_Garcias I Sancho, King of NAVARRE _+ | (.... - 0970) _Sancho II Abarca, King of NAVARRE __|_Andregota GALINDEZ ________________ | (.... - 0994) m 0962 (.... - 0972) _Garcias II Sancho, King of NAVARRE _| | | | | _Gomez DIAS ________________________+ | | | | |_Urraca Fernanda of CASTILE _________|_Muniadona FERNANDEZ _______________ | (.... - 1007) m 0962 _Sancho III (The Great) Garcias of NAVARRE _| | (0980 - 1035) | | | _Vermudo NUNEZ _____________________ | | | (.... - 0954) | | _Fernando VERMUDEZ __________________|____________________________________ | | | | |_Ximena (Simena) of ASTURIAS ________| | | | | _Diego MUNOZ _______________________+ | | | | |_Elvira DIAZ ________________________|_Tigridia NUNEZ ____________________ | _Ferdinand I ("the Great") of LEóN _| | (1005 - 1065) m 1032 | | | _Fernan Gonsalez, Count of CASTILE _+ | | | (.... - 0970) | | _Garcia Fernandez, Count of CASTILE _|_Sancha of NAVARRE _________________ | | | (0938 - 0995) | | _Sancho Garcias, Count of CASTILE ___| | | | (.... - 1017) | | | | | _Raymond II of RIBAGORZA ___________+ | | | | | (.... - 0970) | | | |_Aña of RIBAGORZA __________________|_Garsenda of FEZENSAC ______________ | | | | |_Doña Muna Elvira of CASTILE ______________| | (0995 - 1066) | | | ____________________________________ | | | | | _____________________________________|____________________________________ | | | | |_Urraca SALVADORES __________________| | (.... - 1025) | | | ____________________________________ | | | | |_____________________________________|____________________________________ | | |--Sancho II of CASTILE | (.... - 1072) | _Ramiro II, King of LEóN __________+ | | (.... - 0951) | _Ordono III, King of LEóN __________|_Theresa of NAVARRE ________________ | | (.... - 0956) | _Bermudo II, King of LEóN __________| | | (.... - 0999) m 0991 | | | | _Pelayo GONZáLEZ __________________+ | | | | | | |_Guntroda PELAEZ ____________________|_Ermesinda GUTIéRREZ ______________ | | | _Alfonso V, King of LEóN __________________| | | (.... - 1028) m 1013 | | | | _Fernan Gonsalez, Count of CASTILE _+ | | | | (.... - 0970) | | | _Garcia Fernandez, Count of CASTILE _|_Sancha of NAVARRE _________________ | | | | (0938 - 0995) | | |_Elvira GARCES ______________________| | | (.... - 1017) m 0991 | | | | _Raymond II of RIBAGORZA ___________+ | | | | (.... - 0970) | | |_Aña of RIBAGORZA __________________|_Garsenda of FEZENSAC ______________ | | |_Sancha of LEóN ____________________| (1013 - 1067) m 1032 | | _Hermengildo GONZALEZ ______________+ | | | _Gonzalo MENENDEZ ___________________|_Munadona DIAZ _____________________ | | | _Menendo GONZALEZ ___________________| | | | | | | _Pelayo GONZáLEZ __________________+ | | | | | | |_Ilduara PELáEZ ____________________|_Ermesinda GUTIéRREZ ______________ | | |_Elvira MENENDEZ ___________________________| m 1013 | | ____________________________________ | | | _____________________________________|____________________________________ | | |_____________________________________| | | ____________________________________ | | |_____________________________________|____________________________________
[19372] As first-born son, Sancho II inherited the dynastic kingdom along with the "parias" from the Muslin Kingdom of Zaragoza. He tried to reasemble his father's territory by displacing his two brothers, but Sancho II was assassinated in 1072 and Alfonso returned from Toledo (whence he had fled) to reclaim all the territory, including that of his brother Garcia, setting himself up as Alfonso VI of Castilla and Leon. See http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sancho_II_de_Castilla.
_Maredudd ("Meredith") Ap TUDOR _____________+ | _Owen TUDOR ______________________________|_Margaret FYCHAN ____________________________ | (.... - 1461) m 1429 _Edmund TUDOR _______________| | (1430 - 1456) m 1453 | | | _Charles VI "Le Bien-Aimae", King of FRANCE _+ | | | (1368 - 1422) m 1385 | |_Katherine "The Fair" of VALOIS __________|_Isabelle WITTELSBACH _______________________ | (1401 - 1437) m 1429 (1389 - 1435) _Henry VII Tudor, King of ENGLAND _| | (1457 - 1509) m 1486 | | | _John BEAUFORT ______________________________+ | | | (1372 - 1410) m 1397 | | _John BEAUFORT ___________________________|_Margaret HOLLAND ___________________________ | | | (1403 - 1444) (1380 - 1439) | |_Margaret BEAUFORT __________| | (1443 - 1509) m 1453 | | | _John BEAUCHAMP _____________________________+ | | | (.... - 1412) | |_Margaret BEAUCHAMP ______________________|_Edith STOURTON _____________________________ | (.... - 1482) (.... - 1441) _Henry VIII Tudor, King of ENGLAND _| | (1491 - 1547) m 1533 | | | _Richard PLANTAGENET ________________________+ | | | (1375 - 1415) | | _Richard Plantagenet, K.G., Duke of YORK _|_Anne MORTIMER ______________________________ | | | (1411 - 1460) m 1438 (1390 - ....) | | _Edward IV, King of ENGLAND _| | | | (1442 - 1483) m 1464 | | | | | _Ralph NEVILLE ______________________________+ | | | | | (1364 - 1425) m 1396 | | | |_Cecily NEVILLE __________________________|_Joan BEAUFORT ______________________________ | | | (1415 - 1495) m 1438 (1379 - 1440) | |_Elizabeth PLANTAGENET ____________| | (1465 - 1503) m 1486 | | | _Richard WOODVILLE __________________________+ | | | (.... - 1441) | | _Richard Woodville, Earl RIVERS __________|_____________________________________________ | | | (1410 - 1469) | |_Elizabeth WOODVILLE ________| | (1437 - 1492) m 1464 | | | _Peter of Luxembourg, Count ST. POL _________+ | | | (1390 - 1433) m 1405 | |_Jacquetta of LUXEMBOURG _________________|_Marguerite DE BAUX _________________________ | (1416 - 1472) (1394 - 1469) | |--Elizabeth I, Queen of ENGLAND | (1533 - 1603) | _Geoffrey Boleyn of SALLE ___________________+ | | (.... - 1440) | _Geoffrey Boleyn, Lord Mayor of LONDON ___|_____________________________________________ | | (1406 - 1463) | _William BOLEYN _____________| | | (1451 - 1505) m 1485 | | | | _Thomas HOO _________________________________+ | | | | (.... - 1455) | | |_Anne HOO ________________________________|_Elizabeth WYCHINGHAM _______________________ | | (1425 - 1484) | _Thomas Boleyn, Earl of WILTSHIRE _| | | (1477 - 1539) | | | | _James BUTLER _______________________________+ | | | | (1392 - 1452) | | | _Thomas BUTLER ___________________________|_Joan BEAUCHAMP _____________________________ | | | | (.... - 1515) (.... - 1430) | | |_Margaret BUTLER ____________| | | (.... - 1537) m 1485 | | | | _Richard HANKEFORD __________________________ | | | | (1397 - 1431) | | |_Anne HANKEFORD __________________________|_Ann MONTACUTE ______________________________ | | (1428 - 1485) (.... - 1457) |_Anne BOLEYN _______________________| (.... - 1536) m 1533 | | _Robert (II) HOWARD _________________________+ | | (.... - 1437) | _John HOWARD _____________________________|_Margaret MOWBRAY ___________________________ | | (.... - 1485) (.... - 1459) | _Thomas HOWARD ______________| | | (1443 - 1524) m 1472 | | | | _____________________________________________ | | | | | | |__________________________________________|_____________________________________________ | | |_Elizabeth HOWARD _________________| (1480 - 1538) | | _____________________________________________ | | | _Frederick TILNEY ________________________|_____________________________________________ | | |_Elizabeth TILNEY ___________| (.... - 1497) m 1472 | | _Laurence CHENEY ____________________________+ | | (1396 - ....) m 1418 |_Elizabeth CHENEY ________________________|_Elizabeth COCKAYNE _________________________ (1422 - 1473) (1392 - ....)
She was the last of the Tudor rulers of England. Although her legitimacy
was questioned and never settled (because an act of Parliament [1536]
invalidated the marriage of her parents and enabled Henry to marry his
third wife, Jane Seymour), both Parliament and Henry named as heirs to
this throne his children Edward, later Edward VI; Mary, later Mary I; and
Elizabeth, in that order.
Elizabeth spent her childhood away from the court and received an
excellent classical education under such scholars as Roger Ascham, who
influenced her greatly. Henry's sixth wife, Catherine Parr, later became
fond of the young Elizabeth and brought her back to court. She remained in
Catherine's charge after Henry's death and took no part in the political
intrigues following the coronation of her brother as King Edward VI. When
Edward died, Elizabeth became a partisan of her sister Mary, refusing to
support the revolt led by the English soldier and conspirator Sir Thomas
Wyatt (1521?-54) against Mary, who became queen in 1553. Nevertheless,
Mary, a devout Roman Catholic, was made uneasy by the Protestantism of
Elizabeth and her potential menace as an heir to the throne. In 1554,
Elizabeth was imprisoned on the false charge of having been implicated in
Wyatt's rebellion. She was later released, having outwardly professed
Roman Catholicism, and regained Mary's favor.
At the death of Mary in 1558, Elizabeth became queen, beginning one of the
greatest reigns in English history. At the time of Elizabeth's accession,
England was torn by religious strife, was economically insecure, and was
involved in a disastrous war with France. To these problems Elizabeth
brought a thorough education, innate shrewdness, and a skill in diplomacy
that she had constantly exercised during the reigns of Edward and Mary,
when one mistake might have meant her death. Although she was excessively
vain and capricious, her monarchial duties were always her primary
concern. Her policies and her colorful personality made her extremely
popular with her subjects. Elizabeth's statecraft was due, to a great
extent, to her choice of able and wise advisers, most notably Sir Francis
Walsingham and William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley.
Religion was Elizabeth's initial problem as queen. She reverted to
Protestantism immediately after Mary's death, and her first Parliament
(1559) had a Protestant majority. Between 1559 and 1563, this Parliament
passed religious legislation that became the doctrinal basis of the Church
of England. In the Elizabethan Compromise (1559), the Church of England
became the established church, and throughout Elizabeth's reign Roman
Catholics and Puritans were persecuted.
Elizabeth's domination of the period to which her name became attached was
due in part to the exuberant national spirit that she inspired and that
characterized all England during the second half of the 16th century. She
restored popular confidence in the monarchy, and a wave of prosperity
swept every field of endeavor. With the religious question settled and the
war with France concluded by the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis (1559),
England was able to develop industrially and economically. Under
Elizabeth's direction, the government began to regulate commerce and
industry on a national scale. England grew to be a great maritime power
with the exploits of such mariners as Sir Francis Drake and Sir Martin
Frobisher. A new system of standard coinage was introduced in 1560 to
replace the silver coins that had been considerably debased during the
preceding three reigns. As a result, prices fell to normal levels and
confidence in English money was restored. Foreign trade, encouraged by the
government, became a great capitalistic enterprise. The Royal Exchange of
London was opened in 1566, and the company of merchants that later became
the English East India Company was chartered in 1600. Above all this
activity stood the figure of Elizabeth. In the eyes of her subjects,
Elizabeth was England.
From the beginning of her reign, Elizabeth's marital status was a
political concern because there was no English heir to the throne.
Parliament insistently petitioned her to marry, but she replied with the
statement that she intended to live and die a virgin, and she became known
as the Virgin Queen. Her statement did not prevent her from toying
constantly with the idea of marriage. She was besieged by royal suitors,
each of whom she favored when it was in her political interest to do so.
Her affections, however, were bestowed on a succession of favorites,
notably Robert Dudley, 1st earl of Leicester, Sir Walter Raleigh, and
Robert Devereux, 2d earl of Essex.
Elizabeth's most delicate political problem was that involving her Roman
Catholic cousin, Mary, queen of Scots. Mary sought refuge in England after
being defeated in battle by her half brother, James Stuart, earl of Moray
(1531?-70). Elizabeth immediately imprisoned Mary because the Catholic
monarchs of Europe and her own Catholic subjects considered Elizabeth
illegitimate. By their reasoning, Mary was the lawful queen of England.
Thus, to Elizabeth, Mary was the potential center of conspiracy. Mary was
kept captive for years, giving rise to many plots by English Catholics for
her release. When in 1586 Walsingham, then secretary of state, discovered
a plot to assassinate Elizabeth and place Mary on the throne of England,
Elizabeth reluctantly agreed to have Mary executed in 1587. The execution
had serious results. Philip II of Spain had, for years, been troubled by
the raids of English mariners on his colonial possessions. Because both
Mary and Philip were Catholic, her death provided him with an added
stimulus to prosecute the war with England that had been going on since
1585; he therefore sent a fleet to invade the country in 1588. The Spanish
Armada, however, suffered an inglorious defeat, and England eventually
took the place of Spain as the great colonizer of the New World and the
reigning power on the seas. Moreover, by inflicting such defeat on
Catholic Spain, England established Protestantism as a force in
international politics.
Elizabeth's popularity waned toward the end of her reign because of her
heavy expenditures and abuse of royal power. Moreover, her policies became
weaker, her later ministers being less able than Cecil or Walsingham. The
close of Elizabeth's reign was disturbed by a revolt in Ireland that was
led by Hugh O'Neill. The 2d earl of Essex, Elizabeth's favorite,
unsuccessfully led an army against the Irish. When he returned to England,
he led a revolt against the queen and was executed in 1601. Following his
death, Elizabeth was disconsolate. She spent the last years of her life
unhappy and alone, having outlived a glorious age, the beginning of the
history of what would become modern England.
In addition to being a time of political triumphs, the Elizabethan era was
notable as one of the greatest periods of English literature. Edmund
Spenser, Christopher Marlowe, and Shakespeare were only a few of the host
of writers who created their great works under Elizabeth. The dramatic
personality of Elizabeth became the subject of a voluminous literature.
[27944] AKA Margaret Fiennes. http://www.thepeerage.com/p1424.htm reports Margaret is daughter of Sir Hugh Fenne (d. 1476) who was Treasurer of the Household to King Henry VI and lived at Braintree, Co. Essex and at Soulton Burdeleys, Co. Norfolk, son of Sir Hugh Fenne.
__ | ________________________|__ | _____________________| | | | | __ | | | | |________________________|__ | _John GRAY __________| | (1810 - 1867) | | | __ | | | | | ________________________|__ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | __ | | | | |________________________|__ | _Thomas McKee GRAY _____| | (1838 - 1928) m 1870 | | | __ | | | | | ________________________|__ | | | | | _Solomon BOWER ______| | | | (1780 - 1867) | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |________________________|__ | | | | |_Sarah B. BOWER _____| | (1818 - 1887) | | | __ | | | | | _Johnnes FUSSELMAN _____|__ | | | | |_Madelena FUSSELMAN _| | (1793 - 1833) | | | __ | | | | |_Maria Barbara BILLMAN _|__ | | |--John W. GRAY | (1870 - 1954) | __ | | | ________________________|__ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |________________________|__ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | ________________________|__ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |________________________|__ | | |_Martha Elizabeth BEAR _| (1851 - 1940) m 1870 | | __ | | | ________________________|__ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |________________________|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | ________________________|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | |________________________|__
[47374] John and family are in the 5 June 1900 federal census in Saville Twp., Perry Co., PA. "The Perry County Times [New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania], 9 September 1954," p. 1: "Landisburg, Sept. 9. John W. Gray, 84, died Tuesday morning at his home following a long illness. He was a member of the Landisburg Reformed Church. ( The deceased is survived (by his wife, Mrs. Dora L. Gray; a daughter, Mrs. S. W. Eberly, of Trenton, N. J.; two sisters, Mrs. James Dum, of Elliottsburg, and Mrs. John Hartman, of Ickvester C. Shope and James T. Gray, of New Bloomfield; William G. Eberly, of Columbus, Ohio, and two great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 10:30 a. m. in the funeral home on West Main street, New Bloomfield, with the Rev. Paul Wright officiating, assisted by the Rev. Donald Geschwindt. Burial will be in New Bloomfield Cemetery."
_________________________________ | ___________________________|_________________________________ | _Daniel GRINDLE _____| | | | | _________________________________ | | | | |___________________________|_________________________________ | _John GRINDLE _______| | | | | _________________________________ | | | | | ___________________________|_________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _________________________________ | | | | |___________________________|_________________________________ | _John GRINDLE _______| | (.... - 1794) | | | _Thomas LEVETT __________________+ | | | (1594 - 1655) m 1613 | | _Thomas LEAVITT ___________|_Margaret LINDLEY _______________ | | | (1616 - 1696) | | _Herzon LEAVITT _____| | | | m 1667 | | | | | _John (Bland or) SMITH __________+ | | | | | (.... - 1668) | | | |_Isabell (Bland or) SMITH _|_Isabel (Isabel) (Esbell) DRAKE _ | | | (.... - 1699) (.... - 1639) | |_Sarah LEAVITT ______| | | | | _________________________________ | | | | | ___________________________|_________________________________ | | | | |_Martha TAYLOR ______| | m 1667 | | | _________________________________ | | | | |___________________________|_________________________________ | | |--John GRINDLE | | _________________________________ | | | ___________________________|_________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _________________________________ | | | | | | |___________________________|_________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _________________________________ | | | | | | | ___________________________|_________________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | _________________________________ | | | | | | |___________________________|_________________________________ | | |_Mary DOWNES ________| | | _________________________________ | | | ___________________________|_________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _________________________________ | | | | | | |___________________________|_________________________________ | | |_____________________| | | _________________________________ | | | ___________________________|_________________________________ | | |_____________________| | | _________________________________ | | |___________________________|_________________________________
[18605] John is not on papers of administration of his father. There is no record that he emigrated to the Bagaduce region of Hancock County, ME.
[18604]
[S289]
"The Grindle Family of Hancock County, Maine" (1978)
_____________________ | _____________________|_____________________ | _____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _Arthur Reuben HAGGERTY _| | (1868 - 1924) | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--Mabel Grace HAGGERTY | (1895 - 1979) | _Peter RITZMAN ______+ | | (1735 - 1796) m 1757 | _John RITZMAN _______|_Christina STUPP ____ | | (1772 - 1827) m 1796 | _Samuel RITZMAN _____| | | (1806 - 1888) | | | | _John Jacob STRAUSS _+ | | | | (1737 - 1780) m 1759 | | |_Catherine STRAUSS __|_Elizabeth BRECHT ___ | | (1778 - 1857) m 1796 (1738 - 1795) | _Samuel M. RITZMAN __| | | (1842 - 1884) | | | | _George Peter MOTZ __+ | | | | (1743 - 1806) | | | _John MOTZ __________|_Anna Mary HAINES ___ | | | | (1783 - 1847) (1755 - 1816) | | |_Mary MOTZ __________| | | (1810 - 1877) | | | | _Philip MEYER _______+ | | | | (1755 - 1831) m 1780 | | |_Barbara MEYER ______|_Anna Margaret MORR _ | | (1782 - 1847) (1759 - 1829) |_Cora Ellen RITZMAN _____| (1870 - 1907) | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Sarah J. TRASTER ___| (1842 - 1924) | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
[47744] "The Akron Beacon Journal, 14 December 1979": "Mabel G. Hoffmeyer, 89, of 610 Treeside Dr., died Dec. 11. She was born and lived her life in Akron. She was a life long member of Grace United Church of Christ. A member of Elva Chapter No. 304, Order of the Eastern Star, and Modern Woodmen of America. She was graduate of Central High, and Hammel Business College, and formerly worked for Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company. The widow of J. Howard Hoffmeyer. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Loren (Ruth) Florell, of Danville, Va.; sister, Mrs. Curtis (Edea) Cavileer, of Akron; eight grandchildren; and ten great-grandchildren; sons-in-law, William O. Sassaman, of Akron, Loren Florell, of Danville, Va.; and daughter-in-law, Mrs. Kenneth (Jane) Hoffmeyer, of Claremont, Calif."
[29110] This line is not verified, but is as presented by Daniel T. Rogers in his web site at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~dantrogers which offers further ancestry.
[56664] Geertrude is daughter of Arthur Henry Partridge (1877-1951) & Florence A. Bartlett (1872-1953).
_Henry (II) WYKE ____+ | _John (III) WYKE ____|_____________________ | _Leonard WYKE _______| | (.... - 1626) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Bridget WEST _______|_____________________ | _John (IV) WYKE _____| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _Leonard WEEKS ______| | (1633 - 1707) m 1666| | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--Mary Haines WEEKS | (1676 - 1740) | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _John REDMAN ________| | | (1615 - 1700) | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Mary REDMAN ________| (1649 - ....) m 1666| | _____________________ | | | _Edward KNIGHT ______|_____________________ | | (1560 - ....) m 1580 | _Robert KNIGHT ______| | | (1585 - 1676) m 1608| | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_Susan COLE _________|_____________________ | | (1563 - 1654) m 1580 |_Margaret KNIGHT ____| (.... - 1658) | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_Margaret GRIMLEY ___| (1587 - ....) m 1608| | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
[863] Find A Grave Memorial 48872941 attributes her to Leonard Weeks' second wife and states her full name is Mary Haines Weeks and provides her children.
_____________________ | __________________________|_____________________ | ______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |__________________________|_____________________ | _Parker Kelley WILCOXEN _| | (1935 - 1917) | | | _____________________ | | | | | __________________________|_____________________ | | | | |______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |__________________________|_____________________ | _John Nathan WILCOXEN _| | (1869 - 1953) m 1893 | | | _____________________ | | | | | __________________________|_____________________ | | | | | ______________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |__________________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Lucinda Ellen NICCUM ___| | (1844 - 1918) | | | _____________________ | | | | | __________________________|_____________________ | | | | |______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |__________________________|_____________________ | | |--Tilman Russell WILCOXEN | (1898 - 1986) | _____________________ | | | __________________________|_____________________ | | | _Samuel GIBSON _______| | | (1793 - 1867) m 1823 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |__________________________|_____________________ | | | _James GIBSON ___________| | | (1835 - 1922) m 1862 | | | | _Philip MEYER _______+ | | | | (1755 - 1831) m 1780 | | | _Philip (Moyer or) MEYER _|_Anna Margaret MORR _ | | | | (1780 - 1858) (1759 - 1829) | | |_Margaret Anna MEYER _| | | (1805 - 1858) m 1823 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_Elizabeth MOYER _________|_____________________ | | |_Katie Anna GIBSON ____| (1872 - 1919) m 1893 | | _____________________ | | | __________________________|_____________________ | | | ______________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |__________________________|_____________________ | | |_Elizabeth OGDEN ________| (1839 - 1900) m 1862 | | _____________________ | | | __________________________|_____________________ | | |______________________| | | _____________________ | | |__________________________|_____________________
[44899] Timan's last residence was Covington, Fountain Co., IN. Find A Grave memorial 23977895 offers his obituary: "Russell Wilcoxen, 86, a retired farmer, died at 7 PM Saturday, March 22, 1986, in Americana Health Center, Danville, IL; he had been in failing health. He was born Jan. 21, 1898, in Vermilion County, IL. He had lived in Highland Township for 46 years and formerly lived in the Union Corner area. Along with farming, Mr. Wilcoxen had worked for a barber supply company and also at the foundry in Danville. He retired in 1963. He was married June 24, 1925, to Marie Long, and she survives. Also surviving are three sons, Ralph Wilcoxen of Danville, IL, Raymond Wilcoxen of West Lafayette, and Richard Wilcoxen of Perrysville; a brother, Clyde Wilcoxen of Spencer; three sisters, Mabel Prather, Lillian Cundiff, both of rural Covington, and Irma Kleiner of Danville, IL; 10 grandchildren, and 14 great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by two sisters and four brothers."