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Matches 16,451 to 16,500 of 18,503
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16451 | Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s (ancestry.com) Name: John K. McDonald Year: 1849 Place: Utah Source Publication Code: 1132.8 Primary Immigrant: McDonald, John K Source Bibliography: CARTER, KATE B., compiler Horticulture in the West. Salt Lake City: Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 1949, pp. 551-472 Page: 462 Source Citation: Place: Utah; Year: 1849; Page Number: 462. Source Information: Gale Research. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2010. Original data: Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2010. Description: Updated annually, this database is an index to passengers who arrived in United States and Canadian ports from the 1500s through the 1900s. It contains listings of approximately 4,838,000 individuals and references thousands of different records compiled from everything from original passenger lists to personal diaries. For each individual listed, you may find the following information: name, age, year and place of arrival, and the source of the record. | McDonald, John Kilpatrick (I195)
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16452 | Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s - Ancestry.com Name: Rachel B. McDonald Year: 1849 Place: Utah Source Publication Code: 1132.8 Primary Immigrant: McDonald, Rachel B Source Bibliography: CARTER, KATE B., compiler Horticulture in the West. Salt Lake City: Bibliography: Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 1949, pp. 441-472. Source Citation: Place: Utah; Year: 1849; Page Number: 462. Source Information: Gale Research. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2010. Original data: Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2010. | McDonald, John Kilpatrick (I195)
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16453 | Pat jensen record says death date Nov 1969. our father's (Dice S. Armstrong record says 11 Sep 1959. JHA 8/2000 | Johnston, William Washington (I1617)
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16454 | Paternal grandparents of Bernardo Iturra Fuentes based on his birth and christening record. | Family F2424
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16455 | Paternal grandparents of grandson Bernardo Iturra Arce based on his birth record. | Family F2422
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16456 | Paternal Grandparents of Guadalupe Segura based on her birth record. | Family F2360
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16457 | Paternal Grandparents of José Filiberto Ortega Aguilar based on his christening record. | Family F2503
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16458 | Paternal Grandparents of José Silberio Ramirez Ortega based on his christening record. | Family F2395
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16459 | Paternal grandparents of Maria Ernestina Crespo Lizarraga. | Family F2386
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16460 | Patty Armstrong Jensen file shows birthdate as 12 June, 1845. | Heltzel, John Davis (I1611)
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16461 | Patty Jensen shows Samuel B., not Dale, as husband.JHA 8/2000 | Coffman, Samuel B. (I1601)
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16462 | Paulus built his home on the Pompton Plains adjacent to the Martin Berry home near the intersection of Jackson Avenue and Route 23. The property extended to the Pequannock River on the east. When Cathalyntie was married to Samuel Berrie, they resided at the "Hill's place in Bloomingdale." Their son Martin built the Martin Berry house next to the Vanderbeck house. Martin was Cathalyntie's son by her first marriage. The Berry house is one of the finest examples of Dutch architecture remaining in the state. - See more at: http://www.northjersey.com/community/history/more_history_news/57620392.html#sthash.vrUFHLda.dpuf | Berrie, Martin (I1383)
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16463 | PECTOL, Lavina d. at birth buried in same grave as Sylvia Per http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~utduches/Cemeteries/Upalco/Upalco.html | Pectol, Lavina "Twin" (I572)
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16464 | PECTOL, Sylvia S. b. 7-1928 d. at birth father Jessie mother Minnie Carroll buried in same grave as Lavina Per http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~utduches/Cemeteries/Upalco/Upalco.html | Pectol, Sylvina "Twin" (I574)
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16465 | Pedro de Avalos Saavedra is nephew to capitán Alonso de Avalos based on source: Guadalajara ganadera: estudio regional novohispano, 1760-1805 By Ramón María Serrera Contreras page 126. | Saavedra, Pedro Dávalos y (I4873)
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16466 | Pedro Mena was husband to Manuela Torres Source: Death record of Manuela Torres. | Family F1880
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16467 | Per 1921 Census | Shoemaker, Norman John (I28)
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16468 | Per 1921 Census | Shoemaker, Dorothy (I33)
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16469 | Per 1921 Census | Shoemaker, Helen (I37)
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16470 | Per 1921 Census | Shoemaker, Gladys E (I24)
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16471 | Per 1921 Census for John Shoemaker | Shoemaker, Wilfred (I39)
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16472 | Per 1921 Census for son John Shoemaker | Grey, Antonia (I82)
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16473 | Per 1921 Census for son, John Shoemaker | Shoemaker, Anthony (I40)
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16474 | Per 1921 Census for son, John Shoemaker | (I81)
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16475 | Per 1921 Census for son, John Shoemaker the family immigrated to Canada in 1806. | Shoemaker, Anthony (I40)
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16476 | Per death records, Samuel was living in Minehead, Somerset, England at time of death, but died in Bristol. He and his wife are both buried in the Quaker Redclift Pit Cemetery in Bristol | Alloway, Samuel Sr. (I2694)
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16477 | Per granddaughter Thelma Marie, "My grandfather Snyder was either born and or lived in West Virginia at least part of the time. I don't know if Dad was born there." | Snyder, Alonzo Melvin (I144)
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16478 | Per Guadalupe Rina Hernandez Bouttier. | Bouttier, Maria del Pilar Hernandez (I4810)
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16479 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I35)
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16480 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I737)
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16481 | Per WWI Draft Registration Card | Bauch, Gustav William Henry (I901)
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16482 | Perhaps "Joseph Baldwin"? http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/49557848/person/12996873717 | Baldwin (I1346)
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16483 | Perry smoked heavily and drank, and had a breast removed for cancer in about 1986 or 1987. She was still alive in March of 1987. | Harrison, Perry (I43)
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16484 | Personal Knowledge of Donna Elaine Cleverly | Cleverly, Donna Elaine (I377)
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16485 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I232)
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16486 | Personal Knowledge of him Three Generation Sheet Submitted by LDS Church Members | Stonebraker, Don Warburton (I134)
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16487 | Peter Baynard was a brother-in-law of Colonel John Schuyler, having married the latter's sister Eva, who died in 1737" Winfield's Hudson County, 541 Source: http://books.google.com/books?id=wOE6AQAAMAAJ&pg=RA2-PA201&lpg=RA2-PA201&dq=colonel+john+schuyler+new+jersey&source=bl&ots=DezTTiDEva&sig=FeuaMBVVQDwVm0ddisP3qB15MLw&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Mt3IUsasLaqQyQGv3YHoCw&ved=0CEsQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=colonel%20john%20schuyler%20new%20jersey&f=false | Family F418
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16488 | Peter went west and was never heard from again. | Heltzel, Peter (I1597)
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16489 | Peter who was left his [land?] by Nathan Ryesson and died young. | Schuyler, Peter (I1414)
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16490 | Petra Fletes christening records states that the "padrinos" were Ygnacio Fletes and Mariana Fletes. | Osuna, Petra Mariana Fletes (I4830)
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16491 | pg 285, Rush Creek M.M. (18 Feb 1875) | Lowder, Rachel Eleanora (I205)
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16492 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1296)
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16493 | pg 285, Rush Creek M.M. 2. 1880 US Federal Census, Vol 26, ED 170, Sheet 19, Line 28 | Mendenhall, Stella V. (I206)
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16494 | pg 285, Rush Creek M.M. 2. 1880 US Federal Census, Vol 26, ED 170, Sheet 19, Line 28 | Mendenhall, Kesiah Agness (I207)
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16495 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1297)
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16496 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1298)
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16497 | Phebe's temple work was done in 1957-58 under the name of Mrs. Phoebe Simmons. The name on the Pendleton County marriage bond is P:hebe Thompson. William Simmons and Joel Thompson posted the bond.JHA7/12/2004. | Family F1662
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16498 | Philip Pieterse by Stefan Bielinski Philipse Pieterse Schuyler was the first outstanding member of early Albany's most important New Netherland-era family. He was born in Holland in 1628, the oldest child of German-born Amsterdam baker Pieter Diercks and Geertruy Philips van Schuyler. By 1650, he had emigrated to New Netherland with his younger brother, David Pieterse. In December 1650, twenty-two-year-old Philip Pieterse was in Rensselaerswyck where he married Margarita Van Slichtenhorst - daughter of the director of the colony. That union admitted a newly arrived carpenter to the upper echelon of New Netherland society. It also produced a large family of twelve American-born children between 1652 and 1672. Eight of those offspring went on to establish the Schuyler family in Albany and beyond. Taking the surname of their mother's family, the Schuylers' success followed the rapid rise of its founder. Settling in Beverwyck, Philip Pieterse was among its earliest householders when lots were first apportioned during the 1650s. Although nominally a carpenter or gunstockmaker, like many of his most successful neighbors, he entered the fur trade. By 1660, he stood with the principal traders of the community. He used those profits to begin a favored family practice of acquiring additional real estate. Those holdings began with the house he built on the corner of today's State and Pearl Streets. It remained a family fixture for most of the next hundred years. By 1672, he also had acquired land along the Hudson north of the Van Rensselaer manor house. That farm became a family summer home known as "the Flats". In addition, Philip Pieterse owned houses and lots in New Amsterdam/New York, several hundred acres east of the Hudson and below Rensselaerswyck, and lots in Wiltwyck and at the Halfmoon as well. His marital connection to the New Netherland leadership set the stage for his appointment to the Beverwyck court. After the English take-over, he was appointed a magistrate of the Albany court - predecessor of the Albany Corporation. Although he retired from the court in 1671, he was considered among Albany's foremost inhabitants for the rest of his life. Sometimes referred to as "Captain Schuyler," he held military commissions under the Duke of York and also was appointed "commissary" at Albany in 1666. He was the first of many Schuylers to represent Albany in meetings with the Iroquois. Born in Holland, Dutch-speaking Philip Pieterse was the first of several generations of independent but reasonable Albany leaders to be favored by the English and British with official appointments, access to land, and contracts. On May 1, 1683, Philipse Pieterse Schuyler filed a joint will with his wife, Margarita. The document noted the ages of their eight living children. He died eight days later and was buried beneath the Albany Dutch Church. His widow continued to live in the family homes on State Street and at the Flats until her death in 1711. Dead before his time, Philip Pieterse did not see sons Pieter and Johannes serve as mayors of Albany. But from his Albany house came dozens of others who made the Schuyler family early Albany's foremost and one of the major families of colonial New York as well. http://www.nysm.nysed.gov/albany/bios/s/phpischuyler.html | Schuyler, Colonel Philip Pieterse (I1205)
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16499 | Philip, d.s.p. in 1795 (Colonial New York - Philip Schuyler - page 197). Summary Transcript of Will Philip A Schuyler of New Barbadoes Neck, Bergen County, New Jersey Dated: August 29, 1795 Mentions: to sister Suan Schuyler, $1000, to brother John?s son John Renselaer Schuyler, 3 ½ acres on Passaic River bounded by lands of Benjamin Sandford and Jacob Mark plus $500, brother John's son Peter Schuyler residue of $500 if John Scuhyler dies, brother John Schuyler residue of real and personal property. Executors: brother John Schuyler, Arent I. Schuyler and nephew Adoniah Schuyler Witnesses: James Brown, John Marley, Pierre E. Fleming. Proved: September 26, 1795 Will 1795, Aug 29. Schuyler, Philip A, of New Barbadoes Neck, Bergen Co.; will of. To sister, Suan Schuyler, (L) 1,000, and all movables I have in her house, excepting a silver bowl. To my brother John's son, John Renselaer Schuyler, the silver bowl. To sister Swan's son, John Schuyler, 3 1/2 acres on Passaic River, bounded by lands of Benjamin Sandford and Jacob Mar, and (L)500, to be put at interest until he is of age; should he die before of age, then the same to go to my brother John's son, Peter Schuyler. Brother, John Schuyler, all residue of real and personal. Executors--brother, John Schuyler, Arent I. Schuyler and nephew, Adoniah Schuyler. Witnesses--James Brown, John Marley, Pierre E. Fleming. Proved 26 Sept 1795. [Original will sent by Nehemia Wade, Surrogate of N.Y. City, to be proved there, no paper on file.] (Record of Wills in New Jersey, 1789-1795, Lib. 32, p 494). | Schuyler, Philip A (I1270)
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16500 | Philo H. Schuyler 1826-1899 Burial: Lyme Cemetery, Huron County, Ohio, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 51932494 | Schuyler, Philo H (I1183)
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