Enchanted Family Genealogy Pages

This is Our New Age Book on Discovering our Ancestors

Notes


Matches 601 to 650 of 1,111

      «Prev «1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 ... 23» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
601 In 1930 Lynn and Ruth bought a farm near Enfield and lived in the old house and it was there that Josh and Bertha built their new home. After Josh and Bertha moved back to Clinton, Lynn moved the new house to its present site and he, Ruth and th e children moved in. Stein, Lynn Rude (I6224)
 
602 In a Snake Pit, Murdered King of the Danes Ragnar Lodbrock (I1965)
 
603 in battle Canmore, Lay Abbot of Dunkeld Crinan (I2056)
 
604 in child birth Edgifu of England (I2163)
 
605 in childbirth Seymour, Jane (I3302)
 
606 In Descendancy there is Kari Orbeck Lerum that married Nils Hansen (which took the Lerum name) Then Anna Lerum Jacobson had one son Marlin. Elsa Lerum Urdahl had 1 girl Ingeborg that had 1 son Peter Herman. Then Uncle Peter Herman has 2 childr en - 1 girl Anna Marie Lerum Lewis which had 8 Children -Lawrence, LeRoy, Carl, Anna Marie , Rachel, Norman, & Albee (Evelyn died at about 2) Then 1 boy Peter Herman who married Ingeborg Urdahl, had a son Peter Herman. Hjerman, Kari Orbeck (I5818)
 
607 In his reign the Picts again refused to pay the tribute imposed on them 250 years before, by Heremon, but this Monarch went with a strong army into Alba and in thirty pitched battles overcame them and forced them to pay the required tribute. King of Ireland Angus Olmucaid (I4289)
 
608 In his time gentlemen and noblemen first wore gold chains round their necks, as a sign of their birth; and golden helmets were given to brave soldiers. Prince of Ireland Deman (I4286)
 
609 In his time the Irish first dug graves beneath the surface to bury their dead; previously they laid the body on the surface and heaped stones over it. Bress Nar Lothar Maceochaid of Ireland (I4348)
 
610 In his time the wild deer were, through the sorcery and witchcraft of his mother, usually driven home with the cows, and tamely suffered themselves to be milked every day. King of Ireland Nia Sedhamain (I4419)
 
611 In his will, he did not mention his oldest 2 daughters, Mary Polly and Aletha. He may have already given them their inheritance before his death. Hilton, Truman (I465)
 
612 In July 1643, the Church of England was over-thrown and Presbyterianism was the
only religion tolerated in England. William Compton was a Baptist and left
England because of religious persecution.

Legend has it that William went into exile in Holland, as many did at that
time, then emigrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colony where the same religious
situation developed. He then moved with other Baptists to Long Island, New
York (at that time a part of Connecticut). 
Compton, William Weillum I (I272)
 
613 In letter from Captain E.J. Smith of the Titanic states this Frank is Nephew. Hancock, Frank (I154)
 
614 in Ludlow, Shropshire, England (no Cemetery Info Yet) Corbett, Lord of Longnor Thomas (I847)
 
615 In most cases Credic is listed as the first King of Anglo-Saxon Wessex. King of Wessex Cerdic (I2023)
 
616 In Niall's rise to Kingship he had to overcome his wicked stepmother, Mongfhinn, who abandoned him as a baby, naked on a hill. He is raised by a wandering bard, Torna Eices.
It is told that when he comes across an old hag who demands that he and his companions give her a kiss. Only Niall has the courage to do so, and she turns into a beautiful woman named Flaithius, the personification of sovranty. She fortells tha t he will be the greatest of Ireland 's High Kings. 
King of Ireland Niall Noigillach Mugmedon (I2674)
 
617 In Revolutionary War to S.C., Tenn, Kentucky, USA Veatch, Elias (I6032)
 
618 In the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is is stated to be theSon of Cerdic and fater to Cynric, which would make Cynric Cerdic grandson and not son as he is listed in other texts. Creoda of Wessex (I2022)
 
619 In the Ashford parish church, in the old town, is a spacious structure, in fine perpendicular English, built or restored by Sir John Fogge in the time of Edward IV; comprises nave, transept, and three chancels, with a lofty tower, resembling the Bell Harry tower of Canterbury cathedral; and contains a figured font, the tomb of Sir John Fogge, a brass of the Countess of Athole of 1375, and some fine monuments of the Smyths of Westenhanger, one of whom was the Sacharissa of Waller.

A Brass is Plaque made of Brass found in churches. 
Ferrers, Countess of Atholl, Lady Elizabeth (I3984)
 
620 In the Barons War 1264-67 he defeated the Barons at Evesham(1265) as King he is noted for encouraging Parliamentary institutions at the expense of feudalism and for subduing Waleson which he imposed the English system of administration. He late r tried to assert his authority over Scotland and died while on his way to fight Robert Bruce. Plantagenet, King of England Edward I, Longshanks (I811)
 
621 In the Book of Jubilees Enosh began to call on the name of the Lord of the earth. He married his sister No'am. It is said he was faithful and righteous servant of God. Enosh of the Bible (I8200)
 
622 In the face of Danish raids, he was forced to pay huge tributes to the enemy named Danegeld. He was driven into exile by Sweyn but returned after his death. King of England Aethelred II, the Unready (I2090)
 
623 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Jimmy Lee Regenhardt / Rebecca Jean Staveness (F3)
 
624 In the original marriage records there is a notation "cousins ?").
Clark Co Marriage Records, Book E, p 96

Family record sheets on this family also record
a May Prather as a child in this family. She is not recorded , however, in the 1860 census or in
Greenberry's will. 
Family: Greenberry Prather / Chloe Bennett (F3614)
 
625 In the struggle between the English and the Danes, he appears in the character of an arch-traitor. When Ethelred in 1009 proposed a great attack on the Danes, Eadric dissuaded him from carrying it into effect. Streona, Ealdorman of the English Mercians Eadric (I10050)
 
626 Initially a Monk, he temporarily gave up his monastic order and married. Rejected by the navarrese he retired to his monastry in 1134 Sanchez, King of Aragon Ramiro II (I2798)
 
627 Injuries in Truck Accident Kehoe, Thomas Joseph (I7034)
 
628 Interesting Note about her is she married both Father and Son that were King of England. But she did not have Children by these Kings only from Baldwin I Count of Flanders. Judith of the West Franks (I1998)
 
629 Invaded England defeated and killed his rival Harold at the Battle of Hastings and became King. The Norman conquest of England was completed by 1072 aided by the establishment of feaudalism under which his followers were granted land in return f or pledges of service and loyalty. As King William was noted for his efficient if harsh rule. His administration relied upon Norman and other foreign personnell especially Lanfranc Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1085 started Domesday Book. King of England William I, the Conqueror (I1945)
 
630 Is a twin with Lorrie Phillips, Lynne (I7739)
 
631 Is a Twin with Lynne Phillips, Lorrie (I7740)
 
632 Is said to be also the Sister of Enosh No'am of the Bible (I9910)
 
633 Is said to be also the sister of Seth Azura of the Bible (I9909)
 
634 Isaac's Sister was married to Degory Priest on the same day. Family: Isaac Allerton / Mary Norris (F3343)
 
635 It is believed that his brother and him were imprisioned in the Tower and murder by their Uncle Richard Duke of Gloucester. Plantagenet, King of England Edward V (I3278)
 
636 It is believed that Noah built an ark to save his family which was his wife and 3 sons and thier wives. He also saved all the animals from the flood.

The grrat flood was said to be sent by God because he was saddened by the wickness of mankind. After the flood Noah was the first tiller of the soil. Noah died 350 year after the Great Flood and was age 950.

Naoh seems to be recorded as the first "excessive drinker". 
Noah of the Bible (I8184)
 
637 It is not clear which wife is the mother of which children. He also married a daughter of Count of Maine. Capet, Count of Neustria Hugh (I2138)
 
638 It is said he died 7 days before the Great Flood Methuselah of the Bible (I8190)
 
639 It is said she is the daughter of Henry, Margrave of Mark (d 886) and not Arnulf. There are only 13 years between the aproximate birth of Arnulf and Henry the Fowler Hedwige of Germany (I2174)
 
640 It is said that a corner house at 51 Well Street, Hanley was the shop which Smith's mother and father kept. Edward Smith of Well Street was listed as a shopkeeper. What used to be an alleyway along side the shop is now an open narrow road as th e rest of the street has been demolished and apartments were built. Local knowledge holds that what is now simply a corner house was indeed the shop which Smith's mother (and later father) kept. Some locals can still recall witnessing the conve rsion of the shop into a house. Smith, Edward II (I128)
 
641 It is said that Adam was still alive for about 50 years of his life. Lamech of the Bible (I8188)
 
642 It is said that God delayed the Flood specifically because of the seven days of mourning in honor of the righteous Methuselah.

Methuselah appears in two important Jewish works from the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC. In the Book of Enoch,[5] Enoch (as the narrator) tells Methuselah of the coming worldwide flood and of the future Messianic kingdom. The Book of Jubilees names Methuselah's mother and his wife  
Methuselah of the Bible (I8190)
 
643 It is said that he married an Irish woman from Ossory. Gaelic surname of MacCoinnich, which when translated into English became MacKenzie. King of Scotland Malcolm II (I2058)
 
644 Jacob's will was witnessed by a William Patrick. Possibly a brother-in-law. Veatch, Jacob (I323)
 
645 James applied for and received 100 acres as Hesters father had passed soon after arrival and had not claimed the land he was entitled to for transporting his family. Smallwood, Col. James (I701)
 
646 James was taken prisoner by the English on his voyage from Scotland to France in 1405, and sent to the Tower of London, where he remained in captivity till 1424. In that year he returned to Scotland but was murdered by his uncle Walter, Earlof A tholl, at Perth Stuart, King of Scotland James I (I3810)
 
647 Jane Plott's husband, George Prater came into possession of other properties of Latton, Wiltshire, England, from the heirs of the Earl of St. German (Ellis). Latton, Wiltshire, England, is recorded as belonging to Reinbold de Presbyter (Prater) , the first Chancelor of England after the Norman conquest (1066). Plott, Jane (I652)
 
648 Jean was the widow of Prince Snow Jr. and dau. of John and Hannah(Doane)Collins. She m. 3rd George Godfrey in 1758. Bro. of Elizabeth Godfrey. Snow, Jean Collins (I1170)
 
649 Jessie worked on the family farm for many years. She attended beauty school in Fargo, North Dakota, in the mid 30's and owned her own shop in Aberdeen, South Dakota.

In 1937 she married Wayne M. Phillips. They lived in Aberdeen for 14 years, moving to the Prather family farm in 1951.

Jessie has been very active in church and community service for many years, including the First Methodist Church of Aberdeen.

Their children are Patricia Mae Phillips and Lyle Wayne Phillips.

"Pat" (or Patty) married Martin Lauren Tveit in Aberdeen in 1959 and lived on a farm near Frederick until their divorce in 1975. Their children are Jeffrey Earl Tveit (a school teacher in Chamberlain, SD), and Bonita Lynn Tveit who is married t o Michael Lane (currently in the Airforce stationed in Omaha, Nebraska).

Pat's second marriage was to C. William Dennert in 1977. They live on a farm Southeast of Frederick, SD. Pat owns and manages a sewing and alterations shop in Aberdeen, SD.

Wayne Phillips and son Lyle farmed the land as Lyle grew to adulthood. Lyle married Marge Mettler in 1964 and divorced in 1992. Their children are Lynne and Lorrie (twins) and Stacey.

Lyle worked for International Business Machines (IBM) for 23 years with assignments in Sioux Falls, SD; Terre Haute, IN; New Jersey; Roanoke, Texas. He is currently working for Dean-Witer Investments.

...as of 1993 
Prather, Jessie Myrtle (I7720)
 
650 John - was the only one of the three HOWLAND brothers to come on the Mayflower, the other two brothers came over in 1624.

John Howland of the Mayflower was called by Governor William Bradford "a lusty younge man". He was one of the hired hands among the Mayflower company, being neither a "Saint," as the Pilgrims were called, nor a "Stranger," engaged for a specific duty, as was the soldier, Captain Myles Standish. During the voyage across the North Atlantic, the Mayflower was buffeted by severe autumn storms during which she was forced to drop her sails and head into the wind, wallowing in the mountainous waves. John Howland ventured on deck and was washed overboard into the boiling sea. In governor Bradford's words, "It pleased God that he caught hould of ye halliards which hunge over board, and rane out at length; yet he was held up... and then with a boat hooke and other means got into ye ship again." It was this tenacity of purpose, perseverance, and the ability to deal with unexpected emergencies that helped John Howland to become a successful leader in the Plymouth community.

His was the 13th name of 41 persons who signed the memorable compact in the cabin of the Mayflower in "Cape Cod Harbor" in Nov 1620. He signed on as a manservant Mr. John Carver. "A profitable instrument of good; the last man that was left of those that came over on the ship called the May Flower..." - Plymouth Col. Recs.

The Carver family with whom John lived, survived the terrible sickness of the first winter, during which many Pilgrims died. But the following spring, on an unusually hot day in April, governor Carver, according to Bradford, came out of his cornfield feeling ill. He passed into a coma and "never spake more." His wife, Kathrine, died soon after her husband. Since the Carvers had no children, John Howland is thought to have inherited their estate. It has been said that he immediately "bought his freedom" but no record has survived.

From "One Hundred and Sixty Allied Families" by John Osborne Austin - 'A lusty young man (called John Howland) coming upon some occasion above the grating was with a seele (Sail) of the ship thrown into the sea, but it pleased God that he caught hold of the topsail halyards which hung overboard, an ran out at length, yet he held his hold (though he was sundry fathoms under water) till he was hauled up by the same rope to the brim of the water, and then with a boat hook and other means got into the ship again.'

When the Mayflower was yet in Cape Cod Harbor, ten of her "principal men", including John, were sent out in a boat, manned by eight sailors, to select a place to establish a longed-for home for the weary band. A storm drove them into Plymouth harbor, and Plymouth was selected as the place of settlement.

John Howland, Sr., died in rocky Nook 23 February 1672/3. In his will dated 29 May 1672, John mentioned his beloved wife, Elizabeth, and his children, named as John, called "eldest son, " Jabez, Isacke, and Joseph, and his married daughter, Desire Gorum(sic), Hope Shipman, Elizabeth Dickinson, Lydia Browne, Hannah Bosworth and Ruth Cushman. John Howland also mentioned his grandchild, Elizabeth howland, "daughter of son John". The inventory of his estate included his dwelling house in Rocky Nook, medow at the Jones River, half of a house and medow in Colchester, a medow near the Jones River bridge in Duxborrow, a house and land in Middlebury, and land near Nemassekett Pond. Also listed among his possessions were "one great Bible and annotations on the five books of Moses", as well as "Mr. Tindall's workes, Mr. Wilson's workes and seven more books." 
Howland, John (I7824)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 ... 23» Next»