Matches 2,351 to 2,400 of 4,024
# | Notes | Linked to |
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2351 | Fourteenth Census of the United States, 1920. (NARA microfilm publication T625, 2076 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. For details on the contents of the film numbers, visit the following NARA web page: NARA. Note: Enumeration Districts 819-839 are on roll 323 (Chicago City). | Source Source: S970 (S970)
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2352 | Fourteenth Census of the United States, 1920. (NARA microfilm publication T625, 2076 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. For details on the contents of the film numbers, visit the following NARA web page: NARA. Note: Enumeration Districts 819-839 are on roll 323 (Chicago City). | Source Source: S1391 (S1391)
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2353 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S100 (S100)
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2354 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S482 (S482)
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2355 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S533 (S533)
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2356 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S647 (S647)
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2357 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S800 (S800)
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2358 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S943 (S943)
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2359 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S1210 (S1210)
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2360 | Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. | Source Source: S1507 (S1507)
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2361 | Frank died in the forest fire that destroyed most of the Citico Wilderness area in 1925. He was a logger working for Babcock Lumber Company. | Coppinger, Frank W. (I7396)
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2362 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Ring, Jutta Elfriede (I8647)
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2363 | Fred Young Cemetery | Presnell, Rebecca Jane (I7538)
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2364 | Fred Young Cemetery | Fox, Elmira (I479)
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2365 | Friedhof (cemetary) Baumgarten | Reichel, Walter Karl Augustin (I22003)
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2366 | Friends Burying Ground | Maugridge, Mary (I5588)
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2367 | Friends Cemetery | Piersall, Amos Dale (I6655)
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2368 | Friends Cemetery | Tuning, William Jesse (I6657)
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2369 | Friends Cemetery | Moon, Joseph (I18749)
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2370 | Friends Cemetery | Presnell, Martha White (I16175)
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2371 | Friends Cemetery | Presnell, Milton Otto (I14958)
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2372 | Friends Cemetery | Tuning, Harlan Edward (I3413)
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2373 | Friends Cemetery | Rinard, Hazel Virena (I19398)
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2374 | Friends Cemetery | Tuning, Jesse Olive (I3178)
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2375 | Friends Cemetery | Presnell, Phoebe Mary (I3176)
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2376 | Friends Cemetery | Tuning, Walter Presnell (I3172)
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2377 | Friends Cemetery | Tuning, John (I3173)
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2378 | Friends Cemetery | Tuning, Evalina (I2708)
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2379 | Friends Cemetery | Hirst, Edwin Claud (I9520)
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2380 | Friends Church(widow of Samuel C Hornaday) | Family F939
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2381 | From "Sullivan County, IN, 175th Anniversary Commemorative Edition" Page 296: "Benjamin and Mary Paddock Harris came from Butler County, Ohio to Sullivan County, Indiana perhaps as early as 1813. In 1817, entered 220 acres of land in Fairbanks Township, near Graysville. They had 12 children: Kessiah (Keziah), John, Jacob, Benjamin Jr., Josiah (Sic?) Joel, William Harvey, Tyra, Agnes, Susan, Louisa and Sarah." (No mention of Anna?) Page 297: "the Harris Family is of English decent and came to America during the early years. They first settled in Virginia and then west into Ohio before locating farmland in the Northwest Territory of Indiana. | Harris, Benjamin (I10807)
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2382 | From "The History of Upson County" an Index of Soldiers who served in the "Soldier's Late War" (The War of 1812), on page 171 lists Jacob Presnal, a member of Dupree's District. The following information was received from Bernice Garner McCown of Granbury, Texas in May of 1991: All of my research points to Jacob Pressnall, son of William and Mary Cabeness, being the father of Elizabeth who married James S. Garner in 1828. In 1800 Jacob and his father, William Pressnall, were still living near King's Mountain in Newberry County, South Carolina. Jacob was about 25 years of age and had one daughter in his household. In 1810 he was still in Newberry County, South Carolina, age 35 with his wife, 3 boys and 2 girls. Jacob served as a substitute Private in Captain Lee Hall's Company of the Georgia Militia In 1820 Jacob was in Newberry County with no wife (Apparantly she had died) and ? children. By 1830 Jacob was living in Carroll County Georgia and was 55 years old. In 1840 Jacob was living in Heard County, Georgia (Heard County was formed from part of Carroll, Troup, and Coweta Co.,) Here in 1840, at the age of about 65, he had seven children, and a woman 30-40 years old in his household. I believe this woman is his daughter, Elizabeth Pressnall Garner, widowed by that time. She and her husband James S. Garner lived in Heard County Georgia in 1833 (the part that was taken from Troup County where they were married in 1828). This woman, named Elizabeth in the 1850 census, and 7 children were still in Jacob's household in the 1850 census. None of them have been found in 1860. Records show that Luke, sone of James S. and Elizabeth Pressnall Garner, came to Texas in 1852. I assume his parents died and the children scattered. Jacob Pressnall was the only Pressnall the age to have been the father of Elizabeth who married James S. Garner. The Garner and Pressnall families apparently moved to Georgia between 1820 and 1830, settling near Atlanta. Both families living in Newberry County, South Carolina before moving to Georgia and both families are listed in the records of Christ Church, Middlesex County, Virginia which ties these two families together for several generations. | Presnal, Jacob (I16394)
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2383 | From an eMail from Donald Plunkette, 24AUG2000: "Robert Presnell has been a businessman all his life, a talent for which he has always had a gift. As I probably told you, he ran a successful restaurant in DeWitt (Nebraska) and then not too long after WWII he and Wilma (his wife) left for California to try their hand there." | Presnell, Robert Lyle (I3374)
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2384 | from Citations from Dr. Ed Ellis | Ellis, Sr. William (I14242)
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2385 | from complications of diabetes. | Lewelling, Henry (I18968)
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2386 | from Death Certificate | Cox, Florence V (I4434)
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2387 | From family story died when granddaughter Emma was 3 months old. | Presnell, Lucinda (I3378)
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2388 | From his grand daughter Mae Rinard, she stated that George was a minister of the Christian Church, and a conductor on the Underground Railroad. | Reynard, George (I1240)
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2389 | From his great-grand-daughter, TerriAnn Wakeman Graduated Clark High School 1927. He was engaged to his high school sweetheart Esther Bonfoey. Before the marriage he died along with his instructor while taking flying lessons. They were flying in a Curtis Jenny when it developed engine trouble right after takeoff and the plane crashed into a giant oak tree. He died before his daughter was born. His daughter was named Donna in honor of him. Donald's parents would have nothing to do with their grandchild because she was conceived out of wedlock and he died before the planned wedding. Donna was not told who here true father was until she became an adult. | Sease, Donald Jay (I1657)
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2390 | from IGI information | Wells, Anny D. (I8376)
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2391 | from IGI information | Wells, Mirza E (I12100)
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2392 | from Michael C. Presnell: Interestingly, Thomas Presnell is born and died immediately following the Great Plague of England, which was the last major epideimc of the bubonic plague to occur in the Kingdom of England. It is estimated that the population of London in 1665 was about 460,000. It is thought that the 1665 Plague in England came from the Netherlands where the disease had been occurring intermittently since 1599. The dock areas outside London and the parish of St. Giles in the fields, where poor workers were crowded into ill-kept structures, are believed to be the first areas to be struck. It started in St Giles and the first victims were buried in the St. Giles churchyard. By September 1665, 8000 people were dying a week in London! By the end of the plague year there were 3,216 listed plague deaths in St Giles parish, which had fewer than 2,000 households. After the Restoration, the area was populated by Huguenot refugees who had fled persecution and established themselves as tradesmen and artisans, particularly in weaving and the silk trade. | Presnell, Thomas (I3686)
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2393 | From Terry Harmon: Miles Presnell was born around 1824 in North Carolina. Some have suggested that his full name was “Harvey Miles Presnell,” and his great-granddaughter, Aner Tester Rominger, even arranged a tombstone with that name on it, but there are no records to substantiate this. In fact, the 1860 Watauga County census records his name as “Miles A. Presnell.” Miles’s son, Jordan H. “Jerd” Presnell, was a patient at the North Carolina State Mental Hospital in the 1920’s and 1930’s, and although more is written about Jerd later, it is important to note here that the hospital archives record Jerd’s parents as Rilda Hix and Miles Abernathy Presnell. There is no indication as to who the provider of this information was, but perhaps it was Jerd himself or Jerd’s son, Harrison Wesley Presnell, who is believed to have sent his father to the hospital. Either way, a son and/or a grandson would probably have known Miles’s name. Jerd’s death certificate also lists his father as “Miles Abernathy Presnell.” Additionally, on the death certificate of Miles’s son, John Columbus Presnell, John’s father is listed as “Miles Avanathy Presnell.” “Avanathy” was likely a misspelling of “Abernathy.” The middle name “Abernathy” supports the 1860 census listing of “Miles A. Presnell.” It is also interesting to note that Miles Presnell’s nephew, Jackson Ward (son of Miles’s sister, Clarissa Presnell Ward), named one of his sons Miles Abernathy Ward, no doubt after his uncle Miles Abernathy Presnell. Miles Ward in turn named one of his sons Charles Abernathy Ward. When I discovered that Miles’s middle name was Abernathy, I wondered about the source of it, particularly since Abernathy is not a name common to the Watauga area. I wondered if it was similar to Lorenzo Dow. Many early residents of this area were named Lorenzo Dow. There were several Lorenzo Dow Wards, for example, as well as a Lorenzo Dow Whittington and a Lorenzo Dow Tester. This name was, in fact, originally given in honor of Lorenzo Dow (1777-1834) who, according to Wikipedia, the on-line dictionary, “was an eccentric minister whose infamy, influence and travels throughout the country led to many thousands of U. S. children of the early 19 th century to be named after him. The 1850 U. S. census lists Lorenzo as one of the most popular first names in America. His autobiography at one time was the second-best selling book in the United States, exceeded only by the Bible.” With that knowledge in mind, I searched for a man named Miles Abernathy. Although I did not locate a Miles Abernathy of the same fame as Lorenzo Dow, there was an Abernathy family in early Lincoln County, North Carolina, and at least two of their members were named Miles and others were named James and Nathan - all names that appear in the Presnell family. Miles Presnell’s father, James Presnell, at one point lived in Burke County, and part of Burke County was later added to Lincoln County (1782- 1784). As is believed to be true of the Presnells, the Abernathys moved to North Carolina from Virginia. Although there appears to be no intermarriages or blood relation between the two families, perhaps they were neighbors or associates, and perhaps that is how the Abernathy name came to be part of the Presnell and Ward families. | Presnell, Miles Abernathy (I25103)
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2394 | From the recollections of his young brother Frank; Graydon and his wife left Omaha shortly after the death of Clinton Edgar Presnell, to take over the buthcher business of his father in Bradshaw, Nebraska. | Presnell, Graydon Jay (I303)
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2395 | Frye Regional Medical Center | Presnell, Thomas Wayne (I12623)
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2396 | Gabriel Drouin, comp, Drouin Collection, Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin | Source Source: S877 (S877)
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2397 | Gabriel Drouin, comp, Drouin Collection, Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin | Source Source: S883 (S883)
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2398 | Gand, Flandre Oriental, Belgium | Flanders, Hildegard Countess of (I530)
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2399 | Garfield Cemetery | Presnell, Robie J (I8136)
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2400 | Gary B. Mills. Southern Loyalists in the Civil War: The Southern Claims Commission. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2004. | Source Source: S1047 (S1047)
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