_Asa BEAL ____________________+ | (1771 - 1848) m 1802 _Asa BEAL ___________|_Elizabeth ("Betsey") KELLEY _ | (1808 - ....) m 1831 (1781 - 1845) _Asa (III) BEAL ________| | (1835 - ....) m 1855 | | | ______________________________ | | | | |_Rebecca CHURCH _____|______________________________ | (1816 - 1890) m 1831 _William Horace BEAL _____| | (1863 - 1927) m 1886 | | | ______________________________ | | | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | | | |_Mary Elizabeth FRENCH _| | (1838 - 1904) m 1855 | | | ______________________________ | | | | |_____________________|______________________________ | _Ernest Rogers BEAL __| | (1887 - 1963) m 1907 | | | ______________________________ | | | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | | | | ________________________| | | | | | | | | ______________________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________ | | | | |_Ella Ann Estelle ROGERS _| | (1866 - 1959) m 1886 | | | ______________________________ | | | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | | | |________________________| | | | | ______________________________ | | | | |_____________________|______________________________ | | |--Linwood BEAL | (1911 - 1957) | ______________________________ | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | | ________________________| | | | | | | ______________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________ | | | __________________________| | | | | | | ______________________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | | | | | |________________________| | | | | | | ______________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________ | | |_Edith Emma WOODWARD _| (1891 - 1963) m 1907 | | ______________________________ | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | | ________________________| | | | | | | ______________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________ | | |__________________________| | | ______________________________ | | | _____________________|______________________________ | | |________________________| | | ______________________________ | | |_____________________|______________________________
[51552] Linwood served as a Lt. in the U. S. Coast Guard during World War II.
[56879] The unverified file GPDD-3N5 in familysearch.org offers: "When Hugh Davis Jr was born on 19 September 1917, in Veazie, Penobscot, Maine, United States, his father, Hugh Davis, was 25 and his mother, Catherine T Russell, was 19. He married Dorothy Blanche Foster on 8 March 1957, in Maine, United States. He lived in Bangor, Penobscot, Maine, United States in 1930. He died on 30 March 1994, in Penobscot, Maine, United States, at the age of 76, and was buried in Veazie, Penobscot, Maine, United States."
[2073] http://www.wishart.org/guiscard.html states: "The name Guiscard, or Wiscard, was a Norman epithet used to designate an adroit or cunning person. One theory is that it was conferred on a Danish soldier named Tancred Visk Hard, probably for distinguished service in Rollo's army in the 11th century. He took a fief at St. Lo and married twice into the French nobility, and thereafter he was known as Tancred de Hauteville La Guichard of St. Lo. Another theory is that he was born in Normandy about 955 and died about 1041. He married Fredistina de Normandie who was born about 960 in Normandy." http://historymedren.about.com/library/who/blwwtancred.htm: "Prince Tancred (known in French as Tancrède de Hauteville) was a Norman lord of Southern Italy who was among the first noblemen to join the Crusades in 1096. He saw considerable success on the campaign, and after the fall of Jerusalem he acquired the title Prince of Galilee. While his uncle Bohemond was imprisoned by Turks, Tancred served as regent of Antioch in his place, then controlled the region permanently when Bohemond returned to Europe." This site reports that Tancred d. 12 Dec 1112. For Tancred's genealogy, see http://www.fast.net.au/tancarville/libro%20d'Oro/hauteville.html and http://www.friesian.com/italia.htm and http://www.fact-index.com/t/ta/tancred_of_hauteville.html. http://www.danbyrnes.com.au/lostworlds/features/women.htm offers: "The De Hautevilles were presumably former Vikings. They sprang from almost nowhere in Norman-dominated France, and were remarkably successful at war in Southern Italy and the Middle East, and also with the dynastic marriage game. Their genealogy well indicates how the noble families of Europe intermarried across vast tracts of territory, from Poland to Spain, from Spain to the newly-opened "baronies" of the Middle East as occupied by European Christians. As to their origins in Normandy, it is thought that perhaps, the mother, Muriella (Unknown) of Drogo De Hauteville (-1035), Drogo who lodged descendants in England, was a relative of Robert I of Normandy." Also see "The Forge of Christendom: The End of Days and the Epic Rise of the West," Tom Holland (Little, Brown, 2008) and http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tancrède_de_Hauteville_(seigneur_du_Cotentin).