
Treffer 1 bis 50 von 6,779
| # | Notizen | Verknüpft mit |
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| 1 | Grdn. LN, Sec. 125, Lot 10, Sp. 4 | FOERSTER, Florence Elizabeth (I16814)
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| 2 | Quelle (S12399)
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| 3 | 02 Aug 1914 steht in der Sterbeurkunde von Heinrich Lebershausen | Familie: Heinrich LEBERSHAUSEN / Louise DORNBUSCH (F8519)
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| 4 | an diesem Tag wurde die neue Schloßkiche eingeweiht an diesem Tag wurde die neue Schloßkiche eingeweiht | Familie: Johann Wilhelm FRIES / Anna Kunigund SCHMID (F8429)
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| 5 | Aufgebot in Greifenstein | Familie: Karl LEBERSHAUSEN / Ella MAUL (F8495)
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| 6 | Aufgebot in Greifenstein, Trauung in Herborn | Familie: Friedrich Carl KUNZ / Mina Pauline GIMBEL (F8558)
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| 7 | bei der Hochzeit Schreibweise Kunz | Familie: Johann Konrad KUNZ / Marie Christine PISCATOR (F8533)
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| 8 | Broad Bay Congregational United Church of Christ | Familie: Johannes HILD / Anna Elisabetha MÖHLIN (F4754)
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| 9 | Die Eltern des Bräutigams haben die Zustimmung zur Hochzeit verweigert. | Familie: Johann Christoph LEBERSHAUSEN / Katharine Elisabeth PLETSCH (F8473)
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| 10 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Karl Peter BENNER / Johannette Wilhelmine BOTT (F8462)
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| 11 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Heinrich BOTT / Johannette CLAUSIUS (F8463)
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| 12 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Heinrich WEBER / Christine Luise Wilhelmine BANGEL (F8471)
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| 13 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Johann Heinrich ERNST / Johannette Christine LEBERSHAUSEN (F8489)
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| 14 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Friedrich SCHWEITZER / Katharine Elisabethe KNAPP (F8530)
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| 15 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Karl ECKHARDT / Wilhelmine KUNZ (F8575)
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| 16 | Heiratsnebenregister HStA Marburg | Familie: Johann Wilhelm PFAFF / Anna Catharina GERVINUS (F8423)
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| 17 | im Hochzeiteintrag Elli geschrieben | Familie: Ewald DEUSTER / Ella Helene PISCATOR (F8543)
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| 18 | Mündliche Überlieferung der über mehrere Generationen bestehenden Johnson-Mink Farm, später bekannt als Mink Dairy Farm, dann Deer Foot Farm, Appleton, Maine. Chris Roberts interviewt seine Großeltern Keith und Grace Mink, seine Mutter Sue Ellen Mink-Roberts und seine Großtante Natalie Irene (Mink) Gushee über den Familienbetrieb und seinen Betrieb in den ersten drei Generationen des Besitzes. Das Anwesen wurde 1897 erworben und wurde zu einer LKW-Farm, auf der Obst und Gemüse, Eier und Milchprodukte produziert wurden. NA4268 Keith Burton Mink and Grace (Grinnell) Mink, interviewed by Chris Roberts at Deer Foot Farm, Appleton, Maine, Monday, March 10, 2003. Chris Roberts is the Minks' grandson. Keith Mink was born April 6, 1922, at Deer Foot Farm, and was 80-years-old at the time of this recording. Mink (1922-2010), a World War II Veteran, lived on the farm his entire life except the period he was in the service. The farm was multi-generational with Mink growing up with his maternal grandparents, Lyndon M. (1869-1933) and Nelle E. (Mitchell) Johnson (1870-1937), and parents, Ivan A. Mink and Irene L. (Johnson) Mink, living in the same farmhouse. Keith Mink discusses the history of the Johnson-Mink Farm (aka Deer Foot Farm), his grandmother and mother both working on and off the farm, Lyndon Johnson keeping cattle for beef, dairy cows, veal calves, and chickens for eggs. Irene (Johnson) Mink growing fruits (strawberries & raspberries) and vegetables (potatoes & beans) and making butter, taking meat and produce to Rockland to ship out on "the Boston boat" or by driving 30-miles to sell to stores in Augusta, driving his grandmother to Augusta in the Essex [produced by Essex Motor Company, 1918-1922] at age 9 and receiving his first driver's license at age 14, getting electricity for the first time when he was 9-years-old [1931], mending fences, milking, cutting wood for lumber, haying using a horse rake, family genealogy, his grandfather dying of cancer on the farm, funerary practices, house fires, and dividing up family property. Both Mink and Grace discuss the importance of him being the first male child born in his generation of the family and his mother teaching school for seven years before his younger brother, Lyndon A., was born. Mink speaks about the Depression era, hiring farm hands to help with potatoes and beans, his father starting a milk route in Rockland to earn 8-cents per quart of milk instead of the 2-cents per quart offered by the creamery in Union, selling milk, cream, butter, and eggs to restaurants and stores in Rockland during the Depression, harvesting ice and using the ice house to cool down the milk, how his mother was able to feed children a hot lunch in a one-room schoolhouse, how his paternal grandfather Ali Mink never played fiddle again after the death of his son Neal, how Mink himself had "no choice" but to be a farmer, and the differences between "today" vs. "years ago." RESTRICTED. No release on file. No transcript. Recordings: mfc_na4268_t113_02_01.mp3, mfc_na4268_t113_02_02.mp3, mfc_na4268_t113_05_01.mp3, mfc_na4268_t113_05_02.mp3. [t113_02A&B, t113_05A&B] Time: 03:12:20. NA4429 Natalie "Nat" Irene (Mink) Gushee, interviewed by Chris Roberts at her home on Sennebec Pond in Appleton, Maine, March 18, 2003. Roberts interviews his "Great Aunt Nat," age 82 (born May 3, 1920, at the Johnson-Mink Farm aka Deer Foot Farm) about growing up on family farm and living in Appleton. Gushee reviews the family genealogy, her single aunts and uncles, family entertainments, her father's disappointment that she was a girl and the importance of her brother Keith being born the first male child of his generation of the family making him the favorite, how her life changed following the death of her grandmother, Ivan Mink working himself to death, Irene's filing for hardship status with the government in order for Keith to be discharged from duty in the Korean War and return to work the farm. Nat describes her mother's controlling nature and attitude toward her children and the farm and the impact of Irene's behavior on her children. She explains that she knew at a young age who she would marry, buying and moving to the George Ames farm for $2,300 and scraping by in the first years of marriage, eventually having nearly 700 acres of land including a gravel pit, raising squash, dried beans, blueberries, and wood, selling off the dairy herd and poultry, raising, processing and selling blueberries, her fear about the associated costs of freezing the crop, selling out when her husband, Carlton, was diagnosed with cancer. She speaks about her grandmother's intelligence and business savvy, but the recorder is stopped during discussion of specific land acquisitions. She discusses changes that took place following the Korean War, going to nursing school and earning her LPN following her husband's suicide, traveling internationally and her preference for traveling alone. She talks about her children, getting older, planning for home healthcare as she gets older. RESTRICTED. No release on file. No transcript. Recording: mfc_na4429_113_03_01.mp3 & mfc_na4429_113_03_02.mp3. [t113_03A&B] Time: 01:19:19. NA3960 Sue Ellen Mink Roberts, interviewed by Chris Roberts at her home in South Portland, Maine on March 13, 2003. Sue Ellen, Chris Roberts' mother, recounts her childhood growing up on the Johnson-Mink Farm, also known as the Mink Farm during the 1950s. She reviews a brief genealogy and leaving home in 1973 when she married; Ivan Mink's illnesses that create cognitive impairment that transitioned into dementia; her grandmother, Irene L. (Johnson) Mink, providing at home healthcare for a number of elderly family members as well as working the farm; her grandmother's social and business life; her father, Keith Mink, telling her more about his mother's influence on him than his father's influence; Irene Johnson being more the head of the household than her husband; Keith Mink's relationship with his mother and wanting to please her, consulting with his mother regarding farm business; little knowledge of her grandmother prior to her marriage or why Irene stayed on the farm; all of Lyndon Johnson's daughters becoming teachers; Irene controlling the farm's money; Irene leaving the farm in 1955 to move into Herb Mitchell's property to care for both her husband, Ivan, and cousin, Herb, both of whom had dementia; Irene's being well-read and well-informed about current events. Sue Ellen describes the farm house buildings; where her childhood swings were located; the produce and livestock raised on the farm during her father's childhood; her uncle Lyndon taking over the chicken barn following Irene's departure from the farm; what Keith raised for livestock and produce; her mother caring for the vegetable garden for family use; putting up food for winter; her emotional connection to the farm; the layout of the farm and outbuildings when she was a child; playing on the farm as a child; changes her father made to the farm; the emotional impact of a large rock being removed from the landscape by an aunt, as well as the impact of losing all the elm trees from Dutch elm disease; dreaming about the farm as it was; playing in the snow as a child; playing in the "fat people cemetery" and how it got its name; and her parents' cottage on the lake; and Appleton Ridge. She discusses her sentimental perspective of the farm and how it was impacted by family dynamics following the death of the family matriarch and how being pushed by their mother to work tirelessly impacted the Mink siblings, their lives, and relationships. RESTRICTED. No release on file. No transcript. Recording: mfc_na4435_113_04_01.mp3, mfc_na4435_113_04_02.mp3, mfc_na4435_113_06_01.mp3, and mfc_na4435_113_06_02.mp3 [t113_04A&B and t113_06A&B]. Time: 02:23:10. | Quelle (S12570)
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| 19 | Nicht verheiratet oder Heirat unbekannt! | Familie: Alfred Theodor HEMANN / Else Luise SCHIPPEL (F8450)
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| 20 | Nicht verheiratet oder Heirat unbekannt! | Familie: Johann Georg SCHNEIDER / Katharina Elisabetha STREUDER (F8428)
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| 21 | Nicht verheiratet oder Heirat unbekannt! | Familie: Johann Andreas PFAFF / Anna Elisabeth WEBER (F8424)
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| 22 | Schreibweise hier Cunz | Familie: Johann Christoph CUNTZ / Louise Catharine HAHN (F8438)
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| 23 | Share this obituary: Beatrice S. Rondeau OBITUARY Beatrice S. Rondeau of Pepperell; 74 PEPPERELL — Beatrice Sally (Marchelletta) Rondeau, age 74, of Pepperell, passed away on December 21, 2009, at the Nashoba Valley Medical Center, after a long term illness. Born in Leominster, MA on Sept. 29, 1935. wife of John F. Rondeau, Sr. for 50 years, and mother to eight children, Albert Rajala, Msgt John Rondeau, Jr., Paul Rondeau, Sr., Susan Landry, Carol Gates, Cynthia Rondeau, and the late Thomas Rondeau, and Antonio Rondeau. She also had 28 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. RONDEAU — A Memorial Service will be held at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witness, 35 Ferry Street, Lawrence, MA on Monday, December 28th at 8 P.M. Relatives and friends will be received by the family Tues., December 29th, 4-6 pm at Hamilton- McGAFFIGAN Funeral Home, 37 Main St. (Rte 113), Pepperell. Please see www.mcgaffiganfuneral.com Published in: Lowell Sun from December 27, 2009 to December 29, 2009 | MARCHELLETA, Beatrice (I45129)
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| 24 | CAIN, Professor Jarvis Lynn (I43050)
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| 25 | Chodowickistr. 30 | KEUCHEL, Wilhelm Jacob (I4264)
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| 26 | (deutsch Bogunschöwen) | BÖHNKE, Johann Adolf (I38718)
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| 27 | 63 Age: 63; Registration Office: Beilstein | TROPP, Friedrich Ferdinand (I10334)
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| 28 | 93229879 | BUEHL, Rosa Sophia (I1109)
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| 29 | age 79 per "Broad Bay Pioneers" page 378 | BOLZ, Anna Maria (I13344)
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| 30 | Bell-O'Dea Funeral Home | PETRIE, Stephen J. (I42073)
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| 31 | Berlin XII A, Nr 227 | WENDT, Friedrich Gustav Otto (I24250)
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| 32 | im Hochzeiteintrag Elli geschrieben | Familie: Ewald DEUSTER / Ella Helene PISCATOR (F8543)
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| 33 | mit Gesang und Klang | LEMBACH, Anna Elisabetha (I5736)
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| 34 | Section L, Map 1, Lot 474, Space 3 | FEID, Ellen (I16749)
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| 35 | St. Ambrosius (Magdeburg-Sudenburg) | LANDGRAF, Friedrich Wilhelm Hermann (I5336)
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| 36 | Taufzeugen waren Christian Pfaff und Anna Elisabetha, des Ältesten Pfaff eheliche Tochter. | PFAFF, Christian (I13202)
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| 37 | † 20.2.1697 Philipp Speet ein Kind | SPÄTH, Peter (I23926)
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| 38 | "FIRST OF THE HK3" Louis was born in Auburn, WA, where he lived most of his life before moving to Ocean Park in 1979 and then Tacoma in 1996. Dad spent the second world war serving his country by working for the NPRR transporting military troops. After the war because of health issues due to allergies, he went to work for Boeing the day his daughter was born, and then later for Kaiser Aluminum in Tacoma before retiring in 1979. Over 40 years ago Mr. Hough started plans for his Ocean Park home which is located on 3 rhododendron-covered acres on Willapa Bay. On visits to the Peninsula he and his family would work toward the home's completion and it remains today a testament to his design and the family's hard work. Mr. Hough was the president of Friends of the Library in Ocean Park. He was a lifelong member of the First Methodist Church in Auburn and a member of the Ocean Park United Methodist Church. He enjoyed woodworking, gardening, and bird watching. | HOUGH, Louis Henry (I35820)
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| 39 | "LAST OF THE HK3" On September 8, 2017, Uncle Chuck passed away in University Place WA at the age of 97, the last of the "Hough Kids Three" as Louis, Bill, and Chuck were known to family and friends. Shortly after graduation from Auburn High School in the late 1930's, Chuck began his railroad career with the NPRR. On 30 September 1940, realizing that war was eminent, Chuck enlisted in the US Navy. He served as a Seabee on the USS Acorn out of Port Hueneme, California. While stationed there, Chuck met and married Irene Adrienne Newton November 9, 1945 in Pasadena, California. After his discharge from the Navy, Chuck resumed his career with the NPRR in Washington State. During his tenure with the railroad, he worked as brakeman, conductor, and lobbyist in Olympia for the railroad trainmen. Besides his work with the railroad, Uncle Chuck served as an Auburn city councilman, and belonged to the Masons, Shriners,Elks, and Eagles fraternal organizations. Throughout his work years and his retirement from the railroad (in the 1980's), Chuck continued to enjoy his hobbies of gardening, woodworking, and boating. He also maintained his involvement in the retired railroad employees association and the Presbyterian church. Ashes to be interred with Irene. | HOUGH, Charles Frederick (I35825)
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| 40 | "Nenderother Kirchenbücher". Dieter Pfeiffer. Nenderother Kirchenbücher. http://www.nenderother-heimatstube.de/kirchenbuch/inhaltkibu.html. | Quelle (S658)
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| 41 | "Peter Nickels Zwillingssöhnlein" | NICKEL, Johann Jost (I14790)
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| 42 | "Uncle Louis", as he was known by family and friends, was actually born Ludvig Carl Balthasar Schmidt April 6, 1853 in Braubach,Hessen-Nassau Province, Germany to Friedrich Wilhelm Ludvig and Anna Marie Ackermann Schmidt (the headstone info is incorrect). Louis came to the US at age 14 to meet his father, who was a successful mining engineer in Missouri. By the time Louis arrived, elder Schmidt was headed home to Germany due to illness. Louie was never to see his father again. Soon Louis teamed up with his older brother, Leo, to travel to the gold fields in Montana. When the gold played out, Louis took a job with the Wells Fargo delivering mail from Deer Lodge, MT to Ogden, UT. Leo developed an interest in the science of brewing (at school in Worms, Germany). Soon after, both boys brought brides home from Germany to Montana. Louis spent from 1882 to 1904 (had been Mayor of Tumwater in 1904) working with and for his older brother, Leopold F. Schmidt, in the brewing industry. Louis changed his life's focus to gentleman farmer on Hope Island, WA . There, he raised 3 children (all born in MT) with his wife, Clara Julia Esperstedt. When Clara died in 1911, he went to live with his daughter until his death in 1919. | SCHMIDT, Ludwig Karl Balthaser (I35775)
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| 43 | "von Görg Thamern daselbsten, welcher mit einer flinten nach spatzen gezielet, unversehener weis erschossen worden; nachdem es von Doctoren und Barbieren besichtigt undt selbige im Haupt 2 Schrot gefunden, ist es d.11. ... bestattet worden." | MEUSER, Maria Elisabetha (I21660)
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| 44 | <i>APL Obituary Index</i>. Appleton Public Library. http://db.apl.org/obit/: accessed 14 October 2012. | Quelle (S372)
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| 45 | <i>Freistaat Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Statistisches Landesamt. Volkszählung am 8. Oktober 1919</i>. Microfilm reels: G654-G871. Landeshauptarchiv Schwerin. 5.12-3/20 Statistisches Landesamt (1851-1945). | Quelle (S562)
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| 46 | <i>Germany, Births and Baptisms, 1558-1898</i>. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013. | Quelle (S2)
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| 47 | <i>Germany, Marriages, 1558-1929</i>. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013. | Quelle (S352)
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| 48 | <i>Germany, Marriages, 1558-1929</i>. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013. | Quelle (S291)
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| 49 | <i>Germany, Prussia, Brandenburg and Posen, Church Book Duplicates, 1794-1874</i>. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013. | Quelle (S38)
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| 50 | <i>Maine Marriage Records, 1705-1922</i>. Augusta, Maine: Maine State Archives. | Quelle (S238)
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