Individual Notes
Note for: Harvey S. Morse, 14 DEC 1833 -
Index
Individual Note: Harvey S. Morse
Residence Genoa Bluff IA; 28 years old.
Enlisted on 8/16/1862 as a Private.
On 8/28/1862 he mustered into "E" Co. IA 24th Infantry
He was discharged for disability on 5/25/1864 at New Orleans, LA
Other Information:
born in Massachusetts
Sources used by Historical Data Systems, Inc.:
- Roster & Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of Rebellion
Individual Notes
Note for: Philip William Carper, 4 NOV 1840 - 27 DEC 1918
Index
Individual Note: Philip W. Carper
Residence was not listed; 22 years old.
Enlisted on 12/17/1862 at White Post, VA as a Private.
On 12/17/1862 he mustered into "A" Co. VA 35th Battn Cavalry
He was Surrendered on 5/15/1865 at Edwards' Ferry, MD
(Estimated day of surrender)
He was listed as:
* Horse killed Brandy Station, VA (date not stated) ($800 dollar horse)
* POW 6/9/1863 Brandy Station, VA
* Hospitalized 6/10/1863 Alexandria, VA (Hospitalized for hand and thigh wounds)
* Hospitalized 6/16/1863 Old Capitol Prison, Washington, DC
* Returned 6/21/1863 (place not stated) (Returned to duty from wounds)
* Paroled 6/25/1863 Old Capitol Prison, Washington, DC
* POW 12/27/1863 Sugarland Run, VA
* Transferred 12/30/1863 Old Capitol Prison, Washington, DC
* Transferred 2/8/1864 Point Lookout, MD
* Exchanged 2/13/1864 (place not stated)
Other Information:
born 11/4/1840
died 9/21/1918
Buried: Chestnut Grove Cemetery, Herndon, VA
(Also had a position as Provost Marshall.)
Internet pedigree has this:
PHILIP ENLISTED ON 10 JUN 1861 IN THE 7TH SOUTH CAROLINA VOLUNTEERS UNDER CAP. W.D. FARLEY. HE PARTICIPATED IN THE FEDERAL PICKETS AT LOWE'S FLATS, NEAR DRANESVILLE, VIRGINIA AND WAS CAPTURED ABOUT 27 NOV 1861. HE WAS PART OF THE PRISONER EXCANGE OF 30 JUL 1862. HIS GRAVESTONE MARKER IDENTIFIES HIM AS A MEMBER OF COMPANY A. WHITE'S BATTALION, CONFEDERATE ARMY.
Individual Notes
Note for: Richard Fitzgilbert De Clare, ABT 1130 - 20 APR 1176
Index
Individual Note: After being ousted from his kingship in Leinster, and seeking help from King Henry II of England, Dermot MacMurrough enlisted the assistance of Richard FitzGilbert de Clare, Earl of Pembroke, better known as Strongbow. Anglo-Normans invaded Ireland in A.D. 1169 led by Strongbow. Norman barons Maurice FitzGerald and Robert FitzStephen were promised Wexford town and two adjoining cantreds for their services. Strongbow was promised the whole of Leinster upon Dermot's death. Dermot MacMurrough died in May 1171, and Strongbow established himself as lord of Leinster, after crushing a general revolt of the Leinster Irish and Ostmen within two years. In his Irish campaign Henry received recognition and hostages from the Ostmen (Vikings) of Wexford, who had captured Robert FitzStephen, as well as from many other kings in Ireland. Monarch, Henry II, armed with the authority of the Pope, proceeded to grant fiefs in Ireland to Norman nobles until they held extensive tracts of land in the east of Ireland that became known as the Pale.
Source: "A Brief History of Wexford"
http://users.rootsweb.com/~irlwex/wexhistory.html
Strongbow, the 2nd Earl of Pembroke, had only one son, the 3rd Earl, who died without issue.Because there was no male line, the title went to Strongbow's daughter Isabel and her husband. William Marshal became the 4th Earl. From then on the title went down through this female line in the Marshal family.
Richard FitzGilbert, 2nd earl of Pembroke
born c. 1130
died April 20, 1176, Dublin, Ire.
byname Richard Strongbow, also called Richard De Clare Anglo-Norman lord whose invasion of Ireland in 1170 initiated the opening phase of the English conquest.
The son of Gilbert FitzGilbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, he succeeded to his father's estates in southern Wales in 1148/49. Pembroke had evidently lost these lands by 1168; it was probably in that year that he agreed to aid Dermot MacMurrough, king of Leinster, who had been expelled from his kingdom by Roderic (Rory O'Connor), high king of Ireland. King Henry II of England (reigned 1154–89) granted Pembroke permission to invade Ireland, and on Aug. 23, 1170, the earl landed near Waterford. Waterford and Dublin quickly fell to the Normans. After the death of MacMurrough in May 1171, Pembroke was besieged in Dublin by Roderic, but in September his forces broke out and routed Roderic's army. In order to prevent Pembroke from setting himself up as an independent ruler, Henry II had him acknowledge royal authority over his conquests in Leinster. Pembroke helped the king suppress a rebellion in Normandy in 1173–74, and in return Henry granted him custody of Wexford, Waterford, and Dublin. By the time Pembroke died, all Ireland had been committed to his care, but within Ireland his supremacy was recognized only in Leinster.
His son Gilbert de Striguil (or Strigoil) died unmarried, certainly before 1189, and as a minor was never styled earl. The earldom passed with Richard's daughter Isabel (d. 1220) to her husband William Marshal, the 1st Earl of Pembroke in the Marshal line.
"Pembroke, Richard FitzGilbert, 2nd Earl of." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
[Accessed November 13, 2005].
Individual Notes
Note for: Maud De Saint Valery, - 1210 Index
Individual Note:
"Murdered by King John who had her walled up alive in her castle walls with her young son William."
Frederick Lewis Weis and Walter Lee Sheppard, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700, (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004).
Individual Notes
Note for: William Marshal, ABT 1146 - 14 MAY 1219 Index
Individual Note:
William Marshal, 1st earl of Pembroke
born c. 1146
died May 14, 1219, Caversham, Berkshire, Eng.
also called William The Marshal marshal and then regent of England who served four English monarchs as a royal adviser and agent and as a warrior of outstanding prowess.
Marshal's father, John (FitzGilbert) the Marshal (d. 1165), fought for the empress Matilda (widow of the German emperor Henry V and daughter of Henry I of England) in her unsuccessful struggle to gain the throne of her cousin King Stephen (reigned 1135–54). After proving his bravery in warfare and in tournaments, Marshal became a guardian (1170) to Prince Henry, eldest son of King Henry II (reigned 1154–89). In 1187, four years after the prince's death, Marshal reentered Henry II's service and fought beside him in France until the king died in 1189.
Upon the accession of Henry's third son, Richard I the Lion-Heart (reigned 1189–99), Marshal married Isabel, the heiress of Richard FitzGilbert (or de Clare), Earl of Pembroke, thereby acquiring vast estates in England, Normandy, Wales, and Ireland. Richard set forth on a crusade in 1190, leaving William Longchamp in charge of the kingdom. In the following year Pembroke joined the opposition that drove Longchamp into exile. While Richard was held captive in Germany (1192–94), Pembroke struggled to prevent the king's brother, John, from seizing power in England.
Upon the death of Richard I in 1199, Pembroke helped John succeed peacefully to the throne; he was formally recognized as Earl of Pembroke. By 1213 he had become the king's closest adviser, and he remained loyal to John during the disputes with the barons that led to the signing of the charter of liberties known as Magna Carta (June 1215). John died during the ensuing civil war with the barons, who had invited Louis of France (later King Louis VIII) to be their king. Designated rector regis et regni (“governor of the king and of the kingdom”) for John's son, King Henry III, Pembroke defeated the English barons and French invaders and in September 1217 concluded a treaty with Louis that wisely granted amnesty to the rebellious barons.
"Pembroke, William Marshal, 1st Earl of." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. [Accessed November 13, 2005].
Individual Notes
Note for: Floyd Emerson Workman, 12 OCT 1903 - 30 MAR 1997 Index
Burial:
Place: White Chapel Memory Gardens, Dewitt, Onondaga, NY
Individual Notes
Note for: Lola Pauline Sutherland, 28 JUL 1910 - 18 JUN 2003 Index
Burial:
Place: White Chapel Memory Gardens, Dewitt, Onondaga, NY
Individual Notes
Note for: Anna Lora Hopkins, MAR 1866 - Index
Individual Note:
Census Place: Pompey, Onondaga, New York
Source: FHL Film 1254906 National Archives Film T9-0906 Page 182B
Relation Sex Marr Race Age Birthplace
George HOPKINS Self M M W 48 NY
Occ: Farming Fa: NY Mo: CT
Euphemia HOPKINS Wife F M W 42 NY
Occ: Keeping House Fa: CT Mo: NY
Anna HOPKINS Dau F S W 14 NY
Fa: NY Mo: NY
Wildman WILLIAMS FatherL M M W 68 CT
Fa: CT Mo: CT
Sarah WILLIAMS MotherL F M W 65 NY
Fa: MA Mo: MA
According to the 1880 census, Anna and family were living 8 doors away from Bert Sutherland and his family.
Individual Notes
Note for: Walter William Sutherland, 24 FEB 1822 - 12 MAY 1906 Index
Occupation:
Place: Farmer
Individual Note:
In 1850, this family was in Milo, Yates County, NY. Walter was farming.
Individual Notes
Note for: Bessie Rose Hobart, 28 APR 1884 - 13 AUG 1967 Index
Burial:
Place: Delphi Cemetery
Individual Notes
Note for: Elijah Gridley Sutherland, 18 AUG 1820 - 30 OCT 1914 Index
Burial:
Place: Christ Church, Manlius, Onondaga, NY
Individual Note:
Elijah G. Sutherland married, apparently for the second time, a lady of 40 years of age named Della. The marriage took place on Mar 24, 1903, when the groom was 82 years old.
He and Esther were living in Pompey, Onondaga, NY when the 1880 census was taken.
Individual Notes
Note for: Mary Scofield, 20 FEB 1722/23 - 1808 Index
Individual Note:
Early Connecticut Marriages
Early Connecticut Marriages: Sixth Book
Stamford
From Fair Haven Church Records
page 49
Roger Sutherland of North Castle & Mary Scofield, April 20, 1758 [p.49]
Mary was a sister of Abigail Scofield, who married Nathaniel Smith.
Individual Notes
Note for: Arthur F. Sutherland, 20 FEB 1884 - JAN 1971 Index
Burial:
Place: Manlius Village Cemetery, Manlius, Onondaga, NY