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18001 Patricia is the daughter of Freida Schuhkecht & Donald A Crowley.

Patricia Crowley married Mr. Shokes.

. 1934 Aug 31 - Births, Mr Mrs Donald Crowley, 279 Brunson avenue, are the parents of a daughter, born Aug 30, at Mercy hospital, Mrs Crowley is the former Friend Schuhnecht & the father of the baby is the soon Dan Crowley who lives at the same address.

. 1954 Jul 14 - Miss Patricia Crowley & Miss Cynthia Crowley honored their sister Mrs. Wm. Gibbs, at a stork shower Monday evening. 30 guests attended the shower held at the hostesses' home, 279 Brunson ave. Daises & multi-colored gladioli were used as decorations. A big pink & blue paper umbrella centered the refreshment table. Prized at games went to Mrs EA Schillinger, Mrs Ealnor Callenador, Mrs Louse Lane & Miss Delores Rupchock. There were out of town guests present from East Lansing, Menden, Mich. & Chicago. The hostesses were assisted in serving by their mother, Mrs Don Crowley.

. 1958 May 22 - Mrs John Schuhknecht & Mrs Jnoris Krieger entertained Wed. in the home of the former, 515 Market Street, St. Joseph, at a shower party for Miss Joyce Weber, who will be married Jun 28, in St. John's church, Benton Harbor, to Dennis Sommerfeldt.

. 1958 Jun 4, Benton harbor High School, Class of graduates: Patricia Crowley.
Ref: News Palladium newspaper, Benton Harbor. - - - 
CROWLEY, Patricia Ellen (I2952)
 
18002 Patrick and Mary belonged to Golden Square church, Berwick, according to Annie Bradshaw's email to John Cowan April 16, 2019, quoting Violet James in 1992. JEFFREY, Patrick (I1262)
 
18003 Patrick emigrated to North Dakota in 1882, and settled in Ops Township, Walsh Co., living not far from the Malone family.
By 1916, this family had moved to Grafton, and by l920,they appear to have left the area altogether.
Margaret Bolster recalls that her father had a cousin Frank, whose family lived near Manvel, ND, likely this family. 
CALLAGHAN, Patrick (I11241)
 
18004 Patrick Joseph is buried in the Canadina Military Cemetery in Ravenna, Italy NORMOYLE, Patrick Jospeh (I2779)
 
18005 Patrick was born in Marysville and his baptismal sponsor was William Doyle.
He is buried in Marysville.
He married Sarah Farrell on November 9,1903.
Sarah's parents were John Farrell and Mary Fallon of Marysville.

In 1903 Patrick bought Lot 10 in Lonsdale from Albert (Ab) Bruein, who then moved to Belleville.
Patrick and Sarah and family lived at Lot 10 until 1925.
At first, Patrick was a "commercial traveller" whose work covered Eastern Ontario.
About 1916 he started a grocery store in Lonsdale. In 1925 they bought the Paddy Doyle house across from the McHenry home in Lonsdale. This was Lot 27 at the corner of Main and Princess St.
Paddy Doyle, the son of Owen Doyle and Margaret Shaughnessy, was the proprietor of the hotel on Lot 9, the corner of Rock and Princess Street.
Paddy (referred to as Big Paddy Doyle) bought this house that used to belong to Ben Haight. He rebuilt the home and lived there until his death in 1923.
Sarah Farrell McVicker died at this home in 1936.
Marie McVicker and her husband Charles O'Neill bought the old Paddy Doyle Hotel and it was there that Patrick McVicker died in 1946.

Joseph married , moved to Vancouver, where he died on October 22,1972.
Francis Gerald, the youngest child, never married, and is buried in Marysville.
 
MCVICKER, Patrick (I2365)
 
18006 Patty married 9 May 1837 David Michael Peregrine, 4 Dec. 1814 - 3 June 1896.
David was a Methodist preacher. 
WILLSON, Martha PATTY (I159)
 
18007 Paul Americas marred1 Thekla Fisher, 2 children; &
married2, 1947 to Laura Weide, Prather, no children.

1950 Jan 5, Tues. - Obituary Death Takes Paul Jones, Lyons Editor
LYONS - Paul A Jones, 71, editor of the Lyons Daily News for nearly 36 of the 48 years the newspaper has been in existence, died late Monday night in a hospital at Sterling, Kas.
Jones, whose editorials & paragraphs were widely quoted in Kansas newspapers, underwent an abdominal operation last September & it was determined at that time he was suffering from cancer. The author of 2 books, he became known as the Admiral of the Kansas Navy because of his name & because he was an ardent went in a dry state.
Jones was born in Lyons May 31, 1882, the son of a pioneer lawyer, Horace Jones. He was educated in the Lyons schools & attended DePauw University at Greencastle, Ind., where he was a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
He went to Tulsa, then to Indian territory, after two years at DePauw, worked for a short time in the Tulsa postoffice, then went to work for the Chetopa (Kas.) Advance, where his uncle for whom he was named, Paul Jones, was owner & editor.
Later he worked as a reporter in Joplin, Mo., & Coffeyville, Kas., then engaged for a time in the job printing business at Coffeyville. About 1910 he established the Coffeyville Sun, a morning daily. He sold this paper in 1915 & went to Pittsburg, where he established another daily of the same name.
Selling his interests there he returned to Lyons in 1918 & purchased the Lyons Daily News from Martin Laud. Six years later, with several others who held minor interests, a corporation was formed to buy the town's other paper, the Republican, from Jack Lawrence. The Republican was operated for a year as a weekly, then merged with the News.
Jones' first book, "Coronado & Quivera," was published as a result of research into the history of Coronado's visit to this locality in 1541. To gather facts for the book, Jones traveled extensively in New Mexico & Mexico. In 1941 he was chairman of Kansas' Coronado Quarte Centennial Commission, which sponsored observances of the 400th anniversary of Coronado's exploration of Kansas. His latest book, "Blue Feather," a novel about Pueblo Indian life in New Mexico before the coming of the white man, was issued only recently.
Jones was married in Lyons in 1912 to Thekla Fisher. They became the parents of two children, now Mrs Charles Haas of Tulsa & Mrs George L Gill of Sterling.

After the death of his first wife in 1944 he was married in 1947 to Laura Weide Prather of St John, who survives. Also surviving are a sister, Mary Alice Jones, & a brother, Horace Jones, managing editor of the Lyons Daily News.
Paul Jones was a former postmaster at Lyons, served on the school & library boards & was Democratic Central Committee chairman for Rice County. A Democrat since the election of Woodrow Wilson to the presidency, he continued as such all his life although he did not list himself as a New Dealer & usually was a severe critic of the Roosevelt administration.
He supported Republican Alf Landon for president & traveled with him on his campaign train. He was a state delegate to the Democratic National Convention at Houston. At one time he was mentioned prominently as a Democratic candidate for governor, but did not permit his name to receive formal consideration. He was a member of the Elks & Masonic lodges.
He had practically retired from the newspaper operation the last 10 years & following a heart attack 6 years ago contributed only through a personal column which he wrote at his home.
A private burial service will be held early Thursday afternoon with only members of the family attending. It will be followed by a memorial service at 2:30 p.m. that day at the Crawford & Miller Mortuary. Burial will be in the Lyons Public Cemetery.
The family asked that no flowers be sent.
Ref: The Hutchinson Newspaper. - - - 
JONES, Paul Americus (I1567)
 
18008 Paulins Kill Creek. SNYDER, Erma CATHERINE (I733)
 
18009 Pearl Alta is the daughter of Ella Briggs & Daniel A Blue of Elm, Wayne Co., Mich.

Colorado Springs Directory
. 1924 - Hamilton, Herman A (Pearl A) sec. Elton Oil Co., h. 22 E San Miguel.
. 1942 - Pearl A Hamilton (wid. Herman A) mustchr, 22 E San Miguel h. do.

Daily Palladium, Benton Harbor, Michigan:
. 1901 July 25 - Mr & Mrs. Fred Hamilton are entertaining Mrs. Hamilton's parents, Mr. & Mrs. Blue, on the river today. - - - 
BLUE, Pearl Alta (I815)
 
18010 Pearl Brown married Bert Ellwood Lee, Three Lee children. BROWN, Pearl Jean Marion (I772)
 
18011 Pearl is the daughter of Mary Florence Felker & Cy Lang, Sr. LANG, Annie PEARL (I280)
 
18012 Pearl is the daughter of Pearl E Morris.
. 1905 May 4 at Detroit she married Austin Kenneth Bryant, b 14 Oct 1879 at Bristol Eng. and died 9 Nov 1908.
Their children are Wm. Bryant, b 28 Feb 1906 and Gertrude Sara Bryant, b 4 Oct 1904. - - - 
MORRIS, Pearle Evelyn (I760)
 
18013 Pearl's parents were born in Norway. LEE, Pearl Amanda (I323)
 
18014 Pedigree Resource File says born 11 Feb 1881 London BLINN, Bertha Elizabeth (I1123)
 
18015 Pedigree Resource File says born 23 jun 1883, London; died about 1963 BLINN, Warren Andrew (I1122)
 
18016 Peel Co., Ontario DUCK, Archie Lawrence (I1263)
 
18017 Peel County, Ontario DUCK, William Henry (I192)
 
18018 Peel Twp., Wellington Co. DUNHAM, Walter Gage (I1628)
 
18019 Peggy WILSON, Margaret Helen Werden PEGGY (I276)
 
18020 Pelham Corners, Niagara Region MILLER, Ella Ocena (P48)
 
18021 Pelham Evangelical Friends. Row 4 from the front of the cemetery. He is buried 1 plot south of Josiah Page. There is no headstone. Information was taken from church records. PAGE, Albert Kimble (P1461)
 
18022 Pelham, Ontario WILSON, Sarah (P512)
 
18023 Pelham, Welland County DILTS, Joseph Cyrus (P942)
 
18024 PELLUM CARTWRIGHT TEEPLE (originally spelled Pelham), thirteenth and youngest child, and ninth son of Peter Teeple, was born 28th November, 1809, and was a participator in the Upper Canadian Rebellion of 1837, or "The Patriot War," as it was then often called. He was the leader of a band of young Canadians opposed to the long misgovernment of the country by an irresponsible body of men known as "The Family Compact," who ignored the statutes passed by the parliamentary representatives of the people, and frustrated their will; and when it was determined to fight, he was chosen a captain; but on the flight to the United States of the two principal leaders, William Lyon Mackenzie and Hon. John Rolph, all those who had been leaders under them were compelled to follow them into exile or forfeit their lives.
Pellum, on attempting to flee, fell in with a party of soldiers who made him their prisoner. The story of his capture and escape is thus told by his nephew, Luke, son of Simon Peter Teeple, who heard it from his own lips:
"The price set upon his head by the Canadian Government was $600 dead or alive.' He was determined to leave Canada and was then on his way to the western frontier line. He was riding a horse, and had reached a point some seven or eight miles westerly from London, Ont., on the road leading from that city along the southern side of the River Thames. His brother, Edward Manning Teeple, lived on this road some two or three miles from London, and he was making for his house. On turning a bend in the road he came in full view of a sergeant and six men advancing towards him. He could neither retreat nor conceal himself, so he rode steadily on and met them. The sergeant halted him and plied him with questions; and as his answers were unsatisfactory he was taken in charge, faced about, and obliged to go with them towards London. They dismounted him, and the sergeant rode the horse. Plodding along for some time, darkness overtook them before they reached the city. They stopped at a tavern and the soldiers ordered a meal, which was at once prepared. They then asked him to come and eat with them, but he assured them he was not hungry, and they left their arms in the bar-room and went into the next room and sat down to eat.
He also went with them into the same room, and asked the waitress for a drink of water, he was on the side of the table next to the outside door, and as the girl gave him the drink of water she flung this door wide open. In an instant he was through it and running for the woods. The men sprang for their arms, and came rushing out, firing after him. He could hear the orders given to surround the cluster of tavern buildings, and see lights moving, but he made good his escape into the adjoining forest. There was snow on the ground and running was difficult., yet for the fear of being overtaken he kept it up until almost exhausted. Taking what he supposed to be a course between the public road and the river, he at length came upon the latter, but he did not know whether above or below his starting point. Going down to the water, which was frozen over, he followed along until he espied an airhole; into this he threw a stick to see which way the water ran, then going down the stream, he finally came upon a house. By this time he was excessively fatigued, and very, very hungry from his long fast- He went up and knocked at the door, and a man appeared and began talking with him. He had no means of ascertaining whether this man was a 'Patriot' or not, so he feigned himself an urgent despatch-bearer of important official papers which must be delivered in London with utmost haste; he said he had given out in travelling, and insisted upon the man's acceptance of and conveyance of them to London forthwith, as he was utterly unable to go on himself. The man demurred; so, after an earnest discussion Pellum said, 'Well, if I could rest a few minutes and get some food to eat, I might try to go on.' He then heard the man's wife getting up, and she protested that her husband could not go, but said she would get Pellum something to eat at once, which she did. While eating he became satisfied they were ' Patriots,' and revealed his true position. The man then said they could not keep him there, but that they would see that he was hidden and fed at a neighbor's over the hill. Pellum went with him to the neighbor's and was concealed there for a time. If there was any likelihood of capture one of the children at the first house was to come over the hill and notify him. He was alarmed one day by seeing one of the children come running over the hill; but it proved to be only a neighborly call. After a few days had passed, and he thought search for him had ceased, he worked his way through the woods at night up to his brother Edward's, and soon after went in the same way to the home of his sister Mary, wife of Andrus Davis, at Orwell, Ont. Several weeks were spent in this hazardous trip.
"Mary and Andrus Davis were known to be staunch Loyalists, and there is no account of any attempt to search for him at their place. There he was supplied with food for a short time, but the danger of recapture was so great that he did not remain all the time in the house but kept concealed sometimes in the woods.
"Still fearing arrest and execution, as some of his compatriots had thus suffered, his sister Mary Davis, nephew James Teeple, and sister-in-law Jemima Teeple, conducted him secretly in the dead of winter by sleigh from Orwell to the Niagara frontier; and his relative, Rev. Samuel Rose, of Lundy's Lane, though a political opponent of the Patriots, espoused his cause, and under the pretence of being the employer of Pellum, sent him on a message to friends in New York State, and at once hired a man to row him across at some point below the Falls.
"He, Pellum, grew very intense when relating this part of the narrative, and declared that had anyone ordered the boatman back to the Canada shore he would have thrown the man overboard and made the attempt to reach the American shore alone. But no difficulty arose; he was safely landed in New York State, and waving a parting adieu to this relatives, who sat in their conveyance and witnessed his crossing, he began his career in the United States."
Though the Patriot War thus came to so inglorious an end, it is now generally admitted in Canada that had it not been for that uprising by which the attention of the British Government was called to the intolerable grievances of the Canadians, and a just form of responsible government quickly conceded, it would in all probability have been many years before the people of Canada would have obtained that full measure of home rule which, they henceforth enjoyed.
We next hear of Pellum journeying down the Ohio River with a party intending to go to Texas, but becoming dissatisfied with the roistering habits of his companions, he left them and struck across the country to a place called Pekin, on the Illinois River. From there he eventually went to the city of Rockford, Ill., where on the 28th of March, 1841, he married Mary A. Gleason, who is still living.
His father and mother were now so old they were desirous he should come home to Canada and care for them the rest of their days; but he would not do this until a special amnesty was sent him by the Canadian Government for his part in the Patriot War. This was obtained and forwarded to him, and he journeyed to the old home in Oxford County, accompanied by his wife, son Charles, and Luke, son of Simon Peter Teeple, (who lived with them), in a two-horse buggy, there being no railroads, and remained there till the two old pioneers were laid away in the churchyard. Later he returned to Illinois and settled at Marengo, where he died on the 12th of December, 1878, and where his son Charles, above referred to, still resides. Pellum Teeple left six sons, viz. :--Charles Gleason, Addison Venelle, Levant, Jared, Lester, and Frank; and four daughters--Elmina, Elvira, Ruth L., and Lydia Mary.
Of the other descendants of Frederick Mabee and Peter Teeple little or nothing of special note is known to the present writer, except the dates of their birth and death, and that Oliver Mabee Teeple was also a captain at Lundy's Lane; but it is hoped that the survivors, should they read these lines, will, as speedily as possible, contribute their quota to these annals before it is too late; and above all, that they will prove worthy successors of those sturdy "Pilgrim Fathers of Canada" who, for the sake of what they believed, rightly or wrongly, to be their duty, were willing to undertake, not only the perils of war, but also the hardships and privations of hewing out for themselves, and for their children, in the wild forests of Turkey Point, new homes and habitations, destined after one hundred years to become an important part of a great and mighty state. [Sketch of Peter Teeple, Loyalist and Pioneer - W.B. Waterbury] 
TEEPLE, Pellum Cartwright (I1221)
 
18025 Pembina, MB PHIPPS, James William (I895)
 
18026 Pembina, ND BRIGGS, Annie Alfrida MAUD (I67)
 
18027 Penelope is the daughter of Baron Van Printzen, born 1598 in Amsterdam, Noord, Holland & died 1650 in Holland.

The History of the Stout Family:
They had together 7 sons & 3 daughters, viz...: John, Richard, Jonathan, Peter, James, Benjamin, David. The daughters were - Deliverance, Sarah, Penelope.
Ref: First Settling in Middletown, Monmouth County, New Jersey, By Nathan Stout, 1823.
Penelope's tenth & last child, David, was born in 1669. That would have made Penelope a mother at age 47.

. The History of the Stout Family:
About the same time a ship from Amsterdam, in Holland, on her way to the said New Amsterdam, was driven on the shore that is now called [Sandy Hook near] Middletown, in Monmouth County, in the State of new Jersey, which ship was loaded with passengers, who with much difficulty got on shore. But the Indians not long after fell upon them & butchered & killed the whole crew, as they thought, but soon after the Indians were gone, a certain Penelope Van Princes, whose husband the Indians had killed, found herself possessed of strength enough to creep to a hollow tree, where she remained some days. An Indian happening to come that way, whose dog coming to the tree, occasioned him to examine the inside of the tree, where he found the said Penelope in a forlorn, distressed condition. She was bruised very severely about the head, her left shoulder so hacked that she could never use that arm like the other, & her bowels protruded from a cut across her abdomen; she kept them in with her hand. She had been in this fearful condition 7 days when the Indian found her. In his compassion he took her out of the tree & carried her to his wigwam where he treated her kindly & healed her wounds, & in a short time conveyed her in his canoe to New Amsterdam, where he sold her to the Dutch, who then owned that city, now called New York.
The man & woman from whom the whole race of Stouts descended, got into the city of New Amsterdam, where they became acquainted with each other & were married.
Ref: First Settling in Middletown, Monmouth County, New Jersey, By Nathan Stout, 1823.

Case of the Milk Cow:
. 1648 Sep 12 - "Ambrose London, plaintive against: Ye wife of Thos Aplegate, defendant in an action of slander for saying his wife did milke her Cowe". "The defendant saith that shee said noe otherwise but as Penellopey Prince told her to Ambrose, his wife did milke her Cowe".

"Rodger Scotte being deposed, saith he being in ye house of Thos Aplegate, he did heare Pennellopy Prince saye to ye wife of Ambrose London, [she] did milke ye Cowe of Thos Aplegate".

"Thos Greedye being deposed saith ye Pennellope Prince being at his house, he did heare her saye to him & Aplegates' Daughter must come as witnesses again: Ambrose his wife milking Aplegates Cowes". Pennellope Prince being questioned acknowledged her faulte in so speaking & being sorry, her words she spake gave satisfaction on both sides."
Ref: Gravesend Town Book, Vol 1, 1648 Sep 12.

The children of Richard Sout & Penelope Van Princis Stout are:
John Stout, 1645 Gravesend L.I. New Netherlands, m. Elizabeth Crawford, d. 1724 NJ
Richard Stout, 1646 - 1717, m Frances Heath, Mary Seymour
James Stout, 1648 - m Elizabeth Truax
Mary Stout, 1650 - 1675, m Judge James Bowne 1665
Alice Stout, 1652 - m John Throckmorton 1670
Peter Stout, 1654 - 1703, m Mary Bollen, then Mary Bowne
Sarah Stout, 1656 - m John Pike
Johnathan Stout, 1660 - 1723, m Anne Bollen 1685
All the above were born in Gravesend Long Island .

David Stout, 1667 -b in Middletown NJ, m Rebecca Ashton 1688
Benjamin Stout, 1669-1734, m Mary Leonard, then Agnes Truax. - - - 
VAN PRINCIS, Penelope (I464)
 
18028 Penrose Flora Marguerite Whittemore. 72 Gerrard St. WHITTEMORE, Penrose Margaret Flora (I267)
 
18029 Pension from 1907 to 1933. COLLINS, Charles P (I1463)
 
18030 Per 1880 Census, John was living with his brother-in-law John Stewart and his wife Annie.
They lived next door to Joseph McGillis and Anna May McDonald - his sister.
 
MCDONALD, John (I7224)
 
18031 Per 1891 Census, William was Widowed. MACSTEVEN, William (I8748)
 
18032 Per Jim Johnson 1-25-02:
The Thompsons: My grandmother Isabel Thompson and her two older sisters, Beth and Alice, got
into a car in London and drove across Canada to the West. They did jobs along the way as
stenographers or whatever for money. My grandmother met her husband at Bulman's Ranch in the Okanagan Valley of BC. That's where they settled and my mother and her siblings were born and raised.
I always thought my grandmother's and Alice's story of working their way across Canada was
romantic and exciting. Imagine three sisters on their own in the 1920s. I've always imagined George Jacobs as being another kind of romantic adventurer type.

Per Jim Johnson 2-25-02:
Apparently Grandma Buffum (Isabella Thompson) did a radio show in Vernon at one time. I only heard that when she died and I was at my aunt's house in Victoria and a guy came over to get info for her eulogy.
Grandma had an affected accent that was not normal Canadian. It was a put-on British accent, and in her defense I would point out that, after all, her mother had been around the Empire, and her grandfather was born and raised in Britain. 
THOMPSON, Isabella Erskine (I3944)
 
18033 Per John A Stewart of Ypsilanti, Michigan: John Stewart and Margaret McDougall came from Scotland, where they were married.
According to family tradition, they landed first in Nova Scotia and lived there for a short while before moving to Glengarry County in Eastern Ontario.
There is circumstantial evidence that they emigrated to Canada in 1837 and lived on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia.
Perhaps they went from there to New Brunswick for seasonal work.
According to the 1861 Census of Canada, their daughter Betsy was born in New Brunswick obo 1839.
According to John Stewart, the family arrived in Glengarry County in 1839, they and appear there on the 1851 and 1861 Census.
A child named Mary Ann was born in Glengarry County and apparently died there as a 9 year old. She is not listed on the 1861 Census.
In 1860, they sold the lot in Lochiel Township that they had been farming.
Their daughter Isabella was alive at the time of the 1861 Census in Lochiel, Glengarry County. She is not listed on the 1871 Census in Bruce County.
Family legend has it that she died in a fire. One could suppose that this was the impetus to leave Glengarry County and head west to Bruce County.
In the early or mid 1860's they moved to Bruce County, where they are listed in an 1867 directory, and on the early tax rolls up until 1873.
In 1864 or 1865, their son John, crossed Lake Huron to Alcona County, Michigan, where he worked in a sawmill and also homesteaded a farm.
In 1868 their daughter Catherine was married in Goderich, to an Alexander McKenzie.
Shortly afterward she left with her husband for western Pennsylvania where the world's first oil boom was in full force.
Around 1873, James Stewart bought a farm in Alcona County near his brother John.
In 1880, John and Margaret are living in Harrisville, Alcona County, Michigan with their son James.
Not long after the 1881 Census for Ontario, Alexander moved with his family from Bruce County to Alcona County, Michigan.
Around the same time, Catherine with her husband and children showed up from Pennsylvania (the oil boom was over).
For about 15 years, the entire family was together in the Harrisville and Mikado areas of Alcona County.
John Sr died in 1889, Margaret in 1897, Catherine died in 1896.
The three youngest of the family - Alexander, Donald, and Hanah all left for for North Dakota around 1896 - as the lumber operations were shutting down or moving westward to Wisconsin or Minnesota.
Betsy, John and James remained in Michigan. Betsy died in 1905, John in 1909, and James in 1918.
There are many descendants who still live in Michigan.
 
STEWART, John (I4989)
 
18034 PER KENT GEROW

Isaac was Captain of the Queen's Rangers who died July 1778 in New York City, most likely of fever. He is buried in the Trinity Church Yard.
The widow Charity and her children came to New Brunswick with the Loyalists. 
GEROW, Captain Isaac (I18764)
 
18035 PER RICH OSTROM in Family Search
Marie was baptized 25 Mar 1662 at the French Church in Mannheim, Germany. In 1674 she emigrated with her mother, stepfather, step brothers and sisters, uncle and his family to New York - likely with the Hasbrouck Party that the Rutemps came with.

On 7 April 1679, the fifteen year old Marie Petilion married Abraham Rutemps (21) in the Walloon Protestant Church in New Paltz (now Kingston, New York). In 1689, Abraham bought land in the New Barbadoes Neck (now Hackensack, Bergen Co., NJ.)

Marie and Abraham had 10-12 children. Their second child Paulus Rutan was our ancestor.

Marie died at the age of 49 on 12 Jun 1713 in Rutherford, New Barabadoes Neck, New Jersey, USA
 
PETILION, Maria (I17786)
 
18036 Per the 1861 Census, the Stewart family lived adjacent to the Gillis McGillis family, District #7 of Lochiel Township.
 
STEWART, Daniel (Donald) John (I4943)
 
18037 Per the 1901 Census, Leonard was lving with his Uncle William Messeroll and Aunt Mary Jane, and his cousins in Hamilton, Ontario.
 
MESSEROLL, Leonard (I4452)
 
18038 Percival Lowery's mother was born in Michigan and his father was born in Canada. Ref: 1920 Census Detroit. LOWERY, Percival C (I1890)
 
18039 Percy is the son Janet Graham & Francis Elias Felker.

Obituary
1952 Nov 13 - Percy G Felker, 61, 2319 Tower Ave., city fireman, died Wednesday night. He was born Nov 16, 1892 in Superior & entered service with the fire department June 22, 1925. He was promoted to a driver on May 16, 1934 & to the rank of captain Feb 15, 1944. Due to a disability, he retired July 1, 1952.

While with the fire department, Felker was active in the welfare programs of fire department service. He was a member of the Wisconsin Paid Firemen's Assn. & the Wisconsin State Assn. of Fire Fighters. He served as trustee & secretary of the Firemen's Pension Fund while on duty here & was a past president of the Superior Firefighters, Local 74. He served as director & financial secretary of the Firemen's Relief Assn.

Olaf Sorenson, chief of Superior Fire department said Thursday, "In the passing of Capt. Percy Felker, who recently retired from the department, I feel a great personal loss. He was always an efficient officer & accepted work for the welfare department without thinking of time or rewards. His loss is keenly felt by many friends he made in the more than 27 years of work in the fire department."

He is survived by his wife, Charlotte; several nieces & nephews.
Ref: The Evening Telegram. - - - 
FELKER, Percy Gerald (I191)
 
18040 Percy is the son of Helen Rachel Willson & John Taylor.

Obituary
A. Percy Taylor, Manufactured Soaps, Perfumes.
Arthur Percy Taylor, 81, president of Taylor Soaps-Perfumes Ltd., dies at his home 110 Madison Ave., Tuesday. He had been at work until a week ago.
Mr Taylor was a son of John Taylor, one of the earliest soap manufactures in Ontario, who found his business in Toronto in1865. Educated in Toronto Public schools, Mr. Taylor later studied chemistry & color work in Germany before entering his father's business, which he eventually headed. He was a member of the Toronto Board of Trade, the National Club, the Royal Canadian Yacht Club; & also a member of the church of the Redeemer.
He leaves his wife, the former Lillian Kent, a son James I, a daughter, mrs W G Clarke, & a sister Mrs Lila Cattn, all of Toronto, & 5 grandchildren. - - - 
TAYLOR, Arthur PERCY (I1383)
 
18041 Percy is the son of Sarah Catherine Duck and Wm. Madget. MADGETT, Percy Hilliard (I2019)
 
18042 Percy was drafted under the Military Service Act of 1917 on Oct 20,1917 in Belleville, Ontario
 
CLEAVE, Percy Moorcombe (I265)
 
18043 perhaps Benjamin St. John JOHNS, Benjamin 8 (P8111)
 
18044 Perhaps Lincolnshire, England MANIFOLD, Benjamin (P8356)
 
18045 Perhaps named after Gen. John Stark's sister, Isabel? MCCAULEY, Isabel Pinkerton McCalley (P3607)
 
18046 Peritonitis; TB & pneumonia. NEAR, William .1 (I291)
 
18047 Perkins

-1852 census: Harris Perkins, 46, farmer, living with wife Harriet, 3 sons, 1 daughter, brother Caleb's family, widowed father Roger; living with Caleb Perkins; Universalist; b. USA
1861 census: Harris Perkins, 56, living at Westminster with wife Harriet, 4 sons, 4 daughters; b. USA
-1871 census: living in Caradoc 
PERKINS*, Harris (I1004)
 
18048 Perkins 2 PERKINS*, Alza Jane (I1031)
 
18049 Perkins 3 PERKINS*, Charles W. (I1032)
 
18050 Perkins/Gardner/Brown
-a livery stable keeper

jamescobban.net says his middle name was Cander. There was a Roger Perkins, b. 1869 Derby, CT who married Betsy Candee. Is this where the name came from? But that Roger and Betsy died in 1834 in the US and jamescobban.net does not link our Perkins with this Roger and Betsy. 
PERKINS*, Freeman C. (I405)
 

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