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Matches 101 to 150 of 330

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
101 Died of burns at 17. Noblitt, Delores (I1855)
 
102 Died of tuberculosis when her children were small. Tubbs, Louvenia Clementine Reagor (I2062)
 
103 Died shortly after the end of the civil war: 1866?.  Reagor, Isaac (I1454)
 
104 Died with no sons. Reagor, Clyde (I1790)
 
105 Died young Reagor, Dorothy (I1056)
 
106 died young Parker, Horace Price (I1182)
 
107 Died young in TN. Reagor, Jacob (I1277)
 
108 Died young. Boone, Jacob (I1430)
 
109 Died young. Boone, Nathaniel (I1435)
 
110 Died young. Hix, Ernest Lavoy (I1589)
 
111 Died young. Sutton, Lillian (I1597)
 
112 Died young. Clenny, Ollie (I1621)
 
113 Died young. Clenny, Charlie (I1622)
 
114 Died young. Driskill, Millie May (I1630)
 
115 Died young. Castleman, Clara (I1653)
 
116 Died young. Never married. Brittain, Jacob Fernando (I1293)
 
117 Dies of Tuberculosis Boone, Israel (I1424)
 
118 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F474
 
119 Divorced Family F535
 
120 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F610
 
121 Divorced Family F612
 
122 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F613
 
123 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F741
 
124 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F754
 
125 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F756
 
126 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F769
 
127 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F629
 
128 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F699
 
129 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F700
 
130 Divorced. Family F709
 
131 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F792
 
132 Drove a bus for Trailways bus lines. Married three times. Reagor, Woodrow Wilson (I117)
 
133 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2030)
 
134 Emigrated to Philadelphia on September 24, 1737 on the Virtuous Grace from Rotterdam, Amsterdam. Family F101
 
135 Enlisted in the Confederate army. Reagor, Anthony Wayne Jr. (I1450)
 
136 Family records put the birth at 1832 Weems, Amanda Reagor (I1368)
 
137 Faught in the 41st Reg. for the CSA. Keith, Anthony Meek (I1666)
 
138 First cousin of J. Edna Reaves Reagor, Rhoda Reaves (I1916)
 
139 First Cousin to Hattie Campbell Rudd, Nora Campbell (I1245)
 
140 First Cousin to Nora Campbell Rudd, Hattie Campbell (I1240)
 
141 Food Service Supervisor Landry, Jane Pauline Reagor (I2075)
 
142 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3101)
 
143 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3071)
 
144 From http://www.berksweb.com/boonetext.html

The name Daniel Boone will forever be synonymous with the saga of the American frontier. Born and raised in Pennsylvania, Boone was the inveterate wayfarer who achieved lasting fame guiding land-hungry settlers to the Kentucky frontier and fighting to defend them against Indian attack.

Boone was born November 2, 1734 (some sources say October 22 - more info here and here), in the log farmhouse that evolved into - and was replaced by - the main house of the Daniel Boone Homestead, situated east of Reading in Berks County.

Daniel's father, Squire Boone, was an English Quaker born in Devonshire in 1696. While still a youth, Squire, his brother George and sister Sarah embarked for Philadelphia to appraise the possibilities of settlement for their father's family, who immigrated finally in 1717.

Squire settled first in Abington, then moved to Gwynedd, where he met Sarah Morgan, born in 1700 to Welsh Quakers. Married in 1720, they lived first near Gwynedd, then in Chalfont, Bucks County, before purchasing 250 acres of the Homestead in 1730. Squire's father and brothers also lived in the area and became prominent in business, local government and the Friends Meeting.

Daniel was the sixth child, one of eleven, born to Squire and Sarah. Although little is known of Daniel's Pennsylvania years, he undoubtedly helped his father as farmer, weaver and blacksmith and had the usual experiences of a boy growing up in the back country.

In 1750 Squire and Sarah joined the growing southward movement of Pennsylvanians, and concluded their long trek in the Yadkin Valley of North Carolina. While their principal motive may have been economic, it is also a fact that Squire had been "read out of Meeting" by the Exeter Friends in 1748 for his unrepentance in allowing his son Israel to marry a non-Quaker.

Daniel was then only 15 1/2 years old, but ahead was a life filled with the rigors of the American frontier. In 1756 he married Rebecca Bryan and with her - when he was home - raised ten children. In 1773 he failed in his first attempt to settle Kentucky, but in 1775 he succeeded in establishing Boonesborough. Between 1775 and 1783 Daniel Boone was a leader among settlers in opening new parts of Kentucky and in resisting Indian raids. Although Boone lost two sons and a brother in the fighting, he was merciful and compassionate toward his native adversaries.

Twice, Boone returned to visit his boyhood home - in 1781 and in 1788 - a hero and legend in his day. Though his legend grew, his finances languished. Beset by creditors and personal disillusion, Boone finally left Kentucky in 1799 for Missouri, where he died near St. Louis on September 26, 1820.

In Pennsylvania, Daniel's boyhood home changed to reflect the growth, prosperity and cultural diversity of eastern Berks County. William Maugridge purchased the property from Squire in 1750. An Englishman who was related to the Boones (though not himself a Quaker), he served Berks County as a judge from its establishment in 1752 until his death in 1766. In 1770 John DeTurk, a Pennsylvania German, purchased the property and prospered there until he died in 1808.

Since 1938 the Daniel Boone Homestead has been a state-owned historic site, administered by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. It includes 579 acres of land, seven eighteenth-century structures, a lake, picnic areas and other recreational facilities. The site interprets the lives of the Boone, Maugridge and DeTurk families through exhibits, programs, tours and publications. The site also serves as a wildlife refuge, where visitors may enjoy numerous species of animals and birds.  
Boone, Daniel (I1428)
 
145 From http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/texts/jtbrown/coc/COC18523.HTM

W. F. REAGOR,
Sacramento, Cal.
Born Singleton, Tenn., October 29, 1865; student at Winchester Normal, Tenn/. 1885-7; student Kentucky University 1889-91; graduating from The College of the Bible 1893; teacher Winder Institute, Georgia, 1893-5; president Pierce's College, College City, Cal., 1896; preached for Colusa church, Colusa, Cal., 1897-1901, with interim of eight months in 1899 for Acworth church, Georgia; minister, Sacramento church 1901--. 
Reagor, William Franklin (I1890)
 
146 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3054)
 
147 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3055)
 
148 From Union City, TN Motlow, Jeannie Garth (I1810)
 
149 George Hamilton BRITTAIN was the only surviving son of William B. BRITTAIN and Jane H.M. COOPER.

George Hamilton BRITTAIN was born about 1839-40 in Rankin County, MS. When Jane COOPER BRITTAIN and an older son both died in MS, William B. BRITTAIN took his surviving son, George and moved to Marshall, Harrison Co, TX to be near his in-laws, the Hamilton COOPERS. From Harrison Co.

George grew up in Marshall, TX. He joined the CSA in 1861 (John Gregg's Co H 7th Texas Regiment Volunteers as a private.)and served throughout the Civil War. He was "severely wounded" at Raymond, MS, May 12, 1863. He was promoted to 2nd Sgt. In 1864. When his group, which had suffered 52% casualties, was to surrender at Bentonville, most of the Texans left for TX without surrendering.

George returned home after the war as he is listed on the voter records of Harrison County. He married Eliza Texanna REAGOR,12 Oct 1871, Ellis Co.,TX. He fathered three children: Jacob Fernando BRITTAIN, Carrie Jettie BRITTAIN and William Hamilton BRITTAIN. According to Eliza's request for CSA pension in 1920, she states that "he departed this life in 1879 in Ellis County." His burial place is unknown.

--- Norma Fisher 
Brittain, George Hamilton (I1292)
 
150 Graduated Franklin Osteopathic Institute in Kentucky Ray, Dr. Henry Francis (I1513)
 

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