Matches 1,076 to 1,097 of 1,097
# | Notes | Linked to |
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1076 | Virgil is also listed as age 5 in the 1910 Santa Clara census. There is no explanation as to why the family showed up in duplicate town census information. The ages of the children differ in the two sources. | HALTER, Virgil Harvey (I9790)
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1077 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | GRIESBAUER, Celeste (I3011)
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1078 | Was judge of county court on 1870 census Got his neck broke in a horse race (was declared a suicide by the Catholic Priest and would not bury him in the Catholic Cemetery | MINDRUP, George Henry (I3310)
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1079 | web site: www.digisys.net/users/scarlett/concemh.txt | Source (S82)
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1080 | When applying for citizenship, he stated "I Henry Becker, born at Alsfeld in the Dukedom of Hessia, Darmstadt, landed in Baltimore in 1832." | BECKER, Henry (I2788)
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1081 | When Louis was baptized, it was the first time the family name appeared as Orf. | ORF, Louis (I3270)
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1082 | When the Civil War began, Mr. Crisler was living on a farm in the timber, which he was trying to clear out, and had been but a short time married. A call came for 300,000 men, and on the 8th Aug. 1862, he enlisted in Co. C, 107th Reg't of the N. Y. Volunteers, and served three years. He was present at the second battle of Bull Run; spent days (and nights) throwing up earthworks to defend Washington; took part in the engagement oat South Mountain; and was in the battle of Antietam. | CRISLER, Helmus (I7799)
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1083 | While sources agree on birth place, the place of death is based on several genealogies which link Joessette Campau with Joseph Vermet. Other sources do not show this marriage, and show a place of death in Terrebonne, Quebec, Canada. | VERMET, Joseph (I98)
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1084 | widow of Rene Foy Lacroix | PLOUF, Genevieve dit Guilleboeuf (I188)
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1085 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | CARRIERE, Jean (I199)
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1086 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | CONSTANTIN, Ignace (I206)
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1087 | Willard, in History of Greenfield, Mass., states that in 1686 John and Edward Allen had grants of twenty acre lots on the Deer River; that Edward Allen's house, built of heavy hewn logs, was where the High School now stands, and was a fort and public house; that Rev. Mr. Newton lived there after he was settled. In History of Greenfield, page 61, Willard says that among the choice spirits and friends of the American cause in the Revolutionary War were the Arms, Smeads, Allens, and others. | ALLEN, Edward Sr. (I5558)
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1088 | William Dodge came to New England in the "Lyons Whelpe" in the year 1629, the ship he came in being one of the fleet of Gov. Winthrop, which brought about forty planters, chiefly from Somersetshire and Dorsetshire. A letter to Gov. Winthrop describes him as "a skilful husbandman" , and asks that he be given "ye charge of ye team of horses". He lived in Beverly, where he became a useful and influential citizen, being elected or appointed to serve the town in many ways, ... selectman, grand juryman, trial juryman, on church and town committees, and deputy to the General Court. In 1685, he disposed of his landed estate by deed, imposing on his son William the duty the duty of "paying to my brother if he come to New England and dwell in this town of Beverly 5 pounds per annum as long as he shall dwell here." | DODGE, William (I8075)
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1089 | William Niebert was a WWI veteran who lost his hearing as an artilleryman and was receiving a government pension. He and Jean lived in a converted railroad trestle and later in a trailer at the edge of the Merimack River in MO. I remember Bill as a very good natured man who was always eager to take the kids fishing or for a ride in his rowboat. | Family F564
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1090 | William's baptismal entry states that his date of birth is 26 June. This date is used because the documentation is closer to the birth date. | LALONDE, William Stephen (I10381)
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1091 | Wilma was born at home at 5814 Vancourt St. | BURNS, Wilma Constance (I10713)
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1092 | Wilma was only 6 years old when her parents separated. She lived with her father on a rented farm in Bloomfield, MI. Her grandfather, William Clyde Hill, lived with them. Wilma walked around the top of the silo and fell. Other children thought she was dead, and told her father that she was. She broke her collar bone and mended. After her parents divorce, Wilma and her father moved back to their old house on Pinehurst in northwest Detroit. | BURNS, Wilma Constance (I10713)
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1093 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family F38
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1094 | Witnesses were Henrico Rothermich and Adam Heller. | Family F1182
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1095 | Yiddish (literally "Jewish") is a High German language of Ashkenazi Jewish origin, spoken throughout the world. It developed as a fusion of German dialects with Hebrew, Aramaic, and Slavic languages. It is considered distinct from Hebrew in that is was more prevalent in Ashkenazi Jewish communities and not commonly spoken by Jews of Sephardic origin. Initially in the U.S., most Jews were of Sephardic origin, and hence did not speak Yiddish. In the the mid-to-late 19th century, as first German, then Eastern European Jews arrived that Yiddish become dominant with the immigrant community. | Fannie (I13625)
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1096 | _STATMARRIED | Family F3617
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1097 | _STATMARRIED | Family F3625
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