The Brown Family from Tandragee, Armagh, Ireland
Matches 5,801 to 5,850 of 6,972
# | Notes | Linked to |
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5801 | She may have died young before the birth of her sister, Mary Harriett. | Prangley, Mary (I12970)
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5802 | She may have married a Carmichael as there is a Janet Carmichael, her age, who is residing with Janet's parents in 1841. | McNaughtan, Janet (I10747)
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5803 | She may have married John Stewart of Inneschaorich. See her un-named sister for more information. | Stewart, Janet (I16657)
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5804 | She may have married John Stewart of Inneschaorich. See her un-named sister for more information. | Stewart, Marjory (I17545)
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5805 | She migrated to Australia in 1920 and was the grandomther of Sharon Bender in Western Australia. | Ferguson, Anne Fraser (I24245)
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5806 | She never married and had no children. | Stewart, Dora (I15706)
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5807 | She never married and had no children. (Nelker) | Steuart, Virginia Francis Jeanette (I22463)
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5808 | She never married and had not children. | Elliot, Mary (I5627)
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5809 | She never married and was alive at the time of Nelker's research in 1968. | Steuart, Marie (I22594)
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5810 | She never married nor had children. | Stewart, Marjory Charlotee Athanass (I17522)
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5811 | She never married nor had children. In 1851, she was residing Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, with her parents. In 1861, she was residing in Dull, Perthshire, Scotland with her parents. | Stewart, Jessie Menzies (I17125)
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5812 | She never married nor had children. Nothing more is known about her. (Nelker) | Steuart, Mary Elizabeth (I14651)
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5813 | She never married nor had children. Nothing more is known about her. (Nelker) | Steuart, Anne Rebecca (I14749)
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5814 | She never married. | Prangley, Alice Maud (I12411)
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5815 | She never married. | Stewart, Mary (I17645)
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5816 | She never married. | Stuart, Eliza Jane (I18668)
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5817 | She never married. She lived next door to James Elliot, her cousin. (Walsh) | Robson, Elsie (I13626)
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5818 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Mary Bartow (I22303)
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5819 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Rose Ann (I22458)
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5820 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Henrietta (I22480)
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5821 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Susan Ellicott (I22495)
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5822 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Caroline Ellicott (I22496)
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5823 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Lydia Morris (I22497)
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5824 | She never married. (Nelker) | Steuart, Elizabeth Donaldson (I22643)
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5825 | She never married. (Nelker) | Haughton, Louise Montell (I22645)
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5826 | She outlived her husband. | Hodgson, Janet Reid (I7943)
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5827 | She presumably died young prior to the birth of her same-named sister in 1739. | Cuthbert, Rachel (I3680)
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5828 | She purchased the former family estate of Dodon back from the Catholic Church in 1929. "Annette was first married to Lansing Minzer Pittman on 4 October 1887. He died in 1894. She married secondly on 22 September 1897 to Homar Wise. He died in 1923 in Flushing, New York. She bought the Dodon estate back from the Catholic Church in 1929. Ann restored "Dodon" to the family." (FindAGrave) | Steuart, Annette Phelps of Dodon (I22306)
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5829 | She remarried in 1888 to William Hamilton. | Crapper, Rosetta (I3058)
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5830 | She resided in Stoney Creek, Ontario, Canada at the time that Janet Duncan wrote her family tree. | Hall, Margaret Hunter (I7413)
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5831 | She was a music teacher and dressmaker. | Sherwood, Annie (I14218)
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5832 | She was a twin to Charles Calvert Steuart. She died young. (Nelker) | Steuart, Elizabeth (I22555)
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5833 | She was daughter of Patrick, Earl of Dunbar. She was the first wife of James Stewart, High Steward of Scotland, but they had no known children. | Dunbar, Cecilia (I20862)
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5834 | She was daughter to William Menteith of Kerse. However it is not certain which William Menteith of Kerse as there were five successive generations of that name. Based on a best guess of dates she would most likely be the daughter of the first William Menteith of Kerse. However, if not then she would be his grand-daughter and thus this line is still a correct ancestral line for her either way. But I may be off by one generation. | Menteith, Daughter (I11140)
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5835 | She was educated by tutors at home and in Baton Rouge. Mrs. Dougherty was throughout her long life a dutiful homemaker, a devoted mother, a sympathetic neighbor, and a diligent church worker. She kept her household intact thru-out the Civil War and refused to leave her home when Baton Rouge was occupied by Federal Troops and the river was controlled by the navy of the United States. | Stewart, Lucy Russell (I23896)
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5836 | She was known for her eccentricities and her piety, the children's saint, and familiarly known to the whole town as " Aunt Becky." She was efficient at the loom, and sought for far and near to do the family weaving, and when she started out with her basket on her arm, fine work was sure to be the result. Her nimble fingers and the swift flying shuttle keeping time to the old Scotch airs alternating with exciting stories of her early childhood, keeping her audience of children spellbound with wonder and delight. She always wore a man's hat ; only once was she ever known to wear a bonnet, and then she declared she was never so ashamed in her life. She could ride a frisky horse like a trooper, and it was no uncommon sight to see her ride up to church, crowned with her beaver and one of her nieces seated on the pillion behind her. She was an ardent student of the Bible, and always ready to make an apt quotation from its sacred pages, her favorite passage being, " Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil." Sons were not plentiful in her father's family and among her duties at an early age was that of an errand boy, and one day her father bade her go to a distant pasture and catch a horse. Obediently she took the halter and started. She had nearly reached her destination, when she caught sight of a huge bear sitting on its haunches and curiously watching her ; with the sudden fright of the moment she screamed, dropped the halter and started for home with all possible speed. The bear equally alarmed started as rapidly in an opposite direction. Another boyish duty, and delight of her life was that of fishing, and many a lone ramble did she take beside the sparkling waters of Stewart brook and bring home a long string of large plump trout. Such duties became native and congenial to her and through her long, useful life she delighted to labor in the field with the husbandmen. She would handle the scythe, pitchfork and rake with ease, and her old sickle with her initial R, cut in the handle bears marks of great use. It was a familiar sight to her neighbors to see her driving two yoke of oxen with a load of potatoes for Greenfield market. When past eighty and infirmity had laid a heavy hand upon her, she would hobble to the woodpile and wield the axe with the dexterity of a backwoodsman. Her Bible was her constant companion, and fortified by its divine promises, death was to her but the lifting of the veil and a flight through the pearly gates. " Many a dear one's blessing went With her beneath the low green tent, Whose curtain never outward swings." | Stewart, Rebecca (I24606)
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5837 | She was married twice but had no known children. | Forman, Annis Skidmore (I6225)
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5838 | She was nicknamed "Biddy" and kept in contact with her cousin, Margaret Stewart Ritter. They moved to Toronto. She was naturalized in California, USA in 1941. | Stewart, Mary Margaret RN (I17813)
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5839 | She was only 16 when she married. | Pearce, Anne Maria (I12291)
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5840 | She was persuaded by her husband, the king, to resign her earldom of Ross in favour of her stepson, Robert Stewart, Earl of Fife and Menteith. Robert, in turn, bestowed it upon his second son. | de Ross, Euphemia (I4589)
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5841 | She was purportedly a niece to the famous General George Washington. | Munro, Jane of Auchenbowie (I11605)
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5842 | She was recorded as "Mary Stewart" in the 1841 census. | McGregor, Mary (I21114)
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5843 | She was recorded as being still alive at the time of her husband's death in 1742. | Fleetwood, Helen (I6123)
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5844 | She was residing with her brothers John and Alexander i 1861 and 1871. | Ferguson, Agnes (I25149)
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5845 | She was sister to Richard de Burgh, and, by him, was aunt to Elizabeth de Burgh, Queen of Scots and wife of Robert The Bruce. | de Burgh, Egedia (I4204)
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5846 | She was sister to Sir William Beardmore, Lord Invernairn, (1856-1936) a famous British automobile manufacturer. | Beardmore, Maria (I612)
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5847 | She was somewhat eccentric and was a lady of considerable means. She was noted for her industrious habits and for fine work at the wheel and loom. She lived and died at Northfield. | Stewart, Lydia (I24607)
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5848 | She was the daughter of Fraces Scott Key, author of the lyrics of The Star Spangled Banner. | Key, Maria Lloyd (I22467)
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5849 | She was the daughter of Patrick Buchanan of MacCarthe, ancestor of the Laird of Arnprior, Ochlesy, MacCarthe, and Desclelles. | Buchanan, Daughter of MacCarthe (I1759)
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5850 | She was the daughter of plantation owner Judge Peter Randolph. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randolph_family_of_Virginia) | Randolph, Sarah Ann (I23756)
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