Notes
Matches 16,851 to 16,900 of 26,208
| # | Notes | Linked to |
|---|---|---|
| 16851 | http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/ACADIAN-CAJUN/1998-12/0914708793 Julie Palmyre Louise Picard d/o Louis Joseph Picard and Marie Julie Clarisse Roy bn. 9 Sept. 1894, bt. 29 September, 1894 at St Mary Church in Pointe CoupTe. Spo: ClTment Joseph Elezar Roy (Paternal uncle) and Maria Patin (Wife of Francois Lieux and mother-in-law of Elizar). (PCP-29, 393) - m. in Independance in Oct. 1914 to Robert Adam Fisher, d. 3 September, 1986, buried in Pontchatoula | Picard, Julie Palmyre Louise (I204168)
|
| 16852 | http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GER-VOLGA/2008-08/1217594954The following article is translated to the best of my ability.----------------------------Page 7, Die Welt-Post, Thursday, November 9, 1922Headline: List of Names of Refugees Living in Minsk>From the colony of Brabander: Russmann, Joseph; Sturm, Peter; Braun, Adam; Mollecker, Peter; Martel, Adam; Sommer, Johannes; Bondang, Caspar; Mollecker, Michael; Buhof, Markus; Keberl, M.; Sommer, Johannes; Ring, F.; Mollecker, Peter; Eberhard, Johannes. | Molleker, Peter (I79557)
|
| 16853 | http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/STECK/2011-08/1313159148 | Neusch, Elisabeth (I288461)
|
| 16854 | http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/STECK/2011-08/1313159148 | Keller, Jean (I288472)
|
| 16855 | http://behindthebluewall.blogspot.de/2008/02/pa-susan-louise-fyock-burkhart-12161968.html Police say the killing came moments after Fyock, a divorced mother of three, appeared briefly on her front porch and announced to a neighbor that she was "throwing Craig out." Then, in the kitchen of the home, Knepper shot Fyock and began sobbing as the youngster screamed, "Why did you kill my mommy?"... JOHNSTOWN OFFICER HELD IN SLAYING OF HIS GIRLFRIEND ARRESTED AFTER FLEEING WITH BOY, 4, LEAVING HIM WITH GRANDMOTHER Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) Tom Gibb June 12, 2002 [Excerpts] The sign is half the size of a checkerboard, hand-lettered with a wood burner. "Craig & Sue's Place," it says... Monday night, Craig - veteran Johnstown police Officer Craig Knepper, 35 - exploded during an argument with Sue -- divorced mother of three Susan Louis Fyock , 33. As Fyock 's 4-year-old boy watched, Knepper aimed a handgun from little more than an arm's length away and killed the woman with a gunshot to the head... Within three hours of the shooting, before Knepper could cross the few hundred yards to U.S. Route 219 and go north again, a local police officer stopped the car - with a man officers won't identify at the wheel and another man riding with Knepper. Yesterday, Knepper, a police officer with 12 years on Johnstown's 46-person force, was in Cambria County Prison without bail, facing charges topped by first-degree murder, which carries a mandatory life sentence... Neighbors and friends told of police coming when Knepper and Fyock tangled before, of Fyock 's lament that Knepper would drink too much. Asked if Knepper was under mental health care, Johnstown's recently hired Police Chief William Clark refused comment. Asked if Knepper approached anyone in the department about getting care for himself, Clark replied, "It's conceivable, but I'm not going to comment on it." -- "I was told that last week, he pulled out a gun and put it to his head," said Bruce Fyock, father of Fyock's former husband... "The police were called up there a couple times, maybe three times," 16-year-old neighbor Nicole Furnari said... The final turn in the relationship came just before 10 Monday night, when Fyock came out of her half of the duplex and told Daria Auguste, the resident of the other side, that "she had enough of Craig and was throwing him out," a police affidavit says. Then, Fyock went back inside... Coroner Dennis Kwiatkowski said Knepper fired into Fyock's head and thigh. Investigators haven't determined yet if he was using his .40-caliber police gun... FORMER JOHNSTOWN POLICE OFFICER TO FACE TRIAL IN GIRLFRIEND'S KILLING Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) TOM GIBB July 19, 2002 [Excerpts] A former Johnstown police officer was ordered yesterday to face trial on murder charges in the death of his live-in girlfriend last month in front of her 4-year-old son at the duplex they shared. While they've made no move to dispute that 12-year veteran officer Craig Knepper is the killer, his lawyers are angling toward a defense in which they would claim that mental health problems and possibly other factors left the 35-year-old defendant unable to properly form the intent to kill. If the strategy works, it could erase the chance that Knepper would be convicted of first-degree murder and risk the death penalty or life in prison without parole... State police say that moments after Fyock emerged momentarily from the house and told a neighbor she planned "to throw Craig out," an argument broke out, followed by gunshots and the sound of Fyock's crying son pleading, "Craig, take me to my grandma's, take me to my grandma's." Knepper, too, was crying -- and still crying when he phoned his 75-year-old mother, pleading for help but refusing her offer to come to the house, telling her, "I don't want you to see what I did," police say. Defense co-counsel Arthur McQuillan said after the hearing that Knepper, who resigned from the police force shortly after the killing, was under care from a psychologist and a psychiatrist at the time of the homicide. "The defense position is that he couldn't form the specific intent to kill," McQuillan said... DEATH PENALTY WON'T BE SOUGHT Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) TOM GIBB August 14, 2002 [Excerpts] Prosecutors said yesterday that they will not seek the death penalty for a former Johnstown police officer charged with killing his girlfriend two months ago... That means that, if he goes to trial, Craig Knepper's greatest risk is life in prison without parole if convicted of first-degree murder. Knepper's attorney could be counting on far less than that -- not contesting that Knepper was the killer but considering a defense that Knepper was drunk at the time and not able to clearly form the intent to kill... Police say the killing came moments after Fyock , a divorced mother of three, appeared briefly on her front porch and announced to a neighbor that she was "throwing Craig out." Then, in the kitchen of the home, Knepper shot Fyock and began sobbing as the youngster screamed, "Why did you kill my mommy?" police say.... Knepper, a 12-year veteran of the Johnstown police force, resigned from jail, where he has been held without bail since he was arrested several hours after the killing. FORMER JOHNSTOWN POLICEMAN PLEADS GUILTY IN GIRLFRIEND'S FATAL SHOOTING Jan 12 2003 [Excerpts] A former Johnstown police officer pleaded guilty to fatally shooting his girlfriend... By pleading guilty, Craig Knepper, 36, avoids the possibility of a life sentence for first-degree murder. A plea agreement worked out with prosecutors calls for him to face 20 to 40 years in prison - the maximum sentence for third-degree murder. The 14-year-police veteran was drinking heavily and taking anti-anxiety medication when he shot Susan Fyock, 33, in the head in June. Fyock died in the kitchen of the Johnstown duplex the couple shared... There were no officers from the Johnstown force present when Knepper pleaded guilty this week. Knepper acknowledged that he has a history of mental illness and had been treated by psychiatrists for anxiety and a panic disorder. "He was drinking heavily that day and also taking Xanax and several medications," Gleason said. "That combination clouded his judgment, as well as his anger and restraint in firing the weapon." District Attorney David Tulowitzki said the plea agreement was acceptable to Fyock's family. "The family wanted closure, which is what they received," Tulowitzki said. JOHNSTOWN POLICE OFFICER SENTENCED FOR MURDER Post-Gazette By Tom Gibb March 11, 2003 [Excerpts] A veteran Johnstown police officer was sentenced today to 20 to 40 years in state prison for killing his live-in girlfriend last spring - a shooting that his defenders say came after a psychological collapse brought on by work and family stresses. Craig Knepper, 36, originally charged with first-degree murder that could have gotten him life in prison, pleaded guilty in December to third-degree murder. That was prosecutors' concession that Knepper had downed a bottle of vodka and a high dose of his prescription tranquilizer Xanax and may not have been able to form the intent to kill that is needed to buttress a first-degree charge. Police say that after a brief, loud argument on June 10, Knepper shot his girlfriend, Susan Fyock, 33, as they stood in the kitchen of the duplex they shared in Johnstown. Fyock's 4-year-old son watched... The defendant's brother, the Rev. Roger Knepper, dressed in his clerical garments as a Church of the Brethren minister, told of times when Knepper would arrive home after seeing a teenager who committed suicide or handling a child-abuse case. "He'd be emotionally distraught. He couldn't eat," Roger Knepper told the hearing. "He would throw up." PERSONALITY CHANGE TURNS JOHNSTOWN COP INTO INMATE Post-Gazette Tom Gibb March 12, 2003 [Excerpts] There was the Craig Knepper of a decade ago - religious, trying to be both standout police officer to the city of Johnstown and stand-up father to his two daughters - his clergyman brother told a Cambria County court yesterday. Then there was the Craig Knepper of a couple of years ago - drinking, out of his 13-year marriage and into an erratic relationship with a live-in girlfriend... By his brother's account, it was the second Craig Knepper, primed with vodka and prescription tranquilizers, who climaxed a loud argument with girlfriend Susan Fyock, 33, by shooting her to death in June in their Johnstown duplex. Yesterday, as relatives of both gunman and victim watched and wept, Cambria County Common Pleas Judge Thomas Swope sentenced 36-year-old Craig Knepper, who had pleaded guilty to third-degree murder, to 20 to 40 years in state prison. But the case won't end here. Pittsburgh lawyer Timothy Schweers promised that he would file a federal lawsuit on behalf of Fyock's estate, charging that the city of Johnstown failed to protect the mother of three, despite indications that Knepper was veering out of control... "He had a hard time establishing the boundaries between his emotional life and the people he served," [his older brother] Roger Knepper said... JOHNSTOWN, POLICE, OFFICIALS SUED OVER KILLER OFFICER Post-Gazette Tom Gibb March 21, 2003 [Excerpts] When he was a Johnstown police officer, Craig Knepper was a violent man with a drug and alcohol problem, and things only got worse before he murdered his girlfriend last year in the duplex apartment they shared, according to a federal lawsuit filed yesterday. What's more, police should have known of Knepper's mean bent; he showed it on the job, and police were called to his home when it flared, according to the complaint. But Knepper never was suspended, taken off active duty, stripped of his weapons or required to undergo a psychiatric evaluation, the lawsuit charges. For that, murder victim Susan Fyock's estate faults Knepper's former bosses in the city of Johnstown. The lawsuit, a civil rights action filed in federal court in Pittsburgh, asks for undisclosed damages from city government, its police department, then-Police Chief William Clark, Mayor Donato Zucco and Knepper himself, who was sentenced last week in Cambria County court to 20 to 40 years in state prison. "It seems to me that everybody in Johnstown who knew him knew he was a danger," Timothy Schweers, the Pittsburgh attorney who filed the lawsuit, said yesterday... After a brief argument in June, Knepper shot Fyock in their home as her 4-year-old son watched. Johnstown police were so concerned when Knepper fled the duplex and briefly disappeared that they posted armed officers at a parking garage overlooking the building housing city police offices. Asked at the time if Knepper approached anyone in the department about getting psychiatric care, Clark replied, "It's conceivable, but I'm not going to comment on it." The 15-count lawsuit charges constitutional rights violations that include Johnstown officials' failure to rein in a law officer known for violence and substance abuse... [police officer involved domestic violence oidv intimate partner violence ipv abuse law enforcement public safety lethal fatality fatalities murder pennsylvania state politics] on 2/11/2008 Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to Facebook 18 comments: AnonymousMay 20, 2011 I knew Sue, and I knew Craig. I was the babysitter of the 4 year old. I can tell you that I think about this often, I think about them often. I was only 14yrs old when "it" happened. It affected the entire community. I do think the Johnstown police department did a poor job of making sure that Craig was mentally stable. This could have been prevented, 3 kids would still have a mother, her parents would still have a daughter and her friends would still have Sue. Craig should have been suspended the 1st time the police were ever called, or they should have at least done an extensive look into his mental health. It's too late now, and I hope the force has learned to act on domestic violence and take it serious no matter what, or who is involved. I can't believe it's been almost 10 years. She shouldn't be forgotten, I believe there should be a memorial in her name, paid for by Johnstown police. I know it's too much to ask, but I know I will light a candle for Sue this June 10th. Reply Behind The Blue WallMay 20, 2011 I think that's a good idea... the memorial. Thank you for sharing here. Reply AnonymousJune 13, 2011 Craig Nepper had many problems. He moved out of Susans home on many occasions. One time she thought he was gone and he was hiding in the attic for three days. On another occasion he threatened to shoot Dalton (her son) if she was 10 minutes late getting home from work. He had a minor conflict with a 80 year old neighbor lady so he climbed on her roof and cut her cable and phone line. He fell off and broke his leg which he claimed was a work related accident and was collecting workmans comp. for. I know this because I am Susans Father. Reply Replies Jen (the babysitter)March 28, 2012 I remember when he was hiding in the attic, I was supposed to babysit that night. It was creepy. I also remember when he cut her line and collected workmans comp. Reply Behind The Blue WallJune 13, 2011 Thank you. I'm so so sorry that you lost your daughter this way. I would love to know anything about her. All I know is from when she was in the paper as a "victim" - but everyone is so much more than that. I invite you to share some of who Susan was a person - as a woman, a daughter, a mother, or friend to people in her life. It is very dissettling and feels disrespectful to her life to not have a photo OR anything PERSONAL about her. Her life was stolen, and that is so cruel and unfair. Much love to your family. Cloud Reply AnonymousJune 13, 2011 Susan was so well liked that after her funeral they had a candelight vigil that took up the whole bock in front of her house and had to baracade the street from traffic. It's hard to beleive that Craig Knepper was a preacher before he became a policeman. Susans three boys are doing Ok and all are very active in school sports. Reply AnonymousJune 13, 2011 Contributing this that I had copied from a link that isn't there anymore. "I love you Sue About a year ago i met a lady that i would soon be babysitting for Named Sue. She was probably the Nicest person i had ever been close to. She had a son named Dalton who was 3 at the time and a boyfriend Named Craig... he was a police officer. it was easy to see that they loved eachother... they had even had eachother's names tatooed to them. I had known them for about a year and Grew to love them both a lot. Towards the end of their relationship they had some problems... Craig had been depressed from his failing marriage but would not divorce because he had before been a reverand and divorce was a sin... He had also hurt his leg falling off of a ladder and was in a brace... he couldn't work and also couldn't take care of sues son because he was too active and craig couldn't walk too well so my friend and i stayed at the house with Dalton and Craig. Craig loved dalton so much like he was his own son... He played with him and watched movies with him and everything. I had also spent alot of time with Craig... He was like an Uncle or so to me. He helped me with my homework and joked around with me... i would call him Gimpy and stuff cuz he couldn't walk and he found that funny. He was an all around great guy. But apparently he and sue had been arguing about him being Lazy because he wouldn't clean up after the dog and he had been drinking alot since he had been off of his depression pills. One day she had come downstairs before she had to leave for work and told us that she had seen him holding a gun to his head and she told him that if he was gonna kill himself to do it in his car not infront of her son. the monday after that she had called and told me that her son was going to his grandma's house so she didnt need us to babysit, but we would be there tomorrow. later that night i was going to call her and tell her that i was going to Maryland for 2 weeks on that friday... It was 9:55 PM when i picked up the phone but then realized it was a little bit late so i would just tell her tomorrow. I wish i would have called her that night. at around 10:05 her and Craig had been fighting and he shot her infront of her 4 year old son who had just come back from his grandmothers house. Once in the face and once in the thigh. At 4:00AM my sister called to tell me that she had heard what had happened... In the newspaper it said that he had held the boy hostage... I have never been more terrified in my life. Dalton was my world... I loved him more than myself. then i found out that he was ok and Craig had been arrested. Just 3 days ago i went to Craigs preliminary hearing before the trial. I wanted to badly to say hello to him and let him kno that even though what he did was wrong... and i could never forgive him for it... i still love him and i still think of him all the time. Though i also miss Sue... I know that i will never see her in this life again... But knowing that craig is still alive and i can't talk to him causes so much agony. And as for the little boy... i still speak to him and one of the things he had asked me is if i hate "Craiggy" now and i told him no... and he said "me Nether... I love craiggy" and he asked me if i miss Craig and i said yes and he said that he wants to go get him out of jail cuz he wants to watch michael Meyers with him and "Coby" (the dog). I know that the boy should understand what craig did... and im sure he does... But Craig was like a father to him and for him to hate him would be so terrible... like losing 2 parents instead of one. I love you Sue... I Miss you too... and lifes so Hard... Without you. in loving memory of Susan Louise (Burkhart) Fyock. you mean the world to me..." Reply AnonymousJune 13, 2011 I wouldn't be comfortable with a babysitter being that attached to my man. Reply Replies Jen (the babysitter)March 28, 2012 There were 2 babysitters, Myself (Jen) another. I won't give her name. But it's not that she was "close" to him, he and Sue were like our other family. Sumtimes we spent more time there than at our own house. I remember going over and Sue would play with my hair. Her friends would have "O*Town" playing for us when we got there. Craig really didn't talk to us much, but when he did it was always in a kidding way. Than we started to see he darker side come out, through the things Sue would tell us. She wouldn't give details but she would give us insight incase he came home while we were there. | Burkhart, Susan Louise (I243777)
|
| 16856 | http://berger.moonfruit.com/ http://www.brianberger.co.uk/ | Renner, Martin (I24387)
|
| 16857 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Davidson, Kenneth Comfort (I206636)
|
| 16858 | http://bismarcktribune.com/deborah-gustin/image_9707cebc-262f-11e3-9f53-0019bb2963f4.html Deborah Gustin was murdered in January 1977. The man who admitted to killing her, Mark Wells, died Sept. 18, 2013, while serving his sentence for Gustin's death. September 25, 2013 5:06 pm • By Jenny Michael Mark Wellls pleaded guilty to the murder of Deborah Gustin in 1977. He died Sept. 18, 2013, of natural causes. He remained in custody from the time of his arrest in Gustin's murder until his death. (1) More Photos A man convicted in 1977 of murdering a Bismarck woman has died while serving his sentence. Mark Wells, 58, died of natural causes at a Bismarck hospital on Sept. 18, Tim Tausend, spokesman for the North Dakota Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, confirmed on Wednesday. Wells, originally from South Dakota, pleaded guilty in May 1977 to the Jan. 23, 1977, murder of Deborah Gustin. Wells long sought release for the crime but served more than 36 years before his death last week. The murder charge against Wells was a Class A felony, carrying a maximum punishment of 20 years in prison, but then-Burleigh County District Judge Gerald Glaser found Wells to be a “dangerous special offender” and sentenced him to life in prison. The status held up under numerous appeals to the North Dakota Supreme Court and a writ to the U.S. Supreme Court, which was denied. Gustin, 24, was reported missing on Jan. 24, 1977, after she didn’t show up for work at the Public Service Commission, where she was a secretary. Within days, the search for Gustin spread nationwide. Police believed she had been taken by force from her apartment building, and a stolen credit card they believed had been used to jimmy open her door was linked to a purse found in southwestern North Dakota. Gustin’s car was located in Flagstaff, Ariz., a few days after her disappearance, and Wells was arrested there on Jan. 27, 1977. Gustin’s body was found in an abandoned mine in the Terry Peak area of South Dakota’s Black Hills on Jan. 30, 1977. A medical examiner ruled that Gustin died of strangulation. Coworkers and friends of Gustin described her to Tribune reporters in 1977 as “just a great person,” a hard worker who enjoyed arts and crafts, played softball, bowled and volunteered with the Big Sister program. Gustin graduated from St. Mary’s Central High School in 1970, then went to Bismarck Junior College for two years for an associate of arts degree. Gustin’s brother, Dwight, said Wednesday he didn’t have any comment about Wells’ death or about his sister’s murder. “It’s been a lot of years,” he said. When Wells pleaded guilty, he gave details about his crime. Wells said Gustin came home to find him attempting to break into her apartment at approximately 11:30 p.m. Jan. 23, 1977. He admitted to hitting her, taking her inside and raping her. Wells claimed Gustin suffocated in a plastic bag while he drove around in her car, but witnesses for prosecutors said a cloth was found around Gustin’s neck and she had been strangled. Wells said he drove Gustin’s body to South Dakota, where he dumped it in the abandoned mine shaft. Wells testified that he did not know Gustin, and he admitted to breaking into her apartment two months before the murder. Police records showed Gustin had reported a burglary at her home over the Thanksgiving weekend in 1976. At a hearing to determine whether Wells was a dangerous special offender, two women testified that Wells entered their homes in the year prior to the murder and asked them to perform sexual acts. The state Parole Board reduced Wells’ sentence over the years from life in prison to 98 years, then to 97 years. Gustin’s family steadfastly opposed Wells’ attempts to be freed, and he never was released. Wells in 1987 became the first prisoner in North Dakota to marry while incarcerated following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling allowing such unions. The couple later divorced. Reach Jenny Michael at 701-250-8225 or jenny.michael@bismarcktribune.com. Copyright 2014 Bismarck Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed | Gustin, Deborah J. (I267607)
|
| 16859 | http://bklyn-genealogy-info.stevemorse.org/LI/LI.Notable.Requests.html FROEHLICH, Francis Bernard When Francis Bernard Froehlich was graduated from the Fordham University Law School in 1943, he was an honor student. That distinction he has carried into his career as lawyer and as a citizen and Catholic layman. For he is prominent not only at the bar, but as a leader of the Minneola Republican Club and the Citizens party of Minneola and an officer of the Knights of Columbus. Mr. Froehlich was born in Floral Park on September 23, 1916. He is a member of a family that has lived in Nassau County for more than a century. His grandfather built the first stores on the Jericho Turnpike in Floral Park. His father, John Frank Froehlich, was a farmer and resident of Floral Park. His mother was Theresia (Rose) Froehlich. Francis B. Froehlich was graduated from the Chaminade High School, Minneola, in 1936. He received the degree of Bachelor of Arts from Fordham University in 1940 and in January, 1943, that of Bachelor of Laws from the Fordham Law School. In October, 1942, Mr. Froehlich passed the New York State bar examinations and in June, 1943, was admitted to practice. He had in the meantime become a law clerk in the firm of Glass and Lynch, New York. In April, 1943, the firm had promoted him to managing attorney. Later he associated himself with Elvin N. Edwards and on January 1, 1946, when James J. McDonough, for many years a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, joined them, the new firm of Edwards, Froehlich and McDonough was formed. It has its offices at 1501 Franklin Avenue, Minneola. The firm is local counsel for Roosevelt Field. Mr. Elvin N. Edwards, prominent lawyer and former district attorney of Nassau County who was the senior member of the firm of Edwards. Froehlich and McDonough, died in July, 1946. Mr. Froehlich and Mr. McDonough carry on under the firm name. Mr. Froehlich is attorney for the Carle Place Water District, secretary of the Minneola Republican Club and vice president of the Citizens party of Minneola. He is deputy grand knight of the Corpus Christi Council of the Knights of Columbus, member of the board of directors of the Kiwanis Club of Minneola and member of the board of directors of Nassau County Cancer Committee and counsel to same. He is a communicant of the Corpus Christi Roman Catholic Church of Minneola. Mr. Froehlich and Carol Hoar, daughter of George Timothy Hoar and Carol (Williams) Hoar, were married in St. Andrews Church, Flushing, on February 7, 1942. They are the parents of two daughters, Patricia Theresia, born August 19, 1943, and Regina Marie, born September 16, 1944. Mr. and Mrs. Froehlich live at 372 Jackson Avenue, Minneola. | Froehlich, Francis Bernard (I163014)
|
| 16860 | http://boards.ancestry.de/surnames.keller/3847/mb.ashx?pnt=1 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/STECK/2011-08/1313159148 | Keller, Jean (I288460)
|
| 16861 | http://boards.ancestry.de/surnames.keller/3847/mb.ashx?pnt=1 | Keller, Jean (I288474)
|
| 16862 | http://boards.ancestry.de/surnames.keller/3847/mb.ashx?pnt=1 | Weiss, Gertrude (I288475)
|
| 16863 | http://books.google.com/books?id=AHq3Qf-sZzYC&pg=PA101&lpg=PA101&dq=epplin+%2Bpinckneyville+%2B+obit&source=web&ots=IkfW3iyPnt&sig=ThvDSH-zR_6Z7SlDaInic4dNtCI&hl=en&ei=032aSeGGOpXE0AXj1a29Ag&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA102,M1 | Family (F6064)
|
| 16864 | http://bowlbyfamilyhistory.com/john9.htm 1e. JAMES RUSSELL BOWLBY, M.D., F.A.C.P. (15) was the first son of Garner Milton and Florence Marie (Russell) Bowlby, born 10 May, 1928, Detroit, Michigan, died 29 May, 1990, Livonia, Michigan. Funeral mass was held at Aidem Catholic Church at Livonia, interment was held at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery, Southfield. He was graduated from the Wayne State University School of Medicine in 1953. After serving in the Army Medical Corps in 1955 and 1956, Dr. Bowlby completed his residency in internal medicine at Detroit Receiving Hospital. He was affiliated with St. Mary Hospital for more than 30 years, specialized in clinical cardiology from 1975. He was the hospital's chief of staff in 1970 and 1971 and retired in January of 1990, after 30 years as physician in Livonia, Michigan. He was a fellow of the American College of Physicians, and associate fellow of the American College of Cardiology and a member of the Michigan State and Wayne County Medical societies, Phi Pho Sigma, and Alpha Omega Alpha. James married at Omena, Michigan on 29 December, 1951, FLORENCE MARIE KIESSEL, born 7 December, 1928, Detroit. She was the daughter of Carl R. Kiessel, born 26 June, 1901, Leelanau County, Michigan, who married at Omena on 30 June, 1926, Viola Mary Reicha, born 2 November, 1903, Leelanau County, died there 24 October, 1973, buried Gills Pier Cemetery, Leelanau County. James and Florence had six children: Mark James, Neil Robert, John Michael, David Eric, Brian Edward, and Kathleen Marie. 1f. MARK JAMES BOWLBY (16) was the first son of James Russell and Florence Marie (Kiessel) Bowlby, born 6 November, 1952, Detroit, Michigan. He married on 9 September, 1978, Livonia, NANCY A. EDWARDS,. (Edwards) (16); born 15 March, 1954. They lived at Livonia in 1990, and had a daughter: 1g, KATHERINE ANNE BOWLBY (17) born 3 May, 1988. 2f. NEIL ROBERT BOWLBY (16) was the second son of James Russell and Florence Marie (Kiessel) Bowlby, born 30 March, 1954, Detroit, Michigan. He received his Ph.D. in 1989. 3f. JOHN MICHAEL BOWLBY (16) was the third son of James Russell and Florence Marie (Kiessel) Bowlby, born 25 January, 1957, Detroit, Michigan. He married at Livonia on 26 September, 1980, CYNTHIA M. KATZMAN,. (Katzman) (16); born 4 July, 1959. They lived in Shanon, Massachusetts, in 1990, and had two children: 1g, DAVID RICHARD BOWLBY (17) born 24 May, 1985; and 2g, SARAH MARIE BOWLBY (17) born 4 October, 1987. 4f. DAVID ERIC BOWLBY (16) was the fourth son of James Russell and Florence Marie (Kiessel) Bowlby, born 8 April, 1958. He married at Livonia on 31 July, 1982, BOBBI ANN CHILSON, born 2 August, 1960, Chicago, Illinois. 5f. BRIAN EDWARD BOWLBY (16) was the fifth son of James Russell and Florence Marie (Kiessel) Bowlby, born 17 March, 1960, Detroit, Michigan. He married at Upsilanti, Michigan, 27 May, 1983, LISA MARIE MALONEY, born 22 September, 1960, Cleveland, Ohio. They lived in Shanon, Massachusetts, in 1990, and had three children: 1g, JASON EDWARD BOWLBY (17) born 16 November, 1984; 2g, MICHAEL ALAN BOWLBY (17) born 25 February, 1989; and 3g, PATRICK JAMES BOWLBY (17) born 8 July, 1990. 6f. KATHLEEN MARIE BOWLBY (16) was the only daughter of James Russell and Florence Marie (Kiessel) Bowlby, born 15 October, 1962, Detroit, Michigan. She passed her bar exams in 1989. | Bowlby, Dr. James Russell (I159348)
|
| 16865 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowlby, Mark James (I159349)
|
| 16866 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowlby, Dr. Neil Robert (I159350)
|
| 16867 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowlby, John Michael (I159351)
|
| 16868 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowlby, David Eric (I159352)
|
| 16869 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowlby, Brian Edward (I159353)
|
| 16870 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowlby, Kathleen Marie (I159354)
|
| 16871 | http://bumbery.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I209&tree=Bumbery1 | Silliman, Mary Elizabeth (I131735)
|
| 16872 | http://bumbery.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I209&tree=Bumbery1 | McCue, Maurice Howard (I223157)
|
| 16873 | http://cap.estevan.sk.ca/cemetery.records/marienthal/a.html ASPENLIEDER, Christina [SCHAFER] circa 1852 RUSS 29 Oct 1922 s= Valentine Aspenlieder | Schafer, Christina (I8721)
|
| 16874 | http://cap.estevan.sk.ca/cemetery.records/marienthal/a.html ASPENLIEDER, Christina [ZIMMERMAN] 28 Jan 1905 SK/CAN 12 Sep 1927 s=p= John AspenliederAloysius Zimmerman, Wilhelmina Schiiller | Zimmerman, Christina (I11324)
|
| 16875 | http://cap.estevan.sk.ca/cemetery.records/marienthal/a.html St. Cunigundis (St. Cunigunda) Catholic ChurchMarienthal Saskatchewan CanadaMarienthal SK (RM of Cambria #6)Location: NW1/4-Sec12-Twsp 1-R12-W2(9 miles south of Torquay, Saskatchewan) ASPENLIEDER, Valentine 1851 RUSS 2 Nov 1929 s= Christina Schafer | Aspenleiter, Valentin (I8641)
|
| 16876 | http://ccha.tufl.org/ccha/records/04061930/0406193013230.htm Title: MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATION 13230 (1930) Comments: APPLICATION FOR THE MARRIAGE OF MARTIN JOSEPH CLER (27 YEARS OLD) OF PESOTUM AND BERNADETTE RUND (21 YEARS OLD) OF PESOTUM. APPLICATION DATED JANUARY 20, 1930. Name(s): CLER, BERNADETTE CLER, MARTIN JOSEPH RUND, BERNADETTE | Family (F49844)
|
| 16877 | http://classic.lcms.org/pages/wPage.asp?IssueID=36&ContentID=618 GRESE, EVERETT GUSTAV; Sept. 26, 1917, Collinsville, Ill., to May 12, 2009, Peoria, Ill.; son of William and Alma (Nicol) Grese; graduated St. Louis, 1942. Served 1942?1982. Ministries/parishes: North Little Rock, Ark.; Memphis, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Maplewood, St. Louis, Mo.; Litchfield, Ill.; retired 1982. Preceded in death by his first wife, Vera (Richter) Grese, and his second wife, Jane (Oster) Grese. Survivors: sons: William, Robert, Richard, Timothy; daughters: Ruth Fleming, Mary Anders, Judy Schomburg, Vivian Lieske, Lois Conner, Carol Hinz, Rebecca Isaacs. Funeral and interment: May 18, 2009, Peoria, Ill. | Grese, Reverend Everett Gustav (I29479)
|
| 16878 | http://collectornuts.com/domer.pdf | Berkey, Ora Andrew (I163548)
|
| 16879 | http://collectornuts.com/domer.pdf | Hamman, Grace Louise (I163549)
|
| 16880 | http://collectornuts.com/domer.pdf | Berkey, Barbara Ann (I163550)
|
| 16881 | http://colubridlady.com/tag/genealogy/ According to a story told to me by my grandfather, my g-g-grandfather, George G. Fyock, was part Native American and wanted to open a bar but his application for a liquor licenese was denied on those grounds. From everything I?ve researched (and from what other?s have researched, as well) he was NOT Native American. I would love to have the letter he received that stated why his application for a license was denied. If it mentioned Native American status, I would have something to work with, otherwise, I think he had another reason for hiding his past and never answering questions about his parents. It must have been a real doozy of a story to prefer lying and saying he was part Native American (realize that this was during the early 1900s) than to tell the truth about his family. | Fyock, George G. (I94651)
|
| 16882 | http://db.yadvashem.org/names/nameDetails.html?itemId=2002240&language=en | Katz, Josef (I254463)
|
| 16883 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Wolf, Alvina (I331714)
|
| 16884 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Braun, Hermine (I331716)
|
| 16885 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Frank, Jakob (I331718)
|
| 16886 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Diehl, Lina (I331719)
|
| 16887 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Dreyfuss, Rosa (I331721)
|
| 16888 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Levy, Ernst (I331723)
|
| 16889 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Löb, Johanna (I331724)
|
| 16890 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Machol, Benno (I331725)
|
| 16891 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Machol, Karl (I331727)
|
| 16892 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Samuel, Ilse (I331728)
|
| 16893 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Trautmann, Ida (I331729)
|
| 16894 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Straaß, Leopold (I331730)
|
| 16895 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Straaß, Simon Lazarus (I331731)
|
| 16896 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Trautmann, Alfred (I331732)
|
| 16897 | http://der-weltkrieg-war-vor-deiner-tuer.de.tl/Bad-Bergzabern.htm Am 10.11.1938 wurde während der Reichspogromnacht die Inneneinrichtung der Synagoge zerstört. 1932 lebten 43 Juden in Bad Bergzabern. Viele verließen in den folgenden Jahren die Stadt. Oktober 1940 wurden die letzten vier verbliebenen Menschen jüdischen Glaubens nach Gurs deportiert. Von den Bad Bergzaberner Juden sind in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus nach den Listen von Yad Vashem in Jerusalem definitiv umgekommen: Alvina Bändel geb. Wolf (1879) Emilie Blum (1866) Hermine Dreyfuss geb. Braun (1871) Jakob Frank (1879) Lina Frank geb. Diehl (1886), Rosa Hené geb. Dreifus (1870) Ernst Levy (1895) Johanna Löb (1878) Benno Machol (1875) Karl Machol (1881) Ilse Samuel (1927) Ida Strass (1865) Leopold Strass (1896) Simon Strass (1893) Alfred Trautmann (1869) Fritz Wolf (1876) | Wolf, Fritz (I331733)
|
| 16898 | http://des.genealogy.net/search/show/9089150 Page Number 27178 Ausgabe 2172 Datum 1918-10-25 Last name Bereswill First name Adam Ort Niederschlettenbach, Pirmasens Liste Preußen 1277 Reg. o.ä. Bemerk. Geburtsdatum | Bereswill, Adam (I361482)
|
| 16899 | http://didier-ott.no-ip.org/public/toutes/ged2web/p0000296.htm#I130575 | Lux, Alfred (I98088)
|
| 16900 | http://drc.libraries.uc.edu/handle/2374.UC/375088?rpp=10&order=DESC&sort_by=0&page=2&query=Tekulve&etal=0&focusscope=2374.UC/2032&mode=search Tekulve, Bernard (Death, 1897-02-15) Show full item record Title: Tekulve, Bernard (Death, 1897-02-15) Author: Cincinnati (Ohio). Health Dept. Description: Address: 1112 Elm St. Age at death: 55 yrs. Pg 16/1897/244/MW M/Germany/Dr. C. G. E. Speidel/J.E. G. Lietemeyer/St. Joseph's Old Bookmark: http://hdl.handle.net/2374.UC/375088 Date: 1897-02-15 | Tekulve, Johannes Bernhard Tehülwe (I198162)
|
