Singing Our Family Song

Notes


Matches 4,101 to 4,150 of 5,544

      «Prev «1 ... 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 ... 111» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
4101 From McClaghry/McLoghry Family Tree provided to me by John Taylor in Riverstown, Oct 2017.
Lastname also spelled McClaghry 
MCLOGHRY, Magdalene (I12426)
 
4102 From Modeland webpage: http://www.angelfire.com/folk/modeland/id297.htm

 
JOHNS, Zita (I2263)
 
4103 From mother's Will - Simpson Emily Isabel of 77 Delhi Street Belfast widow died 21 May 1930 at 163 Stranmillis Road Belfast Administration Belfast 24 July to Pearl Ellen Simpson spinster. Effects  SIMPSON, Pearl Ellen (I25021)
 
4104 From Nolene Bell FT COCHRANE, John (I28342)
 
4105 From Nolene Bell FT CRAWFORD, Ann (I28343)
 
4106 From Nolene Bell FT COCHRANE, John (I28386)
 
4107 From Nolene Bell FT COCHRANE, Frances (Fanny) (I28387)
 
4108 From Nolene Bell FT KINCAID, Joseph (I28388)
 
4109 From Nolene Bell FT COCHRANE, William (I28389)
 
4110 From Nolene Bell FT COCHRANE, Zaccheus (I28390)
 
4111 From Nolene Bell FT - married Robert Anderson or Henderson COCHRANE, Margaret (I28357)
 
4112 From Nolene Bell's FT LEECH, Jane (I21444)
 
4113 From Nolene Bell's FT LEECH, Mary (I28359)
 
4114 From Nolene Bell's FT LEECH, Elizabeth (I28377)
 
4115 From Nolene Bell's FT LEECH, John Jr. (I28378)
 
4116 From Nolene Bell's FT LEECH, Catherine (I28380)
 
4117 From Nolene Bell's FT LEECH, Margaret (I28381)
 
4118 From Nolene Bell's tree
-------------------------------------------------------------
 
ALLEN, William (I9490)
 
4119 From Nolene Bell's tree LEECH, John (I21445)
 
4120 From Nolene Bell's tree ALLEN, James (I28344)
 
4121 From Nolene Bell's tree LEECH, George (I28345)
 
4122 From Nolene Bell's tree NICHOLSON, Elizabeth (I28346)
 
4123 From Nolene Bell's tree ORME, Robert (I28347)
 
4124 From Nolene Bell's tree JOHNSTON, Elizabeth (I28348)
 
4125 From Nolene Bell's tree - her 2x great grandfather. Notes say he lived at Lisconny, Drumcolumb, near Riverstown, Co Sligo
----------------------------------
1812 Birthdate from IG Index - Familysearch
---------------------------------------------------------------
1840 Marriage date and bride's name from several indexes, including https://www.irishancestors.ie/search/marriage/index.php
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
ALLEN, Henry Nolene's 2xggf (I9487)
 
4126 From Nolene Bell's tree - her 2x great grandmother. ALEXANDER, Jane (I9488)
 
4127 From Nolene Bell's tree. She has birthdate as "1846?" - 1 Apr 1847 birthdate is from jigsawpuzzled2's tree.

Married in Riverstown in 1884 and first child born was born in Australia in 1886 so they must have immigrated in about 1885.
-------------------------------------------
 
ALLEN, John Frederick (I9491)
 
4128 From Nolene Bell's tree; she has her birthdate as "1827?"; says she was a spinster and "both parents correctly named on microfiche; DC NO 12239. I adjusted birthdate based on dates of siblings.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
 
ALLEN, Ellen (I9489)
 
4129 From notes authored by his daughter, Meta in 1964 - "Sometime after my father’s marriage, he took a postgraduate course in New York. When he became Master of Dental Surgery, he was one of only nine in Canada at that time. He was a Director of the Dental College twice and was the one who was responsible for introducing dental surgery into the college curriculum.
Of course he never missed a dental convention and at one convention, when he lived in Peterborough in the depression, he was invited to be honoured at a banquet with all these dentists who had been in practice fifty years or more. He said he had no money for that, so the dental organization sent him the wherewithal to be present.
He also invented the formula for the first local anesthetic Novocaine, but did not bother to promote it, so there was the later Novocaine.
He was a very good citizen – always interested in the affairs of the Country and was a teacher in the Sunday School, a superintendent also, and finally an Elder in the church. My mother was engaged 3 years so he could be well-established in practice. He and she both taught school during one year.
 
ALLEN, Alexander Hildane (I4970)
 
4130 From notes made by his niece, Meta Cheves Allen - 1964
Charlie, became a dentist but his health required his living in the U. S. He married a very clever American woman. They had no children. After awhile he found that dental work was too confining. So he sent his wife to Florida to buy a good grapefruit plantation, which she did. After living there for some years they moved to a very fine house in Tampa Florida where he was manager of a department of a Dental Supply Company. His mother-in-law lived with them, as his wife, Aunt Edna, was her only daughter, and she continued to live with him until her death after the loss of his wife. 
ALLEN, Charles Derondo (I4973)
 
4131 From notes of Meta Cheves Allen - 1964
Euart Allen worked for the Dominion Government as a Chemical Analyst at the Experimental Farm in Ottawa.

He was in an artillery unit in the war 1914-1918 in France.
During this war he was refused enlistment, so he trained two Ottawa regiments for the Reserve. His rank was Major, but could only be Captain in the Reserve. After the 1st war, he entered and graduated in chemistry from the University of Toronto; later married Marnie (Marion Harmer McElhinney). Marnie, as last year (1963) is teaching rug hooking once a week at night school, Ottawa.

They have two children:
-Patricia (Patsy), after qualifying at Teachers College, Hamilton, was posted to the Six Nations Reserve, Brantford. She appears to enjoy teaching and finds the financial returns much better than when nursing;
- John, wife Agnes and their two children are happy and healthy. John has received a promotion and enjoys his work as a Civilian Technician (electronics with the Air Force).  
ALLEN, Captain EUART Charles (I5417)
 
4132 From notes provided by J Louese Cameron Jul 2018 - author unknown:
General Notes: - Stella never married. She spent most of her career teaching in Thunder Bay. ON. She is buried in same plot as her parents.
-----------------------------------------------------------
 
PACE, Stella Irene (I16173)
 
4133 From notes written by granddaughter, Meta Cheves Allen - 1964-
He was born and educated in Peterhead far north in Scotland (north of Aberdeen), where the Peterhead granite comes from. It is above a high granite cliff with steps out in the rock going down to the sea. The Norwegian (Vikings) arrived there frequently to fish. If a ship was wrecked, they often stayed there and married the Scotch girls.  
CHEVES, William Donald (I6309)
 
4134 From oath sworn by (Little) Hugh Morrison 16 Dec 1909 included in his brother Richard's estate papers - "The said Richard Morrison immigrated to this country in the year 1847, and subsequently all his said family with the exception of Jane Boyd joined him at his home in the aforesaid Township of Arthur." MORRISON, Richard (I489)
 
4135 FROM OBITUARY
MRS. NELSON E. ALLEN

IRON BRIDGE - A staunch Women's Institute and Women's Association worker was lost here Jan. 21 with the death of Mrs. Nelson Allen, 73, at her home.
Mrs. Allen had been in ill health for many years and bedfast for the past four. Besides her women's work she took a great interest in flowers.
The daughter of the late John and Annie Mason, the former Irene Margaret Ellen Mason was born Dec. 1, .1887, at Bardsville in the Muskoka district. She was educated at Bardsville Public School.
On Oct. 15, 1924, she married Nelson Edwin Allen at the Baptist church in Orillia and the couple soon left, for the Iron Bridge district where they have resided for 37 years.
Surviving are her husband: daughter. Mrs. Ray (Evelyn) Walker; two sons, Leonard of Sault and Harvey, Iron Bridge; two brothers, Lawrence Mason, Port Carling and William Mason, Eagle Lake: and sister, Mrs. Katherine Kydd, Mactier.
Rev. D. S. Warren conducted the funeral service, assisted b/ W. J. Rickard, Bruce Mines, at the United Church in Iron Bridge Monday. Jan. 23. Burial was in Iron Bridge cemetery.
Pallbearers were Robert Nicholson, William Boville, Ray Tulloch, Gordon Seabrook, Arthur Baker and Albert Wedgwood.
Attending the funeral from a distance were: Mr. and Mrs. William Mason. Eagle Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mason Harvey and Wilfred. Port Carling; Mrs. John O'Neil, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Peterkin, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kydd, Mrs. Garnet Kydd, all of Sudbury; Mr. and Mrs. John Mason, Cedar Brae; Mr. and Mrs. Ear] Corbett, Mr. and Mrs. Etsel Haynes, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Craig, Mr. and Mrs. Merland July,' Mr. and Mrs. Chesley Craig, Mrs. Marion Auger and Glenn Allen, all of the Sault. 
MASON, Irene Margaret Helen (I468)
 
4136 From Obituary
The late Dr. McCrea, Newry, served as Coroner for the Hundre of Scarsdale. He was educated at Newry Intermediate School and Wesley College Dublin. He qualified in 1906 and went to Chesterfield, Derbyshire, where he entered into partnership with Dr. J. A. Goodfellow Later he purchased the practice, and retired in 1932.

Becoming a member of Chesterfield Town Council in 1921, he succeeded the late Sid Ernest Shentall as Alderman in February 1937. For over 20 years he was medical officer of health to Brampton and Walton Urban Councils, and for 18 years he was senior honorary physician to Chesterfield Royal Hospital. He was, for a short time, Chairman of Chesterfield Conservative Association and also of the 1933 club, resigning from these positions on his appointment as Chairman of Chesterfield Area of the Unemployment Assistance Board Appeals Tribunal.

Dr. McCrea was Mayor of Chesterfield in 1933 and in 1935 was appointed a Borough Magistrate. He was keenly interested in sport and was formerly a director of Chesterfield Football Club. He was a Past President of Chesterfeld Division British Medical Association,

Dr. McCrea served throughout the Great War in Mesopotamia where he had charge of a hospital.

He is survived by his wife who was formerly Miss Nellie Townrow of Chesterfield, and a son and daughter; also three sisters -Mrs. Alexander Fisher (wife of Mr. Alexander Fisher, solicitor, Warrenpoint; Mrs. A. B. Beard, West Kilbride, and Miss Ethel McCrea.

The funeral took place on Monday last to Old Brampton Church. The service which was conducted by Rev. Mr. Williamson, was attended by the Mayor and members of the Chesterfield Corporation; as well as representatives of all public bodies with which Dr. McCrea was associated and of the football club.

As a mark of respect the Chesterfield football team played at Southend on Saturday last wearing mourning armlets. 
MCCREA, Dr Robert Anderson Martin Luther (I54802)
 
4137 From P Morrison's Genealogist 2010:?u??b? ?/u??/b?Marriage License Bonds from Elphin have George Morrison & Mary Findlay 1824 Family: George MORRISON / Mary FINDLAY (F2160)
 
4138 From Peter Morrison's (PM) family tree MORRISON, John (I7189)
 
4139 From Peter Morrison's (PM) family tree - perhaps related to Margery??? PM commissioned a genealogy search on John and his family in 2010. The likely baptism records for John and his siblings were found, as well as a record of the marriage license bond of John Morrison and Eleanor Craig in the Killala & Achonry diocese.
------------------------------------------------
 
CRAIG, Eleanor (Ellen) (I7190)
 
4140 From Peter Morrison's family tree - perhaps related to Margery???

 
MORRISON, John (I7187)
 
4141 From Research by Robbin Shepherd - Hugh wrote on a page we assume was a bible page that he came to America in 1846. MORRISON, Squire Hugh Esq. (I7871)
 
4142 From review of Church of Ireland records in Dublin Oct 2017: Born to James & Hannah Morrison of Ballybrennan:
10 Dec 1829 - William, Baptized 18 Dec 1829
08 Sep 1833 - James
29 Aug 1839 - Anne 29 Sep 1839 
MORRISON, James (I12405)
 
4143 From Steven Morrison via Ancestry Message Board 2008 (see stevendmorrison) - I am Donald's son. He married Florence Wentland in Hazel Park, Michigan and they had 6 children: Donna Venet; Barbara Moore; Steven Donald; Theresa Borowski; Kevin Casey; and Aleta Grossman. I am Steven Donald and I am married to Susan (Williams) Morrison. We have three children: Sally Jane; John Joseph; William Donald. MORRISON, Donald Ray (I11708)
 
4144 From Susan (Powell) Holland: At some point after Frank died Nana moved to the Sault and worked at the Steel Plant in the lunch room. During WWII she worked as a steel inspector; after the war she had to go back to the lunch room. Susan thinks that she met Jack while working at the steel plant. They went to Toronto - Jack had a job there. They did move around a bit - and eventually came back to the Sault for awhile before moving to Toronto permanently.

Adopted child c1950: Susan (Powell) Holland 
BRANDON, Mabel VERA (I7)
 
4145 from Thrush - Kerry Johnston - March 28, 1912 - Blaine, Washington, USA - Emigration to Portland, Oregon to live with son James
 
WILSON, Amy Elizabeth (I13774)
 
4146 From Wikipedia
In 1842 Graham was appointed to work at Markree Observatory in County Sligo in northwest Ireland. The observatory had been established in 1830 by Colonel Edward Joshua Cooper (1798–1863) as a private institution on his country estate. Cooper equipped it with excellent astronomical instruments. Graham proved an energetic observer at Markree.

Graham discovered the asteroid 9 Metis from Markree on 25 April 1848 while observing with a 3-inch aperture wide-field telescope manufactured for comet searching by the German instrument maker Ertel.

Only eight minor planets were known before then, with the first four having been found in the period 1801–1807, and Graham's discovery consequently attracted considerable attention. His mathematical abilities allowed him to compute the orbit of the minor planet and to predict its apparent position into the future, including the gravitational effects of planets on its orbit around the Sun.

Graham later worked on the Markree Catalogue, which consisted of observations of about sixty thousand stars along the ecliptic taken between 8 August 1848 and 27 March 1856, and was published in four volumes in the years 1851, 1853, 1854 and 1856 respectively. Whilst working on this, he developed the square-bar micrometer, which greatly increased the efficiency of determining positions (right ascension and declination) of celestial objects.

Graham calculated the orbits of a large number of comets. These were used in his employer's book Cometic Orbits.

Graham resigned from his position at Markree and began new employment in Cambridge in March 1864. 
GRAHAM, Andrew (I27022)
 
4147 From WIKIPEDIA: Benjamin Allen (1830 '96 December 23, 1912) was a Canadian politician and retail merchant. Born in Sligo, Ireland, the son of William Allen who was of English descent, Allen first came to Canada in 1850. ... He was elected in 1882 to the House of Commons of Canada as a member of the Liberal Party representing the riding of Grey North.
 
ALLEN, Benjamin (I17607)
 
4148 From: "History of Walworth County Wisconsin" by Albert Clayton Beckwith, publ. 1912. Tr. by George Taylor

WILLIAM ALLEN KNILANS, son of Daniel and Sarah ALLEN, was born in northern Ireland, November 22, 1833; came with parents and brothers to Richmond in 1849; in 1861 enlisted in company I, Thirteenth Infantry, and was successively first sergeant, second and first lieutenant and was transferred to company G as its captain; mustered out late in 1865 at San Antonio, Texas. He served at Huntsville, Alabama, as provost-marshal and was in all ways a capable and trustworthy soldier. He married February 20, 1867. Eleanor Frances, daughter of Samuel STEWART and Margaret MITCHELL, became a farm owner and prospered steadily. In his turn he was president of the Agricultural Society, of which he was a working member. He was seven terms a member of the county board for Richmond. His clerical and business qualifications were good, and he was often appointed executor of wills or administrator of valuable estates. Like Messrs. Bell, Coon, Curtiss, Kinne, Latham, Oatman, Page, Stebbins, Treat, Willis, and others, he reckoned it honorable to be often a defeated candidate on Democratic legislative and county tickets. He was for several years a member of the county soldiers' relief committee. About 1883 he moved to Whitewater. In 1893 he went to Sligo, Ireland to administer an estate of something like twenty thousand pounds value, having been named in an aunt's will as her executor. In the second Cleveland administration he had much influence with Senators Vilas and Mitchell in the distribution of postmasterships within the county. He moved to a farm near Beloit in 1894, where he died June 25, 1909. His children were William Arthur, Alice Elizabeth, Daniel Amos. 
KNILANS, Captain William Allen (I16148)
 
4149 From: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~villandra/momi/i3714.htm#i4586
A photo of him was seemingly taken at Arless, 251 St. James Street, Montreal, whenever he was in Montreal. He lived and died in Ireland.

Marriage was a civil marriage, from IFHF web site. Was in 1862, in Fermanagh. didn't purchase the record.

Baptism record from IFHF web site. Nathaniel Lowe, bapt 17 12 1837. Address, Outerard. Parish/ District: Kilcummin. Co. Galway. Church of Ireland. Father Henry Lowe, mother Catherine Lowe, occupation of father: Police Constable. Sponsors not recorded. Notes: By John Wilson.

From Griffith's Evaluation: Henry N. Lowe County Fermanagh Parish Ennskillen Location: T/Enniskillen Darling St (T may mean Tempo.) (By 1881 the business was at 7 High St. and I think something may have been on Queens St.)

In addition to my family records and Edna Quinlan's, I have info on those of the family who died in Enniskillen from Cardinal Dundas' Ennikillen, Parish and town (1912), from the Ennsikillen parish church graveyard list. This church is now the Church of Ireland cathedral, St. Mcartyn's.

Henry Nathaniel b abt 1837 based on age of death, family records have him b 1837 or 1838. d 24 Feb 1905, Clonmel, Co Tipperary, at age 65, of heart disease, after a brief illness, lived 4 Anne Street. This all confirmed by death certificate among other things.

He m 1861 or 1862 Tempo Church near Enniskillen, Fermanagh Cty or Fanet Mary Dixon b [from Dundas, 14 Aug 1837] at Fanet?

Lived at Enniskillen, Fermanagh County. His business and possibly his residence was at 7 High St, in Enniskillen. He described himself as a printer, bookseller, and agent for several businesses in the Fermanagh Directory which he published.

He owned and edited the Fermanagh Times, a newspaper. He owned a general shop, sold all sorts of things, in Enniskillen; he advertised in the Fermanagh Directory which he published in 1879 and 1880 and also in his paper that he sold stationery, books, patent medicines, hard liquor, groceries etc., and his wife sold shoes and boots, and he ran a printing press, and at one point published a newspaper. All of this at once.

He began, according to Seamuas McCanny who is an Enniskillen author with an interest in history of that period, as a conducting clerk with the Enniskillen solicitor Archibald Collum. Later became Deputy Clerk of the Peace for Enniskillen and agent for Enniskillen Corporation. His court position consisted of keeping records, notes of what happened in court, and preparing papers. He also, according to his own advertisemments and a lawsuit against him, acted as agent for a number of not local businesses, in addition to acting as agent for the feudal estate that consisted of rental properties and was managed by a committee of Enniskillen citizens. It was called Enniskillen Corporation.

In the 1870's he set in business as a printer and stationer at 'The Enniskillen Printing Company' 7, High Street Enniskillen. He was one of the earliest properietors of the Fermanagh Times. The paper went bakrupt and had to be bought over and managed by a local committee in 1881.

He moved to Clonmel County, Tippperary, where he was appointed Deputy Clerk of the Peace for that county and died there at 4 Anne St in 1905.

He republished Lowe's Fermanagh Directory and Household Almanc for 1880 .

His Fermanagh directory was republished in 1990 as Fermanagh One Hundred Years Ago, and several people on the web did lookups in it for me. He set up as a printer and stationer in the 1870's in Enniskillen, at The Enniskillen Printing Company, at 7 High St. In 1881 he became publisher of the Fermanagh Times. He was one of its earliest proprietors. He does not seem tohave been editor. The paper seems to have been started by Lord Erne, who was probably a political reactionary, and A. W. Wheeler published it in 1880. To the degree that the paper involved any politics they were probably pro- large landlord, as there was a need for such a paper since the tenants rights (Land League) movement was well organized and strong in Fermanagh and another paper was owned by a wealthy but liberal and eccentric landowner who took liberal views. But the paper may have become more political after a reactionary editor took it over from the local committee who took it over from Lowe.

"Earlier in 1880 he had sold off the boot and shoe part of his business but it was announced that he would continue trading in ladies' boots. He resigned as agent for Enniskillen Corporation (This seems to ahve been a rent/rate collecting job) shortly after her death. The printing press (which was the first steam printing press in Fermanagh and thus much faster than the hand presses) was mvoed from High Street where he had his shop which continued for other goods apart from the boots and shoes, to Townhall St.,"

Henry Lowe's involvement with the paper didn't last long. He lost his wife to tuberculosis in January 1881, went bankrupt, and lost the paper in April 1881. The paper went bankrupt and was taken over by a local comittee. He was forced to resign from his position as agent for the Enniskillen Corporation,which owned a large amount of property and managed it, in October 1881, due to financial irregularities on his part. He failed to account for the rents he was responsible for collecting and appears to have personally spent some of it. From notes of committee meetings people felt rather sorry for him.Also, he was repeatedly described as ill and unable to get out of bed.

I have a letter from Seamus that After H.N. Lowe resigned (from the paper, apparently), bankruptcy proceedings began and in September a sale of his goods was announced, inlcuidng an insurance policy that stated that he was 44 years of age. Teh newspaper came into the hands of solicitor Joseph Alexander. One of the reports mentioned that he had been appointed agent of the corporation in 1870.

Seamus McCanny has a note that at the bankruptcy hearing in Dublin in May , 1881, Henry Nathaniel's mother said he was in America. I suspect that Joseph Lowe's time in North America dates to this time; he was between 12 and 16 years old in 1881. He wrote that he was a raw lad when he stayed with his mother's brother Joseph in Canada. By 1885, the Fermanagh Times reported that Joseph Allen Lowe was sporting editor of the Montreal Gazette. That is not possible if he was not born until 1869, LOL. Seamus and I wonder for how long he was hiding in America. He didn't become a Mason again in Clonmel until 1889. Of course, he did have a bout of depression.

He got into a couple of conflicts with people; a lawsuit from Dr. Collum for whom he had become agent, perhaps a relative of the Collum he originally worked for. He was sued for libel - by Dr. Collum? When he went bankrupt, he claimed that one of his main backers failed to back him because he had refused her demand that he make a donation to the Methodist Church. Lord knows if this is true or why he relied on such a person if it was. Clearly he was overextended at the time when this happened or someone failing to back him could not have made a difference AND he would not have gone bankrupt. Whatever happened, he struck out particularly nastily at others instead of taking responsibility for his role in his own affairs. Even in his son Joseph's telling of it, it was someone else's fault. He was robbed.

Seamas McCanny says he started on the newspaper business AFTER this (this what? He went bankrupt while he was publishing the paper) but it was after he opened the print shop in East Bridge Street. In notes about his family's life events in his paper and his Fermanagh business directory, ca 1879 - 81, he lists his business at 7 High St and the family residence as High St.

After all of this, he moved to Clonmel, in Co Tipperary, where he again was appointed deputy clerk of the peace, and he died there, apparently with no more excitement.

People came from Cavan, Leitrim, Donegal and Tyrone for his wife's funeral; pretty much all places members of their families are connected with. Two people sent me copies of her obituary, which sounds touchingly like something either of my grandparents or his son would have written. It is pretty clear that he at least wrote the obituary for his wife - and also that he loved and greatly missed her.
[There is more at website quoted at top-personal notes]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
LOWE, Henry Nathaniel (I10229)
 
4150 From: http://www.hartleychambers.com/familytree/people.php?person=00002

Baptised in Kirby. Occupation in England: Schoolmaster in Colne and a city missionary. He was a preacher at Barrowfield in the 1830's

He was a man of considerable ability, great religious fervour and moral passion. He was a Wesleyan local preacher, but later joined the Primitive Methodists. He was urged to join the ministry but declined. At a later period he regretted his refusal and vowed that if he had a son, he would dedicate him to the service of God. At his son Robert's birth that vow was renewed and it was with the boy almost as with the prophet Samuel; for very early in life he took part in Church work.

Later in life William became a missionary in the Isle of Man. He died during an epidemic of fever which claimed him as its victim, as with self-effacing devotion he ministered to the needs of others.
Buried: St Georges, Douglas, Isle of Man

(Birth date and location, Death of death, Burial location and parent's names courtesy of Gordon Hartley)

1841 Census, Colne Lane, Colne:
William Hartley, Age: 52, Occupation: Schoolmaster, Not born in same county.
Christiana Hartley, Age: 49, was born in same county.
John Hartley, Age 17, was born in same county
Richard Hartley, Age 8, was born in same county
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
HARTLEY, William (I10467)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 ... 111» Next»