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Notes |
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551 |
He was a farmer worth over $10,000. | Shore, Thomas Pate (I3298)
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552 |
He was a farmer, 5' 11", light complexion, blue eyes and light hair. | Brown, William James (I3296)
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553 |
He was a farmer. | Gould, Aaron (I3302)
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554 |
He was a farmer. | Ingraham, Friend (I3332)
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555 |
He was a first lieutenant inthe artillery and later a government official in Curaçao. | Willemsen, Willem Constant (I829)
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556 |
He was a follower of Martin Luther and was with him in 1517 when Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the Wittenberge door. Bernardus later became the first Lutheran Minister [COLOR:31,73,125,255,255,255]Börry[:COLOR] and Esperde of the Amte region of what is now Hameln Germany.
He was buried there and his grave still exists. | Muller, Bernardus (I1864)
|
557 |
He was a fruit dealer. | Filippi, Alemanno (I3564)
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558 |
He was a goldsmith and a merchant. | Bruynvis, Pieter (I1800)
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559 |
He was a hat and cap manufacturer in Newark, NJ. He came to the New Jersey from Prussia around 1863. | Cohn, Solomon (I3330)
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560 |
He was a history teacher and became principal of the Freeland High School while his cousins (children of Louis George) were still students. | Feissner, George (I1418)
|
561 |
He was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army which probably meant he was deployed in Indonesia. He was married. | Statius Muller, Casper Helenus (I1736)
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562 |
He was a Lieutenant in the army and served in the Netherlands under Lt. Thomas Fairfax. He came to Dorchester in 1630 and represented the town in general court. In October 1635 he moved to Windsor, CT. He was elected Assistant or Magistrate in 1642 and in May 1637 he commanded the successful expedition against the Pequot Indians near New London. In 1647 he moved to Saybrook and in 1660 he was one of the first settlers of Norwich, Ct. There he was deputy guard and Major General of forces of the Colony. | Mason, John (I517)
|
563 |
He was a Lutheran pastor in Heiligfelde in Lijde and is buried at the church. | Muller, Franciscus (I1862)
|
564 |
He was a major in the infantry. | van Eps, Isaac Christiaan Statius (I734)
|
565 |
He was a manufacturer in Barmen, Germany. | Huisberg, Carl Theodor (I560)
|
566 |
He was a mariner. | Lamb, Caleb (I2511)
|
567 |
He was a merchant. | Howland, George (I3925)
|
568 |
He was a pastor in Bümen and is buried there. | Muller, Statius (I1847)
|
569 |
He was a physician and lived in most of his life in Haverhill. In 1727 he was referred to as coming from Groton. | Ayer, William (I403)
|
570 |
He was a preacher from East Friesland. | Gosset, Gosset (I598)
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571 |
He was a sea captain. | Swaan, Pieter Cornelis (I831)
|
572 |
He was a ship captain, who came to Curaçao on March 4, 1815. | Möller, Joseph (I1582)
|
573 |
He was a shovel engineer. | Feussner, Jacob (I1365)
|
574 |
He was a source on his sister Mary's death certificate.
By the 1891 census he was going by the name Dan A. Chisholm. It's not clear why he and his brother who both had the name Donald as first or middle went by the name Daniel. | Chisholm, Austin Donald "Dan A" (I4209)
|
575 |
He was a steward in Sijelce (now Poland), and later became Amtsman (sor of like mayor) in Wohlenberg in Braunschweig, Germany. | Muller, Bernardus (I1855)
|
576 |
He was a student at Erlangen where his father's oldest brother was a professor. On December 22, 1763 he arrived at Curaçao as a doctor nine years after his brother Johan Georg arrived.
It was with this generation that the name Statius Muller started to become common. However, it was not official until many years later.
August Leberegt was the author of "Statius Muller Family Index", the first Statius Muller genealogy that included the story of the flood. | Statius Muller, August Leberegt (I601)
|
577 |
He was a tanner and a Baptist and lived in Haverhill. | Ayer, Jacob (I411)
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578 |
He was a tanner and lived in the west parish of Haverhill. He fought in the American Revolution. He was Captain of a Company in Col. Johnson's Regiment that marched to the "Alarm" of April 19, 1775. He served seven and a half days. He was also a member of a Committee of Correspondence for the town - appointed July 20, 1774. On January 30, 1775 he was appointed member of the Committee of Inspection for the town. | Ayer, Richard (I417)
|
579 |
He was a wine buyer in Amsterdam. | van der Meulen, Hendrik (I1817)
|
580 |
He was a woolen manufacturer. When his health failed he became a bookkeeper in Buffalo, NY. | Wadsworth, John (I506)
|
581 |
He was a yeoman and lived in Haverhill. | Ayer, Samuel Jr. (I402)
|
582 |
He was a yeoman and lived in Haverhill. | Ayer, Simon (I406)
|
583 |
He was a yeoman and lived in Haverhill. | Ayer, Richard Jr. (I423)
|
584 |
He was a yeoman and lived in Haverhill. He had a significant amount of property including an African American slave named Lot. He was a Lieutenant in the Militia. His gravestone reads: HERE LIES BURIED THE BODY OF LEFt SAMUEL AYER WHO DIED JANy The rest is scaled off. | Ayer, Samuel (I399)
|
585 |
He was a yeoman from Wramplingham, County Norfolk, England and he made his will on April 10, 1618 and named his wife, his sons William, Francis, John and James and his daughters Mary, Hester and Christibell. | Sabume, Wiliam (I2318)
|
586 |
He was a yeoman. He lived in the part of Methuen, MA that became part of Salem, NH. | Ayer, Ebenezer (I404)
|
587 |
He was alive in the 1851 New Brunswick census but did not show up in the 1860 census. It is possible that like his two older brothers, he had moved out of the house (he would have been about 17). His younger brother Clemens was still at home.
William may have drowned. Jane, in a letter to Mrs. Lincoln said she a had had a son that drowned. Since I can't find any other records on him, he may be that son. | James, William Jr (I552)
|
588 |
He was alive on March 21, 1725 and probably not on May 24, 1737. | Davenport, Benjamin (I1983)
|
589 |
He was also lord of Senlis, of Péronne and of Saint Quentin. | -, Herbert I, Count of Vermandois (I3186)
|
590 |
He was an alcoholic who often drank up his weekly pay before getting home. He often beat up Mary and the kids. Mary would call her brothers Irvin and Sam to come and help or haul him out of a saloon. The reason Mary called Irvin as well as Sam is that she was afraid that Sam would kill him. Bucky finally went on the wagon the last ten years of his life. | Brennon, John (I107)
|
591 |
He was an author for the Registrar in Lemvörde. | Muller, Frans (I1846)
|
592 |
He was an officer in East Friesland. | Muller, Statius (I595)
|
593 |
He was an officer with the royal Dutch navy, stationed in Curaçao. | van Osenbruggen, Carel Robert Alexander (I1671)
|
594 |
He was an official at Wölphe in Nienburg. | Muller, Zacharias (I1858)
|
595 |
He was an organist at Den Bosch and later that at Maastricht. | Muller, Wilhelm Godlob (I705)
|
596 |
He was an organist of the Grote Church at Gouda | Hess, Joachim (I711)
|
597 |
He was apprenticed to a Mr. French in 1657-7. He lived in Haverhill. | Ayer, Nathaniel (I389)
|
598 |
He was born Carloman, but after his half brother Pepin the Hunchback was disinherited by his father, the royal name Pepin was passed to Carloman. In 780 Charlemagne disinherited his oldest son and had the pope baptize is third son Pepin. The elder Pepin eventually agreed to participate in a plot to kill his father and brothers but they were caught and he was forced to live in a monastery the rest of his life.
The younger Pepin became King of the Lombards from 791 until his death in 810. He helped his father to expand the Empire, but in 810 he led an unsuccessful siege against Venice. It lasted 6 months and Pepin's army suffered greatly from diseases picked up in the local swamps. They were forced to withdraw and a few months later Pepin died from disease he had caught during the siege. | -, Pepin King of the Lombards (I3159)
|
599 |
He was born Donald but in the United States he went by Daniel C. It's not clear why he and his brother who both had the name Donald as first or middle went by the name Daniel. | Chisholm, Donald "Daniel C" (I2774)
|
600 |
He was chief huntsman to the Duke of Neustadt am Orla. | Franken, Johan Georg (I1274)
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