Notes


Matches 1,351 to 1,400 of 1,463

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1351 [Some sources suggest Southold, Suffolk, NY as the place of death. However, it appears as if the family may have resided in the Patchogue, NY area in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.] Corey, Charles (I5474)
 
1352 [Some sources suggest that Jane had four husbands. Bigelow indicates only three.] Gerard, Jane Eliza ^ (I737)
 
1353 [Some sources wrongly recorded Ellen Swezey's husband's name as Capt. John Petty. However, in the 1880 census record he was clearly recorded in Stephen J. Sweezey's household, following Ellen Petty, daughter, as Henry C. Petty, son. Both Ellen and Henry are marked as married. A memorial stone to Capt. Henry C. Petty can be found at the Woodland Cemetery, Bellport, between Ellen's gravestone and that of her parents.] Petty, Henry C. ^ (I533)
 
1354 [Source indicates South Shore Hospital in Bay Shore. There is no South Shore Hospital in Bay Shore or on Long Island. Southside Hospital was probably intended.] Conklin, Eva Gertrude (I1721)
 
1355 [Source recorded place of death as Falmouth (Portland), ME. While Falmouth is near Portland, it is a distinct community.] Livermore, William (I3996)
 
1356 [Source recorded the place of death as Tewksbury (Lowell), MA. I am uncertain why it was recorded thus; while Tewksbury is near Lowell, it is a distinct community.] Livermore, Edward St. Loe (I3977)
 
1357 [Sources record a death date of 26 Nov 1896, which is the death date of his son also recorded in these same sources -- obviously an error.] Andrews, Nahum > (I686)
 
1358 [Surprisingly, given the prominence of the family, the date of Nicoll's death remains obscure.] Floyd, Nicoll (I1438)
 
1359 [That Benjamin F. Gildersleeve was a child of Julia Gildersleeve is inferred from the 1880 census enumeration entry, that is, that he was William S. Raynor's step-son.] Gildersleeve, Benjamin Frances (I1321)
 
1360 [That Elizabeth (Rose) Ketcham whose gravestone was found in the Rose family cemetery was a daughter Captain Nathan Rose, Jr. is not certain, but seems likely. She is inferred as Isaac's mother (being named after his grandfather Ketcham). Elizabeth was the only Ketcham recorded on the 1800-1820 censuses of Fire Place, Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk Co., NY. In 1820, she is listed next to Nathaniel Miller, which would have been the appropriate location for the Ketcham farm. Also recorded in the household in 1820 was 1-male, age 16-26, which is likely Isaac.] Rose, Elizabeth ^ (I5373)
 
1361 [That Frances Boughton was a daughter of Herbert Boughton has been inferred from several sources. The 1916 death notice for Herbert Boughton indicated that he had two daughters, and that Alice Boughton was his sister. The 1943 New York Times Obituary for Alice Boughton indicated a niece, Mrs. J. B. Sanford of Redding, Connecticut. The 1930 census record for Redding indicated Frances B. Brinckerhoff as the wife of Jonathan B. Sanford; in the Sanford household is an Anne G. Broughton, mother-in-law, and likely the widowed wife of Herbert Boughton. The family listed next after Jonathan B. Sanford is Horrace E. Brinckerhoff; Mrs. H. E. Brinckerhoff is recorded as the other niece in Alice Boughton's obituary.] Boughton, Frances (I8712)
 
1362 [That Margaret Boughton was a daughter of Herbert Boughton has been inferred from several sources. The 1916 death notice for Herbert Boughton indicated that he had two daughters, and that Alice Boughton was his sister. The 1943 New York Times Obituary for Alice Boughton indicated a niece, Mrs. H. E. Brinckerhoff of Redding, Connecticut. The 1930 census record for Redding indicated Margaret B. Brinckerhoff as the wife of Horace E. Brinckerhoff. The family is listed next after Jonathan B. Sanford -- Mrs. J. B. Sanford of Redding is mentioned as another niece in Alice Boughton's obituary; and in the Sanford household is a Anne G. Broughton, mother-in-law, and likely the widowed wife of Herbert Boughton.] Boughton, Margaret (I8706)
 
1363 [That this infant Timothy whose gravestone was found in the Rose family cemetery was the son of William is uncertain, but seems likely.] Rose, Timothy ^ (I6476)
 
1364 [That this person whose gravestone was found in the Rose family cemetery was a son Captain Nathan Rose, Jr. is not certain, but seems likely. Another possibility is that he was a son of Jesse Rose and Mary Greene; if so, he would have been their eldest known son.] Rose, Nathan ^ (I6475)
 
1365 [The "Dea. Dean" recorded in Rev. David Pease and Austin S. Pease is likely Deacon Isaiah Dean recorded in John E. Smith's The History of Cazenovia, New York. as being one of the first settlers in the village.
Lee H. Swan at WorldConnect also records "Deac.Isaiah Smith came from Galway, NY. to Pompey Hollow in 1804, with his wife, Eleanor. He was born in about 1752 and died on 4 Aug 1818, aged 66, and she, as Eleanor Pease, was born in about 1759 and died on 1 Apr 1825, aged 66. They are both buried in the Pease Cemetery, in Pompey Hollow, Town of Pompey, Onondaga County, NY." ] 
Deane, Isaiah (I7406)
 
1366 [The 1850 and 1880 censuses record her name as Harriet. The Civil War records for Ebenezer record her name as Adaline; the Civil War records state that there were no other marriages.] Howell, Harriet Adaline ^ (I113)
 
1367 [The 1850 census record has the family surname as Ackley or Achley. Larry Boddy indicates the family surname is often found with a variety of spellings. He suggests Ackerly as being the most common.] Ackerly, Lemuel ^ (I948)
 
1368 [The 1860 census records his name as Wm. N Ackerly, age 21. It is likely that this is the same person as the Nelson Ackerly found in the 1850 census. Other sources record his name as Nelson W. Ackerly.] Ackerly, William Nelson ^ (I952)
 
1369 [The 1900 census recorded that her mother, Frances, had six children of which five were still living. As all the other children were known to be living in 1900, Annie must have died in the interval between 1880 and 1900.] Burnett, Ann Frances ^ (I1031)
 
1370 [The 1910 census recorded that a Ellen Petty was Irene's husband's sister-in-law, and that Ellen was single. I have inferred therefore that Irene's birth surname was Petty.] Petty, Irene A. (I7784)
 
1371 [The actual entry in Hawkins is "Sarah (Edwards) Morris," which I have interpreted to mean Sarah Morris (Edwards) -- that is, her middle name was Morris, and birth name was Edwards. There are no corrections to her name in Hawkins II.] Edwards, Sarah Morris (I3003)
 
1372 [The ancestry of the Hawkins family continues in England.] Hawkins, Robert > (I734)
 
1373 [The following Biography is for Angelika's second husband, although his family particulars are not mentioned. It is from "Repository Guide to the Personal Papers Collections of Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions: The Frink Family Collection" . He is also referenced in the Viola Wertheim Bernard Papers at Columbia University Health Sciences Library. Archives & Special Collections

While Horace dies in 1936, and the report in Angelika's obituary that she was separated from her husband at her death in 1969 makes me uneasy, a New York Times article 6 Mar 1990 confirms that Horace was her second husband and the "socialite" referenced.]

"Horace Frink was born in Millerton, New York. He received his M.D. in 1905 from Cornell University Medical School and subsequently served an internship at Bellevue Hospital from 1906 to 1908. In 1909, he became an assistant in the outpatient neurological clinic at Cornell University under the tutelage of Charles Dana. It was here that Frink began the outpatient treatment of neuroses using hypnosis and psychoanalysis. In 1914, Frink became assistant professor of neurology at Cornell University and began to teach psychoanalysis to medical students. In 1918, he published Morbid Fears and Compulsions, described as "a clear and readable" explanation of neuroses. At the close of World War I, Frink traveled to Europe to study with Sigmund Freud. Frink was twice psychoanalyzed by Freud, once in 1921 and again in 1922. In August 1923, he gave up practice due to mental illness. In 1924, he put himself in the care of the noted psychiatrist Adolf Meyer at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. From December 1924 through April 1925, he was a patient of Frederick Packard, Superintendent of McLean Hospital in Waverly, Massachusetts, at which time his illness was diagnosed as being manic-depressive. From then until a week before his death in 1936, he lead a normal life functioning as single parent to two children. In April 1936, he had a psychotic incident and arranged to be committed to the Pine Bluff Sanitarium in North Carolina, where he died a week later of a heart attack."

The following excerpted from "Where Will Psychoanalysis Survive?," Keynote Address by Alan A. Stone, M.D., to the American Academy of psychoanalysis, December 9, 1995 at isnteresting reading:

"The details of the Horace Frink affair have been authenticated by Professor Gay of Yale, the author of the definitive biography of Freud. Frink had trained in psychiatry under Adolph Meyer at Johns Hopkins. He later settled with his wife and children in New York, where he began to practice psychoanalysis without any real training as was the custom at the time. Among his patients was a woman who was a New York socialite married to a fabulously wealthy man [Angelika?]. Frink began to have an affair with her which he interrupted to go to Vienna for an analysis with Freud. Frink had one distinction of importance among analysts in New York at the time--he was not Jewish. Reminiscent of his early elevation of Carl Jung, Freud had the idea of installing Frink as the head of the New York/American Psychoanalytic Association, much to the chagrin of analysts like Abraham Brill who had much better credentials. After several months of Frink's training analysis in Vienna, Freud instructed him to send for the patient with whom Frink had been having the affair. Freud told this woman that unless she divorced her husband [Abraham Bijur?] and married Frink, Frink would most certainly become a homosexual. The woman agreed to Freud's drastic remedy and over her husband's bitter objection was divorced and married Frink, her analyst; The exchange of letters between this husband and Freud I found appalling. Frink's wife also accepted Freud's verdict. Unfortunately Frink subsequently began to display unmistakable symptoms of serious bipolar disorder, his socialite wife abandoned him, and he eventually returned to Johns Hopkins as a patient. All of this was revealed a few years ago when one of Frink's daughters found her mother's correspondence."

A fuller account of this scandal may be found in the New York Times 6 Mar 1990. 
Frink, Horace (I6754)
 
1374 [The gravestone could also be read 1860 (Carter). This portion of the gravestone was missing on 18 Nov 2005.] Barteau, Deborah ^ (I594)
 
1375 [The gravestone for his daughter Elizabeth in the South Haven Presbyterian Church cemetery clearly spells John's surname as "Conkline".] Conklin, John (iii) > (I5821)
 
1376 [The Hawkins II source indicates that William H. Bird was her first husband and George Michael Stoll her second. It is clear by P. L. Stoll's comments that Hawkins II is wrong.] Peterson, Eunice Frieda < (I2327)
 
1377 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Watson, James Malcolm < (I2092)
 
1378 [The Hawkins supplement corrects 1939 edition for his date of death and middle initial.] Homan, Alonzo T. (I1651)
 
1379 [The Hawkins supplement corrects an error in the 1939 edition, removing Henry F. Rogers as her husband.] Hawkins, Josephine < (I1589)
 
1380 [The International Genealogical Index found several candidates that could be this Zachariah Hawkins, but the connection was too uncertain to be included here.] Hawkins, Zachariah (I799)
 
1381 [The International Genealogical Index indicates two siblings named Sarah. This could either be an error, or, more likely, the first Sarah (born 1812) has died by 1822, and a second child given the name -- not an uncommon practice of the age, especially since her mother's name was Sarah.] Hulse, Sarah < (I225)
 
1382 [The Leming manuscript and the Cedar Grove cemetery monument indicated that Joshua was an only son of John Smith "Rock" Jr. It is doleful that Joshua was a son of John Smith "Rock," much less that he was an only son. See General Notes for John Smith "Rock," Jr. and John Smith "Rock," Sr.] May 2005 Smith, Joshua (I5167)
 
1383 [The Leming manuscript records his name as R. Battin.] Battin, Richard (I5190)
 
1384 [The Obituary Note is unclear whether Mariah Yates was Emily Ogden's maternal or paternal grandmother, although the context suggests maternal.] Yates, Mariah > (I5642)
 
1385 [The proximity of the gravestones in the Barteau Cemetery, and the use of a distinguishing T.on this gravestone, and his birth year, suggest the possibility that this Barnabas T. Rider may be the son of Barnabas Rider and Dezier. It is not proved, however.]
His middle initial of "T" is likely for Terry, his mother's middle name. 
Ryder, Barnabas Terry (I6981)
 
1386 [The record for the Benjamin Gildersleeve family is very confusing, and as I've recorded it here, highly suspect. The source records do not make sense, and I suspect there is confusion between generations. I have little confidence that I have it right, and will come back to it at a later time.] Gildersleeve, Benjamin (I12792)
 
1387 [The relationship of George W. Scott and his wife Nellie f. to other indivuals at the Barteau Cemetery has not been determined.] Scott, George W. ^ (I8489)
 
1388 [The relationships of the individuals living in the Young Moger household in 1860 is ambiguous. Because she was listed second, I've inferred Elizabeth Moger (age 73) to have been Young's wife. A Brigit Moger (age 71) was listed third, and I've inferred her to have been Young's sister; however, there is difficulty with this as both Young and Brigit are the same age, and on this evidence Elizabeth is more likely the sister (or all three are siblings). Fred D. Moger (age 22) was listed third; he was too young to be a son by Young and Elizabeth (or Brigit). Nancy A. Moger was listed fourth; she was too old to be Fred's daughter. It's could have been that Fred and Nancy were siblings and grandchildren of Young. Of course, other relationships were also possible.] Moger, Youngs (I3400)
 
1389 [The scanned version of the Hedges reference has the date Nov. 23, 174??, which I suspect is a scanning error. Since he remarried in 1941, I think it likely that the date is 1740.] Conklin, Temperance (I4745)
 
1390 [The single International Genealogical Index record indicates a middle initial of A. The 1850 census record indicates L.] Hulse, Nathan L. ^ (I128)
 
1391 [The Social Security Death Index records his last place of residence as Islip Terrace, while the Veterans Cemetery Index indicates Farmingdale, NY] Hiler, John G. (I7508)
 
1392 [The spelling of her name is uncertain in the 1870 census. While it appears at first glance to be Ella, the first letter is not a typical "E" as used by the enumerator, and is more like his "J."] Robinson, Ella ^ ? (I7808)
 
1393 [The stone markers for Angeline and Bethsheba in the South Haven Church cemetery makes it clear that she was Angeline's mother and David's wife.] Homan(), Bathsheba ^ (I461)
 
1394 [There appears to be a misprint in Selah Youngs' record. The likely death date is recorded as the birth date on page 64. Other internet compilations agree.] Youngs, John (I4353)
 
1395 [There appears to be no consensus as to Joseph's family nor of his parents. Further research is beyond the scope of this research.] Davis, Joseph (I21715)
 
1396 [There appears to be some uncertainty whether Hanna (Hannah) was a daughter of Joshua Tuthill and Hannah Reeves. See Bob Sweezey for a discussion.] Tuthill, Hannah (I3870)
 
1397 [There are ambiguities concerning William in the IGI record, the resolution of which are outside the scope of ths project. It seems unlikely that there would bbe both a son William born 1650 and a son William born 1659 when the elder son is recorded with a wife.] Fanning, William (I6414)
 
1398 [There are several Cedar Grove's in NJ, perhaps either Essex or Ocean counties.] Hawkins, Jesse Mills < (I2804)
 
1399 [There is ambiguity in the FamilySearch Ancestry file record at this point. Joseph's wife is usually recorded as Mary Briggs (or Biggs), while Joseph's mother is also recorded as Mary Briggs or Biggs. Joseph's mother is also recorded as Mary Mills. I have chosen the latter course, and leave it to those who study the Hawkins family to sort it out.] Hawkins, Joseph > (I730)
 
1400 [There is an entry for Stephen Barnett at findagrave.com whose wife was Mehetabel. His death date is recorded as 22 Mar 1734. His age at death is not readable from the photograph posted. C. Burnett recorded his death date as 9 Mar 1733/34 from a seconda Burnett, Stephen (I9148)
 

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