudd ap Llewelyn. ===Issue=== #Hugo. "Hugo filius Osberti" donated a saltpan at Droitwich to the mon k s o f W o r cester Cathedral priory, for the souls of "patris mei Osberti e t m a t r i s mee Nest", by charter dated to [early 12th century][423]. ==Research Notes== ===Nest and the Scottish Stewart Legend=== In stories of the legendary Banquo and his son Fleance, as recounted in R a p h a e l Holinshead's Chronicles, Bevington, David . F o u r T r agedies. Bantam, 1988. ISBN 0-553-21283-4, p.714. Cited by W ik i p e d ia. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleance Fleance] Accessed Feb 6 , 2 0 1 8 . [ [Day-1904|jhd]] Fleance-in fear of Macbeth???flees to W a l e s a n d marries [[Gruffydd-5|Nesta verch Gruffydd]], daughter of [[ap L l e w e l yn-23|Gruffydd ap Llywelyn]], the last native Prince of Wales. They have a son named Walter who makes his way back to Scotland and is a p p o i n ted Royal Steward. According to legend, he fathered the Stuart mon a r c h s o f England and Scotland. Shakespeare, Will i a m a n d N icholas Brooke. The Tragedy of Macbeth. Oxford Oxfordshire: Ox f o r d U n iversity Press, 1998. ISBN 0-19-283417-7, p. 68. Cited by Wikip e d i a . [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleance Fleance] Accessed Feb 6, 2 0 1 8 . [ [ Day-1904|jhd]] Gruffydd has a daughter, Nest -- in fact, probably two of them! They a r e r e a l p eople, but the rest of this account has no basis in fact. Nei t h e r [ [ Lochaber-1|Banquo]] nor [[Lochaber-2|Fleance]] ever existed, and t h e W a l t er of this story was [[FitzAlan-573|Walter FitzAlan]], son of [[ F i t z F laald-16|Alan FitzFlaald]]. Alan began his life in Brittany but w a s a w a r ded lands by King Henry in Shropshire, adjacent to Wales. Walte r g r e w u p i n Shropshire and moved on to Scotland to serve the kings the re a s H i g h S teward of Scotland. == Sources == See also: }* Albert F. Schmuhl. The Royal Line. First published New York City M a r c h 1 9 29, Revised March 1980 | Verch Gruffydd, Princess Of Wales Nesta (I7876)
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863 | She was rather tall and of slender appearance, hair was probably blond. She lived in District 2, Union, Kentucky in 1850. By 1870 she lived in Farmersville, Tulare, California, United States. | Shanks, Servilla Ann (I89)
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864 | She was the last representative of the great Norman aristocratic house o f G r a n d mesnil. Her father's name is known only from a grant by her to t he a b b e y o f St Evroult in his memory. She was given in marriage by Henry II to Robert de Breteuil. The marri a g e t o o k place by 1159. They first lived in Normandy, where Robert had c h a r g e o f his father's honor of Breteuil. | Grandmesnil, Petronilla (I8488)
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865 | She was the second Queen consort of Louis VI of France. She was the ni e c e o f P o pe Callixtus II, who once visited her court in France. Her fat h e r d i e d in 1103, and her mother married Renier I of Montferrat as a se c o n d h u sband. She became the second wife of Louis VI of France (1081-1 1 3 7 ) , w hom she married on 3 August 1115. They had eight children, the s e c o n d o f whom became Louis VII of France. Adelaide was one of the most p o l i t i cally active of all France's medieval queens consort. Her name app e a r s o n 4 5 royal charters from the reign of Louis VI. During her tenur e a s q u e e n, royal charters were dated with both her regnal year and tha t o f t h e k i ng. Among many other religious benefactions, she and Louis f o un d e d t he monastery of St Peter's (Ste Pierre) at Montmartre, in the n o r t h e rn suburbs of Paris. She was reputed to be "ugly," but attentive a n d p i o u s. | De Maurienne Savoy, Adelaide (I7630)
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866 | Sheriff of Cumberland 1248 Keeper of Carlisle and Nottingham Castles Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire 1261-4 Regent of Scotland Keeper of the Honour of Peverel Keeper of the City of London Sometime Regent of Scotland, he was an ardent supporter of King Henry I I I i n t h e B aron's War against Earl Simon. He left sons Hugh, Alan , Al e x an d e r, and John. By the mid-13th century, he and his wife had become very wealthy, princ i p a l l y as a result of inheritances from Dervorguilla's family. This wea l t h a l l owed Balliol to play a prominent public role, and, on Henry III' s i n s t r uction, he served as joint protector of the young king of Scots, A l e x a n der III. He was one of Henry III's leading counsellors between 12 5 8 a n d 1 2 65. Following a dispute with the Bishop of Durham, he agreed t o p r o v i de funds for scholars studying at Oxford. Support for a house of s t u d e n ts began in around 1263; further endowments after his death, super v i s e d b y Dervorguilla, resulted in the establishment of Balliol College . | Balliol, John (I7868)
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867 | Siegfried 'the Dane' (''Sifridus de Dachia''), a viking, controlled the a r e a a r o und Gu�nes in 928, though he never seemed to have been designate d a s C o u n t. In about 965 he fell in love with Elftrude (''Elstrude'') the beautiful d a u g h t er of Arnulf (Arnoul) I, Count of Flanders, and she fell pregnant. S i e g f r ied died in 965 and she had a posthumous son, baptised as Ardolf ( A r d o l ph), who became the first Count of Gu�nes | Denmark, Siegfried (I9590)
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868 | Sigefried and Siegfried are two common modern spellings, while Latin ty p i c a l s pellings were Sigefridus or Sigifridus. This could be shortened t o S i c c o . The modern French version is Sigefroid, and this has also infl ue n c e d m any modern historians. | Luxembourg, Siegfried (I915)
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869 | Signator of the Magna Charta | Le Marschall, William (I7622)
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870 | SIMON DE ST. LIZ, said to be a son of Ranulph the Rich, a Norman, appea r s t o h a v e come to England early in the reign of William II. Presumably i n c o n s e quence of his marriage, he became EARL of HUNTINGDON and NORTHAM PT O N a f t er 1086 (for he is not named in Domesday Book) and in or before 1 0 9 0 , w h en he witnessed a charter to Bath Abbey as "Earl Simon." He witn e s s e d a nother royal charter under the same designation a little later. H e f o u g h t for William in Normandy in 1098, and was taken prisoner by Lou is , s o n o f t he French King. On the accession of Henry I in 1100 he witn e ss e d t h e charter of liberties issued by the King at his Coronation. He b u i l t t h e Castle of Northampton and founded or refounded the Priory of S t . A n d r ew in that town, and made it dependent on the Cluniac house of L a C h a r i tï -sur-Loire; this was probably in the time of William Rufus, b ut c e r t a inly before 1108, when he granted an ample charter to it in con jun c t i o n with Maud his wife. He was a benefactor also to Daventry Prior y, a n d p r o bably built St. Sepulchre's, Northampton, about this time. He w e n t t o J e rusalem cruce signatus, and returned safely, but setting out a g a i n h e d ied on the way at the above named Priory of La Charitï , and w a s b u r i ed there. | Senlis, 1st Earl of Northampton Simon I (I8551)
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871 | Simon was descended from Drogo de Montagu, a Norman who came to England w i t h W i l liam the Conqueror. Simon was the son of William de Montagu, a S o m e r s et landowner, and his wife, Berthe. He was under age at his father ' s d e a t h, in 1270, but fought in Edward I's wars in Wales in 1277 and 1 2 8 2 , a n d in 1283 was summoned to parliament at Shrewsbury. In 1290 he s u r r e n dered his lands in Dorset, Devon, Bucki nghamshire, and Oxfordshir e t o t h e k i ng, and was then regranted them with remainders to his sons W i ll i a m a nd Simon. He was summoned to fight in Gascony in 1294, where he s e r v e d a s marshal at Blaye. In 1296 he succeeded in breaking the French s i e g e o f B ourg-sur-Mer, taking a ship loaded with victuals through the l i n e o f F r ench galleys. He returned to Gascony with John Hastings on roy a l s e r v ice in 1302. It was in Scotland, however, that Montagu served th e c r o w n m ost. In 1298 he attended the parliament at York at which the S co t t i s h war was discussed, and may have been present on the Falkirk cam p a i g n l ater that year. He certainly took part in the Caerlaverock exped i t i o n o f 1300; the poet who described the army placed him at the rear o f t h e 3 r d d ivision. Montagu's particular contribution to the wars lay i n n a v a l w arfare in the Irish Sea and around the Western Isles. In 1300 h e p r o v i ded two substantial ships for the Scottish war, a galley and a b ar g e , m a nned by 100 men between them. In 1307 he was captain and govern o r o f t h e E nglish fl eet, and admiral in 1310. He continued to be summo n e d t o c a mpaign against the Scots until his death." | De Montagu, 1st Baron Montagu Simon (I7580)
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872 | Sir Alexander Napier, second of of that name of Merchistoun, administrator and diplomat; was the eldest son of Alexander Napier, 1st of Merchistoun, Provost of Edinburgh in 1438. The Crown confirmed a feu charter at Edinburgh on 15th May 1459 to James Douglas, Earl of Mortoun, Lord Dalkeith, and Jonete his spouse, of the lands of Easter Balbartanis and Wester Balbartanis, with the mill etc., at Kinghorn in Fife, which Alexander Napier of Merchistoun personally resigned. In 1439 Napier was wounded when he tried to help Joan Beaufort (d.1445), widow of King James I, when she was imprisoned by Alexander Livingston of Callendar, Guardian of James II. As a reward, on 7 March 1449/50, after the fall of the Livingstons, James II rewarded Napier with the lands of Philde, Perthshire, forfeited by Livingston's son and on 24 September 1449 he was appointed Comptroller of the Royal Household. He was one of the Ambassadors sent to England in 1451 when he took the opportunity of going on a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Thomas á Becket at Canterbury. He held the office of Provost of Edinburgh between 1453-5 and 1457. He was knighted in 1460/1, possibly at James III's coronation. In a safe-conduct for him as one of the Ambassadors to the court of England dated 24th September 1461 he is designated a Vice-Admiral of Scotland. He had another Safe-Conduct in 1464. On 1468 he was sent to Denmark, with the Lord Chancellor, to negotiate the marriage between King James III and the Danish King's daughter, Princess Margaret. He was employed on several other public occasions, and in his later years held the off ice of Master of the Household to King James III. In 1470 he is again recorded as Provost of Edinburgh. | Napier, 2nd Lord Provost of Merchiston Alexander (I19261)
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873 | Sir John Skene, Lord Curriehill was a Scottish prosecutor, ambassador, and judge. He was regent in St Mary's College, St Andrews from 1564-5 and became an advocate in 1575. He was joint Lord Advocate from 1589 to 1594, and served as the Scottish ambassador to Holland from 1591. He was appointed Lord Clerk Register and Lord of Session, with the judicial title of Lord Curriehill in 1594, serving until 1611. | Skene, Lord Of Curriehill John (I45047)
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874 | Sir John Stewart of Innermeath. "He exchanged with his brother Robert t h e l a n d s of Durrisdeer for the lordship of Lorn, to which the latter su c c e e d ed through his wife Janet De Ergadia. He is designed Lord Of Lorn i n 1 4 0 7 . | Stewart, 1st Lord Lorn John (I127)
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875 | SIR MALCOLM DRUMMOND, LORD OF THAT ILK, THE 9th. THANE OR SENESCAL OF L E N N O X , Sir Malcolm Drummond succeeded to his father, as ninth chief of the hou s e o f D r u mmond. He flourished in the reign of king Robert Bruce, and wa s f i r m l y attached to the interests of that great prince. At the battle o f B a n n o ckburn, in 1314, he exerted in a most conspicuous manner his gre at t a l e n ts, undaunted bravery, and military skill. Immediately after th at b a t t l e in 1315, king Robert, as a reward of his good and faithful se rvi c e s , c onferred upon him a grant of several lands in Perthshirre; and i t i s n o t u n likely that the caltrops were then added, for the first time , b y w a y o f c ompartment to his coat of arms, as in that memorable battl e t h e y w e re used with great success against the English horse, and very p o s s i b ly by the advice, or under the direction of Sir Malcolm. | Drummond, 9th Thane Of Lennox Malcolm (I6998)
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876 | Sir Patrick de Graham was one of the Scottish knights who in 1296 made t h e d i s a strous attempt to relieve the castle of Dunbar, held for King Jo h n B a l i ol against the English by the famous Countess, Black Agnes . The h i s t o r ian Hemingford tells how Sir Patrick, one of the noblest and wises t o f t h e S c ottish barons, disdained to ask for quarter, and fell in suc h g a l l a nt fashion as to extort the admiration of the English themselves . Sir Patrick acquired the lands of Kincardine in Perthshire from his bro t h e r - in-law Malise, 5th Earl of Strathearn. Patrick was sent to negotiate the marriage of Prince Alexander of Scotl a n d a n d M argaret of Flanders in 1281. He sat in Parliament in 1284 an d a c k n o w ledged Margaret, Maid of Norway as heiress to the throne. He swore f e a l t y t o Edward I of England in 1292, and was summoned to attend Edward i n t o F r a nce in 1294. He was killed fighting against the English. | Graham, Laird Kincardine Dundaff Patrick (I7500)
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877 | Sir Ralph Lane (c. 1532 - October 1603) was an English explorer of the E l izabethan era. He helped colonise the Kingdom of Ireland in 1583 and w a s sheriff of County Kerry, Ireland, from 1583 to 1585. He was part of t h e unsuccessful attempt in 1585 to colonise Roanoke Island, North Carol i na . He was knighted by the Queen in 1593. Lane is best remembered for his attempt to establish a settlement on Ro a noke Island at the request of Sir Walter Raleigh. Queen Elizabeth was l o o k i n g for places to colonise and the Americas appeared ripe for Englis h e x p a n sion. The voyage began on 9 April 1585. The fleet comprised the T i g e r ( G renville's), the Roebuck, the Red Lion, the Elizabeth, and the D o r o t h y. The voyage on the Tiger proved difficult, as Lane quarrelled wi t h t h e a g gressive leadership of Grenville, whom he found a person of "i n t o l e rable pride and insatiable ambition". Unfortunately, during a seve r e s t o r m off the coast of Portugal, the Tiger was separated from the re s t o f t h e f leet. The Tiger arrived on 11 May to Baye's Muskito (Guayan i l la , P u erto Rico). While waiting for the other ships, Grenville establ i s h e d r elations with the Spanish (whilst at the same time participating i n p r i v a teering against their ships) and also built a small fortress. Th e E l i z a beth arrived shortly after construction of the fortress. Despite trouble with the natives (because of the attitudes of the Engli s h ) a n d t he shortage of food, Lane and 107 other settlers were left on R o a n o k e Island, Virginia, on 17 August 1585 to establish a colony on its n o r t h e n d. They built a small fort, probably similar to the one at Guaya n i l l a B ay, but Lane and Grenville fell out with each other, a foretaste o f t h e t r o ubles that dogged the colony until the end. Almost immediately , G r e n v ille and his crew set sail for England, promising to return in A pr i l 1 5 8 6 with more men and fresh supplies. April 1586 passed with no news of Grenville. In June, Sir Francis Drake a r r i v e d at Roanoke and offered Lane and his men a return voyage to Engla n d , w h i ch Lane readily accepted because of a weakened food supply and i n c r e a sed tensions with local tribes. Drake's fleet reached Portsmouth o n 2 8 J u l y , at which the settlers of Roanoke introduced snuff, corn, and p o t a t o es to England. The Account of Ralph Lane first appeared in Richar d H a k l u yt's Principall Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries o f t h e E n g lish Nation in 1589. Lane later participated in other expeditions. In January 1592 he was ap p o i n t ed muster-master general of Ireland and was knighted the following y e a r b y S i r William FitzWilliam, the Lord Deputy of Ireland. | Lane, Governor Of Roanoke Ralph (I25271)
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878 | Sir Richard de Peshall was sheriff 1374-1376 and was made a knight in 1 3 7 6 . | De Peshall, Richard (I1396)
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879 | Sir Robert de Roos , Chief Justice of the King's Bench Robert de Roos, Magna Carta Surety, 4th Baron Hamlake, Sheriff of Cumb e r l a n d w as born between 1170 and 1172 at of Helmsley & Hunsingore, Yor k s h i r e , England; Age 13 in 1185, but of age in 1191. He married Isabel, illegitimate daughter of William I 'the Lion', King o f S c o t l and, Earl of Northumberland and Isabel de Avernal, circa Februar y 1 1 9 1 a t H addington, East Lothian, Scotland. | De Ros, Robert I (I1222)
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880 | Sir Thomas (V) de Moulton of Langley was Lord of Moulton (sometimes spe l l e d M u lton during this period) in Lincolnshire. He was Sheriff of Linc o l n s h ire 1205-8, Justice of Common Pleas 1224-36, Sheriff of Cumberl an d 1 2 3 3 - 6. He increased the family fortunes during his lifetime . He lat er b e c a m e lord of Egremont in Cumberland and by marriage became Lord de L u c y . | Multon, Lord of Moulton Thomas (I1560)
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881 | Sir William de Abernethy, 2nd Baron of Saltoun was a 13th-14th century S c o t tish baron and noble. William was the son of William Abernethy, 1st Baron of Saltoun. He swor e f e a lty to King Edward I of England at Birgham in 1290 and again at Be rw i c k in 1296. He was a signatory of the Declaration of Arbroath in 132 0 . | De Abernethy, 2nd Laird of Saltoun William (I2147)
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882 | SKENE OF SKENE. 17 James Skene of Skene was thus married to the widow of Fraser of Corntoun as early at least as the year 1428, and had, by his wife, a son, Alexander, who succeeded him, and who was marriageable in 1438, as on the 12th of May in that year, Egidia de Moravia, domina de Culbin, in her widowhood, with consent of Alan of Kynnarde, her son and heir, grants to Alexander Skene, son and heir of James Skene of that ilk, on account of the marriage to be contracted between him and Mariot of Kinarde her daughter, the lands of Dulpoty, Estertown, and Mill of Dulpoty, in the Barony of Culbin, and Sheriffdom of Forres, in security of the sum of | Skene, 6th Laird of Skene James (I16935)
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883 | Slain at the Battle of Mag Rath in 637 | Cáech, Airmetach (I9717)
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884 | Some family histories show his middle name as NERINCKX. Tradition stated that it was after the priest in the area, BUT Father NERINCKX did not arrive in the rolling fork area until 1805. The Rolling fork church was started on 15 Nov 1804 and renamed the Holy Mary Church. At the time of his father's death in 1814, John Nerinckx Buckman chose as his guardian Cornelius Pierceall. John married Susanna Pierceall on 1/28/1816 presided over by Rev. Charles Nerinckx at Holy Mary Church, Calvary Kentucky. In the 1820's John and his family, moved with his brothers to Union County, Kentucky. On 9/12/1834 John acquired 750 acres on the Ohio River (deed B2:75). In 1836, with his brother Ignatius, he acquired 75 acres on Walnut Bottom (deed 12:262) | Buckman, John Nerincx (I8270)
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885 | Sophia of Halshany c. 1405 - 21 September 1461 in Kraków), known simply a s S o n ka, was princess of Halshany by birth and Queen consort of Poland a s t h e f ourth and last wife of Jogaila, King of Poland and Supreme Duke o f L i t huania. As the mother to Władysław III and Casimir IV, she is the c o - f ounder of the Jagiellonian dynasty. | Of Halshany, Sophia (I8242)
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886 | Source THE FOLLOWING IS PART OF A BRIEF SKETCH FOUND IN "PRE-REVOLUTIONARYDUTCH HOUSES AND FAMILIES IN NORTHERN NEW JERSEY AND SOUTHERN NEW YORK" BYROSALIE FELLOWS BAILEY, DOVER PUBLICATIONS, NEW YORK; 1968: !"CORNELIS HENDRICSE VAN NESS EMIGRATED TO BEVERWYCK IN 1642 ANDSETTLED AT GREENBUSH. HE MARRIED MAYKEN HENDRICKS BURCHGRAEFF, AND SECONDLY IN1664 MARITIE DAMEN, AS HER THIRD HUSBAND. AFTER HIS SECOND MARRIAGE, THEYLIVED IN ALBANY AND LATER IN SCHENECTADY. THEY BOTH DIED SHORTLY BEFORE1682." !NAME OF WIFE IS VAN DEN BURCHGRAEFF. !NYG&BS RECORD, VOL. 72, PG. 148, 150-153, 155. GENEALOGIES OF FIRST FAMILIES OF ALBANY, 1872, JONATHAN PEARSON, PG.128. VAN NESS MSS AT NY GEN. & BIOG. SOCIETY LIB, 1223 58 ST, NYC HUDSON-MOHAWK GEN. & FAMILY MEMOIRS, CUYLER REYNOLDS, VOL II, PG 1376ON VAN NESS FAMILY. VAN RENSSELAER BOUWIER MSS, TRANSLATED 7 ED. BYA.J.F. VAN LAER, 1908, PG 824-825. !#8 HENDRICK MD (2) 25 NOV 1688 VAN DAM, CATARINA #10 GERRIT MD (2) 14 FEB 1676-7 LOOCKERMANS, MARIETJE !Compendium of American Genealogy V 6 . !Compendium of American Genealogy V 6 . 1937, by Frederick Adams Virkus p 53 Immigrant from Holland in 1641. Indian commander at Ft Orange 1665-6 Captain. Occupation-brewer From Compedium - 691 from Nes on Island of Ameland , province of Friesland, North Holland lived with wife Maijgen, in Vianen, South Holland in 1625 and owned property at Sscheperswyck, near Leksmond, Vianen, Holland until 1661 Immigrated Aug 164I on the Ship Eyckenboom. Had a farm at Bethlehem from 1642-48 farm at Greenbush from 1650-58 A wealthy brewer of Ft Orange Magistrate in Rennelaerswyck Document of 1664 turning over property from Cornelis Van Nes to his children gives their names Cornelis Hendrickse VAN NESS Birth: 1 Cornelis Hendrickse VAN NESS Birth: 1602 in Vianen, South Holland, Netherlands, On The Haverdijk Death: 1681 in Greenbush, Albany, NY/Fairfield, Essex, New York Sex: M Father: Hendrick Gerritse VAN NESS Mother: Anneke Gerritje WESSELS Occupation: Brewer, acting Indian Commissioner Changed: 17 Dec 2001 Mayken Hendrickse VAN DEN BURCHGRAEFF (Wife) Marriage: 31 JUL 1625 in Viaven, Havendijke, Zeeland, Netherlands Children: Gerritje Cornelis VAN NESS Hendrickje Cornelisse VAN NESS Hendrick Cornelis VAN NESS Gerrit Cornelis VAN NESS Jan Cornelis VAN NESS Maritie Van Eps DAMEN (Wife) Marriage: 21 MAR 1664 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Notes Individual: Full Context of Albany, New York Church Records, 1683-1700 1699-1700 Pieter, of Pieter Van Slyck and Johanna Hanssen. Wit.: Cornelis Van Nes, Marritje Van Nes. Event: Emigrated 1642 On the "Oaktree" from Vianen, Holland, to Fort Orange Cornelis was the third of Maria's three husbands. He was a brewer. Emigrated in 1642 to Fort Orange. He settled first on a farm at Bethlehem, then in 1650 on a farm near Greenbush. Cornelis was a member of the City Council of Fort Orange from 1652 to 1658, and in 1660, 1661, and 1663. He served as magistrate at Fort Orange in 1665 and 1666. He was the acting Indian Commissioner under the Dutch. He was also captain of the night watch at Rensselaerswyck in 1663. Non-standard gedcom data: 1 HONO 2 NOTE City Council of Fort Orange from 1652 to 1658, and in 1660, 2 NOTE 1661, and 1663 Person note sources Genealogical Notes of NY and New England Families, Talcott, p 44, 343-4; lived upon the Hazendyck, South Holland; 1625 land at Scherperswyck, near Leksmond, South Holland, Holland; Ship Passenger Lists(NY- NJ) 1600-1825, Boyer, p 32, 60; Sailed from Amsterdam 17 May 1641; Arrived at New Amsterdam, NY, Aug 1641; 1642-8 charged tithes, farm at Bethlehem, NY; 1649 Court action, New Amsterdam, NY; 22 Aug 1650 Greenbush, NY land bought; Court Minutes of Rensselaerswyck, NY 1648-52, 14 sep 1648, Cornelis van Es/Nes & son inlaw Pieter Claesz; p 53, insists that the director wronged his son inlaw, Pieter Claesz; Court Minutes of Albany, Rensselaerswyck, and Schenectady, NY, vol. 1; Family search, IGI 1992; 24 Mar 1664 he was magistrate of Rensselaerswyck, NY still a widower, with his children applied for a division of their mothers estate; Will 1681, Greenbush, Albany (now Rensselaerswyck), NY; (Family search Ancestral File has death place as Fairfield, Essex, NY ?); Mar: 1st Mayken Hendrickse Van Den Burchgraeff, 31 Jul 1625, Vianen, South Holland, Holland; Mar. 2nd Maritje Damen, a widow of Dirk Van Eps, 2) Hendrick Andriese Van Doesburgh, abt 1664; deceased by 1681 will; Sources of Information: J Pearsons Gen. Sources of Information: J Pearsons Gen. lst Settlers of ASlbany p l129; Gen Notes of N.Y. & N.E Fam. p 343 Cornelis was also sealed to his parents 11 May 1990 AZ. !Aulls - Bryan & Allied Families:Leslia !Aulls - Bryan & Allied Families:Leslia Bryan, pg 118 NOTES! Third husband of Maria Damen md 2 NOTES! Third husband of Maria Damen md 21 Mar 1664 Hon Cornelius Van Nes/Van Ness (or Van ES) of Amersfort, d 1684 emigrated 1641 to Renesselaerwyck, and Albany. Widower of Mayken Hnedricks(e) Burchgraeff (van den Burchgraeff) who d bet 1658-1664, she was the d/o Hendrick Asriaensz(van den Burchgraef) and Annetje Jans (his second wife). Van Ness came to Albany (Rensselaerswyck) NY in 1641 probably on the "den Eyckenboon". He had lived at Vianen on the Haverdijk, South Holland, 1625. He was a principle farmer at Rensselaweswyck, and battled with van Slichtenhorst. He was a brewer, had a house, lot and brewery, Greenbush, 1650. Councilor of Rensselaeswyck 1652-1658 1660 - 1663. Granted 50 morgens of land at Amerfoort ( Flatlands) 23 May 1659. 16 Jun 1664 granted 21 morgens of land at Schenectady, where he lived with Marritje in 1677. "Antenuptial Contract of Cornelis Van Nes and Maria Damen" found in Notarial Papers 1 and 2, 1660-1696 vol 3 of Early Records of the City and County of Albany and Coloney of Rensselaerswyck NY. This contract is dated 1664 and appears right after the contract where Marritie settles the inheritance rights of Jannetie, her dau by Hendrick Andriesz van Doesburg. In part the antenuptial contract states: "....The Honorable Cornelis van Nes, councillor of the Coloney of Rensselaerwyck, widower of the late Mayken van den Burchgraeff d/o Hendrick van de Burchgraeff, future bridegroom - and the virtuous Maria Damen widow of the Late Hendrick Andriesz Van Doseburgh dwelling in Beverwyck, future bride..... Marritie Damen m1 in Amesterdam Netherlands 1636 Dirck Evertsz van Eps ( thanks to Kees for his wonderful find and the source doucmentation) Lorine Mcginnis Schultz. m2 1649 in Amsterdam Netherlands Hendrick Andriesz van Doesburgh (Again thanks to Kees for sending to the list and providing a URL where we could view the actual documents) m3 1664 in the Albany NY area Cornelis Van Nes (antenuptial contract as cited above) She had only three living children, as evidenced by the agreement made between her heirs concerning the division of her property after her death. The document is dated 5 Aug 1686 and names the 3 children. Jan Van Eps; Lysbeth ( Elizabeth) Van Eps and Jannettie Hendrickse Van Doesburgh. Married 1st 31 July 1625 at Havendijke, Married 1st 31 July 1625 at Havendijke, Neth. Mayken Hendrickse BURCHGRAEFF. Married 2nd 21 Mar 1664 Maritie DAMEN. J. Pearson gen. First Settlers of Albany p.129. Gen Notes of N.Y. & N.E. Families p.343. "The Island at the Center of the World" One of van Nes's companions on the Oak Tree was a major figure in the colony's early history, Adriaen van der Donck. Van der Donck is the leading historical character in Shorto's lively 2004 book about New Netherlands. Here's the New York Times review. THE ISLAND AT THE CENTER OF THE WORLD: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America, by Russell Shorto (384 pp. New York: Doubleday, 2004). ''And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors' eyes -- a fresh, green breast of the new world,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote on the greatest last page in American letters. On the grounds of Jay Gatsby's abandoned Long Island estate, Nick Carraway broods over the ''transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent . . . face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder'' before he lets himself be borne back to the Midwest, along ''the dark fields of the republic.'' And yet, Henry Hudson's entrance into New York Harbor has never gained full iconic status in the American experience. When it comes to the old Dutch colony of New Netherland and its capital, New Amsterdam, which took root on Manhattan Island in 1624, we tend to accept at face value Washington Irving's comic Knickerbocker caricatures, depicting a bunch of fat, bumptious graspers -- a colony full of overgrown hobbits. Surely such a people could not have contributed anything to the national character remotely approaching the influence of, say, those dour Puritans up in Massachusetts. Russell Shorto, in his masterly new history, ''The Island at the Center of the World,'' begs to differ. The author of ''Gospel Truth,'' about the search for the historical Jesus, among other books, Shorto has taken up nearly as intrepid a pursuit here. ''If what made America great was its ingenious openness to different cultures,'' he writes, ''the small triangle of land at the southern tip of Manhattan Island is the birthplace of that idea: This island city would become the first multiethnic, upwardly mobile society on America's shores, a prototype of the kind of society that would be duplicated throughout the country and around the world.'' New Netherland was supposed to be just one more in a series of trading posts that the audacious new Dutch republic was germinating around the world, a private fief of the Dutch West India Company designed to pump more wealth into the extraordinary cultural and economic boom then transforming the mother country. But somehow, as Shorto puts it: ''New Netherland refused to remain a trading post. It was unique among the way stations of the Dutch empire in that it insisted on becoming a place'' -- and one that seemed almost magnetically drawn to the center of world events. From its very inception, New Amsterdam was a remarkably restless, ambitious, polyglot little seaport. ''It was Manhattan, in other words,'' he says, ''right from the start.'' Continue reading the main story What Shorto has hit upon is nothing less than the true dichotomy at the heart of the American story, the fact that most of our ancestors came to this land for material as well as idealistic reasons (to properly recognize the experience of African-Americans, people brought here against their will, one must actually make it a triptych, but that is another story). Both motivations were complex. While Shorto concedes the innate ''messiness'' of colonial Manhattan, a place where at one point a quarter of all buildings were devoted to the production or consumption of alcohol, religious dissenters flocked to the Dutch colony to escape persecution up on Massachusetts Bay. Meanwhile, the Puritans' ''shining 'city on a hill' became Manifest Destiny, and morphs easily into a cheap battle cry.'' A new foundation myth requires a new progenitor. The Dutch republic was nearing the end of an 80-year war for national independence and religious freedom, and while tolerance at the time meant something closer to ''putting up with'' than ''celebrating'' diversity, as Shorto observes, the Dutch had developed a very modern appreciation of free thought, epitomized by the fact that this remarkable little country published an estimated one-half of all the world's books over the course of the 17th century. Yet it is one thing to describe the cultural golden age of the nation that produced New Amsterdam and another to prove its influence upon the realized American nation. Shorto centers his story on the battle between two critical players in Dutch Manhattan, Peter Stuyvesant and Adriaen van der Donck. Stuyvesant, the wily, flinty soldier who had lost a leg fighting for the company on St. Martin, was mainly concerned with thwarting both the encroachments of the expansionary New England colonies and the demands for self-government from his subjects within. Van der Donck is a less well known but even more intriguing figure; a lawyer with the soul of a poet, punctilious enough to attach eight footnotes to a single sentence, but also a man capable of living for months among the Indians, and who kept breaking into rapturous descriptions of the New World in his neglected classic, ''A Description of New Netherland.'' Van der Donck's quest to remake New Netherland in the republican image of the mother country set him inevitably in opposition to Stuyvesant. Ultimately, both men's aims would be frustrated, but their conflict forced the West India Company to grant the colony a charter, under which most citizens of New Amsterdam came to enjoy exceptional rights and freedoms, living as real stakeholders in an opportunity society. These liberties would survive the English takeover of the colony in 1664, and Shorto convincingly traces a direct line from their achievement straight to the New York State Legislature's decision in 1787 not to ratify the Constitution unless ''a bill of specific individual rights were attached to it.'' Why has the Dutch side of our national story remained so obscure for so long? In part because the historical records of New Netherland have literally been buried by the winners in one moldy archive after another, and not the least entertaining part of Shorto's book is his narrative of how these records managed to survive over 300 years of flood, fire and indifference. He generously credits the research other scholars have done to bring these invaluable materials back to the surface, as they translated some 12,000 sheets of rag paper from the 17th-century Dutch. Taking full advantage of these newly recovered sources, Shorto makes frequent, deft excursions from New York to the Netherlands and England, Brazil and Curaçao; and the slave coast of Guinea to the Spice Islands and the German battlefields of the Thirty Years' War; and to Hartford and Boston and that hotly contested colonial prize, New Jersey. He portrays a formidable cast of historical actors -- the cunning, murderous fanatic who was Cromwell; the Stuarts, with all their dogs and horses and mistresses. Poor Henry Hudson, so caught up in his quest for the Northwest Passage that he was still asking, ''What do you mean by this?'' when his starving, freezing sailors finally set him and his young son adrift to die in a small boat, in the bay that would come to bear his name. New York history buffs will be captivated by Shorto's descriptions of Manhattan in its primordial state, of bays full of salmon and oysters, and blue plums and fields of wild strawberries in what is now Midtown. Here the reader may learn, among many other historical tidbits, what the Dutch really paid for Manhattan (it wasn't $24), or the key role that Flushing played in securing freedom of conscience, or why the Knicks wear blue-and-orange uniforms, or how Yonkers, the Hutchinson River and Saw Mill River Parkways, Greenwich Village and Staten Island got their names. Yet Shorto never overwhelms one with trivia, and he writes at all times with passion, verve, nuance and considerable humor. If there is a flaw in ''The Island at the Center of the World,'' it may be Shorto's underplaying of how the patroon system -- a semifeudal arrangement the West India Company allowed to be grafted onto its holdings -- undermined democracy in upstate New York even well into the 19th century. Yet over all, Shorto's basic premise is undeniable. The legacy of tolerance from the Dutch colony in Manhattan would be extended, as he writes, ''into the very heart of the continent, crossroads settlements transformed into cities, lights winking on in the dusk of the endless landscape, each with its cluster of founding ethnic groups: Toledo, Cleveland, Detroit, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Chicago, Green Bay'' -- deep into the dark fields of the Republic, indeed. https://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/04/books/they-took-manhattan.html 1. First Settlers of Albany by J. Pearso 1. First Settlers of Albany by J. Pearsons, p. 129. 2. Gen. Notes of N.Y. & N.E. Families by Talcott, pp. 102,343. "Genealogical Notes of New York and New "Genealogical Notes of New York and New England," GS#974.7,D2t IGI says he was born in Zeeland and ance IGI says he was born in Zeeland and ancestral file says he was born in Holland. I found information he died at Albany, New York but the ancestral file says he died at Fairfield, Essex, New York. In 1641 Cornelis Van Nes came to Rennselaerwyck as a plantation manager and later seraved as a magistrate on the dutach court. Later his son Hendrick would serve on that court. Sources: Wycoff Bulletin June 1985 NYGB Vol 72 Roses Revisited Book 1987 Pioneer Settlers for New York Book xv 1934 Amer Gen Comp Book Vol 1-7 paper-Pre Rev. dutch houses by R.F. Bailey 1936 ancestral file 1993/1994 IGI !1. # 2 page 545 Pippenger Family His. !1. # 2 page 545 Pippenger Family His. SOURCE: "The Wyckoff Family in America" SOURCE: "The Wyckoff Family in America" publ by The Wyckoff Family in America; Summit, N.J.; 2nd Edition; 1950; Pg 4, 10, 11 / Calendar of Wills; 1626-1836; Albany, NY; comp by Berthold Fernow, 1896 Cornelis van Ness, member of Council of Rensselaerswyck Colony secures to ch of 1st wife, Mayeke Hendricx van den Burchgraeff / The Ancestors & Descendants of Simon Van Ness & Hester Delamater, by David M. Riker, 442 Woodcrest Dr, Mechanicsburg, PA [ca 1981-84] FHL Film #1697542 / Fam Group Sheet submitted by Margaret Pack Bowden, Box 209, West Yellowstone, Montana [Pre-1959?]SOURCE: "The Wyckoff Family in America" publ by The Wyckoff Family in America; Summit, N.J.; 2nd Edition; 1950; Pg 4, 10, 11 / Calendar of Wills; 1626-1836; Albany, NY; comp by Berthold Fernow, 1896 Cornelis van Ness, member of Council of Rensselaerswyck Colony secures to ch of 1st wife, Mayeke Hendricx van den Burchgraeff / The Ancestors & Descendants of Simon Van Ness & Hester Delamater, by David M. Riker, 442 Woodcrest Dr, Mechanicsburg, PA [ca 1981-84] FHL Film #1697542 / Fam Group Sheet submitted by Margaret Pack Bowden, Box 209, West Yellowstone, Montana [Pre-1959?] Came from Holland to New Amsterdam in 16 Came from Holland to New Amsterdam in 1641. Settled where Albany , New York is. native of village of Nes native of village of Nes on the Island of Ameland in province of Friesland, North Holland. Later lived near Utrecht in South Holland, home of Killian van Rensselaer; thus he emigrated with his wife to the colony of Rensselaerswick on upper Hudson River, New York, in 1641. | Vanness, Cornelius Hendrick (I1903)
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887 | Sources Clay, J.W. (1897). "Burgoyne," in Visitations of Cambridgshire 1575 and 1619. Publications of the Harleian Society, XLI, pp. 25. London. Google Books. | Stafferton, Elizabeth (I10920)
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888 | Sources of information: 1. Mary Elizabeth Sinnott, Annals of the Sinnott, Rogers, Coffin, Carlies, Reeves, Bodine and Allied Families (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1905), pp. 65-84. 2. W. E. Mugford, “106. Tristram Coffin, of Brixton, Devon,” Devon Notes and Queries, vol. 2, Jan. 1902 to Oct. 1903 (Exeter, Devon: James g. Commin, 1903), pp. 142-144. 3. Stephen Walter Coffin, A Statement on Our Branch of the Coffin Family (1977), pp. 3, 7.; citing Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/CoffinFamilyByStephenWalkerCoffin1975/Coffin%20Family%20by%20Stephen%20Walker%20Coffin%201975_djvu.txt). 4. Sylvanus J. Macy, “The Coffin Family,” The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 24 (April 1870): 149-154; citing American Ancestors ( He was a Churchwarden of Brixton Parish; also, Yeoman. | Stevens, Robert (I45629)
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889 | SOURCES: Information on this person can be found in an article titled ''Col. Mil e s B r e w ton and Some of His Descendents'' in vol. 2 (April 1902) of the S o u t h C a rolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine at pages 128-152. * } | Pinckney, Ruth Brewton (I25210)
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890 | South Carolina state Representative William was the first to drop an "l" in the name, formerly written "Allston". This eccentric act made some suppose the branches were distinct . | Alston, William Algernon (I43976)
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891 | South Carolina state Representative | Alston, John Ashe (I43975)
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892 | St. Margaret was the grandaughter of King Edmund Ironside of England th r o u g h h is son Edward the Aethling. She had been exiled to the eastern c o n t i n ent with the rest of her family when the Danes overran England. Sh e w a s w e l l educated, mostly in Hungary. She returned to England during t h e r e i g n of her great-uncle, Edward the Confessor, but, as one of the l a s t r e m aining members of the saxon Royal Family, she was forced to flee n o r t h t o t he Royal Scots Court at the time of the Norman Conquest. Beaut i f u l , i ntelligent and devout, Margaret brought some of the more detaile d p o i n t s of current European manners, ceremony and culture to the Scott is h C o u r t and thus highly improved its civilized reputation. She had a t a s t e f o r the finer things in life and, in 1069, she won over the Scots K i n g , M a lcolm Canmore, and married him. Their union was exceptionally ha p p y a n d f ruitful for both themselves and the Scottish nation. Margaret w a s o n e o f t he principal agents of the reform of the Church of Scotland w h i c h w a s, at the time, at a low point in its history. Church councils n o w p r o m oted Easter communion and abstinence from servile work on a Sund a y . M a r garet founded churches, monasteries and pilgrimage hostels, incl u d i n g t he revival of Iona, the building of the tiny chapel which still b e a r s h e r name at Edinburgh Castle and establishment of the Royal Mausol e u m o f D u nfermline Abbey with monks from Canterbury. She was especially d e v o t e d to Scottish saints and instigated the Queen's Ferryover the Fort h s o t h a t p ilgrims could more easily reach the Shrine of St. Andrew. In h e r p r i v ate life, Margaret was much given to prayer, reading and ecclesi a s t i c al needlework. She also gave alms lavishly and liberated a number o f A n g l o -Saxon captives. | Wessex, Saint Margaret Margaret (I7889)
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893 | Started the Italian Wars by trying to capture the Kingdom of Naples (14 9 4 - 9 5). His sons died before him and he was the last King of the elder H o u s e o f Valois; he was succeeded by his cousin Louis XII, of the Orléan s - V a lois branch. Named 'Blue King' in the Weisskunig, the semi-biographical project init i a t e d but never completed by Emperor Maximilian I. | de Valois, King of France Charles VIII (I10576)
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894 | State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A066356 Birth: 10 Apr 1737 Harwich / Barnstable / MA Death: 05 Aug 1817 Covert / Seneca / NY Qualifying Service Description: Private in the 7th Regiment, Dutchess Co, NY Militia commanded by Colonel Henry Ludenton DAR RC# 158787 states: PRIVATE - LColonel REUBEN FERRIS, Colonel HENRY LUDENTON 7TH REGT, DUTCHESS CO MILITIA Additional References: James A Roberts, NY in the Rev as Colony and State, pg 149, 150, 151 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Spouse: Lydia Hinckley Children: Tertullus Harrison; Nathaniel; | King, Barzillai (I34154)
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895 | Stearns, Ezra S. Genealogical and Family History of the State of New Hampshire (Lewis Publishing Company, 1908) Vol. 2, Page 869 Thomas Barnard, the emigrant ancestor, born about 1612, was a husbandman or planter of Salisbury, Massachusetts, where he received land in the first divisions, 1640 and 1643. He was one of the first settlers of Amesbury and received grants of lands there at various times. His name is prominent on the records down to 1672. He was killed by Indians about 1677, the time being indicated by the inventory of his estate, August 6 of that year. | Barnard, Thomas (I45553)
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896 | Stephen Bovyer, Senior, was a Huguenot. His family were in France in the years 1598 to 1785 where their name had the French spelling of Boyer. A complete story is printed in "An Island Refuge" Loyalists and Disbanded Troops on the Island of Saint John written by Doris Haslan and Edited by Orlo Jones. Pages 41 thru 45. Stephen is referred to as Reverend Stephen Bovyer. In the War of Independence in America, the sympathies of Stephen Bovyer and those of his wife and family remained with the British. Near the close of the Revolutionary War, Stephen Bovyer Sr. owned property near the entrance to Boston Harbor. He was ordered to use his oxen to haul cannon near the shore and to open fire on a ship of the Royal Navy, H.M.S. Renown, which entered Boston Harbor in 1775 or 1776, he stoutly refused to do so. Some years later during his short stay in Stanhope, he became very friendly with the Reverend Theophilus DesBrisay, the first Anglican clergyman on the Island, and told him this story. On comparing dates, Mr. DesBrisay found he was serving as a naval chaplain on board the Renown on that occasion - an early example of the small world we live in. | Bovyer, Stephen (I8474)
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897 | Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower and his descendants for four generatio n s # 1 8 c p g 21 | Cooke, Josiah I (I857)
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898 | Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower and his descendants for four generations #86 pg 92 ; Andrew Newcomb, 1618-1686, and his descendants, a revised edition of Genealogical memoir of the Newcomb family #5b Pg 28 | Cooke, Elizabeth (I77)
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899 | Stephen Hussey was born in 1632 and died at Nantucket in 1718, leavin, seven children. His wife was Martha, daughter of William Bunker. He received a good education and naturally took to law. Although it is not known that he was an admitted attorney. From the date when the Court records begin to his death there was seldom a session when he was not party or attorney. He lived in continual turmoil, although, singular to relate, he was one of the petitioners for a Friends Meeting, but he engaged in litigation with some of the members and was disowned in 1717. He was a master mariner, and sailed between Nantucket, Boston and New York. He was three times a constable and once selectman and assessor. He was convicted of smuggling ten gallons of rum, and his ten reasons of appeal show a very ingenious mind. He never failed to assert that justice could not be had on Nantucket because neither Judge nor Jury were entirely impartial. He acquired the interest of his father, Robert Pike and others, and was the largest land owner of his day The house lots assigned to Christopher Hussey and Robert Pike were on the west side of Trott's Swamp, but Stephen Hussey built three houses for himself and family one on Federal street near Chestnut, another at Monomov and a third at Shimmoo. " https://archive.org/stream/nantucketlandsla01wort/nantucketlandsla01wort_djvu.txt | Hussey, Stephen (I45595)
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900 | Sterling entered the Jesuit Order in St Mary's KA where he was trained f o r t h e p r iesthood and was ordained on 6/24/1937. He was a Chaplain at S t X a v i e r University, Cincinnati, Oh when he suffered a Cerebral hemmora ge w h i l e w atching a ball game and died on 3//22/1958 | Buckman, Reverend Josephus Sterling (I36374)
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901 | Strycker Family Genealogy by William Strycker The Stryker Family in America by William Norman Stryker | Probatski, Jurriaen (I45422)
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902 | Succeeded about 1325.- Died about 1346. From 19th Robert I, to 16th Dav i d I I . Ancestor of the families of Concraig, Colquhahie, Pitkellony, Mircie, L e n n o c h, Megginch, Balloch, Droich, Milnab, etc. Sir Malcolm Drummond, on the death of his father, succeeded to the esta t e s o f t h e house of Drummond, and was the tenth hereditary thane of Len n o x . H e w as a worthy patriot, a steady loyalist, and deservedly esteeme d f o r h i s m erit and accomplishments. He had a chief concern in all the n o b l e e f forts made by the loyalists in the minority of king David Bruce, i n d e f e n ce of the liberties of their country. In those arduous exertions , h e s u f f ered many hardships: and, at the time when Edward III. of Engl an d f o r f eited Malise the seventh earl of Strathearn, in 1334, he also g a ve a g r a n t of several lands belonging to Sir Malcolm Drummond, to Sir J o hn C l i n ton of England, for opposing, as he said, his lawful sovereign E d w a r d B aliol. | Drummond, 10th Thane of Lennox Malcolm (I7577)
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903 | Sufferance has long been the subject of controversy among genealogists. T h e y d o n 't even agree on her name, variously giving it as Sufferance (as s h o w n h e re), Suffrany, Sufferana, and similar variations. | Haines, Sufferance S. (I8856)
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904 | Suibne mac Colmáin (died 600) was a King of Uisnech in Mide of the Clan n C h o l m áin. He was the son of Colmán Már mac Diarmato (died 555/558), a ls o K i n g o f Uisnech. He ruled Uisnech from 587 to 600.[2] The Marianus Scotus king list names Suibne mac Colmáin as High King of I r e l a n d. He may also be the Suibne referred to in the Baile Chuind (The E c s t a s y of Conn) The annals and other king lists do not give him this ti t l e , h o wever. He was slain in 600 at Brí Dam on the Suaine (near modern G e a s h i ll, County Offaly) by his uncle, the high king Áed Sláine mac Diar m a t o ( d ied 604) of the Síl nÁedo Sláine, treacherously according to the L i f e o f S t . Columba by Adomnán. | Mac Colmáin, High King of Ireland Suibne (I9719)
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905 | Summoned to parliament by Edward I. He was granted quittance of common s u m m o n s for Sussex, 1271, and for co. Hereford, 1272, in which counties h e a l i e n ated lands in 1280 and 1277; and he and his wife Mabel were gran te d f r e e w arren in Iden and Iham, Sussex , 11 June 1271. He was on the K i n g ' s s ervice in Wales, 1277, 1282 an d 1287; was ordered to aid the ro y a l o f f icials in Wales, 1287 and 1288 ; and men were recruited from his l a n d s t o s upply armies against t the Welsh in 1294. On 14 June 1287 he w a s s u m m oned to a military council at Gloucester; and in January and Feb r u a r y 1 290/1 he was summoned as a witness in the dispute between the Ea r l s o f H e reford and Gloucester. He served in Scotland, 1292, 1296 and 1 2 9 7 , a n d in Gascony, 1294. He was summoned to Parliament from 26 Januar y 1 2 9 6 / 7 to 10 April 1299 , by writs directed Johanni de Tregoz, whereb y h e i s h e l d to have become LORD TREGOZ. In March 1296/7 he was ordered t o a i d t h e s heriff of Hereford in punishing those who disturbed the real m, b e i n g a lso one o f the Commissioners concerning the clergy, for many o f w h o m h e v ouched . He was summoned for service across the seas, May fo ll o w i n g; and wa s one of the council to adadvisise the King's son, Oct. 1 2 9 7 . I n 1 298 he served again in Scotland, where he was present at the b a t t l e o f Falkirk , 22 July, and afterwards at Stirling. He made several g r a n t s t o Ewyas Harold priory, confirmed grants which had been made to D o r e a b b ey, co. Hereford, and to Newark, by Guildford, priory, and (Nove m b e r 1 2 83 ) endowed a chapel on the manor of Eaton Tregoz. | De Tregoz, Lord Of Tregoz John (I7887)
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906 | Suppo I (or Suppone) (died 5 March 824) was a Frankish nobleman who hel d l a n d s i n the Kingdom of Italy in the early ninth century. In 817, he was made Count of Brescia, Parma, Piacenza, Modena, and Berg a m o . H e w as also made a missus dominicus, along with the Brescian bisho p R a t a l d, for Italy. In 818, he was instrumental in putting down the re be l l i o n of Bernard against Emperor Louis the Pious. In 822, after the a b d i c a tion and death of Duke Winigis, Suppo was created Duke of Spoleto b y t h e g r a teful emperor and he passed Brescia to his son Mauring. Suppo' s d e a t h w as recorded by Einhard and Spoleto went to Adelard, who died w it h i n f i ve months, leaving the duchy to Mauring. | Spoleto, Duke Of Spoleto Suppo (I7146)
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907 | Susanna came to Maryland around 1718. She was married a second time to William Metcalf, but no children reported. Then married a third time to John Bowles. | Smith, Susanna Anne (I82)
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908 | Susanna came with her husband and children in 1650. Thomas Gerrard's plantation records are the only ones still in existance. Because of these records we know today how the plantation was run in the 1600's. | Snowe, Susannah (I9016)
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909 | Szabolcs de Vajay suggests that she was Richilde de Rouergue, daughter o f E r m e n gaud de Toulouse Comte de Rouergue & his wife Adelais ---, to ex pl a i n t h e transmission of the name Armengol [Ermengaud] into the Barcel o n a f a m ily. | Rouergue, Condesa De Barcelona Richilde (I7148)
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910 | Taken from the "ANNALS OF NEWTOWN" by James Riker. Cornelius Van Duyn, son of Gerrit, was b. July 16, 1664, at New Utrecht, m. Jan. 29, 1691, Matilda, dau. of Wm. Huyken, and the next year removed to Gowanus, in Brooklyn, of which town he was afterwards a trustee. His wife dying Mar. 1, 1709, in her 40th yr., he m. Christiana Gerbrands, June 14, 1714. He d. in 1754, leaving, besides daughters, sons Gerrit, b. Sep. 6, 1691: William b. Mar. 26, 1693, and Cornelius, b. Feb. 12, 1709, who d. in Brooklyn at an advanced age, without issue. He bore the character of an energetic, business man, but was remarkable for his humor. When the Revolutionary troubles began, he inclined to the whig couse, but finally espoused that of the king, served as a captain of militia under the British, and at the peace retired with his family to Nova Scotia, where he died. | Van Duyne, Captain Cornelius Gerretse (I45342)
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911 | The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Thored, son of Gunner" ravaged W e s t m o reland in 966. There are speculations that "Thored was Earl of the part of Northumbria w h i c h w a s previously called Deira, maybe Yorkshire, the territory being d i f f e r ent from Northumbria which ï ¿ ½ lfric "ealdorman" ruled around th e s a m e t i me. | Northumbria, Gunnor (I9409)
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912 | The Audleys, of Anglo-Saxon ancestry, took their name from their Staffo r d s h i re manor of Audley, or Heleigh (Aldith elegh and many variants), g r a n t e d to Henry's great-grandfather by Nicholas de Verdon in Stephen's r e i g n . H enry's elder brother Adam was the constable of Hugh de Lacy, ear l o f U l s t er (d. 1242), and Henry may also have served the earl since bo th b r o t h ers received lands in Ulsster . Audley had succeeded both his f ath e r a n d h is brother by 1212, and in 1217 he married Bertred, daughter o f R a l p h M ainwaring, county justice of Chester. During the civil war of 1 2 1 5 ? 1 7 he served the powerful royalist Ranulf (III), earl of Chester (d . 1 2 3 2 ) , who granted him lands in Cheshire and Staffordshire. Between 1 21 7 a n d 1 2 20 Audley was sheriff of Shropshire and Staffordshire as the e a r l ' s d eputy. | De Audley, Henry (I7806)
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913 | The baptism of daughter, Engeltjen Janse Van Dyck, on 23 Oct 1636 in Amsterdam lists the parents as Jan Guecke and Trijntjen Agges. Then following 1636; Thomas, Anna (Annetje), Maeijke, Aachijmijus (Agias), Angnietje, Jan, Karel and Marten also have baptisms with the parents as Jan Guecke and Trijntjen Agges or slight variations thereof. | Agges, Tryntje (I45472)
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914 | The Bermingham family held the lands of Tethmoy (tuath da muighe) count y O f f a l y near Dublin in the north of Leinster. | Bermingham, Robert (I7612)
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915 | The Black Knight of Lorn was born at Innermeath, Scotland. His father, S i r J o h n S tewart (d. 26 Apr 1421), was ambassador to England and was mar r i e d t o I sabel MacDougall (d. 21 Dec 1439), heiress to the House of Erg a d i a , t he senior line descending from Somerled, King of Mann and the Is l e s . H e w as a direct male line descendant of Alexander Stewart, 4th Hig h S t e w a rd of Scotland, through his second son Sir John Stewart of Bonki ll , w h o w a s killed at the Battle of Falkirk. His mother was also a desc e nd a n t o f Robert I of Scotland through his second marriage to Elizabeth d e B u r g h . | Stewart, 9th Earl Of Carrick James (I6967)
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916 | The Bunker Family, Branches Early Identified wit Charlestown, Massachusetts, Nantucket, Massachusetts, and Delaware and Maryland, as well as a Presentation of Early Bunkers and those in Europe, The Bunker Family Association, 1931, Family History Library, 35 North West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150, US/CAN 929.273, B884aa(?) She m. 8 Oct 1676, at Nantucket, Stephen Hussey (b. 1632, the second child born at Lynn, Mass.; d. 2nd, 2 mo. 1718, at Nantucket; bur. in the first Friends' Burying Ground at Nantucket), s. Christopher Hussey and Theodate Batchelder (or Batchelor, Bachelder, Bacheller, Bachelor, or Bachiler). | Bunker, Martha (I45594)
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917 | The Bunker Family, Branches Early Identified wit Charlestown, Massachusetts, Nantucket, Massachusetts, and Delaware and Maryland, as well as a Presentation of Early Bunkers and those in Europe, The Bunker Family Association, 1931, Family History Library, 35 North West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150, US/CAN 929.273, B884aa(?) Page 183: Jabez Bunker s. William Bunker and Mary Macy, b. 7 Nov. 1678, at Nantucket, Mass.; d. 6th, 5 mo. 1750, at Nantucket. He m., 19th, 11 mo. 1706, among Friends, at Nantucket, Hannah Gardner (b. 6th, 5 mo. 1686, at Nantucket; d. 25th, 3 mo. 1773), d. Nathaniel Gardner and Abigail Coffin. | Bunker, Jabez (I45608)
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918 | The Bunker Family, Branches Early Identified wit Charlestown, Massachusetts, Nantucket, Massachusetts, and Delaware and Maryland, as well as a Presentation of Early Bunkers and those in Europe, The Bunker Family Association, 1931, Family History Library, 35 North West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150, US/CAN 929.273, B884aa(?) Page 189: Ichabod Paddock went to Nantucket to teach the people there how to catch whales, and, at about the same time (1690) or soon thereafter, he brought his brothers, Joseph and Nathaniel, to the island. Ichabod did not remain long, but his two brothers did, and they married there, leaving a numerous posterity. In the spring of 1726, 86 whales were captured by boats from the shore at Nantucket, and, among the Nantucket men who did so, who were probably captains or owners of boats or vessels, Nathaniel Paddock secured two of them. Birth also listed as 12 Sep 1677 Birth also listed as 12 Sep 1677 2 Margaret/Crosby * Nov1735 3 Mrs. Eliza 2 Margaret/Crosby * Nov1735 3 Mrs. Elizabeth/Mayo * 29Nov1739 Research Notes The Bunker Family, Branches Early Identified wit Charlestown, Massachusetts, Nantucket, Massachusetts, and Delaware and Maryland, as well as a Presentation of Early Bunkers and those in Europe, The Bunker Family Association, 1931, Family History L ibrary, 35 North West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150, US/CAN 929.273, B884aa(?) Page 189: Ichabod Paddock went to Nantucket to teach the people there how to catch whales, and, at about the same time (1690) or soon thereafter, he brought his brothers, Joseph and nathaniel, to the island. Ichabod did not remain long, but hi s two brothers did, and they married there, leaving a numerous posterity. In the spring of 1726, 86 whales were captured by boats from the shore at Nantucket, and, among the Nantucket men who did so, who were probably captains or owners of boat s or vessels, Nathaniel Paddock secured two of them. Reliance/Stone * 17Mar1725/6, Mrs. Eliza Reliance/Stone * 17Mar1725/6, Mrs. Elizabeth/Mayo * 29Nov1739 | Paddock, Joseph (I45570)
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919 | The Clare Family of English nobles was prominent in the 12th and 13th c e n t u r ies. The first earl of Clare, the founder of the family, was Richa r d F i t z gilbert, a knight who accompanied William the Conqueror on the N o r m a n i nvasion of England in 1066. His great-grandson, Richard de Clare , 2 n d E a r l o f Pembroke, known as "Strongbow", laid the foundations for Eng l i s h r u le in Ireland, Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Clare (died 12 17), a n d h i s s o n, Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Clare (flourished 1215- 1280) , w e r e l e aders of the barons who forced King John to sign the Magna Cha rt a i n 1 2 1 5 | Fitzgilbert, First Earl Of Clare Richard (I7656)
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920 | The correct territorial designation is John Napier of Rusky & Merchistoun. That said, normally only the principal estate would suffice so probably Merchistoun was worth more at the Exchequer than Rusky, given its location, so really just John Napier of Merchistoun would be correct. The also-rans are just on paper. | Napier, 3rd Laird of Merchiston John (I16869)
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921 | The descendants of Thomas Jr and Robert Barnard settled in Nantucket, MA and there is lot's of data on this family, the Book "History of Nantucket by Starbuck 1926 is available from Mitchells book corner in Nantucket for $75.00. and lists the descendants for 5 generations fo this family plus, descendants of 10 other major family of Nantucket from its settlement in 1660 on. Some of the Barnards that made way to NC are found in Hinshaws Quaker records for NC, later ending in Easter Indiana quakers. Posted by Dale L. Barnard on April 29, 1998 at 13:52:23: In Reply to: Re: Thomas B. BARNARD, Sr. (born about 1580 - England) posted by Don Cordell on March 12, 1998 at 03:42:53: I descend from Robert Barnard through New York Barnards who followed the migration of the Mormon pioneers to Utah and Idaho. Mary Barnard published a book on Nantucket Barnards-Nantucket Genesis. The big question is where the brothers Robert and Thomas come from and who was their father, William Barnard or Thomas Barnard Sr. She was unable to solve that problem. They both are apparently in Nantucket in the 1640s or earlier. Those two questions have vexed Barnard genealogists for some time. I have checked passenger lists without success. The next step would be to check parish lists such as in Branstone where some have traced Thomas Barnard to. | Barnard, Thomas (I45549)
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922 | The earliest known Guillaume de Gometz would appear to be the Guillaume d e G o m e t z who appears for the first time on 20 May 1043 witnessing a cha rt e r o f K i ng Henri I of France ["Signum Guilelmi Comitis de Goms" RHF 1 1 : 5 7 8 ( # 12)]. He also appears as a witness for Philippe I on 29 May 10 6 7 [ " W i llelmus de Gomethiaco" Rec. actes Philippe I, 94 (#30)], again i n 1 0 6 7 [ " Guillelmus Giometensis castri" Rec. actes Philippe II, 98 (#32 )] , a n d o n 2 N ovember 1071 ["Willelmi de Gumetho" Rec. actes Philippe I , 1 6 0 ( # 6 0)]. The earliest known Guillaume de Gometz would appear to be the Guillaume d e G o m e t z who appears for the first time on 20 May 1043 witnessing a cha rt e r o f K i ng Henri I of France ["Signum Guilelmi Comitis de Goms" RHF 1 1 : 5 7 8 ( # 12)]. He also appears as a witness for Philippe I on 29 May 10 6 7 [ " W i llelmus de Gomethiaco" Rec. actes Philippe I, 94 (#30)], again i n 1 0 6 7 [ " Guillelmus Giometensis castri" Rec. actes Philippe II, 98 (#32 )] , a n d o n 2 N ovember 1071 ["Willelmi de Gumetho" Rec. actes Philippe I , 1 6 0 ( # 6 0)]. | Gometz, Bertrade (I7272)
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923 | The eldest son of Casimir IV Jagiełło, king of Poland, Vladislas was el e c t ed king of Bohemia in 1471. The early part of his reign was spent in c o n f lict with the Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus, who in 1478 (Treaty o f O l o mouc) won title to the previously Bohemian crownlands of Moravia, S i l e sia, and Lusatia. After Matthias died, however, Vladislas was electe d k i n g of Hungary as Ulászló II in 1490. During his compliant and vacil la t i ng reign, in both Bohemia and Hungary, the nobility widely extended t h e i r powers and strengthened their hold over an already oppressed peasa n t r y. Vladislas was also faced with the rivalry of the Holy Roman emper o r M a ximilian I for the Hungarian crown and was obliged to concede the H a b s burg succession to his territories should his own line be extinguish e d ( P eace of Pressburg, 1491; Treaty of Vienna, 1515); that agreement g r e a tly contributed to the eventual formation of a Habsburg Danubian emp i r e . | of Hungary, King of Bohemia Vladislaus II (I7800)
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924 | The exact date of Isobel's birth is not known, but she is thought to ha v e b e e n s till a young girl (proably around 12) when she caught the eye o f R o b e r t Beaumont, count of Meulon. Beaumont wanted both Isobel an d th e e l e v a ted social standing that a marriage to the granddaughter of King H e n r i I w o uld give him. | Vermandois, Countess Of Leicester Isabel (I7495)
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925 | The fact that she was such an important Norman heiress, shows that King W i l l i a m wanted the services of the man who she was given to in marriage, t h e A n g l o-Saxon earl Waltheof. His family had been Earls in Bamburgh, an d e v e n u n der the Normans they held a large fief which largely in Northa mp t o n s hire, Huntingdonshire and Leicestershire in the midlands, extendi n g e a s t i nto Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and south into Bedfordshire. ''Complete Peerage'' notes in a footnote that there is a tradition that t h e K i n g h ad first assigned the Countess Judith to him as wife to Simon S t L i z , l a ter her daughter's husband, "and on her refusal (on account of S i m o n ' s lameness) gave him ]udith's counties. ]udith fled for hiding to t h e E l y m a rches, taking her daughters with her. | de Lens, Judith (I2702)
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926 | The family had land and property at Cudnall in Leckhampton | Hore, Thomas (I45040)
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927 | The family held the castle of St. Foy de Montgomery, just south of Lisi e u x [ L i seaux], in France. The village still exists and it was along a r o a d n e a r here that Field Marshall Erwin Rommel was strafed and badly in j u r e d b y Allied fighters in WWII. Falaise, the birthplace of Duke Willi a m , w a s j ust to the west. One legend claims that Gomeric was a Viking, t h e s o n o f I ngvar Ragnarson, the King of East Anglis and Northumberland. G o m e r i c settled in the Calvados area of Normandy and fortified a hill wh i c h g a v e the family its name - Mons Gomerici. Another part of the famil y , s e e k ing deeper roots, claimed the name could be traced back to a Rom a n c o m m ander called Gomericus. | Montgomery, Guillaume (I7723)
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928 | The Fenstermacher family with which we are most familiar, and whose representatives are quite numerous in this and nearby counties, has its origin in Mathias Fenstermacher, a native of the German Palatinate, who crossed the sea on the good ship "Glasgow" which landed at Philadelphia, on 9 September 1738. On the original list of passengers his age is given as sixty years, and he was therefore born about 1678. He was accompanied to America by his two sons, Jacob, then twenty-nine years of age, and Wilhelm, twenty-five years of age. These three were preceded to the new world by a third son, Philip, who was removed to Alburtis and there carried on a general store business until he died in 1809. Altogether he followed the life of an enterprising, successful merchant for upwards of forty years. a passenger on the good ship, Samuel, and qualified at Philadelphia, 30 August 1737. He was then twenty-four years of age." "There is a tradition that the family first settled in Oley township, Berks County. The first positive record we have, however, is in the Berks County tax list of 1753, where Longswamp Township is given as the residence of the father and of his two sons, Jacob and Philip. Concerning the other son, Wilhelm, who accompanied his father to the new world, nothing further is known at this time. The name of Mathias Fenstermacher appears in the early tax lists as late as 1761, at which time he probably died, being then eighty-three years old." Buried Longswamp Reformed Church Cemetery, Lehigh [Berks] County, Pennsylvania | Fenstermacher, Matthias (I45059)
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929 | The following paragraphs are from Margaret Haynes' "Items of Family History" written 1902; Jacob's father sent to Dublin in 1709 for his wife, nine year old son Jacob and his two small daughters Sarah and Anna. Jacob never forgot that voyage from Cork to Charles Town. It lasted five weeks, which was excellent time for those days when passengers often tossed for two, even three months on a stormy ocean and were reduced to a fare of moldy biscuits, salt beef and stale water. In 1713 he was bound as an apprentice to Francis Le Brasseur "for the term of seven years which he faithfully served out. He then entered into partnership in a iron monger's shop with his uncle Charles Hill until the year 1725, when he married. In 1743 Jacob Motte was appointed Public Treasurer of the Carolinas, a post he held for almost three decades. | Motte, Jacob (I12292)
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930 | The following paragraphs are from Margaret Haynes' "Items of Family History" written 1902; "a patriot who died of fever on a British prison ship at the beginning of the American Revolution. There is a portrait of him, as well as one of his wife Susannah, that are still in existence." | Hayne, Abraham (I415)
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931 | The following paragraphs are from Margaret Haynes' "Items of Family History" written 1902; Susanna was a stern faced woman with strong features prematurely aged by the grim era in which she lived and suffered. | Branford, Susanna (I425)
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932 | The following was taken from "Edward Chapman of Ipswitch, Massachusetts . P u r i t an Immigrant and Patriarch" by Philip Chapman Ellsworth. English Orphan, or New England Indentured Servant. (the above informati o n s u g g ests that Edward Chapman did not know or remember his parents. I n o t h e r w ords, he appears to have been an orphan). As such, Edward Chap ma n w o u l d have had a difficult time immigrating to America-it was very c o s t l y , and most of the Puritan emigrants were people with financial mea n s a n d m i dddle class status. However, in 17th century England and later , i n d i v idual parish churches had the responsibility for providing n ece ss i t i e s for the poor and orphans. It was not uncommon,therefore, for ch u r c h e s to pay emigrant passage for an orphan, deeming it a less expensi v e a l t e rnative than supporting the youth to maturity. In other instanc e s , o r p hans became indentur ed s ervants to an emigrant master who brou g h t t h e m to New England. It appears that a seven-year indenture arrang e m e n t e xisted between young Edward Chapman and Reverend Nathaniel Roger s . | Chapman, Edward (I27825)
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933 | The genealogy of this family has for years followed the fabricated line of some 19th Century Genealogist. 2. The true line was proved by Hugh Law in his book: SLC FHLC 940 D2hl, Chapter 7 is entitled: Ancestors traced to France: Joris Jansen de Rapalje & Catherine Trico. Parish records from her home town don't begin for many years after the birth of Catherine Trico, but there are many Trico families living in the area. At her marriage in Amsterdam, Holland, she gives the place of her birth. She was 18 at the time of her marriage. Her sister Mary Flamengh accompanied her. In a deposition in 17 Oct 1688 Catalynie states she was 83 years of age, born in Paris France, She came to this country in the Ship Unity in 1623, commanded by Adrian Jorise arrived in Albany New York and after 2 years moved to New Amsterdam (New York City) !Birth place: She states in 1680 as born in Paris France. On her marriage intents her place of birth Prais France is lined out and Pris in Walslant is written in. Further research verifies that Pris in Walslant is correct. !FATHER: these two sources list her father as Joris Trico: 1. Reg. of Early Settlers of Kings Co., Long Island, N.Y. by. Bergen, Teunis G.; SPL R929.1747 B453R pg 326; 2. Gen. & Family History of Southern New York by Cutter, SPL. R929.1747 C981G pg 830 George E. McCracken, "Catalyntje Trico Rapalje", The American Genealogist vol.35 (1959): 35:193. Dorothy A. Koening, "Further Information About Catalina Trico", New Netherland Connections Vol.1, page 89 (1996): pages 91-92. About Catalyntje (Catherine) "From the Journal of Dankers & Sluter, Labadists [a 17th century religious sect] who visited this country in 1678: On May 30, 1679, they visited Catalynie. "M. deLaGrange and his wife invited me to accompany them in their boat to the Walebocht, a place situated on Long Island, an hour's distance below the city and opposite Corlears Heock. The aunt of de LaGrange (Catalynie Trico) is an old Walloon. She is wordly-minded, living with her whole heart, as well as body, among her progeny, which now numbers 145 and will soon reach 150. Nevertheless, she lived alone by herself, a little apart from the others, having her little garden and other conveniences with which she helped herself." Source: The Vandaveer Family of Greene County, Illinois by Frederick Ewart Vandaveer, West Side Blue, Inc., Fairview Park, Ohio, 1970, page 32, citing the journals of Jasper Dankers and Peter Sluyter,1679-1683, unknown publication information. | Trico, Catalyntje Jeronimus (I45431)
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934 | The Gesta Francorum records that "Gisalbertus, vassallus Karoli" abduct e d " f i l iam Hlotharii imperatoris" and took her to Aquitaine where they w e r e m a r ried. The Annales Fuldenses also record that "Gisalbertus vassa l l u s K a roli" abducted "filiam Hlotharii imperatoris" and married her in A q u i t a ine in 846. | Carolingian, Duchess of the Moselle Berta (I9692)
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935 | The GIFFARD surname is derived from a Saxon word signifying liberal dis p o s i t ion, the giver. It is also a place name from atown of the water of G i f f o r d, Huddington County, Scotland; from the Celtic word Gaf, a hook, a b e n d , a n d ford. | Bolebec, Geoffrey (I8387)
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936 | The High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and the Royal Forestsis a p o s i t i on established by the Normans in England.The High Sheriff is the o l d e s t s ecular office under the Crown. Formerly the High Sheriff was the p r i n c i pal law enforcement officer in the county but over the centuries m o s t o f t h e responsibilities associated with the post have been transfer r e d e l s ewhere or are now defunct, so that its functions are now largely c e r e m o nial. | Fitz Hugh, Hugh (I1771)
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937 | The Hopkins family of the Mayflower was not from Wortley, Gloucester as h a d b e e n p reviously speculated and published. Giles came with his family on the Mayflower in 1620, at the age of 12. H e v o l u n teered for service in the 1637 Pequot War but was not called. He m a r r i e d Catherine Wheldon in 1639 at Plymouth; the family moved shortly t h e r e a fter to Yarmouth, living there for about five years before moving o n t o s e t t le at Eastham, where he died sometime between 1688 and 1690. The Hopkins family of the Mayflower was not from Wortley, Gloucester as h a d b e e n p reviously speculated and published. Giles came with his family on the Mayflower in 1620, at the age of 12. H e v o l u n teered for service in the 1637 Pequot War but was not called. He m a r r i e d Catherine Wheldon in 1639 at Plymouth; the family moved shortly t h e r e a fter to Yarmouth, living there for about five years before moving o n t o s e t t le at Eastham, where he died sometime between 1688 and 1690. | Hopkins, Giles (I125)
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938 | The House of Billung was a dynasty of Saxon noblemen in the 9th through 1 2 t h c e n turies. The first known member of the house was Count Wichmann, mentioned as a B i l l u n g in 811. Oda, the wife of Count Liudolf, oldest known member of t h e L i u d olfing House, was also a Billung as was Matilda of Ringelheim. In the 10th century, the property of the family was centered in the Bar d e n g a u around Lüneburg and they controlled the march named after them. I n t h e m i d dle of the 10th century, when the Saxon dukes of the House of L i u d o l fing had also become German kings, King Otto the Great entrusted m o r e a n d m ore of his ducal authority to Hermann Billung. For five genera t i o n s , the House of Billung ruled the Duchy of Saxony. | Billung, Hermann (I9696)
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939 | The identity of Elizabeth Stewart is uncertain. Sir William Mure of Row a l l an, writing in his Historie, said that she was the daughter of the f i r s t Lord Avondale, but the ediitor of the Historie contradicted this, s a y i ng that the first Lord Avondale died childless. According to the edi t o r , the second Lord Avondale left several sons and daughters: "althoug h t h e m arriage of this Lady, with the heir of Rowallan, does not appear i n a n y o f the accounts published." | Stewart, Elizabeth (I18338)
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940 | The July 1915 issue of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Vol. LXIX Whole Number 275) contains (between pages 242 and 243) illustrations showing two sides of a leaf that probably at one time formed part of a Bible belonging to Capt. John Gorham who married Desire Howland. Pages 242-243 describe the basis for this conclusion and go on to quote from the remnant, including the names and dates of birth of John and Desire Gorham's children. He immigrated in June 1635 perhaps on the PHILIP. Col. John Gorham, recorded in his "Wast Book" that John Gorham went home to England about this time but returned soon to his family. They moved from Marshfield to Yarmouth in 1652 and then; the Wast Book states, they moved to Barnstable to begin a township called Barnstable. We know that Gorham did have a grist mill and a tannery there. He was surveyor of highways in 1654 In Oct. 1675 Capt. John Gorham was in command of a Company of English and Indians at Swamp Naraganset (in King Philips War ) where in Feb.1676 he was mortally wounded when his powder horn was hit and split against his side, driving pieces of horn and powder into his body. He died at Swansey on Feb. 5, 1676. | Gorham, Captain John (I12706)
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941 | The Lacy (or Lacie) family starts with Ilbert de Lacy of the time of Wi l l i a m t he Conqueror. He received from the Conqueror large possessions i n C o u n t y York, West Riding, (Pontefract). According to the "histor of P o n t e f ract," p. 69, he had a son Robert who had two sons, Ilbert, died w i t h o u t issue, and Henry who married Aubrey and had a son Robert.. "At h i s ( H e n ry de Lacy's) death in the latter part of Henry II's reign he wa s s u c c e eded by his son and heir, Robert de Lacy. Robert died without i ss u e i n 1 1 93 and the estate descended to Aubrey de Lisours, She was h i s s i s t er by the mother's side, who was the daughter of Eudo de Lisours b y A u b r e y his wife who as the widow of his father Henry. | De Lacy, Ilbert (I7390)
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942 | The Leete family is an ancient one, traced back to before the Norman conquest of England. Leit is described in the Doomsday Book as a thane (a rank of nobility in pre-Norman England, roughly equivalent to baron) of the Anglo-Saxon, Edward the Confessor, King of England from 1042 until his death 5 Jan 1056/66. The manor of Foxcote in Buckinghamshire, worth £3 annually, is mentioned as being formerly held by Leit. The Eversden branch of the Leete family embraces the names of the known descendants of John Leete, of Eversden, Cambridgeshire whose name stands at the head of the family pedigree, recorded by the Heralds in their Visitation of Cambridgeshire in 1575, and again in 1619. From this John of Eversden also descend the Leetes of Suffolk, whose pedigree is recorded in the Visitation of Suffolk in 1612. | Leete of Eversden, John (I10641)
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943 | The Lion King of Scots Earl of Northumberland, 1152-7 Earl of Huntingdon, 1165-1174 William, King of Scotland, was surnamed "The Lion" due to the rampant ( s t a n d ing on hind legs) red lion on a yellow field, which he had as his s t a n d a rd. It would go on to become Scotland's Royal Heraldic colours and i s e a s i l y recognizable eveven today. He was the second son of Henry, Earl of Huntingdon (died 1152), a son o f K i n g D a vid I, he became king of Scotland on the death of his brother, t h e w e a k -willed Malcolm IV. In December 1165, William was crowned at Sco n e . S h o rtly after his accesssion to the throne, he spent some time at t h e E n g l ish court of Henry II; then quarrelling with Henry, he arranged a n a l l i a nce betgween the two countries, Scotland and France,which would t a k e r o o t again over 100 years later (in 1294) and last until 1746, know n a s t h e " A uld Alliance." The oldest mutual self-defence treaty in Euro pe . H e a r r anged this treaty with French King Louis VII; and even assist e d H e n r y' s sons in their revolt against their father (Henry II of Engl a n d ) i n 1 173. In return for this aid, the younger Henry granted Northum b e r l a nd , a possession which William had sought, in vain, from the Engl i s h k i n g .: William was a ferocious fighter and military commander, but o f q u e s t ionable ability as a tactician, by English chronicle accounts. H e l e d a b a n d of well armed men, a mix of wild Irish Kerns, Norman-Scots , C e lt s a n d Galloway men. According to the chroniclers the kerns slaugh te r e d c h ildren, ripped open pregnant women, and cut down priests at the i r a l t a rs." But, this type of description of William's actions were wri t t e n b y f rightened and highly propagandized English chroniclers, whose p r o s e w a s so compelling that later chroniclers and writers would use thi s s a m e p r opaganda when they described the behaviour of William Wallace' s m e n . | Dunkeld, King of Scotland William I (I1265)
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944 | The Lott Family in America by A V Phillips The Lott's were French Huguenots from Reynerwout in Drenten, Holland. Wikitree: Excerpt from "Early New Netherlands Settlers" website by Robert Gordon Clarke " 2. Engelbert | Lott, Engelbert Pieters (I45446)
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945 | The Lotts were French Huguenots from Reynerwout in Drenten, Holland. They immigrated to Niew Amsterdam in 1652. Pieter Lott settled in Flatbush and married Gertrude Lamberts. Was member of Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church in 1677. He served as Magistrate in Flatbush in 1656 and 1673. He took Oath of Allegiance in 1687. | Lott, Pieter Engelberts I (I45447)
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946 | The men of the Vermandois marched with the subjects of under the colou r s o f t h e ir count , a young prince whose brilliant qualities had been m u c h a d m ired by the court. Proud of being a brother of the king of Franc e a n d t h e f irst of the French knights, he distinguished himself by his b r a v e r y and the ostentation of his manners. He displayed invincible cour a g e i n t h e field of battle, but allowed himself to be too easily overco m e b y f l a ttery, and was wanting in perseverance in reverses. Although f o r tu n e w as not too kind to him, not one of the heroes of the crusade ex h i b i t ed more honourable and disinterested intentions. If he had not mer i t e d b y h is exploits the surname of Great which history has given him, h e w o u l d h ave obtained it for having only listened to his zeal, and for h a v i n g s ought nothing but glory in a war which offered kingdoms to the a m b i t i on of princes and simple knights. | Capet Magnus, The Great Count Of Vermandois Hugues (I7578)
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947 | The Norman Montgomery family ancestry was closely interwoven either by b l o o d o r m arriage with the Duchy of Normandy. However, the family histor y i n N o r m andy was not without blemish. Hugh had five sons. Hugh, Robert , W i l l i am and Gilbert were all murdered in revenge for the murder of Os be r n e d e C repon, guardian of Duke William. Roger was the survivor. | Montgomery, Vicomte Of Hiemes Roger (I7258)
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948 | The original name of the family was de Lundin, from Lundie in Angus. T h e f a m i ly name of Durward derived from the honorific post of king's ush e r o r d o o rward held from William the Lion's reign (1165-1214). | Loudon, Thomas (I7401)
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949 | The pedigree of "Gerberge, Countess d'Anjou," is highly uncertain. She w a s t h e f i rst wife of Foulk II the "Good," Count d'Anjou, who is known t o h a v e r u led this French province in the Loire-Centre region from 942 t o 9 8 7 C E . H e made peace with the Normans and was a scholar, diplomat a nd s t a t e sman. He helped found the Angevin dynasty from which many of E uro p e ' s r oyal houses descend. [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CENTRAL%20FRANCE.htm#GerbergeMFoulques I I A n j ou Medieval Lands: Central France - Anjou: Gerberge] | de Maine, Countess d'Anjou Gerberge (I9579)
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950 | The Puritan Great Migration. William Thorne Sr. migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640). (See The Directory, by R. C. Anderson, p. 334) William Thorn migrated from England in 1637 residing first in Lynn, Massachusetts Bay Colony then moving to Long Island, settling first in Gravesend, then Flushing and finally in Jamaica, New York. His eventual residence in New York qualifies him for "Beyond New England" status in the Puritan Great Migration project. He may have been a Quaker late in life, as he was a signatory of the "Flushing Remonstrance" of 1657 (see "Colonial Life"). However, not all of the signatories WERE Quakers so William's religion is not certain. His birth is sometimes quoted as 1617 or 1617, likely to make him 21 by the time he was a freeman of Lynn. However, this status typically indicated an older man who owned property and was a member of the church with some standing in society so likely he was considerably more than 21 in 1638. His wife is called Susannah Booth, of unknown origins on wikitree. The work of Arthur Eaton cited here[3] proved that her first name was Susannah, but said her last name was unknown. In a followup 1965 NYGBR article her last name is stated as "Booth" and her origin (and their date and place of marriage) are specifically stated as "unknown". Her last name of "Booth" is derived from genealogical work done by two genealogists (John Ross Delafield and his father Maturin Livingston Delafield) who claimed to have had an account of William Hallett stating that his alimony payment (to his ex-wife Susan, widow of William Thorn) was to be paid to "Susannah Both". No such name has been found subsequently in any original document, but Dickinson holds the Delafields in high regard and gives credence to this statement of Susannah's original surname. Her first name (and marriage first to Thorn, then to Hallett) however is well established by these June 1669 New York court records from the legal separation of Susanna Hallett and her husband William noting a subsequent alimony suit where Susannah Hallet's son, Joseph Thorne took an active part. Torrey in "New England Marriages to 1700" sheds no additional light on the marriage of William Thorn and Susannah and makes no claim to her last name. | Thorne, William Sr. (I45250)
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951 | The Quincy family was established in Cuinchy, France, near Bethune on t h e b o r d er of Artois and Flanders, before coming to England. The family n a m e ( a l so written Quency and Quincey) is believed to derive from their e a r l y h o me in France. "The pioneer Quincy in England was Saher I, who ea r l y r e c ords indicate was the tenant of Ansel de Chokes at Long Buckby i n N o r t h amptonshire after 1124. (Cuinchy is a short distance from Chocqu es , t h e o r iginal home of Saher's overlord, Anselm de Chokes. He was a t e na n t o f t he latter circa 1124-29.) In 1155-56 Henry II confirmed Sahe r I ' s r i g ht to Long Buckby. According to Saher IV de Quincy in 1208, Sa he r I a l s o h eld the Advowson of Wimpole in Cambridge after 1154. | Quincy, Saher (I7821)
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952 | The Rev. Johannes Theodorus Polhemus, (1598-1676) who was the first member of the Polhemus family to settle in America, was born in 1598, probably at Boikirchen, a small community now vanished, but thought to be near the present Wolfstein in Rhenish, Bavaria. After serving several churches in Brazil for several years (administered by the Dutch). The Dutch administrations in Brazil, which succeeded that of Governor Maurice, were inefficient and corrupt. The Portuguese revolted and the Dutch finally capitulated January 25, 1654s they were given three months in which either to depart or to embrace the Roman Catholic religion and bacome Portuguese citizens. In April 1654 there was a fleet of sixteen Dutch ships in the harbor of Recif to evacuate the Dutch Protestants together with a small number of Dutch and Portuguese Jews. For some reason Domine Polhemus took a separate ship from the one on which his wife and children were quartered. Fifteen of these vessels arrived safely in Holland including the one bearing his wife and four children. If the sixteenth ship conveying the Domine had not met with a misadventure, there probably would never have been a Polhemus family in this country. The Dutch ship on which the Reverend Johannes Theodorus Polhemus left Brazil was captured by a Spanish privateer not far from Recif. He finally arrived in New Amsterdam and not in Holland in September 1654 on the French frigate St. Charles. After 'Domine Polhemus' arrival in America from Brazil, he went to Long Island to a village called Midwout. There were at that time three Dutch settlements on the western end of Long Island called Midwout, Amersfoort, and Breuckelens they later became the villages of Flatbush, Flatlands, and Brooklyn. There he built a church in Flatbush. This church continued in use for one hundred years and was served by Domine Polhemus until his death in 1676 at the age of seventy eight years. [Belle Polhemus Gaddis, History of the Polhemus Family, Private manuscript - Initial 1962 Rev. 1968 Rev. 1974] | Polhemus, Reverend Johannes Theodorus (I45458)
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953 | The ruling Liudolfing House, also known as the Ottonian dynasty, is nam e d a f t e r him; he is its oldest verified member. Liudolf (c. 805/820 - 11/12 March 866) was a Carolingian office bearer a n d c o u n t in the Duchy of Saxony from about 844. The ruling Liudolfing h o u s e , a lso known as the Ottonian dynasty, is named after him; he is its o l d e s t v erified member. Liudolf was the son of a margrave. Liudolf had extended possessions in t h e w e s t ern Harz foothills and on the Leine river, he also served as a m i l i t a ry leader (dux) in the wars of the East Frankish king Louis the Ge r m a n a g ainst Viking invasions, and the Polabian Slavs. Later authors ca l l e d L i udolf a Duke of the Eastern Saxons (dux Orientalis Saxonum, prob a b l y s i nce 850) and Count of Eastphalia. | Liudolfing, Duke of Saxony Liudolf (I9605)
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954 | The Smith emigrants entered the Province of Maryland in 1660 and settled in St. Mary's County with their sons, James, Robert, and Peter Smith (b1657). According to family tradition, the Smith family came from Lincolnshire, England. | Smith, Peter (I23513)
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955 | The son of George Bowers of Scituate, MA. John Bowers immigrated from E n g l a n d at a young age with his parents, and graduated from Harvard in 1 6 4 9 . H e w as a school master in Plymouth Colony from 1652 -1653, and was c a l l e d t o New Haven by Gov. Eaton and taught school in there for about 7 y e a r s ( 1 653-1660). He was pastor of Guilford and preached in Branford af t e r R e v . Pierson left (1667 to Feb. 1673). On Nov. 19, 1673, he was ord a i n e d a nd became the first pastor of Derby remaining there until he die d i n 1 6 8 7 . The town of Derby voted to build a house for their pastor & h i s f a m i ly on Nov. 18, 1673 to be finished by the next May. He was to re c e i v e £ 3 5 for the first year. At a town meeting at Derby, April 18, 1677, he was granted 12 acres, a l o t o n w h i ch to build his home, all the swamp adjacent to his 12 acres o f l a n d . O n Feb. 22, 1676, he was granted 3 acres of meadow called Davi d' s m e a d ow on the west sid e o f t h e brook. Dec. 30, 1678, the town a g r e e d t o give Mr. Bowers 15 pounds added to his 35 pounds to make his f e n c e . In "A History of the First Church & Society of Branford, CT, 1544-19 1 9 " b y J . R u p e rt Simonds, he is described as not having eloquence or popular it y, b u t h e w as honest, hard-working & a personal life above reproach. | Bowers, Reverend John (I6616)
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956 | The Staats Family have never used the prefix "Van" before their name as their name was conferred upon them rather that being used by them in America to indicate where they came from in Europe. The first staats was one Joachim Guyse of Holland. He was a Rear Admiral and second in command of the Hollard Fleet at the time of rebellion against Spain 1567. At the gathering of the Grand Council of Holland he gave as his opinion that they should become Staats. Joachin Gye performed many courageous feats and saved Holland from ruin. The Grand Coucil conferred the name Staats upon him meaning states. He was made an Admiral over the fleet and granted the coat of arms still used in the Staats Family today. | Van Housem, Jan Pieterszen Staats (I45287)
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957 | The Stryker Family in America by William Norman Stryker | Aertsen, Heyltie (I45421)
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958 | The surname originally came from 'le Hore' then over the years lost the 'le'. Other spelling variations were Whoore, Whoare, Hoore, Woor. In the 1500's and 1600's the English branch of the family slowly changed to Hoare, whilst one branch of the American family kept the 'Hore' spelling, but descendants also changed to 'Hord' and 'Hoard'. Richard is mentioned in the 1522 Military Survey of Gloucestershire with his father Walter and brother Robert. The Military Survey of Gloucestershire 1522, was called for by the then King Henry VIII, he was aware that there may be an upcoming war and wanted to know the worth of each of his subjects and who would be fit and able to bear arms. | Hore, Richard (I45038)
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959 | The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of th e H i e m o is, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz,abovementione d , w h o s e s on Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favour ite o f R o b e rt Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accomp anie d h i m t o t he Holy Land, and was entrusted to bring back the relics t he D u k e h a d obtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the A bb e y o f C e risi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke W i l l i a m in 1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands c o n f i s cated and given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herlui n d e C o n t eville. The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of th e H i e m o is, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz,abovementione d , w h o s e s on Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favour ite o f R o b e rt Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accomp anie d h i m t o t he Holy Land, and was entrusted to bring back the relics t he D u k e h a d obtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the A bb e y o f C e risi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke W i l l i a m in 1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands c o n f i s cated and given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herlui n d e C o n t eville. | Le Goz, Viscount Of Hiemes Thurstan (I7226)
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960 | The third wife but only empress consort of John of Brienne, Latin Emper o r o f C o n stantinople. In 1223, John of Brienne, aged 53, visited Santia g o d e C o m postela, as a supposed pilgrim. He was by then twice a widower . | Alfonsa, Queen Consort Of Jerusalem Castile Berenguela (I7388)
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961 | The title of High Steward or Great Steward was given in the 12th centur y t o W a l t er Fitzalan, whose descendants founded the "Royal" House of St ew ar t , C l an Stewart and all other Stewart cadet branches. In 1371, the l a s t H i g h Steward inherited the throne, and thereafter the title of High S t e w a r d of Scotland has been held as a subsidiary title to that of Duke o f R o t h e say, held by the heir-apparent. Thus, currently, The Prince of W al e s i s H i gh Steward of Scotland, sometimes known as the Prince and Gre a t S t e w ard of Scotland. | Fitzwalter, 2nd High Steward Of Scotland Alan (I7414)
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962 | The titles of Sir William Marshal, Knight, as per Douglas Richardson on p a g e 4 0 o f V olume IV of ''Royal Ancestry'', (2013): Hereditary Marshal of England, Sheriff of Gloucestershire 1189-94, 1198 - 1 2 0 7 Sheriff of Sussex 1193-1208* Warden of the Forest of Dean and Consta bl e o f S t . B r iavels Castle 1194-1206 Constable of Lillebonne 1202 Protector and Regent of the Kingdom (for King Henry III) 1216-1219 Earl of Pembroke and Striguil in Wales and Lord of Leinster in Ireland, h e l d i n r i ght of his wife, from his marriage in Aug 1189 until his death 1 4 M a y 1 2 1 9 William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke was an Anglo-Norman warrior and state s m a n , c alled the "greatest knight that ever lived" by Stephen Langton, A r c h b i shop of Canterbury. William Marshal served four kings: Henry II, Richard the Lionheart, Joh n L a c k l and and Henry III. As regent for the child-king Henry the III , M a r s h a l became a man of great power in Europe. | Marshal, 1st Earl Of Pembroke William (I8027)
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963 | The Van Voorhees Family Association found at http://www.vanvoorhees.org/ has published three volumes of documented family history. The first volume is titled, “The Van Voorhees Family in America, The First Six Generations.” The next two volumes are titled “The Van Voorhees Family in America, The Seventh and Eighth Generations, Volume I and II. On line they have an index to the 9th generation. The Family History Library in Salt Lake City has a copy of the three volumes, and they can be purchased on Amazon. Aeltje Wessels Van Voorhees Association, "Steven Coerts (Coerte) (Coerten) Van Voorhees", New Netherland Connections Vol. 1, page 52 (1996): 1:53. | Aaltjen Wessels (I45467)
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964 | The Van Voorhees Family Association found at http://www.vanvoorhees.org/ has published three volumes of documented family history. The first volume is titled, “The Van Voorhees Family in America, The First Six Generations.” The next two volumes are titled “The Van Voorhees Family in America, The Seventh and Eighth Generations, Volume I and II. On line they have an index to the 9th generation. The Family History Library in Salt Lake City has a copy of the three volumes, and they can be purchased on Amazon. Excerpt from 'The Van Voorhees Family, Vol 1', 1984 Captain Pieter Lucasz sailed his little ship "De Bonte Koe" (the Spotted Cow) between Holland and Nieuw Amsterdam regularly, but the arrival on April 15, 1660 is of special interest, as among the passengers were: "Steven Koorts From Drenthe, wife and seven children aged 22, 10, 8, 6,4, 2. Jan Kiers, farmer and wife from Drenthe" (Holland Society Yearbook, 1902, p. 13) Steven Koerts was the ancestor of the Van Voorhees family in the New World, regardless of later variations in spelling. Even he sometimes signed his name Steven Koerten. Steven Coerten has often been used in genealogical writings; today he is by tradition referred to as Steven Coerte. Aged sixty at the time of arrival in Nieuw Amsterdam, he was born near Hees in the Province of Drenthe in 1600. Having arrived in Nieuw Amsterdam, Steven Koerts took time to look around and apparently had the means to do so and to maintain his family in the interim. It was not until November 29, 1660, seven months after his arrival, that he purchased from Cornelis Dircksen Hoogland nine morgens of corn land, seven morgens of wood land, ten morgens of plain land and five morgens of salt meadow in Flatlands, with the house and house plotin the village of Amersfoort en Bergen (Flatlands) with a brewery, brewing apparatus, kettle house and casks with appurtenances for three thousand guilders (Flatbush Records, Lib. B. p. 37). (A morgen is about two acres of land.) Since he acquired all the equipment it is assumed that he followed the brewing business. That he entered into the religious and civic affairs ofhis community is without question. He was appointed a magistrate in 1664and on March 19, 1664 with Elbert Elbertse (Stoothoff), represented NieuwAmersfoort in the Provincial Assembly. (Brodhead's History of New York,p. 67). In October 1667 Steven Coertes with others, patented the town of Flatlands. | Van Voorhees, Steven Coerte (I45466)
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965 | The Van Voorhees family Vol 1 The First Four Generations by Albert Stokes | Rapalje, Jeronimus Joriszen (I45434)
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966 | The wardship of this young nobleman was granted to the famous Hubert de B u r g h , E arl of Kent, Justiciary of England, whose daughter,Margaret, to t h e g r e a t displeasure of King Henry III., he afterwards(1243 ) clandesti n e l y m a rried, but from whom he was probably divorced.She died in Novemb e r , 1 2 3 7. We find the king marrying him tm the next year, on or before J a n u a r y 25, 1237/8 to Maude Lacy, daughter of the Surety John de Lacy, E a r l o f L i n coln, in consideration whereof the said John paid to the cro w n 5 ,0 0 0 m arks, and remitted a debt of 2,000 more. | De Clare, Richard (I7534)
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967 | There is a confluence of family lines with Richard FitzAlan and Elizab e t h B o h u n 's children. 12 generations down the line, the line from Eliz abet h F i t z Alan marries back into the line of Alice FitzAlan. For simpli cit y, t h i s g eneology will only follow the line of Alice FitzAlan. | D'Arundelle, Lady Elizabeth (I1749)
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968 | There is a confluence of family lines with Richard FitzAlan and Elizabe t h B o h u n's children. 12 generations down the line, the line from Eliza b e t h F i tzAlan marries back into the line of Alice FitzAlan. Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel and 10th Earl of Surrey (1346 -S e p t e m ber 21, 1397, beheaded) was an English nobleman and military comma n d e r . H e was the son of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel and Elea n o r o f L a ncaster. In 1377 he was Admiral of the West and South, and in 1 3 8 6 A d m iral of all England. In this capacity he defeated a combined Fra n c o - S panish-Flemish fleet off of Margate in 1387. The following year he w a s o n e o f t he Lords Appellant to Richard II. In 1397 he was arrested fo r h i s o p p osition to Richard II, and then attainted and beheaded. | Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel Richard (I533)
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969 | There is absolutely no proof of his first name (commoners didn't have middle names back then so that was not obtained from a record either), nor that he ever came to Massachusetts. He died before 2 Jul 1641, when the widow Damaris was admitted to the Salem Church. See Anderson, Robert Charles, New England, The Great Migration and The Great Migration Begins, 1620-1635 . . . . | Shattuck, Samuel William (I45612)
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970 | There were Counts of Rouerge from 790 to 1119, and Gilbert was the firs t . H e i s s o metimes called the Count of Rouergue and founder of that dy n as ty o f c o unts which ruled Toulouse and often all of Gothia for the ne x t f o u r c enturies. In 837 , he was appointed missus dominicus along wit h R a g a m bald in the pago Rutenico seu Nemausense. | De Rouerge, Count Of Rouergue Gilbert David (I7370)
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971 | There were many newspaper articles surrounding the death of the World War I Ace Baron Von Richtenstien (Better known as "The Red Baron"). According to the articles, Margaret had a special relationship with the Ace and he kept her picture in his cockpit while flying. She met the Baron while traveling in Europe after completion of her legal education at UC Berkeley. Margaret graduated from UC Berkeley in 1908 and received her Masters the following year. While continuing to live in Berkeley, after passing the California Bar, she opened an office next to her father's office in San Francisco. Margaret specialized in cases regarding women and children. She traveled extensively, spoke nine languages’ fluently, translated books as a vocation and wrote several books about her travels and family history. Margaret was a teacher at Technical School in Oakland (Oakland Tech). | Hayne, Margaret Perkins (I9124)
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972 | They came from the small town of Borculo in the province of Gelderland in what was formerly the County of Zutphen, and hence assumed the name of Berckelo (Barkelo). Lubberdinck is a farmstead on which they resided for several generations. It is located southeast of Geesteren. When they came to America, this very local name was superceded by van Borculoo. From research done by Helen Barricklow Endecott and her brother Rex Barricklow in 1964: There were two pioneers in New Netherlands, Willem Jans van Barkelo, (who had already lived in New Netherlands) with brother Harmon Jans van Barkelo emigrated on the ship De Trouw (The Faith) sailed from Holland March 24, 1662. They came from the town of Borculo in the province of Guelderland. Harmen Jans brought wife Willempje Warnaers and 2 children, 5 and 3 years old. He died at New Utrecht (now Brooklyn) New York. | van Barkelo, Harmon Jans Lubberijnck (I45372)
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973 | This begins a split of family lines. JOHN FITZALAN DE ARUNDEL and ELEA N O R D E M A LTRAVERS begin the HICKS/RICKETTS Family line to BETTYJEAN OTT | De Arundel, John Fitzalan (I535)
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974 | This day died here Mr Zachariah Paddock, in the 88th year of his age, was born in Plymouth in the beginning of the year 1640. He retained his reason to an uncommon degree, until his last illness, which lasted but a few days. He was married in 1659 to Mrs Deborah Sears, born in this town, and now survives him, having lived together about 68 years, and by her, God blest him with a numerous offspring, especially in the third and fourth generations, having left behind him of his own posterity, 48 grand-children and 38 great grand-children, and of this latter sort no less than 30 descendants from his second son. The old gentleman, his wife, one of his sons and his wife lived for a considerable time in a house by themselves, without any other person, when their ages computed together, amounted to over 300 years. Mr Paddock had obtained the character of a righteous man, and his widow, now near fourscore and eight years old, is well reputed for good works."["N.E. Weekly News Letter."] | Paddock, Captain Zachariah Sr (I378)
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975 | This family which has been researched by a Certified Professional Researcher. Please be so kind to not make any changes until you have followed the Red Alert instructions. Thank you kindly See research on The Ancestry of Lambertje Roeloffse Suebering, 7 February 2020, 9 pages, included in her Memories. See (L9GD-W4R) by an Accredited Professional Researcher. There is no credible sources that Jeanne Demarest is the wife of Roelof Lukassen Dorland Suebering; however, a speculative, secondary source does list her as his wife. In any event, she is an End of Line | Des Mares, Jeanne (I45416)
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976 | This is from Ancestry.com, was posted anonymously. The source is being sought. The Harrisons are said to have come into England with the Norse Viking Sea Kings, who finally under Canute (1016-1035) conquered and possessed the whole of the country. They were among the "free Danes" and were the last to withstand William the Conquerer, himself of Norse Viking origin. Thus they were in England a generation or more before the time of the Battle of Hastings, Oct 14, 1066, and the period of the Doomesday Book (1085-1086), from which many old English families date their origin. Northumberland, the Danish section of England, is said to be filled with Harrisons now, and the name there is variously spelled, sometimes without an H. The name being of Danish patronymic origin. Arysen, Aertzen, which is common to this day in Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. (Richmond, Virginia Standard, No. 41, June 12, 1880). That Daniel and Robert were favorite early given names among the Harrisons of Northumberland is shown by a record of the baptism of Daniell, son of Robert Harrison in the parish of Berwick-on-Tweed, under date of December 26, 1610. Northumberland, is the northernmost shire of England. To the east it borders on the North Sea, and to the north on the River Tweed, which separates it from Scotland. Berwick, Northumberland is the farthest north of any city of England. From the old kingdom of the north, the Harrisons drifted south among the various other shires and some moved into Scotland. Directly South of Northumberland, and bordering also on the North Sea, lies the county of Durham. The county was one of the Counties Palatine; the other two being Lancashire and Cheshire. The city of Durham is the seat of the catherdral of St. Cuthbert, begun in 1095, the view of which from the river is said be surpassed by no other English cathedral. | Harrison, Vicar of York John (I10844)
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977 | This is the break with most of the other lines of Piercealls. One of hi s s o n s - H e nry Pierceall went North to Long Island , New York.. My line went first to Pennsylvania. George - John, - Joseph. The Jose p h m o v e d to Maryland, Then Richard Moved from Maryland to Kentucky in t h e e x o d us after the war. | Pearsall, Thomas Sr (I6687)
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978 | This is the break with most of the other lines of Piercealls. One of his Brothers - Henry Pierceall went North to Long Island, New York. My line went first to Pennsylvania. George - John, - Joseph. The Joseph moved to Maryland, Then Richard moved from Maryland to Kentucky in the exodus after the war. | Pearsall, George (I6688)
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979 | This is the original Brinkerhoff coming to the US in 1638. The name was spelled Brinckerhoff for the first few generations and some branches still spell it that way. I have heard that it originally was van Brinckerhoff but the van was dropped when they migrated to the US. Joris Dirkcsz Brinckerhoff sailed to New Amsterdam in 1641 aboard the ship Den Eichenboom (The Oaktree). The family name originated in Holland from their position around the 14th century as royal messengers, bringer(messenger) hoffe(court). Settled on Staten Island, 1638 under conttract with Cornelius Melyn, owner; Moved to Long Island Aug 15, 1641 after murderous Indian attack, later to Brooklyn. Owner large farm in heart of now Brooklyn. | Brinckerhoff, Joris Dirckszen (I45256)
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980 | Thomas Cornell came to the Americas around 1636 with the 2nd Winthrop Expedition along with his wife, Rebecca and many of their children. Thomas Cornell was an innkeeper in Boston who was part of the Peripheral Group in the Antinomian Controversy, a religious and political conflict in the Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1636 to 1638. Cornell sold his inn in 1643 and left for Rhode Island, where others from the Antinomian Controversy had settled in 1638 after being ordered to leave the Massachusetts Bay Colony, settling in Rhode Island. Thomas Cornell was one of the earliest settlers of Rhode Island and the Bronx and a contemporary of Roger Williams and the family of Anne Hutchinson. He is the ancestor of a number of Americans prominent in business, politics, and education. Cornell became friends with Roger Williams and co-founded the village of Westchester north of New Amsterdam (later New York City) in 1643. He returned to Rhode Island in 1644 and obtained a land grant for 100 acres in Portsmouth, RI on Aquidneck Island that became the Cornell homestead. His neighbor was Edward Hutchison, a son of Anne Hutchison from the Antinomian Controversy. In 1646, Cornell was granted a patent on an area of about four square miles that later became part of the Bronx. It was bounded by Westchester Creek, Bronx River, village of Westchester and East River and was called Cornell's Neck. The area is now known as Clason Point. | Cornell, Thomas (I45219)
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981 | Thomas Crampe/Crompe emigrated to Virginia Colony before 1624. As of the census of 16 February 1623/24 he was living on the Eastern Shore. By the Muster of 24 January 1624/25 he was sharing a home with John West on James Island. Thomas Crampe (Crump) served as Burgess for James City at the Assembly of 1631/32, representing The Neck of Land in 1632 and 1632/3-1633. Since Thomas is not on record owning land prior to 1633, it is likely he and Elizabeth lived on the late Rev. Richard Buck's property in the eastern end of Jamestown Island, acreage in which Elizabeth had a legal interest. | Crump, Thomas (I25303)
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982 | Thomas had entered Henry II's service by 1163. His first known post in t h e r o y a l administration was as sheriff of Oxfordshire (1163?4). A baron o f t h e e x c hequer from 1169 to c.1181, he was an itinerant justice in the s o u t h a n d west in 1175, and again in 1179; in December 1180 he joined th e j u s t i ciar Ranulf de Glanville and other royal justices at Lincoln in a p p r o v ing a final concord. He was custodian of the honour of Wallingford f o r t h e k i ng from 1172 to 1179. He witnessed royal documents in England f o u r t e en times between 1174 and 1179, and he was with the king in Norman d y , c . 1 181, attesting at Barfleur. He died shortly afterwards, perhaps i n 1 1 8 2 . | Basset, Thomas (I7292)
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983 | Thomas Hicks, only son to John Hicks, inherited his father intellectual vigor and character, owned 4000 acres, owned a mansion, Thomas Hicks was Captain of the Queens Co. troops in 1676. | Hicks, Judge Thomas (I8863)
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984 | Thomas Holland is a descendant of Magna Carta surety baron Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent, 3rd Baron Holand ( 1350 - 25 April 13 9 7 ) w a s a n English nobleman and a councilor of his half-brother Richard I I | Holland, 2nd Earl Of Kent Thomas (I7895)
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985 | Thomas Holland, 1st Earl of Kent (d. 1360) was an English nobleman and m i l i t a ry commander during the Hundred Years War. He was from a gentry f a m i l y i n Holland, Lancashire. In his early military career, he fought in Flanders. He was engaged, in 1 3 4 0 , i n t he English expedition into Flanders and sent, two years later, w i t h S i r J ohn D'Artevelle to Bayonne, to defend the Gascon frontier agai n s t t h e F rench. In 1343, he was again on service in France; and, in the f o l l o w ing year, had the honour of being chosen one of the founders of th e M o s t N o ble Order of the Garter. In 1346, he attended King Edward III i n t o N o r mandy in the immediate retinue of the Earl of Warwick; and, at t h e t a k i ng of Caen, the Count of Euand Guaines, Constable of France, and t h e C o u n t De Tancarville surrendered themselves to him as prisoners. At t h e B a t t le of Crâ ecy, he was one of the principal commanders in the van u n d e r t h e Prince o f Wales and he, afterwards, served at the Siege of Ca l a i s i n 1 346-7. Around the same time or before his first expedition, he married the 12- y e a r - old princess Joan Plantagenet, Joan of Kent, daughter of Edmund of W o o d s t ock, 1st Earl of Kent and Margaret Wake, granddaughter of Edward I a n d M a r g uerite of France, and sole heir of John, Earl of Kent. However, d u r i n g h is absence on foreign service, Joan, under pressure from her fam i l y , c o n tracted another marriage with William Montacute, 2nd Earl of S a l is b u ry. This second marriage was annulled in 1349, when Joan's previ o u s m a r riage with Holland was proved to the satisfaction of the papal c o m m i s sioners. Between 1353 and 1356 he was summoned to Parliament as Ba r o n d e H o lland. In 1354 Holland was the king's lieutenant in Brittany d u r i n g t he minority of the Duke of Brittany, and in 1359 co-captain-gene r a l f o r a ll the English continental possessions. His brother-in-law Joh n , E a r l o f Kent, died in 1360, and Holland became Earl of Kent in right o f h i s w i f e. He was succeeded as baron by his son Thomas, the earldom st il l b e i n g held by his wife (though the son later became Earl in his own r i g h t ) . Another son, John became Earl of Huntingdon and Duke of Exeter. | Holland, 1st Earl Of Kent Thomas (I15649)
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986 | Thomas I or Tommaso I (1178 - March 1, 1233) was Count of Savoy from 11 8 9 - 1 2 3 3 . He was the son of Humbert III of Savoy and Beatrice of Vienn o is . H i s b i rth was seen as miraculous; his monkish father had despaire d o f h a v i ng a male heir after three wives. Count Humbert sought counsel f r o m S t . A n thelm, who blessed Humbert three times, and it was seen as a p r o p h e cy come true when Thomas was born shortly after Anthelm himself di e d o n J u n e 2 6, 1178. He was named in honor of St. Thomas Becket. Thoma s p o s s es sed the martial abilities, energy, and brilliance that his fath er l a c k e d, and Savoy enjoyed a golden age under his leadership. He had t ak e n o v e r effective rule of Savoy by August 1191, and despite his youth h e b e g a n t he push north-west into new territories. He conquerored Vaud, B u g e y , a nd Carignano. He supported the Hohenstaufens, and was known as " T h o m a s the Ghibelline" due to his career as Imperial Vicar of Lombardy. I n 1 1 9 5 h e a mbushed the party of Count William I of Geneva, which was es co r t i n g the count's daughter, Marguerite, to France for her intended we d d i n g t o King Philip II of France. Thomas carried off Marguerite and ma r r i e d h er himself, producing some eight sons and six daughters. | De Savoie, Count Of Savoy Thomas (I7046)
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987 | Thomas Isaac is a very shadowy person. His existence and connections is s h o w n b y n umerous contemporary statements including marriage dispens ati o n s f o r h is descendants. He was Town Clerk of Aberdeen. | Isaac, Thomas (I7899)
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988 | Thomas Leete died in 1495, and was the son of another Thomas Leete (1423-1454), who was the son of Richard Leete (1398-1423). The Leete family are well-documented, with four brothers of the family being mentioned in the Letters Patent of King John, Henry III, and Edward I, as they had been knight-crusaders who were rewarded for their service with knighthoods and manorial estates in S.Cambridgeshire, where the family had been resident for many generations. A member of the family (John Liet) is mentioned in The Domesday Book as being a 'thegn of Edward's' (The Confessor), which might explain why he was able to keep his rank and possessions after the Norman conquest, as Edward had been as revered in Normandy as he was in England, and because John Liet had no connection to the administration of Harold Godwinson. As several family members became church wardens, their records were kept up-to-date, with their family connections and coats of arms now held in the British Library and other collections. posted Nov 24, 2023 by Julian McSweeney (wikitree) | Leete, Thomas (I10925)
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989 | Thomas Look was a collier at the Lynn Iron Works. He settled in Massachusetts, whither he had come probably from Scotland to follow his trade at the newly established iron foundry at Lynn. Thomas, the collier, became one of the original ten associates of Salisbury in 1659 who purchased Nantucket, and through this transaction his son Thomas, born June 1646, removed to that island about 1670 and took up the share as a settler. Thomas Look was married to Sarah Miller and had a son by the name of Thomas Look in 1646. | Looke, Thomas (I45578)
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990 | Thomas Prence, governor of Massachusetts, whose name is also written Pr i n c e , b ut not by himself, was born in 1600 at Lechlade in Gloucestershi r e , w h e re his family had been settled for some generations. His father w a s a p u r i tan, and emigrated to Leyden while Thomas was still young. In N o v e m b er 1621 Thomas arrived at New Plymouth, with several distinquished c o l o n i sts, in either the Fortune or the Anne. He brought a considerable f o r t u n e with him, and rapidly became a prominent citizen, though he alwa y s h a d a d i staste for public office. Having become a member of the court of assistants, Prence was elected t o s u c c e ed Winslow as governor of Massachusetts in 1634, but resigned th e f o l l o wing year on removing his residence to Duxbury. In 1637 he did g o o d s e r vice to the state in raising a corps to assist Connecticute agai n s t t h e P ecquot Indians, and in 1638 was urged to become governor again ; h e r e l u ctantly consented, making it a condition that the law requiri ng r e s i d ence at New Plymouth should be relaxed in his favour. At the e nd o f t h e y e ar he retired, but devoted himself to promoting the welfare o f t h e c o l ony. In 1641 he and others obtained a grant and founded a new s e t t l e ment at Nansett or Easthams. In 1650 he establed the Cape Cod fish e r i e s . In 1654 he was authorized by the court of assistants to constit u t e a n e w g overnment in the settlement at Kennebec. In 1657, on the death of Bradford, Prence was again chosen governor, an d s o r e m a ined until his death, through a period troubled by wars with t he I n d i a ns and internal quarrels with the quakers. Besides being gover nor , h e w a s a t one time treasurer, and on various occasions a commissio ne r, f o r t h e united colonies. But his great work was the appropriation , d e s p i te much opposition, of public revenue to the support of grammar s c h o o l s. He governed the colony with firmness and prudence, evincing en e r g y , j udgement, integrity and religious zeal. Thomas Prence, governor of Massachusetts, whose name is also written Pr i n c e , b ut not by himself, was born in 1600 at Lechlade in Gloucestershi r e , w h e re his family had been settled for some generations. His father w a s a p u r i tan, and emigrated to Leyden while Thomas was still young. In N o v e m b er 1621 Thomas arrived at New Plymouth, with several distinquished c o l o n i sts, in either the Fortune or the Anne. He brought a considerable f o r t u n e with him, and rapidly became a prominent citizen, though he alwa y s h a d a d i staste for public office. Having become a member of the court of assistants, Prence was elected t o s u c c e ed Winslow as governor of Massachusetts in 1634, but resigned th e f o l l o wing year on removing his residence to Duxbury. In 1637 he did g o o d s e r vice to the state in raising a corps to assist Connecticute agai n s t t h e P ecquot Indians, and in 1638 was urged to become governor again ; h e r e l u ctantly consented, making it a condition that the law requiri ng r e s i d ence at New Plymouth should be relaxed in his favour. At the e nd o f t h e y e ar he retired, but devoted himself to promoting the welfare o f t h e c o l ony. In 1641 he and others obtained a grant and founded a new s e t t l e ment at Nansett or Easthams. In 1650 he establed the Cape Cod fish e r i e s . In 1654 he was authorized by the court of assistants to constit u t e a n e w g overnment in the settlement at Kennebec. In 1657, on the death of Bradford, Prence was again chosen governor, an d s o r e m a ined until his death, through a period troubled by wars with t he I n d i a ns and internal quarrels with the quakers. Besides being gover nor , h e w a s a t one time treasurer, and on various occasions a commissio ne r, f o r t h e united colonies. But his great work was the appropriation , d e s p i te much opposition, of public revenue to the support of grammar s c h o o l s. He governed the colony with firmness and prudence, evincing en e r g y , j udgement, integrity and religious zeal. | Prence, Thomas (I6943)
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991 | Thomas ran an apothecary at the sign of the Three Fawns on Old Bailey Street. Thomas and his family lived in the cramped town house above his apothecary shop in the Old Bailey area of London. He was well educated and relatively prosperous. It was probably because he was a Puritan that he refused a knighthood to the King who had married a Roman Catholic. “Bromsgrove gentlemen fined for refusing a knighthood: The following is a list of gentlemen belonging to Bromsgrove who were fined for not taking the order of Knighthood on the coronation of Charles 1st (1626) Roger Lowe, John Crabbe, Walter Brace, Thomas Fownes – 10 pounds sterling each. Nicholas Lilley 9.6.8 pounds sterling. John Westwood and Richard Burford 12 pounds sterling each.” William H. Whitmore, "Notes on the Winthrop Family and its English Connections, viz: The Families of Forth, Clopton, Tyndale and Fones," NEHG Register, vol. 18, Apr 1864, p. 185. Milton Rubincam, "A Winthrop-Bernadotte Pedigree," NEHG Register, vol. 103, Oct 1949, p. 247: ANNE WINTHROP, b. 16 Jan. 1585/6; d. 16 May 1618. Married 25 Feb. 1604/5 THOMAS FONES, who died 15 April 1629. She was his first wife. (footenote says marriage was in Groton). | Fones, Thomas II (I45224)
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992 | Thomas took the oath of allegiance at New Haven on 4 April 1654, but settled at Brandford. He was an ensign in King Phillip's War, and he was elected deputy to the General Court on 10 May 1677. The earliest located record for the Harrison family in New England, is Richard Harrison, Thomas' brother, took the Oath of Allegiance 1 July 1644. Thomas's father Richard was in Branford 1 July 1646, so it is believed the family came together, settling at Branford in the New Haven Colony. | Harrison, Ensign Thomas (I9321)
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993 | Thomas, a master cutler, was reputed to have been a supporter of Cromwe l l . A c c ording to genealogy published by Theodore A. Bingham (The Bingha m F a m i l y of Connecticut), Thomas fled England with his family at the ti me o f t h e R e storation, but died on the voyage over in 1659. This often- rep ea t e d f amily tradition is apparently erroneous. The recent Bingham g en e a l o gy, compiled by Donna Bingham Munger and published in 1996 by the B i n g h a m Asssociation, notes, with ample proof, that Thomas died in 1649, n o t i n 1 6 5 9. Moreover, it is not at all certain, according to Munger, th a t A n n e a nd Thomas Jr. emigrated as late as 1659: it could have been an y t i m e a f ter 1651. It is also possible that Anne married William Backus b e f o r e s he emigrated. Backus was also a cutler of Sheffield, and his fir s t w i f e , Elizabeth, died and was buried in Sheffield on 19 February 164 4 . | Bingham, Thomas III (I32751)
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994 | Thored was a 10th century ealdorman of York, ruler of the southern half o f t h e o l d K ingdom of Northumbria on behalf of the king of England. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Thored, son of Gunner" ravaged W e s t m o reland in 966. There are speculations that "Thored was Earl of th e p a r t o f N orthumbria which was previously called Deira, maybe Yorkshir e, t h e t e r ritory being different from Northumbria. | Gunnarsson, Ealdorman Of Deira Thored (I7122)
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995 | Through his wife Emma, he inherited a large property in central Normand y , i n c l uding the honours of Pacy, Jouy, and Cocherel on the Eure, lands d e p e n d ant on Breteuil and centred on Ivry, the earliest demesne of the N o r m a n ' dukes' (D . C. Douglas, William the Conqueror, pp. 89-90, 1964). T h e s e l a nds included the fief of Freschenes. Guardian to the young Duke William (later known as William the Conquero r ) , h e w a s a nephew of Duchess Gunnora. A number of Norman barons would n o t a c c e pt an illegitimate son as their leader and in 1040 an attempt wa s m a d e t o k ill William (the Conqueror). The plot failed but they did ki ll t h e g u a rdians, one of whom was Osbern. He was murdered by William d e M o n g o mery. | Cripon, The Steward The Seneschal Osbern (I7303)
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996 | Through his wife Emma, he inherited a large property in central Normand y , i n c l uding the honours of Pacy, Jouy, and Cocherel on the Eure, lands d e p e n d ant on Breteuil and centred on Ivry, the earliest demesne of the N o r m a n ' dukes' . These lands included the fief of Freschenes. | Ivry, Emma (I7360)
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997 | Timothy graduated from Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA, in 1811. In June of 1813, he married Ann Robinson Maddox in Alexandria, District of Columbia. In 1829, his nomination to serve as a Naval Chaplain (Presbyterian) was approved by Congress. He served as a U.S. Naval Chaplain until 1862, when he retired from active duty. During the Civil War, Timothy Harrison lived in the District of Columbia with his daughter and son-in-law, Augusta and McPherson Barnitz. The Rev. Timothy J. Harrison died on 10 March 1865. His wife, Ann Harrison, remained on their 359-acre dairy farm in Gainesville, Virginia. The farm and family home, were severely affected by the two battles at Manassas -- the farm being immediately adjacent to the battlefield. By the law of 21 December 1861, any officer of the Navy was eligible for retirement "whose name had been borne on the Naval Register forty-five years" or who had attained the age of sixty-two.* This provision made it possible for a number of the older officers to turn over the responsibilities of their office to younger men during the critical days of the war. In the 1862 Navy Register, the following seven chaplains were listed as having been retired under this law: Charles Stewart, T. J. Harrison, George Jones, Moses Chase, J. W. Newton, John Watson, and Henry Wood. Actually, at least half of the chaplains listed as retired continued on duty during the war. | Harrison, Reverend Timothy James (I307)
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998 | Titles of Sir Robert de Brus in right of his 2nd wife (Royal Ancestry) Governor of Carlisle Castle Sheriff of Cumberland 1255, 1265 Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale (Robert de Brus), was a feudal lord , J u s t i ce and Constable of Scotland and England, a Regent of Scotland , a n d a l e a d ing competitor to be King of Scotland in 1290-92 in the Great C a us e . Robert was also Lord of Hartlepool in county Durham and Writtle and Hat f i e l d B roadoak in Essex, England, and through his marriages obtained th e v i l l a ge of Ripe, in Sussex, and the Lordship of Ireby in Cumberland . F o l l o w ing the defeat of Simon de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham(1265) , R o b e r t was granted the estates of the former rebel barons Walter de F au c o n b erg and John de Melsa. Henry III also re-appointed Robert a Just i c e , a n d Constable of Carlisle Castle and keeper of the Castle there in 1 2 6 7 , a p o sition he had been dismissed from in 1255, for his support dur i n g t h e r ebellion. | Bruce, Regent of Scotland Robert (I7856)
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999 | Titles of William de Valance (Royal Ancestry): Constable and Goodrich Castles 1247 Warden of the Town and Castle of Hertford 1247, 1251 Steward of the manors of Stamford and Grantham, Lincolnshire 1258 Privy Councillor Constable of Kilgarran Castle 1275, 1282 Seneschal of the Agenois 1279 Constable and Keeper of Bergavenny Castle 1281 Guardian an Lieutenant of England 1285 and in the right of his wife: Lord (sometimes styled Earl) of Pembroke:Lord of the towns of Ross, C a r n b o t he, and Clumene, co. Wexford, Ireland | Lusignan, 1st Earl of Pembroke William Guillaume (I779)
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1000 | Titles: Keeper of the City of York and of the whole county Warden of the Marches towards Carlisle*Captain and Keeper of Newcastl e - U p o n -Tyne and of the county of Northumberland Keeper of Scarborough and Malton Castles | Mowbray, John I (I670)
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1001 | Titles: Lord of Gower in Wales Keeper of Berwick-on-Tweed | Mowbray, John (I1298)
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1002 | Took th e Welsh lordships of Radnor and Builth before the end of the 11 t h c e n t ury; Philip also acquired a claim to the baronies of Totnes and B a r n s t a ple, Devon, through his marriage to Aenor, daughter of Juhel of T o t n e s . | De Braose, Lord Of Briouze And Bramber Philip (I7515)
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1003 | Trahaearn was the rightful ruler of Arwystli, the region around Llanidl o e s , b u t in 1075, when Bleddyn ap Cynfyn died, he seized Gwynedd. Gruf f u d d a p C ynan of the old Venedotian house disputed his claim immediatel y , a n d d e feated Trahaearn ap Caradox at Dyffryn Glyngin in Meirionydd. H o w e v e r, a subsequent victory by Trahaearn at Bron y Erw forced Gruffudd i n t o e x i le in Ireland. In 1078 Trahaearn killed King Rhys ab Owain of South Wales at Goodwick b u t t h i s b rought Gruffudd ap Cynan and Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr into an allia n c e w h i ch was succedssful in killing Trahaearn at the battle of Mynydd C a r n i n 1 0 81. | ap Caradog, Trahaearn (I9479)
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1004 | Tristram Ciffin, Thomas Macy, and Christopher Hussey were among the ten "original purchasers" of Nantucket Island for 30 pounds and two beaver "Hatts"! Jane Godfrey's second was another-he brought her and her Bunker children to the island. When a young man he spent some time in Holland where he met Theodate, the eldest daughter of Rev. Stephen Bachelor, who he desired to marry. Her father gave his consent contingent on their going to America with him. They arrived in Boston in 1632 on the ship William and Francis, settling first in Lynn. | Hussey, Captain Christopher (I45592)
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1005 | Tristram Coffin's Descendants, pg 309 by Wm. Coffin He married Mary Bunker, daughter of George and Jane Bunker about 1668-69. He took care of his father and mother as they grew older and succeeded his father in the management of the estate. "Tristram reversed the old English law of leaving to the eldest son his land, but he gave all land to his youngest son, Stephen. Stephen fathered 10 children. Their 5th child married Peter Folger and became the grandmother and grandfather of Benjamin Franklin." Sources of information: 1. Mary Elizabeth Sinnott, Annals of the Sinnott, Rogers, Coffin, Carlies, Reeves, Bodine and Allied Families (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1905), pp. 65-84. 2. Sylvanus J. Macy, “The Coffin Family,” The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 24 (April 1870): 149-154; citing American Ancestors ( | Coffin, Stephen (I45582)
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1006 | Tuathal mac Augaire, king of Laigin, d. 958 He was the son of Augaire m a c A i l e lla, king of Laigin, d. 917, having been killed in the Battle of C e n n f u ait by Sitric ua Imair Twice made war on the king of Hy Ceansallagh. Murchadh, son of Finn, w a s m o r t ally wounded by Tuathal; A victory was gained over the people of L a i g h i s and the Ui-Faircheallain by Tuathal, son of Ugaire, in which man y w e r e s l ain; and Cuilen, son of Gusan, was taken prisoner | Mac Augaire, King Of Laigin Tuathal (I7001)
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1007 | Two Godfrey wives of George Bunker Elizabeth Godfrey was the first wife of George Bunker, mother of Elizabeth and William, born in England | Godfrey, Elizabeth (I45643)
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1008 | Two of Charlemagne's children are easily confused because both were cal l e d P e p in: Pepin, called Pepin the Hunchback, was born about 770 to Charlemagne an d H i m i l trude who was either his mistress or wife according to Germanic c u s t o m . He is not known to have had children. Carloman, was named Carloman at birth about 777 to Charlemagne and his w i f e H i l degard, but baptized with the name Pepin in 781. As Pepin, he be c a m e K i ng of Italy. Pepin or Pippin (777 - 8 July 810) was King of Italy from 781 until his d e a t h i n 8 10. Born Carloman, he was the third son of Charlemagne (his se c o n d b y Q ueen Hildegard). Carloman was renamed Pepin upon his baptism i n 7 8 1 , w h ere he was also crowned as king of the Lombard Kingdom his fat he r h a d c o nquered. Pepin ruled the kingdom from a young age under Charl e ma g n e , but predeceased his father. His son Bernard was named king of I t a l y a f ter him, and his descendants were the longest-surviving direct m a l e l i n e of the Carolingian dynasty. In 781, Charlemagne and Hildegard brought Carloman along with his young e r b r o t her Louis the Pious and sisters Rotrude and Bertha, daughter of C h a r l e magne to Rome at Adrian's request. Carloman was four years old, bu t h i s p a r ents had delayed his baptism so that the Pope could perform it . C a r l o man was baptized, and Adrian then crowned him as king of the Lom ba r d s ( l ater styled king of Italy) and his brother Louis as king of Aqu i t a i n e. As part of Carloman's baptism, he was renamed Pepin, now sharin g a n a m e w i th his half-brother. The reason behind the name change is ob scur e , b u t i t was likely chosen to evoke the memory of his grandfather P ep i n t h e S hort, remembered as a staunch ally of the papacy, and this le g a c y w a s important to emphasize for the young king who was to rule Ital y . | Carolingian, King of Italy Carloman (I9430)
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1009 | Two Richard Butler's in Connecticut Please look in Memories at Savage's "Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England" Volume I:321 description of the two Richard Butler. This Richard Butler of Stratford should not be confused with the Richard Butler of Hartford. | Butler, Richard of Stratford (I45191)
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1010 | Undocumented research notes moved here from life history [1642] JOANNA KEMBER was born about 1584, of Butler’s in Brixton, Devon, England, to Robert Kember (1556-1612) and Anne Moullinge (1560-1626.) She married Peter Coffyn about 1604 of Brixton, Plymouth, Devonshire, England. She immigrated in 1642 from England to Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, with her son Tristram and family, and two daughters Eunice and Mary. | Kember, Joanna (I12722)
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1011 | Until he became Duke of Aquitaine, he known as Guy-Geoffrey. He adopte d t h e f i r st name GUILLAUME when he succeeded his brother in 1058 as GUI LL A U M E V III Duke of Aquitaine, GUILLAUME VI Comte de Poitou. He extende d h i s t e r ritories, confirming his authority in Gascogne and pushing as f a r a s T o u louse. He took part in the capture of Barbastro from the Moors i n 1 0 6 4 , a lthough the town was lost soon after. William VIII (c. 1025 - 25 September 1086), born Guy-Geoffrey (Gui-Geof f r o i ) , was duke of Gascony (1052-1086), and then duke of Aquitaine and c o u n t o f P oitiers (as William VI) between 1058 and 1086, succeeding his b r o t h e r William VII (Pierre-Guillaume). Guy-Geoffroy was the youngest son of William V of Aquitaine by his thir d w i f e A g nes of Burgundy.[1] He was the brother-in-law of Henry III, Ho ly R o m a n E mperor who had married his sister, Agnes de Poitou. He became Duke of Gascony in 1052 during his older brother William VII' s r u l e . G ascony had come to Aquitanian rule through William V's marriag e t o P r i s ca (a.k.a. Brisce) of Gascony, the sister of Duke Sans VI Guil he m o f G a s cony. William VIII was one of the leaders of the allied army called to help R a m i r o I o f Aragon in the Siege of Barbastro (1064).[2] This expedition w a s t h e f i rst campaign organized by the papacy, namely Pope Alexander II , [ 3 ] a g ainst a Muslim town and stronghold in the Emirate of Zaragoza, a n d t h e p r ecursor of the later Crusades movement. Aragon and its allies c o n q u e red the city, killed and enslaved its inhabitants and collected an i m p o r t ant booty. William married three times and had at least five children. After he di v o r c e d his first two wives, the first due to infertility, he married a t h i r d t i me to a much younger woman who was also his cousin Robert I of B u r g u n dy's daughter. This marriage produced a son, but William VIII had t o v i s i t R ome in the early 1070s to persuade the pope to recognize his c hi l d r e n from his third marriage as legitimate. First wife: Garsende [fr] of Périgord, daughter of Count Aldabert II of P é r i g o rd (divorced November 1058), no children. She became a nun at Sain t e s . Second wife: Matoeda (divorced May 1068) Agnes, married Alfonso VI of Castile Third wife: Hildegarde of Burgundy[a] (daughter of duke Robert I of Bur g u n d y ) Agnes (died 1097), married Peter I of Aragon William IX of Aquitaine, his heir | Aquitaine, Duke of Aquitaine Guy-Geoffrey VIII (I9674)
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1012 | Upon the death of his uncle John, his mother's brother, he inherited th e v a s t e s tate of the family of Warenne and he assumed the title of Earl o f S u r r e ly, settling the estate in 1366. He was beheaded. | Fitzalan, 9th Earl Of Arundel Richard (I8018)
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1013 | Ursula SCOTT was christened as Urslaye Scoote on 14 Feb 1598 at St. Nicolas, Rattlesden, Suffolk, daughter of Henry and Martha Scoote. Ursula married Richard Kimball, son of Henry Kimball and Johane by 1615. She, along with her husband, children, brother Thomas Scott and mother Martha, on the ship 'Elizabeth' sailing April 10, 1634 | Scott, Ursula (I45624)
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1014 | Venerated in the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church Feast Days: September 6 & December 17 She was buried in Saint Begga's Collegiate Church in Andenne. | Pippinid, Saint Begga (I43883)
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1015 | Virginia MacDonald McCall, 13083 Bradwell Ave, Sylmar Ca 91342 2) Genealogies of Long Island Families from N.Y. Gen. & Biog. Record, Vol I & II. 3) End of Line: (Also for his unknown wife) There is absolutely no documentation to continue this line. A Red Alert has been placed on this Family as it has been extensively researched by a Certified Professional Researcher. See two research projects totaling 26 pages in son's (Captain Jan Gerritsen Strycker M7S7-VHJ) Note Section. Both of which completed by an Accredited Professional Researcher | Strycker, Gerret Hermans (I45417)
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1016 | Walter de Beauchamp (1192/3 - 1236)[1] was the second son and eventual h e i r o f W i lliam (II) de Beauchamp, who was lord of Elmley Castle in Worc e s t e r shire, and hereditary castellan of Worcester and sheriff of the co u n t y . A t William's death in 1197, his heir was his eldest son William, a m i n o r w h o died before Michaelmas 1211, when Walter was in the custody of R o g e r M o rtimer (d. 1214) and his wife, Isabel. Walter married their daug h t e r J o hanna in 1212 (she died in 1225), and was in possession of his b a r o n y b y 1214. He obtained his shrievalty on 19 August 1215, but lost i t w h e n , w ith nineteen of his knights, he deserted to the rebels in May 1 2 1 6 . H e r eturned to his allegiance to King John in August 1216, however , w h e n h e w as reinstated in his lands. Beauchamp witnessed the reissue of Magna Carta on 11 November 1216, and i n M a r c h 1 217 he was restored to his shrievalty and castellanship, and b ec a m e k e eper of the royal forests in Worcestershire. He also witnessed t h e f u r t her reissue of Magna Carta on 11 February 1225. In 1225 or later , h e m a r r ied his second wife, Angaret, who died between 1280 and 1283. | De Beauchamp, Walter (I7842)
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1017 | Walter de Peshale resided in Shropshire and was very closely associated w i t h t h e f amily of Fitz Alan (ancestors of the Stuarts). He is mentioned i n t h e w i l l of Fitz Alan, Lord of Arundel as Master Walter de Peshale, i nd i c a t ingat that time that he was a doctor of medicine. | De Peshall, Walter (I1066)
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1018 | Walter Hore is mentioned in the Cheltenham Manorial Survey of 1440 as owning 1 messuage and half virgate formerly belonging to Thomas Wager, previously John Wery. | Hore, Walter (I45041)
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1019 | Walter is believed to be a descendant of the Flemish house of Freskyn. His daughter and heiress, Egidia, married Thomas Kinnaird. | Moray of Skelbo and Culpin, Walter (I14914)
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1020 | Walter was born about 1450. He passed away after 1522. The Military Survey of Gloucestershire 1522, was called for by the then King Henry V111, he was aware that there may be an upcoming war and wanted to know the worth of each of his subjects and who would be fit and able to bear arms. In the survey there are only 16 men listed for Leckhampton, three of which were the Hore family, out of the 16 men listed only one was recorded as able to bear arms. Walter Hore was born about 1450 in Leckhampton, Gloucestershire, the only record found so far is the entry in the 1522 survey - he was assessed as being worth £3 pounds, with Robert Hore £4 and Richard Hore £5. By 1551 there were only 93 communicants in 20 households registered in Leckhampton, this gives us an idea of how small the village of Leckhampton was. (Communicant -a church member entitled to receive communion, children were deemed ready to take communion at the age of discretion, the age of 7 or 8, or even younger, the age of discretion also applied to when the church deemed it was okay for young girls to be betrothed in marriage). | Hore, Walter (I45039)
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1021 | Walter, Steward of Dundonald (c. 1198-1246) was 3rd hereditary High Ste w a r d o f S cotland and Justiciar of Scotia. He witnessed a charter by Ki n g A l e x ander II, under the designation of "Walterus filius Alani, Senes c a l l u s, Justiciar Scotiae" and it may be that seal which Nisbet describ e d p e r t aining to Walter Hereditary High Steward of Scotland. Around the s e a l i t s t ates "Sigill. Walteri filii Allani". | Stewart, 3rd High Steward Of Scotland Walter (I7224)
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1022 | Waltheof was involved in a revolt, although he never openly rebelled ag a i n s t t he King. Nevertheless, he was jailed and after more than a year w a s e x e c uted by beheading on St Giles's Hill outside Winchester on 31 Ma y 1 0 7 6 . H e spent almost a year in confinement before being beheaded on M a y 3 1 , 1 0 76 at St. Giles's Hill, near Winchester. He was said to have s p e n t t h e months of his captivity in prayer and fasting. Many people bel i e v e d i n his innocence and were surprised when the execution was carrie d o u t . "Waltheof was the last of the Old English earls to survive under Willia m I , h i s e x ecution for treason in 1076 marking a significant stage in t he a r i s t ocratic and tenurial revolution which followed 1066. As one of t h e f e w E n glish magnates not from the Godwin faction, he accepted and wa s a c c e p ted by William I, witnessing royal charters and remaining loyal t o t h e n e w r egime until 1069 when he joined with the Danes in their inva si o n o f N o rthumbria. [[Category: 11th Century]][[Category: Honour of Fotheringhay]][[Categor y : E a r ls of Northampton]][[Category:Earls of Huntingdon]] == Biography == }'''Waltheof''' of Bamburgh, Earl of Northumbria (1050 - 31 May 1076) === Titles ===Earl of Huntingdon and Northampton.Cockayne, Gibbs e t a l . , C o mplete Peerage, 2nd ed. Vol.6 "Huntingdon" p.638. Histor ia n A n n W i lliams also describes him as an Earl of Bamburgh (but not of a l l N o r t humbria).Williams, Ann (1995) ''The English and the N o r m a n C onquest'' [https://books.google.be/books?id=Su1IbQKzocsC&lpg=PA5 8 & v q = judith&pg=PA60 p.60] } === Parents === Siward, Earl of Northumbria (1041-55) and Aelflaed, daughter of Aldred, e a r l o f B e rnicaThe Battle Abbey roll : with some account of the Nor m a n l i n eages. London: J. Murray, 1889; Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian e d . , 1 8 8 7, p.105 Digital Image (Statue); second son; Waltheof may have b e e n b o r n about 1050, and it was later believed that Siward intended him t o r u l e n o rth of the Tees. The death in battle in 1054 of a much older b ro t h e r , Osbearn, made Waltheof his father's heir, but too young to succ e e d a s e a rl of Northumbria when Siward himself died in 1055. === Marriage === : m. Judith of Lens 1070. Issue: 2 dau.Judith's page says she had 3 k i d s ; m a rriage to cement Waltheof into the new ruling group around Willi a m . W a l theof and Judith had two daughters, Maud and Alice (also known a s J u d i t h). :* Maud, Countess of Huntingon ::: m.1 Simon St. Liz de Senlis ::: m.2 David I of Scotland :* Alice (Adeliza, etc.) === Property === By 1066 Waltheof owned manors in eight counties, mostly in the east mid l a n d s ( Huntingdonshire, Northamptonshire, Leicestershire, Rutland, and L i n c o l nshire), but also two big manors near London (Tottenham and Waltha m s t o w ) and the large soke of Hallamshire in the West Riding of Yorkshir e . === Execution === Waltheof was involved in a revolt, although he never openly rebelled ag a i n s t t he King. Nevertheless, he was jailed and after more than a year w a s e x e c uted by beheading on St Giles's Hill outside Winchester on 31 Ma y 1 0 7 6 . He spent almost a year in confinement before being beheaded o n M a y 3 1 , 1 076 at St. Giles's Hill, near Winchester. He was said to hav e s p e n t t he months of his captivity in prayer and fasting. Many people b e l i e v ed in his innocence and were surprised when the execution was carr i e d o u t . "Waltheof was the last of the Old English earls to survive under Willia m I , h i s e x ecution for treason in 1076 marking a significant stage in t he a r i s t ocratic and tenurial revolution which followed 1066. As one of the few English magnates not from the Godwin faction, he acce p t e d a n d was accepted by William I, witnessing royal charters and remai n i n g l o yal to the new regime until 1069 when he joined with the Danes i n t h e i r i nvasion of Northumbria. He was prominent in their capture of York, hoping, no doubt, to be rest o r e d t o h is father's position. This opportunism is perhaps more charact e r i s t ic of English magnate reactions to the political turmoil of 1065-7 0 t h a n a n y supposed national feeling. However, the revolt and invasion w e r e d e f eated by William's winter campaign of 1069-70. It is a measure of William's insecurity that when Waltheof submitted in 1 0 7 0 h e w a s restored to royal favour and, in 1072, added the earldom of N o r t h u mbria to his holdings. To bind him more tightly to the Norman disp e n s a t ion, William gave him his niece Judith in marriage. But in 1075, W a l t h e of was implicated in the largely French revolt led by Ralph, earl o f N o r f o lk, and Roger, earl of Hereford. Despite his lack of military ac ti o n , h i s confession, apparent contrition and the support of Archbishop L a n f r a nc, Waltheof was executed on 31 May 1076. The king's motives are obscure. Waltheof was the only prominent English m a n t o b e e xecuted in the reign. Perhaps his removal was part of Willia m ' s j u s tifiably nervous response to the problem of controlling Northumb r i a . I t m ay have made sense to take the chance to remove a potential -- - a n d p r o ven --- focus of northern discontent. Yet Waltheof's heirs wer e n o t h a r ried, one daughter, Matilda, marrying David I of Scotland (104 2- 5 3 ) , a nd another Ralph IV of Tosny, a leading Norman baron. Waltheof is a significant reminder that the period around 1066 was tran s i t i o nal, with no necessarily definite beginnings or endings. Waltheof a d a p t e d to the new order, falling foul, it seems, of the ambitions and s c h e m e s of others, not least of parvenus Frenchmen. He married into the n e w e l i t e, yet embodied the old. Heir to both English and Anglo-Danish t r a d i t ions, it was he who completed one of the most celebrated of Anglo- S a x o n b lood-feuds. In 1016, Uchtred, earl of Northumbria was murdered by a northern noblem a n c a l l ed Thurbrand. He was, in turn, killed by Uchtred's son and succe s s o r , E aldred, who was himself slain by Thurbrand's son, Carl. Waltheof ' s m o t h er was Ealdred's daughter and he avenged his great-grandfather a n d g r a n dfather by massacring a number of Carl's sons. === Burial === bur. Crowland Abbey where,body initially thrown in a ditch, but wa s r e t r i eved and buried in chapter house of Croyland Abbey. (Royal Ancestry) Waltheof, Earl of Northumberland was executed at Winch e s t e r , Hampshire 31 May 1075 (or 1076). Two weeks afterwards the king a l l o w e d his body to be removed to Croyland Abbey, Lincolnshire, where th e a b b o t b uried him in the chapterhouse.; his remains were subsequently t r a n s l ated into the church near the altar. Waltheof had posthumous fame in a cult that venerated him as a saint by t h e m i d - twelfth centuryCult of martyrdom: In 1092, after a fire in t h e c h a p ter house, the abbot had Waltheof's body moved to a prominent pl a c e i n t h e abbey church. When the coffin was opened, it is reported tha t t h e c o r pse was found to be intact with the severed head re-joined to t h e t r u n k. This was regarded as a miracle, and the abbey, which had a fi n a n c i al interest in the matter began to publicise it. As a result, pilg r i m s b e gan to visit Waltheof's tomb. : After a few years healing miracles began to occur in the vicinity of W a l t h e of's tomb, often involving the restoration of the pilgrim's lost s i g h t . Yet his career in the north shows that not far beneath the m e a s u r ed tones of Norman propagandists or the efficient gloss of English b u r e a u cratic procedures simmered the violence of Dark Age epic. Who's Who in Early Medieval England, Christopher Tyerman, Shephear d - W a l wyn, Ltd., London, 1996; Encyclop�dia Britannica CD, 1997; Per Jim W e b e r < /ref> == Sources == * Powlett, Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina. ''[[Spa c e : T h e Battle Abbey Roll with some Account of the Norman Lineages|The B a t t l e A bbey Roll with some Account of the Norman Lineages]]'' (John Mur r a y , L o n don, 1889) * Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.3. [fmg.ac]. * Haydn, J. (1841). [[Space: Haydn's Dictionary of Dates and Universal I n f o r m ation|Haydn's Dictionary of Dates and Universal Information]], (1s t e d , p p . 63). London: Edward Moxon and Co. [https://books.google.com/bo ok s ? i d =eo3bC8OL_CIC&pg=PA63 Google Books].::* "Beheading - or ''Decolla t i o ' ' o f the Romans, introduced into England from Normandy, (as a less i g n o m i nious mode of putting high criminals to death) by William the Conq u e r o r , 1074, when Watheof, earl of Huntingdon, Northampton, and Northum b e r l a nd, was first so executed. - Salmon's Chron." * Vivian, J.L., ''[[Space:The Visitations of Cornwall Comprising the He r a l d s ' Visitations of 1530, 1573 & 1620|The Visitations of Cornwall Com p r i s i ng the Heralds' Visitations of 1530, 1573 & 1620]]'' (William Poll a r d & C o . , Exeter, 1887) p.105 Digital Image (Statue) * Who's Who in Early Medieval England, Christopher Tyerman, Shepheard-W a l w y n , Ltd., London, 1996; Encyclop�dia Britannica CD, 1997 * [[Wikipedia: Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria]] * ''[[Space:Reports and Papers of the Architectural and Archaeological S o c i e t ies of the Counties of Lincoln and Northampton|Reports and Papers] ] o f t h e A r chitectural and Archaeological Societies of the Counties of L i nc o l n a nd Northampton'' (Savill and Edwards, London, 1850) Vol. 1, [ht t p s : / /archive.org/stream/reportspapersofa01asso#page/236/mode/1up Page 2 3 6 ] | of Northumbria, Earl Of Northumberland Waltheof (I7039)
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1023 | Was a favorite of KingEdward II and of the faction of the Spensers. He f e l l p r e y to the fury of the people, and was beheaded at Hereford, by th e p r o c u rement of Mortimer, 1326 | Fitzalan, 9th Earl Of Arundel Edmund (I8044)
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1024 | Was known before his elevation to the peerage as the Lord of Argyll, be i n g t h e f irst to take his name from the county. An old chronicler says o f h i m , " b eing a person of great parts, he arrived to very high advancem en t s , a s w ell in hounour as estate." Know Titles: 1st Lord of Lochow Lord of Argyll His Majesty's Justice General Member of the Privy Council Lieutenant of the Shire of Argyll Baron Campbell | Campbell, 1st Lord Campbell Duncan (I1082)
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1025 | Was one of the grantees named by King Charles II of England, in Connect i c u t c h arter of 1662 | Clark, John (I25899)
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1026 | We know but little of her life till 1692, when that terrible witchcraft d e l u s i on spread over Salem Village and vicinity. Among those to fall a v i c t i m w as Mary Esty. Her sister Rebecca Nurse, about thirteen years old e r , h a d p reviously been accused, ISAAC ESTY AND SOME OF HIS DESCENDANTS . f o u n d guilty and executed July 19, 1692. Mary Esty was arrested April 2 1 , 1 6 9 2, kept in jail till May 18, when she was released. On May 21, a s e c o n d w arrant was procured and she was taken from her home at midnight, c a r r i e d to Salem jail and placed in chains. She was tried, found guilty a n d c o n d emned to death, and on the 22nd of September, 1692, she was exec u t e d w i th seven others.She was the mother of nine children, a woman of s o u n d j u dgment and exalted Christian character. She asked not for her o w n l i f e ; only that other innocent blood might not be shed, and for thi s u n c o n sciousness of self has been called " the self-forgetful." | Towne, Mary (I27327)
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1027 | We know from her death certificate and her own Bible entries that her maiden name was Saunders, she was born in Maury Co. TN and that she married Jesse Albert Byrd in Maury Co. TN. The land which became Maury Co. was originally in Davidson Co. (Nashville). Isabelle also identified herself as being from Nashville. In 1805 Williamson Co. was carved out of Davidson Co. and Maury Co. out of Williamson in 1807. Her father was R.M. Saunders, (we now know Robert M. Saunders, Jr.) born in SC, or possibly NC territory later becoming Tennessee, and mother, Sophia Josephine Phillips was listed on most census records as born in Tennessee. One source, undocumented, states middle initial stands for MEADE. Another source state middle name is Marguerite. Isabella, herself, never wrote more than "M" in her Bible. Wallace Smith, in his book "Prodigal Sons" asserts that "Isabella was originally a McCullough (in fact her stepfather was McCullough) and her parents had come from the mountains of Tennessee." | Saunders, Isabella Meade (I8282)
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1028 | Welf (Hwelf) is the earliest documented ancestor of the Welf dynasty (s o m e t i mes known as Guelph, Guelf, Guelfe). His name is perhaps a shorte n e d f o r m of Welfhard or Bernwelf.Cawley; Hiebl The first time he appears in the records is in the ''Gesta Hludowici im p e r a t oris'' (Life of Emperor Louis the Pious), written by [https://en.w i k i p e dia.org/wiki/Thegan_of_Trier Thegan of Trier] in about 836-837, | von Bayern, Welf (I9614)
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1029 | Went to Jerusalem in 992 to atone for his sins | Montdidier, Lord Of Ramerupt Hildouin (I7231)
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1030 | Went to MO with Father and killed in train wreck in Parma, MO | Buckman, Jerome Cleveland (I36058)
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1031 | When Dorothy Jones was born in 1603, in Queen Camel, Somerset, England, her father, George Jones, was 31 and her mother, Agnes Thacker, was 25. Richard Sears and Anthony Thacher married sisters, Dorothy and Elizabeth Jones, who were of Dinder, co. Somerset, England, Dorothy marrying Richard in 1632, Elizabeth marying Anthony, early in 1635. Their brother was Richard Jones who came to New England in 1635 and settled in Dorchester, Mass." | Jones, Dorothy Thatcher (I224)
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1032 | When Hugh Giffard III was the age of 9, he was entered into a verbal bo n d o f m a r riage with the 11 year old Elizabeth Mure, daughter of Sir Ada m M u r e o f R owallan. The date of this agreement was about the year 1331. T h i s m a r riage was never ratified or consummated, and the bond was dissol v e d b y P a pal authority on Oct. 12,1344. The daughter of Sir Adam Mure of Rowallan, she initially became the Ste w a r d ' s mistress. He married her in 1336, but the marriage was criticize d a s u n c a nonical, so he remarried her in 1349 following a Papal Dispens at io n d a t ed at Avignon 22 November 1347. She died before her husband in h e ri t e d the crown at the rather advanced age of 54, and he married agai n ( P a p a l Dispensation dated 2 May 1355), so she was never queen of Scot la n d . | Mure of Rowallan, Countess of Atholl Elizabeth (I8005)
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1033 | When Mary Mills was born in 1610 in Stratford Tony, Wiltshire, England, t o J o h n a n d Susanna. She married Daniel Abbott in 1634 in Boston, Massac hu s e t t s. They had children during their marriage. She died as a young m o t h e r i n 1643 in Providence, Rhode Island, at the age of 33, and was bu r i e d i n B ristol, Rhode Island. - According to the "Enroulments of Burials" in Providence RI: "Mary Abb o t t w i f e unto Daniell Abbott of this town of Providence departed this l i f e i n t h e year 1643, or thereabouts." They had two children: Mary Walling & Daniel. Source: Bob Anderson's The Winthrop Fleet Massachusetts Bay Company: Im m i g r a nts to New England, 1629-1630 (an expedition that formed the nucle u s o f t h e M assachusetts Bay Colony.) www.americanancestors.org | Mills, Mary (I25732)
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1034 | When they married their families were against it. The MacDonalds said the MacIntoshes were sheep herders and the MacIntoshes said the MacDonalds were sheep stealers. Both held the other in contempt | MacDonald, James (I8287)
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1035 | Wigeric or Wideric (German: Wigerich; French: Wigéric or Wéderic; died b e f o r e 9 23) was a Frankish nobleman and the count of the Bidgau (pagus B e d e n s is) and held the rights of a count within the city of Trier. He re c e i v e d also the advocacy of the Abbey of Saint Rumbold at Mechelen from K i n g C h a rles the Simple of West Francia. From 915 or 916, he was the cou n t p a l a tine of Lotharingia. He was the founder of the House of Ardennes . | Lothringen, Count of the Bidgau Wigerich (I9624)
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1036 | Wikipedia article on M.P. Van der Voort https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Pauluzen_Van_der_Voort?wprov=sfla1 In New York (it was not New York it was New Amsterdam), Michael went by his Dutch name, Michiel Pauluszen, which means "Michael son of Paul". He added Vandervoort to his name about 1650. In "The Vanderfords-Early Settlers of America" by Cheryl Lynds Jensen (1992) we read: Exactly when Michael Paul Vanderford came to New York is undocumented, but it was no doubt some years prior to 1640, when he and Maria Rapalje were married. Considering the shortage of single women, George Rapalje would have had plenty of offers for the hand of his young daughter, Maria, and would have selected someone established and a "Good match". It is probable that Michael had been employed by the Dutch West India Company in some trade capacity, leaving the Company prior to marrying Maria. This is difficult to verify, however, as all of the early documents and archives relating to the Dutch occupation of New Netherland were sold at auction as scrap sometime around 1820, and were never seen again. Soon after Michael and Maria were married, Michael contracted to purchase land close to George Rapalje but did not complete the transaction, due to the Indian uprisings... The fort was not large enough to shelter all the inhabitants or protect their houses, so in 1653 it was decided to construct a palisade, or wall, along the upper limit of the town of New Amsterdam. On April 20th, it was resolved that "the citizens without exception should begin immediately digging a ditch from the East river to the North (Hudson) river, 4 to 5 feet deep and 11 to 12 feet wide at the top sloping in a little towards the bottom" and that carpenters should "be urged to prepare jointly the stakes and rails...The palisades, completed early in July, protected the southern tip of Manhattan Island, running from the Hudson to the East River. It was a line of solid planks, tapered at the top and set close together, held together by cross timbers, with anearthen ramp behind. The road next to this wall became Wall Street, the financial center of New York. Michael used his sloop to deliver 14 loads of lumber to be used in the construction of the palisades. In September, his wife, Maria, had to go to court to demand payment from the City. Michael was awarded 10 guilders for each load....On January 21, 1647 Michael was granted Lot 2 of Block N Castello Plan, on which was built a large stone brewery. He later obtained part of Lot 7, and built the house in which his family lived, now 49 Stone Street. George Rapalje's family lived on Lot 5 of Block G, right next to the wall of the fort.... Later, Peter Stuyvestant took steps to organize the town. He hired surveyors to define the property lines and required that anyone intending to build submit plans for approval by the surveyors... In 1657 Stuyvestant raised considerable monies to rebuild the city's defenses by introducing the title of "burgher." Michael became one of the 204 small burghers, at a cost of 25 florins. There were also 20 "great burghers," who held positions in the government, Company or military, and paid 50 florins. Being a burgher gave you the right to engage in trade and hold office.... At this time Maryland offered land for settlement, and Michael decided to move. In 1658 and 1659 he sold most of his holdings in New Amsterdam and in 1660 his entire family sailed for the eastern shore of Maryland. Four years later Peter Stuyvestant surrendered New Amsterdam to the British. | Vandervoort, Michael Paulus (I45298)
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1037 | William (III) de Beauchamp (c. 1215 - 1269[1]) was an English baron and h e r e d i tary sheriff. He was born and lived in Elmley Castle in Worcestershire, the eldest so n o f W a l t er de Beauchamp and his wife Johanna de Mortimer, daughter of R o ge r M o r timer of Wigmore. On the death of his father in 1236 he became hereditary Sheriff of Worc e s t e r shire, which title he held until his own death. He also gained the t i t l e o f B aron of Elmley (a feudal barony). | De Beauchamp, Lord Of Elmley William (I7549)
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1038 | William administered his Aquitaine duchy as both a lover of the arts an d a w a r r i or. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy, which he ra ided i n 1 1 3 6 i n alliance with Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou, who claimed i t in h i s w i f e's name and for France. Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and t h e P a r t henays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of t h e e n e m ies. In international politics, William X initially supported an t i p o p e Anacletus II in the papal schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innoc e n t I I , a gainst the will of his own bishops. In 1134, Saint Bernard of C l a i r v aux convinced William to drop his support for Anacletus and join I n n o c e nt. | Aquitaine, Duke of Aquitaine Guillaume (I7664)
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1039 | William became a close friend of his kinsman William the Conqueror and, a t t h e C o u ncil of Lillebonne, urged the Norman barons to invade England. H e p l a y e d a leading part in the events leading up to, as well as during, t h e B a t t le of Hastings. According to Norman chroniclers, FitzOsbern led t h e r i g h t-wing of the forces at the Battle of Hastings. FitzOsbern was one of William's senior administrators and worked on his b e h a l f i n Normandy and Flanders. In England he was one of the first Norm a n s t o b e g ranted an Earldom, part of which became the Earldom of Heref o r d . | Fitzosbern, William (I7378)
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1040 | William came to Carolina in the early part of the eighteenth century. He was from a wealthy and distinguished English family. | Allston, Governor William Sr. (I8969)
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1041 | William Cotesworth Pinckney was called "Billy" by his fa m i l y . He and his wife, Rebecca, had eleven children, four of whom died in infancy. Some of his political offices held were: State Representative, South Carolina, at Jacksonborough in St. Bartholomew's Parish (1798- 1806), Speaker of the State House of Representatives (1804-06), State Senator (1806-10), Lieutenant Governor of S.C. (1820-22), State Representative (1824-26), member of the Nullification Convention (1832-33), Trustee of the South Carolina College (1804-05 and 1820-22). Member of the Episcopal Church, died on 30 Dec. 1833, and was buried at the Chapel of Ease, Edmundsbury, near Ashepoo River. Rebecca lived many years longer, d ying 23 Dec. 1865, and was buried beside him at Edmundsbury Chapel of Ease. Rebecca's death date is also listed as 25 Dec 1865. Members of the 16th General Assembly - 1804 to 1805. This General Assembly convened in two regular sessions, held from November 26th to December 21st in 1804, and held from November 18th to December 19th in 1805. William Cotesworth Pinckney**, ** Elected Speaker of the House. Both Pinckney and Alston are identified, but dates are not known. Richard Gantt was elected as Clerk. (Francis-5937) | Pinckney, State Sen. Williiam Cotesworth (I25220)
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1042 | William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Lincoln and 1st Earl of Arundel (d.12 Oc t 1 1 7 6 ) 1st Earl of Arundel (or Sussex or Chichester), Chief Butler of E ng l a n d , Privy Councillor to King Henry I William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Lincoln and 1st Earl of Arundel (d.12 Oc t 1 1 7 6 ) 1st Earl of Arundel (or Sussex or Chichester), Chief Butler of E ng l a n d , Privy Councillor to King Henry I | Aubigny, William (I7282)
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1043 | William de Braose was hanged by Llywel y nap Iorwerth in 1230. The stat e d r e a s on for the hanging was the accus ation that William had dallied w i t h L l y welyna's wife Joan, bastard of King John. This does not withstan d c l o s e s crutiny, and William was in all probability hung for the crime s o f h i s g r andfather, William deBraose lord of Bramber and Abergavenny, a g a i n s t the Welsh. | De Braose, Lord De Braose William (I7930)
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1044 | William de Lancaster II is chiefly noted as the founder of the Premonst r a t e n sian Hospital at Cockersand, which was erected into an abbey in 11 9 0 . H e c o nfirmed to the monks of St. Bees his father's and uncle's gran t s t o t h a t place. To the hospital of St. Leonard of York he gave land c a l le d D o chergh (now Docker, par. of Kendal ) in exchange for land in K e n d a l , which had been given to the hospital by Ketel, son of Eldred, an d l a n d i n B artonhead which his father gave. He was a liberal benefacto r t o t h e c a nons of Conishead, to whom h e gave land between Ulverston a n d B a r d sea, the church of Ulverston an d the estate of Gascow, near Ul v er s t o n. | Lancaster, William (I7259)
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1045 | William de Warenne died from wounds received at the Siege of Pevensey o n 2 4 J u n e 1 088, at Lewes, Sussex, England, and was buried beside his fi rs t w i f e , Gundreda, at the Chapter-house, Priory of St Pancras (Lewes P r io r y ) , Lewes, East Sussex . Their burial locations were lost until in 1 8 4 5 - 4 7 the railway to Brighton was built across the site of the priory a n d a m o n g the finds were lead caskets thought to contain the bones of Wi l l i a m d e Warenne and his wife Gundrada, the founders of t h e priory. T h e l e a d c askets are decorated with rope-mouldings and diagonal ornament a t i o n i nscribed WILLEMS and GUNDRADA respectively. Presently the church o f J o h n t h e Baptist, Southover High Street in Lewes, East Sussex, has th e l e a d c a skets of William de Warenne and wife Gundrada in a special cha pe l a l o n g with the black marble tombstone of Gundrada. The bones found i n 1 8 4 5 w e re reburied under the stone. Circa 1054 Duke William gave him the castle of Mortemer, which had been f o r f e i ted by his kinsman, Roger de Mortimer, after the Battle of Morteme r i n F e b r uary of that year. Probably at the same time he acquired lands a t B e l l e ncombre, the castle of which became the caput of the Warenne bar on y i n N o r mandy. In 1066, William was one of the Norman barons summoned by William, Duke o f N o r m a ndy, to a Council on hearing that Harold had been crowned King a ft e r t h e d eath of the Confessor. He took part in the invasion of Englan d a n d w a s p resent at the Battle of Hastings. Given Ditchling in Sussex b y W i l l i am the Conqueror which family held for many generations. | Warenne, 1st Earl Of Surrey William (I7893)
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1046 | William De Warenne personal prowess no special anecdote has been preser v e d , a n d it is as the husband of the mysterious Gundred, or Gundrada , t h a t h i s n ame has descended to the present day with any special interest a t t a c h ed to it. Whether the hand of this lady was bestowed upon him prev i o u s l y to his services at Senlac, or as a part of his reward for them, d o e s n o t a ppear, and our ignorance of the date of their marriage has bee n t h e p r i ncipal obstacle in the way of those who have so hotly disputed h e r r e l a tionship to William the Conqueror, for could we even arrive at a n a p p r oximate date it might enable us to calculate her probable age at t h a t p e r iod, and whether she was born before or after 1053, on which fac t d e p e n ds the whole question. That they were married before 1078 is cer ta i n , a s i n that year they founded the Priory of Lewes in Sussex, and w e h a v e t h e charters of King William, which he granted to that establish me n t f o r t he health of the souls of his lord and ancestor, King Edward, o f h i s f a t her Count Robert, of his own soul and that of his wife, Queen M a t i l d a,and of all their children and successors, and for the souls of W i l l i a m de Warren and his wife Gundrada, his (William's) daughter and th e i r h e i rs. The words "my daughter" would be decisive of her being the a c k n o w ledged child of the King; but independently of their being scarcel y l e g i b le, it is contended that they are in a different and later hand; a n d t h e r e is this to be observed, which I do not remember having seen no t i c e d , that the King has just previously used the expression "our child r e n a n d s uccessors" (filiorum atquesuccesso rum nostror um"), so that h i s p a r t icula rising Gundrada as "mydaughter " would imply that she was n o t b y h i s w ife Matilda. Exactly in opposition to this is the declaratio n o f W i l l iam de Warren himself, in whose charter to the priory, granted a f t e r t h e death of Gundred in childbirth (6 kalends of June, 1085), he s t a t e s h is donations to be for the salvation of the souls, amongst other s , o f h i s l ady Queen Matilda, mother of his wife excluding in turn King W i l l i a m from any share in her parentage. | Of Chester, Gundred (I7574)
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1047 | William de Warrenne (Earl of Warrenne), 2nd Earl of Surrey, joined Robe r t d e B e l esmie, Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury, in favour of Robert Cur t h os e a g ainst Henry I, and in consequence forfeited his English earldom a n d e s t a tes, but those were subsequently restored to him and he was ever a f t e r w ards a good and faithful subject to King Henry. His lordship m. Is a b e l , d au. of Hugh the Great, Earl of Vermandois, and widow of Robert, E a r l o f M e llent, by whom he had issue, William, Reginald, Ralph, Gundred , a n d A d e line. | De Warren, 2nd Earl Of Surrey William (I7583)
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1048 | William III of Macon (1088-1156), also known as William IV of Burgundy , w a s c o u n t of Macon (1102-1156), count of Auxonne (1127-1156), coun t of V i e n n e ( 1148-1156) and regent of the county of Burgundy (1148-115 6). He w a s a y o u n ger son of Stephen I, Count of Burgundy, and of Beatrice of Lo r rai n e . A fter the death of his brother, Renaud III, he took control of t h e c o u n ty of Burgundy in the name of his niece Beatrice. He was recogni z e d a s c o unt by the emperor Frederick Barbarossa by 1152 . He died in 1 1 5 6 w h i le on Crusade in the Holy Land, and Frederick married Beatrice a n d t o o k o ver the county. | Of Macon, Count Of Macon William III (I7704)
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1049 | William IV (937 - 3 February 994[1]), called Fierebras or Fierebrace (m e a n i n g "Proud Arm", from the French Fier-à-bras or Fièrebrace, in turn f r o m t h e L atin Ferox brachium), was the Duke of Aquitaine and Count of P o i t o u f rom 963 to his retirement in 990. William's father, William III, abdicated to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien i n P o i t i ers and left the government to Fierebras. His mother was Gerloc, t h e d a u g hter of Duke Rollo of Normandy. His sister was Adelaide, wife of H u g h C a p et, the king against whom William later battled for his duchy. H i s e a r l y reign was characterised by many wars. He fought frequently aga i n s t t h e counts of Anjou, the first time against Geoffrey Greymantle, w h o h a d t a ken Loudun. In 988, he went to war with the newly elected king of France, Hugh Cape t , w h o m h e refused to recognise. Capet had been granted Aquitaine by Ki n g L o t h air before the latter had been reconciled to William's father. C a p e t r e newed his claim on the great duchy and invaded it that year. A r o y a l a r my was defeated on the plain of the Loire Valley. William shelte r e d t h e y oung Louis, the son of Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine, the la s t l e g i timate Carolingian heir. He opened the palace of Poitiers to him a n d t r e a ted him as royalty, regarding him as the true heir to the French t h r o n e . In 968, he married Emma, daughter of Theobald I of Blois and Luitgarde o f V e r m a ndois.[2] Their marriage was stormy, in part because of William' s i n d u l gence in the pursuit of women and, as a hunting aficionado, wild a n i m a l s. She banished his paramours, they separated twice for long perio d s , a n d f inally he retired to a monastery, as his father had done, leav i n g E m m a to rule Aquitaine in the name of their son William until 1004. T h e i r s e cond son, Ebles, died sometime after 997. William IV Fierebras or Fierebrace ("Iron Arm"), Duke of Aquitaine and C o u n t o f P oitou from 963 to his retirement in 990. William's father, William III, abdicated to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien i n P o i t i ers and left the government to Fierebras. His mother was Gerloc, t h e d a u g hter of Duke Rollo of Normandy. His sister was Adelaide, wife of H u g h C a p et, the king agains t w hom William later battled for his duchy. H i s e a r l y reign was characterised by many wars. He fought frequently aga i n s t t h e counts of Anjou, the first time against Geoffrey Greymantle, w h o h a d t a ken Loudun. In 988, he went to war with the newly-elected king of France, Hugh Cape t , w h o m h e refused to recognise. Capet had been granted Aquitaine by Ki n g L o t h air before the latter had been reconciled to William's father. C a p e t r e newed his claim on the gre a t duchy and invaded it that year. A r o y a l a r my was defeated on the plain of the Loire Valley. William shelte r e d t h e y oung Louis, the son of Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine, the la s t l e g i timate Carolingian heir. He opened the palace of Poitier s t o h i m a n d t r eated him as royalty, regarding him as the true heir to the Fr e n c h t h rone. In 968, he married Emma or Emmeline, daughter of Theobald I of Blois an d L u i t g arde of Vermandois. Their marriage was stormy, in part because o f W i l l i am's indulgence in the pursuit of women and, a hunting aficionad o, w i l d a n imals. She banished his paramours, they separated twice for l ong p e r i o ds, and finally he retired to a monastery, as his father had d one, l e a v i ng Emma to rule Aquitaine in the name of their son William un til 1 0 0 4 . T heir second son, Ebles, died sometime after 997. | Poitou, Fierebras Guillaume (I9676)
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1050 | William Longsword (French: Guillaume Longue-Épée, Old Norman: Williame d e l o n E s p ee, Latin: Willermus Longa Spata, Old Norse: Vilhjálmr Langasp jó t ; c . 8 9 3 - 17 December 942) was the second ruler of Normandy, from 9 2 7 u n t i l his assassination in 942. He is sometimes referred to as a "duke of Normandy", though the title d u k e ( d u x) did not come into common usage until the 11th century.[2] Lon g s w o r d was known at the time as count (Latin comes) of Rouen. Flodoard- a l w a y s detailed about titles-consistently referred to both Rollo and hi s s o n W i l liam as principes (chieftains) of the Normans. There are no co nt e m p o rary accounts of William's byname, 'Longsword', either; it appear s f i r s t i n later eleventh-century sources. Birth William Longsword was born "overseas" to the Viking Rollo (while he was s t i l l a p a gan) and his wife more danico (a kind of non-Christian marriag e ) , P o p pa of Bayeux. Poppa's parentage is uncertain. Dudo of Saint-Quen t i n i n h i s panegyric of the Norman dukes describes her as the daughter o f a C o u n t B erengar, the dominant prince of that region. In the 11th-cen tury A n n a l es Rotomagenses (Annals of Rouen), she is called the daughter o f G u y , C o unt of Senlis, otherwise unknown to history. According to the L o n g s w ord's planctus, William was baptized a Christian probably at the s a m e t i m e as his father, which Orderic Vitalis stated was in 912, by Fra n c o , A r chbishop of Rouen. William is not an Old Norse forename, and he m u s t h a v e been renamed as part of this process. | Longue-Épée, Count of Rouen Guillaume (I9406)
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1051 | William Mullins was born about 1572 to John and Joan (Bridger) Mullins of Dorking, Surrey, England. He married a woman named Alice, but her maiden name has not been identified. Longstanding claims that her maiden name is Atwood, or Poretiers, are without basis. Recent research in Dorking records has suggested that Alice is more likely to have come from the Browne, Gardinar, Dendy, Hammon or Wood families, perhaps even related to Mayflower passenger Peter Browne who also came from Dorking. See the Alice Mullins page for additional discussion on her possible identity. William brought his wife Alice and children Priscilla and Joseph on the Mayflower; he also brought over 250 shoes and 13 pairs of boots, his profession being a shoemaker. He died on 21 February 1620/1, during the first winter at Plymouth, as did his wife and son Joseph. His original will has survived, written down by Governor John Carver. In it he mentions his wife Alice, children Priscilla and Joseph, and his children back in Dorking, William Mullins and Sarah Blunden. He also mentions a Goodman Woods (likely a reference to the Wood family in Dorking), and a Master Williamson, who have not been identified, but is possibly an alias for William Brewster. It was witnessed by the Mayflower's master Christopher Jones, the Mayflower's surgeon Giles Heale, and governor John Carver. | Mullins, William (I27651)
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1052 | William of Mar, also known by the name Uilleam mac Dhonnchaidh (Anglici z e d a s " W illiam, Duncan's son"), was the mormaer of Mar in medieval Sco t l a n d f rom 1244 to 1276. His father was Donnchadh of Mar. Uilleam was responsible for the construction of Kildrummy Castle, the g r e a t e st castle to have been built in 13th-century northern Scotland. It i s o n e o f t h e few examples where a native Scottish magnate built a large -s c a le f o rtification, something normally practiced by the incoming Norm a n s . Uilleam, more than any of his predecessors, participated in Scottish an d e v e n B r itish-wide politics, becoming a leading figure in the royal re gi m e o f A l exander II, and the minority of Alexander III. By 1244, Uille a m h a d m a rried into the Comyn house, the fastest rising French family i n t h e S c o ttish kingdom. He married Elisabeth Comyn, the daughter of Wil li a m C o m yn, jure uxoris Earl of Buchan and Marjory, Countess of Buchan. T h e C o m y n-Mar alliance helped fight off the ambitions of the Durwards, w h o w e r e t hen in prime favor with the king. Alan Durward used his descent from a daughter of Gille Críst to contest U i l l e a m's right to the Mormaerdom, but Uilleam successfully held off the s e c l a i ms. Uilleam and the Comyn Earl of Menteith then launched accusat i o n s o f t reason towards Alan while at the court of Henry III of England a t Y o r k . Chamberlain to Alexander III, Sheriff of Dunbarton | Dhonnchadha, 9th Earl of Mar Uilleam (I9413)
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1053 | William PINCKNEY SAR Patriot #: P-331488 State of Service: SC Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A089111 Birth: 11 Jun 1739 St Philip / Charleston / Charleston / SC Death: aft 1780 Ashpoo / Charleston Dist / SC Qualifying Service Description: 1. Furnished provisions 2. NSDAR # 459655, 763333, 863839 state PATRIOTIC SERVICE: FURNISHED PR O V I S I ONS, 1779 Additional References: NSDAR # 459655, 763333, 863839 cite PAY VOUCHER IN DOCUMENTATION WITH D A R # 4 5 9 655 Spouse: Deborah Webb Miles Children: William Cotesworth; Sarah; == Biography == } NOTE: South Carolina Colony became a state of the Union on 23 May 1788 William Cotesworth Pinckney June 11, 1739 Charleston, Charleston, South C a r o l i na, United States -- December 03, 1786 Colleton, South Carolina, U n i t e d S tates Last Updated: June 18, 2018 A Patriot of the American Revolution for SOUTH CAROLINA. DAR Ancestor # A 0 8 9 1 1 1 The Early Families of the South Carolina Low County Information on this person can be found in an article titled ''Col. Mil e s B r e w ton and Some of His Descendents'' in vol. 2 (April 1902) of the S o u t h C a rolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine at pages 128-152. == Sources == William Cotesworth Pinckney https://www.geni.com/people/William-Pinckne y / 6 0 0 0000022639870987 Powell, Mary Pinckney. Over Home: The Heritage of Pinckneys of Pinckney C o l o n y B luffton, South Carolina. Columbia, South Carolina: R L Bryan Com p a n y , 1 982. SOUTH CAROLINA. DAR Ancestor # A089111http://services.dar.org/Public/DA R _ R e s earch/search_adb/?action=full&p_id=A089111 The Early Families of the South Carolina Low County Updated: 2011-09-03 O w n e r : J ohn J. Simons III https://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GE T & d b = syf&id=I7674 | Pinckney, William Cotesworth (I25211)
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1054 | William Sawyer Bergen, Jacob Milton Bergen Family of Long Island New York (1995 Gateway Press Baltimore, Maryland), pg. XII-XIII, 1, Appendix A-2. " Hans Hans (Bergen) immigrated to New Amsterdam in 1633... Our Hans after immigrating to New Amsterdam 1633, lived on Manhatten Island and owned property by Fort Amsterdam. He married Sarah De. Rapalya in 1639. Sarah was but 14 years old and had been born at Fort Orange (now Albany, N.Y.) in 1625 Jans shows in several Dutch court cases. One case, in 1648, was very serious and the prosecutor asked for a sentence of death. Hans had transported military hardware, a serious crime. Had this sentence been carried out we would have little more to write about. Luckily Hans was reprived. Hans purchased property in Wallabout, Brooklyn in 1639 for a farm to which he and Sarah and family moved in late 1640's and where he ultimately died in 1654. | Bergen, Hans Hansen (I45525)
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1055 | William Skeffington is first mentioned in two cases concerning landed r i g h t s i n Skeffington and Keythorp in 1488 and 1496. A supporter of the G r e y s , h e was an executor of the will of the 1st Marquess of Dorset, who d i e d i n 1 5 01. He may have served with Dorset in France, as he was to do w i t h t h e 2 nd Marquess, when he was given command of the ordnance. It was t h u s a s a n e xperienced artilleryman that he replaced Sir Sampson Norton a s m a s t e r of the ordnance in 1515. With the return of peace the work may h a v e b e e n at first less demanding, and by 1522 Skeffington had served tw i c e a s s h eriff and had discharged various other local duties; but when i n 1 5 2 6 h e t estified in the dispute between Dorset and Sir Richard Sache ve r e l l h e admitted that he had not been in his county for four years. A s w e l l a s p erforming ceremonial duties he had served on various commiss io n s r e l ating to Calais and had spent most of his time either there or a t t h e T o w er, the two principal ordnance depots. In 1523 he had also bee n c h a r g ed with supplying victuals to the army in the field, and his fre qu e n t v o yages between Calais and London also made him a useful liaison o f f i c e r. | Skeffington, Lord Deputy of Ireland William (I108)
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1056 | William Tanner was an amazing man! He first married Hannah Avis Tibbets i n 1 6 8 6 . T ogether, they had a son named William Henry Tanner (born 1687 a n d h a v i ng the middle name (Henry) in honor of his grandfather, Henry Ti b b e t s ). Shortly after William Henry's birth, Hannah died , leaving Wil l i a m a w i dower, single father of a young boy. Unable to care for the b o y , a n d p rovide for the two of them, William sought a second wife. Will i a m f o u nd a second wife in Mary Babcock, and they were married shortly t h e r e a fter (1690). | Tanner, William Sr. (I27426)
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1057 | William the Great (French: Guillaume le Grand; 969 - 31 January 1030) w a s d u k e o f Aquitaine (as William V) and count of Poitou (as William II o r I I I ) f r om 990 until his death. Upon the death of the emperor Henry II , h e w a s o f fered the kingdom of Italy but declined to contest the title a g a i n s t Conrad II. Life He was the son and successor of William IV by his wife Emma of Blois, d a u g h t er of Theobald I of Blois.[1] He seems to have taken after his for m i d a b le mother, who ruled Aquitaine as regent until 1004. He was a frie n d t o B i s hop Fulbert of Chartres, who found in him another Maecenas, an d f o u n d ed a cathedral school at Poitiers. He himself was very well educ at e d , a c o llector of books, and turned the prosperous court of Aquitain e i n t o t h e learning centre of Southern France. Though a cultivated prince, he was a failure in the field. He called up o n h i s s u zerain Robert II of France to aid in subduing his vassal, Boso o f L a M a r c he. Initially unsuccessful, Boso was eventually chased from th e d u c h y . He had to contain Vikings who continually threatened his coast . I n 1 0 0 6 , he was defeated by Viking invaders. He lost the Loudunais an d M i r e b alais to Fulk Nerra, count of Anjou. He had to give up Confolens , R u f f e c, and Chabanais to compensate William II of Angoulême, but Fulb er t n e g o tiated a treaty (1020) outlining the reciprocal obligations of v a s s a l a nd suzerain. However, his court was a centre of artistic endeavour and he its surest p a t r o n . His piety and culture brought peace to his vast territories, and h e t r i e d t o stem the tide of feudal warfare then destroying the unity of m a n y E u r opean nations by supporting the current Peace and Truce of God m o v e m e nts initiated by Pope and Church. He founded Maillezais Abbey (101 0 ) a n d B o urgueil Abbey. After a fire in Poitier, he rebuilt the cathedr a l a n d m a ny other religious structures. He travelled widely in Europe, a n n u a l ly visiting Rome or Spain as a pilgrim. Everywhere he was greeted w i t h r o y al pomp. His court was of an international flavour, receiving am b a s s a dors from the Emperor Henry II, Alfonso V of León, Canute the Grea t , a n d e v en his suzerain, Robert of France. | Aquitaine, Duke Of Aquitaine Guillaume (I9675)
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1058 | William Wallace (born c. 1270, probably near Paisley, Renfrew, Scotland-died August 23, 1305, London, England) was one of Scotland’s greatest national heroes and the chief inspiration for Scottish resistance to the English king Edward I. He served as guardian of the kingdom of Scotland during the first years of the long and ultimately successful struggle to free his country from English rule. Wallace was the second son of Sir Malcolm Wallace of Elderslie in Renfrewshire. The elder Wallace was a minor landowner and a vassal of James, 5th steward of Scotland. In 1296 King Edward I of England deposed and imprisoned the Scottish king John de Balliol and declared himself ruler of Scotland. Sporadic resistance had already occurred when, in May 1297, Wallace and a band of some 30 men burned Lanark and killed its English sheriff. Joined by Sir William Douglas (“the Hardy”), Wallace next marched on Scone, drove out the English justiciar, and attacked the English garrisons between the Rivers Forth and Tay. The Scottish steward, Robert the Bruce (later King Robert I), and others now gathered an army, but it was forced to surrender at Irvine by Sir Henry de Percy and Sir Robert de Clifford (July 1297). Wallace, however, remained in action “with a large company in the Forest of Selkirk,” according to a contemporary report made to Edward. Wallace laid siege to Dundee but abandoned it to oppose, with Andrew de Moray, an English army that was advancing toward Stirling under John de Warenne, earl of Surrey. | Wallace, William (I1629)
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1059 | William was a favourite of King John. He witnessed King John's concessi o n o f t h e k ingdom to the Pope on 15 May 1213. On 14 June 1216 he joined P r i n c e L ouis (later Louis VIII of France) after King John abandoned Winc h e s t e r. He returned to the allegiance of the King Henry III after the R o y a l i st victory at Lincoln, on 14 July 1217. He joined in the Fifth Crusade (1217-1221), in 1218. He died on his jou r n e y h o me, in Caneill, Italy, near Rome, on 1 February 1221. d'Aubigny | Aubigny, William (I1826)
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1060 | William was heir to one of the greatest Anglo-Norman baronies. From his m o t h e r , Mabel (d. 1157), daughter of Robert fitz Haimon, came Norman lan d s , t h e W elsh marcher county of Glamorgan, and the English honour of Gl o u c e s ter. His total annual income at times may have been more than 700, a n d h e c o m manded the service of more than 300 knights' fees from England a n d W a l e s alone. Significant additions came from the patronage which Wil l i a m ' s grandfather Henry I bestowed on his father, Robert, earl of Glou c e s t e r, and from Robert's own acquisitions. William was the eldest of a t l e a s t f ive sons and one daughter born to Earl Robert and Countess Mab el . H e a l s o had a number of illegitimate siblings, products of his fath e r' s e x t ramarital liaisons. | Fitzrobert, 2nd Earl Of Gloucester William (I7819)
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1061 | William was ostensibly Lord of Kidwelly, but during this period a numbe r o f c a s t les in south Wales (probably including Kidwelly) were captured b y L o r d R h ys, and Rhys was certainly in occupation in 1190, when he buil t t h e n e w s tone castle there. Rhys died in 1197, and the castle was bac k i n W i l l iam's hands by 1201. William died c. 121 1 (others say c 1200) a n d w a s b u ried at Ewenny Priory. | Londres, William (I7202)
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1062 | William was raised in Scotland. He started a revolt against his brother , D i r k V I I and became count in Friesland after a reconciliation. Friesl an d w a s c o nsidered as a part of Holland by the Counts of Holland. His n i ec e , A d a, eventually inheritited Holland in 1203, but William couldn't a c c e p t t his. After a civil war, which lasted for several years, William w o n t h e w a r. Louis and Ada were supported by the bishop of Utrecht, and t h e c o u n t of Flanders. William was supported by the duke of Brabant and b y t h e m a j ority of the Hollanders. Emperor Otto IV acknowledged him as count of Holland in 1203, because h e w a s a s u p porter of the Welfs. He and many others changed allegiance t o e m pe r o r Frederick II after the battle of Bouvines in 1214. He took pa rt i n a F r e n ch expedition against king John of England. The pope excomm uni cate d h i m f or this. Possibly because of this, William then became a fervent crusader. He ca m p a i g ned in Prussia and joined in the conquest of Lisbon. In Europe , h e c a m e t o b e called William the Crazy for his chivalric and reckless be ha v i o u r in battle. William conquered the city of Damietta during the Fi f t h C r u sade. | Holland, Willem (I7262)
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1063 | William was succeeded by his son, '''RORERT DE ST. JOHN''', who had a m i l i t a ry summons to oppose the incursions of the Welsh, and in three yea r s a f t e rwards, obtained a license to fix a pale upon the bauk of his mo a t , a t B A SING; as also to continue it so fortified, during the king's p l e a s u re. In the 50th of the same reign (1266), he was constituted governor of PO R C H E S TER Castle, and dying soon after, was succeeded by his son, (b y h i s w i f e A gnes, daughter of William de Cantilupe), JOHN DE ST. JOHN , Lo r d o f B a s ing, who succeeded likewise to the governorship of Porchester C a s t l e . | St.John, Governor of Porchester Castle Robert (I7475)
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1064 | William was the son of William VIII of Aquitaine by his third wife, Hildegarde of Burgundy. His birth was a cause of great celebration at the Aquitanian court, but the Church at first considered him illegitimate because of his father's earlier divorces and his parents' consanguinity. This obliged his father to make a pilgrimage to Rome soon after his birth to seek Papal approval of his third marriage and the young William's legitimacy. Early career, 1088-1102 - William inherited the duchy at the age of fifteen up on the death of his father. In 1088, at the age of only sixteen, William married his first wife, Ermengarde, the daughter of Fulk IV of Anjou. She was reputedly beautiful and well-educated, but also suffered from severe mood-swings, vacillating between vivacity and sullenness. She was considered a nag, and had a habit of retiring in bad temper to a cloister after an argument, cutting off all contact with the outside world until suddenly making a reappearance at court as if her absence had never occurred. Such behaviour, coupled with her failure to conceive a child, led William to send her back to her father and have the marriage dissolved (1091). In 1094 he remarried to Philippa, the daughter and heiress of William IV of Toulouse. By Philippa, William had two sons and five daughters, including his eventual successor, William X. His second son, Raymond, eventually became the Prince of Antioch in the Holy Land, and his daughter Agnes married firstly Aimery V of Thouars and then Ramiro II of Aragon, reestablishing dynastic ties with that ruling house. William invited Pope Urban II to spend the Christmas of 1095 at his court. The pope urged him to "take the cross" (i.e. the First Crusade) and leave for the Holy Land, but William was more interested in exploiting the absence on Crusade of Raymond IV of Toulouse, his wife's uncle, to press aclaim to Toulouse. He and Philippa did capture Toulouse in 1098, an act for which they were threatened with excommunication. Partly out of a desire to regain favor with the religious authorities and partly out of a wish to see the world, William joined the Crusade of 1101, an expedition inspired by the success of the First Crusade in 1099. To finance it, he had to mortgage Toulouse back to Bertrand, the son of Raymond IV William arrived in the Holy Land in 1101 and stayed there until the following year. His record as a military leader is not very impressive. He fought mostly skirmishes in Anatolia and was frequently defeated. His recklessness led to his being ambushed on several occasions, with great losses to his own forces. In September 1101, his entire army was destroyed by the Seljuk Turks at Heraclea; William himself barely escaped, and, according to Orderic Vitalis, he reached Antioch with only six surviving companions. | Aquitaine, Duke of Aquitaine Guillaume (I7634)
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1065 | William Wilkinson was the first Anglican minister sent by England. | Wilkinson, Reverand William (I1111)
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1066 | William's Father died before his wife and two sons immigrated to the U. S . H a n n ah and her two sons William and John appears on the manifest of t h e s h i p A bigail. The ship left Plymouth, England destined for Boston in N e w E n g l and on June 4, 1635, among the passengers were William Potter ag e 2 7 , w i f e Frances age 26 & 4 month old son Joseph Potter. Both the brothers John and William Potter, signed the Plantation Covena n t i n N e w H aven, Connecticut on June 4, 1639, just nineteen years after t h e P i l g rims settled at Plymouth, Massachusetts. William purchased land a t N e w H a v en & was occupied there as a "planter" until his death. Willia m' s m o t h er Hannah & his younger brother John Potter also settled at New H a v e n . ( Source: http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/P otter-136 ) William Potter who was tried and executed by hanging on 6 June 1662 . T h i s w a s a P uritan colony, Potter was accused by his wife and son of bes t i a l it y. | Potter, William (I2018)
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1067 | William's father Gilbert appears to have been a member of the "French" c o m m u n ity holding offices for the Norman dynasty in the far northwest of E n g l a n d, bordering Scotland. Gilbert seems to have been associated with t h e a r e a o f Furness, which came to be part of Lancashire and was probabl y a l r e a dy administered together with northern Lancashire | Fitzgilbert Lancaster, William (I7045)
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1068 | With his parents and family, Amasa emigrated to Nova Scotia, Canada in the fall of 1761. His parents returned to New England some years later, but Amasa remained in Cornwallis, Nova Scotia. He was married there 09 November 1773 to Rosina Cone, of whom we have no birthdate, but she was a daughter of Reuben and Nem Cone. Her name is variously given as Roxana and Rozina. Amasa is said to have died accidentally by going through the ice on his own mill-pond about 1805. | Bigelow, Amasa (I12249)
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1069 | Wolcott estimates Cadwr ap Gwenwyn's birth as 865. Other sources estima t e t h e b i rth a decade earlier. | ap Gwenwyn, Cadwr (I9454)
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1070 | Wrong Husband Jan Hansen Van Nostrand GLX8-34H can't possibly be Janneken's husband. He is 85 years older than she is. | Gerrits Van Loon, Janneken (I45334)
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1071 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: (R-M269) R-FT62332 John Alden may be descended from an Alden family that was residing in the parish of Harwich, Essex, England: a family that was related, by marriage, to the Mayflower's master Christopher Jones. He was about twenty-one years old when he was hired from Southampton to be the cooper (barrel-maker) for the Mayflower's voyage to America. The Pilgrims' joint-stock company gave him the option to stay in America, or return to England. He chose to stay, and about 1622 or 1623 he married fellow Mayflower passenger Priscilla Mullins, an orphaned young woman originally from Dorking, Surrey, England, whose parents William and Alice, and brother Joseph, had all perished in the first winter at Plymouth. A fictional account of John and Priscilla Alden's courtship and its entanglement with Myles Standish, is the subject of the famous Henry Wadsworth Longfellow poem, "The Courtship of Myles Standish". Likely a combination of his practical skills as a cooper and carpenter, and his young wife Priscilla's substantial inheritance of company shares, John Alden quickly rose up to become a prominent member of the Plymouth Colony. He was elected an assistant to the governor as early as 1631 and was regularly reelected. He was one of the men who purchased the joint-stock company from its English shareholders in 1626, and was involved in the company's trading on the Kennebec River. In 1634, he was involved in a fur trading dispute that escalated into a double-killing (trespasser John Hocking and Plymouth colonist Moses Talbot). He was held by the Massachusetts Bay Colony for questioning, which caused a major jurisdictional controversy as Plymouth Colony leadership felt the Bay Colony had no authority to detain him. John Alden, along with Myles Standish and several other Plymouth Colonists, founded the town of Duxbury to the north of Plymouth. Dendrochronological evidence suggests the men had started building their houses there as early as 1629. Alden served the town of Duxbury as deputy to the Plymouth Court throughout the 1640s, and served on several committees and sat on several Councils of War. He also served for a time as colony treasurer. About 1653, he built the Alden House, which is still standing and is maintained by the Alden Kindred of America. By the 1660s, John and Priscilla Alden had a growing family of ten children. Combined with his numerous public service duties (which were mostly unpaid positions) he was left in fairly low means. He petitioned and received from the Plymouth Court various land grants, which he distributed to his children throughout the 1670s. He died in 1687 at the age of 89, one of the last surviving Mayflower passengers. Two broadsides (predecessor of the newspaper) printed obituaries for John Alden, illustrated below. | Alden, John (I37598)
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1072 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: E-M35 (E-FTC19215) Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order). Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628. The only record of his death is found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth." All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general and President Ulysses S. Grant; President Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon. | Warren, Richard (I26019)
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1073 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: I-M253 (I-A20032) George Soule's origins have not been discovered. The most promising record found to date is the baptism of a George Soule on 9 February 1595 at Tingrith, Bedford, son of William. However, recent DNA testing has now shown this Bedfordshire Soule family was not the direct ancestor of George Soule. Other Soule families using the name George can also be found in many other places counties across England in the 16th and 17th centuries. DNA testing has eliminated the predominant Soule families of Gloucester, Worcester, East and West Sussex, and Bedford. Louise Throop has published a reasonable hypothesis that George Soule may have been descendant of the Sol family of Leiden, who were involved in the printing press. George Soule came on the Mayflower as a servant to the Edward Winslow family, indicating he was under 25 years old at the time; however, he did sign the "Mayflower Compact," suggesting he was over 18, and probably over 21. This puts his birth year at around 1595-1602. This matches well with his apparent marriage date of around 1625 at Plymouth: by the May 1627 Division of Cattle, he was married to Mary [Beckett], and they had had one son, Zachariah. George Soule and family moved to Duxbury very early on, and he was a deputy to the Plymouth Court for a number of years beginning in 1642. He had volunteered for the Pequot War of 1637, but Plymouth's troops were not needed. He was on various committees, juries, and survey teams, during his life in Duxbury. In 1646, for example, he was appointed to the committee to deal with Duxbury's problem of the disorderly smoking of tobacco. George Soule made out his will on 11 August 1677, and added a codicil to it on 20 September 1677. The codicil is quite interesting as it gives a little insight into a family squabble between son John and daughter Patience: If my son John Soule above-named or his heirs or assigns or any of them shall at any time disturb my daughter Patience or her heirs or assigns or any of them in peaceable possession or enjoyment of the lands I have given her at Nemasket alias Middleboro and recover the same from her or her heirs or assigns or any of them; that then my gift to my son John Soule shall be void; and that then my will is my daughter Patience shall have all my lands at Duxbury and she shall be my sole executrix of this my last will and testament and enter into my housing lands and meadows at Duxbury. | Soule, George (I24215)
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1074 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: I-M253 (I-FT1754) William Brewster was born about 1566, the son of William Brewster. He was educated in both Greek and Latin and spent some time at Cambridge University, although he never completed a full degree. He went into the service of William Davison, then Secretary of State, while his father back home maintained a position as the postmaster of Scrooby, Nottinghamshire. Under Davison, Brewster first traveled to the Netherlands. After Davison was removed as Secretary of State by Queen Elizabeth, Brewster worked himself into his father's postmaster duties and maintained Scrooby Manor. Brewster was instrumental in establishing a Separatist church with Richard Clyfton, and they often held their meetings in the Manor house. Brewster and the others were eventually found and forced out, and fleeing prosecution and persecution they headed to Amsterdam in 1608, and moved to Leiden, Holland in 1609. Brewster became the church's Elder, responsible for seeing that the congregation's members carried themselves properly, both helping and admonishing them when necessary. In Leiden, Brewster working with Thomas Brewer, Edward Winslow, and others, began working a printing press and publishing religious books and pamphlets that were then illegally conveyed into England. Brewster also employed himself teaching University of Leiden students English. By 1618, the English authorities were onto him and his printing press, and had the Dutch authorities in pursuit of him. Thomas Brewer was arrested and held in the University of Leiden's prison, but Brewster managed to evade the authorities and went into hiding for a couple years. When the Leiden church congregation decided to send the first wave of settlers to establish a colony that everyone could eventually move to, their pastor John Robinson decided to remain behind in Leiden with the majority of the congregation, intending to come later. The smaller group that went on the Mayflower desired the next highest ranking church official, Elder Brewster, to go with them; so he agreed. He brought his wife Mary and two youngest children, Love and Wrestling, on the Mayflower with him. Brewster continued his work as Church Elder throughout his life at Plymouth Colony. His wife Mary died in 1627, and he never remarried. He lived to be nearly 80 years old, dying in 1644. His estate inventory lists the titles of several hundred books that he owned. Shortly after he died, William Bradford wrote a short but concise biography of Brewster in his history Of Plymouth Plantation, though he erroneously filed it under 1643 instead of 1644. | Brewster, Elder William (I135)
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1075 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: R-M269 (R-A9703) John Howland was born about 1599, probably in Fenstanton, Huntington. He came on the Mayflower in 1620 as a manservant of Governor John Carver. During the Mayflower's voyage, Howland fell overboard during a storm, and was almost lost at sea--but luckily for his millions of descendants living today (including Presidents George Bush and George W. Bush, and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt) he managed to grab hold of the topsail halyards, giving the crew enough time to rescue him with a boat-hook. It has been traditionally reported that John Howland was born about 1592, based on his reported age at death in the Plymouth Church Records. However, ages at death were often overstated, and that is clearly the case here. John Howland came as a servant for John Carver, which means he was under 25 years old at the time (i.e. he was born after 1595). William Bradford, in the falling-overboard incident, refers to Howland as a "lusty young man," a term that would not likely have applied to a 28-year old given that Bradford himself was only 30. Bradford did call 21-year old John Alden a "young man" though. Howland's wife Elizabeth was born in 1607: a 32-year old marrying a 17-year old is a relatively unlikely circumstance. Howland's last child was born in 1649: a 57-year old Howland would be an unlikely father. All these taken together demonstrate that Howland's age was likely overstated by at least 5 years. Since he signed the "Mayflower Compact", we can assume he was probably at least 18 to 21 years old in 1620. John Howland had several brothers who also came to New England, namely Henry Howland (an ancestor to both Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford) and Arthur Howland (an ancestor to Winston Churchill). 13th signer of the Mayflower Compact - Signed on the Mayflower. John Howland as one of the 10 principal men set out in the shallop to explore a settlement site. Please keep "of Fenstanton" in the suffix It does not affect searching in any way and helps keep completely different families separated. By removing it you are the one causing all the problems to start up again Plymouth Colony Its History and People,1620-1691, by Eugene Abrey Stratton P311-312 John Howland of the Mayflower, V.1 Came on Mayflower as servant to John Carver. On 1633 freeman list. Will dated 29 May 1672, inventory 3 Mar 1672/3, mentions wife Elizabeth; oldest son John Howland; sons Jabez and Joseph; youngest son Isaac; daughters Desire Gorham, Hope Chipman, Elizabeth Dickenson, Lydai Browne, Hannah Bosworth, and Ruth Cushman; and granddaughter Elizabeth Howland, daughter of his son John. "Signed Mayflower Compact; took an active part in the early explorations. A partner in the Trading Company of the Colony; Asst. or deputy almost continually. Prominent in the church, so that he "assisted in the imposition of hands" upon Rev. John Cotton, Jr. when he was ordained pastor 30 Jun 1669. He died "a profitable instrument of good; the last man that was left of those that came over in the ship called the May Flower that arrived at Plymouth." (Plym. Col. Rec. VII, 34) Mayflower See Mayflowerhistory.com for list of passengers and biographies of each passenger. Fell overboard from the Mayflower and managed to grab hold of a trailing rope, giving the crew just enough time to rescue him with a boat-hook. | Howland, John Sr. of Fenstanton (I22370)
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1076 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: R-M269 (R-FGC71615) Read "The Story of Stephen Hopkins of Jamestown and the Mayflower' What do Jamestowne, the Mayflower and Shakespeare have in common? The answer is Stephen Hopkins: a Jamestowne settler, Mayflower passenger and survivor of the wreck of the Sea Venture, reputed to be the basis for Shakespeare’s comedy, The Tempest. ------------------------------------------------------------- Stephen Hopkins was from Hampshire, England. He married his first wife, Mary, and resided in the parish of Hursley, Hampshire. They had their children Elizabeth, Constance, and Giles, all baptized there. It has long been claimed that the Hopkins family was from Wortley, Gloucester, but this was disproven in 1998 with the discovery of his true origins in Hursley. Stephen Hopkins went with the ship Sea Venture on a voyage to Jamestown, Virginia in 1609 as a minister's clerk, but the ship wrecked in the "Isle of Devils" (Bermuda). Stranded on an island for ten months, the passengers and crew survived on turtles, birds, and wild pigs. Six months into the castaway, Stephen Hopkins and several others organized a mutiny against the current governor. The mutiny was discovered and Stephen was sentenced to death. However, he pleaded with sorrow and tears. "So penitent he was, and made so much moan, alleging the ruin of his wife and children in this his trespass, as it wrought in the hearts of all the better sorts of the company". He managed to get his sentence commuted. Eventually the castaways built a small ship and sailed themselves to Jamestown. How long Stephen remained in Jamestown is not known. However, while he was gone, his wife Mary died. She was buried in Hursley on 9 May 1613, and left behind a probate estate which mentions her children Elizabeth, Constance and Giles. Stephen was back in England by 1617, when he married Elizabeth Fisher, but apparently had every intention of bringing his family back to Virginia. Their first child, Damaris, was born about 1618. In 1620, Stephen Hopkins brought his wife, and children Constance, Giles, and Damaris on the Mayflower (child Elizabeth apparently had died). Stephen was a fairly active member of the Pilgrim group shortly after arrival, perhaps a result of his being one of the few individuals who had been to Virginia previously. He was a part of all the early exploring missions, and was used as an "expert" on Native Americans for the first few contacts. While out exploring, Stephen recognized and identified an Indian deer trap. And when Samoset walked into Plymouth and welcomed the English, he was housed in Stephen Hopkins' house for the night. Stephen was also sent on several of the ambassadorial missions to meet with the various Indian groups in the region. Stephen was an assistant to the governor through 1636, and volunteered for the Pequot War of 1637 but was never called to serve. By the late 1630s, however, Stephen began to occasionally run afoul of the Plymouth authorities, as he apparently opened up a shop and served alcohol. In 1636 he got into a fight with John Tisdale and seriously wounded him. In 1637, he was fined for allowing drinking and shuffleboard playing on Sunday. Early the next year he was fined for allowing people to drink excessively in his house: guest William Reynolds was fined, but the others were acquitted. In 1638 he was twice fined for selling beer at twice the actual value, and in 1639 he was fined for selling a looking glass for twice what it would cost if bought in the Bay Colony. Also in 1638, Stephen Hopkins' maidservant got pregnant from Arthur Peach, who was subsequently executed for murdering an Indian. The Plymouth Court ruled he was financially responsible for her and her child for the next two years (the amount remaining on her term of service). Stephen, in contempt of court, threw Dorothy out of his household and refused to provide for her, so the court committed him to custody. John Holmes stepped in and purchased Dorothy's remaining two years of service from him: agreeing to support her and child. Stephen died in 1644, and made out a will, asking to be buried near his wife, and naming his surviving children. | Hopkins, Stephen (I113)
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1077 | Yearbook of the Central Bureau for Genealogy, The Hague, NL, 1995, p. 175. Name also given as Aeltien Cornelis COOL. !BIRTH: estimated by Arie Noot, 1999. Dies in 1683 leaving behind four children Willem, Jan, Neeltje and Marritje Gerritsdr van Couwenhoven. She mentioned as of Nieuwkerk. | Stoothoff, Aeltje Cornelis (I45465)
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1078 | Yellis Jansen de Mandeville of Garderen, Holland, and Greenwich Village on Manhatten Island. Yellis is the founder of the family in this country and is traced as early as 1657, at Voorthuizen, a village near Garderen in Holland. His father's name was Jan, perhaps that Jan Jansen who in 1627, was candidate at the Reformed Church at Koolwyck, also near Garderen, and died at the latter place in 1657. The Garderen marriage and baptismal regesters before 1664, are lost, but there is a tombstone in the ancient church there, to a younger son of the de Mandeville family who died 14, October 165_. Yellis de Mandeville came to America on the De Trouw (Faith), 12 February, 1659, with his "wife and four children of 1 1/4, 5, 6 and 9 years." Yellis is called Gilles Jansen van Garder. (Garderen in the Veluwe, Guelderland, Holland.) He paid f50 for the passage of his wife and himself, and f10 for each child, or 90 guilders in all. Gillis's name was on the list of the vessel Moesman, in April, 1659, indicates that he was not a passenger, but a debtor to the Dutch West India Company, for a small sum advanced by them. Yellis probably lived for a time somewhere on Long Island. Two of his children were from New Amersfoot (Flatlands. Gilles Jansen Mandiviel and his wife Elsje Hendrick were members of the New York Dutch Church, 31 May, 1677, and Jillis, Elsje and Grietie Mandeviel were living above the ancient pond Kalch-Hock in 1686. The Mandeville estate extended from below 14th street to 21st street, though not parallel to either, and from the Hudson River to Warren Road. | de Mandeville, Yellis Jansen (I45529)
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1079 | Yolande de Chiftillon or Yolande de Nevers , who died in 1254, is Countess of Nevers , Tonnerre and Auxerre from 1250 to 1254 of her own right, and Dame de Bourbon by her marriage. She married Archambaud IX, Lord of Bourbon and Dampierre, of whom she has two daughters: Mathilde (c. 1234-1262), married in 1248 to Eudes of Burgundy , son of Hugh IV of Burgundy , Agnes (1237-1287), married in 1248 to John of B urg u n d y ( b rother of Eudes), then in 1277 to Robert II, count of Artois. | Chatillon, Yolande (I7371)
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1080 | Zoelen, Gelderland, Netherlands is Amsterdam, Holland. | Becx, Maria Elisabetha (I45517)
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1081 | Æ lfgar (died c. 1062) was the son of Leofric, Earl of Mercia, by his f a m o u s m other Godgifu (Lady Godiva).[1] He succeeded to his father's tit l e a n d r e sponsibilities on the latter's death in 1057. He gained the ad d i t i o nal title of Earl of East Anglia, but also was exiled for a time. T h r o u g h the first marriage of his daughter he became father-in-law to We l s h k i n g Gruffydd ap Llywelyn, a few years after his death, his daughte r b e c a m e a widow and married the English King Harold. War and exile Æ lfgar profited from the exile of Earl Godwin of Wessex and his sons i n 1 0 5 1 . H e was given the Earldom of East Anglia, which had been that of H a r o l d , son of Godwin. Earl Godwin and King Edward were reconciled the f o l l o w ing year, so Harold was restored to his earldom-but not for long. A t E a s t e r 1053 Godwin died, so Harold became Earl of Wessex, and the ear ld o m o f E a st Anglia returned to Æ lfgar.[2][3] Æ lfgar (died c.?1062) was the son of Leofric, Earl of Mercia, by his f a m o u s m other Godgifu (Lady Godiva).[1] He succeeded to his father's tit l e a n d r e sponsibilities on the latter's death in 1057. He gained the ad d i t i o nal title of Earl of East Anglia, but also was exiled for a time. T h r o u g h the first marriage of his daughter he became father-in-law to We l s h k i n g Gruffydd ap Llywelyn, a few years after his death, his daughte r b e c a m e a widow and married the English King Harold. War and exile Æ lfgar profited from the exile of Earl Godwin of Wessex and his sons i n 1 0 5 1 . H e was given the Earldom of East Anglia, which had been that of H a r o l d , son of Godwin. Earl Godwin and King Edward were reconciled the f o l l o w ing year, so Harold was restored to his earldom-but not for long. A t E a s t e r 1053 Godwin died, so Harold became Earl of Wessex, and the ear ld o m o f E a st Anglia returned to Æ lfgar.[2][3] | Mercia, Earl Of Mercia Elfgar (I7228)
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1082 | !SOURCE: Genealogies of Rhode Island Families, from Rhode Island Periodicals (Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1983), 2:8. !SOURCE: M.M. Wilkinson, _Genealogy of Wilkinson and Kindred Families_ (Shelby, Miss.: Shelby Book Store, 1949), p. 75. !SOURCE: Abby Isabel Brown Bulkley, The Chad Browne Memorial, Consisting of Genealogical Memoirs of a Portion of the Descendants of Chad and Elizabeth Browne (Brooklyn, N.Y., 1888), p. 13. !NOTE: The tallest man in Rhode Island in his day: 7 ft., 2 inches. --A.I.B. Bulkley | Jenckes, Joseph Governor (I45095)
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1083 | (21) dead (21) dead | Massey, Thomas (I45405)
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1084 | (21)dead (21)dead | Bunker, Tristram (I45651)
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1085 | (children) (children) | Jones, Sarah (I45561)
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1086 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S101@ PAGE "New York, Land Records, 1630-1975," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89WZ-J9MD-T?cc=2078654&wc=M7CM-TWL%3A358133801%2C359011301 : [REFERENCE-ERROR]), Dutchess > Deeds 1811-1814 vol 22-23 > image 162 of 628; multiple county courthouses, New York. NOTE @N2934@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89WZ-J9MD-T NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89WZ-J9MD-T | Schenck, Henry (I45324)
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1087 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S101@ PAGE "New York, Land Records, 1630-1975," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WT-4KRR?cc=2078654&wc=M7H1-538%3A358137801%2C358904301 : [REFERENCE-ERROR]), Kings > Conveyances 1679-1736 vol 1-4 > image 544 of 666; multiple county courthouses, New York. NOTE @N2201@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WT-4KRR?view=explore NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WT-4KRR?view=explore | Emans, Andries (I45498)
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1088 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S111@ PAGE "New York, Probate Records, 1629-1971," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?cc=1920234&wc=Q758-4W5%3A213306101%2C226625101 : 28 May 2014), New York > Wills 1767-1769 vol 26 > image 93 of 377; county courthouses, New York. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore | Field, Robert (I45201)
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1089 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S111@ PAGE "New York, Probate Records, 1629-1971," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?cc=1920234&wc=Q758-4W5%3A213306101%2C226625101 : 28 May 2014), New York > Wills 1767-1769 vol 26 > image 93 of 377; county courthouses, New York. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore | Hicks, Elizabeth (I45202)
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1090 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S249@ PAGE "Family Tree," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org : modified 05 June 2025, 18:23), entry for John Worth (PID https://ark.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:LHYG-BZ8 ); contributed by various users. _LINK https://ark.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:LHYG-BZ8 NOTE https://ark.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:LHYG-BZ8 PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-XGZ : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Jethro Worth, 1754. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-XGZ NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-XGZ _LINK https://search.ancestry.com/collections/2129/records/179012 NOTE https://search.ancestry.com/collections/2129/records/179012 _LINK https://search.ancestry.com/collections/27065/records/258 NOTE https://search.ancestry.com/collections/27065/records/258 PAGE New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Vital Records of Nantucket, Massachusetts to the Year 1850 _LINK https://search.ancestry.com/collections/61401/records/135492139 NOTE https://search.ancestry.com/collections/61401/records/135492139 PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-824 : Thu May 23 00:30:06 UTC 2024), Entry for Thomas Crosbe and Mary Worth, 13 Nov 1718. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-82W NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-82W PAGE William M. Worth, Descendants of John Worth of Nantucket, son of William Worth and Sarah Macy., http://history.vineyard.net/worthw1.htm. PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCZ7-85T : Thu May 23 01:49:10 UTC 2024), Entry for John Worth and Anne Sarson, 8 Sep 1704. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCZ7-85T NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCZ7-85T PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-6VF : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Joseph Worth, 1696. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-6VF NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-6VF PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-F9Y : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Nathaniell Worth, 1687. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-F9Y NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-F9Y PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-X31 : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Jonathan Worth, 1685. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-X31 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-X31 PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-FX4 : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Richard Worth, 1692. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-FX4 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-FX4 PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-ZDQ : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Sarah Worth, 1708. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-ZDQ NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-ZDQ PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-49Y : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for William Worth, 1694. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-49Y NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-49Y PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3P5 : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for John Worth, 1725. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3P5 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3P5 PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PJ : 15 January 2020), John Worth, 1666. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PJ NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PJ PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHR : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for Sarah Worth, 1727. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHR NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHR PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHP : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for Sarrah Worth, 1708. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHP NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHP PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-ZXY : Thu May 23 00:29:06 UTC 2024), Entry for John Worth and Darcas Hawes, 22 Dec 1724. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-ZXY NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-ZXY PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-CBW : Thu May 23 01:41:52 UTC 2024), Entry for John Worth and Ame Sarson, 1 Sep 1704. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-CBW NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-CBW PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-XL9 : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for John Worth, 1725. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-XL9 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-XL9 PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-X2B : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for John Worth, 1706. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-X2B NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-X2B PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-L4Z : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for Darcas Worth, 1730. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-L4Z NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-L4Z | Worth, John (I45602)
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1091 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S249@ PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PK : 15 January 2020), Sarah Macy in entry for John Worth, 1666. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PK NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PK PAGE Genealogy of the Macy family from 1635-1868Statement of Responsibility: compiled by Silvanus J. MacyAuthors: Macy, Silvanus Jenkins, 1833- (Main Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: Albany, New York : Joel Munsell, 1868Physical: 457 p., [30] leaves of plates : ill., facsims., ports ; 25 cm.Subject Class: 929.273 M259SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 1206440 Item 1 PAGE Genealogy of Kathryn Emily (Lamb) BoostedStatement of Responsibility: Kathryn Irene (Boosted) BobkoAuthors: Bobko, Kathryn Irene Boosted, 1951- (Main Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: Chicago, Illinois : K.I.B. Bobko, 1984Physical: 176 leaves : geneal. tables, ports.Subject Class: 929.273 B644SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 1321055 Item 11 PAGE Shaking the family treeStatement of Responsibility: co-compilers Irene Macy Strieby Shreve and Marilyn Macy DixAuthors: Shreve, Irene Macy Strieby (Main Author) Dix, Marilyn Macy (Added Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: Columbus, Ohio : I. Shreve, 1985Physical: 104 p., [10] p. of plates : ill., coats of arms, ports.Subject Class: 929.273 M259SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 1321154 Item 9 PAGE Chapman and allied familiesStatement of Responsibility: by Lena E. SweetAuthors: Sweet, Lena E. (Lena E. Bartlett), 1922- (Main Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: Saranac, Michigan : L.E. Sweet, 1980Physical: 203 p., [1] leaf of plates : port.Subject Class: 929.273 C366SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 1033786 Item 5 PAGE Woodburn, Coffin, and allied Nantucket families -- : Barnard, Coleman, Folger, Gardner, Macy, & StarbuckStatement of Responsibility: compiled by Jean W. HendersonAuthors: Henderson, Emma Jean W. (Jean Woodburn), 1927- (Main Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book on FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: Salt Lake City, Utah : Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, 1997Physical: on 1 microfilm reel : ill. ; 35 mm. SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 1598463 Item 3 PAGE Ancestries of John Moran Foy and Samuel Calvert Foy & their wives Louisa Macy and Lucinda Macy, all of southern CaliforniaStatement of Responsibility: compiled by Ella Foy O'Gorman (Mrs. Michael Martin O'Gorman)Authors: O'Gorman, Ella Foy, b. 1862 (Main Author)Format: Manuscript/Manuscript with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: 1935Physical: 245 leavesSubject Class: 929.273 F838SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 873157 Item 6 PAGE Browne, Foster and related familiesStatement of Responsibility: compiled by Florence A. BrowneAuthors: Browne, Florence A. (Main Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: West Hartford, Connecticut : F.L. Browne, 1967Physical: iii, 154 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., geneal. tables, ports.Subject Class: 929.273 B816SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 514675 Item 2 PAGE The history of Nantucket : county, island and town, including genealogies of the first settlersStatement of Responsibility: by Alexander StarbuckAuthors: Starbuck, Alexander, 1841-1925 (Main Author)Format: Books/Monographs/Book with FicheLanguage: EnglishPublication: Boston, Massachusetts : C.E. Goodspeed, 1924Physical: 871 p. : ill., maps.Subject Class: 974.497 H2SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Fiche 6046898 PAGE The Macy familyAuthors: Pearson, Ralph E. (Ralph Emerson), b. 1904 (Main Author)Format: Manuscript/Typescript Photocopy with FilmLanguage: EnglishPublication: [19--]Physical: 2 v.Subject Class: 929.273 M259SLC, UT Family History Library United States & Canada Film 1425698 Items 12-13 | Macy, Sarah (I45601)
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1092 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S34@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1860", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCQP-XD6 : Mon Jul 08 14:02:55 UTC 2024), Entry for John J Bennet and Eliza Bennet, 1860. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCQP-XD6 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCQP-XD6 | Bennett, John I. (I45397)
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1093 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S36@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1880", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZD4-7QK : Mon Jan 20 15:34:46 UTC 2025), Entry for John A. Vanderveer and Harriet E. Vanderveer, 1880. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZD4-7QK NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZD4-7QK SOUR: SOUR @S35@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1870", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8JS-C7N : Tue Jan 21 12:24:27 UTC 2025), Entry for John Vanderveer and Harriett Vanderveer, 1870. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8JS-C7N NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8JS-C7N SOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YML NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YML SOUR: SOUR @S98@ PAGE "New York, County Marriages, 1778-1848; 1908-1937", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FFRX-1HP : Sun Mar 10 20:33:12 UTC 2024), Entry for Newman D Waffle and David A Waffle, 31 December 1915. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FFRX-1HY NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FFRX-1HY | Vanderveer, John A (I45875)
|
1094 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YM2 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YM2 | Vanderveer, Mary (I45889)
|
1095 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMG NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMG | Vanderveer, Henry Vernon (I45544)
|
1096 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMK NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMK | Lott, Eliza Ann (I45543)
|
1097 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMR NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMR | Brownjohn, Mary (I45456)
|
1098 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S38@ PAGE "New York, State Census, 1855", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6W7-BPX : Sat Mar 09 14:07:51 UTC 2024), Entry for Elizabeth Vanderveer and Maria Vanderveer, 1855. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6W7-BPX NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6W7-BPX SOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-5SW : Tue Jan 14 22:44:56 UTC 2025), Entry for Elizabeth Vanderveer and Maria Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-5SW NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-5SW | Van Brunt, Elizabeth (I45540)
|
1099 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S46@ PAGE "Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-R9Q4-6?cc=2061550&wc=Q4D7-HZ3%3A353350101%2C353350102%2C353353001 : 20 May 2014), Dukes > Edgartown > Town records 1657-1827 > image 15 of 528; citing Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth, Boston. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-R9Q4-6 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-R9Q4-6 SOUR: SOUR @S50@ PAGE "Family Group Records Collection, Archives Section, 1942-1969," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9QT-BFH?cc=2060211&wc=WWNV-NBN%3A352085901%2C353125801 : 20 May 2014), C > Coffin, Alexander (1790) - Coffman, John S. (1848) > image 868 of 1154; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, compiler, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE @N291@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9QT-BFH NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9QT-BFH | Coffin, John Tristram (I45619)
|
1100 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S46@ PAGE "Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-R9Q4-6?cc=2061550&wc=Q4D7-HZ3%3A353350101%2C353350102%2C353353001 : 20 May 2014), Dukes > Edgartown > Town records 1657-1827 > image 15 of 528; citing Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth, Boston. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-R9Q4-6 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-R9Q4-6 SOUR: SOUR @S50@ PAGE "Family Group Records Collection, Archives Section, 1942-1969," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9QT-BFH?cc=2060211&wc=WWNV-NBN%3A352085901%2C353125801 : 20 May 2014), C > Coffin, Alexander (1790) - Coffman, John S. (1848) > image 868 of 1154; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, compiler, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE @N291@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9QT-BFH NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9QT-BFH | Coffin, James (I45633)
|
1101 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S48@ PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQ8 : 15 January 2020), Peter Coffin in entry for Peter Coffin, 1729. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQ8 NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQ8 | Coffin, Peter (I45621)
|
1102 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S48@ PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQD : 15 January 2020), Hope Gardner in entry for Peter Coffin, 1729. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQD NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQD | Gardner, Hope (I45622)
|
1103 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S50@ PAGE "Family Group Records Collection, Archives Section, 1942-1969," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-897M-K8DP?cc=2060211&wc=WWNV-N2H%3A352087501%2C353185101 : 20 May 2014), L > Loofburrow, Benjamin Wilson (1786) - Loomis, John (1788) > image 210 of 1563; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, compiler, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE @N1404@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-897M-K8DP NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-897M-K8DP PAGE "Family Group Records Collection, Archives Section, 1942-1969," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-K8WB?cc=2060211&wc=WWNV-N2H%3A352087501%2C353185101 : 20 May 2014), L > Loofburrow, Benjamin Wilson (1786) - Loomis, John (1788) > image 209 of 1563; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, compiler, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE @N1405@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-K8WB NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-997M-K8WB | Looke, Experience (I45584)
|
1104 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S93@ PAGE "New York, Kings County Estate Files, 1866-1923", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N7LF-PYF : Sat Mar 09 11:46:12 UTC 2024), Entry for Maria Vanderveer, 1869. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N7LF-PYF NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N7LF-PYF SOUR: SOUR @S37@ PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV | Vanderveer, Doctor Adrian (I45542)
|
1105 | 1. Cordwainer 1. Cordwainer | Morris, William (I45163)
|
1106 | 1856 1856 Ref 5779 Ref 5779 | Anderson, Horatio Thompson (I29076)
|
1107 | 1857 1857 | Hilliard, Lorenzo Dow (I29506)
|
1108 | Aberdeenshire, Scotland | Mar, Margaret of (I45071)
|
1109 | Achtelsbach | Fenstermacher, Johann Jakob Bernhard (I45058)
|
1110 | Age 2 in 1850 census. Can't find any of Age 2 in 1850 census. Can't find any of his children in the 1900 or 1910 Tulare Co. census records. | Teague, Logan (I32158)
|
1111 | All Saints | Morris, William (I45163)
|
1112 | Ancient Cemetery, Yarmouth Port | Sears, Richard (I37779)
|
1113 | Andrew was the first generation to immigrate to the Americas. He was an early settler in New Jersey. Family lore has it that the area was first settled in 1677, when a group consisting primarily of Quakers settled in the area of Crosswicks, the oldest of the Chesterfield's three "villages". They sheltered in tents made from the ship KENT's sails. Family lore also has it that he migrated to Orange County. | Smith, Andrew (I45119)
|
1114 | Apparently died the same year as his brother, Moses. | Hallett, Joseph (I45217)
|
1115 | Arthur had a Ph.D. in soil science and worked at Camp Detrick in Frederick, Maryland during the war. He met Jean R. Clawson there (who also had a Ph.D. in microbiology). There are family stories about Agent Orange, LSD, death of a friend by suicide (fed unknowingly LSD by the government). Arthur eventually moved to Bethesda, Maryland where he rose to the highest level in government ranks, being eventually the sole person to evaluate USDA grants related to soil science. | Newman, Arthur Stanley (I45785)
|
1116 | Battle of Halidon Hill | Sutherland, Kenneth (I45070)
|
1117 | Biography: Henry was a Major in the Quartermaster's Corps in the American Revolutionary War. During campaigns of the Army in New York State it was his responsibility to keep the Army in adequate supplies. His wife, Hannah Brett, was a granddaughter of Madam Brett, who inherited her father's share of the Rombout patent, covering a large section of Dutchess County, and who, upon her husband's early death, managed her many square miles herself. The Brett-Teller mansion which still stands in the heart of Beacon, New York, was built by her and later became the home of Major Henry and his large family. During the Revolution it became famed for its generous hospitality. Washington, Hamilton, Lafayette and other notables were entertained there. Also it became a storage station for supplies. Major Henry engaged actively in political as well as military affairs before, during and after the war. He was a signer of the Articles of Association and one of the Committee of Observation in July, 1775. He was one of the deputies from Dutchess County to the Provincial Congress in 1775, 1776 and 1777, and following the achievement of independence was a member of the State Assembly in 1791. In private life he was a successful farmer and miller. (Source: Schenck Family Genealogy Forum) SAR Patriot #: P-285407 Major in New York Militia SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 | Schenck, Major Henry (I45321)
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1118 | Blackwell Burial Ground Blackwell Burial Ground | Blackwell, Colonel Jacob Francis (I45128)
|
1119 | Blackwell Burial Ground Blackwell Burial Ground | Hallett, Lydia (I45240)
|
1120 | Bockenheim | Eichelberger, Captain Johann Valentine (I24980)
|
1121 | Bp.31Jan1911. Bp.31Jan1911. | Thorne, Hannah (I45266)
|
1122 | Brothers Charles, Joseph, Francis and Clement Buckman were members of St. Mary's County, Maryland Militia in 1794. Francis served with the Kentucky Militia. Dec 1803 he was fined five shillings on a charge of delinquency. April 27, 1796 left for Kentucky. Moved with family to Washington County, Kentucky with Buckman Clan and William Hayden around 1796, going overland by way of Pittsburg. At Pittsburg, they continued by flatboat down the Ohio River to Limestone (now Maysville), Kentucky where the journey again continued by land. Lived in Rolling Fork. Without moving, the Buckman families lived in Nelson County, Virginia, Washington County, Kentucky and Marion County, Kentucky. When they arrived in this area, they settled in what was then called Nelson County, Virginia. When Kentucky became the fifteenth state of the United States, the area that was Nelson County, Virginia was divided into Nelson County and Washington County. Washington County was further divided in 1834 to create Marion County. | Buckman, Francis (I8537)
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1123 | Burying Point Cemetery | Shattuck, Samuel William (I45612)
|
1124 | Children were raised in the Bunker family and took on their last name Both children were raised in the Bunker family and took on their last name. | Briggs, Marion (I45698)
|
1125 | Church of England Parish Church | Family: Thomas Barnard / Anne Cooke (F25091)
|
1126 | Colchester Burying Ground | Pratt, Mary (I9229)
|
1127 | Cologne Dutch Reformed Church | Becx, Maria Elisabetha (I45517)
|
1128 | Colonial Burying Ground | Severance, John (I45628)
|
1129 | dead dead | VanSiclen, Ferdinand (I45885)
|
1130 | Died after the Battle of Dunkirk, West Flanders in the presence of his friend John Manning, who later married his widow Bridget. | Manningham, Captain Henry Walter (I45230)
|
1131 | Died as a child | Newman, Malcolm (I45841)
|
1132 | Died as infant Died as baby | Schenck, Harold Crocheson (I45680)
|
1133 | Died in a Threshing machine accident | Smith, William Henry (I45739)
|
1134 | Died of Lockjaw | Moe, Eno (I45856)
|
1135 | Donnie (Catlin/Bunker) and Budsie grew up together, never had children, and both left their family photos and memorabilia with Ann Bunker. | Fetters, Franklyn (I45666)
|
1136 | Dutch Church | Van Duyn, Jackomyntie (I45347)
|
1137 | Dutch Reformed Church | Van Couwenhoven, Neeltje Gerritse (I45354)
|
1138 | Dutch Reformed Church | Pieterszen, Engeltje Laurens (I45490)
|
1139 | Dutch Reformed Church | van Cleef, Rebecca (I45497)
|
1140 | Dutch Reformed Church | Bergen, Michael Hansen (I45526)
|
1141 | Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | Hendricks, Elsje Pieters (I45528)
|
1142 | Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | de Mandeville, Yellis Jansen (I45529)
|
1143 | Eugenia worked in Devil's Lake, North Dakota as a practical nurse after she was widowed. | Newman, Eugenia (I45764)
|
1144 | Event Description: Barkaloo Cemetery | Van Barkeloo, Willem Harmense (I45373)
|
1145 | Event Description: Barkaloo Cemetery | Cortelyou, Maria (I45374)
|
1146 | Event Description: Dutch Reformed Church | van Cleef, Rebecca (I45497)
|
1147 | Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church | Van Siclen, Antje (I45391)
|
1148 | Event Description: Reformed Dutch Church | Schenk, Johannes (I45317)
|
1149 | First Cemetery | Jenkins, Peter (I45563)
|
1150 | First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery | Thorne, Hannah (I45266)
|
1151 | First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Wyck, Cornelius (I45267)
|
1152 | Flatbush Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | Van Der Werven, Catharina (I45457)
|
1153 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church | Bergen, Femmetje Isabella (I45535)
|
1154 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Staats, Jan Janszen (I45288)
|
1155 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Bennet, Wynant Joost (I45348)
|
1156 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Bennet, Wynant Janszen (I45392)
|
1157 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Vanderveer, Cornelius Aertse (I45537)
|
1158 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Bennet, Jan Willemsen (I45390)
|
1159 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Der Veer, Jan Cornelise (I45534)
|
1160 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Bergen, Femmetje Isabella (I45535)
|
1161 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Wyckoff, Jannetje Garrets (I45536)
|
1162 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Polhemus, Anna (I45262)
|
1163 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Praa, Pieter Pieterse (I45284)
|
1164 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Rapalje, Jannetie Jorise (I45332)
|
1165 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Swart, Jacomintje Jacobse (I45339)
|
1166 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Duyn, Gerrett Cornellisen (I45340)
|
1167 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Voorhees, Gerrit Coertszen (I45352)
|
1168 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Janse, Lysbeth (I45377)
|
1169 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Suebering, Lambertje Roelofse (I45418)
|
1170 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Couwenhoven, Jan Gerritsen (I45429)
|
1171 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Trico, Catalyntje Jeronimus (I45431)
|
1172 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Rapelje, Joris Janssen (I45432)
|
1173 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Denyse, Annetje Theunis (I45433)
|
1174 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Lott, Pieter Engelberts I (I45447)
|
1175 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Lamberts, Gertrude (I45448)
|
1176 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | van Couwenhoven, Marritje Gerritse (I45469)
|
1177 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Agges, Tryntje (I45472)
|
1178 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Dyke, Jan Thomasse (I45473)
|
1179 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Badie, Marie (I45474)
|
1180 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Van Dyck, Angnietje Jans (I45476)
|
1181 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Bennet, Adriaen Willemsen (I45477)
|
1182 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Verkerk, Jan Janse (I45506)
|
1183 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Jans, Swaentje (I45512)
|
1184 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Nevius, Johannes III (I45518)
|
1185 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Bleljck, Adriantje Cornelisse (I45519)
|
1186 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Nevius, Catherine Johanna (I45521)
|
1187 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Nijssen, Teunis (I45522)
|
1188 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Sales, Phoebe (I45523)
|
1189 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | Nyssen, Femmetje (I45527)
|
1190 | Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church | Lamberts, Gertrude (I45448)
|
1191 | Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church | Witt, Catherine De (I45449)
|
1192 | Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church | Lott, Hendrick (I45450)
|
1193 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church | Wyckoff, Geertje Pieterse (I45379)
|
1194 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church | Van Siclen, Antje (I45391)
|
1195 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | Terhune, Roelof Janse (I45359)
|
1196 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | Lott, Johannes Hendricksen (I45452)
|
1197 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery Old Newtown Cemetery Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | van Voorhees, Maritjie Garretje (I45360)
|
1198 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | Wyckoff, Pieter Claesen (I1107)
|
1199 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | van Ness, Grietje Cornelis (I1912)
|
1200 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery | Pieterse Luyster, Willemptje (I45351)
|