Old Dead Relatives

The genealogy of my extended family

Who's Your Daddy?
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Matches 6,301 to 6,350 of 6,350

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6301 Worked surgery K.C. General Hospital, St. Lukes Hospital, & St. Mary'sHospital. MILLER, Edwin Lee (I27139)
 
6302 Working at 16 for a Livery Stable owned by Charles H. BERRY
——
Difficult to find further information - not sure if the following is related:
* 1900 census, Frank Hall is living in a “tramps lodging house” in Boston.
* Ohio, Summit County, Coroner Inquest records: Frank C. Hall died of organic heart disease
* Frank C. Hall dies 22 Jul 1885 in Passaic, Morris, New Jersey
* various marriages reported, none verfied

Don’t believe he is the Frank Hall from Gloucester 
HALL, Franklin Conary (I45859)
 
6303 works on farm COUSINS, Asa Thorlough (I32947)
 
6304 World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 Record
Name: Alden Blaisdell Ackerman
City: Medford
County: Middlesex
State: Massachusetts
Birthplace: Massachusetts;United States of America
Birth Date: 9 Apr 1891
Race: Caucasian
Roll: 1674359
DraftBoard: 0
Age:
Occupation:
Nearest Relative:
Height/Build:
Color of Eyes/Hair:

Social Security Death Index Record
Name: Alden Ackerman
SSN: 012-03-8116
Last Residence: 02138 Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Born: 9 Apr 1891
Died: Sep 1975
State (Year) SSN issued: Massachusetts (Before 1951 ) 
ACKERMAN, Alden Blaisdell (I10577)
 
6305 World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 Record
Name: Gilbert Newton Ackerman
City: West Roxbury
County: Suffolk
State: Massachusetts
Birth Date: 30 May 1883
Race: White
Roll: 1685015
DraftBoard: 23 
ACKERMAN, Gilbert Newton (I10575)
 
6306 World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 Record
Name: Harrison Alden Fuller
City: Everett
County: Middlesex
State: Massachusetts
Birth Date: 26 Nov 1883
Race: White
Roll: 1685172
DraftBoard: 0
Age: 34
Occupation: Traveling Salesman
Nearest Relative: ANNA P. FULLER, (note: scan hard to read)
Height/Build: med/med
Color of Eyes/Hair: lt. blue/lt. gray 
FULLER, Harrison Alden (I10640)
 
6307 World War II In France and Germany. Wounded at the Battle of the Bulge. Was in the Army Fighting Engineers and had to rebuild one Bridge 3 times at the Battle of the Bulge. The First Time when German Tiger Tanks started coming across. The 2nd time the Germans blew it up but the 3rd time the Troops made it across and pushed the Germans back. When He went in the Service he weighed 185 lbs and when he came out he was 110 lbs. He served as Commander of the James McGrath Post #74 American Legion. GLOVER, Willard Melvin (I23199)
 
6308 Worth $700 TRACY, Benjamin (I38427)
 
6309 Wounded by Indians in 1712 STOVER, Dependence (I41247)
 
6310 Wounded by the Indians July 26, 1696 when his brother Nicholas was killed. OTIS, Richard (I5342)
 
6311 Written May 1838, Probated Jun 1838
Know all men by these presents, that I John Stover, of Castine, County of Hancock, and State of Maine, being weak in body but of sound and perfect mind and memory do make and publish this as my last will and testament…….
to my beloved wife Lucy Stover, so long as she shall live, all my real and personal estates, goods, and chattels
My wife’s son Simeon Bray - $20 if it does not exceed one sixteenth of the whole amount
2/15ths to each of my daughters:
Betsey Farnham
Mary Farnham
Phebe Carleton
Sarah R. Stover
Louisa M Devereux
2/15ths to my nephew Increase Matthews
3/15ths to my daughter Lucy Irish
I do hereby appoint my son in law Willard Devereux the executor… 
BARTER, William G. (I44646)
 
6312 Wrote Book " My Forefathers of Brewer Maine" It's in the Bangor & BrewerLibraries KENNEY, Ethil Leone (I23243)
 
6313 WW I service WINCHESTER, Theodore Dunnica (I34236)
 
6314 WWI Draft Registration Card:
James Harold Dame
Age: 24
Home address: 10 No. Spring St., Concord, NH
DOB: Mar. 14, 1893
Citizenship: natural born citizen
Place of Birth: Manchester, NH
Present Occupation: Agent 26
Employer: Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
Concord, NH
Dependents: No
Martial Status: Single
Race: Caucasian
Military Service: None
Exemption from Draft: No
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION:
Tall, slender brown eyes, dark brown hair, not bald
——
WWII Draft Registration Card:
James Harold Dame
57 Mt. Vernon St., Reading, Middlesex Co., Mass
Phone: Reading 11585
Age: 49
Place of birth: Manchester, NH
Name of person who will always know where to reach James:
Lloyd B. Dame, 15 Green St., Reading, MA
Employer: WPA, Union Street, Reading, MA
Place of Employment: Union St., Reading, Middlesex Co., MA 
DAME, James Harold (I36037)
 
6315 WWI Registration physical description:
Medium height, Medium build, Brown eyes, Brown hair

1933 Concord City Directory
Dame Edward A. (Mildred C), supt NH Bible Society, h 85 Warren

1960 Concord City Directory
Dame, Edw A (Mildred C) retired h 3 Essex 
DAME, Edward Algern (I36023)
 
6316 Yes, this is a woman.

d/o Cicero Columbus Bowlin and Emma Allen. 
BOWLIN, Henry Clay Draughon (I11990)
 
6317 York Co, Maine Court Index: 1686-1760. Courtesy of the Maine State Archives

Full Name ABBOT, PATIENCE
Def/Plt DEF
Location
Index Number 603656
Court SESS
Volume/Page 6-314
Box/File
Cause FORNICATION
Year 1706
Month 4 
ABBOTT, Patience (I4151)
 
6318 yr. s. of John Sutton (d.c.1378) of Lincoln; bro. of John Sutton I*. m. Agnes (d.c.1427), 1s. Hamon Sutton*, 1da.
https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/sutton-robert-1414
One of the richest and most influential Lincoln merchants of his day, Sutton first comes to notice in January 1370, when he was pardoned a sentence of outlawry incurred for failing to appear in court to answer charges of trespass laid by one Alice Quadryng. He and his elder brother, John I, were very close and often used the same vessels to ship goods from Boston to Calais. Over the year ending in June 1378, for example, the two men exported large quantities of wool together, and in the previous October Robert had acted as a surety on his brother’s return to Parliament. Most of Sutton’s substantial income derived from the wool trade, although he is to be found dealing in other commodities such as iron and wine as well. His appointment first as mayor of the Staple and then as collector of customs at Boston (two important offices which his brother had previously occupied) clearly gave him a valuable commercial advantage over his rivals, but even after being replaced in 1390 he remained one of the most successful figures in this field, and numerous references survive to emphasize the scope of his activities. Not all of these fell within the law, however, for in both May 1382 and February 1398 he obtained general pardons from the Crown to cover unspecified misdemeanours; and in October 1395 he and his servant, John Maltster, were granted royal letters patent pardoning all illegal and fraudulent transactions in wool. Occasionally, as in April 1406, ships carrying his merchandise were wrecked off the east coast, but these set-backs did not seriously affect his prosperity. Indeed, in the summer of 1404 he was able to join with four other Lincoln merchants in advancing a loan of £200 to the government towards the cost of the Welsh wars.4
Sutton invested a large proportion of his money in property, becoming a notable landowner with messuages, shops and rents worth £32 a year in Lincoln alone, and other estates in Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire which, in 1412, were said to produce a further £25 if not more. Some of the latter came to him on the death of his father, in about 1378, when he appears to have shared estates in Willingham, Ownby and Cold Hanworth with his brother. His holdings in the Nottinghamshire townships of Sutton and Mansfield may also have been inherited, but the rest were purchased out of the profits of trade. In addition to his home in Lincoln, he kept a country seat not far away at Burton with a separate staff of servants and a well-stocked farm. He was, moreover, able to exploit his position to acquire land from the mayor and corporation of Lincoln on preferential terms. In May 1383, for instance, he obtained a vacant plot for building purposes from them near the great bridge; and he was subsequently able to extend it by piecemeal leases. In 1385 he paid £5 at the Exchequer for a similar site in the parish of St. Peter Wigford, but his property development had by then begun to annoy the dean and chapter, whose relations with the citizenry were already extremely strained. In July 1386, the ecclesiastical authorities complained that Sutton’s building works not only constituted a major nuisance to their own tenants but that he had actually erected a house in St. Andrew’s churchyard, blocking their right of way. In other respects, however, Sutton was a generous benefactor to the Church, being largely responsible for the maintenance of a chantry at St. Andrew’s which he established in January 1382 and helped to support out of the revenues of a messuage and two shops in the city. His foundation attracted other gifts of property from friends and neighbours and thus became comparatively wealthy.5 It is unlikely that Sutton had the same direct personal interest in the endowment of St. Katherine’s priory near Lincoln where he was instrumental, in 1392, in setting up a chantry dedicated to his fellow merchant Walter Kelby. Yet he did leave the house a bequest of £5 in his will, perhaps because his brother had elected to be buried there. The forfeiture of Sir John Holt, j.c.p., by the Merciless Parliament of 1388 (to which both he and John I were returned) gave him a valuable opportunity to make good the loss of revenues alienated by him to the Church; and in the following July he paid 70 marks for 12 messuages and land which had belonged to the judge in Lincoln and its suburbs. King Richard’s complete recovery of the political initiative a decade later led to Holt’s restoration, and Sutton was obliged to surrender the property as a result. Although probably more to do with commercial ventures than anything else, his second royal pardon of 1398 may also have been sought by him with this in mind.6
From the date of his election as mayor of Lincoln in 1379 Sutton played a notable part in local affairs, and was, indeed, chosen to represent the city in no less than 11 Parliaments. In that of May 1382 (which was only his second) he was nominated by the Lords as one of the 14 merchants asked to ‘treter et communer de lour part et par eux mesme’ with regard to a royal loan. On two further occasions, in 1397 (Jan.) and 1399, he was responsible for the presentation to the House of Commons of petitions for the reduction of the city’s fee farm, but both appeals were referred to committees and nothing further was done. Meanwhile, during his mayoralty, Sutton faced the problem of raising £100 to cover the cost of the construction of a balinger (or sloop) for the King, and was eventually obliged to take two of the defaulters to court. As we have seen, his own dealings with the dean and chapter were far from cordial, and he inevitably became drawn into the wider struggle between the civic and ecclesiastical authorities over the exercise of their respective jurisdictions. In March 1390 he was bound over in the unusually heavy sum of 500 marks (the average being 100 marks) to keep the peace and stay away from the cathedral. Whether the size of his pledge was dictated by his wealth or the violence of his behaviour we shall never know, but he was implicated at this time in a similar conflict between the citizenry and John of Gaunt, the keeper of Lincoln castle. Interestingly enough, he and his brother had together witnessed a deed in 1388 for Gaunt’s mistress, Katherine Swynford (who was equally unpopular in the city), but this seems to have been little more than a formality. Although Sutton was henceforward obliged to show constraint towards the dean and chapter, his servants recognized no such restrictions, and in 1395 two of them appeared before the bench for maliciously wounding the dean’s employees.7
As might be expected of a man with so many financial and territorial interests, Sutton was often involved in litigation. During the Michaelmas term of 1392, for example, Thomas Mapperley* was indicted on a charge of attempting to ambush him twice, at both Mansfield and Sherwood, while he was on his way from Lincoln to Nottingham on business in the previous autumn. At some point before March 1395 Sutton also sued two local women for averring threats, albeit with no apparent success. It was during this period that he found himself in trouble for a breach of the Statute of Labourers, since he had been prepared to recruit workmen by paying higher wages than the law allowed. In both March 1397 and April 1407 he went to law to recover debts of, respectively, £4 and £20; and in about 1399 he became embroiled in a serious and probably violent quarrel with the Nottinghamshire landowner, John Pigot. In personal terms, however, the most unpleasant of his lawsuits was with his nephew, John Sutton, whom he arraigned in February 1398 on an assize of novel disseisin at Lincoln. Notwithstanding the fact that his claim to his late brother’s land in and and around Willingham had been ruled out of court, he continued to intimidate the young man, and in the following December a group of Lincoln merchants (including Thomas Forster II*) were called upon to guarantee his future good conduct. Sutton was a party to two or more other property disputes, the first of which concerned the manor of Holme and was decided in his favour during the spring of 1407. He and his friend, Robert Walsh*, lost the second shortly afterwards, and sustained damages of £5 for a wrongful eviction. Not long before his death he appears to have been engaged in an unspecified action against the guild of the Blessed Virgin in Lincoln, to which he left five marks on the condition that they dropped further proceedings.8 Rather less is known about Sutton’s other affairs, although he occasionally witnessed local deeds; and, in 1385, he was offered a recognizance of £20 by the influential landowner, Robert Cumberworth*. He then also acted as a mainpernor in Chancery for the parson of Crick in Northamptonshire, being on hand at Westminster because Parliament was in session.9
Sutton drew up his will on 28 Aug. 1413, not long after intervening personally to obtain a royal pardon for one of his servants who had been convicted of murder. He wished to be buried at St. Andrew’s church in Lincoln, and left £50 to pay for what must have been a truly impressive ceremony. He made a large number of pious bequests of which the most notable were two of £100 each for the poor of Lincoln and the repair of churches in Lindsey and Kesteven. Even more striking was his generosity to his wife and son, Hamon, who not only shared his extensive property and possessions, but were also promised £2,000 in cash. Altogether, he disposed of sums in excess of £2,371 as well as quantities of stock, plate, utensils and other goods. He died on 15 Apr. 1414 and was immediately succeeded by his son. His widow, Agnes, also survived him, as did his daughter, Maud, who had married into the Aileward family.10
https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/sutton-robert-1414 
SUTTON, Sir Robert (I43876)
 
6319 Zachariah (Eaires), with John Aires ±23, were witnesses at Durham in the Chesley cattle case, 1672. See Hoyt's Salisbury p. 37. Zachariah married 27 June 1678 Elizabeth Chase, daughter of Aquila. AYER, Zachariah (I34512)
 
6320 Zemira's mother joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Canada when Zemira was 2, and Zemira inherited his religion from her. He remained faithful to its cause throughout his life. However, his father did not join the Church and died shortly after Phoebe's conversion.
About 1834, after his father's death, Zemira came with his mother from Canada to join the Saints in Kirtland, Ohio. He remained in Kirtland until age 7, when he moved again with his mother to Illinois.
In 1846, Mormon persecutors forced the Saints out of Illinois under bloody and miserable circumstances, and Zemira moved westward with his mother and new stepfather, Ebenezer Brown.
On their way through Iowa, the Saints received a call from Captain James Allen to furnish 500 able-bodied men to march against Mexico with an army under the command of Colonel Stephen L. Kearny.
When Ebenezer volunteered as a soldier for the battalion, Phoebe joined as a laundress in order to remain with her husband. Zemira, at the age of 14 or 15, was too young to join as a soldier, so instead joined as an orderly to Captain Allen.
The Mormon battalion marched more than 2,000 miles to San Diego, Calif. Although the soldiers never saw battle, many died of thirst, hunger, and exhaustion along the way. After the ordeal was over, Phoebe confessed that she sometimes burned a little bread purposely to make it look inedible so she could give it to Zemira.
After Zemira's service in the armed forces ended, he was among the battalion members who found work at Sutter's Mill in northern California. By this time he was 17 and stood about six feet high. He was present when gold was discovered and did some washing of gold on his own. He found a spot rich in gold dust and came out with enough to begin life for himself in Utah.
He settled at Willow Creek in 1850, and forthwith became the second counselor in the first bishopric of the Draper ward. His uncle, William Draper, was the bishop and his other uncle, Zemira Draper, was the first counselor. Not long after this he met Sally Knight and married her on her 15th birthday, Dec. 1, 1851, at Provo, Utah. Sally was the oldest daughter of Newel Knight and Lydia Goldthwaite.
Zemira and Sally lived in Provo until about 1861, when they moved to Heber City, Utah. Two or three years before this, Zemira married as his second wife Caroline Jacques. By these two women Zemira had 20 children, 16 of which lived to adulthood.
While at Heber City, Zemira served a term as Constable of Wasatch County. However, he never stayed in one place long. After six or seven years he took his family to Nevada, living first at Panaca and then at Eagle Valley. Although his motives for moving to Nevada are uncertain, he may have been lured there by the active mining industry, hoping to duplicate the success he had in California.
However, after a few years the Church called him back to southern Utah to assist in promoting the cotton industry there. He operated from Springdale and Santa Clara in Washington County, but finally settled in Orderville, where he and Zemira Draper organized and supervised branches of the United Order.
He loved poetry and often wrote lyrics to songs and performed them in public. He suffered ill health several years before his death and died prematurely at 49 in Orderville on Oct. 22, 1880. 
PALMER, Zemira (I18751)
 
6321 [606360.ged]

[Carelton-Stickney.FTW]

He and Delcena lived in Sabattus, Maine. 
Family F13128
 
6322 [606360.ged]
[Carelton-Stickney.FTW]
Married a French Canadian woman, apparently lived in the Phillips, Maine area. Never had any children. 
CARLTON, Wallace F (I38070)
 
6323 [I am] one of the granddaughters of this couple was my great-aunt by marriage. Her name was Georgiella Middleton (Her mom, Eldora Masterman was one of the kids of Ben and Catherine). Aunt Georgie's dad was James Mercer Middleton Jr., an Irish immigrant to Minnesota who was born around 1833. Georgie went to Wellsley College, unusual for a girl born around 1870. Her dad had a dairy farm and then got into politics, real estate, and loaning money to the financially incompetent. Georgie married my great-uncle, James Granville Fisher, then editor of the nationally popular ladies' magazine, the Housewife's Companion. They had three children, Dorothy Edith, Margaret Alice, and Granville Middleton Fisher. Margaret and Granville, know to the family as "Brother", had children, Dorothy did not. The descendants of Granville Fisher are alive. The only grandson of Margaret is still alive. CARLETON, Catherine B (I37984)
 
6324 [Samuel] was impressed on board of an English man-of-war during the Revolution, and was never heard from. The mother of this family, Mrs. Mercy Staples, afterwards married a Mr. Hutchinson, of Sedgwick, by whom she had two sons and one daughter. The sons were Rev. David Hutchinson, a presiding elder in the Methodist Episcopal church in the western part of the State, and Timothy Hutchinson, who lived and died on Little Deer Isle. The daughter, Susan, was the wife of Capt. Benjamin Gray, of Penobscot.
-----
Samuel Staples removed his family from Deer Isle to Swans Island in 1764. While fishing with others from Swans Island during the American Revolution, Samuel Staples was impressed into service by a British frigate. He was never heard from again, nor have any records of his whereabouts or fate been uncovered. According to the Bangor Historical Magazine, volume 5, when the British evacuated Bagaduce Maine, he was seized and carried off on a "Man of War" vessel and utilized as a pilot. Once the Penobscot Bay was cleared, it is presumed that he was shot and thrown overboard.
-----
The occupant of the land adjoining that of Mr. Thompson on the southeast was a man named Staples. His widow, Mrs. Mercy Staples, with Joshua and Moses Staples, seems to have been here very early, not far from 1764. In all probability the sons above named were then quite young. There was another brother, who must at that time have arrived at manhood, who was the father of Mr. Samuel Staples, who died at Green's Landing, in 1841, aged seventy-three years.
Samuel had one brother younger, named William, and two sisters, one, the wife of Mr. Stephen Babbidge, the other, that of Mr. Timothy Saunders. Their father was impressed on board of an English ship-of-war during the Revolution, when that iniquity was practiced. He was never heard of after that, and probably died while in the service.
Afterward Mrs. Staples married a Mr. Hutchinson, of Sedgwick, by whom she had two sons and one daughter. The sons were Rev. David Hutchinson, a presiding elder in the Methodist Episcopal Church, in the western part of the State, and Mr. Timothy Hutchinson, who lived here many years and died on Little Deer Island; and the daughter was Susan, the wife of Captain Benjamin Gray, of Penobscot.
Mr. Staples moved to Swan's Island, where he died in 1845, aged over ninety years. The other son, Joshua, in whose name the lot appears on the plan, married the daughter of Mr. John Raynes, Sr., who had one daughter, Jane Staples, who married Mr. Elias Morey, Jr., who lived and died on Swan's Island.
The mother, Mercy Staples, also had a settler's right, and it was known as the "Granny Lot," as she was known as "Granny Staples." She had a deed from the Tylers, 'and it passed from her to her son-in-law, Mr. Thomas Conary, by whom it was conveyed to the late Pearl Spofford, Esq., and is now held by his heirs. The lot set off to Joshua Staples afterward became the property of Major Nathan Low, and is now held by his heirs., 
STAPLES, Samuel (I2654)
 
6325 [v76t0922.ftw]

civil war vet. 
Family F13087
 
6326 [v76t0922.ftw]
He was a cousin to James Kingsbury [1767-1847), whose wife Mrs. Kingsbury was the mother to the first white child born in Cleveland, OH. Kingsbury avenue, is named in the honor of the family. (information from Clara Coup, 1943.) 
PRESTON, Grandfather (I37934)
 
6327  13 children; Rebecca, Judith, Sarah, George, Benjamin, John Jr, Thomas, Daniel, Isaac, Mary, Elizabeth, Abigail, and Charles. The birth of one child, Rebecca, the oldest was recorded in Watertown. His eldest five children were baptized June 22, 1690 by Reverend John Bailey of Watertown. The next seven children were baptized May 11, 1701 by Reverend Angier of the West or Second Church of Watertown. Reverend Angier also baptized the last born child February 28, 1703. LAWRENCE, Judith (I7405)
 
6328  Had 7 children: Reuchlin, Lorin, Wilbur, Orville, and Katharine, and a set of twins, Otis and Ida, who died in infancy. KOERNER, Susan Catharine (I46320)
 
6329  she was the second daughter of Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence (1198–1245) and Beatrice of Savoy (1198–1267), the daughter of Thomas I of Savoy and his wife Margaret of Geneva. 
Eleanor had nine children, including the future King Edward I of England. She also was renowned for her cleverness, skill at writing poetry, and as a leader of fashion.
Eleanor was renowned for her beauty. She was a dark-haired brunette with fine eyes. 
PROVENCE, Eleanor (I46340)
 
6330  The middle English for quay and key was "key(e)", or "kay". Thus, a likely meaning for Keyes (and other variations; Kay, Kaye, Key, Keys, etc) is from residence near or employment at a wharf or quay; key-bearer is a possible meaning for all variations (A Dictionary of British Surnames, by P. H. Reaney , 1958).} KEYES, Robert (I44690)
 
6331    .... It was on the 26th of June 1696, that the Indians made their way to this very spot (in the Plains), after their fearful predatory incursions on Dover.... 
.... In the afternoon previous to the Indians commencing their attack on the people and property of that vicinity, the clouds and chilled air portended rain. That night a thunderstorm occurred; the cattle came frightened from the woods, and at an unusually early hour sought refuge around their owners' homes. Dover having suffered from the murdering hands of the treacherous Indians before the thinly settled neighborhood of the Plains had constant foreboding that they might soon be subject to like incursions.  ….

    ….The person named by Mr Belknap as being scalped, was Mary (Sloper) Brewster, born Feb.11,1663, (daughter of Richard Sloper) wife of John Brewster, Jr. ….

    ....When Mrs. Brewster was met by her friends, she was about mid-distance between her house and the garrison, being but a few rods east of the present school-house. She was taken up for dead. Her scalp was entirely removed from her head, and she was deeply wounded by a tomahawk. She became a mother shortly after, and fully recovered her health. The fracture made in the cranium by the tomahawk, was closed by a silver plate (literally a plate from her silver service), and her loss of hair was supplied by an artificial substitute (a horse hair wig). She was afterwards the mother of four sons, and lived till Sept. 22, 1744, then departed this life, aged 81y., 7m., 11d. 
http://mv..com/viewer/0e783fd6-908e-404b-b321-f66f74bc049e/3995281/-1457256622 
SLOPER, Mary (I10440)
 
6332 £119.11 ORCUTT, William (I12332)
 
6333 £126 12s SHERBURNE, Henry (I33382)
 
6334 £1298 5s JACOB, Capt John (I47488)
 
6335 £153 11s GUILD, John (I5514)
 
6336 £170 16s 6d BARTLETT, Robert (I43451)
 
6337 £241 19s HERBERT, John (I7962)
 
6338 £261 14s BATCHELDER, William (I39992)
 
6339 £30 in real estate CANE, Christopher (I15543)
 
6340 £327 15s 6d BEARDSLEY, William (I42575)
 
6341 £531 DIXON, Peter (I4120)
 
6342 £790 CONANT, Lot (I38767)
 
6343 Æ 39yrs 3mos 4dys
m1. Aug. 31, 1785 at Brooksville, Rachael Woodward
m2. Apr. 22, 1788 at Castine, Sarah Hovey 
ORCUTT, Malachi (I12355)
 
6344 Æ 84yrs 5mos 19dys
s/o Capt. William & Mercy [Carter] Conary
m1. Dec. 28, 1856 Hannah Stinson
m2. May 7, 1865 Mary J. Carter 
CONARY, Joseph Pierce (I4386)
 
6345 “Ann Dickson Bound to the Lord Proprietary for having a bastard child, £1/10.” William Tracy, Jr., is bound for the amount of the fine to keep the child off the County.”
Ancestry.com. This Was the Life, Excerpts from the Judgment Records of Frederick County, Maryland, 1748-1765 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.
Original data: Rice, Millard Milburn. This Was the Life: Excerpts from the Judgment Records of Frederick County, Maryland, 1748-1765. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2002. 
STEPHENS, Anne (I38340)
 
6346 “Ann Dickson Bound to the Lord Proprietary for having a bastard child, £1/10.” William Tracy, Jr., is bound for the amount of the fine to keep the child off the County.”
Ancestry.com. This Was the Life, Excerpts from the Judgment Records of Frederick County, Maryland, 1748-1765 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.
Original data: Rice, Millard Milburn. This Was the Life: Excerpts from the Judgment Records of Frederick County, Maryland, 1748-1765. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2002. 
TRACY, William (I45258)
 
6347 “Conrad” was acknowledged by Ripley’s Believe It or Not, 10 Nov 1935, for having 26 sons and grandsons serving in General Washington’s army. Another son, Jacob, was a tory.
——
"Conrad Cunterman, with Hartman Windecker and Casper Leyp, was granted 2000 acres 3 miles south of the Mohawk in 1730 (NY Land Paper, Vol X & XI). A tract of 905 acres was granted to Coenradt Gunterman 13 Oct 1753 in the present town of Minden (History of Montgomery & Fulton Counties, NY, p 73).
——
He came with his parents to America when he was about 9 years old. They landed on Nutters Island 13 jun 1710, with Rev. Kocherthal's second and last group of Palatine immigrants. He lived with his parents on the west bank of the Hudson River.
Later we find him in the Mohawk Valley, in the Conjaharie district, what was then Albany county, later Tryon, and now Montgomery county, at Minden. 12 nov. 1751. King George of England granted 200 acres of land in Tryon on the south side of the Mohawk river, to him and two other men, reserving for the crown all trees over 2 feet in diameter for shipmasts. The men divided the land evenly his share of the land; his son George later erected the settler's stockade and Fort Willet.
His last will was dated 1768 and probated 6 may 1777.
Information obtained from "countryman genealogy" by Alvin Countryman. 
CUNTRAMANN, George Cunradt “Conrad” (I4185)
 
6348 “Deborah, the wife of John Pemberton of Malden” as stated in a deed dated 5 Oct 1676, was probably NOT the daughter of Joseph Hills. BLAKE, Deborah (I38798)
 
6349 “Died intestate in a place where there was no law,” leaving a widow Mary and one child.«s15 397» STONE, John (I34549)
 
6350 “…in the second half of the thirteenth century some thirty administrators who worked with Llywelyn ap Gruffydd can be traced. These were matched by clerical figures who worked with the princes of Gwynedd. Dafydd arch-deacon of St Asaph was clearly a man of influence until the early 1240s, while Ystrwyth, Master Adam and Philip ab Ifor were clerks who built up a considerable expertise in Llywelyn ab Iorwerth’s service. Compared with secular administrators, fewer clerics can be identified: the numbers are of the order of seven for Llywelyn Iorwerth, three or four for Dafydd, and as many as nineteen for Llywelyn ap Gruffydd. It is impossible to gauge what influence an individual administrator might have, but service for a long period of time and continuity may provide useful indices. Dafydd, archeadcon of St. Asaph, Philip ab Ifor and five laymen who served Llywelyn ab Iorwerth continued to work for his successor, Dafydd, and Philip was still active twelve years after the accession of Llywelyn ap Gruffydd.”
• Yale genealogy and history of Wales. The British kings and princes. Life of Owen Glyndwr. Biographies of Governor Elihu Yale ... Linus Yale, sr., and Linus Yale, jr. ... Maurice Fitz Gerald ... Roger de Montgomery ... and other noted persons. By Rodney Horace Yale. Published 1908 by Printed by Milburn and Scott company in Beatrice, Neb . 
AP IVOR, Philip (I15521)
 

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Notes

This website uses dates from the Gregorian calendar (New Style), unless otherwise noted.

For more information on dates, see Wikipedia: Old Style and New Style dates.

I strive to document my sources. However, some people and dates are best guesses and will be updated as new information is revealed. If you have something to add, please let me know.

Updated 23 Dec 2023