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_Charles XIV John, King of SWEDEN _____________________________________________|
| (1763 - 1844) m 1798 |
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_Oscar I, King of Sweden And NORWAY _______|
| (1799 - 1859) m 1823 |
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| |_Desiree CLARY ________________________________________________________________|
| (1777 - 1860) m 1798 |
| | ____________________________________________________
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_Oscar II, King of Sweden And NORWAY _|
| (1829 - 1907) m 1857 |
| | ____________________________________________________
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| | _Alexandre François Marie DE BEAUHARNAIS ______________________|____________________________________________________
| | | (1760 - 1794) m 1779
| | _Eugéne DE BEAUHARNAIS _______________________________________________________|
| | | (1781 - 1824) m 1806 |
| | | | ____________________________________________________
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| | | |_Joséphine, Empress of FRANCE _________________________________|____________________________________________________
| | | (1763 - 1814) m 1779
| |_Josephine Beauharnais of LEUCHTENBERG ____|
| (1807 - 1876) m 1823 |
| | _Friedrich Michael of ZWEIBRüCKEN-BIRKENFELD ______+
| | | (1724 - 1767) m 1746
| | _Maximilian I, King of BAVARIA _________________________________|_Maria Franziska of PFALZ-SULZBACH _________________
| | | (1756 - 1825) m 1785 (1724 - 1794)
| |_Auguste Amalia LUDOVIKA ______________________________________________________|
| (1788 - 1851) m 1806 |
| | ____________________________________________________
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| |_Auguste of HESSE-DARMSTADT ____________________________________|____________________________________________________
| (1765 - 1796) m 1785
|
|--Oscar Charles Augustus BERNADOTTE
| (1859 - 1953)
| _Karl August, Prince of NASSAU-WEILBURG ____________+
| | (1685 - 1753) m 1723
| _Karl Christian, Prince, NASSAU-WEILBURG _______________________|_Auguste Friederike of NASSAU-IDSTEIN ______________
| | (1735 - 1788) m 1760 (1699 - 1750)
| _Friedrich Wilhelm of NASSAU-WEILBURG _________________________________________|
| | (1768 - 1816) m 1788 |
| | | _Willem IV, Prince of ORANGE-NASSAU ________________+
| | | | (1711 - 1751) m 1743
| | |_Wilhelmina CAROLINE ___________________________________________|_Anne of Great BRITAIN _____________________________
| | (1743 - 1787) m 1760 (1709 - 1759)
| _Wilhelm, Duke of NASSAU __________________|
| | (1792 - 1830) m 1810 |
| | | ____________________________________________________
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| | |_Louise Isabelle Alexandrine Auguste of KIRCHBERG _____________________________|
| | (1772 - 1827) m 1788 |
| | | ____________________________________________________
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|_Sophia Wilhelmina of NASSAU _________|
(1836 - 1913) m 1857 |
| _Friedrich Eugen, Herzog VON WüRTTEMBERG __________
| | (1732 - 1797) m 1753
| _Friedrich I. Wilhelm Karl VON WüRTTEMBERG ____________________|_Sophia Dorothea Friederike of BRANDENBURG-SCHWEDT _
| | (1754 - 1816) m 1780
| _Paul Heinrich Karl Friedrich August VON WüRTTEMBERG _________________________|
| | (1785 - 1852) m 1805 |
| | | _Karl II of BRUNSWICK-WOLFFENBüTTEL _______________+
| | | | (1735 - 1806)
| | |_Augusta Caroline Friederika Louise of BRUNSWICK-WOLFENBüTTEL _|_Augusta HANOVER ___________________________________
| | (1764 - 1788) m 1780 (1737 - 1813)
|_Pauline Friederike Marie of WüRTTEMBERG _|
(1810 - 1856) m 1810 |
| _Ernest Frederick III, Duke of SAXE-HILDBURGHAUSEN _
| | (1727 - 1780) m 1758
| _Frederick, Duke of SAXE-HILDBURGHAUSEN ________________________|_Ernestine of SAXE-WEIMAR __________________________
| | (1763 - 1834) m 1785 (1740 - 1786)
|_Katharina Charlotte Georgine Fredericka Sofie Therese of SAXE-HILDBURGHAUSEN _|
(1787 - 1847) m 1805 |
| ____________________________________________________
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|_Charlotte Georgine of MECKLENBURG-STRELITZ ____________________|____________________________________________________
m 1785
[11189] Oscar renounced the right of sucession and was given the title Prince Bernadotte. Find A Grave Memorial 15926322 offers: "Prince and Duke. Religious personality. Bernadotte Dynasty. Duke of Gothland. Son of King Oscar II and Queen Sofia. Prince also of Norway (until 1888). Married below royalty in 1888 and was then called Prince Oscar Bernadotte in Sweden. Also granted that title in the nobility of Luxembourg, plus the title of Count of Wisborg, by his uncle, Grand Duke Adolph in 1892. In Sweden, the special name Bernadotte af Wisborg also was approved by that country's king and developed among certain descendants. For the rest of his lifetime, he was not considered Swedish royalty, but after death he is so, as per standard historical practice (see for example Edward VIII of England)."
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_Manford CRUM _______|
| (1875 - ....) m 1882|
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|--Franklin Dallas CRUM
| (1889 - 1976)
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| _Patrick BARNES _____|
| | (1814 - 1892) m 1843|
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|_Nora Sarah BARNES __|
(1863 - 1928) m 1882|
| _John PICKING _______+
| | (1756 - 1796)
| _Henry H. PICKING ___|_Justina Anna FUCHS _
| | (1774 - 1841) (1753 - 1813)
| _George Henry PICKING _|
| | (1796 - 1878) |
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|_Catharine PICKING __|
m 1843 |
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[9151] Frank's date and place of birth are from his World War I draft registration card which states he r. 326 W. 4th St., Mansfield, OH and is employed by Ward Holdrige at Happy Harry's, 50 Park Ave. W., Mansfield, OH. "News-Journal [Mansfield, Ohio], 27 July 1976," p. 5: "Franklin Dallas Crum, 87, of 178 Westwood Ave., died in Mansfield General Hospital Monday following a one-week illness. He was born March 28, 1889, in Jackson Township and lived in this area all his life. Mr. Crum was a retired employe of the Ohio Brass Co. and a self-employed farmer. Surviving are one son, M.D. (Pat) Crum of 1010 West Hanley Rd.; one daughter, Mrs. Lee (Mildred) Newbright, with whom Mr. Crum made his home; five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. . . . Burial will be in London Cemetery."
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_John GRANT _________|
| (1806 - 1872) m 1826|
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|--William Emery GRANT
| (1850 - 1909)
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| _Nathaniel PHINNEY __|
| | (1733 - 1809) m 1763|
| | | _____________________
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| _Nathaniel PHINNEY __|
| | (1765 - 1822) |
| | | _Israel TUPPER ______+
| | | | (1666 - 1745)
| | | _Samuel Elisha TUPPER _|_Elizabeth GIFFORD __
| | | | (1692 - 1772) m 1726 (1666 - 1701)
| | |_Thankful TUPPER ____|
| | (1740 - ....) m 1763|
| | | _____________________
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| | |_Hannah FISH __________|_____________________
| | (1706 - 1746) m 1726
|_Susan F. PHINNEY ___|
(1808 - 1872) m 1826|
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|_Pamilia TOBEY ______|
(1767 - ....) |
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_Andrew HOOVER ______|
| (1752 - 1834) m 1776|
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_David Jacob HOOVER _|
| (1781 - 1866) m 1807|
| | ________________________
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| |_Elizabeth WAYMIRE __|
| (1753 - 1834) m 1776|
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|--Hiram HOOVER
| (1809 - 1867)
| _Hans Nicholas JUNDT ___+
| | m 1682
| _Hans Georg JUNDT ________|_Anna Ursula SCHORTERS _
| | (1691 - 1751) (.... - 1691)
| _Andrew JUNDT _______|
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| | |_Anna Maria DODDERER _____|________________________
| | (1691 - ....)
| _Jacob YOUNT ________|
| | (.... - 1813) |
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|_Catherine YOUNT ____|
(1790 - 1865) m 1807|
| _Jacob PFOUTZ __________
| | (1700 - 1762)
| _John Michael (Sr) FOUTS _|________________________
| | (1724 - 1803)
| _John Andrew FOUTS __|
| | (1751 - ....) |
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(1766 - 1825) |
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Hiram m. 24 Dec 1830 Elizabeth Marmon. Richard Yount (533 E. Embassy Dr., Gueen Creek, AZ 85243) posted this line in the LDS Church's unverified Pedigree Resource File. Find A Grave Memorial 116427705 offers: "Several records place Hiram Hoover in Wayne County, Indiana. He purchased land there in 1837. He was listed on the 1850 Wayne, Wayne, Indiana census with seven sons & daughters. They were listed as Hiram M., age 21; Lydia, age 17; Sarah J., age 15; Catherine A., age 13; William B., age 10; Rebecca, age 7; & David H., age 5. Ancestry.com family trees list his wives as Elizabeth Marmon, who probably died in 1845, and Mary Louisa Price. There is a Coffey County, Kansas, marriage index listing for his 1859 marriage to Louisa.
Hiram Hoover moved to the Kansas Territory by 1855, where he was listed on the Kansas Voter lists in Neosho County. The 1859 voter & census list shows him in California Township, Coffey County, Kansas Territory, with a family of 5. This record shows that his year of settlement in the Kansas Territory was 1855.
The 1860 California, Coffey, Kansas Territory census lists him as age 51 with M. L., a female, age 27, born in Pennsylvania; William, age 20, born in Indiana; and D. H., a male, listed as age 18, born in Indiana.
The 1865 California, Coffey, Kansas State census shows his family listed next to Hiram M. Hoover, age 35, born in Indiana. Hiram, age 51, is listed with M. L. a female, age 34; David Hoover, age 20; and Frederick Hoover, age 5, born in Kansas.
Numerous Ancestry.com family trees record the death of Hiram Hoover (b. 1809) on November 20, 1867, in Coffey County, Kansas. His burial is listed in the Hoover Cemetery. This cemetery was probably located on a family farm. A cemetery named Hoover was located in Sec #18, Township 20 South, Range 14 East in Coffey County. Hiram Hoover, b. 1809 in Indiana, does not appear to be a brother of Jacob Hoover, who was born in 1808 in Tennessee.
Two sons have been enterered on Findagrave. They were Hiram Marmon Hoover, #58241359 and William B. Hoover, #58241371. Rebecca E. Hoover married Asa Clawson in Coffey County, Kansas. They were listed in Coffey County census reports, with the 1880 report listing 8 children. One of their daughters, Bertha F., has been entered as memorial #85367079. Ancestry.com family trees record the deaths Asa Garrett Clawson and Rebecca Hoover Clawson in February, 1885, in Coffey County, Kansas. One family tree records that they died of typhoid fever and some record their burials in the Bowman Cemetery, which was also relocated.
[37422] This person is from the unverified http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hume in 2014 which states Mary is daughter of Joel Huffman and Fannie Leathers.
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_Walter HUNGERFORD __|
| (1378 - 1449) |
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|--Robert HUNGERFORD
| (1405 - 1459)
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| _Thomas PEVERELL ____|
| | (.... - 1422) |
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| _Hugh DE COURTENAY ____+
| | (1250 - 1292)
| _Hugh DE COURTENAY __|_Eleanor LE DESPENCER _
| | (1273 - 1340) m 1292 (.... - 1328)
| _Thomas DE COURTENAY _|
| | (.... - 1356) |
| | | _John de ST. JOHN _____+
| | | | (1225 - 1302)
| | |_Agnes ST. JOHN _____|_Alice Fitz PIERS _____
| | (.... - 1345) m 1292
|_Margaret COURTENAY _|
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[23069] NEHGR, April, 2000, 223 states he was "of Heytesbury, Wiltshire and Hamatethy, Cornwall . . . son and heir of Sir Walter Hungerford, Knt...." See "Magna Carta Ancestry," Douglas Richardson (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2005), p. 443.
[51295] Beth m. (2) in 1946 Nicholas Botzko (1916-1996).
[52917] Frank is son of George Edgar Mcfarland (1863-1926) & Elizabeth Albertina Abbott (1866-1954; m. 05 July 1884 in Bangor, Penobscot Co., ME).
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Thomas' will 10 Sept 1587 requests burial in the churchyard of St. Margaret, Ormesby, and states that he is a yeoman. Children, known from wills: Robert, William, Mary & Rebecca. Thomas and his family were of the manor of Scratby in the parish of Ormesby.
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Here are some facts about Thomas' era, the 1500s':
Most people got married in June because they took their yearly bath in May, and still smelled pretty good by June. However, they were starting to smell, so brides carried a bouquet of flowers to hide the body odor. Hence the custom today of carrying a bouquet when getting married.
Baths consisted of a big tub filled with hot water. The man of the house had the privilege of the nice clean water, then all the other sons and men, then the women and finally the children. Last of all the babies. By then the water was so dirty you could actually lose someone in it. Hence the saying, Don't throw the baby out with the Bath water.
Houses had thatched roofs-thick straw-piled high, with no wood underneath. It was the only place for animals to get warm, so all the cats and other small animals (mice, bugs) lived in the roof. When it rained it became slippery and sometimes the animals would slip and fall off the roof. Hence the saying It's raining cats and dogs.
There was nothing to stop things from falling into the house. This posed a real problem in the bedroom where bugs and other droppings could mess up your nice clean bed. Hence, a bed with big posts and a sheet hung over the top afforded some protection. That's how canopy beds came into existence.
The floor was dirt. Only the wealthy had something other than dirt. Hence the saying, Dirt poor. The wealthy had slate floors that would get slippery in the winter when wet, so they spread thresh (straw) on floor to help keep their footing. As the winter wore on, they added more thresh until, when you opened the door, it would all start slipping outside. A piece of wood was placed in the entrance way. Hence the saying a thresh hold.
In those old days, they cooked in the kitchen with a big kettle that always hung over the fire. Every day they lit the fire and added things to the pot. They ate mostly vegetables and did not get much meat. They would eat the stew for dinner, leaving leftovers in the pot to get cold overnight and then start over the next day. Sometimes stew had food in it that had been there for quite a while. Hence the rhyme, Peas porridge hot, peas porridge cold, peas porridge in the pot nine days old.
Sometimes they could obtain pork, which made them feel quite special. When visitors came over, they would hang up their bacon to show off. It was a sign of wealth that a man could, bring home the bacon. They would cut off a little to share with guests and would all sit around and chew the fat.
Those with money had plates made of pewter. Food with high acid content caused some of the lead to leach onto the food, causing lead poisoning death. This happened most often with tomatoes, so for the next 400 years or so, tomatoes were considered poisonous.
Bread was divided according to status. Workers got the burnt bottom of the loaf, the family got the middle, and guests got the top, or the upper crust.
Lead cups were used to drink ale or whisky. The combination would sometimes knock a person out for a couple of days. Someone walking along the road would take them for dead and prepare them for burial. They were laid out on the kitchen table for a couple of days and the family would gather around and eat and drink and wait and see if they would wake up. Hence the custom of holding a wake.
England is old and small and the local folks started running out of places to bury people. So they would dig up coffins and would take the bones to a bone-house, and reuse the grave. When reopening these coffins, 1 out of 25 coffins were found to have scratch marks on the inside and they realized they had been burying people alive. So they would tie a string on the wrist of the corpse, lead it through the coffin and up through the ground and tie it to a bell. Someone would have to sit out in the graveyard all night (the graveyard shift) to listen for the bell; thus, someone could be, saved by the bell or was considered a dead ringer.
And that's the truth. Now, whoever said History was boring !
_Tristram PINKHAM ______+
| m 1738
_Richard PINKHAM ____|_Martha HAYES __________
| (.... - 1815) m 1784
_Richard PINKHAM ____|
| (1790 - 1835) m 1835|
| | _Thomas LEIGHTON _______+
| | | (1729 - 1813) m 1742
| |_Elizabeth LEIGHTON _|_Mary SMITHSON _________
| (1750 - 1822) m 1784
_Alexander W. PINKHAM _______________|
| (1836 - 1903) m 1861 |
| | _Tristram (Jr) PINKHAM _+
| | | (1746 - 1825) m 1796
| | _William PINKHAM ____|_Annie LEIGHTON ________
| | | (1776 - ....) (1747 - 1825)
| |_Priscilla PINKHAM __|
| (1808 - ....) m 1835|
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| |_Lucy STROUT ________|________________________
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_Edwin Eugene PINKHAM _|
| (1870 - ....) m 1893 |
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| | _Ralph W. PHINNEY ___|
| | | (1816 - ....) m 1839|
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| |_Fidelia C. PHINNEY _________________|
| (1840 - 1912) m 1861 |
| | _Tristram (Jr) PINKHAM _+
| | | (1746 - 1825) m 1796
| | _Thomas PINKHAM _____|_Annie LEIGHTON ________
| | | (1791 - 1860) m 1814 (1747 - 1825)
| |_Alice PINKHAM ______|
| (1815 - ....) m 1839|
| | _Thomas WEST ___________
| | | (1754 - 1842)
| |_Margaret WEST ______|_Mary LEIGHTON _________
| (1794 - 1875) m 1814 (1762 - 1855)
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|--Deborah A. PINKHAM
| (1899 - 1985)
| _Joseph STROUT _________+
| | (1720 - ....) m 1739
| _Joseph STROUT ______|_Hannah COBB ___________
| | (1738 - 1821) m 1762 (1718 - 1748)
| _Barnabus STROUT ____|
| | (1791 - 1874) m 1812|
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| | |_Susannah ROBERTS ___|________________________
| | (1740 - 1830) m 1762
| _Obediah STROUT _____________________|
| | (1833 - 1901) m 1856 |
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| | |_Abigail FICKETT ____|
| | (1794 - 1880) m 1812|
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|_Almeda L. STROUT _____|
(1872 - ....) m 1893 |
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|_Clarissa Harlowe ("Clara") PINKHAM _|
(1833 - 1914) m 1856 |
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_Edmund RICE ________|
| (.... - 1663) m 1618|
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|--Henry RICE
| (.... - 1711)
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|_Thomasine FROST ____|
(1600 - 1654) m 1618|
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[39694] See "History of Framingham, Massachusetts 1640-1885," Josiah H. Temple (Framingham, MA: New England History Press, 1887), p. 681.