Father* | Bartholomew White (b. 4 October 1807, d. 28 December 1866) |
Mother* | Maria Comben (b. 6 January 1808, d. 30 November 1885) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | before 26 November 1837 | Elizabeth White was born before 26 November 1837 in Weymouth, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. |
Death | 11 October 1865 | She died The cause of her death (at the age of 28) on Wednesday, October 11th, 1865 is not known on 11 October 1865 in Weymouth, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. Her death is not known & it occurred in today's England |
Burial | 13 October 1865 | She was buried on 13 October 1865 at Buried in an unknown cemeteryG in Weymouth, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. |
Person Source | Elizabeth White had person sources.1 | |
Christening | 26 November 1837 | She was christened on 26 November 1837 in Weymouth, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. |
Residence | 1851 | She lived in Weymouth, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG, in 1851. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors Most Ancient of Don's Actual Ancients, Enos ben Seth |
Father* | Henry White, Don's 4th GGF (b. before 17 August 1783, d. 8 April 1845) |
Mother* | Tabitha Woodrow, Don's 4th GGM (in another branch) (b. 1784, d. 28 June 1862) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1827 | Charles White was born in 1827 in Bere Regis, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. |
Death | after 1827 | He died The cause of his death (sadly, as an infant in their 1st year) in the year of 1827 is not known after 1827 in Bere Regis, County of Dorset, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. His death is not known & it occurred in today's England (location not known; used birth place) |
Person Source | Charles White had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors |
Father* | Rhys Rees ap Daffyd (b. about 1274, d. after 1330) |
Mother* | Tudo ferch Dafydd (b. about 1278, d. after 1330) |
Pedigree Link |
Son* | Jenkyn Cambrae+ (b. 1326, d. 1400) |
Son* | William Cambrae+ (b. about 1328, d. after 1353) |
Son* | Roger Cambrae+ (b. 1330, d. after 1365) |
Birth | about 1298 | John ap Rhys, le Cambray, was born about 1298 in Wolverton, Buckinghamshire, England (Medieval), EuropeG. |
Marriage | about 1320 | He and Alice, of Staunton, were married about 1320 in England (Medieval), EuropeG+. |
Death | about 1373 | He died about 1373 at age ~75 in England (Medieval), EuropeG+. The cause of his death (at the age of 75) in the year of 1373 is not known-surviving in 1373 was difficult & it occurred in Medieval England1 |
Burial | after 1373 | He was buried after 1373 at Buried in the cemetery at the Sodbury Baptist ChurchG in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England (Medieval), EuropeG. His burial location is shared in the source |
Note | Data for John ap Rhys (le Cambray) Both Roland Jenkes (alt spelling: Jenks, Jenckes) b. 1446 in Wolverton, Buckinghamshire, Eng. and his wife Mary Moore, b 1460 also in Wolverton, Buckinghamshire, Eng were apparently related as 4th cousins, from the following ancestors, all living in Wolverton: 1) for Mary Moore Mary Moore, b 1458 or 1460, was the daughter of Richard Moore, b 1408 m. FNU Perkes (poss alt Parkes?) Richard Moore was the son of John Moore b 1382 m. Margery CAMBRAE b 1386 Wolverton Margery Cambrae was the daughter of Richard CAMBRAE, b 1360 Wolverton Richard Cambrae was the son of ROGER CAMBRE b 1330 Wolverton ROGER CAMBRAE was a son of John ap Rhyes (alt sp Rees, Rhees), b 1300 Wolverton, who apparently was the last in a line of Jenkes ancestors who used the Welsh designation of Name (ie John) "of" (ie "ap") Father's Name (Rhyes) [Note: John ap Rhyes had a father named Rhys ap Daffyd (or David?), and grandfather Daffyd ap Philip, and great grandfather named Philip ap Llewelyn, and gg-grandfather named Llewelyn ap Sisslet, b 1200. This last name was identical to one of the great Welsh Princes of the 8th century, and so perhaps the Jenkes family descends from this Welsh royal line, but more research is needed to confirm this.] 2) for Roland Jenkes Roland Jenkes, b 1446, was the son of John Jenkes, b 1414 Wolverton m. Agnes Higins John Jenkes was the son of Thomas Jenkes, b 1382 Wolverton, m. Jacobina Middleton (daughter of Sir John Middleton, b 1347, granddaughter of Sir Thomas Middleton b 1321, great granddaughter of Sir Peter Middleton b 1300, gg-granddaughter of Sir William Middleton b 1271). Thomas Jenkes was the son of John Jenkes, b 1352 Wolverton m. Alice Bowdler (daughter of Sir Stephen Bowdler, b 1330). John Jenkes was the first of his line to use the name English style surname Jenkes in Wolverton, Buckinghamshire, England. John Jenkes was the son of JENKYN CAMBRAE, b 1326 Wolverton, m. Dorthy Colling (daughter of Sir Walter Colling, b 1300 and Alice Staunton, b 1305) [Note: Alice Staunton's father Sir William de Staunton, b 1235 fought for the English in a war against Wales]. JENKYN CAMBRAE was a son of John ap Rhyes, b 1300 Wolverton, and thus the brother of ROGER CAMBRAE (who was the ancestor of Mary Moore) [ source unk ]. | |
Person Source | John ap Rhys, le Cambray, had person sources.2 | |
Christening | after 1298 | He was christened after 1298 at Cdfr ap Gwthfd in Wolverton, Buckinghamshire, England (Medieval), EuropeG. |
Last Edited | 25 April 2023 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors Most Ancient of Don's Actual Ancients, Enos ben Seth |
Father* | Richard Rich, I (Don's 12th GGF in another branch) (b. 1496, d. 12 June 1567) |
Mother* | Elizabeth Colwell Jenkes, Don's 12th GGM (b. 1499, d. 16 December 1558) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1537 | Richard Rich was born in 1537 at Saint James's Palace in the City of WestminsterG in Region of Greater London, England (Tudor), EuropeG+. |
Death | 1600 | He died in 1600 at age ~63 at Saint James's Palace in the City of WestminsterG in Region of Greater London, England (Tudor), EuropeG+. The cause of his death (at the age of 63) in the year of 1600 is not known-surviving in 1600 was difficult Died as the 2nd Baron of Lieghs |
Person Source | Richard Rich had person sources.1 | |
Title | after 1537 | He held the title of 2nd Baron of Lieghs after 1537. |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors Most Ancient of Don's Actual Ancients, Enos ben Seth |
Father* | Richard John Rich (b. 1470, d. 8 September 1503) |
Mother* | Joan Dingley (b. about 18 September 1472, d. 12 June 1567) |
Pedigree Link |
Daughter* | Dorothy Rich (b. about 1512, d. 1598) |
Daughter* | Mary Rich (b. before 14 August 1516, d. 1573) |
Son* | William Rich (b. 1529, d. after 1529) |
Daughter* | Elizabeth Rich (b. 1530, d. 17 October 1590) |
Daughter* | Anne Rich (b. 1532, d. after 1532) |
Daughter* | Ethelreda Audrey Rich (b. 1533, d. 1610) |
Daughter* | Winifred Rich (b. 1534, d. 1578) |
Daughter* | Dorothy Rich (b. 1534, d. after 1534) |
Daughter* | Mary Rich (b. 1537, d. 8 January 1597/98) |
Son* | Robert Rich, II (b. 1537, d. 27 February 1580) |
Son* | Richard Rich (b. 1537, d. 1600) |
Daughter* | Frances Rich (b. 1539, d. 3 March 1580) |
Son* | Hugh Rich (b. 1539, d. 1 November 1554) |
Son* | Thomas Rich (b. 1540, d. 1567) |
Daughter* | Alice Rich, Don's 11th GGM+ (b. 1542, d. 22 August 1596) |
Son* | Ethelreda Audrey Rich (b. 1543, d. after 1543) |
Daughter* | Agnes Rich (b. 1545, d. 1567) |
Daughter* | Barbara Rich (b. 1546, d. 24 March 1647/48) |
Daughter* | Mary Marie Rich (b. 1547, d. after 1547) |
Son* | Nicholas Rich (b. 1550, d. after 1570) |
Son* | Thomas Rich (b. 1553, d. 1581) |
Birth | 1496 | Richard Rich, I (Don's 12th GGF in another branch), was born in 1496 in Leigh-On-Sea, County of Essex, England (Tudor), EuropeG.1,2,3,4,5 |
Marriage | May 1536 | He and Elizabeth Colwell Jenkes, Don's 12th GGM, were married in May 1536 at Saint James's Palace in the City of WestminsterG in Region of Greater London, England (Tudor), EuropeG+.6 |
Death | 12 June 1567 | He died on 12 June 1567 at age ~71 in Rochford, County of Essex, England (Tudor), EuropeG. The cause of his death (at the age of 71) on Monday, June 12th, 1567 is not known-surviving in 1567 was difficult Died as the Lord Chancellor of England and as the 1st Baron of Leighs |
Burial | after June 1567 | He was buried after June 1567 at Buried in an unknown cemetery in the Uttlesford DistrictG in Felsted, County of Essex, England (Tudor), EuropeG. |
Person Source | Richard Rich, I (Don's 12th GGF in another branch), had person sources.7,8,6,9,10 | |
Title | after 1496 | He held the title of 1st Baron of Leighs, Lord Chancellor of England after 1496. |
Baptism | about 1497 | He was baptized about 1497 at Saint James's Palace in the City of WestminsterG in Region of Greater London, England (Tudor), EuropeG+.11 |
Last Edited | 15 May 2023 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors |
Father* | Thomas Rogers, {Tagged} Research / Who His Children Are Birthed By… (b. 11 July 1586, d. 12 November 1638) |
Mother* | Grace Makin, {Tagged} Common Ancestor (b. 1585, d. 3 June 1662) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 8 July 1627 | Ruth Rogers was born on 8 July 1627 in County of Warwickshire, England (Tudor), EuropeG. |
Death | 4 December 1630 | She died on 4 December 1630 at age 3 in County of Warwickshire, England (Tudor), EuropeG. The cause of her death (at a young age of 3) on Wednesday, December 4th, 1630 is not known-surviving in 1630 at a very young age was difficult & it occurred in Tudor England |
Person Source | Ruth Rogers had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
Father* | Jonathan Rood (b. 9 October 1685, d. 1776) |
Mother* | Margaret Rowe (b. 1689, d. 30 November 1733) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 22 May 1718 | Hannah Rood was born on 22 May 1718 in Stafford, Colonial County of Tolland, Colony of Connecticut, British Colonial America (North America)G. |
Death | 29 January 1749/50 | She died on 29 January 1749/50 at age 31 in Stafford, Colonial County of Tolland, Colony of Connecticut, British Colonial America (North America)G. The cause of her death (at the age of 31) on Wednesday, January 29th, 1749 is not known-surviving in 1749 was difficult & it occurred in the pre-1776 Colony of Connecticut (location not known; used birth place) |
Person Source | Hannah Rood had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
Pedigree Link |
Daughter* | Ann Duckworth+ (b. 1835, d. after 1891) |
Birth | about 1815 | John Duckworth was born about 1815. |
Death | after 1835 | He died The cause of his death (at the presumed age of 20) in the year of 1835 is not known after 1835 at This global place was used as neither death nor birth locations are knownG in A Conceptual Continent that surrounds the Region of OceaniaG+. His death is not known; as neither death or birth location are known, used the conceptual continent |
Person Source | John Duckworth had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
Father* | Edward Chown (b. about 1750, d. about 1780) |
Mother* | Grace Underdowne (b. before April 1750, d. February 1804) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | about 1781 | Sarah Chown was born about 1781 in Rockbeare, Devonshire, England (Kingdom of Great Britain), EuropeG. She was being carried by her Mother when her Father died; see note in her Father |
Death | after 1781 | She died after 1781 in Rockbeare, Devonshire, England (Kingdom of Great Britain), EuropeG. The cause of her death (sadly, as an infant in their 1st year) in the year of 1781 is not known-surviving in 1781 as an infant was difficult & it occurred in England of the Kingdom of Great Britain (location not known; used birth place) |
Person Source | Sarah Chown had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
References | Most Ancient of Don's Actual Ancients, Enos ben Seth |
Father* | Claude de Lorraine (b. 20 October 1496, d. 12 April 1550) |
Mother* | Antoinette Capet de Bourbon-Vendome (b. 25 December 1493, d. 22 January 1583) |
Pedigree Link |
Son* | James Stuart (b. 22 May 1540, d. April 1541) |
Son* | Arthur Robert Stuart (b. April 1541, d. April 1541) |
Daughter* | Mary, I (of Scotland)+ (b. 8 December 1542, d. 8 February 1587) |
Birth | 22 November 1515 | Marie, de Guise, was born on 22 November 1515 at LucG in Aquitaine, France, EuropeG. |
Marriage | 18 May 1538 | James Stewart, V, and she were married on 18 May 1538 at Notre Dame de ParisG in Paris, Île-de-France, France, EuropeG. |
Death | 10 June 1560 | She died on 10 June 1560 at age 44 at Edinburgh CastleG in Edinburgh, Midlothian County, Scotland (Medieval), EuropeG. The cause of the Queen Regent of Scotland's deaty at the age of 45 on Friday, June 10th, 1560 was from dropsy at Edinburgh Castle Her body was taken to France and interred at the church in the Convent of Saint-Pierre in Reims, where Mary's sister Renée was abbess Of Mary's five children, only her daughter Mary (later Mary Queen of Scots) survived her. Her only other child to survive infancy was her eldest son from her first marriage, François. Unfortunately he died in 1551 In modern times, such as in Philippa Gregory's novel The Virgin's Lover, it has been suggested that Queen Elizabeth I of England ordered Mary's assassination by poisoning her, or, as portrayed in the 1998 film Elizabeth, that she was assassinated to protect Elizabeth's interests (although apart from the queen's direct order) However, there is a lack of evidence to prove such an allegation. In the usually paranoid 16th century political climate, many royal deaths were suspected of having been the result of poisoning; such as Catherine of Aragon's, Henry FitzRoy's or Jeanne d'Albret's. However,Mary's death was evidently of natural causes and it was, in fact, one of the very few which her contemporaries felt bore no signs of "foul play". She herself complained she had become lame from the swelling of her legs in April and […lost further details]1 |
Burial | 19 August 1560 | She was buried on 19 August 1560 at Interred or buried in the cemetery at the Abbey of Ste PierreG in Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France, EuropeG. Moved prior to burial |
Name | Marie, de Guise, was also known as Mary Queen de Lorraine, de Guise.2 | |
Note | Mary of Guise (1515-60), queen consort (1538-42) of James V of Scotland and regent of Scotland (1554-60); was also known as Mary of Lorraine The widowed daughter of the French soldier Claude de Lorraine, 1st duc de Guise (1496-1550), Mary married King James in 1538. After his death in 1542, she engaged in a power struggle with James Hamilton, 3d earl of Arran (circa 1517-75), who had been appointed regent for his infant daughter, Mary, queen of Scots. In 1548 she arranged her daughter's betrothal to the French Dauphin. Mary secured Arran's resignation and succeeded him as regent in 1554. When she began persecuting the Scottish Protestants in 1559, they rebelled against her. Both France and England intervened in the struggle, which ended with Mary's death Mary of Guise (French: Marie de Guise) (22 November 1515-11 June 1560) was the queen consort of Scotland as the second spouse of King James V of Scotland. She was the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots,and served as regent of Scotland in her daughter's name from 1554 to 1560 Duchess of Longueville Marie de Lorraine or de Guise was the eldest daughter of Claude de Lorraine, Duke of Guise, head of the French House of Guise, and his wife Antoinette de Bourbon, Mary was born at Bar-le-Duc, Lorraine On 4 August 1534, at the age of 18, she married Louis II, Duke of Longueville (born 1510), at the Louvre. Their union was a happy one and on 30 October 1535, her first son, François, was born. On 9 June 1537, Louis died at Rouen and left her a widow at the age of 21. On 4 August, Mary gave birth to their second son, Louis Later that year, James V, having lost his first wife, Madeleine of Valois (who bore striking similarities to Mary of Guise) to tuberculosis, wanted a second French bride to further the interests of the Franco-Scottish alliance against England. Mary became the focus of his marriage negotiations and his uncle Henry VIII of England tried to prevent this union by asking for Mary's hand himself. Henry had recently lost his third wife Jane Seymour in childbirth and given Henry's marital history-banishing one wife and beheading the next-Mary refused the offer. She was said to have replied, "I maybe a big woman, but I have very little neck." (A tribute to the famously macabre jest made by Henry's French-educated second wife, Anne Boleyn, who had joked before her death that the executioner would find killing her easy because she had "a little neck.") Francis I of France accepted James's proposals over Henry's and conveyed his wishes to Mary's father. Mary received the news with shock and alarm She did not rejoice at the prospect of leaving family and country, especially as she had just lost her younger son, Louis, at only four months. Her father was caught in a diplomatic wrangle. He tried to delay matters until James, perhaps sensing her reluctance, wrote to her, appealing for her advice and support. Mary accepted the offer and hurried plans for departure Queen of Scots On 18 May 1538, at Notre-Dame de Paris, James V and Mary of Guise were married with Lord Maxwell acting as proxy. Accompanied by a fleet of ships sent by James, Mary left France in June, forced to leave little François behind. She landed in Fife on 10 June and was formally received by James. They were married in person a few days later at St Andrews. She was crowned as Queen Consort at Holyrood Abbey on 22 February 1540 James and Mary had two sons: James Stewart, Duke of Rothesay (b. 22 May 1540) and Robert (b. 24 April 1541). Both sons died in April 1541: James at less than a year old, and Robert only days after hi solder brother, and only eight days after his baptism. The third and last child of the union was a daughter, Mary, who was born on 8 December 1542. King James died six days later, making young Mary queen regnant Regency The government of Scotland was first entrusted to James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran as Regent. Henry VIII of England wished the infant Queen Mary to marry his son by Jane Seymour, Prince Edward. This lead to internal conflict in Scotland and the English invasions now called the Rough Wooings. In 1548 Mary was sent to France to be raised with her husband-to-be, the dauphin, son of the French king Henry II. After a Scottish defeat at the of Battle_of_Pinkie_Cleugh in September 1547, French military aid weakened English resolve, and increased the power base of Mary of Guise who had remained in Scotland After a peace treaty was signed, her brother Claude, Duke of Aumale came to Scotland, and she was able to travel to France. She saw her relatives and daughter, and participated in a festival at Rouen,and in October 1551 during her return journey to Scotland met Edward VI in London In May 1554, she succeeded Arran as Regent of Scotland, who had been given the French title of Duke of Châtellerault. In many affairs, she consulted her brothers in France-Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine, and Francis, Duke of Guise, both of whom held government positions-so Scotland and France worked as allies in dealing with other nations During her regency (1554-59), Frenchmen were put in charge of the treasury, the Great Seal, and the French ambassador sometimes attended the Privy Council The Reformation Crisis Mary's regency was threatened, however, by the growing influence of the Scottish Protestants, (namely the Protestant Lords of the Congregation), supported secretly by Elizabeth I of England. The Lords of the Congregation deeply distrusted Mary which led to a breakdown in authority. Mary called on her French family for help, which in the eyes of the Scottish Protestants questioned her loyalties to Scotland (at this time Scotland was worried about being dominated by either England or France). In 1559, the Lords of the Congregation had Mary deposed At first Mary of Guise cultivated the now growing number of Protestant preachers. She needed to win support for her pro-French policies, and they could expect no alternative support from England, which had recently come under the rule of the Roman Catholic Mary Tudor. However, the marriage of Mary, Queen of Scots, to the dauphin in 1558 heightened fears that Scotland would become a French province By 1557, a group of Scottish lords, known as 'the Lords of the Congregation,' drew up a covenant to 'maintain, set forth, and establish the most blessed Word of God and his Congregation.' This was followed by outbreaks of iconoclasm in 1558-9. At the same time, plans were being drawn up for a Reformed programme of parish worship and preaching, as local communities sought out Protestant ministers. In 1558, the Regent summoned the Protestant preachers to answer for their teaching, but backed down when lairds from the west country threatened to revolt The accession, in England, of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth in 1558 gave fresh hope to the reformers. January 1559 saw the publication of the anonymous Beggars' Summons, which threatened friars with eviction on the grounds that their property belonged to the genuine poor. This was calculated to appeal to the passions of the populace of towns who appeared to have particular complaints against friars.[11] Fearing disorder, the Regent summoned the reformed preachers to appear before her at Stirling on May 10: insurrection followed. The men of Angus assembled in Dundee to accompany the preachers to Stirling, on May 4 they were joined by Knox recently arrived from France. Here, stirred by Knox's sermons in Perth and Dundee, the mob sacked religious houses (including the tomb of James I). In response, the Regent marched on Perth, but was forced to withdraw and negotiate when another reformed contingent arrived from the west Among the Regent's ambassadors was the Earl of Argyll and Lord James Stewart (both professed Protestants), however when the Regent went back on her word, by stationing French mercenaries in Perth, both abandoned her and joined the Lords of the Congregation at St Andrews, where they were joined by Knox. Even Edinburgh soon fell to them, as Mary retreated to Dunbar. Chatelherault, at this point, accepted the leadership of the 'Lords of the Congregation' and established a provisional government. However, Mary of Guise was reinforced by professional French troops, and drove the rebels back to Stirling. All seemed lost for the Protestant side until an English fleet arrived in the Firth of Forth, in January 1560, causing the French to retreat to Leith Negotiations then began, from which Knox was excluded, his earlier tract The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, although it had been aimed at Elizabeth's predecessor Mary Tudor, rendered him unacceptable. The resulting Treaty of Berwick (February) was an agreement between Châtelherault and the English to act jointly to expel the French. As a result, an English land army joined the Scots besieging the French at Leith. However, while continuing to fortify Edinburgh Castle and following the action at Leith, Mary of Guise died in June 1560 (see her death note), thus allowing the Treaty of Edinburgh: a negotiation between France and England, which secured the withdrawal of both French and English troops from Scotland. Although the French commissioners were unwilling to treat with the insurgent Lords of the Congregation, they offered the Scots certain concessions from King Francis and Queen Mary, including the right to summon a parliament according to use and custom. The effect of the treaty was to leave power in the hands of the Protestants. | |
Title | between 23 November 1515 and 18 May 1538 | She held the title of Princess of Lorraine between 23 November 1515 and 18 May 1538 in Lorraine, France, EuropeG. |
Title | between 19 May 1538 and 1542 | She held the title of Queen Regent of Scotland between 19 May 1538 and 1542 in Scotland (Medieval), EuropeG. |
Title | between 1554 and 10 June 1560 | She held the title of Queen Regent of Scotland between 1554 and 10 June 1560 in Scotland (Medieval), EuropeG. |
Last Edited | 25 April 2024 |
Pedigree Link |
Daughter* | Maggie Sartick (b. 1895, d. after 1895) |
Son* | John Sartick (b. 1901, d. after 1930) |
Son* | Steven J. Sartick (b. 22 June 1903, d. 4 September 1962) |
Son* | Albert Thomas Sartick (b. 6 June 1905, d. 22 October 1984) |
Son* | Peter Sartick (b. about 1906, d. after 1930) |
Son* | Michel Sartick (b. 20 January 1909, d. 5 October 1968) |
Son* | Joel Sartick (b. 1911, d. after 1920) |
Son* | Paul Woodrow Sartick (b. 2 November 1912, d. 15 December 1978) |
Son* | Charley Sertich (b. 1915, d. after 1920) |
Daughter* | Katherine Sartick (b. about 1916, d. after 1930) |
Birth | about 1874 | Barbara Marek was born about 1874 in Region of Croatia-Yugoslovia, Austria, EuropeG.1,2,3 |
Death | after 1930 | She died after 1930 in Salem, Columbiana County, Ohio, United States (North America)G. The unsourced cause of her death in the State of Ohio (location not known; used Residency fact) at the age of 56 in the year of 1930 is not known |
Residence | 6 February 1894 | Barbara Marek lived in Austria, EuropeG, on 6 February 1894. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA4 |
Arrival | before 1899 | She arrived in the US at at Arrival in Ellis Island, New York HarborG+, in New York City, New York Metropolitan Area, State of New York, United States (North America)G+, on or around before 1899 an actual Immigration event may not be present. Source (1930 Census) has an arrival date of 1893 (presumably in the US); as there is a Residence in Austria after that, presumed that the date should be similar to 1899 where both 1910 & 1920 census's have her arriving |
Residence | 1910 | She lived at Ward 1G in Salem, Columbiana County, Ohio, United States (North America)G, in 1910. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA |
Residence | 1920 | She lived in Perry, Columbiana County, Ohio, United States (North America)G, in 1920. Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: wife |
Residence | 1923 | She lived at AuglaizeG in Salem, Columbiana County, Ohio, United States (North America)G, in 1923. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA5 |
Residence | 1930 | She lived in Salem, Columbiana County, Ohio, United States (North America)G, in 1930. Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: wife |
Last Edited | 3 November 2024 |
Father* | William Eales (b. March 1843, d. April 1909) |
Mother* | Ann (b. about 1830, d. after 1878) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | about 1867 | Ada Eales was born about 1867 in Tetsworth, Oxfordshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. |
Death | after 1867 | She died The cause of her death (sadly, as an infant in their 1st year) in the year of 1867 is not known after 1867 in Tetsworth, Oxfordshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. Her death is not known & it occurred in today's England (location not known; used birth place) |
Person Source | Ada Eales had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1898 | Gwilym E. Clarke was born in 1898. |
Death | after 1931 | He died The cause of his death (at the age of 33) in the year of 1931 is not known after 1931 at This global place was used as neither death nor birth locations are knownG in A Conceptual Continent that surrounds the Region of OceaniaG+. His death is not known; as neither death or birth location are known, used the conceptual continent |
Person Source | Gwilym E. Clarke had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
References | Most Ancient of Don's Actual Ancients, Enos ben Seth |
Father* | John Clarke (b. 1791, d. after 1871) |
Mother* | Mary Webb (b. 4 February 1781, d. 21 July 1876) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1820 | Hannah Clarke was born in 1820 in Kenilworth, Warwickshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG. |
Death | 1 March 1888 | She died The cause of her death (at the age of 68) on Thursday, March 1st, 1888 is not known on 1 March 1888 at age ~68 in Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales (United Kingdom), EuropeG+. Her death is not known & it occurred in today's Wales |
Person Source | Hannah Clarke had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
Pedigree Link |
Daughter* | Mary Clarke+ (b. about 1607, d. 19 September 1683) |
Birth | 1585 | Elizabeth Nasber was born in 1585 in Belgrave, Leicestershire, England (Tudor), EuropeG. |
Marriage | 28 November 1607 | William Gersham Clarke and she were married on 28 November 1607 in Swinford, Leicester County, England (Tudor), EuropeG. |
Death | 1650 | She died in 1650 at age ~65 in Yarmouth, Colonial County of Barnstable, The Colony of Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America (North America)G+. The cause of her death (at the age of 65) in the year of 1650 is not known-surviving in 1650 was difficult & it occurred in the pre-1776 Colony of Massachusetts Bay |
Arrival | 1630 | Elizabeth Nasber arrived in the US at in The Colony of Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America (North America)G+, on or around in 1630 an actual Immigration event may not be present.1 |
Residence | before 1650 | She lived in England (Tudor), EuropeG+, before 1650. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA |
Last Edited | 25 April 2023 |
Father* | Albert Sims (b. 1860, d. after 1901) |
Mother* | Anna (b. 1866, d. after 1901) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1885 | Florence Sims was born in 1885 in Southampton, Hampshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG+.1,2 |
Death | after 1901 | She died The cause of her death (as a teenager aged 16) in the year of 1901 is not known after 1901 in Southampton, Hampshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG+. Her death is not known & it occurred in today's England (location not known; used birth place) |
Residence | 1891 | Florence Sims lived in Saint Mary Bourne, Hampshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG, in 1891. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA |
Residence | 1901 | She lived in Saint Mary Bourne, Hampshire, England (United Kingdom), EuropeG, in 1901. Resource event had no description; added / NFIA |
Last Edited | 25 April 2023 |
Father* | Robert Thomas Andrews (b. 14 November 1609, d. 29 May 1668) |
Mother* | Elizabeth Grace Millborne (b. April 1613, d. 25 December 1700) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 29 May 1639 | Abigail Mary Andrews was born on 29 May 1639 in Colonial County of Essex, The Colony of Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America (North America)G+. |
Death | 24 June 1665 | She died on 24 June 1665 at age 26 in Colonial County of Essex, The Colony of Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America (North America)G+. The cause of her death (at the age of 26) on Wednesday, June 24th, 1665 is not known-surviving in 1665 was difficult & it occurred in the pre-1776 Colony of Massachusetts Bay (location not known; used birth place) |
Person Source | Abigail Mary Andrews had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
Pedigree Link |
Son* | Abel Burt (b. about 1673, d. 16 November 1766) |
Birth | about 1665 | Abell Burt was born about 1665. |
Marriage | 26 June 1685 | He and Elizabeth Grace Millborne were married on 26 June 1685 at TauntonG in Colonial County of Bristol, Colony of Rhode Island, British Colonial America (North America)G+. |
Death | 1711 | He died in 1711 at age ~46 at This global place was used as neither death nor birth locations are knownG in A Conceptual Continent that surrounds the Region of OceaniaG+. The cause of his death (at the age of 46) in the year of 1711 is not known-surviving in 1711 was difficult-as neither death or birth location are known, used the conceptual continent |
Person Source | Abell Burt had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors Most Ancient of Don's Actual Ancients, Enos ben Seth |
Father* | William d'Aubigny, of Arundel (b. 1139, d. 24 December 1193) |
Mother* | Matilda Mary de Saint-Hilaire-du-Harcouët (b. 1132, d. 24 December 1193) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1175 | Willem d'Aubigny, V, was born in 1175 in Arundel, Sussexshire, England (Medieval), EuropeG. |
Death | 1 February 1221 | He died on 1 February 1221 at age ~46 at CainellG in Roma, Lazio, Italy, EuropeG. The cause of his death (at the age of 46) on Monday, February 1st, 1221 is not known-surviving in 1221 was difficult Died as the Earl of Arundel |
Historical data | Willem d'Aubigny, V, has a Forced relationship (moved from Roger de Clare) | |
Person Source | He had person sources.1 | |
Title | after 1175 | He held the title of Earl of Arundel after 1175. |
Last Edited | 6 November 2024 |
References | Don's Family & Direct Ancestors |
Father* | Malcolm MacCrinan Canmore, III (Don's 27th GGF in another branch) (b. 26 March 1031, d. 13 November 1093) |
Mother* | Margaret Ætheling, of Wessex and Scotland (Don's 27th GGM) (b. 8 September 1045, d. 16 November 1093) |
Pedigree Link |
Birth | 1060 | Duncan Canmore was born in 1060. |
Death | 12 November 1094 | He died on 12 November 1094 at age ~34 at This global place was used as neither death nor birth locations are knownG in A Conceptual Continent that surrounds the Region of OceaniaG+. The cause of his death (at the age of 34) on Monday, November 12th, 1094 is not known-surviving in 1094 was difficult-as neither death or birth location are known, used the conceptual continent |
Burial | after November 1094 | He was buried after November 1094 at Buried in an unknown cemeteryG in Isle of Iona, County of Argyll and Bute, Scotland (MiddleAges part of Anglo-Saxon Britain), EuropeG. |
Person Source | Duncan Canmore had person sources.1 |
Last Edited | 9 April 2024 |