Match 351 til 400 fra 3,803
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351 | As far as I know, no one has written a story about my maternal grandparents. For this reason, I will write a short story about my maternal grandparents, May Pearl Wright and Don Carlos Ivie. The information in this story is my memories about my grandparents, information taken from the life history of my mother, Elma May Ivie Perez, and information that I found about the Wright and Ivie families on familysearch.org. My grandmother May Pearl Wright was born on Sep. 30, 1889, in Charleston, Wasatch County, Utah, USA. Shie died on Jan. 17, 1962 willing living in Heber City, Wasatch County, Utah, USA. At the time of her death she was married married to Charles Brigham Barnes. My grandmother, May Pearl Ivie, was 72, and died on Wednesday, 8:40 p.m. In a Heber City hospital after a long Illness. She was Born on Sept. 30, 1889, Charleston, Wasatch County, Utah to William and Mary Jane Baum Wright. Married to Don Carlos Ivie, April 6, 1907, Heber City. He died June, 1940. Married to Charles B. Barnes, June 24, 1945, Heber City. He died October, 1954. Active member. Church of Jesus Christ of Latler-day Saints. Survivors: sons, daughters, Eugene Ivie, Butte, Montana.; Dr. James Leonard Ivie, Baker, Oregon; Don K. Ivie, Moab; Marvin, Mrs. Walter (Phyllis) Cummlngs, Mrs. John Cano {May) Perez, all Salt Lake City; 19 grandchlldren, 19 great-grandchlldren; brothers, sisters, Charles, Loren, both Provo; Mrs. Leora Mosley, Portland, Oregon; Mrs. Zora Malr, Chicago, IIIinois. Funeral Saturday, 1 p.m.. Center Creek LDS Ward Chapel. Friends call Olpln Mortuary, Heber, Friday, 7-9 p.m., Saturday prior to services. Burial, Heber City Cemetery. -Salt Lake Tribune, January 19, 1962, transcribed by Rhonda Holton Parents Father: William WRIGHT Mother: Mary Jane BAUM Marriage(s) Spouse: Don Carlos IVIE Marriage: 4 Apr 1908 Heber, Wasatch, Utah Spouse: Charles Bingham BARNES Marriage: 24 Jun 1945 Family links: Parents: William Wright (1831 - 1903) Mary Jane Baum Wright (1854 - 1928) Spouses: Don Carlos Ivie (1881 - 1940) Charles Brigham Barnes (1899 - 1954)* Children: Vivian Ivie Barnes (1909 - 1946)* Ivan Don Ivie (1914 - 1928)* James Leonard Ivie (1930 - 1963)* Siblings: William Thomas Wright (1857 - 1907)** Jamima (Jemima) Ann Wright Penrod (1859 - 1888)** Margaret Ashbridge Wright Murdock (1860 - 1948)** James Lehi Wright (1864 - 1930)** Joseph Smith Wright (1866 - 1948)** Hannah Rebecca Wright Penrod (1868 - 1944)** Hyrum S. Wright (1871 - 1871)** George Baum Wright (1872 - 1959)* Eliza Jane Wright Jacobson (1874 - 1902)* Mary Isabell Wright Penrod (1876 - 1952)* Owen Uriah Wright (1877 - 1954)* Wallace B Wright (1880 - 1944)* John Elmer Wright (1883 - 1945)* Charles Wright (1885 - 1971)* Stella M Wright Mason (1886 - 1916)* Elbert Wright (1888 - 1888)* May Pearl Wright Barnes (1889 - 1962) David Nephi Wright (1891 - 1892)* Zella Wright Thacker (1892 - 1958)* Zora Wright Mair (1892 - 1968)* Edna Wright (1894 - 1894)* Leora Wright Yeager (1895 - 1978)* Lorin Atkinson Wright (1898 - 1973)* *Calculated relationship **Half-sibling Burial: Heber City Cemetery Heber City Wasatch County Utah, USA Plot: A_185_6 Created by: Rhonda Record added: Jul 17, 2010 Find A Grave Memorial# 55049570 My grandfather Don Carlos Ivie died on 24 June 1940, which was almost one year before I was born. Therefore, I never had a chance to see him and I am unable to find stories about him. My older sister Eleanor Bentley has very pleasant memories about my grandfather Ivie. She said that he loved his grandkids and was a very kind man. Eleanor said that he died of a brain tumor and was in pain for about six months before his death. He was born 26 June 1881 in Daniel, Wasatch, Utah and died 24 June 1940 in Miners Hospital in Park City, Summit, Utah. He was married 4 April 1908 to May Pearl Wright and sealed in the Salt lake Temple on 6 May 1941. They had nine children Vivian, Phyllis, Ivan Don, Kenneth Don, Elma May (my mother), Eugene, Marvin, Harold Ivie, and James Leonard. My grandparents also raised a son born to Phyllis who went by the name of Donald Kenneth Ivie. After the death of my Grandfather my grandmother raised nine children of her oldest daughter, Vivian ivie Barnes, who died on 5 February 1946. The names of the Barnes Children were: Margaret Betty (Margaret died at early age), Vern Dale, Raymond, Lila May, Hyrum, Robert, Nancy, Janet Rose, Jerry, Tommy, and Larry. Memories from a story by my Mother, Elma May Ivie Perez. My grandfather worked in a mineral hard rock mine. The name of this mine was Silver King Collation. They mined silver, zinc, and lead ore. It was a very rich mine. My mother was very young when they lived in a small home in Lower Deer Valley. She was four years old when her family moved in the house that was much too small for the family. My mother loved her dad and he made her swing on the porch and she would sing nursery rhymes and count to one hundred. My mother tells me that my grandfather had health problems form working in the mines. Dr. Brogly ran tests and x-rayed his lungs. The doctor told him to quit the mine and get a job where he could breathe clean air. He had dark spots on his lungs. He quit the mine and started preparations for his journey to find another job. My grandmother was sad, but she encouraged him find another job. He told the family goodbye except my mother. He let her think he just went to work. My grandfather found a job in Night, Wyoming on a ranch. My grandparents moved to Evanston, Wyoming only for a few months and returned to Park City, Utah. When he returned he got a job in the mine, rented a two-bed room house and sent for his family. Grandfather started building our new house on Onterio Ridge. The house was built on company ground, which was quickly claimed. Grandfather had to have permission to build there. Memories of my grandmother May Pearl Wright Ivie I do have loving memories of my grandmother Ivie (May Pearl Wright). She was to me a sweet and kind person. Although, we did not visit her a lot. She was a good cook and taught my mother home making skills. As a young boy I lived in Park City, Utah and knew that I could go to grandmother’s house any time for dinner. Long before I went to school, I was playing out side and came into our house because I was hungry. I asked my mother when we were going to eat. She replied in a joking voice that she was not going to cook and we were not going to eat. I thought my mother was serious so I went out side and headed for my grandmothers house, which was some distance away. I grandmother saw me coming and she asked what I was doing and I told her that I came for my supper. She set me down to the table and fed me. At about the same time my mother told my sister Eleanor to go out side and tell me that supper was ready, but they could not fine me. They were consider because they could not find me. After supper at my grandmothers house she had my Uncle Gene take me back home. I am not sure that I remember this story but my grandmother would tell me this story just about every time she saw me. My grandmother was visiting our family when we lived in Salt Lake City, Utah and we were eating. She asked if I wanted some fruit cocktail and I told her no because to me it look like soup. She encourage me to try some and told me fruit cocktail was very good. I agreed to try some and from that day on I loved fruit cocktail and always think of my grand mother. I lived in Park City only for a short time and then we moved to Salt Lake City and then Price, Utah. From that time on we only saw my grandmother about once a year and she was living in Center Creek, Utah on a 40 acre farm. I enjoyed visiting my grandmother because farm life was a new experience for me. They raised most all their food on the farm. They had milk cows, pigs, chickens, workhorses, bees, fruit trees, raised potatoes, carrots, peas, corn, alfalfa, wheat and oats. They had a root cellar to store potatoes and carrots during the winter. They also had a small granary to store grain. Her oldest daughter, Vivian Ivie married Charles Brigham Barnes and they had nine kids. Vivian died on 5 February 1946 leaving 8 children to be raised. My grandmother was living in Park City, Utah at the time and she went to Center Creek, Utah to take care of the grandchildren. She still had one son Leonard and grandson Don in addition to eight Barnes. She married her son-in-law Charles Brigham Barnes and they raised the kids of both families. Charles Brigham Barnes and my grandmother never had children. Charles Brigham Barnes died on 5 October 1954 in Heber City, Wasatch, Utah. At the time of Charles death there were three other children to be raised. My grandmother died on 17 January 1962 in Heber City, Wasatch, Utah. She continued to live on the farm until she died. At that time I was in the United States Army stationed Germany and never got a chance to attend her funnel. My grandmother was a great mother and grandmother who raised nine children of her own, nine Barnes grandchildren, and one child of Phyllis who went by the name of Don Ivie. This makes her one of greatest grandmothers in the world. | Wright, May Pearl (I123491)
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352 | Assuming the gravestone (findagrave.com) of Israel Platt, listed previously as the last-born child of John Platt and Jemima Lewis, is correct in that he was born November 30, 1740, and Jemima's death occurred in 1739, then she could clearly not be his mother. John remarried Mary Wood, according to "John Platt, widower, and Mary Wood, widow, on August 16, 1738-39" according to Chapter XLV, Huntington Marriages, etc., pg. 304, of The Platt Lineage, a Genealogical Research and Record by George Lewis Platt (Google Books). The findagrave.com site also says that he was the son of John Platt and Mary Wood. | Platt, John (I118853)
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353 | Asylgade 9 | Knudsen, Anders Frøkjær (I111509)
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354 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Knudsen, Grethe Frøkjær (I111496)
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355 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Knudsen, Jens Kristian Frøkjær (I111356)
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356 | At age 14 he became a bank messenger in New York City and lived there for the rest of his life. He was the President of the International Bell Telephone Company, Limited | Babcock, Samuel Denison (I36975)
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357 | At head of title: 1789.|||Includes index. | Kilde (S315)
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358 | At head of title: 1789.|||Includes index. | Kilde (S96)
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359 | At head of title: 1789.|||Includes index. | Kilde (S272)
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360 | At Sea, Yellow Fever aboard the ship Talma going from New Orleans to New York | Babcock, Benjamin Franklin (I36886)
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361 | At some point her last name must have been changed from Larsen to Lassen because she named her first child Lassen and her name appears in each of her children's birth record as Lassen. In some of them it is easy to see that it has been changed from Larsen and written over to say Lassen. Her birth record looks like Larsen. Her youngest sister's last name is Larsen on her birth record. | Larsen, Emma (I110900)
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362 | Atwood Cemetery | Kimball, Ruth (I115142)
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363 | Augustus' 1870 census record states he was a physician. His death notice states he was single | Bigelow, DENTIST Augustus (I142445)
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364 | Aultorest Memorial Park | Barlow, Fanny Pearl (I115294)
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365 | Aunt Lucina, with her husband and three children Albert Otis, Oscar Willard and Lucina Ellen, left St. Johnsbury in 1836 and came with her father's family to Kirtland,Ohio, There she and her husband remained when the rest of her father's family went on to Missouri. They remained in Kirtland until 1840. While living there, her third son, Horace Everett, was born. In 1840 the family moved to Janesville, Wisconsin. There they took up a farm about six miles from the town. Here she had three more children Arthur C. ,who died at the age of ten, Juliette, and Henry Franklin. Her sons Albert and Horace and her daughter Juliette became school teachers. After leaving Kirtland, she never saw any of her father's family again except once. Uncle Erastus called on her once while on a mission in the East. She died April 1st, 1861 at the age of 57 and was buried at Janesville. After her death, her husband married the mother of Ella Wheeler Wilcox. | Snow, Lucina (I121209)
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366 | Aurora, a Utah Pioneer who, at age 13, left with her family and the William Budge Company, a wagon company in July 1860; they traveled 77 days. Her mother died en-route, near Little Big Horn River in Nebraska Territory, on July 23, 1860. | Mariager, Aurora (I126807)
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367 | Aurora/South Jordan, Utah Gladys Kay Larsen Hallows Brown, 91, passed away on August 23, 2015 in South Jordan, Utah in the presence of her children. Kay was born March 24, 1924 in Monroe, Utah to Daniel Jones and Gladys Eola Tuft Larsen, the third child in a family of nine children. She married Dale Hallows May 22, 1942. They lived in Aurora, Utah until the family moved to Hereford, Texas in 1952. They were the parents of four children: Lane, Linda, Julie, Bret. Kay was a faithful member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints her entire life. She held many callings and was instrumental in helping others find membership and acceptance in the gospel. She was always recognized for her happy and sweet smile until the last day of her life. Dale preceded her in death in December 1980. She married Rulon Brown in November 1985 in the Jordan River Temple. She was welcomed into the family and acquired more children and grandchildren whom she dearly loved and was loved in return. Rulon also preceded her in death in 2002. Survived by children: Linda (Blake) Daniels, Julie (Rex) Myers, Bret (Lisa) Hallows; daughter-in-law, Bobbie Hallows; grandchildren and great-grandchildren; brothers: Frank, Vic and David Larsen. Also preceded in death by son, Lane; parents; sisters: Donna, Karma, Marilyn; and brothers: Birch, Ole. Funeral services will be held Monday, August 31, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. in the Aurora Ward Chapel, 85 North Main, Aurora Utah. Friends may call Sunday evening from 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. at the Magleby Mortuary, 50 South 100 West, Richfield, or on Monday at the church in Aurora from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Burial will be at Aurora City Cemetery. Funeral Directors: Magleby Mortuary, Richfield, Salina and Manti. | Larsen, Gladys Kay (I68716)
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368 | Aus Batsch. | Halfar, Joseph (I21535)
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369 | Aus Deutsch Klawan. Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Lauffer, Joannes Antonius (I20789)
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370 | Aus Jägerndorf. Vaterschaftserklärung am 10.Mai 1866. | Dittmann, Joseph (I20995)
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371 | Aus Lönsiz z.zt in Freiburg in Pfl. | Kaul, Johanna (I21217)
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372 | Autobiography of Jens (James) Jacob Jensen 1835-1912 will be released in 2018 on Amazon.com at cost. The original untranslated Life Story written in his Day Book is in the possession of Lawrence Willes Jensen. | Jensen, Jens Jacob (I110190)
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373 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Kristensen, Henning Smed (I20826)
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374 | b. 1719 d. aft. 1769, husband of Mary Lincoln, believed buried in this cemetery, he was an early settler of the Deep Creek Valley. --- Article from news clipping by Russ Maurer, dated 12/22/1995 centered upon this cemetery and the myth of Lincoln kin buried here. The cemetery is located just off Lincoln Lane near the Little Mahanoy Creek at Taylorsville. The cemetery is on posted private land and permission should be sought by owners before accessing with respect. It is somewhat maintained to preserve but many burials according to known records either have no markers or are made of native stone and may be hard to locate. Some have been vandalized, removed or even thought washed away by flooding over time for which this location is known. -- 1/17/2020: Information on Francis Yarnell and family can be found posted on genealogy.com forum by Tina McNulty, 1/1/2002 "There were Kinsmen of Abraham Lincoln in Schuylkill County" a Paper Written and Prepared for The Historical Society of Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania by Edgar Downey. In the early 1770's when he was commissioned to survey land Yarnell purchased a large amount of fine farmland in the vicinity of Taylorsville, Barry Twp. and proceeded to clear enough for several farms. Northumberland County was organized in 1772 and it's southern line not yet established, therefore he was assessed as a resident of Augusta Twp. in that county for several years. Later once the lines of Northumberland Co. were accurately established he became a resident of Berks Co. By 1811 the land where his farms were located became Schuylkill Co., now part of Barry Twp. The Great Road of The King's Highway ran through his farms. It is stated that both he and his wife Mary spent the remainder of their years here and are buried here in the old burial ground, now known as Reed's Cemetery, just off The Great Road which he surveyed on the south bank of the Mahanoy Creek. They were married abt. 1741. !Reed's is also referred to as Bickels Cemetery although signage shows Reed's for another prominent area family. The covered bridge over the creek is long gone more than likely washed away, the graves are unmarked although other Yarnall/Yarnell markers exist here. !Edit of Taylorville should read Taylorsville, Barry Twp., Schuylkill Co., Pennsylvania and correct by today's standards. Oral histories state both are buried here and being Quaker/Mennonite/Friends did not believe in adorning their graves with monuments. FRANCIS YARNALL I b. 1719 d. aft. 1769, h/o Mary Lincoln, believed buried in this cemetery, he was an early settler of the Deep Creek Valley. Article from news clipping by Russ Maurer, dated 12/22/1995 centered upon this cemetery and the myth of Lincoln kin buried here. Francis Yarnall Find a Grave Birth: 1718 Death: unknown Spouse: Mary Lincoln Yarnall (1719 - 1769)* Children: Mordecai Yarnall (1743 - 1781)* Burial: Exeter Friends Cemetery Exeter Berks County Pennsylvania, USA Memorial# 136106608 2nd Find a Grave Spouse: Mary Lincoln Yarnall (1719 - 1761) Children: Isaac Yarnall (1755 - 1834)* Burial: Bickels Cemetery Ashland Schuylkill County Pennsylvania, USA Memorial# 156221643 | Yarnall, Francis (I28618)
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375 | Bager i Skjern. Døde på adressen; Bredgade 50 | Sunesen, Jens Christian (I106978)
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376 | Bakersfield, Kern, California, USA | Mecham, Joseph (I89268)
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377 | Baldwin, Thomas W. Vital Records of Reading, Massachusetts, to the Year 1850. (Boston: Wright & Potter Printing Co., 1912), 555. The Wife of James Pike Senr Died April 1693 Cutter and other early authors named wives Naomi and Sarah but neither appear in primary sources. Both names, Naomi and Sarah, appear as given names for the female descendants of James, but they were popular given names then in many families. | Putnam, Naomi (I121622)
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378 | Ballerum | Christensen, Mariane Caroline (I385)
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379 | Baltimore: Biography, by Clayton Colman Hall, Lewis Historical Publishing Company http://books.google.com/books?id=DMcLAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA45&lpg=PA45&dq=%22Nicholas+Hayward%22+Thomas&source=bl&ots=HG0G-jQKDE&sig=XxtHoQSCWOK-018c9D9dJf9eywM&hl=en&ei=RiS2S_nFJMGC8gbxyrg4&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CAkQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22Nicholas%20Hayward%22%20Thomas&f=false Nicholas Hayward, eldest child of Thomas and Joan (Haward) Hayward, was baptized in St. James, Clerkenwell, London, December 29, 1611. He was evidently away from his home in England in 1642 when Nicholas Hayward, or Haward, appears in the records of Essex county, Massachusetts, and also away in 1663, when his younger brother Nathaniel was the only son present at the inquest after their father. He came to New England, settling first at Salem, Massachusetts, where he was a fisherman. May 8, 1672, he petitioned the court for exchange of half an acre of land on the road leading to Beverly. The selectman laid out a quantity of the common land on the north side. A fisherman made the will of Nichoals Hayward, January 6, 1682, and it was proved April 10, 1683. In it he mentions sons ; Nathaniel and Nehemiah, deceased ; son Nicholas ; grandson Nehemiah ; grandsons Jonathan and Samuel Hayward; granddaughters Elizabeth, Abigail and Sarah Hayward ; "children of my son Nehemiah, deceased, namely, Sarah Harad, Anah Sargent, Roose Hayward." Nathaniel Hayward was appointed executor. There are no records showing the name of his wife, who was called "Sister Howard," but we have the date of baptism of one of their children. Chotankers; by A.Edward Foote -page 1 In 1652, Nicholas Hayward, a wealthy merchant of London, engaged in an extensive trade with the Virginias and Marylanders who were already establishing their plantation up and down the Potomac. Furs were being trapped and sold for hard currency by these first immigrant Americans to buy almost every necessity from England. Hayward dealt primarily in tobacco, which in the next 30 years would become the only cash crop od any significance in Virginia. But from time to time he accepted beaver pelts for he had plenty of competition from other London merchants, who sent their agents into the most famous harbor-of-call of its day. Port Tobacco lay just across the Potomac from Mathias Point, to become the home of the cousins of George Washington. Here Washington spent many enjoyable days in his youth nearly a century later, by then next door door to Hayward's descendants. | Hayward, Nicholas Sr (I87128)
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380 | Baptized up in a creek on the Christoffersen family farm. After Clara's husband had lost the family farm, Clara went and asked a lady down at the Corner Store in Brigham City if she would like to sell it. (when Ira was in high school) Clara made a deal with the woman to buy the store with the cost of the inventory in the store. Ira doesn't know where she got the money to pay for it. Clara ran the store while her husband became a policeman. Clara's children all took turns in the store from time to time working. Clara served a lot in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. She was asked by her bishop to write a history about her mother: Ane Christoffersen who was the first Relief Society President in the 6th ward in Brigham City. Clara was working on this and searching for a book that had information that she needed. One day, in the afternoon she was out behind the family store cleaning up some things when she heard the front door to the door shut. She came inside to see who it was and found nobody, but on the counter was the book she needed. Clara loved to play in Bridge Group where they rotated playing at each others houses with the ladies in town. She had an outgoing personality, taught her children all they needed to know. Clara passed away while visiting her son Ira in Tucson, Arizona. She had a stroke, and her body was prepared and flown back to Brigham City to be buried. Her husband Ira Walter was still living at this point. (as told to Ciara Larsen by her grandfather Ira Junior Larsen) | Christoffersen, Clara Dorthea (I131591)
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381 | Barbara Bush (née Pierce; June 8, 1925 - April 17, 2018) also known as the Bush Mother, was the First Lady of the United States from 1989 to 1993 as the wife of George H. W. Bush, who served as the 41st President of the United States, and founder of the Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy. She previously was Second Lady of the United States from 1981 to 1989. Among her six children are George W. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States, and Jeb Bush, the 43rd Governor of Florida. Barbara Pierce was born in Flushing, New York, on June 8, 1925. She met George Herbert Walker Bush at the age of sixteen, and the two married in Rye, New York, in 1945, while he was on leave during his deployment as a Naval officer in World War II. They moved to Texas in 1948, where George later began his political career. Barbara Pierce was born at the Booth Memorial Hospital on East 15th Street in Manhattan, New York, on June 8, 1925, to Pauline (née Robinson) and Marvin Pierce. She was raised in the suburban town of Rye, New York. Her father later became president of McCall Corporation, the publisher of the popular women's magazines Redbook and McCall's. She had two elder siblings, Martha and James, and a younger brother named Scott. Her ancestor Thomas Pierce Jr., an early New England colonist, was also an ancestor of Franklin Pierce, 14th president of the United States. She was a fourth cousin, four times removed, of Franklin Pierce and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Pierce and her three siblings were raised in a house on Onondaga Street in Rye. She attended Milton Public School from 1931 to 1937, Rye Country Day School until 1940[5] and later the boarding school Ashley Hall in Charleston, South Carolina, from 1940 to 1943. In her youth, Pierce was athletic and enjoyed swimming, tennis, and bike riding. Her interest in reading began early in life; she recalled gathering and reading with her family during the evenings. Barbara Bush, center, surrounded by her family, mid 1960s When Pierce was 16 and on Christmas vacation, she met George H. W. Bush at a dance at the Round Hill Country Club in Greenwich, Connecticut; he was a student at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. After 18 months, the two became engaged to be married, just before he went off to World War II as a Navy torpedo bomber pilot. He named three of his planes after her: Barbara, Barbara II, and Barbara III. When he returned on leave, she had discontinued her studies at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts; two weeks later, on January 6, 1945, they were married at the First Presbyterian Church in Rye, New York, with the reception being held at The Apawamis Club. For the first eight months of their marriage, the Bushes moved around the Eastern United States, to places including Michigan, Maryland, and Virginia, where George Bush's Navy squadron training required his presence. Over the next 13 years, George and Barbara Bush had six children who, among them, gave the couple a total of 14 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren: George Walker Bush (b. 1946), who married Laura Welch on November 5, 1977. They have twin daughters, and two granddaughters. Pauline Robinson "Robin" Bush (1949-1953), who died of leukemia at the age of three. John Ellis "Jeb" Bush Sr. (b. 1953), who married Columba Gallo on February 23, 1974. They have three children, and four grandchildren. Neil Mallon Bush (b. 1955), who married Sharon Smith in 1980; they divorced in April 2003. They have three children, and one grandson. Neil married Maria Andrews in 2004. Marvin Pierce Bush (b. 1956), who married Margaret Molster in 1981. They have two children. Dorothy Walker "Doro" Bush Koch (b. 1959), who married William LeBlond in 1982; they divorced in 1990, and have two children. Dorothy married Robert P. Koch in June 1992; they have two children. Texas years After the war ended, George and Barbara had their first child while George was a student at Yale University. The young family soon moved to Odessa, Texas, where George entered the oil business. In September 1949, Barbara's parents were in a car accident in New York and her mother was killed. Mrs. Bush was pregnant at the time with her second child, and was advised not to travel to attend the funeral. When the baby was born, she was named Pauline Robinson Bush in honor of Barbara's mother. The Bushes moved to the Los Angeles area for a time, and then to Midland, Texas in 1950. The Bushes would move some 29 times during their marriage. Over time, Bush built a business in the oil industry and joined with colleagues to start up the successful Zapata Corporation. Barbara raised her children while her husband was usually away on business. In 1953, the Bushes' daughter, Robin, died of leukemia. When their daughter Dorothy was born in August 1959, the Bushes moved from Midland to Houston. In 1963, George Bush was elected Harris County Republican Party chairman, in the first of what would become many elections. In 1964, he made his first run for a prominent political office-U.S. Senator from Texas. Although he lost the election, the exposure that the Bush family received put George and Barbara on the national scene. In 1966, George Bush was elected as a U.S. Representative in Congress from Texas. Barbara raised her children while her husband campaigned and occasionally joined him on the trail. Over the ensuing years, George Bush was elected or appointed to several different positions in the U.S. Congress or the executive branch, or government-related posts, and Barbara Bush accompanied him in each case. As the wife of a Congressman, Barbara immersed herself in projects that piqued her interest; the projects included various charities and Republican women's groups in Washington, D.C. Though her husband lost a second bid for the Senate in 1970, President Richard Nixon appointed him the United States Ambassador to the United Nations, which enabled Barbara to begin forming relationships in New York City with prominent diplomats. As the Watergate scandal heated up in 1973, Nixon asked Bush to become Chairman of the Republican National Committee; Barbara advised her husband to reject the offer because of the harsh political climate, but he accepted anyway. Nixon's successor, Gerald R. Ford, appointed Bush head of the U.S. Liaison Office in the People's Republic of China in 1974, and the Bushes relocated. She enjoyed the time that she spent in China and often rode bicycles with her husband to explore cities and regions that few Americans had visited. Three years later, Bush was recalled to the U.S. to serve as Director of Central Intelligence during a crucial time of legal uncertainty for the agency. He was not allowed to share classified aspects of his job with Barbara; the ensuing sense of isolation, coupled with her perception that she was not achieving her goals while other women of her time were, plunged her into a depression. She did not seek professional help. Instead, she began delivering speeches and presentations about her time spent in the closed-off China, and volunteered at a hospice. Barbara Bush defended her husband's experience and personal qualities when he announced his candidacy for President of the United States in 1980. She caused a stir when she said that she supported ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment and was pro-choice on abortion, placing her at odds with the conservative wing of the Republican party, led by California Governor Ronald Reagan. Reagan earned the presidential nomination over her husband, who then accepted Reagan's invitation to be his running mate; the team was elected in 1980. Barbara Bush's eight years as Second Lady made her a household name. After her son Neil was diagnosed with dyslexia, she took an interest in literacy issues and began working with several different literacy organizations. She spent much time researching and learning about the factors that contributed to illiteracy-she believed homelessness was also connected to illiteracy-and the efforts underway to combat both. She traveled around the country and the world, either with the vice president on official trips or by herself. In 1984, she wrote a children's book, C. Fred's Story, which recounted the adventures of a family as related by their cocker spaniel, C. Fred. She donated all of the book's proceeds to literacy charities. By the mid-1980s, Bush was comfortable speaking in front of groups, and she routinely spoke to promote issues in which she believed. She became famous for expressing a sense of humor and self-deprecating wit. During the 1984 presidential campaign, Barbara made headlines when she told the press that she could not say on television what she thought of vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro, but "it rhymes with rich". After receiving criticism for the comment, Bush said she did not intend to insult Ferraro. Bush was diagnosed with Graves' disease in 1988. Later on, she suffered from congestive heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Bush was a heavy smoker for 25 years, quitting in 1968 when a nurse condemned her smoking in her hospital room after a surgery. In November 2008, Bush was hospitalized for abdominal pains and underwent small intestine surgery. She underwent aortic valve replacement surgery in March 2009. Bush was hospitalized with pneumonia on New Year's Eve 2013 and was released from the hospital a few days later. On April 15, 2018, her family released a statement regarding her failing health stating that she had chosen to be at home with family, desiring "comfort care" rather than further medical treatment. Bush died in her Houston home at the age of 92 on April 17, 2018. Her son George W. Bush tweeted, "My dear mother has passed on at age 92. Laura, Barbara, Jenna, and I are sad, but our souls are settled because we know hers was [...] I'm a lucky man that Barbara Bush was my mother. | Pierce, Barbara (I56675)
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382 | Barnabas Baker was born on Feb 23 1733/34 in Yarmouth, Massachusetts British Colonial America, son of Judah and Mercy Baker. He married Mehetable Smith, daughter of John Smith Jr. and Elisabeth Brown Smith, on October 13, 1753 in Yarmouth, Massachusetts. In 1764, the family moved to Barrington, Shelburne, Nova Scotia, Canada, together with two brothers-in-law, Thomas and Benjamin Smith, where he is listed among the first proprietors of the town. After dwelling there ten years, he moved about 1774 to Pownalboro, Maine (now Pownal). In 1779 he moved to Litchfield, Maine. He was married to Mehitable Smith on Mar 14, 1754 in Chatham, Mass. They had 15 children. Sergeant Barnabas Baker was in Captain Keen's company, Colonel Thomas's regiment during the French war. Barnabas was a Private in the Continental Army from Massachusetts during the Revolution. | Baker, Barnabas (I76702)
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383 | Bartel Lott (Bartholomew Engelbertszen Loti, Lott, Lodt, Loot and Loth) was the son of Engelbert and brother of Peter, was a French Huguenot, who emigrated from a point near the Lotte river [Ruinerwold, Drenthe, Netherlands], in the year 1652, and settled in Flatbush, Kings county, New York. He was born about 1630 and married Harmantje Van Reynerwout on 16 December 1662 In the Reformed Dutch Church of New Amsterdam. In 28 July 1663 Edward Griffen conveyed to "Bartel Lot and Pieter Loot" bouwery No. 9, in "Midwout,"next to the Pastor's‘land, 600 Rods in length and 24 in breadth, long 24 morgens, as per book G.G. in Office of the Secretary of State, Albany, N.Y. 1665. Peter and Bartel initially bought and sold their first land together, but records indicate that Bartel lived in Richmond county, Staten Island, and on April 10, 1708, “he was lately deceased, intestate, and Letters of Administration were granted to his only son, Engelbert." In 1670, Barthel Lott and his wife Harmantje, took Oath of Allegiance and joined the Reformed Dutch Church in New York. He signed his name Bartel Lot. His only son Engel was baptized 16 February 1663 in the Reformed Dutch Church, New Amsterdam, Sponsors with Pieter Loth, Engelbert Steenhuyszen and Magdalena Van Vleck. His daughter Anna Maria was baptized 4 January 1668 in the Reformed Dutch Church, Port Richmond, Stratton Island. Sponsors: Pieter Loth, Isaac VanVleck and Gerritje Lamberts. The Lott Family in America by A V Phillips, Travelor's Book Store, Trenton, New Jersey, 1942. | Lott, Bartel Engelbertsen (I139566)
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384 | Based on extensive research in England. See the 2014 article: Claassen, Judith Gleason. The Origin of Thomas Gleason of Watertown and Cambridge, Massachusetts. New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (New England Historical & Genealogical Society, Jan 2014), 168:15 https://www.americanancestors.org/databases/new-england-historical-and-genealogical-register/image?pageName=6&volumeId=20034&rId=43409677 THOMAS Gleason was bo 3 SEP 1609 in Cockfield, Suffolk, England Watertown son of Thomas Gleasona and Anne Armesby. His parents married in Cockfield 22 March 1602. His father was buried in Cockfield 22 March 1609/10. His father left a nuncupative will in Cockfield 19 Mar 1609/10 in which he calls himself "Thomas Gleeson of Cockefeild in the countie of Suff husbandman" and names his wife Anne and "children." Anne Armesby was bp. 6 Nov. 1572. She married second to Humphrey Sowgate after 1 Oct 1610 and had two more children Bridget and Martha. Her parents were John Amesby and Fraces Frost. Thomas Gleason had two siblings Susan and Elizabeth. He married Susanna Page on Susanna Page in Cockfield, Suffolk, England and four children are recorded there from 1635-1643 (Susan, Thomas, Joseph and Frances) and Frances was buried there 1644. There are no records of him from 1644-1652 when he is first recorded in New England. This gives us a narrow window of arrival. On June 1, 1652 -- Thomas Gleason took the Oath of Allegiance at Watertown, Middlesex County, Massachusetts Bay Colony. Thomas Gleson {sic} and Susanna Page had four children who were baptized at Cockfield, Suffolk, England: Susan Gleson, baptized on October 13, 1635. Thomas Gleson, baptized on January 21, 1637/1638 (i.e., 1638). Joseph Gleson, baptized on November 19, 1640. Frances (daughter) Gleson, baptized on May 4, 1643; she was buried at All Saints Church, Hartest, Suffolk, England Susanna Page is mentioned in the will of William Page of Watertown Dec 16 1665 as kinsman Very little is found of Thomas Leason or Gleason on the records of Watertown although he seems to have lived there till 1654 he then lived in Cambridge until 1658 when he settled in Charlestown and on Dec 3 he leased from Capt Scarlett a portion of the Squa Sachem lands 1639 Squa Sachem had deeded to the town of Charlestown her lands lying in what is now Medford reserving to herself certain tracts on the west side of Mysticke Pond By her will she bequeathed all her property to certain prominent citizens among whom were Gov John Wiinthrop and Edward Gibson The latter secured possession of the lands on the west side of Mysticke Pond and this was the land subsequently leased to Thomas Gleason Soon after this l ease was made a question arose as to the rightful ownership of these lands and in March 1662 the town of Charlestown instituted a suit against Thomas Gleason for the purpose of obtaining possession All of Thomas Gleason's resources were swallowed up in the litigation and the case was unsettled when he died in the Spring of 1686 (How do we know he died in 1686?) His widow Susanna died in Boston Jan 24 1691. See also: Melinde Lutz Sanborn, Ages from Court Records, 1636-1700, Volume I, Essex, Middlesex, and Suffolk Counties, Massachusetts (Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2003) 88 Thomas was age 52 in 1662 and 66 in 1676, but his age in other records varies. Suffolk Co., Mass., Probate Records 11:39 On 9 Sept. 1685 Ann Winne of Watertown made her will. She was widow of Edward Winn but also widow of William Page. Near the beginning of the long list of heirs she named brother in law Gleason, kinsman Thomas Gleason, the wife of Thomas Prat Sr., and kin: Joseph, John, Philip, Isaac, Willilam, Marie, and Anne Gleason. Robert H. Rodgers, Middlesex County, Records of Probate and Administration, March 1660/61 - December 1670 (Boston: NEHGS, 2001) 258-61 Willilam Page of Watertown made his will 16 Dec. 1664 directing his wife Hannah [a frequent alternate to Anna] to give "to Thomas Leason my kinsman the summe of twentie shilllings: and that shee given to William Leason now living with me the summe of ten pounds to be payd at age of twenty two years, provided he stay with her . . . ." While William does not call Thomas his brother-in-law, William's widow Anna did call Thomas that in her will. Roger Thompson, Cambridge Cameos (Boston: NEHGS, 2005) 105-09 This chapter describes the colorful Gleason family, the information mostly from court records. On p. 107 it suggests he was born between 1607 and 1610. Helen Schatvet Ullmann, CG, FASG, "Susannah Pratt, the Evidence for her being a Daughter of Thomas Gleason of Middlesex County, Massachusetts" (Massachusetts Society of Genealogists, Inc. MASSOG 32 (2008):71-72) This article provides evidence that no one heretofore has published. | Gleason, Thomas III (I126619)
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385 | Bavaria | Miller, Michael (I47637)
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386 | Bear River Cemetery | Hansen, Bodil Maria (I115039)
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387 | Bear River Cemetery | Crowther, Richard Franklin (I115033)
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388 | Bear River Cemetery | Andersen, Louis Albert (I115018)
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389 | Bear River Cemetery | Jensen, Clifford (I115003)
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390 | Bearce Cemetery | Bridgham, Captain John (I114875)
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391 | Bearing the same name as her sister born in 1895 who must have died before the second Bodil Marie was born in 1907. | Pedersen, Bodil Marie (I138433)
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392 | Beaver Creek Cemetery | Head, Michael Henry (I115299)
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393 | Beaver Meadow Cemetery | Babcock, Mary (I33075)
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394 | Became a member of the Severn's Valley Baptist Church August 25, 1792. The church was located in Hardin County by 1792. | Kennedy, Margaret Ann (I34968)
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395 | Because of the disagreement as to the parents of George Gardiner, both Lydia Ballou LVJ5-16L and Herodias Long L5CT-V7X are attached to two separate George Gardiners to illustrate this point. If you believe George Gardiner was the son of Reverend Michael, merge INTO L5NP-3QP. Otherwise, merge INTO George Gardiner LZVY-GGS. Because of the disagreement as to the parents of George Gardiner, bot h Lydia Ballou LVJ5-16L and Herodias Long L5CT-V7X are attached to tw o separate George Gardiners to illustrate this point. If you believe G eorge Gardiner was the son of Reverend Michael, merge INTO L5NP-3QP. O therwise, merge INTO George Gardiner LZVY-GGS. | Ballou, Lydia (I92193)
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396 | BEFORE ANYONE CHANGES ANY NAMES, BE SURE YOU UNDERSTAND THE PRACTICE OF PATRONYMICS USED IN DENMARK PRIOR TO THE 1850s | Christensen, Niels Peter Sr. (I131446)
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397 | BEFORE MAKING ANY CHANGES TO THE ABBE FAMILY, CHECK OUT THE ABBE-ABBEY GENEALOGY, IN MEMORY OF JOHN ABBE AND HIS DESCENDANTS ( Abbe--Abbey genealogy : in memory of John Abbe and his descendants BY Abbe, Cleveland, 1838-1916; Nichols, josephine Genung) ON THIS SYSTEM ************************************************************************* Abbe-Abbey Genealogy, In Memory of John Abbe and His Descendants on pages 17 & 18 states: 10. MARY (3) ABBE, daughter of John (2) and Hannah ( ) Abbe, born in Wenham, Mass., September 16, 1684; baptized there before 1685. Lived in Somers and Enfield. Some authorities have given Mary, wife of James Pease, as the daughter of Thomas and Sarah (Fairfield) Abbe of Enfield. But Mary, the daughter of Thomas and Sarah, died in Wenham, Mass., October 15, 1705 (Wenham Vital Records). Moreover, Richard Abbe, son of John and Hannah ( ) Abbe, in his will mentions his sister Mary, ye wife of James Pease. Her mother divided land belonging to her first husband, John Abbe, among his children, June 16, 1710, using these words,'' moved by the love and affection I bore to my beautiful daughter Mary Abbe.'' Married November (or October) 15, 1710, JAMES PEASE, born in Salem, Mass., 1677 or 1679, son of John, jr., and Margaret (Adams) Pease. The first of the Pease family in America was Robert, who married Marie________ , father of John Pease, Sr., called the FATHER OF ENFIELD. John Pease, Sr., married Mary Goodell and had a son, Captain John Pease, jr., a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Boston, served in the Colonial Wars, and married Margaret Adams, daughter of James and Frances (Vassall) Adams. James Adams was a son of John Adams, who came to the Plymouth Colony in the ship Fortune in 1621, and liis wife Eleanor Newton. James Pease removed with his father to Enfield when he was a child, was living in Enfield in 1710, and in Somers in 1713. He served as sergeant in one of the military companies. Children, born in Enfield: 1 - Mary Pease, b. Oct. 8, 1711. 2 - James Pease, b. May 4, 1713 ; m. Abigail Ford. 3 - Margaret Pease, b. May 16, 1715. 4 - Richard Pease, b. Sept. 22, 1717 ; m. Elizabeth Parsons. 5 - Hannah Pease, b. April 20, 1722. 6 - John Pease, b. June 19, 1725 ; d. July 25, 1730. | Pease, James (I86301)
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398 | BEFORE MAKING ANY CHANGES TO THE ABBE FAMILY, CHECK OUT THE ABBE-ABBEY GENEALOGY, IN MEMORY OF JOHN ABBE AND HIS DESCENDANTS ( Abbe--Abbey genealogy : in memory of John Abbe and his descendants BY Abbe, Cleveland, 1838-1916; Nichols, josephine Genung) ON THIS SYSTEM ************************************************************************* Abbe-Abbey Genealogy, In Memory of John Abbe and His Descendants on pages 17 & 18 states: 10. MARY (3) ABBE, daughter of John (2) and Hannah ( ) Abbe, born in Wenham, Mass., September 16, 1684; baptized there before 1685. Lived in Somers and Enfield. Some authorities have given Mary, wife of James Pease, as the daughter of Thomas and Sarah (Fairfield) Abbe of Enfield. But Mary, the daughter of Thomas and Sarah, died in Wenham, Mass., October 15, 1705 (Wenham Vital Records). Moreover, Richard Abbe, son of John and Hannah ( ) Abbe, in his will mentions his sister Mary, ye wife of James Pease. Her mother divided land belonging to her first husband, John Abbe, among his children, June 16, 1710, using these words,'' moved by the love and affection I bore to my beautiful daughter Mary Abbe.'' Married November (or October) 15, 1710, JAMES PEASE, born in Salem, Mass., 1677 or 1679, son of John, jr., and Margaret (Adams) Pease. The first of the Pease family in America was Robert, who married Marie________ , father of John Pease, Sr., called the FATHER OF ENFIELD. John Pease, Sr., married Mary Goodell and had a son, Captain John Pease, jr., a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Boston, served in the Colonial Wars, and married Margaret Adams, daughter of James and Frances (Vassall) Adams. James Adams was a son of John Adams, who came to the Plymouth Colony in the ship Fortune in 1621, and liis wife Eleanor Newton. James Pease removed with his father to Enfield when he was a child, was living in Enfield in 1710, and in Somers in 1713. He served as sergeant in one of the military companies. Children, born in Enfield: 1 - Mary Pease, b. Oct. 8, 1711. 2 - James Pease, b. May 4, 1713 ; m. Abigail Ford. 3 - Margaret Pease, b. May 16, 1715. 4 - Richard Pease, b. Sept. 22, 1717 ; m. Elizabeth Parsons. 5 - Hannah Pease, b. April 20, 1722. 6 - John Pease, b. June 19, 1725 ; d. July 25, 1730. | Pease, Capt John (I86273)
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399 | BEFORE MAKING ANY CHANGES TO THE ABBE FAMILY, CHECK OUT THE ABBE-ABBEY GENEALOGY, IN MEMORY OF JOHN ABBE AND HIS DESCENDANTS ( Abbe--Abbey genealogy : in memory of John Abbe and his descendants BY Abbe, Cleveland, 1838-1916; Nichols, Josephine Genung) ON THIS SYSTEM. If you delete this information, much of the work that many did on this book throughout the years, will be lost. ************************************************************************* ********************** SECOND GENERATION OF ABBES ************************* Abbe-Abbey Genealogy, In Memory of John Abbe and his Descendants page 14 & 15 states: 6. Thomas (2) Abbe married at Marblehead, Mass., December 16, 1683, SARAH FAIRFIELD, born December 24, 1655, at Reading, Mass; died in Enfield, Conn., November 27, 1742. She was the daughter of Walter and Sarah (Skipper) Fairfield, and had previously been married to ______ Needham. The Wenham records give this record of the marriage, "Thomas Abby and Sarah Fairfield of Wenham were married the 17th day of December, 1683, being lawfully published with the consent of her parents Walter Fairfield, and his witness with Moses Maverick and Elizabeth Fairfield." The marriage is recorded in both Marblehead and Wenham. Walter Fairfield was son of John and Elizabeth ( ) Fairfield, who came to America in 1638. According to tradition he sprang from the Huguenot Beauchamp family that left France for England shortly before St. Bartholomew's Day. Children: 21 Sarah Abbe, b. March 31, 1684; m. Shubael Geer. 22 Thomas Abbe, b. Oct. 30, 1686; m. (1) Mary Pease, (2) Mrs. Rebecca Pierce. Mary Abbe, b. Feb. 4, 1688; d. Oct. 15, 1705, as recorded in the Wenham town records. Many family and published records have wrongly stated that Mary, daughter of Thomas and Sarah, m. James Pease. Her cousin Mary, b. Sept. 16, 1684, daughter of John and Hannah ( ) Abbe, was the one who m. James Pease. The Wenham records read: "Mary, the daughter of Thomas Abbe by Sarah his wife, d. Oct. 15, 1705," and the will of Richard Abbe is further proof. See No. 9. 23 John Abbe, b. Sept. 27, 1692; m. Hannah Boardman. Tabitha Abbe, b. March 29, 1696. She is called Abigail in her father's will, probably through the mistake of the scribe. Married in Enfield, Nov. 19, 1713, John Warner of Enfield, b. March 29, 1696-7. Children, born in Enfield: i. Nathaniel, b. Oct. 11, 1714; ii. John, jr., b. Aug. 28, 1716; iii. Daniel, b. May 25, 1719. Elizabeth Abbe, m. in Enfield, November 28, 1723, Benjamin Bement, b. in Enfield, 1698, son of John Bement. They had a son Benjamin, jr., b. in Enfield, 1724. They later removed to the part of Simsbury now called Granby. ************************************************************************* ************************** THIRD GENERATION OF ABBES ********************** Abbe-Abbey Genealogy, In Memory of John Abbe and his Descendants on page 25 states: 22. Thomas Abbe, Jr, son of Thomas (2) and Sarah (Fairfield) Abbe, born October 30, 1686, in Enfield, Conn, died there 1759. He was Captain and then Lieutenant (1714) of military companies. He resided in Enfield, Conn. With his brother John and sisters Sarah Gear and Tabitha Warner, he signed receipt for legacy from his grandfather, Walter Fairfield, January 6, 1725-6. He was executor of the will of his uncle, Obadiah Abbe, together with Elizabeth Warriner in 1732. His will, made December 30, 1758, probated April 18, 1759, mentions wife, Rebecca, children, Mary Bement, Sarah Parsons, Tabitha Pease, Hannah Phelps, Thomas, grandchildren, Nathaniel and Eliphalet Chapin, Thomas and Elihu Geer, son Thomas executor. Married (1) in Enfield, March 3, (or 13), 1714-5, MARY PEASE, born in Enfield, May 24, 1688, died March 18, 1745 (Enfield record), daughter of Captain John, Jr. and Margaret (Adams) Pease. She was descended from Wilham Vassail, Assistant with Governor Winthrop of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay in 1630, who was son of John Vassall who built and commanded the Samuel and Tobey, jr, in the Spanish Armada. Married (2) June 12, 1746, MRS. REBECCA PEIRCE. Children, all by first wife, born in Enfield: 72. Mary Abbe, b Jan 23, 1715-6, m. Dennis Bement. 73. Sarah Abbe, b Mrch 26, 1718, m. (2) Nathaniel Chapin, (2) Hezekiah Parsons. 74. Tabitha Abbe, b July 9k, 1720, m. Ephraim. 75. Hannah Abbe, b. March 27, 1723 m. (1) Thomas Geer, (2) Noah Phelps. Abigail Abbe b. July 28, 1725, probably d. young as she was not mentioned in her fathers will, 1758 Obadiah Abbe, b Feb 18, 1728; d in Enfield, April 15, 1745. 76. Thomas Abbe, b April 11, 1731, m Penelope Terry. | Pease, Mary (I86326)
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400 | Before reading all this please see the Pike DNA project for group 6: https://www.math.mun.ca/~dapike/family_history/pike/DNA/index.php?content=results.html#Group6 These results prove that Sarah Hyde actually married John3 Pike (john2, James1) Because his male descendants are closely related to Javis3 (John2, James1). Also note that John2 supposedly son of James1 is not actually his biological son. He removed to Roxbury it is stated but he may have actually been an immigrant and the John2 of Reading my have died young. Note also the use of the name Jarvis which is only used in the family of Roxbury and that also Roxbury had a close genealogical connection to Windham County in general. Elizabeth Welch must have married John3 (James2, James1) because he is closely related to that family in terms of Y DNA results. John3 (James 2, James1) b. 18 Aug. 1687 in Reading, Ma; m 1710 Elizabeth Welsh ; settled in Norwick , Ct. ; had chr: a) Elizabeth4 b) John. b. 1712 c) Samuel, b. 1715 d) Nathaniel, b. 1716-7 e) Isaac, b. 1721 f) Hannah, b. 1723 g) Silas, b. 1726; m ;d, 1745; ch. (probable) It has been accepted for some time by the Pike researchers that the John Pike son of James Pike and Hannah Cutler married to Elizabeth Welch. However, an alternate version of this John Pike was published in: William Henry Harrison Stowell, in 'Four Generations of Descendants of Jonathan Hyde of Newton. Mass.' (The NEHGR Vol. 71. 1917. p. 262) He gives a different line of descent for a John Pike whose birth date and parents' names make him identical to John Pike (above) That version is as follows: Sarah Hyde. b. 17 Oct. 1685 at Watertown; m. on 23 May 1706 John Pike, b. at Woburn. Ma. 18 Aug. 1687, son of James and Hannah (Cutler) Pike; they removed to Canterabury, Ct. In 1751 he was executor of the will of Mrs. Abigail Hides, his wife's stepmother. He d. at Canterbury, Ct. 2 Sept. 1754. Chr.. all (ten) b. at Canterbury: John.. b. 23 July 1707; m. at Canterbury 9 July 1729 Sarah Backus Ebenezer b. 3 Mar. 1709: m. at ' 24 Jan. 1737-8 Abigail Adams Elizabeth . b. 25 Mar. 171/6 Jonathan . b. I Apr. 1713 Jarvis , b. 14 June 1714 James . b. 7 Nov. 1715: m. at Canterbury 25 May 1741 Hannah (Adams) Hyde, widow of Jonathan Hyde. Seth Hide of Canterbury, s. of Jonathan and Hannah in his will dated 25 Apr. 1758 and proved 28 Nov. 1760, made a bequest to his two brothers and sister, Jonathan Pike, Joseph Pike and Ruth Pike, 'the only sons and daughter of the testator's mother and father. James and Hannah Pike ". (Plainfield, Ct. Probate Records, vol. 10. p. 56 Elijah Nov. 1717; d. Canterbury. 22 Aug. 1719 David. b. 9 Jan. 1719-20 Solomon . b. 21 liar. 1722-3. d. Canterbury. 17 June. 1723 Sarah. b. M Feb. 1724-5 Elizabeth Welch and Sarah Hyde cannot represent successive marriages of one and the same John Pike since the birth dates of the children overlap. Proper identification has not been made. Do not merge John Pike LZKJ-JRJ and Sarah Hyde with this John Pike. Two seperate families just down the road from each other. | Pike, John (I121520)
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