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
551 I2363               
552 I2373               
553 I2182  Conner  Vera L.  11 Aug 1911  2 Jul 2000  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

still living - details excluded 
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554 I2325  Conner  Virginia Montez  27 Jan 1910  9 May 1985  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Virginia married (1) Willoughby Francis Brazeau, (2) William Karl Dick and (3)Frederick Strong Moseley (as his 2nd wife).  She was a prominent interior designer who also designed furniture for Frank Lloyd Wright and Henredon, among others.  She
graduated from the Paris (France) School of Fine and Applied Arts in 1931, and also attended The University of Akron (where she was a Kappa Kappa Gamma) and the Cleveland School of Art.
In 1939 she did a house for Wannamaker's at the New York World's Fair, and in 1940 exhibited a room of her own company at the same fair. In May, 1940, GO, a magazine for New York visitors, profiled her and reported that "Ginni" is 5'6", slim,
blue-eyed and attractive. And that she loves "golf, opera, philharmonic, fishing, swimming and walking her Keeshund, Meisje, through the park." She was often featured in "House and Garden" - the August, 1936 issue shows photos of her own apartment
(p. 74), the June, 1938 issue contains a multi-page layout and article about her work, the March, 1943 shows her dining room at One Beekman Place and the May, 1944 shows her bedroom at Allen Winden Farm, Islip, NY.
 
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555 I2014  Conner  William  1 Aug 1774    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

William was a blacksmith and resided at Penobscot, Maine. The first
schoolmaster in the village, James Whitelaw, for many years "taught in the
home of William Conner, as early as 1785 and as late as 1791." {-"Penobscot
Bicentennial" [booklet], p.31} John and Elizabeth had a large family; the
children listed here are those whose names were remembered by Fred S.
Conner in 1938 and Ardelle M. Conner in 1932 (in a letter to her niece
Luena) - they are not listed in birth order. 
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556 I2026  Conner  William  14 Mar 1831  9 May 1848  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

His brother Fred stated that William Augustus Conner died of yellow fever on
the African coast hunting animals for P. T. Barnum, the circus magnate -
another source states that the sibling who died in this pursuit was Robert. 
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557 I2004  Conner  William G.  7 Oct 1848  11 Apr 1926  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

The Penobscot Town Register, 1906, lists William as a farmer. He married
Emma Conner before Samuel Dunbar, J.P. Some sources give the year of his
birth as 1849, but the Conner-Morgrage family Bible gives the date above. 
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558 I2639  Conner  William Henry  1807  3 Oct 1884  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

William's family history is given in "A Family of the Bagaduce: The Ancestry and Genealogy of William Conner, Jr....," by Albert E. Myers (Harrisburg, PA, 1976). His middle name is Henry per plaque under his portrait in the Wilson Museum, Castine,
Maine; this plaque notes that Capt. Conner sailed clipper ships to the West Indies and other ports, and later sailed to the Grand Banks. He is not to be confused with person of the same name in coastal Waldo County, Maine. The ship William H. Conner,
built in Searsport, was named for this other William H. Conner, who d. 13 Sept 1875 at age 57, resident of Belfast, ME, merchant and shipbuilder (m. Caroline R. Porter 22 Sept 1839, she d. 13 Sept 1875) - the ship was the largest and last full-rigged
ship built at Searsport [launched in June, 1877, 210' long, 40' beam, 24' depth, 1496 tons]. A fine description of fishing on the Grand Banks under sail is given in Chapter 26 of "Coastal Maine: A Maritime History," Roger F. Duncan (New York:
W.W.Norton, 1992). Also see "Maine Sea Fisheries: The Rise and Fall of a Native Industry, 1830-1890," by Wayne M. O'Leary (Boston: Northeastern University Press). By 1860 Castine was the wealthiest town in Maine, due to its fishing fleet. 
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559 I2009  Conner  William Wallace  1878  24 Jul 1920  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

William is said to have been age 33 when he married the 19 year old Effie
Dodge. He may be given the wrong mother here - note discrepancy in her date
of death and his date of birth. 
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560 I2163  Connor  Alfred Merle  19 Nov 1915  May 1965  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

He was a teacher in York, ME and renown as a pianist. His widow resided on
Franklin St., Bucksport (1977). 
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561 I2130               
562 I2134               
563 I2131               
564 I2129               
565 I2109               
566 I2168               
567 I2117  Connor  Caroline Dora  5 Mar 1933  20 Apr 2000  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Her brother Herbert's obituary states that she predeceased him. 
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568 I2113               
569 I2106               
570 I2138               
571 I2159               
572 I2136  Connor  Gerald Hollis  10 Feb 1903  May 1977  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Gerald was a teacher at Plainville, Connecticut. 
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573 I2148               
574 I2133               
575 I2127  Connor  Herbert Richard  15 Mar 1936  27 Oct 2000  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Herbert served 1958-62 in the U. S. Air Force as a military policeman.
He later worked at ITO and Howard's Construction. His obituary states his
wife Ruby died in 1996, and reports children not listed here (perhaps her
children from a prior marriage?). 
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576 I2167               
577 I2112               
578 I2157               
579 I2107               
580 I2116               
581 I2123               
582 I2173               
583 I2166               
584 I2110               
585 I2104  Connor  Robert Kenneth  2 Dec 1900  3 Feb 1980  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Robert served in the southwest Pacific with the U.S. Navy during World War
II and is buried at the Maine Veterans' Memorial Cemetery, Augusta. His
father's obituary in 1942 reports that Robert is "of the U. S. Coast Guard." 
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586 I1795  Conrad        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing
Co., 1968), p. 6, states that Hugues l'Abbi (d. 844) is father of Tertullus
d'Anjou (instead of Conrad of Paris), and that Hughes l`Abbi is a son of
Charlemagne and Regine. Encyclopedia Britannica, 1956 Ed., 1:976:
"...towards 861, Charles the Bald entrusted [the county of Anjou] to Robert
the Strong, but he unfortunately met with his death in 866.... Hugh the
Abbot succeeded him in the countship of Anjou as in most of his other
duties, and on his death (886) it passed to Odo, the eldest son of Robert
the Strong, who, on his accession to the throne of France (888), probably
handed it over to his brother Robert. In any case, during the last years
of the 9th century, in Anjou as elsewhere the power was delegated to a
viscount, Fulk the Red, son of a certain Ingelgerius." 
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587 I1704  Conrad    825  Between 879 and 881  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.181,
gives Conrad II as son of Conrad I and Adela of Tours. 
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588 I1771  Conrad  800  863  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Conrad is called "a Count in Swabia." 
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589 I1592  Constantine    877  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

http://www.magoo.com/hugh/scotskings.html (in 2002): "During the first year of his reign, Maelseachlainn died. The Annals of the Four Masters give this year as 860. An entry in The Picts (http://www-personal.umich.edu/%7Emerrie/Arthur/Picts.html) web
site says: 'The only text left to us by the Picts is their king list, which gives the names and the lengths of the reigns of 60 or more Pictish kings. The list ends with Causantin Mac Cinaeda, who died in 876.' Weir says he was killed in a battle
against the Danes at Inverdorat (Inderdovat), the Black Cove, Angus. Another source places the battle against the Norse at Forgan, Fife, in 877. Another source says he was beheaded and is interred at Iona. (863–877) [868]. Father of Donal." 
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590 I1279  Conteville  Emma de      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Half-sister of William the Conqueror. 
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591 I5451  Cook  Susan Catherine  1885  1965  Find a grave memorial 142769554  bratt01 
592 I2515  Coombs  Elizabeth  18 Dec 1900    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Elizabeth is dau. of George B. Coombs and Laura Whittaker. {Beth Westcott
of Blue Hill stated, 1976, Elizabeth is dau. of John D. Coombs and Marion
Welch.} 
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593 I1020  Cospatric    Abt 1090  1166  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Earl Cospatric founded the Cistercian Convents of Coldstream and Eccles in
Co. Berwick, and supported liberally the abbey of Melrose. He left two
sons, Waldeve and Patrick (ancestor of Homes, Earls of Home). 
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594 I1110  Cospatric  1040  1075  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Cospatrick was Earl of Northumberland (1067-72), first Earl of Dunbar (1072-75), Lord of Carlisle and Allerdale. He m. a sister of Edmund.{-Carr P. Collins, "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons" (Dallas, 1959, p. 229)} One lineage states that he is
son of Maldred, Lord of Carlisle and Allerdale, who was slain in battle in 1045 and whose wife is Edith of England - Maldred is son of Crinan the Thane and Bethoc. Created Earl by William the Conqueror, he was soon deprived of the earldom and fled to
Scotland where King Malcolm Canmore gave him Dunbar and adjoining lands. Burke's "Dormant and Extinct Peerages" (London, 1883) reports "The monks of Durham celebrated 15 December, 1069, the death of this Cospatricius, Earl and Monk; and, in 1821, a
stone coffin inscribed on its lid, `+ Cospatricius Comes,' was found in the monks' burial ground at Durham."
"The Scots Peerage," James Balfour Paul (Edinburg: David Douglas, 1906), pp. 241-3, also gives Maldred (or Malcolm, ID 3257) as his father. Cospatric I visited Rome in 1061; his wife was a sister of Edmund per "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992), 34-22.
Dunbar = Lothian. The LDS Church's unverified Ancestral File gives Cospatrick's wife as Aethelreda, Princess of England. In 2001 there is a Dunbar Clan site on the Internet at: http://www.tartans.com/clans/Dunbar/dunbar.html 
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595 I1065  Cospatric  II  Abt 1062  23 Aug 1138  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

This Cospatric was a great benefactor of the abbey of Kelso, described in
its charters from him as "Cospatricius, Comes." {-line from Burke's
"Dormant...Peerages."} He was a signer of the Charter of Scone by
Alexander I in 1115. Cf. "The Scots Peerage," James Balfour Paul
(Edinburg: David Douglas, 1906), pp. 246-7. Cospatric was also Baron of
Beanly in Northumbria. 
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596 I1037  Cospatric  III      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

This Cospatric is styled in the Register of Kelso as "Cospatricius Comes,
filius Cospatricii Comitis." He witnessed a charter of King David I dated
1140. 
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597 I2524               
598 I4656  Courtney  Archie  26 Apr 1904  29 Jul 1963  Industry: Avacado
Class of worker: Wage or salary worker in private work 
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599 I1920  Covell  Gertrude C.  24 Apr 1907  2 Oct 1992  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

still living - details excluded 
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600 I1955               


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