Down the Hallway

Our Family's Journey Through Time

Notes


Matches 151 to 200 of 1,668

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151 Edgar James Hall married Mary E. Kerr on 16 June 1943 and divorced on 24 June 1944. Edgar James Hall remarried Mary E. Kerr 15 Oct 1955 in Silver city, New Mexico and divorced. Edgar James Hall remarried again Mary E. Kerr 16 June 1959 in Lordsburg, NM Family: Edgar James Hall, Jr / Mary Elizabeth Kerr (F13)
 
152 Eheregister und Namensverzeichnisse. Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Wiesbaden, Deutschland. Source (S657619207)
 
153 Eheregister und Namensverzeichnisse. Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Wiesbaden, Deutschland. Source (S657619488)
 
154 Eheregister und Namensverzeichnisse. Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Wiesbaden, Deutschland. Source (S657620595)
 
155 Elizabeth Koster
Southington Citizen, The (CT) | 27 January 2012
Elizabeth (Liz) H. Koster, 81, died peacefully on Dec. 21, 2011, at The Orchards of Southington after a short illness.
She was born in Stamford, May 23, 1930, to Louis and Anne (Carmichael) Koster. Shortly after her birth, the family moved to Westport and then to Maine where she graduated from North Yarmouth Academy in 1947. She was an accomplished violinist, violist and cellist having studied at Julliard and was a member of symphonies and orchestras in Alabama, New York, Louisiana, Oklahoma, North Carolina, Connecticut, and, most notably, the Houston Symphony under the direction of Leopold Stokowsky. Her latest association was with the Farmington Valley Symphony.

In the 1960s, she introduced the Suzuki violin method - the first in the eastern United States - through the Hartt School of Music. In 1965, she personally worked with Dr. Shinichi Suzuki, the method's founder, who became involved with the program at Hartt. Following his method, she taught hundreds of students, many of whom now have international concert careers. She also taught many students privately in her home studio.

In 1982, she earned a bachelor of music degree from the University of Hartford, Hartford.

Shortly afterward, she earned her teaching certificate and taught math for a time in the Southington school system. In 1986, she graduated with a master of science degree in mathematics from Central Connecticut State University, New Britain.

In addition to being a talented musician and teacher, she was an accomplished artist, and sometimes posed as a model for art students in New York City. She settled in Southington in 1969 in a house she built largely by herself and heated only with wood, which she often cut and split herself. Her love for animals extended to horses, cats and dogs, and she always had at least one pet in her home. She was an enthusiastic skier and hiker, having completed the New England section of the Appalachian Trail, and believed in the preservation of wilderness. She was predeceased by her parents; and her brother, William.

Donations may be made to the Visiting Nurse Association, 80 Meriden Ave., Southington, CT 06489 or the Nature Conservancy, 55 Church St. Floor 3, New Haven, CT 06510.


Copyright, 2012, Southington Citizen, The (CT), All Rights Reserved. 
Koster, Elizabeth H. (P5958)
 
156 Find a Grave in Symyra, Kent, Delaware Cummins, Ann (P3716)
 
157 Florida Department of Health. Florida Divorce Index, 1927-2001. Jacksonville, FL, USA: Florida Department of Health. Source (S657470074)
 
158 Forester Feuerstark, Georg (P5626)
 
159 Friedericke Blankenberg, daughter of Justus Blankenberg. Kaufmann, Friedericke Philippine Marie (P7926)
 
160 From Brownie Mackie:
Uncle James Barry (w/o the D) was married to Johanna Gould. Children were Mary and Ann. He and Johanna (Joanna) brought their children and our James d. Barry (a small boy) from Ireland and Portugal to NY and DC in about 1783 give or take ten years. Uncle James (as I will refer to the elder) was Portuguese Consul General to America for several years, and he was the shipping merchant. Mary and Ann have portraits painted by Gilbert Stuart in the Smithsonian (NGA). Uncle James' portrait hangs at Princeton. James D. Barry, our ancestor, as a young man, became quite busy with his uncle's business affairs. He married Julianna Coombe, daughter of Griffith and Mary Pleasanton Coombe, son of Benjamin Coombe (a Rev. War patriot), son of John Coombe. All the Coombes were in Delaware in the 1600's. Everybody was Catholic ( wonder when we were no longer Catholic, because the McGarys were also Catholic)
Uncle James and his daughters all died of TB. Joann's will is publshed in the DAR magazine.

Name: James BARRY , Capt. Sex: M Name: James BARRY , Capt. Birth: in Fermoy, Co. Cork, Ireland Death: 7 JAN 1808 in Washington, DC Burial: Congressional Cemetery, Washington, DC Event: Removed 1800 To Washington Event: Removed 1793 Lisbon to Baltimore Note: Born in Cork Co., Ireland. After a stay in London went to Portugal, where he married his wife, Joanna Gould. They resided there for some time. They came to Baltimore, MD in 1793, where he served as the Portuguese consul general in the US. In 1800 the family moved to Washington and Barry joined Thomas Law in business. He was clearly wealthy and important in the early days of the development of the capital city. (For refences to this, see "Through a Fiery Trial - Building Washington 1790-1800" by Bob Arnebeck.) (For information on his daughters, his only natural children, see Notes on Joanna.) There is an article on "Capt. James Barry" in the Reports of the Columbia Historical Society of Washington,DC, the 1942 volume. A website (www.americanmemories.gov) stores copies of letters from Capt. Barry to Pres. Jefferson, plus President Geo. Washington diary entries mentioning Capt. James & his son, James David, (who spent the night in Washington's house after having dinner there). Ireland was a very poor country in the 18th century, terribly oppressed by the British. So Catholic Portugal, rich with gold from Brazil, was a natural haven for Irishmen of poor and/or merchant families. Many of the latter had started commercial connections between Cork and the ports of Coruna and Cadiz in Portugal and Lisbon, where ships from Brazil and India arrived. Between the 1740s and 1780s many merchants, sailors, priests and soldiers of fortune came to Lisbon. **** The following information was gathered by Pedro O'Neill of Lisbon. "Tue, 16 Oct 2001 23:51:50 GMT From: 'Pedro O'Neill' To: BMacKie1@compuserve.com Subject: James Barry and Joanna Gould marriage in Lisbon Date: Tue, 16 Oct 2001 23:51:50 +0000 Lisbon, the 17th October 2001, Dear Mrs. Brownie MacKie First you must excuse me for my bad English, and for all the time I had to reply your kind e-mails. I wanted to search on the National Archives for some data. Only this week I finally searched for all those many things, including the Barry/Gould Lisbon connection, something that also interests me deeply. So, this I what I have: 1- In the 22th of May 1781, in Lisbon, was baptized Dionisio ( Dennis )Donovan, son of Cornelio ( Cornelius ) Donovan and Helena ( Helen ) Donovan, both from Cork. Godfather was Geraldo ( Gerard ) Gould, and godmother his sister, Joana ( Johanna ) Gould, both were living at Cornelio Donovan house, at Monte de Santa Catarina ( a hill-top place in a Lisbon old quartier, with a beautiful view to river Tagus ). Later Dionisio Donovan changed his name to Carlos ( Charles ) Donovan. 2 - In the 24th of January 1782, in the evening, in Lisbon ( Santa Catarina church ),Diogo ( James ) Barry, married Joana ( Joanna ) Gould. James Barry was born in County Cork, in the parish of Fermoy, son of Robert Barry and Mary Connell. Joanna Gould was born in County Cork, in the parish of Watergrasshill, daughter of George Gould and Ann O'Brien. Signed as witnesses Gerard Gould, Joanna's Brother, and father Dennis O'Driscoll, both living at Lisbon. My Note: Gerard was also "Garrett." 3 - If you have an Ireland map you just see north of Cork the little city of Fermoy, and in the road, between them, Watergrasshill. You have a very nice site on the net about Fermoy history and written by a Michael Barry (!). Look at http://www.murrayfamily.org/fermoyhistory.htm and see what Rev. William Adair said about Fermoy in the 1780's, in the time of young James Barry. 4 - You must see that Ireland in the 18th century was a very poor country, terribly oppressed by England. So, catholic Portugal, rich with the gold from Brazil, was a natural haven for many of those poor Irishman, just before they start to discover the new world in the Americas. Many of them where merchants from Cork, who started commercial connections between that port, and the ports of Coruna and Cadiz in Spain, and Lisbon ( where ships from Brazil and India arrived ) Between the 1740's, through the 1780's, Lisbon received many of those merchants, sailors, priests, soldiers and man of fortune from Ireland. Some of them still have generation here, but only a few. 5 - The Gould brothers turned to be very wealth merchants in 19th century Lisbon. The two Joanna's brothers, Geraldo ( Gerard) Gould and Jorge Jo (George John ) Gould, formed a company named Gould Brothers & C., until Gerard's death in 1825. George died in 1844, also a rich man. He had no sons, so in his will he named his nephews, Gerard's sons as heirs. One of them, Francisca Gould, married a British merchant from Madeira Island, named William Newman Roope, other, Christina Gould, married Portuguese rich merchant Osborne Teixeira Sampaio, and lived in London. There was a connection between the Goulds and a very rich man named Henrique Teixeira de Sampaio, later to be the count of Povoa (Osborne's uncle , and one of the richest man of Portugal in the 1820's). He married Angelica Slack and Gerard Gould married Francisca Slack in 1789. So they were brothers-in-law ). Interestingly, when Inácio Palyart went to London, after leaving Filadelfia, he formed with A.T. Sampaio ( Osborne's father and count of Povoa brother ) a commercial venture in London named A. T. Sampaio, Palyart & C. When the count of Povoa died, in 1833, he named one of Gerard Gould sons , also named Gerard Gould ( born 1800 )as one of his heirs. that Gerard Gould, and his wife ( born Walsh ), were still living by the year 1870, giving brilliant parties at their house in Lisbon, as said one newspaper from that year. They had four sons, but I don't know if there's a Gould generation today at Lisbon. 6- Well! I hope you liked this very report! Now I will search for the birth of the son of James Barry and Joanna Gould in Lisbon. Do you know his, or her, name? I am also very interested to know what happened in America. In which cities they lived? When they died? The names of his sons? This connection is very interesting to me, as I am searching for the biographies of those irish who came to Portugal in the 18th century. Finally, i want to give a word of support from the Portuguese friends to America, in these terrible times we are living. My sincerely best wishes Pedro Diogo O'Neill" Father: Robert BARRY Mother: Mary CONNELL Suggested Next Step: Search OneWorldTree for: Barry, James , Capt. Included with this search: View multiple generations Change tree views to get the look you want View supporting source, i.e., census images View alternate information Anonymously contact submitters of tree data
Marriage 1 Joanna GOULD b: in Watergrasshill, Co. Cork, Ireland
Married: 24 JAN 1782 in Lisbon, Portugal
Children
Ann BARRY b: 29 SEP 1823
James David BARRY b: 1774 in Bandon, Cork, Ireland
Robert Barry (ADOPTED) b: ABT 1775 in Co. Cork or Portugal
Mary BARRY 
Barry, James David (P1359)
 
161 Geburtenregister und Namensverzeichnisse. Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv, Wiesbaden, Deutschland. Source (S657620578)
 
162 General Register Office. England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes. London, England: General Register Office. © Crown copyright. Published by permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Office for National Statistics. You must not copy on, transfer or reproduce records without the prior permission of ONS. Database Copyright © 1998-2003 Graham Hart, Ben Laurie, Camilla von Massenbach and David Mayall. Source (S658360911)
 
163 General Register Office. England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes. London, England: General Register Office. © Crown copyright. Published by permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Office for National Statistics. You must not copy on, transfer or reproduce records without the prior permission of ONS. Database Copyright © 1998-2003 Graham Hart, Ben Laurie, Camilla von Massenbach and David Mayall. Source (S658361000)
 
164 Georg was godfather (1664) to Georg Lücke from Langenthal.

House #73 built 1657, reconstructed 1781
Owner: Julius Ebbrecht, descendent of Johannes Lips (1807)
New address: Hofgeismarer Straße 1
This is the second oldest house which still is used, from Gottsbüren. It was the house of the Forest Rangers during the 17th century. This can be identified because of the inscription above the house entrance. The house got reconstructed during 1781. The old, smaller door was replaced by a large entrance, which allowed to let wagons to pass. For this, the girder was cut and parts of the inscription removed. However I was able to complete the inscription.

AEDIFICABANT Magister At Silvae ANNO 1657 DEN 8. Mary 1ST DIS HUS GERICHTET
"Built by the Forest Ranger ANNO 1657 May 8. This house was built"

This house was probably owned by descendants of the family Lips.
Georg Lips (the older) lived from 1631 to 1683 and was Forest Ranger as well as his son Georg Lips (the younger) From church and other records on the at 1692 newly casted big churh bell one can see that George Lips (1658-1703) was judge, mayor and forest ranger at the same time.
Christian Lips (1677-?) was identified at the church records as his son.
Johan Daniel Lips (1707-1775) to be a forest ranger.
Christian Lips (1738-1790) Johan Daniel's son was called a lumberjack. If he lived at #73 cannot be proven but is probable.
Since the early years of the 18th century the church records are giving the house No. This proves, that from then the following families have lived at house #73. Christian's family, although he had 13 children with two wives, died out. Since he was the last of his family the house was passed on to other Lips.
Johannes Lips (1807-1848) lived at this house for sure when his first son was born. He was a turner. (Wood-lathe operator)
Wilhelm Heinrich Lips (1831-1874) Johannes's son, was as his father a turner. He had 4 children of which only his oldest daughter survived.
Marie Wilhelmine Charlotte Lips (1861-?) married in 1882 to Heinrich August Genuit (1858-?). He was a decorator. They had a son in 1885, Friederich Wilhelm Ferdinand Genuit, who was killed during the First World War. Their only daughter Marie Genuit married ??Junge and moved away from Gottsbüren. Her husband was killed also in WW1. She returned to Gottsbüren and married the decorator Heinrich Ebbrecht from Langenthal. Marie and Heinrich had one son, Julius Ebbrecht who as well as his son, Martin Ebbrecht, is a decorator too. Both, Julius and Martin are still living together with their families at the house #73. (Today: Hofgeismarer Str. 1) 
Lips, Georg (P3894)
 
165 Georg was godfather (1664) to Georg Lücke from Langenthal.

House #73 built 1657, reconstructed 1781
Owner: Julius Ebbrecht, descendent of Johannes Lips (1807)
New address: Hofgeismarer Straße 1
This is the second oldest house which still is used, from Gottsbüren. It was the house of the Forest Rangers during the 17th century. This can be identified because of the inscription above the house entrance. The house got reconstructed during 1781. The old, smaller door was replaced by a large entrance, which allowed to let wagons to pass. For this, the girder was cut and parts of the inscription removed. However I was able to complete the inscription.

AEDIFICABANT Magister At Silvae ANNO 1657 DEN 8. Mary 1ST DIS HUS GERICHTET
"Built by the Forest Ranger ANNO 1657 May 8. This house was built"

This house was probably owned by descendants of the family Lips.
Georg Lips (the older) lived from 1631 to 1683 and was Forest Ranger as well as his son Georg Lips (the younger) From church and other records on the at 1692 newly casted big churh bell one can see that George Lips (1658-1703) was judge, mayor and forest ranger at the same time.
Christian Lips (1677-?) was identified at the church records as his son.
Johan Daniel Lips (1707-1775) to be a forest ranger.
Christian Lips (1738-1790) Johan Daniel's son was called a lumberjack. If he lived at #73 cannot be proven but is probable.
Since the early years of the 18th century the church records are giving the house No. This proves, that from then the following families have lived at house #73. Christian's family, although he had 13 children with two wives, died out. Since he was the last of his family the house was passed on to other Lips.
Johannes Lips (1807-1848) lived at this house for sure when his first son was born. He was a turner. (Wood-lathe operator)
Wilhelm Heinrich Lips (1831-1874) Johannes's son, was as his father a turner. He had 4 children of which only his oldest daughter survived.
Marie Wilhelmine Charlotte Lips (1861-?) married in 1882 to Heinrich August Genuit (1858-?). He was a decorator. They had a son in 1885, Friederich Wilhelm Ferdinand Genuit, who was killed during the First World War. Their only daughter Marie Genuit married ??Junge and moved away from Gottsbüren. Her husband was killed also in WW1. She returned to Gottsbüren and married the decorator Heinrich Ebbrecht from Langenthal. Marie and Heinrich had one son, Julius Ebbrecht who as well as his son, Martin Ebbrecht, is a decorator too. Both, Julius and Martin are still living together with their families at the house #73. (Today: Hofgeismarer Str. 1)

!Occupation: Mayor (Grebe) in Gottsburen
!Occupation: Judge (Richter) in Gottsburen

In 1690, George became godfather to Georg Heyse from Ostheim.

George was contributing financially for the restoration of the big church bell which received a crack in the year 1690. His signature can be found under a church document which tells about the rules how to use the church bells at funerals. It reads: "At the time the big bell was repaired because of a crack, it was decided that at the funerals of all 'normal' people, the big bell was used. This was necessary since many people were complaining before. It was decided by the pastor, judge and major and the churchwardens that from now on at all funerals without difference between poor and rich and for all of them who got their confirmation, the big bell should be used. Only for small children below twelve years old it should stay as earlier, that in the morning the small and at noon the small and the middle one should be used.

Gottsbeuren d 23, May 1692 Johannes Nickel
Christopherus Ellenberger George Wigandt
Christian Thiermer
George Lips Judge Jost Kohlen

During his time as judge in 1694, a murderer, named Breidenstein, from Vaake poisoned his brother in law. He was condemed to death by cutting off his head with a sword. The local church authorities ordered several monks to Sababurg and Gottsburen to 'celebrate' something unusual known only from the middle ages. They were fastening his cut off head on the back of a donkey and put his body to the wheels of a carriage and then they were driving the donkey from Gottsburen to Sababurg and back. There were many over exited people participating in this happening. This was not very well received by the 'superintendent' of the churches in the Cassel area. There were letters between the 'superintendent' and the local pastor on this matter.

In 1690, Goerge became godfather to Georg Heyse from Ostheim.
 
Lips, Georg (P5316)
 
166 Gloucestershire Anglican Parish Registers. Gloucestershire Archives, Gloucestershire, England. Source (S658364302)
 
167 Gloucestershire Anglican Parish Registers. Gloucestershire Archives, Gloucestershire, England. Source (S658364334)
 
168 God father is Gustav Bonning, Polizeiwachtmeister in Frankfurt
Georg Feurstack, Revierörster in Höhnebach

He was born near 74
 
Lips, Bodo Gustav Georg (P5599)
 
169 Godfather is Richard Bremer, judicial sergeant in Hannover.
Born house 74.



 
Lips, Wolfgang Richard Maximilian (P5600)
 
170 Godfather is Richard Bremer, judicial sergeant in Hannover
Born house 74
 
Lips, Manfred Wilhelm Walter (P5602)
 
171 Godfather is Walter Lips + Erhard Gipper.

He was born near 74


 
Lips, Jürgen Walter Erhard (P5598)
 
172 Godfather: Daniel Endemann.
The death records tell, that he was 70 years old, however it must be 69 years.

!Occupation: Forest Ranger like his father.
 
Lips, Johan Daniel (P1973)
 
173 Godfather: Georg Feuerstack, Forester in Höhnebach Lips, Werner Georg Louis (P5636)
 
174 Godfather: His godfather was his grandfather, Christian Lips, who was born 17 Apr 1677.
He married twice.

He was a woodcutter.
 
Lips, Christian (P5320)
 
175 Godfather: Wilhelm Lips, Mayor, grandfather of child Franz Schmidt, O Postsekretär, grandfather of child in Kassel Friedrich Gödecke, Lehrer in Veckerhagen




 
Lips, Wilhelm Franz Friederich (P5594)
 
176 Godmoher: Her godmother was her mother's sister, Anna Katharina Thebes from Hamburg.
The church records state, "In absence, Christoph Witthelm's daughter, Anna Martha Wilhelm presented the child."
 
Lips, Anna Catharina (P5321)
 
177 Godmother is Wilhelmine Thöne, unmarried.
 
Lips, Wilhelmine Marie Bertha (P2016)
 
178 Godmother: Her godmother was Anna Catherina, wife of Conradt Lips. Lips, Anna Catharina (P1974)
 
179 Godmother: The godmother of Anna was Anna the wife of Antonius Thiele(mans).

Anna Catharina had a illegitimate son, Andreas, born on 18 Nov 1707. The father was her fiance Ricus Geken from Lippoltsberg. Anna married Andreas Hehsling (Hasing) in 1712. 
Lips, Anna Catharina (P1977)
 
180 GONZALES INQUIRER Kathleen Springs Transcriptions at Gonzales Archives This file contains 3 Jan 1885-26 Dec 1889Owens, U., dentist, Vol. 34 No. 33 Gonz.Inq. 13 Feb 1886Owens, V., Dr., dentist, died, Vol. 36 No. 42 Gonz.Inq. 4 Apr 1889"Dr. U. Owens, who has practiced dentistry in this county for a number of years, died Monday from heart disease, at the resient of Frank Baker, six miles west of Hochheim."

Bruce Langley 63 added this on 8 Jan 2010 Ancestry.comThese profiles for Samuel Owen and Elizabeth Maxwell are based on census records from 1820 onward, and represent what appears to be the makeup of that family, originally from Virginia. Two of their children remain unidentified atp, sons born between about 1816 and 1822. By 1830, one of those sons had apparently died. In 1820, three Owen families (George, Samuel, and Thomas) are living very close together in Beaver Creek, Greene County Ohio (a small farming community). They appear to be brothers and the profiles are set up accordingly. By 1830 Thomas is no longer there, and by 1840 another brother, Elias, has appeared, living next door to Samuel, who had moved to McLean County, Illinois. From that point on, the families of Samuel and Elias are well documented (as well as George, who was still living in Beaver Creek, Ohio). A sister, Catherine (Cheney) was an early pioneer in McLean County. (See her account of life in McLean County, attached to her profile). Elias seems to have had no children, but he and his wife Elisabeth took in an orphaned nephew, Otha, about 1834 (son of another Owen brother, Uriah, b. abt. 1792 in Virginia, d. abt 1831 in Ohio); Otha married and had a large family residing in Cheneys Grove. There are other individuals in the Cheneys Grove area who must be tied into the Owen group, but we don't know how. These include Johathan Owen, b. 1821 in Ohio, Sarah Owen, b. abt 1820 in Ohio, Sarah Owen, b. abt 1818 in Virginia (possibly a niece of Catherine Owen-Cheney), and Elias Owen, b. abt 1803 in Ohio. More information would be most welcome.
 
Owen, Uriah (P405)
 
181 Gonzales Inquirer Oct. 13, 1903

Death has entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Rose and taken from them little Pearl. She was a child of unusual brightness and the only daughter in the home, and of ____ the mother looked upon the future with much happiness and comfort in little Pearl. But alas, God said no and the poor heart broken mother, though so hard to give little Pearl up, bowed in humble submission to the Divine, with, and the writer never heard sweeter words fall from a sad mothers lips than from hers. She said enjoyed being a Christian and asked God to help her be a more perfect Christian so she could meet little Pearl where parting is no more. The poor heart broken mother took her brother in her arms and pleaded with him to lead a better life and go with her to heaven and told him to live for Christ was all there was in life. May God help that brother and father to listen to those pleadings, and all meet little Pearl in a home beyond where sadness and sorrow never come. We know, dear parents, no one can ever take the place of, your darling, but cheer up with the assurance Jesus has carried her to a world far better than this and you shall see her again, not with pale cheek as you last saw her in her little coffin, but eternal health will be blooming on her sweet little face. Trust in Jesus and he too will carry you all sadly through.
A Friend

Gonzales Inquirer Oct. 10, 1903

Pearly Rose, the ten year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Rose died yesterday evening at 7:45 o'clock at the residence of her grandmother, Mrs. J. W. Crawford, in the northern portion of the city.
Little Pearly, who was a bright and winsome girl, had been in poor health for many months, and the frail little form was not enough to withstand the attack of her late illness.
The funeral procession will move from the family residence this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock to the Public cemetery, where the interment will take place. The family has the sympathy of many friends in their bereavement. 
Rose, Pearle Martin (P438)
 
182 Grandfather: Marie Schmidt born Rumpf out of Kassel
Grandmother: Elise Lips born Hirdes 
Lips, Ella Marie Elise (P5593)
 
183 Harriet dies November 5, 1879 living at 60 Neswick St.
Her sister Eliza Jane and husband are living in 1881 on Neswick St.
W.L. Peain is present at Harriet's death, so I'm assuming Harriet was living with them in 1879 when she died.
 
Hawkins, Harriet (P939)
 
184 He and Ann Wilhelmine may have come to America. Bergmann, Joseph Fritz (P5659)
 
185 He born in house 30 Blanckenberg, Anna Elisabeth (P6327)
 
186 He did in house 30. Blankenberg, Wilhelm Karl Friedrich (P7117)
 
187 He died from suicide. He resided in Clinton, Md. He was a native of nearby Camp Springs. His father was George Coombe. US. Army veteran
Wife - Blanche
sister Belle or Isabelle C. Hunter 
Coombe, William A (P3844)
 
188 He died in World War I Schweinsberg, Friedrich Konrad Ernst (P7867)
 
189 He died in a car accident in Warburg. Herbold, Karl Julius Ernst (P7847)
 
190 He died in an accident. Schweinsberg, Bernd Wilhelm (P7940)
 
191 He died in house #142, March, 1869, nine months after his birth.
His godfather was Justus Schweinsberg. 
Lips, Justus Heinrich (P1942)
 
192 He died in house #142, March, 1869, nine months after his birth. Lips, Justus Heinrich (P2007)
 
193 He died in house 10 Aßheuer, Johann George (P9310)
 
194 He died in house 103 Schmitt, Marie Sophie Caroline (P7748)
 
195 He died in house 103. Dörbaum, Karl Heinrich (P7751)
 
196 He died in house 107 Schäfer, George Karl August (P7170)
 
197 He died in house 115 Blanckenberg, Heinrich Friedrich (P6359)
 
198 He died in house 115 Blanckenberg, George (P6363)
 
199 He died in house 115. Blanckenberg, Heinrich (P6361)
 
200 He died in house 116. Berger, Peter (P8451)
 

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