Report: individuals with associated notes
Description: personen met geassocieerde notities
Matches 1451 to 1500 of 2508 » All Reports » Comma-delimited CSV file
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| # | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1451 | I3279 | Judge | Patrick | 1830 | Between 1875 and 1878 | 0 | Directory lists Occupation as Laborer (in 2011, Google street view captures this as a vacant lot) | bratt01 |
| 1452 | I3279 | Judge | Patrick | 1830 | Between 1875 and 1878 | 0 | Patrick is listed in 1875 NY Census and in 1875 city directory. No listing until 1878, then Catharine is recorded at 235 Orange, as Widow. | bratt01 |
| 1453 | I1678 | Judicael | 888 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Judicael is brother of Alain le Grand of Nantes and in 879 was "Chief of Half." Rennes is a town in western France and was the capital of Brittany; its Roman era name was Condate (hence Condat and Conde), a center of the Roman road network. |
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| 1454 | I1736 | Judith | 846 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Debrett's Kings and Queens of Britain" by David Williamson (Salem House Pub., 1986) says, "....he [Charles the Bald] gave her [Judith] in marriage to Ethelwulf, the wedding being solemnized at Verberie-sur-Oise on 1 October 856. Ethelwulf returned home in 'good health' and died over a year later on 13 January 858. He was buried first at Steyning in Sussex, but was later removed to Winchester." |
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| 1455 | I5925 | Junkin | Glynn M | 15 Jul 1877 | 28 Nov 1966 | 0 | https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/54729005/glenn-morton-junkin | bratt01 |
| 1456 | I5925 | Junkin | Glynn M | 15 Jul 1877 | 28 Nov 1966 | 0 | General nature of industry, business or establishment: House Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner |
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| 1457 | I5925 | Junkin | Glynn M | 15 Jul 1877 | 28 Nov 1966 | 0 | Industry: Albany City Class of worker: Wage earner |
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| 1458 | I5619 | Junkin | Wilma Glenneva | 26 Dec 1901 | 16 Feb 1959 | 0 | Industry: Pianos & Music Store Class of worker: Own business |
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| 1459 | I5619 | Junkin | Wilma Glenneva | 26 Dec 1901 | 16 Feb 1959 | 0 | Industry: Professional Class of worker: Wage earner |
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| 1460 | I5619 | Junkin | Wilma Glenneva | 26 Dec 1901 | 16 Feb 1959 | 0 | Industry: Public Schoo Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in Gov't work |
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| 1461 | I2151 | |||||||
| 1462 | I3313 | Karganilla | Diana | 29 Jul 1944 | 24 Mar 2013 | 0 | Diana L. Swihart, dear mother of Susan (Judd) Hirschberg, Sally (Jeff) Shore, and the late Andrew (Kathy) and Diana. Loving grandmother of Sasha and Cyndy. Dearest daughter of Theresa and the late Domiciano Karganilla. Visitation at Herdegen-Brieske Funeral Home, 1356 W. Wellington Ave., Wednesday, from noon to 3 pm with services Wednesday at 2:00 pm. Int. private. For further info visit www.herdegenfuneralhome.com or call 773-525-0178. Published in a Chicago Tribune Media Group Publication on Mar. 26, 2013 - See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/chicagotribune/obituary.aspx?pid=163864645#sthash.1WgBPA8A.dpuf |
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| 1463 | I5900 | Kastner | Wesley D. | Cal 1907 | 0 | Industry: Telephone Company Class of worker: Private employer |
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| 1464 | I4966 | Keith | Phoebe | 27 Nov 1807 | 14 May 1883 | 0 | http://person.ancestry.com/tree/83517233/person/36489360864/facts | bratt01 |
| 1465 | I2244 | |||||||
| 1466 | I3394 | Kelly | John | 1793 | 22 Feb 1882 | 0 | Relationship: Father in law | bratt01 |
| 1467 | I3394 | Kelly | John | 1793 | 22 Feb 1882 | 0 | May have been 1783 | bratt01 |
| 1468 | I3394 | Kelly | John | 1793 | 22 Feb 1882 | 0 | John Kelly fought in the War of 1812, enlisting at age 19 years and, according to family sources, he served with Commadore Perry at the Battle of Lake Erie. | bratt01 |
| 1469 | I3394 | Kelly | John | 1793 | 22 Feb 1882 | 0 | Obituary Text: KELLY - John Kelly was born in Lewiston, Pennsylvania in 1792. He served in the war of 1812, moved to Old Franklin, Missouri, in 1817, and married Miss Bitha Lawless there in 1821. In 1826 he moved to St. Louis, living there until 1835 when he removed to Boonville. Under the ministry of Dr. Joseiah Boyle (sp?) he converted and joined the church in 1847. He died February 22, 1882 and was buried by his Masonic brethren, with whom he had been a member sixty years. He lived up to the principles of his order, and was held in great respect by his brethren. But he did not depend upon his Masonry for eternal salvation. He sought God through Christ, and lived a holy life for thirty-five years. He died in peace. Brother Kelly's ripe age and pure character brought him great respect from his many friends. He had been afflicted for twenty five years, a quiet sufferer in the family of his son-in-law, Brother R.R. Thompson, but never murmured. He only wondered why he was son long detained here and was always ready to depart. His good wife, who had been his comfort for sixty one years, survives him, and has the tender sympathies of numerous friends. The aged pair were greatly revered in Boonville, where they had lived so long and so beautifully adorned the Gospel. The fruits of Dr. Boyle's great revival in 1847 are still seen in Boonville and his works are still following him Brother Kelly is the last to have joined him above. -- G.W. Horn. |
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| 1470 | I3744 | Kennedy | Robert | 1839 | 1924 | 0 | Ancestry.com search | bratt01 |
| 1471 | I2234 | Kenniston | Vivian Inez | 27 Sep 1881 | 21 Jun 1960 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Vivian entered Eastern State Normal School (now Maine Maritime Academy) at Castine, Maine in 1898, teaching in small schools to pay for her tuition and graduating in June, 1901. In the fall of 1900 she met Ed Conner, a fellow student whom she married in her family's living room. After the birth of their first child she returned to the normal school and finished the Advanced Normal Course in 1905. She was organizer and president of the Goodyear Women's Club, Central High School PTA, the Women's Democratic Club and League of Women Voters, all in Akron, Ohio. She also belonged to the Sixth Ward Democratic Club, Public Affairs Study Club, Cleveland Shakespeare Society (charter member), and the Cleveland South Side Women's Club. She was active in the Society of Mayflower Descendants, Daughters of the American Revolution (Regent of the Akron Chapter), National Huguenot Society, Daughters of American Colonists, National Society of Women Descendants of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company (National Number 626), National Society of Magna Carta Dames and the New England Genealogical and Historic Society. She was active in the Women's Suffrage Movement, Democratic Party State Central Committeewoman, served as a delegate to the National Democratic Convention in 1936 and vigorously engaged in local politics. She would have agreed with First Lady Hillary Clinton ("It Takes a Village," 1996) in the "view of government that dates back to the Pilgrims. In this view, government is an instrument both to promote the common good and to protect the individual's rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." She was first president of the Mothers' Clubs of Kappa Kappa Gamma (her daughter Marian's sorority at The University of Akron) and of Chi Theta Tau. She is buried beside her husband in Castine. |
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| 1472 | I1497 | Kent | Eadgifu of | 25 Aug 968 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] {Carr P. Collins, Jr., "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons," Dallas, 1959, p. 89, states that her name is Lady Edgina Meapham, his third wife, and that she died on 24 August 968 = mother of Edmund I, Thyru and Eadgifu.} |
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| 1473 | I5896 | |||||||
| 1474 | I1181 | Kiev | Anne of | 1024 | Aft 1075 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Anne is buried at Abbaye Villiers b La-Ferte-Alais per "Ancestral Roots... (Balt., 1992) 53-22. |
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| 1475 | I2903 | Kleeck | Baltus Barents van | 25 Nov 1644 | 9 Apr 1717 | 0 | [daniel_bratt_ancestors.FTW] Source: The Van Kleeck Family, Albert Van Kleeck, 1909 Source: An Account of Barent Baltus, the Progenitor of the Van Kleeck Family in the U.S. and Canada, Van Kleeck and Van Benthuysen, 1958, in NEHGS Library Source: D.A.R. Patriot Index, p.701 Baltus first wife, Maritje Ten Eyck, was buried in 1676 in Flatbush as "wife of Baltus Barentszen". Baltus moved first to Albany then to Bergen, New Jersey, and in 1687 was in Poughkeepsie where he built the first stone house and became one of the largest holder of real estate in Dutchess County, New York. Baltus was one of the first settlers of Poughkeepsie. His house was near what is now the corner of Mill and Vassar Streets. It had very thick walls which were pierced near the eves and gables with loop-holes for muskets to ward off any Indian attacks. It stood until 1835 when it was torn down. Adjoining the house was a family burial plot which remained until the house was demolished. During the Revolution the house was the scene of may patriotic meetings and the New York Legislature met there in 1788. Baltus represented Dutchess in the 16th Colonial Assembly, which sat from May 3 to July 21, 1715. He was elected to the 17th New York Colonial Assemblies, which sat, at intervals, for eleven years, 1716-1726, but served only from its beginning, June 5, 1716 to the spring of 1717, when he died. He was succeeded May 4, 1717, by Johannes Terbosch. About 1776 some of the descendants of Baltus emigrated to Canada and formed a settlement in Prescott County, Ontario, and named it Van Kleeck's Hill, but the great majority remained in Dutchess County and were loyal to the cause of freedom. Dutchess County from: " The Concise History of Dutchess County" Hope Farm Press & Bookshop 252 Main Street Saugerties NY 12477 914-246-3522 Although Dutchess was mapped out as a county in 1683, first legal residence in the county was not established until four years later under a land purchase from the Indians with confirmation of title by the Colonial Governor. Robert Sanders, an Englishman, who was an interpreter between the Indians and Europeans, and Myndert Harmense Van Den Bogaerdt, a Dutchman, purchased land embracing the present city of Poughkeepsie, which is the county seat of Dutchess. As of June 9, 1687, Sanders and Harmense ( for so the latter was known, rather than Van Den Bogaerdt) leased a large part of their holdings to Baltus Barents Van Kleeck and Hendrick Jans Ostrom. This leasehold also marked the beginning of permanent legal residence within the entire county, according to contemporary historians. Dutchess County was not named after the Dutch, but as a compliment to the Duchess of York. Her title was derived from the French word, duchesse, and was spelled with a "t" until 1755, in which year Dr. Johnson, the English lexicographer, dropped the "t," and also the final "e." Lands upon which Messrs. Van Kleeck and Ostrom agreed to settle were described by the Dutch as "lying in the Lange rack" and "called Minnisingh and Pochkeepsin." "Lange rack" was the broad expense of the Hudson River extending north and south of the approximate center of the shoreline of Poughkeepsie, a total distance of about ten miles. This straight section of the river was called "the Long Reach" by Robert Juett, mate of Henry Hudson's "Half Moon,"when Hudson sailed up the river, in 1609. "Minnisingh" was believed to refer to high ground in the Dutchess Turnpike east of the present Poughkeepsie, while "Pochkeepsin" was one of the numerous spellings of the county seat. This same colorful "Long Reach" of the Hudson contains the present four-mile course for the Poughkeepsie Intercollegiate Regatta, annual rowing event, which has attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors to Poughkeepsie's shores and Dutchess County. The course begins at Crum Elbow, not far from the river estate of President Roosevelt; it extends south to a point below the mid-Hudson vehicular bridge at Poughkeepsie. One now widely accepted explanation of the meaning of the name "Poughkeepsie" evolves from a story surrounding the first legal settlement in the community. Johannes Van Kleeck and Myndert Van Den Bogaerdt, sons of the original settlers, frequented a spot close to the present New York-Albany Post Road, less than two miles south of the present courthouse at Poughkeepsie. The Indians followed a trail to this same point, known by the two boys as Rust Plaetz, and meaning Resting Place. The Indians had another name for the spot, which was marked by a spring, and, so the story goes, surrounded by cat-tail reeds, a small stream issuing from the spring. They used three words to describe it: uppuqui-meaning lodge covering, the name of the cat-tail reed; ipis-little water; ing-meaning place; and freely translated, "The Reed-covered Lodge by the Little Water Place." The Dutch and the English settlers spelled the name phonetically, and it appeared in various combinations of letters. In the Van Kleeck-Ostrom lease it was "Pockkeepsin." A more familiar later form of the word was "Apokeepsing," resembling uppiquiipis-ing, until the "A" was dropped; and out of Poughkeepsing there came the accepted name, "Poughkeepsie." So much for the name of the principal city of Dutchess County. The date, June 9, 1687, is now recognized as not only marking the beginnings of permanent legal residence of white men in Poughkeepsie, but in the county as well. Prior to that time there were undoubtedly transient residents in the county, but there is no documentary evidence pointing to an earlier legal white residence than that at Poughkeepsie. Early local historians set forth that the first settler may have been Nicholas Emigh, or Eighmie, presumed to have arrived at Fishkill, southern Dutchess, at an early date. These historians conceded that authorities differed as to the exact date of settlement, although one writer placed Eighmie in the county as early as 1682. It remained for the late Helen Wilkinson Reynolds, careful historian of the modern period, to lay before the public the complete story of the Van Kleeck-Ostrom lease and its significance as fixing the time of the first legal white residence at Poughkeepsie. To be sure, early settlements in both Fishkill, to the south of Poughkeepsie, and Rhinebeck, to the north, were contemporaneous with that in the present county seat. Peter Pieterse Lassen, an ancestor of the late historian, Benson J. Lossing, is known to have been living at the mouth of Jan Casper's kill in 1688. In 1700, Hendrick Kip built a house in Rhinecliff (town of Rhinebeck). All of the early settlers lived close to the river; it was not until the early part of the eighteenth century that the thickly wooded interior of the county was opened to home sites. birth: 1. D-221: 2. D-236: Abstracts of Wills Filed in New York City, 1708-1728 other: 1. "of Dutchess Co.," executor of sister's (Mayken) will dated 23 Apr 1722, proved 7 Feb 1723/5; D-236, ibid. |
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| 1476 | I2904 | Kleeck | Cartelijntie Barents van | 0 | [daniel_bratt_ancestors.FTW] The first reference to Catelyntje is in 1660, when she witnessed the baptism of her sister Jannetie's son John, and the next in 1668 in the same connection for her nephew Assudius Harberding. Source: Mention in will of John Harberdinck, Abstracts of Wills, Liber 9, p.440 |
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| 1477 | I2910 | Kleeck | Jannettje van | 0 | [daniel_bratt_ancestors.FTW] Source: Mention in will of John Harberdinck, Abstracts of Wills, Liber 9, p.440 In Dutch church records she was called "van Haerlem". Sometime during 1660 Jannettje made a voyage to Europe, for what purpose, and whether accompanied by her husband or not, is not known, but January 11, 1661, "Jannetje Barents, widow of Jan Guisthout" is entered on the passenger list of the ship "Golden Eagle" sailing for America. Her husband's death apparently left her without resources, for August 16, 1663, she filed a Petition for a writ empowering her to surrender all claim to her late husband's estate in favor of his creditors, mention being also made of her infant child, (Dutch MSS., Albany, Vol. 10, pg. 274) but September 6, 1663, the creditors waived all claims against her. Shortly after the settlement of this matter she married her second husband, Jan Petersen Bosch. In 1686 Jan Petersen Bosch and Jannetje Barents, his wife, were living on Smith Street, New York City, New York. (Memorial History, City of NY, Vol. 1, pg. 451) birth: 1. D-221: The Van Benthuysen Genealogy by Alvin Seaward Van Benthuysen & Edith M. McIntosh Hall marriage: 1. D-221, ibid. |
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| 1478 | I2915 | Kleeck | Maijken Barents van | 1723 | 0 | [daniel_bratt_ancestors.FTW] Prior to her marriage, but two references to Mayken Barents' appear; the first, April 25, 1662, when she was plaintiff in a suit vs. a servant of Egbert van Borsum in NY (Court Records of New Amsterdam, Vol. 4, pg. 67), and the second September 29, 1662, when she witnessed the baptism in NY of a child of Hendrick Jansen Ruyter and Tryntje Willems. In 1674, "John Harberding" is on a list of the substantial citizens of New York City, with an estate rated at $800 (see "Mem. History, City NY," Vol. 1, pg. 362.) In 1686 "Jan Harberdinck" and his wife Mayken Barents were living on High Street, New York City. (Memorial History, City of NY, Vol. 1, pg. 450). birth: 1. D-221: The Van Benthuysen Genealogy by Alvin Seaward Van Benthuysen & Edith M. McIntosh Hall 2. D-236: Abstracts of Wills on File in New York City, 1708-1728 marriage: 1. D-221, ibid. 2. D-236, ibid. death: 1. D-236, ibid. |
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| 1479 | I2905 | Kleeck | Saertie van | Abt 1671 | 0 | [daniel_bratt_ancestors.FTW] Sara evidently died soon after the birth of her son, for her husband married again in November of the same year, 1671 (Ref. Records Dutch Church, NY). birth: 1. D-221: The Van Benthuysen Genealogy by Alvin Seaward Van Benthuysen & Edith M. McIntosh Hall |
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| 1480 | I714 | |||||||
| 1481 | I4904 | Knox | Caroline | Abt 1854 | 0 | Listed in 1970 and 1860 Portland Census -- with family of TM and Sarah Arnold. | bratt01 | |
| 1482 | I3563 | Kowalonek | Anthony | 20 May 1904 | May 1987 | 0 | Industry: Gass-House Class of worker: Wage earner |
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| 1483 | I3563 | Kowalonek | Anthony | 20 May 1904 | May 1987 | 0 | Industry: Coal Mine Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work |
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| 1484 | I3564 | Kowalonek | Walter | 12 May 1928 | 11 Mar 1967 | 0 | Honorably discharged, Cpl, 77th Bomber Squadron, 28th bomber group, USAF, WW II | bratt01 |
| 1485 | I2299 | |||||||
| 1486 | I747 | Kumbert | Anna | 0 | Name may be Gambert as Gamberts lived next to them in Berks. Co. | bratt01 | ||
| 1487 | I1930 | |||||||
| 1488 | I1808 | Lambert | 826 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Nantes is 35 miles from the mouth of the Loire River, where it meets the Orleans River. Prior to Roman occupation it was the major center of the Namnetes; under the Romans it became a great commercial and administrative center. |
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| 1489 | I2395 | |||||||
| 1490 | I57 | Lansberry | Ai Douglas | 7 May 1895 | 14 Apr 1965 | 0 | Rank: Sgt QM | bratt01 |
| 1491 | I57 | Lansberry | Ai Douglas | 7 May 1895 | 14 Apr 1965 | 0 | Industry: Upolstering Shop Class of worker: Working on own account |
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| 1492 | I57 | Lansberry | Ai Douglas | 7 May 1895 | 14 Apr 1965 | 0 | From Find a Grave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/68651569/ai-douglas-lansberry "AI D. Lansberry Canoga Park, Calif. - Ai Douglas Lansberry, a native of Curwensville, Pa., died in his home at Canoga Park, Calif., Thurday, April 15, at the age of 70. Mr. Lansberry was born May 7, 1895, at Curwensville, a son of Samuel and Lucy Lansberry. He was graduated from high school in 1914. Mr. Lansberry was a veteran of WWI and after his army service, settled in California in 1920 where he became an upholsterer and furniture maker. He recently retired. He is survived by his wife, Leonora; a daughter, Marion Stamas; two sons, Dale, at home, and Donald of Los Angeles; three sisters, Ida Demi of Cornwells Heights, Pa.; Lena of Sophia, N.C. and Genevieve Riley of Higginsville, Mo.; one brother Allen of Phoenix, Ariz., and three grandchildren. Interment will be at Canoga Park. -- Clearfield Progress (Pa) April 17, 1965 Many Lansberry's are interned in this cemetery |
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| 1493 | I57 | Lansberry | Ai Douglas | 7 May 1895 | 14 Apr 1965 | 0 | Ai Lansberry can be found in the family tree of Michael Lansberry at Ancestry.com. See MLansberry Family Tree Michael appears to be avtively maintaining this tree, as of early 2026. |
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| 1494 | I94 | Lansberry | Dale Hawkins | 16 Dec 1939 | 10 Dec 2008 | 0 | Possibly something heart related. From an e-mail sent by Shirley | bratt01 |
| 1495 | I92 | Lansberry | Don Douglas | 3 Apr 1933 | 17 Oct 2017 | 0 | Adoption, natural birth details from family rememberances. | bratt01 |
| 1496 | I415 | |||||||
| 1497 | I416 | |||||||
| 1498 | I4861 | Lansing | Gerrit Frederickse | Abt 1610 | 0 | Into Place: New Amsterdam, Manhattan, New Netherland Colony (New York) | bratt01 | |
| 1499 | I4861 | Lansing | Gerrit Frederickse | Abt 1610 | 0 | Gerrit Frederickse Lansing was a citizen of Hasselt, Province of Overijssell, Holland. He came to New Amsterdam (New York) about 1610 and was one of the early settlers of Rensselaerwyck. He died and his widow married Wouter Van Den Uythof of Albany. The heirs of Gerrit Frederickse Lansing e.xecuted a Power of Attorney in favor of Jan Barentse ten Kate of Zwolle and Gysbert Janse Vermeer of Hasselt, Holland, on October 3, 1697. (Albany County deed book No. 3, page 51.) Also more at http://exhibitions.nysm.nysed.gov//albany/bios/l/geflansing3060.html Suggests emmigration about 1640 and birth, about 1610 |
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| 1500 | I4854 | Lansing | Hendrick G. | 1640 | 11 Jul 1709 | 0 | COLKET, MEREDITH B., JR. Founders of Early American Families: Emigrants from Europe, 1607-1657. Cleveland: General Court of the Order of Founders and Patriots of America, 1975. 366p. Into Place: New Amsterdam, Manhattan, New Netherland Colony (New York) |
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