Matches 101 to 150 of 229
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101 | Buried in Plain Lawns Cementery in Hicksville, NY, | Schweder, Hilda Gustava (P552)
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102 | Burried in Long Island National Cementery, Melville, NY, | Fergus, Austin R (P556)
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103 | Burried in Plain Lawn Cementery, Hicksville, NY. | Weston, Evelyn (P559)
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104 | Burried Rose Hill Cementery, Linden New Jersey | Fergus, William Thomas (P545)
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105 | Catalina Frau was the posthumous child of Antonio Frau and Luisa de la Sierra. She was a bit younger than my grandmother. She married a few years after her, probably in the early twenties to Juan Rullan, known in town as Juanín. Catalina died in labor in 1923. She had a boy, who also died. Juanín remarried and had two daughters. | Frau, Catalina (P271)
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106 | Census Returns of England and Wales, 1851 | Source (S1525223746)
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107 | Census Returns of England and Wales, 1891 | Source (S1509819699)
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108 | Daughter of John Henry Turnier and Eliza Ann Fash, both born NYC Widowed, spouse unknown, died before 1922 Event Place: Bronx, NY, NYAddress: 880 Forest AveResidence: Bronx, NYAge: 78Marital Status: WidowedRace: WhiteOccupation: HousewifeBirth Date: 15 Apr 1844Birthplace: NYCBurial Date: 06 Oct 1922Cemetery: Woodlawn, NY "New York, New York City Municipal Deaths, 1795-1949" (https://familysearch.org) Reference ID cn 5907GS Film Number 2167962 | Turnier, Sarah (P1323)
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109 | Died In Vietnam may be: William Gary Young Length of service 0 years His tour began on Feb 26, 1970 Casualty was on May 5, 1970 In QUANG TIN, SOUTH VIETNAM HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY MULTIPLE FRAGMENTATION WOUNDS Body was recovered Panel 11W - Line 108 https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/161103829/william-gary-young/photo William, the son of Solomon Young and Blanche Young of Woodland Hills California enlisted in the US Marine Corps on July 17, 1969. He arrived in Vietnam on February 26, 1970 where he was assigned to and served with H&HS-1, MWHG-1, 1st Marine Air Wing. On May 5, the Chu Lai Airfield was hit with a barrage of NVA 122m rockets which hit the MAG 13 area of operations. 3 A-4 aircraft received superficial damage, 33 personnel were wounded and PFC Young was killed by shrapnel from the hostile rocket fire. | Yankelowitz, William Gary (P1368)
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110 | Died tragically March 18, 1992. | Shutowich, Jaclyn (P566)
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111 | Domingo Franceschi was a Napoleonic soldier that came to Puerto Rico in 1820 under the auspices of the Cédula de Gracia. This law allowed a foreigner (non-Spanish) to settle in the islands and gave him land, if he brought money , slaves or possessions. It was used as a form to increase the population of the island. | Franceschi, Domingo (P141)
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112 | England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 | Source (S1536817750)
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113 | Enrique was the third son of a very large and wealthy land owning family of Puerto Rico. He received a choice education. Because of the family's wealth the family kept two houses, one in the plantation in Yabucoa and another in San Juan. He studied high school (bachillerato) with the Jesuits in the Seminario Conciliar. After that he went to the University of Barcelona to study medicine, but he did not like the climate and transferred to the University of Seville, graduating in 1899. While in Seville he lived in the house of his paternal aunt Catalina. There he met and married Carmen Guzmán de Giles. After his graduation he returned To Puerto Rico. He first practice medicine in Juana Diaz. After that he served in the town of Coamo, where his daughter Carmen was born. Latter, he was in charge of the public hospital in Guayama. He finally decided to settled in one place and moved to Ponce where he practiced in the Clínica del Doctor Pila. It was at this time that his wife died. He continued practicing in Ponce and died there in 1932. He loved music, specially opera. He was one of the first people in Juana Diaz to own a record player. Politically he was a life long Republican (Puerto Rican style, rather liberal and well educated). After the death of his second wife he lost all faith in religion and never went to church again. He felt betrayed by God. | Vallecillo, Enrique (P1)
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114 | Find A Grave | Source (S-920040518)
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115 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919785653)
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116 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919595569)
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117 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919496320)
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118 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919496314)
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119 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919496309)
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120 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919289904)
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121 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919289871)
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122 | Find A Grave | Source (S-919284844)
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123 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508303553)
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124 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508427213)
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125 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508474680)
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126 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508475837)
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127 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508476168)
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128 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508666825)
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129 | Find A Grave | Source (S1508859078)
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130 | Find A Grave | Source (S1509597399)
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131 | Find A Grave | Source (S1509816469)
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132 | Find A Grave | Source (S1513192685)
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133 | Find A Grave | Source (S1513192778)
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134 | Find A Grave | Source (S1513931074)
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135 | Find A Grave | Source (S1519518206)
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136 | Find A Grave | Source (S1525223697)
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137 | Find A Grave | Source (S1525358121)
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138 | Find A Grave | Source (S1534004318)
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139 | Find A Grave | Source (S1534170316)
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140 | Find A Grave | Source (S1537638086)
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141 | Frances Xavier Navas died the day after she was born. Her mother Ethel had chicken pox while pregnant and her death might be attributed to that. It also could have been SIDS. | Navas, Frances Xavier (P293)
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142 | Francisco Lizana was a pages from the area of Gerona. In the year 1809 the French Army of the Pyrenees invaded the region devastating the region, massacring anyone they found on the way and finally laying siege to the city of Gerona. According to tradition all the family of Francisco was killed. At the age of 13 he left Spain, crossed the Pyrenees and established himself in the city of Perpignan, who was also Catalan speaking. we do not know why, he went to Strasbourg and there married his wife. they both left France for the island of Santo Domingo, where Francisco, now conversant in French too, served as a customs officer, very likely for the Hatian government that at the time controlled the Spanish sector of the island of Española. | Lizana, Francisco (P243)
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143 | Francisco Mandry came to Puerto Rico from the town of Ronda, Spain. He was of Jewish lineage by both his mother and father, "New Christians." This side of the family kept the tradition of circumsicing their sons, but as far as I know there are no other rituals that have been preserve. It is to be pointed our, al;s, that the name Mandry in Puerto Rico had two spellings. sometimes, mostly during the generation of my great-grandmother Modesta, the name was spelled with an i at the end. Still in Puerto Rico there are geographical locations that are called, Cabo Mandri, and Hacienda Mandri. The family, nowadays, spells the name with a Y. | Mandry, Francisco (P42)
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144 | GenealogieOnline | Source (S1537078036)
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145 | Genealogy of descendants of Claude Le Maitre (Delamater.) [sic] : who came from France via Holland and settled at New Netherlands, now New York, in 1652 | Source (S1546431780)
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146 | He was a "criminal" and involved with drugs | Yankelowitz, Rubin (P1294)
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147 | He was a candy wholesaler. Called the ""Candy Man". this can be see in the 1920 Census | Tonjes, John H (P551)
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148 | HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY- MULTIPLE FRAGMENTATION WOUNDS, Age: 19 | Yankelowitz, William Gary (P1368)
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149 | http://m.legacy.com/obituaries/latimes/obituary.aspx?n=blanche-young&pid=104278894&referrer=0&preview=True | Altman, Blanche (P1367)
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150 | Ines María de la Sierra lived what was probably a priviledge existence. She was a very well educated woman, attending school and receiving a fine intellectual education. She probably studied in a school for young women that was opened in Mayagüez in the 1860's by Venezuelan women. This school tried to give an education comparable to those received by boys (I say this because my grandmother told me that she went to what could be considered a high school and the only institution of that kind that existed in Mayagüez at the time was this school). She lived in Calle San José, which later became Once de Agosto (Now is Ramos Antonini) in the what became the shoe store of one of the Vidal brothers (Almacenes Vidal rings a bell). The house, like most houses on the square served a double purpose: business and home life. She lived in the upstairs area. In the 1950's out of curiosity I asked the owner if he would take me up and he did! It was no longer a house, but a maze of rooms that stored merchandise. Still it must have been a very nice place to live. When she was eighteen her father died and shortly thereafter her mother. At this point her younger brother Nicolas was dying of TB and her youngest sister Luisa was about ten years old (Manuelita had died shortly after birth). Her mother's sisters had married powerful men in the community so she and her brother went to live with Antonio Annoni (tío Antonio) who at the time was one of the wealthiest men in town and had a son about her age. Luisa went to live with Jose Miguel de Olaguibel. She served as woman in charge because her aunt was a sickly woman and had great responsibilities as the wife of one of the town's most prominent citizen, She married late, probably in her early thirties to Luis Lassise. Her life with Luis was also one of comfort and prestige. He was a well to do businessman and he built a lovely house in San Vicente Street. Her only misfortune was the sudden death of her husband from horse fall. But she was wealthy when he died. A generous woman, she gave to the needy, helped her, also widowed, sister Luisa, and sent her only son to study medicine, in style, to the University of Maryland. She was absent minded, to the point that one day she was talking with a friend and stood up, forgetting that her youngest child, a baby still, was on her lap. But also, she was very cultured and raised her three children with a view of simplicity, service to the community and culture. My grandmother, the one that was dropped, spoke three languages and was a voracious reader of fine literary works and philosophy. She was also a big spender and had rather opinionated views. When she got into an argument with her niece Carmen Frau over her parents grave (who contained her husband's remains), she simply purchased another plot, exhumed her husband's remains and stopped talking to her niece. The family was not reconciled until the 1920's when Guillermo Mulet, Carmen's husband died and my great grandmother went to the funeral. She was so secured in her economic position that burned all the deeds the family had from the lands in Venezuela. God only knows what we lost. She died in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico, the town that saw her birth and her life after the hurricane of San Felipe in 1928. | la Sierra Y Estrada, Inés María de (P170)
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