Notes


Matches 4,201 to 4,250 of 7,802

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4201 Liutfrid (* um 700; † um 743)

war ein fränkischer Adliger und unter der Herrschaft der Merowinger der fünfte bekannte Herzog im Elsass. Er gehörte dem nach seinem Vorgänger benannten elsässischen Herzogsgeschlecht der Etichonen an und war der letzte elsässische Herzog aus diesem Adelshaus

was a Frankish nobleman and under the rule of the Merovingians the fifth known duke in Alsace. He belonged to the Alsatian ducal family named after his predecessor, the Etichonen, and was the last Alsatian duke from this noble house 
von Elsass, Luitfrid I (I33851)
 
4202 Lived 12 hours Newell, Ralph Edward (I17157)
 
4203 Lived 15 minutes. Day, Harold Arthur (I13072)
 
4204 Lived at 4318 Fairmont in Kansas City at the time of his death Wiedenmann, Charles Frederick "Fred" (I14871)
 
4205 Lived at 513 Pendleton Avenue, right down the street from my childhood home. Back, KARL Peter (I19961)
 
4206 Lived for a least a while in Pettis County, Missouri Rennison, John Jr (I8245)
 
4207 Lived for three hours. Esser, Infant (I6867)
 
4208 Lived in Boonville and never married Quint, George (I5969)
 
4209 Lived in Boonville from 1860 to 1875

Served as a private in the 6th Regiment Missouri State Militia (Eppstein), enrolling on 21 Dec 1861. Transferred to Field and Staff as Principal Musician. He served through the changes to the 13th Regiment Missouri State Militia to the 5th Regiment Missouri State Militia Cavalry. He mustered out at Ft. Leavenworth, KS on 14 Jan 1865. Although another record has his discharged at Ft. Leavenworth as Feb 1866. It also notes that he was disabled by deafness at Denver Colorado on Jan 1866. This was from exposure to cold which settled in his head and resulted in deafness, which continued up until the time of his death. It prevented him from manual labor.

The following is from Adolph's medical officer: "I first saw a soldier called Adolph Wald in March 1865 at Rolla, Missouri. He was our Chief Musician, and a good brave one too. He was well and hearty then to all appearances as I could see him performing daily. Each and day, when we were in Camp together and that was almost all the time, we travelled out to the Plains together, But Constant blowing the Instrutment (a horn) and then Severe and Sudden changes of weather. In heat in day time from which there was no retreat, and the Chilling nights, Severe Rains and Sometimes very cool rains and other times being off very warm, Sleeping on the Ground without Tents freuently, commenced to wear on him. And he had what in common Parliance was called a cold, stopping up in the Head, Severe and Constant Headache when I noticed him yet performing his duties as Leader of the Band as well as he could, I gave him tgreatment for it at Junction City (near Ft. Riley) Cold Creek and at Council Grove Kansas, we parted about the 8th day of July 1865. Since which time I have not met him. However I understood from Some of the Soldiers that he was worse after I parted with him. I have no interest in the presentation of his Claim for pension. Either directly or indirectly, nor am I of relations to him Either by blood or marriage."

In the Boonville City Directory of 1869-1870 " Wald, Adolph (Wald & Aehle) 6th Street between Chestnut and Spring Streets; Wald & Aehle (Adolph Wald and Walter Aehle) dry goods, groceries 5th between Spring & Chestnut"

The Boonville Advertiser of June 22, 1906: "Adolph Wald, a former citizen of Boonville, died last Sunday at his home in Cinn, Ohio. He lived here from 1860-1875 and was in the Mercantile Business several years under the firm name of Wald & Aehle"

The following is from http://members.tripod.com/~debmurray/marion/marbioref-29.htm#awald
ADOLPH WALD, of No. 417 North Liberty street, Indianapolis, is a well known andhighly esteemed German-American citizen. He was born near Berlin, Germany, Dec. 14, 1843, son of Emanuel Wald.

Emanuel Wald brought his family to America in 1855, and soon found recognition for his abilities as a teacher and preacher. On coming to this country the family located at Burlington, Wis., but in 1858 removed to Brownsville, Mo. There the influence of the coming strife of the Rebellion was already felt, and, as Mr. Wald favored the Union cause, conditions became so unpleasant that he decided to return to the North. He again took up his residence at Burlington, Wis., where he passed his remaining years, dying at the ripe old age of eighty-five years. Mr. Wald had been twice married, his first wife dying in his German home, and his second in Missouri. He was the father of seventeen children.

Adolph Wald and his brother Herman bore arms for the Union during the Great Rebellion. Herman, who served in a Missouri regiment, died in Burlington, Wis., in 1897. Adolph enlisted August 1, 1861, in Company B, Boonville Battalion, United States Reserve Corps. He was an accomplished musician, having given this art much attention from his childhood, and when he entered the army his services were in great demand, and he was present as a musician in the leading events in and around Boonville and Carthage until the Battalion was disbanded Dec. 18, 1861. Three days later, Mr. Wald and the most of the battalion enlisted in the 1st Missouri Volunteer Infantry. He served with this regiment as principal musician until it was mustered out at St Lou is, Jan. 14, 1865. Mr. Wald, however, did not return to civil life, and on Feb. 20, 1865, he became a member of the 13th Missouri Veteran Cavalry, being appointed its chief trumpeter; with this command he remained until it was mustered out Jan. 11, 1866, months after the closing of the War, as it was long engaged on the southwest frontiers, where it did various duties, until its discharge at Fort Leavenworth, Kans. Mr. Wald served as leader of the regi mental band, and was so commissioned.

In 1876 Mr. Wald and his family became residents of Indianapolis, where he was prominent for many years as a musician and band leader, until deafness, which was the result of catarrh acquired in the army, compelled him to give up active musical labors. He is now engaged in the manufacture of cigars. He is a prominent and popular member of Major Anderson Post, G. A. R., at Indianapolis. Mr. Wald was married at Boonville, Mo., Dec. 27, 1866, to Miss Barbara Herlinger, who came to the United States with her parents when but three years of age. 
Wald, Adolph Gustav (I11290)
 
4210 Lived in Boonville, Missouri
Newspapers: Boonville Daily News: Obituary, Of Rudolph Toennes. 
Toennes, Lena (I14631)
 
4211 Lived in Cooper County at Boonville and Clarks Fork Roads.
Newspapers: Boonville Daily News: Obituary, Of Johann Fredrich Krohn. 
Krohn, Johann Fredrich (I12545)
 
4212 Lived in Dubuque, Iowa.

Robert T. Roedell, 73, died at Finley hospital Friday morning at 3 o'clock. The body has been taken to the home of his son, R. P. Roedell, 264 Hill Street.

Funeral services are to be conducted at the Walton and Schroeder chapels Sunday afternoon at an hour to be announced later. Burial be made in the Linwood Cemetery.

Mr. Roedell was born in Quincy, Illinois October 15, 1852 and has been a resident of Dubuque for the past forty years. He was a painter by trade. He is survived by four sons, F. G., R. C., R. P. and A. T. Roedelll all of Dubuque, and one daughter, Mrs. Alex Duccuni, Dubuque.

Telegraph, Dubuque, Iowa, Aug. 7, 1926. 
Roedell, Robert Theodore (I21160)
 
4213 Lived in England de Plessis, Tor (I34156)
 
4214 Lived in House number 31 in Hofstädten. Walther, Johann (I1821)
 
4215 Lived in House number 31 in Hofstädten. Walther, Peter John (I9664)
 
4216 Lived in houses 48 and 49 in Hofstaedten.
Death of John Peter Schmidt, roughly translated

Johann Peter Schmidt Evangelical Lutheran husband of lumberjack in Hofstaedten.

Died Tuesday 13 April 1886 in the forest around 8:00 O'Clock in the morning when a tree that he was cutting down hurt him in the brain. He died around 1:30 PM. Buried Thursday the 15th of April 1886 at 1o'clock in the afternoon on the God's Way with talk. He was born in Esbach on 14 Mar 1831. He lies behind his wife Anna Gertruad Thoma, 2 sons Peter Wilhelm a farmhand at Furth at the mountain and Carl 2 years old; 2 daughters Augusta a maid here, and Sophie not yet 1 year old. 
Schmidt, Johann Peter (I21296)
 
4217 Lived in Iowa Fall,s Hardin County, Iowa
Maria Nieland and Jula Rosburg were the baptismal sponsors
They were married in the Wm Rosburg home. Info per JF Thoma. Info from Arlene Schulz says he was born in Blairstown, IA, but Mary (Nieland) Rosburg obituary says that she moved Brom Clayton County, Iowa to Blairstown in 1868. Arlene info says he was a farmer in Eldora, Iowa in 1913. 
Rosburg, Carl Henry (I16732)
 
4218 Lived in Monticello, IA prior to dying in Iowa City. Albright, Denise Elizabeth (I9667)
 
4219 Lived in Prague. His trade was being a ladies tailor to the Baroness from Zamberk. She had him come to her castle there. There in Zamberk he married his wife, Miss Serbouksovou (alternate spelling Serfouskerov). His name is most like Jan and may be the son of Joe R. Mares. Mares, Jan (I21813)
 
4220 Lived in Sioux City, Woodbury County, Iowa and Hinton, Plymounth County, Iowa Rosburg, Martin John (I20363)
 
4221 Lived in Sumner, Iowa. Last name could be DANKELBURG or DUNKELBURG or DUNKLEBERG.

Bert C. Dunkelberg, the youngest child of Solomon and Caroline Dunkelberg, was born at Pendleton, Niagara County, New York, on December 24th, 1863, and passed away at his home in Sumner on November 7th, 1927, at the age of 63 years, 8 months and 13 days. When he was fourteen years old the family moved to Iowa and located on a farm in Blackhawk County near Waterloo. Waterloo has since been the family home. The elementary education which started by the boy in New York was continued in Waterloo and he graduated from the East Waterloo High School. He also attended the Prairie Home Seminary, a private school in Waterloo, and later attended the State University of Iowa, at Iowa City, where he graduated from the medical college in 1889.

He was married Dec. 31, 1891 to Alice E. Perrott who survives him. Dr. Dunkelberg practiced first at Schaller, Iowa where he lived for about ten years. Falling this he came to Tipoli in Bremer county and after 9 years there, came to Sumner which has been his home for the past 19 years. as a young man at Schaller, Dr. Dunkelberg joined the Methodist Church and a few years ago transferred his membership to the Sumner church. He also was made a Mason in Schaller, on July 12, 1890, later transferring his membership to Lookout Lodge in Sumner, of which he has been a faithful and interested member.

His last illness has been over a period of Several years. About five years ago, he was confined to his home throught the entire winter, where many an anxious vigil was kept at his bedside when it seemed that he could not live through the night. But his strong constitution to live brought him through the crisis and while he was in a semi-invalid condition he was again able to spend a portion of each day at his office and for three years has seldom missed an afternoon in winter or in summer. From his own knowledge he realized the seriousness of his own condition, but he was unafraid nor did he complain at the affliction which had befallen him. His end came as he had hoped it would, suddenly, when he was preparing to spend an afternoon at his office with his beloved books and in the familiar scenes which he had know for over a quarter of a century. He died, as he had lived, in the harness. In addition to the wife, he is survived by on son, Elmer and wife of Omaha, Neb., a daughter Helen of Des Moines, a brother Dr. E.E. Dunkelberg, of Wolf Creek Wis., two grandchildren and many other relatives. To those who knew him best Dr. Dunkelberg was an unuseual character. His early training, his education, and his own mental disicinline produced in him qualities which were not common to the average man. A school teacher in his younger days and always interested in the intellectual life of the community he was familiar with those essentials which are necessary to a well-rounded useful life. Mental vigor made him an adept in the community debates which characterized the social life of the early nineties, and many a spelling bee found him among the last ones on the floor. Dr. Dunkelberg attacked the problems of this profession with the same vigor which characterized his other activities. Here again his studious nature asserted itself, and the idle moments in his office were spent in research which was invaluable in the conduct of his practice. the country doctor of the last decade sis not have an easy life, but it was one which was productive of genuine sympathy and sturdy character. Dr. Dunkelberg took great pride in his home. through his kindly counsel he directed the foot-steps of his children in the paths of useful- service, and the interest has never lagged in the years which followed their subsequent engagement in the affairs of life. And in the later years the grandchildren came as a source of comfort and hope through the trying months of illness and despair.

To those who were his friends, Dr. Dunkelberg was a friend indeed. For them he held a genuine concern, and even though a kindly heart was oft times hidden by a gruff exterior, he could be depended on for helpful counsel. and invaluable assistance when its need was greatest. Those finer instincts of the soul there in man makes his peace with God were not lacking in his character. His faith was of the substantial kind which grows out of ordered reasoning and intelligent understanding, and he passed into the Valley of the Shadow not with the belief, but with the knowledge, that it was not the end. Dr. Dunkelberg sleeps but he is not dead. the influence of his life will manifest itself through the years to come. And he is deserving of the highest tribute that can be paid to any mortal man. The world in which he lived, his home and his community , has been made better by his life. The Sumner Gazette, Thursday, November 10, 1927. 
Dunkelberg, Bert Clay (I6163)
 
4222 Lived in Venango County, Pennsylvania Simmons, Nancy E (I16993)
 
4223 Lived in Vienna
Married a shoemaker and lives in Vienna per Antonette Mares 4/9/1938. 
Mares, Marie (I21614)
 
4224 Lived in Vienna.
!He was a shoemaker in Vienna per Antonette Mares 4/9/1938. 
Jaksa, Josef (I4478)
 
4225 Lived next to Phoebe and his parents. Bearce, David (I32742)
 
4226 Lived on Locust Street in Boonville.

Herman died from a heart attack attending the funeral of Annie Mamie nee' Behrens Stegner (who died 03 Aug 1956). It was a hot and humid day and he suffered the heart attack at St John's Cemetery. 
Schwitzky, Herman Henry (I4091)
 
4227 Lived only six months.

These records are listed in Esterville, Iowa. 
Rosburg, Ardith Esther (I19226)
 
4228 Lived outside of Lincoln, Missouri for most of their married lives Simmons, Henry Thomas (I6685)
 
4229 Lived since 1920 in Siskiyou, California. Remarried to Peter Klink. Daugherty, Mary (I33322)
 
4230 Lived Smith Creek, near Newmarket, Virginia Zirkle, Lewis H "Ludwig" (I11222)
 
4231 Lived to be 85. Hassenforder, Jonas (I32517)
 
4232 Lived west of Boonville near the Ernest Walther place. They sold the farm in 1881 to Marcus Thauer and moved to Chariton County, Missouri. Engel, John George (I6430)
 
4233 Lived with his grandparents, Andrew McClellan (Clell) and Dollie York Decker until Dollie's death in 1919. Herschel is shown on the 1920 census with his grandfather and Estil Price Decker. He was returned to the orphanage at age 12 and is shown as a 15 year old boarder in the home of A. J. Beucke and Gertie in Sedalia in 1930. Decker, Herschel Monroe (I23591)
 
4234 Lived with sister, Martha. Selwold, Maybelle Lillian (I4342)
 
4235 Lived with son Jeremiah in 1850 Pierce, Hannah (I4929)
 
4236 Lives in Cornwallis, OR. Beachboard, Nicole (I22832)
 
4237 Lives in Denver, Colorado - retired as of 2002 Schler, Rosamond "Rosie" (I4387)
 
4238 Lives in Fulton, Missouri Hanna, Charles Robert (I13660)
 
4239 Lives in Kansas Rowley, N.N. (I10935)
 
4240 Lives in Kansas City, Missouri Van Steenburgh, Dixie Grace (I17943)
 
4241 Lives in Neosho, Missouri Sophia, Mrs Betty (I18302)
 
4242 Lives in Sedalia, Missouri Stone, Margaret Ardella (I132)
 
4243 Lives in Sedalia, Missouri Lawson, Ace Lester (I8205)
 
4244 Lives in Sedalia, Missouri Hanna, William (I20872)
 
4245 Lives in Sedalia, MissouriMary V. Elvers age 64 of Sedalia died on Thursday January 5, 2012 at Bothwell Regional Health Center.
She was born on April 10, 1947 in Marshall Junction, Missouri daughter of Ace and Anna Stone Lawson... From the Sedalia Democrat online. 
Lawson, Mary (I22611)
 
4246 Livesi LaMonte, Missouri Lawson, Jim (I15408)
 
4247 Livia Drusilla, also known as Julia Augusta after her formal adoption into the Julian family in AD 14, was the wife of the Roman emperor Augustus throughout his reign, as well as his adviser. She was the mother of the emperor Tiberius, paternal grandmother of the emperor Claudius, paternal great-grandmother of the emperor Caligula, and maternal great-great-grandmother of the emperor Nero. She was deified by Claudius who acknowledged her title of "Augusta."

-- Wikiwand: Livia 
Livia Julia Drusilla (I34099)
 
4248 Living at 126 Royal Avenue, Miami, Florida in 1950s. Quint, Katherine Lorayne (I7290)
 
4249 Living at Buch am Forst, Bavaria in 1828. Today Stettin, Pomerania, Germany is Szczecin, Poland. Kalbarczyk, Andreas (I20113)
 
4250 Living Center Hanlin, Velma Elizabeth (I1603)
 

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