Report: individuals with associated notes
Description: personen met geassocieerde notities
Matches 1651 to 1700 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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1651 | I535 | Luper | Lewis Taylor | 22 Jul 1848 | 27 Mar 1945 | 0 | General nature of industry, business or establishment: Wheat Farm Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Own Account |
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| 1652 | I535 | Luper | Lewis Taylor | 22 Jul 1848 | 27 Mar 1945 | 0 | Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Own Account | bratt01 |
| 1653 | I535 | Luper | Lewis Taylor | 22 Jul 1848 | 27 Mar 1945 | 0 | Auto Accident | bratt01 |
| 1654 | I535 | Luper | Lewis Taylor | 22 Jul 1848 | 27 Mar 1945 | 0 | Find A Grave Memorial# 53705385 | bratt01 |
| 1655 | I3106 | Luper | Loren Bird | 1867 | 10 Dec 1945 | 0 | Industry, business or establishment: General Farming Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Own Account |
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| 1656 | I3106 | Luper | Loren Bird | 1867 | 10 Dec 1945 | 0 | General nature of industry, business or establishment: General Farm Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Employer |
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| 1657 | I5332 | Luper | Loren John | 9 Nov 1898 | 9 Mar 1987 | 0 | Industry: Pianos & Music Store Class of worker: Own business |
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| 1658 | I5332 | Luper | Loren John | 9 Nov 1898 | 9 Mar 1987 | 0 | Industry: Band Class of worker: Wage earner |
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| 1659 | I5332 | Luper | Loren John | 9 Nov 1898 | 9 Mar 1987 | 0 | Industry, business or establishment: Home Farm Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Wage earner |
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| 1660 | I5332 | Luper | Loren John | 9 Nov 1898 | 9 Mar 1987 | 0 | Industry: Public School Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in Gov't work |
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| 1661 | I531 | Luper | Margaret Abagail | 27 May 1829 | 27 May 1915 | 0 | 9 Children | bratt01 |
| 1662 | I5341 | Luper | Marilyn R. | 28 Nov 1930 | 14 Nov 1999 | 0 | Industry: Pianos & Music Store Class of worker: Private employer |
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| 1663 | I5341 | Luper | Marilyn R. | 28 Nov 1930 | 14 Nov 1999 | 0 | The record I can find regarding Marilyn Luper is a bit confusing. One leads to death in Albuquerque, NM -- another leads Marriage in Las Vegas NV to T. R. Pennington, and then death in Snohomish, WA. I have elected to capture the path leading to WA as I believe this to be more probable. If you read this and have information about Marilyn please write me. | bratt01 |
| 1664 | I4262 | Luper | Marjorie L | 1915 | 1981 | 0 | Industry: Restauraunt Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work |
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| 1665 | I534 | Luper | Sarah Jane | 29 Mar 1843 | Nov 1927 | 0 | Memories of the Plains Crossing, See p. 9-11 of citation | bratt01 |
| 1666 | I534 | Luper | Sarah Jane | 29 Mar 1843 | Nov 1927 | 0 | Notes from Mollie Luper | bratt01 |
| 1667 | I534 | Luper | Sarah Jane | 29 Mar 1843 | Nov 1927 | 0 | REMINISCENCES OF TRIP ACROSS THE PLAIN By JANE LUPER DOUGLAS Now, as Uncle John Luper has crossed the Plains, I will see what I can think of, or see if I can freshen up my memory of those childhood days out on the Plains where we saw Indians, Buffalo, Rocky Mountain Sheep, Sage Hens and Rabbits. It was in the Spring of 1853 that I remember well of leaving the old Home place in McDonough County, Illinois, for Oregon. My father had three large wagons loaded with provision and clothing besides a large spring wagon that Ma and us children rode in. This wagon was drawn by a span of large mares, and the large-loaded wagons were drawn by oxen. We had several cows that were broke to yoke and hitched to the wagons the same as the oxen, but I don't remember of seeing the cows put into the teams with the oxen. After bidding all the friends and relatives good-bye, we drove up to Uncle Issac Butler's to stay that night. And after supper there, we went over to my Grandfather Robinson's and there ate another supper, though my supper there consisted mostly of biscuit and honey and I don't think that I have ever tasted honey that was half so good, and that too with big fat cream biscuit. My, I can almost taste them yet. Well, after bidding those relatives good-bye in the morning, we started on, and it seemed to me only 2 or 3 days till we reached the Mississippi River that we crossed at Burlington. There we stopped for awhile. I remember that Ma went into the store and done some shopping. And I sat there in the wagon and watched the fashionably dressed women. It seemed to me that I never saw so many pretty women. I am surprised now that our men didn't all stop there - according to my childish fancy they were something grand. Then on and on we traveled, through the state of Iowa through storm and mud. When almost across that State, we saw the first Indians 98 out in their war paint, great tall, strapping big fellows that made us children crawl back into the wagons and cover up our heads. The Indians came out to meet the emigrants, holding out their hands, begging for money. Before we reached the Missouri River, we stopped at Council Bluff to load in provisions that had been shipped on ahead from some point near our old home, I think Canton. After Pa and the men had loaded in their freight, we drove on and I believe crossed the Missouri River that afternoon, late. There on the steamer that crossed us over, I saw the first Negro that I ever saw. And that scared me almost cold, for as he pulled our hack on deck, I thought he was going to pull us into the river. But we were all cold that night for we had to crawl off to bed with just crackers and hardtack for our supper. I remember of complaining over that night's lodging too. The river was rising fast and the men had to get some teams together and haul the wagons up out of the river bottom into the woods that was higher land; and there tied their teams to the trees ill morning. There is the spot where Omaha now stand. Then, after driving out into the open prairie, a pretty spot I thought, they made a fire and cooked eur breakfast. I don't remember anything of importance for a long distance, only the long tedious journey. It was travel all day. Stop and camp. Cook and eat - the next day the same thing over. And so on to the end. I can look back now and see so many little things that are only "memories" now. And I don't wonder that the men got too lazy to wash their faces when we struck camp-even refused to wash before they ate. I remember one evening that Pa told them there was no supper for them unless they washed and cleaned up a little. And just think of the dust and heat. But we were all there and had to keep moving if it was tiresome, and so it was. I remember of crossing Green River, a rough, rocky stream but the water so low that we forded. And after crossing safely, I got the worse scare that I encountered on the whole trip with an old Indian. I was riding in Uncle John's wagon and an Indian came sneaking up along beside the wagon as we were waiting for other teams to come on; and the off ox, Old Buck that would not let any of us children come near him was so very kind that he let that old Indian come forward between him and the wheel to look in and see what was inside of that wagon. Of course he saw a rifle strapped on each side of the wagon bows. Well, maybe I did not let out a yell loud enough to raise the dead on those plains, and I gave Uncle John a scolding besides. To this day I have no love for an Indian nor do I like to read Indian stories Well do I remember old Fort Laramie where Pa came near turning one of his men away for taking something that did not belong to him. I wrote my name on that Independence Rock that Uncle John mentions in his diary, and I tried to do what I saw others do, except to plunge into some stream and try to swim. 99 I also remember a big snow storm on Bear River on the 4th of July. I also remember Hot Springs and crossing a small stream where the water was hot enough to wash clothes. One spring they called Humboldt that was huge like a great boiling kettle. On Platte River I saw a herd of buffalo plunge into the river and swim across to the other side. We heard thunder storms in that country that were hard to beat. So along in that country it was thunder storms and Indians. One time as soon as our cattle were turned loose, they swam across a stream and into the woods' they went, seemingly on an Island I know. I rode there day after day, reading the Guide Books to see where would be our next camping places; those books which tell the names of streams and mention the camping places and if there was grass or not. Pa made it his business to walk on ahead towards evening to hunt up a camping place where there was water and grass - and wood if to be had. Well, finally we drifted on over the Cascade Mountains into Oregon, or better yet, into the Willamette Valley and on into Linn County where Pa bought out Avery Smith's Donation Claim, paid him $500.00 in gold - yes, in 50 dollar "gold slugs" that I never forget. There we were in a house again and how glad to have an earthen plate to eat on once more. Now you know all the rest. So, good-by till we reach the other country. Sarah Jane Luper Douglas Source Foulkes, Allied Families, 1952. |
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| 1668 | I541 | Luper | Willys Grant | 6 May 1865 | 31 Mar 1952 | 0 | Industry: Mare Island Ship Yard Class of worker: Wage earner |
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| 1669 | I541 | Luper | Willys Grant | 6 May 1865 | 31 Mar 1952 | 0 | Industry, business or establishment: Shipyard Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Wage earner |
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| 1670 | I541 | Luper | Willys Grant | 6 May 1865 | 31 Mar 1952 | 0 | As recorded in Calif. Death Index and this matches Luper family history (presume added by Lenore Smith). | bratt01 |
| 1671 | I541 | Luper | Willys Grant | 6 May 1865 | 31 Mar 1952 | 0 | Letter written by Grant Lupfer. April 10 It took my father six months in 1853 to make only a part of that trip - and to write a little history. My Father had Jane-10; Lewis-5; James-3; George-1; when they crossed the plains. My mother's family: Father and Mother-50 and 49; Oscar Warren -22; Lansing-20; De Lavantia Elizabeth-18-my Mother; James- 14; William-13. My father got thru well - but my mother's folks when they arrived at the Fort Hall location in Idaho near Boise were so badly off that they took the rear wheels of their wagon and made a cart of it and used the best yoke of oxen from there to the Portland area and the two remaining oxen to be killed for food. And all the children walked barefoot from there to the end of the trip and only carried what had to be for absolute needs. My mother had some sheets that she had woven and carried them until she had to throw them by the wayside - she was so little - never weighed more than 108 or 110. In later years my father's wife died and my mother had married and had Raleigh, David and Vesta Anne and became a widow. Grandmother Warren kept house for my father a while, then my mother moved in with her three children and they were married. And when I look back on that hardship, I wonder how they stood it. And my mother had the most wonderful discipline. One of our real sins was to snuff our nose instead of using our hankies. At the table once when we were all seated - help and all - about fourteen, help and all, I snuffed my nose (I was probably six) - I heard my mother's foot tap on the floor. I looked and caught her eye. A side-wise nod of the head that meant leave the table - and I quietly left until the meal was over and then I finished my meal but no one except myself and mother knew what had happened. And there were very few "don't's" in my childhood. I was allowed a lot of leeway. One day while on the old ranch, a man passing by while I was out in front, stopped to pass the time of day and asked who lived there, etc. And asked me it I was a good boy. I told him I "minded my mother". He said, "Well, you are a pretty good boy if you mind your mother." My early childhood was a very happy one - we were never "hard up" - good horses, cattle, sheep, wagons, etc., well-kept fences, barns, harness, etc. Source xerox page from my family history files. pp 100, 101. Foulkes, Allied Families, 1952. |
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| 1672 | I3117 | Lupfer | Hans | 1 Feb 1674 | 22 Jan 1744 | 0 | Property owner, in Birmensdorf, Kt. Zurich, Switzerland | bratt01 |
| 1673 | I4304 | M | Louisa | 1867 | 1921 | 0 | Find A Grave Memorial# 57048096 | bratt01 |
| 1674 | I1673 | MacAlpin | Kenneth | 13 Feb 860 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The name Dalrieda for the Scottish kingdom based in Argyllshire (and for its parent kingdom in northern Ireland) fell into disuse from the time of Kenneth MacAlpin. {Encycl. Brit., 1956 Ed., 6:994; 20:146:} "Dalraida [sic] threw off Pictish control and in 843, when the Norsemen were attacking Pictland, Kenneth MacAlpin, king of the Scots, established a claim by the Celtic law of tanistry to the Pictish throne." Kenneth reigned 844-859. Cf. H. Pirie-Gordon, "Succession of the Kingdom of Strathclyde," `The Armorial', Vols. 1-2. Kenneth is regarded as the first king of Scotland. He united the Pictist kingdom with his own base in Galloway, and in later years expanded into Lothian (southern Scotland, then part of Saxon Northumbria). He also had a daughter who married Run of Strathclyde, a king of Scots (they had Eocha, king of Scots). http://www.magoo.com/hugh/scotskings.html (in 2002): "'On the Stone of Scone (http://members.aol.com/Skyelander/mediev20.html), Kenneth MacAlpin, already king of Scots, was made King of Picts (http://members.tripod.com/%7EHalfmoon/pict4). . . . about mid 9th century, the Scots themselves only represented 1/10 (10%) of Scotland's people. They became dominant through battle and marriage. The Celtic . . . Scots passed Kingship down through the male line. The Celtic Picts, by way of the female.' 'His Pictish mother was descended from the royal house of Fortrenn, and his great-grand uncle, Alpin Mac Eachaidh had actually reigned as King of Picts until deposed by Oengus I.' MacAlpin's Treason (http://members.tripod.com/%7EHalfmoon/macalpin.html). He married his daughter to Rhun (http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/page78.asp>, King of Strathclyde, and Rhun and she were the parents of Eochaidh. (Professor Donnchadh O Corrain says that the wife of King Rhun, the mother of Eochaidh, was the daughter of Constantine. The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland in the Ninth Century (http://www.ucc.ie/chronicon/ocorr2.htm).) The Annals of the Four Masters (http://www.ucc.ie/celt/online/T100005A/) record: 'M835.15 Gofraidh, son of Fearghus, chief of Oirghialla, went to Alba, to strengthen the Dal Riada, at the request of Cinaeth, son of Ailpin.' (841859) [843]. Grandfather of Niall Glundubh. His daughter Muire was the mother of Conghalach. He died of a tumor in the palace at Forteviot, Perthshire, and was interred on the Isle of Iona. Father of Constantine and Aodd." |
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| 1675 | I1169 | MacCrinan | Duncan | 14 Aug 1040 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Duncan married a daughter of Siward, Danish Earl of Northumbria (a Viking) and his first wife Elfleda of Northumbria; Siward, d. 1055, is son of Earl Berne of the Royal House of Denmark. Duncan succeeded his maternal grandfather, Malcolm II, in 1034 ("the first example of inheritance of the Scottish throne in the direct line"); previously he was King of Cumbria (ruling from Strathclyde){-Encycl.Brit.,1956,7:736,20:146}. He was slain by his own general, Macbeth. His male line ruled Scotland until the death of Alexander III in 1286. Duncan is the first king of the House of Atholl. http://www.magoo.com/hugh/scotskings.html (in 2002) states: "Acceded to the throne on November 25, 1034. Considered the first 'general ruler.' In his reign, the north and west of Scotland were conquered by Northmen under Thorfinn. 'Duncan (http://hometown.aol.com/Skyelander/timeline.html), made King of Strathclyde after the battle of Carham, helps kill his grandfather Malcolm II and becomes King of a (largely) united Scotland.' Married Aelflaed. He was killed in battle by one of his commanders, Macbeth, on August 14, 1040, at Bothnagowan, near Elgin, Morayshire. Interred on Iona. "Duncan I (http://members.aol.com/Skyelander/mediev20.html) of Scotland, was actually, (as opposed to the more well known Shakespeare version), an impetuous and spoiled young man whose six years of kingship brought glory neither to Scotland nor to his family." He married Aeflaed (Sybil) of Northumbria about 1030 and was the father of Malcolm III and Donald III." |
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| 1676 | I1396 | MacDonald | Malcolm | Abt 897 | 955 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Malcolm was slain by the men of Morne. |
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| 1677 | I1210 | MacKenneth | Malcolm | 953 | 25 Nov 1034 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] [Malcolm phps. m. a daughter of Sigurd, Jarl or Earl of Orkney, who died 23 April 1014 in the Battle of Clortarf, Ireland, and wife Donada (Alice) of Scotland. S's ancestry is known as far back as Sveide the Viking, a Norse King who died in 760.] Malcolm II reigned 25 March 1005-1034 & was murdered. Malcolm frequently invaded northern England and at the battle of Carham in 1015 finally secured Lothian for Scotland. OR Malcolm "is said to have m. an Irishwoman from Ossory" [more likely]. |
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| 1678 | I1296 | MacMalcolm | Kenneth | 995 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Kenneth II was murdered by his own men. He is said to have married a princess of Leinster. |
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| 1679 | I1092 | Macmurrough | Dermot | 1100 | 1 Jan 1171 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Dermot or Dermond was deposed as King of Leinster in Ireland. His son Conor was blinded by an enemy in 1168, and later given as hostage to High King Roderick O'Connor. When Dermot broke his treaty with Roderick, the High King had Conor put to death. |
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| 1680 | I1053 | Macmurrough | Eva | Abt 1151 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Eva was also Countess of Strigoil. "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) p. 175-7 states she was living in 1186. David H. Kelley in "The Genealogist" (1980) traces her ancestry for 27 generations to Cathair Mar, King of Leinster in the 4th Century AD. See another ancestry in Stewart Baldwin's "On a Supposed Descent from the High Kings of Ireland," in "The American Genealogist," Vol. 76, No. 4 (Oct. 2001). |
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| 1681 | I5395 | Macy | Aaron C. | 1801 | 1879 | 0 | https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58579441/elizabeth-c_-rivenburgh | bratt01 |
| 1682 | I4963 | Macy | Elizabeth | Mar 1835 | 28 Mar 1869 | 0 | New York State Census, 1865 | bratt01 |
| 1683 | I4963 | Macy | Elizabeth | Mar 1835 | 28 Mar 1869 | 0 | https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58579441/elizabeth-c_-rivenburgh Note: Wife of Jacob M. Rivenburgh, b. 1835, Mellenville, NY, d. 7 Dec. 1900. Jacob's 2nd wife, Harriet (Delameter) Rivenburgh is buried in Claverack with her family. From user: Juanita HiCienda: Elizabeth C Macy Rivenburgh was the daughter of Aaron C Macy (1801-1879) and his first wife Sarah Hull Clapp Macy (1803-1839)--she was sister to Cyrus--Emily (1826-1830)--Deborah C (1828-1830)--Catharine (1829-1830)--Caroline (1831-1837)--Abraham (1836-1837)--Sarah H (1838-1839) |
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| 1684 | I2323 | |||||||
| 1685 | I2324 | |||||||
| 1686 | I2322 | |||||||
| 1687 | I2320 | |||||||
| 1688 | I4481 | Madsen | Johanna | Cal 1883 | 0 | General nature of industry, business or establishment: Private Family Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner |
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| 1689 | I1800 | Maer | Hrollager of | Aft 896 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] {This line of descent to Matilda d'Avranches who m. Ranulf, Viscount of Bayeux, is from "Falaise Roll...," M. Jackson Crispin & Leonce Macary (London: Butler & Tanner, 1938, Table III).} |
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| 1690 | I1123 | Malet | Lucia | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Lucy (or Lucia) is identified as daughter of William Malet in the LDS Church's unverified Pedigree Resource File (CD 16, Pin 189380). Lucy married Roger FitzGerold and by him had William de Roumare, later Earl of Lincoln (although the profits of this Earldom ofen seem to have gone to Ranulph, the half-brother); as a widow Lucy confirmed the grant of Manor of Spalding to the monks there, and paid 500 marks to King Henry "for license to remain unmarried for 5 years." Lucy is said to be the granddaughter of William, Lord Malet {-"Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons," Carr P. Collins, Jr., Dallas, 1959}. Also see "The Complete Peerage", VII:743. The Countess Lucy was married three times. Lucy married (1) Ivo de Taillebois (2) Roger Fitzgerold, Seigneur, of Roumare. He died 1095. Lucy married (3) Ranulph (de Brisquesard) called 'le Meschines' third Earl of Chester. There is an article about her and her supposed parents in The Genealogist, Vol. 5, pages 131-144 and pages 153-173. See also "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700," Frederick Lewis Weis, Seventh Edition (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1992), Line 246B (p. 213). |
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| 1691 | I1255 | Malet | Robert | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Baron of Curry-Malet, Robert died by 1156. He is thought to be a grandson of the William Malet who died in 1071, of Granville St. Honorie in Normandy, at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, sheriff of Yorkshire in 1068, held barony of Curry Malet, Somersetshire in 1135 (previously held by the de Courcelles family), d. by 1156. |
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| 1692 | I1185 | Malet | William I | 1072 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] William appears to be son of _____ Malet, a descendant of Robert (son of Maleth, living 990), and a daughter of Leofric (ID3229) and Godiva (ID3230)[see "Falaise Roll..." table cited for ID3229]. Carr P. Collins, Jr., "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons" (Dallas: 1959), pp. 176 & 258, suggests that William, "Lord Malet," was Governor of York Castle and a General and Companion of William the Conqueror, that he may be a brother of King Harold's wife, that he is called a grandson of Godiva of Mercia, and that his wife is Hesilla (Elsie) Crispin - and offers a chart showing Hesilla as daughter of Gilbert Crispin and William as son of Alfgar III (Earl of Mercia) and wife Princess Elfgifu (dau. of King Ethelred II of England)(Alfgar III is son of Earl Leofric III and Lady Godiva). Cf. Arthur Malet, "Notices of an English Branch of the Malet Family." "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 234A-25 states William is "of Granville St. Honorine, Normandy, at Battle of Hastings, 1066..." |
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| 1693 | I1548 | Mancer | Elbes | 932 | 0 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Elbes I succeeded William I ("the Pious") as Duke of Aquitaine (per one source). His mother is Ermengarde, probably a concubine. |
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| 1694 | I6183 | Manheim | Charles Allen | 31 Aug 1929 | 23 Jun 2016 | 0 | Relationship: De Facto for 1 FAMC [F2332] ...of Frank GOVE and Elizabeth Leantha HUNTINGTON | bratt01 |
| 1695 | I6180 | Manheim | Erwin | 1 Nov 1898 | 26 Jun 1989 | 0 | After the death of Hester, Erwin returned to New York and married again. | bratt01 |
| 1696 | I6180 | Manheim | Erwin | 1 Nov 1898 | 26 Jun 1989 | 0 | Industry: Advertising Class of worker: Own Account |
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| 1697 | I6181 | Manheim | Lenore | 29 Nov 1926 | 10 Oct 1993 | 0 | Relationship: De Facto for 1 FAMC [F2332] ...of Frank GOVE and Elizabeth Leantha HUNTINGTON | bratt01 |
| 1698 | I2170 | |||||||
| 1699 | I2172 | |||||||
| 1700 | I2169 |
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