Matches 276 to 300 of 1,097
# | Notes | Linked to |
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276 | Cause of death was Cardiac hypertrophy. He died at home. | CAHILL, John Hamlin (I10724)
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277 | Cause of death was coronary thrombosis. | PURDHAM, Rev Benjamin F. (I13984)
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278 | Cause of death was Cryptococcal Meningitis which he contracted in 1971. He died at Laurel Avenue Convalescent Hospital at 7509 Laurel Ave., Fontana, CA. | MEYERS, Glen Lee (I10714)
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279 | Cause of death was hemorrhage of the lungs. | HUGHES, George Melton (I9724)
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280 | Cause of death was Hydrocephalus. | BURNS, Joy June (I1832)
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281 | Cause of death was old age. | BRUMLEY, Mary Pollyann (I9725)
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282 | CD Rom of Acadian genealogy compiled by Yvon Cyr | Source (S72)
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283 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | KEMPER, Mary (I3148)
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284 | Cemetery is located east of Durham | HUGHES, George Melton (I9724)
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285 | Cemetery located east of Durham. | HUGHES, Alma Esther (I9726)
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286 | Cemetery located west of Durham, OK. | HUGHES, Grace (I9733)
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287 | Cemetery lot number 041. | SORENSEN, Nicolai (I3833)
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288 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | VERMETTE, Cherie (I257)
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289 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | VERMETTE, Cathy (I258)
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290 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | SAULTEAUX, Madeleine (I11232)
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291 | Church record reads "The twenty seventh day of February eighteen hundred & fifty four, the body of Archibald McGinnis husband of Mary McDonald and son of Catherine McLellan & Archibald McGinnis was buried in the burial ground of St. Raphaels. He departed the day before yesterday at Riger Baudett Parish of St. Polycarpe at the age of fifty one years - John MacDonald M. Ap(?)" Note on St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Church: Begun as early as 1815, St. Raphael’s was situated in the heart of an early Highland Scottish settlement, and for the next half-decade, its parish would be the cradle of Catholicism in Ontario. St. Raphael's is located at 20000 King's Road (County Road 18), South Glengarry, Ontario, Canada | MCINNIS, Archibald (I4222)
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292 | Circa 1907: "Samuel Porter lived in Ipswich, Boxford, Bradford, and Chester, N. H. His house in Chester is no longer standing, and the grounds that surrounded it now form a part of the old graveyard, where he and his wife are buried. He is described by one who remembered him, as a person of very decided opinions and not easily influenced by others. He was a Revolutionary soldier, marching on the Lexington Alarm, 19 April 1775 (Mass. Archives, Lexington alarm, Vol XI, page 259.) He was in Capt. John Cushing's company, Col. Samuel Johnson's regiment. He was chosen by field officers as second lieutenant of Capt. Robert Dodge's company, and commissioned by council, 7 May 1776, at Ipswich. His son Nehemiah used to amuse his grandchildren by telling stories of the Revolution, one of which was as follows. One night when Samuel was on sentry duty, it was evident that the British were about to make some move, and the Americans wished to know on which of two roads they were likely to make their march. it occurred to Samuel that on one of the roads there was a bridge, and he lay down and put his ear to the ground, and was able to tell by the hollow sound that they had passed over the bridge, and this information enabled the Americans to defeat the British in a skirmish the next day." "Just when he moved to Chester is not known, but he was living in Boxford in 1775. At first he haired a farm in Chester from Mr. Matthew Templeton, but later bought a place of his own, where he lived until his death. He was called by the Indians "Port Pig's Ear," though the origin of the curious name is now unknown." | PORTER, Lieutenant Samuel (I7921)
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293 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | RASHAW, William (I12975)
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294 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | ORF, Clarence (I3100)
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295 | Conflict in notes: In one passage, Harry was said to have immigrated to Canada, Andrew stayed in Iowa. Another passage has Andrew dying in Canada. | BLACK, Andrew (I9713)
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296 | Connie ran a beauty shop in her home in 1925 and eventually had her own shops in Highland Park and Clawson, Michigan called Connie's Beauty Shop between 1936-1940. | HILL, Constance Lauryne (I1348)
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297 | Cornelia's mother died when she was fourteen years old and she was sent to boarding school for two years, meanwhile corresponding with William Henry Cocke whom she had met before she left. When Cornelia was sixteen, Chastain Cocke and James Loftus III, fathers of the young couple, held a conference and decided to let William and Cornelia marry. This took place Oct 18, 1838. Cornelia was sixteen and William was nineteen. Cornelia's father explored four states and finally bought four quarter sections of land for his children. Cornelia's land was in Jefferson County, MO., border on the Mississippi. There their first child, of eleven in all, was born. Later they moved to Clinton, Henry County, Mo., and from there started to California with a small party that went on horseback all the way. James Loftus was one of this Party. When in the vicinity of Kansas, he died of cholera and was buried along the trail. William reached California, looked over the land and returned to his home, having been gone for one years. His wife, with no word, had feared he was dead, until he suddenly appeared one night in the fall of 1851. He spent the year of 1858 disposing of his property and in organizing a wagon train, of which he was to become the Wagonmaster. In the spring of 1854, all being ready, they started for California on the Overland Trail, coming through Salt Lake City. William Henry rode horseback all the way, supervising the wagon train, but his family came in a covered wagon drawn by horses. William Henry first settled in Three Rivers, where he was in the cattle business for a number of years. There was a slump in cattle prices and he lost heavily. For a time the lived in Santa Rosa. He made a cattle buying trip to Nevada, was taken ill with pneumonia, and died Feb 17, 1863. Cornelia arrived an hour before his death. He was buried temporarily at Silver City, Nevada; the intention was to bring home his body later, but they never did. The family moved to San Luis Obispo, County in 1866 and settled on the Big Morro Creek, six miles north of Morro Bay. | LOFTUS, Cornelia Ann (I8553)
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298 | Cornelia, who was born inj 1822, was fourteen at the time of Mary Atwell's death, making Mary's death year abt 1834. | Mary (I8667)
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299 | Coro was Alfred's second wife according to the 1930 U.S. Federal Census. | Family F5190
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300 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | PAGE, Marie Anne (I11241)
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