Matches 4,851 to 4,900 of 7,147
| # | Notes | Linked to |
|---|---|---|
| 4851 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: J.W. Slocum / M.K. Wiley (F8236)
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| 4852 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: J.B. Carder / J.K. (F8360)
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| 4853 | no children | Family: Clarence Eugene Bisbee / Alice G. Stager (F77)
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| 4854 | no children | Family: Claude Harry Parker / Myrna Cora Bisbee (F78)
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| 4855 | no children | Family: Frederick William Bisbee / Lola E. Coy (F1171)
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| 4856 | no children | Family: Floyd Henry Bisbee / Genevieve A. Baugher (F163)
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| 4857 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: A.L. Turner, D.O. / Beryl Nadine Butler (F5650)
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| 4858 | no children | Family: Waldo Stephen Worden / Ruth Helen Kimball (F7427)
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| 4859 | no children | Family: Edwin Hazelton Kimball / Mary Frances (F7426)
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| 4860 | No children | Family: Ansel Bisbee Bumpus / Lorinda K. Richmond (F7541)
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| 4861 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Weiderholt, D.A. (I26195)
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| 4862 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: J.E. Bisbee / C. James (F5985)
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| 4863 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: P.C. White / J.M. Lochore (F4442)
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| 4864 | No children. | Bisbee, Reuben Ebenezer (I2438)
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| 4865 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: R. Welch / J.M. Griffith (F5237)
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| 4866 | No children. | Family: Homer Pelton / Hannah Elizabeth Bisbee (F1269)
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| 4867 | No children. | Family: Emil John Schwartz / Gay Winsor Bisbee (F4240)
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| 4868 | No children. | Family: Charles Johann Minton / Hazel Marie Smith (F11298)
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| 4869 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: R.H. Pettigrew / M. Henkel (F4935)
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| 4870 | No Children. | Family: Rev. George O. Long / Berta Helen Thompson (F4936)
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| 4871 | No children. | Family: Richard Elmer Thompson / Wilma (F4941)
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| 4872 | No children. | Family: Arthur Joseph Thompson / Matilda Kubitschek (F4938)
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| 4873 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: D.B. Backus / L. Brodeur (F5226)
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| 4874 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: M. Bell / H.L. Backus (F5228)
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| 4875 | No children. | Family: Robert Orrin (Oren) Peabody / Phoebe Mahala Roby (F5018)
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| 4876 | No children. Most of this was taken from their obituaries and marriage record. Found Lilian in 1900 census, Lincoln Co., with brother-in-law Eugene and niece Fern A. | Family: William Bisbee / Lilian Harvey (F4290)
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| 4877 | No direct evidence of Reuben's parentage has been found, but his parents are thought to be Reuben Bisbee (son of Elijah of Plympton) and Eunice Jackson (daughter of Nathaniel Jackson of Middleboro). The evidence is scant and circumstantial, and consists of the following: 1) Reuben Bisbee (son of Elijah) and Reuben Bisbee Jr. were both "of Kingston" at the time of their marriages. These are the only two Reuben Bisbees known to have been in Plymouth County at those times. It should be remembered that the title "Jr." did not always mean a father-son relationship--it was sometimes used to distinguish between a younger and older man of the same name living in the same vicinity. 2) Our Reuben Bisbee was born the year following the marriage of the older Reuben Bisbee and Eunice Jackson House. An exhaustive study of the census fails to find any other family in Plymouth County that could reasonably have been Reuben's parents. Those families were either in the wrong generation or had other children during the same year that our Reuben was born. 3) The names given to some of our Reuben's children suggest the connection: Reuben, Joseph and Elijah were all names of children born to Elijah and Eleanor Pierce Bisbee, and not commonly found in other Bisbee lines. There is a story passed down by Reuben's eldest daughter Sophia to her grandson, Lee Kibbe. Lee was very interested in his family's genealogy and was known far and wide as a man who hated liars; presumably, his account of his grandmother's story is accurate. "Reuben Bisbe, Sr., was a sailor fisher on New England. Went out for a two week voyage, got shipwrecked, was picked up by African Pirates, being a good sailor helped them with their plundering and running their ship and faired well till he got foot on English soil, then goodby pirates, worked his way home. Gone over two years: never went to sea again." Sophia after she was 90 would tell of sitting on her mother's bed watch(ing) for her father's ship, until they give up that he was lost. --"Lee G. Kibbe, The Man and The Mill," by Hope S. Klee, 1965, College Paper, New York State University, Cortland, N. Y. In a followup conversation with the Author (Hope Stanton Klee), she recalled more of the story: While Reuben was missing and given up for dead, another person was courting Lydia. When Reuben returned, Lydia did not recognize him. Reuben vowed never to go to sea again. Reuben's second son Joseph was born in 1803, and his next child was not born until in 1806. If the story is true, he was probably shipwrecked in 1803. In 1800, Reuben and Lydia were living in Pembroke, Massachusetts. Sometime later, they moved to New York State, possibly Jefferson County. In 1815 they settled in the Town of Smithfield in Madison County, New York. There they were members of the First Baptist Church at New Stockbridge, and they owned property in the Town of Lebanon, about 18 miles to the south. In 1816 they were present at the founding of the First Baptist Church of Lebanon. According to the census, The whole family moved from Smithfield to Lebanon about 1824. Mrs. H. L. Hammond in her 1872 book, "History of Madison County, State of New York" (pages 558-9) writes, "It is remarkable with what facility and rapidity the land in Lebanon was settled. We have before us a map drawn by Silas Seymour, Surveyor, in 1815, which locates the lots, and every farmer then living on them. ...In the south border of the quarter and of the town (Lebanon) were Joseph and Reuben Bisby...." Silas Seymour's original map appears to no longer exist, but land records show that the area referenced by Mrs. Hammond was indeed Bisbee Hollow. Note that in 1815 Reuben Bisbee's sons, Reuben and Joseph Bisbee, were only 14 and 12 years old, respectively, and presumably too young to own property. Reuben was active in the affairs of his church. From the minutes of the First Baptist Church of Lebanon, we learn that he made visits to faltering Brothers and Sisters, provided recommendations about excommunications and letters of dismissal, contributed to the Church's annual minutes, and pledged firewood to the Church and to the Elder. In 1839 Reuben Bisbee was exempted for the time being from paying into the Church treasury. A few months later he was among those appointed trustees of the "Singing School." The possibility must be noted that some or all of these records actually pertain to Reuben's son, Reuben, Jr. After Lydia died in 1856, Reuben continued to live on his farm with son Elijah, Elijah's wife Calista, and their six children. According to the census, Reuben owned 212 acres of improved land and 20 unimproved acres with a total value of $5240. He had three horses, six milk cows, five other cattle and one swine having a total value of $396. He produced wheat, oats, Irish potatoes, butter, hay and maple sugar. During his final days in 1865 Reuben lived in the village of Lebanon with his son Hiram. A life-long resident of Lebanon recalled to this compiler (2007) that Hiram's house was right across the street from the entrance to the Lebanon Valley Cemetery. The house is no longer there. In his Last Will & Testament (Madison County Probate File No. 2621), made March 6, 1865, Reuben Bisbee bequeaths to his daughters, Sophia Kibbe, Lydia Reynolds and Louisa Damond (sic), and to his sons Reuben Bisbe and Hiram Bisbe, and appoints his grandson, James M. Bisbee, executor. The village of Lebanon, once known locally as Toad Hollow*, is surrounded by lush, rolling farm land. In Reuben's time it was heavily treed and much of it remains so. No doubt, if left alone, the countryside would soon return to forest. Coming into the village from the north, the road descends a long hill, passing the well-maintained Lebanon Village Cemetery on the right. Lydia and Reuben are buried there, side-by-side, near their son Hiram. Although no Bisbees remain in Lebanon today (1998), the road to their former property is still signed, "Bisbee Hollow Road." *James H. Smith, History of Chenango and Madison Counties, D. Mason & Co, Syracuse, 1880. | Bisbee, Reuben (I28)
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| 4878 | No further records found in vital statistics of Plympton, Pembroke, Plymouth or Duxbury. | Family: Aaron Bisbee / Abigail (F462)
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| 4879 | No Plymouth Co. PR for Prudence Cushman. | Sherman, Prudence (I2191)
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| 4880 | No record of 9 children by Lydia Bisbee, his second wife. | Geer, Luther (I3675)
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| 4881 | No record of any children. | Family: Hopestill Bisbee / Sarah King (F428)
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| 4882 | No record of children. | Rock, Ida S. (I7913)
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| 4883 | No record of children. Noah family information from William Austin, son of Sylvia A. (Bisbee) Austin #10-421. This information was compiled by Angelia Azuba (Sweet) Bisbee, his great grandmother. William has a photocopy of the original in her handwriting. | Bisbee, Noah (I4032)
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| 4884 | No record of divorce. | Family: Edward Coffin Bisbee / Rachael Boardman (F1119)
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| 4885 | No records of children. The family left Hingham early in the 18th century. | Family: Jonothan Low / Sarah Bisbee (F478)
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| 4886 | Noah Bisbee at various times at the following addresses: Noah Bisbee, residence St. Peter St., Salem, MA -- 1842 Noah Bisbee, stone mason, residence 99 essex St., Salem, MA -- 1865 Noah Bisbee, residence, 6 Brownville Place, Salem, MA -- 1871 | Bisbee, Noah (I2579)
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| 4887 | Noah Bisbee served his country in two wars. Mexican War he enlisted in the Mississippi Rifle and fought under General Zachary Taylor until the close of the war. In the Civil War he lost a leg at the battle of Antietam. was honorably discharged and received a pension. Was Post Master in Lanesboro many years. One Noah Bisbee purchased property near Harburg, Susquehanna County, Pa. in 1871. Noah d. "Aged 82 yrs." | Bisbee, Noah (I4032)
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| 4888 | Noah Bisbee, Jr. wrote "The History of the Falco's," a comedy in 4 acts. This was written in Walpole, NH. Noah was killed in the charge made by the troops of Col. James Miller on a British battery at Bridgewater, Upper Canada. In American history the Battle of Lundy's Lane has sometimes been called the Battle of Bridgewater, because of the nearby Bridgewater Mills. Due to the swift current that existed here, it was a ideal site to take advantage of water power. The mill complex was constructed in the late 1790s, and included a saw mill, a gris mill, and an iron foundry. The American army burned the mills on July 26, 1814, during their retreat from the Battle of Lundy's Lane. -- "Guidebook to the Historic Sites of the War of 1812," by Gilbert Collins, 1951, p. 133 Noah Bisbee also was noted for speech making and delivered an oration in Baptist meeting in Richmond on the Fourth of July, 1808. | Bisbee, Noah Jr. (I2616)
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| 4889 | Noah Turner was from Cummington, Mass. From "CUMMINGTON, HAMPSHIRE CO., MASSACHUSETTS" birth records. | Family: Noah Turner / Martha Bisbee (F669)
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| 4890 | Norma died at Cooley Dickinson Hospital. | Bourne, Norma Sylvia (I14566)
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| 4891 | Norma was a school teacher and swimming instructor --from gravestone | Bourne, Norma Sylvia (I14566)
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| 4892 | Norman Lee Jr. took his step-father's surname of Minthorn. | Bisbee, Norman Lee Jr. (I13202)
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| 4893 | Norton Daily Telegram, 9 September 1941. "C. W. BISBEE IS DEAD AT 70. Long Siege of Heart Disease Takes an Old Resident Early Today. Charles Wesley Bisbee, 70, well known retired farmer and President of the local Townsend Club, died at 12:15 o'clock this morning at Norton Hospital. He had been in extremely poor health for the past year or more as a result of heart disease. He survived a critical illness several months ago and was able to be down town recently but about three weeks ago suffered an attack which kept him bedfast at his home at 209 N. Norton. His condition became so grave he was removed to the hospital during the weekend. Funeral services had not been arranged today, awaiting advices from relatives. The body lies in state at the Diets Funeral Home. "Charley" Bisbee was born August 6, 1871, a son of Reuben E. Bisbee, Jr. and Hannah (Burk) Bisbee, while the family was in Canada more or less temporarily. His parents and grandparents, Mr. & Mrs. Reuben E. Bisbee Sr. were New Englanders but moved to Canada shortly before the rebellion of 1837-38 and the elder Bisbee was forced to take the oath of allegiance to Great Britian. The seven sons, of whom Mr. Bisbee's father was one, were generally dissatisfied, however, until 1873 Reuben Jr. and family determined to come to the new west. With his parents and others in the family who joined the trek, the Reuben Bisbee Jr. [family] stopped at Plattsmouth and Lowell, Nebraska, and eventually located in the Sappa Creek country, where Reuben, Sr. became the first postmaster at Devizes and named the office. He gave the tract and laid out the Devizes Cemetery, where he was buried in Late Jan. 1887. Charley Bisbee meanwhile homesteaded in Bell Plain Township southeast of Norton, whrere he and his wife resided for many years. During their residence there Mr. Bisbee for years was superintendent of the Belle Plain Sunday School. He was a member of the Methodist Church for many years, his father having been ordained an elder of that denomination in 1883. Surviving Mr. Bisbee are his wife, Mrs. Jennie Bisbee, two daughters, two sons, 10 grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren, three sisters and two brothers. One brother, Reuben Bisbee of Ford, Kansas died recently. The children are Bertha E. Steelsmith of Lenora, Conan W. Bisbee of Tecumseh, Nebraska, Ross Leroy Bisbee of Riverton, Wyo., and Mrs. Ollie Mae Bruinekool of Edmond. Sisters and brothers are James Bisbee of Denver, Colo., Rev. Milton Bisbee of Claflin, Kans., Mrs. Mamie Bridgewater of Ford, Kans., Mrs. Millie Wilson, a resident of Kansas and Mrs. Lizzie Pelton of Vermillion, Ohio." | Bisbee, Charles Wesley (I2413)
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| 4894 | Not certain who mother of these children was. Francis Hamlin was a farmer and lived near Sweden, Maine. He had a common school education and taught school; was a Selectman, a Methodist and an ardent Abolitionist. He will his property to this third wife (Elvira Bisbee) and children. | Hamlin, Francis (I4342)
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| 4895 | Not in the 1850 census, Monroe Co., Mich. | Bisbee, Lucy Ellen (I8581)
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| 4896 | not married | Family: C. Mayfield / T.K. Butts (F5139)
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| 4897 | Not mentioned in father's will Sept. 1796 - nothing more found about him. | Milliken, Alexander (I18140)
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| 4898 | Note that in the 1910 census Clark and Maud have been married 11 years, yet in the 1900 census Clark is single and living at home. Even though his mother was born in Canada, there is some question whether this Clark Brown is actually our subject, since the family has no record of a wife (Maud) or a son (Sherman). If this is our Clark Brown, it is possible that Sherman was actually Clark's stepson. | Brown, Clark (I23184)
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| 4899 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Melia, P.V. (I25259)
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| 4900 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Johnson, M.L. (I25279)
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