Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II The Later Novel: Howells ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Freepages.books.rootsweb.com/~blackwell/ma/Hingham1893/supps.txt p. 352 i.), m. at Boston, June 7, 1888, Annie Heywood, dau sd Deborah Cushing orher heirs, Executors or administrators shall se reason to Call for ye Payson. http://freepages.books.rootsweb.com/~blackwell/ma/Hingham1893/supps.txt
Extractions: David J. Buerger (with the assistance of Art de Hoyos) The following titles are listed chronologically, the author appearing first, then title, then publisher. Reprints and/or revisions by same author are listed after the first title. Pertinent commentaries on the first title are listed under same number; some of these comments are taken from Chad Flake, comp., A Mormon Bibliography (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1978). Reprints of first title by other authors are listed under separate, chronologically sequenced numbers, with bibliographic reference to original source. Bracketed trailer numbers refer to Flake's identifying number in A Mormon Bibliography . Most titles contain only a partial depiction of the endowment ceremony. Photocopies of most titles are in the David J. Buerger Papers, Ms. 622, Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. Bennett, John C.
Thomas Holcombe Of Connecticut - Person Page 2 was the daughter of Lemuel Alsup and Annie Lee Carpenter. Foote Holcombe (20 Jan 1837)Edward Payson Holcombe (17 for their sons and daughters to Call their own http://www.holcombegenealogy.com/data/p2.htm
Extractions: b. 29 Apr 1907, d. 1954 Wilton C. Moore was born on 29 April 1907 at Webb City, Jasper Co., MO. He was the son of Harry Claude Moore and Valera Mae Chappell . Wilton C. Moore died in 1954 at Houston, Harris Co., TX. He was buried at Restland Cem., Floral Hill Section, Space 3, Lot 19, Block R., Dallas, Dallas Co., TX. b. 27 Jan 1870, d. 20 Dec 1941 George Harvey Norton was born on 27 January 1870 at Eureka, KS. He was the son of Charles Harrison Norton and Laura Adelaide Lillie . George Harvey Norton married Zinn Talley Alsup , daughter of Lemuel Alsup and Annie Lee Carpenter , on 5 July 1917 at Methodist Parsonage, Washington, DC. George Harvey Norton died on 20 December 1941 at Houston, Harris Co., TX, at age 71. He was buried on 22 December 1941 at Hollywood Cemetery; Lot 142., Houston, Harris Co., TX.
Sarah Pulsipher Ella) on 4 Dec 1853, and Ann Eliza (Annie) on 20 another child and hence it was inPayson, Utah, that her sisters and brothers had also accepted a Call to do http://www.johnpratt.com/gen/7/3.s_pulsipher.html
Extractions: Show Pedigree Sarah Ann Pulsipher was born 2 Nov 1824 in Stafford, Onondaga Co., N.Y., the fifth child of Zerah and Mary Brown Pulsipher. The family had moved there from Pennsylvania in late 1823 or early 1824 and bought a farm and built a mill. Sarah was seven years old when her parents heard the restored gospel and were baptized into the LDS Church. When she was 10, the family moved to Kirtland, Ohio, in spring 1835, so she would have remembered those times well. Persecutions drove them to Nauvoo, Illinois, and there she met John Alger, the son of Samuel and Clarissa Hancock Alger, who was four years older than she. At age 18 she married him in the Nauvoo Temple on Sun, 13 Feb 1842. About 1843 they had a son named Nelson, the name of her older brother who was killed at age 4 by a falling tree, but this Nelson also died young. Then Sarah Ann, known throughout life as "Surrie Ann" was born on 13 Apr 1845 in Nauvoo. Shortly afterward, persecutions drove them from Nauvoo to cross the plains for the Salt Lake Valley. While at Winter Quarters, Nebraska, Olivia (Ollie) was born on 23 Jun 1847. Just as they were arriving at Salt Lake City, Sarah gave birth to Adeliza (Addie) on 9 Aug 1849. As the young couple struggled to establish a home there, John Zerah was born 15 Jan 1852, Martha Ellen (Ella) on 4 Dec 1853, and Ann Eliza (Annie) on 20 Dec 1855.
Archives Of The Gray Herbarium Subject, Call Number, Type, Size, Date, Photographer, Notes, See Also. Louis. Webb,RW; Payson, EB; Armstrong, GM. SemiHistoric Letters; Oakes, Henry N; Rowe, AnnieE. http://www.huh.harvard.edu/libraries/archives/w.htm
Extractions: Library of the Gray Herbarium Subject Call Number Type Size Date Photographer Notes See Also [Wade, Jos M ?] photoprint on cabinet card mount, burnished albumen 17 x 11 cm ca. 1853 or 1854 ? copied from cabinet size by Eugene A. Rau Photograph of Thos. Nuttall. Notes on back describe this as a reproduction of a daguerreotype owned by Gray; it may be a reproduction of the ambrotype owned by Gray, but the tonalities are so different, it is hard to tell. If this is a reproduction of the ambrotype, it may be the work of Eugene Rau (1891) or Jos. M. Wade (March 10, 1880). From Walter Deane.
David Lant as his own, along with his and Annie's other children Often the children of Paysonfollowed him to the pastures At times he would Call them from their play so he http://www.concentric.net/~Ssbray/lantdavd.htm
Extractions: DAVID LANT Our ancestor David Lant (1830-1908) was born in Romsey, Hampshire, England 14 March 1830, the son of Thomas Lant (abt. 1777-1853) and Ann Pearce (1803-1840) of Michelmersh, Hampshire, England. He was undoubtedly related to the THOMAS LANT mentioned in the LANT ORIGINS page, but whether or not he was a direct descendent of that Thomas is not known. David was the fourth child in a family of eight. The oldest was his sister Alice, then his older brothers William and Thomas, younger brothers John and Edward , and younger sisters Ellen and Lydia. A PORTRAIT OF DAVID LANT IN LATER LIFE Within a few years the young man had become a lodger in the boarding house of recently widowed Elizabeth Hurley (Harding), who was born at Ilfracombe, Devon, on January 8th, 1809. David's landlady Elizabeth was the mother of an adolescent daughter, Susan Mary Harding, born on Dec. 25, 1835 at Ham, Somerset, by her late husband Robert Harding. Despite their great age difference, affection between tenant and landlady grew, and on Feb. 25th, 1850 at Liverpool, Lancashire, 19 year old David Lant and 41 year old Elizabeth Hurley were united in marriage by J.B. Phillips. A son, Thomas Lant, was born to the couple at Ordsall, East Retford, Nottinghamshire in 1851, but the infant soon died, on December 12th of that year.
Charles Hogg in case of war with the army, we removed to Payson. 30, 1868, three weeks after thecall came. the celestial order of marriage by taking Miss Annie Todd, late http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~schick/hart/CharlesHogg.htm
Extractions: b. 18 Sept. 1831, d. 9 Oct. 1901 I was born at Deighton, near Morthallart, Yorkshire, England, Sept. 18, 1831, one of a family of six sons and four daughters. My father was Thomas Hogg; my mother was Ellen Rowland Hogg. My father was a stock jobber. He broke me in the business when I was about five or six years of age. I hired out to a farmer when seven years of age to drive a team of horses and then worked in the brick yards three summers. Without much chance to go to school I did learn to read and write a little, and studied arithmetic a little. I hired out to a farmer named Thomas Webster when eleven years of age for one year. My wages being two pounds ten shillings or twelve dollars and fifty cents for the year. I worked for this man the three years and six months and then worked as a farm hand until I was nineteen years of age. I then worked as a drainer until the year 1855. I had to assist father's family (as wages were very low) to get the necessities of life. I was married to Ann Stanger of Faceby, June 26, 1852. I became a little acquainted with the Gospel of Christ as revealed to Joseph Smith the same year. I was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints May 29, 1853, by Moses Cluff. Spoke and bore my testimony in a public meeting four weeks after, held in the house of James Stanger. I was ordained a Priest Sept. 6, 1853, by Elder Thomas Squires. Commenced to take charge of meetings in the absence of Elder Cluff. Commenced to travel around to deliver tracts of meetings in other places. I was much blessed of the Lord in those humble efforts to help spread the eternal truths of the Gospel as revealed through the Prophet Joseph Smith. On April 16, 1854, I was ordained an Elder by Elder William Glover, President of the Newcastle Conference and called to act as President of the Faceby Branch the same day.
Ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ca/losangeles/cemeteries/liveoakab.txt Lutie A. 1870 1963 Baldwin, Susan E. 1853 - 1902 Wife of Barmore, Elmer A. 1903- 1952 Barnes, Annie E. 1855 1951 time and Space which men Call heaven Barrows http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/ca/losangeles/cemeteries/liveoakab.txt
Barratt's Chapel Library: Sunday School Literature The Solemn Warnings of the Dead and A Call to the Smith Museum display F CLA ClarkPayson, a Model Boy Phillips Museum display F MOR Morse, Annie E. Sunny http://users.aol.com/Barratts/sunsch.html
Extractions: The following is a list of the Sunday School literature in the library of Barratt's Chapel Museum, Frederica, Delaware. The list is alphabetical by author and title. Barratt's Chapel Library is open to the public for research, but it is not a lending library. For more information visit our home page home page . Contact: Lynn Hobbs, Curator Barratt's Chapel Museum 6362 Bay Road Frederica, DE 19946 302-335-5544 e-mail Barratts@aol.com URL for this page http://users.aol.com/Barratts/sunsch.html Revised July 15, 2001 Page maintained by Phil Lawton
Bryan Family History Alvin Velma Louise (b. 1926, Holland, TX) Call Cari Ruth Adella Church AbrahamAnnie E. (b b. 1988) Cloward Mary Jane (b. 1870, Payson, UT) http://www.rcasey.net/bryan/bryindc.htm
Stone Family History And Genealogy: Stones Of Surry And Utah daughter of Peter J. and Elosia (Call) Williams. Children, all born in Salem AnnieElizabeth Flygare, born 6 Utah, 10 August 1869; buried in Payson, Utah, Utah http://www.familyhistorypages.com/Stone.htm
Extractions: John Quincy Stone , son of Calvin Gordon and Jane Elizabeth (King) Stone, born in Surry, North Carolina, 5 September 1862; died in Blackfoot, Bingham, Idaho, 28 June 1942; buried in Salem, Utah, Utah. He married in Salem, 16 November 1884, Matilda "Tillie" Beddoes , daughter of William and Mariah (Brockhous) Beddoes, born in Windhall (or Wooley), Stafford, England, 10 May 1867; christened 5 July 1877; died in Blackfoot, 7 September 1932; buried in Salem, 10 September 1932. The following is an abridged account of John Q's life, written by his son, John Q. Stone, Jr., for The Stones of Surry. On November 16 1884, Father married Matilda Beddoes. Just where they lived I have no way of determining, but suppose it was with Grandmother for a while [in Salem]. I was born January 25, 1886, in a two-room adobe cabin on the George Hanks farm, just a short way from Grandmother Stone. Father had been down with typhoid fever in the fall and Mother feared for him to make the two-mile journey afoot to get her mother and the midwife, Mrs. Sheen. I suppose everything went all right, for I am here and all the other participants are gone. Father scouted around that spring and acquired a span of mules and did hauling and such other work as he could obtain and bought a fourth of a square from Grandmother Stone's home. I am of the opinion that she built the two rooms in the early nineties, as I remember when she made the addition in the late nineties. Uncle Julius paid for the addition with the understanding that he was to inherit the whole estate when she died. She left no will, however, and after a great deal of hard feelings the estate was divided equally among the heirs. Early in the nineties, Father decided that the house we were living in was too small and he built a nine room brick house and tore down the old adobe shack.
Rhode Island Kenyons (Generation 8) CLARKE FRANCIS KENYON, B 7 Dec 1853; D 25 Fullerton, son of Edward Payson and AnniePayson (Trot) Shaw he enlisted on President Lincoln's first Call for 75,000 http://members.aol.com/ctk0209/kgen/kgen8.htm
Extractions: Table of Contents Baron's Peerage Gen 1 Gen 2 ... Gen 7 Gen 8 Gen 9 Gen 10 Gen 11 Gen 12 1111141 ELIAS SMITH KENYON, B 19 Mar 1828 in Adams, Jefferson County, New York; D 15 Feb 1873 in Algonquin, Ill.; M 7 Aug 1852, Prudence R. Kenyon (111121C) in Granville, Washington County, New York. CHILDREN: 1111141A Florence A. Kenyon, b 19 Jan 1854; d ; m 8 Aug 1872, Robert K. Plumliegh. He and his wife are buried in the Bluff Cemetery, in Elgin, Illinois. His wife died in Elgin, Ill. 111114A LOUISA KENYON, B 29 Oct 1832; D Mar 1920 at Benton Harbor, Michigan; M White. Her mother and her are buried in Coldwater, Michigan. 111126A LODUSCIA KENYON, B ; D . 111126B SYNTHIA KENYON, B ; D .
Books On-line: Titles Starting With "N" Old Lumberman's Secret by Annie Roe Carr (Gutenberg text) Old Mexican's Treasure by Annie Roe Carr (Gutenberg text; Nancy Prince (second edition, 1853) by Nancy Prince (HTML at http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/titlestart?N
. 3, 1897, Annie Rose Crocker. To George Hallowell Irwin and Annie Rose Crocker Irwinwere born two children vi. RICHARD EWALT IRWIN, b. July 25, 1853. vii. http://www.protosight.com/family_tree/chapter11.htm
Extractions: CHAPTER XI ROBERT QUIGLEY AND HIS DESCENDANTS. b. Robert, son of James Quigley and Jeanette Quigley, was born 1744, in Hopewell township, Cumberland Co., Penna., near Quigleys Bridge, along the Conodoguinet Creek, died September 1, 1815; married Mary Jacob, born 1745, died July 9, 1821, whose ancestors lived in Wales. Their descendants were Quakers. Her father came to America with the Penns. His brother John, who was some years his senior died in 1753, leaving Robert the sole protector of his mother during the absence of his father when serving his country in the Colonial War, after his appointment as ensign in 1756. Robert Quigley was born with the love of country deeply implanted within his bosom, and was commissioned July 31, 1777, lieutenant of the Seventh Company, First Battalion, Cumberland County Militia. His encounters with the Indians and practice in the shooting of game made him a skilled marksman, and during the Revolutionary War many a redcoat fell beneath his unfaltering aim and steady nerve. He fought for freedom, and helped to sever his land and the countrymen from the galling yoke which bound them. He and his wife were members and regular attendants of the Middle Spring Presbyterian church, which his parents were instrumental in organizing.
Name-key For Spiritualists 1) to AJ Davis, 18061853 Davis, Delphine Fawcett, Henry Augustus, 1791- Fay, AnnieEva, 1850 Charlotte Lottie, 1846- Fowler, Edward Payson, 1833-1914 http://www.spirithistory.com/namekey.html