Report: individuals with associated notes

         Description: personen met geassocieerde notities


Matches 2051 to 2100 of 2470   » All Reports  » Comma-delimited CSV file

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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
2051 I1636  Robert  Duke    15 Sep 866  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Witichin is traditionally given as Robert's father, but more recent
scholarship disputes this. {See New England Historic and Genealolgical
Register, October, 1963, pp. 268-71.} Robert, Count of Anjou and Blois, was
one of the great leaders in the Carolingian period and became Rector (Lay
Abbot) of St. Martin de Marmoutier, near Tours, in 852. He was killed in
action against the Norsemen. He was created Count of Anjou and of Blois,
and acquired the countships of Auxerre and Nevers. He is remembered for his
heroic defense of the Frankish realm lying between the Seine and Loire
rivers against the Norse and Bretons. His title of "Duke" was military,
not hereditary. Modern scholarship states that he is Rutpert IV, Count in
the Wormsgau as early as 836, whose father is Rutpert III, Count of record
from 812, dead by 834. "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992), line 48, shows
his mother to be Adelaide or Aelis of Tours and Alsace (b. ca. 819, d. ca.
866), widow of Conrad I, Count of Aargau and Auxerre (d. 863) and dau. of
Hugh, Count of Tours. 
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2052 I1543  Robert  866  15 Jun 923  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Robert did not claim the crown on his brother's death in 898, but recognized the Carolingian king, Charles III; Robert continued to defend northern France from Norman attacks as "duke of the Franks"; about 921 he gathered support for his claim, and
drove Charles into Lorraine; 29 June 922 he was crowned at Rheims and the next year faced Charles' attempt to oust him, during which "in a stubborn and sanguinary battle near Soissons, Robert was killed, according to one tradition, in single combat
with his rival." {-Encyclopedia Britannica, 1956 Ed., 19:346} Robert's daughter, Emma, m. Raoul of Burgundy who reigned 923-936. 
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2053 I1215  Robert  Abt 1008  22 Jul 1035  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Robert I was Duke 1028-35. His wife is Estrith, sister of Canute the Great
(no issue). Robert was called "Robert the Devil", accused of poisoning his
brother (whom Robert succeeded as Duke); he sheltered the exiled English
princes, Edward and Alfred; he died returning from a pilgrimage to
Jerusalem. 
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2054 I2679  Robert  11 Jul 1274  7 Jun 1329  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Robert, "the son of Robert de Bruce VII, earl of Carrick by right of his wife, Marjorie, was a
direct descendant of a Norman baron who accompanied William I to England." - Encycl. Brit.,
'56, 19:347. The earldom of Carrick was resigned to him by his father in 1292, was merged in
the crown of Scotland, and became extinct "with the failure of the royal male line of Bruce."
Robert is reported by "The Bruce Journal" (I:1) to have been born at Writtle Essex, crowned at
Scone 27 March 1306, regained Sotland's independence through victory at Bannockburn in June,
1314, etc. See "Robert Bruce," G. W. S. Barrow (U. of CA Press, 1965). Also see 1999 Web site:
http://www.infodex.demon.co.uk/index.html 
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2055 I1387  Robert  II    997  second child  bratt01 
2056 I1248  Robert  II  27 Mar 970  20 Jul 1031  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Robert was educated at Rheims under Gerbert (later Pope Silvester II). "As
the ideal of mediaeval Christianity he won his surname of `Pious' by his
humility and charity, but he also possessed some of the qualities of a
soldier and a statesman." Crowned in 12-987, he became sole king on his
father's death in 996. Marriage irregularities led to his excommunication
by Pope Gregory V.{-Encycl.Brit.,`56,19:347}
"Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 101-21 gives his birth year as 985. 
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2057 I2663  Robert  II  2 Mar 1316  3 May 1390  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Robert II is buried at Scone, Scotland. For this line see "The Scots
Peerage," I:14. He is first King of the Stuart House. He m. (2) Euphemia of
Ross, dau. of Hugh, Earl of Ross (per "The Bruce Journal," Vol. I, No. 4,
p. 48). He succeeded his uncle, King David II, 22 Feb 1371. With wife
Euphemia, Robert II had David, Earl of Strathbearn and Walter, Earl of
Atholl, and daughters. 
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2058 I1047  Robert  William Fitz    23 Nov 1183  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

William, grandson of King Henry II, was Lord of Glamorgan and Cardiff Castle
and 2nd Earl of Gloucester (succeeding his father). 
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2059 I5260  Roberts  Caroline    29 Jul 1887  Admitted to Stocton State Mental Institution June 27 1884  bratt01 
2060 I3393  Robinson  Francis  8 Mar 1740  1810  Place of death uncertain  bratt01 
2061 I533  Robinson  Margaret  19 Nov 1821  11 Apr 1844  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/121637521/margaret-luper  bratt01 
2062 I4217  Rochester  David  1859    Early Oregonians Index, 1800-1860
May appear in 1910 US Census in White River, Tulare, CA. 
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2063 I4217  Rochester  David  1859    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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2064 I4218  Rochester  James      Does not appear in 1860 US Census. Since DeLavantia marries James M. B. Luper in 1861, presumed either abandoned or deceased sometime between 1858 and 1860.  bratt01 
2065 I4218  Rochester  James      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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2066 I4215  Rochester  Raliegh  11 Jul 1855  23 Nov 1937  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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2067 I4216  Rochester  Vesta Anne  1857    in the Oregon, Early Oregonians Index, 1800-1860  bratt01 
2068 I4216  Rochester  Vesta Anne  1857    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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2069 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Drops Rodriguez-Larrain upon emigration to United States  bratt01 
2070 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  SS "Cristobal" Lists occupation as Student  bratt01 
2071 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Confirms birth date. Arrived on vessel Santa Ana, arriving New York from Callao Peru. White, complexion Dark Height 5 ft. 8 in. Wt. 138 Lbs., Black Hair, Brown Eyes. Married to Marie (Petravage). Declaration 59642, Chicago, Ill.  bratt01 
2072 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Industry: Private Practice
Class of worker: Working on own account 
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2073 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Army  bratt01 
2074 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Industry: Own Practice
Class of worker: Own Account 
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2075 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Industry: Own Practice
Class of worker: Own business 
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2076 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  From Find-a-grave # 119471319:
Dr. Abel Lucio Rodriguez Larrain was commissioned a Captain, Doctor, U.S. Army Medical Corps, on 12 Aug 1943, and was honorably discharged on 17 Apr 1946. He participated in the 6 Jun 1943 Normandy invasion as a member of the 1st Engineer Special Brigade, which was the first assault brigade to land on Utah Beach. Dr. Larrain established one of the first medical stations on the Allied beachhead. During World War II he was wounded in action three times and was awarded the Purple Heart. He was also awarded the French Croix de Guerre, which was presented to him by General Charles De Gaulle. His other awards and decorations include the Presidential Unit Citation, American Campaign Medal, European-African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with 2 Bronze Service Stars, the World War II Victory Medal, and the Honorable Service Lapel Button WW II. He served a total of 30 months in the European Theater, and later became the post surgeon at Camp Brooklyn during the re-deployment of troops. 
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2077 I40  Rodriguez-Larrain  Abel Lucio  22 Apr 1902  11 Feb 1983  Dates from probable match of death certificate, Cook Co. Illinois.  bratt01 
2078 I82  Rodriguez-Larrain  Emillio  16 Oct 1873  1967  More of this family is available from
https://gw.geneanet.org/fracarbo?lang=en&n=rodriguez+larrain&oc=0&p=emilio&type=tree
Also, see the Facebook group for Rodriguez-Larrain Family 
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2079 I1540  Rogenwald    830  890  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Also known as Count Regnvald ("the Rich") and as "The Wise", Earl of North
and South More, of Raumsdale in Norway.{"Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta
Barons," Carr P. Collins, Jr., Dallas, 1959, p.201-02, states that he died
about 894. (Rogenwald = Regnvald = Rognald)} 
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2080 I2221               
2081 I1440  Rollo    846  931  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Rollo (Robert) was first Duke of Normandy about 911, and abdicated in 927. He was baptised in
912 in the Cathedral of Rouen. A correspondent on Prodigy states he was born about 870 in
Maer, Norway, died 927-32. "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 121E-18: "Ganger Rolf, 'the
Viking' (or Rollo), banished from Norway to the Hebrides ca. 876, 890 participated in Viking
attack on Bayeux, where Count Berenger of Bayeux was killed, and his dau. Poppa captured and
taken, 886, by Rollo (now called Count of Rouen) as his 'Danish' wife. Under Treaty of St.
Claire, 911, rec'd the Duchy of Normandy from Charles III, 'the Simple'; d. ca. 927 (Isenburg
says 931), bur. Notre Dame, Rouen." "The Normans in European History," Charles Homer Haskins
(NY: Frederick Ungar Pub. Co., 1959), p. 28: Rollo was granted Normandy in 911 by King Charles
the Simple of the Franks. Rollo "...was known in the North as Hrolf the Ganger, because he
was so huge that no horse could carry him and he must needs gang afoot. A pirate at home, he
was driven into exile by the anger of King Harold, whereupon he followed his trade in the
Western Isles and in Gaul, and rose to be a great Jarl among his people." 
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2082 I1929               
2083 I1931               
2084 I5958  Ropp  Bessie  Feb 1890    General nature of industry, business or establishment: Telephone Office
Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner 
bratt01 
2085 I5956  Ropp  Joseph  1849  1927  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/86856716/joseph-ropp  bratt01 
2086 I5956  Ropp  Joseph  1849  1927  Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner  bratt01 
2087 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  Whether employer, employee, or working on own account: Wage earner  bratt01 
2088 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  WW I Registration Card  bratt01 
2089 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  Industry, business or establishment: O
Employer, salary or wage worker, or working on own account: Own Account 
bratt01 
2090 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  Industry: Building Construction
Class of worker: Employer 
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2091 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  Industry: Building Contractor
Class of worker: Working on own account 
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2092 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  WW II Registration Card  bratt01 
2093 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  Industry: Real Estate Broker
Class of worker: Own business 
bratt01 
2094 I222  Ropp  Roy  19 Jun 1888  8 May 1974  Roy moved from Oklahoma to California. First to Blythe/Palo Verde, then to Orange County, Laguna Beach. He was a prominent figure in the early development of Laguna Beach. He was active in building construction as well as an early founder of the Laguna Beach Festival of the Arts. He is mentioned in multiple accounts of the early founding of that art festival.
Some Google searching produced a record of several family artifacts on file at the Cal State University, Fullerton Library. There may be a negative of him and his wife Mary Gostling in this collection. "Ropp, Roy M., 1970-08-05 - 1974-05-11, 18-2, Document box: 60. Local History Subject Files (Collection), LH-2018-09. CSUF University Archives & Special Collections."

Ropp, Roy M., 1970-08-05 - 1974-05-11, 18-2, Document box: 60. Local History Subject Files (Collection), LH-2018-09. CSUF University Archives & Special Collections.This collection contains a photograph/negative of Roy Ropp and his wife, MarieRoy M. Ropp was born in Kansas in 1888, and his parents homesteaded in Oklahoma in 1901. By 1921, Ropp brought his family to Laguna Beach, California, where he worked in the construction industry. A self-taught painter, in 1935 Ropp began the "Pageant of the Masters" in Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts, using real people to identically recreate iconic works of art. Ropp directed the Pageant until 1941 and again in 1950. In 1961, Ropp retired to Yucca Valley, California, where he died in 1974.See also: "Muted Symphony" oil painting by Roy M. Ropp (currently hanging in office). LH 50-20-2: Laguna Beach (City) Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters. LH 50-20-2 (Oversize): "Through the years with Roy M. Ropp" scrapbook. CSUF Center for Oral and Public History: O.H. 86.Ropp and his wife, Marie are significant figures in the early Festival of the Arts in Laguna Beachhttps://www.ocregister.com/2008/07/03/a-pageant-of-the-masters-timeline/Several of his desert landscapes gave sold at auction in the past few years
See also, OC Register Article from 2008
Roy married my relative, Mary Elizabeth (Bess) Conkey in 1963 and the two of them lived in Yucca Valley until he passed away in 1974.

Roy was an artist and Google searches will produce a few examples of his work, particularly his desert landscapes. His work will occasionally come up in various auctions and you may find some of his paintings available for sale on eBay.
Roy is listed many books and newspaper/magazine articles about artists and Laguna Beach development. Google index suggests Roy is listed in Who was who in American Art, 1564-1975, Volume 3, but I have not had a chance to research this to validate the reference.
 
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2095 I5952  Ropp  Roy Macauley  9 Oct 1916  12 Jan 1994  WW II Registration Card  bratt01 
2096 I5952  Ropp  Roy Macauley  9 Oct 1916  12 Jan 1994  Class of worker: Own business  bratt01 
2097 I5952  Ropp  Roy Macauley  9 Oct 1916  12 Jan 1994  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/116268723/roy-mcauley-ropp  bratt01 
2098 I2648  Rose  Hugh      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Kilravock is near Croy, a village very close to the Inverness airport, and
also to Macbeth's castle of Cawdor. 
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2099 I1403  Rosele    952  26 Jan 1003  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{See Crispin, "Falaise Roll" (London, 1938), pp.186-87.} She m. (2) 988
Robert II of France (repudiated). 
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2100 I4264  Ross  Patricia  6 Dec 1936  8 Nov 2014  Macomb-Patricia L. Rutledge, 77, of Macomb, passed away at 7:31 PM Saturday Nov. 8, 2014 at the Richard L. Owens Hospice Home in Peoria, IL.

She was born December 6, 1936 in Huntington, West Virginia to Charles and Ruby Walker Ross; she first married David R. Luper on Jan. 26, 1958; she then married Harold “Bus” Rutledge on Oct. 8, 1991. He preceded her in death on May 26, 2007.

She was also preceded in death by 2 step-sons, James and Jerrold Rutledge and a brother, Omen Walker.

She is survived by 3 sons, Donald Luper of Reeds Spring, Missouri,Daniel Luper of Yates City, Illinois, Steven Luper of Davenport, Iowa; 4 grandchildren, Seth, Meghan,Conner and Matthew Luper.

She was a member of the Checkrow Community church, and Red Hat Society.

Services will be at 10:30 AM Thursday Nov. 13, 2013 at the Dodsworth-Piper-Wallen Funeral Home, where visitation will be Wednesday from 5-7 PM.

Pastor Joe Olson will officiate. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Memory Gardens.

Memorial Contributions may be made to Richard L. Owens Hospice Home. 
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