_____________________ | ___________________________|_____________________ | _______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |___________________________|_____________________ | _John Morris ________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | ___________________________|_____________________ | | | | |_______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |___________________________|_____________________ | | |--Living | | _James Sawyer _______ | | (1784 - 1850) m 1804 | _Michael Henderson Sawyer _|_Hannah Henderson ___ | | (1807 - 1879) m 1875 (1785 - 1870) | _John Starling Sawyer _| | | (1880 - 1976) m 1901 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_Rebecca Ann Hall _________|_____________________ | | (1855 - 1936) m 1875 |_Anne Manora Sawyer _| (1904 - 1988) | | _____________________ | | | ___________________________|_____________________ | | |_Myrtle Ann White _____| (1885 - 1942) m 1901 | | _____________________ | | |___________________________|_____________________
[12021] living - details excluded
__ | _Alexander Beall ____|__ | (1565 - ....) m 1593 _James B. Beall _____| | (1603 - ....) m 1646| | | __ | | | | |_Margaret Ramsey ____|__ | (1569 - ....) m 1593 _Ninian Beall _______| | (1625 - 1717) | | | __ | | | | | _____________________|__ | | | | |_Anne Marie Calvert _| | (1603 - ....) m 1646| | | __ | | | | |_____________________|__ | | |--Sarah Beall | (1658 - 1734) | __ | | | _____________________|__ | | | _Richard Moore ______| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |_____________________|__ | | |_Ruth Moore _________| | | __ | | | _____________________|__ | | |_Jane Unknown _______| | | __ | | |_____________________|__
_____________________________ | __________________________|_____________________________ | ______________________________________| | | | | _____________________________ | | | | |__________________________|_____________________________ | _Andrew De Beauchamp _| | (1160 - 1198) | | | _____________________________ | | | | | __________________________|_____________________________ | | | | |______________________________________| | | | | _____________________________ | | | | |__________________________|_____________________________ | | |--Maud De Beauchamp | (1192 - ....) | _Anchitel De Grey ___________+ | | (1087 - ....) | _Richard De Grey _________|_____________________________ | | (1110 - ....) | _Anchitel De Grey ____________________| | | (1130 - ....) | | | | _____________________________ | | | | | | |_MABILIA _________________|_____________________________ | | (1095 - ....) |_Eva De Grey _________| (1164 - 1242) | | _Richard Redvers ____________+ | | (1065 - 1117) m 1089 | _Baldwin De Reviers ______|_Adelise Peverel ____________ | | (1107 - 1155) (1069 - 1156) |_Matilda (Eva) De Reviers (Redviers) _| | | _Drew "Dru" Miles De Baalun _ | | (1052 - ....) |_Lucia Adeliza De Baalun _|_____________________________ (1107 - 1155)
__ | __|__ | _Thomas Goolsby ____________| | (1649 - 1687) m 1680 | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Thomas Goolsby _____| | (1684 - 1747) m 1707| | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |_Frances Elizabeth UNKNOWN _| | (1665 - 1753) m 1680 | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Peter Richard Goolsby | (1728 - 1798) | __ | | | __|__ | | | _William Turentine _________| | | (1654 - 1753) | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_Tabitha Turentine __| (1683 - 1753) m 1707| | __ | | | __|__ | | |____________________________| | | __ | | |__|__
[34660]
[S1250]
Family Search, John Blackford Grant
[17449] Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth Century Colonist by David Farrar, 1st Edition, 1996, Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore:pg 187: ... was m. for the 3rd time to Charles Noel (or Nowell). On 27 Oct. 1452, while hearing massin the chapel at Thorpe, she was seized by Edward Lancaster, Gent., of Skipton in Craven, and his men, placed on horseback and taken to an unknown churchwhere a priest performed a marriage ceremony enforced by Lancaster against her protests. Her son, Henry Beaumont, and her husband, Charles Nowell, petitioned Parliament for redress. She was living (apparently at the manor of Thorpe, after her son came of age) in 1460. FTM CD194, MA & ME Families, Ancestry of Walter Goodwin Davis, Beaumont, Ancestry of Nicholas Davis, by W. G. Davis, reprinted 1996, GPC, Baltimore, pg 144, 145: Joan Heronville, wife of Sir Henry Beaumont, was the dau. and eventually sole heir of Henry Heronville,lord of the manor of Wednesbury, co. Stafford. She was b. abt. 1402, being aged 4 when her father died in 1406. Before 1418, when her two younger sistersbecame nuns, she had m. William Leventhorpe, who had a dau. Elizabeth by a previous marriage. Joan's marriage to Sir Henry Beaumont is known, but the twoevents probably took place abt .1439 as there is a record of Leventhorpe as living in 1438. On Nov. 3, 1445, Beaumont and Joan, his wife, conveyed to trustees the manors of Wednesbury and Tymmore and 120 acres of land, 20 acres of meadow, 40 acres of wood and 10 pounds in rents in Wednesbury, Walstode, Fynchespath and Tybynton, and, after Beaumont's death, Joan made a similar conveyance of a fifth part of the manor of Egynton, co. Derby. Lady Beaumont m. thirdly, Charles Nowell, and they apparently lived on the manor of Thorpe, co. York, after her son Henry Beaumont came of age. At an unknown date, but after 1446, Jhn Hodelstone "cousin and heir to one William Leventhrop, Esq., that is to say son and heir to Elizabeth dau. and heir to the said William" sued Joan for 130 acres of land in Wednesbury, claiming that the settlement thereof provided that this land should be Joan's for life but that, if she married again after Leventhrop's death, it should go to William's heirs. "And the same William Leventhrop died after whose decease the said Jane to husband Henry Beamond and after the said Henry died, after whose decease the same Janetook to husband Charles Nowell." On Oct. 27, 1452, whole Jona was hearing mass in the chapel at Thorpe in Balne, "there came one Edward Lancastre of Shipton in Craven in the shire of York Gentilman . . . with many other Riottours . . . arraied in the maner of werre [war[To the nombre of XL persones . . . the which Edward . . . the said Joane . . . with force and arms felonesly ravished and toke and set her on a hors behynde a man of his and bonde fast to hym with a Towell and rode away with her unto unknowen place, . . . brought herto a Chirche and there a Preese . . . was redy to wedde and mary the said Edward Lancastre and her togidre; and whan the said Preese wolk have hir say the wordes of matrimony, she wold not sey hem, for she said that she was another mannes wyf and thereupon the seid Edward manaced hir hideously to bete and to lede hir out of this and into Scotland . . . and so she was agenst hir will by cohercion wedded to hym." Anneys Beaumont, Joan's daughter, also suffered assault, was taken away "and thrugh misrule . . . she is . . . lame as itis seid." Property in the chapel to the value of 100s. was stolen. Henry Beaumont, son and heir of Sir Henry Beaumont, Knight, and Charles Nowell, Squire, petitioned the Kin in Parliament for justice against Lancaster and his accomplices, and asked that Joan be delivered to the Archbishop of York, or to Viscount Beaumont, her brother-in-law, within three weeks after the first proclamation made "so that she may be at large in he
[17448]
Plantagenet Ancestry by Faris, pg 187
FTM CD194, MA & ME Fam., V1, pg 144-5
[17450]
[S221]
John Kahlerl (jbkaherl@aol.com)
[17451]
[S221]
John Kahlerl (jbkaherl@aol.com)
[23951]
[S936]
Gedcom File provided by
[23952]
[S937]
[Plantagenet Descent]
[23953]
[S938]
Descendant of.....
[23954]
[S938]
Descendant of.....
[23955]
[S945]
[Ancestry of Jesse James (Outlaw)]
[23956]
[S939]
[Plantagenet Descent]
[27500]
[S141]
Roots Web (http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com)
[27492]
[S148]
1860 United States Federal Census
[27493]
[S154]
1850 Federal Census - Charles Roy & Family
[27494]
[S470]
1880 Federal Census - Benjamin Piper & Family
[27495]
[S155]
1900 Federal Census - Georgia Piper & Family
[27496]
[S156]
1880 Federal Census - Sarah Smith & Family
[27497]
[S471]
1870 Federal Census - Sarah Smith & Family
[27498]
[S472]
Tombstone reading for Sarah J. Smith. Peoria Cemetery, Yuba County, California. http://www.yubaroots.com/cemetery/peor
[27499]
[S472]
Tombstone reading for Sarah J. Smith. Peoria Cemetery, Yuba County, California. http://www.yubaroots.com/cemetery/peor
[35749]
[S1096]
Marriage Bond and Record Extract for Charles H. Roy & Sarah Jane Smith, Fayette Co., Kentucky. Record Source: FHL#00089
_Johann Phillip Straub _+ | (1730 - ....) _John Stroup ________|_Barbara Unknown _______ | (1754 - 1832) m 1783 (1740 - 1807) _William Stroup _____| | (1785 - 1863) m 1809| | | ________________________ | | | | |_Mary Steely ________|________________________ | (1767 - 1835) m 1783 _John A. Stroup ______| | (1814 - 1851) m 1835 | | | ________________________ | | | | | _____________________|________________________ | | | | |_Anna Thomas ________| | (1790 - 1868) m 1809| | | ________________________ | | | | |_____________________|________________________ | | |--Louisa Eliza Stroup | (1837 - 1901) | ________________________ | | | _____________________|________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | ________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|________________________ | | |_Eliza Jane Clemmons _| (1812 - 1882) m 1835 | | ________________________ | | | _____________________|________________________ | | |_____________________| | | ________________________ | | |_____________________|________________________
_Lawrence Washington Rev._+ | (1601 - 1652) m 1633 _John Washington _________|_Amphyllis Twigden _______ | (1633 - 1676) m 1658 _Lawrence Washington _| | (1659 - 1697) m 1688 | | | _Nathaniel Pope __________ | | | (.... - 1659) | |_Anne Pope _______________|_Lucy Unknown ____________ | (.... - 1667) m 1658 (.... - 1659) _Augustine Washington _| | (1693 - 1743) m 1730 | | | _Augustine Warner ________+ | | | (1611 - 1674) | | _Augustine Warner ________|_Mary Towneley ___________ | | | (1642 - 1681) m 1670 (1614 - 1662) | |_Mildred Warner ______| | (1670 - 1701) m 1688 | | | _George Reade ____________+ | | | (1608 - 1674) m 1640 | |_Mildred Reade ___________|_Elizabeth Martiau _______ | (.... - 1693) m 1670 (.... - 1685) | |--George Washington | (1732 - 1799) | __________________________ | | | __________________________|__________________________ | | | _Joseph I Ball _______| | | (1649 - 1711) | | | | __________________________ | | | | | | |__________________________|__________________________ | | |_Mary Ball ____________| (1708 - 1789) m 1730 | | _Peter II Montague _______+ | | (1602 - 1659) m 1633 | _Peter III Montague ______|_Cecily Reynolds _________ | | (1634 - 1695) m 1665 (1605 - 1660) |_Mary Montague _______| (1670 - 1721) | | __________________________ | | |_Maria Mary Minor Doodes _|__________________________ (1642 - 1685) m 1665
[18312] Was elected without opponent by 69 electoral votes. Was in office from 1789 to 1797 (two terms). His vice-president was his successor John Adams. Refused to run for a third term and - thereby - inofficially instituted the 2-term rule for american presidents, the only exception being Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _James Watson _______| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Hannah Watson | (1794 - 1875) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
[11077]
[S32]
Obituaries, Obsequies And Notices Of Death, 1870-1905, Sullivan County Indiana
[11078]
[S32]
Obituaries, Obsequies And Notices Of Death, 1870-1905, Sullivan County Indiana
[11079]
[S15]
Sullivan County Indiana Cemetery Records
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _James Webb ____________| | (1795 - 1833) | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Lucy Ware Webb | (1831 - 1889) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_Marietta (Maria) Cook _| (1801 - ....) | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
[12825]
Lucy Ware Webb Hayes
There was no inaugural ball in 1877--when Rutherford B. Hayes and his wife, Lucy, left Ohio for Washington, the outcome of the election wasstill in doubt. Public fears had not subsided when it was settled in Hayes' favor; and when Lucy watched her husband take his oath of office at the Capitol, her serene and beautiful face impressed even cynical journalists.
She came to the White House well loved by many. Born in Chillicothe, Ohio,daughterof Maria Cook and Dr. James Webb, she lost her father at age two. She was just entering her teens when Mrs. Webb took her sons to the town of Delaware to enroll in the new Ohio Wesleyan University, but she began studying with its excellent instructors. She graduated from the Wesleyan Female College in Cincinnati at 18, unusually well educated for a young lady of her day.
"Rud" Hayes at 27 had set up a law practice in Cincinnati, and he began paying calls at the Webb home. References to Lucy appeared in his diary: "Her low sweet voice is very winning ... a heart as true as steel....Intellect she has too.... By George! I am in love with her!" Married in1852, they lived in Cincinnati until the Civil War, and he soon came to share her deeply religious opposition to slavery. Visits to relatives and vacation journeys broke the routine of a happy domestic life in a growing family. Over twenty years Lucy bore eight children, of whom five grew up.
She won the affectionate name of "Mother Lucy" from men of the 23rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry who served under her husband's command in the war.They remembered her visits to camp--to minister to the wounded, cheer the homesick, and comfort the dying. Hayes' distinguished combat record earned him election to Congress, and three postwar terms as governor of Ohio. She not only joined him in Washington for its winter social season,she also accompanied him on visits to state reform schools, prisons, and asylums. As the popular first lady of her state, she gained experience in what a woman of her time aptly called"semi-public life."
Thus she entered the White House with confidence gained from her long and happy married life, her knowledge of political circles, herintelligenceand culture, and her cheerful spirit. She enjoyed informal parties, and spared no effort to make official entertaining attractive. Though she was a temperance advocate and liquor was banned at the mansion during this administration, she was a very popular hostess. She took criticism of her views in good humor (the famous nickname "Lemonade Lucy" apparently came into use only after she had left the mansion). She became one of the best-loved women to preside over the White House, where the Hayes escelebrated their silver wedding anniversary in 1877, and an admirer hailed her as representing "the new woman era."
The Hayes term ended in 1881, and the family home was now "Spiegel Grove,"an estate at Fremont, Ohio. There husband and wife spent eight active, contented years together until her death in 1889. She was buried in Fremont, mourned by her family and hosts of friends.