Match 301 til 350 fra 3,803
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301 | Am 27.12.1891 schon verstorben. | Hoppe, Adolph Theodor (I99559)
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302 | Am 28. Juli 1931 56 Jahre alt. | Eilers, Heinrich August Eduard (I21017)
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303 | Am 28. Juli1931 64 Jahre alt. Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Hoppe, Heinrich Adolf Theodor (I76477)
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304 | Am 29.3.1745 in Bleischwitz im Alter von 52 Jahren verstorben. Besegl til forældre: @I307@ | Satke, Johann (I21519)
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305 | Am 29.Mai 1839 schon verstorben. | Zahel, Valentin (I77098)
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306 | Am 4. Mai 1811 38.Jahre alt. | Bartkin, Apolonia (I20761)
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307 | Am 6.2.1884 schon verstorben. | Gretschel, Joseph (I24519)
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308 | Am 8.Nov.1795 schon verstorben. | Lahres, Johann Georg (I20957)
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309 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Cox, Courteney Bass (I17499)
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310 | American Fork Cemetery | Rhodes, Daniel R (I114307)
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311 | Ammon City Cemetery | Rawson, Dora May (I33646)
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312 | Amtssygehuset | Pedersen, Jens Frøkjær (I111512)
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313 | Amtssygehuset | Nørgaard, Anne Marie (I106974)
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314 | An alumnus of Yale College (1776). Eleazer Conant was married to Eunice Storrs on July 10, 1777 in Mansfield Center, Connecticut. "Eleazer Conant from Mansfield, Conn., in 1794, purchased the south half of the Bentley pitch and a part of the Risley pitch, and went into possession' of it with his family; and the same year his brother John Conant purchased of Elisha Fuller, and went into possession of the north half of the Bently lot. Eleazer Conant resided on his farm for many years, until his sons had grown up and settled in the west, among whom was Hon. Shubael Conant of Detroit." "Soon after in 1819 he and his wife went to visit their children, and both died, while making their visit at the residence of their son, Hon. Horatio Conant, at Maumee, Ohio. His farm is now owned by different persons. The dwelling house and land above the road belongs to the estate of John Simmons Esq." Source: "History of the Town of Middlebury: In the County of Addison, Vermont" By Samuel Swift, Middlebury Historical Society A veteran of the Revolutionary War. | Conant, Eleazer (I35989)
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315 | An attached christening record shows Francis English, Residence Place Bishop-Wearmouth, Durham, England, son of John English and Martha English, was christened 24 May 1840, at Bishop-Wearmouth, Durham, England. A Death and Burial record shows Francis English, Gender Male, Age 2, Birth Date 1840, Burial Date 31 August 1842, Burial Place Bishopwearmouth, Durham, England. | English, Francis (I53091)
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316 | An attached christening record shows John English, residence place South Shields, Durham, England, son of John English and Martha English, was christened 5 November 1826, at St. Hilda, South Shields, Durham, England. The 30 March 1851 Census shows this family at Residence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham, England: Martha English Head F age 47 widowed birthplace Tanfield, Durham occupation Lodging Housekeeper; John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham; John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Mariner ; Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker. Attached marriage records show John English, occupation Mariner, age 25, son of John English, whose occupation was also Mariner, and Elizabeth Old, age 27, daughter of William Old, were married 14 May 1851, at Bishopwearmouth, St Thomas, Durham, England. The image of the marriage records shows both of their residence at the time of marriage was Brougham Street, Bishopwearmouth, Durham, England. A christening record shows Elizabeth English, daughter of John English and Elizabeth was christened 19 December 1852, at Bishop-Wearmouth, Durham, England. A christening record shows Jane Elizabeth English, daughter of John English and Elizabeth, was christened 15 April 1855, at Bishop-Wearmouth, Durham, England. | English, John (I50856)
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317 | Andersonville Prison | Brown, Lucius (I33522)
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318 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Hammer, Dolly (I20568)
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319 | Andrew came to America about 1676 with his uncle, Andrew Robeson Sr. and his aunt Elizabeth. Andrew was appointed assessor of taxes for the county of Gloucester on 1 Feb 1687; West Jersey, by the Grand Jury of Gloucester County. (Old Gloucester County was formed on 26 May 1686 from the third and fourth tenths of the Province of West Jersey.) Andrew Robeson Jr. was a member of the Council of Proprietors from 1688 to 1701, having become a proprietor to one share on 12 Dec 1687 He was also a Ranger for this county.. He was made judge of Gloucester County in 1692 and a member of the Governor's Provincial Council of the Province of New Jersey, 1697-1701. He was also Chief Justice of the Province of Pennsylvania 1693 to 1699. In 1702, Andrew moved to Philadelphia and lived in the Roxborough township at "Shoomack Park". Andrew then moved to the Swedish settlement Amity township at Manatawny, Philadelphia County (now Berks). He died at the age of 66 on Feb 1719/20 and was buried at the Swede's log church (now St Gabriels) at Douglassville in present Berks County. Andrew was a nephew of Andrew Robeson Sr., a merchant from Clonmell, Ireland, who was one of the original English proprietors of West Jersey and died 1694 with Andrew Jr. acting as his executor of his estate. Andrew Jr. was made one of the executors of the will of Samuel's mother, Elizabeth Robeson that had died 1695. | Robeson, Andrew Jr (I139293)
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320 | Andrew practiced polygamy. He brought his second wife (Anna Christina) and family to Canada on the 3rd of March 1904. Two of their sons, Neils and Nephi came to Canada with John in a box car with the furniture and animals the year before the rest of the family arrived. They settled in Raymond, where they had 20 acres of land and raised sugar beets. Andrew took out a homestead and pre-emption at Fincastle. Andrew’s son John, "Jack", later proved up on the original homestead and Nephi on the pre-emption. They moved their house from Raymond to the farm in 1906. They lived in Raymond in the summer, and Fincastle during the winter. The children first went to school at Raymond, then at Taber - until the Reliance School was built at Fincastle. Andrew used to visit back and forth between his two families (the ones in Utah and the ones in Canada). In 1916 he went back to Salt Lake City with his 2nd wife, Anna, when she became ill. He and their daughter, Alberta (Bertha) nursed her until her death in 1917. Andrew lived in Salt Lake City, in poverty, until his own death in 1924 (his children in Salt Lake didn't want to have anything to do with him). He lived in a little shack and didn't take very good care of himself. Andrew's daughter, Alberta "Bertha" Fuller, wrote this account 31 October 1978: Andrew came to Salt Lake City, Utah from Denmark with another family. He was a husky man. He had dark hair and blue eyes and wore a heavy beard. He was a very happy-go-lucky guy - always whistled and sang, even when things went wrong. He wasn't very ambitious - I think having two wives and so many children .. he just gave up .. he didn't worry at all about supporting them. DBland1941 DBland1941 originally shared this 17 Apr 2013 story | Jensen, Andrew William (I52745)
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321 | Ane Cathrine Jensdatter was born 17 May 1830 in Jetsmark, Hvetbo, Hjørring, Denmark. She was baptized into the Lutheran Church on 23 May 1830 in the Jetsmark Parish. Her parents were Jens Nielsen and Maren Jensdatter. In 1857, Ane Catherine and a man named Jens Pedersen had a son whom was named Jens Peter Jensen. However, Ane Catherine and Jens Pedersen never married. On 22 June 1860, Ane Catherine married Peder Andersen in Saltum, Hvetbo, Hjørring, Denmark. They became the parents of Anders (1861), Jens Martinus (1863), Maren (1865), Cecilia (1868), and Petrea (1871). Ane Catherine's husband Peder Andersen died in 1887. Ane Catherine was baptized into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on 28 June 1890. Ane Catherine immigrated to Utah, and on 1 March 1895, she married Jens Sorensen in Cache County, Utah. Ane Catherine died on 19 February 1904 in Central, Bannock, Idaho. She was buried later that month in Grace, Caribou, Idaho, United States. | Jensdatter, Ane Catherine (I88572)
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322 | Ann Elizabeth "Eliza" Parker Todd Memorial Photos Flowers Edit Share Birth: May, 1794 Lexington Fayette County Kentucky, USA Death: Jul. 5, 1825 Lexington Fayette County Kentucky, USA Family links: Parents: Robert Porter Parker (1760 - 1800) Elizabeth Rittenhouse Porter Parker (1769 - 1850) Spouse: Robert Smith Todd (1791 - 1849) Children: Elizabeth Porter Todd Edwards (1813 - 1888)* Robert Smith Todd (1814 - 1814)* Levi Oldham Todd (1816 - 1864)* Frances Jane Todd Wallace (1817 - 1899)* Mary Ann Todd Lincoln (1818 - 1882)* Ann Maria Todd Smith (1820 - 1891)* Robert Parker Todd (1821 - 1822)* Margaret Todd Dillon (1822 - 1874)* George Rogers Clark Todd (1825 - 1900)* Siblings: John T Parker (____ - 1862)* James Porter Parker (1793 - 1860)* Ann Elizabeth Parker Todd (1794 - 1825) John Todd Parker (1799 - 1862)* John Todd Parker (1799 - 1862)* Andrew William P. Parker (1800 - 1837)* *Calculated relationship Inscription: wife of R.S. Todd Note: s/w Robert P. Todd Burial: Lexington Cemetery Lexington Fayette County Kentucky, USA Maintained by: Janet Todd Frey Originally Created by: Anonymous Record added: Jun 05, 2004 Find A Grave Memorial# 8878194 | Parker, Elizabeth Ann (I139050)
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323 | ANN ELIZABETH WILD ASHMAN 1826-1906 Ann Elizabeth Wild Ashman was born April 26, 1826 to Thomas Wild and Sarah Rushworth in Meanwood, Chappeltown, Yorkshire, England (near Leeds) into a family of ten children. When Ann was a little girl, she saw Queen Victoria as she sat in her carriage which was drawn by six white horses. Ann was often told she looked like the Queen. She had brown eyes and brown hair, and was a very stately lady. She was very outspoken, but had a very sympathetic heart. When she was almost eighteen, she met a young man by the name of John Ashman who had joined the army for four years and was stationed in Leeds. He and a companion were walking down the street, passed two young ladies, and even though John had never seen her before, he told his companion he intended to marry the pretty one. It was Ann Wild. John married Ann November 18, 1844 in Islington, Middlesex, England (near London). They became interested in the Mormon Church and were baptized-- John in 1851 and even though Ann at first was opposed, she was baptized the next year in 1852. The Elders made the Ashman home their headquarters. Ann cared for them as her own. George Q. Cannon, president of the British Mission, lived with the family. They worked hard saving money to get to Zion. Ann Elizabeth, the oldest, was sent ahead to America, and her mother, Ann, was anxious to join her. She went to her bachelor uncle and asked for money to go to America, and since she was going to Utah to be with the Mormons, he refused to give her any. John told her not to despair, as “The Lord would take care of them.” Shortly after, her uncle passed away, and they used the inheritance to go to America. They traveled on The Monarch of the Sea with one of the largest groups of Mormon emigrants arriving in New York in June of 1864. They took the train to the jumping off point in Wyoming, Nebraska and crossed the plains and arrived in the valley in August. She and John moved to Fillmore with their five children and were reunited with Elizabeth Ann, her new husband, Abraham Carling, and their first grandson, John’s namesake, John Carling. Ann was the first of four plural wives. The lovely home pictured was the Ashman home with a gable for each wife, so the story goes. The other wives were Lydia Tye, Batilda Nielsen, and Jane Ingles. John and Ann had eight children all born in England, but in several different places indicating their many moves from one mill town to another. Ann Elizabeth was born December 20, 1846 in Islington, Middlesex, England; Harriet born July 4, 1848 in Leeds, Yorkshire; Isabella born May 15, 1850 in Leeds; John Thomas Ashman, our grandfather, born March 29, 1852 in Leeds; Ellen born May 28, 1854 in Moston, Lancashire; Sarah Jane, born in Fallsworth, Manchester in 1856 and dying in infancy; Emma Jean, 1858 dying in infancy; Imogene, 1859 dying in infancy. (Some records show a second Imogene who also died, and some records indicate that Emma Jean and the Imogene were the same child, with the name spelled two different ways). Ann had a lovely singing voice, and sang in the choir for forty years. Music was an important part of the Ashman home. Ann never lost her English brogue, and everyone who knew her loved her witty jokes. She was known as a great entertainer, who gave excellent parties. She and John had a great deal of respect and love for each other. He enjoyed her humor as much as anyone. Fillmore was the first capitol of the state of Utah. After the capitol was moved to Salt Lake, this building was used for church, recreation, and other meetings. The Ashmans would have been among those who sang, danced and worshiped there. Their pictures along with other pioneers hung on the walls of this old capitol building. Ann would live a long life as wife of the Patriarch, and devoted mother, and church member. She passed away on March 12, 1906 at age of 80, three years before her husband. She is buried in Fillmore. Taken from Pioneer Immigrants to Utah Territory, History of Ann Wild Ashman by Nellie Peterson Foote, and The Ashman Story by Kristie C. Teames, the 1900 Utah Census, the 1961 British Census, information from Ancestry. com (John Ashman Family Trees) and Family Group Sheets in my possession. Compiled by Jane Watson Hales | Wild, Ann (I132593)
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324 | ANN ENGLISH GARDNER, below is part of Excerpts of story by Merrill Gardner Utley (which is in Ann's Memories section) Source: Gardner Book of Remembrance - Page 38 - Compiled by C. Fern Burrell 1977 "It was in South Shields on a crisp Sunday morning, September 24, 1837, Just as the sun broke the mists of the North Sea, a baby girl was born to John and Martha Todd English. This, their fourth child and only daughter was christened "Ann". Ann was a beautiful baby with blue eyes and red hair that turned to a dark auburn in later years. Red hair was probably inherited from her father's mother, Elizabeth Redhead, of the "Lancashire Redheads," whose ancestral name came from their flaming red hair. Ann's father, John English, master mariner, was a typical English seaman during the time of iron men and wooden ships, when Britannia ruled the waves and the sun never set on the British Empire. Born of a family of surgeons, his father, William, and his grandfather, Thomas, were both practicing surgeons in South Blyth, Northumberland. John was expected to follow in their footsteps, but his heart was at sea, and as a lad he shipped before the mast as a cabin boy and worked his way up through the ranks until he was a Sea Captain in the mighty merchant fleet of Great Britain. Ann's mother, Martha Todd, had been raised in the coalfields of Tannfield Parish where her father, Luke Todd, was a coal miner from Gateshead. Martha was born at Whitely Head on September 1, 1804. Ann had three brothers: John, the eldest, Thomas, and then William, Just 3 years her senior. Their life was a happy one in South Shields. ... They played on the docks and watched for the appearance of their father's ship in the harbor or its sails disappearance over the horizon. As the children grew older, the boys wanted to go to sea also. For this reason John decided to find a place with more opportunities for his children. John moved his famiIy to the port of Sunderland, a town of 17,000 people, Bishopwearmouth. The streets were paved and fronted with nice homes. The streets and homes were lighted with gas and the homes had piped water. The famiIy moved into a residence at #34 Brougham Street. Inasmuch as John was away to sea continually, Martha decided to open a lodging house to help supplement their income. Here in Bishopwearmouth and Sunderland, the children grew up, doing the things children have done in English seacoast towns since their beginning. The River Wear abounded with fish, and the boys spent much time fishing from the docks. As soon as Ann was big enough she accompanied them. These fishing trips helped to supplement their diet, and Ann developed a love for seafood which stayed with her alI of her life. John went to sea first. He shipped out as a cabin boy. Thomas soon followed and then William. Ann and her mother were left quite alone at home. There was always friendly rivalry among the boys and their father to see who could bring Ann the most beautiful and exotic gift. Ann and her mother grew very close. They were at home for long periods of time with no company except each other. July 15, 1849 John died the night following his boarding the ship in Amsterdam, Holland, and was buried at sea. It was after the death of John English, that two Mormon Missionaries knocked on the door at #34 Brougham Street. Ann and her mother had just gone through a trying time of adjustment and sorrow after the loss of their father and husband. They could not find much comfort or solace with the Anglican faith, but this new Church seemed to be what they were looking for. After a period of study and prayer, during which time they were taught the gospel by Elders Ebeneezer Gilles, Jacob Secrist, and Thomas Squires, they decided to be baptized January 14, 1853. Ann was fifteen. On Saturday, January 15, 1853, she met Elder Elias Gardner who had arrived in Liverpool on December 20, after a three month journey from Utah. He was assigned to the Newcastle Conference, of which Sunderland was a branch. During the following 2 years, Ann and her mother continued to study the gospel and attend their meetings. Elias visited them often in the course of his missionary duties. He stayed many nights in their home and learned to appreciate the delicious seafood dinners that Ann loved and that Martha was so adept at preparing. Elias was there to comfort them when the news came that William had been lost in a shipwreck at sea. Not long after that, they received word that Thomas was also missing. All of these events of sadness, together with their lonely life, caused Ann and Martha to talk much of immigrating with the Saints to Utah. They bade John and his family good-by and boarded the train for Liverpool on March 21, 1855. Ann and Martha went aboard the ship Juventa, ... They were organized into a company of 573 members under the presidency of Elder William Glover. President Glover called them all to a meeting on deck where they were all divided into branches. He appointed presidents and counselors for each branch. These presidents in turn appointed men to stand guard to protect the Saints from thieves, fire and any other hazards. Elias was one of those chosen to stand watch. The instructions were to rise at 5 o'clock, clean their portion of the ship and throw the garbage overboard. Prayers were to be held in each branch, and then they were to prepare and eat breakfast. After breakfast the ship was to be fumigated and sprinkled down with lime, and the strictest rules of cleanliness observed at all times. Ann and Martha were to furnish their own beds and bedding, pots, pans, plates, cup, knife, fork and spoon and also a water jug large enough to hold each of their ration of 3 quarts of water per day. The ship provided cooking apparatus, fuel and a cook for each 100 passengers. Each passenger was to be allowed 3 quarts of water daily and a weekly ration of 2 1/2 pounds of bread, 1 pound of wheat flour, 5 pounds oatmeal, 2 pounds rice, ½ pound sugar, 2 ounces of tea, 2 ounces salt, and this ration was to be supplemented during the voyage with 2 1/2 pounds of sugar, 3 pounds of butter, 2 pounds of cheese, and 1 quart of vinegar. Each passenger would be allowed a bunk 6 feet long and 18 inches wide with storage space of 10 cubic feet. For 11 days the ship sailed in a south-south-westerly direction. Ten minutes of exposure to the tropical rays gave one a good sunburn. In the vicinity of the Cape Verde Islands, the ship started to gradually change course toward the west.... They got their first glimpse of the United States as they sailed through the Florida Straits. The ship sailed up Delaware Bay, took aboard the pilot, and at the mouth of the Delaware River the steam tugboats tied on to the Juventa and towed it upriver to the port of Philadelphia. After 39 days, on May 8, Ann and her mother, Martha walked down the gangplank into the promised land. Within 24 hours after their arrival in Philadelphia, Ann and her mother found themselves traveling through the hills of Pennsylvania with other members of the Perpetual Immigration Company. Elder Erastus Snow chartered a boat to take them up the Missouri River. Their landing was at Atchison about 20 miles above the Army Post at Ft. Leavenworth in Kansas. But it wasn't until July 1, under the command of Richard Ballantyne, their wagon train made the long awaited start to cross the plains for Utah. The company consisted of 404 people, 45 wagons, 220 head of oxen, 24 head of 'cows; 3 head of horses and 1 mule, and-was organized into groups of 100's, 50's, and 10’s. Guards had been appointed for the entire trip. Elias was one of them. He was appointed to help keep the train supplied with meat during the trip. It was September 24, on Ann's 18th birthday when they reached the summit and could see the Salt Lake Valley. The next morning they arrived in Salt Lake City. Ann and Martha 'stayed the first night with Elias' daughter and family, Mary and Thomas Cloward. The next morning they continued on a wagon train to Payson with Elias. Everyone was glad to see them arrive in safety. Elias had been gone 3 years. It was good to have him home. The children had grown until Elias hardly knew them. Ann and Martha were made welcome in their home. Ann had grown to admire this tall dark man with the piercing black eyes and accepted his proposal of marriage. The marriage ceremony was performed by President Brigham Young at 8 o'clock in the evening on December 4 at the home of James Pace in Payson. They had twelve children. Ann died 22 February 1922, in Glenwood, Utah. The 30 March 1851 Census shows Ann's mother Martha and her family at Residence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration District Sunderland, Durham, England: Martha English Head F age 47 widowed birthplace Tanfield, Durham occupation Lodging Housekeeper; John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham; John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Mariner ; Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker. The history of Ann English Gardner is included in the life of Elias Gardner, His Life and His Family - too large to place here. See book "Triumphant Banners, Higgins, Lowry, Tuttle, Gardner" by Kay Lundell. Pages 290-410. This book is on family ANN ENGLISH GARDNER, below is part of Excerpts of story by Merrill Gar dner Utley (which is in Ann's Memories section) Source: Gardner Book of Remembrance - Page 38 - Compiled by C. Fern Bu rrell 1977 "It was in South Shields on a crisp Sunday morning, September 24, 1837 , Just as the sun broke the mists of the North Sea, a baby girl was bo rn to John and Martha Todd English. This, their fourth child and onl y daughter was christened "Ann". Ann was a beautiful baby with blue ey es and red hair that turned to a dark auburn in later years. Red hai r was probably inherited from her father's mother, Elizabeth Redhead , of the "Lancashire Redheads," whose ancestral name came from their f laming red hair. Ann's father, John English, master mariner, was a typical English seam an during the time of iron men and wooden ships, when Britannia rule d the waves and the sun never set on the British Empire. Born of a fam ily of surgeons, his father, William, and his grandfather, Thomas, wer e both practicing surgeons in South Blyth, Northumberland. John was ex pected to follow in their footsteps, but his heart was at sea, and a s a lad he shipped before the mast as a cabin boy and worked his way u p through the ranks until he was a Sea Captain in the mighty merchan t fleet of Great Britain. Ann's mother, Martha Todd, had been raised in the coalfields of Tannfi eld Parish where her father, Luke Todd, was a coal miner from Gateshea d. Martha was born at Whitely Head on September 1, 1804. Ann had three brothers: John, the eldest, Thomas, and then William, Ju st 3 years her senior. Their life was a happy one in South Shields. .. . They played on the docks and watched for the appearance of their fat her's ship in the harbor or its sails disappearance over the horizon . As the children grew older, the boys wanted to go to sea also. For t his reason John decided to find a place with more opportunities for hi s children. John moved his famiIy to the port of Sunderland, a town of 17,000 peop le, Bishopwearmouth. The streets were paved and fronted with nice home s. The streets and homes were lighted with gas and the homes had pipe d water. The famiIy moved into a residence at #34 Brougham Street. Ina smuch as John was away to sea continually, Martha decided to open a lo dging house to help supplement their income. Here in Bishopwearmouth and Sunderland, the children grew up, doing th e things children have done in English seacoast towns since their begi nning. The River Wear abounded with fish, and the boys spent much tim e fishing from the docks. As soon as Ann was big enough she accompanie d them. These fishing trips helped to supplement their diet, and Ann d eveloped a love for seafood which stayed with her alI of her life. John went to sea first. He shipped out as a cabin boy. Thomas soon fol lowed and then William. Ann and her mother were left quite alone at ho me. There was always friendly rivalry among the boys and their fathe r to see who could bring Ann the most beautiful and exotic gift. Ann and her mother grew very close. They were at home for long period s of time with no company except each other. July 15, 1849 John died the night following his boarding the ship in A msterdam, Holland, and was buried at sea. It was after the death of John English, that two Mormon Missionaries k nocked on the door at #34 Brougham Street. Ann and her mother had jus t gone through a trying time of adjustment and sorrow after the loss o f their father and husband. They could not find much comfort or solac e with the Anglican faith, but this new Church seemed to be what the y were looking for. After a period of study and prayer, during which t ime they were taught the gospel by Elders Ebeneezer Gilles, Jacob Secr ist, and Thomas Squires, they decided to be baptized January 14, 1853 . Ann was fifteen. On Saturday, January 15, 1853, she met Elder Elias Gardner who had arr ived in Liverpool on December 20, after a three month journey from Uta h. He was assigned to the Newcastle Conference, of which Sunderland wa s a branch. During the following 2 years, Ann and her mother continued to study th e gospel and attend their meetings. Elias visited them often in the co urse of his missionary duties. He stayed many nights in their home an d learned to appreciate the delicious seafood dinners that Ann loved a nd that Martha was so adept at preparing. Elias was there to comfort them when the news came that William had be en lost in a shipwreck at sea. Not long after that, they received wor d that Thomas was also missing. All of these events of sadness, together with their lonely life, cause d Ann and Martha to talk much of immigrating with the Saints to Utah. They bade John and his family good-by and boarded the train for Liverp ool on March 21, 1855. Ann and Martha went aboard the ship Juventa, ... They were organized i nto a company of 573 members under the presidency of Elder William Glo ver. President Glover called them all to a meeting on deck where the y were all divided into branches. He appointed presidents and counselo rs for each branch. These presidents in turn appointed men to stand gu ard to protect the Saints from thieves, fire and any other hazards. El ias was one of those chosen to stand watch. The instructions were to r ise at 5 o'clock, clean their portion of the ship and throw the garbag e overboard. Prayers were to be held in each branch, and then they wer e to prepare and eat breakfast. After breakfast the ship was to be fum igated and sprinkled down with lime, and the strictest rules of cleanl iness observed at all times. Ann and Martha were to furnish their ow n beds and bedding, pots, pans, plates, cup, knife, fork and spoon an d also a water jug large enough to hold each of their ration of 3 quar ts of water per day. The ship provided cooking apparatus, fuel and a c ook for each 100 passengers. Each passenger was to be allowed 3 quart s of water daily and a weekly ration of 2 1/2 pounds of bread, 1 poun d of wheat flour, 5 pounds oatmeal, 2 pounds rice, ½ pound sugar, 2 ou nces of tea, 2 ounces salt, and this ration was to be supplemented dur ing the voyage with 2 1/2 pounds of sugar, 3 pounds of butter, 2 pound s of cheese, and 1 quart of vinegar. Each passenger would be allowe d a bunk 6 feet long and 18 inches wide with storage space of 10 cubi c feet. For 11 days the ship sailed in a south-south-westerly direction. Ten m inutes of exposure to the tropical rays gave one a good sunburn. In th e vicinity of the Cape Verde Islands, the ship started to gradually ch ange course toward the west.... They got their first glimpse of the United States as they sailed throu gh the Florida Straits. The ship sailed up Delaware Bay, took aboard t he pilot, and at the mouth of the Delaware River the steam tugboats ti ed on to the Juventa and towed it upriver to the port of Philadelphia . After 39 days, on May 8, Ann and her mother, Martha walked down th e gangplank into the promised land. Within 24 hours after their arrival in Philadelphia, Ann and her mothe r found themselves traveling through the hills of Pennsylvania with ot her members of the Perpetual Immigration Company. Elder Erastus Snow chartered a boat to take them up the Missouri River . Their landing was at Atchison about 20 miles above the Army Post a t Ft. Leavenworth in Kansas. But it wasn't until July 1, under the com mand of Richard Ballantyne, their wagon train made the long awaited st art to cross the plains for Utah. The company consisted of 404 people , 45 wagons, 220 head of oxen, 24 head of 'cows; 3 head of horses an d 1 mule, and-was organized into groups of 100's, 50's, and 10’s. Guar ds had been appointed for the entire trip. Elias was one of them. He w as appointed to help keep the train supplied with meat during the trip . It was September 24, on Ann's 18th birthday when they reached the summ it and could see the Salt Lake Valley. The next morning they arrived i n Salt Lake City. Ann and Martha 'stayed the first night with Elias' d aughter and family, Mary and Thomas Cloward. The next morning they con tinued on a wagon train to Payson with Elias. Everyone was glad to see them arrive in safety. Elias had been gon e 3 years. It was good to have him home. The children had grown unti l Elias hardly knew them. Ann and Martha were made welcome in their ho me. Ann had grown to admire this tall dark man with the piercing black eye s and accepted his proposal of marriage. The marriage ceremony was per formed by President Brigham Young at 8 o'clock in the evening on Decem ber 4 at the home of James Pace in Payson. They had twelve children. Ann died 22 February 1922, in Glenwood, Utah . The 30 March 1851 Census shows Ann's mother Martha and her family at R esidence Brougham Street, Township Bishopwearmouth, Registration Distr ict Sunderland, Durham, England: Martha English Head F age 47 widowed birthplace Tanfield, Durham occup ation Lodging Housekeeper; John English Son M age 26, unmarried, birthplace South Shields, Durham , occupation Mariner; Thomas English Son M 20 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; William English Son M 16 South Shields, Durham, occupation Mariner; Ann English Daughter F 13 South Shields, Durham; John Myers Lodger M 35 Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, occupation Marine r ; Hannah Dove Lodger F 17 Sunderland, Durham, occupation Dressmaker. The history of Ann English Gardner is included in the life of Elias Ga rdner, His Life and His Family - too large to place here. See book "Tr iumphant Banners, Higgins, Lowry, Tuttle, Gardner" by Kay Lundell. Pag es 290-410. This book is on family FSID KWJ4-15R | English, Ann Elizabeth (I113762)
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325 | Ann Fall mother was a teacher and kept a school for the young girls of the community. Besides the usual subjects of reading, writing, spelling, and arithmetic, she taught them to sew. Ann also learned to think, whether from her parents or from her own native instincts. A picture of Ann in the prime of her life shows her as a tall, beautiful figure with an intelligent face and dark eyes. She was always referred to as a "a very religious person." Her life reveals her as a loyal, gentle wife, and mother. A poem she wrote reveals a tender heart. She must have had a strong body to survive the hardhips and persecutions of her life. She lived to be seventy-six years of age. Ann Fall's nephew, George, tells a little incident in his letter about Ann which indicates her religious character and her determination to do what she believed was right. A certain Scottsman by the name of McDonald, came to the Island and started a new church, The members being known as McDonaldites. History says he carried a yellow cane and on Sundays stood at the fork of the road and waved all church goers to his church. Ann joined this cult and wore the long black veil which was prescribed for the women of the congregation. But when McDonald had a change of heart, and forbade the wearing of black veils, Ann insisted on using the veil. Two deacons were instructed to put her out of the church, but as her nephew tells the story, "They never put a hand on her, for she walked out and never returned." Ann Falls' life had been one of hardship and deprivation from the time she joined the church and now the greatest sadness of her life had come to her in losing her husband and not even having the privilege of having her dear husband's body brought home for burial. Though Ann was a sturdy and capable woman she and her children keenly felt the loss of husband and father. Ann was a prayerful woman and she relied on her Heavenly Father for comfort and help, and taught her children as she and her husband had always done to seek the Lord first in all they did. Together they gathered their small crop in the fall of 1858. They gathered wood from the canyon to keep them warm. It was a very gloomy winter that faced them in 1858-59. Food was scarce and Ann suffered and often deprived herself to give a little more to her younger children. Ann became desperate. She had no food, no flour or wheat. It was hard for her to ask someone to help her, but she finally knew she must ask her Bishop for help. She walked from Alpine to American Fork. She told the Bishop of her need for flour. The Bishop told her she should get married, but her reply was, "who would want to marry a woman with 5 children?" Some of her eight children were grown and married by then. The Bishop told her there was a well to do immigrant from London, England that he would take her to see, that he had a year's supply of food stored away. She was taken by the Bishop to see Andrew Hodnett and immediately they recognized their need for each other and seemed to have a mutual appeal. The very next day they went to Salt Lake City to be married and were married in the endowment House, 17 May 1862. Andrew Hodnett brought money with him from England. He was a good provider and she probably had more financial security than she had known in her previous life. (She lived in Alpine at least 9 years.) Ann Fall and her family that was not married moved with Andrew Hodnett to Orderville and joined the United Order. They turned all their sheep into the order. When the United Order broke up they were given back their sheep and they had enough to buy a little farm south of Orderville at Tom's Rock, near Mt. Carmel. They seem to have been fairly prosperous for the time and location. Andrew Hodnett had Ann's children walk through the fields with sticks after he plowed to break up the clods. They worked in the fields and herded his sheep. This was not unusual for those days as women were accustomed to work in the fields along with the men. It was necessary to make a living. Hodnett was a hot tempered man, tight fisted, a hard worker and expected others to do the same. Ann Fall was a mild tempered, kindly woman, with great faith in her Heavenly Father. She spoke kind to her children and others. She always looked fresh and clean and dressed nice. She had dark hair and dark eyes and as she grew older was on the fleshy side.. She raised her family to be true followers of Christ. With a great love and appreciation of the gospel. She had great faith and was loyal and true to her church, her leaders and her Heavenly Father. In the biography of her youngest child Jane, she states that whenever she was frightened of the Indians, her Mother would tell her that God would protect her. Andrew Hodnett gave all her children some sheep, which shows his love and respect for her family. In the later years of Ann Falls her health failed and she was not able to take care of herself. She was taken back to Alpine to the home of her youngest child. Here Jane, who was such a kind and loving individual tenderly cared for her mother. Ann's eyes grew dim, yet they glowed with the love she had for her loved ones and the gospel. Tho feeble she still expressed her appreciation for the gospel and what others did for her. Her willing feet that had traveled far never failed in a step that was right. The autumn of her life had passed and as softly as the snow flakes fall Ann's beautiful spirit left her tired old body on Christmas Day, 25 Dec., 1888. Her husband and father of her children, Thomas Freestone, stood there waiting for her and together they walked into the beyond to find the place which God for them prepared.THE BEYOND It seemeth such a little way to me Across to that strange country, The Beyond; And yet, not strange, for it has grown to be The home of those of whom I am so fond. Ann died at the age of 76. The death record says of "Acute indigestion". | Fall, Ann (I132614)
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326 | ANN FOSTER “In 1692, when Joseph Ballard’s wife, Elizabeth, came down with a fever that baffled doctors, witchcraft was thought to be the cause. Soon, the search for the responsible witch began. Two of the afflicted girls of Salem village, Ann Putnam and Mary Walcott, were taken to Andover to seek out the witch. At the sight of Ann Foster, the girls fell into fits, and Ann, 72, was subsequently arrested and taken to Salem prison.” (3) In 1692, this aged and infirm widow was accused of witchcraft; and feeble though she was, she was carried from her home to prison and examined four times in the court at Salem. “Ann was examined on July 15, July 16, July 18 and July 21. Under pressure from her examiners, she not only confessed that the devil had appeared to her in the shape of a bird, but also implicated Martha Carrier and Rev. George Burroughs, who had previously been arrested. (Ann’s examiners were looking for evidence to use at the trials of Martha Carrier and Rev. Burroughs). “Harassed by the magistrates, she agreed to everything alleged against her and even confessed to a series of additional atrocities. Like others before and after her, she admitted that she had employed the traditional practice of making images of people she disliked and running pins through their bodies. Nor did she deny that she had caused the death of one of Andrew Allen’s children, probably a niece of “Goody” Carrier.” When Ann Foster was testifying against Martha Carrier, she declared that she had ridden on a stick with Martha to Salem Village and had there met with three hundred witches, among whom were not only the Reverend George Burroughs (afterwards executed) but also “another minister with gray hair,” who resembled Mr. Dane. But nobody dared take the crucial step of charging him directly with witchcraft. Not long afterwards, when Ann’s daughter, Mary (Foster) Lacey, and granddaughter, Mary Lacey, were also accused and arrested, Ann Foster refused to implicate her daughter and rose to her defense, saying “I know no more of my daughter being a witch that what day I shall die upon.” (3) This protest accomplished nothing. The constable reported that they had found “a parcel of rags and a parcel of quills which none of the family could explain.” Ann’s daughter insisted that both she and her mother were witches, and her little granddaughter confirmed the story. Thus, All three women confessed to being witches. When Ann Foster, in her despair, was heard mumbling to herself and was asked what she was saying, she answered, “I am praying to the Lord.” “What God do witches pray to?” inquired one examiner. The poor woman could only reply hopelessly, “I cannot tell; the Lord help me.” Ann Foster, was condemned as a “confessing witch,” as was her daughter, and granddaughter, but they were all later reprieved. Because they confessed, their lives were spared and they continued in prison. Ann Foster died in Salem prison on December 3, 1692. Her son, Abraham Foster, in petitioning later for the removal of her body, declared that he had been compelled to pay the jailer 2 pounds, 10 shillings before he was allowed to remove his mother’s dead body for burial. Ann’s daughter and grandaughter were released the following year.” (From Find A Grave) - Convicted in Salem Witch Trials. A careful reading of the trial transcripts reveals that Ann resisted confessing to the 'crimes' she was accused of having committed, despite being "put to the question" (i.e., tortured) multiple times over a period of days. However, her resolve broke when her daughter Mary Lacey, similarly accused of witchcraft, accused her own mother of the crime in order to save herself. The transcripts reveal the anguish of a mother attempting to shield her (undeserving) child by taking the burden of guilt upon herself. Convicted, Ann later died in the jail in the winter of 1693. Ann was more fortunate in her son, Abraham, who later petitioned the authorities to clear her name ("remove the attainder") and reimburse the family for the expenses associated with her incarceration and burial, doubtless at some risk to himself. (bio by: Michael Smith) | Alcock, Ann Hooker (I143777)
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327 | Ann Lee born 1625, may have been called Hannah or Anna. She first married Samuel Sturtevant. He died. She married 2nd on 21 Sept 1675 John Bass born 1630. There are other Hannah Sturtevants, one born 1656 who is not a duplicate of Ann Lee. | Lee, Anne (I114853)
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328 | Ann traveled as a Mormon pioneer in the James Jepson Company (1852) when she was 13 years old. Annie was David's 5th wife in polygamy. She was a nanny/housekeeper in his home for sometime before he married her at 16. He was 36 and they spent 50+ years together before he died, then she outlived him by 20 years! Annie was the first wife married that was left at the time of the manifesto (1890). 2 had died, 2 had divorced him. He spent the rest of his life with her, but still provided for his other wife married after her (who lived a son). His first wife , Mary Ann died, leaving young children, so Annie raised them along with the 11 that she had! Notes written by her husband: "The friend with whom one does not have to make explanations, or who finds justifications for you is God given. Such a friend I have found in my wife, Annie W. Candland, these 44 years (Sept 12, 1899) "Words are too feeble to express my love, my confidence in A. W. C., God bless her." ( Jun 21, 1900) !Obituary: Mrs. Annie Woodhouse Candland, widow of the late David Candland, and a pioneer resident of Mt. Pleasant, died this Friday afternoon at her home in this City, after a lingering illness due to old age. Mrs. Candland was born in Adwick, Lee Street, Yorkshire, England, November 13, 1838 and came to America as a child of twelve years with her parents. In 1852 she began the long hard trip across the plains, with Captain William Jepson's company walking the entire distance. She was married in the Endowment House in Salt Lake, November 4, 1855 to David Candland. In 1861, in obeyance to a request by President Brigham Young, they came to Mt. Pleasant to help in the colonizing of Sanpete county, and endured uncomplainingly all the hardships incident to pioneer life. She was a woman of sterling character and lofty ideals and will be missed by a hose of friends. She was the mother of eleven children, eight of whom survive her. They are Harry D. and Frederick H. of Chester, Percy H. of Salt Lake City, Albert H., Theo C., Leo L. Mrs. Andrew M. Jensen and Mrs. Fannie C. Miles, all of Mt. Pleasant. Funeral services will be in charge of Bishop H. C. Jacobs in the North Ward chapel, on Monday, April 17th at one o'clock. | Woodhouse, Ann (I132421)
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329 | ANN WILMOT, daughter of my immigrant ancestors,BENJAMIN & ANN (LADD) WILMOT, married WILLIAM BUNNELL about 1640 or before. Colket has her husband's immigration at 1638. In 1640, the Colony gave him (William) a home lot in Watertown but there is no indication that he lived there. In May, 1646, he had left his wife & children and returned to England leaving them indigent. Ann and the children moved to New Haven to live with her parents. Because the grandparents were unable to provide for their grandchildren, two of the children, Benjamin & LYDIA (my ancestor) were apprenticed to two families. Around 1649, William Bunnell had returned to New Haven and fathered a daughter, Ann, in 1650. That year, the Bunnells were in court being evicted for not paying their rent, and the family was receiving a weekly allowance from the court so they were able to live. After Ann's death, William requested and was given passage to England. It is believed that he either died in the West Indies during the passage or in England. No tombstone was found for Ann, which is probably because of the poverty of the family. | Wilmot, Ann (I3393)
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330 | Ann. 8. 1773 BEGR Mette Sophia Rossing g.m. først Hr. Erik Faber, Præst til Hunsby i Egen. siden Hr. Erasmus Rossing, Sognepræst i Husby. Hun døde hos sin Svigersøn i Egen Sr. Christian Hansen i en Alder af 82 Aar, Moder til 18 Børn. § 74 renskrevet af Ib Hansen, Ishøj, jul 2004. | Hannibalsdatter, Mette (I21705)
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331 | Anna Elizabeth Rosenberger was baptized 4 May 1762 in Hoosick, Rensselaer Co., New York. Betsy was married first to Johannes Creller ( Kreller) who either died in the Battle of Bennington or died from wounds received there. Betsy and Johannes had two daughters Maria born 1776 and Elizabeth born 1777 Betsy Rosenberger’s brother George, married Regina Creller, her first husband’s sister. The Rosenberger family can be found associated with the Creller family almost at every point in time, Betsy's brother Peter Rosenberger had a farm up in Stanbridge East, Quebec next to the Creller. Peter moved up into the Stanbridge Quebec area along with Peter Creller and his family. Both Crellers and Rosenbergers were in the Militia and are buried in the same cemetery. Betsy married Abraham Katzenbach (bapt 8 May 1763), son of Heinrich Katzenbach and Eva Defoe, in about 1783 in New York state.They had six children and their second was Johannes Kotchapaw, our ancestor. Abraham and Betsy died later than 1810. | Rosenberger, Anna Elizabeth (I58620)
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332 | Anna Mariche Hee married Sir. Erik Christian Grave Hvas, Parish Priest of Søndbjeng and Odby Menigheter, born 1696 died 1775, buried in Borup. She was married the second time to Mr. Villum Schmidt, parish priest in Snedsted, born 1699, died 1769. | Hee, Anna Mariche Christiansdatter (I2356)
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333 | Anne Danielsen Hansen Birth: Feb. 5, 1827, Denmark Death: Aug. 9, 1866 Saint Joseph Buchanan County Missouri, USA CENOTAPH Father: Daniel Nielsen Mother: Ana Marie Jensdatter Spouse: Peter Kaae Hansen Family links: Spouse: Peter Kaae Hansen (1827 - 1903) Children: Jorgen Hansen (1853 - 1935)* *Calculated relationship Inscription: WIFE OF PETER HANSEN BORN HAYLYKKE, DENMARK DIED NEAR ST. JOSEPH, MO Note: Anne was not acually interred in Provo, this monument is commemorative. Burial: Provo City Cemetery Provo Utah County Utah, USA Maintained by: Annie Duckett Hundley Originally Created by: Lisa Record added: Mar 07, 2012 Find A Grave Memorial# 86382190 ***** Peter Kaae Hansen Birth: Sep. 29, 1827, Denmark Death: Jun. 21, 1903 Provo Utah County Utah, USA Father: Hans Jorgenson Kaae Mother: Ane Marie Pedersen Spouse: Anne Danielson Hansen NOTE: Cemetery record shows death date as 18 June 1903, headstone shows he passed away 21 June 1903. Family links: Spouse: Anne Danielsen Hansen (1827 - 1866)* Children: Jorgen Hansen (1853 - 1935)* Charles Peter Hansen (1876 - 1940)* *Calculated relationship Note: Interment 21 June 1903 Burial: Provo City Cemetery Provo Utah County Utah, USA Plot: Block 2 Lot 21 Maintained by: Annie Duckett Hundley Originally Created by: Lisa Record added: Mar 07, 2012 Find A Grave Memorial# 86396923 | Danielsdatter, Ane (I97772)
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334 | Anne Else Laursten was born in Urlev, Vejle, Denmark on 13 April 1854. Her father moved to run a new flax mill in Nebsager, when she was about 5 years old. Shortly after the family came to the Utah Territory, she married a fellow Dane Jens Christensen in 1869. They had seven children, 2 boys and 5 girls. Anne Else's father and brothers adopted the last name of Breinholt. Because she was already married Anne Else never used the surname of Breinholt. Five days before the birth of their last child Mary, Jens died in January 1883. Five years later Anne Else married a fellow Dane and widower Christen Bertelsen, who had four of his own children. Christen had also changed his name from Pedersen to Bertelsen after coming to America. Together Anne Else and Christen had four more children, two sons and two daugthers. Her oldest daughter died in in 1890, and eight years later her younger daughter Mary died. Eight years later her husband Christian died, leaving her a widow for 31 years. | Lauridsen, Anne Else (I118983)
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335 | Anne Hutchinson (née Marbury; July 1591 - August 1643) was a Puritan spiritual adviser, mother of 15, and an important participant in the Antinomian Controversy which shook the infant Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1636 to 1638. Her strong religious convictions were at odds with the established Puritan clergy in the Boston area, and her popularity and charisma helped create a theological schism that threatened to destroy the Puritans' religious community in New England. She was eventually tried and convicted, then banished from the colony with many of her supporters. Hutchinson was born in Alford, Lincolnshire, England, the daughter of Francis Marbury, an Anglican cleric and school teacher who gave her a far better education than most other girls received. She lived in London as a young adult, and there married her old friend from home William Hutchinson. The couple moved back to Alford where they began following dynamic preacher John Cotton in the nearby port of Boston, Lincolnshire. Cotton was compelled to emigrate in 1633, and the Hutchinsons followed a year later with their 11 children and soon became well established in the growing settlement of Boston in New England. Anne was a midwife and very helpful to those needing her assistance, as well as forthcoming with her personal religious understandings. Soon she was hosting women at her house weekly, providing commentary on recent sermons. These meetings became so popular that she began offering meetings for men as well, including the young governor of the colony Henry Vane. She began to accuse the local ministers (except for Cotton and her husband's brother-in-law John Wheelwright) of preaching a "covenant of works" rather than a "covenant of grace," and many ministers began to complain about her increasingly blatant accusations, as well as certain theological teachings that did not accord with orthodox Puritan theology. The situation eventually erupted into what is commonly called the Antinomian Controversy, culminating in her 1637 trial, conviction, and banishment from the colony. This was followed by a March 1638 church trial in which she was put out of her congregation. Hutchinson and many of her supporters established the settlement of Portsmouth with encouragement from Providence Plantations founder Roger Williams in what became the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. After her husband's death a few years later, threats of Massachusetts taking over Rhode Island compelled Hutchinson to move totally outside the reach of Boston into the lands of the Dutch. Five of her older surviving children remained in New England or in England, while she settled with her younger children near an ancient landmark called Split Rock in what later became The Bronx in New York City. Tensions were high at the time with the Siwanoy Indian tribe. In August 1643, Hutchinson, six of her children, and other household members were massacred by Siwanoys during Kieft's War. The only survivor was her nine year-old daughter Susanna, who was taken captive. Hutchinson is a key figure in the history of religious freedom in England's American colonies and the history of women in ministry, challenging the authority of the ministers. She is honored by Massachusetts with a State House monument calling her a "courageous exponent of civil liberty and religious toleration." She has been called the most famous-or infamous-English woman in colonial American history. | Marbury, Anne (I53798)
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336 | Anne Marie Hansdatter was born on 20 September 1840 in Fårdrup, Vester Flakkebjerg, Sorø, Denmark. She was the daughter of Hans Jørgensen and Maren Pedersdatter, and she was their only child to live to adulthood. Anne Marie's father died when she was six years old, and Anne Marie's mother married a man named Christen Ericksen. Anne Marie received an inheritance from her father's death which she used to take a tailoring course and purchase a sewing machine. Anne Marie met her future husband Hans Gregersen at a dance and they began courting. When Anne Marie decided to marry Hans Gregersen, her mother was furious and threw Anne Marie's feather ticking (an important part of every girl's trousseau) out of the house. The Lutheran Church required a three month probation before a marriage would be performed, so Anne Marie lived with Hans Gregersen's parents during that probation. Anne Marie Hansdatter married Hans Gregersen on 11 October 1862 in Kirke Stillinge, Slagelse, Sorø, Denmark. On 3 March 1873 Anne Marie Hansdatter was baptized into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In 1877, Anne Marie sent her oldest daughter to Utah. During the summer of 1878, Anne Marie immigrated to Utah with her children Fred and Maria and settled in Toelle, Utah. The following year, Anne Marie's husband and son Hans also arrived in Toelle, and the family decided to move to Hyrum, Cache, Utah, to settled. Anne Marie Gregersen died in Hyrum, Cache, Utah, on 27 April 1919 and was buried in the Hyrum City Cemetery on 30 April 1919. She was the mother of Christijana Sophie (1863-1954), Maren Kirstine (1865-1866), Hans Carl (1867-1941), Peder Christian (1869-1873), Frederick Julius (1872-1951), Peder Christian (1873-1877), Maren Christine (1875-1876), Ane Marie (1877-1970), Ernst Hyrum Hans (1879-1879), Martha Sarah (1880-1975), and Jacob (1884-1885). In 1889, Anne and Hans also became parents to an 18 month old baby named Arthur Marius Albretsen. Arthur's parents had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and were working to send their children, a few at a time, to America. Once Arthur's parents arrived in Utah, they gathered up their children, but Arthur chose to remain with the Gregersens and was listed as their adopted son on the 1900 US Census. | Hansdatter, Anne Marie (I109796)
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337 | Anne Pedersen was born April 29, 1792 in Oddense, Viborg, Denmark and was christened October 1, 1792. Her parents were Peder Pedersen (Rytter) and Maren Jepsen Her last name is variously known as Pedersen, Petersen and Pedersdatter. and her married name was Anne Marie Andersen. This adds extra challenges to the searching out of our family line. I want to follow the information recorded by her granddaughter, Rebecca, and Rebecca's daughters. Anne and Christen had four daughters and one son besides the girl Maren, who died as an infant. The son, Esper, did not join the LDS Church probably because he was old enough to be on his own by the time Anne heard the gospel preached in 1851. She and her daughters became Mormons and she and three of them sailed to America on the ship Forest Monarch with the first group of Scandinavian Saints in the James E. Fosgren company. The daughters who came with her were Dorthea who married Hans Jorgensen, Dorthe Marie who died in 1854, and Johanne who married Frederic Jensen Holtz while crossing the plains and had four daughters and one son. Anne’s oldest daughter, Mariane, had married in Denmark and came to Utah with her husband, Christen Andersen Thorum after her mother had come. Mariane had one daughter who died at three years old and a son who later had nine children. Johanne was invalid after her children were born and Rebecca Frost mentions visiting her in 1880 with Johanne’s daughter, Carrie Stolsen (Caroline Jensen Holtz Staalesen) who later married Andreas Olsen. When Anne came to Utah she went to live in Ephriam, Utah where Johanne went to live and later Mariane lived also. Anne died in January 1876, probably in Ephriam, Utah. | Pedersdatter, Anna (I140681)
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338 | Anne was the daughter of Thomas Hooker and Susannah Garbrand. She was baptized in Great Baddow, Essex, 5 January 1625/6 and buried at Chelmsford, Essex, England 23 May 1626. (Great Migration) | Hooker, Anne (I143766)
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339 | Annetta Hayter was born on 18 September 1822 in Portsmouth, England to Henry and Kezia Hayter, the youngest of seven children. Ann spent her childhood in an industrious, middle class farming community where her parents had lived their whole lives. On 24 October 1841, Ann married Henry Fleet, a schoolteacher five years her senior. In 1842, Ann and Henry moved across the channel to Normandy, France where Henry took up a teaching position. Three daughters were born to Ann and Henry while living in France: Mary Ann in 1842, Alice in 1844, and Louisa in 1846. Sometime around Louisa’s birth, Ann and Henry’s marriage, strained by Henry’s alcohol addiction, fell apart and they divorced. Not long after her divorce, Ann met Thomas Sharratt Smart from Staffordshire, England, who was also living and working in France. They married on 1 March 1847 and Thomas legally adopted Ann’s three children. In 1848, the Smart family decided to emigrate to America. They made the ocean crossing without incident and settled in St. Louis, Missouri, where two more daughters, Charlotte and Maria, were born to the family. While living in Missouri, Ann and Thomas came into contact with members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, leading to their conversion and baptism into the church in 1851. In 1852, Ann and Thomas decided to move again, this time to Utah to join the main body of their new faith. They joined the Allen Weeks Company, departing from Kanesville, Iowa (present day Council Bluffs, Iowa) on 13 July 1852. The Smarts traveled by wagon and ox team and made the journey without any major incidents beyond the expected hardships of the journey, arriving in Salt Lake City, Utah on 12 October 1852. After a short time in Salt Lake City, Ann and Thomas moved their family south to American Fork, where Thomas engaged in the tannery business. Two children were born to the family here, Thomas and Sarah. Around 1856 or 1857, the Smart family moved to Provo, where two more children were born, Eliza and Frances. Frances lived just three months and passed away. Finally, in 1860 or 1861, Thomas and Ann were asked by church leaders to join a group going to settle the Cache Valley in southern Idaho. They moved their family to what would become Franklin, Idaho, where Ann’s last two children, William and Mary, were born. In 1869, Thomas, with Ann’s consent, began practicing polygamy and married a second wife, Marguerite Justet. As the matriarch of a large family in a frontier settlement, Ann worked hard raising and providing for her family. She was an active participant in the Relief Society, the women’s organization of the church, and in the social activities of her community. Ann was killed by a lighting strike in her farm home in Franklin, Idaho on 22 June 1876 at the age of 54. She was buried in the family cemetery on her farm. | Hayter, Annetta (I76986)
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340 | Anthony sailed on the "Golden Dolphin" from Halifax (in Yorkshire), England and arrived in Massachusetts in 1648. Anthony's son, Israel, married Peter Tallman's daughter. Peter was a passenger on the 1648 ship. On April 8, 1653 Anthony married Alice Stonard in Boston, Ma. They had at least 6 children. Became a "freeman" at Portsmouth, Rhode Island, in 1669, buying a house and land there for 40 pounds and 300 good boards. (Philip Tabor, an enterprising building, evidently considered boards as good as money when he sold the property to Anthony.) When Anthony died in 1705, an item in his inventory was a "negro man 30 pounds" | Shaw, Anthony II (I139599)
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341 | Antonio Bianco was my great grandfather. He came to the United States on May 30, 1906 on the LAZIO, arriving in Ellis Island, he was 27 and married. He left Naples on May 11. He was with my great grandmother, Rosa Russo, who was 4 months pregnant with my grandmother, Mary Bianco. He died in 1910 ( or 1909, exact date unknown at this point ) in Afragola, Italy and was buried there next to his infant son Joseph in the Afragola Cemetery. They all ( Antonio, Rosa, Mary, Fanny & Joseph ) all traveled back to Italy after Antonio became sick in the United States & they hoped the italian climate would cure him but he died shortly after docking. It is believed he died of Consumption/Tuberculosis. | Bianco, Antonio ( Tony ) (I3375)
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342 | Arbejdsmand. | Jensen, Thomas (I109899)
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343 | Are there any records for this person? Apparently, the famous Jonathan Edwards is known to have 10 sisters. 11 sisters are shown here, and Molly (b. 1720) does not appear to have any supporting records. | Edwards, Molly (I140270)
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344 | Arlington North-Cemetery | Burgess, Col. Louis Ray (I115168)
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345 | Armstrong Farm Cemetery | Conway, Margaret Peggy (I115456)
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346 | Mindst én nulevende eller privat person er knyttet til denne note - Detaljer er udeladt. | Arquette, David (I94988)
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347 | Arthur Magnus Abelin was born June 12, 1885 in Mayfield, Utah, the son of Magnus M. & Johannah Marie Christiansen Abelin. He married Mary Sophia Nielsen, daughter of Niels Christian & Johanna Marie Larsen Bolt Nielsen. Their children included: Florence J. | Abelin, Arthur Magnus (I90092)
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348 | Arthur Marius Albretsen was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 10 January 1888. He was the son of Carl and Bergetta Albretsen. His parents joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and began sending their children to Utah. Arthur was the youngest of the clan, and he immigrated to Utah at the age of 18 months. Once in Utah, Arthur resided with Hans and Anne Gregersen. When Arthur's biological parents arrived in Utah, they gathered up their children, but Arthur chose to remain with the Gregersens instead of return to his biological family. The 1900 US Census shows Arthur as an "adopted son" of Hans and Anne Gregersen. As Arthur reached adulthood, he immigrated to the Bear Lake region of Utah and Idaho, then continued further north to Fremont County, Idaho, and eventually settled in Clark County, Idaho, in 1909. Arthur married Belvida Esther Wilson on 20 March 1911 in Blackfoot, Bingham, Idaho. They lived in Clark County where they attempted dry farming, but Arthur eventually began working for the railroad in Dubois, Clark, Idaho. During the Great Depression, Arthur worked for a short time in Salt Lake City, Utah, but returned to Dubois, Clark, Idaho, shortly thereafter. Arthur and Esther were the parents of Rhea Fern (1911), Hazel Rose (1915), Dorothy May (1919), and Arthur Dale (1922). Arthur Marius Albretsen died on 12 January 1946 in Dubois, Clark, Idaho. He was buried there on 16 January 1946. | Albretsen, Arthur Marius (I89347)
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349 | Arvebonde Arvebonde | Pedersen, Michel Severin (I106152)
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350 | Arza was also known as "Toak", short for Tokyo, because of his dark hair and slightly slanted eyes. He is also referred to in the audio memory found on Alonzo Donald Rhode's Family Search page. | Rhodes, Arza Adams (I114435)
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