Notes


Matches 1,151 to 1,200 of 3,350

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
1151 Cliff Mine, Michigan Maas, Mary E (I13461)
 
1152 Clift, G. Glenn, Second Census of Kentucky, 1800, Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2005 Source (S346)
 
1153 Co.D.195 Regiment Ohio Infantry
Discharged from the Army Dec. 18,1865 at Alexandria Va. 
Dunn, David F. (I8151)
 
1154 Cockenzie Tranent Scotland Harkess, Peter (I17665)
 
1155 Colebrooke Church of Ireland, Co. Fermanagh, Ireland Family: George Renick / Isabel Reed (F9268)
 
1156 Colon, Panama Army Hospital Adams, Muriel (I13177)
 
1157 Columbiana County Memorial Park, Calcutta, Columbiana, Ohio, USA Oswalt, Orla Clinton (I12462)
 
1158 Commonwealth of Kentucky, Health Data Branch, Division of Epidemiology and Health Planning. <i>Kentucky Death Index, 1911-present</i>. Frankfort, KY, USA: Kentucky Department of Information Systems.
 
Source (S1013)
 
1159 Compiled from publicly available sources. Source (S1165)
 
1160 Compiled from publicly available sources. Source (S1374)
 
1161 Compiled from publicly available sources. Source (S1396)
 
1162 Compiled from various family history sources. See source information provided with each entry. Source (S386)
 
1163 Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration Source (S339)
 
1164 complications from gall bladder surgery Napierkowski, Anna (I424)
 
1165 Confederate Indigent Families Index
Bastrop, Texas
Faulkner, Wm
Wolfenbarber, W
Wolfenbargeere, Charles
Woods, Elliott
Wright
Wukasch, M
Yates, H
Yoast, John
 
Faulkner, William Mooney (I307)
 
1166 Confederate Veterans Home, Biloxi, Mississippi, USA Eiland, Jeptha Spruill (I7706)
 
1167 Congregational Church, Newry, Co Antrim, Northern Ireland Family: George Neely / Sarah Stewart (F10154)
 
1168 Connecticut Department of Health. Connecticut Death Index, 1949-2001. Hartford, CT, USA: Connecticut Department of Health. Source (S1241)
 
1169 Contwig, Zweibrücken, Rheinland-Pfalz, Deutschland Messerle, George (I16580)
 
1170 Cook County Clerk, comp. Cook County Clerk Genealogy Records. Cook County Clerk’s Office, Chicago, IL: Cook County Clerk, 2008. Source (S1234)
 
1171 Cook County Clerk, comp. Cook County Clerk Genealogy Records. Cook County Clerk’s Office, Chicago, IL: Cook County Clerk, 2008. Source (S1422)
 
1172 Coopers Chil, Alabama Eiland, Coolie John (I7633)
 
1173 Copies of Lists of Passengers Arriving at Miscellaneous Ports on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts and at Ports on the Great Lakes, 1820-1873 (National Archives Microfilm Publication M575, roll 2); Records of the U.S. Customs Service, Record Group 036; National Archives Building, Washington, D.C. Source (S1368)
 
1174 Cordalba, Bundaberg Region, Queensland, Australia Chue (Chuey), Harriet Jane (I17156)
 
1175 CORONA
Ken Whitley
February 4, 2015
Kenneth William Whitley, 64, of Corona, California Died - January 31, 2015 Westwood, CA Beloved husband & best friend of Patricia, peacefully passed away with the one he lived for, laughed with, and loved by his side. After a courageous 2 year battle and beating Leukemia, his body couldn’t recover from the aftermath of a weak immune system. Born - May 26, 1950 to William & Emma Whitley in Long Beach, CA Survived by wife - Patricia Daughters - Sarah, Sally, Christina Sons - Michael, John Grandchildren - Charlotte, Grant, Corinna, Raquel, Collin, Mason, Jacob, Lauren, Declan, Thatcher, Monroe, & Silas Great-Grandchild - Natalie Many loved nieces & nephews, in-laws and out-laws. He was full of life and lived it. It overflowed on all of us! A man of integrity and strength that compares to none. His laughter was contagious and his quick wit would take you by surprise. 30 years of patrol for the Garden Grove Police Department and the community. As a Police Educator, he left us with a legacy of knowledge that only he could provide. He is loved…… In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the: Leukemia & Lymphoma Society in memory of Ken Whitley https://donate.lls.org/lls/donate 
Whitley, Kenneth William (I184)
 
1176 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I14268)
 
1177 Cosford, Suffolk, England Family: Thomas James Tate / Elsie Margaret Bull (F10162)
 
1178 Cosford, Suffolk, United Kingdom Bull, Elsie Margaret (I16609)
 
1179 Cotton Mill Village, Lincoln, Tennessee, USA Mills, Willie Joe Jr (I15708)
 
1180 County Antrim, Northern Ireland Neely, Carrie (I16576)
 
1181 County Antrim, Northern Ireland Neely, Mary Jane (I16577)
 
1182 County Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK Halliday, Andrew (I15402)
 
1183 County Schools: Marshall and Old Orchard. Then St. Francis; Holy Name Academy. Attended Otis Art Institute in the summer. Went to UCLA in 1942 and then back to the Holy Name College. Graduated with a MFA from the Art Institute in Chicago, IL. Moved back to Spokane where she taught at the Holy Name Academy, as well as working at a commercial ad agency. Worked for the Spokane School District. Moved to Glencoe, IL to teach 1952 through 1979. Established many strong friendships, including one with Marge who taught science.

Listing of important dogs: Uller (mix) Troy (border terrier) Dylan (welsh terrier) Geordie (border terrier) and Wee Geordie Anne.
 
Bogle, Maureen Lee Miss (I120)
 
1184 Courtesy of the Steelworks Center of the West. Source (S1141)
 
1185 Covey Chapel Cern, Texas, USA Brown, Rebecca Alice (I12822)
 
1186 Cow Creek-the first 50 years
Cow Creek district
The Cow Creek district was one of the earliest sections of Boundary County to be settled, following naturally the route of the Kootenay River and the great Northern Railroad with its construction camp at cross port. However, some of the settlers came ahead of the railroad.
On the 1880 census the entire Kootenay County showed a population of 318, including railroad construction crews. Kootenay County was created in 1864 from Nez Pierce which was the very first County in Idaho created in 1861. Kootenay County was not organized or officered until 1881. Until my 1815, it also included present-day Benewah County. Bonner County has its beginning in 1907 when including present-day Boundary County became independent of Kootenay County. The creation of the new County of Boundary was approved on January 23, 1915 after my father referred to as a “fight.” The division of Bonner County became official on July 15, 1915.
The settlement of Cow Creek dates back to the arrival of a few stout-hearted man with the vision, the stamina and the dedication that was necessary for the task at hand, the clearing of virgin timber from the land, the removal of beaver dams and drainage of the Peat bogs with their clouds of mosquitoes. The building of an empire!
The very earliest homesteads in the Cow Creek district reclaimed by single man. James Fitzpatrick came in 1891. Mike Bogle came before him, received his patent on August 16, 1904, later selling to his brother in law, Thomas Desmond. Mike, at age 16, had followed his sister West sometime after June 24, 1884
Tom Desmond was the first white man to bring his family into the unexplored wilderness of the cow Creek district. The family, which included his wife, Mary, and three children, had spent their first winter, 1891-92, in a tent in Bonner’s Ferry while Tom cleared the virgin timber with horse and tackle. With the arrival of spring, Tom moved his family into a squatter’s shack on the Homestead.
He had reserved an acre of ground on a wooded hill on the southwest corner of his property for a schoolhouse, which he built of logs in 1892. Tom was a finish carpenter by trade and help to build the first Catholic Church in Bonners Ferry. He also added a side room to his humble abode for a teacher’s privacy, and for several years this was home to the local teacher. Tom’s sole survivor, sister Mary Desmond, recalls her families speaking highly of early date teachers, including a Miss Gilmour and Molly Hoban.
The following spring brought a new son to the Desmond household on May 9, 1893. He was christened Patrick Henry. Tom proudly proclaimed, “he’s the first white child born under old Clifty.”
The Desmond family, heretofore, had been privileged on January 4, 1893 to be witness to the running of the first Great Northern train to cross the continent. The Pall of a brewing winter storm could not dim their anticipation and excitement as the children were tucked into the bobsled for the trek to Crossport, where they could join the railroad construction crews there in singing, “She’ll be coming around the mountain,” as they awaited the arrival of Jim Hill’s flagdecked Special. A day never to be forgotten!
The year 1893 also brought the last of the Fitzpatrick family to the area. They took up adjoining homesteads, the overall holdings of the family becoming the Fitzpatrick Brothers Ranch. To a great extent the history of Cow Creek is a history of the Fitzpatrick Brothers ranch, for from the beginning almost every able-bodied man who ever lived in Cow Creek worked at the ranch during the hay and grain harvest which stuck up the entire summer. Also, many of the unmarried girls worked as helpers in preparing the mountains of food necessary to set the table for a crew of 40 hungry man.
At Crossport, there were log buildings, several of them, on the flat between the railroad in the Country road that crosses the field. There were seven saloons, a couple or more whorehouses and one general store. It was a short-lived boomtown. As quickly as the town sprung up it was abandoned, as the tunnels were dug and the trains rolling by 1893 and the land reverted back to the Fitzpatrick brothers.

Deed Transactions in Bonner's Ferry

Ry Deed Northern Pacific RR to Thomas Desmond Book 3 page 204 5/27/1901
$460.00 120 Acres
The southwest quarter of north east quarter (S.E. 4 of N.E. 4) and the east half of south east quarter (E 2 of S.E. 4) of Section thirty one (31) in township sixty two (62) north of range two (2) east of the Boise Principal Meridian, containing according to the United States Government Survey one hundred and twenty (120) acres more or less...

Warranty Deed Bogle to Desmond Book 3 Page 303 11/9/1905 $3000.00 160 acres

South half of the north west quarter and the west half of the southwest quarter of section 32 in the township sixty-two north of range two east of Boise meridian, containg one hundred and sixty acres.

Warranty Deed Thomas Desmond to Luis Fitzpatrick Book 6 page 592 10/25/1909
$300 20 acres
The west half of the Northeast of the Southwest quarter (W1/2 of NE 1/4 of SW 1/4) of section Thirty-two in township sixty-two (62) north, of Range Two (2) East of Boise Meridian, containing 20 acres.

Warranty Deed Thomas Desmond to Luis Fitzpatrick Book 9 page 208 10/16/1909
$300 20 acres
The East half of the Northeast quarter of Southwest quarter (E1/2 of NE 1/4 of SW 1/4) of Section thirty-two (32) Township sixty-two (62) North, Range two (2) East of Boise Meridian, containing 20 acres
 
Desmond, Thomas (I485)
 
1187 Craig County Antrim, Ireland Campbell, Robert John (I15349)
 
1188 Craigs, Antrim, Ireland Ingram, Mary Ann (I15345)
 
1189 Craigs, Antrim, Ireland Ingram, Mary Ann (I15345)
 
1190 Craigs, Antrim, Ireland Stewart, Eliza (I15380)
 
1191 Craigs, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Mary Ann (I14996)
 
1192 Craigs, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Hugh (I14997)
 
1193 Craigs, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Martha Jane (I15350)
 
1194 Craigs, Antrim, Northern Ireland Stewart, Sarah Jane (I15374)
 
1195 Craigs, Ballymena, Antrim, Ireland Campbell, Hugh (I14997)
 
1196 Craigs, Ballymoney Antrim, Ireland Faulkner, Evelyn Florence (I15101)
 
1197 Craigs, Ballymoney, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Hugh (I15045)
 
1198 Craigs, Ballymoney, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Robert (I15161)
 
1199 Craigs, Ballymoney, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Robert (I15161)
 
1200 Craigs, Ballymoney, Antrim, Northern Ireland Campbell, Robert (I15328)
 

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