Notes


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Matches 3,351 to 3,400 of 7,196

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3351 She is a peer and likely cousin of our Anna Kalincsak in the Byzantine Church records for Neviczke. KALINCSAK, Anna (I9800)
 
3352 She is a possible child in this family by timing and place. COATE, Mary (I10121)
 
3353 She is also known as Constance of Arles and Constance of Provence. (C-456, 1440) OF TOULOUSE, Constance (I13162)
 
3354 She is also known as Matilda of Flanders. (C-1351) BALDWIN V, Matilda (Or Maud) D.Of V (I12849)
 
3355 She is apparently a twin of John. COATE, Joanna (I2579)
 
3356 She is buried 3 miles SW of Silverstreet, Newberry Co., SC in the Coate Family Graveyard. This graveyard was located near the site of the Coate's Meeting House and Old Turner's Fort on Little River. The Coate's meeting house was built byre (Capt.) Henry Coate and was free to all denominations and was also used as a school house for many years. In a book describing this cemetery, it says it is located 6 miles from the Newberry Courthouse. (C-1690, EL) LONG, Elizabeth (Betsy) (I13998)
 
3357 She is buried the same day as her likely son indicating an illness, accident or birth event took them at the same time. HEWLETT, Ruth (I10130)
 
3358 She is called Amelia Lindsey in Summers book "From Newberry...". She and her husband were in Medlin's Quaker Families. (C-1914) COATE, Amelia Long (I13794)
 
3359 She is called Cyntha Ann in the 1848 Chancery records for Montgomery Co, OH as a child of Mary John and Absolom Mast. She and her husband had seven children. (C-756) MAST, Cynthia Ann (Synthaan) (I12396)
 
3360 She is called Suzie and like her brother, Talbert, is working in the mill in the 1900 census and living with her mother and family. HUNTINGTON, Susannah (I1606)
 
3361 She is currently living according to her mother's obituary. PIANALTO NEWMAN, Helene (I5233)
 
3362 She is highly likely to be the Susanna Caotes that married Joseph Gladen on Jan 9, 1771 as she's the only Susanna of this time period whose spouse isn't known. If so, they became residents of VA. (C-1677, E) COATS, Susanna (I1285)
 
3363 She is highly likely to be the the Elizabeth Mary P. Dimmack whose birth was recorded in March of 1873 from Wolstanton Parish, Staffordshire, England, v. 6b, p. 658. DIMMACK, Elizabeth Mary P. (I1967)
 
3364 She is in a deed record dated 1807 in Newberry Co., SC jointly selling land to a Mr. Boyd along with her probable children, Isaiah and William Pemberton. William and Samuel Coate are the witnesses to the deed. PUGH, Lydia (I11709)
 
3365 She is in the burial index twice with her death month being the same, one record as 1794 and one as Sep 3,1795, so we don't know which is correct. COTTE, Tomsin (I2688)
 
3366 She is likely named after her grandmother, Edith Coate, who died in 1718 about 2 years before she was born. She was still single and listed as the daughter of William in her burial record. COATE, Edith (I527)
 
3367 She is likely related to her sister-in-law, Varvara's husband. REPASHY, Julie (I9827)
 
3368 She is likely the Margaret Coats that joined the Greenville Creek Church of Christ at the same time as her husband's parents in 1843. DUNN, Margaret (I13819)
 
3369 She is likely the Mary Coate who was buried on 11 Sep 1681 in Drayton. No relatives were listed. If she had been infant, it almost always lists the father. Mary (I10107)
 
3370 She is likely the niece of Richard Hall, who was a neighbor and friend of Matthew Howard in Virginia. HALL, Ann (I5749)
 
3371 She is likely the sister, Tet Reed, named as a surviving sibling to Ephraim Dimmack in his obituary. In 1944, when Ephraim died, she was living in Los Angeles, California. One of her descendants is Senator Harry Reid. DIMMACK, Harriet (I9669)
 
3372 She is likely to be the Cordelia Gaskins who married James Burnett on 8/21/1845 in Gallia Co., OH marriage records by Trowbridge. DANNER, Unknown (I1413)
 
3373 She is listed 10th in her father's will. Deborah died three weeks after her father while giving birth to twins. Her birth date on Apr. 25, 1772 in her and her husband's family bible is in conflict with her sister Anna's birth date. Wet sure which is correct. JAY, Debora - apparent twin (I5810)
 
3374 She is listed as a kin of Elizabeth Coate in Elizabeth Coate's will dated 1713 and was likely included in her will because she was named after her. Her mother Mary, is named as Elizabeth Coate's sister in this 1713 will. Her christenie is verified in transcripts of original christening records of St. Andrew church in Somerset, England as 1711. ANDREWS, Elizabeth (I2244)
 
3375 She is listed as a minor with consent to marry from her mother Joan Fry. She is listed at age 79 in her burial records. FRY, Ann (I6742)
 
3376 She is listed as a Quaker from the province of Munster, Ireland in the "Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania In Delaware County. Established in 1684." WELDON, Susanna (I14775)
 
3377 She is listed as a spinster in her marriage record. HOOPER, Sarah (I6636)
 
3378 She is listed as a spinster when she married so her birthdate is more likely before 1786. FARLEY, Mary (I6931)
 
3379 She is listed as a spinster when she marries. COGGAN, Nancy (I6904)
 
3380 She is listed as a twin when she was baptised. COATE, Mary (I2826)
 
3381 She is listed as a Weaver in the 1860 census and head of household. EVANS, Julia (I8155)
 
3382 She is listed as a widow. NALYHO, Maria (I9801)
 
3383 She is listed as a Wood in family records and as a Donathan in court records, so which is her maiden name is not clear. She is listed as Rachel Wood Donathan in her marriage to Bartholomew indicating that she was probably married to a Dn before Bart.

My theory is that she is the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Wood and sister to Jeremiah Wood. Both she (as Rachel Gaskins) and Jeremiah Wood are named in the will of Reubin Dolard on Jan 8, 1802 in Bedford Co., Virginia. Reubin Dolard was the same person that provided surety when she married indicating some close relationship between them, possibly uncle or grandparent. She is not named in her possible father, Thomas Wood's will written on Nov. 26, 1773 other than the fact that he alluded to his children in general. The will was not probated until Feb. 25, 1793, a few months before she married. She did name her oldest child, Thomas, again suggesting this is a likely match for the Bedford Co., Virginia area where they all lived. (Hinshaw, V.VI, CL-553, 554) 
DONATHAN, Rachel WardWoods (I8349)
 
3384 She is listed as Aba in some sources. UNKNOWN, Bava (I13289)
 
3385 She is listed as age 60 on her headstone. (E) SMITH, Mary (I14825)
 
3386 She is listed as Amelia Nathan Forte in the Mormon I.G.I. files. FORTE, Amelia Isabella (Nathan) (I1247)
 
3387 She is listed as Amy Hissom, living sibling of Ephraim Dimmack in his obiturary. They were of Washington, Pennsylvania at the writing of the obituary in 1944. DIMMOCK, Amy M. (I5302)
 
3388 She is listed as an Ironmonger by occupation in the 1881 census for Darlaston, England. BUCKNALL, Harriett (I9342)
 
3389 She is listed as desceased when her daughter Elizabeth marries in 1802 in Maryland. LONGSTRETH, Jane (I14788)
 
3390 She is listed as Eliza Parry in the marriage record in the British Isles I.G.I record at familysearch.com. No source or place name is listed for this marriage. She is listed as Elizabeth in Ohio 2nd hand sources that I've noted in the source listings for her.

She is listed as being from Llanarth, Monmuthshire, Wales in her marriage record. There is one other person born in that same town with the last name of Parry that might be her sibling in the 1851 census for Wales. William Parry was born there about 1791. He still lived in the same Parish he was born in in 1851.

She is most likely to be the Elizabeth who was born in Raglan. It was 10 miles from Abergavenny, Wales and 8 miles from Llanarth Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales. 
PARRY, Elizabeth * (I8950)
 
3391 She is listed as Ella Dudick, b. Oct 20, 1901 in the Ridgway Twp., Elk Co, PA birth records which totally does not agree with her baptismal record. The doctor that submitted names and dates to the courthouse made extreme mistakes on everle entry for this family and it can't be taken as truth. The baptismal records have actually been recorded within a week of this families' birth dates, and seem accurate. Julie was taken in while she was in an orphanage after her father's death by the chief of police. Though not officially adopted, she was given the name Marian Gertrude by her caretakers. This was the name she was called as an adult. She and her mother tried desperately to connect again throughout their lives. When Marian finally found her lost family with the help of the Catholic church, her mother had already passed on. (D-164) She is most likely to be named after a close relative of her mother's, as Julia is the name of another person who emigrated from the same region that Mary's sister, Veronica is from with the same surname of Vovcsik. DUDICK, Julia (Marion Gertrude) (I11776)
 
3392 She is listed as Goodyear for her surname in a 1912 book that includes the ancestors of Abel Sperry, but according to Olive Hoffman this is a misinterpretation based on the fact that her husband was known as "Goodyear's farmer". New Havel records supposedly have the Richard Sperry marrying Dennis (Dennise) Richard instead, but this needs to be verified as Jacobus, using the vital records, listed her with no known surname. (F-525, 609) UNKNOWN, Dennise (I16118)
 
3393 She is listed as Hildebrante/Adela of Vexin on CD-100. (C-1363) DE VEXIN, Adela "De Valois" (I12954)
 
3394 She is listed as Jeane Coates, sister to Thomas Sisom when Thomas sent for her sons and asked them to come to Pennsylvania in 1693. In her will, she is listed as Joan Clemson, widow and names children Mary, wife of John Harris, William, Thomas, John, and George Coates. Her executor was her son John Coates. She obviously married an unnamed Clemson after her first husband, a Coates, died. (C-1006, E)

Besides Thomas, she might also have had a brother or nephew named John Sisom. He apparently lived near her son William and witnessed a deed contract William made in 1746 selling land to Peter Aldermost through a yearly rental fee for a period of years. The land became Peter's in a deed recorded in Philadelphia in 1767. John's widow, Ann Sisom, testified that he had witnessed the deed back in 1746.

After hunting for Sisom's in every county in England, the name was commonly spelled Sisson instead. The large majority of Sison's lived in Yorkshire, England. The only family I found that had both a son Thomas and daughter Jane Joan (Jana in latin) was in West Riding, Yorkshire, England, the same place where grandson William traveled and married his wife. However, Joan's age is unexpected. She was born in 1734. The likely reason researchers could not find her in England was because she was born earlier than thought and married before she married a Coats.

Her marriage to what we now have documentary evidence for as John Coates would have been her 2nd marriage. She first married Thomas Robinson in July of 1662. He passed 5 months later. Somewhere after she married Thomas Robinson and before she married John Coats, she became a Quaker. John and she (under the name Jean Robinson) married in 1664 in a Quaker Monthly Meeting. He likely died in Yorkshire, England in 1693. She would have brought mostly grown children to the U.S. near the age of 60 sometime in the early 1700's. The Quaker religion was very new when they were drawn to it's radical ideas at the time. Quakers endured great trials in England as they did not believe in paying tithes to the Church of England. They also believed everyone was equal and did not address authority in a way that denoted their superiority.

We now know that John and Joan practiced the Quaker faith in Thirsk and the Church of England religion in Bolton Upon Swale, both in Yorkshire. This fits all the 1st hand records for the ages of their children according to Philadelphia records. The named 3 sons John and 2 daughters Mary indicating that the younger named children had died before renaming a child the same name. Their two locations suggested that they might have had a summer home or at least were of the wealthy class. 
SISOM, JoanJaneJeane (I14922)
 
3395 She is listed as Jeane Coates, sister to Thomas Sisom when Thomas sent for her sons and asked them to come to Pennsylvania in 1693. In her will, she is listed as Joan Clemson, widow and names children Mary, wife of John Harris, William, Thomas, John, and George Coates. Her executor was her son John Coates. She obviously married an unnamed Clemson after her first husband, a Coates, died. (C-1006, E)

Besides Thomas, she might also have had a brother or nephew named John Sisom. He apparently lived near her son William and witnessed a deed contract William made in 1746 selling land to Peter Aldermost through a yearly rental fee for a period of years. The land became Peter's in a deed recorded in Philadelphia in 1767. John's widow, Ann Sisom, testified that he had witnessed the deed back in 1746.

After hunting for Sisom's in every county in England, the name was commonly spelled Sisson instead. The large majority of Sison's lived in Yorkshire, England. The only family I found that had both a son Thomas and daughter Jane Joan (Jana in latin) was in West Riding, Yorkshire, England, the same place where grandson William traveled and married his wife. However, Joan's age is unexpected. She was born in 1734. The likely reason researchers could not find her in England was because she was born earlier than thought and married before she married a Coats.

Her marriage to what we now have documentary evidence for as John Coates would have been her 2nd marriage. She first married Thomas Robinson in July of 1662. He passed 5 months later. Somewhere after she married Thomas Robinson and before she married John Coats, she became a Quaker. John and she (under the name Jean Robinson) married in 1664 in a Quaker Monthly Meeting. He likely died in Yorkshire, England in 1693. She would have brought mostly grown children to the U.S. near the age of 60 sometime in the early 1700's. The Quaker religion was very new when they were drawn to it's radical ideas at the time. Quakers endured great trials in England as they did not believe in paying tithes to the Church of England. They also believed everyone was equal and did not address authority in a way that denoted their superiority.

We now know that John and Joan practiced the Quaker faith in Thirsk and the Church of England religion in Bolton Upon Swale, both in Yorkshire. This fits all the 1st hand records for the ages of their children according to Philadelphia records. The named 3 sons John and 2 daughters Mary indicating that the younger named children had died before renaming a child the same name. Their two locations suggested that they might have had a summer home or at least were of the wealthy class.
 
COATS\COATES, Johannis (I14839)
 
3396 She is listed as Mary B. Coate when she signs her name to step son's, Hiram's Quaker marriage record in 1838. She witnesses a Thornburgh marriage in Greene Co., Ohio in 1852. (E) BANGHAM, Mary (I5809)
 
3397 She is listed as Mrs. Frances Bond when she married Christopher Estwick, but it clearly indicates that her father was Francis Bond and mother was Elizabeth Bond in her will. BOND, Frances (I12564)
 
3398 She is listed as Mrs. Jane Coate of North Barrow when she is buried on 18 Jul 1780. Jane (I16525)
 
3399 She is listed as Polly Nance in Summers, "From Newberry". When she married her second husband, they moved to Mississippi. (C-1914) LONG, Mary "Polly" (I13989)
 
3400 She is listed as Rhonda in some sources. TEAGUE, Rhoda (I8007)
 

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