Matches 1,051 to 1,100 of 1,584
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
1051 |
Not much is known of him. | -, Domangart Réti King of Dál Riata (I3041)
|
1052 |
Nothing is known of Guadalupe's origins or what her maiden name was. I believe her husband died after having only one surviving child. She and Juanita were then taken in by John Dold who I think was Juanita's god father. | Trujillo, Guadalupe (I3549)
|
1053 |
now Wroclaw, Poland | Silver, Herman (I3327)
|
1054 |
Obediah was her second husband. Nothing is known of her first husband. | Family F707
|
1055 |
Obituary
Galbreath, Mitchell W.
(1943-2016)
On the morning of Sept 25th. At home surrounded by his loving family. He was a longtime resident of Pomona Country Club and a graduate of Spring Valley H.S. Mitch worked at Perruna's Restaurant Spring Valley and after moving to San Francisco(1972)continued a career in the tavern business until his retirement in 2010. Mitch was predeceased by both parents and a older brother Timothy. He is survived by his loving wife of 35 years Tina and two sons Tim of San Francisco and Dan of San Anselmo.
A celebration of his life will be held on Tuesday, Oct.11th at 11AM, ST. Anslem Church, Ross CA. Donations can be made to the Brain Support Network online at brainsupportnetwork.org
Published in the The Journal News on Oct. 11, 2016 | Galbreath, Mitchell W. (I3414)
|
1056 |
Obituary Dr. Malcolm Sowers, San Francisco Chronicle 8 Oct 2014:
Malcolm A. Sowers, M.D.
Dec. 24, 1921-Oct. 2, 2014
Dr. Malcolm Ayer Sowers passed away on Oct. 2, 2014. He practiced psychiatry in Hayward and Castro Valley, pioneering the practice of group therapy. He retired in 1993 after more than 40 years of private practice. He was on the staff at Eden Medical Center, including chief of psychiatry. Before starting private practice he served as a captain in the Air Force in Japan during the Korean War.
He was born in Bangkok, Thailand on Dec. 24, 1921 to Francis and Phyllis Sowers and came to the United States with his mother before he was a year old. As a child he grew up in Carlsbad in southern California and came north to the University of California when he was nineteen. After graduating from Berkeley he earned his M.D. from UCSF Medical School. He met his wife, Helen, at Berkeley and they were married in October 1943. They celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary last year. Malcolm is survived by his wife Helen; four children, Robert, Douglas, Betty, and Brian; eight grandchildren; and five great grandchildren.
Malcolm enjoyed skiing, backpacking, and other outdoor sports. He instilled a sense of adventure and love of the outdoors in all his children. Along with physical attributes he also set the example of tolerance, fairness, and acceptance of differences. Many remember him for his creative mind and unusual sense of humor. After retiring he joined a writing class and wrote a book, The Shrink Talks Back.
He was an avid sailor and sailboat racer. He had a series of sailboats, starting with a sailing canoe when he was 17. When he was stationed in Japan he had the hull of a sailboat built, then shipped to San Francisco. He spent many hours finishing the boat, but finally purchased a larger one and then an Islander 30, which he finally gave up seven years ago. Early during his sailing years he explored Red Rock, a small cone shaped island off the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. He hiked the steep slope to plant a memorial cypress tree near the top. Every summer he made a pilgrimage with friends and family to water the tree to keep it alive for its destiny-to have his ashes scattered under it.
Here he lies where he long'd to be;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
And the hiker home from the hill.
Adapted from "Requiem" by Robert Louis Stevenson | Sowers, Dr. Malcolm Ayer (I1873)
|
1057 |
Obituary from the Naples News, 29 April 1925:
REV. J. H. FRANCE
Death and Sketch of the life of Dr. Joseph H. France
The despatch to relatives in Naples of the death of Dr Joseph H., France received here last Friday was not unexpected as his death was momentarily expected as he had been at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore for the past month and it was generally known that he would not recover. He died of pneumonia at the age of 77 years.
Dr. France was the beloved pastor of the Presbyterian church for 15years coming here from Canandaigua. About a year and one half ago he resigned on account of poor health and with Mrs France went to Orlando Fla., while there be was pastor of a church. While pastor here the church prospered spiritually and materially, under his administration 180 members were added to the church roll. When he tendered his resignation the honor of pastor emeritus was conferred on him.
He was a graduate of George Washington University and valedictorian of his class. After his graduation he took up the study of law in Kansas City, Mo., The call to the ministry caused him to givo up law and he attended the William Jewell college ln the above city. On October 10, 1871 at Lathrop, Mo., he was ordained and began his ministerial career. He served Lathrop, Cameron and Marabon, all small settlements.
From these small charges he accepted a position in Kalamazoo, Mich a large and important church. His next charge was Lowville, N. Y., then Canandaigua, then Johnstown, coming to Naples, October 1, 1908. His first wife was Miss Hannah F. James of Richmond, Va. She died in Naples in 1912 and was buried in Washington, D. C.
Dr. France was an outstanding figure in the Presbytery. and served as delegate to the Synod and General Assembly, serving several times on judicial committees. For many years he was a member of the Mental Hygiene and After Care Committee of the Willard State Hospital for the insane.
Prominent among his noteworthy lectures were "Humorous Side of a Parson's life," and "Present Day Vandalism.” Many of his discourses were published by request, one of the most noteworthy being, "Sunset, and Sunrise Beyond the Sunset."
Besides. his widow, formerly Elizabeth Pottle, Dr. France is survived by three sons, former Senator Joseph I. France, of Maryland; Royal W. France of New York and Clemens J. France; and three daughters, Mrs. William R. Nesbitt, pastor of the New Covenant church of Baltimore; Miss Mary France a former Missionary to Costa Rica, now In Baltimore; and Mrs. Alfred Dennison of Johnstown,
N. Y.
The body of Dr. France was taken to Washington, where funeral services were held Monday mooning at 11 o'clock and the burial was in that city.
Mrs. France after the funeral left for Buffalo with her brother Henry W. Pottle where she will remain for some time. | France, Dr. Joseph H. (I1045)
|
1058 |
Obituary from the San Francisco Chronicle, 20 August 1984:
Malcolm B. Gould Sr.
Private memorial services were held yesterday for Malcolm B. Gould Sr., 61, the owner and chief executive officer of the Sausalito-based mining and metallurgical firm of Henry W. Gould & Co.
Mr. Gould, a mining engineer, died Monday at Marin General Hospital after a brief illness.
The company, which has been in the Bay Area for more than 60 years, was founded in San Francisco by Mr. Gould’s father, the late Henry W. Gould, in 1920. The company moved to Sausalito two years ago.
Mr. Gould was well known in the Western United States, Canada and Mexico as a mining consultant.
He was a former chairman of the San Francisco chapter of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. He also belonged to the Engineers Club of San Francisco, the Society of Mining engineers and the San Francisco Yacht Club.
Mr. Gould, a native of San Jose, did his undergraduate work at the University of Nevada and received his engineering degree from the University of California at Berkeley. He was a Navy veteran of World War II.
He is survived by his wife, Helen, of Mill Valley; two sons, Malcolm Gould Jr. of Mill Valley and Duncan Gould of Oakland, and two sisters, Marjorie McEwen of Puerto Rico and Janet Johnson of Minden, Nev. | Gould, Malcolm Brown "Scott" (I3278)
|
1059 |
Obituary from unknown paper:
Retired surgeon, hospital executive, and community leader, Dr. Bliss B. Clark, age 97, passed away at his home in Harlingen, Texas, on March 20, 2006. Dr. Clark was born in 1908, in Springfield, Massachusetts, and grew up in New Britain, Connecticut, where he resided for most of his life. He studied at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY, where he earned an undergraduate degree, and then taught for two years at the Pomfret, CT, School for boys. He later enrolled in Cornell Medical School, New York City, where he earned his medical degree. After completing his surgical residency at Bellevue and New York Hospitals in 1942, he was inducted into the United States Army, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. During World War II he served as Chief of Surgery at the 135th Evacuation Hospital, and was awarded the Bronze Star for meritorious service and "Outstanding Work in the Field of Hand Surgery".
Following his military service, Dr. Clark returned to New Britain, where in 1946 he established a successful surgical practice and became Chief of Staff as well as Chief of Surgery at New Britain General Hospital. He would serve in these positions for the next 17 years. During this time he also founded the Grove Hill Clinic, one of the first multispecialty group practices in New England. In 1963, he relinquished his surgical practice to become the Executive Director of New Britain General Hospital. In 1974, he became President and Chief Executive Officer of New Britain General Hospital positions he held until his retirement in 1976. In recognition of his many years of dedicated service, he was named Director Emeritus of New Britain General Hospital. He was also honored by the Connecticut Hospital Association's T. Stewart Hamilton Distinguished Service Award.
Dr. Clark was a member of many prestigious professional societies, among them the New England Surgical Society, the Examining Board of the American Board of Surgery, and the Advisory Board of the Medical College of the University of Connecticut. He was a diplomate of the American Board of Surgery, a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, American Medical Association, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Hospital Administrators, and numerous other state and national medical and professional organizations. He was also the author of many scholarly articles about surgery and hospital administration.
In 1980, Dr. Clark moved from New Britain to the Palm Valley area of Harlingen, Texas, where, continuing his deep involvement in service to his community, he was elected to three terms as mayor of Palm Valley, and also served as the president of the Harlingen Country Club in the mid-1980's.
Dr. Clark is survived by his wife, Helen, of Harlingen, TX, four children, four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. He was a devoted husband and father, and a dedicated servant to his community. A memorial service was held on March 24, 2006, at the Buck Ashcraft Funeral Home, Harlingen, TX, which was also in charge of funeral arrangements. | Clark, Bliss Bartlett (I1108)
|
1060 |
Obituary:
Died at Ashland, Hanover County, Virginia,
on Friday, February 28th, 1873, at 4:30 P. M.,
Col William James,
In the 66th year of his age,
The many warm friends of Colonel William James, of Ashland, Hanover County, Virginia, in Washington, will hear with deep regret that after a lingering illness of five weeks, he died at this residence in Virginia, of heart disease, in his 66th year.
Colonel James was extensively known in this city and throughout the South. He was a strong Republican, and has filled many offices of trust and responsibility. He was the first collector of internal revenue for the Richmond district, and by his uprightness and strict integrity won the esteem and respect of all the citizens in his district.
He was a gentleman of great refinement of manners, kindness of heart and integrity of character, and was a pure-minded christian, and passed to his reward “like a shock of corn fully ripe.”
He was the father of Samuel R. James, Esq., formerly connected with the Census Bureau, in this city, but more recently of the Petersburg “Index.”
The funeral services were held at the Foundry M. E. Church, in Washington.
| James, William (I547)
|
1061 |
Obituary:
Mrs. Cora Learn Feissner, of 435 Adam street, Freeland, widow of Louis Feissner, died at 11 o'clock last night.
She was born in Oley Valley, lived in Freeland 38 years ans was a member of St., John's Reformed church and of the Freeland Daughters of Liberty.
Surviving are the following children: Gordon, of Freeland; Mrs. Wilbur Snyder, of Washington, D. C.; Mrs. August Contress, of Freeland; Mrs. Stanley Miller, of Philadelphia; Mrs. Fred Mahnken, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Esther, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mrs. Thomas Evans, of Norwood; Gerald and Belva, at home. Also surviving are five sisters and a brother. Mrs. John Weaver and Simon Learn, of Sandy Valley; Mrs. Reuben Sheaman and Mrs. Theodore Weaver, of Pond Creek; Rhoda Learn, of Sunbury; and Alta Learn, of Freeland.
The funeral will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock with service in St. John's Reformed church, Freeland, in charge of the pastor, Rev. G. W. M. Kohler. Internment will be in the Laurel cemetery, White Haven.
Friends may call Sunday between 2 and 9 p.m. | Learn, Cora (I68)
|
1062 |
Obituary:
COLLINS- Mrs Alice Cole, 73 of Rd 1, Hartland Center Rd, died yesterday afternoon in Fisher-Titus Memorial Hospital, Norwalk. She had been ill the past three months.
Born in Toledo, Mrs. Cole had lived in Collins ten years. She was a member of Halcyon Chapter No 347. Order of Eastern Star.
Her husband, Wendell, survives, A son, William J Cole died in 1921
Services will be Monday in the Gerber Funeral Home, Wakeman, Burial will be in Collins Cemetery.
Source The Chronicle Telegram, May 23 1969 | Alice (I4075)
|
1063 |
Obituary:
Norwalk Evening Herald May 15, 1905
Mrs. Sarah Amsdell was called from her earthly home Sunday morning, her death occurring at the family residence No. 51 Milan Street. Mrs. Amsdell had been ill but 4 days and death was due to old age.
The deceased saw born in Hamburg, New York in 1820 and came to Ohio in 1861.
She was the wife of Philander Amsdell who preceded her to the grave several years ago.
Mrs. Amsdell has been a resident of Norwalk for the past 9 years during which time she had drawn around her a large circle of friends who learned to love her for her true womanly traits of character.
Mrs. Amsdell is survived by a daughter, Mrs. J. M. Chaffee of this city and 2 sisters, Mrs. Julia Platt of Buffalo New York, mother of Rev. Ward Platt and Mrs. Carrie Hunt of Iowa. Two sons, James and John passed away several years ago.
She is also survived by 5 grandchildren: Mrs. Fred Cole of this city, Mrs. Frank Hickey of Glenville, Philip McGuckin of this city, Miss Myrtle McGuckin of Cleveland and Mrs. Louie Seeley of Wakeman.
Mrs. Amsdell dearly loved her 2 great grandchildren, the 2 children of Mr. and Mrs Fred Cole and she often said that her comfort in life was loving these little ones.
During her illness the 2 little ones came to her bedside and taking her hands in theirs begged their grandman to "wake up and talk to them".
Mrs. Amsdell was a true Christian in every respect. She joined the Methodist Church when she was quite young and found much comfort and joy in her religion.
The funeral services will be conducted by Rev. H. S. Powell at the family residence No. 51 Milan Street, Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock.
Interment will be at Townsend Center. | Dart, Sarah Jane (I3342)
|
1064 |
Obituary:
Sandusky Register February 12, 1964
Harold C. McGuckin, 62, a former Sanduskian, died this morning in the Twin Maples rest home, Norwalk, after a lengthy illness.
Mr. McGuckin was a former resident of 1008 Shelby Street and was employed at the Apex Electrical Manufacturing Company.
Later he was employed at the Rockwell Manufacturing Company, Norwalk.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Muriel Ciervo, Sandusky, several grandchildren, 2 brothers, Paul and Marvin both of Norwalk and a number of other relatives.
Burial is to be in Townsend Cemetery. | McGuckin, Harold C (I4083)
|
1065 |
Obituary: Hollister Evening FreeLance Hollister; San Benito Co., CA Fri 2 Mar 1945 p1 c2
Mrs. Grace Brown Taken By Death In San Jose
Mrs. Grace Shore Brown, 80, died today at the O'Connor hospital in San Jose.
She was the widow of the late William J. Brown.
A native of California, she lived in Hollister for about 71 years before going to Los Gatos to make her home with her daughter three years ago.
She recently sold her home on Fourth street here.
She was a member of the Methodist church and of Fidelity Rebekah lodge.
Surviving relatives are as follows: three daughters, Mrs. Helen Wyatt of Sacramento, Mrs. Edith Gould of Los Gatos and Mrs. Bertha Lufbourrow of San Jose; a sister, Mrs. Ruth Burton of Bakersfield; 11 grandchildren, and eight great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2:00 p.m. from the Black-Cooper Mortuary with burial at the IOOF cemetery. Graveside services under the auspices of Fidelity Rebekha lodge No. 29. | Shore, Grace L (I3297)
|
1066 |
Obiturary from St Petersburg Times
O'CONNOR, NORMA A., 79, of Hudson, died Wednesday (April 25, 2001) at Bear Creek Nursing Center in Hudson. Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., she came here 19 years ago from Woodcliff Lake, N.J. She was a certified public accountant with Ingersoll-Rand and member of St. Michael's Catholic Church. Survivors include her husband, Thomas; and a brother, Roger Muller, Florida. Prevatt Funeral Home, Hudson. | Statius Muller, Norina Adelaide "Norma" (I973)
|
1067 |
On a passenger list | Price, Henry (I1177)
|
1068 |
On December 6, 1881 was appointed to officer and on April 2, 1908 he retired as a lieutenant-colonel of the infantry of the East Indian Army. From May 1, 1910 through February 16, 1917 he was a weatherman in the Netherlands. | Statius Muller, August Leberegt (I740)
|
1069 |
On the ship Juliet bound from London to Boston, their final destination was New Brunswick, Canada. | James, Mary Jane 'Jennie' (I443)
|
1070 |
On the ship Juliet bound from London to Boston, their final destination was New Brunswick, Canada. | James, William (I547)
|
1071 |
On the ship Juliet bound from London to Boston, their final destination was New Brunswick, Canada. | Francis, Jane (I548)
|
1072 |
Ordgar had been a wealthy land owner and the son of an ealdorman. The year his daughter Ælfthryth married King Edgar he was made Ealdorman and may have been one of Edgar's closest advisors. | -, Ealdorman Ordgar of Devon (I2717)
|
1073 |
Parish Church | Family F562
|
1074 |
Paul was a veteran of both world wars. He never married. | McGuckin, Paul G (I4081)
|
1075 |
Peachcroft Rd | Cooper, Peter (I324)
|
1076 |
People originally thought that John was the son of Thomas, Symon's brother. It was thought that Richard and William who came to New England on the Planter with him were his cousins. This determination was based largely on the fact the maternal grandfather, John Wells, did not name John in his will and Thomas had a son named John. But there is some evidence that the three Tuttle men on the Planter were brothers. And, the will of their father Symon did name John as his second son. The will was written in 1627 and in a different pen was added, "to my sunn John, his daughter Abigaill, five pounds at the age of fifteene." The will was proved in 1630 and Abigail was born around 1628, so it is pretty definite that our John was the son of Symon and not Thomas.
Alva M. Tuttle theorized that John Wells left John out of his will because he married an older widow. Joanna was about four years older and already had a family. This does not seem likely to me. It was not that uncommon for a man to marry a slightly older woman at that time. Also, because John was almost 30 when he got married. It was not appropriate for an unmarried man to live on his own so he likely lived with his family. Therefore, everyone would have been happy when he finally married.
I believe that a more likely explanation was John's personality. John's two sons were not the best of offspring. For more on this see the write-up on John's wife Joanna and John's son Symon. John showed signs of being a rebel and that may not have set well with his grandfather. Since we will likely never know why John Wells left his grandson out of his will we are free to do all the speculating we want.
In 1635, John, his family, his wife's previous children, his two brothers and their families, his mother and his mother-in-law all traveled to New England on the Planter. From Games:
The traveling cohorts to New England, or "companies," could at times be huge. One of the largest family groups traveling together in 1635 was the Tuttle clan from St. Albans, Hertfordshire, who journeyed on the Planter to Ipswich, Massachusetts. St. Albans is an abbey town about 20 miles from London. In the seventeenth century, St. Albans was also a provincial market town. Benjamin Hare’s plan of St. Albans, drawn up in 1634, reveals the dense concentration of houses along the Watling road and around the abbey. For all its provincial importance, the town had only one main street, but it was a crucial thoroughfare whose existence ensured the economic viability of the community as the first major stopping point on the Watling road out of London. For the Tuttle family, the disjunction between life in bustling St. Albans, a city physically dominated by an immense stone abbey, and colonial life in Ipswich must have been stunning.
This disjunction between a “thronged place” and the “wide wilderness” was softened for the Tuttles by the presence of family and neighbors in their new home. The center of the family group contained Joan Antrobus Lawrence Tuttle, born in St. Albans to Walter and Joan Antrobus, and her second husband, John Tuttle. With Joan Tuttle traveled her four children from her first marriage to Thomas Lawrence. Three were underage – John, Marie, and William Lawrence, and the fourth was her daughter Jane, who had married George Giddings, a yeoman of Clapham, Bedfordshire, in 1634. Joan Tuttle also brought her mother, Joan Antrobus, who had been widowed in 1614, and the four children from her second marriage, Abigail, John, Sara, and Symon. This family of twelve was rounded out by three servants transported by George Giddings, and one by John Tuttle.
The Tuttles had achieved in St. Albans a significant degree of local status. Joan Tuttle’s father, Walter Antrobus, had been one of the twenty-four assistants of the borough of St. Albans. Her first husband, Thomas Lawrence, was a constable of the borough in 1614, and at his death left a sizable estate of £823.1.8. John Tuttle, Joan Antrobus’s second husband, was a draper who paid £6 freedom money to the borough and merited the honorific of “Mr” in the court record of this transaction. By 1630 he had served as constable of the borough. Also accompanying the St. Albans Tuttles were Richard and William Tuttle, with their six children, two wives and mother, relatives of John from Bedfordshire, John Tuttle’s original home. Thus, altogether twenty-seven members of the extended Tuttle clan journeyed together, after their rendezvous at the port of London, to New England. Their gather at the port suggests the convenience that a central location like London could offer these relatives who had lived scattered from each other in England.
His family settled in Ipswich where he lived for several years. Eventually, he left New England after becoming discouraged. He seems to be one who did not believe in rules. According to court records he was fined in 1641 and 1645 for keeping cattle in a common fenced area and for selling wine without a license respectively. Also, he sued three men for borrowing his boat and losing it.
According to G. F. Tuttle, he moved to Ireland when Tuttles from New Haven, also disillusioned, were negotiating to buy the city of Galloway. "He established himself advantageously there and did not return." His wife followed him in 1654. He died in Carrickfergus, Ireland. No one is sure where Joanna died. | Tuttle, John (I1029)
|
1077 |
Philip had many descendants in Germany spelling his name Müller. | Muller, Philip Friedrich (I1845)
|
1078 |
Philip was a preacher at Amersfoort in 1745, in 1749 was at Leeuwarden in his fathers church. He was a professor of philosophy at Erlangen in 1758. | Muller, Philip Ludwig (I695)
|
1079 |
Pieter was married twice but we don't know which one was the mother of Alida. | Bruynvis, Pieter (I1800)
|
1080 |
Plot: Sec: 2, Site: 4791 ES | Meissner, James "Jimmy" Armand (I3368)
|
1081 |
Plot: Section ES, Site C-2 | Gould, Malcolm Brown "Scott" (I3278)
|
1082 |
probably before 1679. | Flagg, Bartholomew (I2233)
|
1083 |
Probate pending suit, granted to John Cogswell, 11 May, 1616, and subsequent sentence admitted Walter Cogswell, a son not named in the Will. | Alice (I1120)
|
1084 |
Publisher: On-line
| Source (S249)
|
1085 |
Ralph was described as being from Over Peover, Cheshire County. Nothing else is known of him except that he had seven sons. | Antrobus, Ralph (I2445)
|
1086 |
Record originated in... | Source (S478)
|
1087 |
Record Title: Library Card
Short Record Title: Library Card
| Source (S454)
|
1088 |
Record Title: World War I Draft Card
Short Record Title: World War I Draft Card
| Source (S447)
|
1089 |
Record Title: World War II Draft Card
Short Record Title: World War II Draft Card
| Source (S424)
|
1090 |
Record Type: Baptimsal Records
Name Of Person: Scholtzes
Date: 1800 to 1850
Memo: From the lutheran baptism registry, Curaçao:
Johann Christoph Scholtz, married to Maria Elisabeth Margaretha de Jonge
children:
1. Catharina Louisa Wilhelmina born october 14, 1808, baptized luth. october 26, 1808
2. Anna Wilhelmina, born october 16, 1810, baptized luth. october 30, 1810
3. Frederik Anthonn, born october 19, 1813, baptized luth. dec. 10, 1813
On dec. 8, 1820 C. Scholtz had already died, because Maria de Jonge witnesses a baptism as widow
Frederik Anton SCHOLTSZ, born october 19, 1813 in Curaçao died 1887 in Curaçao (registry of deaths no. 263/1887) married on september 9, 1835 (witnesses: his mother Maria Elizabeth de Jonge and his stepfather Carel Zeppenfeldt) to Maria Augusta MÖLLER, 19 years old (witnesses her parents Joseph Möller and Cornelia Petronella Engelbron) - in 1862 he owned a pharmacy in Curaçao
children from this marriage:
1. Johan Christoffel SCHOLTSZ, born january 23, 1837 in Curaçao
2. Cornelia Petronella SCHOLTSZ born september 15, 1838 in Curaçao
3. Joseph SCHOLTSZ, born october 7, 1839 in Curaçao
4. Maria Elizabeth Margaritha SCHOLTSZ, born march 31, 1841 in Curaçao.
5. Sophia Wilhelmina SCHOLTSZ, born november 11, 1842 in Curaçao, died september 4, 1884
6. Louisa Catharina SCHOLTSZ, born july 5, 1845 in Curaçao
7. Evert Carel SCHOLTSZ, born january 5, 1848 in Curaçao | Source (S186)
|
1091 |
Record Type: Baptism Entry
Name Of Person: Johann Feissner
| Source (S132)
|
1092 |
Record Type: Baptism Record
| Source (S433)
|
1093 |
Record Type: Baptismal entry
Name Of Person: Jorge Aurelio Williams
Date: 15 March, 1873
Page/item No: Page 26, Entry 757
Manuscrpt Info: Book #13 of the baptims of white people
| Source (S45)
|
1094 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: Arthur Edward Scholtz
File Date: 15 Oct. 1906
File No: 27174
| Source (S81)
|
1095 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: Clemens James
File Date: 1 September 1845
Memo: When and Where:
13th of March Webbs College, Newport [????]
Name:
Hannah Flether
Sex:
Girl
Father:
William James
Mother:
Jane James formerly Francis
Occupation of Father:
Merchant
Signature, description, and residence of informant
Jane Jame, mother, Webbs College, Newport
When registered:
twenty three of April 1849
| Source (S253)
|
1096 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: EmmaJames
File Date: 8 February 1845
Memo: When and Where:
13th of March Webbs College, Newport [????]
Name:
Hannah Flether
Sex:
Girl
Father:
William James
Mother:
Jane James formerly Francis
Occupation of Father:
Merchant
Signature, description, and residence of informant
Jane Jame, mother, Webbs College, Newport
When registered:
twenty three of April 1849
| Source (S254)
|
1097 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: Hannah Fletcher James
File Date: 1 March 1849
Memo: When and Where:
13th of March Webbs College, Newport [????]
Name:
Hannah Flether
Sex:
Girl
Father:
William James
Mother:
Jane James formerly Francis
Occupation of Father:
Merchant
Signature, description, and residence of informant
Jane Jame, mother, Webbs College, Newport
When registered:
twenty three of April 1849
| Source (S252)
|
1098 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: Johan Christoffel Scholtz
File Date: 24 Jan 1837
File No: No. 28
Memo: birth certificate no. 28/january 24, 1837
appeared before me, Frederik Anthon Scholtz, father, assisted by Barend Hendrik Joosten Pletsz and Carl Frederik Neuman, of competent age
to announce that on monday the 23rd of january, 1837 at 7.30 p.m. was born a boy with the names
Johan Christoffel
in wedlock by Frederik Anthon Scholtz and Maria Augusta Möller, residing here
signed after reading
| Source (S179)
|
1099 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: Mary Jane James
File Date: August 1838
Memo: When and Where:
?? August, Newport
Name:
Mary Jane
Sex:
Girl
Father:
William James
Mother:
Jane James formerly Francis
Occupation of Father:
?
Signature, description, and residence of informant
William James, father, High Street, Newport
When registered:
11th September 1838 | Source (S255)
|
1100 |
Record Type: Birth Certificate
Name Of Person: Scholtz, Cormelia Petronella
File Date: 17 Sep 1838
File No: No 172/1838/city
Memo: Birth certificate No 172/1838/city
Today, September 17, 1838 before me…
Appeared Frederik Anton Scholtz, father assisted by Johan Casper Gaerste and Johan Frederik Möller
Of competent age and residing here as witnesses
Announcing that on Saturday, September 15, 1838 at 3 a.m. a female child was born with the names
Cornelia Petronella
In wedlock by Frederik Anton Scholtz and Maria Augusta Möller, residing here
Signed after reading
Curaçao
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