Notes
Matches 1,851 to 1,900 of 10,692
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| 1851 | Dayton Cemetery | Joseph, Virginia June (I47843)
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| 1852 | Dayton Cemetery | Kagey, Myrtle (I47846)
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| 1853 | Dayton Daily Journal Tuesday February 4, 1868 page 3 Colonel 3 Another Pioneer Fallen The venerable Henry Houser died at the residence of his son-in-law, Daniel Kneisly, in Wayne township, in this county on Sunday morning, Mr. Houser was born July 18th 1788, in Shenandoah County, Virginia. He was married at an early age to Miss Magdalena Neff, and he soon afterwards- accompanied by his father, who made his home with him- emigrated to this county and settled upon the banks of the Great Miami River, about three miles north of Dayton about the year 1806. He was one of the first settlers in the county. In the vicinity of this city. Five brothers and two sisters also emigrated here from the Shenandoah Valley, and settled in the Miami Valley. After living about twelve years on the farm he opened on the banks of the Miami. Henry Houser removed to Miami county and permanently settled down on a farm in the vicinity of Piqua, where he lived forty-nine years. During his residence in Miami county, his wife died, and was buried in the Piqua Cemetery. About four years ago Mr. Houser returned to this county and made his home with his son-in-law. Mr. Daniel Kneisly, and he resided there until his death. The father and grandfather of the subject of this brief sketch also died on the 2nd day of February- a rather singular coincidence. His father was aged eighty years and a few days over a month, when he died and only about a week older than his son Henry, when he died. The wife of the deceased was nearly sixty-six years old when she died and she had been married about forty-six years they had seven children-six daughters and one son. The father survived two of his daughters. Those living are Mrs. Catharine Kneisly, Mrs. Rebecca Hathaway, Mrs. Czarina Reed, Miss Elizabeth Houser, and Aaron Houser. Mr. Houser was always greatly esteemed by his acquaintances, and although, he was ever a prominent man in his neighborhood, he never aspired to public position and refused to hold office. His remains will be interred in the Piqua Cemetery today. Being widely known and greatly respected, doubtless a large concourse of citizen will attend his funeral both from Wayne township, and from the vicinity of his old home near Piqua; but of all the number, there will be few who came to this Valley at as early a day as the deceased. | Houser, Henry (I7432)
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| 1854 | Death Comes to Mrs. Thursa Edie Wednesday Death took one of Malvern' older residents, Mrs. Thursa L. Edie, Wednesday morning at the Edmundson hospital in Council Bluffs. Mrs. Edie has been bedfast the past five years as a result of a stroke, but death was due to other causes. Funeral services were held at the Mansfield's Funeral Home Saturday, April 25 at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Don E. Griffin officiating. Survivors are three sons, Dale of Malvern, Carl of Stanton, and Ralph of Long Beach, Calif.; four daughters, Mrs. Gayle Winters, Malvern, Mrs. Faye "Winters, Emerson, Mrs. Maxine Danley, Glenwood and Mrs. Mabel Gamble, Long Beach, Calif.; three sisters Mrs. Ola Fuller, SL Joseph, Mo., Mrs. Ona Edie of Colorado, Mrs. Carrie Landsbury of Oklahoma and many relatives and friends. Malvern Leader, April 23, 1959 | Shelby, Thursa L (I40627)
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| 1855 | Deed book B page 607 Whereas WM. SMITH did on the 9th of this instant become security for us John W. Smith, Mary Smith and Wilson Smith for the sum of $65.15 due the first day of January next, payable to A. ISAACS and we, Mary SMITH, and Wilson SMITH, being willing and desirous to secure payment of same, here by sold unto said William Smith the following property, viz, one sorrell mare, one bay horse. Said Wilson Smith and Mary Smith are to retain possession of the Said Creatures until the first day of January next. This 10th day of February, 1830. witnessed: Leesel Thornton, William Birmingham Wilson moved his family to Lawrence County Alabama about 1838. Wilson purchased land from the State of Alabama on Oct. 7, 1852 and had some other transactions. The land is located beside and Southeast of Big Nance Creek near Highway 157. Some of the old homestead land is still in the Smith family today. The oldest home burned down about Dec. 15, 1927. Charley Smith built the next home, which is still standing, in 1928. 1850 census Wilson Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1800 Tennessee Mary Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1798 Tennessee Frances Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1833 Tennessee Susan Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1834 Tennessee Amanda Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1838 Tennessee Joshua Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1843 Alabama R H Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1845 Alabama Thos Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1847 Alabama Wilson Smith District 7, Lawrence, AL abt 1849 Alabama | Smith, Wilson (I12918)
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| 1856 | Deed in Surry Co, NC in 1770 from James Hampton of Rowan Co, NC to John Halbert of same Co, for land in Rowan Co, NC John Halbert, first child of Joel Halbert and Elizabeth Frances Jones, was born 1741 in Caroline Co., Va., and died about 1820, in Lincoln Co., Tn. as his will and estate was settled Jul 22, 1821. It has been stated that John married Peggy Hill, but no record has been found to support this theory. John was married first to Mary Margaret Hampton about 1770, probably in Rowan Co., NC. Mary Margaret was born 1746, Fairfax Co., Va. In 1783 John Halbert was living on Town Fork and paid taxes on 234 acres of land, a negro girl named Rachel, four horses and six cattle. In 1789 Surrey Co. NC. was divided into Surrey Co. and Stokes Co. and the old county buildings being no longer suitably located for either county, John was commissioned to sell them. About this time he was also appointed one of the commissioners to lay out the town of Germantown which was to be the new county seat for Stokes County, NC. John served in the Revolutionary War as a Corp. in Captain Rice's Co., 11th Virginia Regt. Commanded by Colonel Daniel Morgan. He enlisted Mar 1, 1777 and his name is last found on the rolls dated Apr 6, 1778 at Valley Forge, Pa. which showed him absent on sick leave. It is believed that John first went to Tn. in 1811. | Halbert, John N (I5724)
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| 1857 | Deepdale Memorial Park | Neff, Catherine (I48162)
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| 1858 | Deepdale Memorial Park | Walworth, William McAlpine (I48163)
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| 1859 | Deepwood Cemetery | Prewitt, Margaret Elizabeth (I11540)
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| 1860 | Deepwood Cemetery | Prewitt, William Wallace (I11560)
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| 1861 | Deepwood Cemetery | Givens, George Washington (I56157)
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| 1862 | Deepwood Cemetery | Torrey, Hattie (I56161)
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| 1863 | Deer Creek Cemetery | Yager, Frank Lee (I33352)
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| 1864 | Deer Creek Cemetery | Ide, Lennie Ethel (I33353)
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| 1865 | Delhi Cemetery | Welborn, Reverend Louisa Jane (I51564)
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| 1866 | Delhi Cemetery | Pickens, James Madison (I51565)
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| 1867 | Delhi Cemetery | Pickens, Martha Smith (I51568)
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| 1868 | Delhi Cemetery | Pickens, Robert F (I51569)
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| 1869 | Delhi Cemetery | Pickens, Nora J C (I51587)
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| 1870 | Delhi Cemetery | Pickens, Olivia K (I51590)
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| 1871 | Delmar was the son of Clarence and Lena (Edie) Logue, he passed away July 15, 2010 at his home at Lake Nehai. He married Mary Louise Jackson on June 21, 1945 at Linneus, and she preceded him in death on March 17, 1992. Delmar was a farmer, worked in construction, real estate, and for fifty years was a fur buyer. He was a member of the National Rifle Association, served on the Board of Directors Lake Nehai Property Owners Association, was a 4-H Leader for many years, a member of Marceline First Baptist Church and attended Musselfork Community Church, and was an area resident all his life. He is survived by two sons, L Delmar Logue Jr, and wife Carol Lee, Keytesville, Mo.,and Harold D Logue and wife Carol Sue, Marceline, Mo.three daughters, Joan Mott and husband Cecil, Marceline, Mo.Diane Twyman, Salisbury, Mo, and Zedina Kabler and husband Ron, Roselle, Illinois; soecial friend, Leona Payne, Marceline, Mo; twelve grndchildren, and eighteen great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, wife Mary, two brothers, son-in-law Donald Twyman, and a great granddaughter. Pallbearers will be grandsons, Shon Logue, Eric Logue, Jeremy Kabler Sr, Aaron Kabler, and Andy Logue, and honary pallbearers are granddaughters, Melinda K Twyman, Susan McMinn, Candis Norris, and Jennifer Kabler. | Logue, Lawrence Delmar Sr (I40613)
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| 1872 | Delphia Cemetery | Benefiel, William P (I1636)
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| 1873 | Delphia Cemetery | Chafin, John Lawrence (I2595)
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| 1874 | Delphia Cemetery | McEver, Laura (I9522)
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| 1875 | Delphia Cemetery | McEver, Sarah Ann (I9540)
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| 1876 | Delphia Cemetery | Petree, Delphia (I11114)
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| 1877 | Delphia Cemetery | McEver, Andrew Nathaniel (I21348)
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| 1878 | Delphia Cemetery | Stephens, Nancy T (I21349)
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| 1879 | Delphia Cemetery | McEver, William David (I21352)
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| 1880 | Delphia Cemetery | Smith, Ethel (I49330)
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| 1881 | Delphia Cemetery | McEver, Sarah Ann (I49487)
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| 1882 | Delphia Cemetery | Lewis, Baron Von (I49489)
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| 1883 | Delphia Cemetery | Lewis, Herbert O (I49491)
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| 1884 | Delphia Cemetery | Lewis, Thomas Andrew Ralph (I49492)
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| 1885 | Delta Cemetery | Edie, William Alexander II (I33397)
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| 1886 | Delta Cemetery | Martin, Sarah L (I33398)
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| 1887 | Delta Cemetery | Edie, Merle (I33401)
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| 1888 | Delta Cemetery | Edie, Elizabeth M (I33459)
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| 1889 | Delta Cemetery | Edie, Russsell Thompson (I33465)
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| 1890 | Delta Cemetery | Edie, Allen Russell (I40443)
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| 1891 | Delta Cemetery | (Unknown), Mary Elizabeth (I40445)
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| 1892 | Delta Cemetery | Edie, Esther M (I44598)
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| 1893 | Delta Cemetery | Lugard, Sheldon Newton (I55467)
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| 1894 | Delta Cemetery | Lovato, Pedro A (I55481)
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| 1895 | Delta Cemetery - Block 2, Lot 135, Space 3 | Edie, Howard A (I34670)
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| 1896 | Delta Cemetery - Block 2, Lot 135, Space 4 | Edie, James Allen (I33393)
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| 1897 | Delta Cemetery - Block 2, Lot 135, Space 4 | Smith, Laura Elizabeth (I33394)
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| 1898 | Denbigh Castle | Middleton, Robert (I41837)
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| 1899 | Derden Cemetery | Bell, Donald S (I49426)
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| 1900 | Derrick or Dietrich of Oldenburg, Latin-based anglicization also Theoderic of Oldenburg (c. 1398-February 14, 1440), nicknamed Theoderic the Lucky or the Fortunate (Teudericus Fortunatus), was a feudal lord in northern Germany, holding the counties of Delmenhorst and Oldenburg. He was called "Fortunatus" as he was able to secure Delmenhorst for his branch of the Oldenburgs. Dietrich is the father of Christian I of Denmark, a male-line ancestor to the present-day Danish throne under Margaret II of Denmark as well as the last czar of imperial Russia, Nicolas II. Dietrich of Oldenburg was the son of Count Christian V of Oldenburg (who became count in about 1398 and died in 1423) and his wife, Countess Agnes of Honstein. His grandfather, Count Conrad I of Oldenburg (d. ca. 1368) had left his lands divided between his father and his uncle Conrad II. Dietrich’s father, Christian V, managed to gain the upper hand when Conrad II's son Maurice IV died in 1420. After this, most of the Oldenburg family patrimony was under the power of Dietrich’s branch. However, the house had several minor branches who had estates and claims, as was usual in any medieval fief. Dietrich of Oldenburg was the grandson of Ingeborg of Itzehoe, a Holstein princess who had married count Conrad I of Oldenburg. After the death in 1350 of her only brother, Count Gerhard V of Holstein-Itzehoe-Plön, Ingeborg and her issue were the heirs of her own grandmother Ingeborg of Sweden (d. ca. 1290, first wife of Gerhard II of Plön-Itzehoe), the eldest daughter of King Valdemar of Sweden and Queen Sophia, who herself was the eldest daughter of the sonless King Eric IV of Denmark and his wife Jutta of Saxony. Since other legitimate descent from King Valdemar apparently was extinct by this time, Dietrich was considered the heir general of Kings Valdemar I of Sweden and Eric IV of Denmark. Dietrich succeeded his father as head of the House of Oldenburg in 1423. He had firstly, as a child, married (for reasons of succession and uniting the hereditary fiefs) a distant cousin, Countess Adelheid of Oldenburg-Delmenhorst (who is said to have died already in 1404), daughter of Oldenburg Count Otto IV of Delmenhorst, and in 1423 he married for a second time, Helvig of Schauenburg (born in about 1398-1400, died 1436), widow of Prince Balthasar of Mecklenburg and daughter of the murdered Duke Gerhard VI of Schleswig-Holstein and his wife Elisabeth of Brunswick, thus sister of the reigning Duke Adolf VIII. All his legitimate children were born of the second wife. His second marriage strengthened this interest in Scandinavian monarchies, since Helvig was a descendant of King Eric V of Denmark, King Haakon V of Norway and King Magnus I of Sweden. At this time, all Scandinavia lived under the Kalmar Union erected by Queen Margaret I of Denmark. In 1387 she had lost her own heir Olav IV of Norway, the new heirs now being Eric of Pomerania, and his sister Catherine who was married with a prince of the Palatinate and Bavaria. Count Theodoric of Oldenburg is said to have been a rival claimant to the crowns of Sweden and Denmark during the reign of Eric VII/ Eric XIII, whose succession was through Christopher I of Denmark, the younger brother of the murdered Eric IV, and through Magnus I of Sweden, younger brother of the deposed King Valdemar. Count Theodoric had three surviving sons and one daughter: Christian (1426-1481), who succeeded him as Count of Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, and became later King Christian I of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, as well as Duke of Schleswig and Holstein. Maurice (1428-1464); when his elder brother became king, he was given the County of Delmenhorst. Gerhard (1430-1500); when his eldest brother had become king, he was given the county of Oldenburg, and from his other brother's heirs he also inherited Delmenhorst in about 1483. The third son got his name from usages of the mother's Holstein clan. Adelheid (1425-1475), first married count Ernest III of Hohnstein (d. 1454) and then in 1474 Count Gerhard VI of Mansfeld (d. 1492). | Oldenburg, Dietrich of (I37029)
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