Match 1,401 til 1,450 fra 3,803
# | Notater | Knyttet til |
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1401 | Er konfirmeret i Vesløs Kirke den 4. oktober 1925 Er konfirmeret i Vesløs Kirke den 4. oktober 1925 | Lynge, Anna Søndergaard (I106741)
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1402 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Lynge, Arnfred Kristian (I106755)
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1403 | Er konfirmeret i Vesløs Kirke den 6 april 1924 Er konfirmeret i Vesløs Kirke den 6 april 1924 | Lynge, Edel Kirstine Larsdatter (I106783)
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1404 | er war zweimal verheiratet | Weilenmann, Kaspar (I139562)
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1405 | Erastus Rasmussen, 73, died at his home here Monday morning after a stroke suffered Thursday. Mr. Rasmussen, a retired farmer, had been a member of the Birch Creek school board and a member of the Birch Creek Irrigation Co. for a number of years. He was | Rasmussen, Erastus (I128479)
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1406 | Erhverv: Professor og borgmester (Geni) | Bornemann, Cosmus (I78918)
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1407 | Erhverv: præst i Nakskov- Branderslev på Lolland, dansk og tysk præst ved Christiansborg Slotskirke, 1715 senere Trinitatis i københavn, Provst (MyHeritage) | Rodriquez, Frederik Christian de (I3388)
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1408 | Ermengarde-Gerberga was born c. 956,[1] the daughter of Geoffrey I, Count of Anjou and Adele of Meaux.[2] She married Conan I of Rennes, Count of Rennes, in 973.[3] Her husband Conan of Rennes opposed her father and brother Fulk even though the marriage was apparently designed to form a political alliance between Anjou and Brittany.[4] Even after Conan had been killed by Fulk at the Battle of Conquereuil in 992, and during the period 992-994 when Ermengarde was Regent for their son Geoffrey, she remained loyal to her brother Fulk III, Count of Anjou.[4] In 992, following the interests of her brother, and functioning as Regent, she accepted Capetian over-lordship for Rennes while rejecting that of Odo I, Count of Blois.[5] About 1000[6] her brother Fulk III arranged his widowed sister to marry, secondly, William II of Angoulême, one of his close allies.[7] | Of Anjou, Duchess of Brittany Ermengarde-Gerberga (I77768)
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1409 | Eugene Hillhouse Pool, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Surgery at Cornell University Medical College, New York, died on April 9, 1949 in his 75th year. At the time of his death, Dr. Pool was also Consulting Surgeon to the New York Hospital and an Honorary Governor. Dr. Pool was born on June 3, 1874, the son of John Hillhouse and Sophia Boggs Pool. He was graduated from St. Paul’s School in Concord, New Hampshire, and received his A.B. degree from Harvard College in 1895. Four years later he was graduated in medicine from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University. In 1900 he was appointed Senior Assistant House Surgeon at the New York Hospital, becoming House Surgeon the following year. From 1901 to 1904 he served as Assistant Demonstrator in Anatomy at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia, and as Instructor in Surgery from 1904 to 1912. From 1912 to 1915 he was Associate in Surgery. During this period, in 1907, he was appointed Associate Attending Surgeon to the New York Hospital. In 1915 he became Professor of Clinical Surgery and Attending Surgeon in charge of the Second Surgical Division. He served in this capacity until 1932, when the New York Hospital joined with Cornell University Medical College at its present location. He was then appointed Professor of Clinical Surgery in Cornell Medical College and Senior Attending Surgeon to the New York Hospital, which posts he held until his retirement in 1947 One of the most distinguished surgeons to be associated with Cornell, Dr. Pool did much to develop surgery as we know it today. He was recognized throughout the country and abroad as a master surgeon, an inspired teacher, and an acknowledged leader in his profession. His wide and varied activities produced major achievements in clinical surgery and research. His interest in the young men he gathered about him was deep and lasting, and to many he gave freely of his time, advice, and material assistance to guide them into the positions of responsibility they occupy today in various communities. As one of the leading surgeons of the United States, he was prominent in surgical circles and made many valuable contributions to meetings and to the current literature. It is a lasting tribute to his name that he held the highest positions in the surgical societies and medical organizations of his era. He was elected President of the New York Surgical Society in 1923, of the Society of Clinical Surgery from 1927 to 1929, of the American College of Surgeons in 1926 and was appointed to the Board of Regents of that organization in 1928. He was President of the American Surgical Association in 1935, President of the New York Academy of Medicine 1935-1936, and held many other offices of honor and responsibility. During World War I he went to France with the New York Hospital Unit, Base Hospital No. 9 and then served as Chief Surgeon of Evacuation Hospital No. 1. He was later advanced to Consulting Surgeon to the 5th Army Corps, and at the end of the war was Consulting Surgeon to the First Army. Among his decorations for service were the Legion of Honor from France, the Distinguished Service Medal and a citation from General Pershing for “meritorious service”. Dr. Pool was interested in civic affairs and served on a number of committees for the State, lending advice to those in high position. Of particular note was his work as chairman of the committee appointed by Governor Lehman in 1935 to rewrite the medical provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. He was Administrative Consultant in Surgery for the City Hospitals of New York and a life Trustee of Columbia University.Throughout his professional life Dr. Pool was closely associated with the affairs of the New York Hospital. He was a member of the Medical Board until his retirement, and served as its President from 1929 to 1931. During his tenure of office he worked untiringly for the advancement of the Cornell Medical Center to its present position. It would be difficult to estimate the number of lives he saved or made more bearable by his surpassing judgment and surgical dexterity. His patients benefited not only from his operating skill but from his kindly interest in their personal problems. His wise counsel, friendship and loyalty will be sorely missed, not only by the institution, but by the community at large. Accessed at: https://ecommons.cornell.edu/bitstream/handle/1813/18815/Pool_Eugene_Hillhouse_1949.pdf;jsessionid=2B06151ACD9FF9EFDC9B6BA5DA8ED881?sequence=2 | Pool, Dr. Eugene Hillhouse (I78748)
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1410 | Eugene Hilton was born in the town of Virgin, Utah, November 12th, 1889. His first ten years were spent in Virgin and then the family moved with all their belongings in the family wagon to Church Farm. A few years later that area was renamed Abraham, Utah. The years at Church Farm were difficult ones. Eugene remembered that it was necessary to dilute the milk with water in order to have enough for the whole family of eleven children. A few years later they moved a short distance to Hinckley which became the permanent headquarters for the Hilton family. Eugene had a thirst for knowledge and education. He loved school. At one point in his young adult life he was working his way through school at the Brigham Young Academy in Provo when he received a message that he had to come home to help on the family farm. Reluctantly he left the B.Y.A. and returned home. It was uncommon for young men of Hinckley, Utah to go on missions. So it was rather a special event when Eugene was called at age 24, to serve a mission for the Church in the Eastern States Mission. He had a very successful mission. His last duty was that of Conference President of the East Pennsylvania Conference, covering most of the eastern part of that state, including Philadelphia. A very providential event took place at that time. He was asked to stay on an extra three months, making it a 27 month mission, to continue his administration of that Conference in Philadelphia. During that three month extension the first two lady missionaries were called to serve in the Eastern States Mission. He had the duty to meet and orient them and assign them to their duties. There was one sister from Idaho and Sister Ruth Naomi Savage from Woodruff, Arizona. A few months later Eugene was honorably released and returned home to finish his high school education. He circumspectly corresponded with Sister Savage throughout the duration of Ruth Naomi's mission. She returned home from her mission just in time for April Conference in Salt Lake City and Eugene was waiting at the train station. The first day after her return she accepted his proposal for marriage. Eugene and Ruth were both outstanding missionaries and were married in the St. George temple, as both of their parents had been, on September 28, 1916. Their love of education made their first step quite clear - obviously they must go back to Provo and complete his academic work. These were happy days that included playing the trombone in the dance band, serving as class president and participating on the debating team. The church encouraged Eugene to take a position to open the seventh seminary of the Church, in Lehi, Utah. Off to Lehi they went. Next he was drafted by the Church to open the seminary work in Blackfoot, Idaho. Then back to Salt Lake for an assignment on the faculty of the LDS University with a calling to serve on the General Sunday School Board. They had a lovely brick home and settled into what looked like a permanent home. But the Church had need of a strong administrator to get accreditation for the Church College (Gila College) in Thatcher, Arizona, and Eugene was tapped for the job. So in their model "7" they went all the way to southern Arizona where he served as President of the College. Among the happy memories of those days were the occasions when Eugene was called upon to sing in Church or in the Rotary Club. The Stake Clerk, Spencer W. Kimball, usually accompanied him. During their Salt Lake years, he had earned his Master's Degree at the University of Utah. With Ruth’s encouragement they decided to go all the way for a doctorate. So they moved to Berkeley, California and Eugene was successful in earning his third academic degree as a Doctor of Education. His Doctoral dissertation was accorded unusual recognition and when the University elected to publish it in book form, a rather special acknowledgment of an outstanding dissertation. That was 1930; in that same year he took a position with the Oakland Public School District as Superintendent of Social Studies. He spent his entire professional career in the Oakland School System with several important responsibilities, including principal. Those Oakland years were also busy for Eugene and he liked to reflect back on those years as he states it, as the "wearing of four hats". His first hat was the calling from which he would never be released, that of husband and father. He expressed great gratitude in noting that each of the eight children completed a mission for the Church, each was married in the Temple, and each of the boys graduated from college. His second hat was that of professional educator in his work in social studies, teaching and school administration. The third hat that he wore was that of author. He wrote and published many articles as well as ten books. These covered a variety of subjects-religion, history and civics. The most notable was a two volume work, "Problems and Values of Today" for which Eugene received a four thousand dollar prize from the Atlantic Monthly. Four thousand dollars seemed like a fortune in the 1930's. Ruth was also an accomplished author and had several articles published in the Improvement Era, the Woman’s Journal and the Relief Society Journal. Eugene’s fourth hat was that of tireless Church worker. He served as a counselor in the Stake Presidency, followed by twelve years as Stake president. During that time the Oakland Stake became the largest stake in the Church. He later served as a Patriarch and Temple Sealer. Ruth also loved the church and never refused a call to serve. A partial list of her Church callings includes seven ward or stake relief society presidencies, stake literary leader and three years of service as an Ordinance Worker in the Los Angeles and Oakland Temples. Throughout their life Eugene and Ruth loved sharing the word of the Restoration. Their first mission together was right after Eugene’s retirement in l96l when they served a proselyting mission in Scotland. This was later followed by two academic missions at the Church Colleges in Hawaii and New Zealand. Eugene drew on his experiences at Gila colleges to perform the same task in Laie, Hawaii, getting the academic accreditation for the Church College. After their third mission, they purchased a beautiful home a half block from the Oakland Temple and settled in for what they thought would be the golden years of Temple work. They were both ordained as ordinance workers in the Oakland Temple where Dad also worked as Sealer. That dream was interrupted by the passing of Ruth. It was not too many months thereafter that Eugene rediscovered the biblical truth that "It is not good for man to be alone". His path then crossed that of Ruth Catherine. She had lost her husband Jim and it was a beautiful opportunity for the two of them to spend their later years together. They loved each other and both peacefully ended their mortal probation with their eyes firmly fixed on the Lord Jesus Christ. | Hilton, Eugene (I132332)
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1411 | Eugene Worlton Bushman's Story is found under Documents. | Bushman, Eugene Worlton (I127471)
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1412 | Evelyn started school in Helena, Montana (kindergarten), then Lombard, Sixteen and Ringling, Montana where she graduated from high school. Thereafter, she enrolled in the LDS Hospital for nurse training, completing it in 1934. After receiving her registered nurse (RN) degree, she and John Sherman Tanner were married. They lived in Salt Lake City several years after their marriage and the two older children were born there. Later, they went to Alaska where the three younger children were born. Besides the care of her home and family, she was active in helping those who needed a nurse's help and care and responded willingly whenever there was a need. She was also active in organizing the Relief Society. She loved her church. Evelyn lived a busy and useful life. She went to her reward early in life--2 May 1947. She died of cirrhosis of the liver (note: she never drank alcohol, she did work with carbon tetrachloride in her hospital work - one of her daughters also died of liver disease) | Pitman, Evelyn Joy (I83894)
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1413 | Even though Ann and her 3 children were deceased, they were sealed 6 May 1955 in the Salt Lake Temple to William Frost. The sealing was approved by the First Presidency of the Latter Day Saint Church and was done by her great grandchildren. Ann had been one of the early converts to the Church in Bolton, England and had been baptized in 1840. She was an active member until her death in 1850. Ann Pilkington was born, lived, and died in Bolton le Moors, Lancashire, England. She joined the LDS church during her lifetime, and along with her daughters Jane and Isabella, she contributed to the building of the Nauvoo temple. The three christening records for her children do not list a father, and there is no marriage record for Ann, although there are birth, christening, and death records. | Pilkington, Ann (I83431)
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1414 | Evidence from genealogical and church records proves that the Losee family traveled to Utah in 1852. Further research is needed to determine the name of the company they traveled with. Birth date confirmed by Lehi Ward records. | Losee, David Alma (I54928)
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1415 | Evidently there were 2 Lydia Ladd living at the same time in the same area. Be careful not to mix them. This one did not marry Charles Rundlett II, the other one did. | Ladd, Lydia (I83112)
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1416 | evtl. verwandt mit ihrem Ehemann. Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Wyllschen, Marina (I20978)
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1417 | Excerpt from Genealogy of the Dodge Family of Essex County, Mass., 1629-1894 [as a child of Capt. Joseph Herrick and Mary Dodge, page 33]: --. ii. HENRY, b. 9 Sept., 1688; m. Joanna Woodbury, 1 Dec., 1709. DODGE FAMILY GENEALOGY, 1629-1898, published 1894; Identifier Number and [Nick Name] Nane --. ii. [none] HENRY (Herrick) | Herrick, Capt. Henry (I90575)
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1418 | Excerpts from George's Obiturary. The Journal Thursday, March 18, 1909 A GOOD MAN GONE. Mr. George T. Baugh, one of Logan's most respected citizens passed to his final audit on Monday evening. Some time ago he met with an accident in which he broke one of his legs and otherwise injured himself and he never recovered from his hurts. Furneral services are to be held in the tabernacle at 1pm on Saturday. Friends desiring to view the remains may do so at the residence of Mrs. John Bench, between the hours of 9 o'clock and noon on Saturday. George Thomas Baugh was the son of an English army officer and was born at Gibaltar, while his father was stationed there, on May 20, 1821. When the family returned to England they resided at Birmingham, where he was married in 1840. In 1847, he joined the church, and while re remained in his native land, did much service in Gospel. He came to Utah in 1871, settling in Logan where he remained. For 25 years he labored in the Logan Temple, and therefore was well known to people in this section of Utah.And not one that knew him but admired him. He was indeed a grand old man, cheerful, great hearted, honest and loyal. He had never swerved from the straight line of duty, and the rich reward of a faithful follower of the Master is his. His wife preceeded him to the other side, passing away a little over five years ago. A numerous posterity survives him. He was the father of 14 children. At the time of his passing, there were 101 grandchildren, 78 great grandchildren and 6 great-great grandchildren, a total of 199 descendants. Personal Information in 1841 He is living in BIrmingham, Birmingham at Court no 2 Livery Street with his wife Elizabeth age 15 and daughter Elizabeth 1 month and his mother Ann age 60 (head of household,) and Henry age 20,. Occupation is listed as German Silverspoons Location and occupation in 1851 He is living in St Martin Parish, Birmingham, Birmingham, England on Livery Street with Mother Ann Baugh, head of household, brother Henry, his wife Elizabeth and daughters Eliza, Emmeline, Martha and Melissa. His occupation is Spoon Filer. His birthplace is listed as Gibraltar, British ??? This information is on the 1851 England Census | Baugh, George Thomas (I121206)
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1419 | Ezra Kenyon Bushee: BIRTH 1820 DEATH 10 Jun 1893 (aged 72-73) BURIAL Bethel Cemetery Kimball County, Nebraska, USA MEMORIAL ID 53617486 Mr. Bushee was one of the pioneers of the area, having homesteaded here in 1888. He was the grandfather of Mrs. Bernice Linn of Kimball, NE. Family Members Parents Anthony Bushee 1793-1847 Lucy Convis Bushee 1797-1844 Spouse Alzina Spooner Bushee 1839-1894 Siblings Mariah Bushee unknown-1889 Samual Convis Bushee 1817-1902 Henry Bushee 1818-1891 Lucinda Bushee Barris 1823-1895 Branton Bushee 1825-1904 Louisa Bushee Wheeler 1829-1862 Sarah Bushee Kuhn 1832-1890 Burton Bushee 1833-1918 Amanda Fidelia Bushee Eaton 1840-1932 Children Lucy Bushee Gordon 1842-1934 Emma A. Bushee Green 1844-1885 George Franklin Bushee 1853-1891 Augusta Lucinda Bushee Smith 1853-1945 Berton Kenyon Bushee 1871-1942 Gravesite Details EZRA'S WIFE IS LISTED HERE AS BUEHU, WHICH I BELIEVE IS INCORRECT. | Bushee, Ezra Kenyon (I2482)
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1420 | Factoryville Cemetery | House, Philip (I127711)
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1421 | Familien fik gennem Sorø Amt d. 11/01/1963 tilladelse til at bruge navnet Lynge som efternavn. Familien fik gennem Sorø Amt d. 11/01/1963 tilladelse til at bruge navnet Lynge som efternavn. | Lind, Holger (I18923)
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1422 | Family Data Collection - Births Name: Arthur Moseley Moseley Father: Arthur Moseley Mother: Johan Hancock Birth Date: 1668 City: Henrico Co State: VA Country: USA Source Information: Edmund West, comp.. Family Data Collection - Births [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001. Description: The Family Data Collection - Births database was created while gathering genealogical data for use in the study of human genetics and disease. | Moseley, Arthur II (I30029)
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1423 | Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B John TANNER Self M Male W 51 NY Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Leander TANNER Son S Male W 29 PA Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Milford TANNER Son S Male W 23 PA Cabinet Maker NY NY Homer TANNER Son S Male W 17 PA At Home NY NY Addie TANNER Dau S Female W 14 PA House Keeper NY NY Source Information: Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B Birth Year <1829> Birthplace NY Age 51 Occupation Carpenter & Joiner Marital Status M <Married> Race W <White> Head of Household John TANNER Relation Self Father's Birthplace NY Mother's Birthplace NY Lovell Cemetery MILITARY: Civil War 136th Pa Inf. Went in a Cpl. came out a Pvt. CENSUS: 1880 US CENSUS Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B John TANNER Self M Male W 51 NY Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Leander TANNER Son S Male W 29 PA Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Milford TANNER Son S Male W 23 PA Cabinet Maker NY NY Homer TANNER Son S Male W 17 PA At Home NY NY Addie TANNER Dau S Female W 14 PA House Keeper NY NY Source Information: Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B Birth Year <1829> Birthplace NY Age 51 Occupation Carpenter & Joiner Marital Status M <Married> Race W <White> Head of Household John TANNER Relation Self Father's Birthplace NY Mother's Birthplace NY Lovell Cemetery MILITARY: Civil War 136th Pa Inf. Went in a Cpl. came out a Pvt. CENSUS: 1880 US CENSUS Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B John TANNER Self M Male W 51 NY Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Leander TANNER Son S Male W 29 PA Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Milford TANNER Son S Male W 23 PA Cabinet Maker NY NY Homer TANNER Son S Male W 17 PA At Home NY NY Addie TANNER Dau S Female W 14 PA House Keeper NY NY Source Information: Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B Birth Year <1829> Birthplace NY Age 51 Occupation Carpenter & Joiner Marital Status M <Married> Race W <White> Head of Household John TANNER Relation Self Father's Birthplace NY Mother's Birthplace NY Lovell Cemetery MILITARY: Civil War 136th Pa Inf. Went in a Cpl. came out a Pvt. CENSUS: 1880 US CENSUS Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B John TANNER Self M Male W 51 NY Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Leander TANNER Son S Male W 29 PA Carpenter & Joiner NY NY Milford TANNER Son S Male W 23 PA Cabinet Maker NY NY Homer TANNER Son S Male W 17 PA At Home NY NY Addie TANNER Dau S Female W 14 PA House Keeper NY NY Source Information: Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania Family History Library Film 1255165 NA Film Number T9-1165 Page Number 471B Birth Year <1829> Birthplace NY Age 51 Occupation Carpenter & Joiner Marital Status M <Married> Race W <White> Head of Household John TANNER Relation Self Father's Birthplace NY Mother's Birthplace NY Lovell Cemetery MILITARY: Civil War 136th Pa Inf. Went in a Cpl. came out a Pvt. CENSUS: 1880 US CENSUS Census Place Hector, Potter, Pennsylvania | Tanner, John C. (I54069)
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1424 | Family Record show birth date as 5 april 1723 and not 8 april | Glud, Soren (I138427)
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1425 | Family trees submitted by Ancestry members. | Kilde (S919)
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1426 | Family trees submitted by Ancestry members. | Kilde (S924)
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1427 | Family trees submitted by Ancestry members. | Kilde (S929)
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1428 | Family trees submitted by Ancestry members. | Kilde (S945)
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1429 | Får bevilliget efternavnet Kold i 1905. | Andersen, Larsine (I110139)
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1430 | Farm Cemetery | Armstrong, George (I115461)
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1431 | Farmer-mason He immigrated in about 1851. Re-baptized by James E. Hall 6 December 1877in the Font House in Springville, Utah, because 1867 records were burned. He was confirmed by William M. Bromley 6th December 1877. Ordained an Elder 5th December 1882 by W. H. Kelsey. Ordained a Seventy 20th December 1883 by O. B. Huntington, 20 Dec. 1883 and ordained a High Priest by A. O. Smoot 21 August 1888. After sending four sons on missions he served a 6 month mission to California in 1927, at the age of 67 years old. Family records of William Thomas Tew and Warren Snow Tew in possession of Mrs. Vera H. Tew, Shelley, Idaho. William Thomas Tew was rebaptized on 6 Dec 1877 because the 1867 records were burned. All and any genealogical information pertaining to William Thomas Tew was submitted to the Genealogical Society, 10 June 1981. Another endowment date is 31 Jan 1884. | Tew, William Thomas (I96792)
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1432 | Farmington City Cemetery | Adams, Grace (I121287)
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1433 | Farmington City Cemetery | Smith, Lot (I114080)
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1434 | Ferdinand Henry Olsen, conducting business at Provo under the name of the Provo Automobile & Bicycle Company, was born in Midway, Wasatch county, Utah, September 12, 1882. His father, the late Hans Olsen, was a native of Denmark, from which country he | Olsen, Ferdinand Henry (I132454)
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1435 | Fik bevilliget efternavnet Kold i 1905 | Andersen, Christian (I110140)
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1436 | Fik bevilliget efternavnet Kold i 1905. | Andersen, Marthine (I127294)
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1437 | Fik bevilliget efternavnet Kold i 1905. | Andersen, Ane Kathrine (I110135)
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1438 | Fik bevilliget efternavnet Kold i 1905. | Andersen, Anders Christian (I109958)
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1439 | Fik bevilliget efternavnet Lynge i 1905. | Nielsen, Lars Jakobsen (I106889)
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1440 | Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2012. | Kilde (S518)
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1441 | Find A Grave CDR Joseph B Hoyt - (Navy Commander) BIRTH 1901 DEATH 1992 (aged 90-91) BURIAL Mountain View Memorial Park Lakewood, Pierce County, Washington, USA Show Map PLOT Garden of Peace Wall MEMORIAL ID 107887242 · View Source MEMORIAL Family Members Spouse Photo Winifred M Hoyt 1903-2000 Inscription WORLD WAR I & II | Hoyt, Joseph Burton (I131581)
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1442 | Find A Grave William Hoyt BIRTH 24 Jul 1856 Marion County, Indiana, USA DEATH 5 Mar 1935 (aged 78) Gem County, Idaho, USA BURIAL Emmett Cemetery Emmett, Gem County, Idaho, USA MEMORIAL ID 36228092 · View Source MEMORIAL Son of Susan Maria Walton & Joseph Place Hoyt. Husband of Lillian Winnona Emery. William and Lillian had 7 children, Donald Lester, Inez Clair, Vernon Emery, Evalyn Ingle, William Stanley, Joseph Burton and Emil David. 09 10 12 Family Members Spouse Photo Lillian Winnona Hoyt 1865-1950 (m. 1886) Children Photo Inez C. Blessinger 1889-1972 | Hoyt, William Alverado (I131574)
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1443 | Find a Grave Memorial # 193 Joseph Gurnsey Brown, eldest son of Ebenezer and Ann Weaver Brown, was born November 8, 1824, at Dryden, Tompkins County, New York. His father's family became members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints soon after it was organized. While here in Illinois in 1842 (June) Ebenezer's wife died leaving three sons and one daughter. A baby sister, Ann, was also laid away at Quincy, Illinois. Later Joseph Gurnsey's father Ebenezer, married a widow, Phebe Draper Palmer, who had a large family. They were forced to endure the persecutions of the early saints and were driven from Nauvoo. Ebenezer joined the Mormon Battalion on June 26, 1846. Meantime, Gurnsey at age 22, together with his 19 year old sister, Harriet, and her husband Oliver Stratton, brought the family (Gurnsey's brothers, Norman 15, John Weaver 9, and Phebe's children) across the plains. They met their father in Salt Lake in 1849. The cattle herd they had brought across the plains were taken south of Salt Lake for feed. Ebenezer and his family took up land south of Salt Lake City on what was called Willow Creek They built the first house in Draper in 1850. On December 31. 1851, Gurnsey married 16 year old Harriet Maria Young, the only daughter of Lorenzo Dow and Persis Goodall Young. About five years later, in 1856, Gurnsey along with others was asked to take provisions and meet the belated handcart companies of English saints who were struggling to reach the Valley before winter. These rescuers themselves had nothing easy. A forced drive of 300 to 400 miles across wintry mountains. They crowded their teams day after day looking ahead for the vanguard of walkers but the mountain valleys reached on, snowy and empty, past Echo Canyon on until they saw the shinning Uintah Mountains, and then the Wyoming plains. At Fort Bridger a new storm stopped them. That night of October 20th, Capt Willie and one companion, frostbitten, exhausted and riding two worn out animals, appeared out of the blizzard at fort Bridger. They told the men from Utah, storm or not, if they did not come at once there was no use to come at all. They broke camp at once and started again. They did not stop again until they reached the Willie Company. The night before the rescuers reached them, nine more had died. The rest had not eaten for 48 hours. Among those Gurnsey brought back to the Valley were two young ladies, Esther Brown and Elizabeth White. Brigham Young had asked the settlers to open their homes and care for these Saints. So to his home he brought Esther. His wife, Harriet took her in with her warm friendly way, caring for her until she again blossomed out in all her loveliness. On January 18, 1857, Gurnsey married Esther Brown. On March 22, 1857, Joseph Gurnsey took his third wife, Lovina Manhard. Gurnsey was called on a mission to England in 1864 where he served for nearly three years without purse or script, leaving three wives with children. Soon after his return, President Brigham Young called Gurnsey and his family to assist with the colonization of Moapa Valley, Nevada, known as the "Muddy Mission". In the fall of 1867 Gurnsey and Harriet and their eight children ranging in age from 14 years to 8 months, made the journey to help settle the town of St. Joseph. Here they lost their baby daughter, Julliet, May 20, 1868. This area was at that time a part of the territory of Deseret as mapped out by the early church leaders and was a part of Kane County, later Rio Virgin Co. A warehouse had been built on the Colorado River at a point known as Call's Landing. It was intended that the church would bring converts from Europe by steamships through the Gulf of Mexico and up the Colorado River and unload them at this point to continue the journey overland. The towns on the Muddy would serve as way stations where emigrants could rest and procure provisions for the rest of the journey. The Muddy Mission proved to be unsuccessful, so far as colonization of that area at that time was concerned, and due to excessive taxes, extreme heat, shortage of water and other problems, the saints were released from the mission and were free to return to their former homes if they wished to. However, President Young strongly urged them to remain in the southern Utah area and help re-settle the townsites that had been abandoned during the Indian troubles in the 1860's. Gurnsey brought Lovina and her children, John, Delia and Will, to St. Joseph in the fall of 1870 while Esther and her children remained in Draper. Lovina's son John gives an interesting account of their experiences while in St. Joseph. He said when they arrived Aunt Harriet and her seven children were living in a two-room adobe house with a dirt floor and a flag roof. The roof was made from cattails, ten to twelve feet tall, cut down in the swamps, tied in bundles about six inches in diameter and tied to the stringers and weighted down, making a water-tight roof. They had a chicken coop made of mesquite roots dug from the farm land. They used these roots for fuel also, as there was no timber closer than seventy miles and no willows for thirty miles. Flour was hauled from Draper; but the "muddy" soil was rich and the climate so mild that good gardens could be grown; sweet potatoes as large as small pumpkins and his father said in jest that the watermelons grew so fast they wore the vines out dragging them along. When the settlers were released from their missions, the Browns along with other Muddyites, started for Long Valley. Gurnsey left Lovina in the town of Washington, Washington County, and he and Harriet and their family moved on. Along the way they met Harriet's brother, John R. Young. He persuaded Gurnsey to go to Kanab, and they arrived there in 1871 and lived in a tent bought from Johnson's Army. Lovina and family were brought out later in the spring. In Kanab the Browns secured two lots by squatting on them and they cultivated another 30 acres of land and built a two-room house with a room for each wife. Getting goods into the Kanab area was very difficult because of geographical difficulties and consequently most of the food and dry goods had to be produced by themselves. Sugar was almost unknown to them for several years; but good molasses was made from sugar cane that grew well here. Gurnsey set up the first sorgum mill in the northeast part of town. He planted orchards with all kinds of fruit trees, vines, berries, and shrubbery, etc. The first year he lived in Kanab he planted one acre of alfalfa and it made pig and chicken feed. He also raised garden vegetables of all kinds and raised potatoes in the Kanab Canyon and at what he called Cottonwood Canyon, a nice little tract of land about twelve miles west of Kanab. He had a few acres of meadow land in the Kanab Canyon he could mow several tons of wild hay and the country was just a mat of all kinds of wild grasses and herbs, so much so it was not necessary to have but a few-tons of hay. It was necessary to built not only dams and canals, but roads and trails in order to get in and out of the country. The people would arrange what they called road gangs and ditch gangs and go out and build roads leading to Long Valley where hundreds of people who left the Muddy Mission had settled. The only grist mill was at Glendale, some twenty-seven miles over a set of rolling hills and washes, with sand so deep for a distance of thirteen miles that it would take four horses of good quality to move one ton of anything as the wagon wheels would sink into the sand from four to eight inches. He managed to get along well for several years. President Brigham Young paid us a visit and he told the people to come out of the Kanab Canyon and farm the Valley just south of the town. It was a large fertile valley of very choice land. He told us to open the canyon and turn out cattle in it and let them tramp the water out of the meadows and swamps. He predicted that in a short time we would have a flood that would come down the canyon and wash it down to bedrock. We would build a canal around the town and have water to irrigate the town and to reservoir the water. We would be able to irrigate all the land in the valley and raise plenty of everything we would need in the shape of vegetables and cereals and hay. It was a fact, for the flood came and washed out the sand and swamps and cleaned the canyon out so that the water increased in quantity sufficient to successfully irrigate some 1600 acres of land. Afterwards we had another large flood which tore out sand and rocks and mud down to a lower bedrock and increased the water still more. We have taken up all the land available and have plenty of spring water to irrigate all the land. It will produce good crops of hay and some hardy vegetables such as corn and potatoes. We feel that Brigham was a true prophet and saved us from having to move away from the place. The Browns belonged to the United Order in Kanab as long as it lasted. While in Kanab each of the two wives added three more children to the family. Esther passed away April 21, 1881. In the 1880's during the raid in which the government officials were confiscating church cattle and other property, Gurnsey was appointed to take over the church cattle and sheep at Pipe Springs and run them as his own. So Harriet and the children lived at Pipe Springs for several years and Lovina remained in Kanab. The Indians were hostile at this time and even though they lived in the fort, at Pipe Springs, they were in constant danger. In 1894 Gurnsey bought a large red brick home in the northeast part of town. It had been built by Frank Rider and owned for a few years by Henry Bowman. The Brown's ran a hotel in the home with Harriet and the girls providing meals and taking care of the rooms and the men folk taking care of the teams in the large barn and corral on the lot. During all the years from 1870, Joseph Gurnsey Brown was a strong factor i | Brown, Joseph Gurnsey (I132392)
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1444 | find a grave memorial # 54983946 PHILIP, 2nd known child of John & Margary (Moore) Washburn,, was baptized in Bengeworth 2 June 1622 & buried there 7 June 1622. Source: Anderson's Great Migration Begins. | Washburn, Phillip (I114997)
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1445 | Find a Grave Memorial 23680068; Daughter of Cornelius Carrico and Susan Shanks She first married Francis Hilary O'Bryan on Nov 4, 1823 in Washington Co, KY and after he died she married Thomas Blandford on Jan 3, 1853 in Washington Co, KY | Carrico, Teresa Susan (I139563)
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1446 | Find a grave memorial https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/35996555/john-black: Born about 1591 (at Salem Quarterly Court for 9 September 1645, the court exempted from training "John Black being poor & aged 54;" (note that this would make Black thirty-eight years old in 1629, when we first see him with a family). Husbandman who came to Massachusetts Bay in 1629 on the "Talbot." First settled in Salem; later moved to Beverly. Died 16 March 1674/5. Married by 1629 _____ _____; about July 1646 the "wife of John Blak" gave evidence in court against the wife of Thomas Oliver of Salem. John Black of Salem has been assigned wife Susanna, by confusion with the non-existent John Black of Charlestown. Clarence Almon Torrey, in his article on the many marriages of Elizabeth Black, has some other useful comments on the family of John Black (but includes this incorrect information on Susanna) | Black, John Jr (I90514)
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1447 | Find A Grave Memorial# 12338664 | Scofield, James Jr. (I22705)
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1448 | Find A Grave Memorial# 126068620; Title: Hathaways of America Editor: Versailles, Elizabeth Starr, 1909-Hathaway Family Association (publisher) (Northampton, Mass. : Printed by Gazette Printing Co.). viii, 1426 p., [29] leaves of plates, p. 46. "in a garrison house where his parents fled in King Philip's War. His will dated 5 Oct. 1754, pro'd 6 Feb. 1759 (Taunton 16-217) is long and most interesting; gives to his children three "negro boys" Hector, Benoni, and Perow and four "negro girls" Hagar, Dina, Jenne and Sealler. Ref. N.E.H.G.R. 87-51. George Madison Bodge's Soldiers in King Philip's War, 1899, p. 427, soldier grantee, Narragansett No.4, Jacob Hathaway, claimant; heirs of Taunton. Records in M.D.C. Hqrs. Quabbin, Mass. show heirs eligible, 30 Apr. 1768, but no list of actual settlers was made until much later. He was a selectman of Freetown 1720-9; 31-44; assessor 1725-36. As young man served in militia, but Quaker influence of Chaces, Shermans, and Stranges drew him to join their group before 1719. He gave land for their meeting house, refused to serve in the expedition to Maine against the French and Indians and was in jail for this when his youngest son was born (Jael). He received by deed (Taunton 2-58) just before his marriage, part of his father's land, half a mile east of the highway, 7/14ths of the forge...by deed dated 29 Jan. 1725; and on 24 June 1726 the land from his father and stepmother, beginning at a pine tree between the 18th and 19th lots " Will of Jacob HATHAWAY was written in 1754, and probated in 1760 (Taunton, MA Prob. Ct., 16/217-220). 14. JACOB4 HATHAWAY (JOHN3 HATHAWAY, JR., JOHN2 HATHWAY, NICHOLAS1) was born 1675 in TAUNTON, MASS.. He married PHILLIP CHASE January 28, 1696/97 in TAUNTON, MASS. She was born July 05, 1679 in FREETOWN, MASS., and died Aft. 1754. | Hathaway, Ensign Jacob Sr. (I100315)
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1449 | Find A Grave Memorial# 1341 Birth: Dec. 13, 1818-Lexington,Fayette County,Kentucky, USA Death: Jul. 16, 1882-Springfield,Sangamon County,Illinois, USA Presidential First Lady. She was the wife of 16th US President Abraham Lincoln and was the First Lady from March 1861 until April 1865. Born the fourth of seven children into an affluent family, her father was a banker and the family owned slaves. At the age of six her mother died and her father remarried and had nine additional children. She attended Madame Mantelle's finishing school at an early age where she learned to speak French fluently and studied dance, drama, music, and social graces. By age 20, she was regarded as witty and gregarious, with a grasp of politics. In October 1839 she moved to Springfield, Illinois and lived with her oldest sister, Elizabeth Porter Edwards, who was married to Ninian W. Edwards, the son of a former Illinois governor, and he served as her guardian. She was popular among the gentry of Springfield, and though she was courted by the rising young lawyer and Democratic Party politician Stephen A. Douglas and others, she chose to marry Abraham Lincoln, a rising circuit lawyer, in November 1842. Her husband became famous for his position on slavery, which generated national support for him. During her White House years, she faced many personal difficulties generated by political divisions within the nation. Several of her half-brothers served in the Confederate Army and were killed in action, and one brother served the Confederacy as a surgeon. Her second son Eddie, had died of tuberculosis in 1850 and her third son William (Willie), died of typhoid fever in the White House in 1862. She had difficulty negotiating White House social responsibilities and rivalries, spoils-seeking solicitors, and baiting newspapers in a climate of high national intrigue in Civil War Washington. She refurbished the White House, which included extensive redecorating of all the public and private rooms as well as the purchase of new china, which led to extensive over expenditures. The president was very angry over the cost, even though Congress eventually passed two additional appropriations to cover these expenses. She suffered from severe headaches, described as migraines, throughout her adult life, as well as protracted depression. Her headaches became more frequent after she suffered a head injury in a carriage accident during her White House years. A history of mood swings, fierce temper, public outbursts throughout Lincoln's presidency, as well as excessive spending, has led some historians and psychologists to speculate that she possibly suffered from bipolar disorder. She often visited hospitals around Washington to give flowers and fruit to wounded soldiers and took the time to write letters for them to send to their loved ones. On occasion, she accompanied Lincoln on military visits to the field. On Friday, April 14, 1865, she sat with her husband watching the comic play "Our American Cousin" at Ford's Theatre. The Civil War had just ended five days earlier with the surrender of Confederate General Robert E. Lee at Appomattox, Virginia. During the performance, John Wilkes Booth sneaked into the booth where they were seated and shot her husband in the back of the head. She accompanied her mortally wounded husband across the street to the Petersen House, where he was taken to a back bedroom and laid crosswise on the bed there, where Lincoln's Cabinet was summoned. He died early the following morning and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton ordered her to leave the room as she was so overcome with grief. After his national funeral that took place at different locations across the country and internment in Springfield, Illinois, she returned to Illinois and lived in Chicago with her sons Robert and Thomas (Tad). In July 1870 the US Congress granted her an annual life pension in the amount of $3,000 for which she lobbied hard to obtain. At the time it was unprecedented for widows of presidents to receive a government pension, and she had alienated many congressmen, making it difficult for her to gain approval. The death of her son Thomas (Tad) in July 1871, brought on an overpowering grief and depression and her surviving son, Robert Lincoln, a rising young Chicago lawyer, was alarmed at his mother's increasingly erratic behavior. After nearly jumped out of a window to escape a non-existent fire, Robert determined that she should be institutionalized and in May 1875 he committed her to Bellevue Place, a private asylum in Batavia, Illinois. Three months after being committed, she devised her escape. She smuggled letters to her lawyer, James B. Bradwell, and his wife Myra Bradwell, who was not only her friend but a feminist lawyer and fellow spiritualist. She also wrote to the editor of the Chicago Times concerning her plight and soon, the public embarrassments that Robert had hoped to avoid were looming, and his character and motives were in question, as he controlled his mother's finances. She had a trial to determine if she was capable of being released. The director of Bellevue had assured the jury she would benefit from treatment at his facility. However, in the face of potentially damaging publicity, he declared her well enough to go to Springfield, Illinois to live with her sister Elizabeth as she desired and In 1876 she was declared competent to manage her own affairs. Following the court proceedings, she was so enraged that she attempted suicide. She went to the hotel pharmacist and ordered enough laudanum to kill herself, but he realized her intent and gave her a placebo instead. The committal proceedings had resulted in her being profoundly estranged from her son Robert, and they did not reconcile until shortly before her death. She spent the next four years traveling throughout Europe and took up residence in Pau, France. Her final years were marked by declining health. She suffered from severe cataracts that reduced her eyesight that may have contributed to her increasing susceptibility to falls. In 1879 she suffered spinal cord injuries in a fall from a stepladder. She returned to the US and during the early 1880s she was confined to the Springfield, Illinois residence of her sister Elizabeth. On July 16, 1882, she collapsed at her sister's home and lapsed into a coma and died there at the age of 63. She has been portrayed by several actresses in film, including Julie Harris in "The Last of Mrs. Lincoln," a 1976 television adaptation of the stage play, Mary Tyler Moore in the 1988 television mini-series "Lincoln" (1988), Sally Field in Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln" (2012), Penelope Ann Miller in "Saving Lincoln" (2012), and Mary Elizabeth Winstead in "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" (2012). Several biographies have been written about her as well, including Barbara Hambly's The Emancipator's Wife (2005) and Janis Cooke Newman's historical novel "Mary: Mrs. A. Lincoln" (2007). (bio by: William Bjornstad) Family links: Parents: Robert Smith Todd (1791 - 1849) Ann Elizabeth Parker Todd (1794 - 1825) Spouse: Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865) Children: Robert Todd Lincoln (1843 - 1926)* Robert Todd Lincoln (1843 - 1926)* Edward Baker Lincoln (1846 - 1850)* William Wallace Lincoln (1850 - 1862)* Thomas Lincoln (1853 - 1871)* Siblings: Elizabeth Porter Todd Edwards (1813 - 1888)* Robert Smith Todd (1814 - 1814)* Levi Oldham Todd (1816 - 1864)* Frances Jane Todd Wallace (1817 - 1899)* Mary Ann Todd Lincoln (1818 - 1882) Ann Maria Todd Smith (1820 - 1891)* Robert Parker Todd (1821 - 1822)* Margaret Todd Dillon (1822 - 1874)* George Rogers Clark Todd (1825 - 1900)* Robert Humphrey Todd (1827 - 1827)** Samuel Brown Todd (1830 - 1862)** David Humphreys Todd (1832 - 1871)** Martha Todd White (1833 - 1868)** Emilie Todd Helm (1836 - 1930)** Alexander Humphreys Todd (1839 - 1862)** Elodie Breck Todd Dawson (1840 - 1877)** Catherine Bodley Todd Herr (1841 - 1875)** *Calculated relationship **Half-sibling Burial: Oak Ridge Cemetery Springfield Sangamon County Illinois, USA GPS (lat/lon): 39.80601, -89.64772 | Todd, Mary Ann (I112321)
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1450 | Find A Grave Memorial# 628; Aug. 1, 1843-Springfield,Sangamon County,Illinois, USA Death: Jul. 26, 1926-Manchester,Bennington County,Vermont, USA US Cabinet Member and Diplomat. He is best remembered as the first child of 16th US President Abraham Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln and was the only one of the President's children to survive past the age of 18. After graduating from Phillips Exter Academy at Exter, New Hampshire in 1860, he attended Harvard University at Cambridge, Massachusetts from 1861 until 1865. In February 1865 he was commissioned as an assistant adjutant with the rank of captain and served in the last weeks of the American Civil War as part of General Ulysses S. Grant's immediate staff, a position which sharply minimized the likelihood that he would be involved in actual combat. He was present at Confederate General Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox, Virginia on April 9, 1865 and two months later he resigned his commission. Following his father's assassination on April 14, 1865 he moved to Chicago, Illinois with his mother and youngest brother Tad where he completed his law studies at the Old University of Chicago law school (later absorbed by the Northwestern University School of Law) and was admitted to the bar in February 1867. In 1877 he turned down President Rutherford B. Hayes' offer to appoint him Assistant Secretary of State, but later accepted an appointment as President James Garfield's Secretary of War, serving from 1881 to 1885 under Presidents Garfield and Chester A. Arthur. In 1887 he assisted Oscar Dudley in establishing the Illinois Industrial Training School for Boys in Norwood Park, Illinois. In 1889 he was appointed the US minister to England (the Court of St. James) by President Benjamin Harrison, serving until 1893 during which time his young son, Abraham II "Jack", died from blood poisoning. After finishing his term, he returned to his law practice. In 1897 he became president of the Pullman Palace Car Company and in 1911 he became its chairman of the board until 1922. He died in his sleep at his home from a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 82. (bio by: William Bjornstad) Family links: Parents: Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865) Mary Ann Todd Lincoln (1818 - 1882) Siblings: Robert Todd Lincoln (1843 - 1926)* Robert Todd Lincoln (1843 - 1926) Edward Baker Lincoln (1846 - 1850)* William Wallace Lincoln (1850 - 1862)* Thomas Lincoln (1853 - 1871)* *Calculated relationship Inscription: "Buried at Arlington National Cemetery" Burial: Plot: Across from Abraham Lincoln's monument *Memorial Site [?] Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?] Maintained by: Find A Grave Record added: Jul 04, 2000 Find A Grave Memorial# 10323 | Lincoln, Robert Todd (I112324)
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