Match 401 til 450 fra 3,803
# | Notater | Knyttet til |
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401 | Beheaded | De Mortimer, Earl of March IV Roger Sir (I96238)
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402 | Bei der Geburt wohnhaft Burgwiese Nr. 1, Beim Tod Geppersdorf Nr. 11,13 Freihäusler. | Wallentin, August (I86483)
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403 | Bei der Heirat am12 Nov.1720 schon verstorben. | Pohl, Joann (I20740)
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404 | Bei Eheschliessung 30 Jahre und 8 Monate. Im 4+3. Grad verwandt. 1.Ehemit Erdmann Pratsch. | Gretschel, Theresia (I21081)
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405 | Bei Heirat 22 Jahre alt. | Schmied, Joseph Franz (I21163)
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406 | Beim Tod des Vaters Matthias Lessak 15. 3.1855 46 Jahre alt. Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Lessak, Marianna (I21030)
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407 | Bellevue Navel Hospital | Gillespie, John W (I115006)
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408 | Bellwood General Hospital | Mills, William Alvin (I67075)
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409 | Bemærk at Kirsten kun lige var fyldt 17 da hun blev gift. Efter hun blev enke boede hun de sidste år hos sønnen Christen i Tingstrup. | Tunge, Kirstine Pedersdatter (I50407)
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410 | BENJAMIN CHILD and ELIZABETH GREENWOOD, both of Newton, m., in Wat., May 24, 1722. She d. 1769. Chil., 1. Samuel, b. Ap. 28, 172- ; m., 1745, Elizabeth Winchester. 2. Elizabeth, b. 1729; d. 1732. 3. Hannah, b. Jan. 3, 1731. 4. Elizabeth, b. Jan. 4, 1733 | Child, Benjamin (I53066)
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411 | Benjamin Spink was Captain of the West Greenwich militia in 1741, and Justice of the Peace for the town from 1745 for a number of years. | Spink, Benjamin (I114410)
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412 | Benjamin Thomas Mitchell’s Distinctive Contributions in the Restoration Include the Following: * He was a stone mason for the Nauvoo, IL Temple, dedicated May 1, 1846. As documented in official Church temple construction records, B.T. Mitchell sculpted the first sunstone for the Nauvoo temple. One of the original 30 sunstones is currently on display at the Smithsonian American History Museum in Washington D.C., right next to the original U.S. Star Spangled Banner. The Sunstone at the Smithsonian has a chiseled (M) marked on the upper left hand corner-likely indicating that the Sunstone at the Smithsonian was sculpted by Benjamin T. (M)itchell. * He was ordained a Seventy at the Nauvoo Conference on October 6th, 1844 and was chosen as a Counselor in the 16th Quorum of the Seventies January 19, 1845. * On his first Mormon pioneer trek, he was a Captain in the Heber C. Kimball Pioneer company, 1848. * He carved the Salt Lake City Meridian Marker, currently located in the Church Museum-1st Floor * He was a stone mason /foreman for the Salt Lake City, UT Temple, dedicated April 6, 1893. Benjamin Mitchell was a close associate with Brigham Young, Truman Angell and others in drawing up the plans for the Salt Lake temple. * He served a mission in Nova Scotia, Canada, 1852-1855. * Returning from his mission and on his second Mormon pioneer trek, he led a Mormon Pioneer company, the Benjamin Thomas Mitchell Company, 1854. * He served as the Bishop of the Salt Lake City, Utah 15th Ward in 1857. * He sent two of his sons to work as stone masons on the Saint George, UT Temple, dedicated April 6, 1877. * He helped develop “Deseret” Salt Lake City as a stone mason by constructing commercial and government buildings such as the ZCMI, the Courthouse and a bank building. | Mitchell, Benjamin Thomas (I112106)
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413 | Benjamin was born in Pennsylvania, where his father operated a flour mill. His parents and the older children joined the LDS Church in 1843, a year before Joseph Smith's death. The whole family joined the exodus to Utah when Benjamin was twelve, traveling with the third wagon company to go west. “The adventure excited me,” he said. “We enjoyed the march across the plains. We were aroused by a bugle call every morning at 6:00 a.m. We traveled until mid-afternoon, the speed and distance covered was regulated by the slowest wagons. Often we traveled no more than five or six miles. When we could travel ahead, we raced to see who could be the first to gather wild berries, or shoot quail, grouse or rabbits. One morning a stampede was produced among camp livestock when someone shook a big buffalo robe. Animals raced around, trampling on one another and some of them got their horns knocked off.” When he had grown to manhood, Benjamin was one of the favorite uncles for the families of his brother John. “Colorful, with charm and a generous nature, he was a handsome man.” He married Martha Ann Bitner in 1859, and they moved to a homestead in the south part of the valley. Benjamin farmed and raised cattle there, and operated an inn known as Neff's Station for travelers between Salt Lake and Provo. Before the railroad extended from Salt Lake to Provo, the trip between the cities took two full days. His first wife died in 1868, and in 1870 he married two other women on the same day. Maria Bowthorpe was a widow who had been keeping house for him, and Mary Ellen Love was a young woman from Nephi who had been working as a telegrapher and who was introduced to Benjamin by Benjamin's cousin, a superintendent of the Deseret Telegraph Company. Because of the mining activity in Little Cottonwood Canyon, the Deseret Telegraph Company placed a telegraph station at Neff's Inn, and Benjamin's wife Mary Ellen operated the station until the railroad line extended past Point of the Mountain, and the telegraph station was moved to Sandy. She also worked in Sandy for a short period of time, bringing her three-month-old baby to work every day. Benjamin's children remembered him with affection. One of them remembers that her mother would usually refer difficult childish requests to Benjamin. “When appealed to, he would sit down with the child. In a quiet, sober way, he would ask questions. After full discussion he would remark gently “You don't want to do that,” or “You don't want to have that.” Then, the matter was dropped with everyone feeling happy. The same child remembers traveling to Church with him on Sunday: “When attired in his Sunday best, she thought him the handsomest man in the world.” | Neff, Benjamin Barr (I96784)
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414 | Benjamin was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts, May 4, 1700, and married Mary Hyde in Newton, December 9, 1725. Her ancestry is unknown. He bought three hundred acres of land in Uxbridge, Massachusetts, and settled there in 1735 or 1736, his wife Mary joining the church there by letter on June 20, 1736. He was a prosperous farmer and landowner, and died in Uxbridge early in 1749, his will, signed December 6, 1748, being admitted to probate May 11, 174 9. Inventory, 7,035 pds. Murdock Genealogy-Robert Murdock of Roxbury, Massachusetts and some of his Descendants, compiled by Joseph B. Murdock, published by C. E. Goodspeed & Co., Boston, 1925, Pages 19-20. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=34090959 | Murdock, Benjamin (I94061)
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415 | Benjamin Youngs, in 1694, then 16 years of age, began learning the trade of weaver of John Alaban, who engaged to teach him as far as he could, "excepting bed ticking." In May 1712, John Corwin sold him 50 acres of land, in concideration of which his brother, John Youngs, sold him 50 acres of land to said Corwin. This land he "Benjimin Youngs, Jun. of Southold, weaver," exchanged Sept. 16, 1713, with Joseph Hull, for a house and home lot his wife Mercy Youngs, signing the deed with him. In 1715 he was in the militia Co. No. 3. of which his cousin Benjimin Youngs was Captain. Of his sons, Isaac settled in Southold, Joseph located near Mattituck. Seth removed to Connecticut, and Israel in 1661 bought a farm in Franklinville, L.I. (now Laurel) and he probably went to live with the latter and died there. | Youngs, Benjamin (I28678)
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416 | Benjimin Yongs was probably born in Southold, N.Y., and is first mentioned in the will of his grandfather, Thomas Warren, of Southwold, England, dated March 4, 1641, bequething him L 10.(10 pounds) He seems to have lived in the old homestead with his father and mother, and to have inherited it by will from his mother in 1678 together with all the household and farming affects, and other lands. In 1665 he was a witness to the indian deed for that part of the island, and one of the patentees of the town in 1676. From 1674 to 1693, he was town clerk, and recorder from 1674 to the time of his death in 1697. In 1675 he was on the tax list as "Beniman Yongs". 2 heads (able bodied men) L 36. 18 acres (land fenced in) L18, 6 oxen, 3 cows L51, 2, 3 yr olds, 2,2 yr olds, L13. 1 horse, 1 yearlin horse L 15. 21 sheep, 8 swine L 09. Total 142 L. In the census of 1686, he had 4 males and 3 females in his family, and in the census of 1698 (after his death) his family is given as "Elizabeth Youngs, his widow, John Youngs, Benjimin Youngs, Eliza Youngs, Christian Youngs. In 1649 he indented his son Benjimin to John Alaban, to learn the weavers trade. His two sons are identified by several deeds executed before and after his death. The last record of him is in 1697, when he gave a quit claim to Jonathan Horton for land which he sold to his father in 1675. He evidently died inestate, and the "Younges Homestead" probably passed to his son John. In 1783 it was owned by Joseph Prince. Selah Youngs also reports John's first wife died "about 1630." Selah Youngs, _Youngs family : Vicar Christopher Yonges, his ancestors in England and his descendants in America: a history and genealogy_ (New York, 1907), p. 52-53 | Youngs, Benjamin (I23919)
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417 | Bergen Churchyard | Zabriskie, Maria (I115263)
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418 | Bergen Churchyard | Ackerman, John Jr. (I115260)
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419 | Berkeley Castle | Berkeley, Sir Maurice Knight (I125378)
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420 | Berkeley Castle | Berkeley, Sir Maurice Knight (I125378)
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421 | Bernard Snow was born to Ebenezer Snow (1784-1867)and Polly Hayes (1788-1858)in Pomfret,Windsor County, Vermont. He married his first cousin, Louisa King, 24 November 1841 in Boston Massachusetts. Bernard and Louisa's common ancestors were their grandparents: Samual & Betty Perkins Snow. Bernard & Louisa were sealed 30 Aug 1955 in the Salt Lake Temple. They had four children, none of which reached adulthood. A male stillborn November 1842;Sidney Alfred Snow 1844-1852; Flora Melissa Snow Jan 1846-Mar 1846 from lung fever; and Bernard Snow May 1847 to Sept 1847 with Cholera Infantum. Louisa was fragile, broken hearted over the loss of her three children and died 6 July 1850 while crossing the plains in the Wilford Woodruff Company of Pioneers. She so wanted to see her beloved sister,Melissa, but it was not to be. At this time Louisa's grave is unknown. Her son Sidney went on to Salt Lake. Bernard Snow was already in California when Louisa started the crossing. He had traveled there from Boston via Panama in November 1849. just eight months after being baptized by Wilford Woodruff in Cambridge. In October 1852 he came to Utah from California to discover his wife had died crossing the plains. Just two weeks later, son Sidney died. Bernard married Alice Smith, Mary Walsh, and Anne Liversidge before serving a mission in England leaving Utah in Aug 1856 and returning in June 1858. Upon his return from his mission, Bernard settled in the Sanpete Valley, living in Manti, Ephraim and later Fountain Green. There he built and ran several mills. Later in life Bernard worked in the mines in Tooele and Milford counties. In his later years he settled in Idaho where he died in 1893. | Snow, Bernard (I68367)
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422 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Beyer, Gottfried (I114402)
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423 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Gretschel, Maria Josepha (I3464)
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424 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Ascher, Theresia (I3236)
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425 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Beyer, Joseph (I125174)
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426 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Gröger, Marina (I125163)
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427 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Herfert, Susanna (I125161)
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428 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Köhler, Marina (I125154)
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429 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Weber, Elenora (I125151)
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430 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Kutschker, Maria Clara (I125149)
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431 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Willsch, Catharina (I125147)
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432 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Mader, Michel (I125124)
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433 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Mader, Andreas (I125121)
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434 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Mader, Anna Catharina (I125119)
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435 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Gretschel, Anna (I125103)
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436 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Lauffer, Uhrmacher Robert (I114235)
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437 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Ludwig, Michael (I79006)
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438 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Neugebauer, Anna Catharina (I78931)
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439 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Zahel, Victoria (I77102)
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440 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Lauffer, Josef Antonius (I60328)
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441 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Künne, Luise Karoline Charlotte (I54122)
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442 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Müller, Maria (I24644)
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443 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Wilsch, Magdalena (I24609)
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444 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Heydrich, Maria Anna (I21582)
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445 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Losert, Georg (I21553)
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446 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Heidrich, Michael (I21537)
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447 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Gretschel, Adolf (I21528)
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448 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Zeitner, Franziska (I21504)
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449 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Burgk, Juditha (I21486)
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450 | Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Werner, Rosina (I21471)
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