Notes


Matches 8,101 to 8,150 of 10,692

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8101 Pringle Cemetery Pringle, Gilbert (I41629)
 
8102 Pringle Cemetery Skidmore, Martha Ann (I41630)
 
8103 Pringle Cemetery Pringle, William Wirt (I46040)
 
8104 Pringle Cemetery Casto, Barbara Ellen (I46078)
 
8105 Pringle Cemetery Merrical, Mary M (I46183)
 
8106 Priory Church Neville, 1st Baron Latimer George (I10397)
 
8107 Promise City Cemetery McMurry, Ola Agnes (I34230)
 
8108 Promise City Cemetery Pister, William (I34231)
 
8109 Prospect Hill Cemetery Sprague, Vine (I20511)
 
8110 Prostate Cancer Ainsworth, Bunyan Burton (I33090)
 
8111 Providence Baptist Church Cemetery Mumford, Eddie Davis (I56766)
 
8112 Providence Moravian God's Acre Spainhour, Sarah Frances (I55966)
 
8113 Provy was born about 1800. Her parentage is unknown.

She married John Sebold on Sep. 11, 1819 at Kingwood Baptist Church, Kingwood Twp., Hunterdon Co. New Jersey. They had five children: Joseph H., David Bateman in 1830, Jacob Anderson about 1833, Sarah B. in 1836 and William H. about 1844.

The couple lived in West Amwell Twp., Hunterdon Co. all their married life.

Provy was living with her son-in-law and daughter Andrew and Sarah Stout in West Amwell Twp. for the census on July 20, 1870. 
Howell, Provy (I42058)
 
8114 Prudence' eldest child, daughter Ellen Cogswell Sturge Dallas, kept a diary for many years. An entry for July 1, 1891 says: ". . .Clara and Hattie watched Mother during the night. When I want down stairs at 5:30 went immediately to Mother's bedside. Saw there was a change in her appearance for the worse. Told Clara so, & she immediately sent word to brother Ed. He and Ann came down; stayed during the day. We watched by her bedside trying to do for & administer to her relief until 4 p.m. when she quietly breathed her last, surrounded by her children & all of her grandchildren. . .weather hot. Thermometer 112." July 2. ". . .Chand & I went to Modesto to make necessary arrangements for the funeral of our mother. . .Went to the cemetery. Selected a lot in the western part in the gounds set apart for the Masons & their families." July 3 "Undertaker Phelps came with hearse about 4:30 a.m. Mother was then dressed by loving hands & laid in the coffin. About 6:30 friends & neighbors commenced coming in. Mr. Finley read a chapter from the Bible & he & other friends sang 'Shall we meet beyond the river', which was one of the favorite songs our mother delighted to hear. Also sang 'Nearer my God to thee'. Soon after singing the last we started on our mounful way to Modesto. Were met near Modesto by the Rev. Page who conducted the ceremonies at the cemetery. Friends sang the song commencing 'Jesus Lover of my Soul' with saddening effect & our mother was laid in her last resting place to await the Resurrection Morn." Sprague, Prudence (I20142)
 
8115 Published August 2, 1919 in the Kansas City Star:

Wombles - Nora B Wombles, 15 month old daughter of Mr ad Mrs Henry Wombles, died yesterday at the home of her grandparents, Mr and Mrs J C Nichols, 649 Osage Avenue, Kansas side. Funeral services will be held at 4 o'clock this afternoon at the home. Burial will be in Maple Hill Cemetery.

Her death certificate says Nora V Wombles 649 Osage, Kansas City, Wyandotte, Kansas. It gives her birth as May 13, 1918 and death as August 1, 1919 of Acute lobar pneumonia, with burial on August 2.

Nora Wombles lays beneath a blanket of earth in an unmarked grave which is located 5 rows East and 45 feet north in Block 9. 
Wombles, Nora Viola (I38332)
 
8116 Purdin Cemetery Shipp, Laura C (I45491)
 
8117 Purdin Cemetery Simpson, Matthew (I48912)
 
8118 Purdin Cemetery Simpson, Albert W (I48914)
 
8119 Putnam Cemetery Anderson, Dora (I53901)
 
8120 Quarryville Cemetery Hawkins, Elizabeth Jane (I39503)
 
8121 Quarryville Cemetery Buchanan, William Allen (I39504)
 
8122 Quarryville Cemetery Buchanan, George Alexander (I39509)
 
8123 Quarryville Cemetery Gibson, Marthia Ellen (I39510)
 
8124 Queen of Heaven Cemetery Dial, Yvonne Iris (I55081)
 
8125 Queen of Heaven Cemetery Dinneen, James B (I55082)
 
8126 Queen of Heaven Cemetery Dinneen, William Dial (I55083)
 
8127 Quincy Cemetery McGill, Marie Agnes (I9549)
 
8128 Quinter Cemetery Gibson, Mary Jane (I16433)
 
8129 Quinter Cemetery McKinney, John R (I41813)
 
8130 Quinter Cemetery McKinney, Chester D (I41814)
 
8131 Raburn Baptist Church Jenkins, Logan Cline Jr (I35825)
 
8132 Raby Castle Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland Ralph (I10400)
 
8133 Raby Castle Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby John (I10405)
 
8134 Raby Castle Neville, Lady Cecily (I38103)
 
8135 RACINE - Anna Ruth (nee: Edwards) Musselman, formerly of Pittsburg, KS., 84, passed away on Sunday, April 22, 2012, at Wheaton Franciscan-All Saints Medical Center. Anna Ruth was born in Kansas City, Mo., on October 15, 1927, daughter of the late Alvin and Lula (nee: Merrill) Edwards. She graduated from Northeast High School in Kansas City. On April 7, 1945, Anna Ruth was united in marriage to the love of her life Verl Musselman in San Diego, CA. Anna was an avid reader. Above all it was her time spent with her family, especially her grandchildren and great grandchildren that gave her the most joy. She will be dearly missed. Survivors include her loving husband of sixty seven years, Verl; three daughters, Judy Marcum of Frontenac, KS, Pat (Jerral) Brasher of Loveland, CO, Jana (Steve) McLaughlin of Racine; grandchildren, Christi (Joe) Crapo, Tom Predmore, Lori Nusbaum (Cody Anderson), Wes (Jennifer) Brasher, Beth (Chris) Burman; great grandchildren, Daniel, Jared, Megan, Aaron, Kyle, Payden, Maizy, Jace and an additional great granddaughter due to arrive in August; brother-in-law, Bill (MeSook) Musselman of Oxnard, CA; nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. In addition to her parents, Anna Ruth was also preceded in death by her siblings, Bill, Merrill, Lois, Harold and Bob. A Memorial service will be held at the funeral home Saturday, April 28, 2012, 11 a.m., with Rev. Mark Swanson officiating. Memorials to Lincoln Villas North-Residents Council Fund, 3919 Ruby Ave, Racine, WI 53402 have been suggested. MARESH-MEREDITH & ACKLAM FUNERAL HOME 803 MAIN ST (262) 634-7888 Please send condolences to www.meredithfuneralhome.com

Published in Racine Journal Times from April 24 to April 25, 2012 
Edwards, Anna Ruth (I248)
 
8136 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Neff, Henry Kauffman (I48405)
 
8137 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Bare, Elenora (I48406)
 
8138 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Neff, Elenora R (I48415)
 
8139 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Neff, Samuel Kauffman (I48425)
 
8140 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Neff, Mary Frances (I48426)
 
8141 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Neff, Elizabeth S (I48427)
 
8142 Rader Lutheran Church Cemetery Beam, D M (I48428)
 
8143 Radnor Cemetery Waugh, Amy Elizabeth (I55562)
 
8144 Radnor Cemetery Bass, Jesse Marcelas (I55563)
 
8145 Ramiro II (c. 900-1 January 951), son of Ordoño II, was King of León from 931 until his death. Initially titular king only of a lesser part of Asturias, he gained the crown of León (and with it, Galicia) after his brother Alfonso IV abdicated in 931. The scant Anales castellanos primeros are a primary source for his reign.

Ramiro was the creator of a Navarrese/Leonese coalition that defeated the Muslims in the Battle of Simancas (939). This victory allowed the advance of the Leonine border of the Duero to the Tormes.

In the last years of his reign he could not avoid Castilian independence under the direction of Fernán González of Castile, but still in 950 he launched an expedition to the valley of the Edge and defeated the Muslims at Talavera.

He married twice, first to Adosinda Gutierrez, Ramiro's first cousin, being daughter of Gutier Osoriz and Ildonzia Menendez, niece of Ramiro's mother, queen Elvira Menendez and cousin of San Rosendo. By her had sons Bermudo and Ordoño III, and presumably daughter Teresa, wife of García Sánchez I of Pamplona. He subsequently married Urraca, sister of García, having Sancho I and Elvira.

He figures prominently in the romantic poem, the Miragaia, which tells the apocryphal story of Ramiro bedding Ortega, the daughter of a local Arab lord. By her he is given a son Alboazar, the progenitor of the Galician/Portuguese Maya family.[1] This Maya tradition was subsequently linked to another legend, that told in the Cantar de los Siete Infantes de Lara by giving Ramiro and Ortega (sometimes called Ortigueda) a daughter Ortega Ramírez, who is made to marry Gustios Gonzalez, grandfather of the legendary hero Mudarra Gonzalez de Lara. Subsequent elaboration of this legend gave further supposed descendants, but none of these Lara connections are accepted by modern scholars. 
León, King of León Ramiro II of (I37408)
 
8146 Ranulf II (also spelled Rannoux, Rannulf, Ramnulf, and Ranulph; 850 - 5 August 890) was Count of Poitou from 866 and Duke of Aquitaine from 887. On the death of Charles the Fat in 888, he styled himself King of Aquitaine and did so until 889 or his death, after which the title fell into abeyance.

He may have been selected as a temporary king by the Aquitainian nobles, for they accepted Odo of France after his death. Only the Annales Fuldenses definitively give him this title. He is recorded to have taken custody of Charles, the young son of Louis the Stammerer and he certainly did not recognise Odo as king. He appeared in the Annales Vedastes in 889 with the title dux maximae partis Aquitaniae: "duke of the major part of Aquitaine." He founded the viscountcy of Thouars at about that time, part of larger movement to creat viscounts with powers over regional fortresses to man them against the Vikings.

Ranulf was a son of Ranulf I and Bilichild of Maine. He married an Ermengard (died 935) and by her had a son, Ranulf III, who succeeded him in Poitiers. His illegitimate son Ebalus succeeded him in Aquitaine and, upon the death of Ranulf III, in Poitiers too. 
Aquitaine, Count of Poitou and Duke of Aquitaine Ranulf II of (I15897)
 
8147 Ranulph "le Meschin", 4th Earl of Chester also called "de Briquessart" from the commune of Livry where the earthworks of his castle are still visible, also called Ranulph "the Young" from the Latin "Mischinus" and also called Randal was born circa 1068. He was the son of Ranulph II, vicomte de Bayeaux and Margaret d' Avranches.

Ranulph first married Maud de Vere, daughter of Aubrey de Vere I and Beatrice de Ghisnes, circa 1089. He then married Lucy "the Countess" of Lincoln, daughter of Turold of Bucknell, Sheriff of Lincoln and N. N. Malet, circa 1098. Ranulph was her 3rd husband.

Ranulphwas the successor of Richard, 3rd Earl of Chester; Viscount of Avranches. He was granted the title Earl of Chester following the death, without issue, of his cousin Richard, the son of his uncle, Hugh d'Avranches, on 26 November 1119. He was 4th Earl of Chester at England between 1121 and 1129 and Viscount of Avranches at Normandy, France, between 1121 and 1129.

He was commander of the Royal Forces in 1124 at Normandy, France. Viscount of Bayeaux at Normandy, France, in 1129. He was the predecessor of Ranulph de Gernon, 5th Earl of Chester, Viscount of Avranches.

Ranulphwas buried in Abbey of St. Werburg's, Chester, England. He died circa 1129.
 
Le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester Ranulf (I9915)
 
8148 Ranulph de Gernon, 5th Earl of Chester son of Ranulph "le Meschin", 4th Earl of Chester and Countess Lucy of Lincoln. He was born before 1100 at Castle of Gernon, Normandy, France.

Ranulph was the successor of Ranulph "le Meschin", 4th Earl of Chester, Viscount of Avranches. He was Viscount of Avranches at Normandy, France, between 1129 and 1153 and 5th Earl of Chester at England between 1129 and 16 December 1153.

Ranulph was one of the 5 Earls who witnessed the Charter to Salisbury granted at the Northampton Council of Henry I on 8 September 1131 at Northampton, England. He was made Constable of Lincoln by King Stephen in 1136.

He married Maud of Gloucester, daughter of Robert fitz Roy de Caen, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Mabel FitzHamon, circa 1141 at Gloucestershire, England.

King Stephen laid siege to Lincoln castle. Supporters of Maud defeat the besiegers and Stephen is captured. On 2 February 1140/41 at the Battle of Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. Ranulph took part in the Battle of Lincoln against King Stephen, who was taken prisoner there, on 2 February 1140/41. He distinguished himself as a soldier both on the side of the Empress Maud and of that of King Stephen, with the greatest impartiality. He was seized at court by King Stephen, who he previously had fought against on 29 August 1146 at Northampton, England.

He was granted the city and castle of Chester by King Stephen, probably after the pacification in 1151. He was the predecessor of Hugh de Kevelioc, 6th Earl of Chester.

Ranulph died on 16 December 1153 at England. He died, under excommunication, supposedly poisoned by his wife and William Peverell, Lord of Nottingham.

He was a witness where Lord of Nottingham William Peverel the Younger supposedly, "as men said," the one who poisoned Ranulf de Gernham, Earl of Chester, on 16 December 1153. He was buried in St. Werburg's, Chester, England.
 
De Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester Ranulph (I3800)
 
8149 Ranulph de Mortimer (Ralf de Mortemer, Ralph, Raoul) (d. c. 1104), was Lord of Wigmore, Herefordshire, England and Seigneur of St. Victor-en-Caux in Normandy. He was the founder of the English House of Mortimer of Wigmore in the Welsh Marches, in what is today the county of Herefordshire.

Marcher lord and rebel

Ranulph was a Marcher Lord and was granted his lands in the Welsh Marches by William the Conqueror. He had holdings in Herefordshire and Shropshire[1]. Most notably, he acquired Wigmore Castle after William Fitz Osbern's son Roger de Breteuil joined the Revolt of the Earls of 1075. Before 1086 he had been granted Wigmore[2].
Like many of the Marcher Lords, Ranulph took part in the Rebellion of 1088 against William Rufus. In 1089 he took money from William Rufus for support against Robert Curthose[3]. He had presumably submitted to the king when the 1088 revolt failed, for he did not lose his lands. In 1090 he was backing William with his castles in Normandy[4]. A few years later, wavering, he did give support to Robert[5].
In the 1090s he was instrumental in conquering the Welsh district of Rhwng Gwy a Hafren and founding the castles of Dinieithon (near present Llandrindod Wells, not lasting out the twelfth century[6], and Cymaron (1093, between Llanbister and Llangunllo)[7] in Maelienydd (old Radnorshire, now in Powys).
He rebelled against the Crown twice again under Henry I of England, trying to replace him by his son-in-law Stephen.[citation needed]
[edit]Background and family

Ranulph de Mortimer was born in Normandy before 1070 and died soon after 4 August 1137. He was the son of the Norman baron Roger de Mortemer ("Roger filii Episcopi Mortimer"); his mother was Advisa. His father had originally possessed the castle of Mortemer in Normandy, but had lost it after angering William the Conqueror after the Battle of Mortemer, in 1054. Roger was an uncle of William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey, and a descendent of a sister of Gunnor, the wife of Richard I of Normandy.
He married Millicent, whose parentage is currently unknown, and their daughter Hawise de Mortimer (died after 1127) married Stephen, Earl of Albemarle before 1100[8].
Ranulph's son Hugh de Mortimer rebuilt Cymaron Castle in 1144. Wigmore Castle remained the Mortimer dynasty's family home. His grandson Hugh II married Maud (Matilda) de Meschines.
[edit]Sources

Remfry, P.M., Wigmore Castle, 1066 to 1181 (ISBN 1-899376-14-3)
Davies, Norman The Isles: A History, p. 281
Tout, T.F.. "Ralph (I) de Mortimer". Dictionary of National Biography. 39. pp. 130-131.
Weis, Frederick Lewis Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonist Who Came To America Before 1700 (8th ed.), line 136-24 
De Mortimer, Lord of Wigmore and Seigneur of St. Victor-en-Caux Ranulph I (I37229)
 
8150 Ranulph I, Vicomte du Bessin was born circa 1015.1 He was the son of Anschitil de Bayeaux.1 Ranulph I, Vicomte du Bessin married Alix de Normandie, daughter of Richard III, duc de Normandie and N. N. , a mistress of Richard III of Normandy, before 1040.1,2 Ranulph I, Vicomte du Bessin was fought at the Battle of Val-es-Dunes in 1047. Ranulph, I (I11590)
 

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