Matches 10,801 to 10,850 of 10,865
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| 10801 |
Webster has 17 Oct 1813. | Family: Levi Webster / Louisa F. Coy (F6654)
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| 10802 |
Weintraub, Beatrice Sindell, 4418 Groveland Ave.; beloved wife of Sam; mother of Ronald and Michael; daughter of Mrs. Jennie Sindell; sister of Mrs. Lillian Weiss, Theodore, David and J. Martin Sindell. Funeral services at the Deutsch Funeral Home, 1490 Crawford Rd., Tuesday, May 17, at 3 p. m. | Sindell, Beatrice (I19331)
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| 10803 |
Weintraub, Sam, 4418 Groveland, beloved husband of the late Beatrice, father of Ronald and Michael, son of Rachel, brother of Harry, Hyman, Mrs. Anne Gelman, Mrs. Lillian Weiss, Mrs. Sally Meshman. Funeral services Deutsch Funeral Home, 1490 Crawford Rd., Wednesday, Aug. 3, 3 p. m. In lieu of flowers family suggests contributions to Beatrice Weintraub Fund at Park Synagogue or Heart Fund. | Weintraub, Samuel (I9952)
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| 10804 |
West Simsbury says about 1707 which doesn't fit because of Eleanor. | Holcomb, Experience (I20658)
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| 10805 |
westward of the little or saw-mill river, 200 acres ..., with the orchard, barn and dwelling house in which said Joseph now lives, standing thereon, also 9 acres of meadow which was laid out in Haverhill to said Thomas Davis". | Davis, Thomas (I40174)
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| 10806 |
westward of the little or saw-mill river, 200 acres ..., with the orchard, barn and dwelling house in which said Joseph now lives, standing thereon, also 9 acres of meadow which was laid out in Haverhill to said Thomas Davis". | Dole, Richard Sr. (I7181)
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| 10807 |
What is known, she was his wife when he died. | ________, Ellen (I33721)
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| 10808 |
Wheeler has 10 May 1661. | Noyes, Rachel (I7111)
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| 10809 |
Wheeler has 11 Oct 1707. | Palmer, Nathaniel Stanton (I27953)
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| 10810 |
Wheeler has 12 Mar 1703. | Noyes, Mary (I7086)
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| 10811 |
Wheeler has 14 Mar 1663. | Family: Peter Cheney / Hannah Noyes (F3771)
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| 10812 |
Wheeler has 15 Feb 1669.. | Cobb, Mehitable (I10921)
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| 10813 |
Wheeler has 15 Sep 1674. | Family: Matthew Pettingell / Sarah Noyes (F4330)
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| 10814 |
Wheeler has 1628. | Swan, Robert (I15511)
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| 10815 |
Wheeler has 2 Dec 1594. | Prescott, Roger (I36174)
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| 10816 |
Wheeler has 28 Jan 1630. | Chesebrough, Nathaniel (I10521)
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| 10817 |
Wheeler has 28 Sep 1623. | Chesebrough, Martha (I10518)
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| 10818 |
Wheeler has 8 Dec 1676. | Minor, Hannah (I27919)
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| 10819 |
Wheeler says 1646, dying at age 75. | Prescott, Dr. Jonathan (I19084)
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| 10820 |
when Capt. John "Mad Jack" Oldham was murdered. | War, the Pequot (I45357)
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| 10821 |
When Cranfield dismissed the Assembly and his men tried to impose taxes on the New Hampshire citizens without their consent and approval, the irate people beat off the officers with clubs and boiling water "with true Antimonian spirit". The unfair taxes and the dissolution of the Assembly caused much resentment. | Gove, Capt. Edward (I7555)
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| 10822 |
when four more estates were summarized. | Steele, John (I21410)
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| 10823 |
when four more estates were summarized. | Goodwin, Elder William (I19486)
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| 10824 |
When he joined the church. | Wooster, Edward (I599)
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| 10825 |
When he moved to Landaff he cleared the land of his farm and built a log house, in which he lived several years. It is related that he raised grain and grass, and that it was his custom each winter to take a load to Portland with an ox team, and bring home a year's supply of groceries. A great snow storm detained him on one trip, and several days passed before he could reach home. His wife, a large, robust woman, getting out of fuel, cut down large birches into fire wood. | Noyes, Capt. Nathaniel (I7057)
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| 10826 |
When he signed a bill of credit to his son Richard and the date of his probate. | James, Erasmus Jr. (I41903)
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| 10827 |
when his name appeared in a deed and his widow was baptized at the First Church in Wells. | Sawyer, Daniel (I5643)
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| 10828 |
when she was named in her husband's will. | Bolles, Sarah (I5644)
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| 10829 |
When the British Brig "Mildred" fought the American Privateer "Yankee Hero", a six-pound shot killed Isaac Ingersoll from Newburyport, bound to Boston, Capt. Samuel Ingersoll of Salem, Mass., Master. | Ingersoll, Isaac (I17350)
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| 10830 |
Whenever he got in a fight with Viva, it would be concluded with "I'm goin' back to Job's Island." | Family: Pvt. Harold Mayland Barton / Viva Arlene Wardwell (F2221)
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| 10831 |
Where they were married depends on when he migrated. | Family: Elder Henry Cobb / Patience Hurst (F3606)
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| 10832 |
Which wife was her mother is not known, but she married in 1704, so probably the later. | Mattoon, Grace (I22615)
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| 10833 |
While on a trip, he was taken ill with measles and was put ashore at Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts in the Marine Hospital. Being disgusted with medical attention given him there, he ran away from the hospital while still very ill and came home where he was in bed for months. He contracted T.B. from which he never recovered, being sick for 16 years before he passed away at the age of 64. | Wardwell, Frederick Freeman (I2250)
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| 10834 |
While there, Samuel served as sheriff. | Abbott, Samuel Sheldon (I4808)
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| 10835 |
Whipple Genealogy gives her name as just "Rose Chute". | Barker, Rose (I10839)
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| 10836 |
Whipple has 19 Jun 1680. | Morse, Sarah (I8896)
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| 10837 |
widow. | Bridges, Jane (I31753)
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| 10838 |
Will of Cutting Noyes of Newbury, file date 18 Nov 1734, transcribed from microfilm of Essex County probate copybooks at Massachusetts Archives, Volume 316, pages 534-536 (volume and pages as numbered by the Archives). Probate and bond documents exist but are not included here. Punctuation, spelling, grammar, and capitalization are as they appear on the microfilm. Brackets indicate any illegible portions or editorial comments. Spacing between paragraphs added to increase readability.
***
In the Name of God amen; The sixteenth Day of July 1730, I Cutting Noyes of Newbury in the County of Essex in his majesties Province of Massachusetts Bay in New England being of perfect mind & memory, Thanks be given unto God, Therefore calling unto mind the mortality of my Body [___], do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament; That is to say Principally and first of all, I give and recommend my Soul into the Hands of God that gave it, [___], and my Body I recommend to the Earth to be buried in a decent Christian Burial at the Discretion of my Executors [___], and as touching such worldly Estate wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me in this Life, I give devise and dispose of the same in the following manner and Form.
Impr. I give and bequeath to Elizabeth Noyes my beloved Wife twelve Pounds in money or Bills of Credit and fifteen Ounces out of the Silver I have in my House and all my Stock of living Creatures and all my Household Goods and also I appoint my two Sons John Noyes & Joseph Noyes to keep for their mother, my abovesaid Wife two Cows winter and Summer, and they shall provide for her six Cord of good wood suitable for her and twenty Bushels of Indian Corn and two Bushels of wheat and three Bushels of Rye and six Bushels of Barley and one hundred Pound of good salt Beef, and six Pound of sheeps Wool, and eight Pound of flax [T__] and one third Part of the Apples that shall grow in my Orchard yearly; and I appoint my said two Sons John and Joseph to pay to said mother said Payments yearly the wood to be delivered at the House, and the other Things also, or where she shall order to be delivered, and also I give my said Wife ye Use and improvement of the southerly half of my dwelling House with convenient Cellar room for her and Liberty of using the well for water, and Priviledge of keeping a [___] or [Two?] at the door, and also the Use of a suitable garden spot of Land, and my Will is that my said two Sons shall pay said yearly Payments each of them the one half thereof, and fence said Garden and keep it fenced, all which I give my said Wife in Case she demand no Third or Right of dower in my real Estate, and in Case my said Wife see cause to [marry?] again she shall have none of said yearly Payments so long as she [is?] a married woman, but at all Times when she is a widow she may demand and [___] ye abovesaid Priviledges and Payments, as if she had remained a Widow, and in Case what is above given to my said Wife, be not enough to maintain my said Wife comfortably and Credibly, Then my said Two Sons shall provide for her all [Things?] that she shall want in Sickness and in Health during her Widowhood and at her Decease give her a a decent burial (in Case she be a widow) And further my Will is that what my Wife shall leave at her decease of [what?] is above given her and undisposed of by her, shall be equally divided to and among my [three?] daughters, namely Elizabeth and Bathsheba Pettingall and Mary Moulton, or such as shall legally represent them.
2 To my Son John Noyes [___] his heirs and assigns forever, I give and bequeath the one half [of my?] Land and meadow called my Homestead ye southerly Half
of it, from the High Way down to half way [___] meadow and the One half of ye Remainder of ye Homestead and one half of my two Lotts of pasture land in the lower Commons in Newbury, & the one half of my other Land, lately laid Out to my Common Rights, and one half of ye Lands belonging to my Rights in the undivided Lands in Newbury and one half of my Lott of Land at Indian Hill ye southwesterly half by measure, & I give my Son John my Case of glass bottles after ye Decease of my Wife, and I appoint my Son John to pay to his mother ye one half of ye yearly Payments as above given to her.
3 I give to my Daughter Elizabeth Pettingall thirteen Pound in money or Bills of Credit to be paid by my Son John Noyes & Eleven Pounds to be paid by my Executor.
4 I give to my daughter Bathsheba Pettingall ten Pounds in money or Bills of Credit fourteen Pounds to be paid by my Executor & ye sd. ten Pounds to be paid by my son John Noyes.
5 I give to my daughter Mary Moulton ten Pounds to be paid by my Son John Noyes in money or Bills of Credit and fourteen Pounds to be paid by my Executor.
6 I give to my son Cutting Noyes three Pounds in money or Bills of Credit to be paid by my Executor having paid said Cutting his Portion already.
7 I give to my Grandson Jacob Noyes three Pounds in money or Bills of Credit to be paid by my Executor.
8 I give to my Grandson Samuel Noyes four Pounds in money or Bills of Credit to be paid by my Executor.
9 I give to my Wife my wearing Apparell to dispose as she please, & I give to my Grand Daughter Eliza. Noyes fifteen Pounds to be paid by my Executor in one year after My Decease.
10 I give to my Son Joseph Noyes and to his Heirs and assigns forever the northerly half of my Homestead down to half way the meadow, and half the Remainder of ye Homestead meadow, and my Will is that ye lower half of my Homestead meadow shall be equally divided betwixt my two Sons John & Joseph Noyes in Quantity and Quality, and my Half of the Lane called Rolfs Lane, is to be reckoned as a Part of Josephs half of the Homestead, and also I give my said Son Joseph Noyes his Heirs and assigns forever the one half of my two Lotts of pasture Land in the lower Commons in Newbury, and one half of my Lands lately laid Out, and one half of ye Lands belonging to my Common Rights, and one half of my lott of Land at Indian Hill ye northeasterly half of it, and I give to my Son Joseph Noyes ye Buildings on his half of the Homestead, also my Will is that my Sons John & Joseph Noyes and their Respective Heirs and assigns shall have Liberty of passing & repassing over each others Lands herein given to them for the improving the Lands not in Corn Fields or in mowing Lands, but so as may be most convenient and doing each other as Little damage as may be, and my Son Joseph Noyes shall pay to his mother my now Wife, the one half of ye yearly Payments as above given to her, & the Legacies given in this my Will shall be paid within two years after my Decease, and further I give to my Son Joseph Noyes all my Estate both real and personal which is not disposed of in this my Will, and I do ordain and appoint my Son Joseph Noyes to be the sole Executor of this my last Will and Testament to receive all my Debts and to pay all my Just Debts & Legacies as he is above Ordered to Pay and my funeral Charges & my Executor shall provide a Man & Horse and carry his above named mother to and from meeting & at all Other Times as she shall desire (so long as she is a Widow) to be carried from Place [___] and I give to the first Church in Newbury Twenty Shillings, & I do revoke and disallow all f[ormer?] Wills by me made and ratify and confirm this my last Will and Testament [___] whereof I the abovenamed Cutting Noyes have set to my Hand & Seal ye Day and Year above written.
Signed, sealed, published & declared by the abovesaid
Cutting Noyes to be his last Will & Testament in
Presence of Witnesses
Samuel Moody
Joseph Lunt
Nathanael Coffin
his mark
Cutting Noyes (seal) | Noyes, Deacon Cutting (I7106)
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| 10839 |
William and Elizabeth were both indentured servants. They were charged with fornication after the illegitimate births of their first two children and tried again after the birth of the third. | Family: William Bingley, Sr. / Elizabeth Preston (F3516)
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| 10840 |
William and Thomas were kinsmen. | Dixey, Ensign Thomas (I18543)
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| 10841 |
WILLIAM CHESEBROUGH, the first settler of English lineage in the town of Stonington, Conn. was born in England in the year of our Lord, 1594. The place of his nativity and the names of his parents cannot with certainty be determined. The probabillties are, that he was born in or near Boston, Lincolnshire, where he is known to have had his residence some eleven or twelve years prior to his emigration to America in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and where he and his wife were communicants in St. Botolph's Church. The home of the CHESEBROUGH family was in the eastern counties of England, and the name occurs in the public registries of Wills in the County of Norfolk, which adjoins Lincolnshire. SARAH CHESEBROUGH BROUGH, whose name stands No. 78 on the roll of the First Church of Boston, Massachusetts, was doubtless a passenger with WILLIAM on the ship ARBELLA, and is thought to have been his mother. His wife, ANNA, and three surviving children of the eight that had been born to him,--the youngest, NATHANIEL, an infant in arms,--came with him in the same company.
The "ARBELLA", a ship of three hundred and fifty tons, whereof Captain Peter Milbourne was master, received its name 'in honour of the Lady Arbella,' wife of Isaac Johnson, Esq., one of the prominent personages among the passengers. This ship was one of a fleet of fourteen vessels with eight hundred and forty passengers, comprising the Massachusetts Bay Colony. It set sail from Cowes, Isle of Wight, on Tuesday, March 30, 1630, and was termed 'Admiral' of the fleet, for the reason partly, that it was the staunchest and best furnished of the vessels, and partly perhaps, as Savage in his notes in Winthrop's Journal suggests, that it was owned by and carried 'the principal people' of the Colony, including Johnson, Winthrop, Coddington, Dudley, Bradstreet and Saltonstall with their respective families among others.
Epitaph on the monument in the ancient burying-ground of Stonington, Connecticut known by the name of "Wequetequock" dedicated on the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the settlement of Stonington by WILLIAM CHESEBROUGH, 1649. It is on a hillside at the head of Wequetequock Cove, a few rods from WILLIAM CHESEBROUGH'S first dwelling-house (about two and one-half miles from the Stonington depot). He and his wife, ANNE, were burried there. "WILLIAM CHESEBROUGH. The first white settler of Stonington. Born in England 1594. Migrated to America in John Winthrop's Company which planted Boston in 1630. After spending a few years in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, he with his wife and four sons in 1649 fixed his permanent home in this, then wilderness, and built his dwelling house not far from this monument. He took a leading part in the organization of the town and conduct of its early affairs. He died June 9, 1667. A bold Pioneer, a wise Organizer, a firm Christian." | Chesebrough, William (I9451)
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| 10842 |
William did not arrive with the Winthrop Fleet. | Burnell, William (I12732)
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| 10843 |
William is listed as 38 on the marriage record. | Family: William Lawry Barton, Jr. / Mary G. Abbott (F2147)
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| 10844 |
William Johnson came to America about 1660 and settled in New Haven. He was one of the founders or original proprietors of Wallingford in 1670, and one of the signers of the Compact. In the town records of New Haven he is sometimes mentioned as Wingle Johnson, and is recorded as husbandman and planter. His will is recorded at New Haven. | Johnson, William (I13521)
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| 10845 |
William may have been a brother of Thomas (TAG 70:144). | Lakin, Thomas Sr. (I19340)
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| 10846 |
William Reidhead 1788 deposition:
I William Reidhead of Lawful age Testify and say that during the time that the British Troops resided at Fort George Penobscot I acted as a Cooper & storekeeper to the Commissary of the British Troops the whole time that they stayed at Penobscot, and that I delivered to Mr. Archibald Haney (who was called a British Subject) Rations for himself and Family the whole time that the Troops tarried at Penobscot, and that he was Rationed the same as any of the British troops and Received Rations accordingly. -
Wm Reidhead
Lincoln Ss June 26 1788 Then the above named William Reidhead personally appeared before me and after being carefully examined & duly cautioned to testify the truth the whole truth & nothing but the truth relating to the Cause in which this Deposition is to be used, made Solemn Oath to the truth of the foregoing Deposition by him Subscribed, taken at the request of Archibald Haney to be used in an Action or plea of Trespass to be heard and tried at the Supreme Judicial Court next to be holden at Pownalborough within & for the County of Lincoln on the Second Tuesday next following the fourth Tuesday of this present month June, in which action said Haney is appellant and Thomas Thompson is appellee - The Cause of this Deposition is the Deponants living more than thirty miles from the place of Trial, and the said Thompson living more than twenty miles from the place of this Caption, was not notified, no was he present at the taking hereof.
Before me Joseph Hibbert (?) F--- (?)
Cost witness 1 day - - 0 2 0
Caption- - - - - - - - - - 0 3 0
Sealing & Directing- - - -1 0
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0 6 0 | Reidhead, William (I4524)
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| 10847 |
Williams says after 29 November 1681. | Stevens, Dionis (I7205)
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| 10848 |
Williams says her name was Dionis too. | ________, Katherine (I28775)
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| 10849 |
Willow Avenue 2-97 | Warner, John (I44261)
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| 10850 |
willow avenue, lot 932, grave 1 | Eaton, Wilbur Kimball (I21219)
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