Report: individuals with associated notes
Description: personen met geassocieerde notities
Matches 1301 to 1350 of 2508 » All Reports » Comma-delimited CSV file
«Prev «1 ... 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 ... 51» Next»
| # | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1301 | I1180 | Henry | I | 1006 | 24 Aug 1060 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Annointed king at Reims in 1027, he succeeded his father in 1031. "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 53-22 gives his birth-year. He m. (1) Matilda (or Maud) Germany who d. 1044. |
bratt01 |
| 1302 | I1097 | Henry | I | 1068 | 1 Dec 1135 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Henry I had 20 or 21 bastard children re: N.E.Hist.Gen.Register 4/1965, pp.95-96. His form of government was "severe and grasping; but he `kept good peace' and honorably distinguished himself among contemporary statesmen in an age when administrative reform was in the air. He spent more time in Normandy than in England. But he showed admirable judgment in his choice of subordinates...." -Encyclopedia Britannica (1956 Ed., 11:432). He was King of England, 1100-35, and Duke of Normandy (1106-35); his coronation at Westminster Abbey was on Sunday, 08-05-1100. Thomas B. Costain offers a popular account of his reign in "The Conquering Family" (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1949, pp.43-77). The "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" described him as the "lion of justice." |
bratt01 |
| 1303 | I1956 | |||||||
| 1304 | I1082 | Henry | Robert Fitz | 1090 | 31 Oct 1147 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Robert "of Caen" was also called Robert the Consul; Earl of Gloucester in 1122, founder of the Margam Abbey; his mother is either the king's mistress, Sibyl Corbet (daughter of Robert Corbet, Burgess of Caen), or Nesta of Wales, who became wife of Gerald of Windsor.{ref. "Royal Ancestors...," Collins, p.58} His granddaughter Avisa was the first wife of King John. The family's story is told by Thomas B. Costain, "The Conquering Family" (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1949). |
bratt01 |
| 1305 | I1638 | Herbert | I | 840 | Abt 902 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Herbert was Count de Vermandois, Siegneur of Senlis, Peronne and St. Quentin. {- ref. "Ancestral Roots of Sixty New England Colonists," by F.L.Weis (Lancaster, Mass., 1950, p. 64).} Allstrom's "Dict. of Royal Lineage," Vol. ii, p. 755, states that Herbert m. Richilde, dau. of Robert the Strong who died in battle, 866/67. Herbert I was Imperial Ambassador. |
bratt01 |
| 1306 | I1556 | Herbert | II | 943 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Count of Vermandois and Troyes. |
bratt01 | |
| 1307 | I1339 | Herfastus | Sire de Crepon | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The Forester of Argues. {For line see "Interpolation of Jumieges," Robert de Torigny, and "The Genealogist," New Series, 37:57.} |
bratt01 | ||
| 1308 | I1057 | Hesdin | Aveline de | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Aveline is daughter of Ernulf de Hesdin, a Domesday Baron. She m. (2) Robert FitzWalter. See reference for her first husband, Alan. |
bratt01 | ||
| 1309 | I1141 | Hesdin | Matilda (Sybil) de | Abt 1057 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Matilda is daughter of Arnulf de Hesdin, Seigneur de Hesdin (France), and wife Ameline. |
bratt01 | |
| 1310 | I2408 | |||||||
| 1311 | I1980 | |||||||
| 1312 | I1976 | |||||||
| 1313 | I1978 | |||||||
| 1314 | I1977 | |||||||
| 1315 | I1979 | |||||||
| 1316 | I1046 | Hilary | Maud St. | 1173 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] {Carr P. Collins, "Royal Ancestors...," p. 19, gives William's wife as Maud St. Lis (or Senlis).} |
bratt01 | |
| 1317 | I1541 | Hildir | Dau. of RolfNefio | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] A Prodigy correspondent states 3/91 that the mother of Rollo is Rognald Eysteinson's fifth wife, Ragnhild Hrolfsson, b. about 848 in Norway {I assume the second name should be Hrolfsdotr}. |
bratt01 | ||
| 1318 | I1370 | Hildouin | II | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Hildouin II made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 992 per "Europaische Stammtafeln," Band III. |
bratt01 | ||
| 1319 | I1274 | Hildouin | III | 1062 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Montdidier is a town in northern France which dates from the Merovingian period, perhaps deriving its name from the imprisonment of Lombard king Didier there in the 8th Century - it is on a hill on the Don river. See "Genealogist," X:85. Hildouin de Rameru was also Count of Roucy in right of his wife. |
bratt01 | |
| 1320 | I5101 | Hill | Emily | 24 Mar 1836 | 23 Oct 1906 | 0 | More at Find A Grave Memorial# 30766212. Also see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_H._Woodmansee | bratt01 |
| 1321 | I4813 | Hill | George Elbridge | 10 Oct 1868 | 6 May 1958 | 0 | Complete Bio. on George Hill at Find A Grave Memorial# 62013416 | bratt01 |
| 1322 | I5047 | Hiller | Albert | Cal 1878 | Abt 1953 | 0 | General nature of industry, business or establishment: Meat Store Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner |
bratt01 |
| 1323 | I5047 | Hiller | Albert | Cal 1878 | Abt 1953 | 0 | Industry, business or establishment: Meat PRovisions Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Own Account |
bratt01 |
| 1324 | I5047 | Hiller | Albert | Cal 1878 | Abt 1953 | 0 | Industry: Butcher Shop Class of worker: Own Account |
bratt01 |
| 1325 | I5049 | Hiller | Albert E | Cal 1907 | 0 | Industry: Butcher Shop Class of worker: Wage earner |
bratt01 | |
| 1326 | I4980 | Hiller | Rene Esther | 16 Mar 1914 | 4 Nov 2002 | 0 | Tucson Daily Citizen | bratt01 |
| 1327 | I1478 | Hilpuis | Count D'arcis-Sur-Aube | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Hilpuis married Hersende, Countess, Lady of Rameru. Hilpuis' brother, Hilduiun I, was Count of Montdidier about 930. - "Europaische Stammtafeln," Band III (Tafel 676, "Les Comtes des Montdidier, 956-1063"). |
bratt01 | ||
| 1328 | I2409 | |||||||
| 1329 | I2465 | Hinckley | Jerold Maxwell | 5 Oct 1915 | 5 Aug 1995 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Jerold m. 10-01-1938 Diana Elizabeth Hight (b. 01-16-1915 at Cornville to Frank L. Hight and Emma Hayden) - no issue. Jerold graduated B.A. from the University of ME (Orono), 1937; received the Oak Leaf Cluster and Purple Heart for service in Italy in World War II; became sole owmer of Merrill & Hinckley in Blue Hill in 1954; was a leader in the board of George Stevens Academy and was a 1933 graduate; was a director of the Bar Harbor Banking and Trust Co., the Blue Hill Hospital, etc. |
bratt01 |
| 1330 | I2526 | |||||||
| 1331 | I2440 | Hinckley | Louise | 15 Oct 1882 | 12 Mar 1954 | 0 | never married | bratt01 |
| 1332 | I2375 | Hinckley | Margaret | 19 Feb 1900 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Margaret m. Warren Bettenhauser. |
bratt01 | |
| 1333 | I2495 | Hinckley | Margaret Campbell | 14 Aug 1891 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Margaret m. 10-04-1924 at Winchester, MA to William Aspey (b. 05-19-1891 at Cambridge, MA to George W. Aspey and Sarah J. ____) - d.s.p. |
bratt01 | |
| 1334 | I2398 | |||||||
| 1335 | I2348 | Hinckley | Merrill Perkins | 30 Nov 1853 | 8 Nov 1908 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Merrill is son of William Wallace Hinckley (b. May 27, 1828 at Blue Hill) and Mary Susan Perkins (b. June 20, 1833). |
bratt01 |
| 1336 | I2386 | Hinckley | Roy | 28 Jul 1901 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Harold m. Nellie ____. |
bratt01 | |
| 1337 | I4036 | Hoag | Jonathan | 28 Oct 1671 | 1 Dec 1740 | 0 | Company of Newbury men in French and Indian War | bratt01 |
| 1338 | I3958 | Hoag | Joseph | 10 Jan 1676 | 12 Nov 1760 | 0 | Served 11 days with company under Lt. Caleb Moody | bratt01 |
| 1339 | I4843 | Holbrook | Caroline | 1838 | 10 Apr 1910 | 0 | Extensive biography at Find a grave: 131631625 | bratt01 |
| 1340 | I2236 | |||||||
| 1341 | I2239 | Hooper | Warren Perkins | 5 Apr 1876 | 26 Mar 1964 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Warren and his wife resided in the large house opposite the post office on Main Street in Castine. His ancestor, William Hooper, was a Signer of the Declaration of Independence. For Hooper genealogy, see "History of Castine," by George A. Wheeler, p. 417. |
bratt01 |
| 1342 | I5478 | Hopkins | Edward L | 4 Mar 1876 | 8 Jun 1932 | 0 | General nature of industry, business or establishment: Lumber Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Employer |
bratt01 |
| 1343 | I232 | Hopkins | Helen Pauline | 7 May 1907 | 21 Apr 1995 | 0 | Industry: Healtn Insurance Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work |
bratt01 |
| 1344 | I157 | Hopps | Sarah Jane | 17 Apr 1802 | 5 Apr 1882 | 0 | Sara's father came to the US from Londonderry, Ireland when he was 17 years old. He settled in NY State. | bratt01 |
| 1345 | I1994 | Horn | Elizabeth | 19 May 1770 | 28 Feb 1855 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Elizabeth and their children are from Donna Hoffman, Box 92, Bucksport, ME in the 1970s, and also given in Penobscot VR. Elizabeth received a widow's pension (#W22981) on account of David's military service and in 1850 was residing with her daughter, Lucy (Dunbar) Wardwell. Her surname could be Orn. |
bratt01 |
| 1346 | I69 | Horwitz | Anthony Lander | 9 Jun 1958 | 27 May 2019 | 0 | Passed away while on tour for his, just released book, "Spying on the South" | bratt01 |
| 1347 | I4618 | Horwitz | Norman Harold | 4 May 1925 | 2 Oct 2012 | 0 | Norman Horwitz, neurosurgeon who operated on D.C. police officer wounded in Reagan assassination attempt, dies at 87 By Rebecca Cohen October 3, 2012, The Washington Post Norman Horwitz, a Washington neurosurgeon who helped successfully treat a D.C. police officer wounded by President Ronald Reagan’s would-be assassin in 1981, died Oct. 2 at his home in Chevy Chase. He was 87. He died of complications from Parkinson’s disease, said his son Tony Horwitz, the author and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. Dr. Horwitz was a professor emeritus of neurological surgery at George Washington University Medical Center, where his father had once served on the surgical staff. In a career spanning five decades, Dr. Horwitz trained generations of neurosurgical residents through his affiliations with GWU and MedStar Washington Hospital Center. He drew the most public recognition as part of a team that removed an explosive bullet from the neck of Officer Thomas Delahanty, who was shot while escorting Reagan from the Washington Hilton Hotel on March 30, 1981. Reagan was leaving the hotel after a speaking engagement when John W. Hinckley Jr. fired at him six times with a revolver. One of the bullets ricocheted off the door of Reagan’s limousine, piercing the president’s lung. No one died in the assassination attempt, although press secretary James Brady took a bullet to the brain. Both Delahanty and Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy were shot while trying to protect Reagan. Dr. Horwitz assisted Michael Dennis in operating on Delahanty at the Washington Hospital Center. The doctors volunteered for the task despite being warned that the bullet could injure them if it detonated. Dennis, who served under Dr. Horwitz as a resident and then became his medical partner for 20 years, said Dr. Horwitz was “instrumental in developing neurosurgery in the Washington area.” Norman Harold Horwitz was born May 4, 1925, in Rochester, Minn., where his father, Alec Horwitz, was then a resident at the Mayo Clinic. His mother, the former Jean Himmelfarb, became a Washington lawyer. Dr. Horwitz graduated in 1942 from Woodrow Wilson High School in the District. He completed his undergraduate degree at Princeton in two years and was a 1948 graduate of Columbia University medical school. He was a post-graduate research fellow in neurophysiology at Yale University and a surgical intern at Massachusetts Memorial Hospital before serving in the Air Force during the Korean War. He was in the neurosurgical unit at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio. After his discharge, he completed his neurosurgical residency at Yale and entered private practice in Washington in 1956. He also joined the George Washington University medical school faculty and became an attending neurosurgeon at the university hospital before retiring in 1995. That year, he also retired as chairman of neurosurgery at MedStar Washington Hospital Center, a position he had held since 1987. In the 1960s, Dr. Horwitz took his surgical teaching overseas to Afghanistan, India and Iran. He returned to Shiraz, Iran, in 1977 as a visiting professor of neurosurgery at Pahlavi Medical School. He also was a neurosurgical consultant at the MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington and remained an active investigator at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, now known as the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, after retiring from surgical practice. Survivors include his wife of 62 years, Elinor Lander Horwitz of Chevy Chase; three children, Erica Horwitz of Scarsdale, N.Y., Joshua Horwitz of Washington and Tony Horwitz of West Tisbury, Mass.; a sister, Annetta Kushner of Annapolis; and seven grandchildren. With Washington neurosurgeon Hugo V. Rizzoli, Dr. Horwitz wrote the influential medical book “Postoperative Complications in Neurosurgical Practice: Recognition, Prevention and Management,” which was first published in 1967. Dr. Horwitz also was a prolific contributor to medical journals and dispensed occasional medical opinions in the popular press. In 1989 — on the bicentennial of the French revolution — The Washington Post asked Dr. Horwitz whether King Louis XVI of France could have remained conscious after being guillotined. Some experts speculated that the deposed king could have heard the crowd roar in delight as the blade cut through the monarch’s neck. “I don’t think [any of this] is impossible,” Dr. Horwitz said. |
bratt01 |
| 1348 | I5224 | Houk | Frank Jay | 20 Jun 1878 | 24 Mar 1956 | 0 | Industry: Glass Class of worker: Wage earner |
bratt01 |
| 1349 | I5224 | Houk | Frank Jay | 20 Jun 1878 | 24 Mar 1956 | 0 | Industry: Glass Factory Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work |
bratt01 |
| 1350 | I145 | Houng | Sook | 25 Aug 1920 | 21 Nov 2005 | 0 | Ship passage, Yokohama Japan to Seattle WA, Ship General Hugh J Gaffey lists address: 285 South San Gabriel Bl. Pasadena CA |
bratt01 |
«Prev «1 ... 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 ... 51» Next»
