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Note N5620 :
Burial: Old Town Cemetery Sudbury, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 58761075 |
Note N5621 :
Burial: Old Town Cemetery Sudbury, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 36255772 |
Note N5622 :
Burial: Arms Cemetery Shelburne, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA Plot: Section L61 Find A Grave Memorial# 92807124 |
Note H5623 :
Vermont phoenix., November 30, 1900, Page 7 Births, In Guilford, Nov. 23, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Clapp, and granddaughter to Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Crosier. |
Note N5624 :
Burial: Village Cemetery Charlemont, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 32549519 |
Note H5625 :
From: Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, New York ˇ Page 8 August 1, 1965 Crosier, Beulah M. July 29, 1965, Mrs. Beulah M. Crosier, 216 Bonesteel Street. Surviving are her husband, Sidney M. Crosier, one son, David C. Crosier; one daughter, Mrs. Edward (Nancy) Sullivan; two grandchildren. Friends may call 2-4, 7-9 p m. at the Charles L. Younglove Funeral Home, Inc., 1511 Dewey Ave. Service Monday at n a.m. interment White Hoven Memorial Park. Friends wishing may contribute to the Monroe County Cancer Association. |
Note N5626 :
From: "The Nunda News", May 31, 1924 OAKLAND NEWS. J. S. Crosier and son Sidney of Rochester, R. 0 . Crosier of Binghamton and Mrs. F. E. Hewitt of Corning were guests of Mrs. Ellen Fuller Sunday.- The remains of Mrs. Martha Crosier were removed from the Nunda vault to Oakland cemetery Sunday.- |
Note H5627 :
The Arizona Republic, Phoenix, Arizona, Thursday, April 17, 2003 Sidney Morris Crosier, 89, of Sun City, Arizona, passed away April 11, 2003. |
Note H5628 :
Iowa, Select Marriages, 1809-1992 says that Charles M. Crosier married Clara B. Lineham. |
Note H5629 :
New York Veterans residing in NE in 1891: Crosier, Charles M. Private D, Cavalry Juniata 231 Served in Civil War from Oneonta, N.Y. {A History of Oneonta from its earliest settlement to the Present Times, by Dudley M. Campbell, 1906 |
Note N5630 :
Burial: Harford Cemetery Harford, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 25767272 |
Note H5631 :
Divorced from Elizabeth Millard on 2 Jan 1832 |
Note N5632 :
Burial: Dundaff Cemetery Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 25766454 |
Note N5633 :
Burial: Evergreen Cemetery Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, USA Plot: section E lot 57 Find A Grave Memorial# 131043722 |
Note N5634 :
Burial: Evergreen Cemetery Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, USA Plot: section E lot 57 Find A Grave Memorial# 131043710 |
Note N5635 :
Find A Grave Memorial# 159931598 |
Note N5636 :
Burial: Palmer Center Cemetery Palmer, Hampden County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 159918975 |
Note N5637 :
Burial: Old Burying Ground (Defunct) Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 111189474 |
Note N5638 :
Burial: Old Burying Ground (Defunct) Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 80967335 |
Note N5639 :
Burial: Crosier Cemetery Searsburg, Bennington County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 76480802 |
Note N5640 :
Burial: Crosier Cemetery Searsburg, Bennington County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 76480804 |
Note N5641 :
Burial: Sunbury Memorial Park Sunbury, Delaware County, Ohio, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 16619834 |
Note H5642 :
Carlton Lee Starkweather. A brief genealogical history of Robert Starkweather of Roxbury and Ipswich, Massachusetts : who was the original American ancestor of all those bearing the name of Starkweather, and of his son, John Starkweather, of Ipswich, Mass. and Preston, Conn., and of his descendants in various lines, 1640-189. |
Note H5643 :
Carlton Lee Starkweather. A brief genealogical history of Robert Starkweather of Roxbury and Ipswich, Massachusetts : who was the original American ancestor of all those bearing the name of Starkweather, and of his son, John Starkweather, of Ipswich, Mass. and Preston, Conn., and of his descendants in various lines, 1640-189. |
Note N5644 :
samuel Lyscom was the orignaor of the Lyscom apple veriety |
Note N5645 :
Find A Grave Memorial# 43449427 |
Note N5646 :
Burial: Bridge Street Cemetery Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 8068983 |
Note N5647 :
Burial: Colrain West Branch Cemetery , Colrain, Franklin County Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 73687322 |
Note H5648 :
Divorced 22 May 1968, Washoe County, Nevada |
Note N5649 :
Divorced 22 May 1968, Washoe County, Nevada |
Note H5650 :
Published in Ithaca Journal on Sept. 26, 2015: Gray Thoron, Professor Emeritus and former Dean of the Cornell Law School died peacefully at his home at the Kendal of Ithaca in Ithaca, NY Friday, Sept. 18, 2015. He was 99. His career as a teacher spanned over 40 years, interrupted only by two years as an Assistant Solicitor General in the Justice Department under President Eisenhower in the mid-1950's. He was much beloved and respected by his students. For many years he taught courses in Legal Ethics, Professional Practice and Professional Responsibility. He could perhaps best be described as a "law student's professor". He had great compassion for the pressures that compelled many students to enroll in the Law School. He frequently brought home final term papers to grade and would characterize a particular student by the style of his writing as a "frustrated sportswriter" or as a "frustrated poet" who might well prefer to be composing verse between sips of absinthe at a Left Bank café in Paris. A signature of his deanship and afterwards was bringing together students and faculty for frequent parties and other informal social gatherings at his Highland Road home, for which they were deeply appreciative. Occasionally, he brought to the house students who were far from their own homes to partake of a holiday dinner. Late into his retirement he continued to receive letters and cards from former students expressing their gratitude for his hospitality and for his inspiration in the classroom. Soon after his retirement, a former student established a scholarship fund in his name. Gray Thoron was born at home in Danvers, MA on July 14, 1916, the older of two children of Louisa Chapin (Hooper) and Ward Thoron, a lawyer and businessman, in a house with a bullet hole in the front door dating from the Revolutionary War. He was educated at the Browne & Nichols School in Cambridge, MA and at St. Paul's School in Concord, NH. In 1934, he entered Harvard College and graduated in '38 with honors as an American History major. In his senior year he was manager of the varsity baseball team. The next year he entered the Harvard Law School where he received his LL.B in '41. After graduation, he went to work for the Wall Street law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City. He was there for only a few short months before the bombing of Pearl Harbor. He was one of only two lawyers at the large firm to enlist the next day. He was formally inducted a few months later and served for the duration of the war as a combat infantryman in an armored brigade with the rank of lieutenant and later as Company Commander. He was seriously wounded leading an assault on the Siegfried Line, for which he received the Purple Heart with cluster. He was also awarded both the Bronze and Silver Stars. He continued to serve in the Army reserves for several years. After the war, he returned to the practice of the law as a litigator for S&C. However, he soon found courtroom procedure increasing difficult to follow due to the loss of hearing in one ear from his wartime injuries, and decided upon a teaching career. In 1948, he entered academia as an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Texas Law School and remained there until 1954. He left the Justice Department in 1956 after a two-year stint, during which time he successfully argued a number of cases for the government before the U.S. Supreme Court, to accept the deanship at the Cornell Law School. As Dean, he made the building of a top quality faculty and a substantial increase to the endowment and in alumni giving the hallmarks of his tenure. Under his leadership he considerably expanded the physical plant, most notably with the construction of the Charles Evans Hughes law residence center. He inaugurated the guest lecture series that brought to the School distinguished speakers in government and the legal profession, among them Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas and U.S. Atty General William P. Rogers, and many others from around the globe. He sought to strengthen the curriculum with subjects that stressed legal philosophy, legal history, comparative law, and public and international law. He initiated an aggressive national recruitment program to reverse the declining student enrollment. In 1960 he launched the Cornell Legal Aid Clinic under the supervision of a local practicing attorney and graduate of the Law School to give advanced students practical experience working directly with indigent clients. In addition to his administrative and teaching duties he was named to a state commission to investigate and reform the State of New York's antiquated commitment laws. The findings of this two-year long study, published in two volumes, were accepted and their final recommendations implemented to reflect the new Federal policy calling for the de-institutionalization of state hospital patients and for stricter legal safeguards. During this time he was also kept on retainer by the State of NY to argue cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. He stepped down as Dean in 1963 and continued to teach before retiring in 1987 at the then mandatory retirement age of 70. In June 1939 he married Mary Dwight Clark of Dublin, NH and together they raised 3 daughters and 2 sons. They were divorced in 1968. He was married for a second time in December 1971 to Pattie Porter Holmes of Atlanta, Georgia. They had met the previous summer on a North Cape cruise ship. They enjoyed 29 years of married life, sharing a passion for travel and sports until her death in 2000. They rarely missed a home Cornell football or hockey game. They were also avid fans of the NY Giants and Atlanta Braves. Both were longtime devoted congregants of the First Presbyterian Church of Ithaca. A lifelong Republican, he had an abiding interest in the American political process. In 1952 he served as a member of the Texas delegation at their national convention. He may have had some in the hall scratching their heads whenever he stood up to speak on their behalf in a pronounced Boston accent. He was a good friend and supporter of the late former NYC Mayor John Lindsay from their days working together at the Justice Dept. He was a member of both the NYC and NY State Bar Associations, long chairing the latter's Ethics Committee, and the American Bar Association. For many years he regularly attended ABA annual meetings and reveled in the collegial atmosphere and company of his fellow guild members. He found relaxation and congenial company in the several clubs to which he belonged. He was a member of the Somerset Club of Boston and the Harvard Club in New York City, where he was also a longtime member of the Century Association. Survivors include two daughters, Louisa Thoron of Jaffrey, N.H., and Molly D. Thoron-Duran of Truchas, N.M.; two sons Grenville C. Thoron of Lynn, Mass., and Thomas G. Thoron of Dublin, N.H.; one grandson Louis P. Crosier of Wellesley, Mass., two great-grandchildren Catherine and Wilder Crosier of Wellesley, Mass., and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins, step-children and step-grandchildren. In 2005, he was predeceased by his oldest daughter Claire Pyle of Washington, D.C. A memorial service is planned for later in the fall. Burial will be private. Donations in his memory can be sent to the Gray Thoron Scholarship Fund at the Cornell Law School or to the Dementia Society of America |
Note N5651 :
Lewis is buried in Pownal, VT. Oak hill cemetery. Drive straight up the road leading in the cem. all the way to the back turn right and look on the left side, you will see a stone that says "DORMAN" around that there is several smaller stones that are all for people who are related to Lewis. |
Note H5652 :
Burial: West Brattleboro Cemetery West Brattleboro, Windham County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 47011884 Parsons family: descendants of Cornet Joseph Parsons, Springfield ..., Volume 2 By Henry Parsons Lineage # 56740 of The Daughters of the American Revolution |
Note N5653 :
RAustin: D: ae 62-9-19 "b. Searsburg" ! Child's Gazeteer of Windham Co. 1884 lists him as of West Brattleboro, road 21, farmer, (no acreage listed) [Iris Baird] Vermont phoenix., November 18, 1892 The wedding of Irving G. Crosier and Miss Mary H. Clark took place Wednesday afternoon at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. F. Clark. The wedding was a quiet one, only a few intimate friends of the bride and groom being present. The parlor was prettily decorated with green. The bride was dressed a becoming shade of brown silk, and carried a bouquet of 23 pink-tinted chrysantlnmums, thie number being symbolic of her age. Francis Perry was the best man The four maids of honor were Miss Mary Harris of Charlotte, this state, and Miss Emma Mixer of Brattleboro. cousins of the bride, and Miss Carrie Huntly and Miss Mary Crosier of Brattleboro, nieces of the groom. Many valuable wedding presents were received. After the congratulations of the company had been extended refreshments were served, and Mr. and Mrs. Crosier left for a trip to western New York, amid a traditional shower of rice and old shoes. After their return, about Dec. 1, they will live at 82 High street. Vermont phoenix., August 03, 1906, Page 6 Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Crosier have gone to Bellows Falls to attend the funeral of Mr. Crosler's nephew, Ernest Crosier, who died in New York Tuesday Brattleboro, Reformer April 6, 1925: IRVING G. CROSIER DIES IN HOSPITAL Had Been in Critical Condition Since Undergoing Serious Operation Funeral at 2.30 Wednesday Irvin G. Corsier, 62, died yesterday afternoon at 3.45 o'clock in the Memorial hospital where he underwent a serious operaton a week ago today by Dr. H.H. Howard of Boston. His condition had been critical from the first. He was obliged to give up work a month ago. Mr. Crosier was born in Searsburg, Aug. 17, 1862, the youngest of six children of Timothy G. and Mary A (LeRay) Crosier. He moved with his parents in April 1870, to the Crosier farm on the Marlboro road, where he lived until two years before his marriage. He attended the West Brattleboro academy. On Nov. 16, 1892, he married Miss Mary Clark also of West Brattleboro, Rev. J.H. Babbitt, pastor of the West Brattleboro Congregational church performing the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Crosier began housekeeping in the Cressy house on High street. No children were born to them. At the time of his marriage, Mr. Crosier worked for Thurber & Corbett, bakers, where he remained until the business was sold out to C. H. Eddy. He then took a position in the shipping room at the Hooker, Corser & Mitchell overall factory, where he remained six years. He was employed several years in the so-called Grange store on Elliot street and later at Freeman Scott's grocery store, which Mr. Scott sold to Corey & Davis. Mr. Crosier remained in the employ of Corey & Davis for a time and two years ago last January he began work in E.L. Hildreth & Co.'s printing plant. Mrs. Crosier has long been supterintendent of the primary department in the Centre Congregational Sunday school. Mr. Crosier leaves, besides his wife, a brother, Dudley Crosier of Guilford, one sister, Mrs. Idella Huntley of Brattleboro, a step-mother, Mrs. Emily Crosier of West Brattleboro, two half-sisters, Mrs. George Reed of Amherst, Mass., and Mrs. Emery Miller of West Brattleboro. He also leaves several nieces and nephews. He was a member of the Centre Congregational church, Brattleboro lodge of Masons. Wantastiqut lodge of Odd Fellows, and Oasis encampment. The funeral will be held at the home at 4 Bullock street Wednesday afternoon at 2.30 o'clock. Rev. Dr. Herbert P. Woodin, pastor of the Centre church, will officiate. The Odd Fellows committal service will he held in West Brattleboro cemetery. |
Note H5654 :
Burial: West Brattleboro Cemetery West Brattleboro, Windham County, Vermont, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 22334117 from the Brattleboro Reformer Brattleboro, Windham County, VT. 1925 IRVING G. CROSIER DIES IN HOSPITAL Had Been in Critical Condition Since Undergoing Serious Operation-- Funeral at 2.30 Wednesday Irvin G. Corsier, 62, died yesterday afternoon at 3.45 o'clock in the Memorial hospital where he underwent a serious operaton a week ago today by Dr. H.H. Howard of Boston. His condition had been critical from the first. He was obliged to give up work a month ago. Mr. Crosier was born in Searsburg, Aug. 17, 1862, the youngest of six children of Timothy G. and Mary A (LeRay) Crosier. He moved with his parents in April 1870, to the Crosier farm on the Marlboro road, where he lived until two years before his marriage. He attended the West Brattleboro academy. On Nov. 16, 1892, he married Miss Mary Clark also of West Brattleboro, Rev. J.H. Babbitt, pastor of the West Brattleboro Congregational church performing the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Crosier began housekeeping in the Cressy house on High street. No children were born to them. At the time of his marriage, Mr. Crosier worked for Thurber & Corbett, bakers, where he remained until the business was sold out to C. H. Eddy. He then took a position in the shipping room at the Hooker, Corser & Mitchell overall factory, where he remained six years. He was employed several years in the so-called Grange store on Elliot street and later at Freeman Scott's grocery store, which Mr. Scott sold to Corey & Davis. Mr. Crosier remained in the employ of Corey & Davis for a time and two years ago last January he began work in E.L. Hildreth & Co.'s printing plant. Mrs. Crosier has long been supterintendent of the primary department in the Centre Congregational Sunday school. Mr. Crosier leaves, besides his wife, a brother, Dudley Crosier of Guilford, one sister, Mrs. Idella Huntley of Brattleboro, a step-mother, Mrs. Emily Crosier of West Brattleboro, two half-sisters, Mrs. George Reed of Amherst, Mass., and Mrs. Emery Miller of West Brattleboro. He also leaves several nieces and nephews. He was a member of the Centre Congregational church, Brattleboro lodge of Masons. Wantastiqut lodge of Odd Fellows, and Oasis encampment. The funeral will be held at the home at 4 Bullock street Wednesday afternoon at 2.30 o'clock. Rev. Dr. Herbert P. Woodin, pastor of the Centre church, will officiate. The Odd Fellows committal service will he held in West Brattleboro cemetery. |
Note N5655 :
Burial: Evergreen Cemetery Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, USA Plot: section L lot 13 Find A Grave Memorial# 130216024 |
These pages have been generated by the software Oxy-Gen version 1.41b, on 17/08/2023. You can download it here.