Matches 7,251 to 7,300 of 9,078
# | Notes | Linked to |
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7251 | On the ship manifest of the Fidelia there is listed a Mary Wyburn. She was listed several people away from John and Sarah Wyburn, and her age was listed as 18. But it seems likely that this was Mary Wyburn, John's younger sister. | WYBURN, Mary Minson (I6124)
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7252 | On their marriage record she was listed as Elizabeth W. Scott. Was Scott her married surname or her birth surname? | MCDANIEL, Elizabeth W (I14810)
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7253 | On this census her name was spelled "Myrl" and she worked in an electrical plant. | Family: Olan DeWitt KEMERER / Myrl Susan SUMMERS (F1700)
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7254 | On this census record she was listed as "Gurney E. Twombley." | TWOMBLEY, Ruby L. (I21101)
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7255 | On wedding certificate, his occupation is druggist and his address is given as 580 State St, Springfield, MA The wedding officiant was G.S. Robbins, Minister of the Gospel. His age was 27 years and hers was 23 years. Nellie's address is given as 21 Brown Street, Springfield, MA. | Family: Louis Wales KNIGHT / Nellie Frances TOWNE (F8)
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7256 | On Wilda's birth record in the Birth Register, it lists her father as Illegitimate and her mother as Mary E. Carpenter | UNKNOWN, Unknown (I17921)
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7257 | One family genealogist spells his surname Philpots, but three census records spelled it Philpott. | PHILPOTT, William (I6311)
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7258 | One female 20-30 would probably be Phoebe | ELLIOT, Phoebe (I4725)
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7259 | One genealogist says he was born in Maryland, but the census records show him being born in Pennsylvania. | JASINSKY, John Frederick (I4711)
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7260 | One month old | MARMAN, Rosetta (I20065)
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7261 | One of his gravestones says he was born 17 Sep 1758. | UNDERWOOD, Thadeus (I10270)
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7262 | One of the three girls over five and less than ten | WATKINS, Gulielma (I3660)
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7263 | One of the three girls over five and less than ten | WATKINS, Almeda (I3661)
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7264 | One of the three girls over five and less than ten | WATKINS, Melissa Ann (I3751)
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7265 | One of the three girls over ten and less than fifteen | WATKINS, Mary Ann (I3656)
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7266 | One of the three girls over ten and less than fifteen | WATKINS, Martha Ann (I3658)
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7267 | One of the three girls over ten and less than fifteen | WATKINS, Matilda Ann (I3659)
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7268 | One of the two males aged 16-25 | KELLY, Col. John W. (I16116)
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7269 | One of the two males under age 5. | WATKINS, Benjamin (I3662)
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7270 | One of the two sons aged 16-25. | KELLY, Nathaniel (I16115)
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7271 | One of the victims of a flu epidemic that occurred in Turkey in 1917. | HALLADJIAN, Mithran (I3476)
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7272 | One of two sons age 5-10. | STANTON, Dr. David Sufferins (I13826)
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7273 | One source says he was born 6 Sep 1849. | REIFEL, Jakob Wilhelm (I7527)
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7274 | One source says his name was Thomas Jesse Watkins | WATKINS, Thomas Joseph Sr. (I21251)
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7275 | One source says she was a "Quaker Minister." | STANLEY, Mary S. (I4492)
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7276 | One source says she was from North Carolina | NEWBY, Nancy Anne (I9194)
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7277 | One source spelled his surname D'Arcy. | DARCY, Michael Joseph Sr. (I14800)
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7278 | Only circumstantial evidence suggests that these are the parents of Eleanor A. Leggett. However, that evidence is that they were listed in the 1850 census next to the listing of Eleanor and her family. | LEGGETT, Abraham (I11773)
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7279 | Only her son, Daniel, was living with her in 1860 | LEIPER, Hester (I8439)
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7280 | Opal M. Elliott, age 80, Mt. Carmel West Hospital, July 5, 1983. Daugher of the late Mr. and Mrs. Reuben H. Snedeker, of Union County, Ohio. Preceded in death by husband, James Howard Elliott. Born, reared and married in Marysville before coming to Columbus in 1945. Member of Blue Star Mother's Club, OSU Mother's Club, an active member of Glenwood Methodist Church and its Philanthropies. Beloved mother of four children: James Edward, JoAnn Schaefer, Thomas Hudson, and Suzanne Linebrink. Grandmother of 5, great-grandmother of six and great-grandmother of six. Also survived by her sister, Grace Harvey, and many nieces and nephews and dear friends. | SNEDEKER, Opal Marian (I5122)
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7281 | Operator for Bell Telephone | MUSSEN, Marion Jane (I4075)
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7282 | Organic disease of the heart -- died suddenly. | WATKINS, Margaret Jane (I7006)
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7283 | Original name: Maria Catherina, Dulling | DULING, Mary Catherine (I7154)
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7284 | Original Source: "Short Creek Monthly Meeting: 185., Marriage Certificates 1805-1832" in "The Ohio Yearly Meeting of Friends records, 1760-1965." Roll 24. Indexed by: Carole Dutton Malisiak, February, 2000, page 211. | Family: Joseph HARRIS / Lucinda WATKINS (F2272)
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7285 | Original source: Vol. D., Page 407 Allen County Marriage Records | Family: Levi HAUENSTEIN / Elizabeth MILLER (F2245)
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7286 | Originally his first name was Johannes. | SCHIFERLI, John (I9985)
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7287 | Orrin appears to be a widower as he is listed as living with only his two children and someone who appears to have been his mother. | PARSONS, Orrin (I3900)
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7288 | Orvis Parrish was the first presiding judge to hold court in Logan county, the time being 1818, immediately following its organization, and the place the house or tavern of Edwin Mathers at Belleville. During Judge Parrish’s incumbency the county seat of justice was established at Bellefontaine, and all the details provided for the court and administration of the law. Beginning with judge Parrish, all the judges who sat upon the county bench until 1851, when the new constitution went into effect, were non-resident in Logan. The law, however, provided for "associate judges" for the dispatch of land cases (rarely for criminal cases), and these dignitaries, appointed by the presiding judge, were chosen from the responsible member of local society, and during thirty years included many of the best known citizens of Logan, who thereafter bore the title of "Judge," although their names do not appear in the roster of the bench proper. James Mcllvain, Levi Garwood, James McPherson, Abraham Elder, Joshua Robb, Gabriel Slaughter, William Hoge, Noah Z. McColloch, W. H. McKinnon and Peter Kelly were among the list of associates, none of whom were appointed until after Judge Parrish's term closed. | KELLY, Judge Peter (I3449)
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7289 | OS Plot 41 Grave 6 Grave marker calls her Bernice Cereda. | ORR, Florence Bernice (I16375)
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7290 | Oswald's occupation was listed as Missionary. Their destination was given as Liverpool, Ohio. Their most recent residence had been Colaba, India. | DINHAM, Oswald (I9471)
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7291 | Other sources say he was born in Somerset County, Pennsylvania | WATKINS, Dr. William (I14085)
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7292 | Others say d. Port Richie, FL | CHEEK, William David (I11537)
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7293 | Otto was a widower at this time. | ANDRESEN, Otto (I18779)
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7294 | Outright Murder! It is seldom we have to record open acts of violence in our midst by those who know no law, but it has been manifest for some time that we have a few persons who are perfecting themselves every day for rapine and murder. At lenght we have reached the first fruits of their lawlessness. Saturday evening last, a young man named John Phipps, a resident of this town, came to his death at the hands of Ad. Elliott, by a blow on the head with a jug, crushing his skull. The jug was broken into fragments and PHipps was knocked down and so badly stunned that he never recovered consciousness. He lived until seven o'clock Sunday evening. A post-mortem examination of the diseased was made Monday, by Drs. Henderson, Hamilton, and Robertson, when it was found that the skull had been badly fractured and the brain lacerated, wounds sufficient to cause death. The deed was committed at or near Snodgrass' livery stable. We do not know what the difficulty was between the men that led to the fatal result, but it is supposed to have originated a few days before, a the house of the desceased's father. Elliott was arrested Monday at the house of his brother, south of Marysville, and is now in jail. Dennis McGraw was also arrested and placed in jail as a supposed accomplice in the fiendish act. The parties are vicious persons, and are dreaded by the community, and it is hoped that they law will mete out full justice to the guilty. It is due to the people of this community that they will be protected from such desperate characters. Marysville Tribune, March 19, 1879, Vol. XX No. 32 p.3 c.2 | ELLIOTT, Addison (I5081)
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7295 | Owen was married with a wife and two children. He worked for the Cottonwood Coal Company in Lehigh as a miner. | ASHWORTH, Owen Minor (I21316)
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7296 | Owned own store, Link's Place in Bluffton, Ohio | HAUENSTEIN, Leon Jule (I19431)
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7297 | Owned their home | Family: Horace M. PORTER / Nova Bell WYBURN (F75)
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7298 | Ozni Underwood, youngest child of Thaddeus and Mary (Farr) Under- wood, was born July 27, 1809, at Marlboro, Vermont, died in Springfield, Massachu- setts, July 15, 1885. He spent his boy- hood in Marlboro at the homestead farm, prepared for college in the public schools of Marlboro and Brattleboro, and later en- tered Williams College, whence he was graduated, class of 1835. After gradua- tion he was appointed principal of the town high school, located on School street, he having the distinction of being the first and only principal that school ever had ; because of its location it was soon discontinued. He then became principal of the high school in Spring- field. After teaching a time, the young man began the study of medicine, his pre- ceptor being the eminent Dr. Joshua Frost, of Springfield. He completed his professional education at Pittsfield Med- ical College, and after receiving his M. D. from that institution, began practicing in Longmeadow, but did not long remain there, removing to Springfield, where he succeeded to the practice of his old pre- ceptor, Dr. Frost, becoming eminent in his profession, continuing for over forty years. Later he studied in Paris, France. In 1835, as explained farther on, he peti- tioned the Massachusetts Legislature for permission to change his name ; this was granted and from that time onward he was known as Dr. Henry Robert Vaille. He was a skillful physician and surgeon, making a specialty of obstetrics. He pos- sessed the confidence of a very large clien- tele and was held in the highest esteem. During the Civil War he was in the ser- vice of the Christian Commission, at the front for a time, and in 1862 was assistant surgeon of the I2th Regiment, Massachu- setts Infantry, on duty in the military hos- pitals at Middletown, Maryland, for three months, caring for the wounded soldiers from the battles of South Mountain and Antietam. Dr. Vaille early became a member of the church, and all his life was true to the obligations of good citizenship. Until the founding of the Republican party he was a Whig, and was later affiliated with the new party. He was city physician for a long time, and also a member of the school board. He was a member of the District Medical, and of the Massachu- setts Medical societies, taking a deep in- terest in both. His last years were spent in retirement, and he died in 1885. He was highly spoken of by the press of that day for his professional skill and his worth as a citizen at his Springfield home, and at his death the medical socie- ties and other organizations passed resolu- tions of respect to his memory. The Dis- trict Medical Society, in a memorial to the good doctor, described him as "one who ever maintained the honor and worked for the interests of legitimate medicine." Dr. Vaille married (first), June 25, 1838, Anna Pitman, who died in 1847, daughter of the Rev. Benjamin H. Pitman, of Al- bany, New York, and at this time Dr. Vaille changed his name. The Rev. B. H. Pitman was a man of strong prejudices and thoroughly orthodox, and at some time an Underwood had come under the ban of his displeasure and he would not consider for a moment his daughter taking that name. As there was no objection to the young man personally, a change of name was decided upon and he applied to the Legislature and received permission, when Ozni Underwood became Dr. Henry Robert Vaille. Dr. and Mrs. Vaille be- came the parents of two sons : Henry R., deceased, and Thomas P. Dr. Vaille mar- ried (second), in 1849, Sarah Wilkinson Lewis, of Walpole, who survived him, and died at the age of eighty-nine years. Mrs. Vaille was a member of the Congre- gational church, and a woman greatly esteemed for her charming social quali- ties and womanly grace. She died in Springfield, in 1913. Dr. and Sarah W. (Lewis) Vaille were the parents of four sons and one daughter : Frederick Ozni, born July 28, 1850, married Harriet Wol- cott, and resides in Denver, Colorado ; Frank W., born December 7, 1854, resides in Seattle, Washington, superintendent of a railway mail service division of the Northwest, married Juna Boaz, of Indian- apolis ; Madora Crosby, of further men- tion ; Howard T., born February 26, 1861, married Martha Elder, of Pittsburgh, and resides in Denver, Colorado. | VAILLE, Henry Robert (I10263)
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7299 | Page 5 | ARBEGAST, Daniel (I19298)
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7300 | Paint Township, Holmes County, Ohio | LUGIBIHL, Christian Jr. (I10647)
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