


BONNETT, IVEY
Genealogy
Notes
Matches 851 to 900 of 1,221
# | Notes | Linked to |
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851 | Living with his grandmother, Julia, in 1900 DeKalb Co. Census. | Cantrell, James Robert "Bob" (I5307)
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852 | Lloyd R Young BIRTH 3 Feb 1921 DEATH 24 Jun 1976 (aged 55) BURIAL Nashville National Cemetery Madison, Davidson County, Tennessee, USA PLOT KK 636 MEMORIAL ID 155032945 ? View Source MEMORIAL PHOTOS 1 FLOWERS 1 Family Members Parents Photo Lodis Melton Young 1898?1963 Photo Ascenith Mae Byars March 1900?1990 Spouse Photo Lois Wadene Hunt Schroeder 1921?2006 Half Siblings Photo Lyle Melton Young 1929?2006 Inscription S/1C US NAVY WORLD WAR II end of profile | Young, Lloyd Ray (I722)
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853 | located in Palm Beach County | Family F1
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854 | located in Palm Beach County | Family F1
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855 | Lodis Young, United States Census, 1940, "United States Census, 1940," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K77V-Z1P : accessed 15 Mar 2014), Lodis Young, Barren Fork Township, Ozark, Ozark, Missouri, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 77-1, sheet 3A, family 44, NARA digital publication of T627, roll 2135, abstracted by David A. Hennessee, info@classroomfurniture.com, retrieved or revisited, recorded & uploaded to the website, www.TheHennesseeFamily.com, Monday, August 13th, 2018 | Source (S44)
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856 | Lodis Young, United States Census, 1940, "United States Census, 1940," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K77V-Z1P : accessed 15 Mar 2014), Lodis Young, Barren Fork Township, Ozark, Ozark, Missouri, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 77-1, sheet 3A, family 44, NARA digital publication of T627, roll 2135, abstracted by David A. Hennessee, info@classroomfurniture.com, retrieved or revisited, recorded & uploaded to the website, www.TheHennesseeFamily.com, Monday, August 13th, 2018 | Source (S13010)
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857 | Loie Clontz Christie letter of March 4, 1973, written to Mary Lane. | Source (S12504)
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858 | Loie Clontz Christie letter of October 23, 1972 | Source (S12280)
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859 | Loie Clontz Christie letter to Mary Lane, dated March 4, 1973 | Source (S12500)
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860 | Lori Goughenour, goughenour@aol.com, April 26, 2004 | Source (S6774)
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861 | Lotis Melton Young, Cemetery Profile, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/124350935/lotis-melton-young, abstracted by David A. Hennessee, info@classroomfurniture.com, retrieved or revisited, recorded & uploaded to the website, http://www.TheHennesseeFamily.com, Wednesday, February 20th, 2019 | Source (S13700)
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862 | Louis W. Garrou,letter w/family records,February 18, 1993. | Source (S15337)
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863 | Lucile Byars Hennessee Lucile Byars Hennessee has gone to join her Lord and Savior on Easter Sunday. Born in 1918, Keltonburg, Tenn., she was the oldest daughter of six children to Perry Green Byars and Vernia Swindell. In 1939, she married Bert Hennessee and mothered two sons, David and Fred. Lucile loved God and His Word. She began her discipleship when she was saved and joined Magness Memorial Baptist Church, McMinnville, Tenn., in 1936. In 1939, she and Bert moved to Detroit where they were active in the Grosse Pointe Baptist Church. In 1957, they moved to Lake Park, Fla., and became charter members of the First Baptist Church where she taught Sunday School for 46 years. She leaves in mourning, her loving son, David and daughter-in-law, Sheila, two devoted sisters, Pearl Bess Fultz, Bessie Wright and many nephews, nieces, great-nephews and great-nieces. Funeral services were held Tuesday at Love-Cantrell & Cope Funeral Home in McMinnville and was officiating by Pastor Jerry Hennessee. She was laid to rest beside her beloved husband and son at Mt. View Cemetery on March 24. Southern Standard (McMinnville, Tenn.) March 26, 2008 Mother took her last breath at 7:12 pm, Easter Sunday, surrounded by 10 members of her family. Her burial was on the following Tuesday which broke sunny and cold...DAH end of comments | Byars, Robert Lucile "Lucile" (I2)
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864 | Lucile Byars Hennessee (1918-2008) | Personal Knowledge | Interviewed 10 Oct 1999 | Source (S5)
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865 | Lucille C Young BIRTH 5 Apr 1927 DEATH 2 Feb 2004 (aged 76) DeLand, Volusia County, Florida, USA BURIAL DeLand Memorial Gardens DeLand, Volusia County, Florida, USA MEMORIAL ID 79688377 ? View Source end of profile | Cook, Lucille (I8775)
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866 | Lucille Cook Young (1927-2002), Telephone Interview circa 1998 - her personal knowledge, 12 Jeanette Drive, Deland, FL 32720, 904.734.3434, revisited or retrieved, recorded & uploaded to the website, www.TheHennesseeFamily.com, Wednesday, November 1st, 2017, by David A. Hennessee, info@classroomfurniture.com | Source (S850)
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867 | Lynda Fitch identifies Samuel's wife as, Nancy Jane Godfrey. See attachment under his son, Adolphus...DAH | Godfrey, Nancy Jane "Tina" (I7527)
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868 | Ma & Pop's place, https://earth.google.com/web/@35.6883271,-85.76770642,287.66885376a,0d,60y,155.33958402h,85t,0r/data=CgAiGgoWMkxFZHZRM25NZWlldEprWmhMOHpLQRAC, abstracted by David A. Hennessee, info@classroomfurniture.com, retrieved or revisited, recorded & uploaded to the website, www.TheHennesseeFamily.com, Friday, July 13th, 2018 | Source (S12643)
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869 | Marie Byars Ponder | 26 Sep 2012 | Telephone Interview | slimpond@hotmail.com | Source (S45896)
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870 | Marie Byars Ponder | Telephone Interview | 2 Sep 2002 | 931.934.2354 | slimpond@blomand.net | 1690 Capshaw Road,Smithville,TN 37166 | Source (S4115)
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871 | Marie Millsaps (May 20, 1922 - November 16, 2012) Alice Marie Prince Byars Millsaps died November 16, 2012, at Boulevard Terrace Nursing Facility in Murfreesboro, TN. She was born May 20, 1922, in Sherwood, Tennessee. Her parents were Alice Mossie Taylor Prince and William Calvin Prince. She graduated from Decherd High School and was a secretary at Arnold Engineering Development Center in Tullahoma. She was preceded in death by her first husband, Fred Byars of McMinnville, a U.S. Navy Veteran, and her second husband of 47 years, James W. Millsaps of Jamestown, Tennessee, a U.S. Air Force Veteran. The Millsaps lived in Tullahoma following his retirement in 1975. Mrs. Millsaps traveled the world as a supportive military spouse and mother. She was much loved and will be missed by her daughter, Martha Millsaps, cousins, sisters-and brothers-in-law, nieces, nephews, and friends. A graveside service will be held in Rose Hill Memorial Gardens in Tullahoma on Monday at 11:00 AM. Reverend Michael Murphy will officiate. End of biography. | Prince, Alice Marie "Marie" (I707)
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872 | Mark Garris, Pedigree, 108 Roving Road SE Lot 17, Cartersville, GA 30120, 770.386.7544, markgarris@aol.com | Source (S33055)
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873 | Marriage Certificate Application | Source (S39768)
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874 | Marriage Records,North Carolina Archives,Raleigh,NC,provided by Norman Clontz. | Source (S39735)
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875 | Married and divorced three times... | Vasburg, Georgia (I13150)
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876 | Married but no issue. | Clonts, Robert "Bobby" (I11740)
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877 | Martha Millsaps | 9 May 2010 Telecon | mmillsap@frank.mtsu.edu | Source (S834)
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878 | Martha P. Fults,obituary,"Southern Standard",October 29,1980, abstracted by Margie Tucker. | Source (S25574)
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879 | Mary Lowman Fox, obituary, "The News Herald", Morganton,NC, Friday, May 27, 1994. Sent by Nancy C. Puckett. | Source (S13203)
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880 | Mary Vernell Standefer Harding, age 85, of McMinnville, TN, died Friday, March 30, 2012 at her home. She was preceded in death by husband, Edward Harding; parents, Carroll and Lavina Standefer; three brothers, Howard, Mitchell and Venable Standefer. She is survived by a step-son, Edward Byars Harding Jr., McMinnville; 13 nieces and nephews, Alberta, Dale, Richard, Rockie, Tim and David Standefer, Gracie Watson, Joy Caldwell, Betty Sharp, Patricia Wilson, Debbie Neal, Gina Cribbs and Retha Fay Swanson; several great-nieces and nephews and several great-great-nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Monday 2:00 p.m. CDT at the Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church with Rev. Howell Whited officiating. Burial will be in the Cagle-Mt. Pleasant Cemetery. She will lie-in-state Monday at the church from 1:00 p.m. CDT until funeral time | Standifer, Mary Vernell "Vernell" (I21328)
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881 | May have married James Hendrick...Thelma Clonts. | Clonts, Mary Ellen (I9682)
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882 | McMinnville, TN resident and Warren County, TN native Bessie Lee Byars Wright, age 88, was born February 8, 1925 and died July 12, 2013 at River Park Hospital following a short illness. Part-owner of Tot-To-Teen Shoppe and a member of the First Baptist Church, she was the daughter of the late Perry and Vernia Elvira "Ma Byars" Swindell Green. She was married to Robert Murlis Wright who preceded her in death November 2004. In addition to her husband and parents, she was preceded in death by two brothers, Fred and Pete Byars; and two sisters, Lucille Hennessee and Margie Tarasovich. She is survived by three children and their spouses, Janet Lynn Robbins of Smyrna, TN, Kenneth Reed and Lisa Wright of Mt. Juliet, TN and Debbie and Gary George of McMinnville; five grandchildren, Lori Warrick and husband David of Smyrna, TN, Paul Robbins of Smyrna, TN, Briena Harmening of Knoxville, TN, and Jessica Wright and Marcus Wright both of Mt. Juliet, TN; three great-grandchildren, Janie and Andy Warrick both of Smyrna, TN and Jazelle Featherston of Mt. Juliet, TN; sister, Pearl Bess Fultz of Rock Island, TN; and several nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews. Funeral service will be held at 2:00 p.m. Sunday, July 14, 2013 in High's Chapel with Rev. Bobby Howard and Bro. John May officiating. Burial will follow in Mt. View Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 5:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Saturday, and Sunday until the time of service at High's. Memorials may be made to Amedisys Hospice, First Baptist Church in McMinnville, or do something nice for someone you love. | Byars, Bessie Lee (I751)
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883 | Memories as a girl in Dibrell; "This is Dibrell as I remember it in the early 30's. The high school was a large rambling, frame building built around the gymnasium and the home economics room was built outside to the right of the main building...when you got in the 9th grade the girls took Home Mak' so it was fun to get out the big building. I remember the first thing we learned to make was mayonnaise and Francis Griffith said she could eat it like ice cream. Across the school was the telephone building, a family would take it for 2 years, interchange between Dibrell and McMinnville, our family had it in '28 and '29, Bessie was 4 years old and started to school. Other families that lived in Dibrell were; Dr. Fisher, Kelly Reeder, who owned the grocery store across from the school, the Braggs, Christians, Gutheries, Robinsons, Potters, Clarks, Dewey Slatton, a car mechanic, G.W.Hinkley, principal of the school (all the students were afraid of him), two churches: Church of Christ and Cumberland Presbyterian Church, some of these people were in the nursery business as this was becoming a great thing in Warren county in the 30's..." end of comments | Byars, Robert Lucile "Lucile" (I2)
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884 | Memories of Lucile Byars Hennessee (1918-2008); "Mama & Pop married January 4, 1915 Pete born June 4, 1916 at house on Uncle Claybourne Parrish's place Lucile born December 6, 1918 - Pa's house Keltonburg Fred born December 7, 1920 - Moores College Bessie born February 8, 1925 - Green Hill - Dibrell Pearl born February 8, 1928 - Dibrell Margie born March 21, 1930 - Green Hill Six children in 14 years. Pete was born at the rental house where Mama & Pop first lived, Pop worked for Uncle Claybourne. Moved back to Pa's before I was born, don't know if it was in this period but I remember Mama making us a playhouse in the woods with a stove made from rocks and cooking something on it... They moved to Bildad in a house on Cousin Elmas Potter's place, remember having the ear-ache and Mama covering me up on the foot of the bed, we were never allowed to sit on the bed in daytime. Then they moved to Moores College, Fred born there and Mama had a hard time and had to have a doctor, all the rest were born with a midwife. During that time Pop decided to get rich and took a load of whiskey to Nashville and was picked-up - took all they could scrape together to keep him out of jail - never again. Moved from there to an old house on Uncle Harrell's place called the "Alkhorn Place". Remember taking Fred to the cotton patch with Mama and while she picked cotton I was supposed to watch Fred, but ended up trying to help Mama. The field belonged to neighbors called, "Roller". They were friends to Pop and Mama and took them in the wagon to Keltonburg to a revival meeting at the Methodist Church. Mama and Pop were both baptised, although Pop's background was Primitive Baptist. I can't remember him ever going to any church but to Bildad and one time to Lebanon to an associational meeting. I remember Mama worrying about clothes for Pete, Fred and me and we lived at Pa's at this time. While living at the Alchorn House , Aunt Sarah made me a rag doll. I thought it was the most beautiful thing. She sent word by Pete to come. I went across the field by myself and she said go in and look on the organ and see what you find. Pete told her Mama was going to poison a (her) pig that stayed around the back door (and ate her garden) and Aunt Sarah believed him and I expect that is why they moved back to Pa's. Ten years later when we lived at Dibrell and one eve we were eating supper and Fred came running in the kitchen scared to death, (he) said there was a woman sitting in the living room in a rocking chair! It was Aunt Sarah - she never apologized. Just started coming to see us. Moved from the Alkhorn House to a house close to Mr. Floyd Harris. Pop worked at a sawmill. Pete was 6 and he walked to school at Moores College. Once he found a dollar. He went to the store close to the school and treated (himself) with a watermelon and bought me a box of crayons and told me not (to tell anyone). I don't know why he did not want Ma & Pop to know...for a dollar was a lot of money at that time. Pop was out of job so we moved back to Pa's. I started to school from there to Bluff Springs, walked two miles. The branch that ran by the roadside was frozen so we would skate on it. Next year I walked to Moores College, four miles...walk by Fred Titsworth's, cut through by Uncle Harrell...long walk. When we lived this time at Pa's, Mama walked three miles to Seven Springs, a summer resort, Aunt Harriet lived there with Mrs. White who ran the hotel. When I was 13, the house burned down and Aunt Harriet in it with a little boy. Mama ironed all day there (Ma told me she earned 10-cents an hour...DAH). She would bring home food from the kitchen. A negress cook make the best biscuits. Mama also cut apples. Pa had an apple orchard. She would dry them and sell them. I remember her saying Pa wanted part of the money and here she was cooking and keeping house and using the money to clothe the family... Moved from Pa's to little two-room house (the "Homeplace") on a branch between Green Hill and Dibrell. Bessie was born there. Pete and I went to Green Hill and stayed all night with the Davis', "Mon" and his wife, and helped Granny with the delivery. Mrs. Davis came and sent us home and said your mother has a surprise for you. I said to Pete as we walked home, "I bet it's a little old baby and let's don't look at it". He said, "O.K." but when we got home he went around by the bed. I would not look at her for four days. Granny said she never saw such a stubborn child. Women then stayed in bed 6 to 9 days. When they moved into that house, bedbugs were crawling out of the walls. Mama bought three boxes of "BeeBee Powder". Put it everywhere, closed up the house and left for the day. Came back in the evening, washed all the bed-clothes and set the bed legs in kerosene. Mama said she got rid of them...she was such a hard-worker. I went to school at Dibrell, also Pete. My first teacher was Pauline Gribble. We moved from there to Dibrell, to a house up the road for the school and across the road from Cousin Elmas Potter. Cold old house. Pop was fixing cars, "A-Models". Mama took in washing. Pearl was born here. While we lived here, Aunt Senia came to visit us. She had been living in Cincinnatti but had moved back to Nashville. She brought a victrola and taught me to "Charleston"...nearly drove Mama crazy. We moved from there to the switchboard across from the school, I think for two years. They got free rent and I don't know how much money. Mama was really tied down. I had to watch the kids. One day we climbed up in the loft of an old barn in the back of the house which was open in the front to put hay in and Pearl was just walking and she fell out of the door. We ran to pick her up. She was blue. We took her in to Mama and said she fell backwards off a log. It was a long time before we told her the truth. This is probably why Pearl has back trouble. Bessie started to school. I think she was only four and they let her come as we just lived across the road. I broke my right arm swinging from a tree. It had to be put in a cast. It was summer and I can still feel it itching now. We moved from there to Green Hill. Mr. Davis' store was by crossroads and we lived on the opposite side, up the road a little way, four rooms. Margie was born here. Mama took her to the store to weigh her and with the pillow she weighed 3-1/2 pounds. I had found the baby clothes in a suit box under the bed and was mad about it but she was the prettiest baby. Perry Green had to walk from near Pa's to school at Dibrell and he would stop and sometimes eat with us. He wanted to name her after his girl friend, Margie Griffith, and Iola Davis was about 16 and she added the "Sue". Granny Swindell died when Margie was six weeks old. Mama did not have decent clothes to wear and instead of going to town to buy a dress she went down to Mr. Davis and bought a house dress. I was 12 and was ashamed of the way she looked, but did not bother her. She was the least proud person I ever knew. Mama got a dresser and a "Jennie Lind" bed that belonged to Granny. I remember her using lye to strip the bed, we had never had any decent furniture, just beds and chairs. Mama was always begging Pop to take her to White County to visit her brothers, Uncle Will and Uncle Hatton. I don't think they liked Pop and in turn (he) didn't like them. I think it was in the Fall of that year Pop came in and said if you want to White County you had better get ready and she with 6 kids, for some reason Pete and I stayed home. A revival was going on at Dibrell Church of Christ and Bob Puss Cantrell lived just down below us and he got us a ride to go and before the sermon was over some said there is a house burning and we all rushed out and to see the smoke and flames, it was about two miles away. It was our house. The canning was all done for the winter and potatoes dug. What a bad thing to come back to. Mr. Payton Griffith took his wagon all around the community and took up whatever they would give, for everybody knew them. Mama got 24 new quilts, enough to start back housekeeping and enough money to buy a sewing machine. We moved back to Dibrell to same house where Pearl was born. It was in better shape as some work had been done on it. I think this was when Pop went to work for Mr. Sullivan at the monument company and later to sell farm machinery for not long after this we moved across the creek to his farm to plant on the shares, Pop layed out what was to be done on Sunday and left it to Mama to get it done, Pete and Fred could plow and I chopped out, he would go around on Sunday and survey and never once did he brag on anything that was done but he did not know how. I graduated from the eighth-grade there, Aunt Senia sent material for me a dress. Pete was always in trouble which was an embarrassment to me. I always loved to read and Mrs. Eula Fisher (West) lived with her in-laws Dr. Fisher near the school and thay had a bookcase full of books, I read all of them at least three times, one especially I remember was "Cudjoe's Cave", about colored and the civil war. When I got to go to McMinnville I would go to the office at Sullivan's and they always had the "Geographical Magazine", so exciting to read about Richard Halliburton and his travels. Pop would never give you money to buy anything. The last year I was in school he told Mrs. Sullivan to buy me a coat in Nashville and she bought a "Swagger Suit" skirt with a coat that did not go all the way to the bottom, well I threw a fit, Mrs. Sullivan did not know anything about poor people and he could not take it back & say I did't want it, poor Pop, he said I will never buy you anything else, it was the only thing I ever remember him buying, he wanted Mama to buy black stockings for me (ha-ha). I would pick blackberries in July for 10 cents a gallon and buy my school clothes. Pete had quit school and left home, road the rails to Detroit, Mama was so worried. I don't know how long he was gone but one evening late we looked across the field and saw someone coming. It was Pete and looked like a tramp. (He) could not find any work, this was in the 30's and times were hard, you did not dare leave any clothes out on the the lines at nite they would be stolen. I went to the Church of Christ at Dibrell as the only other was a Cumberland Presbyterian and it was closed so a group of people got together and got a preacher to come once a month so I started there, Fred was saved there and baptised in the creek across from the Pitt Place. I graduated in 1936,I played basketball, if you didn't there was nothing else so I was on the the team, not very good (guard) but had to slip to play as Pop didn't go for the suits and I was forbidden to wear them so when we had a game I would stay all nite with Miss Sheby West, my friend for years, an old maid music teacher that lived on one side of a house next to the school. Mama did her washing so I could take lessons and another good thing Pop did he traded a pig for big upright and Mama fussed everytime I practiced. Pop always had some kind of a car, he bought a victrola, one night he came home with a record by Uncle Dave Macon, everyone in bed and he had to play it, he was drinking. Miss Margie Womack was my Home Ec. Teacher and a relative and she bought material for my graduation dress and made it. When I started to take Home Ec. we were supposed to make a coverall to cook in, our first project and Mama cut up a sheet to a make me one. I was 17 in December and graduated in April of 1936." end of comments | Byars, Robert Lucile "Lucile" (I2)
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885 | Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute | Clonts, Letta Ann "Lettie" (I712)
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886 | Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute | Cantrell, Julia Lee (I702)
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887 | Mildred Faye Clonts, family records & personal knowledge, 2055 SW Kanner Highway, Stuart,FL 34997 | Source (S12590)
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888 | Mimi, adieu? Family and friends celebrated Sheila's life, 4-6 pm, this past Tuesday, June 7, 2016 at Bear Lakes Country Club. I chose the club as we were married there on March 28, 2004. Mid-way through the event I spoke a few words, cited a poem, and then Pastor Shaun Blakeley of Christ Fellowship, Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, gave a brief homily and benediction. The room was festooned with beautiful flowers and orchids sent by her friends and mourners. It was a large turn-out. Instead of the 25-30 people I expected, we had in fact, over 85 family and friends. Trudi found the poem, "She Is Gone!", by David Harkin. I recited it because his instructions would be Sheila's desire for us? "You can shed tears that she is gone or you can smile because she has lived. You can close your eyes and pray that she'll come back or you can open your eyes and see all she's left. Your heart can be empty because you can't see her or you can be full of the love you shared. You can turn your back on tomorrow and live yesterday or you can be happy for tomorrow because of yesterday. You can remember her and only that she's gone or you can cherish her memory and let it live on. You can remember her and only that she's gone or you can cherish her memory and let it live on. You can cry and close your mind, be empty and turn your back or you can do what she'd want: smile, open your eyes, love and go on." Family Attendees: Daughter Tracy Swiatek with partner, Peggy Daughter Trudi Edwards with husband, Chris, and their daughter, Whitney and son, Andrew Son Matthew Swiatek Brother John R. Mynatt, with Gail, his wife, Rhonda, his daughter, Johnnie, his son and Philip, Johnnie's son Nephew C.J. Dumas Husband David Hennessee Friends who signed the guest book (some of the signatures were illegible): Joe Marttirano (attended our wedding) Paul Johnston Candace Keen Bud Blount (attended our wedding) Carole Lee Jean & Wayne Meisenzahl (attended our wedding) Ann & Ernie Borgese (attended our wedding) Victor Carlucci Martha Johnson Patty Markic Dana Haverman Deb & Sissy Mary Lovely Laurie Lovely Chris Lovely Richard Frechette Lisa & Joe Arrigo Christiane & Joe Fox (attended our wedding) John & Donna Wilson Tammy Horner Pat Schmidt Bruce & Mrs. MacDonald Dick Mazzola Mauricio & Angela Prettel with their daughter, Isabella Michael Arconti Dana & Angie Quigley Shaun Blakeney Greg Martzoff Ted Strelec Gabriela Goldstein, our family doctor Merridith Gustafson (attended our wedding) Michael McDonald Geoff & Janice Thomas (attended our wedding) Geroge & Lila Cornell Daniel Newman Tina Rosenna Arthur & Barbara Malaussena Luiza Torres Kitty Mollenberg (attended our wedding) Joanne Ciccotti Linda DeFrehn Pat & Pixie Cary Pat Sheridan After the celebration, the family dined at Bellagio's in City Place, West Palm Beach, Florida for more reminiscences and a final good-bye? Nephew Johnnie was afraid that his 4-year old son Philip would disrupt the table with his youthful & playful antics and disturb the older members of the family. In retrospect, I now think that this toe-headed, animated, young boy was a perfect example of, ?Life is for the living?. This is my last missive. Sheila was my wife, my lover, my best friend and we truly were ordained as one. I cannot picture my future without her. Everything in my life and this house reminds me of her yet I do know that ?time heals all?. Hurry time, hurry? David end of commentary | Mynatt, Sheila Ann "Mimi" (I27517)
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889 | Monday, January 22, 1945: Left Lingayen. First stop Leyte, then to Guam I guess. | Byars, Fred Swindell (I706)
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890 | More about Warren County, Tennessee... http://bit.ly/PIsRbw | Hennessee, Bertha Aldon "Bert" (I1)
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891 | More discourse & misinformation: REF: Stephanie Royers of Ohio An immigrant from Wales, England. Took the oath of allegience at Christianburg CH in 1777 REF: Marjorie Faye Pace On 26 oc 1988 Thelma Lee CLONTS 146 Hillcrest Drive Orieda, FL 32765; gave permission for SCL FHL to microfilm her "The CLONTS Family". NOTE: ...CLONTZ, CLONTS and CLAUNCH are all and the same family.... three known brothers: John, George and Jeremiah emigrated in 1710 from the Palatine (now Germany) ... to Leyden, Holland....and thence to England as political refugees...Queen Anne had promised Palatines 40 acres of land once they had paid for their passage to the New World by supplying tar and other naval resources. They were left stranded when other avenues of support began to be used... at least Jeremiah made it to Ulster,Ireland and eventually to PA then to Lunenburg Co (now Mecklenburg Co) NC. Names were recorded there in Tax and Deed records as CLAUNCH, later CLONTS and CLONTZ as those in GA used. There is more and can be found on LDS#1320921, item #9. LDS# 1320921 item #9; You may go to any Family History Center and look on the Family History Library Catalog and enter your film number to discover at what centers the film is already available or if you need to order it in. I believe a portion of this information is accessiable on line at family search.org. When you have your hands on the film go to item #9 to find the desired portion. You will come closer to getting your questions answered to your satisfaction by reading the record for yourself. It is a private manuscript and has it's own rules. Source: "The Claunch Files A genealocial Collection Volume Two" by Alta Hillman Claunch. REF: Mike O'Hair http://genforum.genealogy.com/claunch/messages/15.html The CLAUNCH history from Johnson Co, TX is Family of Madison Love Claunch, Sr., call number R929.2, C572c, donated by Duval and Kay Edwards, Seattle in 1989. Data I have not in this book is as follows: Jeremiah CLONTZ b. 1715 Holland m. Sophie Erwin, b. IRL, in Ulster (Antrim?) IRL abt 1735, had Jeremiah CLONCH or CLONTS b. 1752/53 Virginia. Second Jeremiah d. abt 1797 Pulaski Co., KY, buried there, m. Jane (prob. McGuire, b. 1755/56 Virginia d. Sep 1841 Pulaski Co, KY, buried Flat Lick Church Cemetery, Shopville, Pulaski Co, KY, second marriage 1804 to Zachariah Adams) and had 1. Margaret (Peggy), 2. William, 3. Christopher, 4. Jeremiah, 5. Jane, 6. John. BURY ME AT DIXVILLE revised 1999, indludes chapters on Armstead PATTERSON; John DIVINE; William LEONARD; Samuel BUGG & Jeremiah CLAUNCH. Please e-mail me direct for info. REF: Mary Beth http://genforum.genealogy.com/clontz/messages/76.html HI, I descend from Mary Ellen Clontz b:Oct.1,1836 Mecklinburg,NC and died Jun.12,1910 in Paulding Co.GA She married Wellie C. Taylor who was born Apr.3,1842 Campbell Co.GA and died Jul.14,1869 Paulding Co.GA They had one daughter that I know of Sarah Elizabeth Taylor b:Dec.6,1867 Paulding Co.GA and d: Feb.13,1951 Douglas Co.GA she married William Irvin Dorris. I would like to know how you deduced that Jeremiah Clontz and Hans Micheal Glantz are one and the same. My info is that Jeremiah Clontz was born 1715 in Ulster,Ireland and married Sophia E. Erwin 1740 in Ulster,Ireland I have not seen one record of Jeremiah and a Margaret togather. Are you sure we are talking about the same families? I have Jeremiah and Sophia's children as: Jeremiah b:Feb.10,1756 d:Nov.30,1840 NC m:Anna Catherine Long 1782Mecklinburge, NC George b:May 6,1760 d: Oct.20, 1839 NC m: Chloe Cline Aug.28,1783 Buncombe,NC unknown b: about 1763 unknown b:about 1765 Violet b: 1769 NC d: OH m:Thomas Haughey 1788 VA Christian b: 1770 NC d: m: Margaret Neal Aug.6,1791 Rowan,NC REPLY from Mike Here is one way out of this dilemna. Hieronymous Glantz, born about 1703 in the Palatinate, with wife Maria Margarette (Magdalene), has eldest child Jeremiah in the Netherlands, assumming that the birth dates of 1703 for Hieronymous and 1715 for Jeremiah are only approximate. Anna Margaret is b. 1723, John Michael (or Hans) is b. later. They eventually go to Ireland and remain there until about 1732, at which time Hieronymous and wife and the two younger children take the Adventure to Philadelphia. The eldest child, Jeremiah, who might be fifteen, say, is left behind (with others?). He marries an Irish girl Sophie about 1740, and perhaps around 1750 he and Sophie go to America, to Virginia, where in the meantime father, mother and sibs have made their home. This Jeremiah CLONTZ has Jeremiah CLONCH, b. 1752, VA., as well as John, Barnett, Edmund, and Jacob. From 1748 to 1764 we have an almost continuous record of Hieronymous. In 1750 in Lunenburg he has two tithes as CLANCH and CLANSH. In 1751 in Lunenburg he is surety for Mary Smith. In 1752 in Halifax (Lunenburg), VA he has two tithes. In 1752, Hans Michael (John CLAUNCH) has one tithe in Lunenburg. Hans Michael marries Margaret and they have George CLONTZ, who marries Cloe CLINE, and Jeremiah (b. 1756), who marries Anna Catherine LONG. Jeremiah and Anna Catherine have Jeremiah who marries Sarah Catherine Rhine. George and brother Jeremiah (b. 1756) go to NC and in the Rev. War are patriots. George is wounded. Father Hieronymous is a Loyalist. Jeremiah (b. 1752) and perhaps also Hieronymous settle in Montgomery Co., VA. In 1774, Jeremiah advertises a stray horse there, and in 1775 he receives a land grant of 80 acres, both sides of Chestnut Creek. In 1777 he swears allegiance to the Commonwealth of VA and refuses allegiance to George III. In 1781 he is listed as "not fit for military duty." Brothers John, Barnett, Edmund, and Jacob are on the muster lists for 1781. Barnett is listed as missing from the list for 1782. Jeremiah (b. 1752) is in Mecklenburg in 1782 with six whites in his household. He marries Jane (McGuire?) and they have Jeremiah CLONCH who marries Elizabeth Kelly. Finally, we might want to consider the following. We have a George CLAUNCH/CLONTZ b. Germany 1770. Some of his descendants ended up in KY. (according to LDS fiche). We have a Jacobi and Annae Mariae CLONTZ whose six children, Anna Maria, Catherina, Bernardus, Mathias, Petrus, Susanna, and Valentinus were baptized Catholic in Karlsruhe in the Rhineland between 1780 and 1786. We have a Dominick CLANCHI, b. abt 1655 in La Chambre who married Margueritte Hennequin. His father was Didier CLANCHI, mother Jakoba SIMONIS. Dominick was baptized in St. Avold, Moselle, France and resided in Bisten, Saarland, Germany. Dominick is clearly a CLANCY. HENNEQUIN is an Irish name, and both DIDIER and SIMONIS are Huguenot names of Ireland. The name CLANCHE is located primarily in the Moselle/Saarland/Palatinate region. GLANCE and CLANCE are forms of CLANCY, which was usually pronounced CLANCHY. Hieronymous is accurately translated not Jeremiah but Jerome, which suggests that Hieronymous was baptized Catholic. And finally, of the two ships lists for the Adventure of 1732, one has him as Hieronymous GLANTZ, the other as Jeremy GLANCE. Why the difference? Also, if the Adventure was from Rotterdam, last from Cowes, where did Hieronymous take ship, assuming that he resided in Ireland for awhile? REF: Naomi B. Robinson http://genforum.genealogy.com/clontz/messages/42.html In response to the Orgin of the Clontz family. The Klotz/Clontz Family came from Mittenwald, Germany. The Klotz/Clontz Family was a family of Violin Makers. REF: Marie Cook http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=mallorycook&id=I536 Other children were Jane, Susan, Polly, Violet, Sarah and Joseph. I have notes on spouses of each. * | Glantz, The Immigrant Hieronymus "Jeremiah" (I9054)
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892 | Mother remembers him as small in stature and bald...DAH end of comment | Byars, John Watson "Pa" (I701)
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893 | Moved to Paulding Co.,GA about 1836...Loie Clontz Christie. 1860 Paulding Census lists his real estate value at $4000 and personal property at $11,110. Listed in 1880 Paulding Co. Census living with single son, A.B. Jacob Klutts appears in 1832 Cherokee Land Lottery of Georgia in Clarke Co. | Clontz, John Jacob (I9023)
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894 | Moved to Stamford, CT circa 1947 and worked for ELECTRO-LUX....Lucille Young end of comment | Young, Jewell Brown "JB" (I721)
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895 | Moved to Yancey Co.,NC | Clontz, James A. (I10718)
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896 | Mr. Carl Ray Clontz age 81, of Mt.Vernon passed away Friday June 5, 2015 at the U.K. Hospital in Lexington. He was born on December 21, 1933 in Rockcastle County the son of the late Lovell and Sadie Lovell Clontz. He was a retired attorney, an Army Veteran of the Korean War, and was a member of the First Baptist Church. Survivors are: his wife; Mrs. Geraldine Noe Clontz of Mt.Vernon. Three sons; John Clontz of Mabelton, GA, Joe Clontz and wife Linda of Mt.Vernon, and Jim Clontz and wife Tammy of Mt.Vernon. One daughter; Carla Parsons and husband Lynn of Mt.Vernon. Nine grandchildren, and four great grandchildren also survive. Besides his parents he was preceded in death by: one sister; Mrs. Sue French. | Clontz, Carl Ray (I10230)
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897 | Mrs. Elizabeth Clonts, 77, long-time resident of Chattanooga, died at the Hill Crest Medical Nursing Home in Knoxville Wednesday. She was the widow of Presley R. Clonts and the mother of Homer R. Clonts assistant city editor of the Knoxville News Sentinel. She was a member of the Salem Baptist Church of Bluffton, Ala Survivors other than her son are a sister, Mrs. J. W. Gray, Anniston, Ala.; two grandchildren and one great-grandson. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at the New Hope Baptist Church, with the Rev. R. E. Knight officiating. Burial will be in Bluffton, Ala. The family will receive friends tonight at the funeral home of J. Avery Bryan Co. Mrs. Elizabeth Clonts, mother of Homer Clonts, News-Sentinel assistant city editor, died this morning at Hillcrest Medical Nursing Institute after a lengthy illness. She was 77. Mrs. Clonts was a former resident of Chattanooga. Her body was to be returned there today to J. Avery Bryan Funeral Home. Services will be held at Chattanooga. Burial will be at Bluffton, Ala. She also leaves a sister, Mrs. J. W. Gray, Anniston, Ala., two granddaughters and one great-grandson. (Knoxville News-Sentinel, Knoxville, TN) | Donaldson, Martha Elizabeth "Lizzie" (I10706)
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898 | Mt. | Source (S12971)
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899 | My sweet Mimi passed at 6:58 pm from complications of leukemia - pneumonia | Mynatt, Sheila Ann "Mimi" (I27517)
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900 | Name listed as "Martha" in 1850 Union Co. Census... | Blair, Martha Ann "Patsy" (I9028)
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