Notes
Matches 21,701 to 21,750 of 23,594
# | Notes | Linked to |
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21701 | husband maybe Charles Braun per father's obituary | Clary, Tina Felicia (I8462)
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21702 | Hutchinson News||6 | Black, Zetta (I32583)
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21703 | Hypertension, pneumonia, cardiac failure | Zimmerman, Christine (I4354)
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21704 | hypertensive cardio-vascular disease | Garton, Josephine E. (I3457)
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21705 | I do not know if this is the correct James Carpenter and Elizabeth Clary | Family F2530
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21706 | Immigrated in 1862, 1880 census shows name as Nicholas? Frank middle name see obitu. 1880 census show a Jacob Schlitz living with them on Washington street in Caledonia, MN; indicates as no relation. Also shows Valentin, , Susan & Maggie(Margaret 9 months) | Bouquet, Nicolas Frank (I885)
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21707 | imprisoned his father "found him and took him home" | Thomas, Henry Marion (I11012)
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21708 | In 1859, Frederick and Catherina Alberswerth deeded one acre of land to the German Methodist Episcopal Church. It was located about two miles northwest of the Senate Grove Methodist Church and was to be used as a meeting house and burialground. This was from land owned by Weber and Meier.The church was called Meier. Also a burial ground located on Spreckelmeyer Road near Berger, was being used. The Reverend Wilhelm Schreck, a Methodist circuit rider and founder ofMethodist churches in the area as well as the Meier Church is buried on the Spreckelmeyer site. Both of these sites contain marked and unmarked graves and are not maintained. In 1879 land was obtained from Senator F. W. Pehle and his wife Hanna by the congregation as a new church site and burial ground on what is now names Highway VV. The congregation was then named Senate Grove Immanuel M. E. Church.Additional land was purchased from Wesley Allersmeyer and his wife Louise in 1926 and 1946. The first burial was that of a child, Emma Pehle, in 1876. This was probably the daughter of Senator Pehle. By-laws were drawn up in 1894 defining the boundaries of the burial grounds and private lots. An instrument of correction was filed in 1899. By-laws enacted in 1938 established a perpetual endowment to provide for the upkeep of the burialgrounds. | Berger, Missouri, Senate Grove Cemetery (I28320)
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21709 | In 1895, he had been a resident of MN for 14 years. Could possible have emigrated from Austria in 1881. His occupation was a day laborer. | Schroepfer, Jacob (I1214)
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21710 | in Company E, 122nd Regiment, Ohio Infantry (Union Army). He lost his right thumb in 1863. | Clary, Thomas (I9353)
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21711 | in Company G, 2nd Arkansas Cavalry (Union Army) | Clary, John S. (I13508)
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21712 | in Company H, 128th Regiment Indiana Infantry, Union Army | Clary, Isaac Marion (I11008)
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21713 | in Company L, 2nd Wisconsin Cavalry of Volunteers | Doelle, Engelhardt (I82)
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21714 | In his military uniform | Schwebach, Lawrence Eugene (I858)
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21715 | in the 3rd Division, 18th Field Artillery. He was gassed in the war, which eventually caused his early death. | Clary, Roy Leslie (I13330)
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21716 | in the army | Heying, Eugene Joseph (I7151)
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21717 | in the Army | Williams, Paul Oscar Thomas (I9388)
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21718 | in the army | Loutsch, Elmer J. (I21071)
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21719 | in the Confederate Army as a private in Company I, 22nd Regiment, Texas Infantry | Clary, Solomon Revis (I12237)
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21720 | in the Confederate Army, Company C, 17th Regiment Texas Cavalry | Clary, Joseph M. (I12240)
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21721 | in the Marines | Jones, Joseph Walter (I13802)
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21722 | in the Navy | Williams, Paul Oscar Thomas (I9388)
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21723 | in the Navy | Jones, Joseph Walter (I13802)
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21724 | in the navy as a bombardier | Bunkers, Otto Anthony (I4997)
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21725 | in the U.S. Army | Schwebach, Marvin (I19669)
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21726 | in the U.S. Navy | Daugherty, Donald Lewis (I9497)
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21727 | in the Union Army served as private and corporal in the 116th and 138th Regiments Indiana Infantry and in the 142nd Regiment Indiana Volunteers. | Thomas, Henry Marion (I11012)
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21728 | in the Union Army with the 10th Regiment, Illinois Cavalry. Served in Companies M and E. | Clary, Willerby Pickett (I10738)
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21729 | in US Navy for 4 years | Ramey, Chester (I9937)
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21730 | Incorporated in 1863 and dedicated in 1864, Crown Hill soon became the area's largest cemetery. While it aimed to provide burial space for the large number of war dead from Indiana, it also was made to serve the growing community ofIndianapolis. Currently it is the third largest cemetery in the United States. It sits upon 555 acres and has roughly 25 miles of road within. Approximately 1500 burials occur each year. The original entrance was on the west side of the cemetery on Michigan Road, but it was closed in 1901. The magnificent entrance on 34th Street (39.81730, -86.16470) on the east side of the cemetery was opened on May 1, 1866. While thatentrance is still in use, the main entrance is the North Entrance just north of 38th Street on Clarendon Road. Enter at the funeral home, which was added in 1993, and drive around its north side to enter the cemetery. There is anunderpass, which was built in 1925, through which to access the south side of the cemetery. The North Entrance has longer hours than the 34th Street Entrance which normally closes and is locked between 5 and 6 p.m. depending on the time of year. Also the North Entrance is where the office is located. It is in the same buildingas the funeral home and can be accessed from the southwest side of the building. Office hours are Monday to Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. The office is closed on Sundays and holidays. The Crown Hill Heritage Foundation is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization which was incorporated in 1985. They serve to protect the historically significant buildings and landmarks at Crown Hill. They also plan tours of the cemeteryat various times of the year. If you are interested in learning more about the foundation, you can contact them at (317) 920-4165. Also on the same grounds is the historic Crown Hill National Cemetery. It is also identified as Sections 9 and 10, but is a separate cemetery. The land was purchased by the US Government on August 27, 1866. | Indianapolis, Indiana, Crown Hill Cemetery (I28888)
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21731 | Indianapolis Star||19 | Barnell, Orus P. (I1720)
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21732 | infantile paralysis | Clary, Celester L. (I19281)
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21733 | inflammation of stomach & bowels | French, Reno Ivan (I3389)
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21734 | influenza | Clary, Addison T. (I10463)
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21735 | influenza | Clary, Enoch Martin (I12332)
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21736 | influenza | Barnell, Marilyn Jayne (I27630)
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21737 | influenza | Henderson, William Eugene (I33357)
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21738 | Info off tomb stone in Caledonia, MN 1976 | Schwebach, C. A. (I1503)
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21739 | Info off tomb stone in Caledonia, MN, 1976, Possible brother of Nicholes? | Schwebach, John Nicholes (I1502)
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21740 | inhaling steam from a boiling kettle on a stove | Waters, Louisa Matlida (I1906)
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21741 | injuries suffered in head-on automobile collision on Highway 85 | Bartles, Claude Lavere (I28994)
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21742 | injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident on Sept. 28 | Coulson, Kenneth Tallover (I26684)
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21743 | interstitial nephritis | Browning, Winfield Taylor (I32602)
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21744 | intestinal obstruction | Sartelle, Bernice Milicent (I31375)
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21745 | intestinal obstruction cause undetermined | Ryan, Catherine (I4934)
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21746 | intestional heamorrhage | Lavalla, Emil Fabian (I2825)
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21747 | ISBN # 0-87745-538-4 | Source (S66)
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21748 | ISBN # 1-877677-39-6 Harrison Co. - County Court FHL #0847273 | Source (S43)
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21749 | ischemic heart disease | Dolan, Beatrice A. (I4820)
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21750 | It is a military cemetery in the United States, established during the American Civil War on the grounds of Arlington House, formerly the estate of the family of Robert E. Lee's wife Mary Anna (Custis) Lee, a descendant of MarthaWashington. The cemetery is situated directly across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C. and near The Pentagon. It is served by the Arlington Cemetery station on the Blue Line of the Washington Metro system. Web address: [html:]http://www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/[:html] | Arlington, Virginia, Arlington National Cemetery (I29000)
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