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Matches 251 to 300 of 33,966

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251 "Joseph and Susanna had nine children, probably all born in Jaffrey, although no record of their births has been discovered here or elsewhere". JENNISON, Susanna (I2505)
 
252 "Judith of the West Franks" Judith (I5078)
 
253 "Killed by the Soo Line train." TOLLEFSEN, Martin (I12699)
 
254 "Klukkarhaugo" ELLINGBØ, Ambjørg Eivindsdtr (I9709)
 
255 "Kristoffer, Nils, og Iøger Knutsønner boende på Norsvin i Vang pantsatte 4 løbol odelsgod i Rønne til Bendicht Engeretson Rønne den 19 Mars 1664). I 1664 brukte Bendik 1 hud og 2 skinn i gården og Knut Melby brukte 8 skinn. Bendiks kone vet jeg ingenting om, men de hadde ialfall tre døtre: Gro som ble på Røine og giftet seg med Torstein Hegge, Ingebjørg som giftet seg med Andris Lome og Marte som giftet seg med Roland Kvåle

Han tok over Røyne omkring 1650. I mantallet fra 1664 står han oppført med 14 skinn i gården. 
DALE, Bendikt Engebretsen (I6398)
 
256 "kämpft als "Getreuer" des Kaisers, Frederik I, gegen Lombardische Städte, und Papst Alexander. Er erhielt das recht, den kaiserliche Adler in seinem Wppen zu führen. Keiseren var hans svoger. VON LOTHRINGEN, Matheus I (I36653)
 
257 "LEONARD, the third president of Harvard College, at which he grad. in 1650, went to England, was a physician and clergyman, and settled as the latter, at Wensted, in Essex. He was ejected from office for non-conformity, and returned to N. E. 1672, and in July, was elected president, but resigned 15 March, 1675, and d. at Braintree, 28 Nov. same year. He had no sons, but two daughters, Bridget and Tryphena. His widow, a daughter of Lord Lisle, m. Mr. Usher, of Boston, and d. 25 May, 1723. Mrs. Joanna Hoar, probably his mother, d. at Braintree, 21 Dec. 1661."

SOURCE: First Settlers

===================

"Leonard returned with his wife to Boston, Mass., in July, 1672, and preached for a short time as assistant at the South Church. He was soon called to be president of Harvard College, December, 1672."

SOURCE: Colonial Ancestors

===================

"LEONARD, grad. Harv. Coll., 1650; M.D.; President of Harv. Coll. 1672 to 1674-5, when he died"

SOURCE: Watertown Genealogies

====================

"Leonard Hoar (1630-75; son of Charles, g.son of Charles); came from Eng. with his widowed mother, Joanna Hincksman, 2 bros. and 2 sisters, and settled in Braintree, Mass., 1639-40; M.D. Harvard, 1650; returned to Eng. and settled as a clergyman in Wenstead, Essex County; returned with his wife to Boston, Mass., 1672, and preached for a short time as asst. at South Ch.; pres. Harvard Coll., 1672-75; m Bridget Lisle (John, of Moyles Court, County Southampton, one of the judges who condemned Charles I, made to leave the country and was murdered at Lausanne, m Alice, dau. and co-heir of Sir White Beconsaw, Kent, she was beheaded by order of Judge Jeffries at Manchester, 1685);"

SOURCE: Compendium of American Genealogy.

====================

"LEONARD, Cambridge, br. of John, b. in Eng. but never has it been kn. wh. was the f. wh. we therefore presume, did not come to our land; his mo. Joanna, who d. at Braintree, 21 Dec. 1661, brot. the three s. and ds. Margaret, wh. was prob. the eldest ch. and m. Rev. Henry Flint, and d. 10 Mar. 1687; and Joanna, wh. m. 26 July 1648, the sec. Edmund Quiney. He was gr. at H C. 1650, went to Eng. was min. at Wenslead, Essex, and one of the ejected under the Bartholomew Act, took the degree of M. D. at the Univ. of Cambridge, 1672, and came again higher to preach by invit. at third, or Old South Ch. but with commend. from strong friends in London, that he should be made Presid. of the coll. to succeed Chauncey, late dec. He arr. 8 July 1672, and same mo. was chos. to the office; but was sadly unfortunate in his place. A combination against him of three of the corp. created such diffic. that all the stud. left the Inst. and in Mar. 1675 he resigned, as the Gen. Court in Oct. preced. had, not indistinctly, desired, tho. on his coming two and a half yrs. bef. they had voted a salary half as much again as they gave C. on the sole condit. that H. be elected. On 28 Nov. foll. he d. prob. of broken heart for his treatm. aged only 45 yrs. Cotton Mather was then one of the undergrad. and may, perhaps, be believed in what he says of the unhappy countenance of sev. very good men, towards the ungovernable youths in their ungovernableness, at least as to the latter portion he was an unwilling, if we may presume he could have been, a good witness. See Magn. IV. 129, among the best, tho. characterist. pages of that strange work. Contempo. documents should be referred to in the Coll. of Hutch. 435, 45, 52, 64, and 71; but the noble Hist. of the Univ. by Quincy, I. 31-5, may seem to be adequate in its decision. His w. Bridget was d. of that lady, sacrificed by the detestab. governm. of James II. and his worthy Ch. Just. Jeffries, 2 Sept. 1685, and of John Lisle, the regicide (a lawyer of distinct. made by Cromwell one of his Commissrs. of the Great Seal, sometimes call. erroneously, Lord Lisle, because the Protector summoned him to the other house, who met a death by violence, after the restoration, in Switzerland). We kn. not of any ch. but d. Bridget, b. at Cambridge, 13 Mar. 1673, who went with her mo. 1687, to England, and bef. her ret. 1697, after d. of her [p.432] sec. h. the d. m. Rev. Thoas Cotton, a min. of London, wh. was a most lib. benefactor of H. C. The wid. of the Presid. had m. 1686 (and she long outliv.) the 2d Hezekiah Usher, with whom she was not happy, and d. 25 May 1723. Farmer mistook, I presume, for that of one of the ds. of the Presid. the name of Tryphena, sis. of the w. of the Presid. wh. m. first, a Lloyd, and bef. the d. of her sis. a Grove. This Tryphena was, prob. mo. of the w. of Lord James Russell, fifth s. of William, first Duke of Bedford, and after his d. wh. was on 22 June 1712, m. Sir Henry Houghton, and d. 1 Sept. 1736. See Collins's Peerage. This lady and her mo. wrote after the d. of Mrs. Usher, sis. of one, and aunt of the other, to Ch. Just. Sewall wh. had many yrs. bef. kn. them, when in his visit to Eng. 1689; and in return he sent the mourning ring that had been presented for Lord James's d. A greater mistake may be observ. in an Art. of Geneal. Reg. IV. 92, where Leonard Cotton, wh. was of Hampton Falls, N. H. and chief mourner at the funer. of his gr.mo. Madam Usher, in Boston, s. of that Rev. Thomas C. (of course gr.gr.s of John Lisle), is made to m. Alicin, d. of Lord John Lisle aforesaid therefore sis. of his gr.mo. Against such matches, the Levitical instit, or the law of nature, is not often necessary to be invoked. "

SOURCE: Genealogical Dictionary of New England Settlers.

====================

"President Leonard, H. C. 1650, M.D. Univ. Camb., preached Wanstead, Essex, Eng., ejected 1662, Pres. Harv. Coll. 1672-75, m. Bridgett, dan. Lord Lisle, d. 28 Nov. 1675, a. 45, wid. m. Hezekiah Usher of Bost., 565; opposition of Urian Oakes to, compelled to resign presidency, 274-5; befriended by Elijah Corlett, 368"

SOURCE: Cambridge (Mass.) History

====================

"Rev. Leonard, son of Charles and Joanna, b. at Gloucester, Eng. about 1632, came to N. E. about 1642. Was grad. at Harvard College in 1650; became its third president, constituted 10 (10) 1672. [S.] He m. Bridget, dau. of Lord John and Alicia Lisle. Ch. Bridget b. March 13, 1673, (m. Mr. Thomas Cotton; res. at Shoreditch, London, in 1695, her mother then dwelling with her). He d. in Boston 28 Nov., and was bur. at Braintree 6 Dec. 1675, ae. 45 years. Will dated 25 Oct. 1675; beq. to dau. Bridget and wife; to bros. Daniel and John Hoar, sisters Flint and Quinsey; cousins Josiah Flint and Noah Newman. To be interred at Brain-tree. The widow m. Hezekiah Usher. She d. May 25, 1723. [Reg. IX, 154, and 377.]

SOURCE: Pioneers of Mass.

====================

"HOAR, LEONARD, educator, college president, was born about 1629. He was president of Harvard college from 1672 till 1675, and was the first person to propose the modern system of technical education, by the addition of a garden and orchard, a workshop, and a chemical laboratory to Harvard. He died Nov. 28, 1675, in Braintree, Mass."

SOURCE: Encyclopedia of American Biography

====================

"HOAR, Leonard (1630? - 28 Nov. 1675), Puritan minister and president of Harvard College, was born in Gloucestershire, England, the sone of Charles Hoare, a brewer, and Joanna Hinksman. Charles Hoare was wealthy enough to provide in his will for Leonard to be sent to Oxford University, but after his father's death in 1638, Leonard's mother moved the family across the Atlantic to New England, where they settled in Braintree, Massachusetts. Instead of Oxford, Leonard Hoar enrolled at Harvard College, where he received an A.B. in 1650 and an A.M. in 1653.

"By this time the success of the Puritan faction in the English civil war had begun to lure many Harvard graduates and New England clergymen back to England, and Hoar joined the exodus. In July 1654 he was granted an M.A. from Cambridge University and soon thereafter was made rector of Wanstead, Essex. But the Restoration of Charles II in 1660 and the subsequent Act of Uniformity forced Hoar and many of his fellow Puritans from their clerical posts. Throughout the 1660s Hoar maintained close ties to other dissenters, especially through his marriage (probably in the late 1600s) to Bridget Lisle, daughter of John Lisle, one of the regicide judges who passed sentence on Charles I. The couple had two daughters. Hoar also strengthened hhis connections to England's scholarly and scientific communities. He published an abridgement and guide to the historical books of the Bible, studied botany and medicine, and in 1671 was made a "Doctor of Physick" by Cambridge University. Hoar's intense piety and scholarly ambition were reflected in a letter to his nephew, Josiah Flint, a student at Harvard College. He instructed Flint not to do only what is "expected of you; but daily something more than your task. . . . [W]hen the classes study only logick or nature, you may spend some one or two spare hours in languages, rhetoric, history, or mathematics, or the like." In addition to this formidable plan of study, Hoar recommended that Flint "read every morning a chapter in the old testament, and every evening one in the new," and meditate on the meaning of these daily scriptural passages.

"In the early 1670s Hoar's reputation for scholarship and piety raised considerable interest in New England. The newly formed Third Church of Boston recruited him to be its minister, and in 1672 Hoar returned to Massachusetts intending to take up the post. At the time the advanced age of Charles Chauncy, the Harvard College president, was worrying Puritans on both sides of the Atlantic. A group of English dissenting ministers sent letters of introduction strongly recommending Hoar's "gifts of learning and the grace of his spirit" as suitable qualifications for Chauncy's successor. Chauncy died while Hoar was crossing the ocean, and shortly after his arrival Hoar was elected to the Harvard presidency and formally installed on 10 December 1672.

"Hoar approached the Harvard presidency with vigor and enthusiasm. He planned to revive the impoverished and underenrolled college by introducing experimental science to the curriculum and by providing equipment for agricultural, chemical, and physical experiments. He pushed through a new college charter to strengthen the hand of the corporation, made up of the president and teaching fellows, against the influence of the outside board of overseers. He also used his transatlantic connections to raise money for a new college building to replace the rapidly decaying "Old College." But for reasons that remain obscure, Hoar's presidency quickly degenerated and ended in disgrace. Shortly after his inauguration, the resident teaching fellows and student body turned sharply against the new president. Cotton Mather, a very young student at the time, later wrote that "the Young Men in the Colledge [sic] . . . set themselves to Travestie whatever he did and said, and aggravate everything in his Behaviour disagreeable to them, with a Design to make him Odious." In 1673 the four teaching fellows resigned their posts, many students dropped out, and vague complaiints about Hoar's "untruthfulness" were brought before the Harvard Overseers and the Massachusetts General Court. These bodies gave some measure of support to Hoar, but their encouragements were only half-hearted, and the students continued their steady withdrawal from the college. Hoar finally resigned on 15 March 1675. His health rapidly declined, and less than nine months later he died in Boston of a "consumption."

"The reason for Hoar's rapid downfall was the subject of considerable controversy at the time and has never been fully resolved. Some blamed the affair on the jealousy of other aspirants for Hoar's position, notably Urian Oakes, the minister of Cambridge who was passed over for the presidency. In addition, Boston's churches had recently been riven with contention over issues of ecclesiastical authority. In this context, Hoar's sudden departure from his English dissenting church without a formal dismissal, together with the breach of his implied promise to become the minister of Boston's Third Church, may have turned some supporters against him. Thomas Danforth, a Third Church member who was glad not to have Hoar as his minister, believed "he will be a better pr[e]sid[ent], than a pulpitt man (at least) as to vulg[a]r acceptation," hinting at the possibility of Hoar's general unpopularity. But supporters like Cotton Mather and John Hull insisted that he was a "worthy man" wronged by enemies, and that if "those that accused him had but countenanced and encouraged him in his work, he would have proved the best president that ever yet the college had."

"Samuel Eliot Morison, Harvard's tercentennial historian, blames "some fault in Hoar's character or conduct," perhaps "something unfortunate in Hoar's manner, repellent in his personality, harsh in his discipline, or unreasonable in his policy." Yet as recently as 1976 a resolution was passed by the Massachusetts State Senate defending Hoar against the "contumacious and envious displeasure" of the college fellows who forced him to resign and proclaiming his "innocence of any misdeed while president of Harvard College." Judged by his scholarly promise and the strength of his plans for the curriculum, it does seem possible that Hoar could have revived the rapidly deteriorating college. But whether the trouble was caused by his personal shortcomings or by a conspiracy of his enemies, Hoar's presidency was a disaster, perhaps the low point in the early history of Harvard."

SOURCE: American National Biography

====================

"... Leonard graduated from Harvard College in 1650, took degree of Doctor of Medicine, returned to England and settled as a clergyman in Wenstead, Essex County Married Bridget Lisle, daughter of John Lisle of Magles Court, County Southampton. He was one of the judges who condemned Charles I. He had to leave the country and was murdered at Lausanne. He married Alice, daughter and co-heir of Sir White Beconsame, Kent. She was beheaded by order of Judge Jeffries at Manchester in 1685.

"Leonard returned with his wife to Boston, Mass., in July 1672, and preached for a short time as assistant at the South Church. He was soon called to be president of Harvard College, December 1672. "At his inauguration the college was thinly attended and badly supported. With little profit and much anxiety, discipline was badly supported and he retired in 1675." (C'lop. Am. Lit., vol. 1, p. 8.)

"Epitaph wrote for the Tomb of Leonard Hoar, Doctour of Phisick, who departed this life In Boston the 28 November. Was interred(*) here the 6 December And was aged 45 years. Anno Dom. 1675.

"Three precious friends under this tombstone lie Patterns to aged, youth, and infancy, A great mother, her learned son, with child, The first and least went free, he was exil'd In love to Christ, this country, and dear friends, He left his own, crosse'd seas, and for amends Was here extoll'd, envy'd, all in a breath, His noble consort leaves, is drawn to death. Stranger changes may befall us ere we die, Blest they who well arrive eternity."

SOURCE: Alfred Hoar Family 
HOAR, Leonard (I3286)
 
258 "lidt av hvert" JOMEN, Knut Knutsen (I29673)
 
259 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. LOME, Eivind Eivindson (I1717)
 
260 "Lived about a mile easterly of Concord Centre"

SOURCE: Watertown Genealogies

=============

"Dan'll Hoar & Sarah Jones both of Concord were marryed by ye revernd mr Joseph Estabrooke Decembr ye 20th, 1705."

SOURCE: Concord Vital Records

==============

"Daniel Hoar, son of Daniel (3) and greatgrandson of the ancestor, born 1680, married Sarah Jones, daughter of John and Sarah Jones, December 20, 1705, lived in southeastern part of Concord, where he died February 8, 1773, aged ninety-three years. Their children were: John, born January 6, 1707; he was twice married. Jonathan, born January 6, 1707 (twin brother of John), graduated at Harvard College, 1740; was an officer in the provincial service during the war of 1744 to 1763. In 1755 he went as a major to Fort Edward; the next year was a lieutenant-colonel in Nova ScotIowa, and an aide to Major-General Winslow at Crown Point. After the peace of 1763 he went to England and was appointed governor of Newfoundland and neighboring provinces, but unfortunately died on his passage thither, aged fifty-two years. Daniel, entered Harvard College, 1730, but did not graduate; he married Rebecca Brooks, November 2, 1743, and removed to Westminster, where he died, leaving two sons and two daughters. Lucy, married John Brooks. Elizabeth, married a Mr. Whittemore of West Cambridge. Mary, married Zachariah Whittemore."

SOURCE: Worchester County 
HOAR, Lieut. Daniel (I3303)
 
261 "Lived in Sudbury" -- Hoar Family HOAR, Isaac (I3328)
 
262 "Lived inBolton and other places, and probably came to Jaffrey about 1794. In 1799, Joseph Meads and Joseph Meads, Jr., described as "both of Jaffrey," bought of Wallace Little of Shirley, a former home of the Meads, the mountain lands still known as the Mead Farm on Monadnock. This farm, with buildings thereon, consisted of parts of lots No. 7, in the 4th range, and No. 7 in the second range, together with the whole of lot No. 7 in the 3rd range, a total by estimation of 220 acres. The cellar and foundations of the Mead buildings may still be seen on the southeast slope of Monadnock, above the Poole Reservoir of the Jaffrey Town Water Works. It was one of the highest habitations on the mountain. --- In 1819, or perhaps earlier, Joseph Meads, Jr., returned to Newton to care for his father-in-law, Phineas Jennison, now well advanced in years. He was given a lease of the homestead, including all tools and equipment, in consideration of the maintenance of Jennison, specifying "firewood, good and suitable victuals and drink, one gyl of spirits daily, also wearing apparel." (Middlesex Record, Vol. 227, p. 504) This agreement was signed in the presence of William Meads and Jackson Durant. --- On Apr. 26, 1826, the farm property in Jaffrey, or a part of it, was sold at public vendue at the house on the premises, for which purpose, William Meads, as guardian of the minor children of Joseph Meeds, obtained a license from the Cheshire County Court of Probate. At this sale in addition to the minors' interest that of William was sold, described by him as his right, title, etc., "in the farm formerly of my grandfather Joseph Meads and my father Joseph Meads, late of Waltham, wherein I am endowable in one ninth part and [in] one undivided half of said farm." The names of the minor children are given as: (1) Serviah; (2) Abigail; (3) Charles; (40 Susan; (5) Harrison; (6) Mary. Of those who attained their majority, William, the oldest. In 1805, the names of John Mead and Thaddeus Mead appear on the Jaffrey tax list, and in 1810, that of Lemuel for whom no family connection has been found. Thaddeus Meed, d. Jaffrey, May 18, 1810. In the sale above mentioned Susanna Meads, widow, of Waltham, also disposed of her rights, dower, etc., in one undivided half of the Jaffrey farm, to Joseph Cutter who also bought the minors' interest andthat of William Meads. In the conveyance of her interest, the widow speaks of her "honored father [in-law] Joseph Meads, and Joseph Meads, JR., my husband late of Waltham." MEEDS, Joseph (I2474)
 
263 "LOVELOCK RESIDENT MARRIED IN RENO
LOVELOCK Aug 13 -- (Special) --
Harry H Hunter carpenter employed at the Hobart Estate and old resident of Lovelock was queitly married on Friday in Reno to Corrine Hague. Mr. and mrs. Hunter are expected to return in a few days after a short wedding trip to Lake Tahoe." 
 
264 "Læreren" grb SKEIE, Bøye Bøyesen (I798)
 
265 "madam" SCHJELDERUP, Dorte Margrethe Vilkensdtr (I39512)
 
266 "Marke" LYKKJUN, Anders Olsen (I11140)
 
267 "Married first Henry V, Emperor of Germany, when she was 11. Contested with her cousin Stephen for the throne of England." Geoffrey V was her second husband. Matilda (I4152)
 
268 "Monsieur"-"Mester maler" ROSS, Gabriel (I19784)
 
269 "Morning Gift" - 30 lod silver (lod = 13 grams) JOHANSSON, Jonas (I19688)
 
270 "Morning Gift" - 50 lod (lod = 13 grams) silver. Gift given the bride on morning after wedding. Sort of an insurance for the bride in case she becomes a widow. Was done when groom was fairly well off. JOHANSSON, Arvid (I19733)
 
271 "Morning gift" 100 lod silver (lod = 13 grams). KNUTSSON, Anders (I19831)
 
272 "Moses Lyon of Newtown, husbandman, sold 2 Nov. 1720, to mother Phebe Lawrence of Stratfield." LYON, Moses (I6908)
 
273 "Moved from Stamford, Connecticut, to Vermont in 1789 and bought land at Brandon, which she then sold to 21-year-old Frederick." Is this attributable to someone else? The date 1789 is after her death, but age of Frederick is correct. Is death date incorrect? This is indicated by census data.

1790 Federal Census, Rutland County, Vermont, p. 36: Eunice Scovill 1 Free white male older than 16 years 0 Free white males younger than 16 years 2 Free white females 
Unknown (I5961)
 
274 "mr Jno Hoar ye husband of mrs Ales his wife dyed, Aprill ye 2nd day 1704" -- Concord Vital Records HOAR, John (I3394)
 
275 "Mr. Gilbert Ellingboe cut his lege quite severely in a shingle saw, while at work repairing a pulley that run on the same last week." ELLINGBOE, Gilbert (I58)
 
276 "Murdered in 1071 by her stepson." Pons was her second husband. Almode (I9451)
 
277 "Nils på Marki". Han tjente på Hovland som ung. I 1758 vitnet han i en rettsak om merke mellom Hovland og Øvre Kvamme, der kom det fram at han også leide en slette der, etter at han kom til Vettei. VETTEI, Nils Andersen (I20648)
 
278 "Norresmeden" HÆREID, Thomas Persson (I36463)
 
279 "Obit magnus Achilles secundus, dominus scilicet Lewelinus filius Gervaisi filli Owini Guynet, tunc princeps Walliae, ...." (Annales Cambriae, BL manuscript Cotton Domitian A.1) Llywelyn ap Iorwerth "The Great" Prince of North Wales (I4041)
 
280 "of Aquitaine" Pepin I (I5097)
 
281 "of Bastable" [Barnstable ?] FULLER, Mary (I21934)
 
282 "Of the first Charles Hoare, of Gloucester, Eng., but little is known. He died in 1636 and left a will, and appears to have been a person of note in that place."

SOURCE: Alfred Hoar Family

=========================

"Of the first Charles Hoare, of Gloucester, England, but little is known. He married Margery (???). He died in 1636 and left a will, which mentions Thomas, Margery, John and Charles, David, Leonard and Joan, last three minors in 1632. He appears to have been a person of note in that place. The "coat of arms" of the "Hoare Family" were used by the Gloucester family. ...

"1. Charles Hoare, Gloucester, England; died 1636; married Margerie (???).

"Children were: 1. THOMAS. 2. CHARLES, m. Joanna Hinchman. He d. in England, 1638. 3. (???). m. Thomas Hill. 4. ELINOR (???). m. Leonard Tarne. (Notes by author of "Hoare Family," say "3" and "4" were 3. Elinor, Anna. Authority lost.) "

SOURCE: Colonial Ancestors 
HOARE, Charles (I3263)
 
283 "Ola i Bu
n", Onkel Nils var betjent hos ham like etter århundreskiftet. Butikken hans står nå på Fagernes Museum (Valdres folkemuseum) og Olaf og Guri Bøland har kjøpt bolighuset. Hans tvillingsøster het Guri, hun døde ugift i 1911 Han kjøpte Søvelheim av Jon K Vold (Kattevold) mot å betale 5000 kroner for varelagret i 1908. Forretningsavtalen kjøpte han av Eivind E Dal i 1909.

Forretningen ble nedlagt da "Ola i Bu'n" sluttet i 1950 åra, huset sto tomt til det ble overfort til Valdres Folkemuseum. Deres bolighus ble senere kjopt av Guri og Olaf Boland. Vang handelsforening holdt til her fra 1870 årene i et gammelt hus som ble flyttet hit. De som styrte butikken var (Valdresboka bd.IV s.205f) Ola Aslaks. Haugen (Kvam) eller Lajord de (1845- ) som reiste til USA. Deretter Thomas H Kjerstein (1819- 1884) grb på Kjerstein 12/1. Så fikk styret tak i Hans Eriksen fra Holmestrand, som drev butikken godt. Det var meningen å selge butikken til ham, men styret kom til at han var for gammel og solgte isteden til Eivind Dal som hadde vært krambusvein hos Eriksen i flere år. Hans Eriksen og kona Camilla, som var lærer, bodde på Tune. Hun var fra Oslo, og da Eivind Dal overtok butikken, flyttet de til Oslo og startet ny butikk der. Eivind E Dal (fra dal 76/) drev fra 1886-1902, da flyttet han til Oslo, men kom tilbake til Fagernes i 1907 og drev Elvely hot ell. Jon Boyesen Wangensteen var en tid krambusvein hos ham, og i en periode overlot han hele driften til Mads Nertost og broren Andris Dal. Han solgte butikken til John Vold som drev den til 1908, da Ola i Bu'n kjopte. Onkel Nils (Nils N Boe) var krambusvein en stund. Jeg husker godt Ola i Bu'n. I 1950 var far og jeg innom, jeg fikk en fin messingklokke, med reinsdyr på av Ola, og far kjopte min forste tollekniv der, som jeg senere på sommeren nesten skar av meg hånda med. og scan Sødrolsboka side 36 
SYNDROL, Ola Ivarson (I83)
 
284 "On August 22, 1862, he enlisted in the U. S. Army at Fort Snelling and on October 10, in the same year he became a private in Company D., Tenth Regt. Minnesota Volunteer Infantry for three years or as long as the war lasted. He was along in a campaign against the Indians in Minnesota and Dakota in 1862 and 1863 and took part in the fight at Big Mound, Dakota, July 24, 1863, also at Dead Buffalo Lake on July 28. Shortly after he left with his regiment for the south and was joined with the First Brigade, 2nd Div., 16th Corp Army of Tennessee and took part in the battles at Tupelo, Miss., July 13 to 15, 1864, at Nashville, Tenn., Dec 15 and 16 in the same year and at Mobile, Ala., from March 18 to April 9, 1865. He received an honorable discharge on Aug. 18, 1865 at Fort Snelling as the war was then over."

"He has been a member of Vangs congregation from the time he located in this settlement and has been interested in church matters and taken an active part in the affairs of the congregation and always took delight in being a regular attendant at the services at the church. He was a prominent farmer and having lived in this vicinity during all his life he leaves a large circle of friends which was shown at the funeral by the large number of people in attendance."

"The funeral took place Monday, Sept. 4, with a short service at the home and regular services at Vangs church conducted by the pastor, Rev. A. Hauge. At the services at the church Rev. Hauge preached the funeral sermon in Norwegian and Rev. A. H. Gjerve of Minneapolis preached the sermon in the English language. S. J. Svien sang a song at the services at the church. The remains were laid to rest in Vangs cemetery. The pallbearers were six of the sons of the deceased: Erik, Iver, Helge, Austin, Bennie and John."

"Those from away who attended the funeral were K. K. Nystuen of Albert Lea, Andres J. Svien, John and iver Nystuen, Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Lysne, H. A. Boe, Mrs. Anna Rorvik and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Stenhaug of Northfield." 
KASA, Helge Eiriksson (I4388)
 
285 "On or about 5 April 1635, 'Anthony Morse' and 'William Morse,' of 'Marlborough, shoemakers,' were adjacent entries in the passenger list of the James, about to set sail from Southampton for New England [Drake's Founders 56]."

"On 8 November 1679, in the course of the witchcraft accusations brought by William Morse and his wife, 'Anthony Mores testified that occassionally being at his brother's house he was a witness to the things which had happened there.' [EQC 7:359]."

See also Pillsbury Anc. 55. 
MORSE, Anthony (I6572)
 
286 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. LYSNE, Hilde Ovesdtr (I380)
 
287 "Perhaps daughter of Morcar of Northumbria; widow of Earl Sigeferth." Ealdgyth (I4146)
 
288 "Peter J. Thompson was a staunch Republican. He was a professional photographer in both Brillion and Crandon. Those days Crandon had no electricity so his work in the dark room was done by kerosene lamps. The end of his business came when his lamp exploded in his hands burning him extensively. The galery burned to the ground along with his records and books. Only one or two people came and paid him. The others knew he couldn't prove they owed him so they didn't pay." -- Pearl Thompson, written for her granddaughter Mary Schaleger's "Search for My Roots."

He started his photography studio in Crandon about 1915. It was located next to the present Mobil station.

Peter was a non-believer but belonged to the Lutheran church, presumably for the sake of the children. He switched to the Methodist church at some point over a dispute about insurance. It seems that the Lutherans would not permit him to switch to the cheaper Woodmen's insurance so he switched religious affiliation instead. (family lore)

"Peter and Melita lost their youngest son Edmund in World War II while liberating Paris. He was a co-pilot and was killed by flying shrapnel. This tragedy nearly killed them and they never got over it." 
THOMPSON, Peder (I10063)
 
289 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. SKOGMAN, Derrick James (I31045)
 
290 "postmann" ROGN, Jon Sjurson (I36250)
 
291 "Probably daughter of Yaroslav I, Grand Prince of Kiev, and Irina, daughter of King Olof Skotkonung of Sweden." Agatha "of Hungary" (I4300)
 
292 "regis Francorum sororia" i.e. a relative (probably) daughter or granddaughter) of a sister of the King of the Franks; possibly identical to St. Ida." St. Ida was the daughter of Theuderic, Duke of Toulouse, whose biography states that she married Egbert, a Saxon duke. Rædburh "Saint Ida" (I4221)
 
293 "RICHARD STRATTON3 (Samuel,2 Samuel1) was born in Concord, Mass., in 1664. "1664. Richard son of Samewell Stratton & mary his wife borne 27. desem4." (C. R.) He seems to have left his native town while quite a young man. He was at Charlestown for a while, and in Boston and Andover, and then settled at Chelmsford where he owned land and a mill. In the records he is styled "Mr. Richard Stratton, miller." January 6, 1686, he married Naomi (Hoyt) Lovejoy, widow of John Lovejoy of Andover. She died December 8, 1687, seven days after the birth of their son Ichabod. Twelve years later, April 8, 1699, Richard married Margaret Sheaf, who was born in Charlestown, May 12, 1673. His will is at Cambridge Courthouse. It is dated March 4, 1724, and proved the following year. His widow, Margaret, married a Mr. Parker, and died in 1750.

Children:

+32 Ichabod,4 b. 1687; d. 1762. -33 Ruth,4 b. Apr. 11, 1700; m. Jacob Warren. -34 Mary,4 bapt. Sept. 7, 1702, by Cotton Mather, in Second Church, Boston; m. Joseph Adams. -35 Margaret,4 b. Oct. 1, 1705; m. Jonas Whitney. "

SOURCE: Book of Strattons 
STRATTON, Richard (I3492)
 
294 "Robert Clench was for a time a landowner at Bottisham and after 1610 moved to Witcham in the Isle of Ely, where the early parish registers are lacking and the Bishop's Transcripts are very incomplete; no burial record has been found for him or for either of his wives. The executors named in his will, his friend Stephen Jellett, his brother John Clench and his nephew Almott Clench, all declined to serve as such and instead accepted appointment as administrators cum testamento annexo. He devised his house and land in Witcham to his [unnamed] wife and daughter Priscilla Clench, made special provision for his eldest daughter Susanna Felton, and left the residue of his estate to his [unnamed] six younger children. Susanna and the six younger children, in this case named, were bequethed £4 each in the will of their grandmother, Susanna (Smyth) (Webbe) Fowkes, wido of Thomas Webbe and of John Fowkes, on the condition that their father, Robert Clench, who had married Joan, a daughter of the testatrix, make no claim against the estate."

"An unsuccessful attempt has been made to locate probate and other records relating to the four sons of Robert Clench. Even in their absence, and the daughter of Thomasine being unmarried when her father's will was made, the identification of Thomasine, wife of Edmund Frost, with Thomaine, second surviving daughter of Thomas Clench, seems clear. Since the eldest daughter married at age 25, Thomasine's marriage at age 26 is not objectionable; their brother Robert Clench, whose family retained a connection with Bottisham, did not marry until he was over forty years of age." 
CLENCH, Robert (I7438)
 
295 "Rolf på Garde" Han var pleiebarn hos Ingebjørg og Ove på Garde JOHANSEN, Rolf (I15143)
 
296 "RYE PATCH SHOWS GOLD
BB. G. Cuirier of Reno is Interested in a Valuable Discovery
A new company has been formed to work the prospect recently discovered seven miles south of Rye Patch. The incorporators are B. F. Curier, Harry Hunter, George H. Copely and Harry Hunter, Jr.
Judge Curier has returned from the mine, bringing in samples of the rock, and from these it would appear to be one of the best surface showings in the state.Many of the samples show free gold in porphyry, the rock fairly bristling with small nubgets. Assays have been made of rock in which no gold was shown to the naked eye with values ranging from $66 to $1,297 per ton.
The ore shoot is two feet wide and has been uncovered for a distance of 15 feet. A shaft of five feet in depth has been sunk at the point of discovery. A small force of men is engaged in doing the location work, and this number no doubt will be increased as circumstances warrant. -- Silver State." 
HUNTER, Henry Hocking Jr. (I5925)
 
297 "Samuel Jackson and Phebe Jackson, alias Phebe Lyon, formerly wife of William Lyon dec'd, sold land 6 May 1714, given her by former husband." JACKSON, Samuel (I6913)
 
298 "SAMUEL STRATTON3 (Samuel,2 Samuel1) was born March 5, 1660. As eldest son he inherited the homestead at Concord. On the town records he is spoken of as "a weaver." November 28, 1688, he married Elizabeth Fletcher. daughter of Francis and Elizabeth (Wheeler) Fletcher. She was born in Concord August 24, 1663. His death is thus recorded on the original records at Concord: "Samuel Stratton, the husband of Elizabeth his wife Dyed november ye 30 day 1717 (in his 58th yr. g. s.)." His widow lived many years later, dying April 18, 1762, "in the hundredth year of her age."

Children:--Born in Concord.

+24 Samuel,4 b. 1684; settled in Rutland. +25 Hezekiah,4 b. 1688; settled in Northfield. +26 John,4 b. 1690; d. 1722. -27 Elizabeth,4 b. Feb. 16, 1692; m. Jan. 26, 1713, Jonathan Minott. +28 Joseph,4 b. 1695. -29 Mary,4 b. Mar. 5, 1698; m. Oct. 16, 1718, James Dawson of Boston. -30 Benjamin,4 b. Dec. 1, 1701; d. unm. in Concord, Nov. 29, 1779. "Non compos" for many years. (C. R.) -31 Anna,4 b. Nov. 26, 1704; m. (???) Billing.



WILL OF SAMUEL STRATTON3 1717

"In the Name of God Amen I Samuel Stratton Senr of the Town of Concord in the County of Middx ss in the Province of the Massachusetts Bay in New england Yeoman Being of sound good and Perfect memory--Praise be Given to god for the same yit knowing the Uncertanty of this Life on Earth and Being Desirous to Settle things in order Do make and ordaine this to be my Last Will and Testament Hereby Revoking all fformer Wills by me made & signed to be void and of none effect

"In Primas My soule I give into the Hands of Allmighty god that gave it in suer and Certaine Hopes of eternall Life through our Lord Jesuss Christ And my Body to the Earth from whence it Came to be Decently Interred at the Discretion of my Executors hereafter Mentioned and after my funerall expencies and Debts Satisfied and paid What Worldly Goods it hath pleased god to Endow me with all I Do give and Bequeath in Manner ffollowing--

"Item I give and bequeath to my Well-beloved Wife Eliseabeth Stratton and her Heirs forever: all my moveable goods Whatsoever:

"My Will is that my two sons Hezekiah Stratton and Benjamin Stratton shall have so much either of them as shall make thier Parts equall With What John and Joseph Straton have Received by Deeds of Gif from me allread: Allso my Will is that my two Daughters Mary Stratton and Anna Stratton shall have so much of my estate as shall make their Parts equall with their sister eliseabeth Minott: and Further my Will is that my Wife eliseabeth Straton shall have the whole Improvement of all my Reall estate so Long as shee shall Remaine a Widow in my Name and shee shall have Liberty to sell any part of it for her subsistance if need shall Require to be don with the advice of my Son Samll Stratton and What Land shall Remain after my Wives marraige or Decease my sons shall Devide it equally amongst them all and they to pay to thier sisters so much apeie as one of their shaers in the Land that shall be Remaining after my Wives marraige or Decease shall be Apprised by Indeferant men: Hereby Authorizing and ffully Impowering My Beloved Wife Eliseabeth Stratton and my son Samuel Stratton to be Executrs of this My Last Will and Testamentt

"In Witness Whereof I the sd Samuel Stratton have hereunto Set my hand and seal the twentieth and fifth Day of Aprill Anno 1717 and in the 3d year of his Majesties Reign over England & C

his SAMUEL V STRATTON [Seal]. mark

"Signed sealed & Published in the Presence of us to be the Last will and testament of Samuel Stratton

"Mary Davis, Joseph Meriam, John Meriam Junr "

SOURCE: Book of Strattons 
STRATTON, Samuel (I3373)
 
299 "She died about the time of King Philip's War, and perhaps in consequence of the raid on Groton during that conflict." Bridget (I9319)
 
300 "She played a dominant role in Iberian politics for many years as queen, regent, and then queen mother." She was the second wife of Sancho. Toda Aznárez de Larron Queen (I9507)
 

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