hmtl5 Notes: Hedges Genealogy

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Matches 12,101 to 12,150 of 12,430

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12101 two children by second marriage. Hedges, Irene Vivian (I219)
 
12102 two daughters

LH note: California death record confirms mother's maiden name of Hamm. 
White, Claude Jesse (I888)
 
12103 two daughters Smith, Orra "Norman" (I55)
 
12104 Two Die, Aged 93 and 82.
Only Thirteen Hours Between Passing of Preacher and His Wife.
Cumberland Md., Nov. 24. – The Rev. Jonathan Kieher Hedges, 93 years old, and his wife, Margaret McClung Hedges, age 92, died within thirteen hours of each other at Smoot, W.Va., yesterday.
The Rev. Mr. Hedges, a native of Kentucky, first joined the Kentucky conference and later the West Virginia conference, this being in the early days of Methodism. His circuit at time included several counties and some years his salary did not amount to over $60.
One son and three daughters survive.
The Washington Post, Washington, District of Columbia. Monday, 25 November 1912, page 3.
 
McClung, Margaret Jane (I664)
 
12105 Two Die, Aged 93 and 82.
Only Thirteen Hours Between Passing of Preacher and His Wife.
Cumberland Md., Nov. 24. – The Rev. Jonathan Kieher Hedges, 93 years old, and his wife, Margaret McClung Hedges, age 92, died within thirteen hours of each other at Smoot, W.Va., yesterday.
The Rev. Mr. Hedges, a native of Kentucky, first joined the Kentucky conference and later the West Virginia conference, this being in the early days of Methodism. His circuit at time included several counties and some years his salary did not amount to over $60.
One son and three daughters survive.
The Washington Post, Washington, District of Columbia. Monday, 25 November 1912, page 3.
 
Hedges, Jonathan Kiher (I662)
 
12106 Two from Joliet die after crash east of Tuscola
Tuscola
Two Joliet residents were killed in a three-vehicle collision at 12;15 p.m. Tuesday at U.S. 36 and Illinois 130, east of Tuscola.
Winnifred Riggen, 76, and Mary M. Riggen, 73, of Joliet died after they were taken to Jarman Hospital in Tuscola, according to Illinois State Police reports.
The drivers of the other two vehicles were not injured. They are Stanley G. Borders, 28, of 1745 Melrose Court and Timothy J. Smith, 20, of Camargo.
The Decatur Daily Review, Decatur, Illinois. Wednesday, 28 March 1979.

 
Kuns, Mary May (I1312)
 
12107 Two from Joliet die after crash east of Tuscola
Tuscola
Two Joliet residents were killed in a three-vehicle collision at 12;15 p.m. Tuesday at U.S. 36 and Illinois 130, east of Tuscola.
Winnifred Riggen, 76, and Mary M. Riggen, 73, of Joliet died after they were taken to Jarman Hospital in Tuscola, according to Illinois State Police reports.
The drivers of the other two vehicles were not injured. They are Stanley G. Borders, 28, of 1745 Melrose Court and Timothy J. Smith, 20, of Camargo.
The Decatur Daily Review, Decatur, Illinois. Wednesday, 28 March 1979.
 
Riggen, Winnifred (I1311)
 
12108 Two Killed By Streamlined Train
William C. Wise and Ernest L. McClanahan Meet Instant Death While Working on Underpass.
William C. Wise, 54, of near Weisburg, and Ernest L. McClanahan, 45, of near Wrights Corner, were killed instantly yesterday morning at 7:23 o'clock, near the Indiana-Ohio state line, where the new underpass for U.S. road 50 is under construction.
Both men were employed by the contractor doing the work, Robert H. King of Danville. They were in a truck and driving across the New York Central double tracks going north from the bottoms. A fast freight, No.87 eastbound, had just passed when the truck was driven onto the tracks. Evidently the men did not see the James WHitcomb Riley streamlined train approaching from the east, for they drove directly in front of it.
Section men working on the run around tracks, which were laid recently, saw their danger and shouted to the men but evidently were not heard.
McClanahan's body was carried about 50 ft., and Wise's about 400 ft. The latter's was badly mangled. The '35 Ford V-Eight truck was demolished.
Coroner Harry T. Moon was called to the scene and the bodies were removed to Fitch Bros. funeral home. This was the first accident for the new streamlined train, which had been put in service just one month ago to the day.
Run-around double tracks have been laid at this point recently so that the main tracks of the New York Central and fill could be cut through for the underpass construction. The cut was made during the past five days.
Wise is survived by a wife and four children, Paul, Albert Edward, Charles, and Sarah Louise.
McClanahan is survived by a wife and two children, Dale and Allen. He also leaves two brothers, Lem and Joe of Williamstown, Ky.
Mr. McClanahan, whose maiden name was Leffler, is a sister of Mrs. Louis Hanson, Mrs. Sadie Mason, Mrs. Sherman Martin, Mrs. Alma Rosenbaum and Elmer Leffler.
The streamlined train was in charge of the conductor well known in this community, J.G. (Brownie) Burgess of Indianapolis.
The Dearborn County Register, Lawrenceburg, Indiana. Thursday, 29 May 1941, page 1.
 
McClanahan, Ernest Leslie (I478)
 
12109 Two Killed Near Olney
Olney, Ill. (AP) – Hobert T. Handy, 33, of rural Attica, Ind., and Mrs. Catherine F. Lewis, 43, of rural Sumner, Ill., were killed today in a two-car collision on U.S.50 near Olney.
State police said Mrs. Lewis was a passenger in a car driven by her daughter, Miss Diana Lewis, 21. The collision apparently occurred after Handy’s car skidded into the opposite lane, officers said.
Journal Gazette, Mattoon, Illinois. Friday, 4 March 1966, page 1.
 
Handy, Hobart Thomas (I4978)
 
12110 Two Persons Die In Crash Near Monrovia
Mrs. Laverne Eaker and Ernest Hedges were victim of accident Monday night.
Car Struck Tree at Curve
Two others were severely injured and were taken to the Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis
Mrs. Laverne Eaker, age 27, and Ernest Hedges, age 27, were instantly killed about 11:30 o’clock Monday night when the car in which they were riding failed to negotiate a curve safely on road 42 east of Monrovia near the Sedwick farm, and crashed into a tree.
Mrs. Edna Lovall and Mr. Eaker were seriously injured and were taken to the Methodist hospital in the ambulance of E.F. Harvey, Mooresville funeral director. Mrs. Lovall suffered a broken femur bone, dislocated hip and cuts on her face. Her condition is considered critical. Mr. Eaker’s injuries were not so serious.
The Eakers address is 827 South Sadies street, Indianapolis.
E.F. Harvey, undertaker, and Dr. Kenneth Comer, both of Mooresville, were summoned to the scene of the accident. When they arrived they found Mrs. Eaker dead, lying across the lap of her husband in the front seat of the car. The husband was unconscious.
Hedges and Mrs. Lovall were in the rear seat. He was dead, and Mrs. Lovel was also unconscious. An examination disclosed that she had suffered a broken femur bone, a dislocated hip and cuts on the face. Her condition is reported critical.
Eakers was bruised and cut, but his condition is not considered dangerous.
The bodies of Mrs. Eaker and Hedges were brought to the Cure & Hensley undertaking parlors in this city and this morning were taken to the Harry Moore funeral home in Indianapolis.
Sheriff Ray Rainwater was called but the injured persons had been taken away when he arrived at the scene.
Hedges died of a fractured skull and broken neck and Mrs. Eaker’s neck was also broken.
Dr. Leon Gray, county coroner, conducted an inquest and gave his verdict as death by accident.
Hedges is the son of Dudley Hedges of Indianapolis.
Mrs. Eaker is the daughter of Theodore Strate, of Indianapolis. It is understood here that the Eakers have three children.
A card found on the body of Hedges gave his address ad Martinsville R.R.6, but Undertaker Harvey was informed that he was a resident of Indianapolis.
The car, a 1934 Ford two door, was badly damaged and was taken to a garage in Mooresville.
The Reporter-Times, Martinsville, Indiana. Tuesday, 22 July 1941, page 1.
 
Hedges, Ernest Easter (I4626)
 
12111 Two Suicides in Linn County
Alonzo Cassity this Moring at Purdin
Wililams King near Marceline
At 10:30 o’clock this (Thursday) morning, the body of Alonzo M. Cassity was found handing in his barn at his home in Purdin, 5 miles north of here. He was in the restaurant business, and had been in his place only 30 minutes before the sad event.
His health had been somewhat poorly of late, but aside from that it is not known what caused him to take his life. The deed was done with a rope which he tied about his neck and then dropped out of the barn loft. He leaves a wife and two sons, Rolla and Alfred.
[article continues about Williams King's death]
The Bulletin, Linneus, Missouri. Thursday, 8 April 1915.
 
Cassity, Alonzo Morton (I1796)
 
12112 Two Tots Burned to Death In Fire Near Morehead
Family Trapped In Two-Story Frame House
Four Other Persons Suffer Serious Injuries In Blaze
Morehead, Ky., June 27 (Special) – Two small children were burned to death and four other persons, suffering from serious burns and injuries were being rushed to Lexington hospital early this morning as a result of a fire which trapped a family in a two-story frame house at midnight Friday at Bluestone, Ky., eight miles from Morehead.
The dead were Glennis Wayne Gilkison, 5, and Mary Louis Montz, 2.
Seriously injured were John Gilkison, 50; his wife, Blanche, 44; Recleu Gilkison, a son and father of Glennis Wayne, and Fred c. Gilkison, a son.
Mrs. Roxy Montz, mother of Mary Lou, who was said to have been in a Lexington hospital for two months, knew nothing of the disaster.
The blaze, which was though to have been caused by a discarded lighted cigarette, started in the kitchen of the home, shortly after Fred Gilkison returned from a hunting trip.
Escape for the family was cut off when the fire, spreading quickly, swept into a stairway which led into the kitchen.
Members of the family after several unsuccessful attempts to make an exit through the kitchen, were forced to leap from the second-story windows. Already severely burned, witnesses said that those who escaped the flaming structure suffered additional injuries when they leaped to safety.
Repeated efforts by members of the family to rescue the two small children were unsuccessful as flames swept the upstairs bedroom in which they were sleeping.
Scores of residents of the tiny village who were attracted to the scene of the fire attempted to aid in the rescue, but were driven back by the intense heat.
The Lexington Herald, Lexington, Kentucky. Saturday, 28 June 1941, page 1.
Gilkison, John Warren (I1148)
 
12113 Two Tots Burned to Death In Fire Near Morehead
Family Trapped In Two-Story Frame House
Four Other Persons Suffer Serious Injuries In Blaze
Morehead, Ky., June 27 (Special) – Two small children were burned to death and four other persons, suffering from serious burns and injuries were being rushed to Lexington hospital early this morning as a result of a fire which trapped a family in a two-story frame house at midnight Friday at Bluestone, Ky., eight miles from Morehead.
The dead were Glennis Wayne Gilkison, 5, and Mary Louis Montz, 2.
Seriously injured were John Gilkison, 50; his wife, Blanche, 44; Recleu Gilkison, a son and father of Glennis Wayne, and Fred c. Gilkison, a son.
Mrs. Roxy Montz, mother of Mary Lou, who was said to have been in a Lexington hospital for two months, knew nothing of the disaster.
The blaze, which was though to have been caused by a discarded lighted cigarette, started in the kitchen of the home, shortly after Fred Gilkison returned from a hunting trip.
Escape for the family was cut off when the fire, spreading quickly, swept into a stairway which led into the kitchen.
Members of the family after several unsuccessful attempts to make an exit through the kitchen, were forced to leap from the second-story windows. Already severely burned, witnesses said that those who escaped the flaming structure suffered additional injuries when they leaped to safety.
Repeated efforts by members of the family to rescue the two small children were unsuccessful as flames swept the upstairs bedroom in which they were sleeping.
Scores of residents of the tiny village who were attracted to the scene of the fire attempted to aid in the rescue, but were driven back by the intense heat.
The Lexington Herald, Lexington, Kentucky. Saturday, 28 June 1941, page 1.
 
Elam, Blanche Mae (I1149)
 
12114 Tyler
Richard Tyler, age 77, of 1647 W. Summit Ave., born April 9, 1900 in Ohio, passed away September 15, 1977 at a local hospital. Survivors: son, James Haught, 4 grandchildren, 3 great grandchildren, sisters: Martha Anderson and Marguarite Pletz, both of Ohio, other relatives. Funeral service departs Friday at 12:45 p.m. from Ortiz Mortuary. Graveside services at 1:15 p.m. at Ft. Sam Houston National Cemetery. Arrangements by Ortiz Mortuary.
San Antonio Express, San Antonio, Texas. Friday, 16 September 1977.
 
Tyler, Richard (I2624)
 
12115 Typhoid Epidemic
Mechanicsburg, O., Aug. 20. – Typhoid fever is raging in epidemic form at Plumwood, nine miles east of here. About 20 cases are reported.
Owingsville Outlook, Owingsville, Kentucky. Thursday, 25 August 1898.
* * ** *
Peculiar – When there was so much typhoid fever in town last year it was remarked as a strange fact that all of the cases were those of residents of the south side of the thoroughfares Main, Sudduth and High streets. This year all of the numerous cases are situated on the north side of the same streets.
Owingsville Outlook, Owingsville, Kentucky. Thursday, 22 September 1898.
* * * *
Shelbyville, Ky., Sept. 23. – An epidemic of malignant typhoid fever is raging in Southville, a neighborhood eight miles south of this place. There are now 25 cases and three deaths resulted. Great apprehension is felt as the fever is spreading rapidly.
Owingsville Outlook, Owingsville, Kentucky. Thursday, 29 September 1898.
 
Kissick, Henry (I1414)
 
12116 U.S. Million Dead.
U.S. Million is another of the Belton”flu” patients who has gone on “the long journey.”
Mr. Million came here last fall to spend the winter months so his children could attend the Belton school. Some days ago the whole family, father, mother and four children, were stricken with the “flu” and have been seriously ill.
Death came to Mr. Million Tuesday night. The rest of the family are believed to be on the road to recovery.
The Star-Herald, Belton, Missouri. Thursday, 20 February 1919.

LKH note: unfortunately his wife and youngest child would die within the week.
 
Million, Ulysses Sanford (I596)
 
12117 U.S. Million Dead.
U.S. Million is another of the Belton”flu” patients who has gone on “the long journey.”
Mr. Million came here last fall to spend the winter months so his children could attend the Belton school. Some days ago the whole family, father, mother and four children, were stricken with the “flu” and have been seriously ill.
Death came to Mr. Million Tuesday night. The rest of the family are believed to be on the road to recovery.
The Star-Herald, Belton, Missouri. Thursday, 20 February 1919.

LKH note: unfortunately his wife and youngest child would die within the week.
 
Gardner, Elizabeth (I597)
 
12118 U.S. Million Dead.
U.S. Million is another of the Belton”flu” patients who has gone on “the long journey.”
Mr. Million came here last fall to spend the winter months so his children could attend the Belton school. Some days ago the whole family, father, mother and four children, were stricken with the “flu” and have been seriously ill.
Death came to Mr. Million Tuesday night. The rest of the family are believed to be on the road to recovery.
The Star-Herald, Belton, Missouri. Thursday, 20 February 1919.

LKH note: unfortunately his wife and youngest child would die within the week.
 
Million, William Clayton (I1665)
 
12119 U.S. Million, Dec’d. J.H. Hatton, public administrator, ordered to take charge of estate, there being no heirs of legal age. The estate in valued at $500. Arthur Brown, George A. Lefland and W.F. Bailey appointed witnesses to assist in making an inventory of the estate. Inventory filed.
The Cass County Democrat-Missourian
Thursday, 6 March 1919.
 
Million, Ulysses Sanford (I596)
 
12120 U.S., Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-1865

Name: Wm M Moore
Birth Year: abt 1837
Place of Birth: Virginia
Age on 1 July 1863: 26
Race: White
Marital Status: Unmarried
Residence: Washington, Ohio
Congressional District: 15th
Class: 2
_____

Missouri Marriage Records, 1805-2002

Name: William M Moore
Marriage Date: 23 Sep 1866
Marriage Place: Linn, Missouri, USA
Spouse: Debora A Cassety
Household Members: Name, Age
Debora A Cassety
William M Moore
_____

Civil War Pension Index: General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934

Name: William M Moore
Gender: Male
Place Filed: Kansas, USA
Relation to Head: Soldier
Spouse: Deborah A Moore
Household Members: Name, Age
William M Moore
Deborah A Moore
 
Moore, William M. (I2498)
 
12121 uanita Marie Hiemstra
1936 ~ 2016
J. Marie Hiemstra, 79, died Monday, April 11, 2016 at St. Alphonsus, Nampa.
A memorial service will be held Saturday, April 23, 2016 at 11:00 AM at the LDS church located at 121 N Canyon, Nampa.
Marie was born in Middlefork, Illinois on the 24th of June 1936. She is survived by her daughters, Donna Ireland and Sophia Neal; six grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her daughter, Tara Ireland.
Memories and condolences may be shared with the family on Marie's memorial webpage at www.summersfuneral.com

https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/idahostatesman/name/juanita-hiemstra-obituary?id=7304323
 
Adkins, Juanita Marie (I5455)
 
12122 ucille Lumbattis Bivens passed away on Saturday, November 30, 2013 at the age of 92. The beloved wife of the late O.B. Bivens, she is also preceded in death by her loving daughter Linda J. Bivens; her parents, Floyd and Bertha Lumbattis; two brothers, Floyd and Bob Lumbattis and one sister, Mary Morrison. She is survived by her loving son, William Carl Bivens and his wife Rose Anne. Grandmother of Thomas, David, and Robert Bivens, Jennifer Bowers, and Ramona Elder. She is survived by seven great-grandchildren and many wonderful nieces and nephews. Relatives and friends of the family are invited to attend a Memorial Service on Saturday, December 14, 2013 at E.J. Fielding Funeral Home, 2260 W. 21st Avenue, Covington, LA 70433. Visitation begins at 10:00 AM followed by a service at 11:00 AM. Please sign the online Guest Book at www.ejfieldingfh.com.
Published by The New Orleans Advocate from Dec. 4 to Dec. 14, 2013.
https://obits.nola.com/us/obituaries/nola/name/lucille-bivens-obituary?id=10524585
 
Lumbattis, Lucille (I4272)
 
12123 Ulysses G. Hedges
Ulysses G. Hedges, 83, died at his home at LaBelle, yesterday. He had lived there for the past 37 years and was a retired farmer. He was born March 26, 1866 in Mason County, Ky. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Jim Watson, Alva; Mrs. Wade Hampton, LaBelle; a son, Thomas Hedges, Charlestown, Ind.; a sister, Mrs. Georgetta Truesdell, Winchester, O. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by the Leo W. Engelhardt funeral home.
News-Press, Fort Myers, Florida. Monday, 14 February 1949, page 2.
 
Hedges, Ulysses Grant (I506)
 
12124 unable to find records after death of her son in 1909 Daulton, Bessie (I5439)
 
12125 Uncle Peter Cassity, blacksmith at Cora, who was hurt in the fall while shoeing a horse, is still not able to be about.
The Milan Republican, Milan, Missouri. Thursday, 26 January 1911, page 8.
 
Cassity, Peter Thompson (I1746)
 
12126 Union Army. Private. Company A, Kentucky 10th Cavalry Regiment. Enlisted on 8 September 1862. Mustered out 17 September 1863 at Maysville, Kentucky.
 
Moody, Joseph Harvey (I515)
 
12127 Union Soldiers Compiled Service Records
Name James K Hedges
Age 18
Enlistment Date 16 Aug 1862
Enlistment Place Maysville, Kentucky
Rank Private
Military Unit Tenth Cavalry, He-Ma
 
Hedges, James K. (I453)
 
12128 Upon the north side of Hoogh (Stone) Straet, and immediately east of the ground where, soon after the period of our survey, Jacob van Couwenhoven erected his brewery, already mentioned, there stood, in the year 1655, three small houses in close juxtaposition. The eight-story yellow brick building of an electrical construction company, which now covers the site of these humble dwellings, towers above the surrounding warehouses, as the cottages themselves were over-towered in the seventeenth century by Van Couwenhoven’s “great stone brew-house.”

The first, or westernmost of these buildings, was the house of Barent Jansen. He was one of the earlier colonists, but hardly anything in relation to him can be gleaned from the records. His very patent or ground-brief for this land cannot be found, and its existence is only learned by allusions to it in other instruments. It was a parcel of about thirty-seven English feet frontage upon Hoogh Straet, and it extended back to the Slyck Steegh. Upon its western side it would appear that Barent Jansen must have built a small house at an early date. Intimately connected with Jansen in some way — probably by marriage — was one Claes Carstensen, a Norwegian of middle age, from the village of Sonde in the southern part of Norway.

New Amsterdam and its people. page 161.
https://archive.org/details/newamsterdamitsp1902inne/page/162/mode/2up?q=couwenhoven
 
Van Couwenhoven, Jacob Wolphertsen (I5788)
 
12129 Upper North Hogan
Several from here attended Memorial services at Aurora Thursday.
Reuben McClanahan a resident of Harrison Ridge for the past nine years, died of paralysis at his home, May 31, 1918, aged 69 years. He was a member of the Christian church and well versed in the bible. Mr. McClanahan was of a pleasant and jovial disposition and will be sadly missed. The body was taken Saturday to Dry Ridge, Ky., for burial. His death is especially sad, there being two taken from a household of three within a week. The youngest son Ernest was called to the military camp on the Monday before.
The Journal-Press, Lawrenceburg, Indiana. Friday, 7 June 1918.
 
McClanahan, Reuben Pickett (I472)
 
12130 US 1880 agricultural census, enumerated 12 June 1880.
Fleming County, Kentucky
William R. Hedges, line 1
Rented for share of produce
tilled acres – 25
value of farm implements - $10
value of farm production - $150
horses – 1
Milch cows – 2
other cattle – 1
cattle sold – 1
butter , pounds – 150
poultry, barnyard – 8
other – 50
eggs produced - 40
Indian corn, acres – 8
Indian corn, bushels – 150
Oats, acres – 5
Oats, bushels – 40
wheat – acres – 8
wheat – bushels – 60
Molasses – gallons – 25
Potatoes, Irish – 12
Potatoes, sweet – 10
Wood cut, cords - 15
value of wood products - $15
 
Hedges, William Riley (I10)
 
12131 US Air Force. Wiseman, Warren Elston (I5133)
 
12132 US Air Force. Lieutenant Colonel.  O'Brien, Alden Walton (I5022)
 
12133 US Air Force. Master Sergeant.  Comment, Henry Joseph (I4246)
 
12134 US Air Force. Master Sergeant. Keaveny, Loy Russell (I3955)
 
12135 US Air Force. Senior Staff Sergeant. Purvis, Clifford Ray (I3990)
 
12136 US Air Force. Staff Sergeant. Johnson, Lyle Verne (I4598)
 
12137 US Army Air Force. Staff Sergeant. Hedges, Duane Thurman (I5168)
 
12138 US Army veteran having served during WWII in England, France, and Germany and received 3 Bronze Stars.

Preceded in death by a son Marion Eugene “Gene” Hammond, Jr., sister Dorothy Mae Miller-Nightingale, and brother Beverly Allen Hammond. 
Hammond, Marion Eugene “Poppy” (I3819)
 
12139 US Army.  Clayton, Lyle Marion (I5161)
 
12140 US Army. Hedges, Wendel Lorraine (I5169)
 
12141 US Army. Bradshaw, Carl William (I3834)
 
12142 US Army. Brooks, Charles Leroy (I5107)
 
12143 US Army. Roberts, Larry Dean (I5032)
 
12144 US Army. Tallman, Herbert (I4698)
 
12145 US Army. 121st Cavalry. Troop B. Corporal. Hamon, Roy Vincent (I3719)
 
12146 US Army. 1st Lieutenant. Ganz, Louis A. (I5069)
 
12147 US Army. 2nd Lieutenant. Atchison, Floyd Russell (I3204)
 
12148 US Army. 305th Infantry. 77th Division. Mech Company H. Moody, Jackson Monroe (I1437)
 
12149 US Army. 59th Infantry. Company L. Hedges, Claude Franklin (I1682)
 
12150 US Army. 609th Tank Battalion. Technician Grade 6.  Bishop, Grover Cleveland (I4837)
 

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