


Wrenacres
Ancestors and Family of Brian Scott Dickson and Kathleen Ann Boyle Dickson
Notes
Matches 3,501 to 3,550 of 5,239
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3501 | Mildred Mae Lampe, 77, of Fort Smith, died April 11, 2009 in Fort Smith. She was a retired employee of the Fort Smith Public School System and Desoto Furniture Company. She was a member of Christ the King Catholic Church and the Women's Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order of the Eagles #208. Mildred will be remembered for her thoughtfulness to others and caring spirit. She is survived by two sons, Darrell Patrom and his wife Liz of Fort Smith and Melvin Hocking and his wife Bonnie of Mart. TX; one daughter, Patricia Cole and her husband Ron of Broken Arrow, OK; two sisters, Sue Tuck of Van Buren, Alivern McDonald of Van Buren; two brothers, Alvin Hunter of Fort Smith and Leonard Hunter of Muldrow; twelve grandchildren and ten great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband Joseph Lampe. Rosary was said April 14, 2009 at 6:00 PM in the Fentress Mortuary Chapel and Mass was said on Wednesday, April 15, 2009 at 12:30 PM in Christ the King Catholic Church and burial in the U.S. National Cemetery all under the direction of Fentress Mortuary. | Hunter, Mildred Mae (I7570)
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3502 | Mildred recorded this ias 16 Dec 1964. The Texas Death Index records it as 15 Dec 1963. | Hudson, Charles Robert (I3733)
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3503 | Mildred Whitten notes him as Robert Edward Almand, but his grave stone says Robert Erwin. | Almand, Robert Erwin (I352)
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3504 | Miles was clerk in the office of the Secretary of State at Jamestown,1691, clerk of the legislative committees of Privileges and Electionsand of Public Claims and Clerk of Warwick Co. until 1718. He wascolonel of the Warwick militia 1702. | Cary, Miles Jr. (I1443)
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3505 | MILITARY: (From Robert Hale) Private, March 4, 1862. Lost right eye at Knoxville, Tenn, November 1863. Captured at Baker's Creek, Miss May 16, 1863, Paroled in 1863. Received at City Point, Va for exchange July 6, 1863. Roll dated December 10, 1863 last on file shows him AWOL. Pension records show he surrendered at Greensboro, N.C. April 26, 1865. | Almand, Thomas S. (I382)
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3506 | MILITARY: (Robert Hale) Appears on the muster roll of Co C, 56th Ga Vol Inf. Private on 10 May 1862. Captured at Vicksburg, Miss, 4 July 1863 and paroled there 8 Jul 1863. MILITARY: Almand, Bennett S. (or Almond)- private May 10, 1862.Captured at Vicksburg, Miss. July 4, 1863 , and paroled there July 8,1863. "Appears on an undated list of effective men of the 56th Regiment Ga. Inf., present and furloughed at Enterprise, Miss. July 23, 1863." No later record. Newton1, N5, N1 Must have moved to Arkansas prior to Dec. 1872 | Almand, Bennett Simeon (I208)
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3507 | MILITARY: CSA | Almand, Joseph L. (I292)
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3508 | MILITARY: CSA | Dennard, John Isaiah (I2456)
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3509 | MILITARY: CSA, discharged for disability in 1863 | Almand, James Thomas (I271)
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3510 | MILITARY: Died in the Civil War. | Almand, Henry Floyd (I254)
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3511 | MILITARY: In John W. Hudson's service record, there is a small confusion as to exactly when and where he enlisted. There are cards in the service jacket for John W. Hudson, Co B, 7th Georgia Infantry and for John W. Hudson, Co F, 7th Georgia Infantry. I suspect that this is the result of a reorganization in the field. It appears that J.W. Hudson enlisted in Co. B, 7th Georgia Infantry on 31 May 1861 in Atlanta. The unit then marched to Virginia where it was reorganized in July of 1861. Consulting the regimental histories might be helpful in this regard. Served under General Lee in Civil War. Was at Appomattox. Member of Co. "B", 7th Georgia Regiment of Georgia Infantry. He enlisted in May 1861 and was paroled at Appomattox in April, 1865, having served the entire war. John W. Hudson enlisted in Co. B, 7th Georgia Infantry as a Private on 31 May 1861 at Atlanta, Georgia for a term of one year. (He ended up serving for the duration of the war.) On July 18, 1861, he was found in Co F of the same regiment, enlisting there in Winchester, Virginia. During July, August, September, and October 1861, he was recorded as Absent - Sick. He is listed on the register of the General Hospital at Orange Court House, Virginia on 21 Oct 1861 with remittent fever. On 25 October 1861, he is again found on a register of the General Hospital at Charlottesville, Virginia for intermittent fever but returned to duty on 4 Nov 1861. John W. Hudson is listed on the regimental return for Co. B, 7 Regt Georgia Infantry for November 1861. On a register of the Medical Director, Army of the Potomac at Manassas Junction, Virginia, 28 Nov 186, it is noted that if his disability is such as to warrant his discharge from the service, transfer him to the General Hospital at Warrenton for that purpose. He appears on the register of Chimborazo Hospital No. 1 in Richmond, Virginia, admitted on 29 Nov 1861 and transferred to Huguenot Springs. He returns to duty on 6 Dec 1861, on register of the C.S.A. hospital at Farmville, Virginia. He was recorded as Present for January & February 1862 and is listed as 2 Corporal. For March & April 1862, J.W. Hudson is listed as present and and promoted to 4th Sgt on 22 March 1862. For May & June 1862, he is recorded as present with Sergeant pay due until 12 May, but listed as a Private again. For the term June 30 to Oct 31, 1862, J.W. Hudson is listed as present, 4th Sgt, and promoted to 3rd Sgt on 1 Oct 1862. He is listed as present for Nov & Dec 1862. For Jan & Feb 1863, he is listed as absent, on furlough since 2 Feb., but present again for March & April 1863. John W. Hudson appears on a receipt roll for the third quarter of 1864 for clothing. On 21 Jun 1863, John W. Hudson was elected 3rd Lieutenant and is listed as present for May & June of that year. He is listed as present for July, August, September, October 1863, January-April 1864, July-October 1864. A roster dated 9 Oct 1864, near Chafin's Bluff, shows that J.W. Hudson was 2nd Lieut and was elected to that position on 21 Jun 1863. John W. Hudson is found on a hospital muster roll at the 2nd Division Hospital in Richmond, Virginia on 31 August 1863. He is found again in the same hospital, admitted on 29 August 1864 with a reason of "V.S. R. arm". He was furloughed for 40 days starting on Sept 15, 1864. Another register listing from the Jackson Hospital, Richmond, Virginia shows he was admitted on 28 Aug 1864 with "v.s. R. arm min B" and was furloughed for 30 days on 15 Sept 1864. A register of the Medical Director's Office, Richmond, Virginia shows him in Jackson Hospital until 17 Sept 1864 with a remark "Griffin, Ga". Perhaps a destination during furlough. Through November, December 1864, January, February 1865, he is listed as present on company muster rolls. John W. Hudson, 2nd Liety, Co B, 7th Ga Inf, is shown on a list of signatures and on a list of prisoners of war paroled at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, 9 April 1865 and in camp at that place on 20 Apr 1865. | Hudson, John Wesley (I3754)
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3512 | MILITARY: James F. Almand served in the CSA and was discharged for disability in April 1862. He died later that year. | Almand, James F. (I267)
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3513 | MILITARY: Jeff Garner was the only one of John Page's sons or sons-in-law who fought for the Confederacy; all others served the Union. Ref: [Military,,Jefferson GARNER], [Page,,Page93a] Jeff Garner's wife, Lucinda, applied for a Confederate Widow's pension in Arkansas on 1902-08-21. Her widow's number was 13750. According to the pension index, Jeff died in 1883. Also listed in Yell County are veterans Arch Garner & Columbus F. Garner. Not on 1884 York voters list Garners do not appear in the York County, SC deeds. On further examination of the tax lists and the census, they do not appear to actually own land. | Garner, Thomas Jefferson (I3108)
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3514 | MILITARY: John O. Brewer was a Union soldier. He died in hospital as a result of disease before actually engaging in battle. According to Susan Dickson, he snuck home at one point early in his military enlistment to visit his wife. Her brother, an ardent Confederate,came to visit so John hid until he left because the brother said that if he saw him, he would shoot him as quick as any other Yankee. This story can only be partly true, since it appears that Sarah's family were Union supporters overall. Interestingly, there is a John O. Brewer in the CSA Rivers' Battery, Arkansas Light Artillery and in the US Army, 1st Regt, Arkansas Infantry, Co. E, however, the Confederate Brewer served after the Union Brewer was already dead and was otherwise not the same person. | Brewer, John Oliver (I1205)
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3515 | MILITARY: Lost three fingers in an accident in Franklin, Tennessee on 30 Nov 1864. | Almand, Henry Pryor (I255)
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3516 | MILITARY: Revolutionary service, Major. | Anderson, George (I432)
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3517 | MILITARY: Revolutionary service. | Anderson, William (I443)
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3518 | MILITARY: Served in the Central Laboratory in Macon, Ga. Muster rolls list him as a nitric acid maker in the Cap Factory | Overton, James H. (I4875)
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3519 | Military: Served in WWII Residence: Fort Smith AR, moved to Allison Park, PA, 1996 Robert served in the 40th Infantry Division of the US Army, 108th Battalion. Though he did not actively seek to enlist, due to the fact that he had two small children, when he was called for the draft, he did not seek deferment. He trained at Camp B. in Florida before shipping out to the Philippine Islands. He arrived on Leyte island in the spring of 1945 after the fighting in Europe had already ended and participated in battle there. Given the choice between being a machine gunner and an mortar man, he selected the mortar. He said that he would much rather be back behind the mountain than out in front just making the enemy mad. He was the 2nd gunner in an mortar team,carrying the mortar tube itself. His unit served in the Philippines through the end of hostilities and them moved to Korea in October 1945 to serve with the occupation forces there. During his time in Korea,Robert served as a truck driver. While in the Army, Robert received his marksman medal, a good conduct medal, and campaign ribbons for the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign and the Liberation of the Philippines Campaign. He served 16 months in the army and returned home in June 1946. His serial number from his dog-tag was 38732441 T44. Granddad says that he and Grandmother met on June 8, 1938. They were at a church youth meeting. She knew who he was but he didn't know her. They met and talked. He walked her home, since she lived close to him. He walked her home the next week as well. After that, she was babysitting on a regular basis and would take the child she was babysitting to the drug store for a soda. He would meet up with her there and talk. After they met one another, they neither one ever dated anyone else. Granddad died peacefully around 5pm on Monday, July 2, 2007. | Dickson, Robert Harrison Jr. (I2600)
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3520 | MILITARY: Welcome was wounded at Gettysburg, Pa. Welcome is listed as William in the 1860 Census. | Almand, Welcome Ussery (I393)
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3521 | Miller DAR | Miller, Polly (I4654)
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3522 | MillerDAR abstracts will. | Anderson, James (I434)
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3523 | Millie is found in the home of J.S. and Charlotta Pool in the 1860 Census of Paulding County, Georgia without James. The 1860 Census does not record marital status, but it appears that she is alone. Her daughter is also not there with her. Where is she in 1860? Is she with James, separate from Millie? Is James dead and she is with someone else? In any case, Millie marries Robert Gann in 1865, so that means James is out of the picture by then anyway, apparently dead, most likely dead by 1860. | Armour, James M. (I488)
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3524 | Millie McGrane has two sets of dates for this person. There must be two Lonnie's. She has one born Sept. 1902, d. 28 Jun 1916 and a second born 13 may 1901, d. 1983. I think this is the first. Lonnie is enumerated in the 1910 census, so this birth date of 1915 must be wrong. Lonnie is not enumerated in the 1920 census. Maybe she has died by then. | Dickson, Lonnie (I2584)
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3525 | Milly Armer is enumerated in 1860 in the home of J.S. and Charlotta Pool, along with Thomas Lacky. Milly is listed as 34 years old. Charlotta is 52 and J.S. Pool (or Bool) is 68. Perhaps Charlotta / Charlotte is a sister to Milly. This is not a very common name but it crops up in this family quite a lot. J.S. Pool is enumerated next door to E.W. Pool, age 33 (probably a son). | Allen, Millie (I158)
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3526 | Minister brought before the Star Chamber and imprisoned for holding Gospel services in private | Thickpenny, George (I6852)
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3527 | Minister brought before the Star Chamber and imprisoned for holding Gospel services in private | Thickpenny, Christopher (I6853)
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3528 | Minnie's half-sister Addi Mullen is living on the same property, presumably in a home in the back yard, with her daughter Geneva. | Dickson, Minnie Zarada (I2595)
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3529 | Miss Bettie Clay Cason of Dustin, Oklahoma arrived in the city this morning and is a guest of Miss Lida Higgs. | Cason, Bettie Clay (I8065)
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3530 | Miss Bettie Higgs has returned from a visit to DeQueen. | Higgs, Bettie (I3526)
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3531 | Miss Bettie Higgs, of Idabel, Okla, and Miss Lucile Smith, of Tyler, Texas, are visiting Miss Bill Dennison in this city. | Higgs, Bettie (I3526)
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3532 | Miss Claire Taaffe entertained with a matinee party at the Lyric Saturday afternoon in honor of her eighth birthday. After the show, the party returned to the home of the hostess, where light refreshments were served, after which a few hours were spent in fun and frolic. Those present were: Misses Fay Strawn, Mary Wilson, Alline Campbell, Kathleen Barnes, Ulas Barrett, Marguarite Spaulding, Nellie Montgomery, Bird Hooper, Louise Mosely, Mary Higgs, Delle Pyron, Stella Carwile, Vera Riley, Dorothy Van Alstyne, and Jeure Duke of Haworth. | Higgs, Mary (I3536)
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3533 | Miss Lida Higgs arrived home today from a three weeks visit to points in Arkansas. | Higgs, Lida (I3535)
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3534 | Missing in 1870 census, probably has died. | White, Wiley J. (I10168)
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3535 | Missing in Decatur tax list for 1852, 1854, 1855, 1856 | Shehee, Henry Daniel (I9580)
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3536 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Eash, Joseph (I2698)
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3537 | Monday evening, Mrs. W. H. Thompson, assisted by Miss Hattie Bell Isbell, entertained in honor of her son, Lewis, and a number of young people attended. The evening was spent in entertaining games. Harry Love, standing highest in the prize awarding contest, received a beautiful box of stationery. Elegant refreshments were served. Among those present were Misses Mary Lee Dewitt, Noreen Ellers, Mabel Smith, Augustine McCrary, Gladys Fulmer, Kate Isbell, and Lida Higgs and Masters Cecil Baxter, Sandlin Ball, Barton McClendon, Harry Love, and Edgar Freeman. | Higgs, Lida (I3535)
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3538 | Monroe appears in the 1850 Census, but no where else. Perhaps he is really A.D. Wren there (as Betty Wren suspects). Or perhaps he took his older brother's name when he passed. | Wren, Monroe (I7117)
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3539 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Friesen, Jeretta Rose (I3054)
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3540 | Mortage for $1050. First Party: Larkin Deshazo Lender: Thomas W. Castle Trustee: Thomas W. Castle Property: 80 acres, E 1/2 NW 1/4 S 11 T 19 R 9 E, the place where Larkin Deshazo now lives. Due 1 Jan 1867 | Deshazo, Rev. Larkin Columbus (I2507)
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3541 | Mortality schedule lists William as 8/12 years old. It also lists that there was an outbreak of typhus in the Randolph area. | Dargan, William Pomroy (I9343)
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3542 | Morton Higgs arrived in the city Saturday evening from Fayetteville, Arkansas where he has been attending the University. | Higgs, Morton Thomas (I3538)
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3543 | Morton Higgs will arrive Saturday. Will complete studies at the University of Arkansas in June. | Higgs, Morton Thomas (I3538)
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3544 | Morton is listed as a 2nd Lt, Field Artillery and is assigned to the 22nd Field Artillery at Camp Logan, Texas. | Higgs, Morton Thomas (I3538)
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3545 | Morton T. Higgs arrived in the city this morning from Fayetteville, Ark. where he has been attending the University for a visit with his parents Mr. & Mrs. J.W. Higgs before going to his summer work. | Higgs, Morton Thomas (I3538)
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3546 | Morton T. Higgs who is attending the University of Arkansas came on Sunday to spend the holidays with his parents. | Higgs, Morton Thomas (I3538)
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3547 | Mother of Senator Walker of Arkansas. | McLean, Susan Howard (I4567)
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3548 | Moved from Truro, Iowa to Marshall, Texas in 1952. | Paulk, Edgar McDonald (I7538)
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3549 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Dickson, Brian Scott (I1)
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3550 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Dickson, Brian Scott (I1)
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