Matches 1,151 to 1,200 of 3,871
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1151 |
Deborah Post, wife of Benjamin, d. June 4, 1775, age 32 yrs. | Chapman, Deborah (I21958)
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1152 |
Deborah was deceased when administration of her mother, Abigail's, estate was granted in November of 1720. | Burr, Deborah (I55477)
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1153 |
Dec 1733 they were fined 40 shillings each for fornication. Abigail was listed as "now wife". (Lost Babes -Fornication abstracts from court records Essex County, Ma 1692-1745 by Melinde Lutz Sanborn Derry NH 1992 pg 54 references Vol 10: 295). Salem V.R. records has their marriage as 26 Jan 1731/2. | Family F1906
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1154 |
December 7, 1941, Experience of John H. Earle, (Col., USMC Ret.)
As a First Lieutenant USMC, I had served in the Marine Detachment, USS TENNESSEE, from June 1940. But my promotion to Captain in the Fall of 1941 made me over-rank for the TENNESSEE Marine Detachment, already commanded by a Captain. Accordingly, orders came directing me to report to the USS ARIZONA, to take over command of that ship's detachment from Alan Shapley, (later Lieut. General), who, having been promoted to Major, was then over-rank for the billet of detachment commander.
The problem, not solved for several weeks, was how and when I could carry out these new orders. The reason for the delay was that the TENNESSEE was flagship of BATDIV 2 while the ARIZONA was in BATDIV 3, and for several week the Pacific Battle Fleet had rotated in and out of Pearl Harbor in divided groupings, with BATDIV 2 and 4 at sea while the odd-numbered BATDIVS were tied up in Pearl Harbor, with crews on liberty.
Then, according to the current operating schedule, rotation would take place, the even-numbered BATDIVS would return to Pearl Harbor - always at General Quarters and with ammunition at the guns - while the odd-numbered BATDIVS would sortie from the Harbor in an equal state of readiness for Anti-submarine Warfare Defense. And so it was, that not until 6 December, 1941, as the Japanese knew in advance and the world now knows, that the entire Battle Fleet (luckily minus the carriers) tied up in Pearl Harbor, with the ARIZONA tied up immediately astern of the TENNESSEE. At last I could carry out my orders.
Accordingly, after logging out on the TENNESSEE, I reported aboard the ARIZONA with all my gear. Major Shapley formally presented me to the ship's captain, Captain Van Falkenburg, as his Marine relief. Then Major Shapley and I began the inventory of Marine Detachment property so that I could assume accountability in time for him to depart for the Mainland on the fleet oiler USS NEOSHO, scheduled to leave Pearl Harbor the morning of Sunday, 7 December, 1941.
Inventory of Detachment property was a lengthy and hot business conducted near the double bottoms of the ship. When, along about 9:30 P.M., Major Shapley suggested we take a break, go ashore for a beer at the Officers' Club and then return to finish the job, I readily agreed. At the Club we encountered a group of young ARIZONA officers, one of whom was celebrating his birthday. As a shipmate, he of course knew Major Shapley and invited him to join their group.
At this point, Major Shapley suggested I go home to my young wife in Waikiki, returning early the next morning to finish the inventory with him. Having been at sea for several weeks and eager to see my wife, I left as soon as a taxi could be found. Major Shapley would later return to the ARIZONA to spend the night aboard. At home early the next morning, I was informed by my neighbor, Cdr. McKillip, USN, that the Japanese were attacking Pearl Harbor. Looking in that direction from our lanai, we could see anti-aircraft bursts covering the area. Several TENNESSEE friends living nearby and I quickly caught a cab to the Naval Base.
When we got there, Pearl Harbor looked like a scene from the Inferno. The second attack wave was still in progress and the ARIZONA, already destroyed, was belching thick black smoke that was to continue for days. I caught a boat from Merry Point Landing to Ford Island, a scene of complete devastation, and in the bomb shelter adjacent to the ARIZONA I found Major Shapley and what was left of the Marine Detachment.
As I recall, they totalled 12 enlisted Marines from the original 85 and all had swum to Ford Island after the order to abandon ship. (Of course, I had not a chance to know them before, but I recall one of them was named Corporal Nightengale, whom I remembered because of his unusual name.) We hunkered down until the All Clear and then emerged, whereupon I led the remaining 12 enlisted Marines across a pipeline connection to the quay where the TENNESSEE, my ship of just the day before, was moored. (I believe that Major Shapley left Hawaii later that day on the NEOSHO as he had planned.)
We then boarded the TENNESSEE - one of my friends aboard said he thought he had seen a ghost when I appeared - and were informally incorporated into the activities of its Marine Detachment. A few weeks later, upon the TENNESSEE's departure for the Mainland and modernization, I was ordered to report along with the 12 survivors of the ARIZONA's detachment to the Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor, for duty. I was a survivor - and damned lucky to be alive! | Earle, John Horatio Jr. (I40767)
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1155 |
December 9, 1624 given in "The Carr Book" 1947. Caleb was eleven on the pssenger list in 1635. | Carr, Caleb (I51817)
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1156 |
Den 17 (September 1793) is een Kind van Tonnis Eisses blik overleeden, Laatende na tot Sibsten bloede beide Ouders en 2 Zustertjes | Blik, Eisse Teunis (I36406)
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1157 |
Dena died of Acute Coronary thrombosis due to Diabetes mellitus. | Lavine, Dena Sofia (I318)
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1158 |
Dena's obituary reads she died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Hazel Blik, 1534 Tamarack NW, Grand Rapids. Besides Hazel, she was survived by daughters Mrs. Edith Swanson of Sparta, Mrs. Florence Williams of GR, 8 grandchildren, 5 great grandchildren, 2 brothers, Arvid B. Lavine of Chicago and Arthur W. Lavine of Grand Rapids.
Dena was born in Sweden and came to the U.S. in 1886 when she was 10 years old. After residing several years in Chicago, IL, she moved to Sparta, where she lived until 1934, when she moved to Grand Rapids. She was a former treasurer of the Norton school board in Sparta and a member of the Mission Covenant Church in Grand Rapids. | Lavine, Dena Sofia (I318)
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1159 |
Deposed on 19 July 1680 aged 36 years. | Howland, Jabez (I44328)
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1160 |
Deposition of THOMAS COWCHMAN of the parish of Rolvenden [co. Kent), having lived there twelve years and before that in the parish of Hawkhurst, aged forty years, dated 25 September 1578. (Depositions at Canterbury, 1578.) ! | Couchman, Thomas (I44553)
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1161 |
Descendants of William Heath include Nelson A. Rockefeller, Walter Disney and Frank W. Woolworth, & Samuel F. B. Morse. | Heath, William (I35249)
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1162 |
Detroit City Directory listings for Lawrence H. Earle:
1909 - none
1910 - none
1911 - Chief Draftsman, Abbott Motor Co., bds 527 Woodward Av
1912 - none
1913 - Sales Mgr, Continental Motor Mfg Co., rms 160 E. Grand Blvd
1914 - Salesman, bds 356 Bewick Av
1915 - Sales Magr, Continental Moters Mfg. Co., b. 362 Bewick
1916 - none
1917 - none | Earle, Lawrence Huntoon (I33190)
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1163 |
Dhe died in the 61st year of her age. | Clap, Elizabeth (I14786)
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1164 |
Did she have a son?
SSDI Search Results
Viewing records 1-1 of 1 Matches
JOHN WOLD SSN 504-03-0906 Residence: 49442 Muskegon, Muskegon, MI
Born 25 Nov 1919 Last Benefit: 49442 Muskegon, Muskegon, MI
Died Jul 1983 Issued: SD (Before 1951) | Family F246
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1165 |
Died 1736
!Framingham Genealogical Register | Pratt, Nathaniel (I25074)
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1166 |
Died a.e. 60 yrs. | Wight, Samuel (I14305)
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1167 |
Died age 59 years, 7 months. | Pardee, Adaline (I20617)
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1168 |
Died apparently unmarried. It seems probable this is the same man who was in Marblehead in 1638 and banished from Massachusetts Bay. | Allen, Robert (I46531)
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1169 |
Died at age 69. | Bushnell, Samuel (I22316)
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1170 |
Died at age 83. | Hull, George (I48778)
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1171 |
Died at sea as a young man. | Bullock, Israel (I50501)
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1172 |
Died between 16 Aug 1670 (the date of the will of his son Nathaniel of Barbados which referred to him as living) and 15 May 1676 (when John Laurence and Matthias Nicolls of New York, trustees of his estate, confirmed to William Vander Scheuren his property in New York City for the benefit of his daughter Mary, wife of Rev. Francis Hooke of Kittery, Maine). | Maverick, Samuel (I16178)
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1173 |
Died between March 1689/1690 (when an heir to her brother Alexander) and September 1694 (when not counted an heir to her mother). | Chalker, Katherine (I22525)
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1174 |
Died during prostrate surgery. | Friz, Charles Clinton (I828)
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1175 |
Died from "a dangerous cut on his knee and lay under ye chirugion's hand 13 weeks." | Heath, Peleg (I35246)
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1176 |
Died in 23rd year. | Peck, Bethiah (I44185)
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1177 |
Died in 28th year. | Richmond, Sarah (I44184)
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1178 |
Died in captivity of the Indians, May or June 1704. | Hoyt, David (I25711)
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1179 |
Died in his 94th year. | Adams, John (I10921)
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1180 |
Died in his 94th year. | Adams, John (I10921)
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1181 |
Died Mar. 17, 1857 AE 83 ys, 7 ms, 21 ds. | Harrison, John (I26354)
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1182 |
Died of intestinal inflammation | Lavine, Johan Arvid (I655)
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1183 |
Died of small-pox. | Minot, John (I16729)
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1184 |
Died of small-pox. | Breck, Elizabeth (I16726)
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1185 |
Died of small-pox. | Capen, Barnard (I37281)
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1186 |
Died same day as her husband. | Stanniford, Mary (I29855)
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1187 |
died young | Adams, John (I12350)
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1188 |
Died young | Griswold, Sarah (I22016)
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1189 |
died young | Hill, Seth (I11045)
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1190 |
died young | Holbrook, Joseph (I6278)
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1191 |
died young same yr | Wight, Hannah (I14315)
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1192 |
Died, "a child of Jacob Manck" | Manck, ? (I47561)
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1193 |
Discovered Mud Lake in Jamestown Township. It was for many years known as Friz Lake. It is the only lake in the township. It was reported by the surveyors in 1851. It took William 4 attempts to find the lake. In 1854, he helped to make the first boat. He died soon after that. | Friz, William (I759)
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1194 |
District 165
Sub-district C
Division 2
Page Number 8
Household Number 42
Myron DURKEE M Male Scottish 71 USA Farmer E. Methodist
Elisabeth DURKEE M Female English 69 Ontario E. Methodist
Almyra DURKEE Female Scottish 25 Ontario E. Methodist | Durkee, Myron Gould (I25563)
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1195 |
Div. of remainder of Est. of Deacon JOHN BUTTERWORTH, dtd. 2 Apr. 1711. To John Butterworth eldest son 2 shares; to Joseph Butterworth 1 share; to heirs of Benjamin Butterworth dcd. 1 share; to heirs of Sarah Howard dcd. 1 share; to heirs of Deborah Jenkins dcd. 1 share; and 1 share each to Mercy Blood, Hopstill Edy wife of John Edy & Mary Thayer wife of Samuel Thayer [3:42]."
[H. L. Peter Rounds, C.G., Abstracts of Bristol County, Massachusetts, Probate Records, 1687-1745 (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.; Baltimore, MD; 1988), p. 51] | Butterworth, John (I41546)
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1196 |
Division of Estate of Josiah Bowen late of Warren deceased. The unmamed Widow gets her 1/3. After the widow's thirds, the remainder was divided into 10 parts to the children as followeth: To James Bowen, To Amos Bowen, to Josiah Bowen, to Nathan Bowen, to John Kelley & his wife, to Samuel Hixe & his wife, to Ebenezer Martin & his wife, to Patience Bowen, to Hulda [Bowen?], and to Margaret [Bowen?]. | Bowen, Josiah (I47757)
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1197 |
dob possibly 9 May 1717, spelled Catherine. | Bates, Katharine (I22509)
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1198 |
Donald Lines Jacobus has and states (Families of Fairfield) "...m. (rec. Fairfield), 25 April 1665, Rebecca 'Wiekle.' She was possibly dau. of James or Henty Wakelee." In Hull Family in America, Weygant states: "...his wife Rebecca Wickla." Elizabeth Schenck in History of Fairfield states: "... m. Rebecca d. of Henry Whelpley..." | Family F3373
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1199 |
Dorcas -- whose maiden name has not been learned, although she was probably related to John Vigorus of Langham, Essex. The Assington parish registers survive only from 1598 and there are no surviving Bishop's Transcripts for 1583, hence the deduction. Their last child was baptized at Assington and their children married there. | Family F3403
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1200 |
Dorchester Church Records: "Sister Agnes Blake, widow of William Blake, she having removed her dwelling to Boston, was dismissed to join the Third Church of Boston." Boston Church records her admission. Her son John, and only daughter, Anne Leager, resided in Boston, but she died in Dorchester 7-22-1678. The graves of many of the Blake family are located in Dorchester Cemetery, now at the Corner of Stoughton and Boston Streets. | Thorne, Agnes (I14772)
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