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3251 Svenstrup-Snesere  Neergaard, Johan Hendrik (I559)
 
3252 Svenstrup-Snesere  Neergaard, Thora Marie Louise (I375)
 
3253 Svenstrup-Snesere  Neergaard, Ellen (I370)
 
3254 Svenstrup-Snesere  Neergaard, Alexander (I345)
 
3255 Sybella White Johnson Clayton
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Birth: Jan. 27, 1854
Philadelphia
Philadelphia County
Pennsylvania, USA
Death: Dec. 17, 1926
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Daughter of Lucius Lyman Johnson and Margaret Worrell McMinn

Married Ernest Irving Young, 19 Nov 1871, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.

Children - Ernest Irving Young, Louis Chancellor Young, James Tyler Young, Ray Young, Leon Young.

Married Nephi Willard Clayton, 26 Jun 1884, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.

Children - Sybella White Clayton, Lawrence Clayton, Charles Comstock Clayton, Robert Mc Minn Clayton, Erving Emerson Clayton.

Family links:
Parents:
Lucius Lyman Johnson (1819 - 1873)
Margaret Worrell McMinn Johnson (1829 - 1910)

Spouses:
Nephi Willard Clayton (1855 - 1922)*
Ernest Irving Young (1851 - 1879)*

Children:
Louis Chancellor Young (1874 - 1913)*
James Tyler Young (1877 - 1956)*
Leon Young (1878 - 1889)*
Ray Young (1880 - 1885)*
Sybella White Clayton Bassett (1886 - 1941)*
Charles Comstock Clayton (1889 - 1971)*
Irving Emerson Clayton (1892 - 1970)*

Siblings:
Loui Chanceller Johnson (1851 - 1922)*
Sybella White Johnson Clayton (1854 - 1926)
Edward Johnson (1859 - 1915)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Salt Lake City Cemetery
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA
Plot: I_1_10_2E

Created by: SMSmith
Record added: Jun 18, 2008
Find A Grave Memorial# 27654308
Sybella White Johnson Clayton
Added by: Judie Latshaw Huff

Sybella White Johnson Clayton
Cemetery Photo
Added by: Patricia Edmonds

Photos may be scaled.
Click on image for full size.

- Amy Wolfe
Added: Oct. 15, 2015
a distant cousin
- Melva "Jo" Wright
Added: Oct. 11, 2015

- SMSmith
Added: Jun. 18, 2008

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Johnson, Sybella White (I142427)
 
3256 Sygehjælper  Bjerregaard, Ella (I109419)
 
3257 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt.  Larsen, Nina Hougaard (I95973)
 
3258 Sygeplejerske i Viborg.  Jensen, Christine Eleonora Amalie (I20501)
 
3259 Sæby Kirke  Rosenkrantz, Oluf Holgersen (I116336)
 
3260 Sætteskipper og gårdmand  Jensen, Hendrick (I111541)
 
3261 søgte tilflugt i København med sin svoger og sine børn under svenskerkrigen, hvor hun døde pinseaften 1658  Tøgersen, Gertrud Pedersdatter (I54897)
 
3262 Søren Pedersen was baptized in the Lutheran Church on 6 May 1798 in Undløse, Merløse, Holbæk, Denmark. He was the son of Peder Jensen Damskov and Maren Pedersdatter. The name Damskov was a name used to distinguish Peder Jensen from other men who were also named Peder Jensen and living in the same parish. Søren Pedersen married Ane Jensen on 27 May 1825 in Ugerløse, Merløse, Holbæk, Denmark. They became the parents of Jens (1825), Maren (1829), Ane Marie (1832), Peder (1835), Ane Margrethe (1839), Ole (1842), and Anders (1844). Søren Pedersen died on 2 November 1867 in Undløse, Merløse, Holbæk, Denmark. He was buried on 9 November 1867.  Pedersen, Søren (I88634)
 
3263 Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt.  Poulsen, Søren (I19190)
 
3264 Tager navne forandring den 10/11/1922 til Dunhammer.

I FT1921 er han straffefange i Horsens Tugthus.

I FT1925, som er udfærdiget 5. nov. 1925, bor han hos sin mor.

Der står også, at han er snedker, og har været i Tyskland, hvorfra han er ankommet d. 25. januar 1925. 
Hansen, Kaj Erhard Virginius Oliver Qvist (I108453)
 
3265 Tager til USA i 2 omgange.
1. gang er det i 1895 fra Southhamton, UK
2. gang er det i 1930 fra København, DK

Han kommer tilbage i 1898 og bliver gift med Karen Kristine Larsen, som han har mødt i Chicago, USA.
 
Agerholm, Peter (I114390)
 
3266 Taken from George Balls Reeder Obituary published in the Box Elder News, September 24, 1914

PIONEER CROSSES THE DIVIDE

When the angel of death called George B. Reeder shortly before midnight last Friday evening, one more of the sterling band who built the roads and bridges and killed the snakes passed on to his reward. Brother Reeder had been confined to his bed practically for two years. He did not suffer pain but was so enfeebled that he had not strength to help himself out of bed except at short intervals and during the last few days he was in a semi-conscious condition. Just a few minutes before the end came, the family surrounded his bed and in fervent prayer asked God to do for their husband and father as He saw fit and it was but a short time thereafter until the aged man gave a sigh of relief and the machinery of life came to a standstill after nearly 87 years of constant operation.

In the passing of this good man Brigham City lost one of the builders of the commonwealth for since his arrival in this city (it was only a fort then) in 1856, George B. Reeder has been actively interested in the up-building of the community and the promotion of every enterprise that made for the betterment of conditions. During his later years, age counted much against him and his activities were confined mostly to looking after his personal affairs, but in the beginning he was identified with all the expeditions that were organized to lay the foundations of the city.

George B. Reeder was born in Linstead, East Suffolk, England, January 12th, 1828. At the age of eight years he saw his mother pass away and in company of other children was compelled to struggle under the direction of their father, to provide for the daily wants of the family. This experience impressed upon him the lesson of frugality in all things, a characteristic which was very prominent in his make-up and by the observances of which he gathered about him after coming to this land, sufficient of the world’s goods to provide for himself and loved ones and leave the world owing no man a dollar.

When he was 25 years of age, he heard a Mormon Elder preach the gospel in his native land and having been a bible reader from his early youth, he was impressed with what he heard. He learned more of the doctrines the missionaries enunciated and immediately accepted the faith and was baptized. He remained in England the following year when he left in company with others for Utah. Before departing from his home, he gave promise to his father that his first efforts would be directed to earning sufficient means to immigrate the family, a promise which was faithfully kept.

Brother Reeder spent eleven weeks on the ocean before arriving at New Orleans. A ride up the Mississippi to a starting point for the journey across the plains was made and after landing, Brother Reeder secured an ox team which he drove to Salt Lake City arriving there on September 19th, 1853. He labored industriously to fulfill his promise to his father and was rewarded by meeting his family, except his father and a sister who perished on the way, in 1856. The family came with the belated hand cart company and what they suffered is a matter of history, the story of which is about the most pathetic thing in print.

Accepting the counsel of Brigham Young delivered at the October Conference in 1855, for the saints to spread out and get possession of the land, Brother Reeder came on to Brigham City the following year and took up his abode in the Old Fort. Since that time Brigham City has been his home. During that first winter, of ’56, the people of this section endured extreme hardship and the following year was little better. They ate segos, boiled bull rushes, rawhide and resorted to other means to provide food with which to sustain life and thru it all the subject of this sketch never waivered in his faith nor regretted his action in leaving England. He at once became one of the leading citizens of the community and took a prominent part in laying out farms, building roads and bridges, getting the water from springs in the canyon and in every way did his share in the upbuilding of the community. When the Echo Canyon war broke out he was called into service and went to the front to fight, if necessary, to prevent Johnson’s army from coming and crushing the handful of people in the valley. During the move south he acted as one of the rear guards. Previous to taking this journey, he was married to Mary Ann Craghead and his first child was born in Rush Valley before the saints returned to their homes in the north.

Returning to Brigham City, he took up his avocation as a farmer and plied himself with energy. He obeyed the law of plural marriage b taking a second wife in the person of Caroline Madsen to whom he was married in March, 1866. He served as County herdsman for three years looking after all the cattle and when the United Order was established he entered it consecrating all he possessed. He took a prominent part in this experience and emerged from it much in the same condition as the others who entered it.

He served as a counselor to Bishop Adolph Madsen during his term as bishop of Third ward and was chosen by Bishop A. A. Janson to act as a counselor to him when he was appointed bishop. Brother Reeder’s motto was the Golden Rule and he lived it faithfully. He was the personification of the noblest work of God for he was as honest as any man could be. He was unpretentious and God fearing, minding his own business under all circumstances but was never too engrossed with his own affairs to lend assistance publicly or privately when called upon.

By his two wives he had 22 children, nine sons and five daughters being still alive. His first wife died many years ago. There are also living 57 grand children and 15 great-grand children besides a brother, Robert Reeder of Hyde Park, and a sister, Mrs. Mary Metcalf of Malad, Idaho.

Impressive funeral services were held in the Third ward chapel on Monday afternoon beginning at 2 o’clock. Bishop D. P. Burt presided and made the opening remarks in which he paid a beautiful tribute to the life and labors of the departed. The other speakers were Henry C. Jensen, Joseph P. Burt, L. Peter Johnson, George Gilbert, George Harding of Willard, A. Madsen, James Olsen, Pres. W. C. Horsley and Pres. L. A. Snow. Each paid a glowing tribute to the life of the deceased and recounted many of the experiences of early days in which he played a prominent part.

The musical numbers rendered by the choir were the hymns “Our Everlasting Friend,”, “Who Are These Arrayed in White?” and “When First the Glorious Light of Truth.” Between speakers Daisy and Sevena Madsen sang the hymn “Glorious Tings (sic.) are Sung of Zion” and Victor E. Madsen sang Brother Reeder’s favorite hymn “Let us Pray Gladly Pray.” The prayers were offered by Bishops P. C. Johnson of Mantua and Thaddeus Wight of Harper. A large cortege accompanied the remains to the cemetery, the nine sons of the deceased walking at the side and behind the horses. The grave was dedicated by W. S. Hansen of Fielding.

There was a profusion of flowers and a very large attendance at the services, many relatives and friends coming from a distance to pay a tribute of respect to the noble man who had been called to his rest.
 
Reeder, George Balls (I41653)
 
3267 Taken from LDS Biographical Encyclopedia. "Jane was a member of the Relief Society in Nauvoo and of the Central and General Boards of Relief Society in Utah from 1888 to 1910. She came to Utah with her husband in 1848, where she presided over the Relief Society and was the first president of the Weber Stake Relief Society, organized July 19 1877 by President Brigham Young. This position she held for 31 years, and was first counselor in the general presidency of Relief Society from 1888 to 1901. She was one of Utah's representatives at the National Council of Women in 1891, when the Relief Society and Y.L.M.I.A. became affiliated with that organization. She was also vice president of the Utah Board of Lady Managers of the World's Fair in Chicago, Illinois in 1893. Sister Richards was the mother of six children and died Nov 17, 1912."  Snyder, Jane (I114451)
 
3268 Tanner, Joseph Marion, second assistant general superintendent of Latter-day Saint Sunday schools, was born March 26, 1859, in Payson, Utah county, Utah.
He is the second but oldest living son of Myron Tanner and Mary Jane Mount, who when their son was about three years of age moved to Provo, where he received his earliest education in the public schools.
From his fourteenth to his seventeenth year he was an employee of the Provo Woolen Mills. He worked during the day in the factory and attended a night school organized at the Brigham Young Academy, under Dr. Karl G. Maeser. The class originally consisted of some twenty-six factory hands who gradually lost their interest in the studies, and he finally became the only student of the class which continued during the entire school year. It was during these night classes, at which he was the only student, that a sympathetic friendship sprang up between the boy and Dr. Karl G. Maeser-a friendship that became increasingly intimate during Dr. Maeser's life. At the age of seventeen he entered the academy as a regular student and was a member of its first graduating class in the year 1878, thus becoming one of the first teachers who had graduated from the institution. He remained at the academy as a teacher of various subjects, especially of mathematics, from his nineteenth to his twenty-fifth year. In 1879 he was engaged in engineering work in the construction of the Denver and Rio Grande railroad, and in 1882 was appointed city surveyor of Provo. In 1884 he left for a mission to Germany. In view of his profession as teacher he traveled extensively in America and Europe on his way to the missionary field, and was finally assigned to the Berlin conference. In the fall of 1885 he was transferred to Turkey for the purpose of opening a mission in the Sultan's dominion. During the spring of 1886 he visited the principal Oriental countries bordering on the Mediterranean, and especially the Holy Land, where an opportunity was discovered to open a mission among the German colonists who were colonizing Palestine under the idea that the chief feature of the gospel in these last days was that of gathering. A number of these Germans subsequently accepted the gospel and emigrated to America. After 3 1/2 years of missionary labor and travel in most of the countries of Europe and in the Holy Land, he returned home, reaching Utah in December, 1887. Owing to the ill health of Dr. Karl G. Maeser at that time, he took the latter's work in the Brigham Young Academy for the remaining part of the year. In the summer of 1888 he was elected president of the Brigham Young College at Logan, and the same year was appointed a member of the Church Board of Examiners, and the Church Board of Education at the same time conferred upon him the doctor's degree. After three years' presidency of the Brigham Young College, he resigned his position to take up a course of study in the East, and passed three years at Harvard University, chiefly in the study of law. On his return from Harvard he entered the practice of law in Salt Lake City, where in 1896 he became the first Supreme Court reporter under the new State government. While occupying that office he edited the first five volumes of the Utah State Reports. He was the same year elected president of the Agricultural College, at Logan, a position which he held for four years. Upon resigning his position as college president in 1900, he again entered the practice of law in Salt Lake City and became a member of the law firm of Ferguson, Cannon & Tanner. After a practice covering a period of ten months, in 1901, he was appointed deputy superintendent of State schools and later in the same year received the appointment of general superintendent of Church schools, to succeed Dr. Karl G. Maeser, who had recently died. Dr. Tanner, who had been a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union Board since 1896, was chosen second assistant superintendent of Sunday schools in 1901, and about the same time was appointed second assistant superintendent of religion classes. For more than twenty years Dr. Tanner has been a constant contributor to Church magazines, and at present is assistant associate editor of the "Juvenile Instructor," and edits "Current Topics" in the "Improvement Era." His studies and teaching during the past twenty-five years have covered a wide range, including, as they do, mathematics, languages, history, and law. His travels in Europe, Asia and Africa have extended to most of the historical fields of those continents and have been undertaken in pursuance of his interest in historical research. These accumulated experiences in educational institutions and in travel are particularly helpful to his work in the school and in the editor's chair.

LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jenson, Vol. 1, p. 709
 
Tanner, Joseph Marion (I121133)
 
3269 Taylor was born in Milnthorpe, Westmorland (now part of Cumbria), England, the son of James and Agnes Taylor. He had formal schooling up to age fourteen, and then he served an initial apprenticeship to a cooper and later received training as a woodturner and cabinetmaker. He claimed that as a young man, he had a vision of "an angel in the heavens, holding a trumpet to his mouth, sounding a message to the nations" - the angel Moroni.[6] He was christened in the Church of England, but joined the Methodist church at sixteen. He was appointed a lay preacher a year later, and felt a calling to preach in America. Taylor's parents and siblings emigrated to Upper Canada (present-day Ontario) in 1830. Taylor stayed in England to dispose of the family property and joined his family in Toronto in 1832. He met Leonora Cannon from the Isle of Man while attending a Toronto Methodist Church and, although she initially rejected his proposal, married her on January 28, 1833.

Between 1834 and 1836, John and Leonora Taylor participated in a religious study group in Toronto. The group discussed problems and concerns with their Methodist faith, and quickly became known as the "Dissenters." Other members included Joseph Fielding and his sisters Mary and Mercy, who later also became prominent in the Latter Day Saint movement. While in Toronto Taylor continued to work in his trade as a woodturner.

Taylor practiced plural marriage and was married to eight wives: Leonora Cannon, Elizabeth Kaighin, Jane Ballantyne, Mary Ann Oakley, Sophia Whitaker, Harriet Whitaker, and Margaret Young.[26] He was the father of 34 children.[27]

Taylor's son, John W. Taylor, continued to serve in the church and in politics and helped to shepherd Utah to statehood in 1896. John W. Taylor was ultimately excommunicated from the LDS Church for his opposition to the church's abandonment of plural marriage. His son, Samuel W. Taylor, became a writer, and the biographer of his father and grandfather.

Another son, William W. Taylor, served as one of the first presidents of the seventy and also served in the Utah territorial legislature.

Taylor's wife Margaret Young Taylor was a member of the inaugural general presidency of what is today the church's Young Women organization. Taylor's daughter Annie Taylor Hyde was a leader in the Relief Society general presidency and was the founder of Daughters of Utah Pioneers. 
Taylor, John (I101586)
 
3270 Temple Engineer for 13 years. Resident of Salt Lake for 50, from Norway. Lived in New York City several years when he first arrived.  Olsen, John Torbjorn (I142617)
 
3271 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.
 
Kilde (S14)
 
3272 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S425)
 
3273 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S392)
 
3274 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S285)
 
3275 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S231)
 
3276 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S210)
 
3277 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S191)
 
3278 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S144)
 
3279 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S79)
 
3280 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S47)
 
3281 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S575)
 
3282 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S430)
 
3283 Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Kilde (S237)
 
3284 Teori:

Hun kan være det uægte barn (Kirstine) der 1684 fødes som datter af Kirsten Vorring og Christen Pedersen af Overgaard der har besovet hende.
Teori:

Hun kan være det uægte barn (Kirstine) der 1684 fødes som datter af Kirsten Vorring og Christen Pedersen af Overgaard der har besovet hende. 
Vorring, Kirsten Christensdatter (I19040)
 
3285 Terrace Lawn Memorial Gardens  Slade, Claude P. (I115162)
 
3286 Terry D. Gardner, 76, of Idaho Falls, passed away Monday, April 1, 2013, at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center after a long, courageous battle with COPD.  Gardner, Terry Darrell (I70796)
 
3287 Terry was born January 4th, 1955, in the Salt Lake area to Stella Harvey Anderson and Aaron William Anderson. He grew up in a humble home with 3 brothers and 3 sisters where he developed a fierce loyalty to family. He was a natural athlete and baseball was his passion growing up. His talent for the sport got him scouted for the minor leagues; unfortunately a 30ft fall on a construction job squashed the dream he had of playing baseball professionally.
He was dedicated to the gospel of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and served a mission in Bogota, Columbia. He took home a love of people and the Latin culture. Shortly afterwards he married Cynthia Mae Farish, his BYU sweetheart, in 1978 in the Los Angeles Temple. They raised 5 children, instilling in them the importance of family, hard work, and charity.
Terry was blessed intellectually and was a walking calculator. He loved reading, especially Louis L'Amour western novels. One of his endearing qualities was his ability to calmly connect with others. Anyone that knows Terry, knows that he was always there with a listening ear and a shoulder to cry on.
Terry’s favorite form of service was teaching youth whether it was on the field, in the chapel, or on the job. Another way he chose to serve was opening his home as a place of refuge to many, and he welcomed all with a Terry bear hug. Everyone was family to him.
One of Terry’s great accomplishments was renovating his childhood home and converting it from a small cottage to a large log home. It turns out that the greater accomplishment in this decade-long labor of love was that he taught all of his children how to work, how to do hard things, and the payoff that hard work can bring. Terry has said that his family is his greatest success...we certainly agree.
Terry passed away after a years-long battle with metastatic prostate cancer on September 15, 2017 in his home as his wife and sisters sang some of his favorite songs. His last breath was taken as they sang "Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing". 
Anderson, Terry Lynn (I86877)
 
3288 Teunis G. Bergen gives us the names of 6 children of Peter Lott and Gertrude _______ : Engelbert, Catrina, Peter, Abraham, Hendrick, and Johannes. If Bergen is correct, it would have been traditional for Peter to have named his eldest son after Peter's own father, and we can assume that his own patronymic was "Engelbertszen" as well.  Lott, Catrina (I139432)
 
3289 The 1852 John Tidwell Company "Council Point Emigrating Company Journal" includes the Coulson/Knapp family's name on their roster, but says they "Went on in a company before we started." Further research is needed to determine the name of the company they traveled with.
He traveled with his mother Lydia Ackerman Knapp Coulson. 
Knapp, William (I37807)
 
3290 The 30 March 1851 Census shows this family at Residence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham, England:
Martha English Head F age 47 widowed birthplace Tanfield, Durham occupation Lodging Housekeeper;
John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham;
John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Mariner ;
Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker. 
English, William (I75644)
 
3291 The 30 March 1851 Census shows this family at Residence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham, England:
Martha English Head F age 47 widowed birthplace Tanfield, Durham occupation Lodging Housekeeper;
John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham;
John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Mariner ;
Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker. 
English, Thomas Burdis (I50727)
 
3292 The 30 March 1851 Census shows this family at Residence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham, England:
Martha English Head F age 47 widowed, birthplace Tanfield, Durham occupation Lodging Housekeeper;
John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham;
John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Mariner ;
Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker.

Find a Grave shows Martha Elizabeth Todd, Death Date 5 July 1863, Burial 1863 at Pioneer Heritage Cemetery, Spanish Fork, Utah, Utah.

A Custom Fact below shows Martha Elizabeth Todd was sealed to Elias Gardner, 13 July 1867, after her death 5 June 1863, and therefore never used the name Gardner.

Please see notes by RBlake Gardner on this subject. Martha and Ann accompanied Elias back to Utah from England after his mission. As stated Martha was sealed to Elias at the request of his wife Ann. Martha was deceased when sealed to Elias. Please don't make any changes on this issue. Thank you
The 30 March 1851 Census shows this family at Residence Brougham Stree t, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham , England:
Martha English Head F age 47 widowed, birthplace Tanfield, Durham occ upation Lodging Housekeeper;
John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham , occupation Mariner;
Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham;
John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Marine r ;
Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker.

Find a Grave shows Martha Elizabeth Todd, Death Date 5 July 1863, Buri al 1863 at Pioneer Heritage Cemetery, Spanish Fork, Utah, Utah.

A Custom Fact below shows Martha Elizabeth Todd was sealed to Elias Ga rdner, 13 July 1867, after her death 5 June 1863, and therefore neve r used the name Gardner.

Please see notes by RBlake Gardner on this subject. Martha and Ann acc ompanied Elias back to Utah from England after his mission. As state d Martha was sealed to Elias at the request of his wife Ann. Martha wa s deceased when sealed to Elias. Please don't make any changes on thi s issue. Thank you
FSID KWV7-ZX4
 
Todd, Martha Elizabeth (I127467)
 
3293 The 30 March 1851 Census shows this family at Residence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham, England:
Martha English Head F age 47 widowed, birthplace Tanfield, Durham occupation Lodging Housekeeper;
John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner;
Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham;
John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Mariner ;
Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker.

Find a Grave shows Martha Elizabeth Todd, Death Date 5 July 1863, Burial 1863 at Pioneer Heritage Cemetery, Spanish Fork, Utah, Utah.

A Custom Fact below shows Martha Elizabeth Todd was sealed to Elias Gardner, 13 July 1867, after her death 5 June 1863, and therefore never used the name Gardner.
 
Todd, Martha (I50654)
 
3294 The Ashby family traveled to the Salt Lake Valley with the Brigham Young Company in 1848. The Ashby family included Susan Hammond Ashby Noble and her children Benjamin, Elizabeth Rebecca Ashby Snow (wife of Erastus Snow), Harriett Maria, Nathaniel, Richard Hammond, William Hardin, Mary Jane, Emma Smith, and John Jefford.
Nathaniel drove a team for Brother Haven. Brigham Young Company (1848)

http://b11wiki.org/index.php/Nathaniel_Ashby_(1835-1882) 
Ashby, Nathaniel (I83497)
 
3295 The birth of William Angel is included in Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Vol. 23: John Howland book (part 1, page 63).
Parents James Angel and Mary Brown
This series of book is considered the authoritative source of all Mayflower lineages through the 6th generation. So anything included in these books will be accepted by The Mayflower Society, and no further documentation will be needed to prove what is provided in these books. From Mayflower Association 
Angell, James (I75144)
 
3296 The birth of William Angel is included in Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Vol. 23: John Howland book (part 1, page 63).
Parents James Angell and Mary Brown
This series of book is considered the authoritative source of all Mayflower lineages through the 6th generation. So anything included in these books will be accepted by The Mayflower Society, and no further documentation will be needed to prove what is provided in these books. 
Brown, Mary (I61896)
 
3297 The book "Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume VI, R-S," by Robert Charles Anderson, pp. 578-80:
"THOMAS STREAM
ORIGIN: London.
MIGRATION: 1635 on the "Truelove" (on 19 September 1635, "Thomas Streme," aged 15, was enrolled at London as a passenger for New England on the "Truelove" [Hotten 131]).
FIRST RESIDENCE: Weymouth.
OFFICEHOLDING: Sergeant of the Weymouth trainband [PCR 4:119]. His inventory included "a sword & belt" valued at £1 10s. [SPR 4:119].
ESTATE. On 12 April 1648, "W[illia]m Richards of Waimouth" sold to "Henry Kingman of Waymouth" a piece of upland bounded by "Thomas Streame south" [SLR 1:91].
There is no entry for Thomas Stream in the Weymouth land inventory of about 1643. Thomas Stream does, however, appear as an abutter in some of the other entries. He held land adjoining the East Field lots of Angel Holland and Jeffrey Staple, the Easterneck lot of John Whitman and the Westerneck lot of William Richards [Weymouth Hist 1:185, 191, 194, 195].
On 10 July 1662, administration on the estate of "the late Thomas, Streame of Weimouth is granted to Ottes his mother in behalf of herself & children" [SPR NS 1:80].
In an undated inventory, "[w]e whose names are underwritten being desired to appraise the goods & estate that was left by Thomas Streame of Weymouth lately deceased, when we came together, we found that his estate & his mother & his brother Benjamine Streame were so joined together that we could not distinguish it one from another and as we were informed, they did all improve their time & estate together, & therefore we thought good to take an inventory of the whole out of the which we judge all his debts to be paid, & we think one-third part of that which doth remain did belong to him that is deceased, but we leave it to the Honored Court to determine as their Worships see good." The estate totalled £431 12s., of which £162 was real estate: "their dwelling house & the spot of land adjoining thereunto," £25; "seven acres of land near unto their house," £20; "twelve acres of upland more near Rich[ar]d Bolter's house," £20, "three acres more of land in the Range Field," £6 "nine acres more of upland in the Ferry Field," £16; "salt meadow three acres at the Burying Island," £20; "salt meadow three acres at Braintry," £15, "five acres of fresh meadow," £2 10s.; "woodland twenty acres among the Great Lots," £5; "woodland more nine acres near the town," £7; "woodland more tern acres amongst the Great Lots," £2 10s.; woodland more eighteen acres near Elder Bates mill," £13; "woodland more near the pen twenty & four acres," £4; and "two common lots," £5 [SPR 4:119].
BIRTH: About 1620 (aged 15 on 19 September 1635 [Hotten 131]), son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Whitman) Stream.
DEATH: Weymouth 27 May 1662.
MARRIAGE: None recorded.
CHILDREN: None recorded.
ASSOCIATIONS: Thomas Stream was brother of JOHN STREAM {1635, Weymouth}, of Benjamin Stream and of Elizabeth (Stream) Holbrook, wife of John Holbrook [GM 2:352, 354].
The mother of Thomas Stream was Elizabeth (Whitman) Stream, sister of ZACHARIAH WHITMAN {1635. Weymouth}. She married (2) after 1653 JOHN OTIS {1633, Hingham} [GM2:5:322-26].
On 22 February 1619/20, the Bishop of London issued a marriage license to "Thomas Streame, cordwainer, and Elizabeth Whitman, spinster, daughter of Richard Whitman, of Leigh, co. Bucks, husbandman; at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf, London" [Harleian Society 26:84], "Thomas Streame and Elizabeth Whiteman" were married at St. Bene't and St. Peter, Paul's Wharf, London, on 22 February 1619/20 [Harleian Society, Register Section, 39:3].
In the Weymouth land inventory of about 1643, Angel Hollard held a parcel of land in the East Field "first granted to widow Streame" [Weymouth Hist 1:185, 188]. The land inventory entry for John Rogers included a small parcel of land bounded "on the west with the land of widow Oatis" [Weymouth Hist 1:191], which is consistent with the fact that the remarriage of the widow Stream to John Otis took place at about the same time that the inventory was being compiled.
In her will, dated 22 September 1672 and proved 17 July 1676, "Elizabeth Otess of Waymouth ..., widow," bequeathed to "my son John Stream fourscore pounds sterling to be paid by my son-in-law Lt. John Holbrooke," along with some moveables; to "my daughter Elizabeth Holbrooke fifteen pounds of that hundred her husband is to pay," along with some moveables; to "Ichabod five pounds"; "Lt. John Hobrooke" to be executor and residuary legatee [SPR 6:133].
The inventory of the estate of "Eliz[abeth] Oates living and of her son Benjamin Stream deceased the 27:3m:1663 [27 May 1663]," taken 22 July 1663, totalled £399 4s., all real estate, substantially the same as that inventoried when his brother Thomas died [SPR 4:148-491. On 30 July 1663, "power of administration to one-third part of the inventory as the right of Benjamin Stream is granted to Elizabeth Oatis formerly Streame his mother in behalf of herself and the children of the said [Streame]' [SPR 4:149]. (The final phrase of this document presumably refers to the Stream children of the widow Otis, and not children of Benjamin, who was not known to have married.)
COMMENTS: On 1 May 1666, in "reference unto a deed surrendered up unto our Court [at Plymouth] by Lieutenant Holbrooke, of Weymouth, made and given by Josias Wampatucke and Webcowett unto Sergeant Thomas Streame, for the lease of a certain tract of land, for the gratification of the said Lieut. Holbrooke, and in reference to his free acknowledging thereof, the Court hath granted unto him one hundred and twenty acres of land" [PCR 4:119]." 
Stream, Thomas John (I123725)
 
3298 The book "Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume VI, R-S," by Robert Charles Anderson, pp. 578-80:
"THOMAS STREAM
ORIGIN: London.
MIGRATION: 1635 on the "Truelove" (on 19 September 1635, "Thomas Streme," aged 15, was enrolled at London as a passenger for New England on the "Truelove" [Hotten 131]).
FIRST RESIDENCE: Weymouth.
OFFICEHOLDING: Sergeant of the Weymouth trainband [PCR 4:119]. His inventory included "a sword & belt" valued at £1 10s. [SPR 4:119].
ESTATE. On 12 April 1648, "W[illia]m Richards of Waimouth" sold to "Henry Kingman of Waymouth" a piece of upland bounded by "Thomas Streame south" [SLR 1:91].
There is no entry for Thomas Stream in the Weymouth land inventory of about 1643. Thomas Stream does, however, appear as an abutter in some of the other entries. He held land adjoining the East Field lots of Angel Holland and Jeffrey Staple, the Easterneck lot of John Whitman and the Westerneck lot of William Richards [Weymouth Hist 1:185, 191, 194, 195].
On 10 July 1662, administration on the estate of "the late Thomas, Streame of Weimouth is granted to Ottes his mother in behalf of herself & children" [SPR NS 1:80].
In an undated inventory, "[w]e whose names are underwritten being desired to appraise the goods & estate that was left by Thomas Streame of Weymouth lately deceased, when we came together, we found that his estate & his mother & his brother Benjamine Streame were so joined together that we could not distinguish it one from another and as we were informed, they did all improve their time & estate together, & therefore we thought good to take an inventory of the whole out of the which we judge all his debts to be paid, & we think one-third part of that which doth remain did belong to him that is deceased, but we leave it to the Honored Court to determine as their Worships see good." The estate totalled £431 12s., of which £162 was real estate: "their dwelling house & the spot of land adjoining thereunto," £25; "seven acres of land near unto their house," £20; "twelve acres of upland more near Rich[ar]d Bolter's house," £20, "three acres more of land in the Range Field," £6 "nine acres more of upland in the Ferry Field," £16; "salt meadow three acres at the Burying Island," £20; "salt meadow three acres at Braintry," £15, "five acres of fresh meadow," £2 10s.; "woodland twenty acres among the Great Lots," £5; "woodland more nine acres near the town," £7; "woodland more tern acres amongst the Great Lots," £2 10s.; woodland more eighteen acres near Elder Bates mill," £13; "woodland more near the pen twenty & four acres," £4; and "two common lots," £5 [SPR 4:119].
BIRTH: About 1620 (aged 15 on 19 September 1635 [Hotten 131]), son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Whitman) Stream.
DEATH: Weymouth 27 May 1662.
MARRIAGE: None recorded.
CHILDREN: None recorded.
ASSOCIATIONS: Thomas Stream was brother of JOHN STREAM {1635, Weymouth}, of Benjamin Stream and of Elizabeth (Stream) Holbrook, wife of John Holbrook [GM 2:352, 354].
The mother of Thomas Stream was Elizabeth (Whitman) Stream, sister of ZACHARIAH WHITMAN {1635. Weymouth}. She married (2) after 1653 JOHN OTIS {1633, Hingham} [GM2:5:322-26].
On 22 February 1619/20, the Bishop of London issued a marriage license to "Thomas Streame, cordwainer, and Elizabeth Whitman, spinster, daughter of Richard Whitman, of Leigh, co. Bucks, husbandman; at St. Bennet, Paul's Wharf, London" [Harleian Society 26:84], "Thomas Streame and Elizabeth Whiteman" were married at St. Bene't and St. Peter, Paul's Wharf, London, on 22 February 1619/20 [Harleian Society, Register Section, 39:3].
In the Weymouth land inventory of about 1643, Angel Hollard held a parcel of land in the East Field "first granted to widow Streame" [Weymouth Hist 1:185, 188]. The land inventory entry for John Rogers included a small parcel of land bounded "on the west with the land of widow Oatis" [Weymouth Hist 1:191], which is consistent with the fact that the remarriage of the widow Stream to John Otis took place at about the same time that the inventory was being compiled.
In her will, dated 22 September 1672 and proved 17 July 1676, "Elizabeth Otess of Waymouth ..., widow," bequeathed to "my son John Stream fourscore pounds sterling to be paid by my son-in-law Lt. John Holbrooke," along with some moveables; to "my daughter Elizabeth Holbrooke fifteen pounds of that hundred her husband is to pay," along with some moveables; to "Ichabod five pounds"; "Lt. John Hobrooke" to be executor and residuary legatee [SPR 6:133].
The inventory of the estate of "Eliz[abeth] Oates living and of her son Benjamin Stream deceased the 27:3m:1663 [27 May 1663]," taken 22 July 1663, totalled £399 4s., all real estate, substantially the same as that inventoried when his brother Thomas died [SPR 4:148-491. On 30 July 1663, "power of administration to one-third part of the inventory as the right of Benjamin Stream is granted to Elizabeth Oatis formerly Streame his mother in behalf of herself and the children of the said [Streame]' [SPR 4:149]. (The final phrase of this document presumably refers to the Stream children of the widow Otis, and not children of Benjamin, who was not known to have married.)
COMMENTS: On 1 May 1666, in "reference unto a deed surrendered up unto our Court [at Plymouth] by Lieutenant Holbrooke, of Weymouth, made and given by Josias Wampatucke and Webcowett unto Sergeant Thomas Streame, for the lease of a certain tract of land, for the gratification of the said Lieut. Holbrooke, and in reference to his free acknowledging thereof, the Court hath granted unto him one hundred and twenty acres of land" [PCR 4:119]." 
Stream, Thomas (I121068)
 
3299 The Complete Book of Emigrants; 1607 - 1660; By Peter Wilson Coldham. Genealogical Publishing Company.

He had a brother Samuel who was born in 1634 in England that died before this Samuel was born in 1638.

SAMUEL YOUNGLOVE, eldest son of Samuel & Margaret (Leggatt) Younglove, was born about 1634 (aged 1 on 11 September 1635; deposed on 29 September 1657 "aged twenty years."
He married (1) Ipswich 1 August 1660 Sarah Kinsman, daughter of ROBERT KINSMAN {1634, Ipswich}.
He married (2) after 2 January 1683/4 (inventory of estate of Edmund Eliot) and before 20 January 1686/7 (date of will of Garrett Haddon) Sarah (Haddon) Eliott, daughter of GARRETT HADDON {1630, Boston} and widow of Edmund Eliot.
He married (3) Ipswich 26 May 1702 Mary Roe (on 25 December 1707, "Mary Younglove of Ipswich . . . relict widow to Samuel Younglove of Ipswich," enlisted the assistance of "my brother Samuel Roe" in settling her husband' s estate).

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/79943332/samuel-younglove 
Younglove, Samuel Jr. (I141370)
 
3300 The couple moved to US and he died in 1859 in Nebraska, she died in 1870 in Morgan Utah  Larsen, Søren Christian (I116330)
 

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