We Served, We Settled
 Patriots and Pioneers - The legacies of the Shane and Beck families

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Matches 1,101 to 1,131 of 1,131

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1101 Was in CPT Nathaniel Johnson's Company, COL William Douglas' regiment and Connecticut, USA state troops and was at the Battle of Long Island. Trowbridge, David (I3481)
 
1102 WAS IN PRESTON CTY, VA IN 1820 Trowbridge, John (I2123)
 
1103 WAS IN THE COLONIAL ARMY Parker, David (I1654)
 
1104 WAS Indiana, USA THE MEAT MARKET AND BUTCHERING BUSINESS. Living in Altoona since 1893.
Moved there when he was 12.
Address at death was 2215 Seventh Ave, Altoona 
Jones, Jerome (I1926)
 
1105 WAS MARRIED THREE TIMES: GEORGE LEMON/WILLIAM KING/WILLIAM MERRIOTT IN 1857 B.
AUG 28, 1825 IN SEOPWICK, LINCOLNSHIRE, ENGLAND 
Shane, Mary Ann (I1909)
 
1106 Was the Count of Hainaut Baldwin, VI (I3616)
 
1107 Washington State Divorce Indexes, 1969-2017. Washington State Archives, Olympia, Washington. Source (S391)
 
1108 West Barree, Centre, Pennsylvania, USA Parker, Robert Stewart (I1695)
 
1109 West Hills Memorial Park Cemetery Neal, Abigail (I1902)
 
1110 White Chapel Memorial Gardens, Barboursville, West Virginia, USA Trowbridge, Margaret Irene (I3678)
 
1111 White, Lorraine Cook, ed. The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records. Vol. 1-55. Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994-2002. Source (S828)
 
1112 Wife is buried at Fon Du Lac, WI Hunt, Mary Anna (I11)
 
1113 Will 336-337

Barn Burned 715

The large barn on George Miller's farm about one mile north-west of Mapleton was totally destroyed by fire with all its contents by fire Wednesday evening, October 26th. How the fire originated is a mystery but the barn was a mass of flames when it was discovered. It occurred a few minutes before 7 o'clock in the evening. Mr. Miller had just finished husking corn late the same evening, and all his crop of this year and much of last year's crop was in the barn. The estimate of contents is as follows: fifteen tons of hay, 175 bushels of wheat, over 100 bushels of oats, about 20 bushels of buckwheat, between three and four hundred bushels of corn, a lot of cornfodder, a lot of straw, three plows, mower, hayrake and a reaper belonging to Joseph Grove. In the stables were Mr. Miller's four mules which have been frequently been pronounced the best mule team in the county. He refused $400 for two of these but a short time ago. These animals perished and all the harness was burned. The house and other buildings were saved by the exertion of the bucket brigades.

715
GEORGE MILLER
George Miller, who almost eleven years ago, sustained a stroke of paralysis, died at his home one mile northwest of Mapleton at 8:25 o'clock, Tuesday morning, September 19, 1916.
Deceased was a son of the late Jacob and Rachel (Dell) Miller and was born in Trough Creek valley May 23, 1831, hence was aged 85 years, 3 months and 26 days. All his life he was a resident of Union township. August 18, 1853 , he was united in marriage to Miss Elizabeth Buckley, of Shirley township. To this union were born seven children of whom three are living. They are Mrs. (Alice) D. E. Parker, of Juniata, Jacob H. of Mapleton and Miss Annie at home. Those deceased are Jennie, intermarried with George W. Morgan, who died in December ,1905, Allen B. who died May 15, 1913, John L. who died July 26, 1913 and Ella, who was killed by a passenger train at Mapleton, the evening of February 7, 1885. Mrs. Miller died April 1, 1878. He is also survived by one brother David B. Miller, of Mapleton; and one sister, Mrs. Leah Beaty, widow of George W. Beaty, of Shirley township; also by one Half-brother, Gideon C. Miller, of Meade, Nebraska. , and one half-sister, Miss Mary J. Miller, of Mapleton.
Mr. Miller, soon after his marriage purchased a small piece of land in Hares valley, one and one-half miles southwest of Mapleton (now in part owned by Jesse Boring) and lived there until 1873 when he purchased the Joshua Jones farm to which he moved his family in 1874 and which has since been home. In the meantime he lived on the M.F. Campbell place. The Miller home was always a hospitable place and it was a rare day when there were no visitors there. The glad hand was always extended to friends and strangers. Mr. Miller, like his ancestors, was fond of the chase. He was one of the best woodsmen we have ever known and was a hardworking, industrious man and a splendid farmer. He was scrupuously honest in all his transactions and was held in high esteem by all who knew him. In early life he was converted at the Methodist Episcopal altar but never united with any church. During the long years of his invalidism he was happy, cheerful and trustful. The community has lost a good man and a good neighbor.
Funeral services will be held at the home tomorrow afternoon and will be conducted by Rev. H.T. Covert after which the remains will be interred in Mountain View Cemetary. 
Miller, George Washington x (I1728)
 
1114 will proved 1 Mar 1571 Clements, Richard (I4825)
 
1115 Will, pg 30, 240 and 242 Miller, Jacob (I1565)
 
1116 William & Effie also had a son; Effie and son died at birth.

Application #33397 marriage license 
Lippy, William Jacob (I3790)
 
1117 William & Effie also had a son; Effie and son died at birth. Stewart, Effie (I3865)
 
1118 William de Mohun, adult by 1131, d. in or bef. 1155, Earl of Somerset, held barony of Dunster, Somerset, son of Sir William de Mohun, d. aft. 1190, lord of Dunster, Somerset, Sheriff of Somerset, 1084, 1086, by his wife Adeliz. De Mohun, William (I3590)
 
1119 William Trowbridge was brought as a child, by his parents, from England, first to Dorchester in the MA Bay colony, and then to the plantation of New Haven (Conn.). When his father was called back to England, he and his brothers were left in the charge of his father's former servant, Henry Gibbons. William Trowbridge is usually described in the public records of that time as a "planter," and later on as a "husbandman." In 1664 he appears to have been master of the sloop "Cocke", making voyages out of New Haven.

Will of William's brother John which mentions William:
English Origins of American Colonists, p.66
Will of JOHN TROWBRIDGE of Exeter, co. Devon. There is oweinge vnto me from my uncle Mr. James Marshall of Exon, merchant, £49, and from my father Mr Thomas Trowbridge £10 which I lent him, and I have sent for Muclinx (sic) eight peeces of Sarges, cost twentie pounds And twentie fowre pounds Mr Jno: Manninge of New England, merchant, owes me, and twen-tie one pounds Mr William Davis of Muskeeta in Newfoundland owes, which I have ordered George Pardon, master of the Will-inge Minde, to receive of him this yeare there and carry it with him for St. Lukas and bring home returnes with him, All which summes amounts vnto £129, of which if it please God to take me hence £20 shalbe disbursed for my buriall, and of the other £109 I give vnto my honored father fortie pounds, to my brothers Thomas, William and James Trowbridge betweene them £50, to my aunt Mace £5, and to my cozen James Marshall £14. Dated at Taunton, 20 Oct., 1653. Witnesses to the identity of the handwriting: James Marshall, senior, Christo: Clarke, junior, Chr: Dore. 26 June, 1654, commission to Thomas Trowbridge, father and principal legetary named in the will of John Trowbridge, late of the city of Exeter, deceased, to administer. (P.C.C. Alchin, 492.) 
Trowbridge, William (I2164)
 
1120 William W. Parker, son of the late Robert Parker, of this place, died at his home in Toledo, Iowa, Friday, February 26, 1897. The Tama County (Iowa) Democrat contains the following obituary:
"The community was shocked last Friday afternoon to learn that Wm. Parker had suddenly died. Mr. parker had not been feeling well at the noon hour, and while his wife observed that he did not look well, he thought that he was able to go down town as usual and said he would call on the doctor. He went directly from his home to the doctor's office where medical attendance as adminsitered and there he remained. He seemed tor evive for a short time, but about 2:30 o'clock suddenly had a relapse and died almost instantly in the presence of attendants. His death is attributed to neuralgia of the heart. While Mr. Parker's death came with such suddenness and is a severe blow to his family, it did not come without some warnings to his faithful wife who had closely observed his physical condition for some time and who knew that he occassionaly suffered from heart difficulty.
Wm. M. Parker was born at Spruce Creek, Pennsylvania, July 9, 1840. His boyhood days were spent in the community of his birth. During the Civil War he served faithfully as a member of the 16th M. Cavalry of Pennsylvania. On September 17, 1872, he was married to Miss Allie Conroy, his surviving wife. Three daughters Maude, Blanche and Bertha, survive the father as a comfort to the mother. About sixteen years ago the family moved from Pennsylvania to Lisbon, Iowa and two and a half years later came to Toledo where they have since resided. Mr. Parker was a tailor by trade and a ,an who stood high among his fellowman in the community. He was a member of the G.A.R. Post, the A.O.U.W., in which he carried a $2,000 life insurance, and of the Toledo Lodge, No. 118, A.F. & A.M.
Religiously he was a member of the Baptist church, having united with that organization in his young manhood in Altoona, Pa., and at the time of his death he was a faithful and consistent member of the church in this city. He had served as a member of the scholl board of Toledo for six years and the high esteem in which he was held by the members of the board is shown by the testimony which they have borne of his life and character in the minutes of their meeting. In every relation of life Wm. Parker sustained a high type of manhood. He was kind and faithful in his family relations and had the uppermost thought of his life seemed to be the welfare of those dependent on him. For this he planned, for this he labored unceasingly. In his death the world loses * of tits best men - best and bravest, * the fact that he was * and unobtrusive upon the world. Funeral services were conducted* last Sabbath afternoon at *. Rev. Amos Weaver of the * officiating. The text * The Baptist * appropriate music. The * Woodlawn Cemetary. 
Parker, William (I1698)
 
1121 Winchester, England Waltheof, II (I2974)
 
1122 Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Madison, Wisconsin. Source (S793)
 
1123 Wisconsin. Rusk. Thornapple. Death certificates. Source (S35)
 
1124 Wisconsin. St. Croix. New Richmond. Death certificates. Source (S37)
 
1125 Woodland Cemetery, Ironton, Lawrence, Ohio, USA Sams, Nora Kate (I3672)
 
1126 Woodland Cemetery, Ironton, Lawrence, Ohio, USA Trowbridge, Malcolm (I3671)
 
1127 Woodlawn Cemetery, Parker, William (I1698)
 
1128 Woodmere Cemetery, Huntington, Cabell, West Virginia, USA Steele, Harold Benson (I2942)
 
1129 Zeb was trained as a millwright in Crown City, OH. After marriage he settled in St. Albans, WV. He owned and ran a large farm there and was a member of the firm Trowbridge & Halstead. He was a deputy sheriff of Kanawha County for 10 years. He was a deputy tax commissioner at Charleston, WV for one term. Trowbridge, Zebulon Henry (I3713)
 
1130 Zelda May, daughter of Ray C. and Daisy Gardner, died at the parents' home in Altoona at 3:20 o'clock Sunday morning, June 12, 1910, after an illness of eleven weeks duration. The little girl was born September 8, 1898 and was the only child of the parents. The funeral took place yesterday afternoon. The mother of the child was formerly Miss Daisy Banks of Mapleton and her friends here learn with sadness of the death of her daughter Gardner, Zelda May (I2002)
 
1131 Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church Cemetery Hansin, Catharine (I3160)
 

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