Mit slægtsforskingsprojekt.

Udskriv Tilføj bogmærke

Notater


Træ:  

Match 951 til 1,000 fra 3,803

      «Forrige «1 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 77» Næste»

 #   Notater   Knyttet til 
951 Besegl til forældre: @I38@  Jensen, Mads (I99681)
 
952 Besegl til forældre: @I38@  Berthelsen, Maren Kirstine (I99633)
 
953 Besegl til forældre: @I38@  Christensen, Anne (I99618)
 
954 Besegl til forældre: @I38@  Berthelsen, Anders (I99587)
 
955 Besidder af baroniet Juellinge fra 1726 og stamhuset Stensballegaard (1771) (Vær S., Voer H), ejer af Stensgaard (ca. 1728-) (Stokkemarke S., Lollands Sønder H). - 1741 (30. aug.) immatr. ved Hannover Universitet og 1743 (30. april) ved Københavns Universitet, 1745-1756 assessor i Danske Kancelli, deltog 1745-1756 i Danske Kancellis kollegiale rådslagninger, 1746 (17. okt.)- kammerjunker, 1747 (10. febr.)-1750 (1. jan.) sæde i Højesteret (uden votum), 1750 (2. jan.)- assessor i Højesteret (med votum), voterede 1750 (8. jan.)-1771 (23. dec.) i Højesteret, jævnligt til 1764, derefter stadigt, med løn fra 1752, gav ca. 1750 med hustruen en altertavle med deres våbener og en fontehimmel med deres initialer til Halsted K. (endnu i kirken) og lod 1751 kirken istandsætte, 1756 (27. okt.)-1769 (15. dec.) amtmand over Københavns Amt.
1756 (30. okt.) kammerherre, 1764 (31. marts) de runion parfaite, 1766 (30. okt.) hvid ridder (symbolum: Ærlighed varer lengst), 1766 m.a. Det Kgl. Kjøbenhavnske Skydeselskab og Danske Broderskab, 1768 (20. maj)- gehejmeråd, 1769 (14. febr.)-1774 (7. marts) 1. kommissarius ved Extraskatten i Kbh., 1769 (15. dec.)-1771 (31. dec.) justitiarius i Højesteret, 1770 (25. maj) befaling at indtræde i Kommissionen angaaende Lovenes Revision, 1771 (20. aug.) patent på navnet og våbenet Krag-Juel-Vind, 1772 (forår) en af de ni dommere i retssagen mod Struensee, samme år (14. maj) provisor for Vallø Stift, 1773 m.a. Overskattedirektionen, 1774 (13. juli) kurator for Vemmetofte Adelige Kloster, 1774 (21. okt.) gehejmekonferensråd, 1775 juridisk dir. for Asiatisk Komp. 
Krag-Juel-Vind, Baron Jens Kammerherre Og Højesteretspræsident (I126958)
 
956 Besidder af grevskabet Friisenborg (1810) (Hammel S., Gjern H., m.m.) og baroniet Juellinge (1776), ejer af Boller (1810) (Uth S., Bjerre H), Møgelkær (1810) (Rårup S., Bjerre H), Thorsølund (1810) (Thorsø S., Houlbjerg H.) og Brusgaard (1799-1801) (Ølst S., Galten H.).
1768 student, s.å. (17. juni) immatr. ved og 1772 (26. juni) cand.jur. fra Kbh.s Univ., 1772 (24. dec.)- auskultant i Højesteret (uden ret til at votere), 1773 kammerjunker hos arveprins Frederik, 1774-1776 hos arveprinsesse Sophie Frederikke, 1777 (3. april, fra 22. s.m. at regne) kammerherre, gav 1777 en klokke med sit navn til Halsted K. (endnu i kirken), 1778 (7. jan.)-1782 ordinær assessor i Højesteret, gav 1778 med hustruen en oblatæske med deres initialer og alliancevåben til Halsted K. (endnu i kirken) og s.å. en alterkalk og en oblatæske til Avnede K. (endnu i kirken), gav et alterklæde til Halsted K. (forsvundet efter 1806).
1782 (25. marts)-1804 (25. maj) stiftamtmand over Lolland-Falsters Stift, 1782 (25. marts)-1803 (25. maj) amtmand over Aalholm, Halsted Kloster og Maribo Amter, 1803 (22. maj) hvid ridder (symbolum: Ærlighed varer længst), s.å. (25. maj)-1804 (25. marts) tillige amtmand over Nykøbing Amt (med gagetillæg for Falster, der lagdes under Lolland), overtog 1804 en del af grevskabet Frijsenborg efter moderen, opførte 1810 en ny hovedbygning på Søbygaard, gav 1806 en messehagel til Halsted K. (nu forsvundet), undlod 1810 ved tiltrædelsen af grevskabet Friisenborg at søge patent som greve efter grevernes privilegier § 6. 
Krag-Juel-Vind-Frijs, Baron Friderich Carl (I98880)
 
957 Bethany  Walling, Mary (I92809)
 
958 Between seventeen and eighteen years old he first heard the Gospel of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints from a fellow worker who used to read scripture and
talk of the Mormon Church during the noon hour in the mines. This man had joined the
Church. As Brother Evans could not read himself, he memorized the passages of
scripture as the man read them.
It was customary among the young people to gather in crowds at the different
homes, for an evening of' amusement, singing being the chief recreation. Brother Evans
was a good singer and was always called upon to sing solos. In these gatherings he heard
more of the Gospel, and he would often quote the passages of scripture that he had
learned in the mines.
Through this singing he was invited to join the choir in that branch of the
Mormon Church, and by going to their meetings, he soon embraced the Gospel.
After joining the Church, 1 Jul 1861 he observed the word of wisdom, and stopped
drinking tea, which in Wales is a very important part of their food. When he refused his
tea, his mother was afraid he was not getting enough to eat. Very often she would prepare
something extra and walk to the mines to give it to him. 
Evans, William (I94076)
 
959 Bevilliget efternavnet Kold i 1905.
Er sypige hos Jens Peter Sørensen i 1911 jfr. census 1911 
Andersen, Else Marie (I109865)
 
960 Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, Listes de passagers, 1865 à 1935, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Kilde (S362)
 
961 Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, Listes de passagers, 1865 à 1935, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Kilde (S275)
 
962 Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, Listes de passagers, 1865 à 1935, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Kilde (S158)
 
963 Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, Listes de passagers, 1865 à 1935, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Kilde (S34)
 
964 Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, Listes de passagers, 1865 à 1935, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Kilde (S217)
 
965 Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, Listes de passagers, 1865 à 1935, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Bibliothèque et Archives Canada Kilde (S882)
 
966 Biggsville Cemetery  Babcock, Milton John (I115452)
 
967 Billedet viser Petrine Jensen Borup, gift med Anders Præstgaard, siddende.
Billedet viser Petrine Jensen Borup, gift med Anders Præstgaard, siddende. 
Jensen, Petrine (I105957)
 
968 BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL2.htm#CatherineMortimerMThomasBeauchampWarwick
KATHERINE (-[4 Aug/6 Sep] 1369, bur Warwick, St Mary's). A manuscript narrating the foundation of Wigmore Abbey names “Edmundum primogenitum…Rogerum militem, Galfridum…Johannem…Katherinam…Johannam…Agnetam…Margaretam…Matildam… Blanchiam… et Beatricem” as children of “Roger comes et Johanna uxor eius”, adding that Katherine married “domino Thomæ de Bellocampo comiti Warwykie”[212]. m (Papal dispensation 19 Apr 1319) THOMAS Beauchamp Earl of Warwick, son of GUY de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick & his second wife Alice de Tosny (14 Feb 1314-Calais 13 Nov 1369, bur Warwick, St Mary's).

** from Wikipedia listing for Katherine Mortimer, Countess of Warwick
Katherine Mortimer, Countess of Warwick (1314 - 4 August 1369) was the wife of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick KG, an English peer, and military commander during the Hundred Years War. She was a daughter and co-heiress of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March and Joan de Geneville, Baroness Geneville.

Sometime before 1355, she became an important figure at the royal court of King Edward III.

Family and lineage
Katherine Mortimer was born at Ludlow Castle, Shropshire, England, in 1314, one of the twelve children and a co-heiress of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March and Joan de Geneville, Baroness Geneville. Her paternal grandparents were Edmund Mortimer, 2nd Baron Mortimer and Margaret de Fiennes, and her maternal grandparents were Sir Piers de Geneville, of Trim Castle and Ludlow, and Jeanne of Lusignan.

Her father was de facto ruler of England together with his mistress Isabella of France, Queen consort of King Edward II, until his eventual capture and execution by the orders of King Edward III, eldest son of Isabella and King Edward II. The latter had been deposed in November 1326, and afterwards cruelly murdered by assassins acting under the orders of Mortimer and Queen Isabella. Katherine was sixteen years old when her father was hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn, London on 29 November 1330.

Marriage
On 19 April 1319, when she was about five years old, Katherine married Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, eldest son of Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick and Alice de Toeni.[1] Their marriage required a Papal dispensation as they were related within the prohibited third and fourth degrees. Beauchamp had succeeded to the earldom at the age of two, therefore Katherine was styled Countess of Warwick from the time of her marriage until her death. The marriage had been arranged in July 1318 in order to settle a quarrel between the two families over the lordship of Elfael, which was thus given to Katherine as her marriage portion.[2] For the term of his minority, Beauchamp's custody had been granted to Katherine's father, Roger Mortimer.[3]

Katherine later became an important personage at the court of King Edward III. As a sign of royal favour she was chosen to stand as one of the godmothers, along with Queen Philippa of Hainault, to the latter's granddaughter, Philippa, Countess of Ulster in 1355. This honour bestowed on Katherine is described by 19th century author Agnes Strickland according to the Friar's Genealogy: "Her [Philippa, Countess of Ulster] godmother also was of Warwick Countess, a lady likewise of great worthiness".[4]

Issue
Katherine and Beauchamp together had fifteen children:[5]

Guy de Beauchamp (died 28 April 1360), married Philippa de Ferrers, daughter of Henry de Ferrers, 2nd Lord Ferrers of Groby and Isabel de Verdun, by whom he had two daughters.[6]
Thomas de Beauchamp, 12th Earl of Warwick (16 March 1339- 1401), married Margaret Ferrers, daughter of William Ferrers, 3rd Lord of Groby and Margaret de Ufford, by whom he had issue, including Richard de Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick.
Reinbrun de Beauchamp
William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny (c. 1343- 8 May 1411), on 23 July 1392, married Lady Joan FitzAlan, daughter of Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel and Elizabeth de Bohun, by whom he had a son Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester, and a daughter, Joan de Beauchamp, 4th Countess of Ormond. Queen consort Anne Boleyn was a notable descendant of the latter.
Roger de Beauchamp (died 1361)
Maud de Beauchamp (died 1403), married Roger de Clifford, 5th Baron Clifford, by whom she had issue, including Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron Clifford.
Philippa de Beauchamp, married Hugh de Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford, by whom she had nine children.
Alice Beauchamp (died 1383), married firstly John Beauchamp, 3rd Baron Beauchamp of Somerset, and secondly Sir William Gournay.[7] She died childless.
Joan de Beauchamp, married Ralph Basset, 3rd Baron Basset of Drayton. She died childless.
Isabella de Beauchamp (died 29 September 1416), married firstly John le Strange, 5th Baron Strange, and secondly, William de Ufford, 2nd Earl of Suffolk. Upon the latter's death, she became a nun. She died childless.
Margaret de Beauchamp, married Guy de Montfort, and after his death, she became a nun. She died childless.
Elizabeth de Beauchamp, married Thomas de Ufford KG,
Anne de Beauchamp, married Walter de Cokesey.
Juliana de Beauchamp
Katherine de Beauchamp, became a nun at Shouldham.

Death and effigy
Katherine Mortimer died on 4 August 1369 at the age of about fifty-five. Two years before her death, in 1367, Katherine was a legatee in the will of her sister Agnes de Hastings, Countess of Pembroke.[8] Katherine was buried in St. Mary's Church, Warwick, Warwickshire. She lies alongside her husband, who died three months after her of the Black Death. Their tomb with well-preserved, alabaster effigies can be seen in the centre of the quire. Katherine is depicted wearing a frilled veil with a honeycomb pattern and she is holding hands with Beauchamp. The sides of the tomb chest are decorated with figures of mourners, both male and female.

References
^ Charles Cawley"Medieval Lands Earls of March 1328-1425 (Mortimer)
^ G. Holmes. Estates of the Higher Nobility in Fourteenth Century England.p13
^ Thomas B. Costain,The Three Edwards, page 231
^ Strickland, Agnes (2009). Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest: With Anecdotes of the Courts: First Published From Official Records and Other Authentic Documents, Private as Well as Public. Volume II. p.295. Google Books. Retrieved 6-11-10
^ Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham, Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, p.56
^ Cawley, Medieval Lands, Earls of Warwick 1263-1449 (Beauchamp)
^ [www.thePeerage.com the Perage.com]
^ Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham, Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families,p.56 
De Mortimer, Katherine (I79588)
 
969 Biographical History of
Pottawattamie County, Iowa”, 1891,

Hooker, J. D.
Submitted by: K & R Rees

J. D. HOOKER, of section 11, Carson Township, was born in Chautauqua County, NY, July 10, 1837, the son of H. M. and Nancy (PALMETER) HOOKER; the father was a native of Genesee County, NY, and a relative of the General "Fighting Joe Hooker." The family were of English ancestry and descendants of two brothers who were among the early emigrants to the northeastern states. The parents reared a family of ten children. The father was born in 1810 and came to Iowa, settling in Delaware County in 1854, being one of the first settlers in that county. He lived there until his death which took place in March 1874. The mother resides in this county at the age of 74 years.

J. D. HOOKER first worked in a saw mill in Pennsylvania, having been brought up in the lumber regions of southern New York, and was well fitted for that situation. He came to Iowa in the spring of 1855, when quite a young man, and his experience in the sawmill made him quite a desirable man to serve in the capacity of foreman, and he easily obtained a situation. He remained here five years and then purchased a farm in Delaware County, Iowa, which he sold in 1869. Here he first commenced the study of veterinary surgery, practicing occasionally while he carried on his farm. He removed to Webster County, south of Fort Dodge, where he lived for two years, and in May 1871, first came to Pottawattamie County, and settled on prairie land, when all was new and wild in that county. Mr. Hooker now owns a valuable farm situated about one mile from Carson. He has a blacksmith shop run by his sons, and his home, called Pleasant Valley, is a beautiful place.

He carries a full line of instruments of all kinds, especially those required in horse dentistry and surgery, having over $200 worth altogether. He is also the inventor of Hooker's Cure for Flatulent (wind) Colic, one of the most prevalent and fatal diseases of the horse, and he contemplates beginning soon to manufacture the medicine.

He was married in Delaware County, Iowa, July 10, 1861, to Miss T. J. Wilson, the daughter of John and Jane (CRELLING) WILSON; the former was born of Scotch parents who had settled in Ireland, where he was born; and the latter was born in Northumberland, England. The family came to the United States in 1848 and settled in Iowa County, Wisconsin, and in 1858 came to Delaware County, Iowa. The father died in 1876 in Delaware County, and the mother still lives at Sioux City, Iowa, at the age of seventy three years.

Mr. and Mrs. Hooker have nine children, namely: J.M., a contractor and builder in Chase County, Nebraska; C.M., at home; Edward D., residing in Chase County, Nebraska; James D., residing at the same place; Jenny L., the wife of Frank Perry of Washington Township; Lewis J., at home; Shockey E., Jennie E., Frederick S. They lost one chld, Leander Vern, by death when two and a half years old. Politically Mr. Hooker is a Democrat, and has served in some of the minor offices of the township. He is a skilled veterinary surgeon, having had about 30 years experience, and is considered one of the leading authorities in the eastern party of the county. 
Hooker, James Dewey (I143712)
 
970 Biography

Reverend Henry Pratt, the father of Phinehas, for preaching the gospel contrary to the rules of the Established Church of England, and as a Nonconformist minister, was imprisoned at the same time that over four other religious teachers were confined in damp and gloomy jails in England for the same offense. While thus incarcerated, he managed to communicate with his distressed family, by writing to them with the blood which he drew from his arm for the purpose..

This information was published for private distribution in 1897 by Eleazer Franklin Pratt, entitled "Phinehas Pratt and some of Is descendants." Printed by T R Marvin & Son Printers, Boston.

Information was digitized by Google and was originally located at The State Historical Society of Wisconsin.[1]

Folks there is no way that Henry could have the dates of his birth and have a child in 1786. He would have been 16 years old and that was not the age that English men married. They were older, somewhere in their 20s to 30s. This file is really mixed up with people adding, deleting, and the sources are a mess. No substantial weight can be given to any of them. If people would only give true sources, it would be credible, but not this way. I won't put him in my database because of the mess.

Source: Rootsweb.com

born beforre 1570, at Hingham, Norfolk, England 
Pratt, Rev., Sir Baronet Henry Lewis (I62388)
 
971 Biography

Richard Wood ... He passed away in 1859. he is Buried in a Cemetery in Floyd Co VA surrounded by his four wives, he was a farmer and a trader in Woods Gap VA now Blairs Park in Pulaski Co along the Indian trail which was a route used by rival tribes to raid one another, his birth record has yet to be found and confirmed but he is definitely part of this pedigree. A long sought after mystery to many family trees as to his parents and orgin. It appears his death record recorded by his son list his older brother and sister as his parents, which is because Richard's son had no idea about his grandparents, Richard may have had no known recollection of his father John who was a frontiersman and indian fighter and was killed when he was 7 years old. Sometime between his father's death and reappearing in Bedford VA orphan records at age 15 His mother, Agnes, relocated to what is now Tennessee during it's settling of the whiteman. She was also killed by indians, Richard Wood settled in Woods Gap but has no relation to the area this is where he had 4 wives and sired many family trees of Wood/s in that area. Many confusions arose over the years by his land deed witnessed by John Woods (unrelated) and by John Woods' son also named Richard. Many genelogies contribute the John and Micheal Woods of Scottish Irish Woods' as his lineage due to copy and paste ancestry.com trees taken from records referencing back to Neander Woods' book which most believed to be correct even my Grandmother followed that theory, both John's were in Lord Dunmore's War and fought at the battle of Pleasant Creek. But in different regiments. We now have access to better data to separate the two as well as my DNA debunks that ,and even though both lines can be connected it is quite distant. Richard's father John is from the Peaks of Otter Wood family as the fist settlers of that area they came from New Jersey via England.

From: WIKITREE 
Wood, Richard (I123494)
 
972 Biography
A son of Abraham and Bathsheba Lincoln, Thomas very probably did NOT have Herring as middle name. In 1998, Paul H. Verduin - then General Secretary of the Abraham Lincoln Institute of the Mid-Atlantic and a noted authority on President Lincoln's antecedents - pointed out two crucial items concerning Bathsheba Lincoln's maiden name. In a letter dated 13 October 1998, Verduin noted that : (1) the name Herring has not been found on any document relating to Bathsheba; and (2) the "tale was invented in 1908, some 140 years after her marriage to President Lincoln's grandfather, by the daughter of one of the co-authors of the highly flawed study of the Lincoln genealogy which appeared at that time". Verduin wrote further that the daughter "visited Rockingham County that summer and enticed a story from a couple of individuals named Chrisman. The tale had never been heard before [1908], and there's absolutely no evidence for it. I've searched high and low, but haven't found the answer - and it may well be that none is available from any extant records."[1]
On 12 June 1806, Thomas Lincoln married Nancy Hanks in Washington County, Kentucky.[2], She was born on 5 February 1784 and died on 5 October 1818. On 2 December 1819, Thomas married Sarah Bush, widow of Daniel Johnson. She was born on 13 December 1788 and died on 12 April 1869. Thomas predeceased Sarah on 17 January 1851 in Cole County, Illinois, where he had lived for twenty years.
Issue: Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, an only son, who in 1854 was of Springfield, aged 45, and had three children, the eldest of whom was 11 years of age. His wife was born and raised in Kentucky. He was born 12 February 1809.
The ancestry of Abraham Lincoln's mother Nancy Hanks has always been somewhat of a mystery. For over a century, historians and genealogists have repeatedly made claims that they have finally solved the mystery of Lincoln's mother, and that everyone before them was wrong. They claim to be able to "prove the truth!" All of these theories regarding Nancy’s ancestry have been “documented” mainly through circumstantial evidence and oral traditions. There are very few primary documents remaining. The one thing that can be proven about Nancy’s origins is that no one can prove the truth, at least not yet.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lincoln-102Biography
A son of Abraham and Bathsheba Lincoln, Thomas very probably did NOT have Herring as middle name. In 1998, Paul H. Verduin - then General Secretary of the Abraham Lincoln Institute of the Mid-Atlantic and a noted authority on President Lincoln's antecedents - pointed out two crucial items concerning Bathsheba Lincoln's maiden name. In a letter dated 13 October 1998, Verduin noted that : (1) the name Herring has not been found on any document relating to Bathsheba; and (2) the "tale was invented in 1908, some 140 years after her marriage to President Lincoln's grandfather, by the daughter of one of the co-authors of the highly flawed study of the Lincoln genealogy which appeared at that time". Verduin wrote further that the daughter "visited Rockingham County that summer and enticed a story from a couple of individuals named Chrisman. The tale had never been heard before [1908], and there's absolutely no evidence for it. I've searched high and low, but haven't found the answer - and it may well be that none is available from any extant records."[1]
On 12 June 1806, Thomas Lincoln married Nancy Hanks in Washington County, Kentucky.[2], She was born on 5 February 1784 and died on 5 October 1818. On 2 December 1819, Thomas married Sarah Bush, widow of Daniel Johnson. She was born on 13 December 1788 and died on 12 April 1869. Thomas predeceased Sarah on 17 January 1851 in Cole County, Illinois, where he had lived for twenty years.
Issue: Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, an only son, who in 1854 was of Springfield, aged 45, and had three children, the eldest of whom was 11 years of age. His wife was born and raised in Kentucky. He was born 12 February 1809.
The ancestry of Abraham Lincoln's mother Nancy Hanks has always been somewhat of a mystery. For over a century, historians and genealogists have repeatedly made claims that they have finally solved the mystery of Lincoln's mother, and that everyone before them was wrong. They claim to be able to "prove the truth!" All of these theories regarding Nancy’s ancestry have been “documented” mainly through circumstantial evidence and oral traditions. There are very few primary documents remaining. The one thing that can be proven about Nancy’s origins is that no one can prove the truth, at least not yet.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lincoln-102 
Lincoln, Thomas Herring (I118392)
 
973 Biography of Erastus Snow in the Joseph Smith Papers

9 Nov. 18181-27 May 1888.2 Farmer, teacher, merchant, publisher, manufacturer.3 Born at St. Johnsbury, Caledonia Co., Vermont.4 Son of Levi Snow and Lucina Streeter.5 Baptized into LDS church by William Snow, 3 Feb. 1833, at Charleston, Orleans Co., Vermont.6 Ordained a teacher by John F. Boynton, 28 June 1834.7 Ordained a priest by William Snow, 13 Nov. 1834.8 Served mission to Vermont, New York, and New Hampshire, 1834-1835.9 Ordained an elder by Luke S. Johnson, 16 Aug. 1835.10 Arrived at Kirtland, Geauga Co., Ohio, Dec. 1835.11 Ordained a seventy by Lyman Sherman, early 1836.12 Served mission to Pennsylvania, Apr.-Dec. 1836.13 Member of Kirtland Safety Society, 1837.14 Served mission to Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Maryland, May-Dec. 1837.15 Located with Latter-day Saints in Missouri, July 1838.16 Married Artimesia Beman, 13 Dec. 1838.17 Located at Montrose, Lee Co., Iowa Territory; appointed to high council of Iowa stake, Lee Co., 1839.18 Served mission to Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Massachusetts, 1840-1843.19 Member of Nauvoo Masonic Lodge, 1844.20 Admitted to Council of Fifty, 11 Mar. 1844. Participated in plural marriage during JS’s lifetime.21 Appointed to serve mission to eastern states, Apr. 1844.22 Member of Brigham Young pioneer company to Salt Lake Valley, 1847.23 Served mission to eastern states, 1847-1848.24 Appointed counselor in Salt Lake City stake presidency, Oct. 1848.25 Ordained member of Quorum of the Twelve, 12 Feb. 1849.26 Established Scandinavian Mission, 1850.27 Appointed to serve colonizing mission to Iron Co., Utah Territory, Oct. 1852.28 Published and edited St. Louis Luminary in Missouri, 1854.29 Founded St. George, Washington Co., Utah Territory, 1861.30 Died at Salt Lake City.31 
Snow, Erastus Fairbanks (I121474)
 
974 Biography of Joseph Kimball
By Clark Kimball
My father, Joseph Kimball, was born December 22, 1851, and was the son of Heber C. and Presendia Huntington Kimball, being the only son of that union.
At the age of 18, Joseph married Lathilla Pratt, daughter of Orson Pratt. They moved to Bear Lake where Joseph went into the cattle business. While there he was bishop of the Meadowville Ward for a period of 20 years.
They later moved to Logan to enable their children to attend school more conveniently, and then to Salt Lake where Joseph took a position with the Studebaker Company. AT a later date he became president of the Beaver Irrigation Company in which capacity he made several business trips to New York, Washington and several other Eastern cities.
Thirteen children were born to Joseph and Lathilla, each one of whom grew to maturity. In 1896, Raymond, the eldest son and his family moved to Canada for the purpose of colonizing. I made the trip with them, being only 14 years of age at the time. A year later, 4 other brothers, Earnest, Orson, Alma, and Oliver joined us. The five of us formed a company and obtained a contract to build a large irrigation canal. Each of us took up a homestead about 10 miles from Cardston and bought up land around there. We established a township which was named Kimball after the Kimball brothers. Later, the Kimball brothers all moved away, some settling in Idaho, and some in Utah.
In 1910, Orson died, leaving a wife and two children. In 1916, Alma was killed in a snowslide, leaving a wife and seven children. In 1925, Louie, the eldest daughter died. She was the mother of ten children, and in her early married life had fulfilled a mission in Tasmania with her husband, Lysander Pond. While there, her first two children were born, the oldest being named Tasmania. Louie was president of the Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association in Pocatello, Idaho, and later was president of the Relief Society in Nampa, Idaho.
Out of the children still living, Florence, Pearl, Jean, and myself live in Salt Lake. Raymond, Earnest, Oliver, Ethel, and Willard, live in San Diego, California, and Pratt lives in Los Angeles, California. Pearl has played quite a prominent role in the music circles of the Church, and Willard is President of the San Diego Stake.
Joseph Kimball died in 1936, after having lived a very eventful life. His wife Lathilla, is still living, a splendid example of what Mormonism can do for an individual. Her children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and great great grandchildren, numbering several hundred, love her because she is the same sweet mother she has always been, ready to cheer and comfort them at all times.
 
Kimball, Joseph Smith (I125311)
 
975 Biography of Julia Powell Tanner written by Charlotte Elizabeth Tanner Hunt a daughter- Julia Powell born 23 October 1867 at Parowan Utah. Father James Powell. Mother Elizabeth Jane Carter. Mother was born at Parawan but moved to Sevier County when she was a baby. They lived at Marysvale and Monroe for a short time but later grandfather took up a farm at Sevier where her childhood days were spent. She use to go to school at Joseph Utah. She said she and her sister had to walk but as she was so anxious to go to school that was no problem for her. When she was a young woman her father operated a shingle mill up Shingle Creek Canyon and sh used to cook for him and her brothers. She told us of her first cotton dress. It was blue with white figures. Her mother made it and she was so happy that she wanted to show it to her aunt so she went across the farm and on her way she had to cross a water ditch that the water had just been turned out of and she saw a large trout in a pool of water so she took off her dress and hung it on a bush and caught the fish which was almost as long as she was tall. When the first road was built up Clear Creek Canyon her mother took the job of cooking for the men and she and her sister helped. One day the men put off a blast just before going to dinner and a big rock came down through the tent and hit the table just before the men sat down to eat. Fortunately no one was hurt. She was married 27 Feb. 1885 to John Tanner. In December 1885 I was born at grandfather's home. The old building is still standing at Sevier at the turn of the road as you go in to Sevier down in the field. Shortly after I was born her father sold his farm and moved to Rye Valley Oregon and father and mother lived in Sevier Valley until I was three years old and then they moved up there and lived for one year and father sent us home on the train. That was mother's first train ride. On September 21, 1889 Jesse Seth was born. In February 1890 we moved to Tuba Arizona. Mother was terribly frighted of the river we crossed in a little ferry boat. The Colorado is such a large river and the boat was small. Mother was very unhappy at Tuba as she was so afraid of the indians. March 1, 1893 Clarence Eugene was born at that time we were living in grandfather Tanner's farm two mile from Tuba. We lived in a canyon near Lot Smith a prominent Utah pioneer. One day we heard shooting and later a Smith boy told us the indians had shot his father. The next morning grandfather went to town to help care for Mr. Smith. Mother was terribly frightened of indian's so she took us children across the canyon and we hid in a cave until grandfather returned. Father was away at the time. We lived at the farm three years and then we moved up on the San Francisco mountain and lived there one and a half years. While there we lived near a large saw mill. One day it caught fire and burned all the timber and lumber. I carried water and mother watched our cabin to keep it from burning. We moved back to Tuba and father bought a home in town and a farm in the fields about two miles from Tuba. Mother was very happy as she thought father could be home with us then. Leah was born that winter 12 December 1895 and mother was very happy for two years when Harvy Russell was born. While mother was in bed when he was born forty armed indians road through our town with orders from an indian agent and a minister to kill us all if anyone did anything to stop them from planting a farmer's field with corn. But no one did anything and all went well with all but mother. The shock was too much for her and it broke her health down and she was sick and father had to take her to Flagstaff where she would not be under such a strain as she had such a fear of indians. We stayed there for over a year then mother's health improved and we went home. The next winter was the turn of the century and we had some wonderful celebrations for us at that time. Father put in a grocery store in part of our home and it kept mother and I busy as there were so many indians came there to trade. It was a great help to mother as she got to know the indians and learned to trust them and was not so afraid of them as she was before. In November 13, 1902 at Tuba City, Arizona, Orin was born and we almost lost mother then but through the Elders her life was spared to raise her family. In 1901 the Government sent a man in to buy our homes as it was needed for an indian school and hospital. In January 190_ we got our checks in February we started on our journey to find a new home. We got a home in Montazuma Colorado. Mother enjoyed her home there very much but there wasn't a branch of the church there at that time, but in the next two years more Latter Day Saints moved in and a branch was started there. In 1905 I was married and we lived there until 1907 when the church released us and told us that the time had not come yet for us to have a ward in that valley and that we were released to go and settle in other places. We went to Bluff, Utah. Mother had a lovely home there and she was very happy for about seven years and then father wanted to move to Escelante. Leah was married the spring before she left Bluff in 1915, and when mother moved she came too. Harvy was thrown from a horse in Bluff and only lived a few hours. Father was away and mother was terribly broke about the tragedy. Died May 4, 1912. Mother had a nice comfortable home in Escelante and some lovely neighbors and she enjoyed life very much there. Father's health was not very good so they thought it best to move and they came out to Sevier. While living in Escalante my brother Jesse died down in Arizona 7 September 1921. His death was a terrible shock to my parents. He went through World War One. Mother was never very happy in Sevier as she enjoyed neighbors and to be on a farm she was too lonely. She did all she could to make father happy there in his declining years and made her children and grandchildren's lives much richer by knowing her. She had a good sized posterity when she died. There were four of us children living, eight grandchildren, and twenty-eight great grand children that survived her. She lived to be 79 years old. died June 21, 1945 at Sevier, Utah.  Powell, Julia Etta (I36011)
 
976 BIOGRAPHY OF LOIS RHODES BRIGGS AMUNDSEN
Written circa 1936

In the year 1869, on the 6th day of August, a little girl was born to Sarah Ann Bushman and Alonzo Rhodes at Lehi, Utah. She was the 8th of 12 children. She was reared on a farm and was brought up to work. The father and mother and grandparents were in the 2nd group of Saints that came to Utah. The father, with others made several trips back to bring their farming implements and food to the Saints in Salt Lake. After 3 weeks the family was called to go to Lehi, 30 miles south of Salt Lake, to settle that city. They camped and pitched their tents. They had to guard their horses and cattle from the Indians as they were quite numerous but they soon built a wall around the small place where they had pitched their tents. They had the Spirit of the Lord with them and were very happy and all united, had their meetings and bore their testimony of the goodness of the Lord to them. They very soon began to raise their crops and built some little homes with logs brought from the canyon. They all had their work helping mother and working on the farm, milking cows and churning butter.
The father was the Sheriff of the County and was gone from home a lot. The mother was a taylor and made the clothes of her husband, 5 sons and most of the men's clothes of the town which was made of cloth that was made by washing the wool and carding and spinning and weaving that was made from their own sheep raise on the farm.
When she was 18 years old, Lois married a young man, Joseph Briggs, a son of another pioneer family. To them a son was born, Joseph, and when 3 months old they went to Idaho to take up a section of land and of course, that was pioneering for there was nothing but sage brush on the land. But both of them being of pioneer stock they soon had part of it cleared and hay and grain planted. They hauled logs and built a little log room which afterwards was used for a stable for their horses but they moved their furniture in it consisting of bed, table, stove and 2 chairs. It had no doors or windows, just 2 holes but they managed to get along. Dug a well and drew the water over 50 feet with a windlass and bucket. Then they fenced their farm with timbers from the mountains. Before winter they were hurrying to get a room built to live in with floor, window and doors, so the horses could have the stable and they expected the stork in the spring. But they were all right; they had a few chickens and a hog to kill and their flour and potatoes and a cow to milk and plenty of wood to burn. The winters were very cold there and lots of snow.
Spring came and also another little baby boy, Archie, born the 12th of February, Lincoln’s birthday. We were all very happy in this little room - nice clean white washed logs, clean curtains, nice polished stove and the room partly covered with homemade carpet and the other half scrubbed nice and clean. About April 20 we planted our garden, peas, beans, carrots, potatoes, and I watched them grow and took care of them for I had planned to sell some of them to my mother for she had never seen the baby and the other one since we left Lehi, when he was 3 months old. We were very busy breaking new ground to raise more hay, grain, and potatoes. In June our little vegetable garden looked fine and was ready to eat and some to sell. Some of each was picked and plans were made for me to take the team and wagon and the 2 babies. They were put in boxes and away I went alone to Idaho Falls to sell my vegetables for the money and then get the babies first pictures which I have kept 58 years. It was late when I started for home which was a 30 mile trip. It was 10o’clock when I got home and there was a very worried husband, but we were all right but very tired. In a few days the pictures came and were sent to my mother. We all got a thrill out of it. We were very happy with our little farm and family and was just going fine. We received a letter from our Bishop in Lehi that my husband’s mother was very sick and thought it best to sell our place and come back to Lehi and take care of her. He was the youngest son and had the smallest family and there were no daughters. We got a small amount for the farm, nobody had any money in those days. We went back and found her in bed and never left her for 2 years, but I was very glad to be able to care for her and make her last days as comfortable as I could.
There were 6 children born to this couple: Joe, Archie, Maurice, Alta, Blanche, and Bert. During the world war of 1917, the mother’s brother and wife died. In 1918 she lost 2 sons, Archie, with appendicitis and Maurice with the flu; 3 months apart, both leaving families. Her faith in God was always strong. After her family was grown she was always ready to help others in sickness and trouble. She was always working in the church - in her early married life worked in the primary and a member of the choir for many years, also Relief Society teacher for many years. Was on the board of the Stake Genealogy and also set apart as Stake Missionary which she is doing at this time.
 
Rhodes, Lois Ladelia (I114472)
 
977 BIOGRAPHY: Transcripts of Wills of Devonshire, England (British film FHL #916870, vol. 4), p. 982 - Will of her father Robert Channon, proved 30 oct 1613, lists her as his daughter and mentions her sone Tobias Jenynges; Ibid, p. 979 - Will of her mother Johan Channon lists her as Catherine Peaton and mentions her children Tobias (no last name), Sarah Jennings and Johan Peaton; Sidmouth, England, Christening Extraction Print Out (British film FHL #0933232, item 9) - lists Richard Jennings as the father of Thobyias (chr. 25 Sep 1597) and Sarah Jennings (chr. 24 Dec 1598) indicating he was probably Catherine's first husband. John Peaton was listed as the father of John (Johan?) Peaton (chr. 29 Sep 1601) indicating he was probably Catherine's second husband.  Channon, Cathrine (I139575)
 
978 BIOGRAPHY: Transcripts of Wills of Devonshire, England (British film FHL #916870, vol. 4), p. 979 - Will of Johan Channon, dated 19 Nov 1616, lists her daughter as Catherine Peaton, whose daughter was Johan Peaton; Sidmouth, England, Christening Extraction Print Out (British film FHL #0933232, item 9), p. 58 - lists John (could be Johan?) christened 29 Sep 1601 whose father was John Peaton. Whether Johan or John, it is believed that child is the child of Catherine Channon Peaton and John Peaton.  Peaten, John (I139576)
 
979 BIOGRAPHY: Transcripts of Wills of Devonshire, England (British film FHL #916870, vol. 4), p. 979 - Will of Johan Channon, dated 19 Nov 1616, lists her daughter Catherine Peaton's children as Tobias (no last name) and Sarah Jennings; Ibid, p. 982 - Will of Robert Channon lists Tobias Jennings as the son of his daughter Catherine; Sidmouth, England, Christening Extraction Print Out (British film FHL #0933232, item 9), p. 47 - lists Richard Jennings as the father of Tobias (chr. 25 Sep 1597) and Sarah (chr. 24 Dec 1598).

She married first Engelbert Lott who died in 1631. She remarried Adam Lott (Mott) in Cambridge. She migrated with him to Massachusetts in 1635 on the Defense. Her daughter Mary by her first marriage arrived with her. 
Jennings, Sarah (I139585)
 
980 BIOGRAPHY: Transcripts of Wills of Devonshire, England (British film FHL #916870, vol. 4), p. 979 - Will of Johan Channon, dated 19 Nov 1616, lists her daughter Catherine Peaton's children as Tobias (no last name) and Sarah Jennings; Ibid, p. 982 - Will of Robert Channon lists Tobias Jennings as the son of his daughter Catherine; Sidmouth, England, Christening Extraction Print Out (British film FHL #0933232, item 9), p. 47 - lists Richard Jennings as the father of Tobias (chr. 25 Sep 1597) and Sarah (chr. 24 Dec 1598).  Jennings, Richard (Jenyges) (I139574)
 
981 BIOGRAPHY: Transcripts of Wills of Devonshire, England (British film FHL #916870, vol. 4), p. 982 - His will, proved 30 Oct 1613, says he was of Sidmouth, County of Devonshire. He was a Mariner and bequeathed his boat to his son William. His will names his wife Joane, his daughter Catherine and her children Tobias and Sarah Jenynges, and sone Charles (deceased) and his son Robert. His wife was appointed executrix.  Channon, Robert (I139489)
 
982 BIOGRAPHY: Transcripts of Wills of Devonshire, England (British film FHL #916870, vol. 4), p. 982 - Will of Robert Channing identified her as his wife and appointed her as executrix; p. 979 - Her will, dated 19 Nov 1616, proved 4 Dec 1618, listed her as a widow. It lists her children and grandchildren: daughter Elizabeth Slade and her children Jane, Beaton, Nicholas, John & Thomasine; daughter Charity Hardie and her children Mary & Tabitha and she bequeathed nets to William Hardie, but did not say he was Charity's husband; daughter Johan Clap, the daughter's husband William and their children William, Jane, Robert, Edward, John, Roger, Sarah; daughter Catharine Peaton and her children Sarah and Tobias Jennings and Johan and John Peaton, indicating Sarah has been married twice; daughter Marie Hoare (deceased), and her children Bernard, Ezechias, Marie and Elizabeth; son Charles (deceased) and his children Charles, Robert and Johan; son William and his daughter Elizabeth.
 
Plumpton, Joanne (I139577)
 
983 Birth - Deaths collection, Mayflower Vol 1 2, Family Histories, Cananda Passenger list, Sons of American Revolution Membership Applications, Historical Cemetery Index, & Ancestry  Fobes, William (I115545)
 
984 Birth between 170-1780 in Rockingham, VA, and died Bef. 1838 in Warren Co., TN. he married Susan (Turner) Before 1806 in N.C.. She was born Abt 1783 ub N.C., and died after 1860 in Warren Co., TN. Children of John Tanner and Susan (Turner) are: Easther or Mary Tunner., Daniel Tosh Tanner, born Abt. 1806 in N. C., died 1880 in McMinnville, Warren,TN. Mary F. Tanner, Born Abt 1814 in TN, Easther Tanner,Abt. 1816 in TN, William Tanner, born Abt. 1829 in TN/N.C.; died Aft. 1866 in TN. Unk Son Tanner, born Bet. 1804-1810. Unk Son Tanner, born Bet 1811-1814. Unk Dau. Tanner, Born Bet. 1810-1815. (The above information has been the research of Dr. Billy Tanner of McMinnville, Warren County, TN USA  Tanner, John Peter (I36015)
 
985 BIRTH DATA & PARENTS FOR WILLIAM BROOKS ARE UNKNOWN OR UNPROVEN (see Discussion item). VIEW BIOGRAPHICAL ITEMS IN STORIES (MEMORIES) FOR THIS RECORD, L5J5-KTB. ***NOTE - This William Brooks is NOT THE SAME PERSON as the William Brooks who was married to Susannah Dunham or Hanford in Plymouth, MA.  Brooks, William (I53382)
 
986 BIRTH DATA & PARENTS' NAMES OF THIS THOMAS SHERWOOD ARE UNKNOWN (See Discussion item). VIEW BIOGRAPHICAL ITEMS IN STORIES ATTACHED TO THIS RECORD, LZVX-KNT.
LIKELY CORRECT LIST OF 8 CHILDREN OF THIS THOMAS SHERWOOD & 1ST WIFE, ALICE TILER, & APPROX. BIRTH DATES (see source below): Jane (1611); Mary (1613); Thomasine (1615); Sarah (1616/7); Anna (1619); Rose (16220); Rebecca (1622) & Thomas (1624): {dateOnly} {inPlace} {(description)}
LIKELY CORRECT LIST OF 6 CHILDREN OF THIS THOMAS SHERWOOD & 2nd WIFE, MARY (UNKNOWN MAIDEN SURNAME), & APPROX. BIRTH DATES (see source below): Stephen (1638); Mary (1640); Ruth (1642); Matthew (1644); Abigail (1649) & Isaac (1651): {dateOnly} {inPlace} {(description)} 
Sherwood, Thomas (I57631)
 
987 BIRTH DATE
28 May 1843
DEATH DATE
15 October 1932
GENDER
Female
Evidence from census and genealogical records proves the Gheen family traveled to Utah in 1849.
Company Unknown (1849)
Age at Departure: 5
Sources
1850 Utah Census.

Pleasant Grove
Funeral services for Mrs. Louisa Robison Kirk, 89, former resident of Pleasant Grove, who died at her home in Phoenix, Ariz., Saturday of infirmities incident to age, will be conducted in Pleasant Grove LDS tabernacle Wednesday afternoon. Burial will take place in the Pleasant Grove City cemetery.
She was born in Indianapolis, Ind., May 28, 1843, a daughter of William and Aseneth Harmon Gheen and came to Utah in 1850. She first married Lewis Robison and after his death married William Kirk.
Surviving are one son and three daughters: Mrs. May Driggs, Phoenix, Ariz.,; Mrs. Nettie Hillman, Driggs, Idaho; Mrs. Nell Halliday, Salt Lake; Ned Kirk, Oakland, Cal.; twenty-eight grandchildren and sixty great-grandchildren 
Gheen, Louisa (I139540)
 
988 Birth Name
Carl Wilhelm Lauritz Anton Larsen is his birth name. He changed his name to Andrew Borgersen when he came to the US also known as Anton Borgersen when immigrated. 
Larsen, Carl Wilhelm Lauritz Anton (I86701)
 
989 Birth Name
Carl Wilhelm Lauritz Anton Larsen is his birth name. He changed his name to Andrew Borgersen when he came to the US also known as Anton Borgersen when immigrated. 
Borgersen, Andrew (I61501)
 
990 Birth record says: "Experience [d. Peleg & Experience] b. Mar. 5, 1748/9" - the old calendar - and her mother "Experience [w. Peleg], d. Mar. 21, 1748/9" - the same month. [Connecticut Town Birth Records, pre-1870 (Barbour Collection) for Experience Chamberlain. Colchester Vital Records 1699-1850, pg 49, Ancestry.com]  Chamberlain, Experience (I111985)
 
991 Birth: 1342
Staffordshire, England
Death: Oct. 16, 1386
Rhodes
Regional unit of Dodecanese
South Aegean, Greece

Hugh de Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford, KG was an English nobleman.
Hugh was born around 1344, the second and youngest son of Ralph Stafford, 1st Earl of Stafford and Margaret de Audley. His elder brother, Ralph, was intended to inherit the title and had been married to Maud Grosmont, daughter of Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster and Isabel de Beaumont in 1344, with the expectation that he would expand the Stafford estates by inheriting had the Lancastrian duchy. However, Ralph died early in 1347 and Hugh became heir. Around 1358, Hugh became the 3rd Lord Audley. Hugh joined his father in the French campaigns in 1359, being part of the retinue of Edward, Prince of Wales, spending time in Gascony and northern Spain.
He spent many years in military service, before returning to England and being summoned to Parliament in 1371 as Lord Stafford and later as Earl Stafford. On 31 August 1372, he inherited the title of 2nd Earl of Stafford. He was a member of a number of royal commissions, such as ones on Scottish affairs and on coastal defence. He was on the committee of nobles who conferred regularly with the Commons, being deemed suitable by that House to be part of the new 'continual council' of state. He did not always make the best decisions though and was admonished by his peers for censuring the John Philipot, the London MP and merchant who had mobilised a fleet to defend merchant shipping.
On or before 1 March 1350, Hugh de Stafford married Philippa de Beauchamp daughter of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick and Katherine Mortimer. They had seven children.
1.Sir Ralph de Stafford (c. 1354 - 1385). Ralph was killed by King Richard II's half-brother, Sir John Holland in a feud during an expedition against the Scots in May 1385, over a retainer's death by one of Ralph's archers.
2.Margaret de Stafford, (c. 1364 - 9 June 1396), married Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland.
3.Thomas de Stafford, 3rd Earl of Stafford (c. 1368 - 4 July 1392). Inherited at age of 18. Married Anne Plantagenet, daughter of Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester and Eleanor de Bohun. No issue, the marriage was reportedly never consummated.
4.William Stafford, 4th Earl of Stafford (21 September 1375 - 6 April 1395). Inherited from his brother at the age of 14. He was a ward of the Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester. He died at 19, no issue.
5.Katherine de Stafford (c. 1376 - 8 April 1419), married Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk.
6.Edmund Stafford, 5th Earl of Stafford (2 March 1377 - 22 July 1403), inherited title from his brother at the age of 17. He married Anne of Gloucester, the widow of his elder brother Thomas. The two were father to Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham.
7.Joan de Stafford (1378 - 1 October 1442), married Thomas Holland, 1st Duke of Surrey. No issue.
Hugh's wife Phillippa died on 6 April 1386, and it was probably this combined with the death of his son that pushed him to undertake a series of pilgrimages. He went first to Walsingham and then sailed for Jerusalem. He only got to Rhodes, where he died in the hospital the knights of St John in October of that year. His bones were returned to Stone Priory, Staffs, for burial next to his wife.

Family links:
Parents:
Ralph 1st Earl Stafford (1301 - 1372)
Margaret Audley Stafford (1310 - 1347)

Spouse:
Philippa de Beauchamp de Stafford (1344 - 1386)*

Children:
Ralph de Stafford (1354 - 1385)*
Joan Stafford (1363 - 1442)*
Margaret de Stafford Neville (1364 - 1396)*
Thomas de Stafford (1368 - 1392)*
William de Stafford (1375 - 1395)*
Catherine De Stafford De La Pole (1376 - 1419)*
Edmund de Stafford (1377 - 1403)*

Siblings:
Elizabeth Stafford Cobham (____ - 1376)*
Joan De Stafford De Beke (1328 - 1379)**
Beatrice de Stafford de Burley (1341 - 1415)*
Hugh de Stafford (1342 - 1386)

*Calculated relationship
**Half-sibling

Burial:
Austin Priory
Stone
Stafford Borough
Staffordshire, England

Created by: Mad
Record added: Mar 04, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 86203188 
De Stafford, 1st Duke of Lancaster Hugh (I125962)
 
992 Birth: 1625, England
Death: Apr. 28, 1675
Dorchester
Suffolk County
Massachusetts, USA

The son of William Blackman, he married (1) Sarah Scotlow about 1653 in Dorchester, (2) Mary Pond abt. 1655 in Dorchester, and (3) Margaret Blackman Locke.
The children of John & Mary (Pond) Blackman born in Dorchester:
1. John Blackman b. Aug. 10, 1656
2. Jonathan Blackman b. 1659, d. July 3, 1690, m. Leah ____.
3. Sarah Blackman b. July 17, 1659
4. Joseph Blackman b. April 27, 1661, d. May 20, 1720, m. Elizabeth Church on Nov. 12, 1685
5. Mary Blackman b. Oct. 18, 1663, d. Oct. 25, 1681
6. Benjamin Blackman b. Oct. 25, 1665, d. 1716, m. Jemima Breck
7. Rebecca Blackman b. April 5, 1668, d. 1747/8, m. John Church
8. Adam Blackman b. Dec. 9, 1670, d. Oct. 5, 1681
9. Abraham Blackman b. Feb. 8, 1674, d. Oct. 5, 1681

Family links:
Spouse:
Mary Pond Blackman (1620 - 1675)

Children:
John Blackman (1656 - 1741)*
Jonathan Blackman (1658 - 1690)*
Joseph Blackman (1661 - 1720)*
Benjamin Blackman (1665 - 1716)*
Adam Blackman (1670 - 1681)*
Abraham Blackman (1674 - 1681)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Dorchester North Burying Ground
Dorchester
Suffolk County
Massachusetts, USA

Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]

Maintained by: Brian McCullough
Originally Created by: Nareen, et al
Record added: Feb 04, 2011
Find A Grave Memorial# 65171785

Kindly shared by liz5353 on ancestry.com 
Pond, Mary (I26221)
 
993 Birth: 1638
Duxbury
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA
Death: Mar. 10, 1697
Bridgewater
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA

Children:

Sarah Alden-1663
Isaac Alden-12 Dec 1664
Mary Alden-1666
Joseph B. Alden-8 Feb 1667
Hopestill Alden-1668
Mercy Alden-1670
Elizabeth Alden-1672
John Alden-Sep 1674

Thanks for Find A Grave Contributor #46831293 for names of children and place of burial 8/9/2011
(bio by: Homeward Bound)

Family links:
Parents:
Moses Simmons (1604 - 1691)
Sarah Chandler Simmons (1622 - 1675)

Spouse:
Joseph Alden (1627 - 1697)

Children:
Isaac Alden (1664 - 1727)*
Joseph Alden (1667 - 1747)*
Hopestill Alden Snow (1667 - 1753)*
Mercy Alden Burrell (1668 - 1727)*
Elizabeth Alden Snow (1672 - 1705)*
John Alden (1674 - 1730)*

Siblings:
Rebecca Simmons Soule (1635 - 1678)*
Mary Simmons Alden (1638 - 1697)
John Simmons (1644 - 1715)*
Aaron Simmons (1650 - 1718)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Mayflower Cemetery
Duxbury
Plymouth County
Massachusetts, USA

Created by: Ken Saccocia
Record added: Jul 23, 2010
Find A Grave Memorial# 55330250
https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=55330250 
Simmons, Mary (I120878)
 
994 Birth: 1678
Amesbury
Essex County
Massachusetts, USA
Death: Jul. 8, 1751
Amesbury
Essex County
Massachusetts, USA

Family links:
Parents:
Thomas Frame (1649 - 1708)
Mary Rowell Frame (1649 - 1708)

Spouse:
John Challis (1672 - 1741)*

Children:
Jacob Challis (1702 - 1705)*

*Calculated relationship

Note: Time and weather has possibly erased the location of this grave.

Burial:
Union Cemetery
Amesbury
Essex County
Massachusetts, USA

Created by: Mookie
Record added: Feb 04, 2016
Find A Grave Memorial# 157816805 
Frame, Sarah (I87064)
 
995 Birth: 1694
Brookline
Norfolk County
Massachusetts, USA
Death: Nov. 24, 1726
Suffield
Hartford County
Connecticut, USA

Family links:
Parents:
John Devotion (1659 - 1733)
Hannah Pond Devotion (1660 - 1698)

Spouse:
Joshua Leavitt (1687 - 1732)

Children:
John Leavitt (1724 - 1798)*

Siblings:
John Devotion (1682 - ____)*
Ebenezer Devotion (1684 - 1741)*
Hannah Devotion Leavitt (1694 - 1726)

*Calculated relationship

Inscription:
Wife of Lt. Joshua 34Y

Burial:
Old Center Cemetery
Suffield
Hartford County
Connecticut, USA 
Devotion, Hannah (I139047)
 
996 Birth: 1783
Rockingham County
Virginia, USA
Death: Jul. 28, 1867
Nevada
Story County
Iowa, USA

Mother of Ursula Womack Tanner.

Burial:
Walnut Grove Cemetery
Ames
Story County
Iowa, USA

Created by: Cora Holland
Record added: Sep 08, 2009
Find A Grave Memorial# 41722717
 
Tanner, Maria Ester (I96320)
 
997 Birth: Apr. 7, 1829
Philadelphia
Philadelphia County
Pennsylvania, USA
Death: Aug. 5, 1910
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA

Daughter of Robert McMinn and Mary Dull

Married Heber Chase Kimball, February 1846

Married Lucius Lyman Johnson, 1850

Family links:
Parents:
Mary Dull McMinn (1786 - 1873)

Spouse:
Lucius Lyman Johnson (1819 - 1873)

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

Sibling:
John Andrew McMinn (1806 - 1869)*
Margaret Worrell McMinn Johnson (1829 - 1910)

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Salt Lake City Cemetery
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake County
Utah, USA
Plot: H_12_8_3W

Created by: SMSmith
Record added: Sep 10, 2009
Find A Grave Memorial# 41787139 
McMinn, Margaret Warrell (I107528)
 
998 Birth: Aug. 14, 1834
Zurich, Switzerland
Death: Apr. 10, 1914
Saint George
Washington County
Utah, USA

He sailed from Liverpool to Philadelphia on a ship called JUVENTA on March 31, 1855 and arrived May 5, 1855. He sailed with his sister Barbara Bryner.

Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel, 1847-1868

Company: Richard Ballantyne Company (1855)
Departure: 1-2 July 1855
Arrival: 25 September 1855
He was 20 years old

Company Information:
402 individuals and 45 wagons were in the company when it began its journey from the outfitting
post at Mormon Grove, Kansas (Near Atchison)

He married Magdalena Gubler August 17, 1861(1st wife) in Salt Lake City and he married Suanna Staheli December 5, 1870 (2nd wife)in Salt Lake City.

A Pioneer Called Casper Bryner died at his home in this city, Friday, April 10, After a long illness with dropsy and complications.

Casper Bryner was born at Zurich, Switzerland, August 14, 1834, He embraced the gospel taught by the Latter-day Saints in 1854, coming to America a year later with the first company of Swiss converts. He crossed the plains with an Ox team, ariving in Salt Lake City in the fall of 1855. His parents and brother followed him to Utah.

Casper Bryner was married to Magdalena Gubler at the Endowment house, Salt Lake City, in April, 1861. He was called on a mission to the Dixie County in 1858 to grow cotton at Heberville, and went on this mission in Joseph Horme's company. Returning from this mission he was called on with others to settle the Dixie County and arrived at the place where St. George now stands, with the first company of Pioneers in the fall of 1861. In December , 1869, he was married to Susanna Staheli at the Endowment hosue, Salt Lake City, and his wife survives him. He fulfilled a mission to Switzerland in 1880 and 1881, and was for many years a member of the High Council of the St. George Stake.

He is survived by his wife, nine children, 6 sons and 3 daughters, thirty-nine grandchildren and two great grandchildren. The sons are Harmon and David of Price, Utah, casper A. of Salt Lake City, and Joseph, Hyrum A. and Carl G. of St. George. The daughters are Mrs. Josepine Empey, Mrs. Annie Sandberg, and Mrs. Mary Cannon, the latter of Stone, Idaho.

Casper Bryner was a loyal and industrious citizen, a devoted husband, a kind parent, a firm friend, and of great integrity in all his dealings.

Funeral services were held in the tabernacle Sunday afternoon, the building being beautifully decorated with a profusion of flowers. The speakers were Elders Geo F. Jarvis, David H. cannon, schuvker Everett and John E. Pace. Interment was made in the city cemetery.

Washington County Newspaper, Utah
April 16, 1914

Family links:
Parents:
Verena Wintch Bryner (1804 - 1896)

Spouses:
Susanna Staheli Bryner (1852 - 1925)
Magdalena Gubler Bryner (1832 - 1894)*

Children:
Magdalena Bryner (1862 - 1871)*
Harmon Casper Bryner (1864 - 1930)*
Henry Bryner (1866 - 1910)*
Joseph William Bryner (1869 - 1921)*
Josephine Bryner Empey (1870 - 1936)*
Franklin Bryner (1873 - 1874)*
John U Bryner (1875 - 1881)*
Paulina Bryner (1875 - 1881)*
David Jacob Bryner (1876 - 1952)*
George Bryner (1878 - 1883)*
Hyrum Alma Bryner (1883 - 1932)*
Casper Abraham Bryner (1888 - 1919)*
Carl George Bryner (1893 - 1950)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Saint George City Cemetery
Saint George
Washington County
Utah, USA
Plot: A_A_38_3_NE

Maintained by: Loose Moose
Originally Created by: Utah State Historical So...
Record added: Feb 02, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 108798 
Bryner, Casper (I139520)
 
999 Birth: Aug. 5, 1762
Ashford
Windham County
Connecticut, USA
Death: Sep. 13, 1836
Washington County
Ohio, USA

Revolutionary War Veteran. Wife (1) Sarah Gray. Wife (2) Mercey Brown Hersey. Wife (3) Sarah [Sally] Devins.

Family links:
Spouse:
Sarah Devin Cheadle (1783 - 1871)*

Children:
Cyrus Cheadle (1787 - 1850)*
Joseph Cheadle (1789 - 1863)*
Clarissa Cheadle Shrader (1810 - 1894)*
John Devins Cheadle (1820 - 1902)*
Quincy Adams Cheadle (1828 - 1925)*

*Calculated relationship

Burial:
Koskey Cemetery
Morgan County
Ohio, USA

Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]

Maintained by: DRShell
Originally Created by: Robert "Rob" Weller
Record added: Aug 19, 2004
Find A Grave Memorial# 9339329 
Cheadle, Asa Percival Jr (I2730)
 
1000 Birth: Dec. 6, 1870
Bountiful
Davis County
Utah, USA
Death: May 7, 1944
Farmington
Davis County
Utah, USA

Daughter of Anson and Emma Summers Call.

Wife of Truman Heap Barlow.

Mrs. Sarah Barlow
Dies Of Heart Attack

Mrs. Sarah Call Barlow, 73 widow of the late Truman H. Barlow of Bountiful, died Sunday at 5:30 p. m. at the home of a daughter Mrs. Annis Cook at Farmington of a heart attack.

Mrs. Barlow had appeared in good health Saturday, when she assisted at the funeral of her cousin, Mrs. Richard Stringham of Bountiful.

Born December 6, 1870 at Bountiful, she was a daughter of Anson and Emma Summers Call. She was married to Mr. Barlow on June 28, 1888 in the Logan temple. He died 29 years ago.

Particularly active in the LDS church, she had served 25 years as a worker in the Salt Lake temple and was a member of the South Davis LDS stake Relief society board for a number of years. She was also a worker in the Relief society of her ward and when residing in Bountiful First ward, was an official of the YWMIA. Later in the Bountiful Third ward, she also served in official positions.

Surviving are four sons, Israel C. Barlow of Vale, Ore.; Elmer C. Barlow of Homedale, Idaho; Joel C. Barlow of Cedar City and Woodrow Barlow of Bountiful; four daughters Mrs. Lucile Clark, Mrs. Annis Cook and Mrs. Eva Whitaker, all of Farmington and Mrs. Naomi Monson of Arlington Va.; three brothers, A. Bowen Call of Old Mexico, Mex.; Willard Call of Bountiful and Aaron Call of Ogden; three sisters, Mrs. Lycina Perkins of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Cynthia Waadoups and Mrs. Samantha Mann of Bountiful and 25 grandchildren.

Funeral services were conducted in the Bountiful Third ward chapel Thursday at 2 p.m.

Burial was in the Bountiful cemetery, directed by the Union mortuary.

(Davis County Clipper 5-12-1944)

Family links:
Parents:
Anson Call (1810 - 1890)
Emma Summers Call (1828 - 1912)

Spouse:
Truman Heap Barlow (1857 - 1913)*

Children:
Israel Call Barlow (1891 - 1973)*
Emma Duella Barlow (1895 - 1896)*
Lucile Barlow Clark (1898 - 1990)*
Elmer Call Barlow (1904 - 1981)*
Eva Barlow Whitaker (1907 - 1984)*
Joel Call Barlow (1910 - 1999)*
Truman Woodrow Barlow (1912 - 2002)*

Siblings:
Anson Vasco Call (1834 - 1867)**
Chester Call (1841 - 1908)**
Ruth Piede Call Davids (1850 - 1919)**
Vilate Call (1852 - 1862)**
Israel Call (1854 - 1938)**
Vententia Call (1856 - 1862)**
Viola Call George (1858 - 1930)**
Mary Call Waddoups (1858 - 1915)**
Ann Call Sessions (1858 - 1926)*
Fannie Call Barlow (1860 - 1916)*
Cylista Call Waddoups (1860 - 1907)**
Samantha Evoline Call Mann (1861 - 1948)**
Lucina Call Perkins (1862 - 1957)*
Anson Bowen Call (1863 - 1958)**
Cynthia Call Waddoups (1864 - 1946)**
Willard Call (1866 - 1945)**
Harriet Louisa Call Mann (1866 - 1932)**
David Call (1868 - 1943)*
Aaron Call (1868 - 1954)**

Son of Cyril and Sally or Sarah Tiffany Call married Mary Flint and later joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. "He was closely associated with the Prophet Joseph [Smith, 1805-1844], and with the saints was driven from his home. He had a great love for the Prophet and did all he could to protect him from the mobs." Smith once said of Call: "There is Anson. He shall go [to the West] and shall assist in building cities from one end of the country to the other." Call started West in a company led by Brigham Young, the second president of the LDS Church. Call came to Salt Lake City, Utah, in 1848. He helped settle Bountiful, with 2nd wife Ann Mariah Bowen the Little Salt Lake Valley, "Pauvant Valley" (Fillmore), Box Elder and Davis Counties, all in Utah, and Carson Valley, Nevada.
In 1856 President Brigham Young had a rescue party (which Anson was in) rescue the Martin/Willie Handcart Company. There he met his third wife Margaretta Unwin Clark. Also the fourth wife was in the Willie party.

Added note:
Some records claim Anson was the Stake President of the Bountiful area, but his g g g granddaughter, Pamela Call Johnson, has not been able to verify this. He did serve as a counselor to the Stake President at the time of his death. He was the Bishop in Bountiful twice. One record also stated he was a Bishop in southern Utah.
Research shows that William Reed Smith was the Stake President when Davis Stake was organized, and he served from 1877-1894. William's life story records that during 1877 several new Stakes were created. A Conference was scheduled for June 16 and 17 to be held at the Farmington Church House to create a stake in Davis County. Brigham Young, along with other General Authorities, attended these meetings. The names he proposed were William R. Smith as President, Christopher Layton as first counselor and Anson Call as second counselor.
John W Hess followed William.
He wrote: “Today William R. Smith, President of the Davis Stake of Zion, died after a severe, lingering sickness of six months, of cancer in the intestines. This was a severe shock to his family and to all the people of the stake, as he was a first-class man, a good president, a good father, and a friend to all good people; his faithful memory will live in the hearts of the people”
John Hess took William’s place with Hyrum Grant as first counselor. He does not name a second counselor.
Joseph Hyrum Grant followed John.
Joseph Hyrum Grant was the Bishop of the West Bountiful ward before he was made a counselor to John W. Hess in the Stake Presidency. By 1912 he was the Stake President. He had failing health for many years but became seriously ill in the few days prior to his death. He lost his hearing which caused him to request to be released as stake president. At the time of Joseph's death, he was a Patriarch for the North and South Davis Stake.

There is no place in this timeline for Anson Call to have been the president of the stake. 
Call, Sarah (I113514)
 

      «Forrige «1 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 77» Næste»


Webstedet drives af The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding v. 14.0.4, forfattet af Darrin Lythgoe © 2001-2024.

Genealogi Website - oprettet og vedligeholdt af John Lynge Copyright © -2024 Alle rettigheder forbeholdes.