Match 2,901 til 2,950 fra 3,803
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2901 | please read notes below, including comments, before changing her name and parentage From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-190100 Biography Sarah was married to Moses Simonson. Her maiden name is not known. If she was the mother of Moses' children, they married by 1635. They were clearly married by 13 December 1660, when Moses executed a deed that referred to the "consent of my wife Sarah."[1] She is sometimes identified as Sarah Chandler, but no basis for this identification has been found.[2] This is a long-time error that has been multiplied over and over online. The Mayflower Society has documented the lineage of Sarah Chandler, through her mother, Isabella Chilton, and has documented that Sarah Chandler married Solomon Leonard. Please see the Mayflower sources someone has attached. Moses Simmons did have a wife named Sarah, but her last name is never mentioned anywhere. It cannot be Sarah Chandler Leonard because both couples were alive and having families at the same time. they were contemporaries and neighbors at times. Sources ↑ Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins, vol. 3, page 1682, page 1683. ↑ Entered by Cliff Cobb, May 25, 2013. A better source for this information is needed. | Sarah (I115094)
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2902 | Please see discussions below before making changes to Benjamin Sherwood or his parents, children, spouses, or siblings. Thank you. | Sherwood, Benjamin (I52348)
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2903 | Plot: sec3-b/// | Davis, Isaac Wayne (I129215)
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2904 | Polly Ann Ross King was born in Provo, UT 18 Oct 1858. Her parents were Thomas Ross and Margret Mecham. Polly Ann married Culbert Levi King in Provo, UT 31 Jul 1876. After his death in 1921, she married second James Elbert Leavitt in Sanpete, UT 12 Sep 1930. She died In Salt Lake County 20 Jan 1940 of pneumonia, and is buried at Manti, UT. | Ross, Polly Ann (I74841)
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2905 | Poplar Hill Cemetery | Kenyon, Caleb F. (I114708)
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2906 | Poplar Hill Cemetery | Maxfield, Isaac (I114325)
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2907 | Poplar Hill Cemetery | Maxfield, Harriet A. (I114314)
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2908 | Poplar Hill Cemetery | Kenyon, Elijah (I114277)
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2909 | Poplar Hill Cemetery, Plot: 85-8 | Briggs, Mary M. (I127386)
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2910 | Poplar Hll Cemetery | Kenyon, Laura M. (I115051)
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2911 | Poquonock Bridge | Smith, Oliver (I35612)
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2912 | Poquonock Bridge | Smith, Oliver (I35612)
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2913 | possible wrong merges, we have the will of John Tarleton, who was married to Frances Hooker, and he was buried 25 January 1654/55 at St Olave Southwark, Surrey he mentions bequests to 3 churches poor of St Olave 5 pounds -poor of the parish of Gillmonton,[Gilmorton] Leicestershire [possibly where he was born] -poor of parish of Kingston upon Thames also this John Tarlton was born about 1585 http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/new-york-genealogical-and-biographical-society/the-new-york-genealogical-and-biographical-record-volume-99-ywe/page-44-the-new-york-genealogical-and-biographical-record-volume-99-ywe.shtml Tarleton's Deposition. John Tarleton, of the parish of St. Olaves in the Borough of South wark, brewer, aged 46, deposes 30 December, 1631, that in July last he, at the entreaty of Susan Hooker, wife of Thomas Hooker of Waltham in the county of Essex, preacher of God's word, now resident of Delph in Holland, did lade aborde the Jacob of London, Robert Jacob master, one small truncke of apparrell to be delivered to Mr. Peters, a minister dwelling at Rotterdam, for the accompte of the said Thomas Hooker. And he also sayeth that the said Hooker was borne at Burstall in the county 0/ Leicester, and went to Holland in or about the month of June last past. J New York Genealogical and Biographical Society. The New York genealogical and biographical record (Volume 99) online. (page 44 of 57) | Tarleton, John (I143685)
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2914 | PostalCode: 07017; Age: 100 | Davidson, Janet Warwick (I46759)
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2915 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Kloster, Knud Erik (I111447)
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2916 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Kirk, Johanne Marie Lynge (I96738)
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2917 | Povl. Byfoged senere borgmester i Randers. | Nielsen, Poul (I23929)
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2918 | PRICE (Special) - Funeral services for John Arnold Mathis, 71, long-time resident of Price, who died Wednesday, will be held at the tabernacle, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Saturday at 2 p.m., with Bishop Duane Frandsen of Price Second ward officiating. Mr. Mathis was born May 3, 1875, at New Harmony, Washington County, the son of Henry and Elizabeth Hudschmidt Mathis.He had lived in Price 51 years and was a former member of the bishopric of the original Price First ward. He had served as a member of the Price City Council and eight years as a member of the Carbon county commission. He was a former director of Price Water Co. and had been an M.I.A. secretary and one of the presidents of the Carbon stake seventies quorum. From 1903 until 1906 he served as a missionary in Germany and Austria. He married Rachel Cottam in the St. George Temple, May 5, 1899. She died at Price in October 1900. Mr. Mathis married Lily Pearl Morrison, Price, in the Salt Lake Temple in 1911. Mrs. Mathis died at Price in 1935. A stockman, Mr. Mathis was trapped by deep snows on the mountain north of Price during the winter of 1923 and had both legs frozen, necessitating the amputation of both feet. He was afterwards active as bailiff of district court until his health failed, forcing his retirement. He died at Price city-county hospital early Wednesday. Mr. Mathis was survived by four sons, Bernard Henry Mathis, Price; Weldon Mathis, Los Angeles, Cal.; Leslie A. Mathis, Inglewood. Cal. and John Arnold Mathis Jr., Price; three daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Hansen, Kenilworth; Mrs. Lucile Sage, Lawnsdale, Cal. and Mrs. Lillian Beal. Price; onebrother. Albert F. Mathis, New Harmony, and 10 grandchildren. Burial will be in Price city cemetery under direction of Wallace Mortuary. -Salt Lake Tribune, April 27, 1950 | Mathis, John Arnold Sr (I139478)
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2919 | Price- Our loving Husband, Father and Grandfather, John Arnold Mathis Jr., age 84, passed away in Provo on May 16, 2010 after a long illness. He was born to John Arnold Sr. and Lilly Pearl Morrison Mathis on September 20, 1925 in Price, Utah. Arnold married Idona H. Ward on November 18, 1949 in the Manti LDS Temple. He was a Carbon County Commissioner for 6 years, worked as a purchasing agent for the Carbon County School District and was a cattle rancher for many years. He was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, serving as Stake Missionary, Bishop, and High Councilor. He loved music and enjoyed singing, especially for funerals. He also enjoyed being with his family, sports, and working outside on his garden. He is survived by his wife, Idona, children: Susan (Bill) Madsen of Sandy, Gary (Terrie) Mathis of Layton, Marilyn (John) Kerekes of Orem, Sheree (Brent) Atwood of Cedar City, Linda (Gary) Dinkelman of Price, Gordon (Julie) Mathis of Spanish Fork, and Craig (Becca) Mathis of Orem, 35 grandchildren, 46 great-grandchildren, and a sister Elizabeth (Dorr) Hanson. He is preceded in death by his parents, 4 brothers and 2 sisters. Funeral services will be held on Friday, May 21, 2010 at 11:00 a.m. at the Price LDS 6th Ward Chapel (300 W. 500 S.). A viewing will be held on Thursday, May 20, 2010 from 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. at Fausett Mortuary in Price, also on Friday from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. prior the services at the church. Interment will be in the Price City Cemetery. Services are in the care of Fausett Mortuary. Daily Herald, May 19, 2010 | Mathis, John Arnold Junior (I139441)
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2920 | Priscilla Alden was not married. According to latest research, Priscilla was child #4 born about 1630 to John Alden and Priscilla Mullins. [See, Wikipedia, "John Alden", Family section and References 1 and 2] | Alden, Priscilla (I118483)
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2921 | Probate was done 28 Sep 1881 in Franklin, Pennsylvania Case # 11751 | Heathcote, Elizabeth (I132625)
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2922 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Frøkjær, Henrik (I111373)
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2923 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Kloster, Ib (I111677)
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2924 | Proprietær | Oddershede, Martin Richard (I106654)
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2925 | Proprietær til "Momtoft", som han arvede efter Faderen, var Stænderdeputeret og Landstingsmand samt Medlem af Thisted Amtsraad. Hans 2 Sønner af 1. Ægteskab Fritz og Christian Neergaard arvede Slægtsgaarden, men satte den i deres Ungdom og Uforstand overstyr, saa den maatte sælges 1860. Proprietær til "Momtoft", som han arvede efter Faderen, var Stænderdeputeret og Landstingsmand samt Medlem af Thisted Amtsraad. Hans 2 Sønner af 1. Ægteskab Fritz og Christian Neergaard arvede Slægtsgaarden, men satte den i deres Ungdom og Uforstand overstyr, saa den maatte sælges 1860. | Neergaard, Thomas (I101188)
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2926 | Proprietær til Dover Østergaard, Ydby Sogn, Refs Herred. | Oddershede, Peder (I20625)
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2927 | Prospect Hill Cemetery | McCoy, Emma Frances (I30423)
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2928 | Proven Mayflower Descendant of John Alden Elizabeth Alden was born about 1624 in Plymouth, MA to John Alden and Priscilla Mullins. Elizabeth Alden married William Pabodie on 26 Dec 1644 in Duxbury, MA. Elizabeth and William had at least 13 children. Elizabeth died on 31 May 1717 in Little Compton, RI. The above information is taken from the Mayflower Silver Books. Folk Figure. Long acclaimed as the first child of European parents to be born in New England. Born the eldest child of noted Mayflower passengers Priscilla Mullins and John Alden in the Plymouth colony (present day Massachusetts). She was described by those who knew her as “a woman of great character, and fine presence, very tall and handsome." She married William Pabodie on December 26, 1644 and settled in Duxbury, Massachusetts where he served as town clerk. The couple had thirteen children before moving to Little Compton, Rhode Island. She died there at about age 94. Among her descendants was the poet most credited with making famous her parents through his work, 'The Courtship of Miles Standish,' Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Her name has also been recorded as Elizabeth Paybody. Source: Find-A-Grave | Alden, Elizabeth (I118482)
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2929 | Provo City Cemetery | Tanner, Hettie Rebecca (I17539)
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2930 | Provo, Nov. 17 -- Mrs Grace Nebeker Allen, wife of J.L. Allen, died this morning from dropsy and heart trouble at the age of 34 years. Mrs. Allen was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ashton Nebeker of Salt Lake. Mr. Allen has business interests in southern Nevada and the family came from there last June and purchased a home at 758 North Academy Avenue. Mrs. Allen is survived by her husband and parents and many other relatives. The funeral services will be held Tuesday in the Fourth Ward meeting house, commencing at 2 o'clock. She was born in Tuba City, Arizona in 1879. The Ogden Examiner, Nov. 19, 1913. | Nebeker, Grace (I100649)
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2931 | Prussia | Beck, Henry (I86749)
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2932 | Præst i Sønder Aaby. | Faber, Erik (I23318)
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2933 | Quad-City Times, The (IA) | 21 May 2013 WILTON, Iowa - Marvella M. Sherwood, 87, of Wilton, Iowa, died on Sunday, May 19, 2013, at Mercy Hospice in Iowa City. Marvella was born May 28, 1925, to Harry and Rose (Petersen) Mayerhofer in New Liberty, Iowa. She attended rural Scott and Muscatine County schools. On April 20, 1946, Marvella married Chester W. Sherwood at St. Mark Lutheran Church in Davenport. Chet preceded her in death on May 28, 2012. She was a member of Sugar Creek Presbyterian Church, where she was a member of the Ladies Aid and played the organ. In earlier years, she enjoyed dancing, painting and working with Chester on the farm. Visitation will be 5-7 p.m. Thursday, May 23, at Bentley Funeral Home, Wilton. Additional visitation will be one hour before the service at the church. Services will be 10:30 a.m. Friday, May 24, at First Presbyterian Church, Wilton. Interment will be in Durant Cemetery, Durant, Iowa. Serving as pallbearers will be Scott Lebeck, Tom Whetstone, Zach Carstensen, Ryan Carstensen, Rick Hansen, Frank Townsend and Dennis Siebel. She is survived and lovingly remembered by her son, Harry, and his wife Diane Sherwood of Wilton; her daughter, Linda Carstensen of Davenport; three grandchildren, Kimberly Lebeck of Coralville, Iowa, Zachary Carstensen of Seattle, and Ryan Carstensen of Davenport; and her great-granddaughter, Camille Lebeck. She was preceded in death by her parents and her husband. Memorial donations may be made to Sugar Creek Presbyterian Church, Wilton, or the American Cancer Society in her memory. Online remembrances and condolences may be left at www.bentleyfuneralhome.com. Copyright 2013, Lee Enterprises, Incorporated d/b/a The Quad-City Times, All Rights Reserved. | Mayerhofer, Marvella Mae (I2672)
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2934 | questionable massacred by Indians? | Mosher, John (I14932)
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2935 | Quinn Meadows Rehab and Care Center | Nelson, Clella (I107606)
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2936 | Raadmand i Randers. | Nielsen, Mogens (I25528)
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2937 | Rachel Ellis was the daughter of Samuel Ellis and Zilpha Hammond of Becket, Berkshire, Massachusetts. She married Phillip Ingram 3 Jul 1796 in Cambridge, Lamoille, Vermont. They had children: Asa Burton Ingram born 1797, Experience Ingram born 1798, Chester Milton Ingram born 1800, Rachel Ingram born 1801, Phillip Turnois Ingram born 1802, Zilpha Ingram born 1805, Samuel Ellis Ingram born 1807 and Lorenzo Hammond Ingram born 1809. Her mother died in 1775. Her father died in 1778. She was raised by her older sister, Rebecca who married Christopher Tiffany and they lived in Cambridge, Lamoille, Vermont. Rachel Ellis is a Mayflower Descendant: Rachel Ellis who married Phillip Ingram, Zilpha Hammond who married Samuel Ellis, Jedediah Hammond who married Elizabeth Jenney, Seth Hammond who married Mary Randall, Samuel Hammond who married Mary Hathaway, Arthur Hathaway who married Sarah Cooke, John Cooke who married Sarah Warren, Francis Cooke The marriage of John Cooke and Sarah Warren makes this a triple Mayflower line because Sarah Warren was the daughter of Richard Warren. And John Cooke son of Francis Cooke was himself a Mayflower Passenger | Ellis, Rachel (I113216)
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2938 | Raised on farm in England. Methodist. Educated, lovely singer. Tall, slender, brown eyes. Joined LDS church - Toronto. Taught school in Kirtland. 1st child was born while Hyrum in prison. Mary nearly died. Great faith - oxen stories. Harassed by mobs, Capt. Lot - Mary won. Mary Fielding Smith Summary Mary Fielding was born in Bedfordshire, England on July 21, 1801. She was the sixth child of John Fielding and Rachel Ibbotson, who were active in the growing Methodist movement in the area. In 1834, Mary emigrated to join her brother Joseph and her sister Mercy in Toronto, Canada. The three Fielding siblings were introduced to the newly formed LDS religion in 1836, and were promptly baptized. Mary moved to Kirtland, Ohio the following year to join the larger body of the church. Well educated, Mary earned a living through teaching school, tutoring private pupils and acting as a governess. At the suggestion of the LDS prophet, Joseph Smith, Jr., the recently widowed Hyrum Smith courted Mary Fielding and the couple married on December 24, 1837. Mary accepted the responsibility of caring for and raising Hyrum's children from his first marriage, including the future church patriarch John Smith. In late 1838 Hyrum was among the church leaders taken off to prison by the Missouri militia. At this time Smith was pregnant with her first child, Joseph Fielding Smith. Mary Smith went to Quincy, Illinois with the Saints, and after Hyrum escaped from jail, they moved to Nauvoo. Their second child, Martha, was born in Illinois. After Hyrum was murdered in 1844, Mary Smith choose to follow the direction of Brigham Young and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. She and her family were among the poorer saints driven out of Nauvoo in the fall of 1846, who experienced the incident later known as the miracle of the quails. She went to Winter Quarters and then on the Salt Lake City. Mary Fielding Smith died in Salt Lake City, Utah at the home of her second husband Heber C. Kimball, on September 21, 1852 apparently of pneumonia. Although she was widely known and respected during her lifetime, her son, LDS Church President Joseph F. Smith, enhanced her reputation after her death as he presented her as a role model of courage and faithfulness in public addresses, sermons and articles. One story recounts Smith's trip across the plains with Heber C. Kimball's company. One of the captains, Cornelius P. Lott, questioned her preparation and suggested she stay behind and wait for others to help her. He called her a burden to the whole company. In response, Mary "prophesied" that she would not only stay but would beat Lott to the Salt Lake Valley without any of his help. She reportedly arrived in the Valley one day before Lott.[1] Marriage to Hyrum In November, 1837, Mary was married to the Patriarch Hyrum Smith, his first wife, Jerusha Barden, having died previously. 5 step-children Resourceful, courageous Mary found herself the mother of five step-children, and never did a girl assume motherhood better prepared for such heavy initial responsibilities than Mary Fielding Smith. All her qualities of resourcefulness and courage were to be tested to the uttermost. And it may be truly said that no trial, not even the supreme one of final integrity to the Truth, ever found her lacking courage and the power of right decision. She did not live in borrowed light. She held supremely the light within her own soul. Missionaries to England Just before her marriage, she was vitally interested in that [128] first mission that was taken by Heber C. Kimball to open the European country for the preaching of the gospel of Christ. Her brother Joseph was the companion of Brother Kimball, who planned to visit their brother, Rev. James Fielding, in Preston, where the English mission was opened. ¶ HIstory of Heber C. Kimball (3) Mary and her sister Mercy who had married the Prophet's friend and one-time secretary, Robert B. Thompson, accompanied the party to Fairport. We are told that Brigham Young, Levi Richards, with Brother Kimball's wife, Vilate, and Brother Greene's wife, Rhoda (who was the sister of Brigham Young), with Mary Fielding and Mercy Thompson, all accompanied Heber C. Kimball and Orson Hyde down the river to Fairport. Gives Heber C. Kimball $5 As Brother Kimball was about to separate from this company, without a dollar in his pocket, and sick, yet not discouraged, Mary Fielding, with her characteristic modesty and the quiet generosity which was so much a part of her nature, stepped tip to him and put five dollars in his hand. It was a God-send and paid his and Brother Hyde's passage to Buffalo. From this time, Mary's history is merged in that of her greater husband, Hyrum Smith. She shared his trials, she sweetened his daily life with her wifely ministrations, and above all she relieved him of every anxiety connected with the care and rearing of his five motherless children. For the heart of her husband could safely trust in her. Far West betrayal On the first day of November, 1838, while she was in a delicate condition of health, indeed, thirteen days before her oldest child, Joseph Fielding, was born, she was informed that her husband had been betrayed by Col. George M. Hinkle into the hands of the mob at Far West, and on the day following they told her that she "had seen her husband for the last time." Birth of Joseph F. Liberty Jail Her son Joseph Fielding Smith, our present President of the Church, was born to his tortured mother while under this black cloud of oppression. She lingered on that bed of affliction for four months, unable to rally from the blow which had been dealt her life-forces. Three months after, she was taken in a wagon on her sick bed to see her husband, then confined with the Prophet Joseph Smith as a prisoner in Liberty jail, Clay County, Mo. Flee to Quincy Still confined to her bed, she was driven in her wagon from Far West out of the state of Missouri, together with the rest of the "Mormon" refugees. After untold sorrows and pains, trials and afflictions, she, together with the little family which she held together with Spartan fortitude, reached Quincy, Ill., where she was at last joined by her loving husband on April 22, 1839. What a picture of persecution and human suffering is confined in that six months of separation. You who go quietly in and out of beautiful and safe homes, can you realize what this frail and loving mother in Israel endured during that soul-racking period? Oh, daughters of Zion, stop and reflect upon the foundation stones [129] laid for us by those heroic mothers who planted their feet with the blood of sacrifice and builded their walls in their own bones and bodies. What scenes float before the vision as these incidents unroll before our eyes. No wonder the Prophet asked to have the vision blotted out from his eyes. To Nauvoo In May, 1839, the Patriarch moved his family to Nauvoo, where Mary thereafter resided till the expulsion from Nauvoo. Some time after arriving in Nauvoo, Mary gave birth to her second and last child, Martha Ann, who is still living in Provo, and who is later spoken of in this sketch. Penny Fund In 1841, Mary set in motion the organization of a simple and modest fund which was called "The Sisters' Penny Subscription" for the purpose of buying nails and glass for the Nauvoo Temple. So quietly did this plan operate that only the briefest mention is made of it in the periodicals of the day; but it worked something of a financial miracle, for hundreds of dollars were thus collected. Initiative Who may say that this initiative on the part of Mary Fielding Smith was not productive of much of the later organized effort put forth by the women of the Church? The Relief Society was not then in operation; this fund was specifically directed for Temple purposes, and it accomplished its end. Woman power We who fancy that today sees the full flower of the powers and genius of woman for organized effort, would do well to study the annals of the earlier heroines of the Church who laid their foundation stones so deep and broad that it is given to us simply to build upon them as best we may. Heroic mother Think of this burdened woman, the mother of two children, the step-mother of four more, and the caretaker of all the poor unfortunates whom her tender-hearted husband brought constantly into her welcoming home-think of this delicately reared lady, herself frail but like sprung steel in composition, think of her-ye daughters of Zion, going about to gather in pennies from the women of Nauvoo to buy the glass and nails for that wondrous Temple in Nauvoo. Our teachers of today who go out from time to time ministering and teaching under the most comfortable modern conditions, can scarcely realize the struggles made in those early days by these heroic mothers in Israel. Agony of the martyrdom When the scenes and sufferings incident to the martyrdom fell upon the families of the Prophet Joseph Smith and his devoted brother Hyrum, who may tell the agony of suspense, the torture of fear which shook the breasts of the women who waited in vain for that release from prison, which had been miraculously given so often before. Few thought that the arrest would terminate fatally, for the Prophet had been so imprisoned and hauled into courts over forty times by his enemies. Yet this time, the Prince and powers of the air held sway and the blood of the martyrs cried from the ground of Illinois. Martyrdom tested Mary's commitment [130] Who can guess the gloom and misery which filled the home of Mary Fielding Smith, when her husband was brought cold in death to receive the last rites from his friends. But here and now was the supreme test of that majestic spirit of the martyred Patriarch's wife, Mary. Was she a true convert to the gospel as preached by Christ, and afterwards revealed again to the earth through | Fielding, Mary (I107526)
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2939 | RALPH de Bohun (-after 2 Nov 1256). Pope Alexander IV issued an indult to “Ralph de Bohun clerk son of the earl of Hereford and Essex constable of England to hold one benefice...in addition to those which he has”, dated 2 Nov 1256. [Medieval Lands,] | De Bohun, Ralph (I93268)
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2940 | Ralph de Stafford, 2nd Baron Stafford, 1st Earl of Stafford, KG (B. 24 September 1301 - d. 31 August 1372) was an English nobleman and notable soldier during the Hundred Years War against France. Ralph was the son of Edmund de Stafford, 1st Baron Stafford and Margaret Bassett.[1] Having lost his father at the early age, Ralph grew up in the midlands with his mother's relatives, including her second husband Thomas Pipe. He had his first experience of royal service, along with his brothers and stepfather, when he joined the retinue of Ralph, 2nd Lord Bassett. Stafford was made a Knight banneret in 1327 and was fighting the Scots shortly afterwards. He supported the plot to free Edward III of England from the control of Roger Mortimer, which earned the king's gratitude. By the summer of 1332, he was a commissioner of the peace in Staffordshire and had served abroad on royal business, accompanying Hugh de Audley, 1st Earl of Gloucester. He was also still fighting the Scots, commanding archers at the Battle of Dupplin Moor on 11 Aug 1332 and on three further Scottish campaigns.[2] He was first summoned to Parliament by writ as Lord Stafford on 29 November 1336 and continued to attend until 1350. His military career continued, accompanying King Edward to France in 1338 as an advisor and being present at the naval battle of Sluys on 24 June 1340. He also fought at the relief of Brest and the siege of Morlaix. He was captured at Vannes but was exchanged in time to negotiate a truce at Malestroit. On 6 January 1341, he was made Steward of the Royal Household but resigned that post on 29 March 1345 having assumed the office of Seneschal of Aquitaine, an English possession in France, where he stayed for about a year. Further battles included the battle of Auberoche, the siege of Aiguillon, from where he escaped prior to its lifting, a raid on Barfleur and the English victory at the Battle of Crecy, on 26 August 1346. He became one of the twenty-six founding members and the fifth Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1348.[2] In November 1347, his wife's father died; they were able to take possession of his estates without paying the king's homage, an indication of the relationship between them. Ralph was now a very wealthy man, from his estates and from the many prizes from the French war.[2] Edward III created a number of new peerage titles to honour his war captains and to mark his jubilee year. Ralph was created the 1st Earl of Stafford on 5 March 1350, with an annuity of 1000 marks. He now replaced Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster as the king's lieutenant in Gascony, he committed to serve with 200 men at his expense with the expectation of this being doubled in March 1353 at the king's expense. The campaigns provided several captives that were ransomed, but were ultimately unsuccessful, leading to the appointment of Edward, Prince of Wales to command.[2] Even at the age of sixty, Stafford continued to command troops and act as a royal envoy, both in France and in Ireland in 1361, accompanying Lionel of Antwerp to try and restore English control. Around 1326, Stafford married his first wife, Katherine Hastang (also known as Katherine Hastings).[1][3] Katherine was the daughter of Sir John de Hastang, Knight, of Chebsey, Staffordshire.[4] Ralph and Katherine had two daughters: Margaret, married Sir John of Bramshall (or Wickham) de Stafford, Knight. Joan, married Sir Nicholas de Beke, Knight. He later sensationally abducted Margaret de Audley, 2nd Baroness Audley, daughter of Hugh de Audley, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Margaret de Clare, who was worth at least £2314 a year, more than ten times his own estates. Her parents filed a complaint with King Edward III of England, but the King supported Stafford's actions. In compensation, the King appeased Hugh and Margaret by creating Hugh the 1st Earl of Gloucester. Margaret de Audley and Stafford married before 6 July 1336 and they subsequently had two sons and four daughters: Ralph de Stafford (d. 1347), married Maud of Lancaster, daughter of Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster and Isabel de Beaumont in 1344.[2][5] Hugh de Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford, born circa 1336 in Staffordshire, England, married Philippa de Beauchamp; they were the ancestors of the Dukes of Buckingham (1444 creation).[5] Elizabeth de Stafford, born circa 1340 in Staffordshire, England, died 7 August 1376, married firstly Fulk le Strange;[5] married secondly, John de Ferrers, 3rd Baron Ferrers of Chartley; married thirdly Reginald de Cobham, 2nd Baron Cobham.[6] Beatrice de Stafford, born circa 1341 in Staffordshire, England, died 1415, married firstly, in 1350, Maurice FitzGerald, 2nd Earl of Desmond (d. June 1358); married secondly, Thomas de Ros, 4th Baron de Ros, of Helmsley; married thirdly Sir Richard Burley, Knt.[5] Joan de Stafford, born in 1344 in Staffordshire, England, died 1397, married firstly, John Charleton, 3rd Baron Cherleton;[5] married secondly Gilbert Talbot, 3rd Baron Talbot.[7] Katherine de Stafford, born circa 1348 in Staffordshire, England and died in December 1361. On 25 December 1357, she married Sir John de Sutton III (1339 - c. 1370 or 1376), Knight, Master of Dudley Castle, Staffordshire.[8] They were parents of Sir John de Sutton IV, hence grandparents of Sir John de Sutton V. | De Stafford, Sir Ralph (I35617)
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2941 | Ralph Hemenway formerly Hemingway aka Hemmingway Born before 1610 in England This person migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1620-1640). Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown] [sibling(s) unknown] Husband of Elizabeth (Hewes) Hemingway - married 5 Jul 1634 in Roxbury, Massachusettsmap Father of Mary Hemingway, Samuel Hemingway, Ruth Hemingway, John Hemingway, Joshua (Hemenway) Hemingway, Elizabeth (Hemingway) Holbrook Hall and Mary Hemingway Died Jun 1678 in Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusettsmap Profile managers: Steven Barcomb private message, David Robinson private message , Jonathan Watkins private message , and Frank Gill Hemingway-829 created 12 Nov 2014 | Last modified 20 Sep 2016 Categories: Puritan Great Migration Contents [hide] 1 Disputed Parents 2 Biography 3 Last Will & Testament 4 Children 5 Sources 6 Last Will & Testament 7 Children Disputed Parents Samuel Hemenway and Ruth Unknown have been suggested as parents for Ralph Hemingway,[citation needed] but according to Anderson's Great Migration series, the origins of Ralph Hemingway are unknown. Until better documentation of Ralph's parents can be found, they are detached from this profile. Biography Ralph Hemingway was born about 1609.[1] Ralph Hemingway married Elizabeth Hewes 1641 in Massachusetts. [2] He passed away in 1678. [3] [4] While he is listed as a "man servant" in 1633, he became one of the larger landowners and taxpayers in Roxbury by 1639. He married Elizabeth Hewes , whose family was of some means. He is listed in the records of the First Church in Roxbury as: Ralph Henningway, (spellings vary) a man servant, came to Roxbury in 1633. As a "freeman", he married Elizabeth Hewes in 1641 cited above in a marriage record/reference. Became one of the larger land holders in Roxbury. Active in town affairs and a member of the Roxbury church. D. June 1678. An original donor of the Free Schoole. Died June 1 or 8...(1678) Last Will & Testament Dated 4 May 1677; proved 11 Jul 1678; inventory taken 15 Jun 1678 to Elizabeth my wife My son John Hemenway my son Samuel Hemenway my son Joseway Hemenway my daughter Elizabeth Holbrook my daughter Ruth Children All born Roxbury: Mary, b 24 Apr 1635; bur 4 Apr 1634 [sic] Samuel, b. __ June 1636; m in New Haven 23 Mar 1661/2 Sarah Cooper. Ruth, b 21 Sep 1638; bur Roxbury 18 Jul 1684. On 28 Jul 1674 Edward Peggy was in Suffolk Court for 'using indirect means by powders or other ways unlawful to engage the affections or desires of women kind to him & for begetting Ruth Henningway of Roxbury with child," and at the same court "Ruth Henningway is ordered to renew her bonds for her appearance at the next Court. On 24 September 1674 Ruth Hemingway was excommunicated from Roxbury church. "Ralph Henningeway" and Joshua "Hews" Sr. went to court 27 Oct 1674 and declared that "Ruth Henningway" was "not yet delivered" and they desired the case be continued until next court. John, b 27 Apr 1641; m Dorchester 6 Oct 1665 Mary Trescott Joshua, bp 9 Apr 1643; m1 Roxbury 16 Jan 1667/8 Joanna Evans; m2 Mary ____ (Mary, the wife of Joshua Hemingway Sr., d Roxbury, 5 May 1703; m3 Roxbury 5 Apr 1704 Elizabeth Weeks. Elizabeth, b 31 May 1645; bp 8 June 1645; m1 Dorchester 24 Nov 1663 John Holbrook; m2 Roxbury 22 May 1679 Richard Hall. Mary, b 7 Apr 1647; bp 18 Apr 1647; bur Roxbury 21 Dec 1653. NOTE: Pope gives a daughter Mary born 7 Apr 1644, but this daughter does not appear in the Roxbury records, and note that the second Mary born to Ralph Hemingway was born on 7 April three years later. (See below ref to first born Mary (aka Mariah) lived only 20 days approximately Apr 4-24, 1635) Sources ↑ American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) ↑ U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900[database on-line]. Ancestry.com .. ↑ Find a Grave [1] ↑ Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, Boston, MA: 1995, pp 908-910" U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) (Godfrey Memorial Library, comp Find a Grave [3] Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, Boston, MA: 1995, pp 908-910 William Barry, A History of Framingham, Massachusetts, pp 282-289 Encyclopedia-of-Massachusetts-Biographical-Genealogical-Volume-7/994381/231 at http://www.mocavo.ca/Encyclopedia-of-Massachusetts-Biographical-Genealogical-Volume-7/994381/231 A Genealogical Record of One Branch of the Hemenway Family, from 1634 to 1880" From: Wikitree | Hemenway, Ralph (I107121)
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2942 | Ralph Lavier Carter was born on June 11, 1915, in Provo, Utah, to Hettie Rebecca Tanner, age 28, and Lafayette Carter, age 39. Ralph Lavier Carter married Elva Burch in Utah, Utah, on August 26, 1937, when he was 22 years old. His wife Elva passed away on March 28, 1990, in Provo, Utah, at the age of 70. They had been married 52 years. Ralph Lavier Carter died on February 16, 1998, in Provo, Utah, when he was 82 years old. | Carter, Ralph L (I97472)
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2943 | Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, RG 85, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration | Kilde (S274)
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2944 | Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, RG 85, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration | Kilde (S33)
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2945 | Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, RG 85, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration | Kilde (S216)
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2946 | Redmond Cemetery | Nielsen, Jacob Christian (I113780)
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2947 | Reed's | Yarnall, Richard (I15301)
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2948 | Referred to in father's will as eldest son. To have with his brother Stephen the land which "I had in Colby with my father Richard." | Allen, Richard (I121423)
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2949 | Register of Deeds. North Carolina Birth Indexes. Raleigh, North Carolina: North Carolina State Archives. Microfilm. | Kilde (S667)
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2950 | Rentemester og Statholder i København. Fik 1655 Færøerne i Len, og fra 1662 besad han også alle handelsrettigheder. Da han ansatte embedsmænd, som var interesseret i at få mest mulig vinding ud af Færøerne, står Gabel-perioden, der fortsattes under hans søn, som en hård tid for færingerne trods bla. Lucas Debes kamp for at bedre forholdene. Som Frederik III's minister spillede Christopher von Gabel en betydelig rolle ved enevældens indførelse og udformning. til Bavelse (Tybjerg herred, købt 1667), og Rantzausholm (nu Brahetrolleborg, Salling herred), udlagt ham 1664 for tilgodehavende fordringer hos kronen, men 1667 mageskiftet til kronen mod Segeberg kalkværk, var 1639 kammerskriver hos hertug Frederik, 1648 kongelig kammerskriver og omslagsforvalter, forpagtede 1654 Færøerne af kronen, spillede som bekendt en fremragende rolle ved forhandlingerne med de svenske og med Holland samt ved enevældens indførelse, 1660 rentemester, kammerråd, assessor i collegio-status i kommerce-sager samt assessor i Højesteret, 1661 befalingsmand på Færøerne, adlet 1. aug. 1664, samme år geheime-etats- og kommerceråd og statholder i København. | Gabel, Christofer (I23907)
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