Notes
Matches 401 to 450 of 467
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401 | There are two dates and places for this marriage in Scots origins, West Calder is mentioned on the D/C. as being in Linlithgowshire | Family: BLYTHE, Daniel / STALEY, Agnes (F116)
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402 | There is also a Frank Phyland, 57 y.o, died 1989. buried with Francis & Ethel. | PHYLAND, Francis Roy (I1990)
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403 | There is an Ann Greig in the 1841 Scottish Census aged 50, living with her sister Fortune and her 2nd. husband, Ann was working as a Cotton Hand Loom Winder, in Westmuir, Shettleston, Lanarkshire. | STALEY, Anne (I176)
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404 | There is an Incoming Passenger List which has her arriving on the USS General H W Butner, at New York on May 1, 1953 from Bremerhaven, Germany, with her were her Daughter Suzanne, and Mother in Law, Charlotte, all residing at 224 W. Lake St. Lake Mills Wisconsin. Harriet had served in the Army, with the Rank of First Class Private. | HIPPENMEYER, Harriet (I2235)
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405 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2236)
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406 | There is still a question on this | BLYTH, John (I243)
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407 | They had an adopted Son named Robert. | WALTER, Nina Victoria (I779)
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408 | They married inChrist Church Church of England Hugh and Alice lived in Bull Street, Castlemaine and were remembered there as practical Christians of the "old school" , where their care extended to the "down and outs" | Family: MONTEITH, Hugh Thomas / NORRIS, Mary Alice (F424)
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409 | This couple appear at Ward 9, 2630 Polk St. N E, Minneapolis, Hennepin, Minnesota in the 1900/10/20/30/ Censuses. Listed as an Engineer with the Soo Line Railroad in Minneapolis 1890/91with several of his family in Polk St. (1890 census substitute) He retired from the Railroad, 1 August 1912 after 32 years service. | STALEY, Robert Bruce (I82)
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410 | This family lived in Lakota, Nelson Co. North Dakota in the 1920 and 1930 Census', all the children are recorded in those census' as being born in Minnesota, perhaps Marion went back to Minnesota for some of the later births. | SWINLAND, Ingman (I1926)
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411 | Thomas and his wife Elizabeth sailed from Glasgow on 8 March 1853, aboard the vessel "Reaper" of 424 tons with five of their children and Agnes Wilson aged 13 years, who was listed in the 1851 census as a step-daughter, after a voyage of nearly 5 months they arrived in Port Phillip on 2 August 1853. They were soon in the Goldfields in the Castlemaine area where they remained until their deaths. | STALEY, Thomas (I534)
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412 | Thomas didn't marry, he spent his working life (52years) on the Railroad, starting as a Water Boy and rising to be an Engineer for the last 22years. 1860/70/80 Census' have him with his parents in Portage City, Wisconsin, 1900/10 has him in Madison, Lake Co. SD. Prior to his death he was living with his sister Catharine and her husband in Minneapolis as he wasn't in good health, his body was taken by train to South Dakota and buried in the same cemetery as his parents. (From Obit.) | STALEY, Thomas James (I81)
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413 | Thomas didn't marry, his Death Certificate states that he was a Mercantile Clerk, he died at 10 Abercorn St. Glasgow, he was bequeathed 50 Pounds by his Uncle Daniel Blyth who died Jan. 1887, in Victoria, Australia, Thomas was then living at 77 Shamrock St. Glasgow, this is also the address that is in the Diary of another Uncle, Dr. Thomas Law McMillan in 1883, they met several times in that year whilst Dr. McMillan was in Scotland. | GREIG, Thomas Staley (I2092)
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414 | Thomas enlisted in the Army during WW1, in March 1916 when he was 41 years and 2 months of age, his details were: 3997 Sapper - 2nd. Tunnelling Coy., he was discharged on 3rd. August 1917, he was suffering with Bronchitis. | STALEY, Thomas Allan (I500)
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415 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1935)
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416 | Thomas is believed to have gone to Scotland for employment, he married there and settled in Muirkirk to raise a family and remained there for over 60 years, his wife Mary and three of his children predeceased him, he was to see the departure of some of his children overseas also some of his grandchildren with some of their children to Australia and America, in his later years two of his widowed daughters lived with him in the cottage at Muirkirk. | STALEY, Thomas (I579)
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417 | Thomas was born on the voyage out from England aboard the "Cambodia", hence his middle name,(recorded as Comebody on the Inquest Papers). His short life ended when was found drowned in a waterhole in the garden of the home where he lived, his body was retrieved by a neighbour, there was no mention of his father at the inquest, he may have been away at the time. On the Inquest Papers and in the Pioneer Index his death is recorded as Thomas Comebody Hamilton. | HAMILTON, Thomas Cambodia (I1035)
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418 | Thomas was previously married to Mary Smith who died in 1908, they had 2 children, John & Mary. | CRYMBLE, Thomas (I2317)
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419 | Thomas was with a group of miners from Derbyshire who went to Teesdale, Durham, to work in the Langdon Beck mine in 1758, however, poor results led to some miners returning to Derbyshire, Thomas stayed, married, and raised a family, through his second son Thomas who went to Scotland, come the lines in this tree that went to USA and Australia. | STALEY, Thomas (I1901)
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420 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Living / PRESTON, Sue (F143)
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421 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I311)
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422 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1191)
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423 | Unable to find anything more on her after the 1900 Census, she wasn't with Thomas in the 1910 and 1920 census' | ???, Elisabeth (I654)
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424 | Vaughan Cemetery | STALEY, David Gray (I185)
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425 | Victoria was the third of six children, she lived at 23 Curraweena Rd. Caulfield for the later part of her life. | LOMAX, Victoria Alice Maude (I255)
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426 | VX146428 Enlisted WW2, 31Dec, 1943 at Milne Bay, New Guinea, NOK Mavis Nulty. | NULTY, William John (Jack) (I793)
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427 | Wallace joined the East Surrey Regiment in England in 1936 and served in the Sudan, China, Singapore and then was a prisoner of war on the Burma Railway and in Japan. | MONTEITH, Wallace Rupert (I1394)
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428 | Was in Ashland, Ashland, WI with widowed mother in 1930 Census, served WW2, Korea & Vietnam, rising to the rank of Colonel. Another database gives his Army enlistment as 28 June, 1947. The 1920C. has Iowa & the 1930C. has Idaho as his birthplace. 1940 Census has him residing with his Aunts, Jennie & Dora, in Madison, Dane, WI. he is a Clerical Worker in a Manufacturing Plant, (born Idaho). In 1958 has was commended for meritorious service as adjutant to the Military Assistance Advisory Group. The award was presented in Saigon, Vietnam. | STALEY, Mortimer Robert (I87)
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429 | While living at Malmsbury, Frank enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force on 19 August 1916 shortly after his marriage. He was 26 years old and did his basic training at Bendigo. He was then posted to the 6/60th Battalion and subsequently depaarted Melbourne aboard HMAT A71, "Nestor" on 2 October 1916, as part of the 6th Reinforcements, arriving at Plymouth on 16 November 1916, barely three months after enlisting. On 30 December 1916 he was shipped from Folkestone to Etaples in France aboard the "Princess Clementine" arriving there on New Years Eve. Through the following months he did not enjoy the best of health, suffering with the mumps and various bouts of diarrhoea, by this time his battalion was part of the British Expeditionary Force. On the 12 May 1917 he was reported missing in action. One of his comrades found Frank "lying dead in No Man' s Land" at Bullecourt. He had died of very bad shrapnel wounds. A Court of Enquiry concluded he had died that day, he'd been in the Army barely nine months. He was posthumously awarded the British War Medal and the Victory Medal, his last resting place has not been determined, however his memorial plaque is at Villers-Bretonneux Memorial, France. | FERGUSON, Frank Ernest (I637)
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430 | Who's Who 2004 P.1896 gives | GUTHRIDGE, Maggie (I620)
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431 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I1190)
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432 | William Staley lived in Inglewood, Victoria, Australia. The following is an extract from a booklet titled " A Brief History of Inglewood" by Ian J Wemyss. It was published for a back to Inglewood function. "...The South Gordon. The last mine t to be operated on a grand scale was the South Gordon. In October 1936 this company acquired a working option over a mine called the "Trivalve" on the Old Inglewood, or Jersey line of reef which had been worked intermittently from 1927 to 1936 b by the late W J Staley. Various partners over the period, lacking faith in his enterprise, tired of it, but Mr Staley's belief never wavered. He disposed of a profitable boot-repair business and invested his own money in sinking the shaft to 200 feet. With the assistance of one of his brothers, the late John Staley, stone studded with gold was exposed. Altogether, the brothers recovered about 1000 ozs of gold and only the fact that expensive machinery was now necessary for efficient operation of the ground, influenced them to part with their interest to the South Gordon Company. In its first three months of operation the company crushed 240 tons for a yield of 939 ozs. Further good crushings were obtained from easily won stone, but the all too familiar evil soon took over. Squabbles between the directors and shareholders contributed towards a stoppage of operations in June 1939, then finally a liquidation order was issued upon the company in February 1940....". Bill saw out his later years looking after the greens at the local lawn bowls club. He and Gladys lived in a large house in Grant St Inglewood. The property has since been sold. | STALEY, William Joseph (I488)
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433 | WW1 he was a Captain in the Australian Army Veterinary Corps, after the war he served in many positions in the veterinary field, both in Australia and overseas, was awarded the OBE in 1954. | KELLEY, OBE, Ralph Bodkin (I736)
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434 | WW1, Cpl. 11 Btn. Service No 5222, twice wounded in action in France, spent some time in England, after the war he was in the Birmingham area, he married there and embarked from England late 1919 with his wife, on the Ormonde to Australia. WW2, Pte, W27662. | WELLS, Nicholas James Francis (I1099)
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435 | WW1, served as a StaffNurse in the Australian Army Nursing Service, served overseas. | MALCOLM, Edith Eileen (I169)
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436 | WW2 WX37154 Pte. 64 Australian Inf. Bn. | WELLS, Stanley Arthur (I1103)
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437 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2479)
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438 | WW2 Enlisted in the Air Force, 27 Aug. 1941, Service No. 42646. | CLAYTON, Allan David (I958)
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439 | WW2 Enlisted in the Army, May 1940, VX14733 | CLAYTON, Frank Denis John (I957)
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440 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2478)
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441 | WW2 No. V362716 | HAMILTON, James Stranger Albert (I1047)
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442 | WW2 Service No. 158567 | NOTT, Denis George (I1201)
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443 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2259)
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444 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2258)
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445 | WW2 VX140893 | MONTEITH, Keith Douglas Jonathon (I1412)
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446 | WW2 VX97566 | STALEY, Malcolm Lee (I363)
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447 | WW2 WX6705 Pte. 2/11 Inf. Bn. Killed in Action. | WELLS, George Robert (I1923)
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448 | WW2, VX32122 and VX60042 | METHERALL, Alexander Jonathan (I1722)
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449 | WW2, VX78976 | METHERALL, Kenneth (I1723)
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450 | Y | STALEY, Agnes (I378)
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