Ray & Welch Family Trees
Notes
Matches 101 to 150 of 279
# | Notes | Linked to |
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101 | Died of pneumonia in April 1880 age 44. | WELCH, James Franklin (I30400756938)
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102 | Died while visiting friends (the Drakes of St. Helena) | RAY, William Smith (I292093783551)
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103 | Died young. | HAGLER, Amos (I340044995194)
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104 | Divorced 1962. | Family: Benjamin Keith MERSHON / Felicia Helene FAIRCHILD (F110)
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105 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: James Michael QUINN / Marinna SHELTON (F163)
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106 | Divorced 6 June 1966 | Family: Norman Henry CARSS / Mary Bethany MERSHON (F654)
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107 | Divorced before 1920. | Family: William WEBB / Coralina Violet "Lena" HAIGLER (F432)
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108 | Dutch Neck Cemetery Princeton Junction Mercer New Jersey Birth: Jul. 8, 1745 Death: Dec. 7, 1805 age 60 years 6 months Burial: Dutch Neck Cemetery Princeton Junction Mercer County New Jersey, USA Created by: Leigh Miller Record added: Nov 02, 2009 Find A Grave Memorial# 43830724 | BERGEN, Lieut. Jacob G (I340005333696)
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109 | Emigrated to American only a few decades after the Plymouth Colony was established, on William Penn's ship, the Submission, sailing from Liverpool. Arrived 2 Nov 1682 in Maryland. Phineas was a close friend and confidant of William Penn and became a wealthy and successful businessman in his own right. Penn had been granted 45,000 acres of land by Charles II in exchange for a dept owed by WP's father, and Admiral in the Navy. His wife's father also bought a large acreage, and most the of combined land holdings descended to Israel. May have helped our ancestor Solomon Allred get started in the New World. Was a devout Quaker like his father, Ralph. From the book "Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania" by John W. Jordan, p 276 ff, also cited in the Griffin book on the Allred family in America. | PEMBERTON, Phineas (I340041243697)
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110 | EMPIRE CEMETERY? | GOODRICH, Zenas (I292096059888)
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111 | Evergreen Cemetery | DANO, William Clair (I340041444042)
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112 | Evergreen Cemetery | DANO, William Orville (I340041440441)
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113 | Evergreen Cemetery | GEHLKER, Anna Elisabeth (I340005511962)
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114 | Evergreen Cemetery | HAIGLER, Irma June Hildreth (I340005511752)
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115 | Evergreen Cemetery | HEMMANN, Caroline "Carrie" Ghelker (I30402088074)
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116 | Evergreen Cemetery | HAIGLER, William Gwinn (I30402087759)
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117 | Evergreen Cemetery, Plot: Block 00052 000034-0000SW. FAG #34857185 | HAIGLER, Raymond Roscoe (I340005511753)
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118 | FAG 59840492 | HOLLINGSWORTH, Elizabeth (I340040513488)
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119 | Fifth Census of the United States, 1830. (NARA microfilm publication M19, 201 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source (S1038637305)
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120 | Find A Grave Memorial # 26964030 | ALLRED, Margaret (I340041427103)
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121 | Find A Grave Memorial # 73009279 | GWIN, Richard Walton (I340028124144)
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122 | Find A Grave Memorial #19698300 | HAIGLER, William Jr. (I30402089289)
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123 | Find A Grave Memorial #63873319 | ALLRED, Aaron (I340041426921)
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124 | Find A Grave Memorial# 63556686 | ALLRED, Mary Ann "Polly" (I340041427046)
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125 | Find A Grave Memorial# 63873819 | ALLRED, Hyrum (I340041426515)
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126 | Find A Grave Memorial# 63874707 | ALLRED, Levi (I340041426717)
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127 | Find A Grave Memorial# 63877177 | ALLRED, Delila (or Delia) (I340041427024)
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128 | Followed his son Abraham to Ohio in the fall of 1814, selling his land to Daniel Maus on 16 Jul 1814. The Haigler graveyard was on a hill behind the barn. The house was still standing at the time of the Melville Genealogy written in 1948. Beginning in December, 1809 (according to Melville) Jacob wrote many letters to his son Abraham then living on Paint Creek in Ohio in the old Swiss dialect of the German border (Allemanic Swiss German) and in German script that are housed (as of 1948) in the Ohio State Museum at Columbus. Melville says that the letters say that Jacob went to Greene County to look at property in 1811, that he Abraham bought part of the land for him in 1812, that he was almost killed in a riding accident in 1813 and that finally in 1814 he sold his land and moved to Ohio, followed by many of his family and neighbors. | HAGLER, Jacob (I340005542607)
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129 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | FARRIS, Diana (I340041498004)
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130 | Fought for the revolutionaries against the British in the Rev. Way. | ALLRED, Elias (I340041359993)
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131 | Fought in local militia during Rev. War. | ALLRED, William (I340041359929)
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132 | From | YOUNGS, Rev. John (I292097335491)
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133 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | RAY, Jennifer Jane (I30402522001)
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134 | Graceland Cemetery | HAIGLER, Mary Catherine (I340005518307)
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135 | Grandchildren are: Ray Gould Glen Gould Bert Gould Rule Gould From John Gwin's website gwingenealogy.net: 25.03--Nancy Ann Haigler, b. Feb 1851; d. 1919; bd. Highland Cem., Ottawa, KS; m1, unk.; m2. ca. 1870 toBenjamin L. Gould (b. Aug 1842 in IL/VT/VT); at least 5 ch. [listed as N. A. Hagler, 14 and b. IA, in the 5 May 1865 census of Stanton P. O., Stanton Twp., Miami Co., KS, and lvg. 14 doors fr. Jane's brother, John H. Gwin, and 7 doors fr. her parents] [listed as Nancy Haigler, age 19, in the 20 Jun 1870 Census of Peoria Twp., Franklin Co., KS] [listed as Nancy A. Gould, age 29, b. IA/VA/IL, in the 8 Jun 1880 Census of Greenwood Twp., Franklin Co., KS] [listed as Nancy Gould, age 49, b. Feb 1851 in IA/VA/IL, md. 29 yrs. w/5 of 5 ch. lvg., in the 11 Jun 1900 Census of Welda Twp., Anderson Co., KS, and lvg. just 6 doors fr. the fam. of their eldest son][listed as Nancy A. Gould, 59, b. in IA/VA/IL, in the 15 Apr 1910 census of Ottawa, Franklin Co., KS, and lvg. w/her 2nd husband (of 40 years w/5 of 5 ch. lvg.), Benjamin L. Gould]; [listed as Benjamin L. Gould, age 37, b. IL/VT/VT, in the 8 Jun 1880 Census of Greenwood Twp., Franklin Co., KS] [listed as Benj. L. Gould, age 57, b. Aug 1842 in IL/ME/IN (sic), md. 29 yrs. in the 11 Jun 1900 Census of Welda Twp., Anderson Co., KS, and lvg. just 6 doors fr. the fam. of their eldest son] [listed as Benjamin L. Gould, 67, b. in IL/PA/IN, in the 15 Apr 1910 census of Ottawa, Franklin Co., KS, and lvg. w/his 2nd wife (of 40 years w/5 of 5 ch. lvg.), Nancy A. HAIGLER Gould]; [listed as Benjamin L. Gould, 77, b. in IL/OH/IN, in the 12 Jan 1920 census of Ottawa, Franklin Co., KS, and lvg. w/his 3rd wife, Nancy's sister, Anna Bear Gwin Freeman Gould];See website for information on the Gould family. | HAIGLER, Nancy Ann (I340005518377)
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136 | Hans may have been called John. | HAEGLAR (II), Hans Jakob (I340005970594)
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137 | He was the third son and never married. In file is story "How Haigler, Dundy County, Nebraska Got Its Name" that was part of the Raymond Haigler genealogy book. | HAIGLER, Jacob Russell "Jake" (I340037036981)
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138 | Henning’s Statutes of Virginia, Vol. 7 p.184” ref militia of County of Augusta -- Benjamin, John, and Jacob. | HAIGLER, John (I340005963063)
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139 | Henning’s Statutes of Virginia, Vol. 7 p.184” ref militia of County of Augusta -- Benjamin, John, and Jacob. | HAIGLER, Jacob (I340005962922)
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140 | Highland Cemetery | HAIGLER, Nancy Ann (I340005518377)
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141 | Highland Cemetery, Ottawa, Kansas, United States: FAG Memorial #30421544 | GWIN, Jane Watkins (I30402089037)
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142 | If his father's age is correct, he was 50 years old when William was born. | HAGLER, William (I30402090282)
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143 | In a note written in 1860 to his grandson Almer he says that his grandfather, Sebastian, was 15 years old when the family emigrated to America and remembered sailing down the Rhine River. | HAGLER, Abraham (I340005542614)
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144 | In an email dated July 7, 2016, Eugene A. Walker stated:Thank you for your two emails. Elizabeth Walker was born 20 Nov 1691 at Charlestown, Suffolk, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Edward and Elizabeth (Dean) Walker. The family moved from Charlestown to Brookfield, Worcester, Massachusetts, soon after 1700. The origin of her father, Edward Walker, has not been ascertained, and thus he may have been an original immigrant. Some references claim that he was the Edward born 12 Oct 1663, son of Samuel and Sarah (Reed) Walker, and grandson of Samuel Walker of Woburn. But that Edward, son of Samuel, was killed in a battle with the Indians at Wheelwright Pond in New Hampshire in 1690. DNA testing has confirmed that Edward, the father of Elizabeth, is not related to the descendants of Samuel Walker of Woburn. My website covers only the descendants of Samuel of Woburn, and thus your Elizabeth has not been included. The Edward who was the son of Samuel can be found at this link (see footnote 39): http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~walkerdesc/b259.htm#P259 | WALKER, Edward (I340038938778)
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145 | 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 (S1038955307)
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146 | Information on the Allred line in the United States comes from Dawnell Hatton Griffin's 2015 book "From England to America, Our Allred Family." She cites incorrect information in the Rulon C. Allred book "Allred Family in America" based on Bennet's book written in the 1940's that said the original Allreds were descended from Henry Aldridge who later changed their names. DNA testing has proven that Solomon's descendants are related to the Allreds of Lancashire England and that the Aldridges are not. People named Aldridge and Diffee married into the Allred line and were later confused as having been direct descendants, errors which persist in many family trees on the internet. The Allred English ancestors lived through the religious turmoil of the 16th and 17th century England when Catholics and Protestants were battling for control, and first one group was persecuted, then the other, leading in part to the Civil War and the short rule of Oliver Cromwell along with persecution of the Quakers at the same time the Huguenots were persecuted in France. Many Englishmen and Frenchmen were desperate to escape the dangerous times by emigrating to America, a path Solomon followed in the early part of the 18th century. (His father was born only 30 years after the original pilgrims settled the shores of Virginia.) It is unknown how he secured passage, which was quite expensive, but presumed that he indentured himself in some way. He applied to his cousin Israel in Philadelphia for help at one point. He arrived in Eventually he acquired land and moved south along the Great Wagon Road that stretched from New Jersey through Pennsylvania and Maryland to Virginia and the Carolinas. There is no marriage record for Solomon and Ann York, but it is presumed that she immigrated with her brother, Jeremiah, about 1712 and that they were married about 1713. There is record of them living in the Nottingham Lots (a disputed area between Pennsylvania and Maryland) where it is believed that their four children were born. A 1719 letter from Solomon to Israel Pemberton Solomon mentions his wife and says he is living in West Nottingham. (Letter is part of the "Collection of Family Daata" in the Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania. They later moved to Fredericks County Maryland, but by 1754 were living on Mount Pleasant Run of Sandy Creek in Orange County, North Carolina (now Randolph County) where he was a chain carrier marking property lines as well as, probably, a farmer. There is no extant record of their movement or activities between 1730 and 1750. | ALLRED, Solomon (I340040513641)
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147 | Isaac was married three times and had nine children. See the FAG site for names and dates. Also see Gallery for a story written by a descendant. | ALLRED, Isaac (I340041426956)
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148 | Jackson, Ron V., Accelerated Indexing Systems, comp.. <i>AIS Mortality Schedules Index</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 (S1030375390)
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149 | John (Johannes) died suddenly on his farm in 1849 while chopping wood and was buried on the farm, according to stories passed down. His widow Dorathea Van Treeck later married Mr. Ott, who worked for John on his farm. | REISS, Johann Michael (I342097263155)
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150 | John G. Streckfus, husband of Helen M. Streckfus nee Godwin, father of Thomas, John, and Donald Streckfus, died on Nov. 30, 1970. Also survived by six grandchildren. Requiem Mass at Immaculate Conception Church, Towson. Interment in Lorraine Park Cemetery. | STRECKFUS, John G (I152129009077)
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