Andrea Genealogy Pages

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101
Alfred lived at Aylesford and about 1908 relocated to Round Hill, Annapolis County. During his early life her served 10 years in the 68th Bn, Kings County Regt., and on 14 March 1916 enlisted in the 219th Bn, Canadian Overseas Expeditionary Force. He accompanied the unit to France, leaving Halifax on the S. S. Olympic 18 October 1916. In England he transferred to the 3rd Lab. Bn., and proceeded to France 9 Feb. 1917. His records show him wounded and shell shocked and returned to Canada via England and discharged at Halifax 14 Jan. 1918. being no longer fit for war service. Following his second marriage in 1927, he lived at Paradise, where he died suddenly while visiting a neighbor. Following his war service Alfred was self-employed drilling wells throughout the Annapolis Valley" (Source: Vernon Morse Spurr, 1989). 
SPURR, Alfred Tennyson (I7406)
 
102
Alfred-Alexandre Coutureau, ingénieur-géomètre de son état, demeurait au 13, rue Preschez à Saint-Cloud et fut l’inventeur de l’équerre d’alignement à réflexion, un outil indispensable aux topographes.

Coutureau optical square
 This optical square was invented by Alfred-Alexandre Coutureau ingénieur-géomètre in Saint-Cloud, France and patented in 1885 in France (pat. 169887), in Luxembourg (pat. 604) and in Germany (DRP 36083). According to the Berthelemy catalogue, the Coutureau optical square was adopted for use by the Italian Cadastre.
 Several (slightly different) versions are known: see Berthelemy 1890, Muret 1906, Morin 1910, and Secretan 1924. The optical square pictured at left is identical to the 1922 version sold by Secretan in their 1924 catalogue.

____________________

NOTES / RÉFÉRENCES

[1] Catalogue et Prix des Instruments de Mathématiques...A. Berthélemy, 1890, page 3 and 12. Library University of Chicago.

[2] H. Morin; Catalogue Général 37th edition, 1910-11, page 35. CNUM.

[3] Sécrétan; Instruments de précision, 1924, page 13. CNUM.

[4] Laussedat, Aimé; Recherches sur les instruments, les méthodes et le dessin topographiques, Gauthier-Villars, Paris 1898-1903.

[5] Charles Muret; Topographie: applications spéciales à l’agriculture; arpentage, nivellement, Cadastre, 1906, page 69. Internet Archive. 
COUTUREAU, Alfred-Alexandre (I20097)
 
103
Also known as Ivy 
ROWE, Iva May (I452)
 
104
Also known as Judson Sandford Skinner. 
SKINNER, Judson Sanders (I8859)
 
105
Alumni of Bowdoin College: Joseph Churchill Skinner. Bowdoin 1922-33; A. B. Cambridge Univ., Eng. 1935; A.M. Cambridge Univ., Eng. 1936. Ed. Boston, Mass. 1936-41. Vice-Pres. Property management, Boston, Mass. 1941-43; Real estate appraiser, Mortgage Corres., Property mgr. 1946-. USN 1943-46. 
SKINNER, Joseph Churchill (I9557)
 
106
Amherst, Virginia Marriage Records 
Family F316
 
107
Amos Straight and his brother Frederick L. Straight are buried in the same cemetery in Jacksonville, Illinois. Sarah and Amos’ daughter Irene is my great-grandmother. She married Paul Breckon and they moved to Wisconsin to farm but were both also buried in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Source: Brenda Pike, July 28, 2005) 
STRAIGHT, Marjorie Irene (I9668)
 
108
Amos Straight was a Fireman. 
STRAIGHT, Amos (I7125)
 
109
Amy is Marine Captain, working at OCS as the head of curriculum development. She is married to Captain Jordan Meads, instructor, TBS 
AKSTIN, Capt. Amy Melissa (I15879)
 
110
Amy is orthodontic assistant at Central Texas Orthodontics. She studied at Tyler Junior College. 
FERRY, Amy Renae (I9691)
 
111
Ancien Président de l’académie de Médecine. Officier de la Légion d’honneur.
Voir le discours d’éloge prononcé après sa mort à l’Association des Médecins de France par le Dr. A. Riant (secrétaire général). 
ROGER, Dr. Henri Louis (I24542)
 
112
Andreas Jann reached New York aboard the Statesman out of Le Havre, France on July 12th, 1850. His name is listed in the ship manifest (#228 | age: 27 | country: Hesse | occupation: Farmer). As it was the usage at that time, his firstname has been translated into the americanized form, Andrew. He stayed in New York three years where he married Eva Horn, then moved in 1856 to Iowa City, Iowa. Andrew Jann was one of the founders of the Germain Aid society of this city. In 1860, the company he worked for moved to Des Moines, so he was transferred to this city where he lived until his death. Andrew Jann (and his sons) are mentioned in successive editions (1866 to 1900) of the Des Moines City Directory. Andrew’s daughter, Henrietta, wrote a very colourful description of the family adventures from New York to Iowa City and Des Moines (follow link below). 
JANN, Andreas (I37)
 
113
Anne holds a B.S. degree (Course in Home Economics) from the University of Minnesota (1941). 
McCARTHY, Anne Beach (I12179)
 
114
Anthody Tirado Chase is a Professor in International Relations at Occidental College, USA. Professor Chase is a theoretician of human rights, most often in the contexte of the Middle East. His most recent article is “Human Rights Contestations: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity” in International Journal of Human Rights (April, 2016). His previous books are Human Rights, Revolution, and Reforem in the Muslim World (2012) and Human Rights in the Arab World: Independent Voices (co-edited with Amr Hamzawy, 2006). 
CHASE, Anthony Tirado (I19755)
 
115
Anthony studied at Dartmouth College (class of 1956) and at Harvard Business School.
 
CARLETON, Anthony Wayne (I9210)
 
116
Arthur Vernon Woodworth was born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1865. He attended the Roxbury Latin School before enrolling at Harvard University. After graduation in 1891, he earned a BA in divinity from Cambridge Episcopal Theological School and a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Freiburg, Germany in 1896. Upon receiving his PhD, Woodworth served as secretary to a committee researching the living conditions of unemployed people in Great Britain.
In 1898, Woodworth joined the Boston Stock Exchange. Ten years later he became a partner in a brokerage firm. In 1920, he resigned this position and joined the faculty at HBS as Instructor in Finance. In 1928 he was appointed Professor of Finance, a position he held until 1935, when he retired at the age of seventy. In addition to teaching at at HBS, Woodworth tutored students in history, government, and economics.
Professor Woodworth was married with three children. He died in Boston in 1950. (Source: Harvard University
WOODWORTH, Arthur Vernon (I7001)
 
117
Arthur was listed as a farmer when he married. He was a Mechanical Engineer, in drafting, working for for the NS car works. Later he became General Superintendent of Companies in Fredericton, NB, Hamilton, Ont.; Dayton, Ohio, manufacturing shells for WWI in Batavia, NY, Missouri and Findlay, Ohio. At the time of his death, he was employed in the drafting department of the American Car & Foundry Company (A.C.F.), the largest manufacturers of cars in the United States. Buried at Dayton, Ohio.

-Nichols, Arthur L., Windemere m. at Berwick 4 Jul 1907 to Carrie E. Power d/o Mrs. Eunice and the late Douglas W. Power, Sheffield Mills (The Berwick Register 25 Jul 1907)
-Nichols, Arthur of Kentville died at Jeffersonville, Indiana 12 Mar s/o Mansfield Nichols (The Berwick Register 30 Mar 1927 and 6 Apr 1927 obit)
-information on Arthur’s descendants from Miss Mabel Nichols 
NICHOLS, Arthur Leroy (I9240)
 
118
Associate Professor, Dalhousie University / Department of Psychiatry
Staff Psychiatrist, Capital District Health Authority
E-mail: lara.hazelton@cdha.nshealth.ca
 Dr. Lara Hazelton completed her medical school and residency training at Dalhousie University, followed by fellowship training in group and cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy at the University of Toronto. Dr. Hazelton is very active in education and has a cross-appointment with the Faculty of Medicine’s Division of Medical Education. She is currently enrolled in a Masters of Education program (Curriculum) at Acadia University.
 Dr. Hazelton’s research interests lie primarily in the area of educational research. In 2012, she received a Royal College Fellowship in Medical Education for her Masters research on teaching professionalism in postgraduate medical education. Her other main area of interest is Psychiatry and the Humanities. She received the Gold Headed Cane Award from the Dalhousie Medical Humanities Program in 2011, and she is the Department of Psychiatry’s Humanities Coordinator.
 In addition to academic publications on education, ethics, and humanities, Dr. Hazelton has published numerous creative works in a variety of medical and non-medical periodicals. (Source: humanities.medicine.dal.ca, 20 Mar 2013) 
KEITH, Dr. Lara Dawn (I12542)
 
119
At Indian Hills, a "fond farewell" party preceded the bridge games given in honor of Mrs. R. N. (Alice) Graham a winter resident for 21 years who is returning to Sharon, Pa., to live permanently. (Source: St. Lucie News Tribune from Fort Pierce, May 14, 1967) 
Alice W. (I11460)
 
120
Attended Roosevelt Elementary and Lincoln Jr. High Schools in Park Ridge, and graduated from Maine Township High School in 1964. He attended Northwestern University, graduating in 1968, and UCLA, taking a Ph.D. in 1974. He taught at UC Santa Barbara, UCLA, and UC San Diego before moving in 1976 to the Philadelphia area to take a position at the University of Pennsylvania. He married Beatriz C. de Jesus de Souza on December 31, 1967, divorcing in 1971. They had one child, Adrian Geoffrey Harpham (b. 10 November 1968). Adrian graduated from Winchester Middle School in 1986, and attended Berklee College of Music from 1988-91.

Geoffrey Galt Harpham is an American academic who currently serves as the fifth President and Director of the National Humanities Center, succeeding Charles Frankel, William Bennett, Charles Blitzer, and Robert Connor. One of the characteristics of his tenure has been the encouragement of dialogue between the humanities on the one hand and the natural and social sciences on the other.
 He is at the same time a Visiting Research Professor of English at Duke University and at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and also a Life Member of Clare Hall at the University of Cambridge.[3] He is in addition a member of the Board of Visitors of Ralston College. (Source: Wikipedia
HARPHAM, Geoffrey Galt (I13082)
 
121
Barbara graduated from Carnegie Tech. (1927, 1928?). She resided in Alexandria, Virginia about 1935.

Barbara Skinner was the private secretary to Lowell Mellet when he was administrative assistant to President Roosevelt. With her husband Max Mandellaub, a State Department employee, she went to Germany where she was Chief of Archives and later acting secretary general to the United States military tribunals in Nuremberg. In 1950 she was appointed special representative to the United States High Commissioner for Germany, John J. McCloy.

She has been chief of the Nuremberg Trials Court Archives from 21 February 1947 to 15 November 1949 [Source]. She married Max Mandellaub, who was also listed in the Nuremberg Military Tribunals’ Personnel in January 1948 :
– Barbara S. Mandellaub, Civilian: Thumenbergerweg 60
– Max Mandellaub, Civilian: Thumenbergerweg 60

Tweede Wereldoorlog. overdracht van Neurenberger archieven aan het Internationale Gerechtshof. De adjunct-griffier J. Garnier Coignet neemt de inventarisatielijst van Barbara Skinner Mandellaub (vertegenwoordiger van de Hoge Commissaris van de U.S.A. in Duitsland) in ontvangst, Den Haag 8 mei 1950.


From Nazi Medicine and the Nuremberg Trials, by Paul Julian Weindling (p. 160): “[...] The mounting piles of documents necessitated establishing procedures for their consultation so that nothing shoud go astray and alos to prevent deliberate destruction of evidence. The IMT prosecution had in fact lost the one surviving copy of the vital Wannsee Conference minutes (it was rediscovered in March 1947). Fortunately, all trial documents had been duplicated en masse. The defence was provided with a reading room. A small industry supported translation and duplication of the documents.
 The Court established an archive on 21 February 1947, keeping track of original documents under conditions of high security. The archivist, Barbara Skinner Mandelaub, serviced the prosecution and defence, maintaining a definitive set of trial transcripts. The staff was subject to a rigorous efficiency rating to maintain output and quality of work. A requirement for an archives assistant was meticulous presentation and order, as These elements a of importance in prepration or records such as indexing, cataloguing and classifying of material which is to be of permanent value for legal an historical reference for generations to come. Mandelaub increased the security and made sure that only archives staff retrieved or filed records, and the archives issued certified copies rather than originals so that nothing could be lost or destroyed. The Trial Documents achieved what amounted to sacrosanct status, once they had gone through the stages of authentication and been presented to the Court, where their authenticity could be challenged. Culprits were to be convicted by the masses of paperwork that the desk-bound killers had generated.” 
SKINNER, Barbara Reid (I34)
 
122
Before 1860 he moved to Lebanon, Maine where he was a farmer. 
JUNKINS, Daniel (I71)
 
123
Benjam Van Cleve is a Civil War veteran.
Regiment: 158 Pennsylvania Inf. | Rank in: Private | Rank out: Corporal. 
VAN CLEVE, Benjamin F. (I12145)
 
124
Benjamin is consultant at Booz Allen Hamilton. 
FERRY, Benjamin Lee (I9692)
 
125
Bessie Pearl ? (not Ethel ?) 
PALMER, Bessie Ethel (I9329)
 
126
Beth Vaughn currently lives in Kansas City, Missouri where she works as a news reporter for NBC Action News. She started her career in Topeka, Kansas after graduating with a Journalism degree from the University of Illinois. GO ILLINI!
 When she’s not chasing down lead stories, she substitute teaches, is a “Big” with Big Brothers/ Big Sisters and volunteers with the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. She’s passionate about people and loves to laugh. 
VAUGHN, Bethany (I10144)
 
127
BIBLE: ROBERTSON Family Bible: NOTE:
BIRTHS:.....
John H.(Harvey) LOGAN b 29 Jul 1842
George L. (Louis) LOGAN b 27 Nov 1843
J.(James) Alexander LOGAN b 18 Sep 1845.

FAMILY-HISTORY:LDS # 485323 LOGAN Family volume 13 pgs 0-4 & 8
Anthony came from Overton Co TN to Pulaski Co MO 25 Dec 1854.

CENSUS:1820 Federal Census Amherst Co VA page 200, male 1810-20.

CENSUS: 1850 Federal Census Rhea Co TN; page 584-325;NOTE:
Anthony LOGAN 30 VA farmer
Lucinda 31 TN
John H. 8 TN
George L. 6 TN
James A. 5 TN
Samuel W. 3 TN
Thomas A. TN
Barbary ROBESON age unk b VA. 
LOGAN, Anthony Malone (I6682)
 
128
BIBLE: ROBERTSON Family Bible: NOTE:
MARRIAGES:....
Anthony LOGAN married Loucinda ROBERTSON 16 Sep 1841
BIRTHS:.....
John H.(Harvey) LOGAN b 29 Jul 1842
George L. (Louis) LOGAN b 27 Nov 1843
J.(James) Alexander LOGAN b 18 Sep 1845. 
Family F549
 
129
BIBLE: ROBERTSON FAMILY BIBLE; submitted by Betty Adwell SMITH, Rt 3 Box 127, Rockwood, TN, 37854; The Bible now in her possession, came to her from her grandmother, Emma Wassom McCUISTION, after having been passed down through the family of Harvey and Mahalia PEARSON ROBERTSON.

MARRIAGE#2: MARRIAGE OF PROMINENT YOUNG PEOPLE: Mr. Thos H. ROBERTSON and Miss Hannah HOLLAND were united in the bonds of holy wedlock at the home of his bride, two and one-half miles SE of town, at 4:00 this afternoon, Squire M. S. HOLLOWAY officiating. A number of relatives and friends of the contracting parties were present to witness the ceremony joining these to young people together for life. The groom is only 63 years of age, while his bride has gathered the fragrant flowers of 50-odd summers. Mrs. ROBERTSON is a sister to Mrs. T.B. HOLLAWAY, of this city. We hasten to extend congratulations.

OBIT: T. H. ROBINSON; T. H. ROBINSON died at his home, four miles from Spring City Tennesse, 4 Dec 1914,aged 72 years. Mr. ROBINSON has been afflicted for some time with that dreadful malady, dropsy. He had twice been married; his first wife was Sarah BURNETT, formerly Sarah BRYSON. who preceded him to the grave by several years. He then married Miss HOLLAND, who survives him. In the eaarly sixties Comrade ROBINSON cast his lot with the Confederacy, and became a member of Captain Burton Leuty’s company in the First Tennessee Calvary snd served four years. He was a splendid soldier, always ready for the call of duty, and it can be truly said of him, that he never missed an opportunity to do effective service for the Southland when presented. He was always present and ready for duty when called, and was true to principle as the needle to the pole, and perhaps no man in the Confederate service undertook more difficult tasks or was more willing to brave danger than he. In fact, he did not seem to realize what the word fear meant. I could mention many instances of his daring rides and heroic escapades of which he, in his life time was too modest to speak, but it is suffcient to say that he was a fine soldier, a splendid citizen, a good neighbor, a loving husband, and we all shall miss him. A Comrade 
ROBERTSON, Thomas H. (I6670)
 
130
BIBLE: ROBERTSON FAMILY BIBLE; submitted by Betty Adwell SMITH, Rt 3 Box 127, Rockwood, TN, 37854; The Bible now in her possession, came to her from her grandmother, Emma Wassom McCUISTION, after having been passed down through the family of Harvey and Mahalia PEARSON ROBERTSON.

CENSUS: 1840 Rhea Co TN Federal Census; NOTE:
Anthony ROBERTSON b 1810-1800
female 1820-1810
male 1840-1835
2 female 1840-1835.

CENSUS: 1850 Federal Census Rhea Co TN; page 584-323; NOTE
Anthony ROBISON 40 VA farmer
Malinda 38
Susan E. 14
William 13
Lutitia J. 11
Thomas H. 9
Semantha C. 7
John W. 3
George H. 1
Thomas LANE 20. 
ROBERTSON, Anthony (I971)
 
131
BIBLE: The following ROBERTSON Family Bible record was submitted by Betty Adwell SMITH, Rt 3, Box 127, Rockwood, TN 37854. The Bible, now in her possession, came to her from her grandmother, Emma Wassom McCUISTION, after having been passed down through the family of Harvey ROBERTSON and Mahalia PEARSON. The Bible was published in Cincinnati br E. MORGAN and Son in 1837. Several members of the Harvey LOGAN family are interred in the Lety Cemetery
r Spring City during the construction of Watts Bar Dam. 
ROBERTSON, Benjamin (I6444)
 
132
BIBLE: The following ROBERTSON Family Bible record was submitted by Betty Adwell Smith, Rt 3, Box 127, Rockwood, TN 37854. The Bible, now in her possession, came to her from her grandmother, Emma Wassom McCuistion, after having been passed down through the family of Harvey Robertson and Mahalia Pearson. The Bible was published in Cincinnati br E. Morgan and Son in 1837. Several members of the Harvey Logan family are interred in the Lety Cemetery in Rhea County. These graves were removed to the Marsh Cemetery near Spring City during the construction of Watts Bar Dam.

Apr 1820; Roane Co TN Order Book: 1801-20, page 174; Apr 1820 Session; (Hazel L COLLINS) NOTE: On the petition of Joseph PRIGMORE and Thomas PRIGMORE, it is ordered by the court that Thomas PRIGMORE, Joseph PRIGMORE, George ALEXANDER, James GAMBLE, Thomas GAMBLE, Harvey ROBERTSON, and Lewis DeROSSETT, or any five of them being first sworn for that purpose, do view the present road to a new way through Benjamin PAWLEY farm and report to next Court.

Members of both the Benjamin ROBERTSON (1780) and Henry (Harvey) ROBERTSON families were resideing in Polk, by 1850 and were enumerated on that Census. Their surname was spelled with a variant spelling. All but one of the five"ROBERTSON" households enumerated on the 1850 Polk, CENSUS can be identified as a descendant of either Benjamin (1780) or Henry (HARVEY). The one exception was a Benjamin ROBINSON, abt. 1810. He was a lawyer from SOUTH CAROLINA and hadmigrated to MO. before 1834.2. Robertson Family Bible. NOTE: Robertson Family Bible is in possession of Betty Adwell Smith, Rt. 3, Box 127, Rockwood, TN 378543. Amherst, VIRGINIA MARRIAGE RECORDS. 
ROBERTSON, Henry Harvey (I966)
 
133
Billion Graves: http://billiongraves.com/pages/record/FrankRKaufmann/2737943 
KAUFMANN, Ronald Frank (I13736)
 
134
birth info from Friday April 8 1904 "Digby Weekly Courier" birth announcements
death info from Saturday January 31 1987 "Halifax Chronicle Herald" obit. 
BOUDREAU, Charles William (I8291)
 
135
Birthdates of family taken from 1901 Census (Sunbury & Queens District of NB, Can, Cambridge sub-district, 2941, page 23). George was of Hampstead, when he married Saraphina Hanselpacker. Year on Census was 1862, but year of birth on gravestone is 1861, so using latter for my primary (source: Jared Handspicker). 
PALMER, George Oliver (I8813)
 
136
Birthplace: Wright City, OK ?
Father: Arthur Rowe (bp: Louisiana) | Mother : Mae Moore (bp: Texas)
 
ROWE, Bernie Lois (I24958)
 
137
Blog: Twigs and Trees.
 
GILLESPIE, Celia Ann (I14199)
 
138
Book : William Henry Doughty [and] Janet Elizabeth Coes, by Shirley F. Libby (1996) 
Family F2939
 
139
born at 16h20 – weight 3,9kg 
BELDICEANU, Florence (I8294)
 
140
Born Feb. 14, 1899, in Brookline, Mass. American geographer. Professor at the University of Michigan (from 1934), Syracuse University (from 1945), and other universities.

James was a consultant to and director of various organizations concerned with Latin American geography and social development. From 1948 to 1953 he was a member of the National Research Council of the American Geophysical Union. In 1951, James became the president of the Association of American Geographers and in 1957 the president of the Council on Latin American Affairs. He wrote a monograph on Latin American geography and a series of text-books on geography for high school and college students.

Works
An Outline of Geography. New York, 1935.
Geography of Man, 2nd ed. Boston, 1959. (In collaboration with H. G. Kline.)
One World Divided: A Geographical Look at the Modern World. New York, 1964.
In Russian translation:
Latinskaia Amerika. Moscow, 1949. 
JAMES, Preston Everett (I15180)
 
141
Born in 1934, Vernon P. Woodward was an Episcopal priest at Church of the Advent in Cincinnati, Ohio when he was arrested for his participation in the Prayer Pilgrimage Freedom Ride in 1961. As part of the pilgrimage, Woodward, along with fourteen other Episcopal clergymen, traveled from New Orleans, Louisiana to Jackson, Mississippi where he and the others were arrested in the Trailways terminal on 13 September 1961.

Cincinnatian 1 Of 15 Pastors Freed In South
Rev. Vernon P. Woodward of Cincinnati was among 15 Episcopal ministers who were freed of breach-of-the-peace charges yesterday in Jackson, Miss. The bi-raclal group of ministers had been fined and sentenced to four-month jail terms after attempting to desegregate a bus station restaurant last fall. The group, which Included a son-in-law of New York’s Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, had spent only a few days in jail following arrest. Rev. Mr. woodward resigned as curate at the Church of the Advent, Walnut Hills, last September to join the pilgrimage which landed him in jail. Charges were dropped against the ministers “out of respect and admiration for the Episcopal Church and the Mississippi Episcopal churchmen,” according to the prosecution in Jackson. (Source: The Cincinnati Enquirer, April 10, 1962.) 
WOODWARD, Vernon Powell (I9794)
 
142
Born in Chicago, Fran Larsen grew up on the south end of Lake Michigan where she learned about the “construction” of the land from an uncle who was a glacial geologist. She also drew at an early age, encouraged by her grandmother who displayed her drawings. After graduating magna cum laude with a BA from Michigan State University, she studied at the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts and at Hope College, Holland, MI. In 1980, she moved to New Mexico.
 Larsen’s paintings reflect her response to New Mexico’s "geological grandeur and vibrant cultures.Paintings are not windows onto the world, they are reflections of who you are. That’s why I started carving and painting my frames". Her frames are inspired by travel in Mexico and by the carved and painted vigas in the NM Art Museum’s St. Francis Auditorium. She designs and carves each frame to complement the painting it surrounds, and to reassert that the painting is an object — what she calls self talk, or an intensely personal dialogue between what she sees and what she feels—not a representation of the buildings and landscapes in them. Larsen is represented by Manitou Gallery, Santa Fe.
 
TERWILLIGER, Frances Ann (I14255)
 
143
Born “Louis Streeter Macbrien”, he changed his name in “Louis Packard Streeter” (reason: unknown, date: before 1900) 
STREETER, Louis Packard (I10172)
 
144
Brenda worked at and is retired from Verizon. Active with children at Good Shepherd UMC Sunday School and Summer Bible School. Elementary school teacher assistant. Active with Beltsville Boys & Girls Club. Still a Canadian citizen, even after living in the states since 1962. 
SPURR, Brenda Joyce (I19859)
 
145
Bruce Boutall has been police office in Athol, Mass. Known for his quick wit, Casella thanked those in attendance and credited his wife Mary with his passing the test and for helping him through the studying.He thanked officers in the rotunda and said " I owe alot of what I am as a cop to Jim Bouchard."He then quipped right back and said " I owe alot of what I am not as a cop to Bruce Boutall."( a recent retired Athol Police Officer) – source: Athol Daily News, 29 Nov 2001. 
BOUTALL, David Bruce (I10559)
 
146
Bruce Rigby A long-time resident of Nunavut, Mr. Rigby is currently on a two-year secondment to the Department of Education from Nunavut Arctic College to write and implement the Nunavut Adult Learning Strategy, and to develop a new funding allocation model for Colleges in Nunavut.Mr. Rigby has held several senior positions with both the federal and territorial governments, and has worked with Inuit organizations throughout Nunavut.Most recently, Mr. Rigby was the Interim President of Nunavut Arctic College, a Deputy Head position of the Government of Nunavut.He has also held a Cabinet appointment as the Science Advisor to the Government of Nunavut and Executive Director of the Nunavut Research Institute.Mr. Rigby continues to work in community participatory action research specializing in sustainable development, traditional land use and community education and development.He has sat on advisory boards for several foundations and agencies which have included the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, the Northern Science Training Grant Program, the Canadian Circumpolar Institute, and as the chair of the Scientific Screening Committee of Polar Continental Shelf Project. (source: gateways.athabascau.ca, 10 Aug 2007).

IQALUIT, Nunavut (12 novembre 2010) – La première ministre Eva Aariak a annoncé aujourd’hui que Bruce Rigby, qui a servi son cabinet à titre de secrétaire principal et de chef de cabinet prendra sa retraite du gouvernement du Nunavut à la fin de la présente année civile.
 Monsieur Rigby a occupé plusieurs postes au cours de ses 24 années de service au gouvernement du Nunavut et au gouvernement des Territoires du Nord-Ouest, ainsi qu’à titre de président du Collège de l’Arctique du Nunavut et de président de la Société d’énergie Qulliq.
 Parmi ses nombreuses réalisations, Monsieur Rigby a notamment conçu et dirigé le Programme sur les technologies environnementales du Collège de l’Arctique du Nunavut, établi l’Institut de recherche du Nunavut, servi en tant que conseiller scientifique du Nunavut et coprésidé le groupe de travail chargé d’élaborer la Stratégie de formation des adultes du Nunavut.
 « Je tiens à remercier Bruce pour ses 24 années de services dévoués au sein des gouvernements du Nunavut et des Territoires du Nord-Ouest. Bruce mérite toutes nos félicitations, non seulement pour son engagement envers son employeur, le gouvernement, mais aussi de manière générale pour son engagement envers les Nunavummiut qu’il a si bien servi en tant qu’employé de l’État », a déclaré la première ministre Aariak, « Son savoir collectif et ses connaissances de l’histoire vont nous manquer. Je remercie Bruce au nom du gouvernement pour ses nombreuses contributions et je lui souhaite bonheur et succès dans ses futures entreprises. » 
RIGBY, Bruce (I12549)
 
147
By 1884, 17 Hereford St. (Boston) was the home of Frank Everett James and his wife, Gertrude (Woodworth) James. He was a banker with the firm of Richardson, Hill & Co. They were joined by Gertrude James’s father, Alfred Skinner Woodworth, a tea importer, and her brother, Arthur Vernon Woodworth, who was a clerk at Richardson, Hill & Co. Gertrude James’s mother, Anna Gorton (Grafton) Woodworth, had died in September of 1883. Also living with Frank and Gertrude James in 1885 was his brother, Edward Preston James, whose wife, Carrie (Piper) James, had died in December of 1883.
By 1886, Frank and Gertrude James had moved to Brookline, and Edward James had moved to Monadnock. Arthur Vernon Woodworth and his son, Alfred, continued to live at 17 Hereford in 1886. Arthur Woodworth remarried in October of 1886 and moved soon thereafter to the Hotel Vendôme. (Source: Back Bay Houses). 
JAMES, Frank Everett (I7004)
 
148
Caleb Rand Bill (9 January 1806 – 1 February 1872) was a member of the Canadian Senate.
 Born in Billtown, Nova Scotia, a town founded by his ancestors, he was a farmer before entering politics. In 1828, he married Rebecca Cogswell. He represented Kings County from 1855 to 1859 and the northern region of Kings County from 1863 to 1867 in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. A Liberal-Conservative, he was appointed to the Senate on 23 October 1867 by a royal proclamation of Queen Victoria following Canadian Confederation earlier that year. He represented the senatorial division of Nova Scotia until his death. He was also governor for Acadia College, president of the county agricultural society and a member of the school commission.
 His son William served as a member of the Nova Scotia assembly. 
BILL, Caleb Rand (I15428)
 
149
Camille was a graduated nurse (diploma received Sept. 14, 1939, in the Danvers State Hospital, Mass.) 
HENNESSEY, Camille (I10782)
 
150
Canadian 1881 census: He resided in Berwick. He was a farmer. 
SKINNER, Edward Manning (I7109)
 

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