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Matches 101 to 125 of 269 » Thumbnails Only
| Thumb | Description | Linked to | |
| 101 | ![]() | Harold and Vera Humpherys Marriage Certificate | |
| 102 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. | ||
| 103 | ![]() | Helen and Victor Young return from Poland - Reported in Chicago Newspaper | |
| 104 | Herman A. Palmer (1883-1960) Obituary Received from Paul E. Williams. | ||
| 105 | ![]() | Hershel Horwitz - Now Brother Howard, Article published in "The Australian Jewish Herald" on 24 May 1968 its source was "The Jewish Voice" - This document is a 2 page PDF file that will download A copy of this article is on file at the The Church History Library (Mormon Church) in Salt Lake City, Utah While there are many obvious errors. For example: Dad was not born in New York and his father was not an Orthodox Rabbi. Dad and his brothers changed their last name when they lived in Chicago in about 1945 when there were strong anti-Semitic sentiments in America. (Dad and his brothers were not alone. Moe, Shep, and Curly Howard better known as the Three Stooges had been Horwitz as well.) Many of the religious concepts were correctly captured. This is a fun read. Dave Howard/Horwitz Oct 2009 | |
| 106 | ![]() | Hinzweiler, Germany | |
| 107 | ![]() | Horowitz Family Name in Estonia Jewish Database Raphal Horowitz went to Estonia to become a Rabbi there. Some of his family members moved with him. This record includes some of his family members and others who were born in Rezken. | |
| 108 | ![]() | Horschbach [1985 ZIP: 6799] area of Germany |
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| 109 | ![]() | Index to Petitions for Naturalization filed in New York City, 1792-1989 Record for Henry Ephraim Index to Petitions for Naturalization filed in New York City, 1792-1989 Name: Henry Ephraim Naturalization Date: 5 Nov 1838 Former Nationality: Dutch Arrival Date: 6 Apr 1833 Title and Location of Court: Superior Court, New York County Volume: 2 Record Number: 26 Source Information: Ancestry.com. Index to Petitions for Naturalization filed in New York City, 1792-1989 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2007. Original data: Soundex Index to Petitions for Naturalization filed in Federal, State, and Local Courts located in New York City, 1792-1989. New York, NY, USA: National Archives and Records Administration, Northeast Region. Description: This database contains an index to petitions for naturalization from 1792-1989 filed in various federal, state, and local courts in New York City in the United States. Information that may be found in this database for each individual includes: given name and surname, court where petitioned, naturalization date, birth date or age, nationality, arrival port, arrival date, a reference to the location of the original record including a volume number, page number and record number. | |
| 110 | ![]() | Index to Wills, Frederick & Other Counties, Virginia: Whittington surname (Photograph by Matthew Stein, a Whittington descendant) ◦Index to Wills & Administrations: Frederick County, Virginia, "Whittington, John, Roanna, & Susan (child of William), Guardian, 1808, GB2 (np)." Wills & Administrations, 1795-1816 (M.N. Kangas, D.E. Payne, comps.): "Whittington, William, Inventory & appraisal, 4 Sep 1809 [Will Book #8, pp. 484-485]. Account 1808/4 Feb 1811 by Joseph Whittington, [Will Book #9, pp 25-26]." "Whittington, Lydia M., Martha A., Mary, Matilda C., Robert W. (child of Joseph), Guardian, 1841, GB 5 (np)." | |
| 111 | Ira Bert Burks (1880- ) & Louis Jacob Culmann (1876-1962), affidavit p. 1, 1907 Civil War pension file of Robert Thomas (1847-1916) | ||
| 112 | ![]() | Ira Bert Burks (1880- ) & LouisJacob Culmann (1876-1962) affidavit p. 2, 1907 Civil War pension file of Robert Thomas (1847-1916) | |
| 113 | ![]() | Iriving and Betty Mayland on Passanger List of Andrea Doria madin voyage in 1953 The List of First Class Passengers of the Andrea Doria voyage which departed New York on 30 Jan 1953 and returned to the same port on 16 Feb 1953. Irving age 40 and Betty age 30 travelled with their 8 pieces of luggage. -- See Photo as well. | |
| 114 | ![]() | Irving and Betty Mayland on Passanger List Arriving at Idlewild (JFK) in NY from Montego Bay, Jamaica 8 Mar 1956 Irving and Betty arrived on 8 Mar 1956 from Montego Bay, Jamaica at the Idlewild Airport in New York on Flight 670/08 Aerovias Nacionales de Colombia (Avianca) | |
| 115 | ![]() | Isaac Haverstick (1819-1901) U.S. Tax 1865 | |
| 116 | ![]() | Isabella (Belle) Burnett (1883-1962) Obituary http://www.hickmanresearch.com/genealogy/burnett/ | |
| 117 | ![]() | Isabella (Belle) Burnett (1883-1962) Obituary http://www.hickmanresearch.com/genealogy/burnett/ | |
| 118 | ![]() | Isadore Rosenberg WW I Draft Registration Card Chicago Illinois Date of birth 15 Cot 1898, residence 1621 S. Ridgeway Ave, Chicago. Residing with Harry Rosenberg. Employed as Waist Cutter at Stern & Kline Co., 206 S Market St, Chicago. | |
| 119 | ![]() | Jacob Segal- Probabte of Estate in 1938- Max Segal- Executor- Irving Holtzman- Attorney | |
| 120 | ![]() | Jacob Thomas Deal (1816-1895) F.A. Sondley, "A Brief History of Buncombe County, NC" (1927) p. 1 This three-page essay was part of a booklet that was issued by Buncombe County to commemorate the dedication in 1927 of yet another new court house in Asheville, NC. Jacob Thomas Deal, according to family tradition, donated land for an early court house in Asheville, NC. Sondley provided the names of donors and sellers of land occupied through 1833 by the town square and court houses, but not those after 1840, when the Deal family arrived in the Asheville, NC area. In the first page, Sondley sketched events from the Spanish exploration in 1540 to the formation of Rutherford County in 1779, from which Buncombe was taken later. | |
| 121 | ![]() | Jacob Thomas Deal (1816-1895) F.A. Sondley, "A Brief History of Buncombe County, NC" (1927) p. 2 Sondley described the formation (1792) of, and subsequent subtractions from, Buncombe County as population increased and other counties were formed from the original Buncombe County. The author then devoted the remainder of the essay to a detailed history of the land and buildings used for the town square and court houses. On page two, he described the delays occasioned by disagreements among the members of the committee who would select the exact location of Asheville. | |
| 122 | ![]() | Jacob Thomas Deal (1816-1895) F.A. Sondley, "A Brief History of Buncombe County, NC" (1927) p. 3 "The first court house of the County [1792] was a log structure across the head of [present day] Patton Avenue at the place where that avenue entered Main Street or the Public Square. At that court house was held the first court which met in what is now Asheville. The land of Samuel Chunn and Zebulen Baird on which this court house was constructed was that part of the Public Square immediately in front of the Thomas building on the western side of the Public Square . . ." The original site of the log court house was enlarged twice before the Deal family arrived in 1840: in 1807 for a more permanent structure in a public square and between 1825 and 1833 for the construction of the first brick court house. It appears that the town of Asheville was more settled in 1840 than later generations of Deals believed. It is possible that some portion of the land owned by Jacob Thomas Deal was donated in the late 1840s for the expansion of the Public Square to accommodate what Sondley described as "a handsome brick building which was constructed in 1850. . . ." In any case, the Deal family moved to Mississippi before the new court house was completed. Sondley provided the name of the builder, but not the names of those who contributed land before construction began. He noted that this "handsome brick building" was gutted by fire in 1865 and was replaced by a lessor structure, "a small one-story house." Edited by Roy Richard Thomas July 2008 | |
| 123 | ![]() | Jacob Thomas Deal (1816-1985) family during the Civil War p. 2 More information about the incident with "Doc Raeburn" was provided on page eleven of Nora Deal Foster, "The Origin of the Name (1949)": "By Emmadell High William (This account was told to Emmadell by her grandfather, James High, who married Emma Deal, a daughter of Jacob [Thomas] and Frances [Lavina] Deal) Doc Raeburn was a Southern spy during the Civil War in this section of the country. He was a terror to the Yankees because at night when they would have meetings, he and his little band of followers would break into them. It is said that he was a small man and would often dress like a woman and go to the Yankee's dances and in that way would often find out some of their plans and then he and his followers would break into them. One night he broke into them and did considerable damages. The next morning he was sitting on his horse in front of Grandfather's house, about ten miles north of Brownsville, where the Yankees were stationed. He was talking to a member of the family, when all of a sudden a band of Yankees, who were hunting him, appeared in sight, and began shooting at him. He fell over on the side of his horse, dodging the bullets and started running. They followed him into the woods, but he escaped. They thought he had been hiding at Grandfather Deal's and after they failed to capture him they came back, freed [Grandfather's] slaves, burned his cotton gin, destroyed his brick kilns, took his horses and mules, and drove off his cattle to help feed the Union soldiers. All that was left was one mule. Jacob Deal never recovered financially. Doc Raeburn died, still a young man, shortly after the close of the war." [This twelve-page document was contributed by Rebekah Canada and edited by Roy Richard Thomas, July 2008] Rebekah also supplied this link to the biography of Howel A. "Doc" Rayburn, the Confederate hero who was chased off Jacob Thomas Deal's place by Union troops: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com:80/~arprairi/DocRay.htm The incident may have occurred after the Emancipation Proclamation took effect: ". . . the first day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free . . .to wit: Arkansas . . ." http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/featured_documents/emancipation_proclamation/transcript.html If so, slaves in Arkansas were legally free, but still in bondage unless Union troops acted to secure their freedom. | |
| 124 | James Alvin Palmer (1909-1996) & Mary Cecilia Mehok (1913-2004) Marriage Record Received from Paul E. Williams. | ||
| 125 | ![]() | James Beatlas Burnett (1886-1942) Obituary http://www.hickmanresearch.com/genealogy/burnett/ |