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1

 
Fairfax-Harris, John Richard (I67)
 
2
 
Woolaghan, John (Willaghan) (I820)
 
3
Will of Francis Calvert 1707

In the name of God, Amen, I Francis Calvert of Ridmire in the County of
Yorks, yeoman, being sick and weak of body but of sound and perfect
mind and memory, praised be Almighty God for the same, and calling to
mind the uncertainty of this life do make, ordaine, constitute and
appoint this my last will and testament in manner and form following.
(that is to say) First I commit my soul into the hands of Almighty God
hoping through the merits of my saviour Jesus Christ assuredly to be
saved and my body to be buried in such devout manner as by my executor
hereafter named shall be thought meet and convenient. And touching such
worldly estate as it hath pleased Almighty God in his mercy to bestow
upon me, I will bequeath and dispose of the same in the manner
following (that is to say)

First I give and bequeath unto Elizabeth Jackson my niece, now wife of
William Jackson of Ridmire aforesaid, the sum of fifty pounds lawfull
money of Great Britain, to be paid her by my executor herinafter named
within eighteen months next after my death and decease. Also I give
and bequeath unto my god daughter, Francis Jackson, daughter of the
said William Jackson, the sum of twenty shillings to be paid by my said
executor within eighteen months next after my decease as aforesaid.

Item, I give and bequeath unto my niece Jane Webster, wife of William
Webster of Ingleton in the said County of Yorks, the sum of forty
pounds to be paid by my executor hereafter named within eighteen months
next after my death and decease.

Item, I give and bequeath unto my niece Catherine Clarke, wife of
Christopher Clark of Whittfield the sum of ten pounds to be paid within
eighteen months by my executors as aforesaid.

Item, I give and bequeath unto my niece Elizabeth Thornton, wife of
John Thornton of East Bolton in the said County of Yorks, the sum of
eighty pounds to be paid by my executor within eighteen months next
after my decease as aforesaid.

Item, I give and bequeath unto my nephew John Calvert, son of my
brother Henry Calvert of Ridmire aforesaid, his heirs executors
administrators and assigns all singular my messuages, lands, tenements
and estate whatsoever, lying and being in Ridmire aforesaid or within
the permits or territories thereof, he paying yearly out of the same
unto my said brother Henry Calvert and Elizabeth his wife during their
natural lives and the life of the longer liver of them, the sum of
three pounds, the first payment thereof to be made at or upon the
eleventh day of November next after my decease and also I give and
bequeath unto my said nephew John Calvert his heirs, executors,
administrators and assigns, all my free rents which I letely purchased
of Edmond Alderson (and James Alderson his son) late of Askrigg in the
said County of York, dyer, and all my messuages, lands and tenements
whatsoever, lying and being within the permits and territories of
Askrigg aforesaid and Little Newbegginn within the said County of York,
with all my rights, privileges and appurtances therunto belonging.
Item, I give and bequeath unto my niece Anne Robinson, wife of William
Robinson of Ridmire aforesaid, the sum of five shillings, to be paid
her by my executor within eighteen months as aforesaid, and also my
mind and will is that the said Anne Robinson (upon payment of the same
leagcy of five shillings) and her heirs shall forever be excluded and
debarred from having or claiming any right, estate or title to all or
any part of my messuages, lands, tenements or estate whatsoever.

In case my said nephew John Calvert, or his brother William, son of my
said brother Henry Calvert, his heirs and assigns forever, all my
messuages, lands and tenements at Ballowfield, Carperby and
Swinithwaite within the said county of Yorks, or else where whatsoever
the same be (except herin above bequeathed ) with all the rights,
priviliges and appurtances whatsoever thereunto belonging. He paying
out of the same yearly unto my said brother Henry and Elizabeth his
wife, the sum of two pounds, the first payment to be made the eleventh
day of November next after my decease, for and during the term of their
natural lives, and the life of the longer liver of them.

And also, lastly, I hereby nominate, constitute and appoint my said
nephew William Calvert my sole and whole executor of this my last will
and testament and do hereby revoke, annul and make void all former and
other wills by me at any time heretofore made and do declare and
appoint this to be my last will and testament, only IN WITNESS whereof
I have hereunto set my hand and seal this thirtieth day of January in
the sixth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lady Anne, by the grace of
God over Great Britain queen, and in the year of our Lord God 1707.

Signed, sealed, delivered, published
and proclaimed in the sight and Francis Calvert
presence of us -

John Thornton James [?] Miles Alderson

Whereas the last will and testament of Francis Calvert, late of Ridmer
deceased is decreed to be delivered unto the above named William
Calvert, the receipt whereof he doth hereby acknowledge, of which this
writing is a true copy as witness my hand the twenty second day of
January 1708.

Witness whereof:

John Thornton Miles Alderson William Calvert

Administration Bond in the estate of
Francis Calvert

[Latin]
Know all men by these presents that we, William Calvert of Ridmer in
the County of York, yeoman, and John Thornton of Bolton in the
aforesaid County, gentleman, are held and firmly obliged to the
Reverend Father in Christ and Lord, the Lord William, by Divine
Permission Bishop, in the sum of one thousand pounds of good and lawful
money of Great Britain, payable to the same Reverend Father or his
attorneys, executors, administrators or assigns; and we firmly oblige
ourselves and each of us for himself the whole and altogether, our
heirs, executors and administrators, well and faithfully to make this
same payment, by these presents. Sealed with our seals. Given this
twenty second day of the month of January in the year of our Lord
1708-9.

[English]
The condition of this obligation is such that if the above bounden
William Calvert do well and truly execute, perform, fufil and keep the
last will and testament of Francis Calvert of Ridmer within the
Archdeaconry of Richmond, deceased, in paying all his debts and
legacies to so far as his goods will extend and law shall bind him; if
also they do exhibit a true and perfect Inventory of all and singular
the goods, chattels and credits which of late were and did belong unto
the said deceased and make a true and just account of the same when he
shall be thereunto lawfully called, and moreover (if need require)
enter into such further bond with more sufficient sureties for
performance of the premises as the Lord Bishop for the time being shall
think fit and lastly save, defend and harmless keep the above bounden
Lord Bishop and all his officers and ministers by reason of the
premises, then this obligation to be void and none effect, or else to
remain in full force and virtue.

Signed, sealed and delivered
in the presence of us William Calvert [Seal]
John Thornton [Seal]
Ar Harmert?
John [?]

A true and perfect inventory of all the singular the goods, cattle,
chattels and goods, all estate of Francis Calvert, late of Ridmer in
the County of York, fellmonger deceased. Apprised by us whose names are
hereunder written, this 21st day of January Anno Domini 1708.

Imprimis, purse and apparel 10 00 00
Item, household goods and husbandry gear 3 00 00
Item, two mares 7 00 00
Item, due to the testator upon bonds, bills of [?] debts 190 00 00
Debts owing by the testator at the time of his death
219 00 00
Apprisers: John Thornton
Henry Bearpark
John Metcalf - mark JM
Miles Alderson

{http://www.redmire.net/wills/francis-calvert-1707.html} 
Calvert, John (I1767)
 
4
Mr. George Fane De Sails, the third eldest son, was born while his parents were residing at Darbalara. He was educated privately. Practically the whole of his adult life has been spent on the land, first, at Cuppacumbalong, and later at his present property, Soglio, near Michelago. Not only has he been associated for sixty odd years with country which is now portion of the Capital Territory, but his con- nection with Canberra was still further accentuated by his marriage to a daughter of the late Rev, Canon Smith, who was rector in charge of the historic St. John the Baptist Church at Canberra for nearly fifty years, the Canon's induction dating back to 1855. Canon Smith was a man of wonderful energy, with a parish spreading from Yass to Goulburn, and across to Tumut, and his name to-day is revered by the older folk throughout the whole country side. Mr. George De Sails fol- lowed In the political footsteps of his father by representing Queanbeyan in the Legisla- tive Assembly for one term in the early eighties. His brother William, who now re- sides in England, also occupied a seat for some years, making the third in the one family to be returned for the same constituency of Queanbeyan.

WWI Service | The AIF Project:
George Fane DE SALIS
Regimental number 33837
Religion Church of England
Occupation Station manager
Address Michelago, New South Wales
Marital status Single
Age at embarkation 27
Next of kin Father, G F De Salis, Michelago, New South Wales
Enlistment date 1 November 1916
Rank on enlistment Gunner
Unit name Field Artillery Brigade, March 1917 Reinforcements
AWM Embarkation Roll number 13/128/1
Embarkation details Unit embarked from Sydney, New South Wales, on board HMAT A74 Marathon on 10 May 1917
Rank from Nominal Roll Gunner
Unit from Nominal Roll 1st Field Artillery Brigade
Fate Returned to Australia 22 September 1919
Family/military connections Brother: 1874 Lance Corporal Eric Fane de SALIS MM, 2nd Light Horse Machine Gun Squadron, killed in action, 5 November 1917.
Other details
War service: Western Front
Medals: British War Medal, Victory Medal
{https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/De_Salis-54} 
De Salis, George William Irvine Fane (I7431)
 
5 Garret Mason Lawrence (My Heritage) descends from Catherine Harrison and Patrick Donahue. Catherine is sister to our 2nd great grandfather Patrick Harrison (and maybe twin to Catherine). The Harrisons were from County Sligo this tree has the parents as John Harrison (which agrees with our data) and wife Elizabeth Custis, daughter to Rev.Edmond Custis and Elizabeth Nicholson.
 
Family: HARRISON, maybe John / KENNEDY, maybe Anne or Alice (F952)
 
6 DEATH: Died from Cerebro-spinal meningitis in military hospital, Lincoln, UK.
___________________________________________________________________

DEATH: Newspaper (SMH?) Obituary:
"ATHLETE'S DEATH
"George Hansel's Promising Career
"On February 13 occured the death of one of the finest athletes New South Wales has known of recent years, Flight Sergeant George Hansel, youngest son of Mr. A.J. Hansel of Edgecliffe-road, Woollahra.
"He joined the colors about six months ago, and left Melbourne on October 25 with the 2nd Flying Squadron, arriving in England towards the end of December. His relatives had no further news of him till Thursday, when the official notification that he had succumed to cerebro-spinal meningitis was received. He was within a month of his 20th birthday.
"His loss will be severely felt by all who knew him, for he was the possessor of a singularly cheerful and attractive disposition. As a student as the Technical High School he gained honors in both sanitary and electrical engineering. He was among the first flight as a sportsman. Hansel commenced his athletic carer at an early age, and ran second in the all schools' age championships at both 9 and 10 years, and won at 11 and 12 years. At the time he was a pupil at the Woollahra Superior Public School.
"Upon entering Fort-street he won his age championship, but shortly after left for England with the contingent of cadets that attended the coronation of King George V {1910}. Later he was a student at Technical High, and in 1914 won the blue riband of the engineering section and the open championship of the school. He then joined the East Sydney Club, and was placed second to J.H. Leadley {note}in the 100 yards club championship 1914. Last year he won both 100 yards and 220 yards titles. His first open race was on Eight Hour Day, 1914, when he carried off the sprint.{Here appears portrait of "The Late George Hansel" in uniform} He won the 100 yards State title at Pratten Park in 1915, and the 100 and 220 yards metropolitan blue ribands last year.
"His swimming performances were equally meritorious. Among the most prominent were: First, 100 yards all schools' championship, 1913 (time, 1 min. 5 sec.), championship Fort-street, 1913; First Keiran memorial races, 1912, 1913; championship Bondi Swimming Club, 1913. Last year he won a 50 yards handicap from scratch in 26 sec, dead.
"He was always big for his age, and wisely refrained from training while growing. As a result he did not seriously prepare for any of his races, and it speaks volumes for his ability that he should have accomplished such feats."

DEATH: {Original with I.D. Wilkinson}
_________________________________________________________________

DEATH: Official War Grave Photograph. Citation on envelope:-

DEATH: "Australian Imperial Force.
=============
"Administrative Headquarters, London.
=============
"Photograph of the grave of the late

DEATH: (Name) George Edmund HANSEL.
(No.) 608 (Rank) Air Mechanic. (Sgt)
(Unit) 69th Australian Flying Corps.
Died on 13th February, 1917.
At Military Hospital. Lincoln, England.
Buried St. Nichols Cemetery, Newport, England. 15.2.17.
Particulara of Grave No. 452.
Nearest Railway Station Lincoln."
{Original envelope containing photograph, with ID. Wilkinson}
_________________________________________________________________

Note: J.H. Leadley was a member of the Sydney University Athletic Club committee in 1918. (ref. University Calendar, 1918)

BIOGRAPHY: Flight Sergeant, WW1.
Sporting medals held by ID Wilkinson.

BURIAL: Inscription on Headstone:

BURIAL: "In Memory of
No. Australian 608, Serg't G.E. Hansel, Died February 13, 1917 aged 22 years (sic 20).
Erected by the Officers, NCOs and Air Mechanics of No. 69 Australian Squadron RFC."
{Original Photograph with ID Wilkinson}
__________________________________________________________________ 
Hansel, George Edmond (I552)
 
7 cert# 6011996 BAIER, Henry F. (I3028)
 
8 ELIZABETH WINCHESTER was born 15th November 1867 in Hartley NSW (source NSW BMD 10116/1868) and died in 1943 at Manly NSW (source NSW BMD 10641/1943). Winchester, Elizabeth (I1635)
 
9 From History of the Mohawk Valley: Gateway to the West 1614-1925:

In 1710 there came to this country five brothers, Theobald, Lawrence, George, Henry and Jacob Zimmerman or Timmerman. They came from Switzerland. Jacob Zimmerman became a trader with the Indians and married a princess of the Wolf clan residing at what is now Fort Hunter. She was christened Anna Margaret receiving her name from the chaplain of Queen Anne's Chapel at Fort Hunter. Queen Anne's Parsonage stands today. This was built in 1712 and was about the date of the marriage of Jacob Zimmerman to Anna Margaret, daughter of a chief of the Wolf clan of the Lower Mohawk Castle. The date of their marriage is fixed by Simms roughly at between 1713-19.

The first enterprise installed here by Jacob Zimmerman was that of a grist mill where corn and wheat were ground for the bread makers, both red and white, who must have found this method preferable to the mortar and pestle. Jacob Zimmerman's descendants are still here and some of them occupy the original land.

The original Mohawk Valley Timerman or Zimmerman, Jacob, Sr., had five sons, Henry, Adam, Frederick and Jacob, Jr., and one other. Jacob and Lieutenant Henry fought at Oriskany as the others probably did also. Henry was there so seriously wounded that his life was despaired of for several months. He recovered and lived to a good old age. Jacob Jr., is considered as the founder of the present village of St. Johnsville, of which his father was the pioneer settler. 
Family: TIMMERMAN - ZIMMERMAN, Jacob / SCHULTZ, Anna Margaretha (F8898)
 
10 Grave: E1 - - 44 - 5 McGINNESS, Elbert V. (I4964)
 
11 Grave: H1 - 14 - 4 - 1 GRIMES, John E. (I4951)
 
12 Grave: J1 - - 2 - 5 BETTIS, Lawson Anderson (I4525)
 
13 Grave: J1 - - 2 - 6 ESTLACK, Elnora May (I4598)
 
14 Grave: J1 - - 87 - 3 SCHOOLEN, Patrick (I4895)
 
15 Grave: J3 - - 2 - 2 McGILVREY, Helen Rhoda (I4972)
 
16 Grave: J3 - - 10 - 2 BETTIS, Viola Alice (I4518)
 
17 Grave: P1 - - 32 - 5 ESTLACK, Eva Cora (I4499)
 
18 He graduated from Dublin University, Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland, with a Master of Arts (M.A.).1 He held the office of High Sheriff of County Kerry in 1656.1 He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) in 1661.1 He held the office of Vice-Admiral of Munster in 1669.1 He was member of the Council of Munster.1 He lived at Tralee Castle, Tralee, County Kerry, Ireland.
{http://thepeerage.com/p35731.htm#i357302} 
Denny, Sir Arthur (I2500)
 
19 In Dec, 1974, Anne lived in Ashland, WI, at the age of 79. Family: PETERSON, Hans M. / HOLMAN, Anna J. (F398)
 
20 In Dec, 1974, Hilda was living in Minneapolis, MN. She died of a heart attack in Minneapolis, on 30 Apr, 1978. Family: ANDERSON, Otto / HOLMAN, Hilda Mary (F399)
 
21 Jack & Donna Huldie
Sent : Tuesday, December 27, 2005

from Deposition for Roger Connaughton, Nov. 21, 1902:
Patrick was 73 and had been living in Wisconsin since 1855. He was never in the army, ?since I was unfit and paid for it?. Roger and family stayed with Patrick?s family in 1866, and then Roger
moved onto land which Patrick Connaughton owned, and built a small house. He was a near neighbor to Patrick for three years.
Patrick grew up in Ireland with Roger, and was ten years his senior.
Patrick?s deposition was witnessed by Nellie and Mary Harrison. 
HARRISON, Patrick (I526)
 
22 O7 - 11 - 1 - 3 GUTCHER, William (I7979)
 
23 Row 15 No 478 WELSH\WALSH\WELCH, Elizabeth W. (I2910)
 
24 Section A HAMP, John Charles (I555)
 
25 Section K Lot 306E Grave 5 REICH, August Edward (I551)
 
26 Section T Site 3381 WALLIN, Axel Richard (I737)
 
27 "A witch" Wall, Johnnie Epperson (I373)
 
28 "Adopted" by Aunt Ann, who had no kids. Gotten lots of Kodak's stock, from Aunt Ann when she passed away. Kehoe, Shirley (I242)
 
29 "Between October 1848 and August 1850 over 4,000 female orphans arrived in Australia from Irish workhouses as part of Earl Grey's pauper immigration scheme. Famine and poverty in Ireland had driven the yound women to the dreary walls of the workhouse. Earl Grey, the British Secretary of State for the Colonies in Lord John Russell's Whig Government, thought he could solve Australia's problems of a shortage of labour and an imbalance of the sexes by alleviating the overcrowding in Ireland's famine filled workhouses."
T McClaughlin

Further research is required on the following information:

According to 'A Short History of First Castlederg Presbyterian Church' the Castlederg Workhouse was constructed in 1840.

We should check if Eliza Woolaghan was housed here before being sent to Australia?

Terry Eakins book 'Research in Ireland' says "Minute books of the Boards of Guardians, c.1840-1948 survive for most of the Poor Law Unions in most of Northern Ireland. The minute books occasionally list the names of the female orphan girls sent to Australia and the district electoral division from which they originated."

PRONI has these records - Castlederg, Co Tyrone reference # BG/8.

You have to search these records personally at PRONI in Belfast or have a researcher do the work.

I've checked my microfiche of the Griffiths Valuation for Co Tyrone (1860)
and the only Woolaghans were in Urney Parish (a few miles south of Strabane)
near Castlederg.
Kilcroagh Townland - William Woolaghan leased a house from William
M'Cormick.
Pullyernan Townland - Thomas and John Woolaghan leased houses, offices and
land from Henry C. Lighton.

Churches in Urney Parish -
Church of Ireland at Castlederg have been filmed by PRONI (Film No.
MIC.1/16)
Baptisms 1807-87, marriages 1807-45 and burials 1839-81.

Alt Presbyterian PRONI Film #MIC.1P/249
Marriages 1845-1955.

2nd Castlederg Presbyterian PRONI Film # MIC.1P/248
Baptisms 1880-1985, marriages 1861-1935.

Unfortunately Presbyterian records are not a good as Church of Ireland.
(Faye Logue) 
Woolaghan, Eliza (Woleghan, Woolahan, Oulaghan, Woolaghan, Willigan, Hoolahan, Wolaghan or Woolonghan) (I64)
 
30 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I0033)
 
31 "Is this Margaret Johnston of Tattykeeran?" asks Gilmour. Margaret, X (I0835)
 
32 "It is very likely that he was the grandson of Archibald Johnston, who settled in the Manor of [illegible text] of Derry [illegible text]. His Father and Uncle] [illegible text] in the town [illegible text] William Lord Vincent Mountjoy on 12th March 1732"
[Gilmour] 
Johnston, Archibald (I0345)
 
33 "Jimmy Roach" was a "gimpy" little Irishman with a big heart who had his legs crushed by a corn crib during a tornado in the early 1900's. grandaughter Jeanne F. Schick, 29Sep2004 FINLEY, James Francis (I3941)
 
34 "Second cousin once removed" (of spouse?) acc to Hazel Kyle Porter, Jane (I0582)
 
35 "The ringleaders ... were two 'politicals'; John Wolloghan, twenty-four years old, of Munster, and Peter McClean, forty, of Ulster. Wolloghan had been in charge of making the pikes, and McClean had recruited the rebels and given them their oath to kill the English officers and guards.

The incident took place on Dec 14 1800 and the two men were hung that night, "summarily and without trial." 
Woolaghan, John (Wolloghan, Wholahan) (I643)
 
36 "The Suttons were Normans in the beginning and before anybody had a surname in the modern sense. It is one of the few names which is practically without variants, although one New England forbearer tried "Sutten" apparently, however, with indifferent success, as few, if any of the family now spell it with an "e". The first Sutton was a Norman and in the train of William the Conqueror when he started upon his never-to-be-forgotten expedition. Sutton-upon-Trent was granted to him as his share of the spoils, to have and to hold forever, and so the Norman Sutton became an English Sutton. (All of this information on the Sutton family is from page 6, 7 and 8 of an unknown publication with the heading of "Decendants of the Sutton-Beasley family of Brown Co., Ohio.")

Sud-tun, meaning a place of dwelling in the South, is the original form of Sutton, and is the name of a large number of towns in England.

More than fifty coats of arms have been granted to the family, which indicates their rank among the English gentry. There were the Suttons of Sutton, in Holderness; the Suttons of Sutton-Madoc, in Shropshire; and the Suttons of Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire. These were three among the many branches of the family tree planted in England by the Norman founder."
{http://www.coltechpub.com/hartgen/htm/de-sutton.htm}


In the Middle Ages the Sutton family inherited the title and estate of Lord Dudley and lived in Dudley Castle. 
de Sutton, Hervey 4th Lord of Sutton (I5541)
 
37 #259 The record shows that she was 40 years old, born in Co Tyrone to parents William and Isabella and that she had previously been married to Mellen. Family: Bowman, Elijah / Woolaghan, Jane (Willaughan, Willoughan, Walloughan, Willahan) (F437)
 
38 (age 45) Stroke during sleep SULLIVAN, Mary Bernadette (I32)
 
39 (age 56) of traffic accident...a drunk trying to commit suicide HARR, Frank M. (I544)
 
40 (age 56) of cancer HUGHES, Robert Joseph (Bobby Joe) (I30)
 
41 (Details - Brooke Goyen) James, Edwin Henry (I6890)
 
42 (Possible) witness at the marriage of James Young, Workhouse Master, to Dorinda Sophia Tarleton on February 20, 1855. THe other witness was Robert Hood Hamilton. Johnston, Archibald (I0879)
 
43 (Research):Find Naturalization papers .. Boone Co Cir. Belvidere Courthouse Vol A page 59 20Apr1857 HARRISON, John (I2909)
 
44 (source NSW BMD 3425/1873)Copy of Marriage Certificate on file. {Marriage Certificate Walter and Eliza.jpg} By Arthur E. Selwyn, 'according to the rites and ceremonies of the Church of England'. Witnesses: Herbert Winchester & Susanna Heeif(?) Family: Wood, Walter Bennett / Winchester, Eliza (F578)
 
45 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Living / LOKEN, Irene B. (F776)
 
46 ... of St. Paul, MN. Family: FOX, Harlan / LOKEN, Lucille M (F749)
 
47 02 9976 6607 Chambers, Margory Zillah (I1319)
 
48 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I7410)
 
49 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1367)
 
50 17 days old LEICHNITZ, Friedrich Wilhelm (I3179)
 
51 178 Howth Road, Clontarf, Dublin McCulloch, Margaret Suzanna (I500519)
 
52 1865 per parish records, 1866 per PRONI Film Woolaghan, Thomas (Willoughan) (I55)
 
53 1880 Census indicated she had dropsey. DONAHUE, Elizabeth (Eliza) (I2928)
 
54 1900 US Federal Census shows Mary Mcbeth married to James Mcbeth. Family: McBeth, James M. / Blaschkie, Mary (F575)
 
55 1901 Census
Farm servant (Church of Ireland) at house 8, Attaghmore, Falla^ghearn, Tyrone 'The Diamond'
Not married 
Coultor, Robert (I1375)
 
56 1901 Census
Farm servant, Roman Catholic,
Aged 24 at house 8 in Attaghmore, Falleaghearn, Tyrone. 'The Diamond'
Not married 
Mullan, Edward (I1373)
 
57 1901 Census
General domestic servant (Church of Ireland) at house 8, Attaghmore, Falleaghearn, Tyrone, 'The Diamond'
Not married 
Keyes, Margret (I1374)
 
58 1901 census Leiston boring machinist at boiler works. Manning, Samuel (I0995)
 
59 1902 per V Corcoran email 15 Oct 2002. Family: Corcoran, Phillip William / Hutchinson, Maria Margaret (F286)
 
60 1911 Census
General servant and domestic to John Young and family at Blacksessiagh
Born in Donegal 
Houston, Ellen (I1351)
 
61 1911 Census identified that he had 5 children, 4 of whom were alive. Woolaghan, Robert (Willoughan) (I971)
 
62 1924-1938 Ike was manager in the Libertyville Office of North Shore Gas, Co.. DUNN, Harold William (Ike) (I2012)
 
63 1st Earl of Cork.
1st Viscount of Dungarvan.
1st Baron Boule of Youghal.
Lord High Trasurer of Ireland.
------------------------------
Boyle, Richard.
Adm. at CORPUS CHRISTI, 1583. S. of Roger,
of Faversham, Kent. B. at Canterbury, Oct. 3, 1566. Adm.
at the Middle Temple. Went to Ireland, 1588. Escheator
general, 1590. Knighted, 1603. Privy councillor for Munster,
1606; and for Ireland, 1612. Created Lord Boyle, 1616,
and Earl of Cork and Viscount Dungarvan, 1620. One of
the Lords Justices of Ireland, 1629 and Lord High Treasurer,
1631. Died Sept. 15, 1643. Buried at Youghal. Brother of
John (1582). ( D.N.B. ; Lodge's Peerage of Ireland, I. 78.)

http://venn.lib.cam.ac.uk/Documents/acad/intro.html
------------------------------
BIOGRAPHY: Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1st Earl of Cork.
Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork (13 October 1566 ? 15 September 1643), also known as the Great Earl of Cork, was Lord Treasurer of the Kingdom of Ireland.
Boyle was an important figure in the continuing English colonization of Ireland (commenced by the Normans) in the 16th and 17th centuries, as he acquired large tracts of land in plantations in Munster in southern Ireland. Moreover, his sons played an important role in fighting against Irish Catholic rebellion in the 1640s and '50s, assisting in the victory of the British and Protestant interest in Ireland.
------------------

In Munster, during the peaceful early years of the 17th century, thousands more English and Welsh settlers arrived in the province. There were many small plantations in Munster in this period, as Irish lords were required to forfeit up to one third of their estates to get their deeds to the remainder recognised by the English authorities. The settlers became concentrated in towns along the south coast ? especially Youghal, Bandon, Kinsale and Cork city. Notable English Undertakers of the Munster Plantation include Walter Raleigh, Edmund Spenser, and Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork. The latter especially made huge fortunes out of amassing Irish lands and developing them for industry and agriculture.
{https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plantations_of_Ireland#}
--------------------
Background
Boyle was born at Canterbury 3 October 1566, the second son of Roger Boyle (d. 24 March 1576 at Preston, near Faversham in Kent), a descendant of an ancient landed Herefordshire family, and of Joan (born 15 October 1529 at Canterbury - died 20 March 1586), daughter of John Naylor, who were married in Canterbury on 16 October 1564. Both are interred in an Alabaster tomb in the upper end of the Chancel of the parish church of Preston.[1]
Young Boyle went to The King's School, Canterbury, at the same time as Christopher Marlowe. University education began at Bennet (Corpus Christi) College, Cambridge, England, in 1583.[2] After this he studied law at the Middle Temple in London and became a clerk to Sir Roger Manwood, Kt., who was then the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer.
Before completing his studies, Boyle decided "to gain learning, knowledge, and experience abroad in the world"[3] and left London for a new start in Ireland. He arrived in Dublin on 23 June 1588 with just over ?27 (?5,287 as of 2012),[4]as well as a gold bracelet worth ?10 (?1,958 as of 2012),[4], and a diamond ring (given to him by his mother at her death and which he wore all his life), besides some fine clothing, and his "rapier and dagger".[3]
In 1590 he obtained the appointment of deputy Escheator to John Crofton, the Escheator-General. On 6 November 1595, he married Joan Apsley, the daughter and co-heiress of William Apsley of Limerick, one of the council to the first President of the province of Munster.[3] This marriage brought Boyle an estate of ?500 a year (?73,435 as of 2012),[4], which he continued to receive until at least 1632.
Joan died at Moyallow on 14 December 1599 during childbirth (the son was still-born). Both were buried in Buttevant church, county Cork.
It is said by his detractors that unlike many of his other close relatives whom he took great care to commemorate, he took no trouble to have Joan commemorated after her death, leading to the conviction among some that his (in every sense) monumental commemorative endeavours were entirely practical (in terms of securing his personal objectives) rather than sentimental (her connections being of no direct use to him after her passing).

Political career
Boyle by this time had been the object of the attacks of Sir Henry Wallop, Treasurer at War, Sir Robert Gardiner, Chief Justice of the King's Bench, Sir Robert Dillon, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, and Sir Richard Bingham, Chief Commissioner of Connaught, a demonstration, said Boyle, of their envy of his success and increasing prosperity.,[5]
Boyle was arrested on charges of fraud and collusion with the Spanish (essentially accusations of covert papist infiltration, a treasonable offence for an official in Queen Elizabeth I's Protestant civil service) in his office. He was thrown into prison (at least once by Sir William FitzWilliam in about 1592) several times during this episode. He was about to leave for England to justify himself to Queen Elizabeth, when there was a rebellion in Munster in October 1598, and "all my lands were wasted"[3] which once again returned him to poverty. The Nine Years War arrived in Munster with Irish rebels from Ulster, who were joined by locals who had lost land to English settlers. Boyle was forced to flee to Cork for safety.
This turn of events left him obliged to return to London and his chambers at The Temple. At this point he was almost immediately taken into the service of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex.
Henry Wallop then renewed his prosecution of Boyle. Boyle was summoned to appear at the Court of Star Chamber. In the proceedings, Boyle's adversaries seem to have failed to substantiate their accusations. Boyle had somehow managed to secure the attendance of Queen Elizabeth I herself at the proceedings, and he successfully exposed some misconduct on the part of his adversaries.
Elizabeth famously said: "By God's death, these are but inventions against the young man" and she also said he was "a man fit to be employed by ourselves".
He was immediately appointed clerk of the council of Munster by Elizabeth I in 1600. In December 1601, Boyle brought to Elizabeth the news of the victory near Kinsale.
In October 1602, Boyle was again sent over by Sir George Carew, the president of Munster, on Irish affairs. He was knighted at St Mary's Abbey, near Dublin, by Carew on 25 July 1603. It was also on this day that he married his second wife, Catherine, daughter of Sir Jeffrey Fenton, Principal Secretary of State, and Privy Councillor, in Ireland.[6]

Acquisition of rank, property and titles
He became a privy councillor for Munster in 1606, and in 1613 became a privy councillor for the whole of Ireland.
He claimed to have built the town of Bandon, but in fact the town was planned and built by Henry Beecher, John Archdeacon and William Newce.[7] The land on which Bandon was built was granted by Queen Elizabeth to Phane Beecher in 1586 and inherited by his eldest son Henry, who sold it to Boyle in November 1618.[8] In Bandon he founded iron-smelting and linen-weaving industries and brought in English settlers, many from Bristol.
He was returned as a Member of Parliament for Lismore (at a Parliament held in the Castle of Dublin) on 18 May 1614.
He ascended to the Irish Peerage as Lord Boyle, Baron of Youghal, 6 September 1616, and was created Earl of Cork and Viscount Dungarvan, 26 October 1620. On 26 October 1629 he was appointed as a Lord Justice, and on 9 November 1631 he became the Lord Treasurer of Ireland. Although he was not a Peer in the English Parliament, it is nonetheless recorded that he was "by writ called into the Upper House by His Majesty?s great grace", and he then took up the honoured position of an "assistant sitting on the inside of the Woolsack."
The town of Clonakilty [1] was formally founded in 1613 by Richard Boyle when he received a charter from King James I.
Oliver Cromwell is reported to have said of Richard Boyle 'If there had been an Earl of Cork in every province it would have been impossible for the Irish to have raised a rebellion.'
Boyle bought Sir Walter Raleigh's estates of 42,000 acres (170 km2) for ?1,500 (?232,180 as of 2012),[4] in the counties of Cork (including Lismore Castle), Waterford, and Tipperary and Youghal in 1602. He made these purchases on the insistence of Sir George Carew. Order on the Boyle estates was maintained by 13 castles which were garrisoned by retainers.
It is a mistake to see Boyle's 'empire' as merely being exclusively confined to the development of the 'Raleigh estates': for instance, his acquisition of the entirety of the town of Bandon was not completed until 1625.
Other towns which also form part of Boyle's municipal development legacy (which records employment of over 4,000 people during his lifetime) include Midleton, Castlemartyr, Charleville and Doneraile.
Richard Boyle had a substantial residence at Youghal, known today as "The College", close to the Collegiate Church of St Mary Youghal. Boyle occupied the office of Sheriff from 1625 to 1626. By 1636 Cork had opted to live in the West country to see out the rest of his days. Cork purchased from Lord Castlehaven for ?5,000 the manor of Stalbridge in Dorset, which became his English seat an in 1637 he laid out a further ?20,000 for Temple Coombe Manor Close by in Somerset. Cork at the insistence of the Howards also Bought Annery House near Bideford in 1640 for ?5000. The Earl was most delighted with Annery House and the living which came with the estate; he was also delighted that he could easily travel to Youghal from Bideford. Annery House was left to Francis Boyle, 1st Viscount Shannon on his father's death in 1643. Cork had also been left the manor of Saltcombe (Salcombe) in Devon by his friend Thomas Stafford the iligitamate son of George Carew, 1st Earl of Totnes. Saltcombe, along with Halberton Manor was also left to Francis Boyle, Viscount Shannon and his wife Elizabeth Killigrew.

Boyle's adversaries
The Great Earl's most famous enemy was Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford. Strafford arrived in Ireland in 1633 as Lord Deputy, and at first successfully deprived Boyle of much of his privilege and income. Boyle patiently husbanded forces in opposition to Strafford?s Irish program and this successful political manoeuvering by Boyle was an important factor in Strafford?s demise.
An illuminating example of the humiliations to which Wentworth subjected Boyle, was the instance where he forced Boyle to remove his wife?s tomb from the choir in St Patrick?s at Dublin.
Archbishop William Laud delighted in Wentworth's attacks on Boyle and wrote: "No physic better than a vomit if it be given in time, and therefore you have taken a very judicious course to administer one so early to my Lord of Cork. I hope it will do him good?.
Laud and Wentworth shared, with King Charles I, the same fate as many others who at some time in his life, found reasons to conspire against Boyle: an early demise, with Boyle showing his customary astuteness by putting on a convincing show of politically appropriate response at every crucial juncture.
Boyle made an entry concerning Wentworth in his diary: ?A most cursed man to all Ireland and to me in particular.? It seems Boyle was someone whom you betrayed at your peril, no matter how safe your position might have seemed to be.
At Wentworth's trial, Boyle was a key witness, but he did not take any other direct part in the prosecution itself. Unsurprisingly, he was in full support of the condemnation of Wentworth and wholeheartedly approved of his execution, making a grim entry in his diary " he had his head struck off on Tower Hill, as he well deserved ".
From his children, Boyle expected obedience, although as an affectionate father he was more forgiving of opposition from them than from political enemies. Lady Mary, " my unruly daughter " angered her father by refusing to marry the Earl of Clanbrassil, and again by marrying the Earl of Warwick without his consent; but they were soon reconciled and he furnished a generous dowry.
Boyle died in 1643, having been chased off his lands in the Irish Rebellion of 1641. His sons, however, recovered the family estates after the suppression of the rebellion.

Boyle's "philosophical" legacy
Boyle has been described as the "first colonial millionaire".
Historian R. F. Foster, in his Modern Ireland calls him an 'epitome of Elizabethan adventurer-colonist in Ireland?,
The Boyle motto is: 'God's Providence is my inheritance'.
Rev. Alexander Leeper, Canon of St Patrick?s, in his Historical Handbook of St Patrick?s Cathedral, Dublin, says that Boyle spent ?700 on having an Irish translation of Gospel made, and sent 500 copies to Ireland.
Boyle's theopolitical philosophy has been described as 'providentialist' when contrasted with its counterpart which prevailed to the north in Ulster at the time, which, is more typically characterised as Presbyterian.
Notice how such a comparison of these two standpoints is neither exclusively religious nor secular, a factor which perhaps offers some small insight as to how Boyle managed to achieve what seems to us now the extraordinary feat of gaining strong favour at various times with the leaders on either side of the English Civil war.

Issue
By his second wife, Catherine n?e Fenton, the 1st Earl of Cork had the following issue:
Roger Boyle (1 August 1606, Youghal, County Cork, Ireland?10 October 1615, Deptford, Kent, England, where he was buried).
Lady Alice Boyle (1607?1667), married David Barry, 1st Earl of Barrymore, then after his death, married John Barry, of Liscarroll, co Cork, Ireland
Lady Sarah Boyle (1609?1633), married Sir Thomas Moore, then after his death married Robert Digby, 1st Baron Digby
Lady Lettice Boyle (1610?1657), married Colonel George Goring, Lord Goring
Lady Joan Boyle (1611?1657), married George FitzGerald, 16th Earl of Kildare ("the Fairy Earl")
Richard Boyle, 2nd Earl of Cork and 1st Earl of Burlington (1612?1698), Lord High Treasurer of Ireland (1660?1695).
Lady Catherine Boyle (1614?1691), married Arthur Jones, 2nd Viscount Ranelagh
Hon. Geoffrey Boyle
Lady Dorothy Boyle
Lewis Boyle, 1st Viscount Boyle of Kinalmeaky (1619?1642), succeeded under special remainder by his older brother Richard
Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery (1621?1679)
Francis Boyle, 1st Viscount Shannon
Lady Mary Boyle, married Charles Rich, 4th Earl of Warwick[9]
Hon. Robert Boyle (1627?1691), author of The Sceptical Chymist; considered to be the father of modern chemistry
Lady Margaret Boyle
Boyle erected an elaborate monument to himself, his wives, his mother and children in The Collegiate Church of St Mary Youghal, County Cork and there is a similar but much larger Boyle monument in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.

Notes
^ Lodge, John, (Keeper of The Rolls), with Archdall, Mervyn, A.M., (member of the Royal Irish Academy), The Peerage of Ireland, Dublin, 1789: 150-1
^ Venn, J.; Venn, J. A., eds (1922?1958). "Boyle, Richard". Alumni Cantabrigienses (10 vols) (online ed.). Cambridge University Press.
^ a b c d Lodge & Archdall, The Peerage of Ireland, 1789: 152
^ a b c d UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Lawrence H. Officer (2010) "What Were the UK Earnings and Prices Then?" MeasuringWorth.
^ Lodge & Archdall, The Peerage of Ireland, 1789: 153
^ Lodge & Archdall, The Peerage of Ireland, 1789: 156
^ p253 The Munster plantation: English migration to Southern Ireland, 1583-1641 By Michael MacCarthy-Morrogh, Oxford University Press, 1986
^ The Lismore Papers by Rev A Gosart, 1886, Vol 1 (Boyle papers)
^ "Rich, Mary". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885?1900.

References
Canny, Nicholas P., The Upstart Earl.
Townshend, D., The Life and Letters of the Great Earl of Cork, 1904.
George Bennett 'The History of Bandon'
Harris, A.L., 'The Funerary Monuments of Richard Boyle, Earl of Cork', Church Mons. 13 (1998), 70-86

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Boyle,_1st_Earl_of_Cork
-------------------------------------
From Encycl Brit - Richard Boyle:
born Oct. 13, 1566, Canterbury, Kent, Eng.
died Sept. 15, 1643, Youghal, County Cork, Ire.

English colonizer of Munster (southwestern Ireland) who became one of

the most powerful landed and industrial magnates in 17th-century

Ireland.

Educated at the University of Cambridge, Boyle went to Ireland in 1588.

He became subescheator under Ireland's escheator general and used his

office to enrich himself, only to lose his property in the Munster

rebellion in 1598. Returning to England, he was imprisoned on charges

of embezzlement arising from his activities in Ireland. He was acquitted

by a royal court, however, and in 1600 Queen Elizabeth I appointed him

clerk of the council of Munster.

Two years later, Boyle bought Sir Walter Raleigh's estates in the

counties of Cork, Waterford, and Tipperary. By employing settlers

imported from England, he developed his lands and founded ironworks

and other industries. The enormous wealth he accumulated brought him

honours and political influence. Created Earl of Cork in 1620,he was

appointed a lord high justice in 1629 and lord high treasurer in 1631.

Nevertheless, soon after Sir Thomas Wentworth (afterward Earl of

Strafford) went to Ireland as lord deputy in 1633, Cork was fined heavily

for possessing defective titles to some of his estates. Thereafter his

political influence declined.

By his wife, Catherine, Cork had eight daughters and seven sons,

including the renowned chemist Robert Boyle and the statesman-

dramatist Roger, 1st Earl of Orrery.
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Boyle, Sir Richard (I904)
 
64 1st Lord of Arran Hamilton, James (I0481)
 
65 1st Viscount and Baron Mountcashell.

Inherited the house, St Catherine's Park, from his uncle, Sir William Davys, as William wanted to keep it in the Davys family.

A very large flat stone still remains in the church of Audoen, Dublin. It is without armorial bearings or any other adornment, but is inscribed: 'Faulus Davys Eques Auratus Sibi Suiibque H. M. P. Apocal XXII-XX Ano Dom 1638.' Beneath it are laid many members of the Davys family as appears both by the Parish Register and Funeral Certificates in Ulster's Office, Dublin Cast. The Davis Arms are: sable on chevron argent, three trefoils slipped vert. 
Davis, Sir Paul (I913)
 
66 1st wife. Of Christchurch, Cork.
aka Mary BOND from her first marriage. Refer page 3 of file: Index-of-MarriageBonds-Cork&Ross-pp36-44.pdf 
Travers, Mary (I927)
 
67 22 offspring, including twins and triplets. 17 reached majority
Living at: 30 Scotch Row, Belfast, NI. at time of marriage. 
Family: Killen, Thomas / Fleming, Harriett (F165)
 
68 22. Robert DELACOUR, Reverend Francis JONES, Rebecca DAVIES, widow, Robert Henry DAVIES, Anna Maria DAVIES, now Anna Maria JOHNSTON, and Charles DAVIES, or some, or one of them, owners, exparte Elizabeth CROSSLEY, widow, petitioner- Fee simple Estate of the late Simon Farthing DAVIES, Esq., situate near the Town of Charleville, in the Barony of Orrery and Kilmore; Part Lands of Ballinadee otherwise Annesville; Lands of Coolyline otherwise Cooline otherwise Farthingville East & West, in the Barony of Orrery and Kilmore, situate near the Town of Bandon- 3 May 1853- (lot maps).
{Reference: Land: CORK, COUNTY CORK ENCUMBERED ESTATES - LANDHOLDER Vol 13 & 64. Copyright 2007, Ireland Genealogy Project Archives, All rights reserved Contributed by Anita Sheahan Coraluzzi. CORK ENCUMBERED ESTATES, Anita Sheahan Coraluzzi} 
Davies, Simon Farthing (I1096)
 
69 239 Dorsey Road Rochester, NY 14616 DeYoung, Peter (I238)
 
70 26y 8m 24d MUNSELL, Libbie (I5115)
 
71 2E, 15, 6 VERLEY, Florence Celia Belle (I12546)
 
72 2nd Addition Lot 23 CINNAMON, Franklin (I498)
 
73 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2515)
 
74 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2507)
 
75 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I0408)
 
76 2nd cousin once removed, from spouse (Gilmour) Johnston, Richard (I0332)
 
77 2nd Duke of Richmond Lennox, Charles (I2609)
 
78 2nd Earl of Donegall. Nephew to 1st Earl. Chichester, William (I2548)
 
79 2nd Earl of Harrington.

BIOGRAPHY: entered the Foot Guards 1741; Col, 2nd Troop of Horse Grenadier Guards 1745-79; distinguished himself at the Battle of Fontenoy 1745; Member of Parliament (Whig) for Aylesbury 1741-47 and for Bury St Edmunds 1747-56; Maj Gen 1755; Lieut Gen 1758; General in the Army 1770 
Stanhope, William (I2567)
 
80 2nd Lord Ochiltree Stewart, Andrew (I0476)
 
81 3 June 1812
Strabane, County Tyrone, Ulster, Ireland 
Burke, Joseph Albert (I152)
 
82 3 kids from 1st marriage, no kids second marriage. Knott, Dorothy S (I132)
 
83 303, 2 RC BROCKMAN, Arthur (I12252)
 
84 329 Plot: 2 Row/Tier: 7 BARRAGAN, Stillborn Son (I11634)
 
85 3rd Duke of Richmond Lennox, Charles (3) (I2614)
 
86 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I0479)
 
87 3rd Viscount Mountcashel. Unmarried. Davis, Edward (I916)
 
88 3rd.180 VEHSLAGE, Donald Lorenz (I17832)
 
89 4299/1863 COCKERON PHILIP PHILIP MARTHA MOLONG Corcoran, Phillip William (I1026)
 
90 4th Earl of Clancarthy.

BIOGRAPHY: A Lord of the Bedchamber in Ireland to King James II 1689; in command of a regiment of infantry in the Irish Army on the side of King James 1689; taken prisoner at the Siege of Cork 1690 and imprisoned in the Tower of London; he was attainted 11 May 1691 upon which both his peerages and vast estates were forfeited; he escaped to France in 1694, where he was in command of a troop of Horse Guards until 1697; returning secretly to England in 1698 to see his wife, he was betrayed by his brother-in-law, Charles, Lord Spencer, and again imprisoned in the Tower of London; he was pardoned following pleas by Lady Russell but at the cost of permanent exile; he was a Lord of the Bedchamber to the titular King James III 1707. On the attainder of the 4th Earl of Clancarty the Earldom of Clancarty was forfeited.

------------------
Donough MacCarthy, 4th Earl of Clancarty
{From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donough_MacCarty,_4th_Earl_of_Clancarty}

(Redirected from Donough MacCarty, 4th Earl of Clancarty)
Donough [Donagh] MacCarthy, 4th Earl of Clancarty (1668, Blarney ? 1 October 1734, Praalshof near Altona, Germany) was an Irish supporter of James II, banished after the victory of William of Orange; His peerage was attained in 1691. MacCarthy lived out his life in exile in Germany and on the Elmersmastede in Hoogkerk, Netherlands. He was part of the MacCarthy of Muskerry dynasty.
He was the son of Callaghan MacCarthy, 3rd Earl of Clancarty. His mother was Lady Elizabeth FitzGerald, daughter of George FitzGerald, 16th Earl of Kildare; she subsequently remarried Sir William Davys, the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland.
As the heir of his father's massive Irish estates at Cork and Kerry (inherited 1676, age 8) MacCarthy's upbringing was a matter of high policy. His mother, described as" a fierce Protestant isolated in a Catholic family"[1] brought him to England for a Protestant education and he was placed under the tutelage of John Fell , Bishop of Oxford, but neither his mother nor the Bishop could match the influence of his uncle Justin McCarthy, Viscount Mountcashel, one of the closest advisers of the Duke of York, soon to become James II. With Justin's connivance, Donough married Elizabeth Spencer, daughter of Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland, in 1684, then principal secretary of state in England [2] : the couple were sixteen and thirteen respectively. The marriage was a legal construct, and went unconsummated for years. Kenyon remarks that Sunderland comprehensively ruined the lives of his daughter and son-in-law, without gaining any of the hoped for advantages.[3]
Imprisoned in the Tower for his part in the Jacobite resistance in Ireland, MacCarthy escaped in 1694 to James II's court on the continent. He returned to England in the new year 1698, to finally begin his married life, only to be turned in by his brother in law, Lord Spencer. Months later, MacCarthy was permitted to flee to exile in Altona, near Hamburg, with his wife.[4]. They had one son Robert MacCarty, Viscount Muskerry, and one daughter, Charlotte, who married John West, 1st Earl De La Warr
------------------- 
McCarthy, Donagh (I908)
 
91 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2540)
 
92 4W, 17, 14 VERLEY, Celia Etta (I12678)
 
93 4W, 17, 15 STUART, Ernest Albert (I12679)
 
94 529 Plot: 1A Row/Tier: 11 BARRAGAN, Luis Gonzalez (I11602)
 
95 529 Plot: 1A Row/Tier: 11 BARRAGAN, Luis (I11604)
 
96 529 Plot: 1A Row/Tier: 11 LEYVAS, Luz Talano (I11629)
 
97 5353/1901 Bunter, Blanche Margaret (I1285)
 
98 56y 4m 10d UNKNOWN, Sarah (I5114)
 
99 5th Baron Inchiquin.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dermod_O%27Brien,_5th_Baron_Inchiquin 
O'Brien, Dermod McMurrough (I892)
 
100 6 Sep 1881, Tartaraghan Church Of Ireland, Tartaraghan, Lurgan, Armagh. Copy of Marriage Cert. on file.
Emerald Ancestors {http://www.emeraldancestors.com/search/marriages/viewdetails.asp?ID=438053}

This is probably NOT our William and Isabella, but a close family line - cousins? 
Family: Morrow, William / Stothers, Isabella (F120)
 
101 66 years of death cert Pennington, Eliza Elizabeth (I1303)
 
102 661-D Gardens of Eternal Life TETER, John Joseph (Jack) (I17807)
 
103 661-D Gardens of Eternal Life HAMMARGREN, Bernice J. (Bee) (I17808)
 
104 6th Earl of Barrymore.

BIOGRAPHY: Capt, 9th Regiment of Dragoons 1767. 
Barry, Hon. Richard (I2565)
 
105 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I911)
 
106 72y 10m MUNSELL, Henry (I5017)
 
107 7:30am. Family: Winchester, Cptn. McCauley Killick / Lovelock, Joan Beatrice (F580)
 
108 7th Baronet Rivers. Rivers-Gay, Sir Thomas Bart. (I1831)
 
109 7th Earl of Barrymore.

BIOGRAPHY: On the death of the 8th Earl of Barrymore the Earldom of Barrymore became extinct, and the Viscountcy of Buttevant (if it ever existed) and the Barony of Barry probably also became extinct. However, the extinction of the Earldom of Barrymore was acted upon as one of the three used, in accordance with the Act of Union, for the creation of the Viscountcy of Guillamore. Had the Viscountcy of Buttevant (or any other Irish peerage which was held at the time of the Union by the then Earl) continued, the Earldom would not have been such an extinction as could have been used for a new creation. This point was decided (as regarding the Earldom of Mountrath and the Barony of Castle Coote, which, at the time of the Union, were united) at the creation of the Barony of Fermoy in 1856.

DEATH: Member of Parliament (Whig) for Heytesbury 1791-93; Capt, Berkshire Militia; killed by the explosion of a musket while escorting some French prisoners to Dover 
Barry, Hon. Richard (I2570)
 
110 8 Alexander St., is now 82 Gertrude St

BIOGRAPHY: Have passenger record of return voyage to Australia in 10 January 1928 on board the "Largs Bay" from Port of London. At the time lived (temporarily) at 169 Park St., Sydenham, Belfast.
"violet and john.jpg"
Occupation:
Engineer, Between 1946 and 1990
Australian Navy, 1945 
Morrow, John Harrison (I406)
 
111 8 October 1907
Helmer, Lakefield Township, Luce, Michigan 
Burke, Joseph Albert (I152)
 
112 9 Scotch Row, Belfast Fleming, Samuel (I1315)
 
113 Area - DUBLIN (COI) , Parish/Church/Congregation - ST. BRIDE

Marriage of JAMES WOOLAHAN of PETER STREET and CATHERINE BYRNE of WICKLOW on 14 July 1871
Husband Wife
Name JAMES WOOLAHANCATHERINE BYRNE
Address PETER STREETWICKLOW
Occupation STONE MASONN/R
Father THOMAS WOOLAHANJAMES BYRNE
Mother N/RN/R
Further details in the record
Husband Age FULL
Husband Marital Status B
Wife Age FULL
Wife Marital Status S
Husband's Father's Occupation MASON
Wife's Father's Occupation FARMER
Witness 1 ABRAHAM ROGERS (WITNESS FOR HUSBAND)
Witness 3 SARAH WOOLAHAN (WITNESS FOR WIFE)
About the record
Book Number Page Entry Number Record_Identifier Image Filename
N/R3773DU-CI-MA-15834d-327-3-3-037 
Family: Woolaghan, James (Woolahan) / Byrne, Catherine (F44)
 
114 Area - DUBLIN (COI) , Parish/Church/Congregation - ST. JAMES

Burial of THOS WOOLAGHAN of THOS ST on 29 July 1822

Name THOS WOOLAGHAN
Address THOS ST
Age N/R
Date of Death N/R N/R N/R
Occupation N/R
Further details in the record
About the record
Book Number Page Entry Number Record_Identifier Image Filename
N/R98N/RDU-CI-BU-115162d-152-1-2-098 
Woolaghan, Thomas (Whoolaghan) (I1144)
 
115 Area - DUBLIN (COI) , Parish/Church/Congregation - ST. PETER

Baptism of CHARLOTTE WOOLAGHAN of 28 UPPER MERCER STR on 10 February 1880
CHARLOTTE WOOLAGHAN
Date of Birth 10 January 1880
Address 28 UPPER MERCER STR
Father HUGH WOOLAGHAN
Mother ELIZA WOOLAGHAN
Further details in the record
Father Occupation PAINTER
About the record
Book Number Page Entry Number Record_Identifier Image Filename
N/R60N/RDU-CI-BA-209004d-45-2-17-060 
Woolaghan, Charlotte (I1420)
 
116 Ireland Calendars Of Wills & Administrations 1858-1920
Record set Ireland Calendars Of Wills & Administrations 1858-1920
First name(s) James
Last name Wooloughan
Deceased's death year 1875
County Dublin
Country Ireland
Deceased's name James Wooloughan
Deceased's death date 18 Dec 1875
Primary beneficiary Margaret Wooloughan
Original source http://www.willcalendars.nationalarchives.ie/search/cwa/details.jsp?id=1639593550
Archive National Archives of Ireland
Category Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers)
Subcategory Wills & Probate
Collections from Ireland 
Woolaghan, James (Wooloughan) (I864)
 
117 Ireland, Londonderry (Derry) City Cemetery Burials 1853-1961

First name(s) Mary
Last name Willoghan
Birth year 1805
Age at death 80 years
Place of birth as transcribed Newtownstewart
Death year 1885
Death date 03 Apr 1885
Burial date 05 Apr 1885
Place of residence 25 Foyle Street
Parents as transcribed '
Parents' last name '
Mother's first name(s) -
Deceased as transcribed Mary Willoghan
Proprietor Francis O'Neill
Residence of proprietor Foyle Street
Reference CRS004517
Grave location D-a-134
Cemetery Derry City Cemetery
Place Derry
County Londonderry (Derry)
Country Ireland
Record set Ireland, Londonderry (Derry) City Cemetery Burials 1853-1961
Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records
Subcategory Civil Deaths & Burials
Collections from Ireland 
Woolaghan, Mary [Willoghan] (I1535)
 
118 Ireland, Northern Ireland Deaths 1998-2020
What can I do with this record?
Title Ms
First name(s) Mary Veronica
Last name Willaghan
Sex Female
Birth year 1932
Birth date 28 Feb 1932
Death year 2016
Death date 27 Nov 2016
Age 83
Residence Belfast
Area Belfast
Postcode area BT
Postcode district BT10
Postcode sector BT10 0
Place Northern Ireland
County Antrim
Country Northern Ireland
Record set Ireland, Northern Ireland Deaths 1998-2020
Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records
Subcategory Civil Deaths & Burials 
Woolaghan, Mary Veronica (I1362)
 
119 Laurence Wooloughan
 in the UK and Ireland, Find A Grave Index, 1300s-Current

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Report a problemName: Laurence Wooloughan
Death Date: 21 Apr 1830
Death Place: Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland
Cemetery: Goldenbridge Cemetery
Burial or Cremation Place: Dublin, County Dublin, Ireland
Has Bio?: N
Mother: Margaret Wooloughan
Spouse: Mary Anne Wooloughan
Children: Laurence J Wooloughan
Debora Wilson
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/mem... 
Woolaghan, Laurence (Wooloughan) (I1511)
 
120 New York, Episcopal Diocese of Rochester Church Records, 1800-1970 for William Willahan
Rochester St. Luke´s Church 1848-1859
Died 6 Sep 1848, buried 8 Sep 1848 at Mt Hope, age 72 years
Name: William Willahan
Death Age: 72
Record Type: Burial
Birth Date: abt 1776
Death Date: 6 Sep 1848
Burial Date: 8 Sep 1848
Burial Place: St. Luke's Church, Rochester, New York, USA
Church: St. Luke's Church 
Woolaghan, William (Willahan) (I1124)
 
121 Beneficiary Identification Records Locator Subsystem (BIRLS) Death File. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Source (S2659)
 
122 Connecticut Vital Records — Index of Marriages, 1897-1968. Connecticut State Library. https://www.ctatatelibrarydata.org/marriage-records/: accessed 8 May 2019. Source (S1913)
 
123 Connecticut Vital Records — Index of Marriages, 1897-1968. Connecticut State Library. https://www.ctatatelibrarydata.org/marriage-records/: accessed 8 May 2019. Source (S2655)
 
124 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S704)
 
125 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S1272)
 
126 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S1276)
 
127 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S1750)
 
128 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2562)
 
129 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2568)
 
130 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2580)
 
131 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2595)
 
132 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2647)
 
133 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2652)
 
134 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2663)
 
135 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2872)
 
136 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2878)
 
137 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2886)
 
138 Find a Grave. Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi. Source (S2901)
 
139 Maine Birth Records, 1715-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Maine Birth Records, 1715-1922, Maine State Archives, Augusta, Maine. Source (S1334)
 
140 Maine Birth Records, 1715-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Maine Birth Records, 1715-1922, Maine State Archives, Augusta, Maine. Source (S2572)
 
141 Maine Birth Records, 1715-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Maine Birth Records, 1715-1922, Maine State Archives, Augusta, Maine. Source (S2632)
 
142 Maine Marriage Records, 1713-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Source (S2559)
 
143 Maine Marriage Records, 1713-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Source (S2561)
 
144 Maine Marriage Records, 1713-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Source (S2626)
 
145 Maine Marriage Records, 1713-1922. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. Source (S2646)
 
146 Marriage Records. Ohio Marriages. Various Ohio County Courthouses. Source (S2753)
 
147 Muster Rolls of U.S. Navy Ships, Stations, and Other Naval Activities, 01/01/1939-01/01/1949; A-1 Entry 135, 10230 rolls, ARC ID: 594996. Records of the Bureau of Naval Personnel, Record Group Number 24. National Archives at College Park, College Park, MD. Source (S2670)
 
148 Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, RG 85. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration.

See Full Source Citations.

 
Source (S2881)
 
149 Selected U.S. Naturalization Records. Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration.

View Full Source Citations.

 
Source (S2581)
 
150 The Obituary Daily Times. The Obituary Daily Times. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~obituary. Source (S1377)
 
151

"Aunt Sue" never married, and had a heart of gold. Stricken by Lupus Erythematosis, which caused her premature death. She took David, Jr. to the Springfield fair at a very young age, and gave David her beloved 1961 VW bug, that had been stored

for 7 years, when he turned 16. Donated her body to Brown University. Lived on Frawley Street in Boston as a young nurse, and took a big trip to Ireland in early 1963/64. Went to school at Newport School of Nursing.

 
Vanable, Susan Jane (I21)
 
152

View Sources.

 
Source (S2754)
 
153

https://www.ancestryireland.com/family-records/marriage-records-co-antrim-co-down/?record=347857

FYI William Johnston Knott was listed as having a father of William Johnston Knott, a carpenter. This is DIFFERENT than what we think we know (in the current tree). 

Susan Jane Evans' father listed as Joseph Evans, a weaver. 

 
Family: Knott, William Johnston / Evans, Susan Jane (F25)
 
154

Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Marriage Records, 1810–1973. Microfilm publication, 137 rolls. Reels 1-110. Cuyahoga, Ohio.

 
Source (S2759)
 
155

Naturalization Records. National Archives at Boston, Waltham, Massachusetts.


A full list of sources can be found here.

 
Source (S2582)
 
156

Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1820-1897. Microfilm Publication M237, 675 rolls. NAI: 6256867. Records of the U.S. Customs Service, Record Group 36. National Archives at Washington, D.C.


Passenger and Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1897-1957. Microfilm Publication T715, 8892 rolls. NAI: 300346. Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service; National Archives at Washington, D.C.


Supplemental Manifests of Alien Passengers and Crew Members Who Arrived on Vessels at New York, New York, Who Were Inspected for Admission, and Related Index, compiled 1887-1952. Microfilm Publication A3461, 21 rolls. NAI: 3887372. RG 85, Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1787-2004; Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service; National Archives, Washington, D.C.


Index to Alien Crewmen Who Were Discharged or Who Deserted at New York, New York, May 1917-Nov. 1957. Microfilm Publication A3417. NAI: 4497925. National Archives at Washington, D.C.


Passenger Lists, 1962-1972, and Crew Lists, 1943-1972, of Vessels Arriving at Oswego, New York. Microfilm Publication A3426. NAI: 4441521. National Archives at Washington, D.C.

 
Source (S2619)
 
157

DIED 89 PLEASANT ST., LINCOLN.

CAUSE OF DEATH - DIPTHERIA, HEART FAILURE.) died: LONSDALE, RI

 
Vanable, Alonzo Foster (I181)
 
158

HOWARD E. KNOTT SR., 91, of Malden Street, a private chauffeur until retiring in 1973, died Sunday at the Roger Williams Medical Center. He was the husband of the late Helen M. (Mowbray) Knott.
Born in Providence, a son of the late Joseph J. and Carrie B. (Wathey) Knott, he lived in Cranston for many years.
Mr. Knott was previously a machine shop foreman. He had received an electrical engineering degree from the former Rhode Island State College, now the University of Rhode Island.
He is survived by a son, a sister, three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

 
Knott, Howard Evans (I39)
 
159

Apparently moved to New York State. Possibly named Charles??.

Originally captured as Stuart Sturtevant - probably from DV's Grandma Florence K Vanable oral history. 

Per https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-10134-205847140-/susan-k-sturtevant-in-1930-united-states-federal-census?indId=individual-630205421-2000077&s=630205421#fullscreen

Seems like probably this is the right person, Seward E Sturtevant... kids and ages make sense. 

 
Sturtevant, Seward E (I82)
 
160

Arthur Noble and James Evans were witnesses to the wedding.

 
Evans, Hannah (Hanna) (I500458)
 
161 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I56)
 
162

Came to the US between June 1888 (Anna) and Sept 1889 (Augusta). Started as a tennant farmer near end of Maiden Lane. Worked for Kodak. In Holland, had a boat, and took cheese on the seas. Joined Dutch Reformed Church on Blossom Rd in Brighton

on 10.26.1902. Papa and Gram met at this church. All kids baptized Nov 2, 1902.

 
DeYoung, William (I155)
 
163

Canadian Expeditionary Force. CEF Personnel Files, 1914-1918. Accession 1992-93/166. Record Group 150. Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

 
Source (S2588)
 
164

Canadian Expeditionary Force. CEF Personnel Files, 1914-1918. Accession 1992-93/166. Record Group 150. Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

 
Source (S2614)
 
165

Canadian Expeditionary Force. CEF Personnel Files, 1914-1918. Accession 1992-93/166. Record Group 150. Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

 
Source (S2877)
 
166

Changed name to William. Known as "Papa". Known as Ted, because he carried around a teddy bear as a kid. Born on Ridge Road, across street from Kodak Park. Originally lived on a farm at end of Maiden Lane, near Long Pond Rd. Just beat the

deadline into WWII (35 or 36 years old, signed up after Pearl Harbor). ssn: 32-138-984. Army service 4.20.42-9.22.45, honorable discharge as aircraft technician. Served in Bismark-Archipelago, Luzon, New Guinea, Papua, Southern Phillipines.

Graduated Rochester Tech High School, 1924.

 
DeYoung, Jacob William (I12)
 
167

Died in 1963 or 1964. Tried to steal bacon from the kids at breakfast. Lived in a house on Woodstock Rd, Rochester, NY. Aunt Leena lived next door, and Aunt Nellie lived on Akron St (nearby). Came to US in 1906?. All the brothers spelled last

name differently: Minch, Minck, Mink.

 
Minck, Albert Charles (I183)
 
168

Landholdings: http://www.connorsgenealogy.net/Leitrim/OughterraghTithes.htm

 
Knott, Alexander (I500030)
 
169

Note from Holland, 3.31.75, re Cornelia Adriana Louret-Tittman widow of Izaak Abraham Louret, died in 74th year. Town names: Breskins, was a Mr. A. Louret Cadzand, family names: Verplanke-de Lijzer Named after her grandmother Magdhlena

Schippers.

 
Tittman, Magdalena (I194)
 
170 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I364)
 
171

Per Irish Baptism Records, a Joseph Burgoyne was baptized on Feb 26, 1832 at Seapatrick Church of Ireland in Banbridge IR. Parents were John and Agnes Burgoyne

 
Burgoyne, Joseph (I500059)
 
172

Stayed with Grandma Jenny during WWII, and until end of high school. A schoolteacher, worked till pregnant with Laurie, then went back when divorced from Tom, 1959. Stopped a year later, when married Harold. Taught again 1977 or 78 till 1986,

librarian for Greece schools.

 
DeYoung, Margaret (I10)
 
173
  • Ohio. Division of Vital Statistics. Death Certificates and Index, December 20, 1908-December 31, 1953. State Archives Series 3094. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio.
  • Ohio Department of Health. Index to Annual Deaths, 1958-2002. Ohio Department of Health, State Vital Statistics Unit, Columbus, OH, USA.
 
Source (S2751)
 
174
  • Ohio. Division of Vital Statistics. Death Certificates and Index, December 20, 1908-December 31, 1953. State Archives Series 3094. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio.
  • Ohio Department of Health. Index to Annual Deaths, 1958-2002. Ohio Department of Health, State Vital Statistics Unit, Columbus, OH, USA.
 
Source (S2760)
 
175
  • Ohio. Division of Vital Statistics. Death Certificates and Index, December 20, 1908-December 31, 1953. State Archives Series 3094. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio.
  • Ohio Department of Health. Index to Annual Deaths, 1958-2002. Ohio Department of Health, State Vital Statistics Unit, Columbus, OH, USA.
 
Source (S2763)
 
176
  • Ohio. Division of Vital Statistics. Death Certificates and Index, December 20, 1908-December 31, 1953. State Archives Series 3094. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio.
  • Ohio Department of Health. Index to Annual Deaths, 1958-2002. Ohio Department of Health, State Vital Statistics Unit, Columbus, OH, USA.
 
Source (S2764)
 
177
  • Ohio. Division of Vital Statistics. Death Certificates and Index, December 20, 1908-December 31, 1953. State Archives Series 3094. Ohio Historical Society, Ohio.
  • Ohio Department of Health. Index to Annual Deaths, 1958-2002. Ohio Department of Health, State Vital Statistics Unit, Columbus, OH, USA.
 
Source (S2775)
 
178 ? 1st married Walter Sullivan ?? HARRISON, Elizabeth B. (I2965)
 
179 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I8243)
 
180 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I8242)
 
181 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I272)
 
182 a landowner in Ireland and England, a Whig Member of Parliament and the British Resident in Florence. Fane, Charles 2nd Viscount Fane (I8232)
 
183 A seneschal (/'s?n???l/) was an administrative officer in the houses of important nobles in the Middle Ages and early Modern period, equivalent to a steward or stolnik.[1] In a medieval noble household a seneschal was in charge of domestic arrangements and the administration of servants.[2] In the French administrative system of the Middle Ages, the seneschal (French: s?n?chal) was also a royal officer in charge of justice and control of the administration in southern provinces, equivalent to the northern French bailiff (bailli). de Mainwaring, Sir Ralph Seneschal (I5487)
 
184 A twin to Edward. Killen, Joseph (I6446)
 
185 A twin to Joseph. Killen, Edward (I6445)
 
186 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I305)
 
187 Aaron was in Co.C 92 Ohio Infantry during the Civil War. He was wounded in the left side at Buzzards Roost in Georgia. He left Ohio in 1878 and moved to West Virginia. Aaron and Margaret are buried in the Ravenswood Cemetery in Jackson County.

I believe he also had an older brother Thomas Battin born 1841 who also migrated with him from Washington Twp. Monroe Cty Ohio to Jackson County WV. and had a family. 
BATTIN, Aaron (I4758)
 
188 Abbey and her husband Cris lived at 36 Hollywood Street, Buffalo, NY. MURPHY, Abbey (I472)
 
189 Aboard the SEA Chant, Luke Bunter (I1344)
 
190 Aboard the SEA Chant, William (I1345)
 
191 Aboard the Sea in Sydney Chant, George James (I1342)
 
192 Aboard the UNA arriving in Sydney

Tried to emigrate to South Australia - Sean Leyland

Aboard the UNA 
Bunter, Richard (I1292)
 
193 About 1953, Glen and Elaine moved from Minneapolis to Waukegan,
Illinois. There, Glen taught Architectural Drawing and many other
subjects in the high school and junior high. In 1971, Elaine started
working for Triangle as a travel agent and still works there. For many
years, Glen and Elaine ran a "round dancing" group called Dance Around,
and even taught round dancing at a national convention in the U.S. and
in places overseas. Glen has volunteered his time at the Botanical
center in (?), IL, becoming a "Master Gardener". 
Family: DOLMAR, Glen Warren / SMITH, Elaine Corrine (F35)
 
194 About 1953, Glen and Elaine moved from Minneapolis to Waukegan. There,
Glen taught Architectural Drawing and many other subjects in the high
school and junior high. In 1971, Elaine started working for Triangle as
a travel agent and still works there. For many years, Glen and Elaine
ran a "round dancing" group called Dance Around, and even taught round
dancing at a national convention in the U.S. and in places overseas.
Glen has volunteered his time at the Botanical center in (?), IL,
becoming a "Master Gardener". 
DOLMAR, Glen Warren (I705)
 
195 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I579)
 
196 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I593)
 
197 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Living / Living (F39)
 
198 About the register

K?llby (R) V?sterg?tland V1, 1696-1798
Last updated: 2016-11-06
Number of entries: 982
Source: K?llby (R) C:1 (1694-1798) (AID: v17096.b1, NAD: SE/GLA/13304) 
Family: PEHRSSON, Joseph / ANDERSDOTTER, Lena (F8959)
 
199 About the register
K?llby (R) V?sterg?tland V1, 1696-1798
Last updated: 2016-11-06
Number of entries: 982
Source: K?llby (R) C:1 (1694-1798) (AID: v17096.b1, NAD: SE/GLA/13304) 
Family: JONSSON, Magnus / JONASDOTTER, Christina (Stina) (F1165)
 
200 About the register
K?llby (R) V?sterg?tland V1, 1696-1798
Last updated: 2016-11-06
Number of entries: 982
Source: K?llby (R) C:1 (1694-1798) (AID: v17096.b1, NAD: SE/GLA/13304) 
Family: JACOBSSON, Jonas / OLOFSDOTTER, Maria (F9222)
 

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