Matches 751 to 800 of 33,966
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| 751 | According to her birth certificate, her mother's maiden name was Ellingboe. She is very likely the Mildred E. Kolmayer, b. 20 Jul 1906, d. 28 Jul 1992 in Gresham, Multnomah County, Oregon (SSDI). Oregon death certificate 92-14936. That Mildred was probably the wife of Albert O. Kolmayer and the couple had at least one child, a daughter who married a man whose last name was Russell. Albert Kolmayer was an unmarried 42 year-old immigrant from Czeckoslovakia and living in Portland, Oregon, at the time of the 1930 census. Albert died in Multnomah County on 22 Mar 1965. According to his World War II draft registration card, Albert was born 4 June 1887 in Czechoslovakia. He and Mildred lived at Route 2, Box 197, Portland, Oregon. He worked for Durkee Famous Foods of Portland. | ELLINGBO, Mildred Elvira J. (I21755)
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| 752 | According to her death record, she was 70 years, 8 weeks and 3 days old at time of death. This calculates to approximately the 2nd of January 1732, | RIIS, Madam Kirsten Larsdatter (I262)
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| 753 | According to her obituary, "Esther was preceded in death by her parents Will and Edith Caddy Watts, her husband Lawrence Mash, daughter Bonnie Louise Siminoe, sister Phyllis Kane, and granddaughter Van Dee Dennis. She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Judy and Cliff Davis of Whitewater Whitewater; granddaughters and their husbands, Lora and Dennis Wynn of Whitewater and Kellee and Neland Kissinger of Vail, CO; grandson and wife Vince and Julie Siminoe of Hotchkiss, CO; and Howard Singer of Whitewater. Esther had many loving great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren." | WATTS, Esther Louise (I4015)
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| 754 | According to her obituary, "Esther was preceded in death by her parents Will and Edith Caddy Watts, her husband Lawrence Mash, daughter Bonnie Louise Siminoe, sister Phyllis Kane, and granddaughter Van Dee Dennis. She is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, Judy and Cliff Davis of Whitewater Whitewater; granddaughters and their husbands, Lora and Dennis Wynn of Whitewater and Kellee and Neland Kissinger of Vail, CO; grandson and wife Vince and Julie Siminoe of Hotchkiss, CO; and Howard Singer of Whitewater. Esther had many loving great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren." | BRACKETT, Edmond (I5968)
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| 755 | According to her obituary, she was survived by one son, Arlie of Dennison, four grandchildren, and one brother, Edward Ellingboe of Dennison. | ELLINGBOE, Amanda Bertina (I4448)
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| 756 | According to his gravestone, he died 4 Mar 1897. | KASTEN, Willie F. (I1194)
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| 757 | According to his obituary, he and his family moved to a farm near Crystal Lake in Lakeville when he was 12. He was confirmed at Christiania Lutheran Church and attended Lakeville High School. He worked with his father on the family farm and later on other farms in the area. After marriage, he and his wife continued farming, but he also worked for a while at Swift & Company and the Lakeville Creamery. They farmed near Castle Rock until 1960, then moved to Northfield, where he worked as a mechanic for Rydberg Implement until his retirement in 1973. After retirement, he worked for a number of years for his son Ken at the Standard Gas Station and later with his son Charles at the Northfield Foundry. "Survivors include his wife of 70 years, Beulah; 4 children: Carol Brenner of PhiladelphIowa, Iowa, , Edwin and wife Rev. Peggy of Tillamook, Oregon, Sharon Ann Stre of St. Paul, Charles of Northfield; his daughter-in-law, Sylvia Luckman of Faribault; 13 grandchildren: Darla (Alex) Hanson, Steven Luckman, Susan (Ed) Narewski, Donna (Ed) Gensemer, James Brenner, Brandon (Julie) Luckman, Michael and Joseph Satre, William, Ryan, Genevieve, Bridget and Cheyenne Luckman; 12 great-grandchildren; one sister, Jeanette Severson of Roseville; nieces, nephews and other relatives and friends. He was preceded in death by his son, Kenneth; his parents; and three brothers: Robert, Walter and Ray." "Funeral services will be 2:00 P.M. Wednesday, January 3, 2007, at St. John's Lutheran Church in Northfield with Rev. Mark Johnson officiating. Music will be provided by Randy Ellingboe and Ruth Ferguson. Interment will be in Northfield Cemetery. Casket bearers will be Brandon, Steve, William and Ryan Luckman, Michael and Soseph Satre. Visitation will be 4-8PM Tuesday, January 2, 2006 (sic) at the Benson & Langenhough Funeral Home in Northfield. Visitation will continue on Wednesday at the church one hour prior to the service." | LUCKMAN, Lloyd Winfield (I4462)
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| 758 | According to his obituary, he was Korean War veteran, a member of the Walter Scott Erickson American Legion Post No. 557 of Deerwood, Garrison VFW and the Moose Lodge in Aitkin. He was a retired depot agent for Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad. At his death, he was survived by two sons, Keith Ellingboe, of Brainerd, Brian (Michelle) Ellingboe, of Robbinsdale; two daughters, Carrie Vukelich, of Nisswa, and Elizabeth "Lisa" (LeRoy Jr.) Iler, of Foley; 11 grandchildren; and two great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, his wife, Clara; a son, Ronald; and two sisters. | ELLINGBOE, Elvin Julian (I8386)
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| 759 | According to information on a double gravestone, she and her sister Anne Sophie Tasa Svien died on the same day. | TASA, Marit Lovisa (I6806)
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| 760 | According to naming tradition, he should have been called Ola after his mother's father, Ola Kvåle, but because his father's father was also named Ola and his eldest grandson was therefore named Ola after him, the parents made a slight change and added a "v" to the end of his name. Like his father, he was handy. He received an award certificate at the Bærumsutstillingen in 1930 for his milk container, salt shaker, newspaper folder and Valbjørk (furniture or other items made from birch with twisted grain and irregular rings). He built a house called Veslenibb (after a peak on Grindadn) at Evje Terasse 11, Sandvika. It was sold in 1933. He was a junior officer at the Bolærene (a group of islands in the Oslo fjord) on 9 Apr 1940, the day that Germany invaded Norway by attacking all seaports simultaneously. He received a medal for being a participant in the defense of Norway at that time. | HAMMERSTAD, Olav Bøyesen (I5853)
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| 761 | According to obit. he had a great physical handicap. They lived on the old homestead, one mile east of town, on the hill. "Tom had diabetes and had both legs amputated below his knees. He pulled himself along the ground and drove a tractor for fieldwork. He kept a lovely garden." Although it has written that he was a contortionist with the Ringling Brother's Circus, this is not true. The contortionist may have been Thomas Henry Helgeson Ellingboe (1882-1978) according to Vickie Hart. | ELLINGBOE, Trond Iversson (I4428)
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| 762 | According to obituary, at time of death he had 4 living sisters and 1 brother, his parents were Torsten and Ingeborg Sanness. His three unmarried sisters were Sidsel, Kari and Ingeborg, all living in Decorah. His married sister was Mrs. Olaf Ramstad, living in California. His brother Ole Sanness lived in Thief River, Minnesota, and was not married. | SANNES, Torsten (I6410)
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| 763 | According to Professor Arthur Latham Perry (a descendant of Matthew), of Williams College, Matthew Gray and his wife Joan were among the Scotch-Irish immigrants who landed in Boston 4 Aug 1718. In the autumn they settled in Worcester, where they died. He was Scaler of leather and Hogreeve in Worcester in 1724. In 1728, he bought the nucleus of the "Gray Farm" in Worcester, which remained in the hands of his descendants for more than a century. His son Matthew Gray was deeded the farm in October 1735. The "marks" of both Matthew and Joan were made on the deed. | GRAY, Matthew (I2920)
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| 764 | According to Ruth Ellsworth Richardson, Sir John Ellsworth and Lucia (Bowers) Ellsworth of Cambridgeshire were probably the parents of Josiah Ellsworth who came to America. | ELLSWORTH, Sir John (I5782)
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| 765 | According to Stewart Baldwin, "he was the historical prototype of the Ivar the Boneless of the Icelandic sagas, which, however, cannot be trusted to give any historical information about him. The only certain information about him is given in the Irish annals during the period 856-873, and his possible role as king of York, through reasonably likely, is disputed by some." | Ívarr "Inn Beinlausi" Ragnarsson King of Dublin, York, Orkneys, etc. (I392)
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| 766 | According to stories he went to Årdal where he was a smith at the copper works and had a farm under Hjelle. He is believed to have been married to Marta from "Karhodne" in Valdres and had six children. | GRIHAMAR, Mads Knutsson (I5044)
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| 767 | According to the "History of Jaffrey, NH," Joanna's father was James Bates, who arrived in America in April 1635 on the ship "Elizabeth." Is this ancestry correct? Could Joanne's father (or older brother ?) be the James Bates who was born 2 Dec 1582 and died after 22 Nov 1655 (will) in Dorchester, married Alice Glover 13 Sep 1603 in Lydd, daughter of William Glover and Anne Goverard, born 1583 in Kent, England and died 14 Aug 1657 in Dorchester? | BATES, John (Or James?) (I2711)
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| 768 | According to the 1900 census he was born in September 1887. | LEFFINGWELL, Lowell L. (I10819)
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| 769 | According to the 1900 census, she had 12 children, 6 of whom were living in 1900. | SVIEN, Anna A. (I6371)
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| 770 | According to the 1905 Census of Minnesota, taken on June 7, Ole's family consisted of wife Maria age 36, Martin O. age 18, Herbert O. age 9 and Cornell O. age 8. Ole was listed as having resided in Minnesota 37 years. His occupation is farmer. Ole had two sons, but neither had a family, according to Arta Juneau. | ELLINGBOE, Ole Olsen (I8256)
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| 771 | According to the 1930 census, she was born in Maine and both her parents were born in Sweden. | Bertha W. (I10858)
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| 772 | According to the 1930 U.S. Census, her mother was born in Wisconsin and her mother's parents were born in England. Her father was French Canadian. | LYSIGNAN, Anna M. (I1820)
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| 773 | According to the 1930 U.S. Census, Theodore Ellingboe (age 36), his wife Josie Ellingboe (age 30), daughter Anna (age 2 years 9 months), and son Cledith Ellingboe (age 1 year and 8 months), were living at Poulsbo, Kitsap County, Washington. Theodore was a farm manager. In 1970, Theodore's cousin Andris was living at 5743 Enfield Ave., Encino, California. Theodore was living at 924 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard, Washington. Theodore wrote that Miss Agnes Ellingboe of Maynard, Minnesota, was also gathering data on the Ellingboe family. | ELLINGBOE, Theodore (I4415)
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| 774 | According to the Nicholas Knapp Genealogy, "Samuel enlisted Apr. 4, discharged Dec. 7, Campaign of 1761, Co. 6. Capt. Thomas Hobby of Greenwich, 2nd Regt. Col. Whiting. Samuel served in Capt. Mead's Regt. of the 9th Conn. Militia and went to the saw (or salt) pits in Rye, N.Y., under command of Gen. Wooster, in the Continental service. Many have joined the S.A.R. and D.A.R. from his record. After the Revolution, he settled in Rensselaerwick, now Troy, N.Y." | KNAPP, Samuel (I3329)
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| 775 | According to the baptismal record for his son Iver, the alleged name of the father was Ole, whose residence was unknown. | Ole (I54037)
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| 776 | According to the cemetery inscription, she was age 3-6-10 when she died. If this means 3 years, 6 months and 10 days, she would have been born in December 1799. | SCOFIELD, Lydia (I10170)
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| 777 | According to the church book he was born 18 Aug 1822, but his gravestone reads 5 Aug 1822. | ELLINGBØE, Endre Andrisson (I4993)
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| 778 | According to the church book he was born 18 Aug 1822, but his gravestone reads 5 Aug 1822. | ELLINGBØ, Endre Andrison (I1788)
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| 779 | According to the church book record, he died at the age of 18 years. | ELLINGBØE, Andris Helgesson (I9075)
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| 780 | According to the church book, she was the illegitimate child of maiden Randi Olsd. Ellingbø 1841 and bachelor Iver Knudsen Ellingbø 1848. She entered the USA through Ellis Island in 1898, sailing from Liverpool on 31 Aug 1898 on the ship S.S. Majestic and arriving on 8 Sep 1898. The manifest gives her name as Rangdi Ellingbó, age 28, from Vang, a U.S. citizen with a residence in Minneapolis. Accompanying her was Berith Kvåle, age 26, also from Vang. Berith is listed as from Sweden, which must be a mistake of the person who filled in the manifest. Randi must have been visiting Vang after having immigrated in 1889, according to U.S. Census. But, according to the census, she was not naturalized until 1902. The Berit Kvåle who traveled with Randi across the Atlantic in 1898 was born 13 April 1872, the illegitimate daughter of maiden Berit Olsdatter Kvåle (born 1851) and bachelor lensman's son Lars Johnson Wangensteen (born 1843). | ELLINGBØ, Rangdi Iversdatter (I6818)
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| 781 | According to the Concord VR, Joseph Billing, son of John Billing and his wife Elizabeth, was born 3 Sep 1672 ( p. 16) and Joseph Billing, son of John Billing died 31 Dec 1690 (p. 55). Is this the same person who married Anna (or Hannah)? On p. 436 of Concord VR, Joseph Billing, age 58 years, died 12 Sep 1760. He would have been born in 1702. Also, the older Joseph Billing would have been 59 years old at the time of birth of daughter Anne. | BILLING, Joseph (I7287)
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| 782 | According to the Gray Genealogy, John's ancestors came originally from Argylshire, Scotland, and settled near Londonderry, Ireland, in 1612. John was one of a committee in Ireland who wrote to Gov. Shute of the Massachusetts Colony in 1717, to inquire as to the encouragement emigrants would receive if they came to this country. John Gray's family was one of 140 families came from the North of Ireland to Boston in 1718. John bought land in Worcester in 1718, and in 1722-1723. From Lincoln's History of Worcester, it appears that John occupied one of the 'fore-pews' in the church, indicating that he was a man of some position. He was also one of the signers of the "Shute Memorial." | GRAY, John (I2917)
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| 783 | According to The Great Migration Begins and The Winthrop Fleet, the marriage was by about 1625, but the name of his wife is unknown. According to other records, the name of his first wife was Ruth. | |
| 784 | According to the Minnesota Marriage Collection, the marriage date was September 1958. | |
| 785 | According to the sketch in The Great Migration Begins, the origin of the Lockwood brothers in Combs, Suffolk, seems to be based on finding the right names at about the right time, so further research is needed and a birth date of 2 Sep 1574 (as given in genealogies) may not be correct. In an updated sketch, in The Winthrop Fleet, his origin is given as probably Combs, Suffolk, based on an article in Connecticut Ancestry 47:120-123. He was certainly born by about 1600 based on estimated date of marriage. | LOCKWOOD, Edmund (I5043)
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| 786 | According to the Slidre marriage records, Ole Knudsen Dahle married Anne Knudsdotter on 16 Jun 1781 (engaged 3 Feb 1781). She is not listed under Dahle in the 1801 census, but Inge Erichsdotter is listed as wife of Ole Knudsen Skatteboe in the 1801 Census. | SKATTEBOE (DAHLE), Ole Knudsen (I1409)
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| 787 | According to the Stavanger Emigration Index at Vesterheim, Søren de Fine, his brother, traveled with him. | KROGH, Bernhardus Arnoldus (I8502)
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| 788 | According to Tore Ey (p. 194) he was born in 1743. The churchbook is difficult to read in that year so it is uncertain if there was another son by the name of Jon born then. | KVÅLE, Jon Pedersen (I8520)
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| 789 | According to tradition, he once shot a bear. A young boy from the main Windingstad farm came to Maradokke to fetch a mare that was there with a foal. When he arrived he saw that a bear that was eating the foal. The boy was scared to death and climbed up in a spruce tree and shouted as loud as he could: "Lars, Lars, come and shot him." Lars i Bakka heard the shouts, shot the bear and saved the life of the boy from Windingstad. The story has also been told differently, saying that Lars used the foal as bait in an animal trap, and thereby got the better of the bear. On p. 658 of V&S a Lars Olsen Veningstad is said to have married Kari, who is said to have been a daughter of Gølik Knutson Lien (nørre I) and Kari Hansdotter [Beito?] (her second marriage). But -- the engagement record in the church book for Lars Olsen and Kari in 1784 gives her father's name as Thorsten, and this is the name used at time of baptism for all of their children. Could she have been a daughter from the first marriage of Kari Hansdotter? Could V&S be wrong in this? His mother was from Løken, where the church book record states that Lars and Kari were engaged. | WINDINGSTAD, Lars Olsen (I208)
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| 790 | According to V&S, p. 712, Knut Gulbrandson Onstad married Marit Pedersdotter. | DALE, Kari Pedersdotter (I4763)
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| 791 | According to Vang A, she had two children with Jon, but the birth date of her second son Torstein (1751) does not agree with her death date (before 1743). There must have been some confusion with Torstein, the son of Jon's second wife Sigrid. | Guri Torsteinsdotter (I7882)
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| 792 | According to Watertown VR, "Jonathan knap the sonn of Nickholas and Elinor knap buried the 27 of the tenth aged 7 weekes" (27-10-1631 is the same as 27 Dec 1631 when converted to the old style date. He was probably buried in the Arlington Street Buring Ground, Watertown. | KNAPP, Jonathan (I3431)
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| 793 | Accused of being a witch, tried in Boston, convicted and sentenced to be executed. She was in jail for almost a year and then was allowed to go home in 1681. She was never formally exonerated and died a natural death [EQC 7:355-357; RCA 1:159, 189-190; Magnalia 2:450-452; Witchhunting 230-259; Entertaining Satan 132-152. | Elizabeth (I7286)
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| 794 | across the North Sea on the "Scotia" and across the Atlantic on board the "Anglia." | LAJORD, Thomas Torsteinson (I6862)
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| 795 | Acs. to throne 976. Killed by his own men. | Cinaed King (I4176)
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| 796 | Active on the Roy, UT, Town Counci; BPOE. He was married in the Catholic Church but was raised Southern Baptist. He told the story that he walked out of the Baptist Church at the age of 16 when they insisted he stand up in front of the congregaton and say he wa sorry for dancing. | SMITH, Milon Richland (I2506)
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| 797 | Actress in 1920´s | OLIVER, Edna Mae (I12036)
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| 798 | Add other children. | Einarr "Torf-Einarr" Rognvaldsson , Earl (I1319)
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| 799 | Add. 1, Lot 413, in same lot as her son Carlos Eugene Jones | WOODRUFF, Edith L. (I22190)
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| 800 | Add. 1, Lot 413, in same lot as his mother Edith W. Jones. | JONES, Carlos Eugene (I22197)
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