Carney & Wehofer Family
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Matches 11,651 to 11,700 of 12,685

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11651 William was Sgt of Arms for Henry VII. He had a large fortune which he left to daughter Joan according to "Hawkins Family Records" by J. Montgomery Seaver in 1929. AMADOS, William Carol (I11589)
 
11652 William was the son of John Speight and wife Elizabeth. The proof of this can be found in the will of William Powell of Isle of Wight Co, VA, Bk 4, p. 85. John Speight and brother William Speight were the executors of William Powell's will dated 13 Sep 1747, pr 12 Nov 1747. William Speight of Edgecombe Co, NC sold 75 acres in Isle of Wight Co, VA given to William Speight by the last will & testament of William Powell, dec'd. William Powell gave a deed of gift to his dau-in-lw Elizabeth Speight now the wife of John Speight 70 acres in Lower Parish of Isle of Wight during her natural life land on the western branch in Isle of Wight. Bk 4, p. 200 deeds, 1732. Deed BK 4, p. 230 to my loving kinsman John Speight and his wife Elizabeth 50 acres adj. Richard Hutchins & Jacob Powell (1733). William Speight & Abigail sold land in Edgecombe (Halifax deed Bk 8, p. 431 stating he was of Johnston Co, NC. Wake formed in 1771 from Johnston Co, NC.

On 18 November 1760, William Speight requested his brother John's patent of 300 acres be transferred to him since John had recently been killed (Colonial Records of North Carolina, Vol. 6, p. 341).

NOTES BY DORIS SCOTT: William Speight was probably born in Virginia as the Speights were in Nansemond County, Virginia, in the late 1600?s and early 1700?s before migrating to North Carolina through Perquimans and Chowan Counties and settling in Craven County in the section that became Johnston County in 1746 and then part of Wake County in 1770. Several land grants are recorded for William Speight in Craven County from 1751 to 1765. William Speight served as a captain in the Johnston County Militia in the French and Indian Wars in 1754.

SPEIGHT, William will R. 22 June 1774 p40
In the Name of GOD Amen this Second day of July in the Year of Man's Redemption One thousand Seven hundred Seventy and three I William Speight of Wake County in the Province of North Carolina planter, being Sick, and weak, in Body but of perfect mind and Memory do make and Ordain this my last Will and Testament in the following manner and form
Imprimis,
I lend unto Abigail my Well beloved Wife the use and profit of the Plantation whereon I live with the Land in that Tract thereunto Adjoining being by Estemation two hundred and forty Acres and two Negroe Men both Named Dick and One Negroe Woman Named Sarah, and two feather Beds and furnitures thereto belonging and Six Cows and their Calves two Steers and three Yearlings and three Mares One Rhoan One Bay & One Black in Coular and One black Horse or Gelding and all my Hogs raised at the said Plantation One Iron pot and One third part of my Pewter and One side Saddle, and my Plantation Tools, & Casks and Six Chairs and One Disk and One Small walnut Table and One pine Do and One linin Wheel and One Woollen Do and One washing Tubb and One water pail and One piggin, which use or lent of the above said things to my abovesaid Wife I desire may be and remain for and during her Widowhood or Natural Life and no longer.

Item, I give unto my Daughter Winifred Speight and to her heirs and assigns forever One fether bed and furniture and One Chest that was my Mothers and five Chairs and four Cows and their Calves, and two Steers and One Rhoan Coulared Horse or Gelding and One side Sadle and One third part of my Pewter, and as soon as the above lent of the Negroe Man Dick which was my Mothers is Expired to my said Wife either by the Marriage or Death of my said Wife for him to revert to my said Daughter Winifred as & in manner of the other things above given.

Item I give to my Daughter Patience Speight and to her Heirs and Assigns forever the Revertion of the other Negro Man Dick above lent to my said Wife after the Expiration of the said lent and One feather bed and furniture One Ovill Table and five Chairs and One black Walnut Chest and One third part of Pewter and four Cows and their Calves, and four two Year old Cattle-

Item I give unto my Son William Speight and to his Heirs and Assigns forever my Cooper Alembick or Still One Whip Saw and One Crosscutt Saw, and the Reversion of the Land and Plantation above lent to my said Wife after the Expiration of the said lent.

Item it is my further desire in Case any of my said Children theretofore or hereafter Named should depart this life without issue for the Reversion of their Estate to be Distributed in equal Degree among my Surviving Children or their Representatives Except in Case of the Death of Either of my Maiden Daughters above said Winifred or Patience should as afore said die without issue. that before such distribution the Survivor of the two may Inheritt the Negroe Man above given if left alive at the time of the Death of the other Sister and that the same two Maiden Daughters may Inherett an Equal Moiety of the Money That the Negro Woman Sarah above lent to my said Wife shall sell for at fair Sale after the lent to my Wife is Expired,

Item I give to Reuben Hunter Junr my Grandson and to his Heirs and Assigns forever the Survey of Land whereon William _______ Now lives and ten pounds proclamation Money to pay for the taking out or the Issuing a Deed for the Same at the Opening of the Propriators Land Office, and my Negroe Boy Named Pompey and four heifers three Years old each,and One Grey Horse and One New Small Gun, and in case He should depart this life without issue and under the Age of


SUMMARY: Wife Abigail: plantation wheron I now live; two negro men, both named Dick; one negro women named Sarah; household goods; livestock; plantation tools. Daughter Winifred SPEIGHT: furniture; livestock; negro Dick to come to her at remarriage or death of wife. Daughter Patience SPEIGHT: other negroDick at decease of wife; furniture; livestock. Son William SPEIGHT: home plantation after death of wife. Grandson Reuben HUNTER, Jr: land whereon William SIMMONS now lives; negro Pompey; livestock. If grandson should die without issue or before 21, revert to his brother Dempsey HUNTER. Daughter Mary MIATE: negro Sam. Son-in-law Silius GREEN to get right to land surveyed for William BROWN, Jr., and sold to Abner LEEGATT and by him sold to me. Rest equally divided among my 8 children: son William SPEIGHT, daughters Sarah HUNTER, Lydia LANE, Charity GREEN, Betty TURNER, Mary MIATE, Winifred SPEIGHT, Patience SPEIGHT. 2 July 1773. Executors: Wife Abigail and son William. Witnesses: William UTLEY, Isham (x) UTLEY, Jesse LANE. 
SPEIGHT, William (I29043)
 
11653 William Yonge, Gent. of Caynton in Edgmont, Tibberton, etc. co. Salop, son of John Yonge, of Caynton (of Magna Charta Surety descent), by his wife Maud Bull, of Staffordshire. He had been married previously to Anne Sneyd (died before 1579). William Yonge, Gent., died in December 1583. [Plantagenet Ancestry] YONGE, William Of Caynton, Gent (I12907)
 
11654 William's birth was registered twice, once in the name of Cain and once in the name of McPhie.
Baptism: 28 Sep 1864 
CAIN, William Ashfield (I21072)
 
11655 William, 5th Earl of Mar; Chamberlain to Alexander III King of Scots c1252; intermittently member of Council of Regency of Scotland in the 1250's and 1260's; also Chamberlain 1262-64 and Sheriff of Dunbartonshire 1264-66. [Burke's Peerage]

Click here for Photo of Kildrummy Castle (use browser back arrow to return) 
MAR, William 5Th Earl De Sir (I11738)
 
11656 William, of Great and Little Harrowden, High Sheriff of Northants 1436-37; married Maud, sister and coheir of Sir William Lucy, and died c 1460. [Burke's Peerage] VAUX, William Sheriff Of Northampton, Sir (I13507)
 
11657 William, surnamed Meschines, and likewise Brito, had Belvoir Castle and a considerable portion of his lands restored by King Henry II, in the 14th of which monarch's reign [1168] he d. and was s. by his son, by his 1st wife, Adeliza, William de Albini. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 160, Daubeney, Barons Daubeney, Earl of Bridgewater] ALBINI, William "Le Breton" De Lord Of Belvoir (I17873)
 
11658 William, took surname Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, so created 8 Sep 1468, as also earlier 26 July 1461 Baron Herbert/Herberd by writ, KG (1461/2); knighted 1449, served Hundred Years War (captured by French 1450 at Formigny), Yorkist during War of the Roses, Sheriff of Glamorgan and Morgannoc and Constable of Usk Castle 1459, MP Herefs 1460-61, Chief Justice and Chamberlain of South Wales 1461, granted 3 Feb 1461/2 castle, town and lordship of Pembroke, with other castles, following surrender of Pembroke Castle to him by Lancastrians five months previously, Chief Justice of North Wales 1467; married c1455 Anne (living 1486), daughter of Sir Walter Devereux, and was beheaded 27 July 1469 following his capture at the Battle of Edgcot, near Banbury, Oxon, one or three days earlier; The 1st Earl of Pembroke of the 1468 creation also had two or more illegitimate sons; one of them, by Mawd, daughter of Adam (Turberville) ap William ap Howell Graunt. [Burke's Peerage]

-----------------------------------------

When the Lancastrian insurrection [War of Roses] broke out in 1469, Edward IV commissioned the Sir William Herbert, Knight, Earl of Pembroke, and his brother, Sir Richard Herbert, Knight of Coldbrook, to command an army of 18,000 Welshmen against the rebels. In July of 1469, the army was defeated at the Battle of Edgecote. The Herberts were captured by Richard, earl of Warwick and beheaded the next day in Northamptonshire. They were buried in the priory chapel on July 27, 1469, beneath the arch which separates the Herbert Chapel & the choir in St. Mary's Priory Church.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------
Copied from Herbert, George biography, 88.1911 encyclopedia.org/H/HERBERT_GEORGE.htm:
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His sons William and Richard both partisans of the White Rose, took the surname of Herbert in or before 1461. Playing a part in English affairs remote fron the Welsh Marches, their lack of a surname may well hav inconvenienced them, and their choice of the name Herbert can only be explained by the suggestion that their long pedigree from Herbert the Chamberlain, absurdly represented as a bastard son of Henry I, must already have been discovered for them. Copies exist of an alleged commission issued by Edward IV to a committee of Welsh bards for the ascertaining of the true ancestry of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, whom "th chiefest men of skill in the province of South Wales declar to be the descendant of Herbert, a noble lord, natural son b King Henry the first", and it is recited that King Edward, after the creation of the earldom, commanded the Earl and Sir Richard his brother to "take their surnames after their first progenito Herbert fitz Roy and to forego the British order and Inanner". But this commission, whose date anticipates by some years the true date of the creation of the earldom, is the work of one of the many genealogical forgers who flourished under the Tudors.

Sir William Herbert, called by the Welsh Gwilim Ddu or Black William, was a baron in 1461 and a Knight of the Garter in the following year. With many manors and castles on the Marches he had the castle, town and lordship of Pembroke, and after the attainder of Jasper Tudor in 1468 was created Earl of Pembroke. When in July 1469 he was taken by Sir John Conyers and the northern Lancastrians on Hedgecote, he was beheaded along with his brother Sir Richard Herbert of Coldbrook.

The second Earl while still a minor exchanged at the king?s desire in 1479 his Earldom of Pembroke for that of Huntingdon. In 1484 this son of one whom Hall not unjustly describes as born "a mean gentleman" contracted to marry Katharine the daughter of King Richard III, but her death annulled the contract and the Earl married Mary, daughter of the Earl Rivers, by whom he had a daughter Elizabeth, whose descendants, the Somersets, lived in the Herbert?s castle of Raglan until the cannon of the parliament broke it in ruins. With the second Earl?s death in 1491 the first Herbert Earldom became extinct. No claim being set up among the other descendants of the first Earl, it may be taken that their lines were illegitimate. One of the chief difficulties which beset the genealogist of the Herberts lies in their Cambrian disregard of the marriage tie, bastards and legitimate issue growing up, it would seem, side by side in their patriarchal households. Thus the ancestor of the present Earls of Pembroke and Carnarvon and of the Herbert who was created marquess of Powis was a natural son of the first Earl, one Richard Herbert, whom the restored inscription on his tomb at Abergavenny incorrectly describes as a knight. He was constable and porter of Abergavenny Castle, and his son William, "a mad fighting fellow" in his youth, married a sister of Catherine Parr and thus in 1543 became nearly allied to the king, who made him one of the executors of his will. The Earldom of Pembroke was revived for him in 1551. It is worthy of note that?all traces of illegitimacy have long since been removed from the arms of the noble descendants of Richard Herbert.

-------------------------

on the history of the Earldom of Huntingdon:

Eight years later William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, gave up his existing Earldom to the Crown and was made in compensation Earl of Huntingdon. So even at this late date a peerage title could be treated as something which one could simply resign. [Burke's Peerage, p. 1474] 
HERBERT, William Kg, 1St Earl Of Pembroke (I5052)
 
11659 Willliam was the oldest of 11 children. He was in the Civil War as a Confederate cavalry soldier, and was one of Morgan's Raiders. He was captured on the Ohio River and was a prisoner of war at Camp Morton, near Indianapolis, and then sent on to Camp Douglass on the south side of Chicago. Amanda bore him three sons, with descendants from the two elder boys and the youngest son was alive through 1880, where further info on him cannot be found yet. Amanda died in 1864, six months before her husband was paroled by the Yankees, leaving her three sons as wards of her father-in-law. Her husband remarried five years after her death, but he had no other children. (Info from Linda Chesser of Indiana) READ, William Benjamin (I14022)
 
11660 Wiltshire, England FITZHUBERT, Matilda "Maud" (I3776)
 
11661 Windsor Vital Records:
Benjamin Eno and ye Widow Jerusha Pinney were married January 1741/2{no day given}
Names of the members of the Church of Christ in Union, Connecticut,who were admitted during the pastorate of Rev. Ezra HORTON: 24 Jan1768 - Widow Jerusha ENOS 
GRISWOLD, Jerusha (I28083)
 
11662 Windsor, CT PINNEY, Nathaniel (I6321)
 
11663 Windsor, CT PINNEY, Nathaniel (I6321)
 
11664 Windsor, CT PINNEY, Mary (I6351)
 
11665 Windsor, CT PINNEY, Sarah (I6352)
 
11666 Windsor, CT PINNEY, John (I6353)
 
11667 Windsor, CT PINNEY, Isaac (I6355)
 
11668 Windsor, Hartford, CT GILLETT, Ruth (I6299)
 
11669 WINEFRED (SPEIGHT) JONES
6 May 1840
REC 24-493, File 727
Clerk of the Superior Court
Wake County, North Carolina

In the name of God, Amen, I Winefred Jones of the State of North Carolina & County of Wake Plantay (?) being poorly in body but of a sound and disposing memory & mind do make and ordain this last Will and Testament at the same time utterly revoking all others or former wills made by me declaring this to be my last Will and Testament in manner & form as follows:
Viz:
First I give to Dellilah Laseter or the serving (sic) [surviving] heirs of her body fifty cents.

2nd I give to Mary Utley (Daughter of Allen Utley) one brindled cow and calf in payment for waiting on me, while in low state of health.

Thirdly, I give and bequeath to the rest of my children or their heirs an equal Share of the remainder of my property after paying my Funeral expenses and all my just debts, that is to say I wish my property to be sold on a credit of twelve months, and the money arising from the sale thereof with what money I have coming to me, and what I have in hand at my decease to be equally divided between the rest of my children though some of them be dead, I wish their heirs to have what would be a living ones part. I here name my childrens names the Dead as well as the Living, that is to say
Abigail, Rebecca, Laban, Alvin, Josiah, Delpha, Bethany, Chrischany, Mary, Zilpha and Charity. At the same time I do appoint William Betts, Augustin Turner and Augustin Jones executors to this my last [Will] and Testament. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this Sixth day of May in the year of our Lord one Thousand eight hundred and forty.
her
Signed seald in presence of us. Winefred X Jones (Seal)
Alsey Holland. Barnabas Jones mark

May Term 1841. The foregoing last Will and Testament of Winifred Jones was exhibited in open Court & offered for probate and the due execution thereof was proven by the Oath of Alsey Holland a subscribing [witness] thereto, therefore it is ordered to be Recorded.
A Williams C C.

NOTE: Word in brackets [ ] are inserted by transcriber as words apparently left out by clerk.



Parents: William SPEIGHT Sr. and Abigail
SPEIGHT, Winifred (I5379)
 
11670 Winston - b. about 1759, Bedford Co., VA; d. 1830, Mercer Co., KY. Served three years as a private from Albemarle Co., VA in the Revolution, and received a land warrant for 100 acres in KY. Winston is listed in the DAR Patriot Index. Married 1784 Eliza BUNCH (b. 1764; d. 1834). Children: David W. married Elizabeth WRIGHT (DAR line); William married Martha HART; and others. BUNCH, Winston (I4757)
 
11671 Withdrew to the Abbey of Chelles when her son Clotaire III came of age. ANGLIA, Balthild (Saint Bathildis) Of (I9530)
 
11672 Witnesses 8 SEP 1800 in James Oliphant & Daniel Rawlings
Note: m. 9-8-1800, Greene County, Tennessee. Bondsman were James Oliphant & Daniel Rawlings. (From: "Greene County, Tennessee Early Marriage Bonds, 1783-1820," compiled by Mrs. Z.R. Peterson - (1968). 
OLIPHANT, Elizabeth (Betsey) (I1803)
 
11673 Wledig - "The Imperator" GWYNEDD, Cunedda "Wledig" Ap Edern King Of (I6935)
 
11674 Wolf Clan TELLICO, Quatsy Of (I12193)
 
11675 Woolendraper LOOMIS, Joseph (I799)
 
11676 worked 2 jobs; Buick dealer / Texaco statn ESTABROOK, Robert Olin (I8506)
 
11677 Worked as a laborer at Besser Cement plant in Alpena.

NameFrederick William Kalish
SexMale
Age79
Death Date15 Nov 1938
Death PlaceAlpena, Alpena, Michigan, United States
Marital StatusWidowed
Father's NameJacob Kalish
Event TypeDeath
Birth Date27 Nov 1850
BirthplaceGermany
Birth Year (Estimated)1859

Michigan Deaths and Burials
Name: Frederick William Kalish
Birth Date: 27 Nov 1858
Birth Place: Germany
Death Date: 15 Nov 1938
Death Place: Alpena, Alpena, MI
Burial Date: 17 Nov 1938
Burial Place: Alpena, MI
Cemetery Name: Evergreen
Death Age: 79
Occupation: Laborer
Race: White
Marital Status: Widowed
Gender: Male
Street Address: 210 W. Lake
Residence: Rogers City, MI
Father Name: Jacob Kalish
Father Birth Place: Germany
Mother Birth Place: Germany
Spouse Name: Eva Kint Kalish
Informant Name: X
FHL Film Number: 2020778

1900 US Fed Census
NameFrederic Kaliseh
Age41
Birth DateNov 1858
BirthplaceGermany
Home in 1900Alpena, Alpena, Michigan
Sheet Number1
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation16
Family Number16
RaceWhite
GenderMale
Immigration Year1875
Relation to Head of HouseHead
Marital StatusMarried
Spouse's NameEva Kaliseh
Marriage Year1882
Years Married18
Father's BirthplaceGermany
Mother's BirthplaceGermany
Years in US25
NaturalizationPapers
OccupationFarmer
Months Not Employed0
Can ReadYes
Can WriteYes
Can Speak EnglishYes
House Owned or RentedOwn
Home Free or MortgagedF
Farm or HouseF
NeighboursView others on page
Household membersNameAge
Frederic Kaliseh41
Eva Kaliseh36
Albert Kaliseh17
Gustav Kaliseh15
Rudolph Kaliseh13
William Kaliseh6
Emma Kaliseh2 
KALISCH, Frederick "Fred" William (I594761841)
 
11678 Worked in cotton factory at age 11. BUNCH, Charlie (I112681272)
 
11679 Worked in Cotton Factory at age 15. BUNCH, William Albert (I112681270)
 
11680 Worked in oil pipelines as x-ray technician and inspector. Once married to Erma he gave up drinking and gambling, and although a little gruff anound the exterior, was a gentleman in caring for Erma as her condition worsened. WAGLEY, Johnnie Ray (I4447)
 
11681 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. PETERSON, John Melbourne (I2891)
 
11682 Works In Cotton Factory at age 13. BUNCH, Johny Issac (I112681271)
 
11683 World War I Draft registration Card 1917-1918 states:
Herman Kemnitz
Alpena County, Michigan
Birth Date 4 Jan 1875
Age: 48
Roll: 1675114

Name:Herman Kemnitz
Arrival Date:16 May 1891
Estimated birth year:abt 1876
Age:15
Gender:Male
Port of Departure:Cape, Haiti and Tonaives
Destination:United States of America
Place of Origin:Russia
Ethnicity/Race-/Nationality:Russian
Ship Name:Fulda

Found in 1930 US Fed Census under Kimnitz, aged 55.
Remarried to Ottile J. aged 42 - Year of Immigration 1891

Found in 1900 Census as Hermon Kimnetz age 25, with wife E. Ernestina aged 25, Elsia aged 2, and Hermon aged 1. Living in Wilson, Alpena, Michigan. Immigration year 1891. Years married - 3. Could not read or write. 
(KIMMITZ) KEMNITZ, Herman (I17779)
 
11684 World War I Draft Registration Cards, Camden Co., Missouri, Draft Card L
Order No. 980
Name: Green Berry Leap
Permanent Address: Linn Creek, Camden Co., Missouri
Age in Years: 36
Date of birth: Sept. 6, 1882
White
Natural Born
Farmer
Employers Name: Self
Place of Employment: Linn Creek, Camden Co., Missouri
Nearest Relative: Louisa Leap (wife)
Address: Linn Creek, Camden Co., Missouri
Signed: Green Berry Leap

Registrar's Report
Height: Medium
Build: Slender
Color of eyes: Brown
Color of hair: Brown
Name of Registrar: Ezra N. Knight
Sept., 12, 1918

1900 United States Federal Census, Osage, Camden Co., Missouri, District 9
June 9-11, 1900
Griffith, Joseph R., head, white, male, b: Dec. 1839, age 60, married, married 34 years, b: Tennessee, parents b: Tennessee, farmer, months not employed: 0, could not read & write, spoke English, owned farm free,
Griffith, Frances, wife, white, female, b: Jan. 1838, age 62, married, married 34 years, b: had 5 children, 4 children living, b: Virginia, parents b: Virginia, could not read & write, spoke English
Leap, Everett, grandson, white, male, b: Dec. 1883, age 16, single, b: Missouri, parents b: Missouri, farm laborer, could read & write, spoke English
Leap, Hattie E., granddaughter, white, female, b: Jan. 1888, age 12, single, b: Missouri, parents b: Missouri, attending school, could read & write, spoke English
Leap, Greenberry, grandson, white, male, b: Sept. 1883, age 16, single, b: Missouri, parents b: Missouri, farm laborer, could read & write, spoke English


1910 United States Federal Census, Osage, Camden Co., Missouri, District 33
May 2, 1910
Leap, Green B., Head, male, white, age 27, married once, married 5 years, b: Missouri, father b: Missouri, mother b: Illinois, spoke English, farmer, could read & write, rented, farm
Leap, Laura (ancestry.com) I read Louise, female, white, age 21, married once, married 5 years, had 2 children, 2 children living, b: Missouri, father b: Missouri, mother b: Texas, spoke English, could read & write
Leap, William E., son, male, white, age 4, single, b: Missouri
Leap, Seth F., son, male, white, age 2, single, b: Missouri
Griffith, Joseph R., step-father, male, white, age 60, married 2?, b: Tennessee, parents b: Tennessee, spoke English, could not read & write

1920 United States Federal Census, Osage, Camden Co., Missouri, District 37
January 19 & 20, 1920
Leap, Green B., head, rented, male, white, age 37, married, able to read & write, b: Missouri, parents b: Missouri, farming, general farming,
Leap, Louise, wife, female, white, age 30, married, could read & write, b: Missouri, father b: Missouri, mother b: Texas
Leap, William E., son, male, white, age 14, single, attending school, could read & write, b: Missouri
Leap, Seth, son, male, white, age 12, single, attending school, could read & write, b: Missouri
Leap, Leona, daughter, female, white, age 7, single, attending school, could read & write, b: Missouri
Leap, Ray, son, male, white, age 1, single, b: Missouri

1930 United States Federal Census, Osage, Camden Co., Missouri, District 8
April 8, 1930
Leap, Green B., head, home owned, value of home: 2000, live on farm, male, white, age 48, married, age at first marriage: 22, not attending school, can read & write, b: Missouri, father b: Missouri, mother b: Illinois, farmer, employed: yes, military: no
Leap, Lousa S., wife, female, white, age 40, married, age at first marriage: 15, not attending school, can read & write, b: Missouri, father b: Missouri, mother b: Texas
Leap, William E., son, male, white, age 24, single, not attending school, can read & write, Plumber, looks like Phumburg Co., worker, employed: yes, military: no
Leap, Roy E., (Ray) son, male, white, age 11, single, attending school, can read & write, b: Missouri
Leap, Debra F., daughter, female, white, age 8, single, attending school, b: Missouri
Leap, Henry H., son, male, white, age 6, single, attending school: no, b: Missouri
Leap, Leonard I, son, male, white, age 3 0/12, single, b: Missouri

This is a work of love of my family and my husband's family. I appreciate all of the help I have gotten over the years for everyone. I know there will be mistakes. If you see one, please notify me and I will correct it. 
LEAP, Green Berry (I21236)
 
11685 Worthington, Franklin Co, OH PINNEY, Levi (I6310)
 
11686 Wounded at Bloreheath SUTTON, Sir. John V Baron (I13871)
 
11687 Wright bible in Mich State Lib. says 11 Sep 1787 WRIGHT, Ira (I4802)
 
11688 Wright bible in Mich. State Lib. gives date of death as 11 Apr. WRIGHT, William Deacon (I4800)
 
11689 Wrote under the pseudonym of Thomas Matthews and wrote the first English Protestant translation of the Bible, Matthews Bible, for which he was burned at the stake in Smithfield, England in 1555, with his eleven children watching. Took Roman Catholic Orders 1526 after leaving Cambridge - before becoming involved in the Protestant Reformation. ROGERS, Rev. John (I170722)
 
11690 WWI Registration Certificate (in possession of Richard Coleman) it reads that Isaac received card number 3 in Needham, Precinct 6 County of Choctaw, State of Alabama. The card was issued on June 5, 1917.

The family lived in Melvin in Choctaw County prior to Washington County. Did public work - check into CCC or WPA as a logger?

Isaac moved the family to Washington County in 1925 he was a farmer, prior to that he worked as a Logger and a sawyer in the mills. 
CARNEY, Isaac Isaiah (I4381)
 
11691 WWII: dockbuilder in the Navy; Philippines ESTABROOK, William Huntington (I8501)
 
11692 LE VAVASOR, Mauger Kt. (I11033)
 
11693 NERONDES, Radegonde (I11040)
 
11694 WARIN OF METZ, Warine (I11043)
 
11695 EVA (I11044)
 
11696 X!Source: Gena Oelrich of Prodigy, FWTB62A. I do not believe that
it has been

documented that Daniel is the father of this family. I have asked
Gena to send
me whatever Pat Saupe has developed.

!Rita B. Denman of 1008 Blue Ridge Pl, Richardson, TX, 214-235-7808
notes
in her pedigree that she feels that Daniel is the son of John Ponder
of Sussex
Co, DE. 
PONDER, John? (I13964)
 
11697 XSGR-LB  (I4444)
 
11698 XSGR-NN CARNEY (I4442)
 
11699 XSGR-Q1 Family (F1242)
 
11700 XSGT-46 Family (F2209)
 

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