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 #   Notes   Linked to 
19851 https://books.google.com/books?id=0P8LAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA605&dq=zebulon+Mygatt&hl=en&sa=X&ei=2-PaVOavHcyuogS1j4HwBg&ved=0CCUQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=zebulon%20Mygatt&f=false Mygatt, Roger (I6261)
 
19852 https://books.google.com/books?id=nJw-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA281&lpg=PA281&dq=James+Whiting+Mary+Beitson&source=bl&ots=De9PhqLg2z&sig=_CrYaJfmbfNHiHVoLbubhlBMf08&hl=en&sa=X&ei=T9S9VP31GeWHsQSAi4DoCg&ved=0CDcQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=James%20Whiting%20Mary%20Beitson&f=false
Memoir of Rev. Samuel Whiting, D.D., and of His Wife, Elizabeth St. John ...
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Family F2366
 
19853 https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JZLM-YT5

William Parker
mentioned in the record of Elizabeth Parker
Name: William Parker
Gender: Male
Wife: Elizabeth Parker
Other information in the record of Elizabeth Parker
from England Deaths and Burials
Name: Elizabeth Parker
Gender: Female
Burial Date: 19 Feb 1693
Burial Place: Uttoxeter, Stafford, England
Marital Status: Married
Spouse's Name: William Parker
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: B05136-4 , System Origin: England-EASy , GS Film number: 1526194

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England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 about Elizabeth Tresham
Name: Elizabeth Tresham
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 8 Nov 1573
Baptism Date: 15 Nov 1573
Baptism Place: All Saints and Saint Peter,Rushton,Northampton,England
Father: Thomas Tresham
FHL Film Number: 1441052 IT 4


http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?rank=1&new=1&MSAV=1&gss=angs-c&gsfn=elizabeth&gsln=tresham&msbdy=1573&msbpn__ftp=Northamptonshire%2c+England&msbpn=5277&msbpn_PInfo=7-%7c0%7c0%7c3257%7c3251%7c0%7c0%7c0%7c5277%7c0%7c0%7c&msbpn_x=PC&msbpn__ftp_x=1&uidh=qxa&msbdp=5&pcat=34&h=95449805&db=FS1EnglandBirthsandChristenings&indiv=1&ml_rpos=1

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Elizabeth Tresham
England Births and Christenings
Name: Elizabeth Tresham
Gender: Female
Christening Date: 15 Nov 1573
Christening Place: ALL SAINTS AND SAINT PETER,RUSHTON,NORTHAMPTON,ENGLAND
Birth Date: 08 Nov 1573
Father's Name: Thomas Tresham
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: P01717-1 , System Origin: England-ODM , GS Film number: 1441052 IT 4

https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:JWS9-Q89

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HISTORICAL NOTICES OF THE TRESHAM FAMILY IN EBOOK FORM.

https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=APwHAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA50

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A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies ...
By John Burke, Sir Bernard Burke


http://books.google.com/books?id=DqkTAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA532&lpg=PA532&dq=Elizabeth,+daughter+of+Sir+Thomas+Tresham+of+Rushton,+Northamptonshire,&source=bl&ots=wajqvxoLWt&sig=DeaoH2YpISHlF5n4-oCLR8Jw2FU&hl=en&sa=X&ei=yOJKVKfHDNb_yQSU7YLwBQ&ved=0CEUQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=Elizabeth%2C%20daughter%20of%20Sir%20Thomas%20Tresham%20of%20Rushton%2C%20Northamptonshire%2C&f=false

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https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=n7pSAAAAcAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA5

A Calendar of Papers of the Tresham Family, of the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I., 1580-1605, Preserved at Rushton Hall, Northamptonshire 
Tresham, Elizabeth (I1322)
 
19854 https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KC63-ZHD Ellis, Alonzo (I44233)
 
19855 https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KC63-ZHD Guillon, Susan (I44223)
 
19856 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MH27-RG1 (24 May 2012)
"United States Census, 1860," Chas Whiting, , Sanpete, Utah
Name: Chas Whiting
Residence: , Sanpete, Utah
Ward: Manti City
Age: 7 years
Estimated Birth Year: 1853
Birthplace: Utah
Gender: Male
Page: 19
Family Number: 126
Film Number: 805314
DGS Number: 4297342
Image Number: 00116
NARA Number: M653

DOCUMENTATION (by Margaret Whiting):
Birth: U.S. Census 1860 Utah p20.
Manti Record of Members (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Film #026,129 p9, also recorded as 16 Dec 1853 Manti, Sanpete, Utah.

!BIRTH : Utah Census 1860 p20; Manti Rec of Members, Film #026,129 p9
MARRIAGE : TIB #6728 Book H p307 Endowment House
DEATH : L.D.S. Membership Records, St.Johns, AZ #1248-721
LDS BAPT : TIB #6728 Book H p307 EH; Rebaptism 26 Jun 1874 SL
ENDOWMENT: TIB #6728 Book H p307 EH
SEALING : TIB #6728; IGI Utah H09 Batch #6940212-0; Rebapt 26 Sep 1974 SL
SEALING TO SPOUSE:
Ref 6010188 88 #00310-7 088 20, TIB Record; SL Gen Lib B14A1992

Marriage: TIB #6728 Book H p307 Endowment House.
Ordinance Index (Mexico): 7 Jan 1889 Juarez Batch # A183373, 10 Oct 1899 Salt Lake Temple Batch # A851127, 4 Feb 1967 Arizona Temple Batch #A471803.

Death: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Membership Records, St.Johns, AZ #1248-721.

Bap: TIB #6728 Book H p307 EH; Rebaptism 26 Jun 1874 SL
End: TIB #6728 Book H p307 EH
Seal: TIB #6728; IGI Utah H09 Batch #6940212-0; Rebapt 26 Sep 1974 SL
Ref 6010188 88 #00310-7 088 20, TIB Record; SL Gen Lib B14A1992

Christensen, Clare B, "Before and After Mt. Pisgah" page 380.
SEALING TO SPOUSE: Ref 6010188 88 #00310-7 088 20, TIB Record.

George A. Brown Journal page 101 (In possession of Beverly Brown Killpack).

DEATH: Also shown as Died St. Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Saint Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States, United States.

BURIAL: Also shown as Buried St. Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Manti, Sanpete, Utah, United States.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Manti, Sanpete, Utah, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Saint Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States, United States. 
Whiting, Charles (I16822)
 
19857 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MNSJ-9QV
"United States Census, 1880," Annie Elisa Jacobson in household of James Jacobson, Bear River, Box Elder, Utah.
"United States Census, 1880," Annie Elisa Jacobson in household of James Jacobson, Bear River, Box Elder, Utah Name: Annie Elisa Jacobson Residence: Bear River, Box Elder, Utah Birthdate: 1870 Birthplace: Utah, United States Relationship to Head: Daughter Spouse's Name: Spouse's Birthplace: Father's Name: James Jacobson Father's Birthplace: Sweden Mother's Name: Annie Jacobson Mother's Birthplace: Denmark Race or Color (Expanded): White Ethnicity (Standardized): American Gender: Female Martial Status: Single Age (Expanded): 10 years Occupation: At School NARA Film Number: T9-1335 Page: 88 Page Character: A Entry Number: 783 Film number: 1255335 Household Gender Age Parent James Jacobson M 45 Parent Annie Jacobson F 43 Erastus Jacobson M 13 James Jacobson M 10 Annie Elisa Jacobson F 10 Caroline R. Jacobson F 8 John Jacobson M 6 Mary E. Jacobson F 3 Derepta Melvina Jacobson F 2 Less
U.S. Census 1880 Household of James Jacobson Bear River City, Utah.

Pauline H. Christiansen, 924 N 1400 W, Salt Lake City, UT 355-1327:
Bear River, Utah Ward Record (FHL 0025684);
Colonia Diaz, Mexico Ward Record (FHL 0035126)
St. Johns, Arizona Ward Record (FHL 0002456).
St. George Temple Record (FHL 0170590).
LDS Ordinance Index & Restricted International Genealogical Index.
Book "James and Anne Jacobson Family compiled by Elva R. Shumway, printed in 1993.
NOTES: She was sealed to her husband outside the temple by Pres. Alexander F. McDonald who had special authority to do such sealings. The marriage date and place was listed in the 1975 Restricted International Genealogical Index and her history in the James and Anne Jacobson book. Some of her family records list the marriage place as Colonia Diaz. The sealing was re-affirmed October 10, 1899. Also sealed to spouse 4 Feb 1967, Arizona Temple.

Sealing to husband: 7 Jan 1889 by Alexander F. Macdonald at Colonia Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico (Confidential Records Dept.), then again 4 Feb 1967 AZ.

(December 2003) Pauline has some new information on Peder Brodersen family 1708, that she obtained from Connie Jepperson, which Pauline is sharing via email phchristiansen@comcast.net (1-1-2004).
_________________________________________
History of Anna Eliza Jacobson Whiting
Anna Eliza Jacobson was born April 24, 1870 in Bear River City, Utah. She was the third child and first daughter in a family of eleven children. Her parents were James Jacobson and Anne Rasmussen Olsen. Their home life was patterned after a Scandinavian way, her father being Swedish and her mother Danish. The mother spoke Danish until the children spoke English, then she spoke English very brokenly.
Their first home was a dugout close to the Bear River. Their next home had one large room built of weatherboard, lined with adobe. They had a lumber shanty used as a summer kitchen, joined by a slant-roofed cellar for storing milk, meat, butter and fruit. There was a grain cellar, where vegetables were stored, and also a barn for cows in one end and horses in the other. They had summer gardens, growing all their vegetables, beans, melons, etc. There were chickens and pigs, and always at least three cows.
The Jacobson's were industrious and hard-working, though poor, as many early pioneers were. Her mother did all the family's sewing by hand, including underwear, dresses, shirts, pants and men's suits. Eliza and Rebecca usually dressed alike, and they never had more than one best dress at a time, which was worn on Sunday. Eliza's mother sent the wool to Brigham City where it was corded, spun and woven into small red and white broken checked linsey and returned. Their everyday dresses were made of this. These dresses didn't wear out, but were handed down from one to another as they were outgrown--a Danish custom. Eliza's mother had a green and white checked gingham dress she wore for sixteen years and then remodeled for Eliza. They always had nice white handmade stockings and black pernell shoes (leather bottoms and high cloth tops) to go with their nice dress. The everyday stockings were grey, a mixture of white and black yarn, usually worn with clogs. A pair of clogs was made each fall by a clog maker and lasted all winter. Eliza's mother taught her girls to cord and spin yarn for stockings. Rebecca did most of the cording and Eliza did the spinning. They learned to knit and mend their stockings and each girl had the responsibility of keeping up stockings for one of the younger children.
The children played games such as mumble peg, guinea ball, jump the rope, and swing. They liked to play on a large flat wooden waterwheel. They could dig little dug-out houses and farms in the damp earth while they tended the smaller children.
With such a large family it was important for the children to learn to help as much as they could. Mother Jacobson was ill a lot, too, and with so much work to do she was wise in teaching them how to do all that must be done. Eliza, being older than Rebecca, helped more with the housework. Their mother also taught them to make their own clothes and to cook. They did most of the cooking, but their mother made the bread which was baked in a Dutch oven. They had good food, most of which they raised themselves. There were very little pastries and sweets, except on Christmas and special occasions.
When alkali began to raise in the soil and kill the crops, the Jacobsons, along with others, were released from the Bear River settlement.
They elected to go to Arizona; the entire family became involved in the two month preparation for the trip. Eliza, not quite fourteen, played an important role. She learned to skillfully handle the Dutch oven and did most of the baking. The last few days were spent baking quantities of bread, cookies and cinnamon rolls. When provisions ran low on the trip, they stopped and made camp where feed, water and wood were plentiful, and baked, cooked, and washed again.
The Jacobson's left in the fall of 1884, traveling in two outfits, the father driving one and the two older boys the other. Their money was gone, it has been said, by the time they reached Salt Lake City, but people helped them along the way. Eliza felt that the most harried experience of the trip was going down over Lee's Backbone, the drop to the Colorado River. But her sister, Rebecca, said that while ferrying over the Colorado River with the teams and wagons on the flatboat, Eliza enjoyed the first trip so much that she went back to make the second trip. Rebecca, however, was too frightened to attempt it again. Then followed a long tedious trip through the desert, where they found barely enough water for themselves and their animals. Two hymns Eliza remembers singing on the way were, "Oh Thou Rock Of Our Salvation" and "The Parting Hymn."
Eventually, as shown in earlier accounts, the family went through Woodruff and Snowflake and settled in Percheron, now known as Pinedale. Later they moved to Heber, forty miles west of Snowflake.
While still in Percheron, Eliza helped the family by hiring out to do housework in Snowflake. She was a beautiful girl and popular among both old and young. Joseph Hawkins, Mr. Mortensen's hired man, liked her very much. A Mr. Hans Nielson, age 65, and his wife tried to get Eliza to marry him, but she would not. John Scarlet started keeping company with Eliza and proposed to her. Her father objected to him because he broke the Word of Wisdom. Scarlet tried to get Eliza to elope with him, but Father Jacobson prayed earnestly about this matter and was told that Eliza should become the wife of Charles Whiting. (She had only met him once previously at a conference in Wilford.)
Charles Whiting, who was later to become Eliza's husband, was the son of Edwin Whiting and Mary Elizabeth Cox, born at Manti, Utah, December 16th, 1853. He moved to Springville when a small boy. He married Verona Snow in 1876. He was then called, three weeks later by Brigham Young to settle in the Arizona Mission. He was also called to take a second wife, Amy Porter. They were married and sealed in November, 1880 at the St. George Temple.
In the summer of 1878, Charles Whiting and Sylvester "Vest" Perry visited Springville, Utah, and for awhile worked with Edmund Richardson, cutting timber for the mines at Park City. While they were thus together, they persuaded Edmund to go back to Arizona with them.
Because Charles' sister, May was not well, he felt she would also feel better in Arizona. After consideration by their 71 year old father, Edwin Whiting, he gave his consent.
In October of 1878, Mary Elizabeth Cox Whiting, with her sons Charles, Arthur Cox, Edwin Marion, John Clarence, Frederick Walter, her daughters May Whiting and Harriet Lucinda with her husband, Joseph Henry Curtis left for Arizona along with Vest Perry, Sully and Edmund Richardson. They travelled through Manti, Utah, where Edmund and Sully met their blood father, Frederick Walter Cox (Mary Elizabeth's brother). He gave them consecrated oil to take with them. May's health did improve. She had a few happy years before she died on a trip back to Utah. Eventually Mary Elizabeth Cox and some of her sons settled in St. Johns, Arizona.
When the Jacobson's came to Arizona the Whitings' were living at Wilford.
When the persecution because of plural marriage became great, Charles and others were sent on to establish a colony in Mexico, where they would be allowed to live and take care of their families. He left his mother and his brothers and sisters at St. Johns, Arizona and went on to help colonize Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. After the death of Amy Porter, his second wife and their two children who died in infancy, Charles had no need to stay in Mexico, but friends persuaded him to stay.
Father Jacobson became discontented in Heber, Arizona (only seven families there) and decided to follow those who had moved to Mexico. They arrived in Mexico on January 11th, 1888, where they lived in a tent until July.
The account of their first year of hardship, ending in the death of their mother at Colonia Diaz July 1, 1888 is given elsewhere.
By now Eliza was 18 years of age. She was pretty, with dark hair and blue eyes. She was 5 ft. 3" tall and had a beautiful complexion. She was shy but friendly and had a beautiful singing voice.
One day, while Eliza was singing in the bowery at Colonia Diaz, Charles said it was as though he heard an angel singing. He later proposed to Eliza and they were sealed in the Endowment House at Juarez on January 7, 1889, by Alexander F. MacDonald, who held the Sealing Authority given him by President Woodruff. Eliza became his third wife. (Ten years later, October 10, 1899, she and Charles traveled 1000 miles to the Salt Lake Endowment House, where Eliza was Endowed and their marriage re-affirmed.) They took their 3 year-old daughter, Iris with them to be baptized for her health.
A miracle of healing occurred at Wilford, just before the Whiting family made the move to Colonia Diaz, Mexico. Because of a serious illness, Charles became pale and emaciated, too weak to stand. Conference visitors were there from Salt Lake City. They administered to him. By the power of the Priesthood which they held, the brethren administered to him and sealed him to health and strength. Then leaving him and his wife Amy alone, they held a well-attended meeting. The Spirit of the Lord was there. Among them were H.M. Tanner, J.J. Adams, John Bushman and J.H. Richards. The people felt they had attended a good meeting, but the best was yet to come. As the choir finished the last hymn, ready for the benediction, in walked Charles Whiting and his wife Amy, with faces aglow with light. They walked to the stand and testified to the blessing which he had received. He had been healed by the Priesthood and knew that the Gospel was true. Amy testified that after the Elders left, Charles asked her to pray, then he prayed with great power. They then sang "God Moves In A Mysterious Way" and "We Thank Thee O God For A Prophet". While singing, heavenly voices filled the room, so that they could not hear their own. A most glorious light filled the room, their faces shone. They dared not look up. They both testified they had experienced the most glorious feeling, rejoiced and praised God.
While living in the White Mountains, 35 miles east of Snowflake, Charles Whiting' and J.J. Adams' families engaged in cattle raising. It was good cattle country but again the problem of theft confronted them. One day they missed seven of their best horses. Charles and J.J. followed the tracks. Some places the horses had been led over solid rock, but they continued to follow. They camped for the night on top of the mountain. Down the other side they came to a log cabin by a spring. They were eating a turnip from the garden there when two armed men rode up and demanded to know what occasioned the visit. The co-op store at Woodruff had been robbed earlier that year. One of the tough looking strangers was carrying a pair of field glasses, and they carried other articles which looked like articles stolen from the store. Adams and Whiting told the strangers they were looking for a man called Martin Sanders. The men offered to show the way. One rode ahead, one behind. When the desperados had ushered them out of their hideout, they told them not to come snooping around again.
Three weeks later, Whiting and Adams returned over the mountain with four other men. A search ensued and the horses were found. The horses were staked out. The brands had been defaced with a hot iron. The gang of thieves later got to fighting among themselves and in the feud all of them were killed but one. That served as the plot to the Zane Grey novel "To the Last Man".
As has been pointed out, there was at this time trouble with outlaws, robbers, and cattlemen fighting sheep men. the Blevens' and Coopers', cattlemen who had been driven out of Texas, and the Tukesberrys' who were sheep men, fought each other. The Hashknife Outfit built up their herd by branding other people's calves. Cowhands were given a commission on the calves they branded. They tried to drive the sheep men out. They also stirred up the Indians, from whom they had stolen. The Coopers' or Blevens' ran their cattle in the Tonto Basin and another family of outlaws by the name of Tukesberry fought among themselves until most of them were killed off. Because of all the trouble, Wilford was eventually evacuated.
Twelve days after Eliza's marriage to Charles, Rebecca Jacobson married Edmund Richardson. This left their father with Mary, age twelve, as his only help within the household. Eliza and Rebecca took the responsibility of helping all they could with baking, washing, ironing, mending, etc. Her father was left with nine un-married children. Eliza and Rebecca also worked doing house-cleaning and washing for others whenever they could, received fifty cents a day. It was always hard work.
The family missed their mother very much. Eleven-year-old Serepta felt the loss very keenly and seemed to take sick the day her mother died and kept pining away. At the cemetery, she asked to be placed beside her mother. A terrific rainstorm arose while the family was at the grave and they were all drenched. After the burial, the family was taken to different places. Serepta continued to fade and waste away; she couldn't eat though she was hungry all the time. Father Jacobson watched over his little girls like a mother, never resting day or night. He became ill and bedfast. About this time, Rass came home sick with the quinzy, so there were three sick ones for Eliza and Rebecca to care for. James, being older, was in Arizona. Rebecca was sixteen, Mary thirteen, Serepta eleven, Ransome about seven, and Jessie five. Serepta lingered on until November, and when she died, she wasn't allowed to be buried by her mother as she had requested. The Mexican officials ordered her to be buried in the new cemetery. She was the first one. All the graves in the old cemetery had to be leveled.
Eliza lived close to her father. She did his laundry and brought him food. Some of his favorites were little pots of soup, rice pudding, sweet soups made from dried fruits and spices when they were available, Danish beer (a non-intoxicating drink which he used almost in place of water). The art of making yeast for this beer served a very useful contribution to the pioneers. They learned to use the yeast for making lighter bread, yogurt and cheese. These things gave a greater variety in an otherwise small assortment of foods and their uses.
Some of James' grand-children, while living in Mexico had the privilege of hearing him tell of celebrating the Festival of Light. Because of the long winters, Swedish people loved the sun and staged many of their celebrations around it. In this festival each family staged it's own celebration by appointing a daughter to play the part of Saint Lucia. She would wear a white dress and a crown of evergreen leaves topped with seven candles and carry an evergreen bough. On Christmas eve she would hand out gifts to the family members and they would sing the song "Santa Lucia" together. She would arise early on Christmas morning and prepare breakfast of a hot drink and special 'lucia buns' to serve her family before they were out of bed. Christmas season was celebrated from December 13th to January 13th. The celebration called Mid-Summer's Eve was from June 19th to the 25th and was almost as important as Christmas. The time was spent dancing around may-poles decorated gaily with flowers and flags, with much singing.
Eliza adored her husband, Charles. To them were born six children, three boys and three girls. John Lucius, Myrtle Ivy, James Albert, Iris Esther, William Verland and Mary Estelle.
Charles was a fairly successful farmer and a good provider. He loved animal husbandry best, but when the life of the cowboy was so rough and careless he gave it up. He sold his horses and many head of cattle in order to protect his sons from this life-style. He built Anna Eliza and Verona each a nice brick home on Colonia Diaz city lots. Sullivan Calvin Richardson' and Charles Whiting' families were very close since their serving together on calls to settle the Little Colorado. They lived side by side in Diaz. When Edmund Richardson's family came to Colonia Diaz all the town-lots were taken, so Charles and Sully gave him one-third each of their lots to settle on.
At Diaz the soil was alluvial, rich and fertile. Some of the time the river would overflow and bring it's top-soil over the land. Sometime, on the other hand, there was drought.
In 1891, a drought struck. Sully and Teressa, Charles and Eliza went south-ward to the mountain area beyond Colonia Juarez. The ranch of Helaman Pratt, son of Parley P. Pratt, was east of them. They built a joint home for their two wives. A porch in the middle divided the family's living quarters.
The pastures were lush and the cows produced well. The women milked the cows and began to accumulate butter which was made into butter lard, by heating it and straining out the milk particles. This helped to preserve it. They then loaded it into barrels.
Charles and Sully Richardson loaded their wagons with lumber from the mountain saw mill and started the trip to Colonia Diaz. They left two young boys, Charles Whiting and Will Donaldson to help the women with the work.
At Cave Valley, Charles and Sully learned that an Indian outlaw called "The Kid" had been seen heading in the direction of their wives. They combined both outfits and Charles, being an excellent teamster went on with the two wagons. Sully borrowed a rifle, bought cartridges and started back. About midnight, on top of the first mountain, he was seized with cramps. He camped with a Turley boy until near morning. Soon after he tried to shoot a deer and found the gun had no firing pin. He borrowed another gun and took a short-cut toward his destination.
He met little Annie Thompson with her dog. He got off his horse to warn her about the Indians. Through her sobs he learned that the Indians had killed her grand-mother and shot her brothers. They had looted their place and had stolen everything they could carry away, including 15 valuable ranch horses, considerable money and even two suits of Temple clothes. Had not his cramps delayed Sully, he might have arrived at the Thompson Ranch with his useless gun in time to be killed.
Going back with the little girl, Sully met a posse of men who went with him to the Thompson Ranch and found an awful scene. one boy still alive. He was cared for and lived. Sully carried on to find all was well with his family, who were unaware of the events happening so nearby. The ranchers did not know the direction the Indians had gone, so they all moved away at once. Charles and Sully decided to sell out and move their families back to Diaz. They preferred drought to the Indians.
As they moved to safety, the women took turns riding with the children. After about four miles travel down a ravine, they were motioned to stop and the women and children to go behind trees. Eliza was among them with her children John and Myrtle. Although she was very frightened, she showed self control as she hid her children. The alarm proved to be false. It was only three horsemen coming to help them. For years, however the awful scene at Thompson's Ranch haunted them.
Iris remembered that their food was usually very basic, plain and coarse, for a long time. Corn bread and beans, beans, beans! Later, others learned to provide better foods, such as molasses and honey for a little sweet, vinegars from over-ripe fruits, mills to grind lighter flour from both corn and wheat, meat from beef, chicken and pork. Occasionally they would be treated to bear meet, which tasted sweet. Summer's vegetables were a treat when new peas and potatoes, carrots and onions, beets and greens and turnips showed up on the tables. The longing for a little taste variety caused Eliza and some of her children to sip vinegar. They thought it a real treat. Sugar was hard to get. It was used by sprinkling it into burns, cuts, boils and other wounds to help healing instead of in the diet.
There were no doctors. Illness or injuries became very serious indeed. Golden Seal, a very bitter herb, was used for soothing the mucous membranes. It was packed into hollow grass reeds and blown into the back of the throat of people with diphtheria or sore throat.
Once when one of the children was bitten by a rabid skunk he asked his mother to tie him down so he would not bring harm to anyone when rabies drove him mad. Hydrophobia was a horrible illness and always fatal until a much later date.
Eliza was neat and clean in her humble home. She had a gift for making pretty things from very little. Rag rugs were her specialty, with heart designs and flowers. She was skilled in making simple foods taste excellent. Iris recalled that her mother would give thanks in prayer for even the slightest snack, so great was her gratitude for her blessings.
She helped her sister-wife, Verona in suit making. They would work at one or the other house while Charles entertained the children at the other. He told them stories and sang songs and read to them the stories of Horacio Alger and Ragged Dick. One little song he taught them was: "Thank you pretty cow that makes lovely milk to soften our bread. Every night and every day, warm and white and sweet and good."
James Albert, Eliza and Charles' third child, died at 15 months of age. Iris Esther was born 10 months later to fill her mother's grieving arms. At this time Eliza was 26 years of age. She suffered an injury and began having seizures which would render her unconscious for a short period of time, but she would not fall down nor faint. Once while caring for a new mother and ironing a fancy leg-a-mutton sleeve blouse, to be worn when guests arrived to see the new baby, Eliza put her hand directly on the hot iron handle instead of using a hot pad as she started a seizure. This left a terrible burn which left her hand twisted from that time. Because of her seizures, Charles, Verona and Eliza held a counsel and it was decided that Eliza should have no more children. As a result, Iris was the last baby for 13 years. Later, Sullivan Richardson spoke to Charles and advised him that it was not right for him to live apart from his lovely wife, Eliza. She should have the right to choose if she should have more children.
August 12th, 1909, William Verland Whiting was born. This was cause for great rejoicing.
At age 21, Eliza and Charles' son John Lucius Whiting left Mexico to work at St. Johns, Arizona, for his uncle Edwin Marion Whiting in the lumber mill. Soon after starting, while working with his cousin, Herbert Berry, he slipped and fell across the circular saw. Because of a lack of antibiotics, he died of blood poisoning in a few days. His father, Charles, left immediately upon hearing of the injury but arrived at St. Johns too late. John's body was just being brought to town when he arrived. John died August 12th, 1911. This was a cause of great mourning to all the family, to lose this outstanding young man.
On July 5th of 1912, Mary Elizabeth Cox passed away at St. Johns, Arizona. Because of great unrest due to the Mexican Revolution against Presidente Diaz, Charles was unable to leave his family to attend her funeral. This period of time was filled with a multitude of sorrows.
Only a few days later suddenly on July 12th, 1912, the Saints were advised by Stake President Romney to pack in a hurry and leave Mexico. Obediently, Charles Whiting, his wives and children and their families took only the barest essentials and wearing their oldest clothing. They traveled 17 miles to the closest border of New Mexico, believing that they would soon return to their Mexican homes.
The Exodus in 1912 was a sad and traumatic experience, one they never forgot. All but one of the children were born there. They had many happy times there. They thought they might be able to return for their good clothes, silverware and dishes, their cattle and many other things, but it was not to be.
According to May Whiting Cordon, Charles and his sons, Bernard and Charlie Jr. did return to Mexico at different times to bring out some of their stock and household goods. This was a dangerous and most difficult thing to do.
Verona Snow Whiting arrived in St. Johns on the 5th of August, 1912. At that time, Eliza was expecting her 6th child, Mary Estelle, who was born in Hachita, New Mexico in a temporary United States government tent provided for the exiles. After a short time, Verona and her married children went on to St. Johns, Arizona, while Charles and Eliza and other children and their families went to Franklin, Arizona in Greenlee County. Charles worked by plowing and helping others. Eliza did washings and anything else to earn a little money to replace all their lost goods.
While there, they met with another misfortune. When they were away one day from their little rented home, it burned down so they again lost everything they had. Iris later recalled that kind friends consoled Eliza as she told of doing many washings to earn money for new curtains which had just been purchased and not yet put up, when they were destroyed in the fire. The bishop gave them a hundred dollars to help with all their loss, for which they were very grateful. Charles and Eliza had always been full tithe payers, and this was the only time they ever needed help from the Church.
Charles' brother, Edwin Marion gave him a job in St. Johns hauling lumber and supplies to and from the saw mill in the White Mountains. Charles' mother, Mary Elizabeth Cox had owned two city lots there and Charles' brothers felt that she would want Charles to have them, so they were deeded to him. Lumber was available from Charles' brother Eddie's Saw Mill. Two lumber houses were soon built on them, one for Verona and one for Eliza.
On December 20th, 1917, Charles was killed instantly while with his son Bernard, each with four horses and two wagons, were freighting grain to St. Johns from Nutrioso, Arizona. He had a spirited team and, when passing a dead horse by the road, the horses bolted, throwing him off the wagon. His head was crushed by the wheels. This terrible tragedy was hard to bear.
Bishop W. D. Rencher officiated at his funeral December 22nd. Other speakers were Pres. D. K. Udall, John Plumb, Marinus Christensen and M. H. Peterson. Each spoke of his good and honorable character and enduring patience and faithfulness, which characterized his life. The opening prayer was offered by Charles P. Anderson and the benediction was by Patriarch J. W. Brown. A Sketch of his life was given by Judge George H. Crosby. Beautiful music was furnished by the ward choir, with a special selection by Josephine Patterson. There was a large attendance.
The accident left his two wives, Verona Snow Whiting and Anna Eliza Jacobson Whiting without support. Verona's children were all married. Eliza had two little children, Estelle, age 5, and Bill, age 8, besides her two married daughters.
Charles was remembered for his love and kindness. He always lived within his means and when he left Mexico, had no debt. He never complained. He was always a peacemaker and disliked bickering and trouble. He was modest about his talent of storytelling, singing and joking. He read to his children often when they were young.
Two years after Charles' death, Anna Eliza died of influenza on January 20, 1919, at 46 years of age, in Iris' little home in St. Johns, Arizona, while her husband George Brown was in France during World War I. At that time Myrtle was expecting a baby. Iris' mother-in-law, Thurza Berry Brown helped her nurse Eliza and as her death became imminent, had Iris leave the room. She did not want Iris to live with those memories, with her husband, George, being away in the war. Funeral services were held at the St. Johns Academy on Wednesday, January 22, 1919. She was buried in St. Johns cemetery beside her husband, Charles. Only a small service was held by family members because of the influenza epidemic. Few gatherings were held during this time.
Bill was 9 years old and Estelle was 6 years old at the time of their mother's death. Iris cared for them for some time. Later, Bill went to live with Myrtle and Arch Isaacson.
A niece, Madge Germaine, recalls that her Aunt Eliza was a wonderful woman, very warm, thoughtful and kind. Whenever there was a death in town, she would go into the home and clean it nicely while the family was away.
Myrtle said this of her mother: "Anna Eliza was a very generous person and very religious. She taught her children early in life to take their problems to our Heavenly Father and to share whatever they had with those less fortunate. She set the example for her children to live by, and they are all grateful."
Iris said of her mother: "She was humble and grateful to Heavenly Father for every blessing. She would not so much as eat a snack before first giving thanks to Him for it and ask a blessing upon it."
References:
1. Myrtle Ivy Whiting Isaacson
2. Iris Esther Whiting Brown
3. George A. Brown
4. Before and After Mt. Pisgah- Clare B. Christensen
5. Lorraine King Isaacson
6. Beverly Brown Killpack
7. Kathleen Brown Wilson
8. St. John's Newspaper articles
9. Annie Richardson Johnson
Compiled by Lorraine King Isaacson and Beverly Brown Killpack.

Carl T. Cox
ctcox@getgoin.net
Last update April 14, 2007

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Bear River City, Box Elder, Utah.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Saint Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died 23 Jan 1919

BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Saint Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Saint Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States, United States.

BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Saint Johns, Apache, Arizona, United States, United States.
 
Jacobson, Anna Eliza (I16825)
 
19858 https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XHBG-WP2
"United States Census, 1930," Geo Albert Brown, St John's, Apache, Arizona
Name: Geo Albert Brown
Event: Census
Event Date: 1930
Event Place: St John's, Apache, Arizona
Gender: Male
Age: 36
Marital Status: Married
Race: White
Birthplace: Arizona
Estimated Birth Year: 1894
Immigration Year:
Relationship to Head of Household: Head
Father's Birthplace: Utah
Mother's Birthplace: Utah
Enumeration District Number: 0018
Family Number: 51
Sheet Number and Letter: 3B
Line Number: 60
NARA Publication: T626, roll 55
Film Number: 2339790
Digital Folder Number: 4532413
Image Number: 00190
Household Gender Age Birthplace
Head Geo Albert Brown M 36 Arizona
Wife Iris E Brown
F 38 Mexico
Daughter Estelle W Brown
F 17 New Mexico
Daughter Barbara Brown
F 11 Arizona
Son Geo A Brown
M 9 Arizona
Son John W Brown
M 8 Arizona
Daughter Margaret Brown
F 6 Arizona
Daughter Roberta Brown
F 3 Arizona
Daughter Beverly Jean Brown
F 1 Arizona
Source Citation
"United States Census, 1930," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XHBG-WP2 : accessed 11 June 2012), Geo Albert Brown, St John's, Apache, Arizona.

https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MCR6-Z1G
"United States Census, 1920," George A Brown, , Apache, Arizona
Name: George A Brown
Residence: , Apache, Arizona
Estimated Birth Year: 1894
Age: 26
Birthplace: Arizona
Relationship to Head of Household: Self
Gender: Male
Race: White
Marital Status: Married
Father's Birthplace:
Mother's Birthplace:
Film Number: 1820046
Digital Folder Number: 4294342
Image Number: 00111
Sheet Number: 3
Household Gender Age Birthplace
SELF George A Brown M 26y Arizona
WIFE Iris W Brown F 23y Mexico
DAU Barbasha Brown F 1y0m Arizona
Estella Whiting F 7y New Mexico
Source Citation
"United States Census, 1920," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MCR6-Z1G : accessed 3 July 2012), George A Brown, , Apache, Arizona.

Birth: 9 Feb 1896 Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. LDS Membership Records.
According to account related by her to her daughter Beverly, she travelled by train from Mexico to Salt Lake City on 10 Oct 1899 and baptized for her eyesight. She had poor eyesight before that, caused from measles. On the return trip she had improved sight.
SSN: 527-30-2692
George A. Brown Journal page 102: "Baptized 3 Apr 1904 by Charles W. Whiting".

Sealing of George Albert Brown and Iris Esther Whiting witnessed by daughter Beverly Jean Brown Killpack 9 Apr 1960 at the Arizona Temple, at which time the following children were sealed to them:
Barbara Brown, John Whiting Brown, Beverly Jean Brown, Kathleen Brown and Franklin Willis Brown.llis Brown.

!Birth: 9 Feb 1896 Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. LDS Membership Records.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States, United States.

BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States, United States.

DEATH: Also shown as Died Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States, United States.

BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Phoenix, Maricopa, Arizona, United States, United States.
 
Whiting, Iris Esther (I16831)
 
19859 https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=EWhZAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA484


COMBE WAGSTAFFE, Eques. Aur. filius THOMÆ WAGSTAFFE, unicus (e MARIA conjuge sua filia & cohærede WILL. COMBE nuper de STRATFORD super Avon,arm.) primogeniti TIMOTHEI WAGSTAFFE, Jurisconsulti sagacis. Qui quidem COMBE Calebs obiit XV0 Januarii A°. D. MDCLXVII0. ætatis suæ XXX. MARIAM sororem (JOHANNI CREW de VTRTNTON in Com. CESTRIÆ equiti aur. enuptamj relinquens, Ac THOMAM 'WAGSTAFFE filiumunicum JOHANNIS WAGSTAFFE, patrui Hæredem ex asse constituens. Arms on this monument are, argent two bends in- grailcd with an escallop in sinister chief sable empaling Combe , ermine three lions passant gules. On another marble monument :

S. To the Memory of JOHN WAGSTAFFE Esq-, third son of TIMOTHY WAGSTAFFE of TACHEBROOKE Esq; descended from the ancient Family of the WAGSTAFFES of HARBVRY He was a Person of Exemplary Charity, approved Integrity, & known Loyalty, a Constant Churchman, and a zealous Assertor of Monarchy : In him the Christian and the Gentleman were united. His Religion did not make him insociable, nor his mirth irreligious ; He lived 63 years deservedly beloved, and died as generally lamented on the 4th of June 1681. He married ALICE the daughter of THO. STANTONofWOLVARDINGTONEfq; who died the 4th. of Nov. 1681. aged 63 ye rs : She was indued with all those virtues & Graces that made her Admired here, and prepared her for a happy Immortality hereafter* They lived together 34 years mutually happy, and had ilfue only one Son Sr. THOMAS WAGSTAFFE Knt. who erected this as a lasting Monument of his Duty and Gratitude to the most loving & beloved Parents. Arms on this monument are, Wagst.ife empaling Stantotiy viz. argent two ckeverons, with a border ingrail- ed fable. On a large grey marble monument fixed to the south wall, are depicted the arms of Wagstaffe era-


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Family F460
 
19860 https://play.google.com/books/reader?printsec=frontcover&output=reader&id=ohwwAAAAYAAJ

As this book is not a Lord Genealogy, I have made no effort to follow the fortunes of these brothers and sisters. A few facts, however, as to the senior brother Richard have an historic value. He was a merchant in Hartford, and was one of the body cor porate to whom King Charles granted the Connecticut charter, April 20, 1662. He seemed to be of rather a pugnacious dispo sition, for on Oct. 12, 1643, he engaged his brother-in-law, Thomas Stanton, in a quarrel about trading for Indian corn. He used very threatening language, and drew his sword, but be fore he could use it he was arrested and fined five pounds by the Hartford Court. It would be interesting to know how Mr. Stanton conducted himself in this little broil, but we only know that the Court Record makes no case against him. In 1658 the first troop of horsemen in Conn. was organ ized, and Richard Lord was chosen captain. He died in New London, May 17, 1662, and was buried in the old burial-place there. A table of red sandstone covers his grave, cracked and sunken below the surrounding soil; it is, nevertheless, still there; probably the oldest inscribed tombstone east of the Connecticut river.

An Epitaph ok Captaine Richard Lord, Deceased. May 17, 1662, Miktk SV. M 51.

" The bright starre of our ca valine lyes here. Unto the state a counselore full dearo And to y* truth a friend of sweete content. To Hartford Towne a silver ornament. " Who can deny to Poore he was releife And in composing paroxysmes was cheife. To Marchants as a patterne he might stand Adventring dangers new by sea and land."


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U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 about Richard Lord
Name: Richard Lord
Gender: Male
Birth Place: En
Birth Year: 1611
Spouse Name: Sarah Graves
Marriage
Year: 1635
Marriage State: CT
Number Pages: 1


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Family Data Collection - Births about Richard Lord
Name: Richard Lord
Father: Thomas Lord
Mother: Dorothy Bird
Birth Date: 15 Nov 1611
County: Northampton
Country: England

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U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Richard Lord
Name: Richard Lord
Arrival Year: 1633
Arrival Place: Cambridge, Massachusetts
Source Publication Code: 116.1
Primary Immigrant: Lord, Richard
Annotation: Date and place of first residence in New England. Extracted from passenger lists, lists of freemen, colony and court records, notarial records, vital records, land records, church records, and journals and letters. Place of origin, occupation, and other genealogical and historical information may also be provided.
Source Bibliography: ANDERSON, ROBERT CHARLES. The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. Three Volumes. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995. 2386p.
Page: 1198



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Millennium File about Richard Lord
Name: Richard Lord
Gender: Male
Christening Date: 5 Jan 1612
Christening Place: Towchester, Northampton, England
Death Date: 17 May 1662
Death Place: New London, New London, Connecticut, USA
Marriage Date: 1635
Spouse: Sarah
Children: Richard Lord


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Connecticut, Deaths and Burials Index, 1650-1934 about Richard Lord
Name: Richard Lord
Death Date: 17 May 1662
Death Place: New Haven, Connecticut
Gender: Male
FHL Film Number: 3162


http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=FSConnecticutDeath&h=2353953&indiv=try&o_vc=Record:OtherRecord&rhSource=7836 
Lord, Richard (I1346)
 
19861 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/1558/records/301324101/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=8912 Barkler, Henry (I3166)
 
19862 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/1558/records/301324101/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=8912 Mary Ann (I3167)
 
19863 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/2352/records/38967254/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=AvZ132&_phstart=successSource Eastwood, John Kenworthy (I499)
 
19864 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/2352/records/38967254/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=AvZ132&_phstart=successSource Eastwood, Wright (I1118)
 
19865 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, John (I1573)
 
19866 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Eliza (I1620)
 
19867 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, Mary Ann (I436)
 
19868 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, William (I478)
 
19869 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, William (I540)
 
19870 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, Thomas (I590)
 
19871 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, Elizabeth (I616)
 
19872 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/8860/records/5984303/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=7619

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Legg, Levi (I860)
 
19873 https://search.ancestry.com/collections/9841/records/23342840/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=8912

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1878
Sarah Ellen Whiting
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915

Name: Sarah Ellen Whiting
Estimated birth year: abt 1836
Registration Year: 1878
Registration Quarter: Jul-Aug-Sep
Age at Death: 42
Registration district: Hunslet
Parishes for this Registration District: Search for Hunslet in the London Times
Inferred County: Yorkshire West Riding
Volume: 9b
Page: 185
© 2020, Ancestry.com
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Eliza (I3478)
 
19874 https://search.findmypast.com/record?id=GBC/1841/0001478805&hintId=c9fc2d7e-5b5f-47c4-aa60-e614432e0fec&hintsRequestId=5a1a9a45-01fd-4491-a809-597fa6b53916&_ga=2.126903752.470447546.1541016162-1881000738.1508983263 Townsend, Susannah (I432)
 
19875 https://search.findmypast.com/record?id=GBPRS/YORKSHIRE/MAR/500109227/1&hintId=7b398047-2035-4381-b754-bb7140f85ac8&hintsRequestId=9c28a81d-722b-47a0-8588-6a4e1d25eaa2 Family F1394
 
19876 https://search.findmypast.com/record?id=GBPRS/YORKSHIRE/MAR/500127655/1&hintId=765ff0a4-8dd3-4fbb-9c09-05a3551057e2&hintsRequestId=89ca29b7-0045-4194-b89b-68cf63cc3094 Family F1391
 
19877 https://sites.google.com/site/emilyfarrer/home/joseph-wadsworth-and-elizabeth-talcott

Joseph Wadsworth and Elizabeth Talcott
Joseph Wadsworth was born in Hartford, Connecticut the son of William Wadsworth and Elizabeth Stone about 1648.
Elizabeth Talcott was born February 21, 1656 to John Talcott and Helena Wakeman in Hartford Connecticut.
He was of an impetuous, aggressive nature, courageous and resolute, and early a leader among the younger set of Hartford. As a young man he must have taken an active interest in military affairs, for "at a meeting of the councill, held at Hartford, Sept. 6th, 1675, the Councill ordered that Sgt. Joseph Wadsworth should take under his conduct twenty men, and pass up to Westfield, to assist them against the common enemie." A few months later, on the 14th of January, 1675/76, the Council, when appointing John Stanley captain " of part of an affidavit made by Joseph Wadsworth in support of a petition of James Mini to the General Assembly at its session of May, 1721, gives the approximate date of his birth. It reads, " These may Informe ye Honoured General Court that my Hononed Father haveing been a first planter of Hartford I in my youth who am Now 74 years old did often hear my sd Father say that those Lots Caled the Soldiers field was the Lots Granted to ye Paquoit soldiers only ft yt for there Good service in said warr. Joseph Wadsworth."
Document 217, Vol. Ill, "Towns and Lands," in the archives, State
Library, Hartford.
He was propounded, for freeman in 1676, with his brothers Samuel and Thomas, and all were admitted the same year
He was a lieutenant and served in Philip's war.
He first married Elizabeth Barnard, daughter of Bartholomew Barnard. Joseph then married Elizabeth Talcott, daughter John Talcott. He married late in life, Mary, daughter of John Blackleach, the younger, who had been the first wife of Thomas Welles, next of John Oleutt.

Joseph is most remembered with gratitude as the preserver of the Connecticut Charter.
The Charter Oak is Connecticut's official State Tree. An image of the Charter Oak was selected to emblazon the back of Connecticut's state quarter. In 1662, Connecticut received its Royal Charter from England's Charles II. A quarter century later, James II's royal representatives attempted to seize the charter. Well, our Connecticut forebears were not about to take that lying down, even though the Brits threatened to split the state and divide its lands between Massachusetts and New York.
On October 26, 1687, Sir Edmund Andros, who had been appointed by the Crown as governor of all of New England, arrived in Hartford to demand the charter. What exactly happened during that evening's showdown at Butler's Tavern may never be ascertained, but the upshot is that, in the midst of heated debates between Connecticut leaders and the royal entourage over surrendering the Charter, the room was plunged into darkness when the candles that illuminated it were overturned.
Was it an accident, or a crafty maneuver carefully plotted by the feisty defenders of Connecticut's rights? We may never know, but what we do know is that one passionate Nutmegger, Captain Joseph Wadsworth, who was positioned outside the tavern, found himself in possession of the Charter during the ensuing chaos in the darkness. Wadsworth took it upon himself to hide the charter safely inside a majestic white oak tree on the Wyllys estate in Hartford. The stately tree was already more than 500 years old when it served its spectacular role as a hiding spot for the precious document. Wadsworth's bold move served to preserve not only the document but the rights of the colonists.
Thus, the tree earned its nickname – the "Charter Oak." The venerable tree stood as a proud Connecticut symbol for another 150 years until it was toppled during a storm on August 21, 1856.
Now, the symbol lives on thanks to the U.S. Mint's state quarters program. [Source: http://hartford.about.com/cs/cthistory/a/aacharteroak.htm]
At a session of the General Court held in September, 1689, Joseph was chosen lieutenant " for the traine band of the north side of Hartford," and at a session of the Court held in October 1697, Capt. Joseph Wadsworth was by this Court confirmed Capy." of the train band in Hartford on the north side of the river." He had been called Captain some years earlier, as in the list of deputies to the General Court in October, 1694, the first name is that of "Capt. Jos. Wadsworth."
For several years, intermittently, he was elected townsman and doubtless displayed his characteristic vigor in the discharge of that office. While his services as deputy or representative were not so continuous or so extensive as his father's, his name appears on the records during a period of thirty years, from May, 1685, to May, 1715. The sessions, in detail, at which he was a deputy were those of May and October, 1685, May and October, 1694, May and October, 1695, October, 1699, May and October, 1703, May and October, 1704, October, 1705, October, 1706, April and May, 1707, and May, 1715. A few allusions in the records indicate that, as deputy, he spoke his mind freely and sometimes intemperately, with utter disregard to the consequences.
At the October session of 1703, for using " reproachfull words " against " William Pitkin Esqr, Assistant," and also for casting forth " reproachfull expressions against divers members of the Assembly," he was sentenced to pay a fine of ten pounds.* And during the last session that he attended, in May, 1715, he was publicly admonished by Gov. Saltonstall for a " discourse of a seditious nature and tendency," delivered on the 17th of that month. Only once does he appear to have been a member of the Council, and then toward the end of his life. At a meeting of the Governor and Council held at Hartford, August 16, 1726, Capt. Joseph Wadsworth was present as a member, and this is the last mention of him in the Colonial Records. [Colonial Records of Connecticut, 1665-1677, p. 400. lbid., 1689-1706, p. 5.]
Under date of Oct. 15, 1688, John Allyn, Secretary of the Colony,
wrote Gov. Andros, " I allso make bold to inform your Excelency that if you please to make Joseph Wadsworth Lieutenant of the company of the North side of or Towne & Mr. Niccols of the Sowth side, it will be most accomadating to the people as their habitations are settled." [Colonial Records of Connecticut, 1678-1689, p. 450.]
Many years afterwards when he himself was a deputy to the General Assembly for the last time, in May, 1715, his valiant exploit was recognized by the Colony as follows: — "Upon consideration of the faithful and good service of Capt. Joseph Wadsworth, of Hartford, especially in securing the Duplicate Charter of this Colony in a very troublesome season when our constitution was struck at, and in safely keeping and preserving the same ever since unto this day: This Assembly do, as a token of their grateful resentment of such his faithful and good service, grant him out of the Colony treasury the sum of twenty shillings." [Colonial Records of Connecticut, 1689-1706, p. 453. lbid.,
1706-1716, pp. 492 and 493. Jlbid., 1726-1735, p. 52. lbid., 1706-1716, p. 507.]
It is strange that the death of such a patriot is not recorded, but it probably took place in 1730, as his will was proved March 2, 1730-31.
Joseph Wadsworth married (1) Elizabeth Talcott, born February 21, 1656, daughter of Lieut. Col. John and Helena (Wakeman) Talcott, who died October 26, 1710. He married (2) Mary Blackleach, widow of both Thomas
Welles and John Olcott, and daughter of John and Elizabeth Blackleach of Wethersfield, Connecticut, who survived him. [Early Connecticut Probate Records, Vol. Ill, p. 122.]
There are several reasons for believing that Elizabeth Talcott, and
not Elizabeth Barnard, was the mother of his children. In March, 1753, Aaron Cook and his wife Hannah (Wadsworth) Cook of Harwinton, conveyed to Joseph Wadsworth Jr., Daniel Wadsworth and William Wadsworth, all right pertaining to them " by the Right of Our Hond Mother Elizabeth Wadsworth in the five mile so called on the East side of the great River." Hartford Town Records, No. 8, p. 424.
That Lt. Col. John Talcott possessed lands in the above described
tract, appears from a statement in the inventory of his estate taken Nov. 3, 1689, of his owning "2 prsells Land Giuen by Jos[h]ua Sachem And Cap' Sanupp nott yett deuided."
On the other hand, Bartholomew Barnard left by will only £20 to his
daughter Elizabeth. Still weightier evidence is presented in the petition of Joseph Talcott to the General Court, dated May 15, 1691. In it he recites that " Y Honourd father of your poor petitioner departed this Life upon ye 23d
day of July 1688 haueing made no writen will for yi setelment of his personall estate this Colony then being under y Gouerm' of his Excellency Sr Edmon Andros aplycation was made to him by my brother in law
Lift Jos Wardsworth: for leeters of Adminisstration upon y« sii estate etc." Document 47, Vol. IV, " Private Controversies," in the archives.
State Library, Hartford.
This proves that Joseph Wadsworth was married to Elizabeth Talcott
prior to April 18, 1689, when Sir Edmund Andros was arrested and
imprisoned. For further discussion of this question, see p. 81, Vol. LXIV,
of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register, where Mr. Frank
Farnsworth Starr, to whom the editor is indebted for the information,
examines the matter in detail.

Source: An Account of Some of the Descendants of John Russell, the Emigrant from Ipswich, England, who Came to Boston, New England, October 3, 1635, Together with Some Sketches of the Allied Families of Wadsworth, Tuttle, and Beresford by Gurdon Wadsworth Russell, Edwin Stanley Welles, Samuel Hart, J. R. Hutchinson, published by Case, Lockwood & Brainard, 1910, original from the University of Wisconsin - Madison, Digitized Nov. 1, 2007
http://books.google.com/books?id=XrxOAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA239&lpg=PA239&dq=joseph+wadsworth,+1648&source=web&ots=3SyqRC4vtp&sig=b2XzSlO-y0ULjwgD7RDw_3rhtG8&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=6&ct=result#PPA243,M1
The Charter Oak

Connecticut's history of constitutional government dates back to the seventeenth century and two significant documents: the 1639 Fundamental Orders, which bound the three original towns of Windsor, Wethersfield and Hartford into a colonial entity, and the Royal Charter of 1662 granted by Charles II. Twenty-five years later, when agents of James II attempted to seize the charter, it was spirited away and hidden in a majestic oak tree on the Wyllys estate in Hartford, thereby preserving the charter and the rights of the colonists. For over a hundred and fifty years, the "charter oak" was a prominent and widely recognized Connecticut landmark. When it was toppled during an 1856 storm, acorns were collected as keepsakes, as were a considerable amount of twigs, leaves, branches, and lumber. [Google images]
http://kristinabraham.com/CT%20constitution.jpg
http://kristinabraham.com/CT%20constitution.jpg


=================================================================
The Charter Oak - Connecticut's Most Famous Tree
The "Charter Oak incident," though never fully proven as fact, remains one of the
most exciting chapters in both Hartford and Connecticut history.
Thanks to the diplomacy of Gov. John Winthrop Jr., the General Court of
Connecticut won a charter from King Charles II on Oct. 9, 1662. Among other
things, the document legitimized all existing settlements in Connecticut, set the
boundaries of the colony, and - most importantly - perpetuated the rights laid out
in the Fundamental Orders, allowing the colonists a high degree of self-
government.
But by the time James II assumed the throne 25 years later, England wanted
greater integration of the New England colonies - and more centralized control.
Sir Edmund Andros, assigned by the king to rule New York and all of the New
England colonies in a single "Dominion of New England," demanded return of
Connecticut's charter. After trying various strategies for accomplishing this, he
finally marched to Hartford with an armed force to seize it. The following is
legend:
On October 27,1687, Andros' party met with Gov. Robert Treat and other
colonists at the public meeting house. Andros again demanded surrender of the
charter; Treat responded with a long speech in defense of the colony. The
debate went on for hours. Eventually, candles had to be lit - darkness fell early at
that time of year. With the Charter on the table between the opposing parties, the
room suddenly went dark. Moments later, when the candles were re-lighted, the
charter was gone. Captain Joseph Wadsworth is credited with swiping the
document and hiding it nearby, in the trunk of a giant white oak before the home
of Samuel Wyllys, one of the magistrates of the colony.
"This secreting of the charter in the great Charter Oak tree soon grew into one of
Connecticut's cherished traditions," historian Albert V. Van Dusen wrote.
"Whether or not the charter ever was actually put there, even for a few hours, is a
matter of conjecture. It does seem fairly certain, though, that the charter actually
was spirited away under cover of darkness." He noted that 28 years later, in
1715, the colony paid Wadsworth 20 shillings for "securing the Duplicate Charter
of this Colony in a very troublesome season."
Yet, despite all the drama of that night, the colony effectively surrendered to
Andros, who named Treat and John Allyn to his council and made various other
Dominion appointments before leaving. Van Dusen observed, though, that
Andros "undoubtedly felt vexed at his failure to obtain the charter." Moreover, the
colonists had only recorded that he was taking control; they never made a
positive vote of submission.
Andros' reign did not last long anyway. The spring of 1689 brought news of the
Glorious Revolution in England. James II had fled to France; in Boston, Andros
was arrested. Connecticut colonists convinced James' successors, William and
Mary, to confirm the 1662 charter.
The tree itself lasted another century and a half as a cherished landmark.
According to historian Ellsworth Grant, its base eventually reached a
circumference of 33 feet. When a windstorm finally toppled it in 1856, the
marching band belonging to gun maker Samuel Colt played funeral dirges on the
site. In 1907, the Connecticut Society of Colonial Wars erected a monument at
the corner of Charter Oak Avenue and Charter Oak Place, near the spot where
the tree stood. The monument remains.
In tribute to the Charter Oak legend, Connecticut designated the white oak as the
state tree.
The Charter Oak is Connecticut's official State Tree - am image of the Charter
Oak was selected to emblazon the back of Connecticut's state quarter. Until very
recently, every Connecticut school child was familiar with Hartford's Charter Oak
and the stirring legend which planted the venerable tree firmly at the center of the
state's cultural symbolism - the tree that played a pivotal role in saving a young
colony from tyranny and preserving her people's freedom. The history (and
legend) surrounding the Charter Oak is of interest to all Connecticut historians
and may be of interest to Charter Oak Figure Skating Club members.
The great white oak stood taller than other trees in the forest long before
circumstances rooted it deep in the colonial history of Connecticut. Ancient
(perhaps 400-500 years old) at the time of Columbus' voyages to America, the
tree had been an object of veneration by generations of native Americans, who
had traditionally held their councils beneath its expanse. In 1614, the old tree
became the property of Samuel Wyllys, one of the first landowners in what would
come to be the city of Hartford. But according to legend, as Wyllys was busy
clearing away the forest around his homestead and getting ever closer to the
white oak, he was visited by a delegation of Indians fearful that their revered tree
would be destroyed. The Indians begged him to spare the tree, explaining that it
had originally been planted as a token of peace by a great sachem who had
brought his people from the west to the Connecticut River valley, and that the
appearance of its first leaves in spring was a signal from the Great Spirit to begin
the spring planting. To the relief of the Indians, Wyllys left the ancient tree
standing.
In 1662, Connecticut received its Royal Charter from England's Charles II. The
Charter granted concessions to the Connecticut colonists' home rule making it
the most liberal guarantee of rights enjoyed by a British colony in America, with
the exception of Rhode Island. A quarter century later, King James II, in
contempt for the colonies' chartered rights, attempted to seize the charter. The
monarch was upset by the number and variety of rights granted to the people by
their separate charters, and wanted to bring all of the colonies together under a
consolidated patent which made it unequivocally clear that the word of the King
of England was law. The colonies would be "encouraged" to give up their
charters to the crown. They would then be revoked. Sir Edmund Andros, who
had been appointed by the Crown as governor of all of New England, began
putting pressure on Connecticut by sending messengers into the colony,
demanding that the precious Charter under which the people had lived more or
less happily for a quarter-century be surrendered to the Crown. When Governor
Treat refused, Andros responded with a threat to eliminate Connecticut. All of the
colony's lands east of the Connecticut River would be annexed to
Massachusetts, while territory west of the river would become part of New York.
In a last attempt to take control of the Charter, Andros personally appeared in
Hartford ad Moses Butler's Tavern on the evening of October 26, 1687 to
address Governor Treat and the Assembly on the meaning of treason.
By accident of as part of a conspiracy on the part of defenders of Connecticut's
rights, Guilford's Andrew Leete knocked over two candelabra on the table,
plunging the chamber into darkness. Captain Joseph Wadsworth, who was
positioned outside the tavern, found himself in possession of the charter during
the ensuing chaos. Wadsworth took it upon himself to hide the Charter safely
inside the majestic white oak tree on the Wyllys estate. Wadsworth's bold move
served to preserve not only the document but the rights of the colonists. Thus,
the tree earned its nickname - the "Charter Oak."
The tree, which in 1687 seemed on the verge of collapse, continued to put out
new growth for almost 170 years thereafter, until it was finally destroyed by a
great storm on August 21, 1856. The city of Hartford and all of Connecticut
began a period of civic mourning. On the day the Charter Oak fell, an honor
guard was placed around the remains, Colt's Band of Hartford played a funeral
dirge, and an American flag was attached to the shattered trunk. At sunset, all of
the bells of Hartford sounded in homage. From near and far the people of
Connecticut came to gather even the smallest fragments of the oak to hold and
to pass along to posterity as precious reminders of their heritage. At least three
chairs, including the one used today by the Speaker of the House in the General
Assembly, were fashioned from the wood of the Charter Oak, while acorns
dropped by the tree were gathered and planted, to produce in time a forest of
trees directly descended from the historic oak.

http://www.charteroakfsc.com/TheCharterOak.pdf

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Abt 1647

DEATH: Also shown as Died Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.

In 1662, the colony of Connecticut, owned and governed by England, was granted a Royal Charter by King Charles II. The “Connecticut Charter” permitted the colony to make some of its own rules and to elect certain officials. Charles’s death in 1685 brought his brother, James II, to the throne. James disapproved of the Royal Charters and demanded their return. The charters interfered with James’s plan to establish the Dominion of New England—a combination of the New England colonies and the colony of New York under the leadership of one royal official.

In 1687, Sir Edmond Andros, the Royal Governor of the Dominion, met with leaders of the Connecticut colony in Hartford. Debates continued for hours as the colonists steadfastly refused to give up the Charter. According to legend, all of the candles in the meeting house suddenly blew out and, during the confusion, the Charter disappeared. It was hidden in the trunk of a large white oak tree where it was protected from the King and from Andros.

Despite Connecticut’s resistance, it became part of the Dominion of New England for the next two years. In 1689 James II was overthrown and Andros lost power in the colonies. The Connecticut Charter emerged from hiding and was used to govern Connecticut until 1818. 
Wadsworth, Captain Joseph Charter Oak (I22995)
 
19878 https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/7572/GLSRG11_2552_2556-0374?pid=6312656&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1881%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D6312656&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true Whiting, Elizabeth (I613)
 
19879 https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/8860/SFKHO107_1787_1787-0098?pid=6373741&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1851%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D6373741%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true Midson, Enoch (I3134)
 
19880 https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/8978/SFKHO107_1032_1033-0009?pid=9947944&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db%3Duki1841%26indiv%3Dtry%26h%3D9947944%26indivrecord%3D1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true Whiting, Charles (I3130)
 
19881 https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/9200/42672_339904__0002-00065?pid=17397&backurl=https://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv%3D1%26dbid%3D9200%26h%3D17397%26tid%3D%26pid%3D%26usePUB%3Dtrue%26_phsrc%3DNvd649%26_phstart%3DsuccessSource&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Nvd649&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true&_ga=2.196354924.1789817721.1577347294-1637891434.1575926917
========
1870
Charles Laundon
in the Northamptonshire, England, Church of England Burials, 1813-1912

Name: Charles Laundon
Age: 4/12
Birth Year: abt 1869
Burial Date: 9 Mar 1870
Burial Place: Piddington, Northamptonshire, England
Parish as it Appears: Piddington
Register Type: Parish Registers
Search Photos: Search for 'Piddington' in the UK City, Town and Village Photos collection
Phillimore Ecclesiastical Parish Map:
View this parish
Source Citation

© 2020, Ancestry.com

https://search.ancestry.com/collections/9201/records/52885/printer-friendly?o_vc=Record%3aOtherRecord&rhSource=9200 
Laundon, Charles (I4078)
 
19882 I INTRODUCTION

Newton, Sir Isaac (1642-1727), mathematician and physicist, one of the foremost scientific intellects of all time. Born at Woolsthorpe, near Grantham in Lincolnshire, where he attended school, he entered Cambridge University in 1661; he was elected a Fellow of Trinity College in 1667, and Lucasian Professor of Mathematics in 1669. He remained at the university, lecturing in most years, until 1696. Of these Cambridge years, in which Newton was at the height of his creative power, he singled out 1665-1666 (spent largely in Lincolnshire because of plague in Cambridge) as "the prime of my age for invention". During two to three years of intense mental effort he prepared Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy) commonly known as the Principia, although this was not published until 1687. 
Newton, Isaac (I18563)
 
19883 I believe Mary Axford to be the wife of Henry Whiting because of the proxcimity of the parish where Mary was christened, Bishopstrow, and the parish where she was married, Great Cheverell.
===============
1802
Mary Axford
in the England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980
Name: Mary Axford
Gender: Female
Christening Date: 8 Aug 1802
Christening Place: Bishopstrow, Wiltshire, England
Father: Isaac Axford
Mother: Elizabeth

© 2016, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/bivri_EnglandBirth/5237900/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=8914

no actual image:

=======
1841
Mary Whiting
in the 1841 England Census
Name: Mary Whiting
Age: 35
Estimated birth year: abt 1806
Gender: Female
Where born: Wiltshire, England
Civil Parish: Great Cheverell
Hundred: Swanborough
County/Island: Wiltshire
Country: England
Street address: Cheverele Green
Registration district: Devizes
Sub-registration district: Lavington
Neighbors: View others on page
Piece: 1186
Book: 2
Folio: 9
Page Number: 12
Household Members:
Name Age
Henry Whiting 35 1806 Male Wiltshire England
Mary Whiting 35 1806 Female Wiltshire England
William Whiting 15 1826 Male Wiltshire England
James Whiting 14 1827 Male Wiltshire England
Sarah Whiting 12 1829 Female Wiltshire England
Adelaide Whiting 9 1832 Female Wiltshire England
Mary Whiting 7 1834 Female Wiltshire England
Abraham Whiting 3 1838 Male Wiltshire England
Isaac Whiting 1 1840 Male Wiltshire England

Source Citation
Class: HO107; Piece: 1186; Book: 2; Civil Parish: Great Cheverell; County: Wiltshire; Enumeration District: 2; Folio: 9; Page: 12; Line: 21; GSU roll: 464202
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1841 England Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2010.
Original data: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1841. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1841. Data imaged from the National Archives, London, England. The National Archives gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to the National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU.
Description
This database will detail those persons enumerated in the 1841 Census of England and is an every-name index. In addition, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to the actual images of the 1841 Census, reproduced by courtesy of The National Archives, London, England. There are 15,000 records accessible through this database. Learn more...
© 2016, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com//cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&db=uki1841&h=16084617&tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&rhSource=8767&indivrecord=1

Actual Image: NOTE: family on both images below ( parents on bottom of image 6 and children on top of the image 7)

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8978/WILCHO107_1185_1186-0273?pid=16084617&backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2f%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3findiv%3d1%26db%3duki1841%26h%3d16084617%26tid%3d%26pid%3d%26usePUB%3dtrue%26rhSource%3d8767%26indivrecord%3d1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8860/NTTHO107_1839_1839-0617?pid=16916159&backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2f%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3fdb%3duki1851%26indiv%3dtry%26h%3d16916159%26indivrecord%3d1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true#?imageId=NTTHO107_1839_1839-0618

==============
1851
Mary Whiting
in the 1851 England Census
Name: Mary Whiting
Age: 48
Estimated birth year: abt 1803
Relation: Wife
Spouse's Name: Henry Whiting
Gender: Female
Where born: Great Cheverell, Wiltshire, England
Civil Parish: Great Cheverell
Phillimore Ecclesiastical Parish Maps:
View related Ecclesiastical Parish
County/Island: Wiltshire
Country: England
Street address:Cheverele Green
Registration district: Devizes
Sub-registration district: Bishops Cannings
ED, institution, or vessel: 9
Neighbors: View others on page
Household schedule number: 25
Piece: 1839
Folio: 356
Page Number: 5
Household Members:
Name Age
Henry Whiting 47
Mary Whiting 48
William Whiting 25
James Whiting 24
Sarah Whiting 21
Mary Whiting 16
Abraham Whiting 13
Isaac Whiting 10
Source Citation
Class: HO107; Piece: 1839; Folio: 356; Page: 5; GSU roll: 220986
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1851 England Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1851. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1851. Data imaged from the National Archives, London, England. The National Archives gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to the National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU.
Description
This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1851 Census for England. The census contains detailed information on each individual who spent the night in each household including name, relationship to the head of the family, marital status, age at last birthday, gender, occupation, and birthplace. Additional information about the dwelling and property was collected. Each name in this index is linked to actual images of the 1851 England Census. Learn more...
© 2016, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1851/16916159/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&rhSource=8978

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8860/NTTHO107_1839_1839-0617?pid=16916159&backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2f%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3fdb%3duki1851%26indiv%3dtry%26h%3d16916159%26indivrecord%3d1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true

===============
1861
Mary Whiting
in the 1861 England Census
Name: Mary Whiting
Age: 59
Estimated birth year: 1802
Relation: Wife
Spouse's Name: Henry Whiting
Gender: Female
Where born: Cleverell, Wiltshire, England
Civil Parish: Cheverell Magna
County/Island: Wiltshire
Country: England
Street address: Cheverele Green
Registration district: Devizes
Sub-registration district: Lavington
ED, institution, or vessel: 2
Neighbors: View others on page
Household schedule number: 119
Piece: 1291
Folio: 25
Page Number: 21
Household Members:
Name Age
Henry Whiting 58
Mary Whiting 59
Abraham Whiting 24
Isaac Whiting 22
Source Citation
Class: RG 9; Piece: 1291; Folio: 25; Page: 21; GSU roll: 542790
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1861 England Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1861. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1861. Data imaged from The National Archives, London, England. The National Archives gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU.
Description
This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1861 Census for England. The census contains detailed information on each individual who spent the night in each household including name, relationship to the head of the family, marital status, age at last birthday, gender, occupation, and birthplace. Additional information about the dwelling and property was collected. Each name in this index is linked to actual images of the 1861 England Census. Learn more...
© 2016, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1861/17481598/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&rhSource=8860

Actual Image:

http://interactive.ancestry.com/8767/WILRG9_1291_1293-0050?pid=17481598&backurl=http%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2f%2fcgi-bin%2fsse.dll%3fdb%3duki1861%26indiv%3dtry%26h%3d17481598%26indivrecord%3d1&treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true
========
1871
Mary Witing
in the 1871 England Census
Name: Mary Witing
Age: 68
Estimated birth year: abt 1803
Relation: Wife
Spouse's Name: Henry Witing
Gender: Female
Where born: Cheverell Magna, Wiltshire, England
Civil Parish: Great Cheverell
County/Island: Wiltshire
Country: England
Registration district: Devizes
Sub-registration district: Lavington
ED, institution, or vessel: 2
Household schedule number: 76
Piece: 1910
Folio: 22
Page Number: 13
Household Members:
Name Age
Henry Witing 65
Mary Witing 68
Source Citation
Class: RG10; Piece: 1910; Folio: 22; Page: 13; GSU roll: 830868
Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1871 England Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
Original data: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1871. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1871. Data imaged from the National Archives, London, England. The National Archives gives no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided. Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to the National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU.
Description
This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1871 Census for England. The census contains detailed information on each individual who spent the night in each household including name, relationship to the head of the family, marital status, age at last birthday, gender, occupation, and birthplace. Additional information about the dwelling and property was collected. Each name in this index is linked to actual images of the 1871 England Census. Learn more...
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1881
Mary Whiting
in the 1881 England Census
Name: Mary Whiting
Age: 77
Estimated birth year: abt 1804
Relationship to Head: Mother
Gender: Female
Where born: Cheverell Gt, Wiltshire, England
Civil Parish: Great Cheverell
County/Island: Wiltshire
Country: England
Marital Status: Widow
Registration district: Devizes
ED, institution, or vessel: 2
Neighbors: View others on page
Piece: 2042
Folio: 20
Page Number: 13
Household Members:
Name Age
Abraham Whiting 43
Anne Whiting 39
Herbert Whiting 15
Hugh Whiting 12
Amelia Whiting 10
Henry Whiting 2
Mary Whiting 77
Adolphus Carpenter 19
Source Citation
Class: RG11; Piece: 2042; Folio: 20; Page: 13; GSU roll: 1341492
Source Information
Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 1881 England Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
1881 British Isles Census Index provided by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints © Copyright 1999 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. All use is subject to the limited use license and other terms and conditions applicable to this site. Appreciation is expressed to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for providing the 1881 England and Wales Census Index.
Original data: Census Returns of England and Wales, 1881. Kew, Surrey, England: The National Archives of the UK (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO), 1881.
Images © Crown copyright. Images reproduced by courtesy of The National Archives, London, England.
The National Archives give no warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or fitness for the purpose of the information provided.
Images may be used only for purposes of research, private study or education. Applications for any other use should be made to The National Archives Image Library, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 4DU, Tel: 020 8392 5225 Fax: 020 8392 5266.
Description
This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1881 Census for England. The census contains detailed information on each individual who spent the night in each household including name, relationship to the head of the family, marital status, age at last birthday, gender, occupation, and birthplace. Additional information about the dwelling and property was collected. Each name in this index is linked to actual images of the 1881 England Census. Learn more...
© 2016, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/uki1861/17481598/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&rhSource=8860

Actual Image:

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======
1887
Mary Whiting
in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915
Name: Mary Whiting
Estimated birth year: abt 1802
Registration Year: 1887
Registration Quarter: Jul-Aug-Sep
Age at Death: 85
Registration district: Devizes
Parishes for this Registration District: Search for Devizes in the London Times
Inferred County: Wiltshire
Volume: 5a
Page: 57
Source Information
FreeBMD. England & Wales, Civil Registration Death Index, 1837-1915 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.
Original data: General Register Office. England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes. London, England: General Register Office. © Crown copyright. Published by permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Office for National Statistics. You must not copy on, transfer or reproduce records without the prior permission of ONS. Database Copyright © 1998-2003 Graham Hart, Ben Laurie, Camilla von Massenbach and David Mayall.
Description
This database is a searchable, digitized version of the indices of civil registrations in England and Wales, reported quarterly to the General Register Office (GRO) in London. This index spans the years between 1837 and 1915. You need the information found in an original index to request a copy of a death certificate for the individual referenced. Learn more...
© 2016, Ancestry.com

http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/FreeBMDDeath/36505470/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=1351 
Axford, Mary (I1316)
 
19884 I doubt Peter Brown is Elizabeth Steven's father Brown, Peter (I25780)
 
19885 I expect James would be a bit surprised to find himself listed as female and his relationship to his father as sister. as listed in the 1880 census. Fairbanks, James O (I2162)
 
19886 I have not been able to find any original sources for Ann. I have spent a quite a bit of time searching for her. So I will leave her for now. 22 March 2017 Whiting, Ann (I1319)
 
19887 I merged Amorite, of this birthdate and parentage to Amoret of this marriage date. Needs to be verified. Fairbanks, Amoret (I1980)
 
19888 I merged John P., son of Lewis to John P. of this death date and place. However, there may be two, and this needs to be verified. Fairbanks, John P (I2079)
 
19889 I was born August 3rd, 1915 on a farm 4 miles south of Deer Creek, Ottertail County, Minnesota. My parents, Orrin & Belle (Fletcher) Vargason, were two of the most loving and caring parents a girl could ever ask for. I was the 4th child of 7 (An older brother and younger sister died in infancy) leaving me the middle child of 5 girls.
I learned to milk cows at 8 years of age, and I also learned to hoe in the garden and how to load hay on a hayrack as I got older. I always liked to cook and bake, so I was Mom's right hand helper in the kitchen as I became a teen-ager.
The first devastating thing I can remember happening to our family was when I was 6 years old. My oldest sister, Myrtle, came down with polio. There were many anxious weeks when we didn't know if she would live, and many more months and years of therapy, but thanks to prayers and great care she survived to get married and raise a family of her own.
Dad bought Ilo and I a pony who we named Beauty. I loved to ride her, and one day a neighbor girl came by and wanted me to ride with her to Deer Creek. I had some chores I needed to finish, so Lois said "I'll saddle Beauty for you while you finish them". Soon we were off for Deer Creek, out on the highway at a fast trot, when I felt the saddle slipping. Somehow I had sense enough to throw myself off into the ditch, and the minute I left her back, the pony stopped. I received a stiff neck and was sore all over, but no broken bones. I tightened the under strap, and we went on into town and back.
One time I was loading hay on a full hay-rack. I was at the back reaching for the sling rope, when the horses started up unexpectedly. I went flying off the hay-rack and landed on my feet like a cat. Ilo and I used to hurry to get our work done, so we could walk the "4 mile square" for our recreation.
Once when I was older and had a date that evening, I was milking my usual cow. Dad had been to a sale and bought a new cow. He put her in the stantion next to the cow I was milking, but she stepped over and felt me there, promptly kicking me into the gutter. Was I mad?? Oh no - just so furious I vowed never to milk another cow as long as I lived - but of course I did.
The Christmas of 1934 I rode the train to Independence, Missouri to see my new little nephew, Stanley Eugene Whiting and my sister Ilo and her husband Julian. I stayed for 2 weeks and had such a wonderful time. I never seemed to be satisfied at home after that.
I came back to Independence in the fall of 1938, worked that winter, and returned home in April of 1939 to help Mom that summer. I returned to Independence in September of 1939. I had met Phil the first winter I was here. We started dating in 1938 and when I returned, we were married on October 15, 1939.
We have 3 beautiful daughters: Linda Lee born August 9, 1940, Carol Jean born April 5, 1945, and Kathy Arlene born February 9, 1947. All are married to fine young men and doing well. The girls all have families now and we have 8 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren, including 8 step-grandchildren.
I worked 19 years for J.C. Penney Company and retired from there. Phil retired from the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant after 27 years of service. We have been married for over 60 years now, and at this writing I am 84 years old.

Hazel (Vargason) Whiting

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Deer Creek, Otter Tail, Minnesota.

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Deer Creek, Otter Tail, Minnesota. 
Vargason, Hazel Belle (I29959)
 
19890 I was born May 13, 1912 on a farm 4 1/2 miles south of Deer Creek, Ottertail County, Minnesota, the second child of Orrin and Belle (Fletcher) Vargason. I had one sister, Myrtle Imogene, that was 2 years older than myself.
As I have grown older, I can see so many changes that have taken place, things that we had to get along without back there. We lived on a farm, and at that time there was no electricity or running water as we have today, so my mother had a really hard life. She would scrub her clothes by hand on a washboard, and then boil her white clothes. Then she would hang them on a line to dry. One can imagine how cold her hands would get in the winter when the temperature would get down to 30 or 40 degrees below zero.
I remember on the farm where we lived all kinds of weeds grew...some really tall. There was one special weed that grew 4 or 5 feet tall and had a tassel on the top. We would take this weed and strip all the leaves off except for the top, and we made several that way. We called them our horse's reins. If I was the horse, I'd take 2 of these reins in my hands and Myrtle would drive me that way. One night it looked like it was going to rain and we didn't want our horses to get wet, so we took the reins upstairs into our bedrooms. Mama had emptied the "pot" and to save her a trip upstairs, she had set it on the steps. Well, "clumsy me" fell over it and both me and the pot came tumbling down the stairs. I hit my front tooth and broke a corner of it off. Dad took me to the dentist (more expense), but he said to wait until I was 16 and the tooth would be full grown. He did and then the dentist put a 3/4 gold crown on it.
Dad once gave me a little calf to raise. When it got bigger, I sold it and got the money. I don't remember what I did with the money, but during those days we were taught to use what we had wisely. I also had a pony and I learned to ride her.
I used to help Dad in the fields, raking hay, and stomping loads of hay so it would stay on the wagon better. Hazel and I used to go into the meadow and pick wild strawberries. We would bring them home and clean them, and that was our dessert for a meal. We also had a lot of raspberries, and that also made a good dessert.
Our school was only 40 rods from the house where we lived, so we would walk to school unless the weather was really bad. Sometimes in the winter it would get down to 40 degrees below zero, and the wind would blow up a real blizzard. Then Dad would take us to school with the team.
We loved to go to Clitherall, Minnesota where our grandparents lived, and where our church was located. We seldom got to go to church, as 20 miles seemed like a long way to go without a car. Later on Dad got a Ford touring car, but he never did drive very fast.
Hazel and I used to milk cows, and helped with whatever else we could. Mama also had a large garden and we used to help with that. We used to walk a lot whenever we had any spare time. We all loved to walk.
One time I was raking hay for Dad. We had worked all day and the horses were getting tired, so they decided it was time to quit. They started running for home and I fell off the rake. I rolled under the tines a few times before it released me. I wasn't hurt, but I was as black as coal. When I think back on those times now, I realize how innocent and fortunate I was. We would go out to the garden and pick peas for dinner. Then we girls and Mama would go out in the shade and shell the peas for dinner. We usually would have guessing games to help pass away the time.
Before going any farther, I'd better speak of the other members of the family. I'll list each in the order of their arrival: Myrtle Imogene - born May 22, 1910 and died August 20, 1973, Violet Marie (Ilo) - born May 13, 1912, Harry Fletcher - born January 29, 1914 and died April 24, 1914, Hazel Belle - born August 3, 1915, Laurel Loretta - born December 11, 1917 and died December 20, 1917, Grace Orena - born December 28, 1920, and Irene Rozella - born July 10, 1925.
We would usually go to Clitherall each summer, and stay at Grandma Rose's for a few days. She would teach me how to record the sales she made from the business in the store (they ran a grocery store).
In 1933 I was down to Richard and Myrtle's visiting, when Julian came by. He drove a truck and was loaded for Fort Lincoln, at Bismark and Dickenson, North Dakota, out near the Montana line. He had stopped to visit his folks over the weekend, and planned to go on out there on Monday. Richard, being curious as to what trucking was like, decided to go along, leaving Ronald (their younger brother) and I there to take care of the chores while he was gone. They left early on Monday morning, and going through Jamestown they were held up 3 days for lack of a Dakota liscense. They finally got unloaded at Bismark and Dickinson, getting back to Clitherall the following Friday afternoon.
Business being slow over the holidays, and being instructed to wait for a back load, Julian and I began visiting places and people we both knew until he surprised me by asking me if I would marry him. I'd always liked him so I told him "Of course I will", and on Christmas eve, 1933, we became "Husband and Wife". Now, 67 years later, we still are though now much older.
The week after we got married, we got instructions for Julian to pick up a load of steel headed for St. Joseph, Missouri. On New Years Day in the afternoon we took out for Davenport, Iowa getting as far as Alexandria, Minnesota that night. When we got to Minneapolis at around 9:00 A.M. the next morning, it had started to rain and then freeze, so the roads became extremely icy and stayed that way for the next 2 days. Ronald and I spent most of our time throwing blankets under the rear wheels of the truck, trying to get traction on the millions of hills (Ronald had decided to go back to Independence with us). Anyway, he sure came in handy as Julian had to drive the truck and Ronald could help with the blanket throwing. We finally got to Davenport on Thursday night, loaded the steel, and headed out for St. Joseph. The skies had cleared and the weather moderated, so we got into St. Joseph on Saturday morning. It took some pretty good talking to get them to unload on Saturday, but they finally did, and we were then free to take out for the 55 miles to Independence. We arrived there about 4:00 P.M. that afternoon, surprising everyone, as they had never heard the news yet of what all had happened. This started a whole new Phase of my life, but that's another story.

Ilo (Vargason) Whiting

!BIRTH :
MARRIAGE :
DEATH :
ORDINANCES :

GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Violet Marie Ilo

!BIRTH :
MARRIAGE :
DEATH :
ORDINANCES :

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Deer Creek, Otter Tail, Minnesota.

GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Violet Marie Ilo

BIRTH: Also shown as Born Deer Creek, Otter Tail, Minnesota. 
Vargason, Violet Marie "Ilo" (I32272)
 
19891 ID: I38005
Name: William Whiting
Sex: M
Change Date: 28 SEP 2011
Note:
William Whiting married in 1724 to Anna Raymond, daughter of Joshua Ray mond and Mercy Sands of Block Island. Anna's maternal grandparents were C apt James Sands from England and Sarah Walker who both died on Block Is land.
Anna died November, 1773. William's second marriage was to widow Alithe a Woodworth.

William Whiting of Bozrah, a part of Norwich, Conn., the eldest survivi ng son of Samuel, served with distinction in the French War. He "gained m uch applause" for his gallant conduct at Louisburg and was made Captain i n the regular British service. In the battle of September 8, 1755, at t he head of Lake George, under Sir William Johnson, Lieut. Col. Whiting a dded to his fame "as an officer of great merit." He was Captain of the S ixth Company, or Trainband in Norwich, May, 1739. Captain of a company r aised to serve in the expedition against Louisburg, March, 1745. Captai n of a Company of Foot in the Expedition against Canada, 1746. Major of t he Fourth Regiment raised for the expedition against Crown Point, Augus t, 1755. Lieutenant-Colonel of the Second Regiment raised for the Exped ition against Crown Point, March, 1756. [Colonial Records of Conn.] His e ldest son John, who was with him, was murdered by the Indians.

Research By JMB 
Raymond, Anna (I1140)
 
19892 ID: I567185352 Name: Elizabeth Gilbert POWERS Given Name: Elizabeth Gilbert Surname: Powers Sex: F Birth: 27 Mar 1782 in Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut Death: 21 Jan 1859 in West Tisbury, , Massachusetts Ancestral File #: GXTB-DF Change Date: 6 Aug 2004 at 00:09
Marriage 1 Daniel WHITING May 1768 in Canaan, , New York
Married: 4 Jan 1804 in Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut
Change Date: 6 Aug 2004
Children
Charles Lathrop WHITING b: 13 Feb 1816 in
Elizabeth Gilbert WHITING b: 4 Nov 1804 in Albany, , New York
Mary WHITING b: 6 Dec 1806 in Troy, , New York
Daniel Powers WHITING b: 31 Jul 1808 in KY.
Angelica Gilbert WHITING b: 9 Feb 1811-1812 in
William Bradford WHITING b: 13 Nov 1813 in
Harriet Lathrop WHITING b: 13 Nov 1818 in
Henry Laurens WHITING b: 5 Feb 1821 in Albany, , New York 
Powers, Elizabeth Gilbert (I6587)
 
19893 ID: IND00152 Name: MARY COTTON Sex: F Birth: 5 NOV 1687 Death: 29 MAY 1731 Note: BORN- HAMPTON, N.H. DIED- CONCORD, MA.
Father: REV. JOHN COTTON b: 8 MAY 1658 Mother: ANNE LAKE b: 12 OCT 1663 Marriage 1 REV. JOHN WHITING b: 20 JUN 1681
Married: 30 OCT 1712
Note:
source- Boston, Massachusetts Marriages, 1700-1809 Spouse1: The Rd. Mr. John Whiting Spouse2: Mrs. Mary Cotton Married By: Rev. Mr. Benj. Colman Presbytn Date: 30 Oct 1712
Children
MARY WHITING b: 3 AUG 1713
ELIZABETH WHITING b: 1718
STEPHEN WHITING b: 6 AUG 1720 
Cotton, Mary (I13311)
 
19894 Idaho Marriages, 1842-1996 about Ralph A. Whiting
Name: Ralph A. Whiting
Gender: Male
Spouse: Irene Katherine Snyder
Spouse Gender: Female
Marriage Date: Oct 18, 1916
Marriage Location: Crystal
Source: This record can be found in the marriage book at the County Courthouse located in Bannock Co., ID in Volume 7 on Page 323.MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Pocatello, Bannock, Idaho, United States.MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Pocatello, Bannock, Idaho, United States.
 
Family F2974
 
19895 Idaho Marriages, 1842-1996 about Ruth E. Whiting
Name: Ruth E. Whiting
Gender: Female
Spouse: Sidney Phillips
Spouse Gender: Male
Marriage Date: Jul 15, 1912
Marriage Location: Pocatello, Bannock Co., Idaho
Source: This record can be found in the marriage book at the County Courthouse located in Bannock Co., ID in Volume 5 on Page 312MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Pocatello, Bannock, Idaho, United States.MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Pocatello, Bannock, Idaho, United States.
 
Family F2975
 
19896 IGI 1-2003 Parents: Edward Stradling, Elizabeth Arundel. Stradling, Catherine (I22103)
 
19897 IGI 1988 (Mary Hatch) Hatch, William (I21016)
 
19898 IGI 1988 Conn p 12,181 batch 7505212 3; Archive rec (Eleazer BROWN) Walter
Richard Buss; TIB SG no. 7789 Bk C p 416; Arch rec Emily R Richards. 
Pendleton, Ann (I19987)
 
19899 IGI 2-2003 Parents: Christopher Browne Jr. b.abt 1482 of Swan Hall, Suffolk, England and Anne Mrs. Browne b.abt 1484 of Swan Hall, Suffolk, England. His grandparents: Christopher Browne and Agnes Bedingfield. Browne, Christopher III [Royal Line] (I22195)
 
19900 IGI Film # 442676

IGI Film # 442676 
Fairbanks, Abraham (I2155)
 

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