Report: individuals with associated notes

         Description: personen met geassocieerde notities


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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
1351 I5227  Houng  Suongi      (Listed in Social Security Application of Sook H Ray)  bratt01 
1352 I1043  Hugh    1147  1181  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Hugh was sixth Earl of Chester and Vicomte of Avranchin and the Bessin
(1153-81). He was in rebellion against King Henry II and taken prisoner at
Alnwick 13 July 1174, but was restored in January, 1177. 
bratt01 
1353 I1443  Hugh  Prince  895  17 Jun 956  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Hugh was one of the founders of the Capetian House in France. He ruled
Burgundy and the heartland of France. His title was Count of Paris, Oreans,
Vexin and Le Mans, Duke of France ("The White Duke"). 
bratt01 
1354 I1825  Hugues  II    837  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Line from W.H.Turton,"The Plantagenet
Ancestry"(Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.181.} Hughes II married Ava _________. 
bratt01 
1355 I5473               
1356 I1040  Huntingdon  Henry de  1114  12 Jun 1152  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Earl of Huntingdon and Northumberland; founder of the Abbey of Holmcultram.
King David I resigned the earldom of Huntingdon to Henry in 1136. Henry
resigned this earldom in 1139 to become Earl of Northumberland. 
bratt01 
1357 I1010  Huntingdon  Isabel of    1252  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Either Isabel - this person or her husband's grandmother - are supposed to
be daughter of King William the Lion of Scotland - per Carr P. Collins,
"Royal Ancestors...", p. 226. But see comment for the other Isabel, ID6004
- this is the line accepted by AEM. "The Bruce Journal," I:1, p. 10 agrees
with the line shown here, and states that Isabel was co-heir with her
brother, John the Scot, Earl of Chester.} 
bratt01 
1358 I1071  Huntingdon  Maud of  1072  1130  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Maud was Countess of Huntingdon and Northumberland; m. (1) Simon de St.
Liz, Earl of Huntingdon and Northampton, who died about 1111. Also known
as Maud de Senlis, she brought to her husband David the English earldoms of
Northampton and Huntington. 
bratt01 
1359 I6173  Huntington  Elizabeth Leantha  17 Oct 1873  2 Nov 1948  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/134584342/elizabeth_leantha-gove_lincoln  bratt01 
1360 I2042               
1361 I2055               
1362 I2056  Hutchins  Gerald Dewey  14 Feb 1897  14 Aug 1989  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Gerald owned and operated Hutchins Mountain View Motel at Hulls Cove near
Acadia National Park on Mount Desert Island. 
bratt01 
1363 I2039  Hutchins  Gordon Erwin  14 Oct 1911  2 Jun 2002  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Gordon was a teacher at Gardiner Junior High and retired as principal of Farmington Elementary School in 1972. He also worked in the customs patrol, in the paper mill, as an inspector for A&P and for the state as a restaurant health inspector. His
obituary in The Ellsworth American 13 June 2002 reported he graduated from the Eastern State Normal School in Castine in 1933 and pursued graduate studies at University of Maine and Bates College. He r. at Randolph, Me. he was professionally active
in wrestling and boxing as a young adult, and remained interested in these sports throughout his life, as well as in the ocean, boats and reading. He m. (2) Eva Gerrish who survived him, as did his three children and his step-children Arthur and
Elizabeth. 
bratt01 
1364 I2051               
1365 I2041               
1366 I2059               
1367 I2036  Hutchins  Margaret Ella  Jun 1894  1938  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Maggie and Walter r. Nautilus Island, opposite Castine, and cared for the
Wilson property there. 
bratt01 
1368 I2043               
1369 I2049               
1370 I2034  Hutchins  Pearl Samuel  1871  1951  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

After Lottie's death, Pearl m. (2) Maggie Clements (1887-1926, daughter of
Millard Clement) - they had five children: Regina Estelle (b. 10 Oct 1906),
Adeline Velzora (20 Feb 1909), George Howard (1 Oct 1918), Dorothy (7 June
1920) and Oakley Fillmore (16 June 1922; Oakley m. Belva E. Blake, b. 2 April
1922 in Castine, ME to Herman Blake and Mary Perkins; Belva d. 28 July 1999
in Belfast, ME - per obituary in The Ellsworth American). 
bratt01 
1371 I2047               
1372 I2050               
1373 I2044  Hutchins  Walter Elwin  27 Apr 1913  15 Nov 1944  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Elwin was a school teacher and later principal at Isleboro, ME. The
American Legion Hall at Orland, ME is named for him. 
bratt01 
1374 I2035  Hutchins  Wilbert Homer  Sep 1892  1959  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Judy Hutchins (hutchins@acadia.net) shared 4/99 via email that he m. 20 Aug
1916 Beatrice Bowden and had Reginald Bowden Hutchins (b. 1919, d. 2 March
1993 at Portland, ME- m. and had Douglas Hutchins). 
bratt01 
1375 I476  Hyde  John  Abt 1833  1876  See Riego Hawkins' life sketch. John Hyde is author of "Mormonism: Its Leaders and Designs," available from Google Books: https://books.google.com/books?id=XgxFAAAAIAAJ An early expose of Mormon faith.
Later John Hyde sued for Divorce in English Courts (Hyde v. Hyde Mar. 1866) which was dismissed. This case establishes a definition for Common Law marriage (it provides precident for "one man, one woman" marriage. However, see https://ojs.lib.byu.edu/spc/index.php/BYUStudies/article/viewFile/5256/4906) 
bratt01 
1376 I1421  Hywel Dha    910  950  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Hywel "journeyed to Rome in 928 and is styled `king of all the Welsh.' His
position enabled him to undertake a reform of Welsh law, for which
posterity gratefully remembered him; the representative gathering which met
at Whitland to receive the new code is without a parallel in the early
annals of Wales, and the `law of Howel', amplified and re-edited by
generation after generation of Welsh legists, became the standard of tribal
and personal relations throughout the country. In its precision and
subtlety, it has been held to be the greatest intellectual achievement of
mediaeval Wales."{-Encycl.Brit.,`56,23:291-2} See extended discussion of
him and his times in "A History of Wales," John Davies (New York: Penguin
Books, 1993), Chapter Four. 
bratt01 
1377 I1417  Iago        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Iago's mother is second wife of Idwal I, Prince of North Wales. Her name
is not known. {-W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.: Gen.Pub.Co.,
1968, pp. 91, 128; this source provides Iago's supposed daughter,
Angharat, wife of Llydocca of Hereford.} 
bratt01 
1378 I1153  Iago  III    1039  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Iago's wife, Avendreg, is daughter of Gwyr (son of Pyll). {Line from
W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"(Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.128.} 
bratt01 
1379 I1105  Idnerth        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Idnerth's wife, Gwenlian, is dau. of Aaron the son of Paen Hen. 
bratt01 
1380 I1527  Igor      Aft 945  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Igor (Ingvar) may be son of Rurik. Igor is Oleg's successor and he
concluded a treaty with the Byzantines in 945. He was slain by rebellious
tribes at Izkorosten. 
bratt01 
1381 I1651  Ingelgerius      888  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

"A semi-legendary soldier of fortune who carved out an estate for himself
in the Loire valley. His son, Fulk the Red, built effectively on his
foundation and became count of Anjou by 941." {-"The Plantagenet
Chronicles," ed. by Elizabeth Hallam (N.Y.:Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1986,
p.19).} Ingelgerius is thought to be the first Count of Anjou. 
bratt01 
1382 I1870  Ingeramun        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Kraentzler,op.cit.,p.285,states that he is brother of Bishop Chropegang
von Metz (742-66), and son of Sigram in Haspengau, Count, and
Landrade______.} 
bratt01 
1383 I2655  Innes  Isabel      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

The Innes clan is found in Moray as early as the 12th century. Branches of
the family spread all over northern Scotland. Isabel is daughter of Sir
Walter Innes. 
bratt01 
1384 I1006  Iorworth  Llewellyn  Abt 1164  11 Apr 1240  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Llewellyn I, Ap Iorworth: he descends from the ancient Princes of North Wales (earliest known ancestor is Llewellyn, Prince of N. Wales, d. 994) and from Aelfgar (Edgar), Earl of Mercia who was banished in 1058 (d. 1059), and his wife Alfigifu (their
dau. Editha m. Griffith I, Llewellyn's son & heir). He recovered his paternal lands in 1194 and in 1201 was the greatest prince in Wales; in 1215 he took Shrewsbury; his rights were secured by special clauses in the Magna Charta. In 1239 he retired to
a Cistercian monastery. Ernst-Friedrich Kraentzler, "The Ancestory of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily de Neville..." (Salt Lake City: Accelerated Indexing Systems, 1978), p. 25, gives Llewellyn's birth year as about 1164. He is known as "The Great".
Professor Stewart Baldwin discusses Llewellyn's ancestry in "The American Genealogist" for October, 2001. 
bratt01 
1385 I891  Irwin  Jean Alice  4 May 1928  22 Feb 1997  A memorial service will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1997, in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church for Jean Alice Dunn, who died Feb. 22 at age 68. A family graveside service will follow in River View Cemetery.

Mrs. Dunn was born May 4, 1928, in Portland. Her maiden name was Irwin. She graduated from Lincoln High School in 1946. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church.

Survivors include her husband, John T. 'Jack' Sr.; sons, John and Jeff, both of Portland, and Jim of Yorba Linda, Calif.; and 10 grandchildren.

Arrangements are by Riverview Abbey Funeral Home.

Oregonian, The (Portland, OR)
Date: February 25, 1997

Inscription:
Loving And Devoted Wife, Mother, Daughter, Grandmother 
bratt01 
1386 I1875  Isembert        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Isembert was part of the Court of Charlemagne and fought against the
Saracens; he married Charlemagne's sister-in-law. 
bratt01 
1387 I1204  Ivry  Emma of      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

(Emma's brother, Hugh, was Bishop of Bayeux.) 
bratt01 
1388 I3843  Jackman  Abel  2 Aug 1762  24 Jun 1820  Salem Gazette, 11 August 1820: Death - At Corinth, suddenly, Col. Abel Jackman, 56. He was assisting in putting a swarm of bees into a hive, when they stung him so that he expired in about ten minutes.

Also New Hampshire Sentinel, 1820-07-29. Vermont Historical Gazetteer by Hemenway, Page & Wing, page 886 (203): Col. Jackman was a soldier of the Revolution and was at West Point at the time of Arnold's defection. Col. Jackman continued to live on his farm until June 24, 1820, when he, assisting in putting a swarm of bees into a hive, was stung so that he expired immediately. He was aged at the time of his death 56 years 
bratt01 
1389 I3857  Jackman  Abigail  4 Sep 1759  13 May 1777  Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Salisbury, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849. (Topsfield, Massachusetts: Topsfield Historical Society, 1915), 141.

Abigill, d. Daniel and Elenor, Sept. 4, 1759.
 
bratt01 
1390 I3851  Jackman  Angier March  2 Mar 1813    Unattributed:
JACKMAN, A. M., of Barre, son of Abel and Dorothy (True) Jackman, was born in Corinth, March 2, 1813. His father came from Salisbury, Mass., and was one of the early settlers of Corinth. The son, left an orphan at an early age, went to Barre and learned the trade of wool carder and cloth dresser. His opportunities for education were limited to the common schools of Corinth and a few terms at Barre district schools. Working with untiring industry and living prudently, laying up and not squandering the liberal wages he received, he was enabled in 1836 to hire and three years after to purchase the mill in which he was employed, and he conducted his business until the factory was destroyed by fire in 1853. In February, 1856, Mr. Jackman bought an estate in Barre. Much of this he has sold, and this portion of the property is now occupied by the thriving village of Barre. When he commenced his business everyone, with perhaps the exception of the doctor, lawyer and clergyman, wore homespun, the product of the family loom, woven and fashioned in the home circle, and there was but one cloth manufactory in the state, that of Governor Paine of Northfield, the only product of whose mills was exclusively indigo blue broadcloth. Mr. Jackman has lived to see an entire change in the population of the town of Barre, and he is the only one that remains of the bygone generation of Barre village. He took to wife, April 11, 1837, Christina, daughter of David and Delia (French) French. Their union was blessed with four sons and one daughter: Orvis French (a soldier of the Union, deceased in 1885), John, George W., Eveline (Mrs. F.H. Roberts), and Charles Edgar (deceased). Mrs Jackman departed this life in 1885. Mr. Jackman has always been a Democrat, and has taken an active interest in town and county affairs. For twenty -five years he was sheriff or deputy sheriff and also justice of peace. He was strongly in favor of a resolute prosecution of war for the preservation of the Union, and one of his sons lost an arm in the service. Mr. Jackman carries the cares and labors of his four score years bravely, with form still erect and his mental faculties unimpaired. 
bratt01 
1391 I3848  Jackman  Celinda  12 Oct 1801  23 Mar 1892  Possibly married Ebenezer Dearborn  bratt01 
1392 I3853  Jackman  Daniel  9 Jan 1725  30 Sep 1794  Births recorded at Newbury, in Early vital records of Essex County, Massachusetts to about 1850. (Wheat Ridge), Vol 1, pg. 240, Secondary quality.

Daniel, s. James, jr. and Mary, Jan. 9, 1725.
 
bratt01 
1393 I3853  Jackman  Daniel  9 Jan 1725  30 Sep 1794  Deaths recorded at Salisbury, in Early vital records of Essex County, Massachusetts to about 1850. (Wheat Ridge), Vol 1, pg. 579, Secondary quality.

Daniel [Jackman], Sept. 31, 1794.
 
bratt01 
1394 I3856  Jackman  Daniel  1758  24 Jan 1779  Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Salisbury, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849. (Topsfield, Massachusetts: Topsfield Historical Society, 1915), 141.  bratt01 
1395 I3855  Jackman  Eunice  11 Sep 1754  8 Jan 1840  Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Salisbury, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849. (Topsfield, Massachusetts: Topsfield Historical Society, 1915), 142, . (contains birth an death details)  bratt01 
1396 I3842  Jackman  Henry A  18 Feb 1829    JACKMAN, Henry A. Men of Vermont: Illustrated Biographical History of Vermonters & Sons of Vermont. Ullery. Brattleboro: Transcript Publishing Company, 1894, p 219 Henry A. JACKMAN, of East Corinth [Orange County, Vermont], was born 18 February 1829 in Barre [Washington County, Vermont], son of Winthrop T. and Mary (ELKINS) JACKMAN. His mother died when he was four years old and for two years he resided with an aunt, then he was compelled to push his own way, working on a farm until he was twenty-one and obtaining such instruction as the winter terms of the district school afforded. After attaining his majority he went to Boston [Suffolk County, Massachusetts] where he remained nine years engaged in teaming. At the commencement of the Civil War [which began in April 1861] Mr. JACKMAN enlisted in the Second Massachusetts Light Battery. This battery was the first stationed at Baltimore and afterwards sent to Fortress Monroe and witnessed the naval contest between the Monitor and Merrimac. Soon after he accompanied the command to Ship Island and New Orleans in General BUTLER's expedition. He was present at the first attempt of FARRAGUT to capture Vicksburg, and afterwards participated in almost all the battles and hostile expeditions in the department of the Gulf including the successful attack upon Mobile. When his term of service expired he promptly and patriotically re-enlisted as a veteran volunteer, and with his command marched from Mobile to Montgomery and thence to Vicksburg, where he remained until honorably discharged in August 1865, after more than four years of active and continuous service, during the latter part of which he acted as quartermaster sergeant. Soon after his discharge he came to East Corinth, and in company with his brother purchased and carried on the grist mill in that place for four years. In 1876 he moved to Topsham [Orange County, Vermont] and engaged in the manufacture of bobbins and spools and to this end he has just erected a plant that promises much for the future prosperity of the community. He is an ardent Republican, a man of few words, but prompt, decided and resolute in action and with a persistence that in the end is bound to succeed in whatever he undertakes. He has always avoided rather than sought office, as the demands of his business are imperative. For several years, however, he served as selectman and represented Topsham in the House in 1876. He is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, and for two years served as commander of Ransom Post No. 7, of East Corinth. In October 1869 at Bradford [Orange County, Vermont] Mr. [Henry A.] JACKMAN was married to Mrs. Nancy (CROWN) ROWLAND, and four children have been born to them: Alfred C., Winthrop T., Henry A. Jr., and Mary E.  bratt01 
1397 I3912  Jackman  Hester  12 Sep 1651    Births recorded at Newbury, in Early vital records of Essex County, Massachusetts to about 1850. (Wheat Ridge), Vol 1, pg. 241, Secondary quality.

Hester, d. James, Sept. 12, 1651
 
bratt01 
1398 I3898  Jackman  James  30 Dec 1611  30 Dec 1694  Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Newbury, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849. (Salem, Mass.: The Essex Institute, 1911), p. 624.

Jackman... James, sr. Dec. 30, 1694
 
bratt01 
1399 I3908  Jackman  James  22 Jun 1655  16 Sep 1723  Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Newbury, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849. (Salem, Mass.: The Essex Institute, 1911), 1:241.

Jackman, James, s. James, [born] June 22, 1655.
 
bratt01 
1400 I3908  Jackman  James  22 Jun 1655  16 Sep 1723  Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Newbury, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849. (Salem, Mass.: The Essex Institute, 1911), 2:523.

Jackman, James, sr., [died] Sept. 16, 172 
bratt01 


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