WebGED: Family Tree child Sadler, Robert Alexander (1880 1962) father Barnett,Prentice(*1874 - ) mother Lane, Nellie(*1878 - ) http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Ranch/2298/main4.html
The Political Graveyard: September 2, 1874 Wednesday, September 2, 1874. 20/21 Elul, 5634 (Jewish calendar) Age 44William P. Frye; Age 42 Frederick W. Viehe; Robert Alexander Campbell http://politicalgraveyard.com/chrono/1874/09-02.html
Extractions: Birthdays of presumed living (at the time) politicians on this date: Age 73: Andrew Jackson Age 60: William Lawrence Age 48: Hiram Pitt Bennet Age 47: Nathaniel Cobb Deering Age 46: James Pickett Adams Age 44: William P. Frye Age 42: Frederick W. Viehe Robert Alexander Campbell Age 35: Henry George Age 32: James W. Covert Age 31: Henry H. Pulver Age 19: Hoke Smith Age 18: John H. Capstick Age 10: Fred J. Kern Age 9: Henry D. Flood
Driving Tours Of Mecklenburg County John Milton Alexander, who built the house in 1873 to 1874, was a jackof-all-trades . It was built in about 1840 by Robert Davidson Alexander, http://www.cmhpf.org/driving/route5.html
Extractions: home search survey and research reports neighborhood guides ... guestbook Route V is about 60 miles long and takes about two hours to drive. Allow extra time for stops at Latta Place, the Torance Store, and Davidson. Since there are many opportunities to stop and explore on this tour you may want to divide it into two parts. Davidson provides a natural dividing point for this tour. NOTE : The towns of Davidson, Cornelius, and Huntersville each have their own tour routes included on this site and can be incorportaed with this regional tour. Click on the map to browse Apart from the incursions of Lake Norman and I-77, northern Mecklenburg has seen surprisingly little twentieth-century development, though the scene is fast changing. Perhaps its distance from Charlotte has ensured relative protection from the city's expansion. In any case, this part of the county boasts the greatest number of early plantation homes. We have records of settlement in the area as early as the 1740s, a decade before Charlotte's first settlers stopped their wagons near what is now the center of the city. In 1744 Mecklenburg's first itinerant Presbyterian minister, John Thomson, was invited by the residents in the Hopewell area to preach at the home of Richard Barry. The early history of the northern part of the county is characterized by flourishing plantations and a tight-knit plantation community; as we shall see, family histories in the area are intricately intertwined. Davidson College added a new dimension to the area in 1837, providing the county with its only institution of higher education until Biddle Institute (now Johnson C. Smith University) was founded thirty years later. In the post-Civil War period, as the old plantations declined, the new railroad built through northern Mecklenburg caused Cornelius and Huntersville to grow as textile villages. For the same reason, Davidson also increased substantially during this period.
Naturalization Records-Place Fargnharson Alexander 1874 Vol. 01, page 164 1217.34 Declaration of Intent 1st Wason Alexander 1880 Vol. 3, page 177 1217.31 Final Papers - 2nd Papers http://www.state.de.us/sos/dpa/collections/natrlzndb/place/naturalization record
Sprague Database - Sprague Website Master Index George Lee 12 Apr 1815 4 Jan 1889 WARD, George Robert 25 May 1867 Mar 1953 WARD Pamelia WARD, Robert Alexander 28 Oct 1977 WARD, Ruby May 1899 WARD, http://www.sprague-database.org/_index/sidx128.htm
Extractions: Glasgow Digital Library OLD COUNTRY HOUSES INTRODUCTION HOUSES A-G ... The old country houses of the old Glasgow gentry Previous Contents Next THE property of John Campbell, Esq., is situated in the Barony parish of Glasgow and county of Lanark, and is distant about three miles from the Cross of Glasgow. About 1242 Alexander II. granted certain lands in the neighbourhood of Glasgow to the Bishop thereof, and those of "Possele" were among them. In the sixteenth century they were divided into Over or Upper Possil , and Nether or Lower Possil In 1589 Over Possil was the property of Robert Chirnsyde, who was Commissary of Glasgow in 1602. It afterwards came into the hands of the Crawfords of Milton, and in 1706 a bond of taillie was executed by John Crawford of Milton in favour of the second son of Sir William Stuart of Castlemilk by Dame Margaret Crawford, his spouse, eldest daughter of the entailer. There is included in that deed, among his other lands, "all and haill his thirty-six shilling tenpenny land of Over Possil." In 1828, on the death of his grand-aunt, Mrs. Margaret Stuart Rae Crawford of Milton, William Stuart Stirling succeeded, in terms of the entail, to the Milton estates, including Over Possil, and assumed the name of Crawford. He was the son of William Stirling, Captain King's Dragoon Guards
Extractions: Glasgow Digital Library 100 GLASGOW MEN INTRODUCTION VOLUME 1 ... William and James Baird were the eldest and fourth of the eight sons (and two daughters) of Alexander Baird and Jean Moffat, from the Monklands area of Lanarkshire. The family moved from farming to coal mining and iron smelting, with the first Gartsherrie furnace opening on 4 May 1830. William Baird took over the business after his father's death in 1833, and served as MP (Conservative) for the Falkirk Burghs 1841-46. He was a director of the Caledonian Railway Company and the Forth and Clyde Canal. He married Janet Johnston in 1840, and bought the Elie estate in 1853. James Baird was MP (Conservative) for the Falkirk Burghs 1850-57. He was a Deputy-Lieutenant of Ayr and Inverness, and bought the Knoydart estate in 1857. He was twice married: in 1852 to Charlotte Lockhart and in 1859 to Isabella Agnew. There were no children. James Baird died at Cambusdoon. WILLIAM and JAMES BAIRD were perhaps the most remarkable members of a remarkable family - the Bairds of Gartsherrie. They were not proprietors of the estate of that name, which belongs to Mr. Hamilton Colt. All the property which they possess there is the ground on which their great ironworks are erected. Their father was also a remarkable man, and their mother -
Extractions: Hennepin County Historical Society Minneapolis, MN This essay was originally published in 1988 by the Hennepin County Historical Society, Minneapolis, MN. Reprinted with permission of Hennepin County Historical Society Robert Koehler: Artist in Milwaukee by Peter C. Merrill Robert Koehler (1850-1917) was a notable artist and art teacher who for twenty-two years was the director of the Minneapolis School of Fine Arts, now known as the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Koehler was the outstanding artist in Minneapolis during his lifetime. In this article, an effort will be made to present an account of Koehler's career, including the influences which shaped him as an artist and the influence which he himself exerted on other artists of his time. nor his sister got on well with their older brother, Amandus. The youngest of the four children in the family was a daughter who died in infancy. In 1854 the family immigrated to the United States and settled in Milwaukee, where Koehler attended the German-English Academy. The drawing instructor at this liberal, non-sectarian school was Henry Vianden, a native of Bonn who had been an art student at the Munich Academy. Vianden was locally much admired as a landscape painter and was for many years the leading art teacher in Milwaukee. At the age of fifteen, Koehler became an apprentice in a
PERKINS OF MARYLAND—9th Through 11th Generations He married MARGARET CARNEY Abt. 1874, daughter of DANIEL CARNEY and CATHERINE LEARY . Robert Alexander LOGAN (ARRELIA EMELINE MORRISON, LUCINDA PERKINS, http://littlecalamity.tripod.com/Genealogy/Perkins8.html
Extractions: Search: Lycos Tripod 40 Yr Old Virgin Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next 1016. JAMES THOMAS PITTILO (JAMES H., JOHN HENDERSON, JAMES, ELIZABETH PERKINS, RICHARD, RICHARD, RICHARD, ROBERT) was born September 11, 1869 in Centerville, Yell County, Arkansas. He married ROSA EVANS in Yell County, Arkansas. She was born in Centerville, Yell County, Arkansas. Children of JAMES PITTILO and ROSA EVANS are: ...vi....AGNES PITTILO. 1017. RILEY J. PITTILO (JAMES H., JOHN HENDERSON, JAMES, ELIZABETH PERKINS, RICHARD, RICHARD, RICHARD, ROBERT) was born March 29, 1874 in Centerville, Yell County, Arkansas. He married JERUSHA STRAIT October 22, 1896 in Centerville, Yell County, Arkansas. Children of RILEY PITTILO and JERUSHA STRAIT are:
Andreas' History Of The State Of Nebraska - Dakota Co. The population of Dakota County in 1869 was 1598; in 1874, 2759; T. Woods,Robert Alexander, JW Hallock, John Bay, Albert Puett, and John Gallagher. http://www.kancoll.org/books/andreas_ne/dakota/dakota-p1.html
Extractions: Part 1 SOIL AND STREAMS. The native prairie grasses yet prevail, slough grass on the bottoms, blue joint on the uplands. Timothy is, however, being successfully introduced, and Kentucky blue grass is successfully introducing itself; crowding out all other varieties wherever it gets a start. GEOLOGY. The Dakota group consists mainly of sandstone, of different kinds and of different degrees of hardness, from very soft to very hard. A great deal of it is, however, a medium between the two extremes and is very valuable for smaller structures, from the ease with which it can be quarried and dressed. It is here also that is found an intensely hard quartzite suitable for the foundations of the largest structures. On the hill-top in this county may be seen a peculiar species of limestone, called from the abundance of its fossils, the Inoceramus limestone bed. It often breaks up into flagging stone, and, because capable of resisting great pressure, furnishes good building material. There is also an abundance of clay which makes excellent brick, and plenty of sand for plastering, both in the Missouri bottoms and uplands.
Help Wanted Messages, 2000; Ballarat Genealogical Society 1893, Ballarat) who married in 1874 at Ballarat as her second husband George Children were Robert, Ellen, James Alexander, Eliza, Catherine Ewing, http://www.ballaratgenealogy.org.au/hw/help2000.htm
Extractions: Robert and Sarah Matilda Carson McGough by Hugh McGough Robert McGough, was born in 1725 in county Down, according to A Glimpse Of The Past: Descendants of Robert McGough (b 1725, Northern Ireland) , a comprehensive compilation of the genealogy of this branch of the McGoughs, by Carolyn McGough Rowe. Carolyn Rowe's book is a prodigious work and contains the pedigrees of hundreds of the descendants of Robert and Matilda Carson McGough. Much of the information on this page is from her book. Most sources say that the name of Robert's wife was Sarah Matilda Carson McGough, but some sources say her name was Mary. One family historian says that she was "traditionally called Matilda Carson McGough." See the paper by Rev. E. M. Sharp on Edward McGough's web site . Robert E. Parrott, in his beautifully written book, (1992), refers to her as "Matilda (sometimes called Sarah)." On this page, I call her Matilda or Sarah Matilda. The family of Robert and Matilda Carson McGough sailed in 1773 from Newry, county Down, Northern Ireland, to Charleston, South Carolina, when their oldest son John was almost 12 years old, and their five younger children were 9, 7, 6, 5, and 3. They were part of a group of about 40 relatives and neighbors. Robert would have been 48 years old in 1773 when he migrated from Ireland with has family and neighbors. An account of the emigration of the Robert McGough family from Ireland to North Carolina is in
Toms's Guestbook William Paterson came from Scotland (Banff) to Canada around 1874, returnedin 188?, My father Robert Alexander Paterson. Had one sister Kathy. http://web.ukonline.co.uk/tom.paterson/book.htm
Mary Cassatt. Biography. - Olga's Gallery In 1874 Cassatt finally decided to settle in Paris. Alexander Cassatt andhis son Robert, the older brother of Mary, was a successful businessman with http://www.abcgallery.com/C/cassatt/cassattbio.html
Extractions: Mary Stevenson Cassatt was born on May 22, 1844 in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, US, into a well-to-do family. Her father, Robert Cassatt, was a successful stockbroker and financier. Her mother, Katherine Kelso Johnston, came from a banking family, which had provided her with a good education. The Cassatt family was of French Huguenot origin; they escaped persecutions and came to New York in 1662. The Franco-Prussian war (1870) made Cassatt return to the US for the next year and a half. The US atmosphere was so discouraging that she almost gave up painting. Late in 1871 she was on her way back to Europe, setting in Parma, where she copied works by Correggio for the archbishop of Pittsburgh. In Parma she spent 8 happy months.
ROBERT CRICHTON WYLLIE He was the son of Alexander and Janet (Crichton) Wyllie. In August 1874, Mr.Funk wrote to Mr. Wyllie from Maui reporting that although he had continued http://hml.org/mmhc/mdindex/wyllie.html
Extractions: MMHC Home Hours About Us Contact Us ... HML Home Robert Crichton Wyllie was born at Hazelbank, Parish of Dunlap, County of Ayreshire, Scotland, on October 13, 1798. He was the son of Alexander and Janet (Crichton) Wyllie. His father was a farmer. A biographical sketch of Wyllie in "The Victorian Visitors" by Alfons L. Korn states that as a boy of twelve Robert was enrolled at the University of Glasgow as a pupil of Professor William Richardson but that his name was not among the graduates of the institution nor did it appear among the graduates of the Faculty of Medicine at Edinburgh. It is probable that he got his medical training by serving as assistant to some practitioner. In any case, he began his career as a ship's surgeon and was shipwrecked three times. Forsaking the sea, Mr. Wyllie first went to Chile and then to other South American countries where me became a most successful merchant. From 1825 to 1830 he settled in Mazatlan, Mexico, and continued to prosper. While he did not actively practice medicine during this period, he did render medical aid when called upon and attended the member of several convents. In 1830 he returned to London and was a junior partner in the firm of Lyall, Wyllie, and Company, shipping merchants, until 1835. He then went into business for himself. He was on the original Board of Directors of the Pacific Steam Navigation Company. In 1843 he came to the United States to represent the interests of some of his clients, and here he met General William Miller whom he had known in Valparaiso, Chile. The General had been appointed British Consul-General to Hawaii, and he was able to persuade Mr. Wyllie to accompany him as his secretary. The two arrived in Honolulu aboard HMS "Hazard" on February 3, 1844. Shortly thereafter, Mr Miller left for a visit to Tahiti and Mr. Wyllie was appointed acting consul and served for about a year.
James-Younger Gang: Information From Answers.com They next robbed Alexander Mitchell and Company Bank in Lexington, The gangdecided to try another train robbery on January 31, 1874. http://www.answers.com/topic/james-younger-gang
Extractions: showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping James-Younger gang Wikipedia James-Younger gang The James-Younger Gang was a gang of American outlaws , that included (but was not limited to), the Younger Brothers ( Cole Younger Jim Younger John Younger and Bob Younger ), the James Brothers ( Jesse James and Frank James ), the Miller Brothers ( Clell Miller and Ed Miller Charlie Pitts John Jarrette (the Younger's brother-in-law), and later, the Ford Brothers ( Robert Ford (outlaw) and Charlie Ford ) and The Hite Brothers ( Wood Hite and Clarence Hite Many people are said to have ridden with either James' or Younger's gang, but often times there is no proof, debatable proof, or the person only rode with the gang for a short time. The James-Younger Gang started out robbing banks because most of them were Confederate guerilla fighters during the American Civil War and could not surrender because they might be shot. Jesse and Frank James, Cole and Jim Younger, John Jarrette and Clell Miller were all former guerillas. Their first robbery was committed on February 13 at 2:00 PM in Liberty, Missouri
Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg Authors W Washington, Booker T., 18561915 Authors W Wason, RobertAlexander, 1874- Authors W Waterlow, Sydney Philip Perigal, 1878-1944 http://www.archive.org/mediatypes-browse.php?mediatype=texts&collection=gutenber
Sydney Heritage Fleet - A Thoroughbred Of A Ship Part 2 The first was on 7 October 1873 and the last on 18 March 1874, Clan MacLeod sfirst master was William Alexander and typically she carried a crew of 17 http://www.australianheritagefleet.com.au/JCHistory/Thoroughbred2.html
Extractions: for menu In the previous article David Wenban dealt with the background of the original owner of the Clan MacLeod The Indenture between George Bartram and firm states among other things that: "the said apprentice his Masters well and faithfully serve, their secrets keep, ....Fornication or Adultery shall not commit .... Taverns or Ale houses he shall not haunt or frequent shall not play ..... Matrimony with any woman ..... etc." In return the apprentice would be: "taught, learned and informed in the Art Trade or Business of a Ship Carpenter," paying up to ....."Nine shillings a week for the seventh and last year ...." On completion of his apprenticeship, George went to sea and after returning to the River Wear area worked from 1822 to 1831 as foreman (or manager) for a Mr Dryden who built ships at Biddick Ford near Hylton. In 1828 he was in partnership with J.M. Gates and, was later associated with Robert Reay, known at Hylton, as "Squire Reay". George Bartram married Margaret Appleby in 1834 and in 1835 had a son Robert Appleby Bartram. Sadly, eight other following children died.
Extractions: Source Navigator, 3/2003 By Roger Donway Few men of great stature provide a more striking contrast to Sebastian Bach than does Alexander Graham Bell. Bach was the supreme master of his craft, one whose skill improved throughout his lifetime and who rarely produced any work that was less than superb. Bell was a kind and loving man with an inquisitive temperament, and an outstanding teacher to the deaf. Seen historically, however, he did one great thing: he invented the telephone. He then spent the rest of his life trying to prove his legal and moral right to that accomplishment (a task at which he succeeded), as well as trying to prove that his life had not reached its high point at the age of twenty-nine (a task at which he did not succeed). Born in Scotland on March 3, 1847, Alexander Graham Bell was the son and grandson of prominent elocutionists and speech therapists. Indeed, the Bells and their circle provided the inspiration for George Bernard Shaw's Henry Higgins. Aleck Bell, as he was called, stood as best man to James Murray, the first editor of the
James-Younger Gang - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia They next robbed the Alexander Mitchell and Company Bank in Lexington, The gang decided to try another train robbery on January 31, 1874. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James-Younger_gang
Extractions: The James-Younger Gang was a legendary 19th Century gang of American outlaws that included Jesse James The gang included (but was not limited to) the Younger Brothers ( Cole Jim John and Bob ), the James Brothers (the famous Jesse James and his brother Frank ), the Miller Brothers ( Clell and Ed Charlie Pitts John Jarrette (who was married to Cole's sister Josie), and later, the Ford Brothers ( Robert and Charlie ) and The Hite Brothers ( Wood and Clarence The Jameses and Youngers were distant cousins by marriage. The Hites were first cousins of the Jameses. The Youngers were cousins of the Dalton brothers (of the infamous Dalton Gang ) who were killed in an attempted robbery in Coffeyville, Kansas in 1892. Adeline Younger Dalton, the Daltons' mother, was an aunt of the Youngers. Various other people are said to have ridden with the gang, but often there is no evidence for the claim (or insufficient evidence), or the person only rode with the gang for a short time. The James-Younger Gang had a long career robbing banks trains and stagecoaches in the American West. They became outlaws because most of the members were