Matches 451 to 500 of 1,463
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451 | He "came to New England with his wife Elizabeth, aged thirty, a servant and ten children. His daughter Sarah was then eighteen years of age." | Long, Robert > (I10187)
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452 | He "left home and was never heard of again." | Gerard, Luther (I1523)
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453 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Blanchard, Geraldo Phillip (I1846)
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454 | He apparently did not regularly use his first name, William, but rather was known by Brewster, or sometimes as W. Brewster. His son, however, was commonly called William or William B. | Rose, William Brewster Sr. ^ (I203)
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455 | He apparently immigrated to Orange County with his brother Samual. | Brewster, Henry < (I5819)
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456 | He apparently use Shepard, rather than William, as his given name later in life. | Newey, William Shepard ^ (I1051)
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457 | He apparently was most often called by his middle name, Warren. | Swezey, John Warren ^ (I511)
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458 | He appeared in the 1930 census, and his estate sold the Lush House on Beaverdam Road, Brookhaven Hamlet, Suffolk Co., NY in 1932. | Lush, Carman R. ^ (I5673)
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459 | He appears to have remained single. | Lush, Carman R. ^ (I5673)
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460 | He came to this country in the ship Francis from the port of Ipswich, England the last of April 1634, and landed at Boston. He was accompanied by his brother John and eldest son Robert. His wife Marie, and other members of the family, probably came in a later ship. Information found in book Descendants of John Pease on Genealogylibrary.com. by David Pease Published by Samuel Bowles & Company, Massachusetts 1869. | Pease, Robert > (I3549)
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461 | He did not marry. He ran the Titus House, a well known guest house in Bellport, NY. | Shaw, James Benjamin < (I9274)
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462 | He died at age 90 while sailing in a race on the Peconic Bay, L.I., with his nephew Norman and his great-nephew Peter Nelson (son on Norman).. His last words were "Norman, take the helm." His ashes were scattered on Robin's Island in Peconic Bay. | Nelson, Norman Fairlie Jr. [ii] ^ (I5636)
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463 | He died at his home, 135 East 37th Street.[While his obituary in the New York Times indicated that he "expires at 69," he recorded on his passport applications the birth date recorded here.] | Cook, Walter ^ (I9300)
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464 | He died at the age of 16 from a falling into a well being dug on the "minister's lot." | Reeve, Obadiah < (I5858)
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465 | He died at the Andersonville Prison of either small pox or diarrhea A. The Leming manuscript and Smith monument erroneously recorded that he died at Libby Prison, which was at Richmond, Va. | Smith, George R. "Rock" ^ (I781)
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466 | He died at the home of his son [Charles Malcolm Fraser], in the 64th year of his age. An "Appreciation" appeared in the New York Times Review of Books, 28 Oct. 1905:WILLIAM L. FRASERAn Appreciation of the character and Gifts of the Recently Deceased A | Fraser, William Lewis (I5439)
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467 | He died by falling in a well.[His gravestone has been transcribed in some sources as Oct. 2, 1787, which appears to have been a misreading. See gravestone image.] | Reeve, Obadiah < (I5858)
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468 | He died from cancer at age 73. [Ralph Clymer Hawkins in his compilation recorded his death date as 7 Feb 1881, while the Hawkins Supplement II recorded 20 Feb 1881.] | Hawkins, Charles Greenville ^ (I795)
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469 | He died from injuries sustained when struck by an automobile while walking along Conklin avenue in Patchogue, NY on December 26, 1936. | Norton, George A. (I11560)
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470 | He died from typhoid fever.As reported by Patricia and Edward Shillingburg in 'The Disposition of Slaves on the East End of Long Island from 1680 to 1796': "In 1757 [sic] Nicoll Floyd of the Manor of St. George in Brookhaven left to his eldest son William | Floyd, Nicoll l (I1427)
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471 | He died from wounds received on 3 June 1864. His name appears on the Civil War Monument in the Woodland Cemetery, Bellport, NY, as one of four men from the community who lost their lives during the Civil War but who were never brought home for interment. | Cooper, Elias Thompson ^ (I8913)
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472 | He died intestate "so that all his right, title and interest in all the aforesaid premeses fell to the said Sarah his wife and the issue he had by both (wives)." | Salmon, William > (I4358)
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473 | He died intestate. His widow Susanna and her brother Davis Overton were granted administration of his estate on 7 September 1801. | Hulse, Joseph ^ (I3748)
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474 | He died intestate. Letters of Administration were issued to his eldest son, Thomas Booth, on 6 Nov 1861 | Booth, John (i) > (I7981)
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475 | He died unmarried. | Hawkins, Joseph < (I6570)
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476 | He died unmarried. [Date of death is said to be from his gravestone. Other sources record 21 Feb 1878 and 21 Feb 1875. The c. 1939 Town of Brookhaven Historian's Cemetery List recorded "2/21/1875."] | Hawkins, David Tuthill ^ (I181)
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477 | He died unmarried. From the Archives of the Long Island Advance, 75 Years Ago, 30 Aug 2007: "That at least $500,000 out of the estate of an old Colonial descendant may some time become available to provide income for the relief of the poor in Suffolk | Smith, Clarence Grant Tangier (I8220)
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478 | He died unmarried.His body was found in the narrows of the Nissequogue River. It was never known whether his death was from accidental drowning or was caused by a native who accompanied him on a hunting trip. It is said that he was the first European bu | Smith, Obadiah "Bull" (I8173)
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479 | He died without issue. | Burnett, Isaac (I9156)
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480 | He died without issue. | Miller, Tuthill [g. 7] (I4742)
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481 | He disappeared. | Fanning, Thomas (I6402)
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482 | He drowned or burned to death while in a fire on the Sewanakha. Sixty others perished, but his wife and son were saved, and later went to California. | Hawkins, Chauncy (I1226)
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483 | He early settled in Somers, and was one of the earliest settlers in Stafford, the town next east of Somers. He had land allotted to him in Stafford, November, 1722. He was living there the year following, and some time afterwards. It is probable several of his children were born there. It is said he died at Somers. | Pease, Daniel > (I3519)
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484 | He endowed Robert College at Istanbul, Turkey. | Robert, Christopher Rhinelander Sr. (I6421)
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485 | He fell over the threshold of his barn and broke his leg; gangrene set in and he died from the effects. | Hawkins, William Smith ^ (I1183)
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486 | He first settled at Salem in the "Northfields." He shared with his elder brother the enterprise of leaving the sea-coast to seek out and make ready new homes for himself, his relatives and neighbors, in the Connecticut Valley. To which place his family removed in 1681. He is said to have been one of the first constables chosen by vote of the town of Enfield. | Pease, Robert > (I3526)
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487 | He funeral service was conducted in Brooklyn, Kings, NY on 12 Sep 1969. [A Rootsweb WorldConnect source erroneously records a death date of 1985.] | Andors, Isidore (Isadore) > (I5587)
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488 | He generally took the surname Seeley for public use, at least in the United States. | Abrahams, MIchael Elias (I12078)
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489 | He had a sister in Caney, KS. | Bird, William H. (I2334)
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490 | He had a son George S. who had son George A, who was a Supervisor of the Town of East Hampton. | Miller, Asa [g. 7] (I4744)
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491 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Dawson, Elliott < (I3303)
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492 | He had no issue. | Rowland, Jessie M. < (I2525)
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493 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Farlow, Raymond (I2131)
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494 | He had two wives. | Jessup, Leslie < (I2078)
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495 | He inherited the Setauket Manor of St. George and was the last Lord of the Manor. He was a judge of the Court of Common Pleas and clerk of Suffolk County 1730-1750. | Smith, William Henry "Tangier" (I6094)
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496 | He is living with his parents. | Mott, Horatio < (I7146)
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497 | He is living with his parents. | Darling, Leonard S. (I7220)
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498 | He is mentioned in his father's will; he is not mentioned in his grandfather's will, suggesting his death during the interval. | Corsen, Jacobus (I10263)
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499 | He is probably the Selah Hulse mentioned in the will of Ebenezer Hulse as owning land adjacent to his on Fire Place Neck. Some sources record them as being brothers, as they are entered here. Selah Hulse was also a witness to Ebenezer's will. | Hulse, Selah ^ (I8348)
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500 | He is referred to as "the late..." in their son's marriage announcement. Their son is born in 1911; Marion remarries about 1918. | Hansen, Herman Nicholas Sr. ^ (I9207)
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