Notes


Matches 4,601 to 4,650 of 7,802

      «Prev «1 ... 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 ... 157» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
4601 Memorabilia of Cooper County has birth date as 27 Aug 1833 Muntzel, Frederick "Fritz" (I11775)
 
4602 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Geiger, Anne Louise (I8829)
 
4603 Memorabilia of Cooper County has date of birth as 19 Jan 1907. Kalb, Wilbur Hurt (I22038)
 
4604 Memorial ID 53954349; Sawyer Hill Burying Ground, Newburyport, Plot ; GPS Coordinates: 42.8199997N, -70.9250031W

Richard, b February 21, 1648, yeoman, currier, and cordwainer of Newbury; m. Hannah Emery November 18, 1673. She d. May 1, 1705, age fifty; he d. April 17, 1724, aged seventy-five.
They had twelve children.
Children of Richard and Hannah Bartlett, born in Newbury:
1. Hannah, b. November 8, 1674; d. June 17, 1676.
2. Capt. Richard, b. October 20, 1676, miller, cordwainer, "gentleman", m. first, Margaret Woodman; m. second, Susanna Eastman, widow, of Salisbury. He d. February 10, 1750, leaving a family of ten children.
3. John, b September 23, 1678, called "weaver"; m. Mary Ordway, November 18, 1701, who died April 6, 1755. His estate administered June, 1741.
They had nine children.
4. Samuel, b. July 8, 1680; d. November 7, 1685.
5. Daniel, b. August 8, 1682, yeoman and weaver, lived in Newbury; m. Abigail before 1705. The had nine children.
6. Deacon Joseph "Esquire," b. November 18, 1865, in Amesbury, was a soldier, captured in the Indian attack on Haverhill in 1708, captive for four years; m. December 6, 1717, first Elizabeth Tewkesbury; m. second, Sarah Hoyt, April 27, 1721. He had eleven children. His daughter Mary married her cousin, Josiah Bartlett, signer of the Declaration of Independence.
7. Hannah, m. John Ordway of Newbury, December 28, 1706.
8. Samuel, b May, 1689, cordwainer, weaver, miller; m. January 2, 1716, Judith Coffin of Newbury. Will proved November 27, 1749. They had six children.
9. Deacon Stephen b. Apr 21, 1691, cordwainer; removed to Amesbury; m. December 18, 1712, Hannah Webster of Salisbury, who d. January 15, 1768; he d. April 10, 1773. Their eighth child was Josiah Bartlett, "physician," signer of the Declaration of Independence.
10. Josiah, weaver, m. April 13, 1725, his cousin Elizabeth Bartlett (John) will proved September 15, 1746. He bequeathed twenty pounds to the Third Church; she bequeathed a sliver tankard. No Children.

Marriage Record Hannah Emery to Richard Bartlett
Female
Hannah Emery
1654–1705 • 9KFY-3X5
Show More
Spouse
Male
Richard Bartlet
Parents
Male
John Emery Jr.
Female
Mary Whipple
Richard Bartlet
Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001
Name: Richard Bartlet
Event Type: Marriage
Event Date: 18 Nov 1673
Event Place: Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States
Gender: Male
Spouse's Name: Hanna Emory
Spouse's Gender: Female

(Source for above?) 
Bartlett, Richard III (I35806)
 
4605 Memorial Service, Body Cremated Stamberger, Henry Franklin (I18943)
 
4606 Memoryland Memorial Park Wilson, Linda Kay (I9192)
 
4607 Mendhausen Family: Eyring, Johann / Spöhn, Anna Sophie (F6483)
 
4608 Menteith was the son of Alexander, Earl of Menteith, and is first on record as a hostage in England, to ensure the good behaviour of his father in 1296. He and his brother Peter Menteith accompanied the English King as esquires on his expedition to Flanders in 1297.

He supported King Robert the Bruce in his initial attempt to seize power following the deposition of John Balliol. Menteith was declared forfeit by Edward I of England, and his lands and title given to John Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings. He was captured at the Battle of Methven, and given to Hastings' disposal. Menteith was committed to Abergavenny Castle; he died a prisoner before 13 March 1308/09, when John de Hastings had licence "to demise to Margery, late the wife of Alan, earl of Menteth, for her life, the manor of Wotton..."[1]

Menteith was succeeded in his Earldom by his son Alan II, Earl of Menteith, who was then a minor.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan,_Earl_of_Menteith 
de Burgh, Allan I (I34769)
 
4609 Mention of William in an article about his brother, Frank Westerman:

Oct 4, 1901. Frank Westerman left last Saturday 29 of September for Kansas City where he secured a position in the Sante Fe offices and will make his home there. His brother, William Westerman and his widowed mother, Mrs. George Westerman, will move there also. Willie has secured employment with Armour Packing Co. 
Westerman, William Adolph (I22675)
 
4610 Mentioned in her mother's will. She did not receive anything as you was provided for in her marriage. Rosburg, Sophie (I3859)
 
4611 Merchant's daughter to Petersburg. Wilm, Marie Friederike (I29719)
 
4612 Merfyn Frych seized control of Gwynedd in 825 on the death of Hywel ap Rhodri Molwynog, though he may have held power in Anglesey since 818. Merfyn was not a member of the traditional dynasty of Gwynedd, the direct male line of Maelgwn Gwynedd, and his succession marked the start of a new dynasty. His claim was apparently based on the fact that his mother, Esyllt, was the daughter of Cynan Dindaethwy ap Rhodri and the niece of Hywel ap Rhodri. According to bardic tradition, Merfyn came "from the land of Manaw", but it is uncertain whether this refers to the Isle of Man ("Ynys Manaw" in Welsh) or to Manaw Gododdin, the area around the Firth of Forth. It would seem likely that it was the latter on account of the probability he would be a blood relative of Cunedda, the founder of the Gwynedd dynasty, who was a prince of Manaw Gododdin. On the other hand there is an inscription "Crux Guriat" on a cross in the Isle of Man. This cross has been dated to the eighth or ninth century and might possibly refer to Merfyn's father.

Merfyn allied himself to the royal house of Powys by marrying Nest, daughter of Cadell ap Brochwel and sister of Cyngen king of Powys. [Actually, according to The History of The Princes, The Lords Marcher, and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog, Nest verch Cadell is Merfyn's mother, not his wife.] He had a reputation as a patron of scholars; for example the Historia Britonum attributed to Nennius is thought to have been written in Gwynedd during his reign, possibly by request of Merfyn himself. A manuscript found at Bamberg gives a further insight into Merfyn's scholarly interests. Irish visitors to his court were given a cryptogram which could only be solved by transposing the letters from Latin into Greek.

Despite Danish raids, Merfyn was able to maintain his position and on his death in 844 to hand the Kingdom over intact to his son Rhodri the Great. He is said to have died in battle, but the circumstances are not recorded. His descendants came to rule not only Gwynedd but also Powys and Deheubarth and played a major role in Welsh politics until the end of Welsh independence in 1283.

Powys was united with Gwynedd when king Merfyn Frych of Gwynedd married princess Nest, the sister of king Cyngen of Powys, [Actually, according to The History of The Princes, The Lords Marcher, and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog, Nest verch Cadell is Merfyn's mother, not his wife.] the last representative of the Gwertherion dynasty. With the death of Cyngen in 855 Rhodri became king of Powys, having inherited Gwynedd the year before. This formed the basis of Gwynedd's continued claims of overlordship over Powys for the next 443 years. 
ap Gwriad, King Merfyn Frych (I33498)
 
4613 Merovech is the semi-legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks (although either Childeric I, his supposed son, or Clovis I, his supposed grandson, also can be considered the founder), which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He is proposed to be one of several barbarian warlords and kings that joined forces with the Roman general Aetius against the Huns under Attila at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains in Gaul.

The family of Childeric and Clovis, the first Frankish large-scale royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him, and this was known to historians in the following centuries, but no more contemporary evidence exists. The most important such written source, Gregory of Tours, recorded that Merovech was said to be descended from Chlodio, a roughly contemporary Frankish warlord who pushed from the Silva Carbonaria in modern central Belgium as far south as the Somme, north of Paris in modern-day France.

The name "Merovech" is related to Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (compare modern Dutch mare "news, rumour"/vermaard "famous" as well as "(ge)vecht," "fight" with" -vech)."

There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours named him only once as the father of Childeric I, but remained vague about his relationship to Chlodio. The "Chronicle of Fredegar" recounts that Merovech was born after Chlodio's wife encountered a sea creature while bathing in the sea; according to Fredegar it remained unclear whether Merovech's father was the creature or Chlodio. Another theory considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.

Clodio is said to have been defeated by Flavius Aëtius at Vicus Helena in Artois in 448. Historian Ian S. Wood therefore would place his son somewhere in the second half of the fifth century.

A contemporary Roman historian, Priscus, writes of having witnessed in Rome a "lad without down on his cheeks as yet and with fair hair so long that it poured down his shoulders, Aetius had made him his adopted son," Priscus writes that the excuse Attila used for waging war on the Franks was the death of their king and the disagreement of his children over the succession, the elder being allied with Attila and the younger with Aetius. As Chlodio died just before Attila's invasion, this seems to suggest that Merovech was in fact Chlodio's son.

The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln in their book "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail," as the seed of a new idea. They hypothesized that this "descended from a fish" legend actually referred to the concept that the Merovingian line had married into the bloodline of Jesus Christ, since the symbol for early Christians also had been a fish. This theory, with no other basis than the authors' hypothesis, was further popularized in 2003 via Dan Brown's bestselling novel, "The Da Vinci Code." However, there was no evidence for this claim that Merovech is descended from Jesus.

The identity and historicity of Merovech is one of the driving mysteries in "The Widow’s Son," second book of Robert Anton Wilson’s "The Historical Illuminatus Chronicles," first introducing the fish legend to the reader by having the early Merovingians appear in a vision as a hideous fish creature resembling H. P. Lovecraft’s Deep Ones, before settling on a variation on "Holy Blood, Holy Grail," which goes a step further by identifying Jesus and Mary Magdalene as the bridegroom and bride in "The Alchemical Marriage of Christian Rosycross" and Merovech as the titular Widow's Son from Masonic lore and positing that the entire bloodline is descended from alien-human hybrids.

-- Wikiwand: Merovech 
of the Salian Franks, King Merovech (I32195)
 
4614 Mersey Trotter, John (I27790)
 
4615 Messages, Volume 3 of History and Antiquities Researching Society of Easterland, Altenburg Proserpina
by Friedrich A. Moerlin 
Mörlin, Friedrich August Christian (I28179)
 
4616 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: McQuigg, Paul / Spainhower, Laura (F3380)
 
4617 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Wedge, Deborah MICHELE (I17235)
 
4618 Middle name at birth was Rolla, but Charles changed it later in life. Johnson, Charles Raul "Charlie" (I23504)
 
4619 Middle name may not be William. Langlotz, Casper William (I1683)
 
4620 Middle name of Warren from the death certificate of Lucinda nee' Roach (Hawkins) Doyle Roach, John Warren (I2716)
 
4621 Middleton Friends Johnson, William (I33358)
 
4622 Migrated from Bolton, Canada to Northampton, Hampshire County, MA in time for the Civil War. He died in the war.

Hello Jim
Not sure what church my Goulds were members of. They certainly were poor. Isaac Gould did not own any property in Newfane VT or in Leverett MA. A probable son Charles C. Gould did own a small farm in Leverett and his "heirs" lived on it at the time Isaac Gould died in 1847.
I did find a few items on Lorenzo.

In Mass Soldiers in the Civil War (not sure if this is the whole title, it's a multi-volume setz0. 52cd Regiment Mass. Volunteer Infantry Company C.
Gould, Lorenzo D. Priv. Res. Northampton, weaver, 33, enl. Oct. 9 1862, must. Oct. 9 1862, killed June 14 1863 at Port Hudson, La.
Right below his name is that of Nathan P. Gould, prov. res. Northampton, printer, 42, enl Sept. 9 1862, Must out Aug. 14 1863.
Nathan Phillips Gould was one of the sons of Isaac Gould and Betsey Phillips.

History of the Fifty-Second Regiment Massachusetts Volunteers by the Chaplain J.F. Moors 1893
Company C.
Lorenzo D. Gould, place of birth Northampton, date of birth '29, Place of enlistment Northampton, Date of enlistment Aug. '62, Private, occupation ___, residence ____, killed in action Port Hudson June 14 '63.
I'm guessing the chaplain estimated the year of his birth from his age. The entry for Nathan P. Gould says he was born in Hatfield and enlisted Aug. '62. He lived in Hatfield previous to moving to Northampton.

Hampshire Gazette June 30 1863 (Northampton MA)
N.P. Gould, a private in Company C was also killed in the same action. He was formerly in the employ of Mr. Amos Sawyer in this town. It is said that his will was found on his person after death being dated just three days previous.
* It was actually Lorenzo who died, not Nathan P. Gould.

The probate file on Lorenzo Gould in Hampshire County Registry of Probate (Northampton MA) contains a document that states:
To the Honorable the Judge of the Probate Court in and for the County of Hampshire;
Respectfully represents Albert C. Morton of Williamsburgh in the County of Hampshire that Lorenzo D. Gould who last dwelt in Northampton in said County of Hampshire, died on the fourteenth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three possessed of goods and estate remaining to be administered, leaving no widow, and as his only heirs-in-law and next of kin, the persons whose names, residence and relationship to the deceased are as follows, viz: - Chauncey Gould of Fennimore in Grant County Wisconsin brother, that said deceased left a will and codicil herewith presented, wherein no one is named executor Wherefore your petitioner pray that that said will may be proved and allowed, and administration with the will annexed be granted him. Dated this twentieth day of Sept. A.D. 1863. Albert C. Morton. The undersigned, being all the heirs-at-law and next of kin, and the only parties interested in the foregoing Petition, request that the prayer thereof be granted, without further notice.
* This is the only document I copied. I can check the probate file for the will and let you know what it says. Might not be able to get to this for a few weeks.

Happy Easter
Jim Carroll 
Gould, Lorenzo Dow (I372)
 
4623 Migrated to Missouri sometime before 1860 from Greene County, Tn and return to Hawkins County sometime after 1870. Cradic, William (I26216)
 
4624 Mike Fuser, 63, of Boonville, passed away at Columbia's University Hospital on Sunday, July 29, 2012.
Funeral services for Mike will be held at Davis Funeral Chapel at 11:00 A.M. on Friday, Aug. 3, 2012, with Rev. Judy Fiocco officiating. Visitation will be one hour prior to the funeral, from 10:00 o'clock until time of service. Burial will follow in Walnut Grove cemetery.
Martin Michael Fuser IV was born in St. Louis, MO July 20th, 1949 , the son of Martin Fuser and Nettie Taylor Fuser. Mike graduated from Wentworth Military Academy in 1967. He had worked at several different jobs around the country until settling in Boonville, where he was self employed in the area until health problems forced his retirement.
Mike was preceded in death by his mother, Nettie, in 1988. He is survived by his father, Martin Fuser III of Boonville, as well as several first cousins.
Memorials are suggested to the Evangelical United Church of Christ in Boonville or to the American Diabetes Association 
Fuser, Martin Michael (I19353)
 
4625 Mile Marker 111 Taylor Highway Fee, Charles David (I1987)
 
4626 Miles the Marshal, and his wife Lesceline, in or after 1059, sold to the Countess Maud (the Conqueror's wife) for her foundation of the Abbey of the Holy Trinity at Caen, whatever they held in the vill of Vaucelles -- now a suburb of Caen -- and in the church and the mill there, for four score pounds. Miles and Leseline gave land at Caen, Vaucelles and Venoix in marriage with their daughter Beatrice to a certain Arfast. Miles sold to Lanfranc, abbot of St. Stephen's, Caen (1066-1070), the land occupied by the channel of the Odon, from the point at which it left the old channel, with both banks, but he died before Lanfranc left Caen for Canterbury in 1070. [Complete Peerage XI:Appendix E:122-3]
____

DE VENOIS.
From Venoix near Caen, Normandy. The barons of Venoix,Verbois or Venois held their fief as hereditary marshals of the stable (master of the horse) of the dukes of Normandy, hence they bore the name of le Marescal or Mareschal of Venois. Milo le Mareschal and Lasceline his wife, were living in 1050, when the duchess Matilda purchased lands at Vancelles from them for Holy Trinity at Caen.
They had issue:
. Ralph le Mareschal and other sons, who came to England at the conquest.
. Robert of Hastings
. Geoffrey the Marshall

Ralph was living in 1086 and had issue:
. Robert,
. Roger le Mareschal, who had lands in Essex,
. Gerald, owner of estates in Sussex, and
. Goisfred, a baron in Hampshire and Wiltshire in 1086 (Domesday). Goisfred was the father of Gilbert ancestor of the Mareschals.

Robert the eldest son, sometimes styled Fitz Ralph, de Hastings, and le Mareschal, was lord of Venoix and the king's sheriff or seneschal at Hastings, where, and at Rye, his descendants long held the revenue in farm from the crown. He had issue William de Hastings who c. 1100 married Juliana, granddaughter and heir of Waleran, a great baron in Essex, living in 1130. With Robert de Venoix his brother, he instituted a suit against his cousin, Gilbert Marescal and his son John, to recover the office of hereditary marshal, which Gilbert or Goisfrid his father had obtained and successfully held, although it could not have been theirs by right of birth. The suit failed, but William in compensation was created dapifer. Hence the celebrated and renowned family of Hastings, who married into the royalty of England and were so famous in history. From this line descended the Hastings, barons of Abergavenny, the marquesses of Hastings, the earls of Pembroke, and earls of Striguil in Ireland, as well as the earls of Huntingdon. This latter great branch of the family still exists in the male line which was ennobled in the person of sir William Hastings, created baron Hastings of Ashby-de-la-Zouch, by king Edward IV, in 1461, under which title he was summoned to parliament. He was one of the most powerful persons in the kingdom and erected at Ashby a magnificent castle, where afterwards Mary queen of Scots was kept in captivity. He possessed tremendous estates, the honours of Pevrel, Belvoir Hagenet, and Huntingdon, the lands of viscount Beaumont, Belvoir castle, with a great part of the possessions of lord Ros, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, which had belonged to the earls of Wiltshire, the castle and rape of Hastings. He was invested with many high offices; was ambassador to France, chamberlain to North Wales, constable of six castles and many more honours, too numerous to mention. Upon the death of king Edward IV, his greatness came to a sudden end, as he was lured to the tower of London by the new protector, Richard, duke of Gloucester, and beheaded forthwith in 1483.

--(Falaise Roll).
http://www.1066.co.nz/Mosaic%20DVD/library/people/venois.htm 
de Venoix, Miles the Marshal (I35756)
 
4627 Milo John Kouba

Milo John Kouba, 76, of Cedaredge, a former Colorado Springs resident, died Sunday at a Montrose hospital. He was employed with civil service at Fort Carson for 27 years before retiring. Mr. Kouba also was a master carpenter.

Visitation will be Wednesday at Taylor Funeral Service, Cedaredge. Services will be at 10 a.m. Thursday at the First Baptist Church, Cedaredge, with the Rev. Jim Kennington officiating. Masonic rites will be conducted by members of Masonic Lodge 136, Eckert. Graveside services will be at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Grand Junction.

Mr. Kouba was born June 24, 1913, in Belle Plain, Iowa, to Frank and Emma (Dousil) Kouba. He lived in Colorado Springs for 44 years and moved to Cedaredge in 1971. Mr. Kouba attended a business college in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He was a member of First United Presbyterian Church, Colorado Springs, for 40 years and was ordained a ruling elder of the church on May 7, 1933. Mr. Kouba joined the Eckert United Presbyterian Church in 1971 and was attending the First Baptist Church, Cedaredge, at the time of his death. He was a 32nd degree Mason and member of El Paso Lodge 13, Eckert Lodge 136 and Rocky Mountain Consistory 2 in Denver.

He was married in 1946 to Leafy Jane Twyma, who died in Jan. 1, 1980. Mr. Kouba also was preceded in death by his former wife, Blanche Theresa (Koranda).

He is survived by a daughter, Carol Lovelady of California; a stepdaughter, Emma Jean Anthony of Rifle; two brothers, Paul of Colorado Springs and Godfrey of Texas; a sister, Martha Simanek of Center Point, Iowa; two grandchildren; and a great-grandchild.

Memorial contributions may be made to Eckert Masonic Lodge 136, in care of the lodge secretary, 285 N.W. Dahlia Ave., Cedaredge 81413. (The Gazette, Colorado Springs, Colorado, Tuesday, November 14, 1989) 
Kouba, Milo John (I15702)
 
4628 Milton Hill (Buddy) Schlotzhauer, Jr., 77, of Pilot Grove, Mo. died quietly Feb. 2, 2009 at Cooper County Memorial Hospital in Boonville, surrounded by family and friends.

Visitation will be Wednesday, Feb. 4, from 6 to 8 p.m. at Meisenheimer Funeral Home in Pilot Grove. Services for Mr. Schlotzhauer will be at 11 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, 2009 at the Pilot Grove Community Church with Rev. Gary Trotnic and Rev. Wayne Colflesh officiating. Burial in the Pilot Grove City Cemetery. 
Schlotzhauer, Charles L (I24707)
 
4629 Milwaukee, Oregon?
Memoirs of Rose Marie (Rosburg) Noye-Kanzler

Born on November 21, 1926 at their farm home near the town of Charter Oak, Iowa, to Henry W. and Dora Theresa (Hanneman) Rosburg. She was the fifth child, after three brothers and one sister - the oldest brother, Fred, was born in 1906, Albert - born in 1909, Loretta- born in 1917, and Henry born in 1922.

The family was torn apart after her father drowned and her mother had a complete mental breakdown when Rose was only two years old. Her Uncle Carl and Aunt Frieda Hanneman took care of her until brother Fred married, and he and his wife (Adelia) took her in to live with them. She was part of their family as they began having their own children - like having her own brothers! Fred and Adelia made sure that she attended Sunday School and went through Confirmation classes at St. John’s Lutheran Church in Dunlap.

This went on until she was 13, when they moved to another farm community, and decided she should stay with some neighbors to continue public education as a freshman at Dunlap High School. This was the start of being adopted by the generous people of that little town of 1,500. The first three years she lived with an almost-blind lady, the home being near the high school. Rose Marie would help her cook, clean and run errands. But going to high school was fun! She participated in all the activities possible - such as girl’s basketball, the glee club singing group, one-act plays, etc.

During the summer she would stay with a farm family, and help with the gardening, cleaning and cooking for the threshing crew - and then back to school again. Her senior year was different. Rose Marie shared a room with another senior girl in another lady’s home near the high school. She took a job at the town newspaper office after school and on Saturdays. It was a job of setting type (hot lead to create columns of print for the newspaper press), among many other duties. In the evenings, she would work at the town theater selling tickets or popcorn. Yet through all this adversity, she completed high school and graduated Salutatorian of her class, with a small scholarship grant to Grand Island, Nebraska, business college.

But the idea of going to a school in Nebraska didn’t interest Rose Marie. She chose to go to California to visit her older sister, who, with husband and family, was living in Santa Monica. This was a sister she hardly knew because her family had been so torn apart during their childhood. They had a nice home just thirteen blocks from the ocean! She found work at the Saks Fifth Avenue store in Beverly Hills, working in the stock room. It was fun to see the celebrities come in and try on clothes in the dressing rooms. Then, for a while, Rose Marie decided to take on work at a nearby factory because it paid more money. In the meantime, her sister and husband were making plans to move to Oregon. They soon sold their house and were gone. Rose Marie stayed a while longer in California, but eventually made the move to Oregon, too.

After settling in Oregon City, she found office work at Globe Union Battery Factory. About that time she met the man she was to marry - Harry Noye. They had three children, a daughter and two sons, who attended schools in Gladstone. They were wed and built their first home around their new family on Berkley Street in Gladstone. Rose Marie diligently nurtured the children, while also helping her husband manage his automobile mechanic and gas station business on McLoughlin Boulevard. She would occasionally boast that, not knowing the ‘standard’ margin for per-gallon gas pricing, unintentionally advertised their prices way below market and started a gas war from Oregon City, all the way into Portland!

In 1957 she decided to take on accounting work at Publishers Paper Company in Oregon City, working in the Timber Department. In 1961, the couple took their family out of the town setting and built their second home on Dagmar Road - somewhat between Gladstone, Clackamas and Milwaukie. This semi-rural setting with forested property on both sides of the road allowed the children to thrive in a healthier and more natural environment.

In 1970, her husband had a fatal heart attack and left the family to go it alone. Rose Marie continued working at Publishers Paper Company and managed to make ends meet, keep the house, provide the children with all their basic needs, and send them on through higher education.

Rose Marie married her second husband, Leslie Mortensen, in 1974. This marriage was short-lived, and they parted company a few years later, in 1978.

Unencumbered by those pesky husbands, in 1979 she hooked up with a good friend, Esther Bush, and took cruise ship tour up the Inland Passage to Alaska, visiting Juneau, Ketchikan, Glacier Bay, and other interesting ports. A few years later, in 1983, she partnered with Leta Menken on a sojourn to Mexico City. There she observed some extreme contrasts - the cathedrals lined with gold, while the extremely poor people on the streets begged for money. And to her end, this inequity bothered her. It was because of this she established a trust with a Lutheran Church evangelical foundation, that now on her passing, the entire fund will be distributed by the church to the needy.

The period between 1985 and 1988 Rose Marie trained and acquired multiple life insurance, health insurance, and securities licenses. She worked during this time for Waddell & Reed Investments, but eventually lost interest, and decided it was time to retire.

Rose Marie sold the large Dagmar family home in 1989 and downsized to a comfortable 2-bedroom house in the Summerplace community in Northeast Portland. About a year later, a neighbor friend mentioned that she was going to join a travel tour group with their sights on Europe - would Rose Marie be interested? Soon thereafter, they were on a plane to Dallas, Texas, then to New York, and overnight to London, accumulating about fifty people in the group along the way. After sightseeing in London, they crossed the channel to the mainland, and toured the continent by bus through France, Germany, Austria, Italy and Switzerland. This was the trip of her lifetime - never to be forgotten.

In 1992 she sold her Summerplace home and moved into a brand-new double-wide manufactured home atop Oregon City in the Country Village community. About that same time, she married Herman Kanzler, a friendly Summerplace community neighbor, and settled in Oregon City. As fate would have it, he suffered a major stroke on the third day of their honeymoon, and was 80% incapacitated for a year or so. Herman’s health failed drastically again after a serious fall, and was bedridden in Mountain View Rehab. & Care Center for years, unable to walk and hardly able to communicate. This period was another testimony to the character and strength that Rose Marie possessed. With very few exceptions, she was at the care facility for hours every single day - many times the entire day, or multiple visits. She would provide him company, tend to feeding - and due to the facility’s understaffed conditions - take care of unmentionable clean-up chores. Most of us would find excuses to provide ourselves with ‘vacation’ periods, and during the times we are there, stay at an arm’s length from the unthinkable clean-up tasks, but not this woman. Without question, it was her Christian duty as a wife to take care of her husband, no matter what the circumstances, and she carried out those tasks for years without falter or complaints, until his passing in June of 2002.

Eventually, the maintenance and landscape labors of home ownership became more than she wanted to deal with, so she sold the place and moved on to Homewoods, an adult community in Jennings Lodge on the Willamette River. Her stay there was brief - from one apartment to a second in that location, then on to a rental house in West Linn. That lasted for about six months, until she decided to move back closer to her friends and church atop Oregon City hill to an apartment complex called Murray Woods.

Throughout this last five years of lifestyle changing, Rose Marie was also experiencing a new facet of her life - the onset of memory loss and cognitive degeneration … dementia. So, in September of 2009, the family and Rose Marie agreed it would be best to move into Avamere at Berry Park (Oregon City), an adult living community. There she found new friends and enjoyed a lifestyle where everything was taken care of for her - meal preparation, apartment cleaning, laundry, entertainment, bus tours, etc. She thrived in this environment until 2013, when she took a tumble, broke her hip and had to have three screws inserted to pull her leg back into shape. Following her surgery, she spent three weeks in rehab, and upon release, was directed by doctor's orders to move into an assisted living center. Fortunately, Avamere at Sandy welcomed her in, and she thoroughly loved that warm environment for three years, scooting around the facility with her 'Hot Wheels' walker, attending Avamere-sponsored social events, mini-concerts, in-house church, and tour-bus outings.

All was well until this year, when her age and the progression of Alzheimer's caught up with her, and Rose Marie succumbed to a couple of infections that resulted in hospital stays. The first time she was strong enough to rebound to her health baseline and return to Avamere. The second time, almost a year later, she couldn't find the strength as before, and was compelled to endure another rehab center stay with a physical therapy regimen to build back her strength. But, at an age just two months shy of 90, her iron-will makeup couldn't push her frail body any more. She no longer had strength and balance for her walker, and basically lived in a wheelchair or bed from this point on.

Once again, those wonderful people at Avamere accepted Rose Marie back into her familiar Sandy, Oregon surrounds, but this time, recognizing that her needs were much greater than before, made a place for her in the extended care wing of the facility. There she was tended to by loving and caring attendants in a beautiful, peaceful, and quiet environment - back at her Avamere home - for her final nine days.

Rose Marie was not in pain or discomfort when she took her last breath at 8:40 a.m., Saturday morning, September 3, 2016.

Provided by her children, Steven H. Noye, Paul Jeffrey Noye and Nancy L. (Noye) Morgan on 9 Sep 2016 
Rosburg, Rose Marie (I15841)
 
4630 Minnie Ida was not a biological child of Malcolm and Jane McQuigg. She was not part of the family for the 1871 census. She could have been a "Home Child", or she could have been an illegitimate or orphaned grandchild. DNA research for her descendants might prove interesting.

In 1891 she was living with Thomas Peter McQuigg’s family and Jane Brown McQuigg. She was was born in 1868

In 1881 she was living with Thomas Peter McQuigg’s family and Malcolm and Jane Brown McQuigg. She was 1868. 
McQuaig, Minnie Ida (I7914)
 
4631 Minnie Louise Bates, 89, of Boonville, Missouri, passed away Saturday, October 22, 2011 at Ashley Manor Care Center in Boonville, Missouri. Visitation will be 5:00 - 7:00 pm Wednesday, October 26, 2011 at William Wood Funeral Home. Funeral service will be 1:00 pm Thursday, October 27, 2011 at the funeral home with Father Bob Duesdieker officiating. Burial will be in Walnut Grove Cemetery. Minnie was born September 16, 1922 in Cooper County, Missouri to Lucinda Cox Bates and Henry Bates. She was a cashier for many years at Greyhound Bus, Holt's Cafe, A&P Grocery and Safeway. Minnie was preceded in death by six brothers and three sisters; August Bates, Oscar Bates, infant Herman Bates, Carl Bates, Bessie Nichols, Ellis Bates, Henry Bates Jr., Catherine Grady and Leona Riemann. She is survived by one sister, Myrtle Cahill of Lincoln, Nebraska and numerous nieces and nephews. Bates, Minnie Louise (I31445)
 
4632 Miscellaneous: Jodocus Morlin and seine Nachkommen (Karina Kulbach-Fricke), Has birth date at 1544 - 1545 and birth location as Coburg, Germany.

The Pfarrerbuch has her husband as Andreas Neuman, deacon to coburg fin 1548. 
Mörlin, Appolonia (I20339)
 
4633 Miscellaneous: Wedding Announcement, Anniversay of Robert Eugene Bader - 19 Oct 1995. Bader, Sheila (I4937)
 
4634 Missouri Pacific Station Back, Antone Daniel (I22188)
 
4635 Missouri River Bauer, John George (I984)
 
4636 Missouri River Bernard, Louis (I8652)
 
4637 Missouri River Schnuck, Norbert Joseph (I7725)
 
4638 Missouri River Fredrich, Betty Christine (I1238)
 
4639 Missouri River Fredrich, Rosa Kay (I11163)
 
4640 Mitchel F. "Tody" Geisler, 78, of Marshall, died Sunday, May 22, 2005, at Fitzgibbon Hospital in Marshall.
Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, May 25, at St. Peter Catholic Church in Marshall. Father Kevin Gormley will officiate. Friends may call until 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 24, at Campbell-Lewis Funeral Home in Marshall. There will be no visitation. Burial will be in Ridge Park Cemetery in Marshall. Memorials are suggested to St. Peter Catholic Church in Marshall or the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

Born April 19, 1927, in Marshall, he was the son of the late Mitchel F. Geisler and Enid Duvall Morris. On Oct. 21, 1950, he married Dorothy Marie Solomon, who survives of the home. He was a 1945 graduate of Marshall High School. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, following which he returned to Marshall and attended classes at Missouri Valley College while working for the Marshall Police Department. He was then selected to serve as Marshall chief of police. He later served as chief of police for Garden City, Kan. He again returned to Marshall and spent 27 years working for Wood & Huston Bank of Marshall. He retired as the bank's senior vice president and continued serving on its Board of Directors. After his retirement, he served as mayor of Marshall from 1991 to 2003. In 2003, he received the Marshall Chamber of Commerce Citizen of the Year award. He had served twice as president of the Western Missouri National Academy Association, was a four-year chairman of the State Land Reclamation Commission, president of Marshall Chamber of Commerce and president of the Missouri Chiefs of Police Association. He was district chairman of the Santa Fe Council, Boy Scouts of America, served on the Lake Ozark Council's Board of Directors and was a member of the Marshall-Saline Development Corporation Board. He was a member of St. Peter Catholic Church in Marshall, where he was a 15-year member of the church board and had served as the first president of the Mercy Academy School Board, where he also coached football for five years. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus.

Additional survivors include one daughter, Julie Geisler of Marshall; one son, Jerald Geisler and wife Shirley of Springfield; two granddaughters, Anna Marie Geisler and Christen Geisler; and several nieces and nephews.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by two sons, John Geisler and James Geisler; and three children in infancy. 
Geisler, Mitchell Finis (I11698)
 
4641 Mixed Marriage Family: Schulte, Horace W / Day, Ottilla Anna (F2527)
 
4642 Monastery Holzschuher, Heinrich (I30299)
 
4643 Monastery of Austrasia, Count Alberic (I32142)
 
4644 Monetary and famous silversmith, he worked for a large number of churches in France and Italy. de Chapteuil, Ursus-Adhémard (I34276)
 
4645 Mór Ní Thuathail (anglicised as Mor O'Toole) (c. 1114–1191) was a Queen-consort of Leinster as the principal first wife of King Diarmait Mac Murchada. Under Brehon Law, Irish men were allowed more than one wife. King Dermot's second wife was Sadhbh Ní Fhaolain.

Mór was the mother of Aoife of Leinster, the wife of Richard de Clare, Earl of Pembroke, known to history as Strongbow.

Mór was born in Castledermot, Kildare, Ireland in about 1114, the daughter of Muirchertach Ua Tuathail, King of the Uí Muirdeaigh, and Cacht Ní Morda.

Her paternal grandparents were Gilla Comgaill Ua Toole and Sadbh Ní Domnail and her maternal grandparents were Loigsig Ua Morda, King of Laois and Gormlaith Ní Caellaide.

One of Mor's four half-brothers was St. Lorcán Ua Tuathail, Archbishop of Dublin, who was canonised in 1225 by Pope Honorius III.

Dermot MacMurrough, King of Leinster, husband of Mor O'Toole
Marriage and issue[edit]
Sometime about 1140 in Loch Garman, County Wexford, Mór was married to King Diarmait Mac Murchada of Leinster as his principal first wife, making her Queen-consort of Leinster. His second wife was Sadhbh Ní Fhaolain. Under Brehon Law, Irish men were permitted more than one wife. In 1152, he abducted Derbforgaill Ní Mhaol Seachlainn, the wife of the King of Breifne, Tighearnán Ua Ruairc (Irish: Tighearnán Ua Ruairc).[1]

Together Dermot and Mór had about three children:

Conchobhar Mac Murchada (died 1167)
Aoife MacMurrough (1145–1188), married 29 August 1170, Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, known to history as Strongbow, by whom she had two children, including Isabel de Clare, 4th Countess of Pembroke, who became the heiress to her father's titles and estates.
Órlaith of Leinster,[1] married Domnall Mór Ua Briain, King of Thomond, by whom she had issue.
In 1167, Mór's son Conchobhar was killed by Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair, High King of Ireland, after having been taken hostage while Diarmait waged war against Ruaidrí with the aim of overthrowing him in order to take his place as the High King.

Queen Mór died in 1191, three years after her eldest daughter, Aoife. Her husband predeceased her on 1 May 1171 in Ferns, shortly after the Cambro-Norman invasion of Ireland led by their son-in-law, Strongbow.

https://www.geni.com/people/Mor-O-Toole/6000000002043192158?through=6000000002043192166

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%B3r_N%C3%AD_Tuathail 
Ní Tuathail, Mór (I33271)
 
4646 More on this family and his father in the Pfarrerbuch of Sachsen-Meiningen. Kühner, Johann Balthasar (I28843)
 
4647 Moriarty assumed Ernneburga was fitzBaldric's daughter because around 1087 some of Hugh FitzBaldric's lands found their way into Stuteville hands. Moriarty appears unaware that they had been confiscated and there is no evidence to support the assumption de Rieux, Blanche (I33784)
 
4648 Mörlin, Joachim
Born Wittenberg 8. (6?) Apr 1514 died Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 21 May 1571, buried in the Cathedral 26 May 1571, father was Jodocus Mörlin, university professor in Wittenberg, University of Marburg 1535, Magister 1538, member of the University of Wittenberg, 10 Aug 1599, ordained as Preacher in the city church, 17 Aug 1539 Luther's chaplain. 1540 Doctor of Theology, 1540-1543 pastor in Arnstadt [Arnstadt, Ilm-Kreis, Thüringen, Germany], Superintendent in Göttingen [Göttingen, Gottingen, Niedersachsen, Germany], 27 Dec 1550 inserted. Also, pastor at the Kneiphöfer church in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 19 Feb 1553 by Duke Albrecht because of all kinds. Overgrazing of land referenced, superintendent in Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany]. Called back by the Duke 3 Feb 1567. Appointed Bishop of Samland, consecrated by Bishop Venediger in the Cathedral Church of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] on the 6th of September 1568, in 1567 set up the "Repititio corporis doctrinae Prutenicum" An avid visitor, an energetic defender of Lutheran doctrine and a faithful adviser to his sovereign. At the free residence and the native deputy had 3,000 marks in salary. Married 1539 Anna Cordussin, born 10 Oct 1518, died Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 3 Nov 1570, buried in the cathedral, daughter of Sebastian Cordus in Erfurt.
Children:
1. Joachim Mörlin, graduated from University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 6 Jul 1563 as Master of Arts. 1591 Fiscal in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia].
2. Maria Mörlin, married Enoch Baumgartner, Ducal clerk in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia].
3. Christian Mörlin.
[Original Page 1209 Starts Here]
4 Hieronymus (Jerome) Mörlin, born in Göttingen [Göttingen, Gottingen, Niedersachsen, Germany] 23 Dec 1545, died Tilsit [Sovetsk, Kaliningrad, Russia] 1602, archpriest.
5. Daniel Mörlin.
6. Anna Mörlin.
7. Jeremias (Jeremiah) Mörlin, born Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany] 12.10.1554, died. 1607, pastor in Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia].
8. Maximilian Mörlin, born Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany] 22 Nov 1558, died Wargen [Kotel'nikovo, Kaliningrad, Russia] 3.9.1603, pastor in Wargen [Kotel'nikovo, Kaliningrad, Russia].

Additions:
Meanwhile Doctor Joachim Mörlin had arrived on 13 Sep at Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia]. He was born in Wittenberg [Wittenberg, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany] where his father, Jodocus Mörlin, was Professor of Metaphysis and afterwards Pastor of Welschhausen, 2 Meillen of Coburg. Joachim first moved to Marpurg and Cosenitz and in his 18th year to Wittenberg, since he heard Lutherum. - and also made him doctor in 1540, and in just the year after Arnstadt called a preacher. The count aber enturlaubee him from 1543 - The year thereafter he was appointed the magistrate of Göttingen [Göttingen, Gottingen, Niedersachsen, Germany] to inspect their churches, he preached the 18th January and took the 10th May to his office. But as he preached in sharp contrast to the interim in 1548, and a guarantor was thereby initiated the imperial mandate. And to break in half and throw you into a nasty place; so sent the Duke. He had learned from the downfall of the sons that he had brought him from the city of Göttingen [Göttingen, Gottingen, Niedersachsen, Germany], and that he had also come to him by some reporters posted on the paths and passages, not Duke Erich Mutter, Princess Elisabeth, by their tutor, Jobst von Hohnstein, and He sent 14 Reuters to Oldendorf in search of him, from where he moved to Schleusingen. Thought Prince Elisabeth recommended him to her daughter and Hertzog Albrecht in Prussia, who voted him to the Superintendent in Holland. So Mörlin came to Königsberg with M. Francise Maartihuesen, past preacher to St. Johannis in Göttingen [Göttingen, Gottingen, Niedersachsen, Germany], and as Hertzog preached to him, he pleased him so much that he kept him in Königsberg and made him preacher of the cathedral church in Kneiphoffe He made the point Peter Hegemon had to dismiss him, and at the little church in the Löbenicht, he had to take on the position of parish priest, as well as improving his salary. 
Baumgartner, Enoch (I30115)
 
4649 Mörlin, Maximilian
Born Braunschweig 22 Nov 1558, died Wargen [Kotel'nikovo, Kaliningrad, Russia] on 3 Sep 1603? Father was Joachim Magister Bishop of Samland, 1590 Pastor in Wargen [Kotel'nikovo, Kaliningrad, Russia], married Ursula N. She married secondly in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] (Alstadt) on the second Sunday before Ash Wednesday 1603 to Johannes Gisingus, formerly schoolmaster, Marburger zu Wehlau [Znamensk, Kaliningrad, Russia]. 
Mörlin, Ursula (I30117)
 
4650 Most sources say her father was john but if you read the inscription from http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=95750965 it states her father was Thomas. I cant figure out which one is correct. Partridge, Mary (I25282)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 ... 157» Next»