Notes


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 #   Notes   Linked to 
16601 Question of endowment date, whether Jun or Nov.

Question of endowment date, whether Jun or Nov. 
Searle, Emma (I1971)
 
16602 QUESTION:I communicated with one of Mae's descendant once about who D.V. Stonehocker might have been. She told me that she had a picture of him and Mae. She also told me that Mae passed away a short time after marrying D.V. I believe that D.V. Stonehocker is actually Dock Vest but I have never entered it into my records since I cannot prove it. Earl Stonehocker, Dock Vest (I117)
 
16603 Quote from his fathers will " To son Joseph ?40 Stirling, ?10 a year, " to begin five years after my decease, to be paid in good merchantable shoes or other pay that will orocure hides towards his setting up a Tannery." Sayre, Joseph (I348)
 
16604 Rafael Bouttier said that the place where Ernestina, Leonardo and his daughter Ernestina and Francisca "Pacheta" Sibrian were all born was called ‘Hacienda de San Rafael’ or also known as 'El Rancho Maniscal' which is east of El Rosario about 1-2 miles. Cibrian Verde, Ernestina (I1976)
 
16605 Rafael Bouttier said that the place where Leonardo and his daughter Ernestina and Francisca "Pacheta" Sibrian were all born was called ‘Hacienda de San Rafael’ or also known as 'El Rancho Maniscal' which is east of El Rosario about 1-2 miles. Aragon, Francisca "Pachita" Sibrian / Cibrian (I1792)
 
16606 Rafael Bouttier, the town historian of Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico said that the place where Leonardo and his daughter Ernestina and Francisca "Pacheta" Sibrian were all born was called ‘Hacienda de San Rafael’ or also known as 'El Rancho Maniscal' which is near Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico. This information was given to J. R. Astorga in 2014 while in Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico.
Birth date (28 Feb 1886) information provided by his daughter Ernestina Sibrian to J. R. Astorga 2014 in Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico.

"México, Sinaloa, Registro Civil, 1861-1929," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CS4S-R9WG-D?cc=2290241&wc=4VSH-B9H%3A1601422375%2C1601382355 : 30 August 2019), Rosario > Nacimientos, matrimonios, defunciones 1889 > image 879 of 1323; Archivo Historico de Sinaloa (Sinaloa Historic Archives), Culiacan. Film 102154427 image 879. 
Cibrian de Guerra, Leonardo (I1974)
 
16607 Rainbow Division In France Little, Elmer Pat (I523)
 
16608 Ralph Robbins is not the son of of William Way Robbins and Mary Barnes, but the son of William Way Robbins and Mary [surname unknown]. There are two different couples named William and Mary Robins in Brighton, Sussex in the 1820s-1840s.

For more information, see the note below his parents' marriage. 
Robbins, Ralph (I418)
 
16609 Ramona Vargas arrived in Mexico about the time of the French civil war (Abt April 1871) according to the aricle found in https://chaikobarraza.wordpress.com/page/2/.

On the death record it indicates the names of her husband Carlos Bouttier Cibrian, who was from Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico, son of Leopoldo Bouttier and Francisca Cibrian. 
Murillo Vargas, Ramona (I3459)
 
16610 Raymond Rex Stonehocker, son of Otto David and Florence Arabell (Gregg) Stonehocker passed away today (Mar 29, 2010) at the Heritage Manor in Girard, Crawford, Kansas. Burial will be in May at Morrisburg Cemetery as his wishes were to be cremated. This is where his parent, two sister, a brother, a brother-in-law, and great nephew and many other family members are buried. Will send obituary when I receive it.
Rex was my uncle.
Marilyn Hart 
Stonehocker, Raymond Rex (I579)
 
16611 Re Bap 6 May 1877? Oler, George (I244)
 
16612 Re--Cora Simmons
Found an old letter (no date-think it was in 1960) in my dad's file (Dice S. Armstrong) from Hannah____.She listed all the birthdates for Cora's older brothers and sisters from the old family Bible but said Cora's birthdate was not in theres they were tired of writing! Hannah stated that Elsie had been in touch with Aunt Cora for the last several years until her death a few months ago. She said Cora's daughter Elsie lives about forty miles from Columbus, Ohio. Her married name is Mrs.Walter Rippel, 225 Cole Road, Galloway, Ohio. JHA 3 Aug 2000. 
Simmons, Cora A. (I1648)
 
16613 Re: James Armstrong 1800 SC information
By Lucy Grisham October 06, 2009 at 02:55:34
Robert and Alice Calhoun Armstrong had these children:
1. John- b 1729- Co. Antrim, Ulster Ireland.Married to Catherine McDonald, b 1727- Mill Creek, New Castle Delaware, d/o Bryan McDonald and Catherine Robinson, d/o James Robinson and Catherine Howell.John died 1805- Wilkes Co. Ga. He is listed in the 1773 ceded lands of Wilkes Co. with wife , 2 sons and 2 daughters- (13 yrs of age down to 4 years)- 150 acres land at spring running into Soap Creek at O’Neal’s Path. 
Armstrong, John (I3787)
 
16614 Rebecca Bird
· 2013-05-20 22:16:10 GMT+0000 (UTC) · 0 Comments
Rebecca Bird

Rebecca Bird was born on 28 October 1838 in the little town of Yardley near Birmingham, England, the second daughter and third child of John Bird and Ann Russon. Eliza her older sister, died when she was a child of about eighteen months, a year before Rebecca was born. Walter the oldest of the family was six years older than Rebecca, and three more children joined the family ? John, Ann Elizabeth, and William Henry.
As a child Rebecca and her family belonged to the Church of England. When very young, she worked for Gillets Pen Manufacturing Company and also for the Raybolt Rule Company.
Rebecca belonged to a family who heard the gospel and responded to the sound of truth. Sometime in 1847 Walter, the oldest son, joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the parents followed a couple of years later. Rebecca was twelve years old when she was baptized by Elder Bailey in the Livery Street Chapel. Walter and a friend Thomas Tew Jr., were the first to emigrate and both of their families eventually followed them. They left England on 1 January 1851 and had many trials along the way. Finally, after eight months of struggle, they arrived in Utah on 30 August 1851 and began preparations in Springville to welcome their families. This took a lot of effort on the part of those two young boys, but they finally had sufficient funds to ask for assistance from the Perpetual Emigration Fund. Thus, on borrowed money (partially), the families were granted permission to sail.
Rebecca, along with her mother, father, sister, and two brothers, ate Christmas dinner aboard the ?Helios? which was anchored at Liverpool, England. When out at sea three days, an accident occurred and the ship was tugged back into the harbor and lay there three weeks for repair. When the passengers were taken aboard again, it was on a far inferior ship, the ?Charles Buck? which sailed on 17 January 1855. The ship carried four hundred and three souls under the direction of Richard Ballantyne.
After eight weeks and three days on the open sea, Rebecca and her family landed at New Orleans, Louisiana, transferred to a river boat and sailed for St Louis, Missouri. After boarding still another boat, they made their way up the Missouri River and landed at Atchison, Missouri to join other immigrants waiting to be out fitted for the trip across the plains. There in a little settlement called ?Mormon Grove? Rebecca?s father died. He had been weakened by working in lead in Birmingham. Also the voyage had taken its toll and his life?s work was completed on 11 May 1855
Richard Ballyntine comforted the family and promised Ann, the mother, that they would be able to make the trip to the valleys of the mountains and that they would not lack for bread. The company left Mormon Grove on 1 July 1855, four hundred and two souls traveling with only forty five wagons. All who possibly could had to walk, often passing many of the graves of those in the S.M. Blair Company just ahead. In one instance they saw the spot where three persons had been buried in one grave. This must have been exceedingly depressing to follow a company afflicted with cholera. However, the Ballantyne company had only three accidental deaths on the way, two were shot and one run over by stampeding oxen. All considered, they managed to evade the buffaloes and the marauding Indians and arrived in Salt Lake on 25 September1855 after a long, and often heart breaking journey. They soon joined Walter and established a home in Springville.
On January 1856 at the age of seventeen, Rebecca married Thomas Tew Jr., a man who had seen many hardships in his twenty two years. The ceremony was performed by Bishop Aaron Johnson and the newlyweds lived in the fort which had been built to protect the settlers from the Indians. This union had the blessing of nine children, most of who lived long upon the land.
About 1865, Rebecca and Thomas took their three children- Eliza, William Thomas, and Lorinda, and moved to Paris, Bear Lake Idaho. The two oldest children drove cows most all the way barefooted, often through prickly pears until their feet were sore and bleeding. Thomas drove one team and Rebecca?s brother Will, drove the other, the trip took almost two weeks, a distance of about two hundred miles or a little more.
When this little party reached the Bear River, The wagons were put on a raft. This was a terrifying experience as it was in the spring of the year and the water was very high. The children were convinced that only the prayers of the parents kept the wagons afloat.
Winters in Bear River were hard, with frost every month of the year and deep snow in the winter. Thomas sometimes had to dig steps for the children to get out of the house and go to school. Grain was so frozen that the bread was black and sticky, but spring brought wild strawberries and other wild fruits.
Rebecca and the children delighted in watching Aunt Polly take her lovely things out of her trunk and tell stories about England and her ocean voyage. Eliza learned to knit and made garters for her mother about a yard long, Rebecca would wrap them around her legs, she knitted stockings, candle-making, dying yarn, hand sewing clothing, etc. which occupied most of the time for the mother and her children. Home-made flannel and linen dresses were worn all year round. Rebecca had a good spinning wheel and her daughter Eliza, became an expert operator. Often she would go to spinning bees and carry the wheel on her hip, spinning four skeins in a day.
At school all sizes and grades were in one room. The school house was built of logs, with slabs for seats, holes were bored through and legs put through them. Books and slates were limited, usually one to a student. Many times bone was burned until it turned white to use for slate pencils. The children did not realize that times were hard, and they were happy.
Thomas made snow shoes and when spring came he made his way over the mountain to Richmond, Cache County, Utah to secure work. Then he returned in the fall with food for the family. After three and one half years of this sort of endeavor Thomas moved his family to Richmond, having added four more children, Julia, Anna Belle, John Henry and Cora. This proved to be a good move, as the family lived on a farm and Thomas worked at his trade, a mason.
Indians were numerous and troublesome, a village of them living about a mile away. Many times quite a band of them would go through town, singing and dancing and expecting people to feed them. If they were ignored the first time, they would make a second trip through the town, some with painted face. On one occasion a little girl, Annie Thurston, was stolen. Her parents and friends hunted for her for years, but never found her.
One day Thomas and Rebecca left the children at home, cautioning them to watch out for Jim, an Indian, one who had brought fear into the hearts of the women in the area. Well, Jim came over the hill and the children locked the doors, pulled the blinds down and huddled quietly together. Jim knocked on the doors and windows, determined to enter the house. Hearing nothing on the inside, he finally went back over the hill. The children breathed again.
In 1872 Thomas and Rebecca moved back to Springville. Rebecca had made a large chicken pie with two chickens in it for the trip. Well, when the family reached the far side of town, someone remembered the pie back in the cellar cooling. Being a bit superstitious, Thomas and Rebecca would not turn back, so the new owners of the home enjoyed the chicken pie. Possibly they thought it a good will gesture.
The first winter back in Springville was spent in the home of Thomas Tew Sr. a family of nine living in one front room. Soon Thomas and Rebecca purchased seven acres of land in exchange for a yoke of oxen and a team of horses. Thomas made the adobes himself for their new home. He tramped the clay with his feet, as there was no machinery available at that time. This was a long and tedious process, as the adobes had to be dried before using. He undoubtedly had help from the children along the way. Although Thomas had only two weeks of schooling in his life, he knew just how many adobes to make to complete a home. He learned the trade when he first move to Utah, and he helped build the old meeting house in Springville which was erected in 1854.
Thomas studied hard and learned to read, write and figure. Rebecca was never able to read or write, having had no education, but she cherished the poems written by her husband, a natural poet.
In 1882-1884 Rebecca consented to allow her husband to serve a mission in England, leaving her with eight unmarried children. Her oldest son William Thomas, supported his father, and married before his return. Two of the poem which Rebecca received from her husband during his absence follows:

I do not promise thee page to wait Holy, free, and unpolluted
Nor maiden to bend the knee Will this land forever remain
I do not promise thee robes of state Let us seek the Holy Spirit
Nor gilded canopy And forever praise His name
I may not lead thee to Lordly dome
Where pride and proud ones be Jesus Christ is my Redeemer
But I?ll share with thee in our future home He for us a ransom paid
What Kind Providence wills it to be. Let me try and praise the giver
For the gift that He has made

Zion is by walls surrounded
Blessed are the Saints of God
If they are faithful to the message
Of the Servants of the Lord

Oh may we all be reunited
With the Saints who dwell above
Ever keep our vows we?ve plighted
With the Lord who doth us love

The last of Rebecca?s children were born in Springville, Melvina and Erma. Her husband passed away on 6 August 1904, she was a widow for almost eighteen years, Rebecca was always cheerful, sunny disposition, always looking on the bright side. She was a good mother, full of faith, true to the gospel to the end. In her later years she lived with her daughter Melvina Smith, at 862 East 6 south in Salt Lake City. Here she died on 10 March 1922 at the age of eighty three years, four months and thirteen days. Six of her nine children were living at the time, along with fifty four grandchildren and one hundred and twelve great-grandchildren.
(Much of this information was taken from accounts written by daughters, Melvina Tew Smith and Eliza Tew Mendenhall)

 
Bird, Rebecca (I114)
 
16615 Rebecca Miner Jensen Bird of Springville, Utah died at a care center in Provo, Utah of a heart condition. She was reared and attended schools in Fairview, Utah. She worked at BYU as a housekeeper and at Grants as a receiving clerk. She was a member of the LDS church and served in the Relief Society and MIA programs.
Survivors include two daughters Evelyn Hamilton, and Reeda Roundy. Two sisters Izetta Black & Floral Rasmussen. She was preceded in death by a daughter Renee Ostlund and husbands Reed Jensen and Ellis Bird.
She lived most of her life in Fairview & Springville, Utah.

Burial:
Fairview City (Upper) Cemetery
Fairview, Sanpete County, Utah, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 41408200 
Miner, Rebecca Elma (I980)
 
16616 Record

Series: 83781
Page Number: 32
Entry Number: 897

Baby

Name: JENNIE
Sex: F
Color: WHITE
Race: AMERICAN
Birth Date: 05/17/1900

Parents

Father: CROOKSTON, DAVID
Mother: CROOKSTON, AMELIA
Residence: HYRUM

Notes

Reported By: EMMA LILJENQUIST
Position: MIDWIFE
Note:

http://archives.state.ut.us/cgi-bin/indexesresults.cgi?RUNWHAT=IDXFILES&KEYPATH=IDX837810001427
 
Crookston, Jennie (I48)
 
16617 Record of Death, Sanford Ward Record of Members, Film #0002771. (age 73)(Widow) Coxwell, Martha Jane (I2807)
 
16618 Record Series: Death Records
Collection: Washington State Death Records
County: Statewide
Da Reference Number: {74A12F66-4655-41AB-A049-F9B23002E854}
Image Number: 00317
Document Number: 10
First Name: Harvey M.
Last Name: Lichty
Date Of Death: 26 May 1936
Age: 82
Gender: Male
Father Name: Jona Lichty
Mother Name: Mary Miller
Batch Id: 518226
Batch Locality: Washington, United States
Death Place: Sunnyside, Yakima, Washington
Mother Name Gn: Mary
Mother Name Surname: Miller
Spouse Name: Ida Belle
Source:
http://www.digitalarchives.wa.gov/Record/View/AF9658A79A9AFC6E93EA3D3AE8857047  
Lichty, Harvey Miller (I12)
 
16619 Record Series: Death Records
Collection: Washington State Death Records
County: Statewide

Da Reference Number: {AC040993-5BF1-4F8C-B04A-A4AF3480ED6C}
Image Number: 723
Document Number: 81
Document Reference Id: 7296

First Name: Howard Anderson
Last Name: Muse

Date Of Death: 31 Mar 1955
Age: 37
Gender: Male

Father Name: Hayward Muse
Mother Name: Sula Smith

Batch Id: 278289

Batch Locality: Washington, United States

Death Place: Tacoma, Pierce, Washington

Mother Name Gn: Sula

Mother Name Surname: Smith

Spouse Name: Patricia J. Muse

Source:
http://www.digitalarchives.wa.gov/Record/View/99171914D9500BCFC146C0A013078296
 
Muse, Howard Anderson (I4)
 
16620 Records (1) & (2) Hagewolt, Jan Jansen (I2084)
 
16621 Records obtained from: Va. H 2, History of Highland County; 1850 & 1860 census of Highland County. Vint, William (I4104)
 
16622 Records of Rev. M.E.Dwight; Gen'l & Personal Memoirs of State Massachusetts.
He was the natural son of Theobald Russell. 
Georges, Theobald (I1852)
 
16623 Records of Springfield,Massachusetts. lists Ruth Haynes dau. of Edmund Haynes. b. 2 mon. 27 day 1646. Haynes, Ruth (I2083)
 
16624 Records of Thomaston and Cushing, Maine in New England Historical and Genealogical Record Bickmore, David (I53)
 
16625 Records, Vol 2, pg 48 Waller, Mary (I124)
 
16626 REES, Patricia b. 4-6-1940 Roosevelt
d. 6-10-1940 dau of Moroni Dee Rees & Virginia Pectol Ree

REES, Patrick b. 4-6-1940 Roosevelt
d. 6-17-1940 son of Moroni Dee Rees & Virginia Pectol Rees

Per http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~utduches/Cemeteries/Upalco/Upalco.html 
Family F182
 
16627 Reformed Dutch Church Records of Pompton Plains, page 7 (copyrighted and can not publish)

Sara Debow, wife of Philip Schyler (assumed joined the church) September 1801. 
DeBow, Sarah (I1296)
 
16628 Regarding Beatriz Fernández and last last part of her name of 'de Hijar'...from the Source: Book 'Guadalajara ganadera: estudio regional novohispano, 1760-1805' By Ramón María Serrera Contreras. She mentions that "This family branch took hold of his descendants adopted the surname of Hijar." Fernández de Hijar, Beatríz (I4880)
 
16629 Registration Place: Frome, South Australia, Australia. Source also indicates birth place "Pinda". Case, Alice Catherine (I52)
 
16630 Regon was the original entry but has now been updated based on source: No Mere Shadows: Faces of Widowhood in Early Colonial Mexico By Shirley Cushing Flint, chapter 4.1 Rengel, Isabel Alvarez (I4888)
 
16631 Relationship to family cannot be proven but M R Mew feels strongly that he is a child of this family. Bull, John (I2079)
 
16632 RELATIONSHIP: 14 gg neph

RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Hugh WALWYN, RIN 1768.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Eustace WALWYN, RIN 1767.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Hugh WALWYN, RIN 1900.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Eustace WALWYN, RIN 1899. 
Walwyn, George (I1427)
 
16633 Religion: Freidedn's Christian Church
Served in revolution: Pvt 8th Class under Capt Wendel Weaver 
Walborn, Christian (I601)
 
16634 Remembering the Siskins

Tim Wharnsby
The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Sep. 18 2009, 12:07 PM EDT
Last updated Monday, Sep. 10 2012, 12:29 PM EDT


This evening, young, old and ancient will gather in Waterloo, Ont., for a reunion weekend to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the local junior B team called the Siskins. It should be quite a gathering, beginning with the Siskins' 2009-10 home opener against the Elmira Sugar Kings at the Hauser Haus.

Even though I moved from Waterloo to Toronto almost 25 years ago, the Siskins remain close to my heart. My Dad, Bill, played a pivotal role - at least that's the way he tells it - as a centre for the Siskins when they partied long into the next day after beating Harry Neale and the Weston Dukes to win the 1953-54 Sutherland Cup for the club's second of a record 11 provincial championships.

When old enough, I looked forward to visiting the old barn, Waterloo Memorial Arena, for a Siskins match on a Friday or Sunday evening more than travelling to Toronto to witness a Leafs game at Maple Leaf Gardens. It was always easier to follow a winner, and the Siskins have won four provincial titles since the Leafs last won the Stanley Cup in 1967.

As a kid growing up, my heroes were not Darryl Sittler or Bobby Orr, but former Siskins Mike Yosurack and Marc Thiel. I see as part of the weekend festivities Doug Thiel is being added to Waterloo's Hockey Wall of Fame along with other worthy local leading men in hockey Kevin Brown, Charlie Brooker, Wayne Clairmont, Jack Egers, Wayne Gowing, Wayne Litzgus and Albert McCormick.

The Siskins won Sutherland Cups in 1939-40, 1953-54, 1955-56, 1959-60, 1961-62, 1963-64, 1983-84, 1984-85, 1987-88, 1990-91 and 1993-94. Many of my friends growing up played on those guts-and-glory teams in the early-to-mid 1980s. Guys like Tim Fedy, Al Kimmel, Chris Lang, Todd Loveday, John McKerrow, Jeff Sittler and - oh yeah, I better mention Terry McCutcheon to avoid another of his witty e-mails.

I'm in debt to these guys for providing some memorable and exciting times and we all should be so lucky to have been mentored by three unsung heroes in Peter Brill, Jerry Harrigan and Rich Ennis - the general manager, coach and trainer/psychotherapist of the Siskins, respectively.

Here's hoping Bruce Springsteen's Glory Days is blaring this weekend and you guys party like in the spring of 1984 and 1985.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/globe-on-hockey/remembering-the-siskins/article790297/ 
Litzgus, Wayne John (I25)
 
16635 Renton, King, Washington Cemetery
Age at Death- 24 years. 
Stonehocker, Clarence (I781)
 
16636 RESEARCH

The Plainfield, Sullivan County, New Hampshire town notes from 1761-1800 do not appear to have Adams mentioned. Births and marriages are recorded throughout the notes.

DO: Index of vital records (loose sheet file), 1765-1937 -- NOTE: Also give some information of births and marriages. Film 2229159

DO: Sullivan County, New Hampshire, Deeds and General Index 1827-1850 Film 16346 & 7

DO: Plainfield Genealogies publication

New Hampshire, County Probate Records, 1660-1973, Sullivan, Probate record index 1827-1874 has a Rowena and Thophilus B. Adams (Image #7) Daniel and Susan Adams (Image #8).

Will of Rowena Adams of Plainfield, Sullivan, New Hampshire, 26 January 1828, a single woman, infirm health. To mother, Sarah Adams, $50. To sister, Lois Adams, personal property. To brothers, W. B. and Aramiah Adams. $400 to American Home Missionary Society. Witnessed by Robert, Fanny and Betsey Kimball.

Reverend Theophilus B. Adams died 1831 in Acworth (33 miles from Plainfield. Born in Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts 18 Feb. 1789 to Benjamin and Judith Adams. He married Jemima Knowlton abt. 1806 and Lydia Bagley in 1819.

Daniel Adams of Charlestown in Sullivan County, probated 18 March 1846, leaving children.

NEHGS - Plainfield, Sullivan County, NH - Records of Eliphalet Adams and Sally Weston married 1787. Sophia born 1788, Rowina 1790, Lois 1793, Sophia 1793, Bela 1794, Almire 1797, Azariah 1798, Erastus 1799, Weston 1805. Olive Adams marries John Glassier in 1797. Joseph Adams born 22 Feb 1790 to Jonathan and Hannah Adams. Loisa Adams married Benjamin F Dow in 1829.


Town Clerk Records vol 2
Eliphalet Adams chosen as "Tithing men" pg 139
Eliphalet Adams and Sally Weston married 29 November 1787 v II pg 57, children on pg 58

John Glassier (Glazier) from Lebanon (11 miles north) married Olive Adams from Plainfield 16 Nov 1797 by Daniel Kimball, Justice of the Peace of Plainfield.


The General Catalogue and History of Kimball Union Academy states Ira Young married Eliza Adams from Hanover, NH 23 August 1833 (pg. 53). This tree on Ancestry http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/13693009/person/18690054018?ssrc= has Eliza Minot Adams born in 1810 and daughter of Ebenezer Adams (possibly the daughter of Professor Ebenezer Adams who retired in 1841). Ebenezer died in 1841. Also see tree http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/12646002/person/13947176578?ssrc= with Eliza as daughter of Ebenezer.

Two sons of Micaiah do not have record of children in the historical record. However:
Simeon Adams in the 1820 census has 1 boy 10-15 yrs old and 2 boys 16-26 yrs old.
Lemuel Adams has a boy between 10-15 yrs old, 1 boy 16-18 yrs old, one 16-26 yrs old and 3 girls.

In 1820 Micah would be 26 years old.

A Lemuel Adams shows up in the 1850 census born in Massachusetts about 1769 living in Haverhill, 44 miles north of Plainville (http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?rank=1&new=1&MSAV=0&msT=1&gss=angs-c&gsfn=lemuel&gsln=adams&msbdy=1764&msrpn__ftp=New+Hampshire%2c+USA&msrpn=32&msrpn_PInfo=5-|0|1652393|0|2|3242|32|0|0|0|0|&uidh=m71&_83004003-n_xcl=f&pcat=35&h=10886278&db=1850usfedcenancestry&indiv=1&ml_rpos=1)

Simeon Adams shows up on the 1850 census still living in Plainville at age 87 living with Dolly Adams (from Connecticut) and Mary Adams (New Hampshire). Simeon's birthplace is Connecticut (http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1850usfedcenancestry&indiv=try&h=11086880).

A Simeon Adams is born in Groton, CT, 17 miles downriver from Groton (http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=CTvitalsBarbour&h=67184&indiv=try&o_vc=Record:OtherRecord&rhSource=8054).

Name: Simeon Adams
Home in 1810 (City, County, State): Plainfield, Cheshire, New Hampshire
Free White Persons - Males - 10 thru 15: 1 (Boy)
Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 25: 2 (2 Boys)
Free White Persons - Males - 45 and over: 1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: 1 (Abbey?)
Free White Persons - Females - 16 thru 25: 1 (Mary?)
Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44: 1
Number of Household Members Under 16: 2
Number of Household Members Over 25: 2
Number of Household Members: 7

Name: Lemuel Adams
Home in 1810 (City, County, State): Plainfield, Cheshire, New Hampshire
Free White Persons - Males - Under 10: 2 (Lemuel and Caleb)
Free White Persons - Males - 16 thru 25: 1 (Boy)
Free White Persons - Males - 26 thru 44 : 1
Free White Persons - Females - Under 10: 2 (Jane and Emily)
Free White Persons - Females - 16 thru 25: 1 (Girl)
Free White Persons - Females - 26 thru 44: 1
Number of Household Members Under 16: 4
Number of Household Members Over 25: 2
Number of Household Members: 8

Martha Miranda b. 14 June 1816
 
Adams, Micah (I1)
 
16637 research by Mary Heilman heilman@msu.edu Lamm, Silas (I673)
 
16638 Research Log:

Fold3.com
GenealogyBank.com
Newspapers.com

The newspaper for New Haven was the New Haven Register (1871-current). A library research request initiated 31 Aug 2017 for obit for Antonio Inorio. Turn-around time is 1-2 weeks.

Saint Lawrence Cemetery, 280 Derby Avenue, West Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut (203) 624-3980 - 21 Aug 2017 telephone call for verification of burial, family plot

Apparently does not file for citizenship according to Name index to declarations filed, 1844-1923, Connecticut. City Court (New Haven) since no record for him exists up to 1923.

-------------------------------------------------------
There are not any Inorios in New Haven from 1890 to 1895 so Antonio is probably not there yet.

1890 New Haven city directory 1377146 Item 2
1891 New Haven city directory 1377147
1892 New Haven city directory 1377147
1893 New Haven directory 1377148
1894 New Haven directory 1377148
1895 New Haven directory 1377149
1896 New Haven directory 1377149
1897 New Haven directory 1377150
1898 New Haven directory 1377150
1899 New Haven directory 1377151
1900 New Haven directory 1377151
1901 New Haven directory 1377152
1902 New Haven directory 1611875
1903 New Haven directory 1611875
1904 New Haven directory 1611876
1905 New Haven directory 1611876
1906 New Haven directory 1611877
1907 New Haven directory 1611877
1908 New Haven directory 1611877
1909 New Haven directory 1611878
1910 New Haven directory 1611878
1911 New Haven directory 1611879
1912 New Haven directory 1611879
1913 (Start - Hoyt, J.) 1611880
1919 New Haven directory (1st Antonio listing)

 
Inorio, Antonio (I31)
 
16639 Research Sources found at www.garfieldfamilies.com Garfield, Edward (I939)
 
16640 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Abraham FOSTER, RIN 1360.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Abraham FOSTER, RIN 1528. 
Foster, Reginold (I1250)
 
16641 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Ada Evelyn TAYLOR, RIN 3555. Taylor, Edith Pearl (I3023)
 
16642 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Ada Evelyn TAYLOR, RIN 3555. Taylor, Manila Favorite (I3026)
 
16643 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert IRWIN, RIN 3063.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert IRWIN, RIN 3109. 
Irwin, William H Jr. (I2615)
 
16644 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert MEW, RIN 2475.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert MEW, RIN 2553. 
Mew, Steven (I2072)
 
16645 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert MEW, RIN 2553. Mew, Chharles (I2083)
 
16646 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert MEW, RIN 2553. Mew, Frederick (I2084)
 
16647 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Albert MEW, RIN 2553. Mew, Henry (I2086)
 
16648 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Alex BENNETT CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2365.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Doran Howard CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2355.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Jordan HARDER CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2354.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Brandon Duhn CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2353.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Devin Taft CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2352.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Quinn CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2351.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Derek CHRISTENSEN, RIN 2350. 
Christensen, Trent Gordon (I1974)
 
16649 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Alice SHORE, RIN 493. Shore, Laura Alice (I2519)
 
16650 RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Alienor WALWYN, RIN 1754.
RESEARCH-FOR-MERGE: This individual might be the same as Alienor WALWYN, RIN 1881. 
Walwyn, Sybil (I1407)
 

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