Matches 12,501 to 12,550 of 26,054
# | Notes | Linked to |
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12501 | Ethel E daughter of Emily Ford, & Daniel Jepson. | JEPSON, Ethel Emily (I355)
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12502 | Ethel is the daughter of Ella Willson & Virgin Springsteen. | SPRINGSTEEN, Ethel (I1736)
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12503 | Ethel is the daughter of Emily ford & Daniel Jepson. | JEPSON, Ethel Emily (I1704)
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12504 | Ethel is the daughter of Ethel E Gepson and Arthur E Snider, Jr. | SNIDER, Ethel Emily (I2219)
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12505 | Ethel is the daughter of Ethel Lorene Briggs & Harvey Bevier Kinne. | KINNE, Ethel Mae (I474)
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12506 | Ethel is the daughter of Franny Long & Owen O'Rourke. | O'ROURKE, Ethel May (I638)
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12507 | Ethel is the daughter of Mary Theresa Mosack & Jacob Moore. | MOORE, Ethel Teresa (I1395)
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12508 | Ethel is the daughter of Sarah Ann McDonald Gould & Henry Spencer. . Obituary Brandon, Manitoba. The funeral was held here Sunday afternoon of Mrs. Ethel Lawrence, wife of George Lawrence of Moore Park, who died Friday, age 48. Rev. F E James officiated & burial was made in Brandon cemetery. Mrs. Lawrence came here from Alton Staffordshire England & had lived in the Moore Park district 20 years. She was active in church & community work. Besides her husband, she is survived by 4 children: Muriel, Gwendolyn, Spencer & Ruth, all at home. - - - | SPENCER, Ethel May (I2067)
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12509 | Ethel is the son of Mary E Jacobs & Wm. Teetzel. . First Marriage to: Robert John Flemming - drowned in Lake Erie late 30's or early 40's working on a barge. . Children from 1st marriage: Beverly Fleming-Ondreako. Eileen Joyce Fleming-Roberts from Erie PA B March 22, 1936- Died 2003, Middleboro, MA. . Second Marriage to Paul Harmon. - - - | TEETZEL, Ethel Gertrude (I1380)
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12510 | Etobicoke | SPEIGHT, Frederick John (I2568)
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12511 | Etobicoke (Toronto), ON. Monument 16.5 | WALKER, Sarah Jane .1 (I57)
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12512 | Etobicoke, monument 18 'J.L.' Aged 56y 2d. | DENISON, Capt. John Lawrence .ii (I762)
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12513 | Etobicoke, ON Bronze monument with small red granite base. | LANG, Annie PEARL (I280)
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12514 | Etobicoke, ON. Monument A11 with John Hale. | HALE (HALL), Aleda SUSANNAH (I324)
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12515 | Etobicoke, Ontario, Lot 601, Plot B3, at burial time this plot was beside a small bush. | FELKER, John Walker .20th (I129)
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12516 | Etobicoke-Toronto. | STEWART, Ralph DOUGLAS (I2683)
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12517 | Etobicoke. Medium small monuments lies flat on the ground. | MADGETT, Gordon Francis (I2077)
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12518 | Etobicoke. Small faded stone, green grass/ mold stain obscures surname. | HALE, John S (I499)
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12519 | Etobioke, ON. Monument 45. | CASSAN, Virginia Christina (I2014)
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12520 | Eugene is the daughter of Elizabeth Dales? and John Thomas Crawford. | CRAWFORD, Eugene Marguerite (I775)
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12521 | Eugenie is the daughter of Marie L. LeChene, b 1852 France & Alphonse Girouard. | GIROUARD, Eugenia C (I2876)
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12522 | Eulogy for Bradley Aiken: Who was Brad Aiken? Maybe that is a question that can't be answered either. Do you really ever know who or what a person is? Brad was certainly some obvious things. He was a devoted son of Ross & Muriel, a brother loved by Murray & Merri, a fiancee loved by Louise & a friendly clerk at the hardware store. He held an university degree. But he was more than that. I remember the first time I met Brad about a year ago last April when I first preached in Allenford. He was one of the first people I met & I knew he had to be a good fellow. He had a beard. But you know as I got to know him, he was a good fellow. He was kind, he was sincere, he was generous. He loved his church & it was important to him & he was active in it. In the choir, as Recording Stewart, as a lay delegate to Presbytery. This quiet, shy man who sometimes had difficulty expressing in words his feelings, expressed his faith so forcefully by his action. Brad would have fed the world if he had had the resource. There wasn't anything he wouldn't do for people. Last night we saw testimony to that by his many friends, some had now known by the family, who came to pay their respects because Brad had done them a favour. We are all poorer for the loss of Brad because he touched each of our lives in some way & a part of each of us dies with the death of someone we love. If it were not for love, there would be no grief. Brad will be remembered always for his generous spirit, his kind, gentle brown eyes & the way he would help anyone who asked him for it. He must remember all that his life & his death has taught us & try to use it to help others. Brad would want it no other way. Ref: As delivered by Reverend Bain Milroy, of the Allenford United Church. OBITUARY Brad Aiken passes: Aiken, Bradley Ross: 33 of Allenfort, Tues. Aug. 20, 1985, Elision son of Ross & Muriel Aiken, a brother of Murray & his wife Debbie & Merri Lynn. He was an uncle of Angela & Steven Aiken & a special friend of Louise McCulloch. Brad grew up in Allenford when he went to public school before attending high school at Wet Hill in Owen Sound. In 1976 he graduated from the University of Waterloo with an Honors Bachelor of Mathematics degree. Following graduation, Brad work 3 years of General Motors of Canada in Oshawa as a computer programmer. He returned to Allenford in 1979 to work in his family's business, Aiken Brothers Home Hardware, alongside his father Ross & brother Murray. He was unfailingly cheery & helpful with customers in the store. Brad was an active member of Allenford United Church. He was recording secretary for Allenford/Park Head charge, on the Board of Stewards & was lay delegate to bruce Presbytery. He also belongs to the Allenford Curling club. The high regard in which Brad was held was demonstrated by the many friends & relatives who visited downs & sons funeral home in Hepworth & who filled the Allenford United Church, as well as its basement, for the funeral Thursday, conducted by Mr. B Milroy. Pallbearer were Tom Greenaway, Ron Wade, Paul Walker, Syd Wilkie, all of Allenford, Ian Sinclair of Tara & Richard Day of Toronto. Flower bears were Jennifer Walker, Molly White, Carolyn Walker, Susan Walker, Steven Dale, Wesley Greenaway, Todd Aiken & Michael Gaetz. Relatives attended from Calgary, Sault Ste. Mario, London, Barrie, torn to, St. Thomas & Acton. - - - | AIKEN, Bradley Ross (I593)
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12523 | Eulogy of Gladys Margaret Pearson 7 April 1928 - 20 July 1999 I am Jay, Gladys Moore's first born child and I'd like to welcome you here with us. I am grateful for so many things - for the wonderful expressions of sympathy and the sharing of so many memories from all the people who have come here yesterday and today; for all the members of our family and for my aunts and uncles who have all rallied round and been such a great support through this time of shock and separation; for all of you here today participating in this celebration of a life well-lived and helping us say good-bye to my mother. For all these things, I am grateful. Three years ago, I stood here in this same room and delivered the eulogy for my father. Most of you were here then, too. Little did any of us know that we'd be gathered together again for Gladys so soon. As I began to think of what I might say, I remembered the theme in my father's eulogy was "His Legacy." As I continued to think about Mom, a theme emerged and it was this: "Her Teachings." She taught us so much. She certainly taught through her words but I want to share with you today what she taught us through the example of her life. She taught us that life is fragile and she showed this knowledge through how she lived and how she died. She knew life could end at any time and she was prepared. She appreciated living and she accepted death. When I started to pull my thoughts together, the first word that came to mind was "fearless." I'm not saying she was never afraid but she approached so many things in life fearlessly. She didn't second guess herself and had very few doubts. By her actions, she taught us to have the courage of our convictions. She taught us that there is great strength in deep faith. As with all great strengths, however, there is a often a weakness hidden inside that strength. Sometimes that single-mindedness we experienced made it difficult for her to make room for another point of view and to have understanding about why someone might wish to do things differently. As she aged, she mellowed and accepting others became easier, although she was still biting her tongue sometimes. Some may say that she should have bitten her tongue more often than she did. Gladys Moore was not a hypocrite, even to a critical eye. She was a woman of principle - she said what she meant and meant what she said. This quality is more rare among us than it should be. We all know of people or perhaps know of ourselves that we may say one thing and do another, even in very innocent ways. This didn't happen very often with Mom. She taught us to have congruence, that is, to have our thoughts, feelings, beliefs and actions all match and to be true to ourselves. Another message she delivered by her actions was very similar to this: go with your strengths. She was not a sentimental or affectionate person and she didn't pretend to be. Her strengths were in reaching out to others, in making connections, in participating. I'd like to read an excerpt from something I wrote for Mother's Day last year. "My mom was the best mom in the neighbourhood when I was a boy. She could throw a baseball better than any other mom I knew. She was often the one to suggest we go out and play catch or hit a few grounders for practice. Dad didn't like sports much. When he wasn't cutting the back field or fixing the car, he liked to sleep with the newspaper. When the Young People's group from our church came out to our place for a baseball game and cornroast, Mom would be the pitcher for her team. She was a good pitcher. She even owned her own baseball glove. I was so proud of her." Another strength was in her thinking ability and she challenged us to think. The dinner table in our house when I was a boy and whenever we got together in later years was a place of debate, of probing, thoughtful questions that she would pose, a place of learning. She taught us to use our heads and to speak our minds. Even as late as two weeks ago, she and I had a conversation that was really a respectful debate about some issues that were unresolved between us for many years. True to herself, she was open, spoke her mind and listened and we came to an understanding with each other. I will always be grateful to her for giving me the opportunity to do this before she was so suddenly taken. But the flipside to this strength in her ability to think was that sometimes emotions were a mystery and not only the emotions of others, which sometimes just didn't make sense to her, but I think her own emotions were perhaps the most mysterious. A recent example of this is how she experienced the time after the death of my father. Many of us know that, when one loses a spouse, the pain may never go away. I'm sure that Gladys thought that, after a respectable period, she would pick herself up, dust herself off and get on with life. On the outside, that's what she did but on the inside there was always a large hole in her heart, a deep sadness, a place that was empty without Joe and those who knew her well could see it. Many of us understand and accept these normal emotions but she seemed surprised sometimes by her own feelings of grief. What she taught us by her actions was the importance of love between two people. Their marriage was a testament to that deep and abiding love. They were in love to the very end. Mom was in charge. She took charge of whatever needed to be taken charge of and when she wasn't in charge, she wished she was. She was in charge right to the end. In fact, she's still in charge today. A few weeks ago, she wrote out her funeral service and we are all following her directions in this service, including me as I give this eulogy. The last time I saw her in the hospital after the heart attack, she was graceful, composed and "in charge," giving instructions to the nurses, happy and prepared for the next adventure. Mom was a traveler. She was always going somewhere and never to the same place twice. For Mom, this was one more journey. Her bags were packed and she was ready to go. In my mind's eye I can see her smiling and waving, off on her next adventure saying, " | PEARSON, Gladys Margaret (I151)
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12524 | Eunice is the daughter of Matilda J Burk & Wm. Hall, Jr. | HALL, Eunice Muretta (I1192)
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12525 | Euphraisa, Ontario is in Grey County near Meaford, Ontario (Collingwood area). | WILSON, Margaret Elizabeth (I4058)
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12526 | Eva Adelia is the daughter of J Merritt Willson & Juliet D DeWitt. * 1900 Jan. Fifth Generation, 1st child: Eva Delia: Born August 24th, 1893. died May 16th, 1909. A Student at Blair Hall. Aged 16 years, 8 months, 22 Days. - - - | WILLSON, Eva Adelia .ii (I940)
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12527 | Eva is the daughter of Jane Auld & Hiram Gibbons. 1898 May 18 - McCutcheon - Gibbons Married At the Manse, Georgetown, on Wednesday, May 18, by Rev L Perrin, Hugh McCutcheon of Erin, to Miss Eva Gibbons, Esquesing, new Acton. Ref: Acton Free Press, pub. 1898.6.2. . Obituary: Died McCutcheon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J J Stewart, on Tuesday, Sept 25, 1956, Eva Gibbons, wife of the late Hugh McCutcheon, & dear mother of Edna, Mrs. J J Stewart & sister of Mrs. A J Murray of Acton. funeral service was held at the Rumley funeral Home, Thursday, Sep 27, at 2:30 p.m. Interment Fairview Cemetery, Acton. Ref: Acton Free Press, 27 Sep 1956, page 8, column 4. - - - | GIBBONS, Eva (I47)
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12528 | Eva is the daughter of Janet Campbell Cameron & James Easterbrook, farmer. | ESTERBROOK, Eva Ruth (I1210)
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12529 | Eva is the daughter of Margaret McKeown & Orange Jull. | JULL, Eva Gertrude (I719)
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12530 | Eva is the daughter of Nancy Margaret MADGE Johnson, Alfred Cowan Ross, born in Georgia & her mother. . Herbert R Myers drowned 26 Oct 1940, In Ellis Prairie Tx. MO., while fishing. Herbert & Gladys had 4 children: . Virginia Irene Myers, b 21 Mar 1920 in Ellis Prairie TEx., MO. married 9 Mar 1939 to Ernest Altis, in Hardy, Sharp Co., AR. . Herbert Monroe Myers, b 25 Apr 1921, Ellis Prairie Tx., MO. died 25 Apr 1921, Ellis Prairie, Tx., MO. . Wanda Dorene Myers, b 4 Mar 1923 Ellis Prairie Tx., MO. married 19 Mar 1946 to Clifford Wayne Morris 19 Mar 1946 in Olathe., Ks. They had 3 children, Roger Dwain Norris, b 22 Apr 1947, in Waynesville, Pulaski, MO. He married Carolyn Elaine Ferguson, 13 Sep 1969 in Houston, TX., MO. Theresa Sue Norris, b 15 Jan 1952 Waynesville, Pulaski Co MO, died 17 Jan 1952. Dana Lynn Norris, b 22 Oct 1959, Houston, TX. MO, married Charles Michael Sparks, 22 Jul 1975 in Houston, TX. MO. . Shirley Jacquelyn Myers, b 8 Feb 1936 Ellis Prairie, TX. MO, married 28 May 1955 to Darrell Gene Gentry, Houston, Tx., MO. - - - | ROSS, Eva May (I113)
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12531 | Eva Mabel married an Edward Osbourne in Omagh in 1921 and went to live in England. | OSBOURNE, Edward (I1946)
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12532 | Eva S Simons married Mr. Turgeon. | SIMONS, Eva Sabin (I2498)
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12533 | Eva was married to Unknown Smallwood and had a son named Ronnie prior to her marriage to Joseph Lindley Moore. | Family (F81)
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12534 | Eva's surname was Smallwood at the time of her marriage to Joseph Lindley since she had been previously married. | Family (F11)
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12535 | Evangeline is the daughter of Sarah Maria Lawrence & William Morris. | MORRIS, Evangeline Mary Alberta (I52)
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12536 | Evangeline is the daughter of Sarah Maria Lawrence and William Morris. | MORRIS, Evangeline Mary Alberta (I436)
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12537 | Evangelische-Reformiert Kirche- | VÖLCKEL, Johann ECKARDT .6 (I76)
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12538 | Evelyn is the daughter of Abigail Woods & Walker Charles Tisdale. . 1901 Census, Woodhouse, Norfolk Evelyn Tisdale, 24, single, born 29 Nov 1876 in Ontario, resided in the house of her uncle David James Wyckoff. . date? Miss Evelyn Tisdale suffered heart trouble while visiting Mrs. S. L. King. She has improved, but not enough to return home - - - | TISDALE, Evelyn (I1899)
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12539 | Evelyn is the daughter of Myra Lawrence and Frank M Grow. . 1913 Jun 9 - Miss Mabel Eaman of Chicago, is here for the wedding of her brother James Eaman & Miss Evelyn Grow, which occurs tomorrow. . 1913 Jun 14 - Miss. Evelyn Grow, dau of Mrs Myra Grow of Superior Street, was married to James Eaman of Kennewick, Wash., Wed. morning at her home. Rev. A Diefenbach officiating. After the ceremony Mr Mrs Eaman went to Sister Lakes to spend a few weeks before going to Kennewich to make their home. Both young people are well known here. Ref: St. Joseph Saturday Herald Newspaper. . 1934 Mar 6 - Former Resident Dies. Word was received today of the death of Mrs James R Eaman, the former Evelyn Grow, which occurred Tuesday at Albuquerque, N Nex. 2 sons, aged 17, 20 survive besides the husband, a brother Frank Grow of Eau Clair, a sister Mrs Elizabeth Olinger of Holland, Mic & Mrs Myra Grow mother of the deceased who resides at the Olinger home, also survived, Burial will occur in Albuquerque. Ref: New Palladium Newspaper, Benton Harbor, MI. - - - | GROW, Evelyn Hazel (I1673)
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12540 | Even though this is a long way from Stralsund it could be possible | MÜNNS, Jochim Heinrich (P7258)
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12541 | Event Type Birth Registration Registration Quarter Jul-Aug-Sep Registration Year 1891 Registration District Salford County Lancashire Event Place Salford, Lancashire, England Volume 8D Page 65 Line Number 261 | RUSSELL, Jane (P10)
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12542 | Eventide Cemetery, Woonsocket, Sanborn County, South Dakota, Lot number 28 Block number 14 | CHAPPELL, Martin Henry (P1398)
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12543 | Eventide Cemetery, Woonsocket, Sanborn County, South Dakota, Lot number 28 Block number 14 http://findagrave.org/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=chappell&GSfn=mary&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=44&GScnty=2413&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GRid=140750716&df=all& | WALKER, Mary Elizabeth 4 (P6)
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12544 | Everett is the son of Gracie Orlena Hamilton, 1910-1933 and Chester R Hamilton (1906 - 1981). | HAMILTON, Everett Allen (I303)
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12545 | Everett Percival married an Emma - no last name known. He moved to Rochester, New York. He joined the US Army, and was a cook in WW1. | GOODMURPHY, Everett Percival (I2410)
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12546 | Everette is the daughter of Amos Sargent. | SARGENT, Everette (I914)
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12547 | Everette was killed in a car accident outside Cherry Valley, Ontario Everette was first married to Effie Bingham. He was re-married to Louella Mae Baverstock on November 26, 1938 at the Picton United Church parsonage by the Rev. David Wren. Everette and Louella adopted Leonard. Leonard became the lighthouse keeper at Point Petre. As of 1991, he was at Point Pelee on Lake Erie. | GOODMURPHY, Everette (I298)
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12548 | Ewart is the son of Mary Ann Wood, born 8 Dec 1852 & Elijah Brock, born 13 Mar 1837. WW1, Attestation paper, Ewart Brock, 107 Strachan Ave., Born 20 Apr 1895, School Teacher. Next of Kin, Mother, Bradford, Ontario. - - - | BROCK, EWART (I126)
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12549 | Exhuband Wm Scott McDougal listed on her monument. | FROHLICH, Julianna JULIA (I612)
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12550 | Extract of Church records | Source (S89)
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