Home | What's New | Photos | Histories | Sources | Reports | Cemeteries | Headstones | Statistics | Surnames Are we related? Please send additions, corrections and questions to ansley.david@gmail.com |
Matches 51 to 100 of 299
# | Notes | Linked to |
---|---|---|
51 | Calculation from gravestone. | Clark, Prudence (I3905)
|
52 | Caroline, known as Carrie, apparently was named for her paternal grandmother, whose name reportedly was Carrie Goodman. | Goodman, Caroline (I3161)
|
53 | Catherine Moses was most likely a child of the Joseph Moses who immigrated from England to Australia in 1832/33. There is no primary record of this relationship. However, here is the evidence: When Catherine and Eleazer married at Hambro Synagogue, her father was given as a Joseph (Mr.). When Abraham Moses died in London in 1873, his will named Catherine (Moses) Levy as one of his sisters (and named two of Catherine's daughters as his nieces). There is no direct record of Abraham's father's name either, but Abraham and his family landed in Australia aboard the same ship as Joseph Moses. Abraham's will also names a brother, John/Jacob, living in Australia. Thanks to convict records, this John/Jacob has been tied to another brother, Moses -- and the death records for both of them name their father as a Joseph Moses. | Moses, Catherine (I3170)
|
54 | Cause of death was given as "ileo-colitis". | Ansley, Thomas Francis (I4289)
|
55 | Charles Mortimer OGDEN was born 23 FEB 1871 in Milton Township, Rock Co., Wisconsin, and died 12 MAR 1942 in Wauwatosa, Milwaukee Co., Wisconsin. He was buried 14 MAR 1942 in Milton Junction, Rock Co., Wisconsin. He was the son of 2. Charles Arthur OGDEN and 3. Julia Annamaria CRANDALL. He married Bessie D. PELLETT 09 OCT 1899 in Janesville, Rock Co., Wisconsin, daughter of Ira PELLETT and Matilda M. ANSLEY. She was born 23 JUN 1877 in Milton Township, Rock Co., Wisconsin, and died 13 NOV 1932 in Wauwatosa, Milwaukee Co., Wisconsin. She was buried 15 NOV 1932 in Milton Junction, Rock Co., Wisconsin. http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=AHN&db=jonsaunders&id=I86652 source: Jon Saunders, cousin.connecter@cox.net | Pellett, Bessie (I4837)
|
56 | chris.atzl@absamail.co.za | Source (S3495)
|
57 | Clinton Ansley was born on his parents' farm near Geneva, N.Y. When he was about 10, his parents sold out and moved to the frontier, a river town in western Wisconsin. There he met Ella Cross, another New York native, whose parents had resettled in Minnesota. For a few years Clinton ran a dry goods store with his brother, but then he became a wholesaler and apparently struggled financially. He and Ella raised their two sons in a series of boarding houses in St. Paul and Minneapolis. Genio also went into grocery wholesaling, and Frank went into banking and insurance. | Family F1514
|
58 | Date is estimated, based on the assumption that she died before marriage. | Eliasiewicz, Baila (I3264)
|
59 | Death was caused by artillery shelling during World War I. | Abrahams, David (I3285)
|
60 | Deborah's maiden name is said to be Barnett, but I have found no source for this yet. | Deborah (I7836)
|
61 | Died in German army during World War I. | Huber, Erich Johannes Hermann (I2890)
|
62 | Died in World War I. | Abrahams, David (I3285)
|
63 | Edwin Mallory was an institution in South Fredericksburgh. He was a gentleman farmer who kept close track of his farm, the weather, his workers, his large extended family and local politics. He wrote letters to family, letters to politicians, and daily diary entries (which can be found in the Ontario Archives). He married a young local woman, Sarah Bedell, and with her had 11 children, most of whom raised families of their own on farms nearby. Edwin died in nearby Napanee at age 69; Sarah lived to 85. | Family F377
|
64 | Estimated. It was between the births of Szmul in 1871 and Hersz in 1875. | Eliasiewicz, Jakob David (I3261)
|
65 | Evidence suggests that Josiah Way had a daughter, Mary, who was the first wife of Samuel Hewitt of Jay. This is unproved. | Way, Josiah (I5018)
|
66 | Five-generation family tree provided by Jonathan P. Ansley, Rochester, N.Y., in 1992. | Source (S3273)
|
67 | Florence appears to have married second to George Wilkens. She and Claude were in his family in 1920, in Fullerton, California. | Family F1960
|
68 | For the historical pages of this publication, Philena Ansley provided a seven-page, first-person account of her family's move from Pennsylvania to Michigan in 1831. It contains a few key genealogical details not otherwise available. | Source (S3434)
|
69 | Found on Rootsweb at this address: http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/ORUNION/2004-08/1092020423 | Source (S3458)
|
70 | Frank and Amy were an unlikely match. He was a salesman's son from Minneapolis, she was a wealthy industrialist's stepdaughter in Cleveland. The matchmaker apparently was Anna Burhyte, the sister of Frank's uncle Marcus Fulton. Anna met Amy and her mother aboard ship while they were returning from tours of Japan in 1916. Anna must have told Amy and Frank about each other; 18 months later they were married. But the fairytale ended quickly. Their infant son Tommy died of a stomach disorder, and then Amy died of tuberculosis. | Family F1521
|
71 | Franklin Hawley Bedell (1891-1975). His records are held by his son, Bruce Bedell of Belleville, Ontario. | Source (S3498)
|
72 | Frederick Green was born on a farm in eastern Ontario in 1858, the youngest child of a carpenter. At the age of just 16, he joined his older brother, a young lawyer, in Columbus, Ohio, and studied law as well. He rose quickly, becoming private secretary to Gov. George Hoadley in his 20s. In 1888 he married Stella Hall, the wealthy and cultured daughter of the president of the National Insurance Co. They moved to Cleveland, where Frederick worked as an accountant in City Hall and then as director of the Lake View Cemetery. Stella meanwhile became active in civic affairs and the Unitarian church and demonstrated for women's suffrage. Their beloved first son died at age 5; they then had another son, Harold, and a daughter, Helen. Frederick died in 1935 and Stella in 1948. | Family F404
|
73 | From Alice A. Gerth of Mapleton, Minn., in 1984. | Source (S3428)
|
74 | From Israel Interior Ministry records. | Tondovski, Dina (I3442)
|
75 | From Israel Interior Ministry records. | Izbicki, Ide (I3299)
|
76 | From Israel Interior Ministry records. | Izbicki, Ide (I3299)
|
77 | From Martha Sullivan, greendragon2@comcast.net, great-great granddaughter of Lowell Harding. | Source (S3438)
|
78 | From this Blanding Genealogy: http://www.pglg.com/blanding/don_blanding/DB-ancestors.pdf | Kimble, James L. (I4810)
|
79 | Full title is: Mitchell & Co.'s General Directory for the City of Kingston and Gazetteer of the Counties of Frontenac, Lennox & Addington, for 1865. | Source (S3411)
|
80 | Genealogical data from their files, in a letter dated 10 Dec 1991. | Source (S3270)
|
81 | granger@bfm.org | Source (S3375)
|
82 | Gravestone inscription: "She awaits the last Trump" | Robbins, Dorothy (I4420)
|
83 | Gravestone, Abingdon, Illinois. | Ansley, Elizabeth Margaret (I3613)
|
84 | He and his second wife may also have been counted in the 1910 census living in Santa Cruz, California. | Ansley, George Wallace (I4691)
|
85 | He apparently was named after his mother's older brother, who died young. | Fingleston, Lionel Joseph (I801)
|
86 | He died before 1900. | Hughes, Orra L.C. (I4427)
|
87 | He died in a coal mining accident. | Jones, Francis Lamont (I769)
|
88 | He died less than two days after his wife, unaware of her death. | Ansley, Marcus M. (I3588)
|
89 | He drove away one night in the buggy and never returned; foul play was assumed. | Ansley, George W. (I3829)
|
90 | He established a textile mill in Passaic, New Jersey. | Kick, Ludwig Edmund (I3029)
|
91 | He invented, sometimes with his son, a portable clothes drier, a cultivator, a milk pail, a floor cleaner, a seltzer siphon bottle, a cigar cutter, and hammers. | Ansley, George Wallace (I4691)
|
92 | He is listed in his father's will, and from birth order was probably born in the late 1790s, and presumably in New York. The only George Bedelll so far found who meets this description is George W. Bedell, born NY c1798, married (unk) in New York in the 1830s and had at least two children with her, moved to Wayne County Michigan by 1840, lost his wife, and married 2nd Ann Kenyon, with whom he had more children. This George W. Bedell died in June 1869 and is buried in Wayne, Michigan. | Bedell, George (I5593)
|
93 | He is listed in his father's will. | Bedell, William (I5592)
|
94 | He may be the Sherman Ansley who was living in Portland, Oregon, in 1905 when he filed a patent application for an improved sewing awl. | Ansley, Sherman D. (I4696)
|
95 | He presumably was 21 in late 1814, when he was named executor of his father's will, instead of the two other executors nominated in the will. | Bedell, Hall (I5595)
|
96 | He was apparently disabled by a recurring illness during childhood; he lived at home until his death at age 18. | Mallory, Stephen George (I1104)
|
97 | He was Bessie's child from a previous marriage, not one of Emil's children. | Huber, Henry (I2937)
|
98 | He was listed in his father's will. | Bedell, Hall (I5595)
|
99 | He was listed in his father's will. | Bedell, Richard (I5587)
|
100 | He was living with his wife, age 20-30, and a son and daughter both under age 5. An older woman, presumably either his mother or his wife's, also lived with them. Brother Robert and brother-in-law Michael Labar lived nearby. | Ansley, Thomas Mifflin (I4643)
|
This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding, Copyright © 2001-2006, created by Darrin Lythgoe, Sandy, Utah. All rights reserved. |