_Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk & SUFFOLK _+
| (1095 - 1176)
_Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk & SUFFOLK _|_Juliana VERE __________________________
| (1150 - 1221)
_Hugh Bigod, Earl of PEMBROKE _|
| (.... - 1225) m 1207 |
| | _Hameline PLANTAGENET __________________+
| | | (.... - 1202) m 1164
| |_Isabella ("Ida") PLANTAGENET ___________|_Isabel DE WARREN ______________________
| (.... - 1199)
_Hugh BIGOD _________|
| (.... - 1266) |
| | _John MARSHALL _________________________+
| | | (.... - 1165)
| | _Sir William the MARSHAL ________________|_Sibyl DE SALISBURY ____________________
| | | (1146 - 1219) m 1189
| |_Maud (aka Matilda) MARSHALL __|
| (.... - 1248) m 1207 |
| | _Richard ("Strongbow") DE CLARE ________+
| | | (1130 - 1176) m 1170
| |_Isabel DE CLARE ________________________|_Eva MacMurrough, Countess of IRELAND __
| (1173 - 1220) m 1189 (1145 - 1188)
|
|--John BIGOD
|
| _William DE STUTEVILLE _________________+
| | (.... - 1202)
| _Nicholas DE STUTEVILLE _________________|_Bertha DE GLANVILLE ___________________
| |
| _Nicholas DE STUTEVILLE _______|
| | (.... - 1233) |
| | | ________________________________________
| | | |
| | |_Gunnora DE GURNEY ______________________|________________________________________
| |
|_Joan DE STUTEVILLE _|
(.... - 1276) |
| _Uchtred of GALLOWAY ___________________+
| | (.... - 1174)
| _Roland, Lord of GALLOWAY _______________|_Gunnild of DUNBAR _____________________
| | (.... - 1200)
|_Devorgilla of GALLOWAY _______|
|
| _Richard DE MORVILLE ___________________
| | (.... - 1189)
|_Elena (or Ela) DE MORVILLE _____________|_Avice DE LANCASTER ____________________
(.... - 1217) (.... - 1191)
[11138] Sir John was heir to his brother, Roger, Earl of Norfolk. Sir John m. Isabel _____ who d. in 1311.
_John Gardner BOYDSTUN ________+
| (1805 - 1847) m 1826
_James Berry BOYDSTON _|_Elizabeth "Betsy" ATTERBERRY _
| (1827 - 1897) m 1851 (1808 - 1837)
_John Thomas BOYDSTON _______|
| (1853 - 1937) m 1878 |
| | _Thomas REA ___________________+
| | | (1807 - 1878)
| |_Hannah Caroline REA __|_______________________________
| (1832 - 1917) m 1851
_William ("Bunk") Ralph BOYDSTON _|
| (1893 - 1931) m 1914 |
| | _______________________________
| | |
| | _______________________|_______________________________
| | |
| |_Sarah Eliza Alvora FLEMING _|
| (1858 - 1923) m 1878 |
| | _______________________________
| | |
| |_______________________|_______________________________
|
|
|--William Ralph BOYDSTON
| (1918 - 1961)
| _John Gavin BURLESON __________
| | (1790 - 1866)
| _James BURLESON _______|_______________________________
| | (1817 - 1905)
| _Rufus Clark BURLESON _______|
| | (1870 - 1945) m 1893 |
| | | _______________________________
| | | |
| | |_______________________|_______________________________
| |
|_Phyllis Viola BURLESON __________|
(1894 - 1919) m 1914 |
| _______________________________
| |
| _______________________|_______________________________
| |
|_Lillie Alice HILLHOUSE _____|
(1879 - 1926) m 1893 |
| _______________________________
| |
|_______________________|_______________________________
[22082] BIRTH:Given from the AF-version 4.19, by David L.Taylor, 2789 Bluebird Circle, Costa Mesa,CA 92626, 1-714-546-2121. Submitted data in 1995.10-10-00 MTR. Although Ann Franks Nollsch shows this William as a son of Karl Marx, his birth year belies that fact. I have emailed her for clarification, but for now, have placed him as a child of William R. and a brother of Karl's. - "Annie"
_Christian I, King of DENMARK __________+
| (1426 - 1481) m 1449
_Frederick I, King of DENMARK ________|_Dorothea HOHENZOLLERN _________________
| (1471 - 1533) m 1502 (1430 - 1495)
_Christian III, King of DENMARK ____|
| (1503 - 1559) m 1525 |
| | _Johann Cicero, Elector of BRANDENBURG _+
| | | (1455 - 1499) m 1476
| |_Anna of BRANDENBURG _________________|_Margarethe of SAXONY __________________
| (1487 - 1547) m 1502 (.... - 1501)
_Frederick II, King of Norway And DENMARK _|
| (1534 - 1588) m 1572 |
| | _John V, Duke of SAXE-LAUENBURG ________
| | |
| | _Magnus I, Duke of SAXE-LAUENBURG ____|_Dorothea of BRANDENBURG _______________
| | | (1470 - 1543) m 1509 (.... - 1519)
| |_Dorothea of SAXE-LAUENBURG ________|
| (1511 - 1571) m 1525 |
| | _Henry IV, Duke of BRUNSWICK-LÜNEBURG __+
| | | (1463 - 1514)
| |_Katharina of BRUNSWICK-WOLFENBÜTTEL _|_Catherine of POMERANIA-WOLGAST ________
| (1488 - 1563) m 1509 (.... - 1526)
|
|--Anne, Princess of DENMARK
| (1574 - 1619)
| _Magnus II, Duke of MECKLENBURG ________
| | (.... - 1503) m 1478
| _Albert VII, Duke of MECKLENBURG _____|_Sophie VON POMMERN-WOLGAST ____________
| | (.... - 1504)
| _Ulrich III of MECKLENBURG-GÜSTROW _|
| | (1527 - 1603) m 1556 |
| | | ________________________________________
| | | |
| | |______________________________________|________________________________________
| |
|_Sophia of MECKLENBURG-GUSTROW ____________|
(1557 - 1631) m 1572 |
| _Christian I, King of DENMARK __________+
| | (1426 - 1481) m 1449
| _Frederick I, King of DENMARK ________|_Dorothea HOHENZOLLERN _________________
| | (1471 - 1533) (1430 - 1495)
|_Elizabeth of DENMARK ______________|
(1524 - 1586) m 1556 |
| _Bogislaw X, Duke of POMERANIA _________+
| | (1454 - 1523) m 1491
|_Sophie of POMERANIA _________________|_Anna of POLAND ________________________
(1498 - 1568) (1476 - 1503)
__
|
__|__
|
_William DEVEREUX ___|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
_Walter DEVEREUX ____|
| (1357 - 1403) |
| | __
| | |
| | __|__
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
|
|--Elizabeth DEVEREAUX
| (1419 - 1475)
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | |__|__
| |
|_____________________|
|
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
|_____________________|
|
| __
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|__|__
[30065] Elizabeth's information and ancestry are from the unverified OneWorldTree in Ancestry.com in 2011 and require verification.
[28035] This line is from an unverified file in http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com which offers: "Abraham was baptised by Rev. John Davenport April 24, 1657, under whose strict Puritanic teachings he was reared. He attended the grammar school in his native town and recived the careful religious and secular training prescribed for the Puritan youth of that time. The rules excluded girls from school and said that boys on admission must know their letters and have begun to read. School hours were from 6 to 11 A.M. and 1 to 4 P.M. in winter; in summer till 5 P.M. On Monday morning the scholars were examined on the sermons of the day before, and on Saturday afternoon they were catechised. The course led up to the study of the classics of Latin, Greek and Hebrew. The Family moved to Wallingford before he was twenty and planted their rude log house in the forest glade. Round about them was very little open ground and that covered with thick grass taller than a man's head. Great oaks abounded in the dense woods, which extended in every direction. Bands of Indians roamed the wilderness to hunt the numerous moose, deer, bear, and other game. Packs of wolves often attacked the cattle or carried off the sheep and made the night hideous with their howls. At that time there was not a fence, road, church, school or store nearer than New Haven. However, they were undaunted by the vicissitudes of pioneer life, for the bright star of Faith shone out of the darkness, beconing them upward and onward, and never below their horizon. Bancroft says: 'Puritanism exalted the laity. Every individual who had experienced the raptures of devotion, every beliver who had moments of ecstacy, had felt the assurance of the favor of God, was in his own eyes a consecrated person, chosen to do the noblest and godliest deeds. Before heaven he prostrated himself in the dust. Looking out upon mankind, how could he but respect himself whom God had chosen and redeemed. He cherished hope; he possessed faith; as he walked the earth his heart was in the skies.' Of such material were our fathers made. At town meeting May 27, 1672, Abraham was elected constable, a position then of much importance. President Noah Porter of Yale, in writing of those colonial times, says: "The constable was an officer of superior dignity." He was to the inhsbitants "the right arm of the King himself; a functionary treated with reverent awe and obeyed with implicit deference. Whoever resisted the power resisted the ordinance of God." He took an active interest in Wallingford's affairs and is spoke of as " a worthy son of a worty sire." The handwriting of father and son is affixed to several agreements made by the planters,- that of the father written as by a hand tremulous with age; that of the son in a bolder crooked style with some attempt at ornamentation asbecame a young man, who in courting some winsome puritan maiden might send an occasional little note on the black, unruled paper of two hundred years ago. Abraham married Mary Holt at Wallingford Conn. Nov. 9, 1680. She was daughter of William and Sarah Holt. The Holt family also comes from a sturdy old English stock. William and Sarah located in New Haven about 1644 and soon owned a home there. In 1675 they moved to Wallingford. He was a thrifty citizen and died in 1683 aged 73. Mercy was born in 1649amid the stirring scenes of pioneer life in New Haven, and here passed her childhood and girlhood days. In those times there were frequent alarms of hostile Indians, but their neighbors, the Mattabesitt tribe, who had a fort at Middleton and with whom Davenport had made a treaty, stood as a wall of protectionfor more than a generation between the settlers and the warlike tribes. Still, year by year she saw the edge of the forest pushed back and the colony grow and prosper. She came to know the sturdy founders of many venerable old Connecticut families, and heard their earnest conversations on weighty matters of church and state, as they called at her father's house or gatheredat his hospitable table, while their discussion of Cromwell, his death, end of the Commonwealth, and the restoration, filled her with awe and wonder. We can imagine that her interest in the marvelous tales her parents told of their early life in England, of their breaking home ties, and their long trip of two months or more over the stormy Atlantic. The standard for the waman's education of that day was exceedingly limited, for the girls were barred from grammar school "as improper and inconsistent with such a grammar school as the law enjoins." However, she acquired an elementary knowledge under a careful mother's training and developed habits of industry, arose with the dawn and blossomed into young womanhood amid healthy, wholesome household duties. She was taught to spin, and sew, and bake-those arts in which New England housewives have ever proudly held a prominent place. Merrymakings, spinning-wheels parties, and other rural gatherings afforded her special enjoyment, but she was fond of the open air, of society, and delighted in short visits to relatives and friends. In 1675 the Holts moved to the new settlement of Wallingford, whose lowlands, sunny slopes and woody hills were awakening to new life under the ax and plow of industrious settlers. Here she and Abraham married and settled, busied with farm and household cares. Mercy died probably in 1688, leaving four children of tender age. Abraham married (2) Ruth Lathrop of New London, Feb12,1689 ( a sister of John and Joseph Lathrop). She lived but a few years after marriage and left no children. He married (3) June 5, 1695 Elizabeth Thorp. The ceremony was preformed by Rev. Samuel Street. She was the eldest child of Sergeant Samuel and Mary Thorp of New Haven, and was born Feb. 1668. Samuel was an early settler in the eastern part of Wallingford. His wife died 1718 and he 1728, aged 84. Abraham drew some lands in Wallingford in the division of 1789. At his father's death in 1690, he inherited an extra portion of the estate, being the eldest son. The following order of the General Court appears under date of October, 1710: "upon consideration of the great affliction and trouble of Abraham Dowlittell of Wallingford in the weakness and infirmity of his children: This assembly do relive and exempt him the said Dowlittell, from payingany county rates for the future." He died in Wallingford Nov. 10, 1732 aged 83. Elizabeth died Aug. 27, 1736, aged 68. Her will made May 20,1736, proved Nov. 1, same year, calls herself widow, aged 67; names Elizabeth Armstrong, exec.; four grandchildren: Anna, Jemima, Esther and Thomas- children of her son Thomas, deceased, also her father, Thorp and two daughters, Elizabeth Armstrong and Lydia, who married John Joyce."
[28500] See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Dudley.
_James FEAGAN ____________+
| (1775 - 1853) m 1807
_Mathew William FEGAN _|_Elizabeth GLASS _________
| (1809 - 1888) m 1834 (1776 - 1872)
_John A. FEGAN _______|
| (1851 - 1917) m 1879 |
| | _James DOYLE _____________+
| | | (1784 - 1844)
| |_Mary A. DOYLE ________|_Mary Polly TIBBENS ______
| (1811 - 1854) m 1834 (1787 - 1842)
_Arthur Mark FEGAN __|
| (1898 - 1988) |
| | _John Adam PIPER _________+
| | | (1803 - 1880)
| | _L. Martin PIPER ______|_Mary (Margaret) STRUBLE _
| | | (1838 - 1914) m 1859
| |_Harriet Alice PIPER _|
| (1861 - 1930) m 1879 |
| | _Jacob C. ECKENRODE ______+
| | | (1813 - 1884)
| |_Mary Ellen ECKENRODE _|_Mary G. SHIELDS _________
| (1839 - 1917) m 1859 (1816 - 1875)
|
|--Arthur Mark FEGAN Jr.
|
| __________________________
| |
| _______________________|__________________________
| |
| ______________________|
| | |
| | | __________________________
| | | |
| | |_______________________|__________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| __________________________
| |
| _______________________|__________________________
| |
|______________________|
|
| __________________________
| |
|_______________________|__________________________
[26037] living - details excluded
_Hugh MCKIBBEN ______
| (1776 - 1852) m 1797
_John A. MCKIBBEN ____|_Susana HUGHES ______
| (1802 - 1882)
_William Wesley MCKIBBEN __|
| (1835 - 1901) m 1857 |
| | _Levi PIGMAN ________+
| | | (1778 - 1822) m 1801
| |_Jemima PIGMAN _______|_Jane TAYLOR ________
| (1802 - 1882) (1779 - 1827)
_Enos William MCKIBBEN _|
| (1860 - 1947) m 1890 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| | _John LEE ____________|_____________________
| | | (1811 - 1855) m 1835
| |_Permelia LEE _____________|
| (1835 - 1926) m 1857 |
| | _Edward CUNNINGHAM __+
| | | (1778 - ....)
| |_Margaret CUNNINGHAM _|_Sarah MORELAND _____
| (1817 - 1862) m 1835
|
|--Charles Russell MCKIBBEN
| (1911 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
| ______________________|_____________________
| |
| _Sylvester William COLVIN _|
| | (1844 - 1918) m 1872 |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |______________________|_____________________
| |
|_Fannie A. COLVIN ______|
(1873 - 1954) m 1890 |
| _____________________
| |
| ______________________|_____________________
| |
|_Ann WINCHELL _____________|
(1849 - 1908) m 1872 |
| _____________________
| |
|______________________|_____________________
_____________________
|
______________________|_____________________
|
________________________|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |______________________|_____________________
|
_Archie Charles MEYERS ______________|
| (1913 - ....) m 1941 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| | ______________________|_____________________
| | |
| |________________________|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |______________________|_____________________
|
|
|--Eva Joann MEYERS
| (1946 - 1946)
| _____________________
| |
| ______________________|_____________________
| |
| _Alfred William GLOVER _|
| | (1888 - 1951) m 1918 |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |______________________|_____________________
| |
|_Rosalind ("Roseland") Marie GLOVER _|
(1920 - ....) m 1941 |
| _Thomas TUCKER ______
| | m 1875
| _John William TUCKER _|_Elizabeth BRINER ___
| | (1876 - 1958) m 1900 (1846 - 1884)
|_Mary Elizabeth TUCKER _|
(1901 - ....) m 1918 |
| _____________________
| |
|_Elma Mary BEATTY ____|_____________________
(1885 - 1948) m 1900
____________________________
|
_Arthur SALZMAN _______|____________________________
| (1827 - 1871)
_Joseph Arthur SALZMAN _|
| (0863 - 1932) m 1888 |
| | ____________________________
| | |
| |_Magdalina SCHROCK ____|____________________________
|
_Raymond ("Ray") Elmer SALZMAN _|
| (1891 - 1976) m 1916 |
| | _Nathaniel HOBBS ___________
| | | (1791 - 1862)
| | _Albert HOBBS _________|_Elizabeth HAMILTON ________
| | | (1832 - 1899) m 1855 (1805 - 1899)
| |_Sarah Amanda HOBBS ____|
| (1867 - 1949) m 1888 |
| | _Levi SMITH ________________+
| | | (1814 - 1887)
| |_Amanda Melvina SMITH _|_Evaline DARNEILLE _________
| (1840 - 1929) m 1855 (1814 - 1890)
|
|--Raymond Elmer (Jr) SALZMAN
| (.... - 1997)
| ____________________________
| |
| _Hardy BUSH ___________|_Elizabeth Perry WIMBERLY __
| | (1812 - 1872) m 1847 (1789 - 1850)
| _John Abner BUSH _______|
| | (1865 - 1913) m 1891 |
| | | ____________________________
| | | |
| | |_Martha Jane SYKES ____|____________________________
| | (1827 - 1880) m 1847
|_Verda Vance BUSH ______________|
(1895 - 1990) m 1916 |
| ____________________________
| |
| _______________________|____________________________
| |
|_Mattie Etna PATTON ____|
(1872 - 1973) m 1891 |
| _James Armenious PATTERSON _
| | (1815 - 1902) m 1840
|_Nancy C. PATTERSON ___|_Susan N. STUBBINS _________
(1842 - 1911) (1806 - 1901)
OBITUARY by Malia Rulon on Mar. 21, 1997:
Design was Salzmans true calling
From his studio, Rays Interiors, he embellished many homes and businesses here.
A memorial service will be held April 16 for Ray E. Salzman Jr., a prominent interior decorator in Tucson and a founder of Catalina United Methodist Church and the Arizona Opera Company.
Mr. Salzman, 78, died Sunday of complications after esophagus surgery Feb. 21.
He and his wife, Martha "Marty" Salzman, started an interior design studio in Tucson in 1955 called Rays Interiors. "Always, his love was design. That was his true calling," she said. For 30 years, they ran the studio as Mr. Salzman designed the interiors of many Tucson homes and locales, including the original Old Pueblo Club, the Tucson Medical Center and the youth lounge of the Catalina United Methodist Church. He was the churchs first minister in 1946. The church started in an old barracks building on South Country Club Road before moving to 2700 E. Speedway Blvd. Mr. Salzman served as a minister for a year before he and his wife moved to California so he could continue his theology education at the University of Southern California. He returned to the Chicago area - where he had graduated earlier from Lake Forest College with degrees in English and speech - and tried interior design work at a studio in Evanston. Mr. Salzman learned the business from the ground up, working in the shipping, receiving, upholstery, drapery, slip cover and drapery rod departments. He returned to Tucson in 1950 and worked for two more design studios before opening his own. "He was always decorating something," his wife said.
From 1963 to 1965, Mr. Salzman was president of the Arizona state chapter of the National Society of Interior Designers. He was treasurer for the American Institute of Interior Designers in 1968. Mr. Salzman and his wife helped start the Arizona Opera Company - then called the Tucson Opera Company - in 1972. "A lot of his money and energy went into keeping it alive. That was really a love for him," his wife said. Marty Salzman, once an opera singer, served 12 years on the Tucson Opera board - three as president. The Salzmans hosted the opera companys first fund-raising party in their East Fort Lowell Road in 1973. A Tucson Citizen article about the event described how "Tucsons opera aficionados" turned out for the party. "Stars were there, and strings of lights twinkling in trees and reflecting in the pool in Ray Salzmans beautiful patio on East Fort Lowell Road," the article stated.
Besides his wife, he is survived by daughters, Janet Baron of Vashon, Wash., and JoAnne Briggs of Tucson; and brothers, William and Robert Salzman of Illinois and Joseph Salzman of Tucson.
_Johann Georg STRAUSS _______+
|
_Johann Caspar STRAUSS ___________|_____________________________
| (1688 - 1754) m 1709
_Albrecht STRAUSS _______|
| (1711 - 1787) |
| | _____________________________
| | |
| |_Maria Barbara LOSCH _____________|_____________________________
| (1685 - 1759) m 1709
_John Jacob STRAUSS _|
| (1737 - 1780) m 1759|
| | _Martin ZIRBE _______________
| | | (.... - 1694)
| | _Johann Martin (Zirben or) ZERBE _|_____________________________
| | | (1671 - ....) m 1697
| |_Maria Margaretta ZERBE _|
| (1715 - 1787) |
| | _Johannes JUNGEL ____________
| | |
| |_Anna Elizabeth JUNGEL ___________|_____________________________
| (.... - 1750) m 1697
|
|--Phillip STRAUSS
|
| _Hans Balthasar BRECHT ______+
| | (1636 - 1703) m 1658
| _Johannes Michael BRECHT _________|_Anna Margaretha CHRISTMANN _
| | (1662 - 1719) m 1684 (1637 - ....)
| _Johann Stephan BRECHT __|
| | (1692 - 1747) m 1725 |
| | | _Hans Jost HOFFMAN __________
| | | | (1628 - 1697) m 1651
| | |_Anna Katharina HOFFMAN __________|_Christina FRANK ____________
| | (1664 - ....) m 1684
|_Elizabeth BRECHT ___|
(1738 - 1795) m 1759|
| _____________________________
| |
| __________________________________|_____________________________
| |
|_Anna Praxedis KRAEMER __|
(1705 - 1745) m 1725 |
| _____________________________
| |
|__________________________________|_____________________________
[1027] See David Hamblen, "First Settlers of Barnstable, Ms", The New England and Genealogical Register, vol. 2 (January, 1848) for name and marriage. He was a freeman at Boston 3 May 1665 and also r. Barnstable, MA. Lydia was his first wife. See NEHGR 9:287. http://www.geocities.com/~weekseekers/hatch.html offers: "He probably son of John Taylor. He evidently followed his wife's people to Barnstable where he resided until her death. He appears to have been the same Henry Taylor who was made freeman in Boston, 3 May, 1665. After the death of Lydia he md. Mary --. She is mentioned as his wife in 1665. On Aug. 6, 1666, 'Henry Taylor of Boston, Chirurgeon and Mary his wife, for a valuable consideration' sold Roger Rose ----- Lighterman - - - a dwelling house and land on which it standeth 'in Boston, on the streets or way leading toward the great Dock.' The deed was signed: Henry Taylor (seal) Mary Taylor (seal) Suffolk County Deeds Book, 7 Page 125. On May 6, 1667 Henry Taylor, Chirurgeon, of Boston and his wife Mary, for 508 pounds, paid by William Talor of the said Boston merchant, sold him, 'A Warehouse in Boston , aforesaid with the wharfe before it bounded with the mill Creeke, Southerly, with Land of Thomas Lake, Merchant , Westerly.' Also two 'wharfs adjoining' with the two warehouses upon them, which 'are yet in the possession of the said Henry Taylor.' The deed, signed by 'Henry Taylor' and 'Mary Taylor', was acknowledged 'in the presence of John Paine.' The house near the 'great Dock' and the wharf property are not recorded as having been purchased by Henry Taylor; he appears to have come into possession by inheritance, or through his second wife. On March 6, 1666, 'Moses Mavericke of Marvellhead (Marblehead) gent. and Eunice his wife,' for 230 pounds sold 'Henry Tailor of Boston, Chirurgeon, A dwelling house with a yard, garden and all other appurtnances thereunto belonging,' formerly belonging to 'Thomas Roberts formerly of Boston aforesaid Deceased and appropriated unto the said Eunice the Relict of the said Roberts and her children namely, Timothy Roberts, Elizabeth Roberts, Lidia Roberts and Eunice Roberts.' This deed was signed by 'Moses Mavericke,' Eunice Mavericke (and) Timothy Roberts,' their acknowledgement was witnessed by Joshua Scottoew.' Januarv 27, l667, 'Henry Tailor Chirirgeon of Boston mortgaged the above house and land, for 258 pounds, to John Richard, to be paid November 20, next.' Evidently he met this payment in part by the sale of his house near the 'Dock.' Sept. 25,1671, Henry Taylor and his wife, Mary, again mortgaged the premises bought of Mavericke; this time for 362 pounds, to John Morse. There is no further record of Doctor Taylor in Boston; possibly he became financially involved, lost his house, and left the town; yet he may have lived there some years."
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_Eystein, Earl of THRONDHEIM _|
| (.... - 0710) |
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|--Asa of TRONDHEIM
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|_Solveig HALFDANSDOTTIR ______|
(0684 - ....) |
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