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_Tristam BOWDEN _____|
| (1790 - 1895) m 1816|
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(.... - 1895) m 1816|
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[54536] The unverified file LH37-3QQ in familysearch.org offers: "When Ruth Cates was born on 1 January 1796, in Harrington, Washington, Maine, United States, her father, Edward Cates, was 42 and her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Cates, was 41. She married Joseph Strout Jr on 5 December 1822, in Harrington, Washington, Maine, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 4 daughters. She lived in Milbridge, Washington, Maine, United States for about 10 years. She died in 1867, in Harrington, Washington, Maine, United States, at the age of 71, and was buried in Milbridge, Washington, Maine, United States."
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_George E. W. DEIBERT ____|
| (1860 - 1933) |
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| (1902 - 1941)
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|_Sarah Alice KOPPENHAVER _|
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[13954] Jersie and her parents are from her death record. "The West Schuylkill Press and Pine Grove Herald [Tremont, PA], 12 December 1941," p. 7: "Mrs. Harry Geist of Leck Kill, sister of Miss Martha Deibert of Tremont, was buried on Tuesday morning, services being held at her late home at ten o'clock. Burial was made in the Klingler's Cemetery. Mrs. Geist is survived by her husband, two sons, William and Daryl, and her sister Miss Martha Deibert. Local folks who attended the funeral were: Harry F. Wigmore, Mrs. John Maurer, Mrs. Charles Davis, Mrs. Sevilla Rissinger, Miss Martha Deibert, all of Tremont, and Mrs. Wellington Hoffman of Donaldson." Ancestry.com offers: "Deibert Name Meaning - German: from a short form of a Germanic personal name Theudobert, composed of the elements theud people, race + berht bright, famous."
_Ealhmund ___________+
| (.... - 0786)
_Ecgberht (Egbert), King of WESSEX _|_____________________
| (0775 - 0838)
_Æthelwulf ("Noble Wolf") King of WESSEX _|
| (.... - 0858) m 0830 |
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_Alfred The Great, King of ENGLAND _|
| (0849 - 0900) m 0868 |
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| |_Osburh of ENGLAND ________________________|
| (.... - 0853) m 0830 |
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_Edward I (The Elder), King of ENGLAND _|
| (0875 - 0924) m 0919 |
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| |_Ealhswith (Alswitha) of ENGLAND ___|
| (.... - 0905) m 0868 |
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|--Edmund I, King of ENGLAND
| (0921 - 0946)
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(.... - 0968) m 0919 |
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[1663] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle calls him "the deed-doer"; Florence of Worcester calls him "Edmundus magnificus"; "buried at Glastonbury, an abbey which he had entrusted in 943 to the famous Dunstan" {-Encycl.Brit., 1956 Ed., 7:962}. He reigned 940-946. He regained northern England and Strathclyde from the Vikings and gave Strathclyde to his ally Malcolm I MacDonald, King of Scots. Edmund I is known as a legal reformer, especially for his restrictions on the "blood feud." An outlaw, Leolf, stabbed him at a banquet in Pucklechurch on St. Augustine's Day. http://www.san.beck.org/AB17-FeudalEurope.html offers: "Athelstan died in 939 and was succeeded by his 18-year-old brother Edmund. Within a few weeks Dublin king Olaf Guthfrithson invaded and took over York before raiding the midlands. Edmund's army met his at Leicester, but the archbishops of Canterbury and York arranged a treaty giving Olaf the region between Watling Street and the Humber. The next year Olaf invaded Northumbria; but he died and was succeeded by his cousin Olaf Sihtricson, who lost the gained territory to Edmund in 942. The next year the Northumbrians chose Raegnald as king, and both he and Olaf were baptized at Edmund's court. When Olaf and Raegnald began fighting, Edmund expelled both with his army. A poem celebrated Edmund's victories in reconquering the five boroughs of Mercia and claimed that the loyal Danes were rescued from the Norse invaders. Next Edmund with Welsh allies invaded Strathclyde, where he had King Dunmail's two sons blinded. Edmund gave Strathclyde to the Scot king Malcolm (r. 942-952); but within a few years Dunmail was ruling again. Canterbury archbishop Oda (a Dane) urged the king to humanize his laws. Family feuds were prevented when Edmund's laws pronounced that a murderer's kinsmen could not be held liable if they did not support the crime, and revenge could only be taken on the killer himself. In 946 while trying to defend his steward, Edmund was stabbed to death by a criminal." Also see the highly readable and delightfully written "Saxons vs. Vikings: Alfred the Great and England in the Dark Ages," Ed West (New York, NY: Skyhorse Publishing, 1977; ISBN: 9781510719903).
[19879] living - details excluded
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_Jonathan KNOWLES ___|
| (1776 - 1863) m 1795|
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_Thomas Jefferson KNOWLES _|
| (1815 - 1889) m 1843 |
| | _Jabez SNOW _________+
| | | (1670 - 1750)
| | _Sylvanus SNOW ______|_Elizabeth TREAT ____
| | | (1705 - 1772) m 1733 (1676 - 1755)
| | _Edward SNOW ________|
| | | (1745 - 1791) m 1768|
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| | | |_Hannah COLE ________|_____________________
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| |_Mehitable SNOW _____|
| (1775 - 1859) m 1795|
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| (1747 - 1822) m 1768|
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|--Ernest A. KNOWLES
| (1858 - 1936)
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(1819 - 1895) m 1843 |
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| (1328 - 1388)
_Ralph NEVILLE ____________________|_Maud PERCY ______________________________
| (1364 - 1425) m 1396
_George NEVILLE _________|
| (.... - 1469) |
| | _John of GAUNT ___________________________+
| | | (1340 - 1399) m 1396
| |_Joan BEAUFORT ____________________|_Katherine DE ROET _______________________
| (1379 - 1440) m 1396 (1350 - 1403)
_Henry NEVILLE ______|
| (.... - 1469) |
| | _Thomas DE BEAUCHAMP _____________________+
| | | (1339 - 1401)
| | _Richard DE BEAUCHAMP _____________|_Margaret DE FERRERS _____________________
| | | (1382 - 1439) (.... - 1406)
| |_Elizabeth DE BEAUCHAMP _|
| (1417 - 1480) |
| | _Thomas DE BERKELEY ______________________+
| | | (1353 - 1417) m 1367
| |_Elizabeth DE BERKELEY ____________|_Margaret DE LISLE _______________________
| (1386 - 1422) (1360 - 1392)
_Richard NEVILLE ____|
| (1468 - 1530) m 1490|
| | _William BOURCHIER _______________________+
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| | _William BOURCHIER ________________|_Eleanor DE LOVAINE ______________________
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| | _Sir John BOURCHIER _____|
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| | | | _Thomas of Woodstock, Duke Of GLOUCESTER _+
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| | | |_Anne (Plantagenet) of GLOUCESTER _|_Eleanor DE BOHUN ________________________
| | | (1383 - 1438) (1366 - 1399)
| |_Joan BOURCHIER _____|
| (.... - 1470) |
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| | _Richard BERNERS __________________|__________________________________________
| | | (.... - 1421) m 1408
| |_Margery BERNERS ________|
| (.... - 1475) |
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| (.... - 1421) m 1408
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|--John NEVILLE
| (1493 - 1543)
| _Ralph DE STAFFORD _______________________+
| | (.... - 1410)
| _Humphrey STAFFORD ________________|_Maud DE HASTANG _________________________
| | (1384 - 1419)
| _Humphrey STAFFORD ______|
| | (1400 - 1450) |
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| | (1426 - 1486) |
| | | _John AYLESBURY __________________________+
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| | | _Thomas AYLESBURY _________________|_Isabel LE STRANGE _______________________
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(1470 - 1513) m 1490|
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http://www.thepeerage.com/p10151.htm reports: "He married, firstly, Dorothea de Vere, daughter of Sir George de Vere and Margaret Stafford, before 1520. He married, secondly, Elizabeth Musgrave, daughter of Sir Edward Musgrave, on 20 July 1526. He married, thirdly, Catherine Parr, daughter of Sir Thomas Parr and Maud Green, in 1533."
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/JohnNeville(3BLatimer).htm offers:
"Born 17 Nov 1493, first son of Richard Neville, 2nd Lord Latimer, by Anne, dau. and heiress of Sir Humphrey Stafford of Grafton, Worcsester and Blatherwyk, Northants. Married first, by 1520, Dorothy (d. 7 Feb 1527), dau. of Sir George Vere, sister of John, 14th Earl of Oxford, by whom he had at least one son and one dau.; second, lic. 20 Jun 1528, Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Edward Musgrave of Hartley, Westmoreland and Edenhall, Cumb.; (3) 1533, Catherine, dau. of Sir Thomas Parr of Kendal, Westmoreland, widow of Sir Edward Borough. Kntd. 14 Oct 1513; succeeded family title as 3rd Lord Latimer Dec 1530. J.p. Yorks. (N. Riding) 1528-39, (liberty of Ripon) 1538, (W. Riding) 1538-41, (E. Riding) 1538-41; commr. to inquire into all misdeeds, Yorks. 1536, musters 1539; steward, Ripon in 1536, Galtres forest May 1542; member, council in the north Jun 1530.
"John Neville was a descendant of Ralph, 1st Earl of Westmorland, by his second wife Joan Beaufort, the daughter of John of Gaunt: thus he was not only a distant kinsman of Henry VIII but he was also connected by blood and marriage with many noble families. His immediate forbears had been protagonists in the feuding which preceded the Wars of the Roses and in 1469 his grandfather had fallen in the cause of Henry VI at Edgecote. The fortunes of this branch of the Nevilles were rescued after that disaster by a sympathetic relative, Cardinal Bourchier, who procured the wardship of the 2nd Lord Latimer and preserved his inheritance. Latimer grew up to become a figure of importance in the north.
"The first glimpse of his son John Neville is of a 20 year-old warrior accompanying Henry VIII to northern France in 1513 and being knighted after the taking of Tournai. By 1522 he was recognized as a spokesman for his father by the northern magnates and the heads of monastic houses, but it was not until six years later that he was first named to the Yorkshire bench for his native Riding. His return to the Parliament of 1529 as one of the knights for Yorkshire was a further step in his progress, even if he owed it to his father: the representation of the county was something of a family affair, Neville's fellow-knight being his cousin Sir Marmaduke Constable, over whom he took precedence probably by reason of his noble lineage. He was not to be a Member of the Commons for long: his father died either a few days before the close of the first session or immediately after it and thenceforth he was to sit in the Lords. The resulting vacancy was not filled until three years later, when his kinsman and namesake of Chevet was chosen in his place.
"In 1530 the new Lord Latimer was appointed to the council in the north and signed the letter sent to Clement VII in favour of the King's divorce. The opening of the second session of the Parliament saw him take his place in the Lords: the loss of the Journal of that House for all but one of the sessions obscures his attendance save at the sixth, when he was regularly present, but his two letters of 1534 and 1536 to Cromwell asking for leave of absence show that he journeyed to Westminster for the prorogations and in 1532 he used his attendance in Parliament to sue out livery of his inheritance.
"Lord Latimer, had a daughter named Margaret, betrothed in Oct of 1534 to Ralph, son of Sir Francis Bigod. The contract provided that 'Ralf or other son of Sir Francis should marry Margaret or other daughter of Lord Latimer'.
"Business in Worcestershire kept Latimer from the opening of the Parliament of 1536; he reappeared there soon afterwards but although this was a brief Parliament he evidently quitted it early as for the last week his name lacks the p which would have signified his presence. He may have returned to Worcestershire to complete his business there, but by the time the Pilgrimage of Grace began in the autumn he was back in Yorkshire. As the leading figure in Mashamshire, one of the centres of the revolt, he was urged to spare no effort to prevent it from spreading, but his house at Snape was not strong enough to be held and he could not rely on the support of his neighbours. By 16 Oct he was reported with his brother-in-law Sir Christopher Danby to have been taken captive, and his behaviour at the conference at York and later at Doncaster, where he put the Pilgrims case to Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, prompted the suspicion that he secretly sympathized with his ostensible captors. Norfolk did not share this view and recommended Latimer's retention on the council in the north, but others were not so sure and Latimer was to spend the following year enlisting the aid of friends to clear his name. Cromwell still harboured doubts even after Sir Francis Bigod's insurrection of Jan 1537 in Yorkshire had given Latimer the chance to prove his loyalty by decisive action, and he cultivated the minister with an annuity of 20 nobles and perhaps by surrendering to him the Latimer house in London: he followed this up in 1538 by selling one Buckinghamshire manor to Cromwell's friend John Gostwick and another to Cromwell himself, although these sales were also designed to pay for lands at Nun Monkton and elsewhere in Yorkshire which he bought about the same time.
"Latimer attended the Parliament of 1539 nearly every day, but he did absent himself on 19 May 1539, when the attainder of Thomas, Lord Darcy, for complicity in the Pilgrimage was made final, and during the final session a year later he missed the last week of May. The deterioration of relations with Scotland and the troubled state of the borders soon demanded his presence in the north, but he was able to attend the first session of the Parliament of 1542. By the summer he was back in the north fighting the Scots and advising the Earl of Rutland on the conduct of the campaign. He prepared for the hazards of war by making a will on 12 Sep 1542 in which he provided for his wife, family and servants, but he was not to die in the field. When the second session of the Parliament opened in the following Jan he did not make an appearance in the Lords, but he must have journeyed to London to attend the session for it was there that he died on 2 Mar 1543 and in St. Paul's that he was buried. He was succeeded in the barony by his son John, then aged 23 years. His widow, Catherine Parr, was sought in marriage by Sir Thomas Seymour but in the following Jul she became the sixth wife of the King and only after his death did she marry Seymour.
_Isaac PERKINS ______+
| (1571 - 1629)
_Abraham PERKINS ____|_____________________
| (1603 - 1683) m 1638
_Luke PERKINS _______|
| (1641 - 1709) |
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| (1618 - 1706) m 1638
_Luke PERKINS _______|
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|--Luke PERKINS
| (1733 - 1819)
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| | (1642 - 1718) m 1671|
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| | (1671 - 1761) m 1718|
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| | (1648 - 1718) m 1671|
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(1705 - 1751) m 1722|
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| | (1561 - 1617)
| _Henry COBB _________|_Pleasance REDWOOD __
| | (1605 - 1679) m 1632
| _John COBB __________|
| | (1632 - 1714) |
| | | _James HURST ________
| | | | (.... - 1657) m 1608
| | |_Patience HURST _____|_Gertrude BENNISTER _
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(1668 - 1759) m 1718|
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(1700 - ....) |
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[39001] This person is from the unverified Sunseri Tree in Ancestry.com in 2015.
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_Geoffrey PIGOT _______|
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[25627] Alicia m. John de Richmond and had Elizabeth de Richmond who m. Miles Stapleton, son of Miles de Stapleton and Sybil Isabel de Bellew; Eliozabeth and Miles had Gilbert de Stapleton (b. ca. 1297 in Bedale, Yorkshire, d. by 1321). [This line is not verified.]
[30604] Elizabeth is daughter of Henry John Ward (b. 1787 in Hickman Co., TN, d. in March 1863) and wife Penepole _____ (b. 1793). Ancestry.com offers: "Ward Name Meaning - English: occupational name for a watchman or guard, from Old English weard 'guard' (used as both an agent noun and an abstract noun). Irish: reduced form of McWard, an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac an Bhaird 'son of the poet'. The surname occurs throughout Ireland, where three different branches of the family are known as professional poets."
[34209] This person is from the unverified Tyson Family Tree in Ancestry.com in 2013 which states Charles m. Nancy Scothorn and that he is son of Charles Young (b. 1759) and Catharine Elizabeth Kint.