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Matches 926 to 950 of 1,510 » See Gallery
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926 |
| Lucy S. Finley (1843-1919) affidavit p. 1 1916 In support of Civil War widow's pension application of Addie Davenport (1861-1928) |
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927 |
| Lucy S. Finley (1843-1919) affidavit p. 2 1916 In support of Civil War widow's pension application of Addie Davenport (1861-1928) |
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928 |
| Luetta Clark (1882-1981), Obituary
Terre Haute Star, Tuesday, 30 Jun 1981, p. 10
Received from Paul E. Williams.
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929 |
| Lydia A. Thomas (1852-1937) Death certificate |
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930 |
| Lydia C. Killion (1879-1966), Obituary
Brazil Daily Times, Monday, 21 May 1966 p. 1
Received from Paul E. Williams. |
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931 |
| Lydia Emily Tutwiler (1840-1905) Death certificate |
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932 |
| Lydia Hannah Mueller (1892-1961), Death Certificate |
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933 |
| Lydia Magdeline Sylvester (1842-1903) Death certificate |
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934 |
| Mabel Edith Thomas (1886-1959) Obituary
Find-A-Grave |
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935 |
| Mabel Edith Thomas (1886-19590 Death certificate |
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936 |
| Mabel M. Hardesty (1901-1976) & Charles H. Stump (1901- ), Marriage Record Received from Paul E. Williams. |
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937 |
| Mabel M. Hardesty (1901-1976), Obituary
Terre Haute Tribune, Wednesday, 8 Dec 1976 p. 2
Received from Paul E. Williams.
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938 |
| At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld. |
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939 |
| Mae Thomas (1901-1963) Death certificate |
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940 |
| Manifest, 21 Aug 1824, for the ship "James M" which sailed from Londonderry, Ireland to Philadelphia.
Many of this family's names and birth dates were derived from the Manifest, dated 21 Aug 1824, of the ship "James M," which sailed from Londonderry, Ireland to Philadelphia. According to the ages listed for some of the children, the parents claimed (To obtain lower fares?) they were younger than indicated by the exact birth dates found in later sources.
Roy Richard Thomas December 2007 |
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941 |
| Map of Central Europe, Birthplaces: Michael (1811) & Ludwig (1834) Janke
Received from Richard Janke. |
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942 |
| Map of Gallatin, KY 1839
Robert Henley Payne and Sarah (Sally) Whitecotton were married in 1818 at Gallatin, KY, on the Ohio River opposite Indiana. They would have been married in a private home since the Methodist Church there had not yet been formally organized and a building dedicated to religious worship. For later maps and views of Gallatin, KY:
http://www.nkyviews.com/maps/map_title_page.htm
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943 |
| Map of the National [Cumberland] Road
"Washington Post," Review of Simon Winchester's book, "The Men Who United the States," (Outlook, 17 Nov 2013)
"John Loudon McAdam, from his native Scotland, taught Americans to abandon the traditional method of road building, as old as the Romans, that featured 'big slabs of rock, the bigger and tougher the better.' Such roads were often treacherous and unreliable. Building roads in Scotland, McAdam discovered the benefits of compaction. To last, he found, a road's top two inches had to be made of compacted stones . . . large gravel. One of the first highways built this way was the Cumberland Road, from Western Maryland across Ohio into Indiana, completed in the 1830s. Crushed gravel proved a durable surface. Roads made that way soon became known as macadam. they had just one drawback--they threw up great quantities of dust when dry. . . ." |
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944 |
| Marcus Deal ( - ), Deserter 1862
"Deserters, $30 Reward for Each," Raleigh, NC "Weekly Standard," 22, 24, 31 Oct 1862, p. 1, & 4 Nov 1862, p. 1. |
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945 |
| Marcus Deal (1837-1924), Death Certificate
Ancestry.com |
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946 |
| Marcus Sylvanus Deal (1837-1924), Democratic Party 1910
"Caldwell's Democratic Convention," (from Lenoir, NC "News"), Watauga, NC "Democrat," 25 Aug 1910, p. 2:
"for county commissioners, . . . and Marcus Deal." |
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947 |
| Marcus Sylvanus Deal (1837-1924), Mad dog scare 1893
"Dogs or Sheep, One Week's Ravages of the Former in North Carolina, . . . from the Lenoir, NC "Topic," Ashville, NC "Daily Citizen," 17 Jan 1893, p. 2. |
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948 |
| Marcus Sylvanus Deal (1837-1924), Republican Party, 1880
"The arresting Business at Rutherford College," letter to the editor, Charlotte, NC "Democrat," January 7, 1881, p. 2
In the presidential election of November 1880, Marcus Sylvanus Deal evidently was an election judge appointed by the "Radical," i.e., Republican Reconstruction, government. He did not allow college students living on campus to vote because Marcus Sylvanus knew that they intended to vote the "Democratic ticket" printed by that party. North Carolina did not yet have the "Australian" or secret ballot system in which the government supplied a printed "official" ballot that contained the names of all candidates and that was to be marked in private, folded, and placed in the ballot box by each voter.
[A "staked and ridered Radical" meant "hidebound," "unwavering," or "staunch." The expression refers to a stake and rider rail fence in which two rails are crossed to form an X-crotch, at which point they are bound in order to support, together with a second X-crotch, a cross bar, much like a modern sawhorse. With such an arrangement, a farmer did not need to dig post holes.] |
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949 |
| Marcus Sylvanus Deal (1837-1924), Republican Party,1867
"Republican Party Convention, Burke County," North Carolina "Standard," November 27, 1867, p. 4. |
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950 |
| Marcus Vergil Deal (1878-1920), Death Certificate
Ancestry.com |
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