Matches 51 to 100 of 385
# | Notes | Linked to |
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51 | Age at Death: 59 | TRUSTY, Martha (I-2144833676)
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52 | Age at Death: 61 | GEARHART, Conrad Langdon (I-2144833924)
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53 | Age at Death: 66 | GEORGE, Robert (I6916454372)
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54 | Age at Death: 68 | ELLIOTT, Sarah (I6916455289)
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55 | Age at Death: 72 | RENFRO, Chloe (I411943364)
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56 | Age at Death: 76 | MINNIX, Elizabeth (I-2144834622)
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57 | Age at Death: 86 | MENDENHALL, Martha (I6908682963)
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58 | Age at Death: 90 | GEARHART, Jessie Nadine (I-2144834267)
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59 | Age: 27 | AURELIA (I-2144834229)
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60 | Age: 36 | RUSH, William (I-2144834230)
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61 | Age: 41 | PATINGIL, Nancy (I410671378)
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62 | Age: 48 | RUSH, James (I7018056122)
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63 | Age: 57 | OVERMAN, Isaac (I152019402816)
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64 | Age: 60 | ANTHONY, Joseph (I-2144834486)
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65 | Age: 62 | JENNINGS, Veto Curry (I-2144834584)
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66 | Age: 62 | KENNEDY, William Wesley (I-2144834712)
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67 | Age: 65 | MEEKS, Melvina (I-2144834654)
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68 | Age: 67 | HUFF, William Martin (I-2144833588)
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69 | Age: 68 | HUFF, Anna (I6916663936)
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70 | Age: 70 | HUFF, Samuel Martin (I6916656928)
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71 | Age: 71 | |
72 | Age: 71 | BOWLING, Stella Ophelia (I-2144834833)
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73 | Age: 71 | STALLINGS, William Newsom (I-2144834544)
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74 | Age: 71 | CURRY, Lucinda Fannie (I-2144834555)
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75 | Age: 72 | STALLINGS, John Thomas (I-2144834570)
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76 | Age: 73 | HUFF, William (I6916643728)
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77 | Age: 75 | MUSGRAVE, Talitha (I-2144834542)
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78 | Age: 76 | BOWLING, William Jones (I-2144834751)
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79 | Age: 79 | MCDANIEL, Mary Shelby (I-2144834594)
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80 | Age: 81 | HUFF, Lee Roy (I-2144833779)
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81 | Age: 82 | JENNINGS, Annie Lola (I-2144834845)
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82 | Age: 82 | |
83 | Age: 83 | COOK, Sarah Francis (I-2144833923)
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84 | Age: 84 | LEDBETTER, Clarence Greenfield (I-2144833824)
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85 | Age: 84 | PERKINS, Gertrude Nettie (I-2144834182)
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86 | Age: 85 | |
87 | Age: 85 | CUNNINGHAM, Herman (I-2144834847)
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88 | Age: 86 | MONTGOMERY, Ophelia Lisenbee Sarepta (I409501665)
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89 | Age: 86 | LIGHTLE, Rolland Mead (I24036285636)
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90 | Age: 87 | JEANETTE, Richard Hezekiah (I1740590027)
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91 | Age: 91 | CUNNINGHAM, Amos Blakey (I-2144834835)
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92 | Age: 91 | |
93 | Alabama Census, 1810-1890 | Source (S261941755)
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94 | Alexander Kennedy was born in the home of his parents, John Kennedy and ? located in Ireland. According the Family Bible of David Kennedy: "Alexander, my father was married in Philadelphia, where his wife died, when he married my mother, Mary Thomas in Maryland. She was born and raised in London and married to John Thomas and had two children: Thomas and Jane, all of which died. Her maiden name was Tanday. My father had by her: Nancy, John, David, Mary, and Alexander. She died when I was small. My father then married the Widow Lavin, and by her he had: George, Annie, Joseph, Robert, Nathan, and Esther." According to the pamphlet entitled, "The Kennedy Family of Moore County," "John Alexander Kennedy -- soldier and gun-maker in Philadelphia for the American army. Drew a pension. He fled to North Carolina after Phildelphia fell to the British." According to a book entitled, "Elise High School and Upper Moore County (1974) by Edwin Arthur West, p. 4, "On the Falls of Bear Creek, near where the Robbins Water Plant now stands, Alexander Kennedy established the first of the Moore County Gunworks, and continued to turn out guns for our soldiers to use against the British." More about the Kennedy Rifle: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~lelandva/kennedygun.html From http://www.sandhills.net/robbins.cfm: "During the latter days of the American Revolution, Alexander Kennedy left Philadelphia and headed south. He wound up establishing a gun factory on the falls of Bear Creek near present day Robbins. From this new location, Kennedy supplied General George Washington’s Continental forces with firearms. Kennedy’s son, David, expanded the operations of the gun factory to a level unequaled in the South; he also produced fine, silver-plated rifles and swords. The gunworks employed nearly 100 workers and supplied many of the guns used in the War of 1812. Large grindstones, operated by waterpower from Bear Creek, shaped the gun barrels. The Kennedy shop led to the establishment of other factories with products similar to that of the gunsmith. Around 1795 the community was labeled with the name "Mechanics Hill." Falling upon hard times in the 1830's David Kennedy moved to Alabama about 1835. He donated the land for the first Mechanics Hill Baptist Church and played a key role in the construction of a store and one of the area’s first schoolhouses. After his departure, the community slowly took shape. Its growth was attributed largely to the Plank Road and a mini gold rush. " Kennedy was "settled in Orange County, North Carolina, as shown in North Carolina Colonial Records, Vol. VII, pp 733-737; by 1793 he had moved across the Deep River into Moore County. By profession he made guns and swords of a high quality; his service to the colonies have been recognized by the Sons of the American Revolution; further, an Alexander Kennedy of North Carolina is recorded as drawing a pension and it may have been this same Alexander Kennedy. In addition to making the Kennedy rifle, he operated a merchant-mill and saw-mill where the Salem Road crossed Bear Creek near Robbins (formerly Hemp) in the upper part of Moore County." Of his children by his second marriage, we know nothing of Nancy, John and Mary, but it seems likely they stayed in North Carolina. However, the youngest child of this marriage, Alexander, settled in Alabama; he had a son Josiah who settled in Centerville, Alabama and there married Eliza or Elizabeth Ann McNeill. Of his children by his third wife: George came to Lauderdale County, Alabama, with his brother David, and the latter's son Hiram; he was not married; he built a church that still stands just south of Green Hill in this county. The other children of the third marriage probably went on to Mississippi to settle." North Carolina, Department of the Secretary of State Land Grant office. Book 84 page 242 100 acres, Moore County, North Carolina Entered 3 January 1783 Issued 6 December 1794 Book 133 Page 79 250 acres Entered 12 June 1813. Moore County, North Side Issued 5 December 1818, Bear Creek between 1793 and 1818 Moore County, NC. | KENNEDY, Alexander (I-2144834113)
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95 | Alpin was killed in a battle against the Picts. | ALPIN (I-2144833942)
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96 | Also know as: Buisman (from Rick Zeutenhorst). | BUIJSMAN, Marijtje Jacobs (I-2144833595)
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97 | Also know as: Claas Sijmensz Bakker (from Rick Zeutenhorst). | BAKKER, Klaas Sijmensz (I-2144833596)
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98 | Also know as: Sijmen Claesz Bakker (from Rick Zeutenhorst). | BAKKER, Sijmen Klaas (I-2144833594)
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99 | Also known as Reynder Claasz Cooyman or Cooijman (from Rick Zeutenhorst). | KOOIJMAN, Reynder Klaasz (I-2144833613)
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100 | Although depicted by Shakespeare as having been killed by Macbeth, he was actually killed in the battle of Burghead, near Elgin (which battle may indeed have been against the forces of Macbeth). | DUNKELD, Duncan (I-2144833952)
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