Our Family's Journey Through Time
Matches 1,051 to 1,100 of 1,972
# | Notes | Linked to |
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1051 | Hance Tuthill, W-M-11, son, single, at school, NY, NY, NY | Tuthill, Hance (I9956)
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1052 | Handwritten family tree of the Slade family. Acquired from Alfred Slade Ballou, who received the tree from Mrs. Sterling Hutcheson. | Source (S726)
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1053 | Hannah Cass, daughter, F-W-24, single, KS, IL, IL | Cass, Bessie F. (I7467)
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1054 | Hannah Rumsey was buried on the east side of the Mattituck Cemetery, beneath a small blue-stone slab which was still there in 1871. | Rumsey, Hannah (I4929)
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1055 | Hannah's last name is sometimes seen as Fuhls, Fowls or Fulks. | Fuls, Hannah (I3405)
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1056 | Hannah's name did not appear in the Symon Rumsey household of 1698, so one might assume she was already married at the age of 23. But Theophilus Corwin's name was alone, indicating he was still single. As Hannah Corwin, wife of Theophilus Corwin, her father's will of 1719 gave her two cows. And since she lived until 1760, it would not be her husband Theophilus Corwin who married Hannah Youngs in 1730 (The Corwin genealogy needs to be checked for this marriage). | Rumsey, Hannah (I4929)
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1057 | Hans B. Skillen, 9-M-W, KS, KS | Skillin, Hance Boyd (I7617)
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1058 | Hariet Weston, 69-F-W, CT | Harriet (I8043)
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1059 | Harland grew up on the farm, and when about eighteen, followed his brother, Irvin, to Cincinnati and took a course at the school in telegraphy. After his graduation he also began working for Burlington Railroad. In 1908 he was in Kansas City. | Otis, Harland (I4715)
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1060 | Harold Rumsey, son, M-W-3, single, NY, NY, Bulgaria | Rumsey, Harold Edward (I9733)
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1061 | Harold was a Staff Sgt during Vietnam in the US Air Force. | Padgett, Harold L. (I7625)
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1062 | Harriet Crowell, 35-F-W, keeping house, GA | [Unknown], Harriet (I9516)
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1063 | Harriet E. Crowell, W-F-6, daughter, single, AR, NC, GA | Crowell, Harriet E. (I9524)
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1064 | Harriet P. C. Painter, 7-F-W, at school, OH | Paynter, Harriet Prudence Capitola (I8065)
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1065 | Harriet was the daughter of an Episcopal minister. | Holcomb, Harriet (I6946)
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1066 | Harriet Western, 59-F-W, CT | Harriet (I8043)
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1067 | Harriett Morris, 59-F-W, CT | Holcomb, Harriet (I6946)
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1068 | Hattie E. Krhut, daughter, F-W-14, single, KS, KS, Bohemia | Krhut, Hattie A. (I6684)
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1069 | Hattie's last residence is listed as Plainville in the SSDI. | Krhut, Hattie A. (I6684)
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1070 | Have several children that resided in Bertie Co., NC. | Pugh, William (I1454)
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1071 | HAYS--Arthur Lee Razak, 85, former Collyer and Hays resident, died Monday, May 31, 2004, at Park West Plaza, Wichita. Paula Rae Peterson of Abilene is a daughter. He was born Sept. 18, 1918, on the family farm outside of Collyer, to Joseph and Grace (Seirer) Razak. He married Myrtle Lynd on Dec. 29, 1940, in WaKeeney. The couple moved to Collyer in 1965. They moved to Hays 16 years later. She preceded him in death in 1999. He then moved to an assisted care facility in Wichita. Mr. Razak was a farmer. He also worked for the railroad, insurance companies and the Kansas Farmers Union. He was a member of the Methodist Church. He was also a member of the Farmers Union. He served on both the Collyer Co-op and the Collyer School Boards. He was a member of the Collyer Paint Horse Association, the WaKeeney Saddle Club, the Kansas Association for the Blind, the Ellis Barbershop Chorus and the Collyer and Quinter Square Dance Clubs. In 1979, he co-organized the Northwest Kansas Association for the Visually Impaired and was president of the organization for several years. Other survivors include another daughter, Lenna Lea Wiebe of Goddard; five grandchildren; two stepgranddaughters; four great-grandchildren; two stepgreat-grandchildren; and other relatives. A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday, June 15, 2004, at Cline's Mortuary, 1919 E. 22nd St., Hays. A private burial will be at a later date in Collyer. Mr. Razak's body was donated to the University of Kansas Medical Center for scientific research. Memorial contributions may be made to the Northwest Kansas Association for Visually Impaired (NKAVI) Lee Razak/ Lloyd Nida Scholarship Fund in care of Robert Chaffin, NKAVI president, 1105 Centen-nial Blvd., Hays, KS 67601; and to Park West Plaza for its educational foundation in care of Aaron Kelly, 505 N. Maize Rd., Wichita, KS 67212. | Razak, Arthur Lee (I6214)
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1072 | Hazel A. Schlegel, daughter, F-W-14, single, KS, KS, KS | Schlegel, Hazel Adeline (I6155)
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1073 | Hazel Pitman, daughter, F-W-8, single, KS, KS, KS | Pitman, Hazel Ann (I6182)
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1074 | Hazel Schlegel, F-W-4 1/12, single, KS, KS, KS | Schlegel, Hazel Adeline (I6155)
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1075 | He came to Milford Township, Defiance Co., OH in the year 1848 where he bought 160 acres of woodland, put up a log house and cleared his farm. In the year 1857 he had a large frame house erected, and gradually improved his fine farm until in 1862, when he was having a bank barn built, he was taken sick on the job and died one week later of catarrh and erysipelas. | Otis, William (I4755)
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1076 | He entered the Army in the old French war and was in the British service under General Braddock in 1755 during the contest against the French and Indians west of the Allegheny Mountains. In consequence of his being one of a body of men who were detailed to guard a post, he was not in the battle at Fort Du Quesne, where Braddock was defeated and lost his life. When the war closed, he returned to Delaware, and after being once married and losing his wife....married Sarah Muncy,.... | Thomas, Jesse (I722)
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1077 | He spent his boyhood days on the farm and in the public schools of Milford Township. At the age of eighteen years, he and his brother, William, enlisted in the service of their country, joining Co. F, 11th Ohio Volunteer Infantry and entering the command of Gen. Rosecrans in his Kentucky campaign against Gen. Bragg. After a short military service on the field, following the battle of Franklin, KY, he was compelled because of ill health to retire from the service, and was appointed postmaster of Park Barracks, KY by Gen. Gilmore. After several months he again joined his company on the field, and again was compelled to retire because of sickness. He received an honorable discharge from the army June 11, 1863, after a service of less than one year, and returned to his home in Milford Township. Shortly afterward he entered a business college at Cleveland, OH and graduated in 1865; after which, for a short time he engaged in teaching school in Adams township. During his business career, he was engaged in farming, the drug business, dealing in agricultural implements, general merchandise, real estate, and other lines. During his latter days, he spent on his farm in Milford township in which he personally engaged in tilling the soil. In the many years of his residence in Hicksville, he was honored time after time by his fellow citizens by election to political office, having at different times held the offices of clerk, treasurer and trustee in the township. In 1894 he was appointed to the postmastership of Hicksville by President Cleveland, and held the office for the full term of four years. | Otis, George K. (I4778)
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1078 | He was a general in the Confederate Cavalry. Fitzhugh Lee served as Governor of Virginia from 1886 to 1890. | Lee, Genl. Fitzhugh (I8295)
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1079 | He was a supposedly prominent lawyer in Washington, D.C. | Braverman, Marvin (I7947)
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1080 | He was born in a sugar camp and rocked in a sugar trough, those being the times of primitive furniture. At the age of seventeen he began teaching school, having before that time only attended for three months himself. When he was twenty-one, he went, for three years, to the Wadsworth Seminary. In 1841 he began the study of medicine with Dr. John R. Cline of Front Royal, VA and he also studied for about a year with Prof. Ackley of Cleveland. He graduated at Western Reserve College in 1850, but began the practice of medicine in Stark Co. in 1849. In 1862 he went to New Philadelphia, OH where he engaged in a successful practice. | Otis, Dr. John Davy (I4749)
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1081 | HEADSTONE: Susannah wife of Royal S. Rumsey, died June 12, 1856 AE 51 years 11 months and 8 days | Lott, Susannah (I5097)
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1082 | Helen F. Morris, daughter, F-W-17, single, MI, IL, IN | Morris, Helen Frances (I2563)
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1083 | Helen Hines, daughter, F-W-2 10/12, single, NE, KS, KS | Hines, Hellen R. (I10644)
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1084 | Helen Hines, daughter, F-W-7, single, NE, NE | Hines, Hellen R. (I10644)
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1085 | Helen Jarrett, head, F-W-35, married, WA, lived at Liberal, Surry Co., KS in 1935 | Skillin, Helen Emma (I6161)
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1086 | Helen Jarrett, wife, F-W-25, married, WA, KS, KS | Skillin, Helen Emma (I6161)
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1087 | Helen M. Jones, daughter, F-W-5, single, VA, VA, MI | Jones, Helen Morris (I44)
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1088 | Helen M. Jones, wife, F-W-27, married, MI, IL, IN | Morris, Helen Frances (I2563)
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1089 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Pitman, H. (I6185)
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1090 | Helen Skillin, wife, F-W-49, married, OH, same house | [Unknown], Helen (I9946)
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1091 | Helen's last residence is listed as Princeton in the SSDI. | Razak, Helen (I451)
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1092 | Hellen Marshall, 10-F-W, MO | Marshall, Hellen (I9460)
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1093 | Hellen R. Hines, granddaughter, F-W-12, single, NE, KS, KS | Hines, Hellen R. (I10644)
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1094 | Henry Ferrers assumed the name from Ferriers, a small town of Gastinois, in France, otherwise called Ferrieres from the iron mines which abounded in that country. Due to this fact, he bore for his arms "six horses' shoes," either from the similitude of his cognomen to the French Ferrier, or because the seigneurie produced iron, so essential to the soldier and cavalier in those rude times, when war was esteemed the chief business of life, and the adroit management of the steed, even amongst the nobility, the first of accomplishments. Henry de Ferrers came into England with William the Conqueror, and received large grants of land. Whatever his services, it was not till after Hugh d'Avranches was created Earl of Chester, in 1071, that Henry de Ferrers received at least the Castle of Tutbury, which had been previously granted to the said Hugh, and resigned by him upon becoming Earl of Chester. In 1085, we find him appointed one of the commissioners for the general survey of the kingdom, and in that year he is recorded as the holder, besides the Castle of Tutbury, of seven lordships in Staffordshire, twenty in Berkshire, three in Wiltshire, five in Essex, seven in Oxfordshire, two in Lincolnshire, two in Buckinghamshire, one in Gloucestershire, two in Herefordshire Royal Families in Europe, Mayflower Descendants: Henry de Ferrers came into England with William the Conqueror, and obtained a grant of Tutbury Castle in County Stafford and large possessions in other counties, including 114 manors in Derbyshire. | De Ferrers, Henry (I2245)
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1095 | Henry Scovill, male | Scoville, Albert Henry (I9369)
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1096 | Henry Scoville, 11-M-W, WI | Scoville, Albert Henry (I9369)
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1097 | Henry served in the Civil War in the 1st and 2nd Minnesota Cavalry, returning as a 2nd Lieutenant. | Plowman, Henry (I8608)
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1098 | Henry served in the Revolutionary War from Orange Co., NY. He located in Allegheny Co., NY and many of his descendants are there. Henry Mapes is not indexed in the 1800, 1810 or 1820 NY census. | Mapes, Henry (I5343)
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1099 | Henry settled in Tyrrell Co. | Slade, Henry (I1504)
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1100 | Henry was born in a soldier's home. | Fordyce, Henry Davidson (I1644)
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