Genealogy of the Bryan and Martin Families

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Matches 601 to 650 of 2,849

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601 Colonel Thomas Sprigg (Royal Lancers) was born c1630 in Kettering, Northamptonshire, and died in December 1704 in Northampton, Prince George's County, Maryland. He (and probably the Nuthalls) settled first in Virginia; Thomas first appears in Maryland in March 1651, already married to a widow, Catherine Graves Roper (there were stepchildren, Verlinda and Nathaniel). They probably came to Maryland with Catherine's brother-in-law, the newly appointed governor, William Stone. They were living on a plantation called "Resurrection Manor" in Calvert County in 1656, shortly after which Catherine died. There was one child, Thomas (1659-1739) who has many descendants (largely in West Virginia). Thomas Sr. must have been a widower for some years, as his second wife was only about nine when his first wife died. He was a justice for many years in Prince George's and Calvert Counties, and sheriff of Calvert County 1664-1665. His larger plantation "Northampton" stayed in the family until 1865. In 1814, President Madison briefly took refuge there when Washington was burned by the British; Pierre L'Enfant is supposed to have designed the gardens. The house burned down in 1909.

From the Baltimore Sun, 1909:

"In Prince George's County, some six or seven miles inland from the grant steel highway, along which travelers between Annapolis and Washington are borne swiftly to their destination, there stands an old Manor House, encircled by a plantation of 800 acres. "Northhampton" was built by Thomas Sprigg, Colonist and Gentleman, from England, whose death occurred in 1704. A full length portrait of that worthy gentleman, still in the possession of descendants represents a handsome man in full court costume, while the archives of Maryland give abundant proof that the original was a gentleman of official distinction and social importance. The manor house is a frame, about 125 feet front, and such portion as is of the original architecture, is put together without nails. The drawing room, library and dining rooms, all with high chimney places and wide open fireplaces, face the front and in the rear according to the fashion of 200 hundred years ago, are bedrooms with tall gothic windows, and other rooms now used as pantries. The place is well wooded and about the residence are elm and willow trees, also flowering magnolia trees, white fringe trees, trailing their delicate blossoms. There is a real lover's walk, winding between a hedge of old fashioned lilacs, that being in clusters of purple and white send their fragrance through the early spring sunshine. Here was spent the youth of Governor Samuel Sprigg, who became the heir of his uncle Osborne Sprigg and from him inherited "Northhampton". Here was brought in 1811 the Governor's bride and here was born in 1811 the Governor's little daughter, Sally whose baby helplessness was the safeguard of "Northhampton from destruction by the British, when the latter's troops advanced along the Patuxcent River to attack Washington. Governor Sprigg was in hiding at the time and the house was examined but owing to the young baby and its mother, the homestead escaped injury, or pillage beyond the seizure of wines and provisions."

Most sources say Thomas' parentage is unknown, but some claim his father was Thomas Sprigg (born c1604, died a1679, Kettering), who married Katherine Griffin (born c1610-1661) - see Spriggs, Kenneth W., "Spriggey, Sprigge, Sprigg, Spriggs from 145 AD to 1997 AD", page 37. 
Sprigg, Thomas (I680)
 
602 Compiled by Jack & Marie Loftin Includes isolated graves of Young and the borders of the surrounding counties: Archer, Clay, Jack, Palo Pinto, Stephens, Throckmorton & Baylor Source (S214)
 
603 Con O'Neill was the Earl of Tyrone. O'Neill, Con Bacach (I3520)
 
604 Conn More O'Neill was King of Ulster. O'Neill, Conn Mor (I3522)
 
605 Conn O'Neill was the Earl of Tyrone. O'Neill, Conn Bacach (I3548)
 
606 Conrad Willhoit left Virginia about 1782; in the same year, he witnessed the will of Adam Broyles in Washington County, North Carolina (now Tennessee). He moved to present county Campbell County, Tennessee, buying 100 acres of land there on 29 March 1800. He possibly served in the army during the Revolution. Willhoit, Conrad (I3430)
 
607 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I14502)
 
608 Constant and Sarah Hart moved to New Jersey. Russell, Sarah (I1368)
 
609 Constant Hart served in the Revolutionary War, possibly fighting at Saratoga and Ticonderoga. Hart, Constant (I2635)
 
610 Copies of information in file. Source (S236)
 
611 Coral Sanford lived in Mt. View, Oklahoma. Sanford, Coral Jessie (I15387)
 
612 Cuconnacht was the 11th Prince of Fermanagh. Maguire, Cuconnacht (I3550)
 
613 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I335)
 
614 Cyrus McCormick was the founder of International Harvester. McCormick, Cyrus (I19245)
 
615 Dale Carver was awarded the Silver Star dyring World War II for gallantry in action in Germany. In 1971, he was living in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where he was a Professor of Engineering at Louisiana State University. Carver, Dale Ringwalt (I12408)
 
616 Dallas Herd was County Clerk of Ozark County. Herd, Dallas (I16023)
 
617 Damien Bérubé lived in Paris, although he reported when he married that he had been born in Rocquefort. Damien was working for Jean-Baptiste-François de Boishébert, sieur de Rivière-Ouelle, in the early 1670s, so he very probably crossed the Atlantic on Boishébert's ship St-Jean-Baptiste in June 1671. He was in L'Islet by 1678. Bérubé, Damien (I19921)
 
618 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I18189)
 
619 Daniel B. Magruder and Mary Dyer were married by a man named Silas Burns, who may have been a relative of Daniel's mother, Margaret Porter. Daniel Magruder served in the United States Army during the Civil War. He first enlisted on 1 October 1861, in Company L, Sixth (West) Virginia Infantry, and was discharged on 17 September 1862. On that same day, he enlisted in Company I, 15th Regiment, West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, and was mustered into service on 11 October 1862. He was discharged as a First Lieutenant on 6 April 1864. Mary is listed as a widow in the 1890 Census of Pensioners. In "The History of the Pan-handle: being historical collections of Ohio, Brooke, Marshall, and Hancock, West Virginia" (by J. H. Newton, published by J.A. Caldwell, Wheeling, West Viginia, 1879) is the following: "Daniel B. Magruder was born in Allegany County, Maryland, in 1826. He came to Ohio County, West Virginia, in 1839, worked in an iron mill five years, then engaged in the stone and lime business. He afterwards kept a saloon in Wheeling, two years, then removed to Indiana, where he followed the occupation of a farmer, but now resides at Elm Grove, West Virginia, and is engaged in mining. Our subject married Mary C. Dyer, of New Jersey, in 1854. They are the parents of three children - William H., Ellaretta, and Charles W." Magruder, Daniel B. (I69)
 
620 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I12571)
 
621 Daniel Denison was a general in Cromwell's army. Denison, Daniel (I6272)
 
622 Daniel Holton was from Killingly. Preston, Lydia (I2183)
 
623 Daniel Kelley's estate was probated 6 November 1826 in Greenville County, South Carolina. Kelley, Daniel (I6304)
 
624 Daniel Leblanc arrived in Acadia c1645. Leblanc, Daniel (I2497)
 
625 Daniel Romine and Elizabeth Walters were married by S. Kaemmerer, ELM. Family: Daniel Romine / Elizabeth Walters (F10809)
 
626 Daniel's surname may have been Holt. Holton, Daniel (I2194)
 
627 Daniel's will mentions his brother, Jesse, Sr.; Jesse's wife, Anna; his sister, Savina Walters, and; "four children". Savina Walters may have been his sister-in-law. Romine, Daniel (I28419)
 
628 Database: Georgia Marriages, 1851-1900

Name: AUGUSTUS STUART
Spouse: SARAH DOUGLAS
Marriage Date: 30 Sep 1858
County: Catoosa
State: GA 
Family: William Augustus Stewart / Sarah Elizabeth Douglass (F8318)
 
629 Date:05/05/2000 10:52:50 AM Central Daylight Time
From:kilgore@web-access.net (Kilgore)
To:TXBLUEBNT@aol.com

Uncle James was a carpenter and worked at a hardware store in
Arlington. He was an active member of the Moose Lodge there.
He served in WWII thru the US Army...
James Howard HEUN was born in Galveston, Texas Oct. 13, 1915....
he died in San Antone hospital Dec 9, 1986.... both he and
Fannie Lou are buried in the Eden, Texas cemetery.
They were married June 30, 1946 in San Antone. (I have wedding
pics also!)
Deb K 
Heun, James Howard (I21816)
 
630 David and Martha Jones lived in Portage County, Ohio. Jones, David D. (I20465)
 
631 David Campbell Wallace was in Blount County, Tennessee, by 1798. The David Campbell Wallace family moved to McDonough County, Illinois, around 1812. With his family and in-laws, David Wallace came up the Illinois River on the maiden voyage of the steamship "Red Rover." By 1821, the family was living in Rushville Township, Schuyler County, Illinois. David and his son Alfred erected the first grist mill in Schuyler County, and in 1829 they added an "up and down" saw for lumber. In Schuyler County, they lived on the northeast quarter of Section 21 of Rushville Township. They moved to Lee County, Iowa, around 1830, where Sarah died, then to Ray County, Missouri, and finally returned to McDonough County, Illinois. Wallace, David Campbell (I3373)
 
632 David Cotter was living in Bellefontaine, Ohio, in 1964. Cotter, David Hartwell (I12570)
 
633 David D. Lewis immigrated to the United States with his parents in 1839, landing in Baltimore, Maryland, on October 1. David Lewis was naturalised on 26 October 1852 in Gallia County, Ohio, the same day as his brother, Evan. The David Lewis family was living in Perry Township, Gallia County, Ohio, at the time of the 1870 census. Those listed were David D. Lewis (age 46, born Wales), Hannah Lewis (age 38, born Wales), Margret (age 11, born Ohio), Hannah (age 9, born Ohio), Thomas (age 8, born Ohio), James A. (age 4, born Ohio), Mary E. (age 4, born Ohio), and Samuel (age 1, born Ohio). Living next door was a John S. (?) Lewis (age 28, born Ohio), a boot and shoemaker, Rhoda Lewis (age 28, born Ohio), and Mary (age 6 months, born Ohio). The Lewis family was living with David and Margaret Thomas (ID numbers 27661 and 27662) in Raccoon Township, Gallia County, Ohio, at the time of the 1880 Census. David D. Lewis was living with the John Garrett Magruder family in Union Township, Fayette County, Ohio, in 1900. His date of birth was given as January 1824 in the 1900 Census. Buried nearby David Lewis is a "McGruder", probably Rachel Lewis Magruder, on a lot owned by Frank Colby, purchased in 1888. Lewis, David D. (I164)
 
634 David died in infancy. Alexander, David (I26569)
 
635 David Edward and Mary Keir lived at Kilwinnet, Campsie, at the time of their marriage. Keir, Mary (I22740)
 
636 David Edward died of wounds he received in World War I. Edward, David (I13765)
 
637 David Edward emigrated to Queensland, Australia, in 1883. Edward, David (I13778)
 
638 David Edward was living in Blairgowrie in 1868. Edward, David (I18462)
 
639 David Evans settled in Apollo, Pennsylvania. Evans, David (I20456)
 
640 David Evans's profile at Findagrave.com states that he was born on 29 August 1853, but the tombstone reads 1843. Evans, David J. (I28732)
 
641 David Guthrie's residence was given as Kilgrastown in his daughter's (Ann) baptismal record. Guthrie, David (I22921)
 
642 David Johnson was adopted by his step-father and used the surname Foreman. Johnson, David Allen (I1430)
 
643 David Kohn was living in Springfield, Ohio, in 1966. Kohn, David Eugene (I14473)
 
644 David lived in Gastele, New York. Wallace, David Roterson (I17672)
 
645 David may have died prior to his father's death on 17 May 1893, as he is not mentioned in the estate papers. Jones, David (I20467)
 
646 David Plant's parents, Felix and Miriam Plant, were living in the same village (Harrisville) as Louise Boucher Martin in 1880. David Plante entered the United States on 10 May 1870, at St. Albans, Vermont. Plante, David (I2773)
 
647 David Ringwalt and Mary Jane Cotter were married at the United Brethren Church in Lagonda, Clark County, Ohio. Family: David Lewis Ringwalt / Mary Jane Cotter (F316)
 
648 David Ringwalt enlisted as a private in Company D, 8th Ohio Cavalry, on 28 March 1864, during the Civil War, and was mustered out on 30 July 1865 at Clarksburg, West Virginia. He was in Libby and Pemberton Prisons in the winter and spring of 1865. On 23 May 1866, he enlisted in Company C, 19th United States Infantry, and was discharged on 23 May 1869, at Little Rock, Arkansas. The David Ringwalt family was living in Springfield, Clark County, Ohio, at the time of the 1880 census. They were living in Oakley Township, Logan County, Kansas, at the time of the 1900 and 1910 censuses, having moved to Oakley in April 1887. He served as the first marshal of Oakley in 1887 and was a law enforcement officer until 1919 in addition to holding other city and school board positions. Ringwalt, David Lewis (I827)
 
649 David Ringwalt's obituary reads: "David Lewis Ringwalt, 82, died Friday, May 9, 2003, at the Wellness Center of Fairhaven in Sykesville, Md. He was born July 3, 1920, at Kirksville, Mo., the son of Dr. Levi and Ethel Ringwalt. He graduated from school at Oakley in 1938, and later graduated from Northwestern University and did his graduate degree work at the University of Michigan. Mr. Ringwalt served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during World War II and worked at the Naval Research Laboratories in Washington, D.C., until his retirement. He is survived by his wife, Wahnaton Felts Ringwalt; a sister, Ardella Frantz of Garden City; four children, David L. Ringwalt Jr., Karen A. Highley, Janet E. Collins and Elle Ringwalt Bruner, and their mother, Sue Ringwalt; and two grandsons. A memorial service is planned for 1 p.m. May 27 at Truro Episcopal Church in Fairfax, Va. In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to The Lamb Center, 3220 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA 22030."

Another obituary, from the Washington Post of 18 May 2003, reads: "On May 9, 2003, DAVID LEWIS RINGWALT, beloved husband of Wahnaton F., passed away. He is survived by his sister, Ardella Frantz; four children, David L. Ringwalt Jr., Karen A. Highley, Jan E. Collins, and Elle S. Brunner their mother, Sue Ringwalt and two grandchildren, Bryan and Chris Collins. A Memorial Service will be held on Tuesday, May 27, at 1 p.m. at the Truro Episcopal Church, 10520 Main St., Fairfax, VA. In lieu of flowers contributions in his memory may be sent to: The Lamb Center, 3220 Old Lee Hwy., Fairfax, VA 22030." 
Ringwalt, David Lewis (I12397)
 
650 David Rogers served in the 8th Illinois cavalry. Rogers, David (I25081)
 

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