These pages have been generated by the software Oxy-Gen version 1.41b, on 17/08/2023. You can download it here.
Note H4697 :
From: The Richfield Reaper, Oct 18, 2017 Dwight T. Crosier, 83, Richfield, passed away Oct. 12, of a heart attack in Provo. Dwight was born July 20, 1934 in Salina to Dwight E. and Dorothy Tipps Crosier. He is survived by his brother, Bob and Jane Crosier, Richfield; sister, Betty Ann Larsen, Monroe; nephews, John and Ryan Crosier and his dog Stormy. Highly educated, Dwight graduated from Stanford University. He spent years in real estate, during the summertime he worked for a number of national parks. While working for the parks he enjoyed his favorite pastimes, fly fishing and hiking. Per his wishes, no services will be held. |
Note N4698 :
Burial: Dudley Cemetery Dudley, Noble County, Ohio, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 30427091 |
Note N4699 :
Burial: Barrys Ridge Cemetery Caldwell, Noble County, Ohio, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 132596732 |
Note N4700 :
Burial: Dudley Cemetery Dudley, Noble County, Ohio, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 30427303 |
Note N4701 :
Burial: Our Lady of Czestochowa Cemetery Montague, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 158955237 |
Note N4702 :
Burial: Our Lady of Czestochowa Cemetery Montague, Franklin County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 158955247 |
Note N4703 :
Burial: Bridge Street Cemetery Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 148573510 |
Note N4704 :
Burial: Bridge Street Cemetery Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts, USA Find A Grave Memorial# 143247183 |
Note H4705 :
Obituary: The Baltimore Sun, Baltimore, Maryland Tuesday, June 15, 1993, Page 23 |
Note H4706 :
From Wikipedia Arnulf was born to an important Frankish family near Nancy in Lorraine around 582.[3] The family owned vast domains between the Mosel and Meuse rivers.[4] As an adolescent, he was called to the Merovingian court of king Theudebert II (595-612) of Austrasia[5] where he was educated by Gondulf of Provence.[3] Arnulf was later sent to serve as dux at the Schelde. Arnulf gave distinguished service at the Austrasian court under Theudebert II. He distinguished himself both as a military commander and in the civil administration; at one time he had under his care six distinct provinces.[5] Arnulf was married ca 596 to a noblewoman whom later sources give the name of Dode or Doda, (born ca 584). Chlodulf of Metz was their oldest son, but more important is his second son Ansegisel, who married Begga daughter of Pepin I, Pepin of Landen. Arnulf is thus the male-line grandfather of Pepin of Herstal, great-grandfather of Charles Martel and 3rd great-grandfather of Charlemagne. The rule of Austrasia came into the hands of Brunhilda, the grandmother of Theudebert, who ruled also in Burgundy in the name of her great-grandchildren. In 613 Arnulf joined his politics with Pepin of Landen and led the opposition of Frankish nobles against Queen Brunhilda. The revolt led to her overthrow, torture, and eventual execution, and the subsequent reunification of Frankish lands under Chlothachar II. He and his friend Romaricus, likewise an officer of the court, planned to make a pilgrimage to the Abbey of Lérins.[5] Chlothachar, who appreciated Arnulf's administrative skills, offered him the vacant see of Metz, the capital of the Autrasian kingdom. His wife took the veil as a nun in a convent at Treves, and Arnulf saw it as a sign of God and became a priest and bishop afterwards.[6]Arnulf continued to serve as the king's steward and courtier.[4] Chlothachar later made his son Dagobert I king of Austrasia, which he ruled with the help of his adviser Arnulf. Pepin of Landen, became the Mayor of the Palace. In 624 Pepin and Arnulf encouraged Dagobert in the murder of Chrodoald, an important leader of the Frankish Agilolfings family. During his career he was attracted to religious life, and he retired to become a monk. He retired around 628 to a hermitage at a mountain site in his domains in the Vosges. His friend Romaric, whose parents had been killed by Brunhilda, had preceded him to the mountains around 613, and together with Amatus had already established Remiremont Abbey there. After the death of Chlothachar in 629, Arnulf settled near Habendum, where he died some time between 643 and 647. He was buried at Remiremont.[4] Arnulf was canonized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. In iconography he is portrayed with a pastoral staff in his hand. |
Note H4707 :
Governor of Marseilles (581), Count of Soissons, Mayor of the Palace to Theibert I, Bishop of Tongres (545-599), Ambassadeur à Byzance, Comte de Soisson, evêque de Tongres, Comte de Soissons Maire du Palais de Neustrie, évêque de Tongres (Bishop) |
Note H4708 :
He was the Governor of Aquitaine. He died about 610 C.E. in Carthage, Africa, being murdered while returning from Constantinople. |
Note N4709 :
In 794, Charlemagne signs an agreement with Offa, King of England, to encourage trade between Europe and England. Charlemagne Charlemagne (shär´le-mân´) (Charles the Great) or Charles I (shär´lemân), 742?-814, emperor of the West (800-814), Carolingian king of the Franks (768-814). The son of PEPIN THE SHORT, he consolidated his rule in his own kingdom, invaded Italy in support of the pope, and in 774 was crowned king of the Lombards. He took NE Spain from the MOORS (778) and annexed Bavaria (788). After a long struggle (772-804) he subjugated and Christianized the Saxons. In 800 he restored LEO III to the papacy and was crowned emperor by him on Christmas Day, thus laying the basis for the HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE and finalizing the split between the Byzantine and Roman empires. Charlemagne ruled through a highly efficient administrative system. He codified the law in his various dominions, and his court at AACHEN was the center for an intellectual and artistic renaissance. The end of his reign was troubled by raids by the NORSEMEN. His son, LOUIS I, was named co-emperor in 813 and succeeded on his father's death. Charlemagne's legend soon enhanced and distorted his actual achievements, and he became the central figure of a medieval romance cycle. Source: The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia is licensed from Columbia University Press. Copyright © 1995 by Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. |
Note N4710 :
Sir Hugh Worth of Worthe, Knight, married Avis, the daughter of Richard de Redvers of Tiverton Castle, 3rd Earl of Devon, and his wife, Avis/Hawise, who was daughter of Reginald Fitz Roy/Fitz Henry de Mortain, Earl of Cornwall, bastard son of King Henry I and his mistress, Sibyl Corbet, wife of Herbert Fitz Herbert. Reginald Fitz Roy/Fitz Henry married Mabel, who died 1162, daughter of William Fitz Richard, Lord of Cardian, Cornwall, and granddaughter of Count Robert de Mortain, halfbrother of William the Conqueror. Copied from web site http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cecebibby/ancestral-stories/a ncestors-of-william-worth.htm |
Note H4711 :
He was thought of as Duke Robert the Devil. His son William the Conqueror was an illigitimate son. |
Note H4712 :
She was Countess of England |
Note N4713 :
Probably the most important date in British history is 1066, the date of William's victory at the Battle of Hastings. William I ended the reign of the Danes when, in 1069, after laying seige to the town of York, a group of Viking warriors fell to the swords of the Norman Army. William, kings of England. William I or William the Conqueror, 1027?-1087 (r.1066-1087), was the illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy, and succeeded to the dukedom in 1035. While visiting (1051) England, he was probably named by his cousin EDWARD THE CONFESSOR as successor to the throne, and in 1064 he extracted a promise of support from HAROLD, then earl of WESSEX. In 1066, hearing that Harold had been crowned king of England, William raised an army and crossed the Channel. He defeated and slew Harold at HASTINGS and was crowned king. William immediately built castles and harshly put down the rebellions that broke out; by 1072 the military part of the NORMAN CONQUEST was virtually complete. He substituted foreign prelates for many English bishops, and land titles were redistributed on a feudal basis (see FEUDALISM) to his Norman followers. After 1075 he dealt frequently with continental quarrels. William ordered a survey (1085-86) of England, the results of which were compiled as the DOOMSDAY BOOK. He was one of the greatest English monarchs and a pivotal figure in European history. His son Robert II succeeded him in Normandy, while another son, William II or William Rufus, d. 1100 (r.1087-1100), succeeded him in England. William II had utter contempt for the English church and extorted large sums of money from it. He occupied Normandy when Robert II left on a crusade, and gained control (1097) of the Scottish throne. He was killed while hunting, and his death may not have been an accident. His brother HENRY I succeeded him. Source: The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia is licensed from Columbia University Press. Copyright © 1995 by Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. ---------- William the Conqueror was the illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy, and Herleva, daughter of a wealthy Falasian; many contemporary writers referred to him as "William the Bastard". Robert died in 1035 while traveling through Asia Minor, and the young William was named Duke of Normandy. He married Mathilda, daughter of Count Baldwin of Flanders, who bore him at least nine children, four of which were boys. Edward the Confessor, in an effort to gain Norman support while fighting with his father-in-law, Earl Godwin, had promised the throne to William the Confessor in 1051. By 1066, however, Edward had reconciled with Godwin, and on his deathbed and named the Earl's son Harold as successor to the crown. William felt cheated and immediately prepared to invade, insisting that Harold had sworn allegiance to his accession in 1064. He was prepared for battle in August of 1066, but the winds were against him throughout August and most of September, prohibiting he and his troops from crossing the English Channel. This turned out to be an advantage, however, as Harold Hardrada, the King of Norway, invaded England and met Harold Godwinson's forces at Stamford Bridge on September 25, 1066. Godwinson emerged victorious, but two days after the battle, William was able to land unopposed at Pevensey and spent the next two weeks pillaging the area and strengthening his position on the beachhead. The victorious Harold, in an attempt to solidify his kingship, took the fight to William and the Normans on October 14, 1066 at Hastings. Harold and his brothers died fighting in the Hastings battle, removing any further organized resistance to the Normans. The earls and bishops of the Witan hesitated in supporting William, but soon submitted and crowned him William I on Christmas Day 1066. The kingdom was immediately besieged by minor uprisings, each one individually crushed by the Normans, until the whole of England was conquered and united in 1071. William punished rebels by confiscating their land and giving it to Normans. The Domesday Book was commissioned in 1085 as a survey of land ownership to assess property and establish a tax base; within the regions covered by the Domesday survey, only two native English landowners still held their land. All landowners were summoned to pay homage to William in 1086. William imported an Italian, Lanfranc, to take the position of Archbishop of Canterbury; Lanfranc reorganized the English Church, establishing separate Church courts to deal with infractions of Canon law. William was a feudal vassal of the king of France (a situation destined to cause great consternation between England and France), and constantly found himself at odds with King Philip. In a siege on the town of Mantes in 1087 he was injured, and he died from complications of the wound on September 9. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle gave a favorable review of William's twenty-one year reign, but added, "His anxiety for money is the only thing on which he can deservedly be blamed; ... he would say and do some things and indeed almost anything ... where the hope of money allured him." He was certainly cruel by modern standards, and exacted a high toll from his subjects, but he laid the foundation for the building of English history. Source: www.britannia.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sources Title: Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants Author: Langston Publication: Gen. Pub., 1996 Media: Book Title: Notable |
Note N4714 :
John Worthe, born about 1500 and died before 1600, of Compton Pole in Maldon. Married Agnes, daughter of John Bodley of Dunscombe, Crediton, a cousin of Sir Thomas Bodley, founder of the Bodlein Library. Source: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cecebibby/ancestral-stories/a ncestors-of-william-worth.htm |
Note N4715 :
Roger Worthe, Esquire, of Compton Pole and Barnstable, presented to Doddiscombe 1464; Mayor of Exeter 1462. Married Elizabeth. He is buried at St. Petrock in Exeter. This is where our Worth line splits from the family headed by Roger's brother, Thomas Worthe. Source: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cecebibby/ancestral-stories/a ncestors-of-william-worth.htm |
Note N4716 :
Thomas Worthe of Worth, presented at Washfield 1410; died 1412. He married Margery, the daughter of Hugh Beauchamp. She was the coheiress with her brother Humphrey Beauchamp, Lord of Washfield. By this marriage was acquired 16 additional quarterings to the family arms, including those of the Clares, Marshalls, Earls of Pembroke. The Beauchamp line descended from Milo Beauchamp, 4th son of Hugh de Bello Campo, Baron of Bedford. (Harvard Deed #42 proves the marriage of Thomas Worthe to Margery Beauchamp.) Source: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cecebibby/ancestral-stories/a ncestors-of-william-worth.htm |
Note N4717 :
The Arch Deacon of Lester |
Note N4718 :
Robert Johnson was the Arch Deacon of Lester |
Note N4719 :
She was titled Lady Sarah Johnson |
Note N4720 :
Died at about 6 months |
Note N4721 :
Died at about 6 years |
Note N4722 :
He was a blacksmith. |
Note N4723 :
Was never Married |
Note N4724 :
Went by Louis. He was a mason in North Attleboro. |
Note N4725 :
Married name is Lucca |
Note N4726 :
Married name either LeShany or Leshane |
Note N4727 :
Believe she committed suicide. Small stone next to Fortunato stone in St Joseph cemetary is her's. Name on stone is Mary Dambra, 1885-1937. Source of information was Joseph Caproni and Alfred Caproni, (nephews). |
Note N4728 :
2nd wife was Helen Drake |
Note N4729 :
Married name is Deveney |
Note N4730 :
Alien Registration Number 1799589. Born in City of Arce, Province of Arce |
Note H4731 :
Obituary in the North Adams Transcript April 16, 1930. States she lived with son Winfred at 71 Kemp Ave, North Adams. Also says she was 72 years old, dates show 71 years old. Says she had 8 grandchildren.Rev DH Clare officiated. She was a memeber of the First Baptist Church. Buried in Southview Cemetery on April 19, 1930. |
Note N4732 :
Buried in Hillside Cemetery, North Adams,MA |
Note N4733 :
Marriage record of Alfred W. Caproni and Rose Jennings gives her father's name as Thomas. Death certificate says William. |
Note N4734 :
Born at 10:22 PM, 8 pounds 12.4 oz, 22 inches |
Note N4735 :
According to Jennie Seeger Norcross, George Seeger was visiting friend and/or relative in Germany when he died. Assumed he is buried in Germany. |
Note N4736 :
Patricia Salt on her familt tree on FamilyTreeDna has the name Catherine (Catarina) Stanton (Stonmetz) |
Note N4737 :
Patricia Salt has her name as (Elizabeth) Mary Hockman or Earhart |
Note H4738 :
Notes for Henry H. Houghtling: Buried Garfield Cemetary 1873-1961. 1925census, Garfield, 51 yrs. old, road laborer, m. Sophia A. age 36, father of Helen E. 15, Andrew 8, Harold W. 6, Lewis H. 3 Harry A. Infant. 1919 tax farm 2 acres, $175. 1910 taxed for 1 dog. Garfield registered Democrat 1926. |
Note H4739 :
Buried Garfield Cemetary 1889-1961 dau. of Clarissa Green and Hiram Reynolds. Married Henry Houghtaling. Garfield registered Democrat 1926 Info from Stephentown Heritage Center Living Gravestones collection. Sophia's obituary reads: Mrs. Sophia Houghtling Mrs. Sophia Houghtling, a native of North Adams, Mass., who resided in Garfield most of her life, died yesterday at the residence of her son, Louis Houghtling in Garfield after a long illness. She was the widow of Henry Houghtling who died last Jan. 14. Surviving are four sons, Andrew of Stephentown; Harold of Albany; Louis of Stephentown and Harry of Albany; also 20 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. The funeral will be held tomorrow at 2 p.m. from the Larkin Funeral Homein Averill Park. Interment will be in Garfield Cemetary, Garfield. Rev. H. Douglas Pierce, pastor of the Federated Church of Stephentown, will officiate both at the funeral home services and at the committal service. March 14, 1961 |
These pages have been generated by the software Oxy-Gen version 1.41b, on 17/08/2023. You can download it here.