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3051 SARAH STANLEY was born 18 February 1651, in Farmington, Hartford, Connecticut, to Captain John Stanley (1624-1706.) He died in the Indian War leaving 8 children; his father died crossing the ocean; and Sarah Fletcher (1621-1713.) She married Joseph Gaylord, 14 July 1670, in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut.

Sarah Stanley died 12 February 1711, in Durham, Middlesex, Connecticut, at about 59 years old.

Children of Joseph Gaylord and Sarah Stanley:

1. Sarah Gaylord (1671-1738)
2. Joseph Gaylord (1673-1742)
3. William Gaylord (1675-1753)
4. John Gaylord (1677-1699)
5. Elizabeth Gaylord (1682-1751)
6. Mary Gaylord (1683-1783)
7. RUTH GAYLORD (1686-1726)
8. Abigail Gaylord (1686-1738) twin
9. Patience Gaylord (1687-1763)
10. Joanna Gaylord (1688-)
11. Benjamin Gaylord (1692-1774) 
Stanley, Sarah (I143463)
 
3052 Sarah Streeter Gleason Birth: Apr. 2, 1643 Gloucester Essex County Massachusetts, USA
Death: Jul. 8, 1703 Framingham Middlesex County Massachusetts, USA

Thomas Gleason and Sarah Streeter were married about 1663 in Massachusetts.
Children of Thomas and Sarah:
Sarah Gleason born February 6, 1665 in Sudbury, Mass.
Anna Gleason born about 1667 in Sherborn, Mass.
Isaac Gleason born February 1674 Sherborn, Mass.
Mary Gleason born about 1677 Sherborn, Mass.
Patience Gleason born June 19, 1680 Sherborn, Mass.
John Gleason born about 1682 Sherborn, Mass.
Parents: Stephen P Streeter (1600 - 1652)
Ursula Adams Streeter Hosier Robinson Crafts (1619 - 1679)
Spouse: Thomas Gleason (1637 - 1705)
Children:
John Gleason (1682 - 1740)*
Siblings:
John Streeter (1640 - ____)*
Stephen Streeter (1641 - 1689)*
Sarah Streeter Gleason (1643 - 1703)
Burial: Find A Grave Memorial# 126861732 
Streeter, Sarah (I40547)
 
3053 SARAH TRACY PARTRIDGE was born 2 September 1639, of Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts, to Governor George Partridge (1617-1695) and Sarah Tracy (1623-1708.) She was their oldest child. Sarah Tracy Partridge married Deacon Samuel Allen II, 16 December 1658, in Bridgewater, Massachusetts.

Sarah’s family was one of the earliest settlers in Bridgewater. She was a member of the Congregational Church.

Stacy Tracy Partridge passed away 7 August 1722, age 83, Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts; buried 8 August 1722, Bridgewater.

Sarah Partridge, eldest child of George Partridge & Sarah Tracy, was b. circa 1639 at Duxbury, Mass. and d. Oct. 30, 1717 prob. at Bridgewater, Mass.

By early 1660, Sarah m. Dea. Samuel Allen, Jr., s. of Samuel Allen & Ann Whitmore, b. Nov. 10, 1632 at Braintree, Mass. and d. circa 1703, prob. at Bridgewater, Mass. They had the following ten children of record at Bridgewater, dau. Mehitable the exception stated to have been b. at Duxbury:

i. Samuel Allen, 3rd, b. Dec. 4, 1660.
ii. Essiel (f) Allen, b. Mar. 1, 1662/3.
iii. Mehitable Allen, b. Jan. 20, 1664/5.
iv. Sarah Allen, b. Apr. 14, 1667.
v. Bethia Allen, b. May 12, 1669.
vi. Nathaniel Allen, b. Feb. 10, 1672/3.
vii. Ebenezer Allen, b. Oct. 14, 1674.
viii. Josiah Allen, b. Apr. 21, 1677.
ix. Elisha Allen, b. Feb. 8, 1678/9.
x. Nehemiah Allen, b. Jan. 5, 1680/1.

Sarah Partridge Allen
Birth: 1639
Duxbury
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA
Death: Aug. 7, 1722
Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA

By early 1660, Sarah m. Dea. Samuel Allen, Jr., s. of Samuel Allen & his 1st wife purportedly named Ann (whose maiden name is unknown). Samuel is claimed to have been b. Nov. 10, 1632 in Braintree, Mass. However, no proof of the latter date exists and no record exists of when his father arrived in New England. Braintree was incorporated as a distinct town in 1640 and the town's first recorded vital record is June 1643. Samuel d. testate between June 29, 1703 and Dec. 21, 1705 (date of will-date of proof) in Bridgewater, Mass.

Sarah Partridge and Samuel Allen, Jr. had the following ten children of record in Bridgewater, dau. Mehitable the exception stated to have been b. in Duxbury, Mass.:

• i. Samuel Allen, 3rd, b. Dec. 4, 1660.
• ii. Essiel (f) Allen, b. Mar. 1, 1662/3.
• iii. Mehitable Allen, b. Jan. 20, 1664/5.
• iv. Sarah Allen, b. Apr. 14, 1667.
• v. Bethia Allen, b. May 12, 1669.
• vi. Nathaniel Allen, b. Feb. 10, 1672/3.
• vii. Ebenezer Allen, b. Oct. 14, 1674.
• viii. Josiah Allen, b. Apr. 21, 1677.
• ix. Elisha Allen, b. Feb. 8, 1678/9.
• x. Nehemiah Allen, b. Jan. 5, 1680/1.

Children of Samuel Allen and Sarah Tracy Partridge: Check FamilySearch for kids.

1.*SAMUEL ALLEN (4 Dec 1660-28 June 1750)
2.Essiel\Asahel Allen (1 Mar. 1662-1685) female
3.Eleazer Allen (1663-1685) male
4.Mehitable Allen (10 Jan. 1664-2 Dec. 1685) Md. Alden
5.Sarah Allen (14 Apr. 1667-1743) Md. Snow
6.Bethiah Allen (12 May 1669-11 Mar. 1744) Md. Pryor
7.Nathaniel Allen (10 Feb. 1672-1742)
8.Ebenezer Allen (14 Oct. 1674-1734)
9.Josiah Allen (21 Apr. 1677-1736)
10.Elisha Allen (8 Feb. 1678-1731)
11.Nehemiah Allen (5 Jan 1681-1703)
+
Original Bio by Don Blauvelt

Family links:
Parents:
George Partridge (1617 - 1695)
Sarah Tracy Partridge (1623 - 1708)

Spouse:
Samuel Allen (1632 - 1705)*

Children:
Samuel Allen (1660 - 1750)*
Mehitable Allen Alden (1664 - 1725)*
Sarah Allen Snow (1667 - ____)*
Bethiah Allen Pryer (1669 - 1744)*
Josiah Allen (1677 - 1736)*
Nehemiah Allen (1681 - 1728)*

Siblings:
Sarah Partridge Allen (1639 - 1722)
Tryphosa Tracy Partridge West (1642 - 1701)*
Elizabeth Partridge Allen (1643 - 1722)*
Ruth Partridge Thacher (1645 - 1717)*
Lydia Partridge Brewster (1650 - 1743)*
Mary Partridge Skiff (1656 - ____)*
John Partridge (1658 - 1731)*
James Partridge (1660 - 1743)*

*Calculated relationship

Maintained by: lifescribe
Originally Created by: Don Blauvelt
Record added: Feb 14, 2010
Find A Grave Memorial# 48126369
Elizabeth’s Headstone, Plymouth, Massachusetts

Children of Samuel Allen and Sarah Tracy Partridge: Check FamilySearch for kids.

1.*SAMUEL ALLEN (4 Dec 1660-28 June 1750)
2.Essiel\Asahel Allen (1 Mar. 1662-1685)
3.Eleazer Allen (1663-1685)
4.Mehitable Allen (10 Jan. 1664-2 Dec. 1685) Md. Alden
5.Sarah Allen (14 Apr. 1667-1743) Md. Snow
6.Bethiah Allen (12 May 1669-11 Mar. 1744) Md. Pryor
7.Nathaniel Allen (10 Feb. 1672-1742)
8.Ebenezer Allen (14 Oct. 1674-1734)
9.Josiah Allen (21 Apr. 1677-1736)
10.Elisha Allen (8 Feb. 1678-1731)
11.Nehemiah Allen (5 Jan 1681-1703)
+
 
Partridge, Sarah Tracy (I121172)
 
3054 Sarah Verle Kesler Modified | History 25 March 2012 by LDS Church Membership -------------------------------------------  Kesler, Sarah Verle (I90272)
 
3055 Sarah was born to Erastus Snow and Artimesia Beaman Snow. Her father was an early member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In March of 1840, he responded to another mission call for the church to eastern Pennsylvania. Later Artimesia  Snow, Sarah Lucina (I127800)
 
3056 Sarah was the daughter of John Dickinson and Frances Foote. She was born in 1653 in Amherst, MA where her family was living. She first married Samuel Lane 11 Dec 1677, and second married Martin Kellogg 27 Feb 1691.  Dickinson, Sarah (I91819)
 
3057 Sarah was the daughter of Thomas and Ann Scott of Hartford, CT.

Ann Scotts’ first husband, Thomas Scott of Hartford, was killed 6 Nov 1643, carelessly by John Ewe who was fined and 10 pounds given to his widow. Thomas lay wounded and gave his Will, though incomplete, as it did not name an overseer. He provided for his widow, Ann, and son Thomas, and his three daughters.

His widow married 7 Nov 1644, Thomas Ford; she died in Northampton, 5 May 1675. One daughter, Mary, married at the same time with her mother, Robert Porter; another daughter, Sarah, married 5 Dec 1645, John Staley; and the other daughter, Elizabeth married 3 or 6 Feb 1649, John Loomis of Windsor. (from Savage's Dictionary)

For the Will taken 6 Jan 1643, the Probate Records give the relationships of Thomas Scott: Thomas Scott, Jr.; mother is now Ann Ford, sisters are Elizabeth and John Loomis; Mary and Robert Porter; and Sarah and John Standly.

Dear Lavon Ross,

RE: Sarah Fletcher 1641-1713 • L4C4-GP5
John Stanley II 1624-1706 • 9CDQ-YZM

Thank you for contacting FamilySearch Support and bringing your concern to our attention. Due to the sensitivity associated with this record, the ordinances will be listed as “Not Available” in Family Tree.

The temple ordinances for the individuals named have been completed.

Sincerely,
FamilySearch Data Administration

Your Original Case Description:
ISSUE: Patron called because 2 names popped up in her recommended tasks list. 
Scott, Sarah (I143464)
 
3058 Sarah was the first daughter named Sarah of Thomas Hooker and Susannah Garbrand. She was baptized at Great Baddow, Essex, 5 January 1625/6; and buried at Chelmsford, Essex, 23 May 1626. (Great Migration)  Hooker, Sarah Child (I143765)
 
3059 Sariah was in Heber City because her sister Lovina Bigelow Witt lived there. Mary Sariah Cook, Sariah's child, is buried on the plot in the Heber City Cemetery next to her aunt, Lovina Bigelow Witt's family.  Bigelow, Sariah (I76333)
 
3060 Schleswig  Schönbach, Magdalene Johansdatter (I51778)
 
3061 Schleswig-Holstein  Rantzau, Birthe (I9975)
 
3062 Schleswig-Holstein  Rantzau, Magdalene (I7707)
 
3063 Scipio Cemetery  Johnson, Lorretta (I31685)
 
3064 Sct. Mortens Kirkebog side 166 nr. 1. opslag 336 1790-1810:

April 1803.

Den 15. april.

? Johan Georg Wittrog og hustru Frederiche Sophie Arenstorffs datter døbt Albertine Dorthea Wittrog født den 19 marts og ?

Fadder: Etatsraad Arenstorff, ? ? i ?, Kammerjunker v Ahrendorph, ? Kammerjunker Bentzon, Kammerjunker v Lyt???, Major v Ahrendorph, Rirmester v Christensen og ? H. Ch. Hansen.

...................

Om Albertines far er der følgende historie: Han døde i Napoleonskrigen i 1813, og da ægtefællen, Albertines mor var død i 1812, blev deres 6 børn forældreløse. De blev nu fordelt til Johans 3 krigsvenner (officerer) - de havde nemlig alle 4

indgået en "musketerer-ed": Hvis en af dem faldt i krigen skulle dennes børn fordeles til de andre 3, som så skulle opfostre dem som deres egne.

Albertine havnede på Samsø - en anden kom til Slægten Rosenkrantz, Ølundgaard.

En tredie kom muligvis til Ormslev, idet hun her blev gift med Ove Mohr.

.......................

Af en folketælling fra 1840, Onsbjerg, Samsø fremgår det at:

Albertine er 37 år og lever som præsteenke efter Ancher Heegaard. Hendes indtægter kommer fra hendes pension og gården. Det fremgår også, at der på gården også bor hendes to døtre Helene Sophie Heegaard, 11 år og Georgine Sophie Heegaard, 8 år. Desuden ser man, at døtrenes lærerinde, Christine Lovise Anine J. Steen, 17 år og ugift også har bopæl på gården. Sidst, men ikke mindst fremgår det, at der også bor to tjenestefolk på gården: Ane Kathrine Madsdatter, 29, ugift og Jens Ebbesen Nicolaisen, 26, ugift. Sidstnævnte bliver kort tid efter gift med Albertine.

Af en folketælling fra 1890 fremgår det at:

Albertine nu er 86 år og aftægtskone sammen med sin anden mand Jens Ebbesen Nicolaisen.

............................

Af Kirkebogen 1892-1904, Onsbjerg, Samsø, Skanderborg, opslag 237 fremgår det, at Albertine ved sin død boede hos datteren, Anders Bothilde og hendes mand, købmand Jens Johan Hansen i Onsbjerg.

I samme opslag kan man endvidere læse følgende:

"Enke efter Gårdmand og forhendværende handelsmand Jens Ebbesen Nicolaisen i Onsbjerg. Født i Randers 19. marts 1803. Datter af Oberløjtnand Vittrock ved dragonerne og hustru Sophie Arenstorff. F??rste gang gift med sognepræst Ancher Heegaard til Estvad og Rønbjerg der døde ved besøg i Nordby på Samsø 1834. Havde på sine gamle dage ophold hos datter og svigersøn Købmand J. J. Hansen i Onsbjerg.

Alder 89 10/12 år."
Sct. Mortens Kirkebog side 166 nr. 1. opslag 336 1790-1810:

April 1803.

Den 15. april.

? Johan Georg Wittrog og hustru Frederiche Sophie Arenstorffs datter døbt Albertine Dorthea Wittrog født den 19 marts og ?

Fadder: Etatsraad Arenstorff, ? ? i ?, Kammerjunker v Ahrendorph, ? Kammerjunker Bentzon, Kammerjunker v Lyt???, Major v Ahrendorph, Rirmester v Christensen og ? H. Ch. Hansen.

...................

Om Albertines far er der følgende historie: Han døde i Napoleonskrigen i 1813, og da ægtefællen, Albertines mor var død i 1812, blev deres 6 børn forældreløse. De blev nu fordelt til Johans 3 krigsvenner (officerer) - de havde nemlig alle 4

indgået en "musketerer-ed": Hvis en af dem faldt i krigen skulle dennes børn fordeles til de andre 3, som så skulle opfostre dem som deres egne.

Albertine havnede på Samsø - en anden kom til Slægten Rosenkrantz, Ølundgaard.

En tredie kom muligvis til Ormslev, idet hun her blev gift med Ove Mohr.

.......................

Af en folketælling fra 1840, Onsbjerg, Samsø fremgår det at:

Albertine er 37 år og lever som præsteenke efter Ancher Heegaard. Hendes indtægter kommer fra hendes pension og gården. Det fremgår også, at der på gården også bor hendes to døtre Helene Sophie Heegaard, 11 år og Georgine Sophie Heegaard, 8 år. Desuden ser man, at døtrenes lærerinde, Christine Lovise Anine J. Steen, 17 år og ugift også har bopæl på gården. Sidst, men ikke mindst fremgår det, at der også bor to tjenestefolk på gården: Ane Kathrine Madsdatter, 29, ugift og Jens Ebbesen Nicolaisen, 26, ugift. Sidstnævnte bliver kort tid efter gift med Albertine.

Af en folketælling fra 1890 fremgår det at:

Albertine nu er 86 år og aftægtskone sammen med sin anden mand Jens Ebbesen Nicolaisen.

............................

Af Kirkebogen 1892-1904, Onsbjerg, Samsø, Skanderborg, opslag 237 fremgår det, at Albertine ved sin død boede hos datteren, Anders Bothilde og hendes mand, købmand Jens Johan Hansen i Onsbjerg.

I samme opslag kan man endvidere læse følgende:

"Enke efter Gårdmand og forhendværende handelsmand Jens Ebbesen Nicolaisen i Onsbjerg. Født i Randers 19. marts 1803. Datter af Oberløjtnand Vittrock ved dragonerne og hustru Sophie Arenstorff. F??rste gang gift med sognepræst Ancher Heegaard til Estvad og Rønbjerg der døde ved besøg i Nordby på Samsø 1834. Havde på sine gamle dage ophold hos datter og svigersøn Købmand J. J. Hansen i Onsbjerg.

Alder 89 10/12 år." 
Wittrock, Albertine Dorthea (I18581)
 
3065 Se tilknyttede kilder.  Jørgensen, Peter Kristian (I55038)
 
3066 Second much younger wife Please read "Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to N.E. 1620-1633, Vols. I-III " by Robert Charles Anderson. Boston: NEHGS 2009 pg 688-689 http://www.americanancestors.org/PageDetail.aspx?recordId=235180486
and the discussions under Thomas Scott.

DO NOT MERGE HER WITH MRS. THOMAS SCOTT WHOSE NAME IS UNKNOWN AND HIS FIRST WIFE! 
Ann (I143467)
 
3067 See attached history: "A Brief Historical Sketch of Martha Larsen Sorensen as told by her Daughter Elizabeth Jensen"

Some main points:
She,her brother, and two sisters were raised by their widowed father who never remarried. She was a tomboy and too "adventurous." Her brother died when she was young. She had one older and one younger sister. She went to work for a tailor and his apprentices in Oslo when she was a young woman. It was while thus employed that she met the Mormons. She and a friend went to hear them on a lark because they wanted to see what they looked like. She was disappointed to find they were normal looking people, but their message hit home and she was baptized. Her distressed father sent her older sister Mary to "rescue her from the despised Mormons," but Martha convinced Mary to listen to them first. Mary was sure she would be able to detect their errors, but she ended up also being converted. The money from their inheritance at their father's death paid for their passage to America. The other sister did not convert and remained in Norway where she married.
Martha came to America when the Civil War was in full swing and was very distressed to see all the soldiers wherever she went until reaching Florence, Nebraska. She crossed the plains with Capt. Hans C. Larson's family walking every step of the way. She was in the last ox train to cross the plains--after that, mules and horses were used.
One funny story: she carried with her a little blue jug as a prize possession. Capt. Larsen kept throwing it out, and she just as determinedly kept putting it back. "In a tempestous moment she declared it had as much right to ride as his peevish howling brat." She wore out three pair of shoes on the journey. At one time she was so exhausted, she gave up and lay down beside the trail. A voice told her to arise and go on and face her burden courageously. "She obeyed and found a new strength which endured to the end of the trail."
She was employed to help the wife of Apostle Franklin D. Richards. It was here she met Soren Sorensen and his wife Ane Christine Sorensen.
After she married Soren, the tailor she worked for arrived from Denmark to tell her he had joined the church and still wanted to marry her (He had asked once before.)
She was called the "Salt Woman" because peddling salt and other commodities by freight to various towns was how she survived and supported her children after Soren's death. 
Larsen, Martha (I131408)
 
3068 See Danish test far below.

--Check Ancestral Chart in Documents for Ancestors, Siblings, and Ancestors of Richard II of Normandy--

Here first in English from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_II,_Duke_of_Normandy

Richard II (unknown - 28 August 1026), called the Good (French: Le Bon), was the eldest son and heir of Richard I the Fearless and Gunnora.[1][2] He was a Norman nobleman of the House of Normandy. He was the paternal grandfather of William the Conqueror.
Richard succeeded his father as Duke of Normandy in 996.[1] During his minority, the first five years of his reign (suggesting he was born circa 980), his regent was Count Rodulf of Ivry, his uncle, who wielded the power and put down a peasant insurrection at the beginning of Richard's reign.[3]
Richard had deep religious interests and found he had much in common with Robert II of France, who he helped militarily against the duchy of Burgundy.[3] He forged a marriage alliance with Brittany by marrying his sister Hawise to Geoffrey I, Duke of Brittany and by his own marriage to Geoffrey's sister, Judith of Brittany.[3]
In 1000-1001, Richard repelled an English attack on the Cotentin Peninsula that was led by Ethelred II of England.[4] Ethelred had given orders that Richard be captured, bound and brought to England.[5] But the English had not been prepared for the rapid response of the Norman cavalry and were defeated at the Battle of Val-de-Saire.[6]
Richard attempted to improve relations with England through his sister Emma of Normandy's marriage to King Ethelred.[4] This marriage was significant in that it later gave his grandson, William the Conqueror, the basis of his claim to the throne of England.[7] The improved relations proved to be beneficial to Ethelred when in 1013 Sweyn Forkbeard [Svend Tveskæg] invaded England. Emma with her two sons Edward and Alfred fled to Normandy followed shortly thereafter by her husband king Ethelred.[7] Soon after the death of Ethelred, Cnut [Knud], King of England [and Danmark] forced Emma to marry him while Richard was forced to recognize the new regime as his sister was again Queen.[4] Richard had contacts with Scandinavian Vikings throughout his reign. He employed Viking mercenaries and concluded a treaty with Sweyn Forkbeard who was en route to England.[8]
Richard II commissioned his clerk and confessor, Dudo of Saint-Quentin, to portray his ducal ancestors as morally upright Christian leaders who built Normandy despite the treachery of their overlords and neighboring principalities.[9] It was clearly a work of propaganda designed to legitimize the Norman settlement, and while it contains numerous historically unreliable legends, as respects the reigns of his father and grandfather, Richard I and William I it is basically reliable.[10] [Also his claim that Rollo of Normandie was from Fakse, Sjælland, Danmark].
In 1025 and 1026 Richard confirmed gifts of his great-grandfather Rollo to Saint-Ouen at Rouen.[11] His other numerous grants to monastic houses tends to indicate the areas over which Richard had ducal control, namely Caen, the Éverecin, the Cotentin, the Pays de Caux and Rouen.[12]
Richard II died 28 Aug 1026.[1] his eldest son, Richard becoming the new Duke.

He married firstly, c.1000, Judith (982-1017), daughter of Conan I of Brittany,[13][14] by whom he had the following issue:
Richard (c. 997/1001), duke of Normandy[1]
Robert (1000), duke of Normandy[1]
Alice of Normandy (c. 1003/5), married Renaud I, Count of Burgundy[1]
William (c. 1007/9), monk at Fécamp, d. 1025, buried at Fécamp Abbey[1][15]
Eleanor (c. 1011/3), married to Baldwin IV, Count of Flanders
Matilda (c. 1013/5), nun at Fecamp, d. 1033. She died young and unmarried.[16]

Secondly he married Poppa of Envermeu, by whom he had the following issue:
Mauger (c. 1019), Archbishop of Rouen
William (c. 1020/5), count of Arques

And a Danish text:
Richard 2. af Normandiet (død 1026) var hertug i Normandiet og gik under navnet Richard den Gode [Le Bon]. Han var søn af hertug Richard 1. den Frygtløse af Normandiet og hertuginde Gunnor. Han efterfulgte sin far som hertug af Normandiet i 996. Richard nærede modvilje imod bøndernes opstand og hjalp Robert 2. af Frankrig imod hertugdømmet Burgund. Han slog også et engelsk angreb på den kotentiske halvø tilbage, et angreb der blev ledet af den angelsaksiske kong Ethelred 2.. Richard søgte også at reformere de normanniske klostre.
Richard var gift 2 gange, først i 996 med Judith (død 1017), der var datter af Conan 1. af Bretagne dernæst med Papia. Børn af 1. ægteskab var:
Richard 3. af Normandiet
Robert den Storslåede
William, munk i Fécamp død 1025
Adélaide
Renaud 1. greve af Burgund
Eleanor (eller Ainor, Judith)
Balduein 4. af Flandern
Matilda død 1033
og børn af 2. ægteskab med Papia:
Mauger ærkebiskop af Rouen
Vilhelm greve af Arques

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_II,_Duke_of_Normandy

https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=37360614
 
Of Normandy, Duke of Normandy Richard II (I77734)
 
3069 See Danish text far below:
He was the Duke of Normandy from 1027 until his death. He aided King Henry I of France against Henry's rebellious brother and mother, and for his help he was given the territory of the Vexin. He also intervened in the affairs of Flanders, supported his cousin Edward the Confessor who was then in exile at Robert's count and sponsored monastic reform in Normandy.

and a Life Sketch in Danish, from:
http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_I_af_Normandiet
Robert 1. af Normandiet blev kaldt den Storslåede [le Magnifique] for sin forkærlighed for pynt (22. juni 1000 - 3. juli 1035) var søn af hertug Richard 2. af Normandiet og dennes hustru Judith, der var datter af Hertug Conan 1. af Bretagne.
Da Richard 2. døde, efterfulgte hans ældste søn ham som Richard 3. af Normandiet, mens Robert blev greve af Hiémois. Richard 3. døde dog inden et år, og der er stor mistanke om, at Robert skulle være indblandet i broderens død. Derfra fik han sit øgenavn Robert le Diable [Djævlen]. Robert hjalp kong Henrik 1. af Frankrig imod Henriks oprørske bror og mor, og for dette gav kongen ham land i Vexin. Han blandede sig også i Flanderns indre forhold, da han støttede Edvard Bekenderen, som var i eksil ved Roberts hof. Robert støttede også reformer i klostrene i Normandiet.
Med sin frille, Herleva, blev han far til den senere Vilhelm Erobreren.
En uægte datter, Adelaide, blev grevinde af Ponthieu og Champagne.
Efter at have gjort sin uægte søn Vilhelm til arving, tog han på pilgrimsrejse til Jerusalem og døde i Nikæa mellem 1. og 3. juli 1035. Sønnen Vilhelm var kun 8 år gammel, da han efterfulgte sin far. Man har søgt årsagen til, at Robert 1. af Normandiet deltog i ovennævnte pilgrimsrejse på trods af, at mange frarådede ham at drage af sted. Den engelske historiker David C. Couglas peger på, at Robert sandsynligvis følte et særligt behov for at få syndsforladelse. Man har senere påstået, at Robert ønskede at blive renset og opnå syndsforladelse for sin medvirken i broderens, Richard 3.'s død. I hvert fald er det absolut ikke usandsynligt, at Robert meget stærkt kan have følt kaldet fra Jerusalem. Resolut sammenkaldte han en skare af betydningsfulde normanniske stormænd, som imidlertid frarådede Robert at forlade et hertugdømme, som han netop havde erhvervet sig på baggrund af krigsførelse, og som han ville have svært ved at beholde, såfremt han forlod landet. Desuden anførte de, at han ikke kunne pege på en eneste person, som kunne træde i hans sted, hvis han drog til Jerusalem. Trods advarslerne drog Robert af sted for aldrig at vende tilbage igen. En af de første tre dage af juli i 1035 døde han i nærheden af Nikæa, i staten Bithynien, der tidligere var et selvstændig rige og ligger ud til den nordøstlige kyst af Tyrkiet ved Sortehavet.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_the_Magnificent
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/100682800
https://www.geni.com/people/Robert-I-the-Magnificent-Duke-of-Normandy/6000000010211558649?through=6000000009437997026 
Of Normandy, Robert I (I77731)
 
3070 See Danish text in Memories!

Se dansk tekst i Memories!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_the_Conqueror
William I (c. 1028 - 9 September 1087), usually known as William the Conqueror and sometimes William the Bastard,was the first Norman King of England, reigning from 1066 until his death in 1087. A descendant of Rollo, he was Duke of Normandy from 1035 onward. After a long struggle to establish his power, by 1060 his hold on Normandy was secure, and he launched the Norman conquest of England six years later. The rest of his life was marked by struggles to consolidate his hold over England and his continental lands and by difficulties with his eldest son.

William was the son of the unmarried Robert I, Duke of Normandy, by Robert's mistress Herleva. His illegitimate status and his youth caused some difficulties for him after he succeeded his father, as did the anarchy that plagued the first years of his rule. During his childhood and adolescence, members of the Norman aristocracy battled each other, both for control of the child duke and for their own ends. In 1047 William was able to quash a rebellion and begin to establish his authority over the duchy, a process that was not complete until about 1060. His marriage in the 1050s to Matilda of Flanders provided him with a powerful ally in the neighbouring county of Flanders. By the time of his marriage, William was able to arrange the appointment of his supporters as bishops and abbots in the Norman church. His consolidation of power allowed him to expand his horizons, and by 1062 William secured control of the neighbouring county of Maine.

In the 1050s and early 1060s William became a contender for the throne of England, then held by the childless Edward the Confessor, his first cousin once removed. There were other potential claimants, including the powerful English earl Harold Godwinson, who was named the next king by Edward on the latter's deathbed in January 1066. William argued that Edward had previously promised the throne to him and that Harold had sworn to support William's claim. William built a large fleet and invaded England in September 1066, decisively defeating and killing Harold at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066. After further military efforts William was crowned king on Christmas Day 1066, in London. He made arrangements for the governance of England in early 1067 before returning to Normandy. Several unsuccessful rebellions followed, but by 1075 William's hold on England was mostly secure, allowing him to spend the majority of the rest of his reign on the continent.

William's final years were marked by difficulties in his continental domains, troubles with his eldest son, and threatened invasions of England by the Danes. In 1086 William ordered the compilation of the Domesday Book, a survey listing all the landholdings in England along with their pre-Conquest and current holders. William died in September 1087 while leading a campaign in northern France, and was buried in Caen. His reign in England was marked by the construction of castles, the settling of a new Norman nobility on the land, and change in the composition of the English clergy. He did not try to integrate his various domains into one empire but instead continued to administer each part separately. William's lands were divided after his death: Normandy went to his eldest son, Robert Curthose, and his second surviving son, William Rufus, received England.

killed near Rouen, France by his plunging horse while quelling revolt. Fatal fall from a horse, died of a burst bowel. While jumping a trench on horseback, his stomach was forced onto the pommel. 
Conqueror, King William I (I77722)
 
3071 See English text below:
Herleva var elskerinde (frille) til Robert 1 af Normandiet og datter af en garver fra Falaise. Hun fødte Roberts søn Vilhelm Erobreren.

And from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herleva
Herleva (c. 1003 - c. 1050) was a Norman woman of the 11th century, known for three sons: William I of England "the Conqueror", an illegitimate son fathered by Robert I, Duke of Normandy; and Odo of Bayeux and Robert, Count of Mortain, who were both fathered by her [later] husband Herluin de Conteville. All three became prominent in William's realm.

The background of Herleva and the circumstances of William's birth are shrouded in mystery. The written evidence dates from a generation or two later, and is not entirely consistent, but of all the Norman chroniclers only the Tours chronicler asserts that William's parents were subsequently joined in marriage. According to Edward Augustus Freeman the Tours chronicler's version can not be true, because if Hereleva married the Duke, then William's birth would have been legitimized, and thus he would not have been known as William the Bastard[d], by his contemporaries.

The most commonly accepted version says that she was the daughter of a tanner named Fulbert from the town of Falaise, in Normandy. The meaning of filia pelletarii burgensis is somewhat uncertain, and Fulbert may instead have been a furrier, embalmer, apothecary, or a person who laid out corpses for burial.

Some argue that Herleva's father was not a tanner but rather a member of the burgher class. The idea is supported by the appearance of her brothers in a later document as attestors for an under-age William. Also, the Count of Flanders later accepted Herleva as a proper guardian for his own daughter. Both of these would be nearly impossible if Herleva's father was a tanner, which would place his standing as little more than a peasant.

Orderic Vitalis described Herleva's father Fulbert as the Duke's Chamberlain (cubicularii ducis).

According to one legend, it all started when Robert, the young Duke of Normandy, saw Herleva from the roof of his castle tower. The walkway on the roof still looks down on the dyeing trenches cut into stone in the courtyard below, which can be seen to this day from the tower ramparts above. The traditional way of dyeing leather or garments was to trample barefoot on the garments which were awash in the liquid dye in these trenches. Herleva, legend goes, seeing the Duke on his ramparts above, raised her skirts perhaps a bit more than necessary in order to attract the Duke's eye. The latter was immediately smitten and ordered her brought in (as was customary for any woman that caught the Duke's eye) through the back door. Herleva refused, saying she would only enter the Duke's castle on horseback through the front gate, and not as an ordinary commoner. The Duke, filled with lust, could only agree. In a few days, Herleva, dressed in the finest her father could provide, and sitting on a white horse, rode proudly through the front gate, her head held high. This gave Herleva a semi-official status as the Duke's concubine. She later gave birth to his son, William, in 1027 or 1028.

Some historians suggest Herleva was first the mistress of Gilbert of Brionne with whom she had a son, Richard. It was Gilbert who first saw Herleva and elevated her position and then Robert took her for his mistress.

Marriage to Herluin de Conteville[edit]

Herleva later married Herluin de Conteville in 1031. Some accounts maintain that Robert always loved her, but the gap in their social status made marriage impossible, so, to give her a good life, he married her off to one of his favourite noblemen.

Another source suggests that Herleva did not marry Herluin until after Robert died, because there is no record of Robert entering another relationship, whereas Herluin married another woman, Fredesendis, by the time he founded the abbey of Grestain.

From her marriage to Herluin she had two sons: Odo, who later became Bishop of Bayeux, and Robert, who became Count of Mortain. Both became prominent during William's reign. They also had at least two daughters: Emma, who married Richard le Goz, Viscount of Avranches, and a daughter of unknown name who married William, lord of la Ferté-Macé.

According to Robert of Torigni, Herleva was buried at the abbey of Grestain, which was founded by Herluin and their son Robert around 1050. This would put Herleva in her forties around the time of her death.

--

From geni.com:

Herleva
French: Arlette
Also Known As: "Arletta", "Arlette", "Arlotta", "Arlotte", "Erleve", "Harlena", "Harlette", "Herlette", "Herleve", "Herlève", "Herlotte"

Birthdate: circa 1003 (47)
Birthplace: Falaise, Calvados, Lower Normandy, France
Death: circa 1050 (39-55)
Eure, Upper Normandy, France
Place of Burial: (near Fatouville-Grestain), Eure, Upper Normandy, France

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Fulbert of Falaise and Doda of Falaise

Wife of Herluin, Count of Conteville
Partner of Robert I "the Magnificent", Duke of Normandy

Mother of Robert de Mortagne, Earl of Cornwall; Jeanne de Conteville; Rohesia De Conteville; Muriel de Conteville; Isabella de Conteville; Odo, Bishop of Bayeux; Emma de Conteville; William "the Conqueror", king of England and Adelaide of Normandy, Countess Of Aumale

Sister of Beatrice de Falaise; Lord Reynald de Falaise, Lord of Croy; Osbern, Steward of Normandy; Walter, Chamberlain of Normandy and Muriel de Normandie

Herleve was a concubine, she married Robert II, Duke of Normandy according to the "Danish Way." "A legitimate wife according to old Norman traditions," she eventually had William the Conqueror. At the same time, up-and-coming reformists like pope Gregory VII (Hildebrand of Sovana) hoped to ban these customs and establish authoritarian rule. As a "concubine" through this lens, a "frilla" like Herleve is a glance at the long process of the Christianization of Europe, and the outing of indigenous culture.
She was Robert's mistress. Robert never married Harlette according to Norman law or custom, he was faithful to her and she to him until his death.

https://www.geni.com/people/Herleva-of-Falaise/6000000009437997026
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herleva
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/90987094/herleva-de_falaise 
Of Falaise, Herleve (I101048)
 
3072 See newspaper information provided with each entry. Kilde (S515)
 
3073 See stories under documents. Lewis married, had one daughter and then went on a mission to the Southern States where he passed away from Typhoid Fever.  Bushman, Lewis Jacob (I127479)
 
3074 See The Great Migration, Vol 5, M-P, page 419, for a detailed life sketch of this John Pease's father, Robert Pease. Source is attached in Memories and summarized here.
This John's father, Robert, was born about 1607, son of Robert Pease of Great Baddow, Essex. He gave a deposition in 1634 which stated he was then 27 years of age.
Robert married by 1630 Lydia. With wife Lydia he had:
1. Robert Pease
2. John Pease (this John). John was baptized 11 February 1631/2 in Great Baddow, Essex. He married first by 1654 Mary Goodale, daughter of Robert Goodale, and second Anne Cummings, daughter of Isaac Cummings.
By about 1639 Robert married Mary, last name unknown. With Mary, Robert had:
3. Nathaniel Pease
4. Sarah Pease
5. Mary Pease, wife of Nathaniel Carrell.

The marriage record between John Pease and Mary Goodell did not survive, but there is good, primary, original proof that this Mary Goodell married John Pease. In The Great Migration series, Anderson quotes a deed of 7 November 1682 where "John Pease Senior, aged about 53 years, saith...the land that my father-in-law Goodell..." They likely married about 1653 as their oldest known child was born in 1654, and probably where the bride's family was living at the time, which was Salem, as was customary in those days.

John and Mary have several children listed in Salem vital records:
Pease, John, s. John and Mary, 20: 3m: 1654. CTR
Pease, Robert, s. John and Mary, 14: 3m: 1656. CTR
Pease, Margaret, d. John and Mary, Oct. 8, 1658. CTR
Pease, Abraham, s. John and Mary, 5: 4m: 166-. CTR [1662. TC]
Peas, Mary, d. John, bp. 5: 3m: 1667.
Pease, Jonathan, s. John and Mary, Jan. 2, 1668. CTR

There is an attached source below for a Mary born in 1658 the same day as Margaret above was born. It looks like what happened is that in the original record, the name looks like "Marg" so it was identified as Margaret by one set of indexers, and by Mary by another set. Obviously, if there was a Mary born in 1658, they wouldn't have named the daughter baptized in 1667 Mary as well.

From "Three Mary Peases of Salem, Massachusetts..." by Ian Watson, published in The American Genealogist, volume 70, 205 - 208: "Robert's son John ...had a daughter named Mary, born 8 October 1658. Savage, Frederick S. Pease, and A.S. Pease all called her Mary. But the compiler of the published Salem vital records misread her name as "Marg" and extrapolated that to "Marg[aret]"...Most Pease historians since the publication of the Salem vital records have copied this error. But an examination of the original record at the Essex Institute in Salem ... shows conclusively that the entry reads "Mary"...As further confirmation, John's probate shows that he had a daughter Mary living in 1690, but no Margaret...And a Mary Pease was one of four children of John Pease baptized at Salem in 1667 in order by age...Many other pieces of evidence show that John Pease had a daughter Mary but no daughter Margaret."
So in total, I think it is safe to say that John and Mary had five known children:
1. John Pease - 1654
2. Robert Pease - 1656
3. Mary Pease - 1658
4. Abraham Pease - 1662
5. Jonathan Pease - 1668

Unfortunately, Mary died a few days after her youngest son Jonathan was born. Her death is listed in Salem vital records. John remarried after her death (Ann Cummings) and had three more known children:
6. James - 1670
7. Isaac - 1672
8. Abigail - 1675

Although all of John's children with his second wife have birth records in Salem, it appears that he moved the whole family to Enfield, Connecticut about 1682. All of his children have death records there.
Enfield was originally settled in 1679 by settlers from Salem, Massachusetts. Enfield was incorporated in Massachusetts in 1683 as the Freshwater Plantation. Around 1700 the town changed its name to Enfield after Enfield Town in Middlesex. In 1749, following the settlement of a lawsuit in which it was determined that a surveyor's error placed a section of present-day Hartford County (including Enfield) within the boundaries of Massachusetts, the town seceded and became part of Connecticut. So actually the whole time that this John lived there, it was still part of Massachusetts.

See "MEMORIES Section" Area Here On John Pease Page For PROOF Under "3. Mary (Margaret) Pease". The Three Mary's Pease Of Salem, Massachusetts. John Pease & Mary Goodale/Goodell Had A Mary Pease 1658-1737 Who Married Hugh Pasco 1640-1706

NO DAUGHTER NAMED MARGARET PEASE Born To John Pease & Mary Goddale/Goddell 
Pease, John (I89381)
 
3075 See Wikipedia article on Solomon Stoddard: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Stoddard

Solomon Stoddard (September 27, 1643, baptized October 1, 1643 - February 11, 1729) was the pastor of the Congregationalist Church in Northampton, MA. He succeeded the Rev. Eleazer Mather, marrying his widow around 1670. Stoddard significantly liberalized church policy while promoting more power for the clergy, decrying drinking and extravagance, and urging the preaching of hellfire and the Judgment. The major religious leader of what was then the frontier, he was concerned with the lives (and the souls) of second-generation Puritans. The well-known theologian Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) was his grandson, because Solomon's daughter Esther Stoddard was Jonathan's mother.

Noted Puritan Religious Leader. Remembered as the author of "The Halfway Covenant." His views often clashed with mainstream Puritan ideas and foreshadowed much of modern theological thought.
Parents: Anthony Stoddard & Mary Downing
Wife: Esther Warham (bio by: Find A Grave)

Inscription:
Here is intered
Rev. Mr. Solomon Stoddard AM
Sometime fellow of Harvard College, Pastor of ye Church in
Northampton, N.E. for near 60 years, who departed this Life 11 February 1729 and in the 85 year of his age: A Man of God, an able Minister of the New Testament, singularly qualified for that sacred Office and faithful therein: A light to the Churches in general, a peculiar blessing to this: Eminent for the holiness of his life, as remarkable for his peace at death. 
Stoddard, Rev. Solomon (I140265)
 
3076 seine zweite und dritte Ehefrau waren Schwestern  Wintsch, Caspar (I139591)
 
3077 Served as private and corporal in Capt. James Sawyer's company, Col. James Frye's regiment on the Lexington Alarm.  Sawyer, William (I121410)
 
3078 Seth Benjamin Tanner was born March 6 1828 in Bolton, New York. His parents were John Tanner and Elizabeth Beswick Tanner. He was welcomed by a large family of brothers and sisters, counting himself the family had 21 children. Seth Benjamin's father John Tanner had three wives the first two having died.The first wife was Tabitha Bentley Tanner, the second wife was Lydia Stewart, and the third wife and Seth's Mother was Elizabeth Beswick.

Seth was four years old when his parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

He was in his seventh year when they moved to Kirtland, Ohio to join the main body of the Church. At the time of the move to Missouri in 1838, he was then ten years old, and when they settled in Montrose, Iowa he was twelve years old.

During the six years they remained in Montrose, he changed from a boy to a man. During those six years Seth and his family endured some hard times.Trouble from the mob was almost a contant thing. He learned what it was to be a Mormon at this time.

He came west with his family in 1848, with the Willard Richards Company. Seth was 20 years old at this time. They crossed the plains and came to the Salt Lake Vallley. His family settled between the two cotton wood creeks, about ten miles south of Salt Lake City. They took up land and began to farm. It was said Seth, wasn't very intrested in farming. He would later take another path in his life.

Seth Benjamin married a lovely young lady named Charlotte Levi in 1855. She was born 30 December 1839, in Chili, Hancock, Illinois, to Frederick Levi and Julia Ann Carroll Levi.

They had a family of seven children,four sons and three daughters. John Tanner born 1860-, Frederick Tanner born 1862,Benjamin Seth Tanner born - 1864, Joseph Baldwin Tanner born -1887, Charlotte Anne Tanner born - 1870, Elizabeth Tanner born -1871, Amelia Jane Tanner born 1872.Then as fate would have it Mother Charlotte died,several weeks after the birth of her seventh child.The lives of Seth and his seven children were turned up side down. They were all so sad life looked very bad,Charlotte's death was hard to take, they all thought their hearts would break.

My Father was John Donald Hunt,Grandson of John Tanner 1860 -1947. John Tanner was the son of Seth Benjamin Tanner.Don Hunt wrote his Grandfather John Tanner's life story and in his history he tells that John Tanner -1860 was only twelve years old when his Mother Charlotte passed on.I"Quote from his history, It presented quite a problem for Great Grandfather Seth Benjamin Tanner,the children were all farmed out to relatives,on both sides of the family, they were often moved from one family to another.They were split up.John Tanner 1860 was with his Mother's family, Joseph Hyrum Levi, Charlotte's brother.John came to Sevier, Utah or as it was them known the "Cove". John was with Joseph Hyrum for several years,until he was old enough to get on his own "End Quote".John Tanner _ 1860 was a Cattle and sheep man and a farmer.

It was about four years from the time Charlotte died, until Seth Benjamin married again,so the children lived with kinfolk for several years. Seth married Anna Maria Jensen in 1976.

Charlotte Elizabeth Tanner Hunt was a Granddaughter of Seth Benjamin Tanner and Charlotte Levi Tanner, her father was John Tanner 1860. Charlotte Tanner Hunt, her Mother Julia Etta Powell and brothers Jessie, and Gene Tanner lived for two and one half years with Seth Benjamin Tanner, while John Tanner 1860 Seth's son logged in the hills of Flagstaff,Arizona."Quote from Charlotte Tanner Hunts life story,whenI was five years old we moved to Grandfather's ranch, he lived in Tuba City, Arizona.We were without company, the only companion was my Grandfather Tanner,I would follow him while he was working on his farm.While living on the ranch, we heard shooting, and that evening,Lott Smith's son Sam came by and told us the Indians, had shot his Father. The next morning Grand Father Tanner went to see what he could do to help care for Lott. we were all alone, and my Mother Julia Etta Powell Tanner was so frightened of the Indians that she took me and Jessie and Gene across the meadow and we hid in a cave all day.My Grand father Seth Tanner would take me on his knee and tell me stories, and sing to me. "End Quote".

Seth was chosen by Brigham Young to go on a explority mission with James Brown down to Arizona to search for a suitable place for settlement. He later returned to Utah, and married Anna Maria Jensen in 1878.He took his family to Arizona, to his isolated cabin on the Little Colorado.You could look all around and see no one in any direction.Anna Maria had no children but she raised some of the children of Seth Benjamin Tanner and Charlotte Levi.

Seth helped with the hole-in-the-rock expedition, he joined the expedition as a guide for the initial exploring party.Guiding them up to the Bluff area, after they reached Moenkopi in the Navajo Country. They should have listened to Seth, because it took them six months to get through the hole, and across the red rock country. It would have taken them six weeks to have gone the way Seth told them to go.

Seth Benjamin got along well with the Hopi and Navajo Indians, and he could speak thier languages, and was often called to help deal with Indian problems.

Seth was called (Hostin Shush) which ment "the man who is strong as a bear". His sons were called young bears (Hush Yazzi). The way Seth got his name was , a large branch was blocking the road. Seth looped his arm around the tree brancha nd held tight to his saddle, with the other arm. He spurred his mule, the tree broke in the middle. His fame spread among the navajo people,so they named him "the Man who was strong as a bear".

Seths descendents even today have a chain of Tradeing Posts through out the South West.

He engaged in prospecting and mineing in the area, but didn't seem to have much sucess.

Seth Benjamin Tanner died at the age of 90 on December 3rd, 1918, in Taylor, Navajo, Arizona, and he is buried in Taylor, Navajo, Arizona in the Taylor Cemetery.

Seth Benjamin Tanner has descendents today, who have all kinds of occupations,Doctors, Lawyers, Engineers, Nurses
Schoolteachers, Farmers, Ranchers, Dentists, Mechanics, Bankers, Cooks and many more.He has had descendents who have held,many positions in the church, Bishops, and many others,from all branches of his family.

Seth was a kind, gentle, loveing man, and we all can be glad he was our ancester. He would be proud of his large posterity, and all the accomplishments they have had.

This history was compiled and written by a Great Great Granddaughter, Mary Ann Hunt Parker. 12-29-2013
 
Tanner, Seth (I28990)
 
3079 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2843
 
Wilcox, Clarissa (I23794)
 
3080 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
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Hall, Clarissa 'Kitty' (I23560)
 
3081 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
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Jerome, Leonard Walter (I30613)
 
3082 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
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Jerome, Julia (I30512)
 
3083 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
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Jerome, Camille (I30515)
 
3084 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
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Jerome, Willie (I30534)
 
3085 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2850
PAGE Database online.
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2850
 
Jerome, Jeanette (I58929)
 
3086 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
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Jerome, Clarita Clara (I30661)
 
3087 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Clarissa 'Kitty' Hall
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2852
 
Jerome, Leonie (I7516)
 
3088 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2853
 
Spencer-Churchill, Lord Randolph Henry (I96675)
 
3089 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2855
 
Churchill, John Strange (I7537)
 
3090 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2856
 
Cornwallis-West, George (I23643)
 
3091 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2857
 
Porch, Montague Phippen (I25733)
 
3092 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2854
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2854

SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
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TEXT Record for Jeanette Jerome
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2854
 
Churchill, Winston Leonard Spencer (I95300)
 
3093 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
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Hozier, Clementine Ogilvy (I95233)
 
3094 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
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Churchill, Diana (I7423)
 
3095 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
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TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
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DATA
TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2860
 
Churchill, Marigold Frances (I7303)
 
3096 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
PAGE Database online.
NOTE
DATA
TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2861
 
Churchill, Sarah Millicent Hermione (I78066)
 
3097 SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
PAGE Database online.
NOTE
DATA
TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2862

SEX: SOUR @S-619435594@
PAGE Database online.
NOTE
DATA
TEXT Record for Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=74038013&pid=2862
 
Spencer-Churchill, Randolph Frederick Edward (I80548)
 
3098 Sharpes Corner Cemetery  Sharp, Reuben Q (I116240)
 
3099 She had a nickname of "Betsey." In 1847 Elizabeth was in the Garden Grove, Iowa branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints with her son Francis and her daughter Emeline. At the time of the 1850 federal census all three were in Decater, Iowa. None of them apear in the 1852 Iowa State census because all three are in Weber County in the 1856 Utah territorial census. Francis and Emeline both crossed the plains with the Harry Walton/Garden Grove pioneer company of 1851 and Elizabeth was more than likely with them.  Davis, Elizabeth (I142428)
 
3100 She had lived in Salt Lake City 42 years at the time of her death.  McIntire, Dollie Elizabeth (I107451)
 

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