Notes


Matches 651 to 700 of 3,102

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
651 308 Fourth Street ALESSANDRA, Concetta Euiseffa Caico (I7614)
 
652 35 Clarendon Street, 10 pm

England birth/christening fDec 1857 Camberwell, London, Surrey Vol 1d Page 431

Ann Esther Randall

Ann B. Collis
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Death Certificates, 1803-1915
Name: Ann B. Collis
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 24 Jan 1865
Event Place: Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Gender: Female
Age: 7
Birth Year (Estimated): 1858
Father's Name: William
Mother's Name: Ann E. Collis 
COLLIS, Anna Bertha (I295)
 
653 3707 W 3725 N
Morgan, UT 84050 
Ewing, Dirk (I10566)
 
654 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I375)
 
655 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I10763)
 
656 50 in 1635

Ralph was said to have been married in Buckinghamshire, England. He came in the ship "Truelove" to Mass in Autumn of 1635. He lived in Dorchester, Bridgewater, then Salem, Mass. 
TOMPKINS, Ralph (I7287)
 
657 50th anniversary 1887 in "Vacaville Recorder" Family F2076
 
658 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4420)
 
659 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4915)
 
660 553-00-4114 WOOD, Vere Alonzo (I4949)
 
661 565-10-6448 WOOD, Cyril Aubrey (I4948)
 
662 565-16-6744 BONSLETT, Harold Anthony (I4952)
 
663 569-86-4833 WOOD, Melvin Earl (I4950)
 
664 5729 Belleview Ave, Sacramento, CA 95824, (916-381-4231) Married Jes (Smitty)
No issue.

California Marriage Index, 1960-1985 Name: Esther M Kasdorf
Age: 53
Est. Birth: abt 1919
Spouse Name: Bernard B Smith
Spouse Age: 48
Est. Spouse Birth: abt 1924
Date: 24 Dec 1972
Location: Sacramento

California Divorce Index, 1966-1984 Name: Esther M Kasdorf
Spouse Name: Bernard B Smith
Location: Sacramento
Date: Mar 1973



Social Security Death Index Record
Name: Esther Smith
SSN: 553-34-9021
Last Residence: 95815 Sacramento, Sacramento, California, United States of America
Born: 27 Apr 1919
Died: 11 Feb 1993
State (Year) SSN issued: California (1952 ) 
KASDORF, Esther May (I738)
 
665 573-18-4662 WOOD, Letha Ramona (I4903)
 
666 58 in 1635 Foster, Katherine (I7288)
 
667 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4724)
 
668 668 Cunningham Lane, New Castle, PA 16105
LBPDOT@comcast.net
712-652-0248 
Source Source: S63 (S63)
 
669 6th child of Charles Sherman and Mary Hoyt. He was a General commanding the army of the United States 1869-1883.

William Tecumseh Sherman
Birth: Feb. 8, 1820
Death: Feb. 14, 1891
Civil War General, businessman, and author. General Sherman led an army of sixty-two thousand men with thirty-five thousand horses and twenty-five hundred wagons on an overland march to Savannah on a mission to punish the south for its secession from the union. He cut his army off from the union supply line allowing the troops to forage and sustain them self by feeding off the land. From Savannah, a swath of utter destruction was left by Shermans Army. The tracks of the railroad, trestles and rolling stock was destroyed. Towns, plantations and farms were burned and looted. He destroyed all the public buildings in Atlanta but heaped the most vengeance on South Carolina, the first state to secede from the Union. Columbia was completely burned to the ground. The results of this march together with Grant's victories in Virginia brought the South to the surrender table. He was born in Lancaster, Ohio as William Tecumseh Sherman into a family of eleven. His father, a lawyer and jurist died when he was nine and the children were parceled out to relatives and friends. William was sent to the family of Thomas Ewing, a next door neighbor who was a U.S. senator and a cabinet member. His excellent early education was at the Lancaster academy where his outstanding scholastic record earned him an appointment to West Point at age sixteen. After graduating sixth in his class, he was commissioned a second lieutenant. Sherman served in South Carolina then Georgia, but saw very little action in the Mexican-American war. He resigned from the Army to pursue a career in banking, then a as a lawyer, but with little success. His bank failed and he accepted the position as first president of the Louisiana Military Seminary. The institution would become Louisiana State University. The Civil War brought him back to active duty and he took up the Union cause commanding a number of major battles from leading a brigade at Bull Run, a division at Shiloh and then in charge of four divisions at Vicksburg. Everlasting fame was his during the Georgia campaign and his "March to the Sea." The post Civil War...When Grant became President, Sherman became the top general in the Army and served in this high post until his retirement. He oversaw the completion of the transcontinental railroad and orchestrated the defeat of the Plains Indian tribes. An important contribution was the establishment of the Command School at Ft. Leavenworth. He wrote his memoirs, a two volume classic and it was published in 1875. Sherman retired from the army in 1884 and lived the rest of his life in New York City. He loved the theatre and was much in demand as a colorful speaker at dinners and banquets. Sherman was courted by the Democrats to became their presidential candidate spurring him to coin the famous response, "If nominated, I will not run, if elected I will not serve". He died in New York City at age seventy-one. A brief service was held at his residence with a grand procession escorting his coffin to a special waiting train poised to convey his body to St Louis for interment in the family plot. Upon arrival at the Union Depot in the Missouri city, a caisson drawn by four black horses waited to transport his remains through downtown St. Louis to Calvary Cemetery and burial beside his wife, the former Ellen Ewing, the daughter of his foster father, and two of his children. His son, Father Thomas Sherman , a Jesuit priest, conducted a brief service. The Sherman legacy...Streets, schools, buildings and hundreds of books have been authored about the General. Some of the most enduring monuments...a statue of Sherman on his horse, walking behind an angel carrying an olive branch is located at Grand Army Plaza, corner of 5th Avenue and 59th Street in New York. It has been newly gilt from money donated by Donald Trump and was the eleven year work of Augustus Saint Gaudens. The original and well preserved Sherman House, in his hometown of Lancaster, is his birthplace as well as his famous brother Senator John Sherman

Burial: Calvary Cemetery and Mausoleum St. Louis city Missouri, USA Plot: Section 17, family plot

Sherman, William T., lieutenant-general, was born at Lancaster, Fairfield county, Ohio, Feb. 8, 1820. Left an orphan at nine years of age, he was adopted by Thomas Ewing, later secretary of the interior, and attended school at Lancaster until 1836, when he was appointed a cadet at the West Point military academy. Graduating in 1840, sixth in a class of forty-two, he was made a second lieutenant and assigned to duty in Florida where he was engaged from time to time in incursions against the hostile Seminole Indians. On Nov. 30, 1841, he was promoted to first lieutenant, and until the outbreak of the Mexican war, was stationed at various posts in the South, including St. Augustine, and Forts Pierce, Morgan and Moultrie. At one time he undertook the study of law, with no thought of making it his profession, but to be prepared "for any situation that fortune or luck might offer." In 1846 he was stationed at Pittsburg, as recruiting officer, but shortly after, in consequence of repeated applications for active service, was sent to California, where, contrary to expectation, he was uneventfully engaged as acting assistant adjutant-general of the 1Oth military department under Gen. Stephen W. Kearny, and later under Col. R. B. Mason. In 1850 he returned to the Atlantic states as bearer of despatches, and was stationed at St. Louis, Mo., as commissary of subsistence with the rank of captain. In March, 1851, he received the commission of captain by brevet, to date from May 30, 1848. On Sept. 6, 1853, he resigned from the army and became manager of the branch banking-house of Lucas, Turner & Co., at San Francisco, Cal. In 1857 he returned to New York and, his firm having suspended, opened a law office in Leavenworth, Kan., with Hugh and Thomas E. Ewing, Jr. In July, 1859, he was elected superintendent of the Louisiana military academy, with a salary of $5,000 per annum, the institution opening Jan. 1, 1860, but on the seizure of the arsenal at Baton Rouge in Jan., 1861, in anticipation of the secession of the state, he tendered his resignation. Going to Washington, he endeavored in vain to impress upon the administration the gravity of the situation which he characterized as "sleeping upon a volcano," and the president's call for volunteers for three months as "an attempt to put out the flames of a burning house with a squirtgun." For two months he was president of the 5th street railway of St. Louis, Mo., and on May 14, 1861, was made colonel of the 13th regiment of regular infantry, commanding a brigade in the division of Gen. Tyler in the battle of Bull Run, July 21. On Aug. 3 he was promoted to brigadier-general of volunteers, to date from May 17, and on Oct. 7 relieved Maj.-Gen. Anderson in command of the Department of Kentucky. On Nov. 12, however, he was in turn relieved by Gen. D. C. Buell, his estimate of the number of troops required in his department, "sixty thousand men to drive the enemy out of Kentucky and 200,000 to finish the war in this section," being considered so wildly extravagant as to give rise to doubts of his sanity. It was, however, justified by later events. During the remainder of the winter he was in command of the camp of instruction at Benton barracks, near St. Louis, and when Grant moved upon Donelson, was stationed at Paducah, where he rendered effective service in forwarding supplies and reinforcements. Here, also, he organized the 5th division of the Army of the Tennessee from raw troops who had never been under fire, and with these he held the key point of Pittsburg landing and "saved the fortunes of the day" on April 6, and contributed to the glorious victory of the 7th, although severely wounded in the hand on the first day. On the second, he had three horses shot under him, but mounting a fourth he remained on the field, and it was the testimony of Gen. Grant, in recommending his promotion, that "to his individual efforts I am indebted for the success of that battle." On May 1 he was commissioned major-general of volunteers and on July 1 was put in charge of the Department of Memphis, which he at once proceeded to organize, restoring the civil authorities, causing a revival of business, and sternly repressing guerrilla warfare. In October he concerted with Gen. Grant at Columbus, Ky., the details of the ensuing campaign, in which Pemberton's force, 40,000 strong was dislodged from the line of the Tallahatchie and driven behind the Yalabusha in consequence of a combined movement by both generals from Jackson and Memphis, while 5,000 cavalry under Washburne threatened his communications in the rear. Falling back to Milliken's bend, Sherman resigned his command to Gen. McClernand, but shortly afterward suggested and led the attack on Fort Hindman with its garrison of 5,000 men by which the control of Arkansas river was gained, the key to the military possession of the state, with the loss of but 134 killed and 898 wounded, while of the enemy, 150 were killed and 4,791 taken prisoners. In the campaign of 1863 Sherman was in command of the expedition up Steele's bayou, abandoned on account of insuperable difficulties, though he dispersed troops sent to oppose the movement; and the demonstration against Haynes' bluff was also committed to him, though with some hesitation, by Gen. Grant, lest his reputation should suffer from report of another repulse. In the Vicksburg campaign of 109 days Gen. Sherman entitled himself, in the words of Gen. Grant, "to more credit than usually falls to the lot of one man to earn." The drawn battle of Chickamauga and the critical condition of Rosecrans at Chattanooga called next loudly for the troops resting at Vicksburg, and on Sept. 22 Sherman received orders to forward his divisions, with the exception of one which remained to guard the line of the Big Black. Meanwhile Gen. Grant, having been placed in command of the Division of the Mississippi, assigned the Department of the Tennessee to Sherman, who, on the receipt of telegraphic summons to "drop all work", and hurry eastward, pushed forward in advance of his men and reached Chattanooga on Nov. 15. It was proposed that he initiate the offensive, which he proceeded to do upon the arrival of his troops, Nov. 23. He pitched his tents along Missionary ridge and his sentinels were clearly visible, not a thousand yards away. The battle of Missionary ridge being won, the relief of Burnside on the Hiawassee was next to be contemplated and with weary troops who two weeks before had left camp with but two days' provisions and "stripped for the fight," ill supplied now and amid the privations of winter, Sherman turned to raise the siege of Knoxville. On Jan. 24, 1864, he returned to Memphis, and in preparation for the next campaign decided upon the "Meridian Raid." To the expedition of Gen. Banks up the Red river he next contributed 10,000 men for thirty days, but the force did not return to Vicksburg until more than two months had elapsed, too late to take part in the Atlanta campaign. On March 14 Gen. Grant was appointed lieutenant-general to command all the armies of the United States in the field, and Sherman succeeded to the Division of the Mississippi. On May 6 the movement toward Atlanta was started with the capture of the city as the desideratum, and such progress was made that on Aug. 12 the rank of major-general, U. S. A., was bestowed upon Gen. Sherman by the president, in anticipation of his success. After indefinite skirmishing for a month, following the fall of Atlanta, and during which the gallant defense of Allatoona pass was made by Gen. Corse with 1,944 men against a whole division of the enemy, the famous "march to the sea" was resolved upon, not alone as a means of supporting the troops, but, in Sherman's own words, "as a direct attack upon the rebel army at the rebel capital at Richmond, though a full thousand miles of hostile country intervened," and from Nov. 14 until Dec. 1O he was accordingly buried in the enemy's country, severed from all communication in the rear, and crossed the three rivers of Georgia, passing through her capital in his triumphal progress of 300 miles, during which his loss was but 567 men. On Dec. 25 he telegraphed to President Lincoln, "I beg to present you as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah with 150 heavy guns and plenty of ammunition, and also about 25,000 bales of cotton," in reply to which he received the assurance that to him alone the honor of his undertaking was due, as acquiescence only had been accorded him, and anxiety, if not fear, had been felt for his success. The surrender of Johnston was made at Durham station, N. C., on April 26, 1865, after a triumphal march of Sherman's army through the Carolinas, and on May 24, a year after it had started on its journey of 2,600 miles, the conquering host was reviewed at Washington, D. C. On June 27 Gen. Sherman was placed in command of the military division of the Mississippi which included the departments of Ohio, Missouri and Arkansas, and on July 25, 1866, he succeeded Gen. Grant as lieutenant-general of the army. On March 4, 1869, when Grant was inaugurated as president, Sherman became general of the army, and in 1871-72, on leave of absence, made a tour of Europe and the East. On Feb. 8, 1884 he was retired from active service, and on Feb. 14, 1891, expired at New York, the day following the demise of his friend and comrade in arms, Adm. David D. Porter. Source: The Union Army, vol. 8


1850 United States Federal Census
Name: William T Sherman
Age: 30 First Lt. U.S Artillary
Estimated birth year: abt 1820
Birth Place: Ohio
Gender: Male
Home in 1850(City,County,State): Jefferson, St Louis, Missouri (Jefferson Barrack

1880 United States Federal Census
Name: W. T. Sherman
Home in 1880: Washington, Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia
Age: 60
Estimated birth year: abt 1820
Birthplace: Ohio
Relation to head-of-household: Self (Head)
Spouse's name: Eleanor E.
Father's birthplace: Connecticut
Mother's birthplace: Connecticut
Neighbors:
Occupation: Genl. U. S. Army
Marital Status: Married
Race: White
Gender: Male

Household Members: Name Age
W. T. Sherman 60
Eleanor E. Sherman 55
Mary E. Sherman 27
Rachel E. Sherman 18
Phileum T. 13
Alex M. Thackara 31
Eleanor Thackara 20
Mary O'Brien 22
Ida Johnson 23
James Myers 21
Daniel Hughes 36 
SHERMAN, William Tecumseh (I542)
 
670 7 Jan 1993 Provo Family F2331
 
671 700-07-3638 WOOD, Joel Darrell (I4904)
 
672 700-16-4803 WOOD, Leonard Vernon (I4902)
 
673 780 Matmor Rd. Woodland, CA 95776
530-669-7029
cell 916-709-7029 
RENNING, Fern Ethelyn (I4912)
 
674 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4438)
 
675 8Ontario, Canada, Deaths, 1869-1938 and Deaths Overseas, 1939-1947 about Peter Abner Fick
Name: Peter Abner Fick
Death Date: 8 Sep 1914, Cerebral Appoplexy, Old age and Arterial Sclerosis
Death County or District: Langton, North Walsingtham, Norfolk
Age: 81
Gender: Male, farmer, married
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1833,
Birth Location: Port Royal, Ontario
Father: Peter B Fick
Mother: Fanny Smith
Informant: Archibald B Fick of Langton

abstract of Langton Baptist Church Cemetery, Langton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
Section 1 row G
5 Fick
Peter Abner Fick 1833-1914
Melissa his wife 1846-1929
Iva F Dau of A & M Fick
Adaline E wife of Abner Fick 1846-1967
Chas H son of A & A E Fick 1867-1875 
FICK, Peter Abner (I10431)
 
676 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4441)
 
677 9th marriage in the colony Family F2577
 
678 ?I"m not sure where this marriage came from not that it is accurate. Family F3179
 
679 a Bricklayer of Witham, England PAGE, Robert (I2024)
 
680 A lawyer in Napa in 1963. Dunlap, John (I9483)
 
681 A lawyer in Napa in 1963. Dunlap, Frank Leslie (I9482)
 
682 a lawyer in San Francisco in 1963 Dunlap, David Coombs (I9484)
 
683 a midwife. (Capay Valley 1846-1900, Ada Merhoff) LAMBERT, Cynthia (I6735)
 
684 a rancher on the Scott River in Siskiyou County in 1963 Dunlap, Gordon Strong (I9485)
 
685 A retired Alaska legislator living in El Dorado County, California in 1963. COOMBS, Nathan Henry (I9473)
 
686 a weaver COLLIS, John (I1866)
 
687 Abiel had 1 son and 3 daughters SHERMAN, Abiel (I1406)
 
688 Abiel moved to South Kingstown, R.I. SHERMAN, Abiel (I1116)
 
689 abstract of Langton Baptist Church Cemetery, Concession 11, lot 12, Township of North Walsingham, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada, ISBN 0-7779-0637-6 ( FHL) Matthews, Adeline E (I10432)
 
690 According to Betty Dougherty, John ran an Indian School in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan but wasn't a teacher.

After the death of his first wife, John married Rebecca Beaumont, the daughter of his first cousin, Emaline Dougherty Beaumont. They were married by G Grinwell, J.P. in Coe Twp., Isabella Co., Michigan. Witnesses were L.D. Kyes and R. Kyes.

Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867-1952
Name: John Dougherty
Gender: Male
Race: White
Birth Year: abt 1850
Birth Place: Indiana
Marriage Date: 22 Jun 1890
Marriage Place: Coe Tp, Isabella, Michigan, USA
Age: 40
Residence Place: Fremont Township
Father: Wm Dougherty
Mother: E Heckathorn
Spouse: Rebecca Beaumont
Spouse Gender: Female
Spouse Race: White
Spouse Age: 18
Spouse Birth Place: Michigan
Spouse Residence Place: Coe Township
Spouse Father: Thos Beaumont
Spouse Mother: E Dougherty
Record Number: 229
Film: 41
Film Description: 1890 Emmet - 1890 Menominee

1850 United States Federal Census
Name: John M Dougherty
Age: 1
Estimated birth year: abt 1849
Birth Place: Indiana
Gender: Male
Home in 1850(City,County,State): Washington, Randolph, Indiana

1870 United States Federal Census
Name: John M Dougherty
Age in 1870: 20
Birth Year: abt 1850
Birthplace: Indiana
Home in 1870: Fremont, Isabella, Michigan
Race: White
Gender: Male
Post Office: Winn
Household Members:
Name Age
John M Dougherty 20
Martha J Dougherty 18 born Indiana

1880 United States Federal Census
Name: John M L Dougherty
Home in 1880: Fremont, Isabella, Michigan
Age: 31
Estimated birth year: abt 1849
Birthplace: Indiana
Relation to head-of-household: Head
Spouse's name: Martha
Father's birthplace: OH
Mother's birthplace: PA
Occupation: Farmer
Marital Status: Married
Race: White
Gender: Male
Household Members: Name Age
John M L Dougherty 31
Martha Dougherty 28
Marvilla Dougherty 7
Eva E Dougherty 5
Charles L Dougherty 2
Alfred C Dougherty 13 brothers son work for board 
DOUGHERTY, John M F (I670)
 
691 According to Census records and death records, Ephraim was not born in England but was born in the United States in about 1800 (possibly Warren County, New York). He is listed as the father on my g grandmother, Martha M Smith's, marriage data. She was married at Clear Creek, Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada

questions?
1. Where was Ephraim born? There is an Asa Smith in !800 census in Thurman, Washington, Ny. Thurman is a town now in the western part of Warren County just north of Saratoga Springs. It lies entirely inside the Adirondack Park. Warrensburg is about 5 miles east of Thurman. (1800 Census Thurman, Washington, NY, Asa Smith - 1 - - 2 // 1 1 - - 2)
(1800 Census Bolton, Washington, NY, Asa Smith - - 2 - 1 // - 2 - - 1 and Asa Jr. - - 1 - // 1 2 - - 1 There is also a
Benjamin, Nathaniel, and David Smith on this page.)

Timeline for Ephriam Kellum Smith:
1800 Ephriam born in United States (possibly NY)
1831-32 Minister, London District, Ontario, Canada
1851 son, James, born
1853 19 Nov first wife, Anna dies, buried at Hillcrest Cemetery
1860 daughter, Martha Madora, born in Bayham, Ontario, Canada
1865-66 directory, Baptist minister, village of Straffordville,Township of Bayham, county of Elgin
1871 Census, Houghton, Ontario, Canada, Baptist minister
1880 Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 Record for Ephraim Smith
Middleton Township > 1880 > List of Persons entitled to Vote at Municipal Elections only -
# on roll 542, Ephraim Smith Lot 1 sept consignment or street-18, owner PO 1
1881 Census, Middleton, Norfolk North, Ontario, Canada, Baptist minister
1882 Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 Record for Ephraim Smith (Ancestry.com)
Middleton Township > 1882 > List of Persons entitled to Vote at Municipal Elections only -
# on roll 586, Ephraim Smith Lot 1 ept consignment or street-18, owner PO Glenmeyer.
1884 19 Sep Ephriam died in Haldimand, Ontario, Canada (Glenmeyer Baptist cemetery, Norfolk County, Walsingham North township)

Note: I think that Ephraim was married before he married Mary Steward. (see 1851 Census) The son David in the 1851 census may be the D Smith in the 1861 census.

Is this the right Ephraim?
Ephraim Smith
Ontario Marriages, 1800-1910
marriage: 01 Dec 1848 ,​ Gore District,​ Ontario
spouse: Mary Ann F. Lane
groom's name: Ephraim Smith
bride's name: Mary Ann F. Lane
marriage date: 01 Dec 1848
marriage place: , Gore District, Ontario
indexing project (batch) number: M58551-1
system origin: Ontario-ODM
source film number: 1030051


http://search.ancestry.com/
Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Ephram Smith
Name: Ephram Smith
Year: 1829
Age: 28
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1801
Place: New York, New York
Source Publication Code: 503.10.91
Primary Immigrant: Smith, Ephram
Annotation: Date and port of arrival. Gender, occupation, country of origin, name of ship, and final destination may also be provided. Extracted from Customs passenger lists which are among the holdings of the National Archives. When family relationships were unclear, editor arranged passengers and dependents in alphabetic sequence by given name.
Source Bibliography: BENTLEY, ELIZABETH P. Passenger Arrivals at the Port of New York, 1820-1829. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1999, pp. 655-1373 (Ju-Z).
Page: 1173
Questions?
1 would this have anything to do with Ephraim Smith, minister,
(London District Marriages?
Index of some names of Elgin County residents - Not a transcription and not a complete list
Researchers should refer to the following original source
The London District marriage Register is available at the Archives of Ontario, Record Group 80 27 1, Volume 16. On MS 248 Reel number 3 and MS 201 Reel number 3. The LDS also holds the microfilms on GS 1030053)
Marriages by Ephraim Smith, minister
24 Apr 1831 to 14 March 1832.

Canadian City and Area Directories, 1819-1906
Return to Search Results Ontario > Elgin County, Norfolk County > OL Fullers Elgin and Norfolk Counties Directory, 1865-1866 > Straffordville - Ephraim Smith, baptist minister
(Straffordville; A post village situated on the Ingersoll and Port Burwell Plank Road, at its junction with Talbot Street, in the Township of Bayham, and county of Elgin. Straffordville is situated in the midst of an excellent agricultural country, posesses a very fair local trade, and in its immediate vicinity are water privilegges capable of carrying on manufacturing to any extent. It is distant from St. Thomas, the County Town, 23 miles; Richmond, 4 miles; Vienna, 5 miles; Port Burwell, 8 miles; Aylmer, 11 miles; and Ingersoll, 24 miles. Its population is about 500.

Canadian Genealogy Index, 1600s-1900s about Ephraim Smith
Name: Ephraim Smith
Event: Living 1832
Province: Ontario
Place: London District
Comments: Minister.
Source: Darryl Bonk, Marriages of the London District 1800-1833, Ontario Genealogical Society - Oxford County Branch, 1980.
Volume/Page: 7
Note: The province and county are associated with the location of the record source and in some cases may not be the same as the place where the event occured.
Source Information:
Genealogical Research Library, Ontario, Canada. Canadian Genealogy Index, 1600s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: Compiled from various family history sources. See source information provided with each entry.
Description:
Containing more than two million records referencing individuals from all regions of Canada, this index helps locate an individual in a specific time and place. The vast majority of the records fall between 1600 and the mid-to-late 1900s, although some records date before the 1500s. Included are names, dates, places, and events about individuals gleaned from numerous types of sources such as city directories, marriage records, land records, and census records. The information found in this index can be used to locate your ancestor in the original record and gives you the title, volume/page number, and location of those records, which generally contain more information. Learn more...

Ephriam Kellum Smith was a Baptist minister for fifty years. He was 61 years old when his daughter Martha Madora Smith was born in 1860. He came from London, District Ontario, Canada. He died at age 83. He lived on a farm east of Glenmyer, Ontario, Canada when daughter Martha was married. (coming from Walsingham township)

Could this be Ephraim with 1st wife as the David may be the D in 1861 census
1851 Census of Canada East, Canada West, New Brunswick,
Name: Ephraim Smith (Is this our Ephraim? It may be with a first wife? )
Gender: Male
Age: 51
Estimated birth year: abt 1801
Birthplace: United States
Province: Canada West (Ontario)
DISTRICT: Oxford County
District Number: 27
Sub-District: Norwich
Sub-District Number: 262
Page: 148
Line: 35
Roll: C_11745
Schedule: A
Ephraim Smith, Carpenter, born United States, Baptist, age 51
Anna 48 bn US,
Thomas T 23 bn W Canada; cabinet maker
Lydia S 20 bn W Canada:
Wm H I 19 bn W Canada; laborer
Margett E 14 bn W Canada;
Anna I 11 bn W Canada;
David 9 bn W Canada)

From: Kate Ford
To: marlparker
Subject: Re: cemetery lookup
Date: Sat, Jul 21, 2012 9:35 am
Attachments: ONNRF15630-074-CanadaGenWeb-Cemetery-Ontario-Norfolk.jpg (121K)

Hi Marilyn, Glen Meyer is already done and online here: The Ephraim K. there is 1858 - 1932 You may save that photo from there if you want it. They are my pics so I can give you that permission. The Rev. Ephraim at Hillcrest has no stone of his own but is more likely to be the one you want. He is listed as husband of Anna who died 19 Nov 1853 aged 49 I have attached a pic of that stone. Let me know if you need anything else. Kate On 21/07/2012 11:41 AM, marlparker@aol.com wrote:
Hi Kate,
I found your name on Gebweb. It mentioned you might be willing to take a picture of a headstone at The Glenmeyer Baptist Cemetery, in Norfok County.
If this is so, my ancestor is Ephraim K Smith born about 1800. Following is the source for his death. Thank you for any help you can give me.
Marilyn Parker

1861 Census of Canada about E Smith
Name: E Smith
Gender: Male
Age: 60
Birth Year: 1801
Birthplace: United S
Marital Status: Married
Home in 1861: Bayham, Elgin, Canada West
Religion: Baptist
Household Members:
Name Age
E Smith 60 Minister
Mary Smith 40 born Upper Canada
D Smith 18 " " "
James Smith 11 " " "
E C Smith 4 " " "
Mary Smith 3 " " "

1871 Census of Canada about Ephraim Smith
Name: Ephraim Smith
Gender: Male
Age: 69
Birth Year: abt 1802
Birth Place: United States
Marital Status: Married
Religion: Baptist ( All children and wife are baptist)
Origin: English
Province: Ontario
District: Norfolk South
District Number: 11
Division: 01 pg 23 microfilm roll: C-9907
Subdistrict: Houghton
Subdistrict Number: a
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members:
Name Age
Ephraim Smith 69 Minister English Origin
Mary Smith 49 Scotch origin
James Smith 20 farmer
Ephraim Smith 13
Mary Smith 12
Martha Smith 10

1881 Census of Canada about Ephraim Smith
Name: Ephraim Smith
Gender: Male
Marital Status: Married
Age: 79
Birth Year: 1802
Birthplace: USA
Religion: Baptist minister
Nationality: English
Occupation: Farmer
Province: Ontario
District Number: 158
District: Norfolk North
Sub-District Number: D
Subdistrict: Middleton
Division: 2
Household Members:
Name Age
Ephraim Smith 79 farmer
Mary Smith 59
Ephraim C Smith 23 farmer

Ontario, Canada Deaths, 1869-1932
Name: Ephraim Smith
Death Date: 19 Sep 1884 result of old age, ill 3 wks.
Death Location: Haldimand Division of Rain(bow)
Age: 83
Gender: Male Baptist Minister
Estimated birth year: abt 1801
Birth Location: USA

findagrave
Rev Ephraim Smith
Birth: unknown, USA
Death: Sep. 19, 1884
Rainham Centre, Haldimand County, Ontario, Canada
Aged 83 yrs. Baptist minister.
Family links:
Spouse: Anna Otis Smith (1804 - 1853)*
Children: Maryette Smith Burkholder (1838 - 1925)*
Burial: Forestville, Forestville, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
Created by: Don McArthur
Record added: Dec 05, 2016
Find A Grave Memorial# 173530262
Cemetery records http://ocfa.islandnet.com/ocfa-search.php
2 Ephraims found
Smith, Ephraim K. Glenmeyer Baptist cemetery, Norfolk County, Walsingham North township, reference # NR-95-98
Smith, Ephraim, Rev. (h/o Anna) Hillcrest-Forestville cemetery, Norfolk County, Charlottsville Twp, ref # NR-98-136
Norfolk County Branch, OGS P.O. Box 145 Delhi, Ontario, Canada. N4B 2W9 
SMITH, Ephraim Kellum (I338)
 
692 Ada A Collis
Name: Ada A Collis
Gender: Female
Marriage Date: 3 Jun 1912
Marriage Place: Alameda, California, USA
Spouse: Amos Melcher
Spouse Gender: Male
Record Type: Index to Marriage Licenses and Certificates 
Family F198
 
693 Addie Nellie Wells Knetsch
Birth: Jul. 31, 1890
Lee County, Illinois, USA
Death: May 12, 1984
Paw Paw, Lee County, Illinois, USA

Daughter of Arthur S. Wells & Nellie Miller. Husband-Henry A. Knetsch (1883-1956), married 4 Oct. 1911 in Rockford,IL. Addie's birth cert. #11771. Her obituary: "Dixon Evening Telegraph", Dixon, Illinois, Monday, May 14, 1984. Survived by sons: Henry A., Jr., of Steward; Stanley, of DeKalb; Kermit of Duluth, Minn. & a dau. Mrs. Curtis (Geraldine) Burnett, of Paw Paw.

Family links:
Parents:
Arthur S. Wells (1864 - 1955)
Nellie E. Miller Wells (1866 - 1891)
Spouse: Henry A. Knetsch (1883 - 1956)
Burial: Wyoming Cemetery, Paw Paw, Lee County, Illinois, USA

Created by: Dorothy Alvis
Record added: Sep 14, 2001
Find A Grave Memorial# 5766962 
Wells, Addie Nellie (I11595)
 
694 address 706 Church St., Deep RIver, IA 52222 Carver, Lois (I8388)
 
695 address as of May 1992:
1111 Elderglen La
Harbor City, CA 90710
310-324-2267 
DYE, Thomas M. (I7707)
 
696 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I713)
 
697 Adney Sherman became a physician and principal of medical school in Southwest Michigan.
In 1860 census of Tallmadge Twp, Ottawa Co. Michigan, indicated Adney age 38, b 1823 in Canada, physician; Lydia age 25, b 1835 in OH, wife; Charles Nelson age 18, born 1842 in Canada; Harriet Nelson age 11, b 1849 in Ohio (p69p319/d578/f526)
(Could they be a relation to Adney's mother Hannah Nelson? maybe cousins?)

http://www.sherman-roots.com/sherman/pioneers/sp'ott.doc
1. Adna/Adney7 Sherman born 1823, perhaps in OH (mc/mp; SD p59). (Gen Refs: not in DPS, NES).
xxxx. Adna married Lydia Mary Winchell [born 1835] (SD p59, from Hobart Genealogy, by Edgar Hobart and Margaret Griffith, San Francisco CA, 1952).
1860. Census of Tallmadge Twp Ottawa Co indicated: Adna (uc) age 38, born 1823 in Canada, physician; Lydia age 25, born 1835 in OH, wife; Charles Nelson age 18, born 1842 in Canada; Harriet Nelson age 11, born 1849 in OH (p69p319/d578/f526). [census unclear]
1862/63. Adna of Lamont MI Ottawa Co entered service in the Civil War in the 7th Cavalry as Assistant Surgeon; commissioned 1862; resigned 1863 (MOW Part II p191; MSS v37p119; GRC; Michigan Medical History Vol 2, p841).
1870. Census of Tallmadge Twp Ottawa Co indicated: Adna age 46, physician; Lydia Sherman age 36; children Abbie, Nina (p273/d56/f54); Allen Stoddard born _____, farmer and Hannah Stoddard born _____ (p273/d56/f55).
188x. No record he belonged to the GAR (SA/GARx).
xxxx. No death or burial record (SA/GRCx). 2 Children: 
SHERMAN, Doctor Adney (I522)
 
698 adopted DOUGHERTY, William H (I9174)
 
699 After death of wife, Millie, Herman married Elvia Grigsby Cain, daughter of Captain John. LYONS, Herman (I567)
 
700 Age 3 in 1910 census then not listed with parents in 1920 census. May have died between 1910 and 1920. Stevens, Marion (I8732)
 

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