Notes


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Matches 15,401 to 15,450 of 16,342

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15401 surname spelled Zouck at marriage ZOCK, Anton (I19912)
 
15402 surname spelled Zouck at marriage Zock, Anton (I19912)
 
15403 surname Tiry on birth record? Tivey, Minnie (I35553)
 
15404 surname Tongue or Tonge?

which wife is the mother of which children?

Died at Montville (North Parish) or New London?

also AFN: Z077-KL 
TONGUE, George (I8753)
 
15405 surname Tongue or Tonge?

which wife is the mother of which children?

Died at Montville (North Parish) or New London?

also AFN: Z077-KL 
Tongue, George (I8753)
 
15406 surname was also spelled Warryn WARREN, Margaret (I1923)
 
15407 surname was also spelled Warryn, Waryn Warren, Margaret (I1923)
 
15408 surname was Currier; adopted

Died at Sony Brook University Medical Center

OBIT:
http://www.27east.com/news/article.cfm/Eastport/424486/Robert-W-"Penney-Dies-At-86
Robert W. Penney of Eastport died on Friday, May 11, at Stony Brook University Medical Center of heart failure. He was 86.
Mr. Penney was born on June 15, 1925, and was a longtime resident of Eastport.
In addition to his wife, Dorothy, Mr. Penney is survived by three sons, Brian and his wife Dorie, Jonathan and his wife Lillian, and Seth; and two daughters, Priscilla Tuttle and her husband Gary, and Esther Heine and her husband William. He is also survived by 14 grandchildren, Jared, Joel, Ian, James, Christopher, Philip, Jamen, Caitlin, Sean, Eric, Charles, Faith, John and Christopher; and 12 great-grandchildren, Micah, Gabriel, Sophia, Samuel, Phoebe, Ezra, Solomon, Ariana, William, Abigail, Isaac and Jacob.
A memorial service was held on Wednesday, May 16, at the Eastport Bible Church. Interment will take place at the Eastport Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, the family is requesting that donations be made in Mr. Penney’s name to the Eastport Bible Church, 386 Montauk Highway, Eastport, NY 11941." 
Penney, Robert W. (I32508)
 
15409 surname Wines? HINES, Sarah (I9979)
 
15410 surname Wines? Hines, Sarah (I9979)
 
15411 surname Wolman or Wolmen? WOLMAN, Elizabeth (I2736)
 
15412 surname Wolman or Wolmen? Wolman, Elizabeth (I2736)
 
15413 surnames also spelled Baylis BAYLES, Joanna (I8964)
 
15414 surnames also spelled Baylis Bayles, Joanna (I8964)
 
15415 surnames also spelled Beres Berres, Maria Agatha (I39634)
 
15416 surnames also spelled Haines

of Lonesome Lodge, Wotton, Surrey, England? 
HAYNES, William Richard (I18254)
 
15417 surnames also spelled Haines

of Lonesome Lodge, Wotton, Surrey, England? 
Haynes, William Richard (I18254)
 
15418 Susan/Sarah

unmarried. 
FRYE, Susan (I9090)
 
15419 Susan/Sarah

unmarried. 
Frye, Susan (I9090)
 
15420 Susanna was known as "Susie." She was spirited and lovely Beloved by her husband, her nine children, and numerous grandchildren, her presence shines in our memories, and resides within our hearts forever! Stoddard, Susannah Jane (I41128)
 
15421 Susannah was James' 1st wife. Called Susan in parish register.

might have died 1826, St. Peters, Lincolnshire, England. (Ancestral File)
died at age 28

Rise Gate LDS Branch Records
Seas End LDS Branch Records
Family records
SL Temple Records
1841 Census Records, Lincolnshire, England.
Gosberton B.T.s at the Castle, Lincoln.
St. Peter at the Arches Par. BTs 504565 
FOX, Susannah (I8578)
 
15422 Susannah was James' 1st wife. Called Susan in parish register.

might have died 1826, St. Peters, Lincolnshire, England. (Ancestral File)
died at age 28

Rise Gate LDS Branch Records
Seas End LDS Branch Records
Family records
SL Temple Records
1841 Census Records, Lincolnshire, England.
Gosberton B.T.s at the Castle, Lincoln.
St. Peter at the Arches Par. BTs 504565 
Fox, Susannah (I8578)
 
15423 Tapathy pm gravestone HAWKINS, Tabitha (I15298)
 
15424 Tapathy pm gravestone Hawkins, Tabitha (I15298)
 
15425 Taufzeugen: Amalia Galle Fuchs, Frederick Herman (I35001)
 
15426 Terry in US 1850 Census

Died at age, 86 years, 9 month, 13 days 
ROBINSON, Perry Seymour (I3867)
 
15427 Terry in US 1850 Census

Died at age, 86 years, 9 month, 13 days 
Robinson, Perry Seymour (I3867)
 
15428 Thayer or Thoyer THAYER, Nathan (I9074)
 
15429 Thayer or Thoyer Thayer, Nathan (I9074)
 
15430 The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Sun, Jan 17 1904: "Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Douglass, the latter a bridal couple. Mrs. Douglass being formerly Mrs. Edith Morris." Family F5814
 
15431 THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1905.
OBITUARY.
Nathaniel A. Peterson
(special to the Eagle)
Riverhead, L. I., ...one of the best known men of this place...
He was known all over the island in this business and the jewelry trade - trades that he had folowed since a mere child...
...member of Riverhead Lodge, F, A. and M., and of the local Red Men's order...

mason on gravestone 
PETERSON, Nathaniel A. (I4498)
 
15432 THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1905.
OBITUARY.
Nathaniel A. Peterson
(special to the Eagle)
Riverhead, L. I., ...one of the best known men of this place...
He was known all over the island in this business and the jewelry trade - trades that he had folowed since a mere child...
...member of Riverhead Lodge, F, A. and M., and of the local Red Men's order...

mason on gravestone 
Peterson, Nathaniel A. (I4498)
 
15433 The County review., October 11, 1912, Page 4, Image 4
"On Wednesday evening of last week...Mrs. Glover's birthday." 
Howell, Anna Belle (I30216)
 
15434 The date and place are guesses from the IGI. Family F3398
 
15435 The funeral of Edward S Still was held at his late home in Coram, Thursday, of last week, and burial made in the family plot in Union Cemetery here. He was a man of strict honesty and probity and through modest in his association with men, had the confidence and esteem of his neighbors, who frequently sought to place him in positions of local responsibility and trust. He will be greatly missed.
The Port Jefferson Echo March 15, 1919 
Still, Edward Stephen (I37282)
 
15436 The funeral of Mrs Alice Everson Hallock, wife of Arthur Bishop Hallock of Jersey City, former resident of Center Moriches, was held Tuesday afternoon in the Center Moriches Methodist church, with the pastor, the Rev Harold G Sabin, officiating.
Organ music was rendered by Mrs K T Dayton.
Interment as made in the family plot in Mt Pleasant cemetery, Center Moriches. The pall bearers were David E Goldsmith, A K Chichester, Frank F Penney, D L Brown, Gilbert H Loper and Ezra Hawkins, all of Center Moriches.
Mrs Hallock was the daughter of George Everson, native of Brooklyn Heights, who build a home on Union avenue in Center Moriches in 1890. Previous to that time the family spent its summers in the village. Mrs Hallock was an active church worker, an Episcopalian, also a member of the Methodist Thimble club, Village Improvement society; faithful and generous and interested in the various activities of the village.
She leaves, besides her husband, a daughter, Mrs Bennett Ertel of Hempstead; a brother Dr George Everson of Brooklyn and a number of grandchildren, nieces and nephews. The Hallocks moved from Center Moriches to Jersey City last fall.
Published in The Patchogue Advance on Fri June 15, 1934 p. 11 
Everson, Alice Gertrude (I25541)
 
15437 The funeral services for Tracy Beecher Ketcham, owner and operator of Ketcham Realty Company, who died yesterday at his home,after a long illness, Tracy is a 1917 graduate of Syracuse University. Mr. Ketcham entered the real estate field with Clarence A. Hills. In 1922 he joined in organizing the Ketcham and Waston Company, setting up his own business in 1906.
Mr. Ketcham assisted in developing James Street Manor,Yorkshire and West Genesee Park tracts and the Howlett Hill farm tract.
Mr. Ketcham had served in the Coast artillery in World War 1.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Helen Pomeroy Ketcham;a son, Richard Ketcham, a brother Sherman Ketcham of Utica; two sisters Mary Kirby and Mrs. Ruth Dean. 
Ketcham, Tracy Beecher (I26305)
 
15438 The Independent Newspaper
Serving Dublin, Livermore, Pleasanton and Sunol

Posted: Thursday, September 22, 2016 12:00 am

Margaret Beha

March 22, 1920-Aug. 30, 2016

On August 30, 2016, long-time Livermore resident Margaret Beha died peacefully in Chico, CA, where she had moved to be with her daughter.

The eldest of five children, "Midge" was born March 22, 1920 in New Rochelle, NY, to Howard and Pere Robinson. At eighteen she graduated from New Rochelle High School then went on to Westchester School of Nursing in Valhalla, NY, to become a registered nurse. One of her teachers was William Beha, who soon began a very discreet but successful courtship that ended in their marriage on August 26, 1941, at Church of Magdalene in Pocantico Hills, New York.

Thus began a 60 year marriage that took them from New York to Fort Worth, TX, O'Neill, NB, Sioux Falls, SD, Black Mountains, NC, Atlanta, GA, Houston, TX, Livermore, CA, San Antonio, TX, and finally back to Livermore, all courtesy of the Veterans Administration, her husband's employer. Along the way, Midge produced four children, kept house and worked as a nurse in various hospitals in those cities.
Her energy and "let me help" approach to life touched many people. Midge volunteered to act as school nurse when Granada High lost its paid position, and she was present at home football games when a doctor was unavailable. More than once she interceded when a parent went too far with public discipline of a child.
A fine seamstress and a "closet" poet, Midge wore her Queen Mum hats to mass, sipped a little single malt, and danced while her favorite - lamb chops - sizzled on the grill.
Widowed in 2001, Midge Beha was a 50-year parishioner at St. Charles Borromeo where she was active in the lay ministry.
She is survived by two sisters, Pere Farquar of New York and June McDonald of Florida; her daughters, Pere Summers of Tucson, AZ, Nan D'Anna of La Mesa, CA, and Anelle Beha of Chico, CA; her son, Paul of Troutman, NC and two grandchildren and four great grandchildren.
A funeral Mass will take place at St. Charles Borromeo Church, Livermore, at 10 a.m. on October 11, 2016. 
Robinson, Margaret J. (I31725)
 
15439 The information for this entire family, with Donald being the father, was recieved from Kathryn Alexander in January of 1997.

Died on a cruise and pronouned dead at Saint Kitts
 
TRUSSELL, Donald Lewis (I2159)
 
15440 The information for this entire family, with Donald being the father, was recieved from Kathryn Alexander in January of 1997.

Died on a cruise and pronouned dead at Saint Kitts
 
Trussell, Donald Lewis (I2159)
 
15441 The information of the entire Alexander family, with Dale being the father, was recieved from Rose Strong in Feb 1997.

Died at Holy Family Hospital

cremated; cremains with Rose Marguerite Strong 
ALEXANDER, Dale Victor (I2157)
 
15442 The information of the entire Alexander family, with Dale being the father, was recieved from Rose Strong in Feb 1997.

Died at Holy Family Hospital

cremated; cremains with Rose Marguerite Strong 
Alexander, Dale Victor (I2157)
 
15443 The Kenricks had originally hailed from Woore in Shropshire, where they owned property and maintained a house, Woore Manor. They also possessed land in North Wales. Before bidding them farewell, there is one last tale concerning them that may explain why young Andrew was so anxious to leave the ancestral lands and set up home in Chester instead.
One of their other properies in the village, Woore House- now a farmhouse- was the scene of a grim tragedy, for, at an unrecorded point in the recent past, one of the daughters of the house was murdered by her brother, in pursuit of the money she possessed. It was said by the villagers that the place was afterwards haunted by poor Miss Kenrick's ghost and that a portion of the cellar had been closed off immediately after the event and never re-opened. It was said that in the cellar was a table with a bottle upon it, so it may perhaps be inferred that the murder took place with poison and that the body was hidden here...
In the early 19th century, the house passed to the Farmer family, one of whom became a noted Royal Navy captain- Horatio Nelson served as a midshipman under him. It then, in the 1870s, passed on to the Boydells, under whom the estate was split up and in the 1920s the mansion, described in a Cheshire Sheaf of the day as a 'quaint, old, ivy-covered, gabled house" became the home of the noted family of veterinary surgeons, the Storrars, who continue in that noble profession in Chester to this day 
Kenrick, John (I37112)
 
15444 The Life Summary of Francis Asbury
When Francis Asbury Hammond was born on 1 November 1822, in Patchogue, Brookhaven, Suffolk, New York, United States, his father, Samuel Smith Hammond, was 32 and his mother, Charity Elizabeth Edwards, was 30. He married Mary Jane Dilworth on 17 November 1848, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 6 sons and 6 daughters. He lived in Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States in 1860 and Grand, Utah, United States in 1900. In 1860, at the age of 38, his occupation is listed as tanner. He died on 27 November 1900, in Bloomfield, San Juan, New Mexico, United States, at the age of 78, and was buried in Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States. 
Hammond, Francis Asbury Senior (I8893)
 
15445 The Long Island Traveler "Quogue, Sept 23, Lucinda M. Bassett, aged 8 mo. 24 days, Buried at West Hampton." BASSETT, Lucinda M. (I6907)
 
15446 The Long Island Traveler "Quogue, Sept 23, Lucinda M. Bassett, aged 8 mo. 24 days, Buried at West Hampton." Bassett, Lucinda M. (I6907)
 
15447 The Mather family has included many brilliant men. (See Lineage of Rev. Richard Mather, by Horace E. Mather, pp. 539, Hartford, 1890.) Dr. Increase Mather', son of Rev. Richard Mather, and his sons, Dr. Cotton Mather and Rev. Nathaniel Mather (See A Colonial Boyhood, Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 88 (1901), p. 651.), are so well known as to require no treatment here. The English home of the family was in Lawton, Winwick Parish, Lancashire, England, where it is of record that Thomas, the father, and John, the grandfather, of the American ancestor resided. The family arms as preserved in the family of the early 11lathers of Boston are described thus:

Arms: -Ermine on a fesse wavy Azure, three lions rampant, Or.
Crest: -A lion sedant, Or.

This coat of arms is found in MS.: "Promptuarium Armorum," and is there recorded as the arms of William Mather of Salop, 1602. The motto is sometimes given "Sunt Fortia Pectora Nobis," and sometimes "Virtus Vera Nobilitas Est."

Although the ancestor of the family settled at Dorchester, his grandsons removed to Connecticut and founded the Windsor, Lyme, and Suffield branches of the Mather family. All the Mathers now living are descended from Timothy Mather' of Dorchester, the "Farmer Mather," the other lines having ended at the death of Samuel Mather, the grandson of Dr. Cotton Mather. Many persons claim decent from Dr. Cotton Mather, but they are in error, though some are descended from Mathers who bore the name of Cotton.

Rev. Richard1, the American ancestor of the Mathers, was born in Lowton, Winwick Parish, Lancashire, England, in 1596. He married (1) Catherine, daughter of Edmund Holt of Bury, England, from whom this branch of the family is descended, on Sept. 29, 1624. They came to America from Bristol, reaching Boston on Aug. 17, 1635, and settling at Dorchester. The wife Catherine, who bore all the children of Rev. Richard Mather, died in 1655, and he married (2) the widow of Rev. John Cotton. All his sons who came to mature age, five in number, were ministers, with the exception of Timothy, the "Farmer." Timothy's brother, Increase, was the president of Harvard College and a great man in the colony. Richard' died April 22, 1669.

Timothy2, second son of Rev. Richard1 and Catherine, was born in Liverpool, England, in 1628, and died in Dorchester, Mass., Jan. 14, 1684. He married (1) Elizabeth, the daughter of Maj. Gen. Humphrey Atherton of Dorchester, who bore all his children, five sons and one daughter. In March 1678-9, he married (2) Elizabeth, daughter of Amiel Weeks.

Atherton3, youngest son of Timothy2 and Catherine, was born in Dorchester, Oct. 4, 1663, and died in Suffield, Conn., Nov. 9, 1734. He married (1) _____; (2) Rebecca Stoughton, daughter of Thomas Stoughton on Sept. 20, 1694; and (3) Mary Lamb of Roxbury, Mass. on October 24, 1705. He removed to Suffield in 1712 and founded the Suffield branch of the Mather family. He represented the town of Suffield in Boston for four years in the General Court. He was a cousin of Dr. Cotton Mather. He had five sons and three daughters.

William4, oldest son of Atherton3 and Rebecca, was born in Windsor, Ct., March 2, 1698, and died in Suffield, Ct., in 1747. He married Silence Buttolph, daughter of David Buttolph of Simsbury, Ct., on Nov. 7, 1721 and had six sons and one daughter.

Timothy5, oldest son of William4 and Silence, was born in Greenwich, N. J., Aug. 4, 1722, and lived in Suffield, Ct. On Oct. 25, 1748, he married (1) Hannah Fuller, who died April 7, 1757. By her, he had two sons and two daughters. On March 6, 1760, he married widow Lucy Kellogg, by whom he had three sons.

Timothy6, second son (fourth child) of Timothy5 and Hannah, was born in Suffield, Ct., March 2, 1757, and died March 8, 1818. In 1779, he married Hannah, daughter of Dea. John Church, who died in Oct. 1827. He lived in Marlboro, Vt., and had six sons and four daughters.

Hannah7, second daughter (second child) of Timothy6 and Hannah, was born in Marlboro, Vt., July 1, 1781. She lived at Leyden, N. Y., and died March 9, 1680. On Jan. 1, 1799, she married Rev. Ruel Kimball, who died Oct. 1, 1847. They had six sons and five daughters. 
Mather, Timothy (I40925)
 
15448 The Obit reads:
July 21, 1913-April 18, 2007

Harry Ernest Jayne, 93, of Pineville, Mo., died Wednesday, April 18, 2007, at Golden Nursing Center in Anderson, Mo. He was born July 21,1913, in Cripple Creek, Colo., to William and Marsla Rusetta Thorber Jayne.

He was raised and educated in Colorado. Harry married Willie Marie Hopkins in 1940. They moved to Missouri in 1970. He was employed as a Security Guard for Gallery Graphics. He was also a volunteer Reserve Deputy in Noel, Mo. Willie died Nov. 24, 2001. He enjoyed playing the organ. He liked to keep busy doing carpentry work and mowing.
He was preceded in death by his parents, 13 brothers and sisters.
He is survived by one son, William Jayne of Noel, Mo.; three daughters, Carol Black of Pineville, Mo., Kathy Holcomb and husband, Charles, of Southwest City, Mo., and Norma Lawton and husband, Tom, of Chester, W.Va.; one sister, Margaret Jayne of Texas; 18 grandchildren; and 39 great-grandchildren.

A memorial service was held at 9 a.m. Saturday, April 21, 2007, at the Bella Vista Funeral Home Chapel, 2258 Forest Hills Blvd., Bella Vista, Ark. 
JAYNE, Harry Ernest (I21680)
 
15449 The Obit reads:
July 21, 1913-April 18, 2007

Harry Ernest Jayne, 93, of Pineville, Mo., died Wednesday, April 18, 2007, at Golden Nursing Center in Anderson, Mo. He was born July 21,1913, in Cripple Creek, Colo., to William and Marsla Rusetta Thorber Jayne.

He was raised and educated in Colorado. Harry married Willie Marie Hopkins in 1940. They moved to Missouri in 1970. He was employed as a Security Guard for Gallery Graphics. He was also a volunteer Reserve Deputy in Noel, Mo. Willie died Nov. 24, 2001. He enjoyed playing the organ. He liked to keep busy doing carpentry work and mowing.
He was preceded in death by his parents, 13 brothers and sisters.
He is survived by one son, William Jayne of Noel, Mo.; three daughters, Carol Black of Pineville, Mo., Kathy Holcomb and husband, Charles, of Southwest City, Mo., and Norma Lawton and husband, Tom, of Chester, W.Va.; one sister, Margaret Jayne of Texas; 18 grandchildren; and 39 great-grandchildren.

A memorial service was held at 9 a.m. Saturday, April 21, 2007, at the Bella Vista Funeral Home Chapel, 2258 Forest Hills Blvd., Bella Vista, Ark. 
Jayne, Harry Ernest (I21680)
 
15450 The Oldest Home in Patchogue- Patchogue, L.I., September 28- Long Island abounds in curious old buildings, one of the most interesting of which is at Patchogue, and is said to be the oldest building intact in this vicinity. This building is known as the Case homestead, and stands on the north side of East Main Street, midway between Evergreen and Grove avenues. Its appearance at once betokens age, its long, exended frontage toward the street and the eastern extension "series" telling its own story of antiquity. The immediate surroundings of the old house show also show age, a number of tall, massive black walnut trees abutting on the sidewalk, while the bunches of shrubbery, as originally set out according to the old-fashioned idea of placing the bush to shade the front porch and front window from the heat of the southern sun in midday, speak of bygone days. In line with the old idea, also, is the placing of the cellar entrance at the southern exposure of the house, in this instance, the front of the building. The exact age of the house is not known, though it is at least one hundred years old. The original owner, as far as the present occupants now know, was David Case, who came from Cutchogue. The house was first occupied by his son, David Wickham Case, whose middle name at once associates the family with the famous Wickham family of the Cutchogue section. The occupancy of David Wickham Case gives the house its record, and this includes the steady growth of two of Patchogue's thriving institutions, namely its lodge of Odd Fellows and the Congregational Church Society.
(Long Island Surnames; The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (Brooklyn, New York), Saturday, September 28, 1907 - Page 23)

Note: Located in the Old Episcopal Section of the Waverly Avenue Cemeteries 
Case, David Wickham (I33057)
 

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