Histories of the Martin, Wilson, Bloom, & Ahola Families
Notes
Matches 951 to 1,000 of 1,228
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951 | Rachel was named as a sister of Samuel, Susannah, David, Solomon and Benjamin S. Knapp and wife of Jacob Persells in Catherine Labagh Knapp's will. (Transcript under documents below). | Knapp, Rachel (I2067)
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952 | Rebecca was from Taunton, Massachusetts. | Macomber, Rebecca (I1907)
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953 | Record from http://www.txgenweb2.org/txblanco/marrindex-m.html Blanco County, Texas. Martin, Alford W. & Eakins, Martha -- Book A, Page,118, Marriage date Jul 12 1883. The number of years married was given as 15 in the 1900 US Census. | Family: Martin, Alfred W. / Eakins, Martha (F357)
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954 | Record says 10th day of 10th month. [old style] | Harwood, Joanna (I2321)
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955 | Records contain very many versions of the surname Amidon, including Amidown, Amydowne, Ammidowne, Anidowne, Annidowne, Hannadowne etc. | Anidowne (Amadowne, Amidon), Roger (I2316)
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956 | Rehoboth was first settled in 1643, and the center of the first Rehoboth settlement where Roger initially lived (known as the Ring of the Green) is not in present day Rehoboth, but is now in the Rumford neighborhood of the city of East Providence, Rhode Island. The shift occurred in two steps: (1) In 1812 the Town of Seekonk Massachusetts was created from the western half of the Town of Rehoboth, and the Ring of the Green was then in Seekonk. (2) In 1862 the western half of Seekonk was given to Rhode Island and named East Providence as part of a solution to a boundary dispute between Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The Ring of the Green was then in East Providence (see the map under documents below and the East Providence Historical Society page http://ephist.org/ring-of-the-green/ ). Although Best published his genealogy of the Amidon family in 1904, it appears that he was unaware of the 1862 boundary decision. | Anidowne (Amadowne, Amidon), Roger (I2316)
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957 | Rehoboth was first settled in 1643, and the center of the first Rehoboth settlement where Roger initially lived (known as the Ring of the Green) is not in present day Rehoboth, but is now in the Rumford neighborhood of the city of East Providence, Rhode Island. The shift occurred in two steps: (1) In 1812 the Town of Seekonk Massachusetts was created from the western half of the Town of Rehoboth, and the Ring of the Green was then in Seekonk. (2) In 1862 the western half of Seekonk was given to Rhode Island and named East Providence as part of a solution to a boundary dispute between Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The Ring of the Green was then in East Providence (see the map under documents below and the East Providence Historical Society page http://ephist.org/ring-of-the-green/ ). Although Best published his genealogy of the Amidon family in 1904, it appears that he was unaware of the 1862 boundary decision. | Sarah (I2317)
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958 | Rehoboth was first settled in 1643, and the center of the first Rehoboth settlement where Roger initially lived (known as the Ring of the Green) is not in present day Rehoboth, but is now in the Rumford neighborhood of the city of East Providence, Rhode Island. The shift occurred in two steps: (1) In 1812 the Town of Seekonk Massachusetts was created from the western half of the Town of Rehoboth, and the Ring of the Green was then in Seekonk. (2) In 1862 the western half of Seekonk was given to Rhode Island and named East Providence as part of a solution to a boundary dispute between Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The Ring of the Green was then in East Providence (see the map under documents below and the East Providence Historical Society page http://ephist.org/ring-of-the-green/ ). Although Best published his genealogy of the Amidon family in 1904, it appears that he was unaware of the 1862 boundary decision. | Harwood, Joanna (I2321)
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959 | Rev. Alanson Latham of Ware m. Charlotte White of Wilbraham. There is also a record of their marriage on 10 June 1840 in Wilbraham, Massachusetts | Family: Latham, Rev. Alanson / White, Charlotte (F773)
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960 | Richard W. Cook noted that "the East Hampton History by J.E. Rattray, p. 506, indicates Ephraim married an Elizabeth Miller, but this is not confirmed under the Miller family, p. 445-474." | Family: Osborn, Ephraim / (F594)
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961 | Ringwood is a market town in southwest Hampshire close to the border with Dorset. It is on the river Avon and dates to the middle ages. | Anidowne (Amadowne, Amidon), Roger (I2316)
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962 | Robert Goatley was identified as son-in-law in the will of Susan's father, Robert Hall the elder. | Family: Goatley, Robert / Hall, Susan (F878)
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963 | Robert was named in the will of his uncle Robert Hall the younger (1584) but not named in his father's will written 5 Apr 1608. Thus,he apparently died by the latter date. | Goatley, Robert (I2626)
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964 | Roger is almost certainly not buried in this cemetery as he died in Rowe, Massachusetts many years before this gravestone was erected. The inscription is doubtless a cenotaph. The inscription is on the back of his son Luther's gravestone. | Amidon, Roger Jr. (I185)
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965 | Roger's death and burial were investigated and recorded by Rehoboth officials. Roger's exact burial place is unknown, but it is probably not in present day Rehoboth. The entries on findagrave.com for Roger Amidon and his wives Sarah and Joanna Harwood say they were buried in the Village Cemetery in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. This is the wrong place because the Village Cemetery was established in 1773 and the earliest known burial was in 1774. The present day location of Roger's death is either near the "Ring of the Green" in East Providence, Rhode Island or his property in the Rehoboth North Purchase (now Attleborough). He almost certainly would have been buried locally (see note above). | Anidowne (Amadowne, Amidon), Roger (I2316)
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966 | Row 12. | Briggs, Abigail (I145)
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967 | Row 12. | Simmons, Harriet (I736)
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968 | Row 13 | Simmons, Jonathan Sr. (I146)
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969 | Row 13. | Gooding, Ruth (I147)
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970 | Row 13. | Allen, Orren (I750)
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971 | Row 13. | Simmons, Sally (I734)
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972 | Row 13. | Simmons, Elmina (I737)
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973 | Row 13. | Pomroy, Samuel Hastings (I798)
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974 | Row 13. | Simmons, Simpson (I735)
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975 | Row 13. | Austin, Sally (I795)
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976 | Rowland Green of Rensselaer New York and Elizabeth Champlin. | Family: Greene, Rowland / Champlain, Elizabeth (F157)
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977 | Rufus died before his father Peter's land was sold, but Billicent wife of Rufus Morse was named as an heir in the deed. | Morse, Rufus (I1345)
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978 | Ruth Simmons Stebbins compiled the genealogy of her direct Simmons ancestors, traced her her family's descent from Thomas Rogers, a Mayflower passenger, and wrote a short history entitled "The Simmons family of Westfield Township, Medina County, Ohio". She sent this information to Lottie Lee Tanner Martin, her 2nd cousin once removed. She also wrote a short history of Erastus Simmons and his family, which was donated to the Medina County Public Library by Patricia VanHoose. I have included it as Part 2 of the Simmons family history. | Simmons, Ruth Naomi (I751)
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979 | Ruth was literate, as shown by documents in Roger's probate papers. | Eddy, Ruth (I2687)
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980 | S Sgt 42 Cav Recon Sq MECZ WWII | Ahola, Walter F. (I342)
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981 | Said to be unmarried. | Janes, Noah (I2276)
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982 | Sally's husband and father were members the group that organized the Fancher cemetery. The small stones marked S.K. and J.K. doubtless are Sally's and her husband's grave markers although they are probably no longer at their actual grave locations. | Fancher, Sally M. (I1470)
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983 | Samuel and Silence very likely were married in Lanesborough or a nearby town, although no record has been located yet. Silence's family moved to Lanesborough in 1773 when she was 11, her sister Huldah was married in Lanesborough in 1782, and Silence's son Silas was born in Massachusetts in 1783. | Family: Martin, Samuel / Greene, Silence (F10)
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984 | Samuel Baker reportedly sold his farm about 1811 and returned to USA, perhaps Batavia, New York and died soon after. There is some evidence that his son Joseph and his wife Sarah also lived in Batavia. | Baker, Samuel (I531)
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985 | Samuel moved from New York with his wife and nine children (six sons and three daughters). He lived at first on lot 9 on Dundas Street with his brother-in-law Samuel Baker who had arrived two years earlier. His son Earl is believed to have stayed behind in Middleburgh, where his Greene relatives were living. Earl joined his parents in Canada after he married. | Martin, Samuel (I27)
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986 | Samuel was a nephew Sarah Mills Knapp and an executor of Solomon Knapp's will. | Mills, Samuel (I2062)
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987 | Samuel was named as a brother of Susannah, Rachel, David, Solomon and Benjamin S. Knapp in Catherine Labagh Knapp's will. (Transcript under documents below) | Knapp, Samuel (I1582)
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988 | Samuel, Susannah, Rachel, David, and Solomon Knapp were named as siblings of Benjamin S. Knapp in Catherine Labaugh Knapp's will, but the identity of their parents has not been proved. Many undocumented trees say that their parents were Benjamin Knapp and Hannah. See Benjamin Knapp 3rd (I2097 on this site) Other undocumented trees and A. A. Knapp's Nicholas Knapp Genealogy say that they were Samuel Knapp and Nancy (or Mary) Lyon. It is important to note that the information on the Knapp family of Fulton County, New York (which includes four of the six Knapp siblings) in A. A. Knapp's book contains many errors and inconsistencies. | Family: Knapp, unknown / unknown (F289)
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989 | Sarah and her brother James came to New England as passengers on the Elizabeth in 1635. The passenger list gave their ages as 17 and 15, respectively, and said they were servants of Jo. Browne baker and Wm. Brasey linen draper. | Walker, Sarah (I2745)
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990 | Sarah and James were niece and nephew of John Brown (for whom they were listed as servants on the ship Elizabeth), as shown by a 1665 deed in which John Browne deeded land to "my cousin John Tisdall [Sarah's husband] . . . and my cousin James Walker, his brother in law". | Walker, _____ (I2753)
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991 | Sarah and Joseph may have lived in Batavia after 1813. I have a copy of a note written in Batavia by Sarah Baker. The contents of the note are given under Huldah Greene. | Mallory, Sarah (I924)
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992 | Sarah applied for a pension as the widow of a Revolutionary War veteran in 1852 when she was 88. Eliphalet Huntington gave a deposition for that application in which he stated that "he has heard of though he never knew of a man by the name of Walter Hyde who commanded a company in a campaign in the war of the Revolution & who was said to have died in the Revolutionary War -- that the said Walter Hyde was as he has always understood the father of Daniel Hyde whom this deponent well knew & who was the only man of the name [?] in a [?] that resided in the said town of Lebanon" https://www.fold3.com/image/24139919 | Dana, Sarah (I2463)
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993 | SARAH E. wife of A. C. HYDE Died Jan, 31 1856 The stone appeared to have been reset in a new concrete base which obscured part of the inscription. | Hyde, Sarah E. (I601)
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994 | Sarah Royce is a common ancestor (7th great-grandmother) of Louis Frederick Martin (I9) and his wife Ruth Elma Wilson (I10). | Royce, Sarah (I200)
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995 | Sarah was described as being the daughter of William and Love Wyman. | Wyman, Sarah (I1464)
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996 | Sarah was Samuel's fourth wife. | Family: Dudley, Samuel Esq. / Shepard, Sarah (F896)
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997 | Sarah's burial place is unknown. The entries on findagrave.com for Roger Amidon and his wives Sarah and Joanna Harwood say they were buried in the Village Cemetery in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. This is the wrong place because the Village Cemetery was established in 1773 and the earliest known burial was in 1774. The present day location of Sarah's death is either near the "Ring of the Green" in East Providence, Rhode Island or his property in the Rehoboth North Purchase (now Attleborough). She almost certainly would have been buried locally, (For more on these localities, see Roger's page.) | Sarah (I2317)
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998 | Sarah's gravestone reads: SOLOMON KNAPP DIED AUG. 27, 1847 AE. 80 YS SARAH, WIFE OF SOLOMON KNAPP DIED, NOV 25, 1858 AE. 86 YS. | Mills, Sarah (I558)
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999 | Sarah's husband John died in 1829 when her children were young, and Sarah presumably kept his property. In 1847 her son Solomon K. Knapp paid each of his siblings $100 for their interest in John's property suggesting that Sarah had died before that date. Place of death is assumed, not documented. | Knapp, Sarah (Sally) (I2065)
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1000 | Sarahs' husband Waitstill remarried 17 Mar 1707/8 to Mindwell Bartlet in Northampton, Massachusetts. | Janes, Sarah (I2275)
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