Notes
Matches 5,051 to 5,100 of 10,692
| # | Notes | Linked to |
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| 5051 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Cox, William H (I56809)
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| 5052 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Barnett, Harris Carswell (I56811)
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| 5053 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Cox, Joe Clifford (I56824)
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| 5054 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Stevenson, Wenona (I56825)
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| 5055 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Cox, Colleen (I56826)
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| 5056 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Dunaway, John Alex (I56827)
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| 5057 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Cox, George W (I56831)
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| 5058 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Kennedy, Marjorie (I56896)
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| 5059 | Lincolnton Cemetery | Dallas, Wylie Alexander Sr (I56897)
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| 5060 | Linn County Leader, March 1960: Funeral services for Mrs. Anna Belle Hicks Thompson, 78, who died March 21, 1960, were held Friday, March 25, 1960 , at 2 o'clock, at Bethany Baptist Church, under the direction of Miller-Tillotson Funeral Home, with Rev. Wilbur Harbaugh conducting the services. Burial was in Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Marceline, MO. Mrs. Thompson, the former Anna Belle Hicks, Daughter of John W. and Mattie (Hughes) Hicks, was born in Mike,, MO. She is survived by her Husband, Wayne, of the home; 4 Daughters, Opal Oldham, Ada Belle Hughes and Lucille McMillan, all of Marceline, MO, and Maxine Manlove, of Rothville, MO; 3 Sons, Earl, of Marceline, MO, Wayne, of Monument, Colo., and Virgil, of San Diego, Calif.; 2 Brothers, Robert Hicks, of Marceline, MO, George Hicks, of Des Moines, Iowa; 21 Grandchildren; 18 Great-Grandchildren. She was preceded in death by a Son, Walter; 2 Infant Children; 2 Brothers and 3 Sisters. | Hicks, Anna Bell (I6600)
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| 5061 | Linn County Leader, MO - July 1944: Oscar M. Maupin, former Chariton County Sheriff and Brother of Mrs. James W. Duvall, Marceline, MO, died Sunday, July 2, 1944, at his home, in Salisbury, MO. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon in Salisbury, MO, conducted by Rev. W. L. Meyers, pastor of the Methodist Church, Salisbury, MO. Burial was in Locke Cemetery, south of Marceline, MO. Mr. Maupin was born April 28, 1871, Son of Rev. R. S. and Mary Ellen Maupin. He and Miss Rebekah F, Gunn were married December 10, 1896. In 1924, Mr. Maupin was elected Sheriff of Chariton County, MO. Surviving are his Wife, Rebekah; a Daughter, Mrs. Howard Johnson, of Salisbury, MO; 2 Grandchildren; 4 Sisters, Mrs. James W. Duvall and Mrs. J. J. Bell, both of Marceline, MO, Mrs. J. O. Burgener, of Kansas City, MO, and Mrs. C. W. Hedrick, of Salisbury, MO. | Maupin, Oscar Meadow (I9200)
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| 5062 | Linville Creek Church of the Crethren Cemetery | Neff, Willie (I48381)
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| 5063 | Linwood Cemetery | Penn, Major John (I29757)
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| 5064 | Linwood Cemetery | Greenlee, Levi T (I34523)
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| 5065 | Little Bethel Cemetery | Penn, John Wesley (I29786)
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| 5066 | Little Bethel Cemetery | Littrell, Elizabeth Susan (I29819)
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| 5067 | Little Bethel Cemetery | Penn, Eliza Elen (I29824)
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| 5068 | Little Bethel Cemetery | Penn, Elizabeth (I29825)
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| 5069 | Little Bonne Femme Church Cemetery | Johnston, Robert E Lee (I7905)
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| 5070 | Little Bonne Femme Church Cemetery | Johnston, Robert Thomas (I7908)
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| 5071 | Little Bonne Femme Church Cemetery | Waters, Julia Ann (I14718)
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| 5072 | Little Mound Cemetery | Hammock, Jeremiah Granville (I21618)
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| 5073 | Little Mound Cemetery | Hammock, Francis Afia (I38672)
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| 5074 | Little Mound Cemetery | Hammock, Frances Marion (I38673)
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| 5075 | Little Mound Cemetery | (Unknown), Nannie J (I38718)
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| 5076 | Little River Baptist Church Cemetery | Pratt, Edna Jane (I52405)
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| 5077 | Little River Baptist Church Cemetery | Pratt, John (I52406)
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| 5078 | Little River Baptist Church Cemetery | Kay, Mary (I52407)
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| 5079 | Little River Baptist Church Cemetery, unmarked grave | Harris, Young John (I6266)
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| 5080 | Little River Baptist Church Cemetery, unmarked grave | Tuttle, Kate Ellen (I16862)
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| 5081 | Little Sand Creek Cemetery | Petree, Pryor M (I39666)
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| 5082 | Little Sand Creek Cemetery | Freeland, Polly (I39667)
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| 5083 | Little York Cemetery | Lafferty, Barbara L (I34597)
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| 5084 | Little York Cemetery | Simonson, James Dale (I34606)
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| 5085 | Littleberry Kennedy's death record states that he died of typhoid fever. | Kennedy, Littleberry (I31049)
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| 5086 | Littlejohn Rock Cemetery | Garrison, Joel Halbert (I5199)
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| 5087 | Littlejohn Rock Cemetery | Littlejohn, Caroline E (I52423)
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| 5088 | Liudolf (born about 805, died 12 March 864 or 866) was a Saxon count, son of one count (Graf) Brun (Brunhart) and his wife Gisla von Verla; later authors called him duke of the Eastern Saxons (dux orientalis Saxonum, probably since 850) and count of Eastphalia. Liudolf had extended possessions in eastern Saxony, and was a leader (dux) in the wars of King Louis the German against Normans and Slavs. The ruling Liudolfing House, also known as the Ottonian dynasty, is named after him; he is its oldest verified member. Before 830 Liudolf married Oda, daughter of a Frankish princeps named Billung and his wife Aeda. Oda died on 17 May 913, supposedly at the age of 107. They had six children: Brun Otto the Illustrious, father of Henry the Fowler Liutgard married King Louis the Younger in 874. Hathumoda, became an abbess Gerberga, became an abbess Christina, became an abess By marrying a Frankish nobleman's daughter, Liudolf followed suggestions set forth by Charlemagne about ensuring the integrity of the Frankish Empire in the aftermath of the Saxon Wars through marriage. In 845/846, Liudolf and his wife traveled to Rome in order to ask Pope Sergius II for permission to found a house of secular canonesses, duly established at their proprietary church in Brunshausen around 852, and moved in 881 to form Gandersheim Abbey. Liudolf's minor daughter Hathumod became the first abbess. Liudolf is buried in Brunshausen. | Saxony, Duke of Saxony Liudolf of (I15859)
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| 5089 | Liutgard of Saxony (c. 845-17 November 885) was the wife and Queen of Louis the Younger, the Frankish King of Saxony and East Francia. She was born between 840 and 850, the daughter of Liudolf, Duke of the Eastern Saxons (b. 805-820, d. 12 March 866), and of Oda Billung (b. 805-806, d.17 May 913). She married Louis the Younger - who had already been betrothed to a daughter of Count Adalhard - on 29 November 874 at Aschaffenburg. They had two children: Louis (877-879) and Hildegard (c. 879-after 899), who became a nun in Chiemsee, Bavaria. After her husband's death, she married in 882 Burchard I, Duke of Swabia (b. between 855 and 860, d. 5 November 911). They had two children: Burchard II, Duke of Swabia (born 883-884, d. 28 April 926) and Udalrich von Schwaben (born between 884 and 885, died 30 September 885). [1] Her daughter Dietpirch of Swabia (also known as Theoberga) married Hupald, Count of Dillingen (d. 909). [2] Their children included Ulrich of Augsburg. [3] Liutgard was especially noted for her strong will and political ambition. | Saxony, Liutgard of (I15866)
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| 5090 | live about 10 days | Clawson, Robert Theodore (I18618)
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| 5091 | Lived at 392 5th St, Barberton, OH 44203 | DeVault, Lester Howard Sr (I79)
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| 5092 | Lived at 620 South Pine, Centralia, IL | Petrea, Douglas S (I41119)
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| 5093 | Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales is the son of Iorwerth Drwyndwn. He was born in 1173. He married, secondly, Joan (?), daughter of John I 'Lackland', King of England and Clementina (?), in 1205. He died in 1240. Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales also went by the nick-name of Llwelyn 'the Great'. He gained the title of Prince Llywelyn of North Wales. He hanged the Anglo-Norman baron, William de la Braose, for having an affair with his wife. | Iorwerth, Prince Of North Wales Llywelyn Ap (I7690)
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| 5094 | Llywelyn ap Seisyll (died 1023) was a King of Gwynedd and of Deheubarth in north-west and south-west Wales, also called King of the Britons by the Annals of Ulster. Also called Llywelyn ap Seisyllt Little is known about Llywelyn's father Seisyll, who may not have been of Royal blood. According to some genealogies Siesyll and his son Llywelyn were associated with Rhuddlan, perhaps originally as lords of the Rhuddlan commote in Rhos.[1] Llywelyn's wife Angharad was the daughter of Maredydd ab Owain, who ruled much of both northern and southern Wales for a period. Llywelyn won control of Gwynedd in 1018 when he defeated Aeddan ap Blegywryd in battle, killing him and his four sons. He later gained control of Deheubarth, defeating Rhain, an Irish pretender who claimed to be the son of Maredudd ab Owain, at Abergwili in 1022. According to the annals in Brut y Tywysogion, Llywelyn's reign was a period of prosperity, "there was no one needy in his realm, and there was no town empty or deserted". His reign was cut short by his premature death in 1023. His son, Gruffydd ap Llywelyn, though still a youth when his father died, was later able to gain control of almost the whole of Wales. | Seisyll, King of Gwynedd and of Deheubarth Llywelyn Ap (I15973)
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| 5095 | Loachapoka Cemetery | Elliott, Eli (I57006)
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| 5096 | Loachapoka Cemetery | Elliott, George Washington (I57007)
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| 5097 | Loachapoka Cemetery | Elliott, Benjamin Franklin (I57008)
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| 5098 | Loachapoka Cemetery | Meadows, Viola (I57009)
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| 5099 | Lobb Cemetery | Prewitt, Fisher Mosby (I11422)
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| 5100 | Lobb Cemetery | Steele, Malena Eliza (I13531)
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