Matches 1,501 to 1,550 of 7,196
# | Notes | Linked to |
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1501 | He visited Rome in 688. His brother Cyngils was King. (C-437) | Ceowald (Direct Ancestor) (I16380)
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1502 | He was "Master of the Mint" according to Mary Reumah Mallory's Pedigree on the Mallory families. (F-635) | GALE, George Mayor Of York (I8788)
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1503 | He was 17 when he died in Virginia. | HUNTER, Thomas (I11274)
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1504 | He was 5 foot 8 inches tall, of medium build, light hair and blue eyes when he joined the service in World War I on Sep. 12, 1918. He was unmarried at the time. He was employed by his stepfather - C.C. Nutter and lists his mother, Mary B. Nutter. He was living with his mother and stepfather in the 1930 census and was still single at the time. | SAMPSON, Ray (I313)
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1505 | He was 777 years of age when he passed. (G 5:31) | Lamech (I14258)
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1506 | He was 94 years old when he died according to his son, Roy Steele Glenn. However, this calculated birth date of 1842 doesn't correspond with the birth date I found for Samuel's father, William Curry Glenn in 1831 making his father only1 when he was born. It's more likely that the estitmated age of Samuel is incorrect here. | GLENN, Samuel Newton (I8478)
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1507 | He was a "Gentleman of the Bedchamber" for Edward I and he fought in Scotland under Edward II. He achieved the rank of Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk as well as Governor for Norwich. | HOWARD, John I (I5999)
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1508 | He was a brewer by trade according to his son William's baptismal record. | STEVENS, William (I18289)
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1509 | He was a brewer by trade in his son, John's baptismal record. | STEVENS, William (I18284)
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1510 | He was a carpenter and noted for his great physical strength. He and his brother built Bush River's MM house in 1798 in Newberry. They emigrated together about 1806. He made this trip by carrying his wife and child on horseback until hed in Miami Co., Ohio. His brother, Thomas, continued on to Indiana. Isaac built the West Branch Quarterly Meeting House in West Milton, OH in 1818 and the first barn in 1819 in Miami Co., Ohio It was still standing in 1880 in Beers' History of Miami Co., Ohio (C-10, 109, 296) | HASKET, Isaac (I7615)
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1511 | He was a carpenter by trade and part of his diary is still in existance and under the care of James A. Hetzer. James A. has a DNA match with a cousin, Everett Heiney via Frederick and Sarah's daughter Mary. They have the following large segments in common verifying that they are close cousins. Their tree is up at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cowdery-50. M576715 (E.H.) Minimum threshold size to be included in total = 500 SNPs Mismatch-bunching Limit = 250 SNPs Minimum segment cM to be included in total = 7.0 cM ChrStart LocationEnd LocationCentimorgans (cM)SNPs 3121,717,231149,845,66729.22,687 3150,784,295184,139,30430.02,799 53,156,07016,013,83127.31,798 532,667,73279,082,17139.54,064 5124,167,794147,289,66121.12,239 61,000,6555,855,32813.8857 8102,340,848124,773,54220.42,135 2121,345,87527,025,5158.4695 «u»«sup»5«/u»«/sup» | COWDERY, Frederick Mortimer (I4)
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1512 | He was a carpenter. | FAWKNER, Arthur (I8298)
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1513 | He was a chaplain for Charles I of England. | HAMMOND, Henry (I2515)
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1514 | He was a Colonel in the militia and a member of the Council. He moved his family back to Clifton, England and still has living descendants in western England today. (F-604, 606) | FORTE, Nathaniel (I10715)
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1515 | He was a Count and the Earl of Warren and the first or second Earl of Surrey. (C-1351, 1440) | DE WARRENE, William (I13821)
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1516 | He was a court physician to King James I whose reign ended in 1625. One of his sons was a chaplain for Charles I. | HAMMOND, John (I9726)
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1517 | He was a farmer by trade in the 1850 census for Frederick Co., MD. | SHIPLEY, Larkin (I5285)
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1518 | He was a farmer by trade. | COATES, James (I1656)
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1519 | He was a farmer living in Meigs Co., Ohio while raising his large family. His first born son was named Jacob. I suspect this was his father's name also as there was a Jacob Cowdery living in Chester Twp., Meigs Co., Ohio in the 1830 census. Jacob and his wife were between 60 and 70 and they had one son and a daughter still living with them who was between 15 and 20 years of age. | COWDERY, Charles B. (I42)
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1520 | He was a farmer with property valued at F 550 at his death. (F-405, 448) | CHATTERTON, Samuel (I12395)
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1521 | He was a felt maker in 1712 and was likely the Richard who was the woolcomber by trade in 1719 and 1721. I have eliminated him as the son of Joseph, Richard/Mary, and William/Eliz. of Southwark, Surrey, England as each of their sons named Richard died young. | STEVENS, Richard (I18279)
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1522 | He was a hatter by trade. | STREET, John (I18366)
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1523 | He was a Knight. (F-520) | CATESBY, Sir Humphrey (I13562)
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1524 | He was a lawyer who moved out of Coatesville, Pennsylvania He achieved the rank of Major in the service in Chester Co., PA (probably the Civil War). (C-1741) | COATES, Joseph R.T. (I7919)
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1525 | He was a Lieutenant in the 1st Regiment. (F-462) | FORTE, Herbert Augustus Nourse (I1139)
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1526 | He was a Magna Charta Surety and the 6th Earl of Gloucester, Earl of Hertford and Gloucester. (C-333b, 2294) | DE CLARE, Richard FitzRoger (I7690)
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1527 | He was a Magna Charta Surety in 1215 and held the title, "Earl of Lincoln". (C-1211) | DE LACY, Sir John (I13913)
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1528 | He was a Major in the 77th Regt. (F-604) | FORTE, Cockburn (I1111)
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1529 | He was a merchant in Dunbartonshire, Scotland but inherited 1000 acres called Corkagh Manor in Ireland. A small far house was built on in 1650 likely by son Robert (b. 1622) who was given it by his father. By 1658 it included 2 farmhouses. https://askaboutireland.ie/reading-room/history-heritage/big-houses-of-ireland/corkagh-house-and-estate-/ | COLQUHOUN, Sir Adam of Glennis (I10948)
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1530 | He was a navy admiral. | DUVALL, William Howard (I6229)
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1531 | He was a planter by trade. | YOUNG, Hugh (I9567)
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1532 | He was a postal inspector for the city of Bamberg, Bavaria. He is possibly the Vincenz Link who was born in 1865 and emmigrated to St. Louis, Missouri from Bavaria via Hamburg, Germany in the New York Passenger lists. He lists his pf origin as Schneckby and his trade as shoemaker. He is living in St. Louis from the 1900 census through the 1930 census. In 1900, he was a laborer. In the 1910 and 1920 census, he was employed in a Shoe factory and at age 65 in the 1930 census, he was no longer employed. He and his wife had a large family. The two children's names that seem to be from the family were sons named Leo and Joseph. | LINK, Vincenz (I7388)
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1533 | He was a salesman in the 1910 census in Coshocton, Ohio with a name like his father's or possibly Uncles. I have currently placed him as a son of Lancelott. In the 1930 census, he and his wife still have no children, but they do have a, age 70, named George Hall and his wife living with them. Both men say their father was born in England and their mother in Ohio. He also has brother-in-law, Israel Jones living with him. | HALL, Lance (I9539)
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1534 | He was a Sergeant in Company F, 152nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War. He later became a minister in the New Light Christian Church. He officiated the marriage of his brother-in-law, William Thomas Coats, to Lucinda Wheele869. | DAVENPORT, David S. (I6373)
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1535 | He was a Shipwright by trade. | STEVENS, Richard (I18275)
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1536 | He was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Here is part of what the Encyclopedia Virginia has to say about him. "Carter Braxton (1736-1797) Contributed by Alonzo Thomas Dill and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography Carter Braxton was a member of the Continental Congress (1776) who supported and signed the Declaration of Independence, and of the Council of State (1786-1791; 1794-1797). Born to power-his maternal grandfather was the wealthy land and slave owner Robert "King" Carter-Braxton married it, as well, wedding first a niece of the Speaker of the House of Burgesses and then, after her death, the daughter of a member of the governor's Council. Braxton acquired large amounts of land and numbers of slaves, and he both cultivated and traded tobacco. While in the House of Burgesses (1761-1775), he served on various prestigious committees and, in May 1775, confronted Patrick Henry and a group of militiamen over their demand for reimbursement of Virginia gunpowder seized by the Crown. Braxton arranged for his father-in-law to pay for it. Although he supported independence, he published a pamphlet that challenged the democratic ideas of John Adams and, as a result, was sent home from the Continental Congress. The American Revolution (1775-1783) left Braxton virtually insolvent, but his political connections intact. He served on the Council of State, and during his second term, advised Henry, his one-time adversary and now Virginia governor. Braxton died in Richmond in 1797. " | BRAXTON, Carter Signer of the Declaration of Independence (I10769)
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1537 | He was a soldier in the War of 1812 and was 77 years old when he died. | HARP, Jacob (I9112)
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1538 | He was a sugar planter by trade. (F-462) | FORTE, Harcourt Greenlaw (I10736)
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1539 | He was a surety for the Magna Charta. | DE BOHUN, Henry Earl Of Hereford And Essex (I5971)
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1540 | He was a surveyor by trade. He is possibly the Solomon who married Barbary Phouts on 7/5/1818 in Miami Co., OH marriage records. (C-2251A) | HOOVER, Solomon (I7583)
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1541 | He was a tailor by trade. (F-702) | MCDEVITT, Leo F. (I6345)
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1542 | He was a timber merchant in his son Richard's baptism record. | STEVENS, Richard (I18273)
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1543 | He was a treasurer by trade. | HAMMOND, Charles Gentleman (I5704)
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1544 | He was a twin of Mareen. They were both born and buried in 1698/1699. | DUVALL, Mountillion (I2370)
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1545 | He was a twin to Melissa, second born and he died at birth. | SIMS, Unnamed Twin (I2104)
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1546 | He was a twin to Rebecca. They were born in their parent's first home in Nether Providence, Pennsylvania His wife was a sister to his brother, Isaac's wife. He and Sarah lived on his father's estate of 500 acres in Middletown. It wift in the year they were married. He built the first stone house on this property and named it "Round Top". (C-1073) It later was called Lachford Hall and is now a park called "Tyler Arboretum". It is located in Media, Delaware Co., Pennsylvania (E) | MINSHALL, Jacob (I12417)
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1547 | He was a twin. They were both born and buried in 1698/1699. | DUVALL, Mareen (I2363)
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1548 | He was a very wealthy man and big in religious and civic affairs in North Carolina and Clark Co., IN. He also owned land in Jennings county. He was also the joint executor of George Harmon's will along with his "family friend", John Mas | BOWER, Adam (I9305)
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1549 | He was a Welsh king who was murdered in 1039. (C-501) He is also listed as the Prince of Wales. (C-788) | AP IDWAL, Iago (I5107)
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1550 | He was a Yeoman by trade. Thomas is believed to have built the "Key House" in Castle Donington in 1595. (C-2131) | ROBY, Thomas (I7708)
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