[23769] http://www.geneajourney.com/lorain1.html#judith states she is mother of Didrick II's son Simon of Lorraine, Duke of Lorraine.
_____________________ | _____________________|_____________________ | ___________________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | ______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |___________________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _George Clarke BLANCE _| | (1867 - 1957) m 1921 | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | ___________________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |___________________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--Elinor Clarke BLANCE | (1923 - 2015) | _Philip BUNKER ______+ | | | _Isaac L. BUNKER ____|_Elizabeth ALLEN ____ | | (1777 - 1854) m 1806 (.... - 1824) | _Gowen Wilson BUNKER ______| | | (1823 - 1884) | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_Jane Tanner LYMAN __|_____________________ | | (1784 - 1865) m 1806 | _Henry Cobb BUNKER ___| | | (1863 - 1951) m 1894 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_Martha Parrott ROSEBROOK _| | | (1830 - 1900) | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Beulah Holt BUNKER ___| (1897 - 1976) m 1921 | | _Isaac BUNKER _______+ | | (1740 - 1828) m 1760 | _Theodore BUNKER ____|_Esther IVES ________ | | (1783 - 1872) m 1811 (1740 - 1824) | _Daniel Springer BUNKER ___| | | (1825 - 1895) m 1857 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_Rhoda JOHNSON ______|_____________________ | | (1783 - 1872) m 1811 |_Mary Frances BUNKER _| (1869 - 1917) m 1894 | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_Sarah Ellen STROUT _______| (1834 - 1909) m 1857 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
"The Ellsworth American [Ellsworth, Maine], 2 March 2015":
South Gouldsboro - OBIT - VasseyElinor Clarke Blance Vassey, 92, died Feb. 24, 2015, at her home after a short period of declining health. She was born Feb. 4, 1923, to George Clarke and Beulah H. (Bunker) Blance in Bangor, the eldest of three children. She was predeceased by her husband of nearly 59 years, Emuel Edward 'Ed' Vassey Jr.
Elinor grew up in Winter Harbor, and attended Winter Harbor Grammar School, and graduated valedictorian from Winter Harbor High School in 1939. During high school, she worked part time at the J.M. Gerrish Drug Store, the Grindstone Neck swimming pool, and the Grindstone Inn. She attended Bates College for a year and a half, then moved back home to be bookkeeper for her father, who was superintendent of the Grindstone Neck summer colony. In 1942, she was an honor graduate from Beal Business College, in Bangor, completing her studies in less than one year. The owners of the college were so impressed with her academics and motivation to learn that they asked her to teach at Fort Myers Secretarial School (with no degree required), another one of their schools located in Fort Myers, Fla., when she was only 19 years old. She was the only teacher at the school and taught all of the subjects the school offered. On her own and away from home for the first time, she taught day school and night school, acted as janitor, kept the books, did some accounting on the side and loved it all. It was there she met her future husband, who was in the Army at the time. In 1943, she returned to Maine and worked at the State Hospital in Bangor, while waiting for Ed to return from his assignment to Europe during World War II. Upon Eds return, he and Elinor were married in Winter Harbor in September 1944. After moving a few times with Eds military assignments, Elinor stayed home to take care of their children.
Two boys and two girls later, Elinor finally earned her Bachelor of Science in Business Education at the University of Arizona, in Tucson, Ariz., graduating summa cum laude; third in her class of 1,208. Her education continued while rearing her children during numerous, and often long, absences of Ed, while he continued to serve his country. She attended the University of Maine at Orono from 1959 to 1960. She was regent of the Alpha Theta Chi Sorority at Beal; and a member of the National League of American Women, Washington, D.C.; and Pi Omega Pi and Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi at the University of Arizona.
Elinor accompanied Ed as he served nearly 30 years in the Air Force. The family lived in Mississippi, Texas, Washington, Arizona, Maine, Japan, California, North Carolina, Illinois and South Carolina. She said once that 'moving at the whim of the Air Force was not conducive to my job security, but it lent variety to my experience and kept me from getting stale.' While living in Japan, Elinor taught the familys endeared housekeeper to speak English and type, enabling her to obtain a job as a secretary on the Air Force base. Elinor found great joy in learning new things. She was always interested in what made things work or grow. She completed classes in typewriter repair, furniture upholstering, Japanese writing and conversational Japanese, pattern design and making, stenograph tape program for instructors, and various computer classes. She enjoyed spending time with her children and grandchildren, and turned each visit into a learning experience. She was a member of various parent-teacher associations and a Cub Scout den mother. She was a participating parent in all of her childrens education and extracurricular activities, volunteering in any capacity needed. She was a consummate caregiver, first while rearing her children, then for her parents and parents-in-law, then for Ed in his later years as his health declined. And more recently, she had been a great friend and comfort to her sister.
Throughout her life, Elinor taught seventh grade through business college level. She taught high school at the Department of Defense Schools at Johnson Air Base, Japan; as well as Victor Valley Junior High School in Victorville, Calif.; and Rice Business College in Charleston, S.C. She was certified to teach in five states. She was always eager to stay late at school or take the time to help anyone who was having trouble understanding the days lessons. Her only reasons for leaving any of her jobs were for school, marriage, children, or husbands transfer. She set the ultimate example to her children for school and job attendance.
Some of Elinors other accomplishments included president of Tri-State Goodwill Industries of Charleston, S.C.; member of South Carolina Federation on Aging; president of Small Woodland Owners Association of Maine (SWOAM); member of both the South Gouldsboro and Winter Harbor historical societies, and was often the go-to person for filling in the blanks on some historical events or family names or origins, where information was missing. She was invited by Governor Brennan of Maine to serve as the primary representative on the Agricultural Advisory Council to advise him on the wide variety of agricultural matters of Maine. Elinor graciously accepted and became part of the council to establish public policy and generate appropriate responses to major farm issues in the state.
In addition to her husband, Elinor is predeceased by her parents and sister, Charlene Ray. She leaves behind son, Bradford, and his wife, Rose (Edwards), of South Gouldsboro; son, Emuel III (Bud), and his wife, Ann (Merchant), of Winslow; daughter, Mary Frances, and her husband, William Willis, of Satellite Beach, Fla.; and daughter, Katherine Brown of Wilmington, N.C.; and brother, George C. Blance Jr., of Lowell, Mass. She also leaves behind 13 grandchildren, some of whom (up to five at a time) spent summers with her in their childhood; 25 great-grandchildren; and three great-great grandchildren, all of whom adored her and knew her as the smartest, most compassionate and loving person in their lives. Other survivors are sisters-in-law Carol (Carter) Vassey and Nancy (Thorkelson) Vassey of Raleigh, N.C., and numerous nephews and nieces. Elinor deeply enriched the lives of all of those who knew her, and she will be dearly missed.
________________________________ | _________________________|________________________________ | _____________________| | | | | ________________________________ | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | _____________________| | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | _________________________|________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | ________________________________ | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | _Richard FOLIOT _____| | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | _________________________|________________________________ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | _________________________|________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | ________________________________ | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | | |--Jordan (II) FOLIOT | | ________________________________ | | | _________________________|________________________________ | | | _Hugo BARDOLF _______| | | | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | | | _Hugh BARDOLF _______| | | | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | | | _________________________|________________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | | |_Beatrice BARDOLF ___| | | ________________________________ | | | _________________________|________________________________ | | | _Robert DE CONDET ___| | | | | | | ________________________________ | | | | | | |_________________________|________________________________ | | |_Isabel DE CONDET ___| | | _Ranulph II, Vicomte DE BAYEUX _+ | | | _Ranulph III LE MESCHIN _|_Margaret "MAUD" d'Avranches____ | | (.... - 1129) |_Adeliza MESCHINES __| (.... - 1128) | | _Turold of BUCKNALL ____________ | | |_Lucia MALET ____________|_Daughter MALET ________________
http://www.frh3.org.uk/content/month/fm-02-2009.html offers: "The inheritance of Richard Foliot of Grimston, Nottinghamshire, 1236:
"David Crook, director of the project and a leading expert on the history of medieval Nottinghamshire, examines the history of Grimston and the fortunes of its owners, the Foliots. He shows, through a number of entries to be found on the Fine Rolls, the closeness of the relationship of this knightly family to the Crown and its principal benefactor, ensuring the continued possession of the estate throughout the thirteenth century.
"1 Jordan Foliot was, in the reign of King John, the head of an established knightly family in southern Yorkshire, tenants of the Lacy lordship of Pontefract. The Foliots of Norton and Fenwick can be traced back to the reign of Henry I, and a rough pedigree has been constructed. Their principal residence was probably a fortified manor house in Fenwick, which was later once, in 1272, described as a castle. Jordan Foliot was the third of that name in the family, and his grandson became a fourth. Jordan was militarily active in the service of King John in the troubled later years of his reign after 1212. He may have accompanied the king on his military expedition to Poitou, which, after many delays, including opposition by northern barons against performing military service outside England, finally began early in 1214. It is unlikely that he joined his fellow Yorkshiremen in their protest against service, because John persuaded Jordans lord, John de Lacy, to accompany him on the campaign. There is no evidence to show which side Jordan Foliot took in the conflict between John and the barons after the failure of Magna Carta to bring peace in the summer of 1215, but it is most likely that he followed Lacy into rebellion and returned to his allegiance when Lacy did.
"2. Grimston came into the hands of the Foliot family as a result of the break-up of the estate of Robert Bardolf of Great Carlton, Lincolnshire, and Hoo, Kent, who died in 1225, when his lands in Kent, Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire were divided between his two nephews, Jordan Foliot and Ralph Paynel, and his niece Isolda de Gray. Jordan Foliots mother was one of the five sisters and co-heirs of Bardolf. In the division Grimston fell to Foliot, to add to his existing Yorkshire manors. The area of Nottinghamshire where Grimston lay was disafforested at just that date, following years of dispute between the kings advisors and the local knights. Jordan, who is unlikely to have been involved in any way in that process, was nevertheless one of the first to benefit, soon creating a park just to the north of his new manor house. The building was probably very similar to that at Fenwick on his Yorkshire estate, and since at least the early nineteenth century it has been known locally as Jordan Castle. Only two years after his arrival at Grimston, Jordan was privileged to entertain King Henry, now over 20 years old, at his home there.
"3. Between 1227 and 1229 Henry and his entourage stayed with the Foliots on three occasions while travelling to the north. It was uncommon for the monarch to stay with a family of relatively modest importance, with two manors in Yorkshire and one, only recently acquired, in Nottinghamshire. A more obvious place would have been nearby Laxton, the home of the hereditary keepers of Sherwood forest, and a place visited several times by his father during his reign. It is even more surprising in that Grimston was only about seven miles from the kings own houses at Clipstone in Sherwood, established by Henry II and frequently visited by King John. There is, however, a quite simple explanation for this. Henry did not stay at Clipstone because his chamber there had not been sufficiently repaired in preparation for a visit. In September 1228, when committing the manor of Clipstone to the custody of the sheriff of Nottinghamshire, he ordered Brian de Lisle to cause the money that he had received to repair the kings chamber there, and had not yet spent, to be delivered to the sheriff, who was himself to have the chamber repaired. It was then over five years since, in February 1223, Brian, then temporary keeper of the forest in the county, had been ordered to provide the sheriff with timber from Sherwood forest to repair the chamber, and then in May that year instructed to get it repaired himself. In fact it was rebuilt for 15 marks by Master Robert de Hotot, one of the kings carpenters, probably late that year or sometime during 1224, but evidently that work was only part of what had been needed. Henry, an infrequent traveller north of the Trent, did not visit Clipstone until the 1250s.
"4. The king first visited Grimston on 26 November 1227. He had been at Nottingham earlier on that day, and reached Blyth by 28 November, so he possibly spent two nights there. It seems likely that he stayed at Jordan Foliots residence. His second visit was on 4 January 1228, on his return from the north after spending Christmas at Beverley, and travelling via Blyth, where he had been on the previous day. He was accompanied by his chief minister, the justiciar Hubert de Burgh, earl of Kent, and six other courtiers. While at Grimston he issued four charters, all dated 4 January, and witnessed by those men. He may have spent several days there, because the next charter issued was dated 12 January, at Sempringham in Lincolnshire. While he was at Grimston, Henry granted Jordan Foliot a respite of an Exchequer demand concerning Jewish debts relating to his Yorkshire lands. This was not his only favour to the Foliot family. On his third and final visit, about 17-19 December 1229, by when he must have become well acquainted with Jordan Foliot, he granted him a buck and eight fallow does from Sherwood forest to stock his new park at Grimston. Foliot was probably not the earliest local landowner to have taken advantage of the disafforestation, because his Yorkshire lord, and also his Nottinghamshire neighbour at Kneesall, John de Lacy, constable of Chester, had already created one there by 1226.
"5. By 1229 Jordan Foliot was apparently firmly established at Grimston as well as continuing to be deeply involved in the affairs of his part of Yorkshire. He may have been the first frequently resident lord of Grimston, since the earlier holders of the manor had bigger interests elsewhere, and his clear interest in establishing the park suggests that he did not disregard his new Nottinghamshire estate in favour of Norton and Fenwick. He and his heirs remained very closely associated with Grimston for the rest of the thirteenth century. Jordan Foliot died in early 1236, his son and heir Richard not having yet reached his majority, and at that point King Henry granted a very significant favour to the heir to Grimston. On 5 March 1236, in return for a fine of 25 marks, he permitted Richard to take livery of his fathers lands before he came of age. This was a significant favour to the young man, who he may have seen during his visits to Grimston in the late 1220s. The agreement of the king is said in the fine roll entry to have been at the request of John de Lacy, since 1232 earl of Lincoln as well as constable of Chester, and other faithful men. It was a significant act of patronage by the earl, now in his forties, in favour of his young neighbour and tenant. How many years below the age of 21 Richard Foliot was in 1236 is unclear, but he could have been quite young because his eldest surviving son and eventual heir was not born until about 1249. It is conceivable that he was only ten or even slightly younger than that.
"6. The motives of the earl in making the request can only be surmised, but it was probably in his own interest for Richard Foliot to succeed to the estate immediately after his fathers death; indeed it seems likely that Lacy paid the fine himself. Perhaps he feared that the wardship of the young heir, which would normally fall to himself as the lord of the fee, would fall to the king if any of Jordan Foliots land was held in chief of the crown. That holding had mainly fallen to Isolda de Grey, who still held it for the fee of half a knight in 1242-43, but the fine roll entry indicates that a fifth of a fee at Hoo had been held by Jordan Foliot before his death. The fine overcame this difficulty in 1236; many years later the Hoo property again caused a problem over the wardship of another Foliot heir for a later earl of Lincoln, Henry de Lacy.
"7. Richard Foliot continued to enjoy his inheritance for 63 years, during which time he was a royal household knight in the 1250s, rebelled against the crown in 1261-63, becoming a baronial sheriff, before once again becoming a trusted supporter of the king in December 1263; he was one of those who went to Amiens on Henrys behalf to receive the Mise made there by Louis IX early in 1264. He benefited from the distribution of rebel lands after the battle of Evesham, and survived an episode in 1272 when his castle at Fenwick was confiscated because he had harboured outlaws. In 1289 he transferred the Nottinghamshire lands to his son and heir, the fourth Jordan Foliot, but received them back as a life tenant. He finally died in late March 1299, when Jordan succeeded him briefly before his own death five weeks later at the age of fifty. From that point the connection of Grimston with the male line of the Foliot family came to an end. Jordans widow Margery Foliot retained her life interest in the Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire estates, holding Norton and Fenwick from Henry de Lacy, earl of Lincoln, for the service of three knights fees, and Grimston, with other lands in Nottinghamshire, of the earl and his countess, Margaret, for one knights fee. In October 1299 the kings escheator was ordered to give up custody of Jordans lands because he had held nothing in chief of the king, but two years later this was reversed because an inspection of Chancery and Exchequer records showed that Jordan had held a fifth of a fee at Hoo in Kent in chief of the king, and so the wardship and marriage of the young heir Richard did belong to the crown. The tenants from Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Kent, as well as those from Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire, were to appear before the king in November 1301 to show any reason why the king should not have the wardship.The outcome of this is not known. When Margery herself eventually died in 1330 the Grimston estate, along with the Yorkshire manors and two in Norfolk, was divided between the husbands of her two grand-daughters.
[45528] Find A Grave memorial 73178374 states Elizabeth is daughter of "George and Catherine Decker Harpster."
[37031] This person is from the Ritter Family Tree in Ancestry.com in 2014 which states Gali m. 26 March 1660 in Switzerland Anna Thomen (b. ca. 1635) and that he is son of Junger Heffelfinger and Elizabeth Gysi.
_____________________ | _Richard HIGGINS ____|_____________________ | (1603 - 1675) _Benjamin HIGGINS ___| | (1640 - 1691) m 1661| | | _____________________ | | | | |_Lydia CHANDLER _____|_____________________ | (1615 - 1650) _Richard HIGGINS ____| | (1664 - 1732) | | | _John BANGS _________ | | | (.... - 1626) | | _Edward BANGS _______|_____________________ | | | (.... - 1677) | |_Lydia BANGS ________| | (.... - 1705) m 1661| | | _Edmund HOBART ______+ | | | (1573 - 1646) m 1600 | |_Rebecca HOBART _____|_Margaret DEWEY _____ | (1611 - 1679) (1574 - 1649) _Reuben HIGGINS _____| | (1708 - 1749) m 1733| | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Sarah HAMBLIN ______| | (1671 - 1743) | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--Hannah HIGGINS | (1737 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Hannah COLE ________| (1715 - 1750) m 1733| | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
_William Talvas Montgomery DESPENCER _ | (1099 - 1172) _Thurston LE DESPENCER _|______________________________________ | _Thomas LE DESPENCER _| | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | |________________________|______________________________________ | _Hugh LE DESPENCER __| | (.... - 1238) | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | ________________________|______________________________________ | | | | |______________________| | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | |________________________|______________________________________ | _Hugh LE DESPENCER __| | (1223 - 1265) | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | ________________________|______________________________________ | | | | | ______________________| | | | | | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | | | |________________________|______________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | ________________________|______________________________________ | | | | |______________________| | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | |________________________|______________________________________ | | |--Joan LE DESPENCER | | _Ralph (Lord) BASSET _________________+ | | (.... - 1120) | _Thomas BASSETT ________|_Alice DE BUCI _______________________ | | | _Alan BASSETT ________| | | (1155 - 1233) | | | | _Alan Reginald DE DUNSTANVILLE _______ | | | | | | |_Alice DE DUNSTANVILLE _|_Adeliza (Alicia) DE WARREN __________ | | (.... - 1157) | _Sir Philip BASSETT _| | | (.... - 1271) | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | | ________________________|______________________________________ | | | | | | |_Aline DE GRAY _______| | | (1159 - ....) | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | |________________________|______________________________________ | | |_Aline BASSET _______| | | _Godfrey III, Count of LOUVAIN _______+ | | (1142 - 1190) | _Godfrey DE LOUVAIN ____|_Imaine of LOOS ______________________ | | | _Matthew DE LOUVAIN __| | | | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | |_Alice DE HASTINGS _____|______________________________________ | | |_Hawise DE LOUVAIN __| | | ______________________________________ | | | ________________________|______________________________________ | | |______________________| | | ______________________________________ | | |________________________|______________________________________
_John MARTINDALE ____ | m 1621 _John MARTINDALE ____|_Jane RUMNAL ________ | (1620 - 1693) m 1666 (1598 - 1621) _John MARTINDALE ____| | (1676 - 1750) m 1706| | | _____________________ | | | | |_Ann TUCKER _________|_____________________ | (1646 - 1676) m 1666 _John MARTINDALE ____| | (1719 - 1826) | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Mary BRIDGEMAN _____| | (1687 - 1726) m 1706| | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _Thomas MARTINDALE __| | (1765 - 1852) m 1789| | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_Mary STRICKLAND ____| | (1728 - 1769) | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--William MARTINDALE | (1793 - 1852) | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Mary BOOTHE ________| (1771 - 1818) m 1789| | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | |_____________________| | | _____________________ | | |_____________________|_____________________
__ | __|__ | _____________________| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _____________________| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _Albin Adam MELUSKEY _| | (1881 - 1939) m 1913 | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | _____________________| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--Albin MELUSKEY | (1928 - 1992) | __ | | | __|__ | | | _Daniel CANTLIN _____| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | _Thomas CANTLIN _____| | | (1852 - 1923) m 1871| | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_Abbie Ann CANTLIN ___| (1886 - 1943) m 1913 | | __ | | | __|__ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_Anna M. HURLEY _____| (1852 - 1937) m 1871| | __ | | | __|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | |__|__
[37373] Albin m. in 1859 Bethea Anderson Smith (b. 18 Dec 1922 in Boston, MA, d. 28 July 2008 in Micco, Brevard Co., FL), daughter of John Marshall Smith (b. in Feb 1876 in MD), according to the unverified file in the Cassell Family Tree in Ancestry.com in 2014.
[56830] Norene is daughter of Albert Roderick and Ariel Bates. She graduated from the Waterville High School in 1949. She was predeceased by her siblings, Wallace and Marvel; and her nephew Timothy Wynne. She was survived by her parents; her husband William; her stepchildren, William III, Jonathan, Richard and Bonnie; her nephews, Kelly Dean Wynne, Michael Wynne and Bruce Roderick; and her children, Broadway and Bangor.
_Samuel WARDWELL _______+ | (1643 - 1692) m 1672 _Eliakim WARDWELL ___|_Sarah HOOPER __________ | (1687 - 1753) m 1711 (1650 - 1692) _Daniel WARDWELL __________________| | (1734 - 1803) m 1755 | | | _Samuel ( Sr.) BRAGDON _+ | | | (1647 - 1712) | |_Ruth BRAGDON _______|_Mary MOULTON __________ | (1691 - 1760) m 1711 (1652 - 1725) _Samuel WARDWELL ______| | (1774 - 1858) | | | ________________________ | | | | | _____________________|________________________ | | | | |_Sarah STAPLES ____________________| | m 1755 | | | ________________________ | | | | |_____________________|________________________ | _Eliakim WARDWELL ___| | (1802 - 1867) m 1830| | | _John BANKS ____________+ | | | (.... - 1725) m 1686 | | _Aaron BANKS ________|_Elizabeth TURBAT ______ | | | (.... - 1763) m 1726 (1667 - ....) | | _Aaron BANKS ______________________| | | | (1738 - 1823) m 1764 | | | | | _Joshua HAINES _________+ | | | | | (1678 - 1737) | | | |_Mary HAINES ________|_Sarah HALL ____________ | | | (1704 - 1763) m 1726 (1679 - ....) | |_Mary ("Polly") BANKS _| | (1772 - 1862) | | | _Jacob PERKINS _________+ | | | (1685 - 1770) m 1712 | | _John PERKINS _______|_Lydia STOVER __________ | | | (1712 - ....) m 1736 (.... - 1717) | |_Mary PERKINS _____________________| | (1743 - 1833) m 1764 | | | _William PEARCE ________ | | | (1680 - 1735) m 1702 | |_Elizabeth PEARCE ___|_Mary BEALE ____________ | (1717 - ....) m 1736 (.... - 1730) | |--Albert Brewer WARDWELL | (1853 - 1874) | _John GRINDLE __________+ | | | _John GRINDLE _______|_Sarah LEAVITT _________ | | (.... - 1794) | _Ichabod GRINDLE __________________| | | (.... - 1810) | | | | ________________________ | | | | | | |_Mary DOWNES ________|________________________ | | | _John B. GRINDLE ______| | | (1767 - 1841) m 1790 | | | | ________________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|________________________ | | | | | | |___________________________________| | | | | | | ________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|________________________ | | |_Joanna GRINDLE _____| (1812 - 1888) m 1830| | _Enoch HUTCHINS ________ | | (.... - 1698) m 1667 | _Jonathan HUTCHINS __|_Mary B. STEVENSON _____ | | (1684 - 1746) m 1720 (1651 - ....) | _Charles (The "Patriot") HUTCHINS _| | | (1742 - 1834) m 1764 | | | | _Joseph WEEKS __________+ | | | | (1670 - 1741) m 1696 | | |_Judith WEEKS _______|_Adah Edith BRIAR ______ | | (1696 - 1742) m 1720 (1666 - 1702) |_Joanna HUTCHINS ______| (1768 - 1820) m 1790 | | _Jacob PERKINS _________+ | | (1685 - 1770) m 1712 | _Joseph PERKINS _____|_Lydia STOVER __________ | | (1717 - ....) m 1739 (.... - 1717) |_Mary PERKINS _____________________| (1745 - 1797) m 1764 | | _Eliakim WARDWELL ______+ | | (1687 - 1753) m 1711 |_Abigail WARDWELL ___|_Ruth BRAGDON __________ (.... - 1760) m 1739 (1691 - 1760)
[47944] Albert, his spouse and their descendants are from the unverified file KCMQ-WDJ in 2020 in familysearch.org which reports "Albert drowned at sea on the night of August 22, 1874 off the banks of Newfoundland. Albert was on board the schooner Fleetwing which was run down by an English vessel. All aboard perished."