Notes


Matches 4,501 to 4,550 of 7,802

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
4501 Married Wilbert Notting Yost, Pearl M (I16282)
 
4502 Married William G. Webb Simmons, Mary Catherine (I32812)
 
4503 Married William P Straba, May 13, 1978.
Newspapers: Boonville Daily News: Obituary, 16 Jul 1996 issue. 
Gerhardt, Shirley Jane (I6546)
 
4504 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Nowlin, Marilyn Charlene (I10850)
 
4505 Married with children Schloemer, Edward Heinrich (I16068)
 
4506 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Nowlin, Terry LeRoy (I18060)
 
4507 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Robins, Sharon Jean (I20791)
 
4508 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Robins, James Dee (I3644)
 
4509 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Nowlin, Douglas Ray (I927)
 
4510 Married, then divorced and later remarried. Family: Labbo, John / Davis, Annette (F2704)
 
4511 Marriee the widow of Michael McGuire. Michael was a brother to Timothy McGuire. Zeigel, John Henry (I7394)
 
4512 Marshall Lusk served two years in the United States Army Signal Corps during World War I. After his discharge in 1919, he joined his brother, Boyd in the grain commission business in St Louis. He continued to be a grain broker and member of the Board of Trade in St Louis until his retirement in 1960. He was married in St Louis to Georgia Wooldridge, daughter of William J. and Lily Hooper Wooldridge, prominent residents of the Wooldridge community of Cooper County. They had no children. They lived in Florida after his retirement until 1972 when they returned to Boonville. Georgia died in December 1975 and Marshall Lusk died October 13, 1976 at the age of 82. Both were buried in the Pilot Grove Cemetery. Lusk, Marshall Brice (I12385)
 
4513 Martell, Nebraska 797-5535 Peterson, Glorianne (I8447)
 
4514 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Rosburg, Alden Leroy (I3197)
 
4515 Martha Bryan was a daughter of Joseph Bryan and Hester (Hampton) Bryan.

Martha Bryan married Edward Boone. They had six children.

-----
NOTES:
From: Clark County, Kentucky Will Abstracts
Will Book - I
Martha Boone
My sons, George and Joseph.
My daughters, Charity Ellsay, Sarah Hunter, Jane Morgan, and Mary Sholl.
Grandson, Joseph Hunter
Written: 12 May 1793.
Witnesses: William Creyerap and John Stilwell.
Probated: 23 July 1793
**Martha Bryan Boone's death occurred on or after May 12, 1793 and before July 23, 1793.

Reference shared by Dolores J. Rush on August 16, 2017:
From: The Boone Family - A Genealogical History of the Descendants of George and Mary Boone who Came to America in 1717
Compiled by Hazel Atterbury Spraker of Buffalo, New York
The Tuttle Company, Publishers
Rutland, Vermont
1922
Martha Boone
My sons, George and Joseph.
My daughters, Charity Ellege, [other possible spellings of married name, Elledge, Willege], Jane
Morgan, Mary Scholl, Sarah Hunter
Grandson, Joseph Hunter
Executor: John Morgan, Jr.
Witnesses shown as: John Morran, William Craycraft and John Stilwell.

From margaret on May 14, 2016:
Corrected birth date and birth place.
**Previously had November 19, 1740 in Berks County, Pennsylvania.
Corrected death date and death place.
**Previously had October 6, 1780 in Clark County, Kentucky.

From Annette Fullington on December 17, 2018:
Hester Hampton born 1720 in Va. and died 19 Nov 1740 was the first wife of Joseph Bryan Sr. and the Mother of Rebecca Bryan and Martha Bryan who married Daniel and Edward Boone. Not Alice Lynville.

From L. S. Stephens on January 18, 2019:
Suggested birth date: November 19, 1740
**Previously had this date before making the change per margaret's suggestion on May 14, 2016.
Suggested birth place: Exeter Township, Berks, Pennsylvania.
Suggested death date: July 23, 1793.
**This was her probate date.
Suggested death place: Clark County, Kentucky.
**Previously had Clark County before making the change per margaret's suggestion on May 14, 2016.

From janicet on May 1, 2020:
"It has been determined by the DAR genealogists that they cannot verify the mother of any children of Joseph Bryan's born before 1755 (see Joseph Bryan's updated records in the DAR)."
**Quaker Meeting Records-1681-1935 shows Martha Bryan's parents as Joseph and Alee (could be Alic -- maybe Alec).

There seems to be a lot of different opinions about the dates and places for Martha Boone. If someone can provide the correct dates and places, I will be happy to make the changes. For now, I will leave them as they stand.

On this memorial page when it was transferred to me:
LDS reports she is buried at "Boone's Creek" Fayette CO., KY.

If anyone has more/better information, please contact me. 
Bryan, Martha (I31848)
 
4516 Martha Latture Jones is the third wife of William Jones.Their children are: Hester Ann, Jacob Latture, Jerushah Jane and GEORGE WHITFIELD JONES.John Angle Jones is from William's second marriage. Latture, Martha (I31856)
 
4517 Martha Niebuhr on 3/92 says Amanda's birthdate is 18 July 1881, but a newpaper obituary gives it as 19 July 1881. Rosburg, Amanda Elizabeth Susana (I14925)
 
4518 Martha Stella Jones Crussell
BIRTH 3 Jul 1895
DEATH 29 Sep 1981 (aged 86)
BURIAL
New Bethel Cemetery
Piney Flats, Sullivan County, Tennessee, USA
Parents
Photo
Jacob Latture Jones
1860–1919

Photo
Nancy Ann Gross Jones
1862–1945

Spouse
Photo
Edgar Herman Crussell
1893–1964

Siblings
Photo
George E Jones
1883–1936

Photo
Jerusha Hassie Ann Jones Smith
1892–1973

Photo
Lewis Woods Jones
1900–1997 
Jones, Martha Stella (I31765)
 
4519 Martha was married to a Smith but was divorced. Baker, Mary Evans (I31496)
 
4520 Martin M. 'June' Fuser III, 94, of Boonville, Missouri, passed away on Saturday, March 9th, 2013 .
Visitation for June will be held at Davis Funeral Chapel on Tuesday evening from 6:00 until 8:00 o'clock. Friends may call from noon until time of the visitation. Funeral services will be held at Davis Chapel on Wednesday, March 13th at 10:00 A.M. with burial following at Walnut Grove Cemetery with full military honors.
Martin'June' Fuser was born March 1, 1919, the son of Henry E. and Minnie [Meyer] Fuser. June grew up working on a farm, growing crops, raising hogs, cattle and mules. He was educated in a one-room schoolhouse named Westwood School, located across the road from his home. He graduated from Saints Peter and Paul Catholic High School in Boonville in 1938.
June joined the National Guard, Medical Detachment, and proudly served his country. Upon the declaration of World War II on Dec. 8, 1941, his unit was activated. He attained the rank of Sergeant before being released to inactive duty. He then returned home and became a valuable asset in the farming industry.
Over the course of his life June became involved in real estate as a landlord in residential, commercial and farmland. He was a board member of Boonville National Bank for many years. June was an active Lifetime Legionnaire of Post 52 until his health began to decline. Throughout his life and especially in his retirement, he was very passionate about gardening, fishing and traveling. He enjoyed traveling the United States with friends and family, especially with his wife, Jean Bruce Fuser.
June was preceded in death by his first wife, Nettie Taylor Fuser, son Martin Michael Fuser IV; sisters, Henrietta Fuser King Grimmer, Alberta Fuser Patrick Ballard McMahan and Virginia Fuser Davis and brother, Hubert 'Bud' Fuser.
June is survived by his wife, Jean Bruce Fuser, and her children David Bruce [wife Debbie] and Deb Spackler [husband Keith]. He is survived by his grandchildren, Christa Wilmsmeyer [husband Jeff], Steffany Spackler, Tyler Bruce, Kelsey Spackler and John Spackler, and his great-grandchildren, Clayton and Connor Wilmsmeyer. June is also survived by nieces and nephews, Diana Dale Davis Shallenburger [husband Jack], Pam Davis Thomas [husband Stanley], Patti Patrick Beale, Barbara Ballard Wendelton [husband Bo], Bill Fuser [wife Lois], John Henry King [wife Donna] and many great nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers the family request that memorials by directed to Evangelical United Church of Christ, Boonville, Missouri or Saints Peter and Paul Educational Foundation, Boonville, Missouri. 
Fuser, Martin Michael (I7665)
 
4521 Martin Rosenthaler's death date is based up the fact that in 1492 he had returned from his second trip to the Holy Land. In 1511 it was noted that Kaspar Rosenthaler was spending his father's inheritance in 1508 he was not spending his father's inheritance. Rosenthaler, Martin (I26914)
 
4522 Martin Tucker, sheriff of Cooper County, was born in Louisville, Ky., Jan. 23,1864. His parents were Joseph Albert and Mary Magdalena (Huber) Tucker, the former a native of England and the latter a native of Germany. Joseph A. Tucker was born in 1826 and died in 1880. He emigrated from England to America in 1860 and fought in the Union army throughout the Civil War, as sergeant of his company in a Kentucky Union regiment of volunteers. Magdalena (Huber) Tucker was born in 1842 and accompanied her mother to America in 1845. Her father died while serving as a soldier in the German army. She now resides in St Louis. In 1870 the Tuckers left Kentucky and after one year in St Louis, they settled at Tipton. The children born to Joseph A. and Mary Magdalena Tucker are: Mrs. Priscilla Belle Hamilton, a widow, residing with her mother in St Louis; Albert Edward, St Louis, and Martin Tucker of this review.

Martin Tucker learned the trade of painter and decorator in St Louis and first followed his trade at Tipton, Mo., where he resided until Sept. 7, 1884, when he located in Boonville. He was employed by Spahr Brothers of this city for a few months and then engaged in business for himself. Mr. Tucker was appointed to a membership on the city police force in 1899 and served as city policeman for six years and seven months. He was then elected city marshal and served for eight years as marshal and chief of police, from 1906 to 1914. The next step in his official career was his election to the office of sheriff of the county in November of 1916 far a term of four years.

Sheriff Tucker was married on Feb. 12, 1885, to Miss Margaret Kirchner, who was born at Belleville, Ill., April 18, 1864, and is a daughter of John C. and Anna B. (Knoch) Kirchner, natives of Germany who immigrated to America in 1854. In about 1854 the Kirchners settled in Boonville, later moved to Belleville, Ill., in 1862, and returned to Boonville in the spring of 1866. Mr. Kirchner was employed in the coal mines near Boonville and was a farmer and grape grower who conducted a vineyard near Boonville. John C. Kirchner was born Aug. 19, 1833, and died Aug. 8, 1900. His wife, Anna B. Kirchner, was born Jan. 29, 1830, and died Aug. 23, 1907. Two children of theirs are living out of 11 born to them: Lizzie is the wife of John G. Bauer, Boonville, Mo., and Mrs. Martin Tucker.

Eight children have been born to Martin and Margaret Tucker, as follows: Two died in infancy; John, Ramsey, Ill., a member of the Masonic order; Charles liven at St Louis, Mo.; Barbara, at home; Edna Jane, her father's office assistant, member of the Eastern Star; Pauline, a teacher in the public schools near Otterville, Mo.; James, graduate of the Boonville High School, class of 1919. Pauline Tucker was married April 17, 1918, to Carl Anthony Watts, a soldier in the National Army, landed in FRANCE in August, 1918, member of Company F, 313th Engineers, 88th Division.

Sheriff Tucker is a republican, but is a sheriff of all the people, faithful and conscientious and honest to the last degree in the performance of his official duties-one of the best and most capable sheriffs who ever held this high office in Cooper County. He is a member of the Evangelical Church and is fraternally affiliated with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Independent Order of Red Men, the Fraternal Order of Eagles, the Woodmen of the World, the Degree of Pocahontas, and the Woodmen Auxiliary Order. Mrs. Tucker is a member of the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Woodmen of the World and the Degree of Pocahontas. 
Tucker, Martin (I777)
 
4523 Mary (Armes) Alston Alston, Mary (I35812)
 
4524 Mary and Chris hand one son, Oscar. Their marriage was 07 Jul 1895 and Oscar was born Dec 1895 so it was a necessity marriage. So when they were divorced in maybe 1905 Oscar it is possible that Mary took Oscar to Shreveport, Caddo, Louisianna. Oscar does not show up on the 1910 census of Chris. Ballard, Mary McClelland (I32715)
 
4525 Mary and Chris hand one son, Oscar. Their marriage was 07 Jul 1895 and Oscar was born Dec 1895 so it was a necessity marriage. So when they were divorced in maybe 1905 Oscar it is possible that Mary took Oscar to Shreveport, Caddo, Louisianna. Oscar does not show up on the 1910 census of Chris. Simmons, Oscar R (I1959)
 
4526 Mary Ann Smith came to Missouri from Illinois in the company of two brothers. She wed Silas Yarnell in 1868. Possibly the unnamed brothers were pleased to be relieved of the teenaged Mary Ann, as she was married to Silas at a very young age. Silas and Mary Ann's children were; Ida May (b.1869), Sarah Frances (b.1872), Ira (b.1876), Harry (b.1881), and Frank Irvin (b.1884). Frank Irvin's birth is recorded in the Missouri Digital Heritage: Birth and Death Records, and the age of his mother is given as 32, which gives Mary Ann an alternate birth year of 1852. After Silas died in 1891 at the age of 49, of tuberculosis, Mary Ann remarried to John F. Kersey, and moved to Sedalia MO. John Kersey apparently died before Mary Ann, because Mary Ann's MO death certificate gives her marital status as "widow", but I have not been able to find any more information on John. Mary Ann & Silas are buried together and share a stone in the Pilot Grove City Cemetery. Smith, Mary Jane (I5178)
 
4527 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Thoma, Mary Beth (I7206)
 
4528 Mary Cole
From GENi

Mary Cole (Mott)
Also Known As: "Hester Cole"
Birthdate: 1576 (40)
Birthplace: Dengie, Essex, England
Death: Died 1616 in Tillingham, Essex, England

Immediate Family:
Father:
Mark Mott, Gent.
Mother:
Frances Mott
Spouse:
Humphrey Cole
Children:
William Cole
Thomas Cole
Siblings:
John Mott;
Adrian Mott;
Frances Forward;
Grace Camp;
Thomas Mott;
Mark Mott;
Dorothy Talcott;
James Mott;
Dorcas Mott;
Adam Mott;
Alice Mott
Sarah Henley 
Mott, Mary (I24973)
 
4529 Mary Cole (Archdeacon)
From GENi

Mary Beatrice Archdeacon
Also Known As: "Mary Erchdeken"
Birthdate: circa 1476 (88)
Birthplace: Slade, Devon, , England
Death: Died 1564 in Slade, Devon, , England
Place of Burial: England, United Kingdom

Immediate Family:
Father:
Thomas Archdeacon
Mother:
Sarah Beckman
Spouse:
John Cole, of Rill, Esq.
Children:
Margaret Cole of Rill
Thomas Cole, of London

About Mary Cole (Archdeacon)
Mary Archdeacon1
F, #26567, b. circa 1472
Father Thomas Archdeacon b. c 1446
Mary Archdeacon married John Cole, son of William Cole and Elizabeth Weston. Mary Archdeacon was born circa 1472 at England.
Family John Cole b. c 1500
Child
Thomas Cole+ b. c 1516
Citations
[S74] Brent Ruesch's Research Notes.
From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p885.htm#i26567 
Archdeacon, Mary Beatrice (I25240)
 
4530 Mary drowned in the Snake River on July 24, 1909 while on a family trip to Buhl, Idaho. Kouba, Mary (I18436)
 
4531 Mary Iles
From GENi

Mary Iles (Tidmarsh)
Birthdate: circa 1565
Death: (Date and location unknown)

Immediate Family:
Spouse:
Thomas Isles
Children:
Sarah Isles 
Tidmarsh, Mary (I25275)
 
4532 Mary Jane McQuigg, 86, of Columbia passed away on Jan. 14, 2019, at Boone Hospital.

Jane was born on June 18, 1932, in Dexter to Ben Terrell and Loucile (Baker) Terrell. In 1952, she married Richard “Dick” Bloomfield in their hometown of Sikeston. That same year, they moved to Columbia to raise a family of three children. Dick completed his Ph.D. from the University of Missouri and became the Dean of the Graduate School. Jane was a member of Mother Singers, Fortnightly Club and Russell Boulevard Elementary room mothers. After her husband passed in 1972, she married Dr. James McQuigg of Columbia. Jim was a UMC Professor of Meteorology and NOAA meteorologist. Together they traveled the world, sang in the Missouri United Methodist Church choir, delivered Meals on Wheels and started a consulting business. He proceeded her in death in 1985.

Jane loved to attend craft shows, flower gardening, singing and playing piano. She liked to watch MU sports, “Days of Our Lives” and “The Young and the Restless.” She lived in the same home for 51 years, the last 33 years living by herself with her furry kids Fletch, Chika, JJ, CC, Sandy and Dee Dee.

Survivors include two children, Matt Bloomfield (Annette) and Emily Gilmore (Mark) of Columbia; five grandchildren, Zach Bloomfield, Kristina Bloomfield, Erika Bloomfield, Alex Schmitt and Nick Schmitt.

She was preceded in death by her oldest daughter, Cindy Lochhaas, in 2013. 
Terrell, Mary JANE (I22221)
 
4533 MARY JANE MCQUIGGE HAMTILON FATAL ACCIDENT. *
A sad accident occurred near the village of Marmora, on Thursday last, about 4 o'clock. As Mrs.
Thomas Hamilton, accompanied by Mrs. T. Howe and Miss Wells, were driving to the village,
the wheel struck a stone, pitching Mrs. Hamilton over the side of the wagon, and dislocating her
neck. Dr. Payne was at once summoned but could do nothing for the unfortunate woman, as she
expired in a few minutes. She leaves a husband and nine children, for whom much sympathy, is
felt in their sad bereavement.
North Hastings Review Madoc, Aug 16, 1877 Page 5 
McQuigge, Mary Jane (I35038)
 
4534 Mary M. Wennerstrum
Obituary

Mary M. Wennerstrum
Des Moines - Mary was born in Sioux Falls, SD to Donald L. and Margaret (McQuigg) Miller. After moving several times, the Miller's settled in Ankeny where Mary graduated from Ankeny High School.
Mary attended Iowa State for a year, and then DMACC, where she graduated with her Assoc. Arts in Lib Arts, this is also where she met her husband to be, Brook.
Mary took after her Grandma 'Hattie' and was a consummate gardener, constantly planting vegetables and canning produce annually.
Married in 1980, living in the Des Moines area, son Jaimeson was born, shortly thereafter, a move to Boone, IA where Brian was born. Relocating to Des Moines before the boys were grade school age, remaining there in several different houses- always working on them- another 'hobby' picked up from her father- leaving them in better condition than which she found them.
Mary went back to DMACC and received her AA in Hotel/Motel management, with the idea of purchasing a resort. Locating a desirable property in N. Minnesota, which eventually fell through after moving to the locale, setting up house on an acreage. The garden spot was located with plenty of sun, with fantastic soil for root crops and berries, but a very short growing season. Mary also became a Worm Farmer, and Peddler of castings! The stay in MN was rather short, as Mary accepted a position with YFU in Des Moines.
Mary's interests varied widely, from theater and movies to gardening and fishing and politics. Most recently RV camping with a group that came to be known as the 'Tribe'. The outdoors and gardening were her escape and Spiritual place; but all those came behind her love for her grandchildren.
Mary is survived by husband Brook, sons Jaimeson (Maria) granddaughters Nina and Annika; son Brian (Michelle) and Claire and Colton.
Preceding her in death were parents Donald L Miller and Margaret Miller, sister Ellen Kohtz, and brother James D. Miller.
A Celebration of Life will be held on Feb. 19, 2022, at noon at 1400 Penn Ave., Des Moines.
Posted online on February 14, 2022
Published in Des Moines Register 
Miller, Mary Margaret (I23003)
 
4535 Mary married in Vienna. Nothing more is known about this line.
!She married in Vienna. per Antonette Mares 4/9/1938. 
Mares, Mary (I23564)
 
4536 Mary Peterman Kuester marriage info says 15 Mar 1949. Martha Smith was a
widow. She had 6 children with her first marriage. Her first husband
died. 
Family: Smith, Judge Walter / Westfall, Martha Mary (F5768)
 
4537 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Schultz, Arlene Betty (I10064)
 
4538 Mary Ruth Meyer
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Mary Ruth Meyer, 88, of Marshall, died Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2011, at Mar-Saline Manor in Marshall.

Memorial services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011, at Campbell-Lewis Chapel in Marshall, with William W. Harlow officiating. Inurnment will be in Ridge Park Cemetery in Marshall. Memorials may be made to Unlimited Opportunities, Inc. 1620 W. Ashley Rd., Boonville, MO 65233. Friends may sign the online register book at www.campbell-lewis.com.

Born Sept. 12, 1923, in Marshall, she was the daughter of the late Harold S. Piper and Rhoda Parker Piper. She was a graduate of Nelson High School. On April 20, 1946, she married Frank E. Meyer who preceded her in death on March 3, 1989. She returned to Marshall in 1965 moving from Independence.

Survivors include two sons, Jerry Meyer and his wife, Anna, of Arma, Kan., and Danny Meyer and his wife, Nicole, of Blackwater; four grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; two great-great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.

In addition to her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by three brothers. 
Piper, Mary Ruth (I20371)
 
4539 Mary Soule is not daughter of Elizabeth Soule Soule, Mary (I32950)
 
4540 Mary Theresa Nelson, reported born 1 Mar 1869 at Gooch Mill, Saline Township, Cooper, Missouri. She was living with the Sangers i Nelson, Mary Louise (I8184)
 
4541 Mary was married at the time so Stegner might be her married name and this is not right Stegner, Mary (I22973)
 
4542 Mary was the daughter of Robert the III, King of Scotland and Annabella Drummond.[1] As such, she had was styled as Princess Mary of Scotland. She was born about 1380 in Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Scotland.

She was married four times:

George Douglas in 1397, 1st Earl of Angus, As a result of her marriage, Lady Mary Stewart was styled as Countess of Angus after 24 May 1397
Sir James Kennedy the Younger of Denure in 1405. The issue by Sir James Kennedy younger of Dunure, were the ancestors of the Marquesses of Alisa
William Graham of Kincardine. The product of her marriage to this William were the ancestors of the Viscounts Dundee and the Dukes of Montrose
Sir William Edmonstone of Duntreath (or Culloden) in 1425.[2][1]
She was betrothed to Sir William Cunningham, Earl of Carrick, Lord of Glengarnock, Kilmaurs and Glencairn in 1409. It appears they were never married.

She died in Strathblane, possibly in 1458, and is interred in the parish church in Strathblane. [2][1]

MARY (or MARION) STEWART, born in or after 1378. She married (1st) GEORGE DE DOUGLAS. GEORGE DE DOUGLAS, 1st Earl of Angus, was taken captive at the Battle of Homildon Hill 14 Sept. 1402. He remained a prisoner in England, and died there of the plague. His widow, Mary (or Marion), married [2nd] before 27 Jan. 1405/6 JAMES KENNEDY, Knt. SIR JAMES KENNEDY was killed in a quarrel with his illegitimate brother, Gilbert Kennedy, shortly before 8 Nov. 1408. Following his death, his widow, Mary (or Marion), married (3rd) by dispensation dated 7 July 1409 (she and his 1st wife, Margaret de Danielston, being related in the 2nd and 3rd degrees of kindred) (as his 2nd wife) WILLIAM DE CUNNINGHAM, Knt. [see BRUS 10.vii.a.1], of Kilmaurs, Lambroughton, Skelmorlie, Kilbride (in barony of Cunningham) and Polquhairn (in Kyle), Ayrshire, and Ranfurley (in the barony of Renfrew), Lanarkshire, Sheriff of Ayr, 1406, and, in right of his 1st wife, of Danielston and Finlaystown, Renfrewshire, Kilmarnock, Dumbartonshire, and Glencairn, Dumfriesshire, 2nd son but eldest surviving son and heir of William de Cunningham, Knt., of Kilmaurs, Lambroughton, Skelmorlie, Kilbride (in barony of Cunningham), and Polquhairn (in Kyle), etc. SIR WILLIAM DE CUNNINGHAM died before 27 Dec 1415, when he is referred to as "the late Sir William Cunningham Lord of Kilmaurs." His widow, Mary (or Marion), married (4th) before 15 May 1416 (as his 2nd wife) WILLIAM GRAHAM, Knt. WILLIAM, Lord Graham, died in 1424. His widow, Mary (or Marion) married [5th] in 1425 WILLIAM DE EDMONSTONE, Knt., They had one son, William, and one daughter, Elizabeth (wife of Humphrey Cunningham, of Glengarnock). SIR WILLIAM DE EDMONSTONE, died about 1460. His wife, Countess Mary (or Marion), appears to have been living in Feb. 1461/2. At her death, she was buried in Strathblane, Stirlingshire.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Sir James Paul Balfour, The Scots Peerage (Edinburgh: David Douglas, 1904), p. 18, digital images, http://archive.org/stream/scotspeeragefoun01pauluoft#page/18/mode/2up. Internet Archive (http://archive.org: accessed 9 August 2016).
↑ 2.0 2.1 Sir Archibald Edmonstone, Genealogical account of the family of Edmonstone of Duntreath (Edinburgh: privately printed, 1875), p. 29-32, digital images, https://books.google.com/books?id=mSoAAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA29. Google Books (http://books.google.com : accessed 3 July 2015).
See also:

http://www.thepeerage.com/p10533.htm#i105322
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. I page 636
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. I page 653-654

- Marriage to George Douglas possibly 1387 same day

2 - Mary Stewart, second daughter of King Robert III and widow of George Douglas (d. 1403), 1st Earl of Angus, and of Sir James Kennedy, by whom she had James Kennedy (1408-65), Bishop of St Andrews and Lord Chancellor of Scotland (after Graham's death she acquired a fourth husband).
[http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/dtog/graham2.html]

3 - Mary Stewart, married, 1st, to George Douglas, first earl of Angus, in 1397, and bore to him;
1. William ;
2. George, both earls of Angus in succession;
3. Lady Elizabeth, who married, 1st, Sir David Hay of Locharret and 2ndly, Alexander Lord Forbes.
Mary married 2ndly in 1402, to Sir James Kennedy of Dunonure, and had to him,
1. Gilbert, created Lord Kennedy in 1450;
2. James Kennedy, promoted to the see of Dunkeld in 1438, translated to the
bishoprick of St. Andrew's in 1440, one of the privy council to James II. and chancellor of Scotland in 1444. He was one of the regents of the kingdom in the minority of James III. and was the noble founder of St. Salvator's college in St. Andrew's ;
Mary married 3rdly, in 1406, to Sir William Graham of Kincardine, and bore to him,
1. Sir Robert of Strathcarron and Fintry;
2. Patrick, bishop of Brechin, and then of St. Andrew's;
3. William of Garvock and Balgowan;
4. Harry
5. Walter of Wallacetown.
And Mary married 4thly, in 1425, to Sir William Edmonstone of Duntreath, and had issue.
(Drummond-Genealogical memoir of the most noble and ancient house of Drummond 1808 by David Malcolm.pdf)

4 - Mary Stewart (widow of George Douglas, Earl of Angus, among others) had a kinship to her proposed husband Sir William Cunningham of Kilmaurs requiring a dispensation for their marriage (dated at Perpignan, 7 July 1409) for affinity, as Mary was related to William's first wife Margaret Danielstoun in the 2nd and 3rd degrees".
(The Scottish Genealogist Dec 2015 - The Ancestry of Elizabeth Mure, first wife of Robert ll, King of Scots by John P. Ravilious)

https://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getperson.php?personID=I252&tree=CC 
Stewart, Princess Mary (I34747)
 
4543 Mary was widowed twice by Thomas Shinn and Silas Crispin. While married to Silas they lived on a plantation in Pennsylvania which was about 500 acres. After Silas Crispin's death, Mary returned to her former home in Springfield township, New Jersey where she married Richard Ridgway Jr. Her older sister Abigail was Richard's father's 2nd wife. Both Richard Ridgway the father and son married sisters. Stockton, Mary (I26164)
 
4544 Masonic Home of Missouri Petzhold, Anna Celica (I8780)
 
4545 Mathilde was the foster daughter of Rudolph and Marie Wald. She came with them to the United States and commonly went by the name of Tillie Wald. She moved with Rudolph to Hanover, Kansas where she passed away. When Mrs. Gertrude Wald-Robinson died she took care of her child Mrs. Gertrude Emerson of Denver, Colorado. Relatives were Mr. Arthur Robinson of Santa Fe, NM, Mrs. Edith Hiller nee’ Robinson of Manhattan, Kansas, Mrs. Gertrude Emerson nee’ Robinson of Denver, Oliver Wald of Indianapolis, and Edna Wald daughter of Louis. Wald, Mathilde Mueckliech (I24487)
 
4546 Mathilde, daughter of Reinhild and the Saxon Count Dietrich (himself a descendant of the Saxon duke Widukind who fought against Charlemagne) was born in around 892, and was raised by her grandmother Mathilde in Herford Abbey. She had three sisters; Amalrada, Bia, and Fridarun, who married Charles III, king of West Francia; and a brother Beuve II, the Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne. Due to Fridarun’s marriage to count Wichmann the Elder, there was an alliance between the House of Billung and the Ottonian family, which expanded their possessions to the west. In 909, she married Henry, at the time Duke of Saxony and later East-Franconian king, after his first marriage to Hatheburg of Merseburg was cancelled. She gave birth to five mutual children: Otto (912-973), who was crowned the Holy Roman Emperor in 962; Henry (919/22-955), who was appointed Duke of Bavaria in 948; Bruno (925-965), who was elected Archbishop of Cologne in 953 and Duke of Lorraine in 954; Hedwig (d. 965/80), who married the West Frankish duke, Hugh the Great; and Gerberga (d. 968/69), who first married Gilbert, Duke of Lorraine and later the Carolingian King Louis IV of France.

In 929, Mathilde received her dowry, that Henry gave to her in the so-called Hausordnung. It consisted of goods in Quedlinburg, Pöhlde, Nordhausen, Grona (near Göttingen), and Duderstadt. During her time as queen, she took an interest in women’s monasteries and is said to have had an influence on her husbands reign by having a strong sense of justice.

After Henry’s death 936 in Memleben, he was buried in Quedlinburg, where Queen Mathilde founded a convent the same year.[8] She lived there during the following years and took care of the family’s memorialization. Thus Quedlinburg Abbey became the most important center of prayer and commemoration of the dead in the East-Franconian Empire.Like in other convents, daughters of noble families where raised in Quedlinburg, to later become Abesses in order to secure the families influence. One of them was her own granddaughter Matilda, daughter of Otto I and Adelheid of Burgundy, to whom she passed on the conducting of the convent in 966, after 30 years of leadership. The younger Mathilde therefore became the first abbess of the convent in Quedlinburg. With her other goods, Queen Mathilde founded further convents, one of them in 947 in Enger. Her last foundation was the convent of Nordhausen in 961.

Mathilde’s handling of her dowry, which she had received from King Henry I previous to his death, was subject to a dispute between her and Otto I during the years 936-946. Otto made a claim on his mother's possessions, which eventually led to her fleeing into exile. Otto's wife, Queen Eadgyth, is said to have brought about the reconciliation in which Mathilde left her goods and Otto was forgiven for his actions.

The exact circumstances of this feud are still controversial to this day, but in order to protect her goods, Mathilde acquired papal privileges for all monasteries in eastern Saxony in the period before her death in early 968. However, these efforts where ignored when Theophanu, the wife of Otto II, received Mathilde’s dowry after she died.

After a long illness, Queen Mathilde died on 14 March 968, in the convent of Quedlinburg. She was buried in Quedlinburg Abbey, next to her late husband. Throughout her life, Mathilde was dedicated to charity and her spiritual foundations- as expressed several times in her two hagiographies. A commemorative plaque dedicated to her can be found in the Walhalla memorial near Regensburg, Germany. Mathilde is the patron of the St. Mathilde church in Laatzen (Germany), the St. Mathilde church in Quedlinburg (Germany), the Melkite church in Aleppo (Syria) and the Mathilden-Hospital in Herford (Germany). Her feast day is 14 March.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_of_Ringelheim

Mar 14 AD; Catholic - Saint Matilda; Patron Saint of parents of large families & widows; Feast Day 14 March 
von Ringelheim, Saint Mathilde (I32265)
 
4547 Matilda
d/o
b-
m- 1st wife - Bernard IV St Valery
d- by 1175-79 -

may be niece of Simon Beauchamp, of Bedford, Dapifer of King Stephen 
de Valéry, Matilda (I31412)
 
4548 Matilda (Maud) d' Aubigny married Gilbert, 3rd Earl of Strathearn. The couple had several children; Robert (4th Earl of) STRATHEARN, Cecilia of STRATHEARN, and Ethna of STRATHEARN. Matilda was His Majesty George I's 14-Great Grandmother, Lady Diana's 22-G d'Aubigny, Matilda (I34791)
 
4549 Matilda of Flanders (French: Mathilde de Flandre; Dutch: Mathilda van Vlaanderen) (c. 1031 – 2 November 1083) was the wife of William the Conqueror and, as such, Queen of England. She bore William nine or ten children who survived to adulthood, including two kings, William II and Henry I.

As a niece and granddaughter of kings of France, Matilda was of grander birth than William, who was illegitimate, and, according to some suspiciously romantic tales, she initially refused his proposal on this account. Her descent from the Anglo-Saxon royal House of Wessex was also to become a useful card. She was about 20 when they married in 1051/2. William was some three years older, and had been Duke of Normandy since he was about eight.

Matilda was about 35, and had already given birth to most of her children, when William embarked on the Norman conquest of England, sailing in his flagship Mora, which Matilda had given him. She governed the Duchy of Normandy in his absence, joining him in England only after more than a year, and subsequently returning to Normandy, where she spent most of the remainder of her life, while William was mostly in his new kingdom. She was about 51 when she died in Normandy in 1083.

Apart from governing Normandy and supporting her brother's interests in Flanders, Matilda took a close interest in the education of her children, who were unusually well educated for contemporary royalty. The boys were tutored by the Italian Lanfranc, who was made Archbishop of Canterbury in 1070, while the girls learned Latin in Sainte-Trinité Abbey in Caen, founded by William and Matilda as part of the papal dispensation allowing their marriage.

Matilda, or Maud, was the daughter of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders and Adèle of France, herself daughter of Robert II of France.

Like many royal marriages of the period, it breached the rules of consanguinity, then at their most restrictive. A papal dispensation was finally awarded in 1059 by Pope Nicholas II. Lanfranc, at the time prior of Bec Abbey, negotiated the arrangement in Rome and it came only after William and Matilda agreed to found two churches as penance.

Matilda and William had four sons and at least five daughters. The birth order of the boys is clear, but no source gives the relative order of birth of the daughters.

Sons
- Robert, born between 1051–1054, died 10 February 1134. Duke of Normandy, married Sybil of Conversano, daughter of Geoffrey of Conversano.
- Richard, born c. 1054, died around 1075.
- William Rufus, born between 1056 and 1060, died 2 August 1100. King of England, killed in the New Forest.
- Henry, born late 1068, died 1 December 1135. King of England, married Edith of Scotland, daughter of Malcolm III of Scotland. His second wife was Adeliza of Louvain.

Daughters
- Agatha, betrothed to Harold II of England, Alfonso VI of Castile, and possibly Herbert I, Count of Maine, but died unmarried.
- Adeliza (or Adelida, Adelaide), died before 1113, reportedly betrothed to Harold II of England, probably a nun of St Léger at Préaux.
- Cecilia (or Cecily), born c. 1056, died 1127. Abbess of Holy Trinity, Caen.
- Matilda, "daughter of the King", born around 1061, may have died about 1086, (but to Trevor Foulds's suggestion, she may have been identical to Matilda d'Aincourt).
- Constance, died 1090, married Alan IV Fergent, Duke of Brittany.
- Adela, died 1137, married Stephen, Count of Blois. Mother of King Stephen of England.

There is no evidence of any illegitimate children born to William.

William was furious when he discovered she sent large sums of money to their exiled son Robert. She effected a truce between them at Easter 1080.

(See "Stories" under the Memories tag, or visit Wikipedia for additional information.) 
of Flanders, Matilda (I25445)
 
4550 Matilda of France - member of the Carolingian dynasty.

Daughter of King Louis IV of France (920/921–954), ruler of West Francia, and his wife, Gerberga of Saxony (d. about 984), sister of the East Frankish king Otto I. At the time of her birth, Carolingian rule had already weakened: King Louis attempted to stabilize his reign by marrying an East Frankish princess, while he fought with the reluctant dukes of Normandy and with the forces of his Robertian rival Hugh the Great.

When Matilda's brother, 13-year-old Lothair ascended the French throne in 954, Gerberga acted as regent.

In 964 Matilda was married to Conrad, the Welf ruler of the Kingdom of Burgundy, who strongly relied on the support of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, Matilda's maternal uncle and husband of Conrad's sister Adelaide. As her dowry, the young queen brought her husband the city of Vienne, which her brother Lothair had ceded to her.

Matilda was outlived by her husband, she probably died after 981. She is buried in Vienne Cathedral 
de France, Mathilde (I34281)
 

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