|
Matches 1,426 to 1,863 of 1,863
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
1426 |
Historical Register of National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M1749, 282 rolls); Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15; National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S346)
|
1427 |
Hull Cemetery | Russell, John S. (I1716)
|
1428 |
Hull Cemetery | Hathecock-Manuel, Mary E. (I1803)
|
1429 |
Hunting For Bears, comp.. South Carolina Marriage Index, 1641-1965. South Carolina marriage information taken from various sources. Many of these records were extracted from copies of the original records in microfilm, microfiche, or book format, located at the Family History Library. | Source (S436)
|
1430 |
Illinois Central Hospital for the Insane | Bass, Michael (I969)
|
1431 |
Illinois Central Hospital for the Insane | Bass, Michael (I969)
|
1432 |
Illinois State Marriage Records. Online index. Illinois State Public Record Offices. | Source (S415)
|
1433 |
Illinois, Cook County Deaths 1878–1922.” Index. FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2010. Illinois Department of Public Health. “Birth and Death Records, 1916–present." Division of Vital Records, Springfield, Illinois. | Source (S136)
|
1434 |
Index compiled from county marriage records on microfilm located at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah by Jordan Dodd of Liahona Research (P.O. Box 740, Orem, Utah 84059). Specific source information is listed with each entry. | Source (S180)
|
1435 |
Index compiled from county marriage records on microfilm located at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah by Jordan Dodd of Liahona Research (P.O. Box 740, Orem, Utah 84059). Specific source information is listed with each entry. | Source (S371)
|
1436 |
Index to New York City Deaths 1862-1948. Indices prepared by the Italian Genealogical Group and the German Genealogy Group, and used with permission of the New York City Department of Records/Municipal Archives. | Source (S392)
|
1437 |
Index to New York City Marriages, 1866-1937. Indices prepared by the Italian Genealogical Group and the German Genealogy Group, and used with permission of the New York City Department of Records/Municipal Archives. | Source (S382)
|
1438 |
Index to New York City Marriages, 1866-1937. Indices prepared by the Italian Genealogical Group and the German Genealogy Group, and used with permission of the New York City Department of Records/Municipal Archives. | Source (S219)
|
1439 |
Indian Territory | Canales, Cedro Jr. (I3441)
|
1440 |
Indian Territory | Canales, Joseph (I3443)
|
1441 |
Indiana County, District and Probate Courts. | Source (S305)
|
1442 |
Indianapolis Recorder,Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1941
JUST AN INDIANA BOY I guess I’m just a country boy, And I guess I’ll always be. There’s pleasure and work for every one here,' / But Ohio is no place for me. Although there’s great high buildings. Many factories and the lake. It doesn’t compare in any way, To my old Hoosier state. I miss that Hoosier scenery, And the folks that I knew there. I miss their smiling faces. And the smell of country air. I know now how that Hoosier felt. When he was on the roam. The one who wrote the song entitled, My Indiana Home. From the words he used while singing, I’m sure he felt the same as I . You just can’t get used to another state. No matter how hard you try. Although I’m up here working, And a new life to me begins. It’s not as good as my home town, And my Indiana frienls. I miss the gang I worked with, And the gang I ran with too. And here I have no mother. I may tell my troubles to. I miss R. J.’s little restaurant , My relation and the rest. I miss the kids I used to tease. And have them call me pest. (P.B.) I miss the Terre Haute friends I had, , And regardless how hard I tried. I could never forget the ones I knew, That lived on the eastern side. I used to sit on the corners there, And jokes we boys would tell. I miss all this, and tell the truth, Old Indiana’s swell. - -'f * * One may not be continued there, But take heed to what I say. You never realize what Indiana means, * Until you get away. Here, whether I am walking or riding And many people meet. They’re not half as friendly as Hoosiers are. For these folks never speak. I haven’t been to the capitol yet. But I don’t care, for thus: I know it couldn’t be, as swell to me. As the city of Indianapolis. I never read the latest news. For inside me isn t space. Except news from Indiana, And my Indiana race. The reason I speak of this paper. To you, is in order You taay know there’s none better printed. Than The Indianapolis Recorder. Everv. time I think of the night I left I could just kick myself. Then ! ask myself, why was it me Instead of some one else. But I am here, and that is that. But hope both day and night. That I may get along up here. And everything comes out right. I guess I’m just an Indiana boy. In the state called Ohio. But here’s one thi,ng, I want my friends. All over Indiana to know. When I get back to the Hoosier state, . With my two sons and wife. Yon can bet your boots that I’ll /stay there, “The balance of my life.” Written by Brazil. Ind.Boy: - in Ravenna.” Ohio: - -“Vernon Estol Bass” | Bass, Estol Vernon Jr. (I7937)
|
1443 |
Interment Control Forms, 1928–1962. Interment Control Forms, A1 2110-B. Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, 1774–1985, Record Group 92. The National Archives at College Park, College Park, Maryland. | Source (S126)
|
1444 |
Iowa Births, 1880-1904, 1921-1946. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines, Iowa.;
Iowa Delayed Births, 1856-1940. State Historical Society of Iowa, States Archives, Des Moines, Iowa. | Source (S447)
|
1445 |
Iowa, Death Records, 1920-1967. State Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines, Iowa. | Source (S441)
|
1446 |
Isaac Bass (John3, John2, William1, John1), born say 1738, was taxed in his own Bertie County household in the constable's list of Michael Collins in 1756. He married Nancy Bunch, Thomason Bass's sister. He purchased 181 acres in the fork of Peachtree and Back Swamp on 18 February 1754 in what was then Edgecombe County near the present Nash-Franklin County border [DB 4:559]. His 27 December 1800 Nash County will, proved February 1801, left nine slaves and land to his wife Nancy and children who were considered white [WB 1:136]. | Bass, Isaac (I6505)
|
1447 |
Isaac, born say 1766, sued Thomas Maclin for trespass, assault and battery in Mecklenburg County court. He was taxable in his own Mecklenburg County household in 1787 and 1789, taxable with Richard Evans in 1790, and taxable in 1793 and 1798 [PPTL, 1782-1805, frames 192, 291, 343, 481, 685]. He married Dicey Stewart, 24 December 1792 Mecklenburg County bond. On 29 July 1796 he made a Mecklenburg County deed of trust for 75 acres bounded by Samuel Young, Bartlett Cox and Sir Peyton Skipwith to secure a debt of 33 pounds which he owed William Hendrick [DB 9:125].
| Evans, Isaac (I3335)
|
1448 |
It is thought that Samuel died at the Good Friday Indian massacre in 1622 at Basses Choice, Virginia.
| Bass, Samuel (I782)
|
1449 |
Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. <i>North Carolina Census, 1790-1890</i>. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state censuses, and/or census substitutes. | Source (S299)
|
1450 |
Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. Michigan Census, 1827-1870. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state censuses, and/or census substitutes. | Source (S393)
|
1451 |
Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. Virginia Census, 1607-1890. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state censuses, and/or census substitutes. | Source (S432)
|
1452 |
Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. AIS Mortality Schedules Index. Compiled and digitized by Mr. Jackson and AIS from microfilmed schedules of the U.S. Federal Decennial Census, territorial/state censuses, and/or census substitutes. | Source (S167)
|
1453 |
James Stewart, born say 1750, was living in Brunswick County, Virginia, on 11 January 1774 when he and Littleberry Pompey of Sussex County purchased 270 acres in Meherrin Parish, to be equally divided between them as if two separate deeds had been made. He purchased 50 acres on the north side of the Maherrin River in Brunswick County adjoining Richard Branscomb and Thomas Evans on 23 November 1778 [DB 11:251-3; 13:280]. He was taxable in Meherrin Parish, Brunswick County, from 1782 to 1796 [PPTL 1782-98, frames 19, 206, 271, 325, 401, 497, 543]. On 26 January 1778 he and Littleberry Pompey and wife Nanny Pompey (James's sister?) sold 135 acres in Meherrin Parish, Brunswick County, adjoining Steward's Branch. And on 15 August 1792 James and his wife Sarah sold for 50 pounds 137 acres on Buckwater Creek in Meherrin Parish, Brunswick County, adjoining Dempsey Stewart's land [DB 13:45; 15:498]. He may have been the James Stewart who married Sally Evans, 2 May 1791 Warren County, North Carolina bond, Eaton Walden bondsman. James and his wife Sarah sued (his brother) William Stewart and his wife Keziah in Brunswick County on 23 November 1795, but the case was dismissed at the defendant's costs [Orders 1795-8, 1, 211]. He was head of a Wake County household of 6 "other free" in 1800 [NC:798]. By his Wake County will, proved in November 1824, he left his land to his children: Evans, Beedy (married James Walden), Mackey (married Joel Stuart), Tazewell, Dickson, Elijah, and Elisha [WB 19:130]. His children were
i. Evans, married Milly Stuart, 15 November 1817 Wake County bond, Joel Stuart bondsman.
ii. Beedy, married James Walden.
iii. Mackey, married Joel Stuart, 2 January 1821 Wake County bond.
iv. Tazewell.
v. Dickson.
vi. Elijah.
vii. Elisha.
| Stewart, James (I1498)
|
1454 |
James, born say 1800, married Polly Stewart, 12 February 1822 Chatham County bond, Thomas Cottrell bondsman. He purchased 62-1/2 acres in Chatham County on the south side of the Cape Fear River on Bush Creek from his father for $150 on 8 February 1825 [DB AB:166] and sold land by deed proved in Chatham County on Wednesday, May 1837 session [Minutes 1833-41].
| Roberts, James (I1736)
|
1455 |
Jamestown, James City, VA | Smythe, Isabella (I7933)
|
1456 |
Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery | Bass, Estol Vernon Sr. (I7936)
|
1457 |
Jennie's parents were Simeon Wilmot and Harriet Redden of Coles/Douglas County Illinois. Sim was born about 1816-17 in Kentucky. I have a transcript of the court records when he was emancipated and paid his required bond in 1846. Harriet was connected to a leading family. She was brought to Illinois from Maryland as a slave but was freed once here. Harriet had three daughters and one son. Jennie was the youngest. Sim and Harriet can be found in the 1850-1880 census of Coles or Douglas County, IL.
Sim is believed to be the brother of Jane Bryant. They were both enslaved by General Robert Matson of Bourbon County Kentucky. The 1847 Matson Slave Trial was a result of Jane fleeing with her four children to keep them from being sold down south. Abraham Lincoln, famously, represented Matson against the Bryants in this case. What is ironic is that Sim got his freedom the exact way Jane tried a year before she fled the Illinois farm. Matson didn't seem to care that Sim left, but he took action to try and stop Jane and her children.
I would love to share the information I have on this family with their descendants! We also do a dinner theater performance three times each year about the trial from all the various viewpoints. www.matsontrial1847.org for more details. Perhaps they would want to attend to hear about their great, great, aunt and her struggle.
Renee Henry
| Wilmot, Jane "Jennie" (I1532)
|
1458 |
JEREMIAH ANDERSON, farmer, Terre Haute, was born in Chattanooga county, North Carolina, in 1806, and came to Vigo county, Indiana, in 1832, and located in Lost Creek township. He first entered forty acres of land and paid government price. This was his first start, and by industry at one time he was the owner of 730 acres of as fine land as there was in Lost Creek township. But on account of his age he is unable to manage so much, and he has divided it with his children. In 1827 he was married to Rhoda UNDERWOOD. She died in 1871, and his second marriage was to Mrs. D. STEWART. Mr. ANDERSON has been a member of the Baptist church for thirty-eight years.
HISTORY OF VIGO AND PARKE COUNTIES, Together With Historic Notes on the Wabash Valley
H.W. Beckwith - 1880
Lost Creek Twp. - pp. 393-394
| Anderson, Jeremiah Joseph (I1645)
|
1459 |
Jethro1 Bass (John3, John2, William1, John1), born say 1734, received a deed of gift of 200 acres on the north side of Urahaw Swamp in Northampton County from his father John3 Bass on 24 February 1755 [DB 2:185]. He purchased a total of 740 acres of land in the same area between 1761 and 1777 [DB 4:121, 127, 128, 179; 5:11; 6:125, 326]. He and his wife Susannah sold 50 acres of this land on 12 February 1773 [DB 5:265]. He was head of a Northampton County household of 8 "other free" and 3 slaves in 1790 [NC:74]. His 27 September 1794 Northampton County will, proved March 1795, left land and slaves to his children, but left his wife Elizabeth only the labor of one slave until son Jethro became twenty-one [WB 2:73]. Elizabeth challenged the will in Northampton court when it was proved on 2 March 1795 [Minutes 1792-96, 147, 166]. | Bass, Jethro (I7750)
|
1460 |
Jethro3, born after 1774 since he was still a minor in 1795. He was head of a white Northampton County household with 20 slaves in 1810 [NC:715]. | Bass, Jethro (I7753)
|
1461 |
John Artis enlisted in 1781 in Abraham Shepard's Tenth Regiment, Colonel Hall's Company.
He left the service on 1 November 1782 [Clark, State Records of North Carolina,
17:190, 16:1007, 15:609]. | Artis, John (I5193)
|
1462 |
John Chavis2 Walden, born say 1742, was taxable on 125 acres in Dinwiddie County in 1782 [Land Tax List 1782-1814]. He purchased 70 acres in Warren County, North Carolina, on the east side of Causeway Branch adjoining Worrell on 23 April 1782 and purchased 125 acres on the west side of Smith's Creek in Warren County for 40 pounds on 27 February 1783. He sold (signing) the 125 acres for 50 pounds on 1 November 1785 [DB 8:13, 93, 347]. He was taxable on 460 acres and 1 poll in Warren County in 1784 and taxable on 75 acres and no polls in 1786 [Tax List 1781-1801, 81, 119]. He purchased three tracts of land in Mecklenburg County, Virginia: 400 acres joining the Warren County line on 26 December 1785 for 120 pounds; a 1-1/5 acre lot on the south bank of the Roanoke River on the west side of the road leading to Christopher Haskins' ferry, about 400 yards from the ferry on 9 July 1792 for 12 pounds; and 110 acres on the Warren County line and the head branches of Cotton Creek for 55 pounds on 8 January 1795 [DB 6:529; 8:149, 485]. He was taxable on 3 horses and 9 cattle in Mecklenburg County in 1787; taxable on himself and William Kersey in 1788; taxable on himself and slaves Pompey and Tiller in 1790; and on himself and John Walden, Jr., in another list for 1790; on himself, John Walden, and Robert Corn in 1791; on himself and son Jarrell in 1795 and 1796; and taxable on himself, son John and slaves Patty, Milly, Amy, Mary & Hannah in 1805 and 1806 [Personal Property Tax List 1782-1805, frames 255, 333, 360, 416, 584, 604, 1095; 1806-28, frame 20]. He was called John C. Walden in August 1793 when the Warren County court ordered the Collector to pay him 67 pounds for building and keeping in repair the bridge across Palmer's Mill Pond, and on 27 August 1793 he was called John Walden of Mecklenburg County, Virginia, when he and John Birchett of Warren County posted a bond for 200 pounds to insure their keeping the bridge in repair for seven years [Warren County Minutes 1793-1800, 15; WB 6:252]. He (signing) and his wife Rebecca sold 400 acres where he was then living in Mecklenburg County on 3 February 1797, sold 60 acres at the head of Cotton Creek on 11 March 1797, and sold 50 acres on the county line to Susanna Mayo on 25 December 1797 with Moses Stewart and Charles Durham as witnesses [DB 9:218, 219, 431-2]. His sons Eaton and John were counted in the 1800 Warren County census [NC:837]. He owned land in Chatham County before May 1785 when he was among the freeholders ordered by the court to work on one of the county roads [Minutes 1781-85, 109b]. On 20 July 1800 he was called John C. Walden of Chatham County when he purchased 172 acres in Randolph County on Brush Creek, and on 27 February 1805 he bought another 170 acres on Flat Creek in Randolph County which he sold to his son William on 1 September 1810 [DB 8:174; 11:110; 12:97]. In the Tuesday, November 1819 session of the Chatham County court, a bond from him and John Farrar for building a bridge and keeping it in repair for seven years was returned, and the court ordered the County Treasurer to pay him 33 dollars for building the bridge across Hughs' Creek on the road leading from Ramsey's Mills on Deep River to Fayetteville. He was head of a Warren County household of 10 "other free" in 1800 [NC:837] (perhaps the same John Walden who was head of a Chatham County household of 12 "other free" in 1800), 4 "other free" and a slave in 1810 [NC:747] and 6 "free colored" in Chatham County in 1820 [NC:202]. head of a Chatham County household of 12 "other free" in 1800. He transferred 100 acres to his son Bartley Walden by deed proved in Chatham County court on Tuesday, November 1819 and to (his son-in-law) Wiley Jean by deed proved in Chatham County court on Tuesday, February 1821. His 12 September 1829 Chatham County will, recorded November 1829, mentioned his wife Rebecca and thirteen children to whom he left 514 acres in Chatham and Randolph counties [WB B:170]. The will also mentioned a granddaughter Lucy Scott, probably the Lucy Walden who married Abraham Scott, 22 October 1822 Wake County bond. | Walden, John Chavis Jr (I1881)
|
1463 |
John Redick, probably born after 1770, was to receive schooling according to his father's 1794 will. He received land on the road adjoining John Pinner and the Urahaw Swamp by the division of the estate of his brother Burwell Bass in March 1798 [Gammon, Record of Estates Northampton County, I:24]. John was head of a Northampton County household of 4 "other free" in 1810 [NC:715] and 9 "free colored" and 2 slaves in 1820 [NC:218]. His 9 April 1828 Northampton County will named his wife Rhody and children: Uriah, Peggy, Sterling, Lovel, Mary, Martha, James3, John12, Gideon, and William6. He stipulated that after moving to Indiana the following Fall, Dolphin and James Roberts were to sell his horses and divide the proceeds among his children [WB 4:40]. | Bass, John Reddick (I7755)
|
1464 |
John2 Bass (William1, John1), born 4 December 1673, was living in Norfolk County on 15 October 1701 when a case against him brought by Thomas Hodges, Surveyor, for being delinquent "from the high wayes" was dismissed on his paying costs [DB 6:220]. He was not mentioned in his father's will because he predeceased him. His marriage was recorded in Perquimans Precinct, North Carolina:
John Bas and Love Harris was Married ye 8th day of Janewary 1696 both of Nanse Mum County and Nanse Mum Parresh by Mager Samuel Swann Esqr. [Haun, Old Albemarle County North Carolina, 62].
Love Harris was living in Norfolk County on 19 May 1693 when the court acquitted Ann Harris, Love Harris, and Elizabeth Jennett of any wilful neglect in the death of a 5 week old child of Ann Harris. This was probably the same Ann Harris, widow of Richard Harris, who bound her daughter Jean Harris to Malachy Thruston in Norfolk County court that same day. Four days prior to this she bound her son John Harris to James Lowry, and two months later on 18 July 1693 she presented an inventory of "what little estate Richard Harris died seized of" in Norfolk County court [DB 5, pt. 2, 287, 292-3, 298]. On 30 January 1720/1 John Bass bought 200 acres in Chowan Precinct near the head of Horsepool Swamp [DB C-1:115]. A year later on 16 July 1722 he was in that part of Bertie County which became Northampton County where he bought 200 acres adjoining Urahaw Swamp [DB A:105]. Between 1722 and 1729 he purchased 5 tracts of land including a patent for 460 acres, accumulating a total of 1,060 acres adjoining Urahaw Swamp [DB A:129; C:126, 135; Hoffman, Province of North Carolina Land Patents, 225]. His 18 January 1732 Bertie County will named his children, gave his wife Mary "the liberty of the plantation ... for bringing up my small children," referred to "my sd last wife's children," and left 50 acres to his friend, Daniel Wharten Burbegg [SS 876/3:305]. Norfolk County Bass family papers record his death in the year 1732 at the age of fifty-eight. Mary remarried and as "Mary Staples widow and relict of John Bass, Sr." she sold her one third interest in the plantation where she was living on 21 November 1748 [Northampton DB 1:356].
| Bass, John II (I717)
|
1465 |
John3 Bass (John2, William1, John1), born say 1700, purchased 200 acres on 10 April 1722 near Urahaw Swamp in the part of Bertie County which became Northampton County in 1742. He purchased 100 acres on Plaquet Branch of Antonkey Marsh, 150 acres on 17 January 1727, and received a patent for 410 acres south of Bear Swamp on 2 August 1727 [DB A:108; B:348, 360]. On 7 February 1736 the Bertie County court fined him for selling brandy without a license [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, I:199]. He was the executor of his father's 1732 will. On 16 August 1736 he bought 200 acres at the mouth of Beech Swamp in Edgecombe County [DB 1:164]. He sold 410 acres of his land in Northampton County to George Anderson on 13 January 1738 [Bertie DB E:530]. He bought 150 acres in Edgecombe on 16 December 1740 [DB F:190] and sold another 400 acres in Northampton by deeds of 2 October and 30 December 1742 [DB 1:40,56]. He was a slave owner by August 1742 when he proved rights on five "whites" and 3 "blacks" in Northampton County [SS 906 by North Carolina Genealogy, 1825]. He voted for Joseph Sikes in the Northampton County election of 1762 [SS 837 by NCGSJ XII:170]. His 14 June 1777 Northampton County will was proved in September 1777. He left 16 slaves and 600 acres to his children [WB 1:292-4]. Most of his children, who were very prosperous, married whites and were considered white.
| Bass, John III (I726)
|
1466 |
Jonathan2, born say 1784, head of a Robeson County household of 5 "other free" in 1810 [NC:241]. He entered 100 acres in Robeson County on 1 January 1810 [Pruitt, Land Entries: Robeson County, vol. II, no.162] and was living in Cumberland County when his father's estate papers were proved in May 1829 Chatham County court.
| Roberts, Jonathan (I1741)
|
1467 |
Joshua, born say 1775, a poor orphan, son of Crecy Dinkins, bound to Benjamin Pennington in Mecklenburg County on 10 April 1780 [Orders 1779-84, 29]. He sued Thomas Epps in Lunenburg County for trespass, assault and battery on 9 March 1797, but the suit was dismissed on agreement of the parties [Orders 1796-9]. He was to marry Judah Stewart, 16 December 1797 Lunenburg County bond. He was taxable in Lunenburg County from 1794 to 1806, called Joshua E. Dinkins in 1795 [PPTL 1782-1806]. He was counted in a list of "free Negroes and Mulattoes" as a "Mulatto" in 1802 with his wife Celia, children Polly and John, and Matthew Holmes, farmers on Flat Rock Creek. He was listed as a ditcher on Cedar Creek in 1803 with his wife Celia and children Matthew, Polly and Sally. He was probably related to William Dinkins who was listed with his wife Lucretia in the lists for 1802 and 1803 and Thomas Dinkins who was listed in 1803 [LVA, Lunenburg County, Free Negro & Slave Records, 1802-1803]. William was taxable in Lunenburg County from 1789 to 1806, and Thomas was taxable from 1792 to 1806. They were called Dickens from 1799 to 1806 [PPTL 1782-1806].
| Evans, Joshua (I3339)
|
1468 |
Julia Bullard Shade was a graduate of Indiana State University and taught Home Economics and English. | Bullard, Julia M. (I476)
|
1469 |
Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. <i>Kentucky Birth, Marriage, and Death Databases: Births 1911-1999</i>. Frankfort, Kentucky: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. | Source (S335)
|
1470 |
Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. Kentucky Birth, Marriage, and Death Databases: Marriages 1973-1999. Frankfort, KY, USA: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. | Source (S401)
|
1471 |
Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. Kentucky Birth, Marriage, and Death Databases: Marriages 1973-1999. Frankfort, KY, USA: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. | Source (S435)
|
1472 |
Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. Kentucky Birth, Marriage, and Death Databases: Births 1911-1999. Frankfort, Kentucky: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. | Source (S145)
|
1473 |
Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. Kentucky Birth, Marriage, and Death Databases: Births 1911-1999. Frankfort, Kentucky: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives. | Source (S181)
|
1474 |
Kentucky, USA. Mercer County. Marriage Bond. | Source (S240)
|
1475 |
Kentucky. <i>Kentucky Birth, Marriage and Death Records – Microfilm (1852-1910)</i>. Microfilm rolls #994027-994058. Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives, Frankfort, Kentucky. | Source (S312)
|
1476 |
Killed at the Battle of Blore Heath | De Bostock, Sir Adam (I5787)
|
1477 |
Killed in coal mine accident | Whitted, James (I1913)
|
1478 |
Kinchen2, born say 1784, head of a Chatham County household of 6 "other free" in 1810 [NC:195]. On 15 August 1821 he purchased 154 acres in Chatham County on the south side of Cape Fear River near the Ferry Road and Drake's land for $430 and sold this land seven years later on 25 December 1828 for $200. On 3 April 1829 he sold the 150 acres on Bush Creek which he received as one of the heirs of (his father?) Ishmael Roberts [DB X:320; AB:134, 186]. He was head of a Lost Creek Township, Vigo County, Indiana, household in 1850. He was a sixty-five-year-old, born in Virginia, with $3,000 estate, living with Nancy, fifty-eight years old, born in North Carolina [Household no. 202].
***************************************************************************************************************************************************************************
The buying power of a $3,000 in 1850, would be equal to over $500,000 in value in 2012. The property value of 200+ acres in 2012, would be close to $1, 000,000. Kinchen was affluent in North Carolina, before coming to Lost Creek, and even more so after settling here. The Roberts family resided on Indian Reservation property in Robeson County, North Carolina, and are counted as Indian, on the Lumbee Tribal rolls. Being affluent, the Roberts family were also slave OWNERS, while residing in North Carolina.
| Roberts, Kinchen (I1722)
|
1479 |
Kippax Plantation | Bolling, Col. John (I6710)
|
1480 |
Lakeview Hospital, | Derrickson, Stella P (I4704)
|
1481 |
LDS records give Nathaniel's death as 30 December 1652
| Bass, Nathaniel (I791)
|
1482 |
Leek & Sons Funeral Home/Sunset Memorial Park | Stewart, James Alfred (I1120)
|
1483 |
Lenisler Cemetery Age: 83 | Anderson, Jeremiah (I7313)
|
1484 |
Leven, born before 1776, residing in Warren County on 23 November 1797 when he purchased 122 acres in Halifax County, North Carolina, on the waters of Falling Creek. He was taxable in district 12 of Halifax County on 122 acres and a free poll in 1800 [Gammon, Halifax County Tax Lists I:34]. He sold 22 acres of this land to John Richardson on 9 December 1800 with Joel Evans and Joseph Lantern as witnesses [DB 18:269, 916]. He was head of a Warren County household of 7 "other free" in 1810 [NC:754] and 3 "free colored" in Halifax County in 1820 [NC:147], perhaps the Leaven Evans who married (second?) Hariot Scott, 18 December 1829 Warren County bond, Thomas Edwards bondsman. Harriet, a "Mulatto" farmer born about 1811, was listed in the 1860 Halifax County census with $85 real estate. She may have been identical to Harriet Richardson, daughter of Hardy Richardson.
| Evans, Leven (I2399)
|
1485 |
Lewis Richardson Cemetery, | Richardson, Charles Hendrick (I8598)
|
1486 |
Lincoln Cemetery | Johnson, Harold D (I9011)
|
1487 |
listed as Charlotte Moss | Denwood, Charlotte (I3584)
|
1488 |
Listed as the Sheppard Cemetery | Stewart, Jemima Victoria (I517)
|
1489 |
Long-Term Care Facilities | Malone, Harriet (I7325)
|
1490 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Cooper, Thelma Irene (I607)
|
1491 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Batton, Wiley (I995)
|
1492 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Stewart, Burton (I1644)
|
1493 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Anderson, Anna Jane (I1652)
|
1494 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Bonds, Alvira (I1747)
|
1495 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Waugh, Lulu Birdie (I3001)
|
1496 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Larter, Sarah Sally (I8759)
|
1497 |
Lost Creek Cemetery | Alexander, Susan E. (I9196)
|
1498 |
Louis was the worlds 34th heart transplant recient. He was the longest living heart transplant recipient at the time of his death. | Russell, Louis Byron Jr (I3634)
|
1499 |
Louisville Cemetery | Hill, Anna (I8765)
|
1500 |
Lung Cancer Age: 58 | Perkins, Glenn E (I6092)
|
1501 |
Maple Grove Cemetery, Wichita, KN | Fauver, Jethro Sandall (I2748)
|
1502 |
Maplewood Cemetery | Foster, Casreal Sr (I6630)
|
1503 |
Margaret Leucus (Locus), born say 1799. She married Isham Lucas, 26 August 1820 Robeson County bond, Ethelred Newsom bondsman, and was living in Robeson County when her father's estate was settled in May 1829 in Chatham County.
| Roberts, Margaret (I1737)
|
1504 |
Margaret Roberts, born say 1725, left a 6 June 1789 Northampton County, North Carolina will which was proved in September 1794. She gave two shillings to each of her children Ishmael, James, and John Roberts, Mary Roberts, Faitha Scott, Christian Stewart, Phebe Roberts, Hannah Roberts, Milla Anderson, and Elizabeth Roberts and gave the remainder of her estate to her daughter Delpha Roberts. She named her daughter Delpha and (her son-in-law) Jeremiah Anderson executors [WB 2:54].
| Roberts, Margaret (I1739)
|
1505 |
Marion National Cemetery | Cooper, James Arthur (I611)
|
1506 |
Marriage Index. Various Utah State Public Record Offices. | Source (S311)
|
1507 |
Marriage Record Search. Marion County, Indiana, Circuit Court. http://www.biz.indygov.org/apps/civil/marriage/search. | Source (S202)
|
1508 |
Mary Powell, born say 1695, was called "Mary Powell a mullatto" on 12 June 1755 when the Southampton County court ordered that she be exempt from paying levies [Orders 1754-9, 92]. | Powell, Mary (I5758)
|
1509 |
May 24, 2007
Cleota Mae Russell Waldon, 84, died Monday, May 21, 2007. She was born Feb. 4, 1923, in Terre Haute to Troy P. Russell and Rebecca J. Russell. She was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas G. Waldon Jr.
Survivors include four daughters, Carmen Williams and husband Charles, Rebecca Washington and husband Darrell, Karen Waldon and Alice E. Waldon; two sons, James Waldon and wife Linda, and Thomas G. Waldon III; 10 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins and friends.
Services are 11 a.m. Saturday at Spruce Street AME Church, 1660 Spruce St., with the Rev. George C. Rush officiating. Visitation is 4 to 8 p.m. today in the church, with an Order of Eastern Star ceremony at 6 p.m.. Russell Funeral Home assisted with arrangements. Burial is in Highland Lawn Cemetery.
| Russell, Cleota Mae (I417)
|
1510 |
Meadows Manor East | Scott, Mattie Mae (I3477)
|
1511 |
Memorial Park Sunset Gardens | Morris, Ada (I2385)
|
1512 |
Mentioned in Fox's "Book of Martyrs". | Branch, William (I5775)
|
1513 |
Methodist Hospital | Redmon, Darlene Laverne (I1032)
|
1514 |
Methodist Hospital | Allen, Jerri Lynn (I3887)
|
1515 |
Michigan Department of Vital and Health Records. <i>Michigan Death Index</i>. Lansing, MI, USA. | Source (S276)
|
1516 |
Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867–1952. Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics. | Source (S237)
|
1517 |
Microfilm of Iowa State Censuses, 1856, 1885, 1895, 1905, 1915, 1925 as well various special censuses from 1836-1897 obtained from the State Historical Society of Iowa via Heritage Quest. | Source (S214)
|
1518 |
Microfilm of Iowa State Censuses, 1856, 1885, 1895, 1905, 1915, 1925 as well various special censuses from 1836-1897 obtained from the State Historical Society of Iowa via Heritage Quest. | Source (S370)
|
1519 |
Milton, and father Wiley, are shown to have amassed more than 1100 acres of land, in Otter Creek township, near the river, in the 1858 property map of Vigo County, Indiana. The map also shows that they operated a saw mill on their property, which was located on the old Erie Canal.
| Walden, Milton (I1936)
|
1520 |
Miss Ida Finkelstein was attacked and injuried on her way home from school by Mr. George Ward. She died as a result of her injuries. From her description Mr. George Ward was arrested and confessed but before Sheriff Daniel Fasig could get him out of town a large crowd pulled him from the jail and killed him.
EQUAL JUSTICE INITITIVE
On February 26, 1901, a white mob lynched George Ward, an African American husband and father of two, near the old Wabash River Wagon Bridge. The day prior, a white woman had been shot and stabbed in the woods near Terre Haute and died later that evening. Fear and anger gripped the community.
Though there were no witnesses to the crime, Mr. Ward was arrested and reports of an alleged confession began to circulate. Less than an hour after he was taken into custody, a white mob formed outside the jail.
Around noon, the mob broke into the jail using a battering ram, seized Mr. Ward, and beat him until he collapsed. The mob then dragged Mr. Ward to the bridge and hanged him from a trestle using a noose made of rope and chain.
Unsatisfied, the mob, “in morbid fury,” cut down and burned Mr. Ward’s body on the west riverbank. At least 1,000 white men, women, and children came to watch the spectacle lynching. Some collected fragments of Mr. Ward’s remains as souvenirs. | Ward, George (I11083)
|
1521 |
Mississippi marriage information taken from county courthouse records. Many of these records were extracted from copies of the original records in microfilm, microfiche, or book format, located at the Family History Library. | Source (S134)
|
1522 |
Mississippi marriage information taken from county courthouse records. Many of these records were extracted from copies of the original records in microfilm, microfiche, or book format, located at the Family History Library. | Source (S368)
|
1523 |
Missouri Marriage Records. Jefferson City, MO, USA: Missouri State Archives. Microfilm. | Source (S194)
|
1524 |
Morris Evans Sr. was born in Wales, went to Frome, Somersetshire England arranged indenture, sailed from Bristol, England to Virginia, 4 years in Virginia, yeoman, for Mary Toms widow Nov 6, 1655. Magazine of Virginia Genealogy, vol.22, no.3, pp.57, 63, 67
The Complete Book of Emigrants 1607-1660 by PW Coldham Page 300
1655:2 November. Morrice Evans of Bruton, Som, labourer, bound to Henry Haines of Bristol, mariner, to serve 4 years in Virginia.
6 November. Morris Evans of Frome, Som, yeoman, bound to Mary Toms of Frome, widow, to serve 4 years in Virginia.
| Evans, Morris (I2408)
|
1525 |
Mount Hope Cemetery | Wharton, Joseph Crocket III (I595)
|
1526 |
Mount Hope Cemetery | Malone, Joseph Franklin (I1025)
|
1527 |
Mount Hope Cemetery | Calimese, Mabel J. (I4697)
|
1528 |
Mount Hope Cemetery | Walden, Larkin H. (I5744)
|
1529 |
Mount Hope Cemetery | Harrod, Nora (I7319)
|
1530 |
Mt Olive Cemetery | Carson, Charles (I4103)
|
1531 |
Mt. Hope Cemetery | Collins, Nanny (I7471)
|
1532 |
Murdered by truck hi-jackers | Norton, Walter (I545)
|
1533 |
Murdoch-Linwood Cemetery | Bass, Angeline (I5833)
|
1534 |
Name: Rebecca Pattillo Father: Solomon Pattillo Mother: Sarah Major Birth Date: 1774 City: Dinwiddie State: VA Country: USA | Pattillo, Rebecca (I7124)
|
1535 |
National Archives and Records Administration, Index to the Compiled Military Service Records for the Volunteer Soldiers Who Served During the War of 1812, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration | Source (S114)
|
1536 |
National Archives and Records Administration. <i>Kentucky Miracode</i>. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. T1266, 194 rolls. | Source (S378)
|
1537 |
National Archives and Records Administration. <p><li>Coffelt Database [Archival Database]; Records with Unit Information on Military Personnel Who Died During the Vietnam Conflict, ca. 1983-6/19/2002; Collection COFF: Richard Coffelt, Richard Arnold, and David Argabright Collection; National Archives at College Park, College Park, MD.</li></p> <p><li>Combat Area Casualties Current File, 6/6/1956-1/21/1998 [Archival Database]; Records on Military Personnel Who Died, Were Missing in Action or Prisoners of War as a Result of the Vietnam Conflict, 1/20/1967-12/1998; Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, Record Group 330; National Archives at College Park, College Park, MD.</li></p> | Source (S379)
|
1538 |
National Archives and Records Administration. Electronic Army Serial Number Merged File, 1938-1946 [Archival Database]; ARC: <a href="http://research.archives.gov/description/1263923">1263923</a>. World War II Army Enlistment Records; Records of the National Archives and Records Administration, Record Group 64; National Archives at College Park. College Park, Maryland, U.S.A. | Source (S329)
|
1539 |
National Archives and Records Administration. Kentucky Miracode. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. T1266, 194 rolls. | Source (S137)
|
1540 |
National Cemetery Administration, Nationwide Gravesite Locator | Source (S22)
|
1541 |
National Cemetery Administration, Nationwide Gravesite Locator | Source (S118)
|
1542 |
National Cemetery Administration. Nationwide Gravesite Locator. | Source (S195)
|
1543 |
National Park Service, Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, online <<a href="http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/" target="_blank">http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/</a>>, acquired 2007. | Source (S250)
|
1544 |
Nevada State Health Division, Office of Vital Records. Nevada Marriage Index, 1966-2005. Carson City, Nevada: Nevada State Health Division, Office of Vital Records.Clark County, Nevada Marriage Bureau. Clark County, Nevada Marriage Index, 1956-1966. Las Vegas, Nevada: Clark County, Nevada Marriage Bureau. | Source (S146)
|
1545 |
Nevada State Health Division, Office of Vital Records. Nevada Marriage Index, 1966-2005. Carson City, Nevada: Nevada State Health Division, Office of Vital Records.Clark County, Nevada Marriage Bureau. Clark County, Nevada Marriage Index, 1956-1966. Las Vegas, Nevada: Clark County, Nevada Marriage Bureau. | Source (S174)
|
1546 |
Nevada State Health Division, Office of Vital Statistics. State Death Index. Nevada Department of Health and Human Services, Carson City, Nevada. | Source (S278)
|
1547 |
New Forest Cemetery | Frank, Samuel (I9242)
|
1548 |
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA | Roberts, Jordan (I2392)
|
1549 |
New York City Department of Health, courtesy of www.vitalsearch-worldwide.com. Digital Images. | Source (S414)
|
1550 |
Nicholas2 Manuel, born say 1757, was taxable on 150 acres and one poll in Sampson County in 1784 [L.P. 64.1 by N.C. Genealogy XIV:2174] and purchased 20 acres on the east side of the Coharie Swamp on 5 March 1792 [DB 9:126]. He was head of a Sampson County household of 5 "other free" in 1790 [NC:51], 9 in 1800, was counted as white in 1810 [NC:472], and was a "sleymaker," head of a Sampson County household of 3 "free colored" in 1820. His widow Milly Manuel was about eighty-eight years old on 11 November 1845 when she made a declaration in Sampson County court to obtain a widow's pension for her husband's services in the Revolution. She stated that they were married by Fleet Cooper, Esq., in Duplin County and that her son Shadrack Manuel was born the day (Corn)Wallis was captured. Her husband died on 27 March 1835. Milly died before 30 March 1855 when Shadrack, heir at law of Nicholas Manuel, appointed attorneys to receive his survivor's pension [M804-1627]. The Croatan Indians of Sampson County, North Carolina. Their Origin and Racial Status. A Plea for Separate Schools: Electronic Edition. Butler, George Edwin, 1868-1941 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Funding from the Institute for Museum and Library Services supported the electronic publication of this title. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Text transcribed by Apex Data Services, Inc. Images scanned by Tampathia Evans Text encoded by Apex Data Services, Inc., Tampathia Evans and Jill Kuhn Sexton First edition, 2002 ca. 140K Academic Affairs Library, UNC-CH University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2002 © This work is the property of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It may be used freely by individuals for research, teaching and personal use as long as this statement of availability is included in the text. INDIAN FAMILIES OF SAMPSON COUNTY BY ENOCH EMANUEL AND C. D. BREWINGTON SKETCH OF THE EMANUEL FAMILY The mixed race of people living in Sampson County are sure that the statements given to us by our ancestors concerning our origin are true. We have only asked for Indian prestige, while we know in our veins also flows the blood of our white ancestors. We have always been told by our fathers and mothers that we were mixed with the lost colony of the Roanoke. We therefore are a mixture of Governor White's colony and the original Indians. I have been requested to write a short history of our race. I am seventy years old, and have spent my life among my people. I have taught the schools in the Indian community for the past thirty-five or forty years. Though we were not known in the public mind as Indians, yet I knew all the while that we were pure white and Indian descent. Nicholas Emanuel, who was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and fought side by side with the white soldiers, was my grandfather. He was the son of one Ephraim Emanuel, the son of the first Nicholas Emanuel, who was said to be the descendant of white and Indian. It was told me that they married Portuguese women. One of the women was named Mahalie. The other I do not know. My grandfather, Nicholas Emanuel, married Millie Hale, a pure white woman, of Scotch-Irish descent. Their oldest son was Shadrack Emanuel, who was born during the beginning of the Revolutionary War. All the other children were born soon after the war. Among them was my own father, Michael Emanuel. He married Pharby Harding, who was the daughter of Jonathan Harding, white and Indian. | Emanuel, Nicholas Manuel (I1092)
|
1551 |
North Carolina County Registers of Deeds. Microfilm. Record Group 048. North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, NC. | Source (S236)
|
1552 |
North Carolina County, District and Probate Courts. | Source (S281)
|
1553 |
North Carolina State Board of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics. <i>North Carolina Death Certificates</i>. Microfilm S.123. Rolls 19-242, 280, 313-682, 1040-1297. North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, North Carolina. | Source (S264)
|
1554 |
North Carolina State Center for Health Statistics. <i>North Carolina Divorce Index, 1958-2004</i>. Raleigh, NC, USA: North Carolina State Center for Health Statistics, 2004. | Source (S289)
|
1555 |
Notes for HUMPHREY BASSE: Humphery Basse was a twin brother to Samuel Basse, both being born on july 15, 1615. It is thought that Humphery died in the Good Friday Indian massacre in 1622 at Basses Choice, Virginia.
| Bass, Humphrey (I779)
|
1556 |
Notes for JOHN BASSE:
John Basse came as an infant with his mother and father to the New World of Virginia. Jamestown was founded in 1607, nine years
before John was born. According to genealogist, Alyene Prenn, the story related to her by Justin Bass, at the time Chief of the Nansemond Tribe, was that John was the only survivor at Basse's Choice of the Good Friday massacre in 1622. John's father, Nathaniel had returned to England as presumably had his mother since she died in England in 1630. John was rescued from the carnage by Nansemond Indians and was taken to raise by them. John married a Nansemond Indian girl with the Christianized name, of Elizabeth. Elizabeth's father's name was Robin the Elder. He was the "King", or Chief (Weroance) of the Nansemonds.
Sources: John Basse: "Wittels.FBK.GED" John Basse: "The Bass Family of Black Creek, North Carolina", compiled by James Albert Bass and James Albert Bass, Jr., 1986
| Bass, John (I744)
|
1557 |
Oak Hill Cemetery | Jackson, Alexander (I9330)
|
1558 |
Oak Hill Cemetery | Jackson, Mary (I9331)
|
1559 |
Oak Hill Memorial Cemetery | Tyler, Thelma (I1270)
|
1560 |
Oak Woods Cemetery | Waugh, Wayne Russel (I96)
|
1561 |
Official Roster of Ohio Soldiers, Sailors and Marines in the World War, 1917-1918, Columbus, OH, USA: F. J. Heer Printing Co., 1926 | Source (S97)
|
1562 |
Ohio Marriage Index, 1970 and 1972-2007, Columbus, Ohio: Ohio Department of Health, Office of Vital Statistics, 2008 | Source (S111)
|
1563 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S171)
|
1564 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S327)
|
1565 |
Osu Medical Ctr | Perkins, Levi (I4467)
|
1566 |
Parklawn Memorial Park and Menorah Gardens | Anderson, Leoma (I9758)
|
1567 |
Parklawn Memorial Park and Menorah Gardens | Mitcham, Clinton Austin (I9759)
|
1568 |
Paul Heinegg..http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Brooks_Byrd.htm
Henry1 Bunch Sr., probably born about 1690, was a resident of Chowan County on 18 December 1727 when he purchased 200 acres in Bertie County on Reedy Branch. He purchased 640 acres in Bertie on Conaritsat Swamp from Thomas Pollock on 30 May 1729 [DB C:21, 266]. He was taxable on his own tithe and 2 slaves in the 1750 Bertie County summary tax list and was a "Free Mulatto" taxable on 2 slaves in Bertie County from 1763 to 1766 [C.R. 10.702.1, Box 1]. He made a will in Bertie on 21 April 1775, proved in August 1775. He had already deeded 840 acres of land on Conaritsat and Mulberry to his grandson Jeremiah Bunch, Jr., in 1765, and in his will left most of the remainder of his land to his grandson Cader Bass [WB B:34-7]. He named as heirs the following children:
i. Jeremiah1, Sr., born say 1715.
ii. Tamerson, married Thomas Bass.
iii. Susannah, married Lazarus Summerlin, a taxable "free molattor" in Jonathan Standley's 1764 Bertie tax list [CR 10.702.1].
iv. Rachel, married Joseph Collins.
v. Nancy, married Isaac Bass.
vi. Embrey, born say 1730/35.
| Bunch, Henry (I6525)
|
1569 |
Paul Heinegg..http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Brooks_Byrd.htm
John1 Bunch, born say 1632, was granted a non-suit in York County court on 17 November 1658 [Deeds, Orders, Wills, 1657-1662, 41]. He received a patent for 450 acres on both sides of Rickahock path adjoining Richard Barnhouse's land in New Kent County on 18 March 1662 [Patents 5:152]. The DNA of his descendants is the E1b1a8a haplotype which indicates they descend from a West African man, so he was probably the son of a white woman by a slave. One theory is that he was the child of John Punch, a "negro" who ran away with two white servants in 1640 [McIlwaine, Minutes of the Council, 1622-1632, 466-7]. The DNA testing also indicates that his mixed-race descendants in Virginia and the Carolinas were related [Anastasia Harman, Ancestry.com Lead Family Historian, Natalie D. Cottrill, Paul C. Reed and Joseph Shumway, Obama Bunch Descendancy,
He was apparently the ancestor of
i. Paul1, born say 1658.
ii. John2. born say 1660.
iii. Henry1, born say 1690.
| Bunch, John I (I10774)
|
1570 |
Paul Heinegg..http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Brooks_Byrd.htm
Paul1 Bunch, born say 1658, bought 150 acres in King William County near Sweet Hall Road from John Claiborne on 29 July 1695. He purchased a "Mulatto Servant Man" named John Russell from John West, Gentleman, of St. John's Parish, King William County, on 27 January 1700/1 and on the same day assigned his rights to Russell unto Eliza Bunch. He witnessed (making his mark "P") the St. John's Parish, King William County deed of John Claiborne on 20 May 1704. A "Mullatto" boy named Thomas Russell was valued at 5 pounds in the 17 January 1706/7 inventory of the estate of William Claiborne, Gentleman [Record Book 1, 1702-7, 129-30, 172-5, 402; Book 2, 1702-6, 109]. Paul Bunch was taxed on 150 acres in the King William County, Virginia Quit Rent Roll in 1704 [des Cognets, English Duplicates of Lost Virginia Records, 157]. On 11 July 1719 he was living in the part of New Kent County that later became Hanover County when Gilbert Gibson patented land adjoining his [Patents 10:437]. He received a patent for 400 acres on both sides of Black Haw Swamp in Hanover County on 9 July 1724 [Patents 12:28-9]. He patented 265 acres in North Carolina on the south side of the Roanoke River adjoining Quankey Pocosin and Gideon Gibson on 1 January 1725/6, and he bought a further 300 acres adjoining this land from Thomas Wilkins [Halifax County DB 8:283].
He made a Chowan County will (making his mark) on 16 November 1726 which was probated on 10 March 1726/7. He left his son John Bunch the land that they were both then living on as well as slave Dick; left Fortune Holdbee, apparently his common-law wife, his land (adjoining John Bunch) and slave Frank during her lifetime as long as she remained single, to descend to her daughters Keziah and Jemima after her death or marriage. And he gave "Eliza Bunch one Shilling Sterling and my Daughter Russell I give one Shilling Sterling" (apparently identical to his daughter Elizabeth Russell). He left Keziah Holdbee a "Mullatto" slave named Peg in the care of her mother until she reached age eighteen and left slave Betty to Jemima Holdbee in the care of her mother until she reached age eighteen. He gave Joseph Meacham the land on the Roanoke River (in Halifax County, North Carolina) he had purchased from Thomas Wilkins as well as slaves named Moll, Fortune and Rose. He gave 100 acres and two cows and calves to Thomas Holdbee. He divided his household goods, livestock and slave Daw between Joseph Meacham and Fortune Holdbee and appointed Fortune and Meacham as his executors [Secretary of State Record of Wills, 1722-1735, SS 876, 3:138-9]. (A Joseph and a Paul Micham were heads of "other free" Halifax County, North Carolina households. She the Micham/ Mitcham family history). Fortune Holdebee sold her land, the "plantation where I now live...formerly Paul Bunches," on 5 July 1727 [Bertie DB B:276] and received a patent for 640 acres in New Hanover County in August 1735 [Saunders, Colonial Records of North Carolina, III:52].
The May 1734 Bertie court minutes referred to Keziah as "an orphan Child Entitled to a considerable Estate...(by the will of Paul Bunch) bound to Capt. Thos. Bryant till the age of Thirty one contrary to law," and the August 1735 Bertie County court minutes referred to the estate of "a Mulatto woman, Keziah Holdebee, and three children [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, I:135, 154]. Paul1 Bunch had the following children:
i. John4, born say 1692.
ii. Elizabeth Russell, a daughter, received 1 shilling by her father's will.
iii. ?Joseph Meacham.
iv. ?Keziah Holdebee.
v. ?Jemima Holdebee.
| Bunch, Paul (I10776)
|
1571 |
Paul was the 34th heart transplant patient in the world. | Russell, Paul Everett (I7137)
|
1572 |
Pennsylvania (State). Death certificates, 1906–1963. Series 11.90 (1,905 cartons). Records of the Pennsylvania Department of Health, Record Group 11. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. | Source (S430)
|
1573 |
Philip Pettiford was head of an Oxford District household of 5 male and 3 female
"Blacks" and one white male in 1786 for the state census. He had moved to
Cumberland County by 1790 where he was head of a household of 9 "other free"
[NC:40]. On 5 September 1820 in Granville County Court he applied for a
Revolutionary War pension [NCGSJ XV:162]. His final pension payment papers
recorded his death on 13 April 1825 [National Archives]. | Pettiford, Philip (I7524)
|
1574 |
Plot: Row 19, | Derixson, Jasper Eliza (I4726)
|
1575 |
Plot: Row 19, | Bowman, Laura M (I4728)
|
1576 |
Plot: Sec 6 R 27 Gr 14 | Hammonds, Mildred Irene (I501)
|
1577 |
Plot: Sec 6S R 14 Gr 19 | Russell, Arley Otto Sr. (I566)
|
1578 |
Plot: Sec 6S R 27 Gr 15 | Russell, Arley Jr. (I500)
|
1579 |
Plot: Sec 7, Lot 59, Gr 3 | Bullard, William A. (I3363)
|
1580 |
Plot: Sec 7, Lot 59, Gr 4 | Mitchell, Helen (I497)
|
1581 |
Plot: Section 7, Lot 59, Grave 2 | Bullard, William C. (I496)
|
1582 |
Possible Mother ??? | Dupree, Melissa (I5841)
|
1583 |
possibly 1859 | Walden, Wiley W (I3289)
|
1584 |
PostalCode: 14514; Age: 95 | Ruch, Una May (I10692)
|
1585 |
PostalCode: 27610; Age: 84 | Morgan, Wendell (I10380)
|
1586 |
PostalCode: 46260; Age: 45 | Meriweather, Anthony B. (I10700)
|
1587 |
PostalCode: 46618; Age: 72 | Thomas, Jessie Lena (I9841)
|
1588 |
PostalCode: 46902; Age: 89 | Miller, Cora Mae (I10494)
|
1589 |
PostalCode: 48137; Age: 77 | Russell, Clarence Coolidge (I10647)
|
1590 |
PostalCode: 48226; Age: 77 | Stewart, Richard Leroy (I245)
|
1591 |
PostalCode: 60445; Age: 77 | Meadows, Dean (I10820)
|
1592 |
PostalCode: 73501; Age: 50 | Timbo, Marcus Haynes (I9007)
|
1593 |
PostalCode: 79912; Age: 69 | Gilbert, Cornelius C. (I10205)
|
1594 |
PostalCode: 98118; Age: 61 | Bailey, Deborah Marie Stewart (I10503)
|
1595 |
Private donor. | Source (S232)
|
1596 |
probably died in civil war | Powell, Aaron (I4323)
|
1597 |
Prudence Bass (Edward3, Edward1, John1), born say 1768, posted her own Granville County bastardy bond in April 1791, and in January 1794 Edward Bass and Jacob Anderson paid the bond for a child she had by Jesse Day [Camin, N.C. Bastardy Bonds, 87]. She bound her children Jethro and Cullen to her brother Jason in 1801 [Bell, Bass Families of the South, 159]. Her children were
i. Jethro4, born April 1787, married Polly Mitchell, 3 April 1809 Granville County bond, Henry Anderson bondsman. Jethro and Polly were living in household #874 of Harrison Township, Vigo County, Indiana in 1850.
ii. Cullen, born May 1795.
| Bass, Prudence (I766)
|
1598 |
Rebecca1 Stewart, born say 1717, sued Charles Hix in Brunswick County, Virginia court in September 1738 for her freedom and a certificate for the same, but the court dismissed the case in February 1738/9 when she failed to appear. Hix was ordered to pay Douglas Irby as an evidence for one day and for coming and going fifty miles [Orders 1732-41, 203, 223]. She was living in Surry County, Virginia, on 17 July 1750 when the court ordered the churchwardens of Albemarle Parish to bind out her children: Moggy, Tom, Jack, Nan, Peter, and James [Orders 1749-51, 110]. Joseph Walker sued her in Brunswick County court on 22 June 1756. The jury found her not guilty on 23 February 1757 and ordered Walker to pay costs. She sued Daniel Clarke and Sylvanus Stanton for trespass, but both suits were dismissed by agreement of the parties on 28 February 1759. And her suit against William Evans was dismissed on 28 May 1760 by agreement of the parties [Orders 1756-7, 65, 128, 201-2; 1757-9, 300; 1760-84, 65]. She purchased 50 acres in Brunswick County on the south side of the Meherrin River and the north side of the Great Road from John Parham for 25 pounds on 26 September 1763, and she purchased 70 acres on Fox Branch from Kirby Moody on 16 April 1764 and sold this 70 acres to Moody on 6 June 1766. She purchased 200 acres near the Rocky Run in Meherrin Parish, Brunswick County, on 23 September 1776. Her land adjoined Drury Going and the Pompey family according to Going's deed of sale for land on the south side of the Meherrin River in Brunswick County on 10 October 1787 [DB 4:215; 7:384; 8:311; 12:84-5; 14:366]. She was called the executrix of Peter Moggy on 23 January 1783 when the Greensville County court dismissed a suit against her for debt brought by Batt Peterson, assignee of Ephraim Peebles, because she was not residing in the county [Orders 1781-9, 56]. She was called administratrix of the estate of Peter Moggy, deceased, on 27 March 1787 when Peterson sued her in Brunswick County court [Orders 1784-8, 463]. She was probably the unnamed mother of Thomas Stewart who provided for her maintenance by his 24 February 1791 Greensville County will [WB 1:181-3]. Rebecca was the mother of
i. Moggy, born say 1740.
ii. Thomas, born say 1743.
iii. John/ Jack, born say 1745.
iv. Ann, born say 1746, perhaps the Nanny Pompey who, with husband Littleberry Pompey and (brother?) James Stewart, sold 135 acres adjoining Steward's Branch in Meherrin Parish, Brunswick County, on 26 January 1778 [DB 13:45].
Peter, born say 1748.
vi. James, born say 1750.
vii. Barnett, born say 1760.
viii.William, born say 1761.
| Stewart, Rebecca (I1686)
|
1599 |
Redford Cemetery, sec 3 of Wade Twp | Derrickson, William Jefferson (I4695)
|
1600 |
Regional Hospital-Bell & Braken Funeral Home | Poston, Gonzella Sr. (I3478)
|
1601 |
Register of Deeds. North Carolina Birth Indexes. Raleigh, North Carolina: North Carolina State Archives. Microfilm. | Source (S182)
|
1602 |
Register of Enlistments in the U.S. Army, 1798-1914; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M233, 81 rolls); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917, Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S356)
|
1603 |
Register, Alvaretta K. State Census of North Carolina, 1784-1787. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2001. | Source (S412)
|
1604 |
Restlawn Cemetery | Gardner, Jack O. (I5621)
|
1605 |
Restlawn Cemetery | Stinson, Evelyn V (I5630)
|
1606 |
Revels/Cheyenne Cem. | Jacobs, Mourning (I8514)
|
1607 |
Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files (NARA microfilm publication M804, 2,670 rolls). Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S234)
|
1608 |
Richard3, born about 1774, taxable in the Mecklenburg County household of Isaac Evans in 1790, perhaps the D. Evans who was taxable in the household of Thomas Evans in 1792 [PPTL, 1782-1805, frames 343, 442, 684]. He married Lucy Evans, 17 December 1793 Warren County bond, Randolph Rowe bondsman. He was head of a Chatham County household of 6 "other free" in 1800, 8 in 1810 [NC:201], 12 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:211] and a "Mulatto" farmer worth $480 in Chatham County in 1850 with "Mulatto" Lucy Evans who was aged seventy-three [NC:474b]. He purchased land in Chatham County by deeds proved in November 1818 and February 1820 [DB V:307, X:137]. His 21 June 1855 Chatham County will lent his land to his wife Lucy and named his children: Fildon (Fielding), Granderson, Ancel, Lucy Byrd, and John Evans [WB C:409].
| Evans, Richard (I3336)
|
1609 |
Richard3, born say 1802, purchased 100 acres in Chatham County on Bush Creek from his father for $400 on 8 February 1825 [DB AB:221]. The Thursday session of the August 1821 Chatham County court ordered him to support his child by Elleky Evans [Minutes 1805-10]. He married ___ Bird, 14 December 1827 Chatham County bond, John Archy bondsman. His wife was probably the daughter of Josiah Bird, head of a Chatham County household of 8 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:211]. He sold land by deed proved in Chatham County on Wednesday, May term, 1837 [Minutes 1833-41]. Richard may have been the Richard Roberts who was head of a Ripley Township, Rush County, Indiana household of 5 "free colored" in 1840.
| Roberts, Richard (I1735)
|
1610 |
Richardson Cemetery | Richardson, Margaret (I8599)
|
1611 |
ROBERDS/ROBERTS In what may have been the first act of violence by a
Lumbee Indian in current Robeson County, James Roberts shot James
McCullam five times 29 Jan. 1754, in S1. Martin's Parish, Bladen County.
The murder came to court I Feb. 1754 (Secretary of State, Committee of
Claims, Coroner's Inquests, 1738-1775, SS 316, N.C. Archives). Reuben
Roberts of Bladen sold two tracts of 310 acres north and northeast of
Drowning Creek to Thomas Owen 6 July 1773 (Deed Book B, 29-30). He
lived near Soloman James and Richard Smith. Ishmael Roberts, probably
Lumbee, was living on Saddletree Swamp near Jacob Blount, Phillip Blount,
Robert Willis, John Baggett and Thomas Ivey before 12 July 1788 (Deed
Book A, 282-283). He bought 185 additional acres from Lewis Jenkins 15
Oct. 1790 east of Saddletree Swamp (B, 166-168). He appears on Saddletree
Swamp in the 1790 census. Ishmael patented 100 acres east of Raft Swamp
adjacent to fellow Lumbee Thomas Jackson, Lewis and Edward Jenkins 26
Nov. 1789 (B, 314, H, 109-110). Two Roberts families, Sampson and
Etheldred, age 55-100, and both Mulatoe were in the 1830 census of
Robeson. Several families named Roberts, all listed as mulatto, appear near
each other in the 1850 census close to the Lumbee families of Hammonds,
Revels, Briant, Jacobs and Chavis. All six families were listed as mulatoe.
Roberts was listed as an Indian name in Lumberton e township in the 1870
census of Robeson. The name was self-identified as Indian in the 1900
Census of Robeson. One family was listed in the 1900 Indian Census
Schedule in Robeson County. Lucy Roberts Harris, daughter of White Troy
Roberts Jr. of Lumberton, came from an affluent family. Her brother, Larry
Roberts, was a longtime police chief in Pembroke. Roberts was listed as
Indian in the 1930 census of Pembroke Township. Death records show the
Indian name of Roberts in 1916 in Lumberton and Pembroke townships.
They were related to the Oxendine and Smith families. See Native Visions,
Lumberton, N.C., August, 2005, for Lumberton family of Roberts. Cited at
Deep Branch Cemetery and New Bethel Methodist Church cemetery,
Fairmont, by Jane Blanks Barnhill, Sacred Grounds, 2007, a listing of 162
Lumbee cemeteries of Robeson County.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ishmael1 Roberts, born say 1755, was head of a Robeson County household of 10 "other free" in 1790 [NC:50], 15 in 1800 [NC:415], and 14 in Chatham County in 1810 [NC:195]. He received pay for Revolutionary War service from 3 June 1777 to 3 June 1778 as a private in Colonel Abraham Shepherd's Company. Colonel Shepherd gave him a certificate which stated that he was furloughed at Head Quarters Valley Forge to come home with me who was Inlisted in my Regement for the Term of three years - and Returned Home with me [NCGSJ XV:105]. He entered 100 acres in Robeson County on the north side of Saddle Tree Swamp on 5 September 1787, 100 acres on the north side of Five Mile Branch and 100 acres on the east side of Raft Swamp on 14 February 1788, and 100 acres on the west side of Five Mile Branch on 22 January 1793 [Pruitt, Land Entries: Robeson County, I:7, 13, 70]. He sold land by deed proved in Robeson County on 5 January 1801 and purchased land by deed proved in Robeson County on 6 July 1803 [Minutes I:130, 256]. On 18 February 1804 he purchased two tracts of land in Chatham County, one of 250 acres on Bear and Bush Creeks for $450, a second of 100 acres on the waters of the Cape Fear River for $150, and he purchased a further 57 acres on Bush Creek for 75 pounds on 9 January 1805 [DB N:456, 437; M:641]. The sheriff sold 260 acres of this land on 12 February 1808 for a debt of about 16 pounds [DB P:118]. However, Ishmael repurchased this same 260 acre tract for about 17 pounds on 14 August 1811. And he purchased 102 acres on Little Lick Creek on 10 April 1818 [DB S:26; V:131]. On 8 and 12 February 1825 he sold (signing) most of his land to his sons: Richard, James, and Aaron [DB AB:166, 221; AA:275]. By his 12 July 1826 Chatham County will, he left his land on the west side of Bush Creek to his wife Silvey and then to his grandson Ishmael, oldest son of Zachariah. He also left one dollar to a list of persons, no relationship stated (who were identified as his children in his May 1829 Estate Papers), and he willed that his land where John Archie (Archer, his son-in-law) was living was to be sold and divided among his wife and a second list of persons (which included members of the first list), no relationship stated, and left $20 for the schooling of his grandson Thomas Roberts [CR 022.801.16]. When the will was offered for probate in the Tuesday, May 1827 session of the Chatham County court, the jury ruled that it was his will as regards his personal property but not as regards his real estate [Minutes 1822-27, n.p.]. A committee was appointed to settle the problem, and their report was recorded in the Monday, May 1828 session [Minutes 1828-33]. His estate papers listed seventeen persons and called them his children, but at least two of them, Ishmael and Elias, were probably his grandchildren [North Carolina Archives Estate Papers, Chatham County].
| Roberts, Ishmael (I1723)
|
1612 |
Robert Fitzroy, 1st Earl of Gloucester (before 1100 - 31 October 1147[1]) (alias Robert Rufus, Robert de Caen, Robert Consul[2][3]) was an illegitimate son of King Henry I of England. He was the half-brother of the Empress Matilda, and her chief military supporter during the civil war known as The Anarchy, in which she vied with Stephen of Blois for the throne of England.
Robert was probably the eldest of Henry's many illegitimate children.[1] He was born before his father's accession to the English throne, either during the reign of his grandfather William the Conqueror or his uncle William Rufus.[4] He is sometimes and erroneously designated as a son of Nest, daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr, last king of Deheubarth, although his mother has been identified as a member of "the Gay or Gayt family of north Oxfordshire",[5] possibly a daughter of Rainald Gay (fl. 1086) of Hampton Gay and Northbrook Gay in Oxfordshire. Rainald had known issue Robert Gaay of Hampton (died c. 1138) and Stephen Gay of Northbrook (died after 1154). A number of Oxfordshire women feature as the mothers of Robert's siblings.[5][6]
He may have been a native of Caen[1][7] or he may have been only Constable and Governor of that city, jure uxoris.[2]
His father had contracted him in marriage to Mabel FitzHamon, daughter and heir of Robert Fitzhamon, but the marriage was not solemnized until June 1119 at Lisieux.[1][8] His wife brought him the substantial honours of Gloucester in England and Glamorgan in Wales, and the honours of Sainte-Scholasse-sur-Sarthe and Évrecy in Normandy, as well as Creully. After the White Ship disaster late in 1120, and probably because of this marriage,[9] in 1121 or 1122 his father created him Earl of Gloucester.[10] | De Caen, Robert Gloucester (I5809)
|
1613 |
Roberts Cemetery | Roberts, Benjamin F. (I1744)
|
1614 |
Roberts Cemetery | Overman, Julia A. (I1853)
|
1615 |
Roberts Cemetery | Anderson, Sarah J. (I3489)
|
1616 |
Roberts cemetery Found in find a grave | Goins, Margaret (I3606)
|
1617 |
Rock Island National Cemetery | Harrington, Arabella (I9634)
|
1618 |
Rockville Cemetery | Norton, Cordelia (I1413)
|
1619 |
Rose Hill Memorial Gardens | Underwood, Robert (Bob) (I2379)
|
1620 |
Roseboro Twp. | Draughon, Sarah Eliza (I8264)
|
1621 |
Row 1 Grave 18 | Isabell, 'Little' Clyde (I9453)
|
1622 |
RUSSEL(L) The name Russell, apparently Lumbee, appears on Bladen tax
lists of 1761, 1768, and 1769. Wm. Russell patented 130 acres east of
Saddletree Swamp 20 Oct. 176l. Thomas Russell lived on five Mile Branch
of Saddleltree Swamp in 1773 (Bladen County Deeds, 1738-1779, 419-420).
Thomas Russle and Thomas Ivy sold land they jointly patented on
Saddletree Swamp to Phillip Blount 27 Sept. 1787 (Deed Book A, 147-149).
Thomas Russell lived near Thomas Butcher adjacent to a grant made to
Augustin Willis 26 Nov. 1789 on Wilson's Great Branch (Deed Book B,
102). There were several land dealings with other Lumbees such as the sale
of 100 acres by Major Russell to Edmond Revel 12 June 1790 for land east
of Drounding creek and northeast of Jacob Swamp (Deed Book B, 185-186)
adjacent to a 200 acre tract patented by Thomas Russell. There was a Joseph
Russell who witnessed a deed in Robeson 13 Nov. 1792 (Deed Book C, 303-
304). The names James, Sampson, Thomas and William Russell appeared on
Robeson deed records up to 1800 and later. The surname does not appear in
the 1850 census of Robeson.
| Russell, James (I997)
|
1623 |
Sac and Fox Indian Territory | McKinney, Mary Maude (I3447)
|
1624 |
Saint Luke's Hospital, Age: 87 | Nottage, Talbot Burton (I6187)
|
1625 |
Sampson/ Samuel2 Bass (Edward1, John1), born say 1724, sold the 50 acres he inherited from his father to his brother Benjamin on 22 May 1758 [Northampton DB 2:460]. He was taxable in Granville County in Nathaniel Harris's list in 1758 and in John Pope's list for Bare Swamp District in 1762, called Sampson Bass. This part of Granville County became Bute County in 1764 and Sampson bought 100 acres in Bute County on the south side of Cedar Creek on Beaverdam Branch from William Bass on 26 January 1771 [Warren County DB 3:224]. He was a resident of Brunswick County, Virginia, on 2 April 1765 when he gave 270 acres in Northampton County near the Virginia border to his son Burwell Bass of Northampton County [DB 4:463]. He was taxed on 2,062 pounds property and 12 slaves in Northampton County in 1780 [LP 46.1]. He was called Samuel, Sr., when he bought 200 acres near the Virginia border on 4 June 1784 [DB 7:276]. His 13 August 1787 Northampton County will was proved in December 1790 [WB 1:408]. He left land and six slaves to his wife Sarah and children, most of whom were considered white. They were
i. Ann2.
ii. Herod.
iii. Susanna Snipes.
iv. Matthew.
v. Samuel3, who received a slave by a Halifax County deed of gift from his father on 14 June 1790, "1 negro man Nat, now in possession of my grandson Burgess Bass which sd negro I lent my son Burrell Bass some years ago" [DB 17:213]. He was head of a Halifax County household of 7 "other free" and a slave in 1810 [NC:4].
vi. Burwell.
vii. Lucy Peebles.
viii. Phebe Jordan. | Bass, Sampson (I6620)
|
1626 |
Sand Hill Cemetery | Hardiman, Alexander (I5731)
|
1627 |
Sand Hill Cemetery | Hardiman, Aaron Leon (I8286)
|
1628 |
Sand Hill Cemetery, | Lyles, Eliza J. (I1323)
|
1629 |
Sanhill Memorial Park Cemetery | Stewart, Richard Leroy (I486)
|
1630 |
Sanhill Memorial Park Cemetery | Brown, Della Inarae (I8370)
|
1631 |
Sanitarium | Derrickson, Ruth M (I4706)
|
1632 |
Sarah's death certificate states father is Cornelius Miller born in Toronto Canada | Miller, Cornelius (I5088)
|
1633 |
Sarah2 Anderson, born say 1704, wife of Lewis Anderson, received 100 acres in Northampton County by her father's will. She and her husband Lewis sold this land on 10 November 1757 [DB 2:233].
| Bass, Sarah (I763)
|
1634 |
Saron Church Cemetery | Morgan, Neal (I7470)
|
1635 |
Sec 6 Lot 241 Gr 1 | Golf, Stephen A. Jr. (I10306)
|
1636 |
Sec 6 Lot 241 Gr 5 | Golf, Stephen (I10304)
|
1637 |
Sec 6 Lot 241 Gr 6 | Harrod, Opal Virginia (I10301)
|
1638 |
Second Census of the United States, 1800. NARA microfilm publication M32 (52 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. <p> Second Census of the United States, 1800: Population Schedules, Washington County, Territory Northwest of the River Ohio; and Population Census, 1803: Washington County, Ohio. NARA microfilm publication M1804 (1 roll).</p> | Source (S301)
|
1639 |
Section 6 Ext, Lot 53, Grave 5 | Bradley, Bobby Ray Sr (I10300)
|
1640 |
Section 6, Lot 241, Grave 2 | Golf, Marcia Elaine (I10305)
|
1641 |
See newspaper information provided with each entry. | Source (S326)
|
1642 |
See newspaper information provided with each entry. | Source (S445)
|
1643 |
See newspaper information provided with each entry. | Source (S446)
|
1644 |
See source information provided with each entry. | Source (S411)
|
1645 |
SelfDeathAge: 103 | Redmon, Nellie Leona (I577)
|
1646 |
SelfDeathAge: 71 | Thomas, Eileen (I5222)
|
1647 |
SelfDeathAge: 78 | Whitfield, Viola (I1169)
|
1648 |
SelfDeathAge: 78 | Jasper, Wiley Franklin (I1378)
|
1649 |
SelfDeathAge: 85 | Beacham, Richard D (I7549)
|
1650 |
SelfDeathAge: 87 | Barbour, Jean B. (I4666)
|
1651 |
Services & Burial in Terre Haute, Vigo, Indiana | Poston, Gonzella Jr. (I495)
|
1652 |
Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S153)
|
1653 |
Shadrack, born say 1780, head of a Sampson County household of 8 "white" persons in 1810 [NC:476] and 11 "free colored" in 1820 [NC:298]. | Manuel, Shadrach (I1109)
|
1654 |
Shepard Cemetery | Roberts, Benjamin (I3911)
|
1655 |
Shepard Cemetery | Mathes, Adolph D (I4891)
|
1656 |
Sherrill, William Lander,. Annals of Lincoln County, North Carolina : containing interesting and authentic facts of Lincoln County history through the years 1749 to 1937. Charlotte, N.C.: Observer Print. House, 1937. | Source (S433)
|
1657 |
Shot and killed by father-in-law, George Hucle, Terre Haute Indiana | Mitchell, Fredrick D. G. (I8046)
|
1658 |
Sixth Census of the United States, 1840. (NARA microfilm publication M704, 580 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S211)
|
1659 |
Social Security Administration, Social Security Death Index, Master File, : Social Security Administration | Source (S16)
|
1660 |
Social Security Administration, Social Security Death Index, Master File, : Social Security Administration | Source (S71)
|
1661 |
Social Security Administration. <i>Social Security Death Index, Master File</i>. Social Security Administration. | Source (S317)
|
1662 |
Social Security Administration. Social Security Death Index, Master File. Social Security Administration. | Source (S156)
|
1663 |
Social Security Applications and Claims, 1936-2007. | Source (S256)
|
1664 |
Son of Milford / 2m 22d | Norton, Birdie (I5947)
|
1665 |
Son of white plantation owner and slave. The female slave was most likely Native American, based upon DNA testing results.
He was told to hide the horses from Union Army by his father (master), where he kept one and escaped slavery and immigrated to Indiana, and changed his name to Ross. | Ross, Byron (I1566)
|
1666 |
SOURCE: Paul Heinegg http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Roberts_Sawyer.htm
3. George Russell, born about 1752, was about sixty eight when he appeared in Smith County, Tennessee, on 15 August 1820 to apply for a pension for his services in the Revolution. He served in the 15th Virginia Regiment for a year and nine months. He had a wife of about 45 years of age and a boy of about five years of age in his household. He was a "colored man" who was born in Brunswick County, Virginia and returned there after in Spring 1779 [NARA, S.39059, M804]. He was head of a Wake County household of 11 "other free" in 1790 [NC:103] and 4 in 1800 [NC:791]. He sold 75 acres, and James Russell sold an adjoining tract of 60 acres in Wake County about 1800 [DB Q:415]. Perhaps George's children were
i. James2, head of a Wake County household of 3 "other free" in 1790 [NC:103], 9 in 1800, and 7 "free colored" in Richmond County in 1820 [NC:200].
ii. Matthew, head of a Montgomery County household of 3 "other free" in 1790 [NC:166].
****** 1790 Coastal Carolina Indian Cross-Reference Database ******
Russell(Mattamuskeet*)This is a surname belonging to one of the chief men, Joseph Russell, of the Mattamuskeet reservation. (See Appendix 14 of the Mattamuskeet Documents.)* It should be noted that the Mattamuskeet reservation housed Indians from the small Algonquian villages along the coast, as well as Tuscarora. The southern Tuscarora, led by Hancock, were assisted by virtually all of the smaller tribes in coastal plain, including present day Craven, Beaufort, Hyde, Pamlico and Currituck Counties. The reservation at Indian Woods in Bertie County was set up for the northern Tuscarora, led by Tom Blount, who had been “friendly” to the English. The Mattamuskeet reservation was not established until close to a decade later for the southern Indians who had continued to fight colonial expansion, even after the fall of Fort Neoheroka. | Russell, George (I1278)
|
1667 |
South Carolina County Marriages. South Carolina Department of Archives and History, Columbia, South Carolina. | Source (S404)
|
1668 |
Spanish Flu | Timbo, Anna (I9835)
|
1669 |
Special Schedules of the Eleventh Census (1890) Enumerating Union Veterans and Widows of Union Veterans of the Civil War; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M123, 118 rolls); Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15; National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S75)
|
1670 |
Special Schedules of the Eleventh Census (1890) Enumerating Union Veterans and Widows of Union Veterans of the Civil War; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M123, 118 rolls); Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15; National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S364)
|
1671 |
Spring Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum | Hutcherson, Leonard T. (I9092)
|
1672 |
Spring Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum | Bell, Leola (I9093)
|
1673 |
Spring Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum | Hutcherson, June Elizabeth (I9094)
|
1674 |
Spring Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum | Hutcherson, Jennifer C. (I9095)
|
1675 |
Springville Christian Cemetery | Dobbins, Susannah (I9291)
|
1676 |
St Alfege Churchyard | Lanier, Nicolas (I7984)
|
1677 |
St. Mary Cemetery, Precious Blood Gardens | Batton, Delores (I225)
|
1678 |
State of California, California Death Index, 1940-1997, Sacramento, CA, USA: State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics | Source (S23)
|
1679 |
State of California, California Death Index, 1940-1997, Sacramento, CA, USA: State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics | Source (S89)
|
1680 |
State of California. <i>California Birth Index, 1905-1995</i>. Sacramento, CA, USA: State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics. | Source (S217)
|
1681 |
State of California. <I>California Divorce Index, 1966-1984.</I> Microfiche. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. | Source (S309)
|
1682 |
State of California. <I>California Marriage Index, 1960-1985.</I> Microfiche. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. | Source (S229)
|
1683 |
State of California. California Death Index, 1940-1997. Sacramento, CA, USA: State of California Department of Health Services, Center for Health Statistics. | Source (S176)
|
1684 |
State of Florida. <i>Florida Death Index, 1877-1998</i>. Florida: Florida Department of Health, Office of Vital Records, 1998. | Source (S221)
|
1685 |
State of North Carolina, An Index to Marriage Bonds Filed in the North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, NC, USA: North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977 | Source (S20)
|
1686 |
State of North Carolina, An Index to Marriage Bonds Filed in the North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, NC, USA: North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977 | Source (S113)
|
1687 |
State of North Carolina. <i>An Index to Marriage Bonds Filed in the North Carolina State Archives</i>. Raleigh, NC, USA: North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977. | Source (S338)
|
1688 |
State of North Carolina. An Index to Marriage Bonds Filed in the North Carolina State Archives. Raleigh, NC, USA: North Carolina Division of Archives and History, 1977. | Source (S164)
|
1689 |
Steam roller from road work caught his pant leg. He went under the roller and died later that day from the wounds. | Shepherd, William Perry (I7440)
|
1690 |
Sterling Cemetery | Goss, Sarah Melissa (I7851)
|
1691 |
Stewart Cemetery | Stewart, Logan William (I7)
|
1692 |
Stewart Cemetery | Redmon, Jeanette Elizabeth (I4160)
|
1693 |
STEWART FAMILY
The birth dates of this Stewart's children, coincide with the arrival of the Scottish slaves, shipped to the American colonies by the British, after the first Jacobite Rebellion.
The Stewart family probably originated near present-day Dinwiddie County since there were at least a dozen members of the family in that general area by 1730. No evidence has yet been located to indicate whether or not they were all related. There were several Stewart to Stewart marriages. William ("Sonkey") Stewart married Nancy, the daughter of Dr. Thomas Stewart of Dinwiddie County, about 1770, Doctor Stewart's brother James married Priscilla Stewart in Mecklenburg County in 1791, and a Thomas Stewart married the daughter of Peter Stewart before 1801 when he named her in his Chesterfield County will.
Dinwiddie was formed in 1752 from Prince George County which was formed in 1702 from Charles City County. All three are burned-record counties. However, the register of Bristol Parish from 1720-1789 contains records for Dinwiddie and Prince George counties, and the Prince George County court order books for the years 1710-1714 and 1737-1740 as well as wills and inventories for the years 1713-1728 have survived. These contain a number of references to mixed-race members of the Stewart family, but they also contain over thirty references to free, mixed-race people whose full names are not provided. One mixed-race child was called "a Moll. Boy named Wm" in 1725 when William Eaton petitioned the churchwardens of Bristol Parish to bind the child to him. He may have been identical to the "Mulatto Boy" William Stewart who was bound to Eaton by the churchwardens of Bristol Parish in 1739 [Chamberlayne, Bristol Parish Register, 24; Prince George County Orders 1737-40, 241]. | Stewart, Patriarch (I1690)
|
1694 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Bushnell, Mary (I89)
|
1695 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Ross, Clyde F. (I412)
|
1696 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Anderson, Marvel Dean (I430)
|
1697 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Stewart, Benjamin Harrison (I487)
|
1698 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Tyler, Joseph (I578)
|
1699 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Batton, Martha Ellen (I1001)
|
1700 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Stewart, Edward Eugene (I1124)
|
1701 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Stewart, Janelle Diane (I1125)
|
1702 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Tyler, Omey (I1265)
|
1703 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Tyler, Omey (I1265)
|
1704 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Norton, Austin Tazzwell (I1404)
|
1705 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Allen, Kaywood (I1448)
|
1706 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Ross, Gary Lee (I1561)
|
1707 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Ross, Bert Victor (I1572)
|
1708 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Ross, Marguerite (I1574)
|
1709 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Roberts, Ruth B. (I1752)
|
1710 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Roberts, Mary Mamye (I1753)
|
1711 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Anderson, Grace (I1906)
|
1712 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Pettiford, Jewell (I2066)
|
1713 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Redmon, Mamie Lucille (I4162)
|
1714 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Roberts, Seymore G. (I4441)
|
1715 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Roberts, Seymore G. (I4441)
|
1716 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery | Calimese, Robert L. (I4699)
|
1717 |
Stewart Lawn Cemetery (Terre Haute, Vigo, Indiana, USA) to James Otto Shepard. Cemetery Record Book. 2004.
Cemetery plot reservation and interment record book. | Source (S231)
|
1718 |
StreetAddress: P.O. Box 6342 5200 Fred Wilson Street Fort Bliss, TX 77906; Info: Section G Site 1437; Age: 63 | Derixson, John Walden (I483)
|
1719 |
Sunset Memorial Park | Timberlake, Viola (I6599)
|
1720 |
Tahoma Cemetery | Hathecock, Mabel (I1051)
|
1721 |
Tecumseh Cemetery | Canales, Cedro Jr. (I3441)
|
1722 |
Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002, Nashville, TN, USA: Tennessee State Library and Archives | Source (S83)
|
1723 |
Tennessee State Marriages, 1780-2002. Nashville, TN, USA: Tennessee State Library and Archives. Microfilm. | Source (S184)
|
1724 |
Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S12)
|
1725 |
Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S69)
|
1726 |
Terrace Heights Memorial Park | Roberts, Herman Willis 'Tecumseh' (I9881)
|
1727 |
Terre Haute, Vigo, Indiana, USA | Leavell, Hattie Belle (I167)
|
1728 |
Texas Birth Index, 1903-1997. Texas: Texas Department of State Health Services. Microfiche. | Source (S185)
|
1729 |
Texas Department of State Health Services. <i>Texas Divorce Index, 1968-2011</i>. Texas, USA: Texas Department of State Health Services. | Source (S213)
|
1730 |
The Anderson family was freed by the 29 October 1712 will of John Fulcher in Norfolk County, Virginia. He appointed Lewis Conner executor and granted his
Negroes men and women and Children there freedom...
And he left them 640 acres of land on Sewall's Point in Norfolk County [WB 9:223]. The freeing of these fifteen slaves prompted the Council on 5 March 1712/3 to recommend that the General Assembly provide by a law against such manumission of slaves, which may in time by their increase and correspondence with other slaves may endanger the peace of this Colony [McIlwaine, Executive Journals of the Council, III:332].
On 20 March 1712/3 the Andersons exchanged with Lewis Conner the 640 acres left to them by Fulcher's will with 300 acres of land by a deed of confirmation which identified them by name:
Robert Richards, Maria Richards, Kate Anderson, Hester Anderson, Betty Anderson, Lewis Anderson, Sarah Anderson...and our Children to witt -Peter Anderson, George Anderson, Dinah Anderson, Nedd Anderson, Rachell Anderson, Mingo: Anderson, Tony Anderson, and Susan Anderson Infants [Norfolk DB 9:240, 249].
In response to Conner's petition of that same day the Norfolk County court ordered him to transport "the negroes lately set free by the said Fulcher's will" out of the colony and ordered the sheriff to assist him.
On 11 August 1714 Robert Richards was called "a free Negro man" when the Norfolk County court ordered him to stand trial at the General Court in Williamsburg for receiving stolen cloth from John Chichester's slave. Kate Anderson, who was not charged, was found making a shirt for Richards from three yards of the material [Orders 1710-17, 90-2].
The Norfolk County grand jury issued a presentment against "the free Negroes," but the case was dismissed on 21 January 1714/5 without explanation [Orders 1711-7, 51, 103, 105].
Probably in an effort to "prevent their correspondence with other slaves" Fulcher's executor, Lewis Conner, by a deed dated 20 October 1715, swapped their land in Norfolk County with 640 acres of land on Welshes Creek in the part of Chowan County, North Carolina, which later became Martin and Washington Counties [Chowan DB B#1:109].
Although the deed of exchange for the land was acknowledged and recorded in Chowan County, North Carolina, in September 1715, it appears that the Andersons never took possession of the land. And there is no record of the Andersons ever selling the land in North Carolina. There was also a Norfolk County deed of 15 July 1715 from James, a free Negro of Princess Ann County, whereby he sold to Lewis Conner for 50 pounds "land lying and being between Tanner's Creek and Sowell's Point in Norfolk County being an equal part and all that share of land which was given the said James by his deceased master Mr. John Fulcher" [Norfolk County DB 9].
On 18 December 1715 Lewis Conner charged George, a slave of Margaret Willoughby, with attacking him when he met Kate Anderson and George on the "King's Road" [Orders 1710-7, 103, 105, 137].
On 20 May 1715 Lewis Conner sued the Anderson family to get the Chowan County deed admitted into the Norfolk County record and thus reclaim his bond as administrator of Fulcher's estate, but the Anderson family refused. The case was postponed, alternately at the request of plaintiff and defendants for two years, until 21 June 1717 when a Norfolk County jury found in favor of the Andersons that Conner had not fulfilled his obligations [Orders 1710-17, 118-9, 134, 137, 138, 141, 145, 150, 155, 158, 171, 191]. Lewis Conner appealed to the court at Williamsburg which ruled in his favor on 22 October 1717 [Orders 1710-17, 119, 191; The Williamsburg court ruling is referred to in Norfolk Orders 1734-36, 1, 10-11].
On 16 May 1718 the Richards and Anderson families brought suit against Lewis Conners for debt, but the case, "not being prosecuted," was dismissed, and on 20 June 1718 the court presented Robin Richards for "harboring negroes." A 19 August 1718 Norfolk County deed referred to land on the east side of the path that leaves the road to Sowell's Point to where Black Robin and the rest of the free Negroes now lives" [DB 10:2a, 42b].
On 20 December 1734 Edward/ Ned Anderson, one of the children freed by Fulcher's will, sued Lewis Conner's heirs over "Whether there be deed or no deed relating to the land in Bath County in Carolina." The court ruled against Edward, referring to the 22 October 1717 suit at Williamsburg [Orders 1734-36, 1, 10-11].
Kate Anderson, born say 1670, may have been the mother of Hester, Betty, Lewis, and Sarah Anderson, the other adults listed after her in the above mentioned Norfolk County deed [Norfolk DB 9:240] since the 17 March 1717/8 Norfolk County court case referred to the family as "Kate Anderson and all the free Negroes" [DB 1710-17, 191]. Her son Edward was called "son Born of the Body of Kate a Negro woman set free by the will of said Fulcher" on 20 December 1734 in Norfolk County court [Orders 1734-36, 10-11]. | Anderson, Kate (I5186)
|
1731 |
Third Census of the United States, 1810. (NARA microfilm publication M252, 71 rolls). Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S127)
|
1732 |
Third Census of the United States, 1810. (NARA microfilm publication M252, 71 rolls). Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S244)
|
1733 |
Thirteenth Census of the United States, 1910 (NARA microfilm publication T624, 1,178 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. For details on the contents of the film numbers, visit the following NARA web page: <a href="http://www.archives.gov/research/census/publications-microfilm-catalogs-census/1910/index.html">NARA</a>. | Source (S157)
|
1734 |
This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie. | Source (S373)
|
1735 |
Thomas Stewart was born about 1742 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia. He
enlisted in Captain Dawson's Company in Lunenburg County under General
Gibson and was at Valley Forge and Guilford Court House. He and his wife
Sarah were married by James Yancey of Granville County, North Carolina, in the
fall of the year 1791 [M805-772, frame 69]. He was head of a Person County
household of 7 "other free" in 1800 [NC:598] and 11 in 1810 [NC:632]. His 30
January 1818 Person County will, proved in May 1818, named his wife Sarah and
children [WB 8:77]. His wife Sarah was living in Person County on 4 March 1843
when she received a pension for his services [M805-772, frame 69]. | Stewart, Thomas (I2419)
|
1736 |
THOMAS, Patrick, barber, Rockville, was born at Vincennes, Indiana October 9, 1840. He was the eldest son of John and Margaret (WHITEMAN) Thomas. His mother was born at Natchez, Mississippi. In 1840 his parents moved over into Lawrence County, IL and are still living on the same place on which they originally located. Patrick worked on his father's farm until he became of age, and then began doing for himself, following farm work two years longer. In 1864-65 he was in Chicago attending the Jones school. In December1865, he came to Rockville, looking around for a location, and the next month bought property and took up his permanent residence here. At this time there was but one colored family in the place; they soon moved away, which makes Mr. Thomas the oldest colored resident in Rockville. From the first he devoted himself closely to his business, and during the two first years was not once away from Rockville. By industry and frugality he has accumulated some property; at the same time he has found it in his power, as well as in harmony with his inclination, to dispense his means liberally in private aid and public contribution. In 1865 he heard Frederick Douglas lecture in Chicago in the interest of the Ladies' Loyal League, and having for a number of years read his paper and been in correspondence with him, he at length became deeply interested in the settlement of some of his people here, and as early as 1872 began to encourage a colony of them in NC to emigrate to Rockville. In this same year the exodus began, the first arrival numbering 49 persons and since that time there has been a steady increase of their numbers, perhaps not fewer than 200 having been added in the last 15 months. These people find a ready demand for labor, and they are proving themselves to be an honest, frugal and industrious element of the population. They are developing great interest in their education and in the extension and support of their churches. There can be no question that a bright future awaits them, if they but persevere in the methods they have adopted. To these people Mr. Thomas has been the cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night. He has engaged in the work of inviting them here and of assisting them after they came, with a truly unselfish zeal. Mr. Thomas was the founder of the African ME Church of Rockville; he organized, also, their first Sabbath school, and was for two years its superintendent. He has been equally active in promoting the interests of the colored public school. It was by his own exertions that Frederick Douglass was secured to lecture in Rockville on one occasion to raise money to extend the school from four to six months. Mr. Thomas is a Good Templar and a Mason. He has belonged to the latter order since 1861 and holds his membership in Darn's Lodge at Terre Haute. He was married May 15, 1866 to Angeline BASS daughter Nelson Bass of Vigo Co. She was born November 19, 1844. Their three living children are: Anne B., born October 18, 1868; Margaret born April 4, 1875; Earnest born May 3, 1879.
| Thomas, Patrick (I2749)
|
1737 |
Tom Shepherd owned and operated, a grocery store, a barber shop in Burnett, Indiana, and a saloon in a settlement north of Terre Haute, known as Highland. Tom Shepherd, as well as many other Shepherds in the area, changed the spelling of their surname to Shepard, circa 1895.
Census data for years 1860 and 1870, show Thomas Franklin living in households with Catherine Finley. Catherine Finley's family were tenant farmers, living next to John Shepherd, in the 1850 and 1860 census. She is assumed to be his caretaker or guardian.
There is no DNA evidence that shows any relationship between Catherine Finley and Thomas F. Shepherd, through either the 23andme, AncestryDNA, or FamilyTreeDNA testing sites. | Shepard, Thomas Franklin (I5049)
|
1738 |
Town and City Clerks of Massachusetts. <i>Massachusetts Vital and Town Records</i>. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook). | Source (S248)
|
1739 |
Trailer Fire | Derixson, Loyed E (I4730)
|
1740 |
Transcription of text As transcribed by Hallie Strole John Derixson, a well known and highly respected young colored man, died Thursday night at the home of his parents in northern Wade [Township, Jasper County, Illinois] of pneumonia and was laid to re | Derrickson, John (I4711)
|
1741 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Moody, R.J. Jr. (I9534)
|
1742 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Moody, R.J. (I9535)
|
1743 |
Twin brother of Harry H. | Roberts, Harry K. (I1749)
|
1744 |
Twin brother of Louis | Ross, Lester (I3205)
|
1745 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Ellis, N.K. (I10225)
|
1746 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Burkins, C. (I9437)
|
1747 |
Twin of Macie West | West, Mayo (I4822)
|
1748 |
Twin of Mayo West | West, Macey Elizabeth (I4815)
|
1749 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Ellis, A.J. (I10226)
|
1750 |
Twin to Della | Derrickson, Stella P (I4704)
|
1751 |
Twin to Stella | Derrickson, Della Pecola (I4709)
|
1752 |
Underwood Cemetery | Manuel, Wyatt (I1071)
|
1753 |
Union Cemetery | Hill, Benjamin Franklin (I6533)
|
1754 |
Union Cemetery | Barnes, Marion Josephine (I7877)
|
1755 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930 | Source (S14)
|
1756 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930 | Source (S45)
|
1757 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1940 | Source (S25)
|
1758 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1940 | Source (S47)
|
1759 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900 | Source (S6)
|
1760 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census, Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900 | Source (S51)
|
1761 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census. <i>Seventh Census of the United States, 1850</i>. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1850. M432, 1,009 rolls. | Source (S303)
|
1762 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930. T626, 2,667 rolls. | Source (S160)
|
1763 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1940. T627, 4,643 rolls. | Source (S150)
|
1764 |
United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls. | Source (S149)
|
1765 |
United States, Selective Service System, World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration | Source (S87)
|
1766 |
United States, Selective Service System. Selective Service Registration Cards, World War II: Fourth Registration. Records of the Selective Service System, Record Group Number 147. National Archives and Records Administration. <a href='/search/dbextra.aspx?dbid=1002'>Full Source Citation</a>. | Source (S173)
|
1767 |
United States, Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. M1509, 4,582 rolls. Imaged from Family History Library microfilm. | Source (S188)
|
1768 |
United States. Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, Automated Records Project; Federal Land Patents, State Volumes, Springfield, Virginia: Bureau of Land Management, Eastern States, 2007 | Source (S34)
|
1769 |
United States. Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, Automated Records Project; Federal Land Patents, State Volumes, Springfield, Virginia: Bureau of Land Management, Eastern States, 2007 | Source (S109)
|
1770 |
United States. Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records. Automated Records Project; Federal Land Patents, State Volumes. http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/. Springfield, Virginia: Bureau of Land Management, Eastern States, 2007. | Source (S187)
|
1771 |
Valvular disease of the heart | Hardiman, Alexander (I5731)
|
1772 |
Various county death registers. Microfilm. Washington State Archives, Olympia, Washington. | Source (S388)
|
1773 |
Various Indiana county death records indexed by the Indiana Works Projects Administration. Indiana: circa 1938-1941. | Source (S343)
|
1774 |
Various public records. | Source (S272)
|
1775 |
Various publishers of County Land Ownership Atlases. Microfilmed by the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. | Source (S405)
|
1776 |
Various school yearbooks from across the United States. | Source (S212)
|
1777 |
Various school yearbooks from across the United States. | Source (S328)
|
1778 |
Very young | Calaway, Maggie Zella (I1050)
|
1779 |
Veterans Hospital, | Poston, Segar Stanley (I3480)
|
1780 |
Virginia Divorce Records, 1918–2014. Virginia Department of Health, Richmond, Virginia. | Source (S271)
|
1781 |
Virginia, Births, 1864–2014. Virginia Department of Health, Richmond, Virginia. | Source (S310)
|
1782 |
Virginia, Deaths, 1912–2014. Virginia Department of Health, Richmond, Virginia. | Source (S426)
|
1783 |
Virginia, Marriages, 1785-1940. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013. | Source (S193)
|
1784 |
Virginia, Marriages, 1936-2014. Virginia Department of Health, Richmond, Virginia. | Source (S246)
|
1785 |
Voter Registration Lists, Public Record Filings, Historical Residential Records, and Other Household Database Listings | Source (S26)
|
1786 |
Voter Registration Lists, Public Record Filings, Historical Residential Records, and Other Household Database Listings | Source (S76)
|
1787 |
Voter Registration Lists, Public Record Filings, Historical Residential Records, and Other Household Database Listings | Source (S112)
|
1788 |
Voter Registration Lists, Public Record Filings, Historical Residential Records, and Other Household Database Listings. | Source (S175)
|
1789 |
Voter Registration Lists, Public Record Filings, Historical Residential Records, and Other Household Database Listings. | Source (S196)
|
1790 |
Walden Cemetery | Walden, Richard (I1878)
|
1791 |
Waldrop Cemetery | Moran, Letitia Jane (I8990)
|
1792 |
Walla Walla Union-Bulletin (Newspaper) - January 4, 1966, Walla Walla, Washington - Tribal Chief Dies Here.
OBITUARY
Chief was his given name and he had served as elected chief of the Wenatchee Indian tribe since 1932. Chief Kiutus Tecumseh, of White Swan, who would have been 70 years old Jan. 7, died Monday at the Walla Walla VA Hospital. Tecumseh was born in Vigo County, Indiana, of a Wenatchee mother and a father, John Tecumseh, who was Cherokee and Shawnee. After becoming tribal chief, he was twice invited to the White House. Once by Mrs. Herbert Hoover, and by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Under the name of Henry Willis Roberts, Tecumseh enlisted in the U.S. Navy at Seattle May 3, 1918, and was discharged there in 1922. He was first admitted for a service connected heart disability to the Bremerton Naval Hospital in 1953 and first came to the local VA Hospital for treatment in 1956. He was admitted the last time on Dec. 6. A member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, the chief is survived by his widow, Marie, at White Swan, four daughters and two sons. | Roberts, Herman Willis 'Tecumseh' (I9881)
|
1793 |
War of 1812 Pension Applications, Washington D.C.: National Archives | Source (S98)
|
1794 |
was raised by his fathers parents Charles Roberts and Isabelle Anderson | Roberts, Seymore G. (I4441)
|
1795 |
Washington Memory Gardens | McAfee, George (I6846)
|
1796 |
Washington Park-North Cemetery | Anderson, Harold James (I389)
|
1797 |
Weaver Cemetery | Burden, Jane (I9823)
|
1798 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Gaidoo, N.E. (I8872)
|
1799 |
Whitby Plantation | Goode, Ursula (I2640)
|
1800 |
Wicomico Indian Tribe | Pinn, Rawley (I5878)
|
1801 |
Wiley, and son Milton, are shown to have amassed more than 1100 acres of land, in Otter Creek township, near the river, in the 1858 property map of Vigo County, Indiana. The map also shows that they operated a saw mill on their property, which was located on the old Erie Canal. | Walden, Wiley (I1954)
|
1802 |
William Basse sonne of Nath'll and Mary Basse was married to Sarah Batten
ye 20th day of September in ye yeare of our Lord 1641 A.D.
| Bass, William (I794)
|
1803 |
William I (Old Norman: Williame I; c. 1028[1] - 9 September 1087), usually known as William the Conqueror and sometimes William the Bastard,[2][a] was the first Norman King of England, reigning from 1066 until his death in 1087. The descendant of Viking raiders, he had been Duke of Normandy since 1035 under the style William II. After a long struggle to establish his power, by 1060 his hold on Normandy was secure, and he launched the Norman conquest of England in 1066. The rest of his life was marked by struggles to consolidate his hold over England and his continental lands and by difficulties with his eldest son. | William, King I (I6586)
|
1804 |
William II (Old Norman: Williame II; c. 1056 - 2 August 1100), the third son of William I of England, was King of England from 1087 until 1100, with powers over Normandy, and influence in Scotland. He was less successful in extending control into Wales. William is commonly known as William Rufus or William the Red, perhaps because of his red-faced appearance.[2]
He was a figure of complex temperament: capable of both bellicosity and flamboyance. He did not marry, nor did he produce any offspring, legitimate or otherwise. He died after being struck by an arrow while hunting, under circumstances that remain murky. Circumstantial evidence in the behaviour of those around him raise strong but unproven suspicions of murder. His younger brother Henry hurriedly succeeded him as king. | William, King II (I6588)
|
1805 |
William II was followed on the throne by his younger brother, Henry. He was crowned three days after his brother's death, against the possibility that his eldest brother Robert might claim the English throne.
After the decisive battle of Tinchebrai in 1106 in France, Henry completed his conquest of Normandy from Robert, who then (unusually even for that time) spent the last 28 years of his life as his brother's prisoner.
An energetic, decisive and occasionally cruel ruler, Henry centralised the administration of England and Normandy in the royal court, using 'viceroys' in Normandy and a group of advisers in England to act on his behalf when he was absent across the Channel.
Henry successfully sought to increase royal revenues, as shown by the official records of his exchequer (the Pipe Roll of 1130, the first exchequer account to survive). He established peaceful relations with Scotland, through his marriage to Mathilda of Scotland.
Henry's name 'Beauclerc' denoted his good education (as the youngest son, his parents possibly expected that he would become a bishop); Henry was probably the first Norman king to be fluent in English.
In 1120, his legitimate sons William and Richard drowned in the White Ship which sank in the English Channel. This posed a succession problem, as Henry never allowed any of his illegitimate children to expect succession to either England or Normandy.
Henry had a legitimate daughter Matilda (widow of Emperor Henry V, subsequently married to the Count of Anjou). However, it was his nephew Stephen (reigned 1135-54), son of William the Conqueror's daughter Adela, who succeeded Henry after his death, allegedly caused by eating too many lampreys (fish) in 1135, as the barons mostly opposed the idea of a female ruler. | Henry, King I (I5811)
|
1806 |
William Pettiford was listed in the 1778 Militia Returns for Granville County in
Captain William Gill's Company as a seventeen-year-old "black man" [The North
Carolinian VI:726 (Mil. TR 4-40)]. | Pettiford, William (I7512)
|
1807 |
William1 Stewart, born say 1723, was called the "Moll. boy named William who formerly lived with William Standback" by William Eaton in 1725 when he petitioned the churchwardens of Bristol Parish to have William bound to him [Chamberlayne, Bristol Parish Register, 24]. On 13 March 1738/9 the churchwardens of Bristol Parish in Prince George County ordered William Stewart, a "Mulatto Boy" (no parent or age indicated), bound an apprentice to William Eaton [Orders 1737-40, 241]. He was a taxable head of household in Lunenburg County, Virginia, with Ephraim Drew in 1772 [Bell, Sunlight on the Southside, 299, 351]. He purchased 200 acres on the head branches of Little Creek in Mecklenburg County from Jacob Chaves on 8 March 1779 [DB 5:399]. He was head of a Mecklenburg County household of 6 free persons and 2 slaves in 1782 [VA:33] and was taxable in Mecklenburg County on slaves Edward and Charles, 6 cattle and 4 horses in 1782; taxable on Anselm Cunningham's tithe and a slave named Ned in 1784, called "William Stewart B. Smith" (blacksmith) in 1785 when he was taxable on slaves Bob and Charles. He was taxable on slave Ned from 1786 to 1788 but not taxable thereafter in Mecklenburg County [PPTL, 1782-1805, frames 12, 27, 85, 126, 223]. William (signing) and his wife Mary sold their 200 acres on Little Creek to James Steward, Sr., of Dinwiddie County, on 11 February 1788 [DB 7:253]. Mary may have been identical to "Mary Haris now Stuart" whose son Isham Harris was ordered bound out by the churchwardens of St. James Parish in Mecklenburg County court on 8 November 1766 [Orders 1765-8, 231]. Isham was head of a Wake County household of 7 "other free" in 1800 [NC:769]. William was head of a Wake County household of 11 "other free" in 1790 [NC:105] and 11 "other free" and 2 slaves in 1800 [NC:798]. He had undertaken to pay Thomas Evans' costs on 13 February 1786 when Jacob Chavis sued Evans in Mecklenburg County court, but William left the county without paying Chavis. On 13 September 1790 Chavis obtained an attachment against William's estate and recovered part of the debt from a number of persons including Henry Chavis, Henry Chavis, Jr., and James Stewart who testified that they owed William money [Orders 1784-87, 461; 1787-92, 536, 540]. William was residing in North Carolina on 11 July 1806 when Jacob Chavis of Mecklenburg County, Virginia, gave John Chavis power of attorney to recover a debt from him [Mecklenburg DB 13:1, 2]. He tried to prove the nuncupative will of John Jackson Chaves in Wake County court in May 1808, but John Jackson's aunt Lucy Cole of Mecklenburg County contested the will, claiming she was his only heir. She won her case based on testimony from Frederick Ivey, Peter Chavis and afidavits by three of her white neighbors [Haun, Wake County Court Minutes VII:67-8, 151]. | Stewart, William (I2450)
|
1808 |
William3 Bass (John2, William1, John1), born say 1712, sold the land he inherited in Northampton County to John Bass on 30 December 1742 [DB 2:185]. He was one of the first members of the Bass family in Granville County where he was taxed in the list of Jonathan White in 1749. In 1761 he was taxable with his son Thomas in Oxford District. On 19 November 1762 he purchased 200 acres on the south side of Cedar Creek near the Beaver Dam Branch from Thomas Huland (Huelin) [DB F:441]. He was a "Black" taxable in Granville County in John Pope's list for St. John's Parish, Bare Swamp District, in 1762. Bute County was formed from this part of Granville County in 1764, and in 1771 he was a Bute County taxable in the list of Philemon Hawkins on 5 "Black" tithes: himself, his wife, daughter "Honner," and sons Ben and John [CR 015.70001, p.12]. He may have been the William Bass who appeared in Granville County court on 7 April 1770 as the "next Friend" of Olive Bass when she sued Jean Tylor, alias Mitchell [Minutes 1754-70, 202]. William sold 100 acres on the south side of Cedar Creek to Sampson Bass on 26 January 1771 and another 100 acres adjoining this on 17 September 1771 [Warren County DB 3:224; 4:263]. His children were
i. ?Simon1, not identified as William's son, but listed adjacent to him in Philemon Hawkins' Bute County list of taxables, taxed on 4 "Black" tithes for himself, his unnamed wife, son James, and (daughter?) Elizabeth.
ii. Thomas4, born about 1749 since he was taxable in 1761 in his father's Oxford District household. He was an overseer, taxable in Nathan Thomas's household in the 1771 Bute County list of Philemon Hawkins [CR 015.70001, p.4].
iii. ?Frederick1, born say 1750.
iv. Honor1, born say 1752, taxable in 1771 in Bute County.
v. Benjamin2, born say 1754, taxable in 1771 in Bute County.
vi. John8, born before 1760, taxable in 1771 in Bute County.
| Bass, William (I869)
|
1809 |
Winchester Castle | William, King II (I6588)
|
1810 |
Winney, born about 1752 since she was first taxable in 1764 in Samuel Benton's list. Her bastard child Jacob was bound to Lewis Anderson, Junior, who she married about 1767 [CR 044.101.2].
| Bass, Winnie (I947)
|
1811 |
With some noted exceptions all marriage records in this collection can be found at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, or available through Family History Centers throughout the United States. For specific source information listed by coun. | Source (S152)
|
1812 |
With some noted exceptions all marriage records in this collection can be found at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, or available through Family History Centers throughout the United States. For specific source information listed by county see the extended description above or the see the source information listed for each entry. | Source (S120)
|
1813 |
With some noted exceptions all marriage records in this collection can be found at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, or available through Family History Centers throughout the United States. For specific source information listed by county see the extended description above or the see the source information listed for each entry. | Source (S228)
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1814 |
Woodlawn Cemetery | Bass, Nelson (I980)
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1815 |
Woodlawn Cemetery | Smith, Nancy (I2724)
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1816 |
Woodlawn Cemetery | Ivy, Eddie W. Jr. (I8096)
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1817 |
Works Progress Administration, Index to Birth Records, Indiana: Indiana Works Progress Administration, 1938-1940 | Source (S15)
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1818 |
Works Progress Administration, Index to Birth Records, Indiana: Indiana Works Progress Administration, 1938-1940 | Source (S46)
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1819 |
Works Progress Administration. Index to Birth Records. Indiana: Indiana Works Progress Administration, 1938-1940. | Source (S159)
|
1820 |
Worthington, Greene, Indiana, USA | Hart, Rebecca (I1665)
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1821 |
WPA Indices to Marriage Records, by County, 1814-1935. Alabama Department of Archives and History, Montgomery, Alabama. | Source (S284)
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1822 |
y | Stone, Lucille Juanita (I221)
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1823 |
y | Thomas, Amoletta (I348)
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1824 |
y | Van Williams (I352)
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1825 |
y | Lyles, Alford (I1325)
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1826 |
y | Amopotuskee, Elizabeth Keziah (I1343)
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1827 |
y | The Elder, King of Nansemond Nation Robin (I1344)
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1828 |
y | Wilkinson, Samuel (I1348)
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1829 |
y | Underwood, Ellinda (I1456)
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1830 |
y | Stuart, Joel (I1503)
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1831 |
y | Stewart, Matriarch (I1689)
|
1832 |
y | Stewart, Patriarch (I1690)
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1833 |
y | Wooton, Nellie (I1709)
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1834 |
y | Roberts, Lewis (I1733)
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1835 |
y | Roberts, Rebecca (I1738)
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1836 |
y | Walden, Edward (I1939)
|
1837 |
y | Steel, Benjamin (I2102)
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1838 |
y | Sarah (I2417)
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1839 |
y | Stewart, Sinai (I2423)
|
1840 |
y | Webb, Wallace (I3206)
|
1841 |
y | Toney, Mathew (I3345)
|
1842 |
y | Tann, Ida J. (I3368)
|
1843 |
y | Roberts, Ethelred (I3407)
|
1844 |
y | Roberts, Ishmael (I3421)
|
1845 |
y | Stewart, Barna (I3430)
|
1846 |
y | Russell, Benjamin (I3485)
|
1847 |
y | Parker, Louisa (I3486)
|
1848 |
y | Scott (I3555)
|
1849 |
y | Patridge, Lucinda (I4909)
|
1850 |
y | Stewart, Polly (I5679)
|
1851 |
y | Wise, Mary (I5691)
|
1852 |
y | Paschal, Ben (I5759)
|
1853 |
y | Powell, Grace G. (I5976)
|
1854 |
y | Strayhorn, Rachel (I7332)
|
1855 |
y | Womack, Marianne (I7368)
|
1856 |
y | Pearl, Warren (I7684)
|
1857 |
y | Roberts, Milla (I8134)
|
1858 |
y | Stark, William (I8212)
|
1859 |
y | Wheeler, Clara (I8647)
|
1860 |
y | Stokes, Tom (I8648)
|
1861 |
y | Persell, Mary Ann (I8764)
|
1862 |
Y, Age: 66 | Jasper, James (I2333)
|
1863 |
Zachariah, born say 1782, father of Ishmael2 Roberts who was not yet twenty-one years old when his grandfather wrote his July 1816 will. Zachariah's wife Mary Roberts, and their son Ishmael were mentioned in the 20 December 1820 Robeson County will of her father Ethelred Newsom [WB 1:325]
| Roberts, Zachariah (I1742)
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