Thrale history
Notes
Matches 901 to 950 of 983
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901 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Henry Joseph CANALE / Adrienne FRANCK (F991)
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902 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Hayden WELDS / Reniece (F965)
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903 | Very kind, giving, thoughtful. | TAVARES, Hazel (I461)
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904 | Victoria died age 14 years . | ELLIS, Victoria (I83)
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905 | Visited their youngest son, an attorney in Big Lake, Texas, Gordon Fish Thrall. After spending a month in Big Lake they liked it so well; they decided to take up residence there | Family: Clyde Lowell THRALL / Beulah Mae FISH (F1115)
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906 | Vol 1c. Page 66. | Family: Alfred ABRAHAMS / Bessie BLOOM (F192)
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907 | Vol: 4a. Page 140. | BLOCK, Michael (I410)
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908 | Volume 93 (page 100) of The Publications of the Harleian Society records the union of Thomas Smethwick b 1619 to Mary Thrale (daughter of Francis Thrale of St Martin in the Fields). It also says that Thomas and Mary had a son William born 1646. It is, however, not clear as to whether this Francis Thrale and the Francis mentioned by the Harleian Society, is one and the same? | Family: Francis THRALE / (F517)
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909 | Volume: 5e. Page 139 | STAPLES, Jane Henrietta (I1547)
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910 | Walter G Thrall genealogy states ... "Jonathan C. died in 1852; his family are in Rutland. He was a communicant in the Episcopal Church, and a man of extensive information and influence Samuel R. is a Presbyterian clergyman in Illinois. The following obituary notice is copied from the Rutland Herald "Died April 4, 1844, in West Rutland, Chauncey Thrall Esq., aged 72 years. The inhabitants of this place have been called of late to mourn the departure of an unusual number of leading men; men who have occupied such stations, and taken such a part in the affairs of the community as to cause their deaths to be universally felt and lamented. The deceased was one of that number. The equanimity of his temper, and his uniform kindness as a father, can be realized only by those who sustained to him the relation of children, and are left to lament their loss. But as a citizen and a Christian, his example has been before all, and was such as to gain the respect and love of his neighbors, and inspire them with the hope that death did not find him unprepared." He had been a Representative in the Legislature, and most of his life in. some public employment. His wife died a few years before him. Jonathan had 3 children with Betsey Gates and 7 children with Mary Townsend | THRALL, Jonathan C (I448)
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911 | Walter G Thrall#s 1862 Genealogy book, says of Timothy ... "Timothy 1st, the son of Justus, was of pure morals, a jovial companion, a Judge of the Common Pleas Court, and a deacon in the church. He served three years as a sergeant in the army of the Revolution. During his service the following circumstance happened: He and his brother Lemuel, and Amasa Howe, were companions in the army at the south. While there Timothy was taken very sick with the small pox, and was confined in the hospital. During his sickness the army, with Lemuel Rose and Mr. Howe, marched to the north. Some time after, one Watson, an acquaintance of theirs who was left in the hospital with Timothy, joined the army where Lemuel and Howe were. He had a quantity of TimothyÂ’s clothing, and other articles, and said that Timothy died in the hospital, and gave the articles to him for taking care of him. Lemuel wrote to the friends in Granville. informing them of the death of Timothy. The friends deeply mourned his death, and his funeral sermon was preached. Some weeks after, some troops marched into camp, and Timothy, the brother and companion for whom they had mourned as dead, was one of them. Lemuel and Howe stated what Watson had told them. He replied that Watson expected he would die, and stole his things. Timothy was a prominent leader in the church after they settled in Granville, Ohio, until a clergyman was procured." | ROSE, Timothy (I550)
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912 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "Samuel 1st (the writerÂ’s grandfather) was a farmer, active vigorous and industrious. He was an officer in the English service in the French war of 1762 and a Captain in the American service in the war of the Revolution. Before the Revolution he removed from Windsor to Granville, Massachusetts. He sympathized with the malcontent Shays, in 1784, and suffered considerably thereby. In 1788 he was a member of the Legislature of Massachusetts. In 1790 he removed to Rutland, Vermont. All his sons and daughters moved there about the same time, except Samuel, Jr., Lucy and Worthy. Samuel 1st had the reputation of a sensible honest man, and exercised considerable influence in society. He was about 5 feet 9 inches in height and weighed about 150 pounds, which was lighter than the average of his brothers or children. He was many years a consistent member of the Congregational Church in West Rutland. He died December 3, 1821 aged 84 years and 5 months. He was the last survivor of his generation. In the year 1820 he had six living sons and daughters, sixty-two living grand children, twenty-eight great grand children, and several of the fifth generation. His children ... the first mary and James died young. All the others had large families." ______________________________ D Stephen Thrall's Genealogy of the Thrall's says on page 23 ... "As the Winchell family were near neighbours and good friends of the Thrall family, Samuel Thrall and his older sister both maried Winchells. Samuel was a good student, and he was given jobs that required a knowledge of bookkeeping and record keeping, and as he moved from Windsor to Granville, Mass, and then to Rutland, Vermont, he told his children about their forebears. He moved to Granville, Massachusetts and reared his family there. The country was hilly but he had a farm in Granville, and moved from there to Vermont in 1790. samuel Thrall served in the Colonial Army and held a commission in the English troops in the French War of 1762. When the Revolution came he was 39 years old and he enlisted in the Colonial Army. He was a Supply Officer in the Massachusetts Militia at Ticonderoga and several other campaigns. In the last year of the Revolution, he was Captain of a Company of Militia that marched into the Mohawk Valley to stop an English or Indain attack. His son Jesse, served the same Company. After the war, Samuel Thrall returned to Granville, Mass, and in 1788-89 was a member of the General Court at Boston. He had sympathised with the leaders of Says' Rebellion, however, on the currency situation, and as a result suffered much criticism, and his property was threatened. In 1790 at the age of 53, he moved to Vermont with most of his children and most of his worldly goods. For thirty years he was a much revered citizen of Rutland. His property was in what is now West Rutland, and marble quarries are near the old Thrall homestead. Samuel is buried in the old west Rutland Cemetary and a marble marker tells of his Revolutionary activites. His wife lucy, and son Chauncey Thrall are buried nearby. Samuel was five feet nine inches tall and weighed a little over 160 pounds. He remained in sound health until shortly before he died at the age of 84." | THRALL, Samuel (I219)
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913 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "SamuelÂ’s wife, Lucy, was a woman of plain manners, stout frame and robust health; a kind-hearted Christian, always ready and willing to do her whole duty to her family and neighbors. Her father died February 15, 1785. Her brothers were Martin, Nathaniel and Dan. She had one sister, Deborah, who married Simeon Lewis, of Windsor, Connecticut. | WINCHELL, Lucy (I345)
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914 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says "Ellen K. is married, and lives near San Francisco, California" | THRALL, Ellen K (I479)
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915 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says "Report says that four of Worthy’s family were in 1850, living near Tonawanda Creek in Western New York." In December 1786 the NY colony granted Massachusetts the right to purchase a large tract of land in the western part of the state called Genesee Country. Nathaniel Gorham obtained title from the Indians to 2,250 acres west of Lake Seneca. Olive Phelps seems to have been the local manager and in 1789 opened a land office in Canadaigua, N.Y. In 1792. there were towns called Phelps and Gorham in Ontario County. | THRALL, Captain Worthy (I355)
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916 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says ... "He is a thrifty merchant, in Rutland, Vermont" He was a leader in Rutland County, and a very much loved and respected citizen. He was a big heavy-set man with a friendly and kindly disposition, charitabe to friends and employees. | CHAFFEE, Frederick (I488)
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917 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "All the children, except Aaron, Jr., raised families." | THRALL, Aaron (I352)
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918 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "Cotton M. was killed about the year 1848, by a fall from a wagon." | THRALL, Colton Mather (I389)
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919 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "James was killed about the year 1814, by the fall of a log or tree while he was chopping it." | THRALL, James B. (I386)
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920 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "Samuel, Jr., the son of Samuel and Lucy, was born August 31, 1760, and died May 8, 1815. He married Triphosa Cooley, sister of the Rev. Dr. Cooley, for more than half a century the pastor of the Congregational Church in Granville, Massachusetts. Samuel was one of the Licking Land Company, who, with others, removed from Granville Massachusetts, in the year 1805, and formed the first settlement in Granville, Ohio, where the Company had purchased a township and three-quarters of land at about three dollars per acre. He was a farmer, a member of the Congregational Church, an honest, industrious and respectable citizen. He had been a soldier in the war of the Revolution; his widow died in 1841, aged 74 years. They had seven sons : James, Aurelius, Samuel, Cotton M., Alexander, William and Timothy L; and five daughters: Sarah, who married Jacob Goodrich; Mary Ann, who married P. Dean; Abigail, who married George Plumb, and after his death Ira Wood; Lucy, who married Azel Mead, and Barbary, who died aged eleven years. All except the last named had families. James was killed about the year 1814, by the fall of a log or tree while he was chopping it. Aurelius was killed about the year 1831, by the falling of a bank of earth on him, while he was working near it. Samuel was killed about the year 1832, by the kick of a horse; and Cotton M. was killed about the year 1848, by a fall from a wagon. Strange fatality! that the four brothers should, by accident, at different times and ways, meet a sudden death." | THRALL, Samuel (I351)
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921 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says ... "Friend and his wife and child, were lost in Lake Erie about the year 1830, while emigrating to the West." | GRISWOLD, Friend (I440)
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922 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "He had a strong intellect, a retentive memory, and was a jovial companion; was fond of company, a farmer; he was a man of large size. This couple had eight children: Luther, Walter, Reuben R., William B., and Charlotte, and three others who died in infancy." Thrall History 1640 - 1965 by D Stephen Thrall says ... "All Jesse's children received a good education, for that period. Two sons were prominent lawyers, anoth son a successful publisher and printer, and one was Treasurer of Ohio and Grand Master of Ohio Masons." | THRALL, Jesse (I353)
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923 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 Genealogy book says ... "Mabel was the third daughter and eighth child of Justus and Deborah Rose. For about fifty years she was a consistent member of the Baptist Church, beloved by all of her acquaintances, pious and exemplary; a warm friend, and possessed a cultivated mind." D Stephen Thralls, Thrall genealogy 1630 -1965 says ... "mabel Rose came from true pioneer stock. Her grandfather had come from Scotland to Granville, Mass. Her father and brothers had been very active in Granville Affairs. they had been leaders in the movement West. Obviously Mabel Rose was a virile, strong and intelligent woman." | ROSE, Mehitable (I412)
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924 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had 5 children. | THRALL, Oliver (I425)
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925 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had five children. | THRALL, Doctor Aaron (I429)
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926 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had four children. | THRALL, Lyman (I426)
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927 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had four children. | THRALL, Worthy (I430)
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928 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had nine children. | THRALL, Eliphas (I427)
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929 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had nine children. | THRALL, Doctor Benjamin F (I428)
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930 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that he had two children. | THRALL, Dr. Joel (I424)
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931 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that she had four children. | THRALL, Orilla (I431)
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932 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that she had four children. | THRALL, Caroline (I433)
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933 | Walter G Thrall's 1862 genealogy book says that she had nine children. | THRALL, Mary (I432)
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934 | Walter G Thralls' 1862 Genealogy of the Thralls said of Hiram ... "The following obituary notice was published of Hiram: 'Died, on Thursday, December 20, 1855, Mr. Hiram Rose aged 89 years. He emigrated from Granville, Massachusetts, to Granville, Ohio, in the year 1805, with the Licking Land Company. He was one of the original church members. He saw the fifth generation from him. His wife who had been his faithful companion for sixty-four years deceased about one year before him, from which time he gradually and peacefully declined, and paid the debt of nature without the intervention of disease; other than those incidents to extreme age. He possessed an inflexible principle, was a devoted Christian and faithful citizen. He went to the grave mourned by numerous friends, and without an enemy.' Several years before Mr. Rose's death, he related to the writer the following facts: He was a few months in the army of the Revolution. After the close of the war he taught school several winters; and such was the hardness of the times, and the scarcity of money, that for four winters he could only get three dollars and board, per month. The fifth winter, as times grew better, he had ten dollars and board, per month. In 1787 he was living in Granville, Mass., was strong, and accustomed to hard labor. The wages of laborers were very low. He could get from five dollars to six dollars per month. It was common for good hands to work for their board in the winter, and-for three or four dollars, and board and washing, per month, in the summer. By the laws of Massachusetts at that time, he and his brothers, when they had no property, were each assessed a poll tax of $6 12, annually. Yet by industry and economy, he was able, in 1805, to buy a good farm in Granville, Ohio, on which he lived till his death. All his family, seven in number, that in 1805 moved to Ohio, were living in 1854. Four generations were then living on the same farm. Hiram, when he died, was the last of that numerous generation. He and his brothers Timothy, Lemuel, Enoch Graves, and others, formed what was called 'The Licking Land Company,' and bought seven quarters of townships of land in and near Granville, and settled there in 1805, and soon converted the wilderness into a fruitful field." | COOLEY, Sabra (I553)
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935 | Walter G Thrll's 1862 Thrall Genealogy book says of Lemuel ... "a good neighbor, an upright citizen, and possessed a good property" ... and ... "Lemuel 1st was one of the twenty-five who were formed into a Congregational Church in Granville, Mass., in 1805, and emigrated as a church to Granville, Ohio. It was said of him that 'his gravity, inflexible integrity, and promptness, enabled him to honor his offices, and his kindness and generosity was a blessing to his church and friends.' " | ROSE, Deacon Lemuel (I551)
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936 | Walter made several trips East whilst Probate Judge, in an effort to find relatives of persons who had died in Ohio. Through this he started looking up his own family. He spent a great deal of time in the 1850's comiling information about his own family. He spent much time in an around Windsor, Connecticut, and Granville, Massachusetts and with his brothers in Vermont. In 1862 the results of his efforts were published by his son Lucian, who owned half-interest in the Columbus Gazette Publishing Company. Walter sold his law books to William McKinley who was just opening a law office. | THRALL, Walter (I416)
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937 | Wandsworth. Register number: C109A. District and sub district: 2561C. Entry number 131. | ABRAHAMS, Alfred (I391)
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938 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Warren Thrale RICHARDSON / Claire DODD (F819)
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939 | Was a teacher for 18 years and was an accomplished grammarian. | THRALL, Ira (I1392)
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940 | Was a teacher for 18 years and was an accomplished grammarian. | THRALL, Ira (I1392)
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941 | Was a 41 year old widow when she married Thomas Salusbury. | Family: Sir Thomas SALUSBURY / Sarah Burroughs KING (F213)
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942 | Was a drummer boy in the Civil War. Enlisted in a Connecticut Regiment ate Norwish Connecticut. He was wounded but escaped from the hospital and crossed two states to rejoin his regiment. He was captured and put in Libby Prison. | THRALL, Charles Alva (I1909)
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943 | Was a good father and disciplinarian. | THRALL, Reuben Roland (I467)
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944 | Was a spinster. | LANE, Jennie (I17757)
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945 | Was a very industrious and active man who lived in Rutland all his life, was a member of the Congregational Church amd of its prudential committee. | THRALL, Chauncy (I449)
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946 | Was a widow when married | Family: Nathan THRALL / Sylvia PHELPS (F404)
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947 | Was administrator in his father's estate | THRALL, Nathaniel (I1245)
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948 | Was born and died on the same farm in Vernon, Connecticut, USA | THRALL, James (I211)
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949 | Was considered by everyone at that time to be remarkable for her knowledge and literary ability. | SMITH, Esther M (I769)
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950 | Was Director for many years. | THRALL, George Evans (I1628)
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