
Matches 1,651 to 1,700 of 3,031
| # | Notes | Linked to |
|---|---|---|
| 1651 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Mathew (I20357)
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| 1652 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | LEE, Catherine (I20359)
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| 1653 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Joseph (I20413)
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| 1654 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | (WILDER), Mrs John Wilder (I20643)
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| 1655 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, [II] Samuel (I20646)
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| 1656 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Mathew (I20649)
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| 1657 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Nicholas (I20721)
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| 1658 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, William (I20729)
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| 1659 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Avery, Esther (I21651)
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| 1660 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Irvin, Frances (I21652)
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| 1661 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, MRS. (I21653)
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| 1662 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | RICHARDSON, Madison (I21654)
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| 1663 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | RICHARDSON, Sarah (I21655)
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| 1664 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | RICHARDSON, William R. (I21656)
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| 1665 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | WILDER (I21657)
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| 1666 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | WILDER, Abram (I21658)
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| 1667 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | WILDER, Hillory (I21660)
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| 1668 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | WILDER, Jeremiah (I21672)
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| 1669 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Joseph (I21674)
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| 1670 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Joseph (I21676)
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| 1671 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | WILDER, Katie (I21678)
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| 1672 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | WILDER, Lee (I21680)
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| 1673 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | RICHARDSON, Joseph Hopkins (I21687)
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| 1674 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Samuel (I21751)
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| 1675 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Michael (I21794)
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| 1676 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Mrs. William (I21796)
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| 1677 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Samuel (I21798)
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| 1678 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.Edna Aline was not actually a Carpenter. She was an Upchurch and was adopted by John Carpenterin 1803. Jubal Carpenter was her great great grandfather. | CARPENTER, Edna Aline (I3637)
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| 1679 | From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. | Wilder, Michael (I19927)
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| 1680 | from Chronic Brights Disease | Ackley, Bernice Idelle (I22546)
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| 1681 | From gravestone, showing "AE. 32 years". Sister Betsy's birth is known in Feb of 1824. Jonas would have to have been born in Nov or Dec if it was 1824. | Brown, Jonas M (I16608)
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| 1682 | From her Find-A-Grave memorial: Folk and literary figure. Born the eldest child of Charles and Caroline Ingalls in Pepin County, Wisconsin on her father's birthday. At the age of 14 she fell ill with what was then described as brain fever. Although she recovered, the illness robbed her of her sight. In 1881, Mary enrolled in the Iowa Braille and Sight Saving School in Vinton, Iowa. Mary's academic achievements were considered exceptionally high, in addition to academic subjects she excelled in music sewing, beadwork, knitting, hammock and fly net tying. Mary graduated in June 1889, one of eight in her graduating class. After graduation she returned to De Smet where she lived with her parents. After her father's death, she made fly nets in order to supplement the family income. She was active in the church, and taught Sunday school classes. With the death of her mother in 1924, Mary moved in with her sister, Grace, before settling in with her sister Carrie, at Keystone, South Dakota. She never married. At the age of 63, she succumbed to pneumonia, and was interred in the family plot at De Smet. Her sister, Laura, would later immortalize the family in the popular ‘Little House' series of books. | Ingalls, Mary Amelia (I14846)
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| 1683 | from http://mv.ancestry.com/viewer/77548ca4-c45f-4c83-8ee5-94bc96183590/40074564/19446133379 of Attleboro, Bristol Co., MA. DAR-WILDER, JOHN National DAR #: 336994 Ancestor #: A126584 Service: MASSACHUSETTS Rank: PRIVATE Birth: 8-5-1750 LANCASTER MASSACHUSETTS Death: 9-8-1776 ASHBURNHAM MASSACHUSETTS Service Description: 1) CAPT ANDREW HASKELL, COL THOMAS MARSHALL Residence 1) City: ASHBURNHAM - State: MASSACHUSETTS Spouse Number Name | Wilder, John 1750 (I17910)
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| 1684 | From https://www.northernvermontfuneralservice.com/obituary/norman-dailey SOUTH WOODBURY: Norman Elwin Dailey, 66, of South Woodbury died unexpectedly at his home, on Sunday February 4, 2024, following a brief illness. He was born September 27, 1957, in Montpelier; the son of Clarence E. Dailey Sr. and Eleanor (Brown) Dailey. He attended East Calais public schools and Union 32 in Montpelier. Following his education, he worked as an auto mechanic and until he retired in 2019, he worked as a carpenter. Norman made his home in South Woodbury with his companion of 45 years, Cheryle McAllister. He enjoyed hunting, boating, fishing, especially deep-sea fishing, country fairs and refurbishing old cars to enter local antique car shows. On one occasion he won first prize. Survivors include his companion, Cheryle McAllister of South Woodbury; his mother and stepfather, Eleanor, and Ed Wilson of East Calais; siblings, Clarence Dailey Jr and his wife Joyce, Wendell Dailey and his wife Tracey, all of East Calais, Arnold Dailey of Burlington, Donna Dailey of Williamstown and Evelyn Dailey of West Topsham; 3 aunts, many nieces and nephews and great nieces and nephews. Norman was predeceased by his father, Clarance E. Dailey Sr on March 22, 1982; and a sister, June Day on September 15, 2000. To honor his request, there will be no public services. In lieu of flowers, contributions in his memory may be made to the Lamoille Area Cancer Network, P.O. Box 828, Morrisville, Vt. 05661. Arrangements are in the care of Dian R. Holcomb of Northern Vermont Funeral Service, Hardwick. Online condolences are welcomed at: northernvermontfuneralservice.com | Dailey, Norman Elwin (I23466)
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| 1685 | from.."www.therestoredhomestead.com" The early years of the Pierce homestead This lovely Georgian colonial has been a landmark in Pepperell for many generations. Holly remembers the home from her childhood when she and friends would ski or tobaggan down the hill behind it and the home was being used as a ski shop. The huge barn next to it was called the Indian Head Ski Lodge but also did double duty as a site for youth center dances and a meeting house for the local chapter of the American Legion.. We often drove past the vacant house on the corner of Dow and Nashua Roads admiring its saltbox profile and wondering how to save it. Time marched on while we reconstructed the Benjamin Spaulding house and the Maxcy Fisher homestead - but we never lost our fascination for this lovely saltbox. And then, it seemed that the gods decided to smile on us for, one day on a whim, we stopped in to see the owner to inquire about the house. The first words out of his mouth were - you want it? How could we say no? Of course, we did!. Ebenezer Pierce Homestead He got the keys to the front door and in we went, shoving aside the boxes, old mattresses, and piles of junk littering the rooms. But despite the mess - and we kid you not - we could see the original bones of the old house - the summer beams, wide pine board flooring, huge keeping room fireplace and beehive oven. More was clearly yet to be discovered once dismantlement began but structurally the house was sound and still square. . The next stop was to the county registry of deeds followed by visits to the local library and cemetery to sort out the homestead’s history. Here is what we know:.. Ebenezer Pierce (b. 1701, d. 1773) and his wife, Mary, (b. 1714, d. 1787) were married in the early 1730’s. We know they had 10 children: Ebenezer, Rachel, John, Richard, Abigaill, Isaac, Abigail, Sarah, Ephraim, and Eunice. When they built their home, sometime in the early 1740’s, about 70 families lived in what was then Groton. Throughout the 1750’s and 1760’s Pepperell continued to grow (despite war and the dreaded scarlet fever); by 1765 there were about 130 families living in 117 homes with a total population of around 758 persons. (We estimate maybe a dozen of these early homes still exist in Pepperell).. When Ebenezer and Mary built their home the center chimney Georgian style two over two was popular. There was a small center hall with central stairs leading to the two upstairs rooms that were spacious, even by today’s standards. Downstairs the kitchen was on the right and the second large room on the left was probably the “master” bedroom where the parents and small children slept. Later, a back shed extension created the saltbox profile that substantially enlarged the house. That addition became the working kitchen.. And in typical Yankee style, additional outbuildings were attached to the home,. Tragedy was never far from the front door. Of Ebenezer Sr. and Mary’s ten children, we think Ebenezer, Abigaill and Eunice died in infancy. John appears to have settled in Groton but we’re not sure where. We think he served in the Continental Army at the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, as he is listed on the muster list under the command of Colonel James Prescott whose regiment marched to Concord after the alarm of April 19th and then fought so bravely at the Battle of Bunker Hill. John may have been in and out of the army over the next several years, enlisting for short periods of time and being paid for his service by the town Selectmen. We don’t know much about his brother, Richard, except that he lived in Hollis. Isaac married a local girl, Sarah Blood, in 1769 and they had three children, - Sarah, Eunice, and Ebenezer - before Isaac died September, 1775 which sounds suspiciously as if he, too, had enlisted in the Continental Army and been killed. Pepperell was a hotbed of pro-rebel sentiment so our assumption about Isaac is not too far-fetched.. Ebenezer Sr. died in 1773 of a lung fever. With Richard established in Hollis, Ephraim may have been the only son interested in the family homestead as he was engaged to be married to Patty Chamberlain and was probably looking for a place to settle down. His father’s will had named his children as heirs to his estate and on January 5, 1776, “in the sixteenth year of His Majesty’s reign” Ephraim purchased the family homestead for the grand sum of 153 pounds sterling.. Luckily for us, the Pierces had acquired a family plot in the old Pepperell cemetery. Ebenezer Sr. and Mary are laid to rest there, as are various children and grandchildren.. Ephraim and his wife, Patty, settled into the home with his mother, Mary. Their first child, Patty, was born in 1778 and from that point onward, a new baby arrived roughly every two years: Sarah, Mary, Ephraim, Isaac, Abigail, Rachel, Wilder, Becca, Submit, and Asa. But fewer than half their children survived to adulthood. 1787-1788 was a particularly hard year. Grandmother Mary died from what was recorded as the black jaundice in December, 1787. Then, that following spring, Patty, Ephraim and Abigail died within six weeks of each other - clearly the result of some dreadful infectious disease. Three years later, Wilder died at age two; later Isaac would die leaving only Asa to carry on the family name - but he, too, died at the early age of 30.. These children, along with Ephraim and Patty, are buried in the Pepperell cemetery. There are poignant, yet hopeful, epitaphs written on the parents’ gravestones, reflecting the faith that sustained them through their long, productive lives. Ephraim’s reads as follows:. Return my friends, Dry up your tears, Here I must lie until Christ appears, And when my Jesus doth me call, I hope in bliss to meet you all.. And Patty’s: Friends and Physicians could not save My mortal body from the grave. Nor can the grave confine me here When Christ shall me to appear.. As we rebuild the Ebenezer Pierce homestead, let’s continue to remember the strong, kindly spirit of these early American families who worked so hard to sustain their families and build their communities.. | Pierce, Ebenezer (I16282)
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| 1686 | full-blood indian | Foss, Thankful Atwood (I22224)
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| 1687 | G2RN-BTQ | Fairbanks, ??? (I24797)
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| 1688 | G4S1-5TR | Fairbanks, Mary (I24778)
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| 1689 | G55Y-J42 | Bradley, Jennet (I24801)
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| 1690 | G5S3-3WD | Fairbanks, Jonathan Jeremiah (I24811)
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| 1691 | G65P-XGZ | Fairebanke, Agnes (I24802)
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| 1692 | G9Z6-ZDH | Fairbank, Dorothy (I24792)
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| 1693 | Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin. | Source (S28)
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| 1694 | Genealogical Society of Utah. British Isles Vital Records Index, 2nd Edition. Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, copyright 2002. Used by permission. | Source (S145)
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| 1695 | George Bowers probably immigrated around 1635, settling first in Scituate in Plymouth Colony where he was a freeman on March 7, 1636/7 and a town officer. The family removed to Plymouth where he was elected constable. In Plymouth, he purchased land from Governor Winslow at Eele River. A complaint was brought against him for not allowing cattle to pass over his land and a committee was appoionted to find ways through his land for cattle to be herded through. He was appointed one of three men to a committee to find timber to use in building the new colony jail. In Jan., 1641/2, he along with two others (including Gov. William Bradford) were contracted to build a ship having 1/16th interest each. However, he soon removed to Cambridge -- probably so that his son, JOHN, could be educated there, which he did graduating in 1649. . George's first wife, (1) BARBARA (SMYTHE) BOWERS died at Cambridge on March 25, 1644, and son Matthew Bowers died there on Jan. 30, 1644/5. He married on April 15, 1649 at Cambridge (2) Elizabeth Worthington (she married second, Henry Bowtell at Cambridge on June 25, 1657). In his will dated Nov. 8, 1656 and proved Dec. 30, 1656, he does not mention daughter, Ruth Knowles, but bequeaths to his wife, sons: Benanuel, John and Jarathemel, and to his youing daughters, Patience and Silence. | Bowers, George (I14437)
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| 1696 | George was elected President of the Monadnock Circle which met every Wednesday evening and had 16 members in November 1886. He was the janitor of the Hollis Church Building in 1888. He lived on a farm at 28 Ridge Road which he owned for some years and in the winter he ran a cooper shop. Around 1910 he purchased a home which had been George Cleasby's store and renovated into a home by Franklin Worcester located at 3 Broad Street. He was living there when he died. He was a resident of Hollis since 1881. He was Supervisor of the Check List for may years and a library trustee for 9 years. Funeral services were held at the Hollis Congregational Church. | Woodin, George W (I16203)
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| 1697 | Georgia is related to Hazel Belle Brown by step-daughter relationship with George Fowler | Fowler, Georgia Lucinda (I22401)
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| 1698 | GK3S-Z8Y | Waide, Cibella (I24807)
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| 1699 | GLMF-SPY | Fayrebanke, Sara (I24794)
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| 1700 | GN43-HHR | Fairbanke, Johanna (I24804)
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