
Matches 2,151 to 2,200 of 3,031
| # | Notes | Linked to |
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| 2151 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Anna was baptized at St. Henry's, the godmother being Anna Keim. | Lossos, Anna (I19635)
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| 2152 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Anne Tucker Comstock Smith sold Samuel Comstock's home to Roger Mowry. She died sometime after February 10, 1667. | Tucker, Anne (I12191)
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| 2153 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Anthony came to America on the "Recovery of London" in 1633. He was in Charleston in 1634, Hingham in 1634, Marshfield in 1652. He was a deputy, and reached the rank of Captain. | Eames, Anthony (Captain) (I19321)
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| 2154 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Anton was buried 10/8/1930 in Princeton, at St. John's Catholic Church Cemetery. (Dave and Mary visited 8/88) OBITUARY ANTON MASHOCK: - "Anton Mashock, pioneer resident of the Town of Neshkoro, passed away very sudden at the home of his son, Joe Mashock, on Monday, Oct. 6. Apoplexy causing his demise. Mr. Mashock was born in Poland, Germany, Dec 25, 1833, and had attained the age of 96 years, 9 months, and 11 days. He came to this country in 1871 and first settled in the state of New Jersey. Later came here and took up residence on a farm in the town of Neshkoro, Marquette county. He was united in marriage with Miss Agnes Yess who preceded him about 50 years ago. His second marriage occurred with Mrs. Dreger, who also preceded him. To his union ten children were born: Mrs. Frank Cujak, Berlin; Mrs. Jake Cujak, Princeton; Mrs. O. J. Bush, Los Angeles, California; Stanish, on the old homestead; Joe, Neshkoro, and Mike. Four children preceded him. .... The funeral services were held at the St. John's Catholic church last Wednesday morning. Interment was made in church cemetery, Father Thos. Jankowski, his pastor, officiated. He leaves his children, 28 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren." Anton's second wife was Juliana "Dreger", 1832 - 1906 | Mashock, Anton (I9967)
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| 2155 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Apparently Mary died young. | Staples, Mary (I11275)
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| 2156 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Arrived on the Planter per Second Boat Vol 9, Issue 1. In Boston in 1635, in Yarmouth in 1641. According to Volume 9, Issue #1, page 8 of the "Second Boat", Francis BAKER arrived on the Planter in 1635. | Baker, Francis (I20502)
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| 2157 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Arthur grew up in Prairie du Sac, and worked several summers for his uncle George Schneller at Airy Knoll Farm, outside Sauk City. He went West and worked with companies opening up newly irrigated land (courtesy of dams on the Snake River). | Lindemer, Arthur John (I9365)
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| 2158 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Asa served in the Revolutionary War. | Sparks, Asa (I21413)
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| 2159 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Asthenia (probably cancer) was listed as the cause of death on the death certificate. He died at the age of 57, and lived in St. Louis for 35 years. He arrived in St. Louis in 1854. His place of death was his home at 2901 Hickory. He's buried at Sts. Peter and Paul Cemetery in St. Louis. He obtained citizenship on July 24, 1860 at the Court of Common Plea, St. Louis. There was no record of Frederick serving in the Civil War (searched National Archives in Washington, D.C. on 8/2/1989). | Knichel, Frederick Wilhelm (I19623)
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| 2160 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Being a non-conformist of the radical wing, the Separists, Edward was destined to be persecuted. All of his troubles began just eight years into the reign of James I in the year 1611. Although James I spent little time governing England, he could hardly overlook a direct challenge to his monarchy when Edward Wightman presented a manuscript to him as he passed through Royston in March 1611. King James, finding that Wightman was from the Diocese of Coventry and Litchfield, sent him to Westminister to Richard Neale with command to commit him to the gatehouse and to take examination of his several opinions which did not conform to the Established Church. Wightman was found to be obstinate and "every day more blasphemous". King James then ordered his removel to Litchfield for trial. Finally, sentence was pronounced on December 14, 1611 in the Cathedral. They actually threw the book at him, to use the modern vernacular. The account of charges brought against him because of his faith included eleven distinct heresies, several of which were unheard of opinions. His contempories said that if Edward really held all the opinions that he was accused of, he must have been an idiot or a madman. Edward was excommunicated and publicly denounced following the sermon in the cathedral at Litchfield. He was condemned to burn at the stake the following spring on the 9th of March 1612 by warrant of King James I. While the flames started to burn his flesh, he shouted out unintelligible words that seemed to infer that he had changed his mind and was ready to accept the religion of the Established Church. The crowd rushed forward and assisted the sheriff in releasing him from the stake. Later, however, as he refused to make a formal retraction in writing and cntinued to preach heresies, he was again tied to the stake and his body reduced to ashes on April 11, 1612. "It is said he died so cheerfully, and yet so cruelly, that the popular feeling created was so great the authorities feared to deliver another who had been condemned to the same fate." To his last breath, "he died blaspheming." He was the last of the religious martyrs in England to be burned at the stake. He left a grieving wife and five children at home. Both of his sons, John and Samuel, came to Rhode Island. | Wightman, Edward (I10654)
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| 2161 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Ben and Mercy are buried in Middlefield. Ben had eight children with his first wife. He had seven more with Mercy. One of the first settlers of Middlefield. | Miller, Gov. Benjamin (I10428)
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| 2162 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Bena was baptized at St. Henry's, her godparents being Fred and Phillipine Knichel. She died of multiple injuries from a severe fall. She's buried at Resurrection Cemetery. | Lossos, Phillipine Agnes (I19711)
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| 2163 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Birth certification. | Lincoln, Hannah (I9360)
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| 2164 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Birth date listed on death certificate was 7/17/1858, looked like 1848 on tombstone (visited by Dave and Mary 8/88)). Died of Disease of heart and kidneys. | Kamrath, Wilhelmina (I18375)
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| 2165 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Both of Moritz Schneller's parents were born in Switzerland. Much of the information we have comes from the 1900 U. S. Census and the 1905 Wisconsin Census, both of which were taken in Fairfield Town, (Sauk County), Wisconsin, and the 1870 Census taken in the Town of Sumpter, County of Sauk, on August 11, 1870. Moritz was listed as a farmer, and they had a total of six children, all living at the time of the 1900 Census. Dave and Mary searched National Archives in Washington, D.C. on 8/2/89. We found no record of Moritz serving in the Civil War from the state of Wisconsin. | Schneller, Moritz (I11780)
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| 2166 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Both Robert and Mary arrived in the Anne at Plymouth on July 10, 1623. He was a wine cooper, and a freeman. | Bartlett, Robert (I21550)
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| 2167 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Brothers Ulrich and Moritz Schneller (sons of Johannas Schneller) had sons Edward and George E. Schneller, respectively, marry on the same day, October 20, 1897 according to the marriage records of Sauk County. Perhaps a double ceremony? | Kinzler, Theresa (I9018)
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| 2168 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Buried in Baraboo. Dave and Mary visited gravesite 8/88. Both Lyman and Mary were born in Ohio (according to 1910 Federal Census of their son Eugene Norton), New York (according to 1900 Federal Census of their son Eugene Norton), and Wisconsin (according to Eugene's death certificate). According to Eugene Norton's obit (in 1948), Lyman and Mary had at least one other child, Mrs. Jim Cummings of Baraboo. | Henry, Mary (I7676)
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| 2169 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Buried in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin. The following obit was found in Beaver Dam Argus Newspaper (P70-2019).: HUGHES.- At Oshkosh, at 9:30 P.M., June 6, 1894, of heart failure, aged 27 years and 3 months. The deceased was born at North Adams, Mass., March 6, 1867. He removed to New York state with his parents when four years of age, where he resided sixteen years. Seven years ago he came west and spent two years in Iowa and Dakota. In 1889 he come to this state and took charge of the Free Methodist Church at Montford. He was also pastor successfully of the Free Methodist Churches at Marshall, Caledonia, and Oshkosh. He was married last July to Miss Minnie M. Webb, of this city, who survives him with a babe six weeks old. He also leaves a mother, Mrs. R. B. Hughes and a brother J. F. Hughes, of Oswego, N. Y. He had been somewhat indisposed for two of three days, but his death came very suddenly and unexpectedly. His funeral was held at Oshkosh on Sunday, June 10, and his remains were brought to this city on Monday, and interred in Oakwood Cemetery. The many friends of Mrs. Hughes will extend to her their sincerest sympathy in her sad bereavement. From the Oshkosh Daily Northwestern Newspaper - June 6, 1894 DIED VERY SUDDENLY - Rev. C. V. Hughes Expires Last Night of Heart Disease - Rev. C. V. Hughes, pastor of the Free Methodist churches in the city, died very suddenly last night at his residence on Lincoln Avenue. The deceased had not been feeling well for about a week, and the day before his death was obliged to take to his bed. It was supposed that he had merely contracted a severe cold. Yesterday afternoon he appeared much improved, and although he appeared even still better last night, he suddenly passed away. His death is attributed to heart disease. He was twenty-seven years of age, and had been married somewhat over a year. He leaves a wife and child six weeks old. The remains will be taken to Beaver Dam for burial, but the time has not yet been decided upon. Rev. Mr. Hughes has been in the city nearly a year, and during that time he has occupied the pulpits of both Free Methodist churches. He was very popular among both congregations. | Hughes, Rev. Clarence Victor (I8467)
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| 2170 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Beaver Dam, (Dodge County), Wisconsin. Died in Decatur, Illinois. We (Dave and Mary) visited the gravesite (Section 8C). The 1900 U. S. Census listed Minnie Hughes, her father Douglas C. Webb, her brother Willard Webb, and her son Clarence (II) living in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin. | Webb, Minnie Mabel (I8403)
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| 2171 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Buried with her husband in the "Ballou Burial Grounds". | Lovett, Mary (I9708)
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| 2172 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Came to America on the Anne in 1623 with his mother, Margaret Hicks. He was in Eastham in 1646, Plymouth in 1651, in Barnstable, Dartmouth in 1667. Samuel was baptized August 18, 1611 at St. Mary Magdelen Parish, Bermondsey, Surrey, England (per Children of Robert Hicks by Robert S. Wakefield in "The American Genealogist", Volume 51, pages 57-58. From the "Plymouth Colony - Biographical Sketches", Samuel arrived at Plymouth in 1623 on the Anne with his mother. From More on Robert Hicks Ancestry by R. G. Rider in "The American Genealogist", Volume 54, pages 31-34, Samuel arrived aboard the Ann in June of 1622 with his mother, Margaret. | Hicks, Samuel (I16399)
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| 2173 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Captain Daniel Harris lived in Charleston, Rowley (1652), and Middlefield (1654). | Harris, Daniel (I7523)
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| 2174 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Captain Daniel Harris lived in Middlefield, Connecticut. | Harris, Daniel (I7526)
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| 2175 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Captain John Coe fought in the French and Indian War. John and Mary had five daughters and five sons. His tombstone was still standing in 1900. | Coe, John (I4561)
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| 2176 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Catherine's brother was John Birdsey. | Birdsey, Catherine (I2249)
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| 2177 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Ceremony performed by Rev. Babcock, a Baptist Minister. Marriage license listed Charles' occupation as a printer. Died on a train in Arizona. Buried briefly in Forest Home Cemetery, West Allis. Transferred to cemetery in Clintonville, Wisconsin on April 4, 1929. Charles and Jennie divorced in December, 1916, in Oshkosh, Winnebago County, Wisconsin. They had been married 38 years. Charles was a thirty-third degree Mason. The name of his second wife is Laura (she was the informant on his death certificate). The 1880 U.S. Census found Charles, Jennie, and James living in Omro, Wisconsin. | Coe, Charles Austin (I4550)
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| 2178 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Charles's father, John, visited him at his farm near Irving, Kansas in 1891. Charles's sister, Julie, kept house for him. | Neumayer, Charles (I10742)
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| 2179 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Clara's father, John Neumayer, visited her in June of 1891. She was living in Grand Island, Nebraska. | Neumayer, Clara (I10744)
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| 2180 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Daniel's second wife was Elizabeth Buffum, married August 2, 1750. | Comstock, Daniel (I20199)
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| 2181 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Date/place of birth provided in the Dinghy, Vol 4 , No 4, p13. | Leet, Phebe (I18283)
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| 2182 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Dates were obtained in the Dinghy, Vol 4, No. 4, p. 8. | Scudder, Margery (I18334)
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| 2183 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Dave and Mary searched National Archives in Washington, D.C. on 8/2/89. We found no records of a Lyman Norton serving in the Civil War from either the Wisconsin or Ohio records. | Norton, Lyman (I7769)
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| 2184 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Dave Lossos spoke with Clifton Gomon, Leslie's brother, on 9/27/92. He mentioned that Daryl was deceased, and her husband, Henry Pierce, was living in Aurora, IL. | Gomon, Leslie Edward (I6939)
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| 2185 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] David and Mary Scouton were listed in the 1850 U. S. Census in Lowell, Dodge County, Wisconsin. They were living with Douglas and Laura Webb, and their daughter Martha, William Webb and Luther Webb (Gelson?). Webb Taylor reports that she smoked a clay pipe and that this accounts for her surviving 3 husbands. | Baker, Mary (I1273)
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| 2186 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] David and Sylvia had five sons, five daughters. | Staples, David (I4363)
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| 2187 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] David had three children with each of his two wives. | Robinson, David (I9978)
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| 2188 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Deacon Paul Peck arrived on the "Defense" in 1635, stayed in Boston, left for Hartford, Connecticut in 1636. He and Martha had at least two daughters. | Peck, Paul (I9854)
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| 2189 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Death certification. Jonah, Constance, and Mary all arrived on the "Hercules" in the spring of 1635 from Tenterden to Cambridge. | Austin, Jonah (I1100)
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| 2190 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Death certified. | Lovett, Daniel (I22417)
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| 2191 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Died in Glendale, California, but is buried in Highland Memorial Park Cemetery, New Berlin, Wisconsin. | Coe, Lucile Eleanor (I19621)
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| 2192 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Died in Glendale, California, but is buried in Highland Memorial Park Cemetery, New Berlin, Wisconsin. | Hughes, Clarence Victor (I19625)
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| 2193 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Dorothy Coo Turner Dixon passed her last years at Scotland Hall in Stoke- Nayland. | Dorothy Coo (I5415)
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| 2194 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Ebenezer was the village blacksmith and inherited the hoestead where he lived to the ripe old age of eighty. | Staples, Ebenezer (I11271)
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| 2195 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Ed was baptized at St. Henry's Church. His sponsors were John Keim and Liz Ziegler. Ed was inducted in the Army on October 30, 1918, but served only a few months. Ed and Helen were married at Assumption Catholic Church. He spent the majority of his life owning/operating a Texaco Service Station in North St. Louis. He died of cerebral thrombosis, and is buried in Sts. Peter and Paul Cemetery. | Lossos, Edward John (I19637)
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| 2196 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Edmund Letton was found to have fathered Agnes Letton Golding on page 580 of the Visitation of Essex, Volume 14. | Letton, Edmund (I9465)
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| 2197 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Edward was from Reading, Berkshire, England. He came to America in 1636, settling in Wethersfield. | Birdsey, Edward (I2231)
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| 2198 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Elizabeth arrived on the "Anne" at Plymouth on July 10, 1623. | Elizabeth Warren (I16330)
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| 2199 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Elizabeth married Thomas Geo. of London. | Wightman, Elizabeth (I10656)
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| 2200 | [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #5006, Date of Import: Apr 26, 1997] Elizabeth was the second wife of William. | Daniel, Elizabeth (I5188)
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