Home Page | What's New | Most Wanted | Surnames | Places | Sources | Statistics | Blog | Links | Contact Us

 Notes


HomeHome    SearchSearch    PrintPrint    Login - User: anonymousLogin    Add BookmarkAdd Bookmark

Tree:

Matches 1 to 50 of 4129

      1 2 3 4 5 ... 83» Next»

   Notes   Linked to 
1 [bradshaw.FTW]

[Breech1.FTW]

[breech22.FTW]

[jerrybordelon.FTW]

Children from this marriage are listed in the 1880 Census.[breech1.FTW]

[jerrybordelon.FTW]

Children from this marriage are listed in the 1880 Census.[bree.FTW]

[jerrybordelon.FTW]

Children from this marriage are listed in the 1880 Census.[furm.ged] 
Family: F00436
 
2 [bradshaw.FTW]

[Breech1.FTW]

[breech22.FTW]

[jerrybordelon.FTW]

Ures divorced Etta. Etta did not want the divorce. Ures Jr was only a few months old. Notes given to me by Velma Barker Hale.[breech1.FTW]

[jerrybordelon.FTW]

Ures divorced Etta. Etta did not want the divorce. Ures Jr was only a few months old. Notes given to me by Velma Barker Hale.[bree.FTW]

[jerrybordelon.FTW]

Ures divorced Etta. Etta did not want the divorce. Ures Jr was only a few months old. Notes given to me by Velma Barker Hale.[furm.ged] 
Family: F00434
 
3 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

Source for marriage to E. L. Varner: Marriages of Hamilton Co., from Hamilton Co Court House. 
Family: F00235
 
4 The father of Roy Nyberg gave his consent to said marriage in writing. Both were residents of Prosperine. Family: F00355
 
5 She died in child birth. ADKINS Stella
 
6 Killed in WWII. ALLEN Robert
 
7 [KAPP.FTW]

From Austin Ancestry on Ancestry.com:
John Barger removed from the Philadelphia MM to Exeter MM 30th day 1st Missouri 1750. In 1749 he wrote saying that he knew his father had brought a certificate for the whole family from Ireland, and sometime after had taken one from said meeting for himself, but not for John, he being removed to live at Conestogo at a great distance from any Friends, where he afterward married a Quaker woman before a Magistrate that was a Friend with the consent of both their parents, thinking it would be allowed. But then becoming aware that it was not allowed, he wanted a few lines from the Philadelphia meeting to recommend him to the Exeter MM. The Philadelphia MM replied that he was not on his father's certificate, and since they had no knowledge of his conduct, they wrote to the Exeter MM that if they wanted to admit John to their society, the Philadelphia MM had no objection. John was in the Pequea Valley district of Chester Co. on a tax list of 1720. This, however, did not mean that he owned the land; in that area the occupant of the land paid the taxes. He was on a petition to establish a new township of Maidencreek in 1746. 
BARGER John
 
8 [KAPP.FTW]

Will Abstracts 1787-1791, Becks Co., PA: BARGER, SIMEON, Maidencreek. May 9, 1787 - January 23, 1790. To wife Sarah 1/3 of all estate during life. On wife's decease real estate to be sold and all estate divided among children, viz: Mary wife of Thomas BREACH, Rebecca BARGER, Elisabeth wife of Samuel BROOKS, Sarah wife of James STARR, Susanna BARGER, Hannah BARGER, Dinah BARGER, John, Simeon Isaac and Rachel BARGER in equal shares. Exrs: Wife Sarah and brother Isaac. Wits: Leonard STEIN and Magdalena STEIN. 
BARGER Simeon
 
9 Beulah was put in jail in 1934 for abandoning her 2 daughters. She had put them in the basement of a house and left them there for several days. Rose became very ill, and almost died. The daughters, Rose and Dean, were put into a foster home. Lee, the son, was left with the Workman side of the family. 1 year later (1935), Velma, Beulah's sister, and her husband Jim Hale, took the girls. Velma and Jim raised them until 1945.

After Beulah got out of jail in 1935, she meet and lived with Ralph Chamberlin. They moved around the country. They raised sheep in Wyoming, and finally settled in Renton, Washington on a farm raising chickens. In 1945, Beulah came back to Illinois to get girls and take then to Washington. Lee, her son, was with her all during that time. Six months after ariving in Washington, Dean and her brother Lee, ran off to California. Rose remained on the farm. In 1947, Ralph got a job working on the Hungary Horse Dam in Montana. The family moved in their travel trailer up to Northport, Washington. Later they moved to the tent city around the Hungary Horse Dam. Sometime in the 1950's Beulah married Ralph Chanberlin.

When Beulah was dying, she was on life support in the hospital in Burien, Washington. Her daughter, Rose, had to make the decision to take her off life support.

Beulah was cremated, and the ashes were put in an Urn next to her husband, Ralph Chamberlin. They are buried in Washington Memorial Park Cemetery by the Seattle International Airport. 
BARKER Beulah Hattie
 
10 Note from World Family Tree Vol. 23: "Sam and Edith had 3 sons in the army in June 1862" according to a letter written by Edith's niece, Sara Jean Casselberry to Hannah. Sara lived with her parents on a farm in Missouri but had to leave it and came to Illinois "on account of the jay hawking, murder and house burniing". Sam and Edith also had 3 daughters living near them. BARKER Samuel Elbridge
 
11 Served in the Army during World War II in the Phillippines, France & England. Member of the American Legion Post 318, and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2078. Notes from the Peoria Journal Star newspaper indicate that 3 brother and 2 sister preceded him in death. BARKER Ures Sills, Jr.
 
12 Served as a bonbardier stationed in England during World War II. Was shot down over Hamberg, Germany on November 6, 1944, after flying 7 missions. Captured by the Germans and spent a month in as a prisoner of war in the hospital. He received the Air Medal for participating in 5 missions with the Eight Air Force and received a Purple Heart Medal for the shattered leg suffered when parachuting from his plane. A Member of the Bartonville American Legion Post 979, Veterns of Foreign Wars in East Peoria, AMVETS Post 64, American Ex-prisioners of War, American Association of Retired Persons, & Musicians Local 26. BARKER William G.
 
13 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

The source that Nancy Bentley is the correct Nancy who married Henry Fisher is a set of family notes that have been passed down through the Marcus De Lafayette Brown/Caroline Fisher descendents. Those same notes claim that Nancy Bentley is the daughter of Grannie Bentley who lived to be 110 years old. 
BENTLEY Nancy
 
14 From FindaGrave.com: Alfred Breech was the seventh child of Jacob and Rebecca Leiby Breech. After his father's death on the last day of the Civil War (Union soldier) he was placed in different Children's Homes. On November 21, 1866 he was placed in the Home For Friendless Children in Wilkes Barre, Pa. On September 1, 1869 he was transferred to the Mount Joy School. He was discharged on December 11, 1873 (his sixteenth birthday). Little is known except that he was a farmer. He never married.
 
BREECH Alfred
 
15 From FindaGrave.com: Amanda Breech was the eighth child of Jacob and Rebecca Leiby Breech. After her father died in the Civil War (Union soldier), she was placed in different Children's Homes. On November 21, 1866, she was placed in the Home for Friendless Children, In Wilkes Barre, PA. On September 21, 1869 she was transferred to the Mount Joy Home. She was discharged on October 29, 1875 , her sixteenth birthday. She later attended the Bloomsburg Normal School. She died at the age of 22 years, 3 months and 1 day. Amanda never married. Amanda is buried quite a distance from her parents. Her stone is difficult to read.
 
BREECH Amanda
 
16 PFC Ohio Co. B 142 Infantry WWII. BREECH Carl Kenneth
 
17 1920 Census Nile Twp., Sc ioto Co,Oh
Breech C. Charley 44 head
J. Margaret 37 wife
M. Fran cis 12 dau
V. Emily 8 dau
J. Harry 6 son
Wm. Hartz el 3 2/12 son
E. Lester 7/12 son
Lewis Arthur 28 son-in-law
Della 15 dau[Breech2.FTW]
 
BREECH Charles Cecil
 
18 Civil War: Co. B 46th Regt Mo Vol Inf. BREECH Charles J.
 
19 PVT US Army WWII BREECH Charles Otis
 
20 From FindaGrave: Delilah Breech was born December 25, 1852 in Catawissa. She was the fourth child of Jacob and Rebecca Leiby Breech. She was injured in a childhood accident at the Orangeville Orphan School, which left her permanently crippled. She was placed in the Orphan School after her father died on the last day of the Civil War (Jacob was a Union soldier). She entered the Orphan school on November 7, 1866 and was discharged on May 31, 1868, at age 16. She was admitted to the Bloomsburg Hospital on April 25, 1942, and passed away April 29, 1942.
 
BREECH Delilah
 
21 Earl Jr was an Auto Dealship owner in Bloomington Ill, he was also President of Earl Tool and Supply Inc. He was a Navy Pilot during WWII and Korean wars. Attended Calvary Baptist Church West Lafayette. BREECH Earl James, Jr
 
22 Funeral services for Earl James Breech 73yrs, brother of Earnest Breech well known industrialist and former board chairman of Ford Motor Company. Earl Breech died at 9.15 P.M. Saturday Burge-Protestant Hospital. long time employ of Fairbanks-Morse in Chicago, also treasurer of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Rev. Mark Randle at National Av. Christian Church burial at Maple Park Cemetery. BREECH Earl James
 
23 Also have a death date of October 1916 from FindaGrave.com. BREECH Elizabeth
 
24 Obituary: Ford Motor Co. has been on a roll - toting up record sales and profits, assembling a stable of foreign subsidiaries including Volvo and Jaguar, taking a lead in cutting pollution from light trucks, forging into uncharted waters with a strategy to offer an array of consumer services of which cars will be just apart. Only students of history or those with long memories will recall how this dynamic company has sometimes teetered on the precipice - most notably, just after World War II. Indeed, Ford was in a financial free fall at a time when its founder, Henry Ford, was growing senile and incapable of wielding a firm hand over a company bedeviled by strikes, material shortages and archaic manufacturing processes. Ultimately, the company was saved by Henry's young grandson, Henry II, and a group of "whiz kid" executives recruited from the Army Air Force. And it was saved, too, by a car, which turned 50 years old this year. Like the ground-breaking '86 Taurus that appeared during another troubled chapter in the company's history, the '49 Ford was born of desperation. It was sleek and daring by the standards of the day; it set benchmarks for styling and packaging, and it proved to be a hit with a car-buying public that was hungry for anything new from an industry that had curtailed production during the war, then started anew for 1946 with the old prewar designs. The car now known as the '49 Ford would not have existed but for Henry Ford II (who died in 1987, and who was the uncle of the current chairman, William Clay Ford Jr. By the late 1940s, the company had fallen to No. 3 in sales, behind General Motors and Chrysler, and Was losing $9 million a month; Robert McNamara, who rose through Ford's ranks in the '50s to become president, once said that the company had not shown an appreciable profit in the 20 years before Henry II took over. This was in stark contrast with GM, which became healthier and wealthier each year. As old Henry Ford was losing touch - his pacifist, anti-union, anti-Semitic views had tarnished the good will he once gained with his willingness to hire blacks and improve the lot of working people - his most trusted aide, a combative ex-fighter named Harry Bennett, was poised to take over. Henry's son, Edsel, was dead, and the Ford family concluded that its only hope to save the company was to install Henry II, then 28 years old, as president.
In September 1945, Henry's wife, Clara, and Eleanor Ford, Edsel's widow and Henry II's mother, joined forces to give the patriarch an ultimatum: Either make his grandson president or Eleanor would sell her 42 percent stake. Henry, darkly able to comprehend, didn't want strangers to take over, so he resigned and elevated Henry II. The pugnacious, pistol-packing Bennett was immediately ousted. Henry died in 1947. Once in the unenviable position of trying to stem the flow of red ink and realizing that he couldn't save the company alone, Henry II hired the best business talent money could buy. Immediately after the war, the 10 Whiz Kids - bright former Army Air Force officers with advanced degrees in economics and management - offered themselves as a package deal. In addition to McNamara, they were Charles B. Thornton, Ben D. Mills, Arjay Miller, George Moore, W.R. Anderson, C.E. Bosworth, J.E.
Lundy, Francis C. Reith and James O. Wright. These men brought modern business practices and
accounting principles to Ford. And Henry II lured a former GM vice president, Ernest R. Breech, away from Bendix Aviation and empowered him to do whatever was necessary to save the company.
Breech convinced Henry II that Ford needed to rebuild itself along the lines of GM. Breech hired Harold T. Youngren, Oldsmobile's former chief engineer, who assembled a staff of 120 additional engineers, many from GM. Breech essentially ran Ford until Henry II edged him aside a decade later by telling him, "I've graduated." Like every other American automaker, Ford yearned to get a new, restyled postwar car on the road as quickly as possible. Breech recognized that the car proposed by Ford's chief stylist, E.T.
Gregorie, would be too large, heavy and expensive to serve as an entry-level Ford, so Breech made it the 1949 Mercury. Gregorie's proposed Mercury became the '49 Lincoln. That left the company without a '49 Ford. Breech contacted a golfing buddy, industrial designer George W. Walker, who came up with a smaller, lighter design. (The styling of the car was done by a team of Studebaker designers at the behest of a laid-off colleague, who thought - correctly, as it turned out - he could land a job with Walker if he could present a suitable styling proposal for the next Ford. Walker's 1949 Ford went into production in May '48, and despite manufacturing glitches - leaks, rattles and the like - proved a tremendous hit. Its "spinner" grille, evocative of an airplane propeller, became a Ford touch. The sedan seated six, its trunk carried farmers' milk cans upright and its clean, squarish silhouette and flush fenders made its styling a benchmark. Base prices ranged from $1,333 to $3,563 ($9,600 to $26,000 in 1999 dollars). Production for the year exceeded 1.1 million, though Chevrolet still slightly outsold Ford.1- News paper clipping from Springfield Leader and Press, Springfield, Missouri, of his gronddaugher in TV sope opera.
2- Retired board chairman of Ford Moto Company.
3- Made possible Breech School of Business Administration and Economics at Drury College, Springfield, Missouri.
4- Social Security death records US 1937-1993, state that issued SS # 089-03-7803 was New York.
Individual: Breech, Ernest
Social Security #: 089-03-7803
SS# issued in: New York

Birth date: 24 Feb 1897
Death date: Jul 1978

ZIP Code of last known residence: 48013
As of April 1995, this ZIP Code was not in use by the U.S. Postal Service. The
following primary location may have once been associated with this ZIP Code or
may be in the same general geographic region of the U.S. It is also possible that
the Social Security Administration had the wrong ZIP Code listed for this person.

Bloomfield Hills, Michigan

arch Terms: BREECH (1), ERNEST (2434)
Database: Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Texas), Obituaries, 1990-1999
Combined Matches: 1
Headline: Team of young Army Air Force engineers saved Ford with '49 model
Publication Date: September 26, 1999
Source: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram Page: 10
Subjects: Region: Dallas-Ft. Worth Metro, Texas
Obituary: Ford Motor Co. has been on a roll - toting up record sales and profits, assembling a stable of foreign subsidiaries including Volvo and Jaguar, taking a lead in cutting pollution from light trucks, forging into uncharted waters with a strategy to offer an array of consumer services of which cars will be just apart. Only students of history or those with long memories will recall how this dynamic company has sometimes teetered on the precipice - most notably, just after World War II. Indeed, Ford was in a financial free fall at a time when its founder, Henry Ford, was growing senile and incapable of wielding a firm hand over a company bedeviled by strikes, material shortages and archaic manufacturing processes. Ultimately, the company was saved by Henry's young grandson, Henry II, and a group of "whiz kid" executives recruited from the Army Air Force. And it was saved, too, by a car, which turned 50 years old this year. Like the ground-breaking '86 Taurus that appeared during another troubled chapter in the company's history, the '49 Ford was born of desperation. It was sleek and daring by the standards of the day; it set benchmarks for styling and packaging, and it proved to be a hit with a car-buying public that was hungry for anything new from an industry that had curtailed production during the war, then started anew for 1946 with the old prewar designs. The car now known as the '49 Ford would not have existed but for Henry Ford II (who died in 1987, and who was the uncle of the current chairman, William Clay Ford Jr. By the late 1940s, the company had fallen to No. 3 in sales, behind General Motors and Chrysler, and Was losing $9 million a month; Robert McNamara, who rose through Ford's ranks in the '50s to become president, once said that the company had not shown an appreciable profit in the 20 years before Henry II took over. This was in stark contrast with GM, which became healthier and wealthier each year. As old Henry Ford was losing touch - his pacifist, anti-union, anti-Semitic views had tarnished the good will he once gained with his willingness to hire blacks and improve the lot of working people - his most trusted aide, a combative ex-fighter named Harry Bennett, was poised to take over. Henry's son, Edsel, was dead, and the Ford family concluded that its only hope to save the company was to install Henry II, then 28 years old, as president.
In September 1945, Henry's wife, Clara, and Eleanor Ford, Edsel's widow and Henry II's mother, joined forces to give the patriarch an ultimatum: Either make his grandson president or Eleanor would sell her 42 percent stake. Henry, darkly able to comprehend, didn't want strangers to take over, so he resigned and elevated Henry II. The pugnacious, pistol-packing Bennett was immediately ousted. Henry died in 1947. Once in the unenviable position of trying to stem the flow of red ink and realizing that he couldn't save the company alone, Henry II hired the best business talent money could buy. Immediately after the war, the 10 Whiz Kids - bright former Army Air Force officers with advanced degrees in economics and management - offered themselves as a package deal. In addition to McNamara, they were Charles B. Thornton, Ben D. Mills, Arjay Miller, George Moore, W.R. Anderson, C.E. Bosworth, J.E.
Lundy, Francis C. Reith and James O. Wright. These men brought modern business practices and
accounting principles to Ford. And Henry II lured a former GM vice president, Ernest R. Breech, away from Bendix Aviation and empowered him to do whatever was necessary to save the company.
Breech convinced Henry II that Ford needed to rebuild itself along the lines of GM. Breech hired Harold T. Youngren, Oldsmobile's former chief engineer, who assembled a staff of 120 additional engineers, many from GM. Breech essentially ran Ford until Henry II edged him aside a decade later by telling him, "I've graduated." Like every other American automaker, Ford yearned to get a new, restyled postwar car on the road as quickly as possible. Breech recognized that the car proposed by Ford's chief stylist, E.T.
Gregorie, would be too large, heavy and expensive to serve as an entry-level Ford, so Breech made it the 1949 Mercury. Gregorie's proposed Mercury became the '49 Lincoln. That left the company without a '49 Ford. Breech contacted a golfing buddy, industrial designer George W. Walker, who came up with a smaller, lighter design. (The styling of the car was done by a team of Studebaker designers at the behest of a laid-off colleague, who thought - correctly, as it turned out - he could land a job with Walker if he could present a suitable styling proposal for the next Ford. Walker's 1949 Ford went into production in May '48, and despite manufacturing glitches - leaks, rattles and the like - proved a tremendous hit. Its "spinner" grille, evocative of an airplane propeller, became a Ford touch. The sedan seated six, its trunk carried farmers' milk cans upright and its clean, squarish silhouette and flush fenders made its styling a benchmark. Base prices ranged from $1,333 to $3,563 ($9,600 to $26,000 in 1999 dollars). Production for the year exceeded 1.1 million, though Chevrolet still slightly outsold Ford

arch Terms: BREECH (1), ERNEST (2434) Database: Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Texas), Obituaries, 1990-1999 Headline: Team of young Army Air Force engineers saved Ford with '49 model
Publication Date: September 26, 1999 Source: The Fort Worth Star-Telegram Page: 10 Region: Dallas-Ft. Worth Metro, Texas
[furm.ged][KAPP.FTW]

Chairman of Ford Motor Co. 
BREECH Ernest Robert "Ernie"
 
25 From FindaGrave: Jacob Breech was mustered into the Union Army on March 13, 1865 in Pottsville, PA. He was admitted to Post Hospital Camp Cadwalader, PA on March 31, 1865 for treatment of ophthalmic and died April 12, 1865 (last day of the Civil War), of Cerebral Spinal Meningitis. BREECH Jacob Martin
 
26 Died in WWI. BREECH Michael Phinnas
 
27 Funeral services were held at a funeral in Jackson, Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 and burial was at Woodland Cemetery in Jackson.Death notice reads: Funeral services were held at a funeral in Jackson, Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 and burial was at Woodland Cemetery in Jackson.Death notice reads: Funeral services were held at a funeral in Jackson, Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 and burial was at Woodland Cemetery in Jackson. BREECH Minnie Elizabeth
 
28 According to Norman L. Gray: Simeon Breech was in a gun fight with a Deputy and was shot and died on 30 May 1849 in Wayne township, Belmont County, Ohio The Deputy also died that day. He is buried in the Old Brown Cemetery, in Wayne Township. AT least Half of his body is. The other half is buried in New Bellesville Cemetery, Brown County, Indiana. Mary Miller, his wife, is also buried in the Old Brown Cemetery and she died on 19 Dec 1850, I have a picture of her headstone. One of her children is buried along side her. Simeon and Mary Breech's Daughter, Elizabeth married my 4th Great Grand Father, John Gray in Belmont County, Ohio BREECH Simeon
 
29 From: Newcomer's Genealogy (www.ancestry.com)
Lived on a farm in Columbia County at Catawissa Creek area..
Came to New York during the Revolutionary War. WFT Vol. 10, Tree #992
Thomas applied for a pension from the Revolutionary War but was turned down because he couldn't say what unit he was in during the war. Information taken from the Ancestry.com's database Revolutionary War Rejected Pensions. It states: "Thomas Breech, Pa.. Catawissa Twp., Columbia County; Reason: Narrative obscure and imperfect - -he claims to have served eighteen months, from December 26, 1776, without stating in what troops or what terms enlisted". It doesn't give the date that he applied for the pension.

From Breech Tree on Ancestry.com:
Last Will and Testament of Thomas Breech, deceased, in the name of God amen, I Thomas Breech of the Township of Cattawissa in the County of Columbia and the State of Pennsylvania, farmer, being sick and weak in body, but of sound and disparing mind,memory, and understanding [blessed be God for the same] and considering the uncertainty of this mortal life, and being desirous of settling my wordly affairs, do make and publish this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following to wit, Imperious It is my will, and I do order, that all my just debts and funeral expences be duly paid and satisfied as soon as conveniently can be after my decease.
Item, I give and bequeath to my son Isaac Breech, my little personal property with the plantation or Tract of Land on which I now live, situate in Cattawissa Township afforesaid, adjoining lands of Charles S. Coxe, Joseph Yocum, Isaac Breech and Mary Fox. Together with the rights, members and appertenances thereunto belonging, to and for the only proper use and behoof of him, the said Isaac Breech his heirs and assigns forever.
Subject to paying all as above named - and paying the legacies herein after named, Item, I give and bequeath to my other children, to wit, Simeon Breech, Elizabeth Mowder, Sarah Hale, Charles Breech, Hannah Casselbury and Mary Fox, the sum of Five Dollars each to be paid in full, for their shares of my estate to be paid to them one year after my desease, Item, and I do hereby authorize and impower my said Executor, to oversee while I am yet in this world, that my dear beloved son Isaac pays that proper attention to me, in my last illness as a son ought to do, towards his father, and pays all debts aforesaid and the expences of settling my Estate - and my Executor to make and Execute a deed or deeds to my son Isaac or to other purchaser or purchasers of my Lands. lastly, I nominate, constitute and appoint my good friend, Joseph Brobst to be the Executor of this last will and testament, hereby revokiong all other wills. legacies and bequeath by me hereto foremade and declaring this and no other, to be my last will and testament.
In Testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal the Eight day of January Anno Domini One Thousand Eight hundred and forty five.
Thomas Breech [seal] Signed Sealed and declare by the Testator Thomas Breech as his last will and Testament in the presence of us. Isaac Erwin, Witness, William Mason, witnessrom: Newcomer's Genealogy (www.ancestry.com)

Some genealogy's give his place of birth as England but I belive he was born in America. 
BREECH Thomas Briggs, II
 
30 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
31 From the History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania: ...settled in Loyalsock Township. ...died at the home of his son Abram. (His wife) survives her husband and resides with her son Abram. ________ Casselberry was an adherent of the Republican party and a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. CASSELBERRY Charles M.
 
32 From the History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania: Came to Lycoming Co. from Catawissa with his father at an early age. Settled in Muncy Hill, Lycoming Co., PA. Buried in Hall's Cemetery, located just east of the Old Fort Nursey on the old Route 220.From the History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania: ...settled in the Muncy Hills. Isaiah Married Hannah Breach, who bore him six sons and five daughters.
 
CASSELBERRY Isaiah
 
33 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
34 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

He was ________ in Birmingham, AL at the time of bro. Thomas G. Fisher's death. (T. G. Fisher obit)

He may have moved with his brother, Thomas G. Fisher, to the Birmingham, AL area to work.
Thomas G. met and married Lula Quinn in Bibb Co., AL in 1885. Bibb Co., is just west of Birmingham.

Charlie's date of birth, found on his death certificate, is 29 Jul 1878. However, the 1880 Walker Co., GA census gives his age as nine. This would mean that he was born in 1871.
Cause of death is cerebral hemorrhage. Source: Certificate of Death.
Source: Certificate of Death. 
FISHER Charles Malcomb
 
35 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

I speculate that Elbert died young. He is not found in any census after 1860 Hamilton Co.
Elbert is two months old when the 1860 census is taken. He does not appear in any subsequent census with his family. Elbert probably died between 1860 and 1870. 
FISHER Elbert
 
36 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

Source of Georgia's middle name and Georgia's spouse is the McMinn County Heritage Book, family 723. The same source gives her date of birth as 10 Jan 1889, and her death date as 26 Jan 1923. 
FISHER Georgia Mae
 
37 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

Notes passed down through the family tell us that Henry came, in a covered wagon, to Georgia from Hickory or Granite Falls, North Carolina with a sister named Margaret Fisher. Henry brought his wife Nancy and at least four children with him. This migration to Walker County, GA occurred after 1834, as daughter Margaret Caroline Fisher was born in 1834 in North Carolina.

The 1850 Census for Walker Co., GA gives:

Henry Fisher 49 M farmer NC
Nancy wife 50 F NC
Marquis son 25 M mechanic NC
Malcolm M son 20 M mechanic NC
Margaret dau 16 F NC

Henry was a depot agent at Graysville, GA.

Dr. James Brown, a descendent of Henry's daughter, Margaret Caroline Fisher, stated in an email to me:

I recall hearing of Henry Fisher-he was an excellent carpenter, and built some of the homes in Chickamauga, Ga.( just down the road from me) .He also built the old 'Cove Methodist Church', which still stands, is on the historic buildings registry.--It's a beautiful structure. He also made a chest of drawers, which is still in the family, now in the home of ________ Bernard Kemp, son of my Aunt Bessie. Henry Fisher's son , Mack had a son Tom, who used to
live on our farm,as told me by my father & we always referred to that acreage as the Fisher House. I recall as a child, seeing two spinning wheels in the attic, and they were in good shape--the old house burned long ago. 
FISHER Henry
 
38 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
39 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
40 The 1880 Walker Co., GA census has him listed as three year old Jesse J. The 1900 Census has him as Joseph J. His name was probably either Jesse Joseph or Joseph Jesse. FISHER Joseph Joseph
 
41 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

She may be the the Lela mentioned as Thomas G. Fisher's sister in his obituary. Their is a Leila mentioned in the marriage records of Walker Co. 
FISHER Lear E.
 
42 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

________ in Lindsay, CA at the time of Thomas G. Fisher's death in 1925. (Source: Obit of Thomas G. Fisher) 
FISHER Lillie
 
43 The 1850 Walker County, GA census has Malcolm M. Fisher ________ with his father, Henry, and his mother, Nancy. Also in the household are brother, Marquis L. and sister, Margaret Caroline.

Census of 1860, Hamilton Co., Tennessee, Dist 14, p 112

Mac Fisher 30 NC
Minerva 24 Tennessee
William 7 Tennessee
John 5 Tennessee
Thomas 2 Tennessee
Elbert 2/12 Tennessee

Census of 1870, Hamilton Co., Tennessee

Fisher, Mack M. 40 m HS carpenter NC
Minerva 35 f Keep House Tennessee
John M. 14 m at school Tennessee
Thomas 12 m at school Tennessee
Sarah 7 f at school Tennessee
Lilly 5 f Tennessee
Mary C. 3 f Tennessee
Rice, Sarah 63 f Dom wk Tennessee

Sarah is Minerva's mother.

The obituary of son Thomas G. Fisher gives the following siblings (children of Mack and Minerva): Lillie, Cammie, Lela, and Charlie. Perhaps Cammie is Mary C. Perhaps, Lela is Lear E.

Census of 1880, Walker Co., GA

Malcolm M. 50 m ret. carpenter NC NC NC
Emma L. 33 f AL SC Tennessee
Thomas G. 22 m Tennessee NC Tennessee
Lilla 13 f Tennessee NC Tennessee
Mary C. 11 f Tennessee NC Tennessee
Charles M. 9 m Tennessee NC Tennessee
Anna R. 7 f Tennessee NC Tennessee
Jesse J. 3 m Tennessee NC AL

Census of 1900, Walker Co., GA

Fisher, Malcolm M. 70
Georgia M. f 17
Lear E. f 16
Joseph J. m 24
Florence f 18
Edward M. m 8/12

Mrs. Margaret Simmons speculates, "Since they named Joseph first being 24, I would say he married Florence and the 8 mo old Edward M is their child. I don't think he would be Malcolm's child."

Mrs. Eloise Kemp Strickland says that her family records have Malcolm with eight children by Minerva and three by his second wife, Emma Varner. 
FISHER Malcolm M.
 
44 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

The following family information has been passed down in written form through the Margaret Caroline Fisher and Marcus Lafayette Brown descendents. "Margarette Fisher, born December 16, 1814, came to Georgia from Hickory or Granite Falls, in North Carolina. She came in a covered wagon with a brother named Henry, his wife and children. It was reported she inherited property from a relative Lord Fisher, of England, but did not accept it. After coming to North Georgia she became the second wife of Churchwell O. Hale and lived on Three Notch Road, near Boynton. They had no offspring. Both are buried in the Hale Cemetery, on Three Notch Road. Church Hale gave the land for the burial ground but ________ Green, who later purchased the place, refused to give a right of way to the cemetery."
(Personal Note: I have some evidence that most of the "note" information is factual. However, I doubt the part about the inheritance of property from a Lord Fisher of England My research leads to Fisher ancestors from Germany. False family legends of wealth and such are very common.) 
FISHER Margaret
 
45 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

Mark never married. 
FISHER Marquis L.
 
46 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

According to Pam Fisher, and email friend, Molly was ________ with her daughter, Anna Holler at the time of the 1850 Census of Catawaba Co., NC. Anna's husband was Israel Holler.
She was ________ with her daughter Anna Holler in Catawba County when she died. 
FISHER Molly
 
47 [KAPP.FTW]

Sarah, widow of Simeon Barger, along with sons Simeon, Isaac, and John, and daughter Rachel, moved to Lincoln Co., North Carolina in 1800-1801. One June 1, 1801, she along with Simeon and Isaac bought 100 acres each from her brother John Fisher. 
FISHER Sarah Jane
 
48 [KAPP.FTW]

[davidboehmer.FTW]

Thomas G's first wife was Lula Quinn. His second wife was named Mattie. Mattie was the widow of Thomas's brother, Charles.

His obit has him as age 69 at his death on 4 Jan 1925. This would indicate that he was born about 1854 or 1855. The Hamilton County census has him as born about 1858, as does the 1880 Walker Co., GA census. The 1900 Hamilton County census has him as born Dec 1855. His tombstone has the inscription 1859-1826. Because of this conflict in information the birthdate and the death date and his age at death are uncertain. The copy ready obit I have gives his residence at the time of his death as 1205 Sheardan Ave, Chattanooga, Tennessee The obit in the newspaper gives his death date as 4 Feb and his address as 1802 Rubio St., Chattanooga, Tennessee At the time of his death, he was a member of the Avondale Methodist Episcopal Church and was a member of the Masonic Lodge.

According to Nora F. Hixson Hager, Thomas G. and family moved from Alabama to North Georgia because his work with the railroad took him there.

The 1900 Census of Hamilton County has the family ________ there. It has Clara as having been born in AL and youngest child (at that time) Ezra as being born in Tennessee This indicates that the family moved to North Georgia, then to Chattanooga, Tennessee between 1896 and 1900.

Census of 1900, Hamilton Co., Tennessee; 17th Civil Dist

Fisher, Thomas G. Dec 1855 44
Lula July 1865 34 ALA
Laura Sept 1886 13 ALA
Mary R. Jan 1888 12 ALA
Mack C. Oct 1889 10 ALA
W. Thomas Feb 1894 6 ALA
Clara July 1896 3 ALA
Ezra Mar 1900 3 mo Tennessee

This census indicates that Thomas, Lula, and family lived in AL at least from 1885 to Jul 1896. Thomas G. was ________ with his father in Walker Co., GA in 1880 and could have moved to Alabama anytime between 1880 and 1885

Ken May writes: Lula was my great Aunt, my grandfather's eldest sister. They (the Fishers) lived in the Chattanooga area I am told and I have met two of their descendents in Cleveland, Quinn Hixson, and his brother, whose name I cannot remember. I do not know how Thomas G. Fisher met Lula, but if they were married in West Blockton, they likely would have met there. One family "legend" says my grandfather went to Tennessee or N. GA to see Lula and found them in dire need and brought her and some of the children back to Alabama for a time. I don't know if this is true.

Malcolm (Mack) Fischer, Thomas G. Fisher's son, probably never left Alabama after he was returned to AL as reported by Ken May above. He lived there, worked there, and died there. Some of his children still live in the Birmingham area.

Likewise, Thomas' brother Charles Malcolm Fisher lived, worked and died in or near Birmingham, AL.

Family history information passed down through the Brown family (Dr. Marcus D. Lafayette married Henry Fisher daughter, Caroline) says that Mack Fisher's son Tom Fisher was red headed, and that he lived on the Brown farm. The Brown family notes report, "When I was growing up we called it the Fisher House or the Fisher Place." Tom's brother Charlie was on the farm too. 
FISHER Thomas G.
 
49 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
50 FULBRIGHT Homer, age 90 of OKC, passed away July 21, 1999. He was born September 28, 1908 in Bixby, OK to James and Meldia (Breech) Fulbright. Homer was retired as an accountant for Amoco Oil Co. He was a member of First Christian Churches of Tulsa, OKC and Norman and was a past patron of Eastern Star. He was preceded in death by his wife, Eva in 1995. He is survived by a daughter, Carol and husband John Stone; 4 grandchildren, David Stone and wife ZaZelle, Stephen Stone and wife Suzann, Joanna and husband Vince Benally, and Shawna and husband Jason Lee; 10 great grandchildren and one on the way, and other family members and friends. Services will be 12:00 noon, Monday, July 26 at Memorial Park Cemetery Chapel in Tulsa, OK. FULBRIGHT Homer Russell
 

      1 2 3 4 5 ... 83» Next»

Home Page |  What's New |  Most Wanted |  Surnames |  Places |  Dates |  Reports  |  Sources |  Blog