Matches 2,801 to 2,841 of 2,841
# | Notes | Linked to |
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2801 | Wilson was named after President Wilson. Wilson died at his home in Ft. Pierec, FL | FULP, Samuel Wilson (I837)
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2802 | Wirt & Lillie had 7 children ================================================ From the death certificate (68-7): Name: Jonathan Wirt Angel Age: 91 yrs Residence: Stokesdale Route #1 (outside city limits) Birth date: Oct. 13, 1874 Birthplace: Rockingham Co Marital status: Married Spouse: Thelma May Cummings Occupation: Ret. Farmer Father: Constance W. Angel Mother: Minerva Robertson Informant: Howard E. Angel Date of death: July 8, 1966 Place of death: Rockingham Co Stokesdale Route #1 (outside city limits) Cause of death: Bronchopneumonia Contributory: Apoplexy - Generalized Arteriosclerotic Vascular Disease Burial: July 10, 1966 Gideon Grove Meth. Ch. Cem. ====================================================== | ANGEL, Jonathan Wirt (I3648)
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2803 | Wirt & Lillie had 7 children ________________________________________________________ From the death certificate (15-387): Name: Lillie May Angel Age: 45 yrs 5 mos 13 days Residence: Stokesdale, N.C. Birth date: 12-29-1880 Birthplace: Rockingham Co. Marital status: married Spouse: J. Wirt Angel Occupation: Housewife Father: Walt Wilson, b. N.C. Mother: Matilda Turner, b. N.C. Informant: J. W. Angel Date of death: 6-12-26 Place of death: St. Leo's Hospital Greensboro, NC Cause of death: Myocarditis (Chronic) Contributory: Acute Dilitation of Heart Burial: 6-14-26 Gideon Grove Church _________________________________________________________ | WILSON, Lillie May (I1069)
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2804 | Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services, Wisconsin Vital Record Index, pre-1907, Madison, WI, USA: Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services Vital Records Division | Source Source: S307 (S307)
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2805 | Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services, Wisconsin Vital Record Index, pre-1907, Madison, WI, USA: Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services Vital Records Division | Source Source: S521 (S521)
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2806 | Witness: Solomon Fulp Death notice from the 2-17-1876 "Peoples Press" (Salem, NC) 1851-1892 gives the following account of Peter's death. "Fulp, Peter, of Forsyth Co, the father of Joseph Fulp, burned to death, Feb. 11, 1876. Mr Fulp was very feable, upwards of 80 yrs of age, and in the habit of resting on a pallet near the fire, from choice. When the house he was in was discovered to be on fire, his son's family hastened to the rescue but on opening the door found the inside all ablaze; it was impossible to enter and Peter Fulp perished in the flames. It is supposed the fire communicated to the bed and the old man could not make his escape." Note: Glenn McGee in discussion with Vestal Fulp said he had read that Peter burned to death when sparks from a train set his roof on fire. I must go with the death notice in Peoples Press. *1850 Forsyth Co., NC Census - 1677/1692 *Stokes Co, NC Deed Book 10, page 381 Peter Fulp to son John Fulp. *In 1850, Alley Fulp, age 7, living with Peter & Nancy 13. Peter FULP was born on 30 Jun 1790 in Stokes County, North Carolina. He appeared on the census in 1810 in Stokes County, North Carolina. He appeared on the census in 1820 in Stokes County, North Carolina. He died in 1850. He was a Farmer in 1850 in Forsyth County, North Carolina. He appeared on the census in 1850 in Forsyth County, North Carolina. He was married to Nancy FAIRE on 4 May 1809 in Stokes County, North Carolina. Nancy FAIRE was born in 1792 in North Carolina. She appeared on the census in 1850 in Forsyth County, North Carolina. Children of Peter FULP and Nancy FAIRE were: | FULP, Peter (G/M) (I244)
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2807 | Words cannot describe Harry Buskey. When he was born, they threw away the mold. He was a genius with a photographic memory. He retired from Western Electric after a great wroking career with their Defense Activities Division. His experiences included work on the Nike Ajax and Hercules missiles, the ZEUS and Safeguard Missiles, riding Nuclear Submarines testing towed array monitoring devices manufactured by Western Electric, and communications desgn for Robbins Air Force Base. | BUSKEY, Harry Lee (I1414)
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2808 | Works for the US Gov. as instructor-trainer on one of their computer simulators for the rifle range (Training for US Soldiers on how to shoot a weapon) Source: Keanan Caudle (Dec 2004) | CAUDLE, Keanan Gary (I783)
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2809 | WWII | WHITMORE, Tillman B. (I3233)
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2810 | Year of death 189? | DUNCAN, Nancy W (I1209)
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2811 | Year of death may be 1935. The 19 and 5 are legible on tombstone, but the 3 is not. (VGF note) Spelling on tombstone is "Goolsby", Other infor spells it as "Goulsby" - this needs to be checked out (VGF note) | GOULSBY, Sam (I2014)
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2812 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | CHASTEEN, Katherine Dana (I16507)
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2813 | [.Ft] 99 99 | SCHURPRIN, Anna (I62320)
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2814 | [24240.ftw] Johannes Philip Dellinger sailed on the ship "Two Brothers", Thomas Arnt captain, into the Philadelphia harbor, from Rotterdam, on the 28th of August of 1750. He signed the ship's list "Philip Dellinger." Under his signature, the ship's clerk has written the name "Henry Dellinger," which is assumed to be Philip's son. After arriving in America he moved to Lincoln County, North Carolina, were he is listed on the 1757 tax roll. Philip Dellinger was in the area of present day Lincoln County, North Carolina by 1757. Records in Anson County, North Carolina, deed books show that on September 2, 1757, Philip Dellinger, tailor, is buying 185 acres on Leeper's Creek from Martin Dellinger, being half of 370 acres which has been granted to the said Martin Dellinger on August 30, 1753. On the same date, Martin Dellinger sold the other half of the 1753 of 350 acres to Jacob Hoyle, weaver. Later, Martin Hoyle, son of Jacob Hoyle, deeded the same land on Leeper's Creek to Joseph Aker of Lincoln County (Deed Bk. 18, pg 449, September 7, 1797). Received a grant of 300 acres on the Lick Branch of Leeper's Creek. In a deed record in Book 4, page 472, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, deed dated January 7, 1769, Philip Tillinger and Mary, his wife, are selling land to William Tankersley. In the Lincoln County, North Carolina Deed Book 2, pages 623 and 624 records the following: May 20, 1783, Philip Dellinger, County of Lincoln, State of North Carolina, for love and affection to my son Henry Dellinger, the land on which I now live, 185 acres, being half of a tract of 370 acres granted to Martin Tillinger August 30, 1753 and conveyed from Martin to the said Philip Dellinger September 3, 1757. Philip Dellinger for natural love and affection to my son John Dellinger, "me hereunto moving," have given and granted all and singular my goods and chattels: two mares and colts, one still and vessels, 14 head of cattle, sheep, loom and gears, horse, one wagon and hind gears, one wire sifter, one feather bed and cover, one chaff bed, seven books, one pair of shears, mall rings, one tailors goose, one pr. wool cards, one pr. double trees, one log chain, four augurs, three scythes, one small anvil, one mattock, one hand saw, pitch fork, two chisels, drawing knife, grindstone, two felling axes, coopers howel, three sides of tanned leather, one hackle, plough and tacking, seven plates, one basin and one pot and other moveables. Name signed in German, "Johann Philip Dellinger." Tailor and grave digger. | |
2815 | [24240.ftw] Johannes Philip Dellinger sailed on the ship "Two Brothers", Thomas Arnt captain, into the Philadelphia harbor, from Rotterdam, on the 28th of August of 1750. He signed the ship's list "Philip Dellinger." Under his signature, the ship's clerk has written the name "Henry Dellinger," which is assumed to be Philip's son. After arriving in America he moved to Lincoln County, North Carolina, were he is listed on the 1757 tax roll. Philip Dellinger was in the area of present day Lincoln County, North Carolina by 1757. Records in Anson County, North Carolina, deed books show that on September 2, 1757, Philip Dellinger, tailor, is buying 185 acres on Leeper's Creek from Martin Dellinger, being half of 370 acres which has been granted to the said Martin Dellinger on August 30, 1753. On the same date, Martin Dellinger sold the other half of the 1753 of 350 acres to Jacob Hoyle, weaver. Later, Martin Hoyle, son of Jacob Hoyle, deeded the same land on Leeper's Creek to Joseph Aker of Lincoln County (Deed Bk. 18, pg 449, September 7, 1797). Received a grant of 300 acres on the Lick Branch of Leeper's Creek. In a deed record in Book 4, page 472, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, deed dated January 7, 1769, Philip Tillinger and Mary, his wife, are selling land to William Tankersley. In the Lincoln County, North Carolina Deed Book 2, pages 623 and 624 records the following: May 20, 1783, Philip Dellinger, County of Lincoln, State of North Carolina, for love and affection to my son Henry Dellinger, the land on which I now live, 185 acres, being half of a tract of 370 acres granted to Martin Tillinger August 30, 1753 and conveyed from Martin to the said Philip Dellinger September 3, 1757. Philip Dellinger for natural love and affection to my son John Dellinger, "me hereunto moving," have given and granted all and singular my goods and chattels: two mares and colts, one still and vessels, 14 head of cattle, sheep, loom and gears, horse, one wagon and hind gears, one wire sifter, one feather bed and cover, one chaff bed, seven books, one pair of shears, mall rings, one tailors goose, one pr. wool cards, one pr. double trees, one log chain, four augurs, three scythes, one small anvil, one mattock, one hand saw, pitch fork, two chisels, drawing knife, grindstone, two felling axes, coopers howel, three sides of tanned leather, one hackle, plough and tacking, seven plates, one basin and one pot and other moveables. Name signed in German, "Johann Philip Dellinger." Tailor and grave digger. | |
2816 | [24240.ftw] Johannes Philip Dellinger sailed on the ship "Two Brothers", Thomas Arnt captain, into the Philadelphia harbor, from Rotterdam, on the 28th of August of 1750. He signed the ship's list "Philip Dellinger." Under his signature, the ship's clerk has written the name "Henry Dellinger," which is assumed to be Philip's son. After arriving in America he moved to Lincoln County, North Carolina, were he is listed on the 1757 tax roll. Philip Dellinger was in the area of present day Lincoln County, North Carolina by 1757. Records in Anson County, North Carolina, deed books show that on September 2, 1757, Philip Dellinger, tailor, is buying 185 acres on Leeper's Creek from Martin Dellinger, being half of 370 acres which has been granted to the said Martin Dellinger on August 30, 1753. On the same date, Martin Dellinger sold the other half of the 1753 of 350 acres to Jacob Hoyle, weaver. Later, Martin Hoyle, son of Jacob Hoyle, deeded the same land on Leeper's Creek to Joseph Aker of Lincoln County (Deed Bk. 18, pg 449, September 7, 1797). Received a grant of 300 acres on the Lick Branch of Leeper's Creek. In a deed record in Book 4, page 472, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, deed dated January 7, 1769, Philip Tillinger and Mary, his wife, are selling land to William Tankersley. In the Lincoln County, North Carolina Deed Book 2, pages 623 and 624 records the following: May 20, 1783, Philip Dellinger, County of Lincoln, State of North Carolina, for love and affection to my son Henry Dellinger, the land on which I now live, 185 acres, being half of a tract of 370 acres granted to Martin Tillinger August 30, 1753 and conveyed from Martin to the said Philip Dellinger September 3, 1757. Philip Dellinger for natural love and affection to my son John Dellinger, "me hereunto moving," have given and granted all and singular my goods and chattels: two mares and colts, one still and vessels, 14 head of cattle, sheep, loom and gears, horse, one wagon and hind gears, one wire sifter, one feather bed and cover, one chaff bed, seven books, one pair of shears, mall rings, one tailors goose, one pr. wool cards, one pr. double trees, one log chain, four augurs, three scythes, one small anvil, one mattock, one hand saw, pitch fork, two chisels, drawing knife, grindstone, two felling axes, coopers howel, three sides of tanned leather, one hackle, plough and tacking, seven plates, one basin and one pot and other moveables. Name signed in German, "Johann Philip Dellinger." Tailor and grave digger. | DELLINGER, Johannes Philipp (I62208)
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2817 | [24240.ftw] Last named is spelled with one or two "F's" depending on which source. | |
2818 | [24240.ftw] Last named is spelled with one or two "F's" depending on which source. | |
2819 | [24240.ftw] Last named is spelled with one or two "F's" depending on which source. | HUFFSTETLER, George Sr (I60964)
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2820 | [24240.ftw] Middle name also given as Paulo. Was a farmer and operated a full sized farm either as an owner or as a tenant in Neuenburg/Bruchsal. He later became a grave digger in Oberacker. Bruchsal, with Catholic Church records beginning in 1687, was only 11 km. west of Oberacker, where Protestant Church records began in 1567. According to the Oberacker Local Family Book, in 1697 there was 49 inhabitants of Oberacker, 12 married couples, 24 children and 1 single person. That group consisted of: Mayor Keller, the juryman Melchior Schaufele, widower Bartholomaus Paquet, Hans Jakob Velte and his women, citizen Paul Dellinger, Jakob Mayer, Johann Adam Schaufele, Johann Jakob Weber, Hans Dellinger, Martin Balduf, Wilhelm Balduf, Jerg Silcher and his dumb sister-in-law, David Knab with his wife and 5 children, the married persons Michael Knab, Jakob Becker, a widow with 1 child, Thomas Knoll, a widow with 2 daughters, Thomas Weber, a widow with 1 little daughter and 2 orphans of her daughter, Lorenz Balduf and Theodore Moschis' daughter. Is "citizen" Paul Dellinger the same person as Hans Paul Dellinger? Likely. In this case "citizen" is a significant distinction because it means this person had risen in wealth and esteem above the peasantry class. | |
2821 | [24240.ftw] Middle name also given as Paulo. Was a farmer and operated a full sized farm either as an owner or as a tenant in Neuenburg/Bruchsal. He later became a grave digger in Oberacker. Bruchsal, with Catholic Church records beginning in 1687, was only 11 km. west of Oberacker, where Protestant Church records began in 1567. According to the Oberacker Local Family Book, in 1697 there was 49 inhabitants of Oberacker, 12 married couples, 24 children and 1 single person. That group consisted of: Mayor Keller, the juryman Melchior Schaufele, widower Bartholomaus Paquet, Hans Jakob Velte and his women, citizen Paul Dellinger, Jakob Mayer, Johann Adam Schaufele, Johann Jakob Weber, Hans Dellinger, Martin Balduf, Wilhelm Balduf, Jerg Silcher and his dumb sister-in-law, David Knab with his wife and 5 children, the married persons Michael Knab, Jakob Becker, a widow with 1 child, Thomas Knoll, a widow with 2 daughters, Thomas Weber, a widow with 1 little daughter and 2 orphans of her daughter, Lorenz Balduf and Theodore Moschis' daughter. Is "citizen" Paul Dellinger the same person as Hans Paul Dellinger? Likely. In this case "citizen" is a significant distinction because it means this person had risen in wealth and esteem above the peasantry class. | DELLINGER, Hans Paul (I62209)
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2822 | [24240.ftw] Middle name also given as Paulo. Was a farmer and operated a full sized farm either as an owner or as a tenant in Neuenburg/Bruchsal. He later became a grave digger in Oberacker. Bruchsal, with Catholic Church records beginning in 1687, was only 11 km. west of Oberacker, where Protestant Church records began in 1567. According to the Oberacker Local Family Book, in 1697 there was 49 inhabitants of Oberacker, 12 married couples, 24 children and 1 single person. That group consisted of: Mayor Keller, the juryman Melchior Schaufele, widower Bartholomaus Paquet, Hans Jakob Velte and his women, citizen Paul Dellinger, Jakob Mayer, Johann Adam Schaufele, Johann Jakob Weber, Hans Dellinger, Martin Balduf, Wilhelm Balduf, Jerg Silcher and his dumb sister-in-law, David Knab with his wife and 5 children, the married persons Michael Knab, Jakob Becker, a widow with 1 child, Thomas Knoll, a widow with 2 daughters, Thomas Weber, a widow with 1 little daughter and 2 orphans of her daughter, Lorenz Balduf and Theodore Moschis' daughter. Is "citizen" Paul Dellinger the same person as Hans Paul Dellinger? Likely. In this case "citizen" is a significant distinction because it means this person had risen in wealth and esteem above the peasantry class. | |
2823 | [24240.ftw] One source has birth date as 27 April 1745. If that is correct, her mother would be Anna Maria Brandstatter rather than Catherina Zimmerman. According to "John Philip Dellinger" by Paul Dellinger, Margaret died on 25 May 1827 in Dallas County, North Carolina. | |
2824 | [24240.ftw] One source has birth date as 27 April 1745. If that is correct, her mother would be Anna Maria Brandstatter rather than Catherina Zimmerman. According to "John Philip Dellinger" by Paul Dellinger, Margaret died on 25 May 1827 in Dallas County, North Carolina. | |
2825 | [24240.ftw] One source has birth date as 27 April 1745. If that is correct, her mother would be Anna Maria Brandstatter rather than Catherina Zimmerman. According to "John Philip Dellinger" by Paul Dellinger, Margaret died on 25 May 1827 in Dallas County, North Carolina. | DELLINGER, Margaretha (I62215)
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2826 | [24240.ftw] Shirley Booker states that Catherina's last name was Zorb and that her father as a carpenter, which in German is "Zimmerman." | ZIMMERMAN, Catherina (I62214)
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2827 | [24240.ftw] The earliest Dellinger in the records of this family lineage. Information on his descendants in Ortssippenbuch, Oberacker, Landkreis Bruchsal in Baden, published 1970, Lahr, Baden. This is a Village Family Compilation by Rudolf and Margarete Herzer of Freiburg and Gustav Mayer of Oberacker. A copy is the Church of Latter Day Saints Library, Salt Lake City (LDS microfilm # 1440784). This reference also lists a Niclaus Dellinger, d. 29 Oct 1623 in Oberacker, so the Dellinger presence there goes back at least to 1623 and possibly much earlier. | |
2828 | [24240.ftw] The earliest Dellinger in the records of this family lineage. Information on his descendants in Ortssippenbuch, Oberacker, Landkreis Bruchsal in Baden, published 1970, Lahr, Baden. This is a Village Family Compilation by Rudolf and Margarete Herzer of Freiburg and Gustav Mayer of Oberacker. A copy is the Church of Latter Day Saints Library, Salt Lake City (LDS microfilm # 1440784). This reference also lists a Niclaus Dellinger, d. 29 Oct 1623 in Oberacker, so the Dellinger presence there goes back at least to 1623 and possibly much earlier. | DELLINGER, Hans (I62211)
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2829 | [24240.ftw] The earliest Dellinger in the records of this family lineage. Information on his descendants in Ortssippenbuch, Oberacker, Landkreis Bruchsal in Baden, published 1970, Lahr, Baden. This is a Village Family Compilation by Rudolf and Margarete Herzer of Freiburg and Gustav Mayer of Oberacker. A copy is the Church of Latter Day Saints Library, Salt Lake City (LDS microfilm # 1440784). This reference also lists a Niclaus Dellinger, d. 29 Oct 1623 in Oberacker, so the Dellinger presence there goes back at least to 1623 and possibly much earlier. | |
2830 | [24240.ftw] The record of his marriage in 1659 in Hochstad states "bei Dillingen, Bayern" meaning with a family in Dillingen. Ortssippenbuch, Oberacker, 1970 has parenthetical note ("Hochstattten unter dem Grafer Fucker"). Grafen means Count and Fucker or Fugger was a wealthy family that financed the Catholic side of the Counter Reformation. Apparently Hochstadt was under the control or rule of the Count Fugger. The Fuggers of Augsburg were one of the most influential banking-houses of the 15th century. Emperor Maximiliam I (1493-1519) of the Hapsburg Dynasty as well as several of the Popes had loans from the Fuggers, whose wealth was acquired from exploitation of the German silver mines. The youngest of three sons of Hans Fugger, Jacbo, d. 1469 founded the trading company of Fugger and his three sons; Ulrich, Georg and Jacob, Jr. carried on the business, intermarried married with nobility and in 1473, received a patent of nobility from Emperor Frederick III. Probably the village residents of Dillingen were required to practice the Catholic region. Since Oberacker has Protestant Church records beginning in 1567 and apparently no Catholic records it is reasonable to assume that the early Dellinger families of Oberacker were Protestant. It is to be noted that Martin Luther had posted his 95 Theses against indulgences granted by the Catholic Church on the castle church door in Wittenberg in 1517. | |
2831 | [24240.ftw] The record of his marriage in 1659 in Hochstad states "bei Dillingen, Bayern" meaning with a family in Dillingen. Ortssippenbuch, Oberacker, 1970 has parenthetical note ("Hochstattten unter dem Grafer Fucker"). Grafen means Count and Fucker or Fugger was a wealthy family that financed the Catholic side of the Counter Reformation. Apparently Hochstadt was under the control or rule of the Count Fugger. The Fuggers of Augsburg were one of the most influential banking-houses of the 15th century. Emperor Maximiliam I (1493-1519) of the Hapsburg Dynasty as well as several of the Popes had loans from the Fuggers, whose wealth was acquired from exploitation of the German silver mines. The youngest of three sons of Hans Fugger, Jacbo, d. 1469 founded the trading company of Fugger and his three sons; Ulrich, Georg and Jacob, Jr. carried on the business, intermarried married with nobility and in 1473, received a patent of nobility from Emperor Frederick III. Probably the village residents of Dillingen were required to practice the Catholic region. Since Oberacker has Protestant Church records beginning in 1567 and apparently no Catholic records it is reasonable to assume that the early Dellinger families of Oberacker were Protestant. It is to be noted that Martin Luther had posted his 95 Theses against indulgences granted by the Catholic Church on the castle church door in Wittenberg in 1517. | DELLINGER, Hans (I62210)
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2832 | [24240.ftw] The record of his marriage in 1659 in Hochstad states "bei Dillingen, Bayern" meaning with a family in Dillingen. Ortssippenbuch, Oberacker, 1970 has parenthetical note ("Hochstattten unter dem Grafer Fucker"). Grafen means Count and Fucker or Fugger was a wealthy family that financed the Catholic side of the Counter Reformation. Apparently Hochstadt was under the control or rule of the Count Fugger. The Fuggers of Augsburg were one of the most influential banking-houses of the 15th century. Emperor Maximiliam I (1493-1519) of the Hapsburg Dynasty as well as several of the Popes had loans from the Fuggers, whose wealth was acquired from exploitation of the German silver mines. The youngest of three sons of Hans Fugger, Jacbo, d. 1469 founded the trading company of Fugger and his three sons; Ulrich, Georg and Jacob, Jr. carried on the business, intermarried married with nobility and in 1473, received a patent of nobility from Emperor Frederick III. Probably the village residents of Dillingen were required to practice the Catholic region. Since Oberacker has Protestant Church records beginning in 1567 and apparently no Catholic records it is reasonable to assume that the early Dellinger families of Oberacker were Protestant. It is to be noted that Martin Luther had posted his 95 Theses against indulgences granted by the Catholic Church on the castle church door in Wittenberg in 1517. | |
2833 | [24240.ftw] Was mid-wife until 1719. | UNK, Clara Anna (I62213)
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2834 | [Franklin.ged] !SOURCE OB of RN=2648 | FULP, Margaret (I3343)
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2835 | [Franklin.ged] !SOURCE OB of RN=2660 | BOLES, Ola (I3353)
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2836 | [Franklin.ged] !SOURCE SOI: Family | SMITH, Kessiah Clemetine (I3296)
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2837 | [Franklin.ged] !SOURCE SOI: Obit of child Bud | COX, Hazel (I3400)
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2838 | [Franklin.ged] !SOURCE SOI: Obit of child Oscar | CAMPBELL, Bettie Lee (I3382)
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2839 | [Franklin.ged] SOI: Family, Richard Vance Fulp, Sr. | LARRAMORE, Susan M. A. (I3294)
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2840 | ___________________________________________________________________ Per Tom's e-mail notes 7-18-03: 1930 NC census, Guilford Co, E.D. 41-44, Gilmer Twp, p. 273, Sheet 6A, #44/47, 8 Apr 1930: Brown, J.T. Head age 31 M(19) truck driver Hardware Co Orphia Wife age 30 M(18) Lyndl Dau age 11 S all born in NC; all parents born in NC. all can read and write. Joe & Orphia were married Aug 1924-Mar 1930, so Lyndl must be his daughter by a previous marriage. ___________________________________________________________________ | BROWN, Lyndl (I3526)
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2841 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | CHASTEEN, Paul Chester (I18168)
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