The Brown Family from Tandragee, Armagh, Ireland
Matches 4,501 to 4,550 of 7,047
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4501 | Leslie King: Elizabeth and siblings may have been taken in by their uncle John Brown after being orphaned. It could be why sister Mary took the alias Brown and listed John Brown as her father on her Marriage Record. 1911 census shows Lizzie as a widow, 44, born 1867 in Caledon, Tyrone, NI, residing in Shankill, Antrim, NI, with children Violet, John, Thomas, Annie, William, and Charles. Descendants confirmed by DNA. | McKenna, Elizabeth (I21088)
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4502 | Leslie's exact dates of birth and death are uncertain. Leslie died tragically at age 13. He was attending summer camp and received severe sunburn. The camp nurse burst his blisters and he contracted blood poisoning and died. | Liptrot, Bertram Leslie (I8903)
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4503 | leukemia related infection | Souter, Norman James (I14530)
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4504 | Lewis Brown was born in Hanover, Luzerne, Pennsylvania, USA in 1857. In 1860, Lews Brown was residing in Hanover, Luzerne, Pennsylvania, USA with his parents and siblings. Lewis Brown had not been found in the 1870 census. In 1880, Lewis Brown was residing in Beloit, Rock, Wisconsin, USA, by himself and employed as a painter. In 1885, Lewis Brown was residing in Belmont, Woodson, Kentucky, USA, with his wife and ten month old son George. He was employed as a farmer. (There were other Browns living nearby. They have not been identified as relatives, but may be a source for future research.) In 1900, Lewis Brown was residing in Beloit, Rock, Wisconsin, USA with his wife and children. He was employed as a merchant. In 1910, Lewis Brown was residing in Beloit, Rock, Wisconsin, USA with his wife and children. He was employed as a painter. In 1920, Lewis Brown was residing in Beloit, Rock, Wisconsin, USA with his wife and daughter, Norma and her husband. He was employed as a paper hanger. Lewis Brown died in 1927. I believe the following note was from Bill Hancock: "Son George H. Brown was born in Beloit, WI June 23, 1884. Sometime afterwards the Lewis C. Brown family, moved to Kansas, ultimately Yates Center, Woodson Co. as son Fred A. was born in Kansas Sept. 14, 1888. Also in Yates Center with them, judging by the number of family pictures taken by photographers in Yates Center, were William F. Hatch and family. Perhaps the entire Henry F. Hatch family were in Yates Center. Research the land records in Yates Center at some point." | Brown, Lewis C. (I1850)
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4505 | Library and Archives Canada. Border Entries. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, n.d.. RG 76-C. Department of Employment and Immigration fonds. Microfilm reels: T-5461-T-5507, T-15249-T-15344, T-15346-T-15393. | Source (S765)
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4506 | Library and Archives Canada. Census of Canada, 1871. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, n.d.. RG31-C-1. Statistics Canada Fonds. Microfilm reels: C-9888 to C-9975, C-9977 to C-10097, C-10344 to C-10388, C-10390 to C-10395, to C-10540 to C-10570. | Source (S89)
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4507 | Library and Archives Canada. Census of Canada, 1891. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2009. http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census/1891/Pages/about-census.aspx. Series RG31-C-1. Statistics Canada Fonds. Microfilm reels: T-6290 to T-6427. | Source (S3)
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4508 | Library and Archives Canada. Census of Canada, 1901. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2004. http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census/1901/Pages/about-census.aspxl. Series RG31-C-1. Statistics Canada Fonds. Microfilm reels: T-6428 to T-6556. Images are reproduced with the permission of Library and Archives Canada. | Source (S19)
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4509 | Library and Archives Canada. Census of Canada, 1911. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2007. http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census/1911/Pages/about-census.aspx. Series RG31-C-1. Statistics Canada Fonds. Microfilm reels T-20326 to T-20460. Images are reproduced with the permission of Library and Archives Canada. | Source (S21)
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4510 | Library and Archives Canada. Census of the Northwest Provinces, 1906. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2008. <http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/databases/census-1906/index-e.html>. Series RG31-C-1. Statistics Canada Fonds. Microfilm reels: T-18353 to T-18363. Images are reproduced with the permission of Library and Archives Canada. | Source (S2)
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4511 | Library and Archives Canada. Form 30A, 1919-1924 (Ocean Arrivals). Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, n.d.. RG 76. Department of Employment and Immigration Fonts. Microfilm Reels: T-14939 to T-15248. | Source (S235)
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4512 | Library and Archives Canada. Form 30A, 1919-1924 (Ocean Arrivals). Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, n.d.. RG 76. Department of Employment and Immigration Fonts. Microfilm Reels: T-14939 to T-15248. | Source (S1499)
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4513 | Library and Archives Canada. Seventh Census of Canada, 1931. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2023. Series RG31. Statistics Canada Fonds. From the collection of Library and Archives Canada De la collection de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. | Source (S2857)
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4514 | Library and Archives Canada. Sixth Census of Canada, 1921. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2013. Series RG31. Statistics Canada Fonds. Images are reproduced with the permission of Library and Archives Canada. | Source (S224)
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4515 | Library and Archives Canada. Sixth Census of Canada, 1921. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Library and Archives Canada, 2013. Series RG31. Statistics Canada Fonds. Images are reproduced with the permission of Library and Archives Canada. | Source (S374)
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4516 | Lieutenant William James Steuart was a Confederate soldier during the American Civil War. He fought with his brother, Brigadier General George Hume Steuart, at the Battle of the Wilderness in 1864 and died from wounds received during the battle. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_H._Steuart_(brigadier_general) | Steuart, Lt. William James (I22248)
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4517 | Like his father, JC was an attorney. | Cuthbert, Joseph C (I3508)
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4518 | Lillian married and had descendants. In 1911 there was a 17 year old Lilly Brown residing with this Lillian's uncle, Charles Brown, in Portadown, incorrectly recorded as a nephew. She is a near perfect match for this Lillian except she is surnamed Brown and living in Ireland! | Schoen, Lillian (I21075)
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4519 | Lillian was married to an unknown person. | Sterritt, Lillian Elizabeth (I21064)
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4520 | Lillian's residence at time of marriage was Tiverton, Bruce County, Ontario. Her husband, James Buchanan, was residing in Grafton, Dakota, USA. | Stewart, Lillian (I17254)
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4521 | Lillianne Browne (b. 1860) married in 1891 to John Buchanan (b. 1858) a farmer from Argyllshire, the son of Angus Buchanan (b. 1808) and Margaret Proctor. Angus Buchanan and Lelias Buchanan Stewart were siblings (Parents were Duncan Buchanan and Marjory Fletcher). So John Buchanan is first cousin to Agnes Stewart Browne and first cousin once removed to Lillianne Browne. On their marriage record they are noted as second cousins. In 1901 Lillianne and John are living at Dunoon, Argyllshire and had three children: Angus Buchanan (b. 1893), John Buchanan (b. 1894), and Lewis Buchanan (b. 1896). This is only as far as I have gotten with this family unit. https://geneal4real.wordpress.com/2014/11/22/john-browne-and-agnes-stewart-revisited/ | Browne, Lillian (I25283)
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4522 | Lilllias had a daughter, Helen, b 1806, from a previous relationship. Helen married a weaver William Denova. | McDougal, Lillias (I20771)
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4523 | Lilly is the twin sister of Robert. | Duncan, Lilly (I5360)
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4524 | Lily Angus was born in 1897 in Halton, Lancashire, England. In 1912, at age 14, Lily Angus, along with her birth family immigrated to Quebec, Canada, bound for Michigan, USA. In 1921, at age 23, Lily married in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, USA, to Frank Sharley. They moved to California and had two children. | Angus, Lily (I20726)
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4525 | Linda Dianne Brown Jones. | Source (S34)
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4526 | Linwood Plantation | Ventress, William Charles Stewart (I19665)
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4527 | List of Passengers to Georgia in the Prince of Wales, from Inverness, Scotland in 1736, includes: George Cuthbert of Inverness, John Cuthbert, John Cuthbert of Drakies. George is also presumed to be the George Cuthbert of Inverness who, along with John Cuthbert of Drakies, witnessed the treaty between General Oglethorpe and the Creek Indians in 1739. (Bulloch) It is suggested, but not proven, that George Cuthbert of Inverness may be the father of the proprietors of Drakies Plantation in Georgia. | Cuthbert, George (I3302)
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4528 | Little is known about Donald Stuart except that he resided on a farmstead called Leth na Coille on the edge of the Abernethy Forest, near Nethy Bridge, Upper Strathspey, Moray, Scotland. According to his daughter Barbara, the Stuart family had resided in Upper Strathspey for "several generations." However, it's not known how much stock we can put in this description and whether three generations might constitute "several". The little knowledge we do have of Donald and his family is largely because he ended up being the maternal grandfather of Donald Alexander Smith, Lord Strathcona. Donald Stuart married on 6 JUN 1769 in Abernethy and Kincardine parish, Moray, Scotland to Jean/Janet GRANT b: 1 APR 1743 in Cromdale and Inverallan, Moray, Scotland as the daughter of Robert Grant of Cromdale. She was descended from the Chief of Clan Grant was a close cousin of the Robert Grant who co-founded The Northwest Company. Donad Stuart and Jean Grant are recorded in the Dictionary of Canadian Biography as parents of John Stuart, the Canadian fur trader and explorer. From the Dictionary of Canadian Biogarphy (online): STUART, JOHN, fur trader and explorer; b. 12 Sept. 1780, probably at Leanchoil, near Nethy Bridge, Scotland, son of Donald Stuart and Janet Grant; d. 14 Jan. 1847 near Forres, Scotland. After receiving some education, John Stuart joined the North West Company in 1796, perhaps under the auspices of Roderick Mackenzie who had known him as a boy. Stuart was sent to Fort Chipewyan (Alta), and subsequently served at various posts in the Athabasca department. In 1805 he was assistant to Simon Fraser*, who had been charged with finding a supply route over the Rocky Mountains for the purpose of extending NWC operations into present-day British Columbia. That fall the two men established Rocky Mountain House (Alta) and the following year what would be called Fort St James (B.C.) on Stuart Lake. Because both Indians and traders were suffering from famine, Stuart was sent to explore a route to Nat-len (Fraser Lake), where provisions were reputed to be plentiful. On the strength of his report, Fraser built a post on that lake in 1806. Stuart spent the winter of 1806-7 on McLeod Lake at Fort McLeod, established in 1805. With the arrival of extra men and supplies in the fall of 1807, preparations began for the descent of the river now known as the Fraser but then thought to be the Columbia. On 28 May 1808 Stuart, as second-in-command, left Fort George (Prince George) with Fraser and 22 men on the epic journey down the river. It was a harrowing experience requiring superhuman perseverance and skill in navigating the whirlpools, rapids, and perpendicular rock canyons. On 2 July they passed the site of New Westminster and came within sight of the Strait of Georgia. They returned upriver, arriving at Fort George on 6 August. The voyage was a disappointment, for the river was not a navigable supply route, nor was it the Columbia. Stuart had proven himself an invaluable lieutenant: he was a good judge of river navigation, kept the official log, took the meridian observations, and was fearless before the suspicious Indians, some of whom had never before seen white men. Stuart returned to McLeod Lake and in 1809 was given charge of New Caledonia, the area west of the mountains. In 1813 he left Stuart Lake for the Columbia, searching for a supply route between New Caledonia and the Pacific coast. In October at Fort Astoria (Astoria, Oreg.), he was one of the signatories to the bill of sale of the Pacific Fur Company to the NWC. That year he became an NWC partner. Stuart returned to Fort St James in 1814, in which year trade goods were received from Fort George via the Fraser, Thompson, Okanagan, and Columbia rivers. This route, which enabled the posts in New Caledonia to receive their supplies by ship from England rather than overland from Montreal, does not appear to have been adopted permanently by the NWC. From 1817 until 1820 Stuart seems to have been in charge of Pierre au Calumet (north of Fort McMurray, Alta). With other Nor’Westers he took part in the successful harassment of Hudson’s Bay Company men, notably John Clarke*, who were trying to gain a toehold in the Athabasca country. By March 1821 he was back at Fort George, directing the establishment of Fort Alexandria (Alexandria, B.C.) that year. After the amalgamation of the NWC and the HBC in 1821 Stuart was made a chief factor and remained in charge of New Caledonia until 1824. By that time he could “no longer engage in the trials and hardships” that had been almost natural to him, and he asked to be transferred. He prided himself on his understanding and treatment of the Indians and the murder by two Carriers in 1823 of two HBC employees at Fort George had profoundly affected him [see ÃKwah]. He subsequently assumed charge of the Saskatchewan district (1824-26) and the Winnipeg district (1826-32). His appointment in 1832 to the Mackenzie River district, an unusual posting for an officer of his service and inclination, may have been a punitive act. In 1830 Stuart had grumbled about the business methods employed in New Caledonia by Chief Factor John McLoughlin* and he had criticized Governor George Simpson* and John George McTavish for abandoning their country wives. Simpson’s unnecessarily harsh description of Stuart in his “Character book” of 1832 was an about-face, for in 1828 he had referred to Stuart as “the Father . . . of New Caledonia; where for 20 years of his Life, he was doomed to all the misery and privation . . . who with a degree of exertion, of which few men were capable, overcame difficulties, to which the business of no other part of the country was exposed.” Stuart was granted a furlough in 1835, which was extended for health reasons until 1 June 1839, when he left the HBC’s service. During that period, in 1838, he wrote to Simpson, Edward Ellice*, and Alexander Stewart, a long-time associate, recommending his nephew Donald Alexander Smith*, later Lord Strathcona, for employment in the HBC. Stuart retired to Forres, Scotland, and died near there at Springfield House in 1847. He had at least three children: a daughter, Isabel, born in 1802, whose mother is unknown, and two sons, Donald and John, by Catherine La Valle. In 1827 Stuart took another country wife, Mary Taylor. She joined him in Scotland in 1836 but because he withdrew his promise to marry her formally she returned to Rupert’s Land in 1838. There was considerable litigation over Stuart’s legacy to her, which Stuart’s sisters managed to have reduced from £500 to £350. Stuart was a man of courage, a good traveller and trader, and fair in his dealings with the Indians. He deserves to be remembered as an outstanding officer of the North West Company, and although he did not always agree with the management policies of the HBC he nevertheless served it well. Stuart Lake in British Columbia was named in his honour. | Stuart, Donald (I18664)
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4529 | Little is known of him except that he worked as a loom weaver. William and Elizabeth had one known son, however given their late age at the time of Abraham's birth it is presumed they probably had other children. | Duncan, William (I5347)
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4530 | Lived all married life on Lot 20 Con 2 Mosa Twp. (Received as a Crown Grant by his Father) | McCready, Archibald (I9841)
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4531 | Lived in "Middleville" and later in Renfrew. Found of Stewarts Ltd. | Stewart, James (I16505)
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4532 | Lived in Brookdale, Manitoba | McNaughton, Elizabeth Vinnie (I10764)
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4533 | Lived in Douglas and later out west. | Stewart, David (I15632)
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4534 | Lived in Lincoln, Nebraska. | McNaughton, Annie Catherine (I10816)
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4535 | Lived in Montreal, Quebec. | McNaughton, Minnie Taylor (I10924)
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4536 | Lived in the Arkell settlement in Puslinch township, Wellington county, Ontario. | Atkinson, Mary Ethel (I238)
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4537 | Lived in Virgil, Ont. | Slingerland, John Alexander (I14416)
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4538 | Liverpool records show the marriage of John Dobson to Alice Wilkinson abt September 1856. A household guest, named Margaret Wilkinson, is recorded as a household servant visiting the Dobson in the 1881 census. It's possible that she may have been the sister of Alice Wilkinson. John Dobson's second wife Rachel is recorded in some online trees as Wilkinson. It is not known if she was related to Alice. | Wilkinson, Alice (I20231)
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4539 | Living descendants for this family are on file. | Prangley, Earl (I12595)
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4540 | Living in Alvinston village, Euphemia Township in 1881 with 2 children between the ages of 3-5. Not found in 1901 census, presumed dead by that date. | Prangley, Christopher (I12563)
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4541 | Living in Moulton Township, Monck County (Present day Lincoln County), Ontario in 1881. In 1871 he is living in Canborough, Monck, with his parents on one side and his sister Mary Furler on the other. | Doughnee, Charles Joseph (I5025)
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4542 | Llewelyn married Angharad, daughter of Maredydd, Prince of Deheubarth. Upon the death of Maredydd the reign of Deheubarth was disputed. The kingdom of Gwynedd was lost and later regained by Llewelyn, who also later succeeded in capturing Deheubarth. | Seisyll, Llywelyn ap (I14142)
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4543 | Lloyd suffered a tragic life. When he was a child his tonsils were removed in an "at home" surgical procedure on the kitchen table. The surgeon accidently cut his vocal chords so Lloyd was never able to speak. This frustrated him and he became a severe behavioural problem. His mother was the only one who seemed to be able to handle him. When she died Lloyd was committed to an asylum where he spent the rest of his life. His sister Winnifred never acknowledged his existence. | Thornton, Lloyd Hubert (I19370)
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4544 | Lot 27, Con. 2 | McNaughton, Donald (I26757)
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4545 | Lottie died in childhood. | Stewart, Lottie Florence (I17297)
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4546 | Lottie Marion Ferguson is buried in Old Zion United Church Cemetery, Dundee, Huntingdon, Quebec, Canada. | Ferguson, Lottie Marion (I25038)
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4547 | Louis came to Canada in 1870 according to Llewella McIntyre. This was his second marriage. He was a widower. His first wife's name is unknown. The family were living at lot 34 front, (concession not given), Puslinch Gore at the time of their son Robert's death. 1901 census indicates that Louis was born in the United States, but was of Italian origin. 1901 census records also show the surname as "Negue". | Negro, Louis (I11710)
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4548 | Louis was a Huguenot who came to America through England and Holland and became part of the Dutch community in what is now New York. Louis was a mariner and it is believed that he drowned at sea. Afterwhich his wife remarried. Her second husband is unknown. The Boulier name occurs with many variant spellings including the following: Boule, Boulje, Beljee, Belyee, Belyea, Bulyea, and Bolye. The variations can be accounted for by Louis being French and living in a Dutch community. He married a Dutch woman and his descendants' surnames take on a Dutch spelling (Beljee). Then when the family moves to Anglo/French settlements in New Brunswick the spelling takes on an Anglo/French appearance (Belyea, Belyee, Bulyea). "Louis Boulier was apparently the first of this line to come to America. A few quotes from The Genealogy of the Boulier- Bulyea- Belyea Family 1697-1969, written and Compiled by Florence G. (Belyea) Tisdale and Marjorie A. (Belyea) Rennie, state: "The traditional story, handed down in our family from our Loyalist forebears, who went to Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada from New York in 1783, was that our original ancestor in America was a Huguenot mariner who had sailed his ship from the western shore of France to escape from the persecution following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. If our early family knew the name of "our ancient mariner" it was not included in the story or recorded. It is therefore the most rewarding fact discovered in our research to have traced the name of Louis Boulier." And: "In a history of the church restoration, found in the library in the museum at Tarrytown, maintained by the Daughters of the American Revolution; Louis Boulier, a native of Saintonge in France, had married Antje Konninck, in the Old Dutch Church of Sleep Hollow on May 23, 1697." -- From GENERATIONS, the newsletter for the New Brunswick Genealogical Society, by Cleadie Barnett, 27 Dec 1998. | Boulier, Louis (I1190)
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4549 | Louisa died as a teenager. | Steuart, Louisa (I22314)
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4550 | Louisa's surname is not know for certain, but was likely Livingston. There is a family of Livingstons residing with the Cuthberts in 1850 and the children show parallel names, and two of her children bear 'L' as a middle initial. | Livingston, Louisa C (I9001)
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