Notes
Matches 451 to 500 of 7,802
# | Notes | Linked to |
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451 | 309 Eldert Street | Schlecht, Gottlieb George (I6627)
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452 | 311 Vine Street | Schlotzhauer, Hallie C (I9446)
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453 | 312 Walnut Street | Brandes, Elizabeth Magdelena (I5287)
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454 | 320 East Benton | Moore, Ernest Harvey (I22635)
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455 | 320 Ontario | Counsell, Jennie M (I22627)
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456 | 320 Washington Street | Imhoff, Geneva (I23494)
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457 | 3200 Norledge | Haley, Maude Gertrude (I21675)
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458 | 3231 Prospect | Simmons, Joseph N (I21329)
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459 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Gavin, Richard Douglas / Chinn, Joyce Lynne (F832)
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460 | 3522 Bamburger | Haller, William Bernard (I30647)
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461 | 37th and Blue Ridge | Vollrath, Julie (I10938)
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462 | 3807 Fairview Avenue | Gareis, Katherine (I15100)
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463 | 4 March 1673/4 fathered a child with an unnamed Indian woman and ordered to pay ten bushels of corn to her for the keeping of the child. Nathaniel was born between 1634 and 1646 and died in Dartmouth before 12 October 1699. He married Rose Thorn by 1680 and had five children. Nathaniel may have caused the most colony trouble of any of his siblings. On 5 March 1667/8, he made an appearance in Plymouth court to "answer for his abusing of Mr. John Holmes, teacher of the church of Christ at Duxbury, by many false, scandalous and opprobrious speeches." He was sentenced to make a public apology for his actions, find sureties for future good behavior and to sit in the stocks, with the stock sentence remitted. His father George and brother John had to pay surety for Nathaniel's good behavior with he being bound for monies and to pay a fine. Three years later, on 5 June 1671, he was fined for "telling several lies which tended greatly to the hurt of the Colony in reference to some particulars about the Indians." And then on 1 March 1674/5 he was sentenced to be whipped for "lying with an Indian woman," and had to pay a fine in the form of bushels of corn to the Indian woman towards the keeping of her child. (Caleb H. Johnson. The Mayflower and her passengers (Indiana: Xlibris Corp., 2006), p. 207) | Soule, Nathaniel (I32953)
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464 | 4 sons | Beall, Mary Ann (I27534)
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465 | 4. George (Jörg), born between 1520 and 1525 and died after 10 Jun 1604. In 1582 he was a Schoolmaster in Westhausen, Germany. George married Barbara Graff from Westhausen. They had a girl named Clepha who born around 1570 and was educated by her uncle Stefan. Clepha was married on 27 May 1600 to Deacon Johannes Bartenstein in Westhausen, Germany. She later married Hugo. Johannes Bartenstein was born in Westhausen around 1547 and died in Molschleben in 1627 aged 81 years. He received his degree from the University at Jena in 1564. In 1571 he was a pastor and from 1578 to 1582 served as a Deacon in Coburg. Married before 1571 to Margarethe Nether, daughter of shoemaker Sebastian Nether, in Altenburg, Germany. From FHL 0073201, Westhausen, Evangelical Lutheran Church, Parish Registers, Volume I, Burials 1557 – 1680, Sheet 397, third entry : “1620. “Den 20 Martÿ Gst Hansen Schubasten das ehem hausfraú MAR “GARETHA begraben. Eodem die et hora, Gst auch zugleich “GORGEN MÓRLIN das ehem hausfraW BARBARA begra “ben, zumd zu ein grab gelegt Worden.” This transcription is German except for one Latin phrase, Eodem die et hora ( “On the same day and hour” ). Zumd is the pastor’s shorthand for zusammengefasst, the German word for “combined”. Clearly, the pastor was not the fan of compound words and verbs. He could have written in Latin if he wanted but his parshioners didn’t have the education to read Latin. Besides, ever since the Reformation, Latin was a Catholic thing so it wasn’t cool for the Lutheran pastors to use it at their churches. But they could still use it to look good to the scholars, the historians, the scientists, etc. Translated from the German and Latin : “1620. “On the 20th of March died the late wife of Hansen Schubasten MAR “GARETHA [ and ] buried. On the same day and hour, died also at the same time “the late wife of GEORG MÖRLIN [ and ] bur “ied, combined to be placed in a grave.” From FHL 0073201, Westhausen, Evangelical Lutheran Church, Parish Registers, Volume I, Marriages 1557 – 1680, Sheet 191, third entry : “1 5 7 1 . “den 9 [ Ian : ] Jorg Mörlin “Vert Barbara Greffin.” Notice that the word “Janna” was written over “Febr”. Jorg is the old German spelling of Georg. Vert is the pastor’s own shorthand for verheiratet, the German word for “married”. Translated from the German : “1 5 7 1 . “On the 9th of Jan. Jorg Mörlin “marr[ied]. Barbara Greffin.” | Graff, Barbara (I2806)
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466 | 4. George (Jörg), born between 1520 and 1525 and died after 10 Jun 1604. In 1582 he was a Schoolmaster in Westhausen, Germany. George married Barbara Graff from Westhausen. They had a girl named Clepha who born around 1570 and was educated by her uncle Stefan. Clepha was married on 27 May 1600 to Deacon Johannes Bartenstein in Westhausen, Germany. She later married Hugo. Johannes Bartenstein was born in Westhausen around 1547 and died in Molschleben in 1627 aged 81 years. He received his degree from the University at Jena in 1564. In 1571 he was a pastor and from 1578 to 1582 served as a Deacon in Coburg. Married before 1571 to Margarethe Nether, daughter of shoemaker Sebastian Nether, in Altenburg, Germany. | Nether, Margarete (I1681)
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467 | 400 McRoberts Street | Meyer, Charles C (I27110)
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468 | 401 E Buchman Street | Spieler, Otto F (I5927)
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469 | 403 West Spring Street | Simmons, Elizabeth Ellen "Ella" (I20514)
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470 | 403 West Spring Street | Lymer, Richard (I7066)
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471 | 404 East Howard | Stegner, George Paul (I23778)
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472 | 404 West 25th Street | Passler, Henry Albert (I10020)
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473 | 405 N Benton | Roach, Mary Louisa (I22174)
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474 | 407 Walnut Street | Potter, John Henry (I5449)
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475 | 408 East High Street | Becker, Nettie (I10488)
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476 | 409 1/2 Fourth Street | Siegel, Kalie (I11935)
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477 | 411 Center Avenue | Williams, Mary (I20644)
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478 | 411 West Street | Lymer, William Elmer (I21090)
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479 | 4172 Shenandoah Avenue | Upman, Mary Isabella (I8056)
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480 | 418 West Street | Westerman, CARRIE Carolina (I19219)
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481 | 420 E Bow Street | Wald, Theodore (I173)
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482 | 422 McRoberts | Meyer, Joseph Leo (I32456)
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483 | 432 Clinton | Figg, John Edward (I33318)
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484 | 4471 Pennsylvania | Kessel, Joseph (I3119)
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485 | 4615 Delor | Graf, Francisca (I30645)
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486 | 471 West North Street | Caldwell, William EUGENE (I12067)
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487 | 4949 Wyoming Street | Vollrath, Harry C (I23593)
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488 | 4th St Pauls Street | McCuaig, Margaret Alexander (I35369)
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489 | 4th St Pauls Street | McCuaig, Duncan (I35360)
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490 | 4th St Pauls Street | Alexander, Alice (I35361)
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491 | 4th St Pauls Street | McCuaig, Mary Johnston (I35367)
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492 | 4th St Pauls Street | McCuaig, Mary Johnston (I35367)
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493 | 4th St Pauls Street | McCuaig, Peter (I35368)
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494 | 4th St Pauls Street | McCuaig, Peter (I35368)
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495 | 5 childre, 4 of whom were still living at his death: John, Joe, Henry and Mrs. Fred Gramlich Obituary of Anton Wessing (Central Missouri Republican, Mar 22, 1917), at age 2. | Wessing, Anthony (I21254)
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496 | 5 Delhia Street | McCuaig, Duncan Anderson (I35370)
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497 | 5 miles north of Syracuse, Missouri | Lowe, Charles L (I22649)
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498 | 5 miles north of Syracuse, Missouri | Lowe, Frank (I5520)
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499 | 5. By way of succession, the building was passed on to the eldest son of No. 4, Christian Friedrich Wilhelm Schlömer (* 17.03.1793; † after 1847 USA). On December 5, 1821 he married Christiane Wilhelmine Elisabeth Pohlmann (* September 8th, 1795; † November 14th, 1845 [in great poverty]). She was the eldest daughter of the master carpenter Friedrich Wilhelm Pohlmann and Marie Christiane Hänschen. Schlömer emigrated to the USA after the death of his wife. He was followed by his daughter Henriette Schlömer and her husband Christian Hofmann. Came to the United States on the ship Louisiana which came to New Orleans on 31 May 1847. The marriage certificate is hard to read but I can tell you that it is full of details. Unfortunately, the mothers are not named in it but your friend may not mind their omission too much when she sees the details. I am not going to try to transcribe and translate the whole thing, especially if your friend doesn’t have the patience to wait. I will just say that — Married in the year 1821. Christian Friedrich Wilhelm Schlömer, citizen and apprentice carpenter, was born “in the *acht” at midnight, between 16 and 17 March 1793, the oldest surviving legitimate son of the deceased Heinrich August Schlömer, the councilor and master carpenter who died on 12 May 1820 and was buried in the Altstadt, and Christiana Wilhelmina Elisabeth Pohlmann, born on 8 September 1795 and confirmed in 1809, both in the Altstadt, the oldest legitimate daughter “( who had an illegitimate child )” of Friedrich Wilhelm Pohlmann, citizen and master carpenter of this place I can’t make out the last line but it looks like the groom needed a dispensation “from the soldiers” to marry and got it on 3 November 1821. | Schlömer, Christian Fredrich William (I21527)
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500 | 5. By way of succession, the building was passed on to the eldest son of No. 4, Christian Friedrich Wilhelm Schlömer (* 17.03.1793; † after 1847 USA). On December 5, 1821 he married Christiane Wilhelmine Elisabeth Pohlmann (* September 8th, 1795; † November 14th, 1845 [in great poverty]). She was the eldest daughter of the master carpenter Friedrich Wilhelm Pohlmann and Marie Christiane Hänschen. Schlömer emigrated to the USA after the death of his wife. He was followed by his daughter Henriette Schlömer and her husband Christian Hofmann. | Hänschen, Marie Christiane (I32693)
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