Notes


Matches 3,501 to 3,550 of 7,802

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3501 II. John, second Earl of Atholl, succeeded his father. He is usually stated to have fallen at Flodden, but in reality he died after 1520, and before 1522. On 3 May 1522 his son was infeft as heir by a precept from chancery dated 4 January 1521-22. He married Janet, daughter of Archibald Campbell, second Earl of Argyll, who survived him, and died about Candlemas 1545-46. Had issue:-
1. John, third Earl.
2. Janet, married, first, about 1520, to Alexander Gordon, Master of Sutherland, eldest son of Adam Earl of Sutherland; secondly, before 1532, to Sir Hugh Kennedy of Girvanmains; thirdly, before 1544, to Henry Stewart, Lord Methven; fourthly, in 1557, to Patrick, Lord Ruthven.
3. Helen, married to John, fifth Lord Lindsay of the Byres. She was married, secondly, to Thomas Moncur, a dependant, and died May 1577. Her son Patrick, Lord Lindsay, attempted to stop this marriage in January 1564.
4. Jean, married, August 1507, to James Arbuthnott of that Ilk.
5. Elizabeth, stated to have been married to Colin Mackenzie of Kintail.
6. Isabel, stated to have been married to James Hering of Lethendy.

Source: THE SCOTS PEERAGE, ed. by Sir James Balfour Paul, Vol I, Edinburgh, 1906, p. 443.
——————————————

Death: Battle of Flodden Field, 
Stewart, Earl John II (I31011)
 
3502 Illegitimate daughter of Anna Margaretha Grinner, a widow of Sonnefeld, and of Georg Friedrich Thoma, master potter of Hofstädten. Thomæ, Margaretha Barbara (I21941)
 
3503 Illegitimate son of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, was Count of Eu and Count of Hiemois. William succeeded his nephew, Gilbert, as Count of Eu and Hiemois after his murder in 1040.

William rebelled against his half-brother Richard II, Duke of Normandy, and was captured by Raoul d'Ivry and imprisoned by Turquetil of Harcourt, former governer of William the Conqueror. He escaped five years later, and eventually was pardoned by Richard and given leave to marry into the Harcourt Family.

The three mothers listed are various wording for the same mistress. 
d'Eu, William (I34582)
 
3504 Illness due to a malignant growth. They reared a nephew, Harold Johnson. Baptised in the St. Paul's Lutheran Chruch. Rosburg, Rosalina Martha (I13404)
 
3505 Im Pass 2 Schlömer, Henry August (I32652)
 
3506 Immelshausen Family: Heusinger, Caspar Philipp / Schueler, Sophie Christine Wilhelmine (F12572)
 
3507 Immigrate from England to Mass. Colonial British America 1640.

Do NOT attach Isabel Anderson to parents Richard and Ann Anderson of Stallingborough, Lincolnshire. Contrary to the indexed records, the actual parish records show that the date of 19 Oct 1621 is the burial date, not the baptism date, of Issabel Anderson, daughter of Richard Anderson. There isn't another baptism date of an Isabel Anderson between 1615 and 1625 in Stallinborough. 
Anderson, Isabell (I35820)
 
3508 Immigrated from Germany to America in 1845 and settled at Boonville, where he was first employed as potter by Mr. Vollrath, the pioneer potter of this city. In his latter years, Mr. Stretz was engaged in gardening. He died in 1878, from the effects of sunstroke. Mrs. Stretz died at the age of 82 years. Both father and mother are interred in the Catholic Church Cemetery at Boonville.

Lived on Jefferson City Road a couple of house from Lorenz Thoma, who was also a potter working for Vollrath. Lorenz also later became a gardener. Lorenz and Frank's children worked together in later trades.

Mr. Frank Stratz (sic), aged 56 years, was found in an insensible condition on Saturday last about 7 o'clock in the evening. He had been at a neighbor's about 4 in the afternoon, and was heard to complain of pain in his limbs and feeling badly generally. It is not known how long he had been there but as soon as he was found, Dr. W. E. Evans, of this place was sent for and applied all the known remedies for sun-stroke, but to no avail, as he died Sunday morning at 9 o'clock. Mr. Stratz (sic) was a highly respected citizen and will be much missed. The family have the sincere sympathy of the Advertiser. 
Stretz, Frank Joseph (I2359)
 
3509 Immigrated from port of Bristol England with 7 children. Had sent oldest 3 children in 1713 or before to scout out new world. Sept 23, 1717 to Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA. The family was Quaker and George was a weaver. Maugridge, Mary (I31851)
 
3510 Immigrated on the ship "Anne" - left London, England with her Master, William Peirce, and arrived in Plymouth before Jul 1623, carrying many family members left behind from the Mayflower and The Fortune.

PLEASE DO NOT EDIT MARY's information; she has been extensively researched.
"Marie/Mary Buckett, wife of George Soule. The young woman known to Plymouth Colony history as "Marie Buckett" arrived in Plymouth in July 1623 as a single woman passenger on the ship Anne. She may have been about age 18 (born c. 1604) and appears to have traveled with some Alden relatives of her mother, or with members of the possible Warren family with whom she may have lived after the death of her father. Earlier researchers have been stymied in their efforts to prove her ancestry, or from where she came, whether Holland or England.

She first appears in Plymouth Colony records in the 1627 Division of Cattle with passengers of the Anne as "Marie Buckett" where she received one lot of her own "adioyning to Joseph Rogers" .."on the other side of towne towards the eele-riuer."

Author Caleb Johnson estimates she married George Soule about 1625 or 1626. As George Soule was probably born in 1601, and he would have had to wait to marry until released as Winslow's servant at age 25, the marriage of George and Mary was probably in 1626.

In the 1627 Division of Cattle she is listed with her husband George and young son "Zakariah" as " Mary Sowle."

Noted Mayflower researcher and author Caleb H. Johnson writes in The Mayflower Quarterly of December 2013 that the origin of Mary Buckett, wife of Mayflower passenger George Soule, has not been conclusively proven by his, or any previous research. What Johnson did find in England, through extensive research and a lengthy process of elimination was a Mary Beckett in the parish of Watford, Hertfordshire. This Mary was born about 1605 and fits the right age to have been on the Anne in 1623. Also she was in a family using the name Nathaniel, which is found in her own children. Her mother had a Mayflower-sounding name – Alden. She and her husband George were grouped with the Warrens in the 1627 Division of Cattle, with Mrs. Warren coming from Hertfordshire, as did Mary Beckett. Mary's home parish register of St. Mary's Church, Watford, has a number of sixteenth-century Warren family entries of names which all appear in the Mayflower Warren family. Johnson considers the following to be among the most important information in considering Marie Buckett's ancestry – Mary Beckett's father died in 1619 when she was only about 14 years old. As a custom of the time, she and her siblings were likely apprenticed out to relatives, neighbors, acquaintances, etc. Her mother remained a widow until at least 1622 (listed in that year as "Widow Buckett") – further increasing the chance that her children would be sent to other families. Johnson concludes by stating that the following could have put Mary Beckett hypothetically on the ship Anne sailing to America in 1623: the right age, associated with families of Mayflower surnames,
Mary's surname has historically been written as Bucket, based on a singular record in 1623, with some writers writing her maiden name as Becket, but whether either was her maiden name remains unconfirmed. The most recent scholarly treatment regarding Mary's possible origins was published in the December 2013 issue of the Mayflower Descendant by Caleb Johnson, a noted Mayflower pilgrim researcher. While Mr. Johnson's research uncovered a potential promising lead, no concrete conclusion can yet be drawn as to Mary's origins."
SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Soule_(Mayflower_passenger)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Mary arrived at Plymouth in 1623 aboard the Ann, the third ship to bring groups of Pilgrim families to Plymouth. Whether she knew her eventual husband, George Soule, in England prior to George sailing in 1620 on the Mayflower is unknown. She is not considered to have been an indentured servant upon arrival as she is not shown in Plymouth's initial 1623 division of land as attached to a specific person or family. In the latter division she was allotted one acre of land "next to John Rogers" who is otherwise shown as having been allotted two acres at a different location than Mary.

George Soule and wife Mary had nine known children, eight of which were born by 1650. This is reflected in the 1650 Journal of William Bradford by the entry "George Soule is still living and hath 8 children." The ninth child, Benjamin, was born approximately one year later in 1651, but died unmarried in 1676 at Pawtucket, RI, a combatant and casualty of the King Philip's War with the Massaquoit Indians.

On May 22, 1627 the Division of Cattle was recorded in the Plymouth Colony Records. This division was essentially a complete census of 1627 Plymouth. At the date of division Zachariah was George and Mary's only living child.

The known children of George Soule and wife Mary, the exact order unknown but likely:

• i. Zachariah Soule, b. before May 22, 1627, d. before Dec. 11, 1663 as a combatant in the French & Indian War; on the latter date his estate was inventoried at Duxbury, Mass. by John Alden and Constant Southworth with the estate falling to his brother John after settlement. He m. in 1646 a wife named Margaret whose identity has never been uncovered. No known children have been identified and the widow is believed to have remarried and moved from Duxbury.

• ii. John Soule, b. circa 1632 (deposed Mar. 8, 1705/6 at aged "about seventy-four years"), d. intestate at Middleborough, Mass. before Nov. 9, 1707, the date his 2nd wife attested to his estate inventory; m. 1) by about 1656 Rebecca Simonson, daughter of Moses Simonson, by whom he had eight known children; m. 2) by 1679 Esther (Delano) Samson, daughter of Philip Delano and widow of Samuel Samson, by whom he had three children.

• iii. Nathaniel Soule, b. circa 1637, d. intestate at Dartmouth, Mass. prior to Oct. 12, 1699, the date of his estate inventory; m. a wife named Rose by whom he had at least four children.

• iv. George Soule, Jr., b. circa 1639 (deposed Mar. 1, 1672/3 "aged 34 years or thereabouts"), d. testate at Dartmouth, Mass. May 12, 1704; m. an unidentified wife named Deborah, who d. at Dartmouth in Feb. 1709/10. Eight known children of the family.

• v. Susanna Soule, b. circa 1642, d. Jan. 2, 1715/16 at North Kingstown (q.v. N. Kingston), Rhode Island; m. Francis West, s. of Matthew, who d. at N. Kingstown Jan. 2, 1695/96. Nine children of the family.

• vi. Mary Soule, b. circa 1644, was living on Mar. 26, 1720 at Duxbury, Mass.; m. John Peterson, who d. testate at Duxbury between Apr. 29, 1718 (date of will) and Mar. 26, 1720 (date of estate inventory). Purportedly nine children of the family.

• vii. Elizabeth Soule, b. circa 1646, d. circa 1700 at Woodbridge, New Jersey; m. July 23, 1667, Francis Walker, who d. circa 1702 at Woodbridge. Purportedly four children of the family.

• viii. Patience Soule, b. circa 1648, d. Mar. 11, 1705/6 at Middleborough, Mass.; m. in Jan. 1666/7, John Haskell, who d. May 15, 1706 at Middleborough. Eight children recorded at Middleborough.

• ix. Benjamin Soule, b. circa 1651, d. unmarried Mar. 26, 1676 at Pawtucket, Rhode Island a combatant in King Phillips War against the Massaquoit Indians.

Revised 10/14/2014 
Beckett, Mary (I32948)
 
3511 Immigrated to Cleveland, Ohio on 13 November 1857 aboard the ship Elise Ruebck, Captained by R. Boysen Kulow, Johann Christian (I18196)
 
3512 Immigrated to the United States aboard the ship Friedeburg arriving in New York on 07 Jul 1869 from Hamburg.

Johann H. Rosburg, age 32, male, farmer
Cristine Rosburg, age 32, female, wife
Heinrich, Rosburg, age 7 male, child
Carl Rosburg, age 6, male, child
Sophie Rosburg, age 8 months, infant
Dorothea Rosburg, age 36, female, woman

In 1870, Henry, Carl (Chas), and Dorothea were living with Johann and Dorothea's sister, Luise in Geneseo, Henry, County, Illinois. 
Rosburg, Augusta Dorothea Wilhelmine (I23394)
 
3513 Immigrated to the United States aboard the ship Friedeburg arriving in New York on 07 Jul 1869 from Hamburg.

Johann H. Rosburg, age 32, male, farmer
Cristine Rosburg, age 32, female, wife
Heinrich, Rosburg, age 7 male, child
Carl Rosburg, age 6, male, child
Sophie Rosburg, age 8 months, infant
Dorothea Rosburg, age 36, female, woman

On 05 Apr 1911, Christine purchase 640 acres of land in Sheridan County, Nebraska in 024N 043W Sections 20 and 21. 
Wolf, Cathrina Christina (I5485)
 
3514 Immigrated to the United States aboard the ship Friedeburg arriving in New York on 07 Jul 1869 from Hamburg.

Johann H. Rosburg, age 32, male, farmer
Cristine Rosburg, age 32, female, wife
Heinrich, Rosburg, age 7 male, child
Carl Rosburg, age 6, male, child
Sophie Rosburg, age 8 months, infant
Dorothea Rosburg, age 36, female, woman 
Rosburg, Carl (I16186)
 
3515 Immigrated to the United States aboard the ship Friedeburg arriving in New York on 07 Jul 1869 from Hamburg.

Johann H. Rosburg, age 32, male, farmer
Cristine Rosburg, age 32, female, wife
Heinrich, Rosburg, age 7 male, child
Carl Rosburg, age 6, male, child
Sophie Rosburg, age 8 months, infant
Dorothea Rosburg, age 36, female, woman 
Rosburg, Heinrich (I8987)
 
3516 Immigrated to the United States aboard the ship Friedeburg arriving in New York on 07 Jul 1869 from Hamburg.

Johann H. Rosburg, age 32, male, farmer
Cristine Rosburg, age 32, female, wife
Heinrich, Rosburg, age 7 male, child
Carl Rosburg, age 6, male, child
Sophie Rosburg, age 8 months, infant
Dorothea Rosburg, age 36, female, woman 
Rosburg, Johann Heinrich (I22615)
 
3517 Immigrated to the United States aboard the ship Friedeburg arriving in New York on 07 Jul 1869 from Hamburg.

Johann H. Rosburg, age 32, male, farmer
Cristine Rosburg, age 32, female, wife
Heinrich, Rosburg, age 7 male, child
Carl Rosburg, age 6, male, child
Sophie Rosburg, age 8 months, infant
Dorothea Rosburg, age 36, female, woman 
Rosburg, CAROLINE Dorothea Sophia "Lena" (I34)
 
3518 Immigration Notes:
Zacharias 60 YO
Susanna 58 YO
Anna 20 YO
Lorenz 15 YO
Johann Conrad 2 YO 
Stegner, Zacharias (I42)
 
3519 Immigration Notes:
Zacharias 60 YO
Susanna 58 YO
Anna 20 YO
Lorenz 15 YO
Johann Conrad 2 YO 
Buehling, Susanna Margaretha (I8017)
 
3520 Immigration Notes:
Zacharias 60 YO
Susanna 58 YO
Anna 20 YO
Lorenz 15 YO
Johann Conrad 2 YO 
Stegner, Anna Margaretha (I9770)
 
3521 in 1213 he was a minor in custody of William Brewere. Dinham, Sir Geoffrey IV (I26398)
 
3522 In 1302, Sara, was the heir of her niece Margery.

About Sarah de Hornacote
Notes:

Sarah de Hornacote was the daughter and co-heir and eventually heir to Margery her niece, Assize Roll 30 Edw I.

Events:
1. Alt. Birth; 1214, Hertland, Devonshire, England.

Marriage Information:
Sarah married Roger CARMYNOWE, son of Robert DE CARMYNOWE and Unknown. (Roger CARMYNOWE was born in 1214 in Tresolyth, Cornwall.)

Marriage Information:
Sarah also married Sir Geoffrey DE DINHAM of Hartland, son of Oliver DE DINHAM & Hartland and Elizabeth. (Sir Geoffrey DE DINHAM of Hartland was born in 1200 in Hertland, Devonshire, England and died before 26 Dec 1258 in Buckland Dinham, Somerset, England 2409,2410.

Spouses/Children:

1st Husband: Roger CARMYNOWE

Daughter: Lady Maude CARMINOWE+

Son: Sir Roger DE CARMINOW Lord of Trelowith+

2nd Husband: Sir Geoffrey DE DINHAM of Hartland

view all
Sarah de Hornacote's Timeline
1214
1214
Birth of Sarah
Tintagel, Cornwall, England
1240
1240
Age 26
Birth of Sir Roger de Carminow,"Crusader"
St. Mewan, Cornwall, England
1242
1242
Age 28
Birth of 
de Hornacote, Lady Sara (I26397)
 
3523 In 1338, Oliver Carminow conceded all his lands to Roger Carminow, his son and heir. Carminow, Sir Roger II (I26396)
 
3524 In 1574 he was sued by the step sons from his first marriage to N. Naumann for 300 florins. Evidently this money was from the estate of his step-sons real father and Michael was supposedly to keep it for them until his step sons reached maturity. Evidently, he never gave them the money, so they sued him.

Based on the marriage record of his daughter, Anastasia, he was evidently dead before her marriage.
From Chip Kalb:
By the way, when I got your reply, I was eyeballing Joel Seigler, Margaretha Klipper and Michael Scheber up and down that Klipper Genealogy.  I couldn’t find anything wrong with any of them until I got to that infamous item about “Ihme sein Schwager Herr Joël Siegler des Rhats alhier” in that verdammt will.  When I read it as “my brother-in-law Mr. Joël Siegler of the [ City ] Council of this place [ Hildburghausen ]”, I remembered that, like the English language, the German language is not carved in stone.  It is always changing with the times, and not just in the spelling.  As any etymological dictionary will show in any language, words do not always keep the same meanings.  What might make perfect sense to Martin Luther in 1516 would not make any sense to his descendants in 2016!

So I looked up “Schwager” in Ernest Thode’s German-English Genealogical Dictionary.  Here is his definition : “brother-in-law ; father-in-law ; relative ; good friend.”   ( It was the same in Ye Olde English. ).  So, when Michael Klipper wrote his will in 1606, Joël Siegler was still his “good friend”, not his “brother-in-law”.  He didn’t become his brother-in-law for real until 1614, when he married Anastasia’s mother.

So why was Anastasia described as a privigna of Joëlÿ Siegler?   If her father had ever left a will, it is not available online.  But, if he did make his will, we can assume that he took his real brother-in-law’s suggestion and made Mr Siegler the legal guardian of his children.  Even if he didn’t, there might be bonds of guardianship for his children.  So, when Anastasia’s marriage record called her the privigna of Joëlÿ Siegler, it meant that she was his ward, not his step-daughter.  That means that her father, Michael Scheber, was already dead by 1606. 
Scheber, Michael (I12549)
 
3525 In 1634 he went to war. On 29 Dec 1639 he hanged himself in his home; which was in front of the upper gate. Scheber, Caspar (I28741)
 
3526 In 1637-had 84 acres of Romney Marsh, 1/2 way from Boston to Salem on the coast.

John Audley (Odlin)( 1600-1685) & Margaret (1620-1685)
Armprer, cutler

Education: Able to sign his name, owned books. Religion: Admitted to Boston Church--late 1632.
He was one of the first inhabitants of Boston. In January of 1637, he was allotted 84 acres at Romney Marsh which he sold 24 December 1638.
John Odlin born 1602. He married Margaret maiden name not known. Hannah Odlin, daughter of John & Margaret Odlin, was baptized in the first church in Boston, MA under the name Audlyn, the 29th day of 8th month, 1643, aged about 8 days and died as the wife of Jonathan Davol.
Source: Letter From Robert L. Webster, Idaho Falls, ID (webfam@srv.net) 12/11/1997
The Ancient and Honorable Lineage Book states [dau. of John (2) and wife Martha of Newport, RI] hence Hannah Audley (3), grd.dau. of John (1) Audley & wife Margaret of Boston, Armorer, (Ancient & Honorable Artillery Company Bk. I 1664-1673). The authority for Hannah (2) (Audley) is from Devol-Willits Gen. and Gilman-Noyes Ancestry. The importance of her ancestry is the fact that she was the mother of all the children--5 sons and 6 daughters.

Born about 1602, based on deposition of 1684, but given the date of birth of his eldest child this may be an exaggeration. An armorer & cutler who came to Massachusetts Bay in 1632 & settled in Boston.
Died in Boston 18 December 1685 and buried the following day.
Married by 1635 Margaret _____; last seen on 11 May 1667 when she joined in a deed with her husband, and may have died soon after since she was not a party to a deed nine months later. She may be one of the otherwise unidentified Margarets who joined Boston church during the early years. 
Audley, John (I32878)
 
3527 In 1662 he was single. His bride died before the intended wedding. Steiner, Johann (I32890)
 
3528 In 1670 she acquired citizenship in Leutenberg Vogel, Margaretha (I33003)
 
3529 In 1741, after the death of her husband, Johann Sebastian Thomæ, the widower Anna Gutsel lived in House 51A along with Konrad Gutsel. Presumably Konrad was a brother to Anna. Gutsel, Anna (I10874)
 
3530 in 1748 he was in service to the King of Prussia. Braunschmidt, Johann Friedrich (I24338)
 
3531 In 1750, one of their sons received the Klipper scholarship. Fischer, Elisabeth (I28508)
 
3532 In 1750, one of their sons received the Klipper scholarship. Bergmann, Friedrich (I28509)
 
3533 In 1773, he was a student on the Klipper scholarship. Baumann, Johann Christian Wilhelm (I29232)
 
3534 In 1778 Johann Paul Thomæ was living in House 51a in Hofstädten. In 1811 after the death of Johann Paul it came into the possession of Johann Ernst Thomæ and his wife Sabine. After the death of Maria Sabina nee’ Bechmann Thomæ it came into the possession of Johann Ludwig Thomæ. And Barbara Thomæ was awarded the Brennhaus. In 1835 Johann Ludwig came into possession of both House 51a and 51b. In 1852 the house came into the possession of Lorenz Thomæ, Sr. and in 1844 passed into the house of Lorenz Thomæ, Jr. Finally in 1854 it came into the possession of Ludwig Thomæ, Sr. (the father of the potter). Then in 1855 in passed to Margaretha Thomæ and her brothers and sisters. Thomæ, Johann Ludwig (I14175)
 
3535 In 1778 Johann Paul Thomæ was living in House 51a in Hofstädten. In 1811 after the death of Johann Paul it came into the possession of Johann Ernst Thomæ and his wife Sabine. After the death of Maria Savina nee’ Bechmann Thomæ in into the possession of Johann Ludwig Thomæ. And Barbara Thomæ was awarded the Brennhaus. In 1835 Johann Ludwig came into possession of both House 51a and 51b. In 1842 the house came into the possession of Lorenz Thomæ, Sr. and in 1844 passed into the house of Lorenz Thomæ, Jr. Finally in 1854 it came into the possession of Ludwig Thomæ, Sr. (the father of the potter). Then in 1855 in passed to Margaretha Thomæ and her brothers and sisters. Thomæ, Johann LORENZ (I8924)
 
3536 In 1778 Johann Paul Thomæ was living in House 51a in Hofstädten. In 1811 after the death of Johann Paul it came into the possession of Johann Ernst Thomæ and his wife Sabine. After the death of Maria Savina nee’ Bechmann Thomæ in into the possession of Johann Ludwig Thomæ. And Barbara Thomæ was awarded the Brennhaus. In 1835 Johann Ludwig came into possession of both House 51a and 51b. In 1852 the case came into the possession of Lorenz Thomæ, Sr. and in 1844 passed into the house of Lorenz Thomæ, Jr. Finally in 1854 it came into the possession of Ludwig Thomæ, Sr. (the father of the potter). Then in 1855 in passed to Margaretha Thomæ and her brothers and sisters.

From the marriage record: On 20 October 1766 were married overnight (literally “in a hour of bed” or secretly) Johann Ernest Thomæ an apprentice potter of Hofstädten with Sabine Bechmann. 
Thomæ, Johann Ernst (I15347)
 
3537 In 1778 Johann Paul Thomæ was living in House 51a in Hofstädten. In 1811 after the death of Johann Paul it came into the possession of Johann Ernst Thomæ and his wife Sabine. After the death of Maria Savina nee’ Bechmann Thomæ in into the possession of Johann Ludwig Thomæ. And Barbara Thomæ was awarded the Brennhaus. In 1835 Johann Ludwig came into possession of both House 51a and 51b. In 1852 the house came into the possession of Lorenz Thomæ, Sr. and in 1844 passed into the house of Lorenz Thomæ, Jr. Finally in 1854 it came into the possession of Ludwig Thomæ, Sr. (the father of the potter). Then in 1855 in passed to Margaretha Thomæ and her brothers and sisters. Thomæ, ANNA MARGARETHA (I4250)
 
3538 In 1778 Johann Paul Thomæ was living in House 51a in Hofstädten. In 1811 after the death of Johann Paul it came into the possession of Johann Ernst Thomæ and his wife Sabine. After the death of Maria Savina nee’ Bechmann Thomæ in into the possession of Johann Ludwig Thomæ. And Barbara Thomæ was awarded the Brennhaus. In 1835 Johann Ludwig came into possession of both House 51a and 51b. In 1852 the house came into the possession of Lorenz Thomæ, Sr. and in 1844 passed into the house of Lorenz Thomæ, Jr. Finally in 1854 it came into the possession of Ludwig Thomæ, Sr. (the father of the potter). Then in 1855 in passed to Margaretha Thomæ and her brothers and sisters.

From the marriage record: On 20 October 1766 were married overnight (literally “in a hour of bed” or secretly) Johann Ernest Thomæ an apprentice potter of Hofstädten with Sabine Bechmann. 
Bechmann, Maria Sabina (I22552)
 
3539 In 1778 Johann Paul Thomæ was living in House 51a in Hofstädten. In 1811 after the death of Johann Paul it came into the possession of Johann Ernst Thomæ and his wife Sabine. After the death of Maria Savina nee’ Bechmann Thomæ in into the possession of Johann Ludwig Thomæ. And Barbara Thomæ was awarded the Brennhaus. In 1835 Johann Ludwig came into possession of both House 51a and 51b. In 1852 the house came into the possession of Lorenz Thomæ, Sr. and in 1844 passed into the house of Lorenz Thomæ, Jr. Finally in 1854 it came into the possession of Ludwig Thomæ, Sr. (the father of the potter). Then in 1855 in passed to Margaretha Thomæ and her brothers and sisters. Thomæ, Lorenz (I17264)
 
3540 In 1805 he took over the house from his brother. He was the eldest son.

Died in difficult economic circumstances.

House Stechbahn 5

7. In 1788, the master carpenter Henrich August Schlömer (* March 31, 1754; † May 12, 1820) acquired the property. He was the eldest son of the master joiner Justus Schlömer and Anna Erich Götte. On February 18, 1783 he married Catharina Thiele (* February 22, 1760; † February 22, 1830), the third daughter of the penny master Henrich Thiele and Anna Maria Götte. Schlömer was the city councilor and city building supervisor. He later lived in house Im Pass 2. He lost his fortune and died of cancer "in bad circumstances". 
Schlömer, Henry August (I32652)
 
3541 In 1820 he was living alongside his father. Simmons, Libbeas Jr (I16609)
 
3542 In 1824 he was a student of Theology and in 1827 he was on a Klipper fellowship. König, Carl Heinrich (I28760)
 
3543 In 1840, Levi actually lived in present day Watauga county even though the census was taken for Ashe County. The reason is that Watauga County was formed from Ashe in 1849
There are some who say that Levi actually died in Johnson County, Tennessee, presumably the Mountain City Civil District. 
Norris, Levi Shinn (I13375)
 
3544 In 1841 he was living on Westholm in Pilton, Somerset England. In 1861 she was living on Huckinghill Lane in Pilton. In 1871 he was widowed and working as a farm Labourer. Gives birthplace as East Pennard, Somerset Booker, Era Rebecca (I27798)
 
3545 In 1841 he was living on Westholm in Pilton, Somerset England. In 1861 she was living on Huckinghill Lane in Pilton. In 1871 he was widowed and working as a farm Labourer. Gives birthplace as East Pennard, Somerset Ward, Richard (I20166)
 
3546 In 1841 he was living with parents and siblings. In 1851 at the home of William Young in Woolavigton, England. Baker, Edward (I5293)
 
3547 In 1841 he was living with parents and siblings. In 1851 at the home of William Young in Woolavington along with brother Edward. Baker, Robert Wall (I22427)
 
3548 In 1841 Samuel was living at Kingsdon House in Kingsdon, Somerset England. In 1851 he was a widower with an 11 month old son. Perrott, Samuel (I20495)
 
3549 In 1841 Sarah was living with her parents on High Street in West Lydford, Somerset, England. In 1851, Sarah is again liivng with her parents of High Street along with her nephew. Perrott, Sarah (I12179)
 
3550 In 1841 she was living on Westholm in Pilton, Somerset England. Ward, Ann Maria (I10224)
 

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