[6827] John is son of Nathaniel Butler and Blanche Blanger. John and Betsynell r. (1976) at Millinocket, ME. Ancestry.com offers: "Butler Name Meaning - English and Irish: from a word that originally denoted a wine steward, usually the chief servant of a medieval household, from Norman French butuiller (Old French bouteillier, Latin buticularius, from buticula 'bottle'). In the large households of royalty and the most powerful nobility, the title came to denote an officer of high rank and responsibility, only nominally concerned with the supply of wine, if at all. Anglicized form of French Boutilier."
_Amauri II, Baron DE MONTFORT ________________+
| (.... - 1031)
_Simon de Montfort L'AMAURY ____________|_Bertrade of GOMETZ __________________________
| (1038 - 1087)
_Amauri de Montfort, Count of EVREUX ____|
| (1101 - 1137) m 1120 |
| | _Richard, Count of EVREUX ____________________+
| | |
| |_Agnes, Heiress of EVREUX ______________|_Gotelina (or Godeheut) Borrell of BARCELONA _
|
_Simon III de Montfort, Count of EVREUX _|
| (.... - 1181) |
| | _William I DE GARLAND ________________________
| | |
| | _Anselm de Garland, Count of ROCHEFORT _|______________________________________________
| | | (.... - 1118)
| |_Agnès DE GARLAND ______________________|
| (.... - 1143) m 1120 |
| | _Guy "Le Rouge" DE MONTLHéRY ________________+
| | | (1037 - 1108)
| |_Agnès DE MONTLHéRY __________________|_Elise DE CORBIEL ____________________________
|
_Simon IV DE MONTFORT _|
| (.... - 1218) |
| | _Robert (Count of Meulan) DE BEAUMONT ________+
| | | (1046 - 1118) m 1096
| | _Robert DE BEAUMONT ____________________|_Isabel (aka Elizabeth) DE VERMANDOIS ________
| | | (1104 - 1168) m 1120 (1081 - 1131)
| | _Robert (Earl of Leicester) DE BEAUMONT _|
| | | (.... - 1190) |
| | | | _Ralph, Seigneur of Gael and MONTFORT ________+
| | | | |
| | | |_Amice de Montfort DE WAER _____________|______________________________________________
| | | m 1120
| |_Amicia DE BEAUMONT _____________________|
| (.... - 1215) |
| | _Ivo DE GRANTMESNIL __________________________+
| | | (.... - 1118)
| | _Hugh (II) DE GRANTMESNIL ______________|_ DAUGHTER OF GILBERT de Gant_________________
| | |
| |_Petronella ("Pernel") DE GRANTMESNIL ___|
| (1123 - 1212) |
| | ______________________________________________
| | |
| |________________________________________|______________________________________________
|
|
|--Guy DE MONTFORT
| (.... - 1228)
| ______________________________________________
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[29153] Guy and Helvis are provided by http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/montfort.html and are not verified. Cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy,_Count_of_Bigorre
[28772] Filips is a great-grandson of Catharina's grandmother, Juliana of Stolberg-Wenigerode.
__________________________
|
_Johannes ("John") HERTZEL ___________|__________________________
| (1783 - 1883) m 1810
_Peter HARTSEL ______|
| (1819 - 1859) m 1840|
| | __________________________
| | |
| |_Catherine KEHLE _____________________|__________________________
| (.... - 1829) m 1810
_Jonas HARTSEL _____________|
| (1847 - 1911) m 1869 |
| | __________________________
| | |
| | _Johannes RITTER _____________________|__________________________
| | | (1769 - 1864) m 1795
| |_Margaret RITTER ____|
| (1813 - 1896) m 1840|
| | __________________________
| | |
| |_Anna Maria HERBSTER _________________|__________________________
| (1777 - 1842) m 1795
_George Allen HARTSEL _|
| (1884 - 1959) m 1903 |
| | __________________________
| | |
| | _John KEENER _________________________|__________________________
| | | (1769 - 1853)
| | _James KEENER _______|
| | | (1812 - 1892) m 1834|
| | | | __________________________
| | | | |
| | | |_Barbara Ann SCHRACK _________________|__________________________
| | | (1782 - 1852)
| |_Mary Ann Elizabeth KEENER _|
| (1850 - 1907) m 1869 |
| | __________________________
| | |
| | _Martin Mason FAST ___________________|__________________________
| | | (1784 - 1838) m 1810
| |_Mary FAST __________|
| (1819 - 1896) m 1834|
| | __________________________
| | |
| |_Catharine BLOSSER ___________________|__________________________
| (1790 - 1859) m 1810
|
|--Marion Willis HARTSEL
| (1908 - 1986)
| _Philip BRINER ___________+
| | (1747 - 1812) m 1773
| _Frederick BRINER ____________________|_Anna Elizabeth SMITHERS _
| | (1781 - 1872) m 1805 (1751 - 1838)
| _Daniel BRINER ______|
| | (1827 - 1894) m 1853|
| | | _Michael REICHELDOERFLER _+
| | | | (1749 - 1822)
| | |_Anna Maria ("Mary") REICHELDOERFLER _|_Susanna KUNTZ ___________
| | (1784 - 1869) m 1805 (1749 - 1803)
| _James Henry BRINER ________|
| | (1854 - 1937) m 1881 |
| | | _Johan George FETTERMAN __
| | | | (1752 - 1801)
| | | _Peter FETTERMAN _____________________|__________________________
| | | | (1782 - 1850)
| | |_Mary Ann FETTERMAN _|
| | (1835 - 1883) m 1853|
| | | __________________________
| | | |
| | |______________________________________|__________________________
| |
|_Mary Almira BRINER ___|
(1883 - 1961) m 1903 |
| __________________________
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| ______________________________________|__________________________
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| _____________________|
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| | | __________________________
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| | |______________________________________|__________________________
| |
|_Clara Alice SMITH _________|
(1862 - 1897) m 1881 |
| __________________________
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| ______________________________________|__________________________
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|_____________________|
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|______________________________________|__________________________
[45526] The unverified Hartsel-Houston Family Tree in 2019 in Ancestry.com offers: "When Marion Willis Hartsel was born on May 9, 1908, in Congress, Ohio, his father, George, was 23 and his mother, Mary, was 24. He married Lois Glorene Koppler and they had five children together. He then married Thelma Irene Shriver and they had six children together. He died on April 16, 1976, in Greenwich, Ohio, at the age of 67, and was buried in Ashland, Ohio."
[36872] This person is from an unverified file in Ancestry.com in 2014.
[41622] http://www.noyesgenealogy.net offers: The following was taken from a souvenir issue of the Aroostook Republican printed during 1895: "Here he [Mr. Long] has made from the wilderness a farm of 200 acres that will compare favorably in beauty and production with any farm in the County. Of this 200 acres, Mr. Long cleared 150 acres himself. His largest crop of potatoes was raised last year. From 45 acres he harvested 3200 barrels - a yield of about 238 bushels per acre. Of other crops he raised 1200 bushels of oats and 75 tons of hay. A few years ago he raised 375 bushels of wheat but does not think wheat as profitable a crop as potatoes. Aside from his 200 acres of cleared land Mr. Long has about 200 acres of woodland. He has 100 acres of land plowed and ready for next seasons planting and he proposes to plant the whole of this tract with potatoes. All large farmers in the County now have potato planters and potato diggers as much as they have mowing machines and horse rakes and we found Mr. Long well supplied with all modern farming implements. He built a potato house near his dwelling house last fall and in which he now has stored 1500 barrels of potatoes. Several years ago Mr Long erected a building in the Village [Limestone] which is now used for a general store, the proprietors being himself, John M. Ward and W. B. Ward. In 1884 Mr. Long erected the large building at the Village, the lower part of which is occupied by C. W. Trafton as a general store and the upper of which is used as a hall. Mr Long and the Ward brothers who are associated with him in the store contemplate building a starch factory the coming season on Shirley Brook in Caribou. The following is a description of Warren A. Long written by his daughter Ethel M. (Long) Noyes about 1978. "My first memories of my father are trudging behind him as he sowed grain or dropped potato seed and on Sundays going along with him to salt the sheep in the sheep pasture where he gave the sheep their weekly ration of salt. I can still hear him calling "Ka-Dah, Ka-Dah" and see the sheep come running and tumbling over each other in their eagerness to eat salt from his hand. He was a slight wiry man with more vitality and energy than any man I have ever seen. He had thick white curly hair and a long white beard. I never saw him without this white beard as he was quite old when I was born. He was never sick and although he worked from daylight until dark I have often heard him say he never knew what it was like to be tired, therefore he had no patience with the ailing or weary. He left his home in New Hampshire when he was a young man coming to the little town of Limestone, Maine when it was virtually a wilderness. With his two hands he cleared three farms which are now numbered among the best farms in Aroostook County. I have often heard people say there was no one who could keep up with him. He was one of the first to envision a great future for Aroostook County. He realized he had a particular type of soil suitable for the raising of potatoes and was the first man who ventured to raise 100 acres all in one field. He sold them for 25 cents a barrel but that did not discourage him. In the years that followed he had many ups and downs and in 1890 [when] he was 50, he lost everything - he had heavily mortgaged, with given determination he worked harder than ever until he was free of debt again. He was married three times and had three sets of children so that for 40 years he had children in school. We enjoyed sitting around the kitchen table studying with a big bowl of apples in the center while he popped corn for us. He had very little schooling, but educated himself by reading. There was no problem in arithmetic that he could not solve in his head. He used to become very exasperated with us when we could not work them out on paper after he had explained them to us. His temper was quickly and easily aroused and his favorite expression was "Hell and Damnation". We had a shelf in the kitchen where we kept a comb and a dipper for drinking purposes. He wanted them always in their places and as [they] seldom were, he chained them to the shelf with a heavy chain. It also bothered him terrible because some of us were [always] looking for a pin and were never able to find one. He went down town and bought 27 papers of pins and nailed one on the wall of every room in the house. Naturally this brought forth expressions of curiosity from visitors and embarrassment to no end. With six girls to dress, in his lean years he found it cheaper to buy a whole bolt of cloth. Whenever he entered a room he would grab the window shade and let them go to the top with a bang. My father never smoked or drank but kept his pockets filled with Canada peppermints and raisins. He was either chewing on one or sucking on the other. He would sit in our parlor and eat raisins and when his mouth was full of seeds he would blow them all over the floor. He was very fond of children and had plenty around partly on account of the raisins. Although he was a hard worker, he ate very little. He loved salt pork, hash, pancakes, gingerbread, sour milk, biscuits and applesauce, pumpkin pie, and molasses doughnuts. Every Sunday night he cooked himself a mess of corn meal mush - 20 minuets stirring continuously. The next day when it was cold, my mother would slice it and fry [in] butter and serve it with molasses. He never wanted any change in his diet. Carpentry was his hobby and he was always thinking up something new. We were in seventh heaven when we moved [to the new house in Caribou] of course we did not have enough furniture to furnish it so my father installed twin beds. He wanted to have enough [room] for all the company. We had to be a little different, he put odd shaped door knobs on all the doors. He built a beautiful lawn putting a row of concrete blocks up the center, he mixed his own concrete putting dyes in it [resulting in] every block being a different color -needless to say we did not like it a bit. He built a nice garage and spoiled it by painting it red, white and blue. He loved to startle people. Not withstanding all his oddness, he was a good indulgent father, a kind neighbor, a trustworthy man whose word was as good as his bond. He had all the stamina and grit of a spartan. Doctors were scarce and dentists unheard of so he did most of his own doctoring. Once he operated on his knee with his jack knife removing a piece of bone - it heeled right up. Another time a horse stepped on his foot and an infection set in his toe. He calmly put his foot on a block and chopped the toe off. I have heard him tell of prying an aching tooth out with some kind of a lever that he had among his farm implements. Years later he had all his teeth extracted without [a pain killer]. He was absolute boss in the family and his word was law. There were no secrets kept from him because he had the sharpest ears and keenness eyes - nothing escaped him. He loved sunshine and hated curtains at the windows saying "those damn curtains"."
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_John MAYO _________________|_____________________
|
_John MAYO __________|
| (1598 - 1676) m 1618|
| | _____________________
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| |____________________________|_____________________
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_Samuel MAYO ________|
| |
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| | ____________________________|_____________________
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| |_Tamisen BRIKE ______|
| (.... - 1682) m 1618|
| | _____________________
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| |____________________________|_____________________
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_John MAYO __________|
| (1656 - 1726) m 1681|
| | _____________________
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| | ____________________________|_____________________
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| | _William LUMPKIN ____|
| | | |
| | | | _____________________
| | | | |
| | | |____________________________|_____________________
| | |
| |_Thomasin LUMPKIN ___|
| (1626 - 1709) |
| | _____________________
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| | ____________________________|_____________________
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| |_____________________|
| |
| | _____________________
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| |____________________________|_____________________
|
|
|--Rebekah MAYO
| (1692 - 1762)
| _____________________
| |
| _Edmund Honington FREEMAN __|_____________________
| | (1570 - 1623)
| _Edmund FREEMAN _____|
| | (.... - 1682) m 1617|
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_Alice COLES _______________|_____________________
| | (1576 - 1651)
| _John FREEMAN _______|
| | (.... - 1719) m 1650|
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | | ____________________________|_____________________
| | | |
| | |_Benet HODSOLL ______|
| | (1597 - 1630) m 1617|
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |____________________________|_____________________
| |
|_Hannah FREEMAN _____|
(1664 - 1743) m 1681|
| _____________________
| |
| _Thomas (Prince or) PRENCE _|_____________________
| | (1576 - 1630)
| _Thomas PRENCE ______|
| | (1600 - 1673) m 1624|
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_Elizabeth TOLDERBY ________|_____________________
| |
|_Mercy PRENCE _______|
(1631 - 1711) m 1650|
| _____________________
| |
| _William BREWSTER __________|_____________________
| | (1565 - 1643)
|_Patience BREWSTER __|
(1600 - 1634) m 1624|
| _Thomas WYRALL ______+
| | (.... - 1590)
|_Mary WYRALL _______________|_____________________
(.... - 1627)
[21011] Jean Mayo-Latakis shared in 2003: "Rebecca Mayo4 ( John3, Capt. Samuel2, Rev. John Mayo1) was married to Ebenezer Paine4 (Joseph3, Thomas2,1), son of Joseph Paine4 ( Mary Snow3, Constance Hopkins2, Stephen Hopkins1), and Patience (Sparrow) Paine4 ( Hannah Prence3, Patience Brewster2, William Brewster1). I copied it verbatim from E. Jean Mayo's book, 'The Genealogy of Rev. John Mayo'. Immigrant ancestor, William Brewster, of Scrooby and Cambridge, England was a friend of William Bradford. They both wrote 'History of Plymouth Plantation' together and in that work can be found a very moving account of the final hours and death of William Brewster. This work can be found in most libraries. William Brewster went to Cambridge University in 1580 when he was 17. William Brewster, of Bury St. Edmunds, probably connected with the Brewsters of Wrentham, may have been his grandfather. William Brewster was the Chaplain of the Mayflower Military Company."
_____________________
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_Henry RICKERT ____________|_____________________
| (1759 - ....)
_Jacob RICKERT ______|
| (1827 - 1914) m 1847|
| | _George (Jr) ARNOLD _
| | | (.... - 1823) m 1780
| |_Barbara Elizabeth ARNOLD _|_Catherine BREINER __
| (1787 - 1862) (.... - 1836)
_James C. RICKARD ___|
| (1852 - 1947) m 1872|
| | _____________________
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| |_Sarah SNYDER _______|
| (1828 - 1878) m 1847|
| | _____________________
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_John E. RICKARD ____|
| (1872 - ....) |
| | _____________________
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| |_Annie Salome SHOPE _|
| (1853 - 1917) m 1872|
| | _____________________
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|--Mary Ann RICKARD
| (1908 - ....)
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|_Maude FLETCHER _____|
(1872 - ....) |
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_John T. ROSS _______|
| (.... - 1879) m 1867|
| | _____________________
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_Millard E. ROSS ________|
| (1872 - ....) m 1895 |
| | _Wilmot (II) WASS ___+
| | | (1740 - ....) m 1762
| | _James WASS _________|_Lucy STROUT ________
| | | (1774 - 1855) m 1797 (1740 - 1780)
| | _Enos Dyer WASS _____|
| | | (1820 - 1882) m 1842|
| | | | _Lemuel DYER ________+
| | | | | (1744 - ....) m 1766
| | | |_Anna DYER __________|_Wealthy JORDAN _____
| | | (1779 - 1846) m 1797 (1744 - ....)
| |_Frances A. WASS ____|
| (1847 - 1885) m 1867|
| | _____________________
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| |_Lydia H. COLE ______|
| (1823 - 1857) m 1842|
| | _____________________
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| |_____________________|_____________________
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|
|--Marion Louise ROSS
| (1912 - 2005)
| _____________________
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|_Julia Bernece PETERSON _|
(1873 - ....) m 1895 |
| _____________________
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[59989] The unverified file LK4L-9Z6 in familysearch.org offers: "When Walter Edgar Scott Sr. was born on 9 May 1886, in Deer Isle, Hancock, Maine, United States, his father, John Scott, was 44 and his mother, Frances Eleanor Dow, was 36. He married Kathryn May McVeigh on 6 July 1913, in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 1 daughter. In 1940, at the age of 54, his occupation is listed as captain - private yacht in Deer Isle, Hancock, Maine, United States. He died on 13 March 1965, at the age of 78, and was buried in Deer Isle, Hancock, Maine, United States."
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_Gustav Kristiansen SLORA _|
| (1828 - ....) |
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_Ole G. SLORA _______|
| (1851 - 1843) |
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| |_Anna OLSDATTER ___________|
| (1825 - 1901) |
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|--Ida S. SLORA
| (1893 - 1974)
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[951] Ida is listed as Ada in the family of Ole and Janna Slore in the 1900 census at 245 Noble St, 11th Ward, West Town, Chicago, IL. "Chicago Tribune, 13 December 1974," p. 42: "Ida S. Fackter, 81, of Oak Park, III., wife of the late Walter V.; fond mother of Walter V. Jr. (Dorothy), Mrs. Phyllis (Fred) Knoch, William R. (Mamie) and Robert S. (Cynthia); grandmother of 13; great-grandmother of one. Memorial service 1 p.m. Sunday at the United Lutheran Church Of Oak Park, 409 Greenfield Av."
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_Ernest Oren VARNEY ____|
| (1867 - 1948) m 1890 |
| | ________________________
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| |________________________|________________________
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_Harold Henry VARNEY ___|
| (1898 - 1985) m 1923 |
| | _Joseph Riggs GETCHELL _
| | | (1791 - 1861) m 1814
| | _Daniel Bunfy GETCHELL _|_Hannah MITCHELL _______
| | | (1827 - 1900) m 1851 (1794 - 1839)
| |_Lillian Dale GATCHELL _|
| (1868 - 1951) m 1890 |
| | ________________________
| | |
| |_Abigail JEWETT ________|________________________
| (1831 - 1887) m 1851
_Lloyd H. VARNEY ____|
| (1924 - 1993) m 1950|
| | ________________________
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| |_Althea Gladys BENNETT _|
| (1900 - 1973) m 1923 |
| | ________________________
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|
|
|--Douglas ("Doug") Morse VARNEY
| (1952 - 2025)
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|_Judith Hope MOSHER _|
(1929 - 2014) m 1950|
| ________________________
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[59733] "The Bangor Daily Nes [Bangor, Maine]," 21 June 2025: "Greenbelt, MD, Maryland - Douglas Morse Varney, beloved husband of Carol Crosby, passed away peacefully at his home in Greenbelt, MD, on June 11, 2025, with Carol by his side. The eldest child of Lloyd and Judith (Mosher) Varney, Doug was born on December 1, 1952, in Waterville, Maine. When he was young, Doug's father instilled in him a love of research and nature by taking him on archaeological digs in Maine. Fascinated by the stars, Doug saved up his money to purchase his first telescope. He pursued this passion studying astronomy at New Mexico State University. Doug left school to join the U.S. Coast Guard during the Vietnam War, serving primarily in the Turks and Caicos and on Nantucket Island. After his service, Doug returned to Maine earning a degree in electrical engineering technology. During this time he designed a WeFax (weather facsimile) downconverter that won a national design competition, beating about 700 other entrants. After graduating, Doug worked at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California for six years before returning to Maine to pursue graduate studies in computer science. It was during this time that he met his future wife. They married and shared 33 years of life together - filled with curiosity, collaboration, and travel. After a brief stint as a software engineer at General Electric, Doug decided to pursue his deeper interests in science and research, first as a software engineer at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, West Virginia, and later as an engineer at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Later while working as a consultant, Doug designed and built a 12-channel GPS receiver for a South Korean company. In his later years, Doug earned an M.S. in astronomy through James Cook University in Australia. While pursuing a PhD there, he designed and built a CCD camera to monitor the skies. More recently he became interested in pattern recognition of clouds and created a complex data management system that could be used on hand-held devices in the field. Always eager to learn and explore, Doug earned the rank of Eagle Scout, served as a lifeguard, raced in 100 mile bicycle races, enjoyed technical rock climbing and obtained an amateur radio license. He also enjoyed cross-country skiing, painting, and gourmet cooking. An avid runner, Doug participated in a number of 5 and 10K races. He loved to sail his 28-foot sailboat, often dreaming of sailing around the world. He had a great appreciation for nature and animals, and shared a reciprocal adoration with all the cats in his life. Carol and Doug enjoyed traveling together, with memorable trips to Maine, Florida, the Maryland Eastern Shore, Banff, Hawaii and Bermuda. Doug loved hardware design and always had some project brewing. Above all, Doug cared very deeply about earth and space research and applied himself industriously in observing and learning as much as he could about what is transpiring in our world and beyond. He is survived by his wife, Carol; his siblings, David (Olga) Varney, Susan Sandler, and Dan (Andrea) Varney; numerous nieces, nephews and great-nieces and great-nephews. He was predeceased by his parents, Lloyd and Judith Varney; and by Susan's husband, Lee Sandler."
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[20623] Hans Godtmann is fifth of eight children of Peter and Margaretha.