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Quellen-Verweis NI64056 :
Personen : Lindsey Lydia "Judy" Carol
Lydia Carol "Judy" Keown, 61, of Bowling Green died at 12:03 p.m. Aug. 22, 2008, at Commonwealth Regional Specialty Hospital.
The Warren County native was born Aug. 25, 1946. She was a Baptist and a retired 32-year employee of Fruit of the Loom. She was a daughter of the late Charles Byron Lindsey and Hattie Viola Murray Lindsey of Bowling Green, who survives. She was preceded in death by three brothers, Monty Gail Lindsey, Roger Dale Lindsey and Jerry Patrick Lindsey; and two sisters, Elizabeth "Peggy" Littrell and Teresa Lindsey.
Funeral is at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Johnson-Vaughn-Phelps Funeral Home, with burial in Fairview Cemetery. Visitation is from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.
Other survivors include her husband, Jerry Keown of Bowling Green; a son, Earl Keown of Bowling Green; two daughters, Carolyn Keown Crews and Kristie Keown, both of Bowling Green; two brothers, Chuck and Jimmy Lindsey, both of Bowling Green; a sister, Eula Mills of Bowling Green; eight grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
Quellen-Verweis NI64072 :
Personen : Lindsey Eula Faye
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64098 :
Personen : Stenftenagel Carol
As of 2008, Carol Stenftenagel is living near Jasper, Dubois County, Illinois.
Quellen-Verweis NI64101 :
Personen : Tipton Vernon
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64106 :
Personen : Tipton Ella "Squeakie" Mae
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64110 :
Personen : Tipton Tim
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64111 :
Personen : Tipton Jackie Lynn
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64123 :
Personen : Metcalf Amy
Amy Medcalf went by the last name Edgins, but she is really a Metcalf.
Quellen-Verweis NI64140 :
Personen : Shelton Ursula Ersley
a/k/a - Ursley Shelton
Quellen-Verweis NI64142 :
Personen : Norton George
George was a prisoner of the CSA during the Civil War, and died in a hospital in Richmond, Virginia of smallpox.
Quellen-Verweis NI64149 :
Personen : Sprague Benjamin
Burial: Pine St. Cemetery, Gallipollis, Ohio.
Quellen-Verweis NI64150 :
Personen : (Unknown) Lucy
Burial: Pine St. Cemetery, Gallipollis, Ohio.
Quellen-Verweis NI64154 :
Personen : Tillett Gerald Gene
Thursday, January 5, 2006, Times Gazette, Shelbyville, Bedford County, Tennessee:
Gerald Gene Tillett Sr.
Gerald Gene Tillett Sr., 82, of Shelbyville died Tuesday at Middle Tennessee Medical Center in Murfreesboro. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Friday at Feldhaus Memorial Chapel with the Rev. Bobby McGee officiating. Burial, with full military honors, will follow at Hillcrest Memorial Gardens.
Quellen-Verweis NI64159 :
Personen : Roberts (Unknown)
Unknown male child died as an infant.
Quellen-Verweis NI64164 :
Personen : Greer Gilbert Dunlap
Gilbert Dunlap Greer, the eldest child of Nathaniel Hunt Greer and Nancy Ann Terry Roberts, was born October 11, 1822, in Bedford County, in Virginia (or possibly Tennessee). Little is known of his youth save that of where his family lived as he was growing up. The Georgia period of his young life was spent first in DeKalb County, then in Troup County. About 1831 the family crossed the Chattahoochee River to live on the Cherokee land that would soon become Chambers County, Alabama. After farm chores were done, the young Gilbert would have helped with his father's prosperous trading post where both whites and Indians bartered for goods.
Gilbert was 14 when the family sailed to Texas and only 17 when the new republic granted him a headright of 320 acres, on December 5, 1839. As a young man, Gilbert would fish along Buffalo Bayou, sometimes supplementing the family table, sometimes selling his catch in the nearby city of Houston. He never converted his headright into actual land; instead, he sold his headright on October 5, 1846. However, Gilbert did acquire property and in 1850 sold 110 acres in Washington County to his future father-in-law, James Addison Lane, a long-time friend of the Greers who had brought his family to Texas around 1846.
On June 18, 1843, Gilbert married Susan G. Corathers in Austin County, Texas. She was born in 1824, the daughter of George Corathers and Susanah Durham who hailed from Jones County, Georgia. Gilbert and Susan continued to live in Austin County for a few years and their first child, Cassandra (Cassie), was born there on March 19, 1846. Gilbert and Susan had at least 2 other children, a son Henry (birth date and site unknown), and a daughter Susanna (aka Susan or Susie) born February 1, 1849, in Washington County. Some claim that Gilbert and Susan had another daughter named Elizabeth, but on this the historical record is silent.
By 1850 settlements had pushed much further up the Brazos River. Gilbert, Susan and their children accompanied this advancing frontier and in about 1851 set up residence in lower Milam County at "Sullivan's Bluffs" near where the Little River joined the Brazos. Just below the falls of the Brazos, the site was at the limit of river boat travel along the greatest river in Texas. In short order, the community created by Augustus Sillaven became the boomtown of Port Sullivan ("Sullivan" being a corruption of the founder's name) with a population of nearly 200 in the year 1852. Before long, Gilbert's parents and siblings had relocated near him.
On October 13, 1853, Gilbert married Marion Bonita Lane, the eldest daughter of James Addison Lane. The little evidence we have suggests that Marion was a what Mormons called a "plural wife," but we cannot be sure. On the ill-fated journey to Utah, many died of cholera. Nearly 70 years later, Gilbert's sister-in-law Catherine Ellen Camp Greer recalled that "Gilbert's first wife, Sue, and most of his children died" of cholera. The toll apparently included daughter Susanna, whose name appears on the migrating company roster, and son Henry, although his name is missing. Daughter Cassie remained in Texas and was reared by her grandmother. The roster lists Susan Greer as dying on June 20, 1855, placing the wagon train in what would later become Brown County, Kansas. But it is uncertain whether the Susan in the record is the mother or the daughter. A record of the ordeal includes the death on June 22 of Elizabeth Greer, which may well have been Gilbert's youngest child.
On August 10 the wagons stopped while Gilbert's second wife Marion delivered their first-born whom they named Margaret. Although little Margaret lived long enough to reach Salt Lake City, she died there a few weeks later on October 28. The following winter was a terrible one and the Greers lost most of their herd. Next spring, over Brigham Young's objections, Gilbert and most of his kin returned to the milder climate of Texas with what remained of their livestock.
On the return trip, the Greers met a Utah-bound wagon train which included the Lanes (Marion's family) and the Phelps (another allied family) whom the Greers persuaded to turn back for Texas. They reached Texas in October and settled in Hill County on what they thought was vacant land. A cabin was hastily erected for Marion who gave birth on December 10, 1856, to Willmirth (Willie) S. Greer. Learning that the land was not vacant, Gilbert found (and on January 16, 1857, purchased) 320 acres of Bosque County land where Plowman's Creek flowed into the Brazos River. Here he built perhaps the first stone house in Bosque County, a warm and inviting structure in which Marion would give birth to 8 more children.
During the Civil War, Gilbert had three stints of military duty. First, with several kin, he served at home in Capt. Samuel Fossett's company of "Minute Men" formed as part of the Texas State Troops. During the next several months, Gilbert was called up for a total of ten days service to protect the county from Indian depredations.
But before his militia duty was over, he enlisted on January 16, 1862, in the regular army at Camp Hebert as a 2nd lieutenant under Capt. Terry Caruthers in Company H, Colonel O. Young's Rgmt. (aka the 12th Regiment - and sometimes incorrectly listed as the 8th Regiment), Texas Infantry, Confederate States Army. The next day, January 17, Gil was dispatched back to Bosque County on a recruiting assignment which apparently lasted throughout February. On March 1, 1862, while in Bosque, he was officially discharged from the militia. Soon, near Hempstead in Waller County, he reported for duty on March 9 at Camp Young - apparently an ad hoc name in honor of the company commander. Two weeks later, on March 26, Gil assumed command of Company H with a pay grade of $80 per month. On July 21, 1862, he was elevated to the rank of Captain and his pay was raised to $130 per month.
Gil's unit was dispatched to Louisiana where about the first of October he contracted dysentery. By year's end the Company Muster Roll of December 31, 1862, showed that he was absented to the Command Convalescent Camp near Little Rock, Arkansas. On January 22, 1863, he tendered his resignation due to chronic dysentery, affirming his inability to perform the duties of his office for the previous 4 months. His petition was initially approved on this date by Surgeons E. L. Massie and J. C. Welch of the Medical Examining Board then forwarded to higher authority. On January 24 it was approved by the Convalescent Camp Commander, Colonel O. W. Roberts and Gilbert was soon on his way home.
Within a few months after Gil's return to Bosque County and his subsequent recuperation, he was once again serving in the military. This time he found himself a lieutenant in Capt. H. Fossett's Company (known as Company "A") of the Battalion attached to the Texas Frontier Regiment, C.S.A. at Camp Colorado, headquarters of said Regiment. On April 1st, 1864 (by Special Order No. 6 of Col. J. E. McCord, Admst Sec Adjt) he was appointed "A.A.Q.M. & A.A.C.S. of said Company" and asked to give "the requisite bond and enter immediately on the duties of that office." Gil's duty in the last stage of the war was one of protecting the Texas frontier against Indian depredations. A few months later the was was over.
After the war, his nickname "Gil" was often replaced with "Captain" by those who held his military service in high esteem. For many years thereafter, his estate on the Brazos, known as "Greer Park," was host to hundreds of veterans from all over the state who gathered each summer to reminisce of gallant deeds and fallen friends.
Gilbert and Marion's daughter Willie was unsuccessfully courted by Robert J. Sims, one of many cowboys who drove the great herds along the nearby Chisholm Trail. On October 23, 1875, Willie was at home preparing for her next day's wedding to another man when she was tragically shot and killed by the rejected suitor who thereupon took his own life.
In 1881 the town of Kopperl began on land which Gilbert and his brothers sold to the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railroad Company. Along tracks just a few hundred feet away from their house, Gilbert and Marion soon heard the frequent thundering of steam locomotives as their frontier was transformed into an modern society. Later, Gilbert donated a part of his farm for the Kopperl Cemetery where he, Marion, and many of his family would be laid to rest.
By the turn of the century, Gilbert and Marion's rock home had fallen into disrepair and had become less comfortable for the aging couple. They sold the farm and moved into their son Tom's comfortable frame house in the railroad town of Morgan which had sprung up along Steele's Creek a few miles southwest of Kopperl. It was here that Gilbert died on March 12, 1910 and Marion on April 15, 1916. Her Kopperl Cemetery headstone bears the inscription: "The Gift of God is perpetual life Through Jesus Christ our Lord" and his reads "There is a balm for every flower. Farewell we shall meet again."
Quellen-Verweis NI64184 :
Personen : Greif Pauline
Pauline Greif died as an infant.
Cause of death: Small Pox
Quellen-Verweis NI64185 :
Personen : Greer Willmirth Margaret
In DeKalb County, Georgia on November 18, 1824, Willmirth Margaret was born the second child of Nathaniel Hunt Greer and Nancy Ann Terry Roberts. Shortly before her third birthday, the family moved to Troup County bordering the Cherokee lands across the Chattahoochee. At age 12 and a half, she brought to Texas childhood memories of several years spent in the verdant hills of Chambers County, Alabama.
After 2 years of Texas frontier life, Willmirth met Edward Wallace East, an enterprising young man from Tennessee. Bold and pioneering, he had served the new republic for 1 year as a Texas Ranger. Although she was not yet 15 and he was 10 years her senior, they were married by her father (as a Justice of the Peace) on October 2, 1839. For his Ranger service, Ed had received a bounty warrant for 1280 acres, but the young couple deferred land acquisition and chose to live on her parents' Washington County property. Among other jobs, Ed helped Nathaniel hunt Greer with his postal contracts.
Willmirth gave birth to their first-born, Sarah Maria Texana, in 1840. With his new family responsibilities, Ed explored religious issues and in 1842 became a Campbellite, an early name of what would later be called Disciples of Christ. (One wonders if other members of the Greer and East households joined the new religion.)
The next year Willmirth gave birth to a son, William, and in 1845 to another girl. The second girl (name unknown) was sickly and died in 1847. Then in 1848, Ed and Willmirth had another, stronger child which they named Nancy. And in the early summer of 1850, Mary Ann was born. On October 28, 1853, twin girls were born: Mira Caroline and Julia, the last children to be born on Texas soil.
By 1852, the Greer and East households had relocated near Port Sullivan and that summer they first heard Mormonism preached. A year later, Ed and Willmirth were baptized into the new religion on July 22, 1853. Eventually the Easts were re-baptized on August 12, 1854 as both families felt a growing urge to gather in Zion with their spiritual counterparts. In the early morning of September 11, 1854, Willmirth experienced the gift of tongues, an event witnessed by many kith and kin. For the remainder of her life, she would demonstrate an extraordinary faith and devotion to her religious community, remarkably so in the face of what was to happen on the trek across the plains.
By early June the Greers and Easts had assembled with hundreds of others at Mormon Grove near Atchison, KS in preparation for the journey to Utah. On the 15th, they headed for the Platte River where the Mormon Trail pointed the way to the Rockies. On the 18th, cholera broke out and the first deaths occurred. The next day Willmirth lost her four-year old daughter, Mary Ann, to the dreaded disease. By then the company would have been in Brown County, KS. Three days later cholera took Willmirth's little brother John, and her father two days after that. By June 27, the migrants had reached Marshall County, KS where on that date the Easts' eldest son William was lost to the disease; he was 12. The wagons rolled on, trying to outdistance death, but in Thayer County, NE on July 4, holiday festivities were replaced by more funerals, including that of Willmirth's seven-year old daughter Nancy.
After the wagon train arrived in Salt Lake City, Ed East (as company clerk) would record, "This closes one of the most arduous journeys ever experienced by the Mormons but few of the incidents of the journey are recorded on account of the cares which were upon me & which were greatly increased by sickness, cholera, measles." The last disease Ed mentioned, measles, would provide a final torment upon his anguished family. Julia, one of their twins contracted the measles as the company arrived in Utah. She lingered for a few weeks, but finally died on November 3 and was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery, the last victim of the doomed 3rd Migrating Company. At the close of 1855, only 2 of the East's 7 children were alive. Their oldest daughter Sarah was to wed Seth M. Blair, Nathaniel Hunt Greer's business partner who had led the wagons west.
After the terrible effects of the cholera, the Easts increased their family in Salt Lake City. On October 12, 1856, Willmirth gave birth to their son, Edward Martin. And on December 30, 1859 another son, Joseph Fielding, was born. Another daughter, Martha, was born December 27, 1862, but she lived less than a week, dying of the croup New Year's Day, 1863. That tragic loss was followed by another, final one when the Easts surviving twin, Mira Caroline, died "of inflammation" on September 17, 1863.
In the spring of 1864, Ed East took a second (plural) wife, Emma Lundberg. Their union was "sealed" on March 5. Two years later Willmirth was delivered of her last child, Thomas Nathaniel, on November 17, 1866. Then in January of 1870, Emma East gave birth to a daughter named Emma. No further record has been found of Emma and her little namesake.
Despite the agony of the plains crossing, the Easts' faith remained intact - even as most of Willmirth's family returned to Texas without her in the spring of 1856. On October 6, 1856, Ed was ordained a Mormon priest and in the fall of 1869 would go on a mission to the "Southern States." In Salt Lake City, Ed served as County Clerk for 14 years and helped lay the foundation of the great Salt Lake Temple while Willmirth taught school, wrote poetry, and did church work. In October of 1875, both Ed and Willmirth were sent on a mission to Texas enabling her to see her family for the first time since before the Civil War. When the Easts moved to Arizona, Willmirth served as the first President of the Relief Society both in Apache County (1877-1883), and in Graham County (1883-1898).
Death came suddenly for Ed East on May 29, 1884 when he collapsed in his chair while reading the morning newspaper. Willmirth continued her steadfast service to church and community before relinquishing her duties in 1898 due to failing health. Her passing on March 31, 1902 was mourned by many grateful citizens and close friends of Pima, AZ where she had lived since 1883.
Quellen-Verweis NI64192 :
Personen : Weilmuenster Imogene
As of 2008, Imogene Weilmuenster is living in a nursing home in Fenton, Saint Louis County, Missouri.
Quellen-Verweis NI64196 :
Personen : Gerot Cleo R.
GEROT, Cleo R.
NORTH LIBERTY, Iowa -- Cleo R. Gerot, 82, 20 N. Dubuque St., North Liberty, died Wednesday, May 22, 2002, at his home after a lengthy illness.
Services are 10 a.m. Tuesday at St. Mary's Catholic Church, Riverside. The Rev. Rich Adams will officiate. Burial will be at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Riverside. After the burial, a luncheon will be held at the church.
Visitation is 3-8 p.m. Monday, with a 7 p.m. rosary, at the Sorden-Lewis Funeral Home, Riverside. A memorial fund has been established.
Mr. Gerot was born on Feb. 2, 1920, in rural Washington County, the son of Peter and Ida Moss Gerot. He married Ethel Hamilton on June 28, 1950, in Leon.
He graduated from Riverside High School.
He was employed by the University of Iowa Physical Plant from 1957 until his retirement in 1983.
He served with the U.S. Army during World War II, 1942-46, as a heavy machine gunner.
He was a member of St. Mary's Catholic Church, Riverside Veterans of Foreign Wars Post No. 6414, the Columbus Junction American Legion Post No. 100, served on the Riverside City Council for six years and the Riverside Volunteer Fire Department.
Survivors include his wife; six children, LaVonne Smith of North Liberty, Joe Gerot and his wife, Barbara, of West Des Moines, Lorrainne Seelman and her fiancé, Mike Curry of Oxford, John Gerot and his wife, Robin, of North Liberty, Susie McKenna and her husband, Bill, of Brooklyn, and Loralie Dyer of Iowa City; 17 grandchildren; Stephanie, Shawn, Amy, Jason, Ashley, Brandon, Michael, Jeremy, Janneane, Emily, Dana, Tyler, Billy, Tanya, Beth, Trace and Megan; five great-grandchildren, Hailey, Remington, Joey, Thomas, Katie, Allan and Angie; two brothers, Robert Gerot of Riverside, Darrell Gerot of Dover, Ark.; a sister, Elaine Matt of Iowa City; and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents; a brother, Orville Gerot; and a sister, Marie Gerot.
Source: Muscatine Journal May 2002
Quellen-Verweis NI64199 :
Personen : Dietiker Edward
Social Security Number: 492-07-0680
Issued: Missouri
Last Residence: Saint Louis, Saint Louis, Missouri
Quellen-Verweis NI64200 :
Personen : Matheny Carolyn M.
Published Sunday, May 6, 2007, Columbia Daily Tribune, Columbia, Missouri:
Carolyn M. Dietiker, 80, of the Harrisburg area passed away into the arms of her Lord Jesus on Friday, May 4, 2007, with her family at her side, following a courageous six-year journey with cancer.
Services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday, May 9, at Memorial Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Memorial Park Cemetery. Visitation will be from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.
Carolyn was born on April 13, 1927, in Miami, Mo., to John and Maude Shipp Matheny. On June 16, 1951, she married Robert Dietiker in St. Louis, and he survives. She was a member of Columbia Baptist Church.
Other survivors include her children, Suzanne Sylcox and husband Cleve of St. Charles, John Michael Dietiker of Waynesville, N.C., Crystal Goldkamp and husband Bill of Defiance, Kerry Dietiker and wife Rosa of Columbia, Deborah Gandy and husband Mark of Fayette; brother John R. Matheny of Harrisburg; sister Ruth Hoffman of Columbia; grandchildren Danielle Hanna, Josh Sylcox, Nathan Robert Dietiker, Nathan Edward Dietiker, Brock Gandy, Clifford Dietiker, Emily Gandy, Tyler Goldkamp, Kyle Sylcox, Drew Gandy, Luke Goldkamp and Rachel Goldkamp.
She was preceded in death by her parents and sister Benicia Whitt.
Quellen-Verweis NI64204 :
Personen : Dietiker Leo
Social Security Number: 492-03-9157
Issued: Missouri
Last Residence: Saint Louis, Saint Louis, Missouri
Burial: November 3, 1972, (Section: 32, Lot: 0328) Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis City, Missouri.
Quellen-Verweis NI64209 :
Personen : Dietiker Bethany
Sunday, February 25, 2007, Southeast Missourian:
Perry and Veronica Dietiker of Cape Girardeau announce the engagement of their daughter, Bethany Dietiker, to Grant Adams. He is the son of Charles Adams and Royce Kessel of Cape Girardeau.
Dietiker is attending Southeast Missouri State University. She is employed in the child care field.
Adams plans to pursue a degree in electrical engineering at Southeast. He is employed at Horizon Screen Printing.
A Sept. 15 wedding is planned at Cape County Park.
Sunday, March 4, 2007, Southeast Missourian:
Bethany Dietiker and Grant Adams have reset their wedding date to May 26. The ceremony will be at North Cape County Park.
She is the daughter of Perry and Veronica Dietiker of Cape Girardeau. He is the son of Charles Adams and Royce Kessel of Cape Girardeau.
Quellen-Verweis NI64210 :
Personen : Dietiker Brandon Eugene
Thursday, June 15, 2006, Southeast Missourian:
Cape police reports 6/15/06
* Brandon E. Dietiker, 21, of 1024 Good Hope St., received a summons for harassment by telephone.
Quellen-Verweis NI64213 :
Personen : Parkhill Charles Lee
Thursday, March 2, 2006, Southeast Missourian:
Charles Lee Parkhill, 63, of Fremont, Mo., died Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2006, at his home.
He was born Dec. 21, 1942, at Van Buren, Mo., son of William Henry and Eunice Madrene Kester Parkhill.
Parkhill was a longtime resident of Carter County. He was formerly of Jackson and retired from Rubbermaid. He had also worked at Florsheim Shoe Co.
Survivors include five brothers, John Parkhill of Ellington, Mo., Kenneth and Bobby Parkhill of Cape Girardeau, Terry Parkhill of Hillsboro, James Parkhill of Sedgewickville, Mo.; three sisters, Margie Allen of Hillsboro, Ethel Bell of Van Buren, and Violet Dietiker of Cape Girardeau.
He was preceded in death by his parents.
The funeral was held Feb. 25 at McSpadden Funeral Home in Van Buren, with the Rev. David Russell officiating. Burial was in Bristol Cemetery near Van Buren.
Quellen-Verweis NI64218 :
Personen : Payne Abygail Nichole
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64231 :
Personen : Seger Randy
Randy Seger was killed by a drunk driver.
Quellen-Verweis NI64232 :
Personen : Seger Michael "Mike"
Mike Seger died of brain cancer.
Quellen-Verweis NI64238 :
Personen : Seger Jon
As of 2008, Jon Seger is living in Centralia, Illinois.
Quellen-Verweis NI64240 :
Personen : Seger Joseph
From 1964 to 1968, Joseph Seger attended Centralia High School, Centralia, Illinois.
Quellen-Verweis NI64245 :
Personen : Suhl Bernard
Social Security Number: 341-12-4093
Issued: Illinois
Last Residence: Centralia, Marion County, Illinois
Quellen-Verweis NI64246 :
Personen : Taylor Opal Ruth
Social Security Number: 321-24-3714
Issued: Illinois
Last Residence: Centralia, Marion County, Illinois
Quellen-Verweis NI64249 :
Personen : Burggraf Davis
The 1930 US Census has Davis Burggraf living with her grandparents Carolinam "Charlie" and Alta (Unknown) Specht in Shepherd Township, Isabella County, Michigan.
Quellen-Verweis NI64253 :
Personen : Specht Dorces Laurel
The 1920 US Census has Dorces Laurel Specht living with her grandparents Carolinam "Charlie" and Alta (Unknown) Specht in Shepherd Township, Isabella County, Michigan.
Quellen-Verweis NI64254 :
Personen : Dietiker Delores H.
a/k/a - Dolores H. Dietiker
Quellen-Verweis NI64274 :
Personen : Dudley Susan
The 1870 US Census has Susan Dudley listed as 10 years old living with her father Solomon Dudley.
Quellen-Verweis NI64281 :
Personen : Echols Julia Mae
Julia is the sister of 'Pretty Boy Floyd's' mother. Julia had gone to Sequoyah County to visit her sister, Mamie Helena Echols, wife of Walter Lee Floyd, when she met Henry Prescott Matlock. It is said that Henry had a new horse and buggy and was racing around the county when she fell for him. He was 48 and she was 18 when they married. Ref. - Ernie Matlock.
Quellen-Verweis NI64291 :
Personen : Reich Gustav
On the 1930 US Census he is living in Oroville, Butte County, California.
Quellen-Verweis NI64292 :
Personen : (Unknown) Caroline
On the 1930 US Census she is living with her son Gustav in Oroville, Butte County, California.
Quellen-Verweis NI64297 :
Personen : Reich Doris
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64298 :
Personen : Wagner David Lee
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64299 :
Personen : Wagner Isaac
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
Quellen-Verweis NI64300 :
Personen : Wagner John Wesley
This information is restricted, but it's available upon request to related family members.
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