Matches 301 to 350 of 373
# | Notes | Linked to |
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301 | or 26 Apr 1892? | Ekse, Olena Larsdatter (I2854)
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302 | or 6 Feb 1902 | Noble, Chaste Helen (I1683)
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303 | or Ann | Scruggs, Nancy (I2252)
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304 | or Aurland, Norway | Slen, Ivar Elivson (I2855)
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305 | or Blount | Blunt, Elizabeth (I1885)
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306 | or Custer, SD (Rodney Ellefson's info) | Ellefson, Shirley R. (I2189)
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307 | or Garretson, SD | Ellefson, Lewis (I2191)
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308 | or Garretson, SD | Schurman, Alice (I2190)
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309 | or Henry Browne | Browne, William (I1895)
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310 | or Polly Fore | Scruggs, Polly Four (I2371)
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311 | or Sarah | Bollar, Sary (I1356)
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312 | or Theoderick | Scruggs, Theophilus (I2719)
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313 | Or Virtus Mary. | Love, Virtuous Mary (I1781)
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314 | Or Woods. | Wood, Polly Sterling (I3180)
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315 | Organized the "Ruffian Dragons," who left Mt. Sterling, Clarke County, on 25 Sep 1861 for the Civil War. | Turner, Colonel Andrew Jackson (I1786)
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316 | Originally I got info that his name was Charles Irving Bush. Current info from Donald W. Gant. | Bush, Irving Fuller (I252)
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317 | Oscar and Emmy were third cousins. | Family F381
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318 | Personal Tax Digests in Mecklenburg County show Richard Claibourne Gregory b. ca 1782 (age 16 by 1798) is the son of Richard Gregory. Richard Claibourne Gregory pays taxes for himself in 1805. I have not checked past 1805. I am not a Gregory descendant. Additional research of Personal Tax digests in Mecklenburg Co 1806 on and Lunenburg Co for the same period should confirm whether if Richard Claibourne Gregory of Lunenburg Co. is the same as Richard Claibourne Gregory of Mecklenburg Co. (from David Robinson, July 2017) | Gregory, Richard Claiborne (I2141)
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319 | Physian | Gough, Dr Edgar Ferdinand (I110)
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320 | Place of death may have been Halls Mill Rd., Mobile, AL (Civil War records). | Scruggs, Gross III (I1682)
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321 | Pneumonia | Stephenson, David Campbell (I836)
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322 | pneumonia | Revercomb, William Frederick (I1108)
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323 | pneumonia | Stephenson, James Buchanan (I975)
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324 | Probably died in Wilmington. Was a lawyer and judge. | Haynes, Judge John Douglas (I61)
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325 | Probably William C. Cayley, Jr.? | Cayley, Bill (I1642)
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326 | Professor of Greek, Tusculum College and minister in the Missionary Baptist Church. Pastor of Mount Harmony Church until Dec 1863. | Scruggs, John (I2281)
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327 | Pronounced "Axer". | Love, Achsah (I1868)
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328 | Represented Bedford County in the Virginia legislature 1846-7 and 1847-8. | Scruggs, Reaves Scott (I2273)
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329 | Robert Sutherland left Aberdeen, Scotland in 1684 in a ship sent out by the Earl of Perth headed for New Jersey. He landed in Virginia near what is now Richmond. | Sutherland, Robert (I3036)
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330 | Sea captain and master of the brigantine "Henry & Benjamin." Made 3 trips to the New World before settling in Chesterfield County, VA. | Friend, Captain Thomas (I2094)
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331 | Seargent in the Colonail Militia, 1758. Gentleman Justice of the Court of Bedford County, 25 June 1771. Justice of the Peace 26 Mar 1771. Trustee to regulate the making of slpes for the passage of fish in the mill dam on Black Water River, Feb 1772. County Committeeman, 25 May 1775. Captain of the Fifth Virginia Regiment, 26 Feb 1776. Major before 1781. Sheriff of Bedford County, 24 Nov 1783 | Scruggs, Major Gross (I2226)
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332 | Served in Congress, 1795-1803. | Cabell, Lt Col Samuel Jorden (I2645)
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333 | Served in the Revolutionary War. | Love, Colonel David (I1760)
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334 | Served in the Virginia Militia during the Revolution in Captain Ballow's Mint. Company. Trustee for extending and clearing for navigation of Slate River, Buckingham County, 1793 and 1794. | Scruggs, Valentine (I2228)
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335 | Served in the War of 1812. | Barksdale, Captain Grief (I1975)
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336 | Several references refer to her as Belle instead of Isabella. | Kenyon, Isabella G. (I535)
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337 | She died of pneumonia five days after the birth of her daughter. | Ekse, Olena Larsdatter (I2854)
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338 | She is "Sarah" in _The Stephenson Family of Highland County, Virginia, and Related Families_ (W. G. Haemmel). But she is "Charlotte" in Annie Tucker Wise's account of the Warwick family which was published in "The Bicentennial History of Bath County, Virginia" and in the 1900 and 1910 census data (from Anne Leyden). | Stephenson, Charlotte Wilson (I1149)
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339 | Some sources call him William Wilson, Jr. | Wilson, Thomas (I1267)
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340 | Sometimes referred to as James C. Crawford. | Crawford, James S. (I1480)
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341 | Sometimes referred to as John Bolar, III. | Bolar, John Wilson (I1411)
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342 | Sometimes spelled "Green." | Greene, William (I641)
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343 | Spelled Rachael in the DAR application of Mary Virginia Stephenson. | Davis, Rachel (I645)
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344 | Still living in 1930 when Grace Haynes Roberg Family Record filled in. | Haynes, Kate (I59)
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345 | streptococcus throat infection | Stephenson, Marion Montague (I924)
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346 | suicide | Stephenson, Donald Wilson (I1189)
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347 | The Haynes girls Grace and Louise lived with my great grandparents parents, the George Mattox family, for some time in a little house near the corner of Manchester and Moore Streets in Aurora, Indiana. I believe it was equivalent to their high school years. I have a vague recollection of their mother having died or being very sick, I also vaguely believe their father may have been a doctor. What I am sure of is that the house was full---two Mattox girls, Mary Ruth and Rosa Lee as well as two boys. (Somewhere I have a picture of a party of girls all lying on a bed smiling and clowning around. The four girls are in the picture, which I will eventually find.) The result was that the women were friends all their lives. In about 1959 or so they decided to have a get-together here at our house in Springfield. My mother Frances Platt Bradley and I were living with my grandmother Mary Ruth Platt. They came by train and stayed about a week. I was about 15 at the time and it was long ago, but a few memories remain. Most particularly I remember the mood. It seemed like we spent a week laughing. There were a lot of shared memories and old in-jokes. One I remember particularly. There had been a car trip to Springfield in the thirties I think, a time when our then new man made lake was filling up. Apparently my mother and uncle had made a big deal of it and when taken out to see it. The Robergs particularly thought it was a great joke so that even in the fifties the folks from the coast were still making fun of our puddle. I remember both women as being very proud of their children and bragging about them. Louise struck me as warm and friendly with a nice common touch. Grace was my favorite. She was elegant, dressed to the nines (shopped at I, Magnin) and conversed with a teenage boy as if he were an adult. Louise told us about Birmingham and Grace told us all about Bellingham Washington where they lived and where Ralph had a paper factory. They also had a house in the woods called Woodwinds, which I thought sounded very exotic. After that I know Louise continued to write regularly a line of round hand writing. My mother had a brother George who taught law at the University of Oregon and on some trips out there she would call or see Jane Roberg. Phil Bradley, Springfield, Illinois, June 26, 2011 | Haynes, Grace (I46)
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348 | The Haynes girls Grace and Louise lived with my great grandparents parents, the George Mattox family, for some time in a little house near the corner of Manchester and Moore Streets in Aurora, Indiana. I believe it was equivalent to their high school years. I have a vague recollection of their mother having died or being very sick, I also vaguely believe their father may have been a doctor. What I am sure of is that the house was full---two Mattox girls, Mary Ruth and Rosa Lee as well as two boys. (Somewhere I have a picture of a party of girls all lying on a bed smiling and clowning around. The four girls are in the picture, which I will eventually find.) The result was that the women were friends all their lives. In about 1959 or so they decided to have a get-together here at our house in Springfield. My mother Frances Platt Bradley and I were living with my grandmother Mary Ruth Platt. They came by train and stayed about a week. I was about 15 at the time and it was long ago, but a few memories remain. Most particularly I remember the mood. It seemed like we spent a week laughing. There were a lot of shared memories and old in-jokes. One I remember particularly. There had been a car trip to Springfield in the thirties I think, a time when our then new man made lake was filling up. Apparently my mother and uncle had made a big deal of it and when taken out to see it. The Robergs particularly thought it was a great joke so that even in the fifties the folks from the coast were still making fun of our puddle. I remember both women as being very proud of their children and bragging about them. Louise struck me as warm and friendly with a nice common touch. Grace was my favorite. She was elegant, dressed to the nines (shopped at I, Magnin) and conversed with a teenage boy as if he were an adult. Louise told us about Birmingham and Grace told us all about Bellingham Washington where they lived and where Ralph had a paper factory. They also had a house in the woods called Woodwinds, which I thought sounded very exotic. After that I know Louise continued to write regularly a line of round hand writing. My mother had a brother George who taught law at the University of Oregon and on some trips out there she would call or see Jane Roberg. Phil Bradley, Springfield, Illinois, June 26, 2011 | Haynes, Sallie Louise (I7)
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349 | The National Academy biographical memoir of Walter P. Kelley (Biographical Memoirs, vol. XL, Columbia University Press, 1969) states his wife's name as Mary Eliza (Mayes) Kelley. | Mayes, Mahala Eliza (I12)
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350 | They were wed at the home of Thomas J. and Mabel Jackson Holden, 210 Brunswick Ave., by the Rev. Robert L. McNair, of Blackstone Presbyterian Church. | Family F47
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