Matches 11,151 to 11,200 of 82,552
| # | Notes | Linked to |
|---|---|---|
| 11151 | Abstracts of Revolutionary War Pension Files Hall, Abner, S21794, MA Line, soldier was born 22 Feb 1761 at Needham, MA and he lived there at enlistment and about 1791 he moved to Sudbury in Rutland Co., VT and he applied there 7 Mar 1833. | Hall, Abner (I4975)
|
| 11152 | Abstracts of Revolutionary War Pension Files Hall, Abner, S21794, MA Line, soldier was born 22 Feb 1761 at Needham, MA and he lived there at enlistment and about 1791 he moved to Sudbury in Rutland Co., VT and he applied there 7 Mar 1833. | Hall, Abner (I4975)
|
| 11153 | Abstracts of Revolutionary War Pension Files Hananiah, S13277, MA & NH Line, applied 15 Aug 1832 in Orleans District of VT aged 74 & living in Sherbrooke Co in Province of Lower Canada, soldier was born 20 Jan 1758 in MA and lived at Kane in Cheshire Co., NH at enlistment and lived there until age of 41 then moved to Eaton in Lower Canada. | Hall, Hannaniah (I433)
|
| 11154 | According to "Ancient Landmarks of Plymouth", Part II - Genealogical Register of Plymouth Families - Page 21; By William T. Davis - Published 1883 Elizabeth (Lothrop), wid. of Thomas Witherell; 2d wife of Samuel Bartlett. Vital Records of Plymouth Massachusetts to the Year 1850, Book One [p. 247] Purpose of Marriage [intentions] May 13, 1738 Mr. Thomas Wethrell Jr. of Plymouth & Mrs Elizabeth Lothrop of Barnstable [p. 236] Purpose of Marriage [intentions] Nov. 5, 1748 Samll. Bartlett Esq. & Mrs Elizabeth Wethrell, both of Plymouth [p. 232] Marriages consummated by the Rev. Mr. Nathaniel Leonard of Plymo. Nov. 24, 1748 Samll. Bartlett Esq. & Mrs. Elizabeth Wethrell, both of Plymo., mar. at Plymouth Book Two [p. 67] The children of Samuel Bartlett Esq. & Elizabeth Bartlett his second wife 1) Samuel Bartlett born Sept. 3rd 1749 Sabbath day about 3 o'clock in the forenoon; decd. Monday July 2nd 1750 at 7 ½ o'clock in the forenoon 2) Samuel Bartlett born April 15th 1751 Monday half after 1 o'clock PM 3) Elizabeth Bartlett born Aug. 9th 1753 Thursday about 2 o'clock in the morning 4) Lothrop Bartlett born Aug. 7th 1755 Thursday half an hour after 7 o'clock AM; decd. June 13 1756 5) Hannah Bartlett born April 11th 1757 Monday about 1 o'clock AM 6) Isaac Bartlett born Oct. 5th 1759 Friday about half after 2 o'clock PM | Lothrop, Elizabeth (I102742)
|
| 11155 | According to Alexander M. Hall's death certificate Allie Manaugh was informant. Allie is Alexander's daughter. | Hall, Allie Belle (I1491)
|
| 11156 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, he was was a child of Allen Hall and Meria. _______ https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4CC-7SH | Hall, Enos (I233)
|
| 11157 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, he was was a child of Allen Hall and Meria. | Hall, Richard (I234)
|
| 11158 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, he was was a son of Allen Hall and Meria. | Hall, Jason (I236)
|
| 11159 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, Moley Hall was was a child of Allen Hall and Meria. | Hall, Mary "Moley" (I230)
|
| 11160 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, she was a child of Allen Hall and Maria. | Hall, Nabby (I7317)
|
| 11161 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, she was was a child of Allen Hall and Meria. | Hall, Esther (I7316)
|
| 11162 | According to an IGI record extracted from locality birth records, she was was a child of Allen Hall and Meria. | Hall, Nancy (I232)
|
| 11163 | according to Elisabeth's newspaper obit. Elisabeth's wishes were to be cremated. She was a member of Calsin Presbyterian Church: 2501 Ruby Lane, Louisville, Ky. | Walker, Mary Elisabeth (I1044)
|
| 11164 | According to FindaGrave, he is believed to have been buried in Newman Cemetery in East Providence. | Hall, Edward of Rehoboth, Y-DNA Family 006 (I164)
|
| 11165 | According to FindaGrave, he took part in the "Boston Tea Party." | Bassett, Joseph (I9805)
|
| 11166 | According to Harriet Bulkley Latimer's autobiography (pp 10-11), her father died at sea when she was 12 years old: "At the early age of twelve, I was deprived of the care and protection of a father, whom I almost idolized. I well remember with what pride I looked upon his manly form... Never shall I forget the morning of that day which brought the sad intelligence, that my mother was a widow,-- that I was fatherless. He died far from home, from friends and sympathy, and his body was committed to ocean's waves to rest amid its waters, 'till the morning of the resurrections... A passing barque that had spoken his ship, was greeted with the intelligence of the death of its captain, but the ship itself was never heard of more. Undoubtedly it foundered at sea, and none survived to tell the story of his death or of their own calamity..." | Latimer, Capt. Robert (I11678)
|
| 11167 | According to her autobigraphy (p. 171): "I remained in Woodstock only one year, having been induced, by the urgent entreaties of a suffering sister [Eliza Sinclair (Latimer) Patton], to consent to make my home with her during the ensuing winter. Accordingly, in the autumn of 1835, I again changed my address, feeling that truly 'Here I have no continuing city,' and took up temporary abode in New York. "The nine months I spent in that city were employed in relieving my sister from her family cares and burdens, in teaching her children, and in seeking to find my place among the benevolent operations of the day." | Latimer, Harriet Bulkley (I11604)
|
| 11168 | According to her autobiography, her husband Milo went first to Augusta about 1817, and then in 1819, she followed with the children. | Latimer, Harriet Bulkley (I11604)
|
| 11169 | According to her autobiography, she commenced her school in Middlebury in December 1829. | Latimer, Harriet Bulkley (I11604)
|
| 11170 | According to her autobiography, she decided to take up teaching and in 1825 commenced a school in Vergennes, Vermont. | Latimer, Harriet Bulkley (I11604)
|
| 11171 | According to her autobiography, she was living in Middlebury in 1830, but I have not located her in the census. | Latimer, Harriet Bulkley (I11604)
|
| 11172 | According to her autobiography, two years after the death of her husband, she left Augusta to return north. She stopped in Charleston, South Carolina on the way. There she visited her brother's grave. As her mother had re-married, they went via New York to Middletown and by September reached Middlebury. | Latimer, Harriet Bulkley (I11604)
|
| 11173 | according to his headstone Addison was a member of Co. B 66th Reg. Ind. Infantry | Turner, Addison G. (I1322)
|
| 11174 | According to his mother's autobiography (p. 167): "By hastening his journey William was enabled to join his brother in Philadelphia on the morning of his marriage, and to proceed with the newly-wedded pair to Virginia, which had been selected as the place of their future residence." | Family F5287
|
| 11175 | According to his probate papers, his only heir was his sister Hannah Hall. An Asa Hall was his Administrator. | Hall, Rufus of Raynham (I64366)
|
| 11176 | According to his Will, his wife was still living. | Cole, Ruth Chase (I102632)
|
| 11177 | According to Jacobus, Famlies of Ancient New Haven, Vol. 2, p. 446, a Nathaniel Cook had following children: 1. Anna, bp. 2 Jan 1774 NHx, bu. 28 Sep 1774 NHx. 2. Mary Anna, bp 24 Sep 1775 NHx. | Cooke, Nathaniel (I85977)
|
| 11178 | According to Jeff Hall, he has only seen mention of her in one source. | Hall, Joanna (I14979)
|
| 11179 | According to Jeff Hall, Richard and Martha's first child, Sarah, was conceived out of wedlock, for which her parents were punished or fined by the Suffolk County court. Her birth date would be about 1671 or 1672, and she only lived to be 19. | Hall, Sarah (I13172)
|
| 11180 | According to Mayflower Births and Deaths, Vol. 2, page 442 Thomas Gibbs was born 23 Mar 1636 in Sandwich, Massachusetts. He was the son of Thomas Gibbs, Sr. of Sandwich, MA and an unknown mother who died on or after 1693 ("New England Marriage Prior to 1700," page 300). NOTE: Some records show Thomas Gibbs, Jr.'s birth year as 1646 but that may be a mistake that was propagated through the Family Data Collection database in Provo, Utah. [Thanks to FAG member Melinda for pointing out the birth year discrepancy.] On 23 Dec 1674 Thomas Gibbs married Alice Warren (1646-1732) in Sandwich, Massachusetts. Alice's grandfather was Richard Warren, one of the original Mayflower passengers. According to "Mayflower Births and Deaths, Vol. 1 and 2" Alice Warren & Thomas Gibbs had the following children together: 1. Bethiah Gibbs (b. 10 Dec 1675; d. before 23 June 1725 (father's will)) 2. Abigail Gibbs (b. ?; d. pre 19 Nov 1741 (husband's 2nd marriage) 3 Thomas Gibbs (b. 28 Jan 1679; d. after 9 May 1733 (father's estate) 4. Sarah Gibbs (b. circa 1682; d. 28 Oct 1716) 5. Cornelius Gibbs (b. ?; d. ?) 6. Warren Gibbs (b. circa 1689; d. after 9 May 1733 (father's estate) 7. Ebenezer Gibbs (b. ?; d. "beyond the sea" in June 1725) 8. Jabez Gibbs (b. ?; d. "beyond the sea" in June 1725) According to "Mayflower Births and Deaths, Vol. 2" Thomas Gibbs died in Sandwich, Massachusetts on 7 Jan 1732. | Gibbs, Thomas Jr. (I22774)
|
| 11181 | According to McGray Genealogy, William Pringle McGray died at sea at the age of 2, aboard the ship Village Queen, on passage from Boston to Monte Video. | McGray, William Pringle (I3753)
|
| 11182 | According to McGray Genealogy, William Pringle McGray died at sea at the age of 2, aboard the ship Village Queen, on passage from Boston to Monte Video. | McGray, William Pringle (I3753)
|
| 11183 | According to NEHGS Register, Vol. 126, p. 276 (1971): Phinehas Briggs served in the Revolutionary War in 1775, and from 1776 until the end of the war as a minute man in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. He received Pension No. S-12328 beginning in 1833. Jabez Briggs of Colraine was witness. He resided in Norton until 1785 when he removed to Rehoboth. In 1791 he was in Savoy, Mass. Nathaniel Carpenter, Jr., of Bullock's Grant, cordwainer, sold 50 acres of lot #43 (being in township alotted to Captain Gallup of the Canadian Expedition) to Phinehas Briggs of Bullock's Grant, 17 October 1794. The deed was witnessed by Nathaniel and Cyril Carpenter (Berkshire County Deed, 5:326). On the 1st Tuesday in October, 1798 Phinehas Briggs sold to Joseph Williams of Lenox, Trader, 17 acres, 4 rods in Savoy, for $85.66. Suit for debt was ordered by the General COurt 22 Oct. 1798. About this time Phinehas Briggs moved to Russia, Herkimer Co., NY, where he remained until his death. | Briggs, Phinehas (I2708)
|
| 11184 | According to the 1880 census from Deblois, Washington Co, Maine, Sumner Torrey was born in Beddington, Washington Co, Maine, and was a "laborer". Sumner married Abigail (Oakes) on December 5, 1859, in Deblois, ME. | Torrey, Sumner (I12251)
|
| 11185 | According to the 1900 census, she had been divorced. | Family F22672
|
| 11186 | according to the 1910 census, Olive was the mother of 6 children, 4 were living | Howes, Olive (I97695)
|
| 11187 | According to the 1910 cesus, she had had 3 children and two were living. | Hall, Amitta "Amity" (I7022)
|
| 11188 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Butler, B.K.". (I19341)
|
| 11189 | According to the book "Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust" published by the Westmoreland Historical Society, Westmoreland, New Hampshire, 1989, Gaius and Esther Mason Hall had a child that died 9 June 1807. No other information given. Also a child that died 5 March 1809. That would be the same day that Esther died. | Mason, Esther (I4018)
|
| 11190 | According to the IGI, based on a record by a member of the LDS Church, he married Polly Hall, about 1789, in East Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut. | Lord, George (I3284)
|
| 11191 | According to the IGI, based on Parish Records for Bromyard, Richardus Halle, son of Thomae Halle and Annae, was baptized at Bromyard. | Hall, Richard (I1351)
|
| 11192 | According to the IGI, Moses Hall, son of Ichabod Hall and Lois, was born 8 October 1732 in Enfield. This data was obtained by extraction of birth information from statewide indexes for Vermont and Connecticut. It references the Barbour collection. ---------- From "History of Enfield": 2:1629 1730 Ebenr Hall (son of Ichabod & Lois Hall) was born novembr 9th 1730 1732 Moses Hall (son of Ichabod and Lois Hall) was born october 8th 1732 1735/6 Lois Hall (Daughter of Ichabod & Lois Hall) was born march 30th 1735/6 1736/7 Hannah Hall (Daughtr of Ichabod & Lois Hall (was born march 105th 1736/7 1738/9 Elizabeth Hall (Daughr of Ichabod & Lois Hall) was born march ye 15th 1738/9 1741 Eunice Hall (Daughtr of Ichabod and Loas Hall) was born march ye 26th 1741 she being a twin; ye other child (being a boy) was still Born 1745 miriam Hall (Daughr of Ichabod & Lois Hall) was born April 4th 1745 48 Mary Hall (Daughr of Ichabod & Lois Hall) was born Septembr 23d 1748 Elisha Hall son of Ichabod and Lois Hall was born november 22d 1761 [I think this was transcribed incorrectly and should be 1751] 2:1617 Ebenezer Hall son of Icabod Hall and Lois his wife was born novbr 9th 1730 2:1617 Moses Hall son of Icobod Hall and Lois his wif was born octbr 8th anno Domini 1732 2:1620 Lois hall daughter of Ichabod hall and Lois his wife was Born march ye 30th 1735 | Hall, Moses Sr. (I3369)
|
| 11193 | According to the Republic Township Militia-1862 roster: Alexand Hall age 18 was a member. If this informaiton is for this correct Alexander Hall his age is incorrect. He would have only been 16 at the time. But 2 of his brothers were also members of the Militia and it's very possible this Alexand lied about his age to inlist with his brothers. | Hall, Alexander M. (I1299)
|
| 11194 | According to the Rogers Silver Book, p. 1, "Her date of death is unknown. She probably died in Leiden, The Netherlands; there is no evidence that she emigrated to the Plymouth Colony... The 1622 Leiden poll tax list shows that his wife Alice, two daughters, Elizabeth Rogers and Margaret Rogers, and younger son John Rogers remained in Leiden in the household of Anthony Clemens, one of the English Separatists whi did not emigrate to Plymouth." __________ From FindaGrave: Pilgrim Thomas Rogers married in Watford, Northamptonshire, 24 October 1597, Alice Cosford, daughter of George Cosford. Their 6 (at most) children: Thomas Jr., (possibly) Richard, John, Elizabeth, & Margaret. | Cosford, Alice (I12629)
|
| 11195 | According to the Rogers Silver Book, p. 1: "Thomas Rogers and his family had left England by 22 February 1617 when he bought a house on Barbarasteeg at Leiden for 475 guilders. In Leiden Rogers worked as a 'greyntrapier' (greyn weaver) or camlet merchant. On 1 April 1620 Rogers sold the house on Barbarasteeg to another English immigrant, Modecai Cohen, for 300 guilders. "Later in 1620, Thomas Rogers and his oldest surviving child, Joseph Rogers, came to Plymouth on the Mayflower." _____________________ From FindaGrave: Thomas Rogers (Mayflower Pilgrim) was born circa 1571 at Watford, Co. Northamptonshire, England. He was the son of William Rogers and Eleanor. Thomas Rogers (Mayflower Pilgrim) married Alice Cosford, daughter of George Dosford and Margaret (Willis?), on 24 October 1597 at Watford, Co. Northamptonshire, England. Our earliest known encounter with Pilgrim Thomas Rogers was on 25 June 1618 when he became a citizen of Leiden, Holland, vouched for by William Jepson, formerly of Worksop, Notts., and by Roger Wilson, formerly of Sandwich, Kent Co. Engalnd. On 1 April 1620 Thomas sold his Leiden house on the Barbarasteeg for 300 guilders, in preparation for the journey to New England. Governor Bradford says in his history of the Plymouth settlement that on board the Mayflower were "Thomas Rogers and Joseph his son; his other children came afterwards......Thomas Rogers died in the first sickness but his son Joseph is still living (1650) and is married and hath six children. The rest of Thomas Rogers' (children) came over and are married and have many children." Therefore we know that Thomas and his son Joseph arrived at Cape Cod aboard the ship Mayflower and on 11 November 1620 according to their calendar, or 21 November on ours, Thomas was one of forty-one signers of the Mayflower Compact. Thomas did not live through the rigorous winter which carried off half the group but young Joseph, like so many of the children, did survive. Recent discoveries show that Thomas had a family living in Leiden, Holland, when the 1622 Poll Tax was taken. In the Over "t Hoff Quarter, in a house with other Pilgrim families in St. Peter's Churchyard west-side, were Jan Thomas, orphan from England without means; Elsgen Rogiers, widow of Thonis Rogiers, an Englishwoman; and Lysbeth and Grietgen her children, poor people. Translated this could read John, son of Thomas; Elizabeth Rogers, widow of Thomas; and Elizabeth and Margaret, her children. At that period the word orphan meant that either or both parents were dead. In the 1623 Plymouth Colony land division, Joseph Rogers was allotted two acres-one for himself and one on behalf of his late father. He may have been living in the household of Governor Bradford with who he was grouped on 22 May 1627, in the division of cattle. Joseph and twelve other inhabitants of Plymouth received "an heyfer of the last year which was of the Great white-back cow that was brought over in the Ann and two shee goats." Governor Bradford's statement that the rest of Thomas Rogers' children came over and married and had children, seems clearly to indicate that more than one of his children came to New England after 1620. We know that his son John came to Plymouth about 1630. Although many other male Rogers immigrants have been claimed as sons of Thomas the Pilgrim, none of the claims has been proved and some have been disproved. Therefore it seems likely that at least one of the Rogers daughters who were living in Holland in 1622 came over. John and Joseph Rogers each named a daughter Elizabeth, perhaps thereby indicating that their sister Elizabeth lived in New England. Unfortunately extensive research has failed to uncover any further evidence. John Rogers came to Plymouth about 1630, when the last of the Leiden contingent arrived and was in Plymouth Colony on 25 March 1633 when he was taxed 9 shillings. The proof of his identity lies in a grant made 6 April 1640 to "Joseph Rogers and John Rogers his brother...fifty acres apeece of upland....at the North River." Both then had growing families to carry forward the Rogers heritage, although only Joseph's descendants would carry forward the Rogers name beyond the fourth generation." He,(Thomas) died in Plymouth Colony in the winter of 1620/21 "in the first sickness." Children of Thomas Rogers (Mayflower Pilgrim)and Alice Cosford: * Thomas Rogers (b. 24 Mar 1598/99) * poss Richard Rogers (b. 12 Mar 1599) * Joseph Rogers ( b. 23 Jan 1602/3, d. between 2 and 15 Jan 1677/78) * John Rogers (b. 6 Apr 1606, d. bt 26 Aug 1691 - 20 Sep 1692) * Elizabeth Rogers (b. 26 Dec 1609) * Margaret Rogers (b. 30 May 1613) Citations: [Ann T. [Revised by], (Originally compiled by Alice W. A. Westgate) Reeves, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Descendants of the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth, Mass. December 1620: Family of Thomas Rogers (Plymouth, MA: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 2000). Hereinafter cited as Rogers-Silver. Clifford L. Stott, "English Ancestry of the Pilgrim Thomas Rogers and His Wife Alice (Cosford) Rogers", Genealogist, The 10 no.2 (1989). Hereinafter cited as "English Ancestry of Thomas Rogers."Ann T. [Revised by], (Originally compiled by Alice W. A. Westgate) Reeves, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Descendants of the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth, Mass. December 1620: Family of Thomas Rogers (Plymouth, MA: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 2000), 1:1. Hereinafter cited as Rogers-Silver. Ann T. [Revised by], (Originally compiled by Alice W. A. Westgate) Reeves, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Descendants of the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth, Mass. December 1620: Family of Thomas Rogers (Plymouth, MA: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 2000), 1:2. Hereinafter cited as Rogers-Silver. ------------------------- CHRISTENING: 11 Jul 1587 DEATH DATE IS: BET 11 Jan AND 10 Apr 1621. His remains are in a sarcophagus on a hill over looking Plymouth Rock. | Rogers, Thomas of the Mayflower (I12630)
|
| 11196 | According to the SAR record for Kingley Childs, John Woods, Jr., was a private in the Massachusetts Militia John Woods - Groton - Private in Capt. Bood's Company; Col. Jonathan Reed's Sixth Middlesex County Regiment. Lieut. John Woods, Sr. - Groton - was a lieutenant int he Militia before the Revolutionary War. | Woods, John Jr. (I15092)
|
| 11197 | According to the Sear Genealogy (p. 104), he died "soon after marriage". | Sears, Stephen (I9253)
|
| 11198 | According to the Whitney Research Group, http://wiki.whitneygen.org/wrg/index.php/Family:Whitney,_Josiah_(1663-1717) She was probably the same Abigail Martin, daughter of Richard and Elizabeth (Gay) Martin, who was born 14 Nov 1669, Boston, MA. She died 6 Dec 1734, Wrentham, MA. | Martin, Abigail of Dorchester (I11380)
|
| 11199 | According to the Winchell Genealogy (Horace V. Winchell and Alexander N. Winchell, 1917), p. 94, it is not proven that he was a son of David Winchell and Mary Trumble. On page 118, it claims that David and Lois Hall were the parents of the following children, all born in Suffield: (based on the birth dates, the first is unlikely) Jedediah, b. 9 May 1755 Lois (twin), b. 12 December 1755 Lucy (twin), b. 12 December 1755 Elizabeth, b. 19 February 1757 | Winchell, Daniel (I4304)
|
| 11200 | According to Walter and Gladys' family bible. Walter Grey Hall died Aug. 26, 1972. He was 68 yrs. 4 months 19 days old. Newspaper Obit: WALTER GREY HALL Walter Grey Hall, 68, Millican Trailer Court, Hanover, died suddenly at 11:15 p.m. Saturday en route to Jewish Hospital in Louisville. He was a native of Jefferson County and a retired carpenter. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Gladys Gray Hall; three sons: Dilver, Darien, Ill.; Donald, Hinsdale, Ill.; and Walter W., Columbus, Ind.; three grandchildren. and a sister, Mrs. Mary Sutherland, Santa Rosa, Calif. Services will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Barnes Funeral Home, Hanover, with burial in Liberty Cemetery. Friends may call after 3 p.m. today. | Hall, Walter Grey (I986)
|