Matches 301 to 350 of 970
# | Notes | Linked to |
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301 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Allen, Minnie Dare (I6614)
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302 | Age: 85, Age: 85 Years 9 Days | Haigler, Julia Alice (I1207)
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303 | Age: 86 | Jackson, Minnie Catherine (I338)
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304 | Age: 86 | Porch, Jane M (I6596)
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305 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Keller, Charles William Sr (I7192)
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306 | Age: 87 | Corpening, William Crawford (I6519)
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307 | Age: 88 | Browning, Laura (I6522)
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308 | Age: 88 | Brinkley, John S (I7135)
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309 | Age: 88 | Danner, Martha A (I7164)
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310 | Age: 89 | Sherrill, William Pinkney (I1209)
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311 | Age: 89 | Hagler, David Blackburn (I5590)
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312 | Age: 89 | Keller, Charles Shaver (I7190)
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313 | Age: 89 Years 6 Months | Pruett, David (I6692)
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314 | Age: 90 | Day, Harvey (I6537)
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315 | Age: 90 | Poarch, Alice J (I6599)
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316 | Age: 90 Years | Lee, Johnsie Etoy (I6864)
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317 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | PARSONS, Ruth Elizabeth (I5330)
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318 | Age: 92 Years | Pennell, Edna (I6682)
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319 | Age: 94 | Browning, James Allen (I6523)
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320 | Age: 96 | Tolbert, Martha Emoline (I67)
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321 | Age: 96 | Hagler, Emma Pearl Haigler (I5522)
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322 | Alcie farmed in Ellis County, Texas. He donated land for a school, in keeping with family priorities: their children, their land, and good schooling. With their children they moved to Dickens County, Texas, in 1913. | Butler, Henry Alcie (I1576)
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323 | ALDRIDGE FAMILY CEMETERY; Greer Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements. | Aldridge, Samuel Anthony (I6366)
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324 | Alice Croasdale with her family made passage to America with William Penn aboard the shipWelcome. During the voyage 30 of the 100 passengers died of small-pox. | Croasdale, Alice (I2093)
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325 | Amanda is in the 1880 North Carolina, Alexander County, Gwaltneys township as a widow with James and his wife Caroline and other children living with her. At that time she was listed as 52 years of age. Amanda also shows up in the same area in the 1870 census with 4 children and no spouse listed. Apparently already a widow at that time. | Allen, Narcissa Amanda (I6235)
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326 | An allotment of land was made to Peter when Germantown, Pa. was laid out. | Keurlis, Peter (I4720)
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327 | Annie was known as "Granny Faught" | Foster, Tabitha Ann "Annie" (I3399)
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328 | Army Enlistment Date: 25 Oct 1943 Army Serial Number: 38566569 | Beavers, Roy Clinton (I25)
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329 | Arrival 1683 | Keurlis, Martha (I4591)
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330 | arrived 10 aug 1750 on ship "Patience" | Setzer, Johannes Adam (I5300)
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331 | Arterio sclerosis; apoplexy | Coffey, Clarissa "Clara" (I3701)
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332 | Assumption: John Yoder was appointed Adminstrator on the Estate of Ephraim on this Date per info provided by Gracie Seitz Cook in his Find A Grave Memorial# 132731812 | Whitener, Ephraim (I7055)
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333 | Auto accident | Haigler, Barry Michael (I1994)
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334 | Auto accident | Family: John Mitchell / Mary Elmore "Eleanor" Goble (F2405)
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335 | Banner Elk | Potts, James Andrew (I55)
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336 | Baptised 23 may 1708 Albany Lutheran Church | Van Hussum, Jacob Jacobse (I6164)
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337 | Baptised 6 jun 1602 | Jackson, John (I1081)
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338 | Beal Memorial Cemetery | Parsons, Theodore "Ted" Clifford (I5324)
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339 | believe to be buried in Snyder, Scurry County, Texas. | Butler, Ramonia Edna (I1582)
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340 | Belleview Cemetery, Lenoir, Caldwell, NC | Poarch, John Cleveland (I5022)
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341 | Bellview Cemetery (FAG# 54068860) | Melton, James Henry (I8149)
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342 | Bellview Cemetery, Lenor NC | McCrary, Walter Franklin (I6272)
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343 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Allen, Pansy Pauline (I6620)
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344 | Best man, John Hagler | Hagler, Abraham (I4614)
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345 | Bettye Jo Jackson CACHE -- Funeral for Bettye Jo Ash Jackson, 73, Cache, will be at 2 p.m. today at Cache First United Methodist Church with the Rev. Jennifer Long officiating. Burial will be at Cache Cemetery under direction of Jackson Funeral Home, Frederick. Mrs. Jackson died Thursday, Nov. 24, 2005, at a Frederick hospital. She was born May 24, 1932, near Chattanooga to James Mathias and Lola Edith Hill Ash. She attended school in Chattanooga until her family moved to Cache when she was a junior. She graduated from Cache High School in 1950. She married Carl Leland Jackson on March 31, 1951. He died Sept. 16, 2003. She was employed by the Cache School Cafeteria for 26 years, retiring in 1994. She was a member of Cache United Methodist Church where she taught pre-school Sunday school for many years. Survivors include two sons and daughters-in-law: Gary and Cindy Jackson, Cache; and Bobby and Georgia Jackson, Frederick; two grandchildren: Scott Jackson, and his wife, Tish, Marlow; and Karla and Raul Ornelas, Altus; four great-grandchildren: Bailey Jackson, Harleigh Mayle, Savannah and Sydney Jackson; two brothers and sisters-in-law: Boyd and Marian Ash, Chickasha; and Dale and Inola Ash, Cache; two sisters and a brother-in-law: Joyce Rhoads, Cache; and Shirley and Don Slack, Edmond; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law: Loretta Pullen, Lawton; D.W. Jackson and Bobby and Diane Jackson, all of Cache; Margie Jackson, Amber; Trudy Jackson, Temple, Texas; and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents; a brother, Richard Ash; and a sister, Evelyn Moore. Memorial contributions may be made to Cache United Methodist Church. | Ash, Bettye J. (I1117)
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346 | Beulah United Church of Christ Cemetery | Brinkley, John Jr. (I4359)
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347 | Bible Record | Elizabeth (I1403)
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348 | Bill was a mechanic in Lawton, built and drove stock cars | Cates, William D. "Bill" (I4180)
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349 | Billie Potts, Seattle, WashingtonA.The land which later occupied the Continental Army during the winter of 1777-1778 was originally part of the "Manor of Mount Joy" which was seventy-eight hundred acres of land granted to Letitia Penn Aubrey and her husband William Aubrey by her father William Penn on October 24, 1701 for an annual rent of one beaver skin. They gradually sold off the property, selling the last 175 acres in 1730 to Daniel Walker, Stephen Evans, and Joseph Williams. This partnership soon became the "Mount Joy Forge," later becoming more commonly known as "Valley Forge." This was a complete ironworks: finery, chafery, bloomery, and a slitting mill. Pig iron was converted to billets; iron billets into bars; cast iron into wrought iron; and manufactured finished metal products. In the 1750's a sawmill was added and in 1757, the entire property was purchased by a prominent Quaker ironmaster, John Potts. He eventually added a gristmill to the property several years later. Potts, Hackley & Potts was the firm operating the forge by 1767 - consisting of Joseph and David Potts (John Potts' sons) and their cousin, Thomas Hackley. On May 10, 1768 the forge was conveyed solely to Joseph. Isaac Potts, another son, became owner of the gristmill by 1773, and soon after built his stone house along Valley Creek near the Schuylkill River. David Potts built a summer residence himself nearby - he lived in Philadelphia - but this house was acquired by William Dewees, his brother-in-law, and Isaac Potts and William Dewees entered into a partnership owning the forge. The forge on Valley Creek was a source of military materials with the arrival of war, and despite his being a Quaker, Dewees became a colonel in the militia and he and Isaac Potts devoted a large part of the production from the forge was for the war effort. The production of munitions from this location was cause for the British to make it a stop on their way to Philadelphia in 1777. On September 11, 1777, following the Battle of Brandywine, a contingent of British forces reached Valley Forge on September 18th. Reinforcements arrived on the 20th and that morning, they carried off the "rebel stores" and burned the forge and all the structures except the gristmill. (Which incidentally survived until 1843 when it was destroyed by fire.) General Washington arrived at Valley Forge on December 19, 1777 with his troops. Other generals had found housing in various farms around the encampment area, and Washington found his own in the home of Isaac Potts, which he rented from its current tenant, Mrs. Deborah Hewes for a hundred pounds in Pennsylvania currency. Mrs. Hewes, whose first husband had been one of Isaac's brothers, moved in with the Dewees family." | Potts, Isaac (I4656)
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350 | Birchwood Cemetery | Whitener, Martha E. (I7062)
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