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Notes


Matches 251 to 298 of 298

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
251 The Susquehanna County Historical Society holds a large collection of handwritten lists of Payne family members. They are not sourced or attributed, and should be the basis of further research. Source (S3431)
 
252 The Sydney Morning Herald reported the death of Eric Paige, late of Glebe, on 12 Sep 1982, at Concord Hospital, in its issue of 18 Sep 1982.
 
Finkelstein, Raphael (I5758)
 
253 The youngest son of a large Connecticut family, Aaron Grannis Page settled first in Marlboro, New York. He set up a mill, married Mary ---, and with her had six children over the span of about 10 years. After 20 years there, he and Mary moved the family further west to Seneca, in Ontario County, New York. One of their children died almost immediately after arriving in Seneca, but the others soon married into local families and raised their own farming families. Mary died in 1843, while Aaron lived to be at least 85.  Page, Aaron Grannis (I474)
 
254 There are records suggesting she was born in Perth in 1896 and died in 1897. Finkelstein, Eva (I5753)
 
255 There is no direct evidence that she is a child of this couple. It's possible she is a child of another Ansley brother living in Calhoun County. Ansley, Charlotte A. (I4757)
 
256 There's no further record of this daughter, who apparently died during the 1850s. Ansley, C.C. (I4779)
 
257 They had three children, according to the 1900 census.  Family F140
 
258 They married 11 days after his first wife died. Family F160
 
259 They were first cousins. Family F2031
 
260 They were married at her mother's home, 15 Clapton Pavement, Hackney. Family F278
 
261 They were the grandparents of Marta Heinschke. Family F1233
 
262 This collection includes five volumes of Edwin Mallory's daily diaries between 1862 and 1873, plus two diaries kept by his son John M. Mallory.

 
Source (S3455)
 
263 This couple apparently had one child, born after the 1900 census and before the 1910 census, according to the 1910 census report for Kittie. Family F1707
 
264 This four-page ompilation was in created December, 1991, from Yates County probate records. Source (S3279)
 
265 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Ansley, A.K. (I472)
 
266 This is a one-page list of the descendants of Jonas Huber of Maulbronn, Germany, written by one of his grandsons, Herman J. Huber of Cincinnati, Ohio, in January 1948, less than a month before Herman died. Source (S3451)
 
267 This is an estimate by her granddaughter, Bertha (Braham) Bennett. Szlamiak, Kazer (I3262)
 
268 This is probably the "Susie A." , age 20, who was wife of Arthur G. Smith of Milford, Pike County, Penn., in the 1880 census (listed immediately after Lucy's sister Morella's family). Ansley, Lucy (I4510)
 
269 This is the death record for Amy Ansley after she died in Silver City, NM, and her body was sent to Cleveland for burial. It is the only known source for her birth date and place. Source (S3250)
 
270 This manuscript was completed in 1887 by Ephraim Killam (1818-88) and is an account of the early families of Paupack, Pennsylvania. A copy has been donated to the Wallenpaupack Historical Society by Nick Green. Source (S3294)
 
271 This Mary --- apparently married an unknown Ansley, had two children (E.B. and Charlotte, circa 1841), and then married Robert McCamly, by whom she had more children. Mary (I4760)
 
272 This might be a second wife of Ray Ainsley. She was living in Ojai and in Santa Barbara at the same time as he was, although she was 13 years older. Family F1965
 
273 This military record might contain more details:
Ainsley, George, Calhoun County. Enlisted in Company C, Fourth Infantry, as Sergeant, June 20, 1861, at Adrian, for 3 years, Age 20. Mustered June 20, 1861. Discharged for disability at Washington, D. C., July 30, 1861. 
Ansley, George Wallace (I4691)
 
274 This valuable letter, two solid pages of genealogical information, was signed by J.L. Harding, Scranton, Jan. 16, 1902. Source (S3419)
 
275 This was Alfred's second son to be named Woolf. Neither lived long. Fingleston, Woolf Godfrey (I797)
 
276 This was the first marriage for both of them; they had no children. Family F1591
 
277 Thompson, Roger. "Two Widows." American Ancestors Winter 2012: 35-37. Source (S3532)
 
278 Three "Family Record" pages (two of births and one of deaths) are found in a Bible owned (2000) by William Robson of Stanley, N.Y.

Internal evidence suggests that this Bible was owned by Marcus Ansley, and that the first entries were all written at one sitting, in the 1830s. 
Source (S3257)
 
279 Three of her brothers named daughters 'Bertha' after her. Eliasiewicz, Baila (I3264)
 
280 Three-page list of James Lorenzo Harding's grandparents, parents, siblings and children. Source (S3432)
 
281 tinkertrip@gmail.com Source (S3530)
 
282 Twenty-five years after they were married, Hiram and Mercy Ansley sold the family farm in upstate New York, said goodbye to the close relatives on all sides of them, and moved their eight children to the frontier, the far western border of Wisconsin. There 'Deacon' Ansley become a prosperous landowner, managing hundreds of acres of farmland from his home in the town of Hudson. Family F1524
 
283 Unmarried Braham, Gertrude (I3198)
 
284 Unmarried Braham, Michael M. (I3199)
 
285 Unmarried Braham, Olga (I3200)
 
286 Unmarried.
She lived in the Lodz Ghetto with her mother for some time during the war before they were transported to Auschwitz. 
Glicensztajn, Mirla (I3318)
 
287 Unmarried. Braham, Olga (I3200)
 
288 Unmarried. Braham, Gertrude (I3198)
 
289 Unmarried. Abrahams, Myer (I3296)
 
290 Unmarried. Glicensztajn, Hela (I3319)
 
291 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F1372
 
292 Was Russian POW for four years after end of WWII. Kick, Helmut (I3102)
 
293 When Kate Reed, daughter of a pioneer doctor in Illinois, met J.B. Hall, the young proprietor of a store just across the Mississippi in Iowa, the future must have appeared straightforward. But less than a year after they married, the panic of 1857 bankrupt him. It was the first of several boom-bust cycles they would endure through their lives and that would force them to move many times. They prospered well enough to send their daughter to finishing school and to hobnob with politicians. But at the peak of his career, when he was president of the National Insurance Company and an Ohio state legislator, his company collapsed and he was charged with fraud.  Family F309
 
294 When they were children, Daniel Reed and Cinda Meigs lived on the frontier, in the wilds of western New York. Within a few years of their marriage, and Daniel now a doctor, they picked up their young family and moved to the new frontier, the edge of the Mississippi. There they both developed reputations among their fellow pioneers as hard-working and creative healers. Except for a few temporary moves to other towns, they lived and prospered in Fulton, Illinois, with six children and 12 grandchildren. Daniel died at age 78, Cinda at age 92, alert and gracious.

 
Family F405
 
295 William James' death record gave his mother's maiden name as Blackwell. Family F1477
 
296 Witnesses included his uncle, Jacob Goodman. Family F1282
 
297 www.geocities.com/histmich/vanburenhist.html Source (S3303)
 
298 www.newenglandancestors.org/research/database/Norwich_CT/ Source (S3258)
 

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