Dr. Calvin Haven Guptill1,2
M, #9239
Child of Dr. Calvin Haven Guptill and Harriet S. Clements
- Emma E.F. Guptill+1 b. 25 Apr 1856, d. 30 Jan 1912
Emma E.F. Guptill
F, #9238, b. 25 April 1856, d. 30 January 1912
Emma E.F. Guptill was born on 25 April 1856 in Elliott, Massachusetts.1 She was the daughter of Dr. Calvin Haven Guptill and Harriet S. Clements.2 Emma E.F. Guptill married Noah Millard Sewall, son of Capt. Joseph Sewall and Eliza Jane Trafton, on 24 October 1877 in Eliot. Emma E.F. Guptill died on 30 January 1912 in Bridgeton, New Jersey, at the age of 55.3
DR. SEWALL'S MOTHER DIES AT HIS HOME
Body Will Be Removed to Maine For Burial.
Yesterday afternoon at 5.15 o'clock Mrs. Emma Sewall. wife of N. Millard Sewall, of York Village, Maine, died at the home of her son. Dr. Millard F. Sewall, corner of East Commerce and Walnut streets.
Mrs. Sewall was 56 years of age. She came to Bridgeton two weeks ago and underwent a minor operation at Bridgeton Hospital, from which she had made a good recovery. Her death yesterday was due-to heart trouble.
Tomorrow the body will be removed to her late home in Maine, where interment will be made in the family plot. Dr. Sewall will therefore of necessity be absent from the city for several days, which fact he desires the Evening News to state.4
DR. SEWALL'S MOTHER DIES AT HIS HOME
Body Will Be Removed to Maine For Burial.
Yesterday afternoon at 5.15 o'clock Mrs. Emma Sewall. wife of N. Millard Sewall, of York Village, Maine, died at the home of her son. Dr. Millard F. Sewall, corner of East Commerce and Walnut streets.
Mrs. Sewall was 56 years of age. She came to Bridgeton two weeks ago and underwent a minor operation at Bridgeton Hospital, from which she had made a good recovery. Her death yesterday was due-to heart trouble.
Tomorrow the body will be removed to her late home in Maine, where interment will be made in the family plot. Dr. Sewall will therefore of necessity be absent from the city for several days, which fact he desires the Evening News to state.4
Children of Emma E.F. Guptill and Noah Millard Sewall
- Dr. Millard Freeman Sewall+1 b. 28 Sep 1878, d. 4 Jun 1945
- Grace Judson Sewall+5 b. 2 Feb 1880, d. 24 Dec 1935
- Judge Arthur Eugene Sewall+5 b. 14 Mar 1882, d. 12 Jun 1956
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, Sinnett's Sewall genealogy, p.16.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 123 p. 752 Vital Records of York, Maine.
- [S205] Newspaper, Bridgeton Evening News (Bridgeton, NJ), 31 January 1912.
- [S205] Newspaper, Bridgeton Evening News (Bridgeton, NJ), 31 January 1912.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, Sinnett's Sewall genealogy, p.17.
Brampton Gurdon1
M, #5965
Of Assington, Suffolk. M.P. for Sudbury 1620; High Sheriff 1629.1 Brampton Gurdon married Muriel Sedley.1
Child of Brampton Gurdon and Muriel Sedley
- Muriel Gurdon+1 b. 1613
Citations
- [S41] Leverett Saltonstall, Ancestry and Descendants of Sir Richard Saltonstall., p. 12.
Muriel Gurdon
F, #5953, b. 1613
Muriel Gurdon was born in 1613.1 She was the daughter of Brampton Gurdon and Muriel Sedley.2 Muriel Gurdon married Richard Saltonstall Jr., son of Sir Richard Saltonstall of Huntwicke and Grace Kaye, in June 1633 in England.2
Children of Muriel Gurdon and Richard Saltonstall Jr.
- Abigail Saltonstall2
- Elizabeth Saltonstall+3
- Muriel Saltonstall2 b. 1634
- Richard Saltonstall2 b. c 1637?, d. c 1665/66
- Colonel Nathaniel Saltonstall+ b. 1639, d. 21 May 1707
Clara Dwight Guthrie1
F, #20969, b. 27 May 1850, d. 7 December 1931
Clara Dwight Guthrie was born on 27 May 1850 in Putnam, Muskingum County, Ohio.2,3 She was the daughter of George N. Guthrie and Sarah Abbott McFarland.1 Clara Dwight Guthrie died on 7 December 1931 in Santa Monica, Los Angeles County, California, at the age of 813 and is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio.4
Citations
- [S533] C.M. Little, History of the Clan Macfarlane, p. 98.
- [S154] 1860 US Census, Putnam Springfield Township, Muskingum, Ohio.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 105651313."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 105651313, Clara D. Guthrie Bootes, includes gravestone photograph."
Cuthbert Burrell Guthrie1
M, #25201, b. 23 August 1883, d. 7 December 1924
Cuthbert Burrell Guthrie was born on 23 August 1883 in Coin, Iowa.2 He was the son of William Adam Guthrie and Isabella Sewall.1 Cuthbert Burrell Guthrie died on 7 December 1924 in Doleib Hill, Sudan, at the age of 41.
Mr. C. B. Guthrie died in Doleib Hill, The Sudan, December 7, 1924. His illness was short and severe. There being no doctor in the station at Doleib Hill, Dr. Buchanan was brought in the mission launch from Nasser in the shortest time possible, and the Government doctors at Malakal were called into consultation. Notwithstanding the best efforts of these physicians, Mr. Guthrie succumbed to the malady, which seemed to be primarily malarial infection. Mrs. C. B. Guthrie died at Doleib Hill, The Sudan, February 17, 1925. There being neither doctor nor nurse at Doleib Hill, Dr. Buchanan and Nurse Huffman had come to Doleib Hill to attend Mrs. Guthrie during confinement. A little daughter was born on January 25. Her progress after the baby's birth seemed quite satisfactory for several days, but she was taken seriously ill and the best efforts of the doctors failed to restore her. Dr. Buchanan called into consultation the Government doctor from Malakal. They felt that death was due to toxemia. Triennial Report on the Foreign Mission of the United Presbyterian Church of North America 1922, 1923, 1924 p. 209.
Mr. C. B. Guthrie died in Doleib Hill, The Sudan, December 7, 1924. His illness was short and severe. There being no doctor in the station at Doleib Hill, Dr. Buchanan was brought in the mission launch from Nasser in the shortest time possible, and the Government doctors at Malakal were called into consultation. Notwithstanding the best efforts of these physicians, Mr. Guthrie succumbed to the malady, which seemed to be primarily malarial infection. Mrs. C. B. Guthrie died at Doleib Hill, The Sudan, February 17, 1925. There being neither doctor nor nurse at Doleib Hill, Dr. Buchanan and Nurse Huffman had come to Doleib Hill to attend Mrs. Guthrie during confinement. A little daughter was born on January 25. Her progress after the baby's birth seemed quite satisfactory for several days, but she was taken seriously ill and the best efforts of the doctors failed to restore her. Dr. Buchanan called into consultation the Government doctor from Malakal. They felt that death was due to toxemia. Triennial Report on the Foreign Mission of the United Presbyterian Church of North America 1922, 1923, 1924 p. 209.
Edward Sewall Guthrie1
M, #25199, b. 27 December 1880, d. 11 December 1964
Edward Sewall Guthrie was born on 27 December 1880 in Coin, Page County, Iowa.2 He was the son of William Adam Guthrie and Isabella Sewall.1 Edward Sewall Guthrie died on 11 December 1964 in New York at the age of 83.3
Edward Sewall Guthrie
The eleventh of December, 1964, marked the passing of one of Cornell's most distinguished professors and one of the true pioneers of America's great dairy processing industry. Edward Sewall Guthrie, who joined the staff of the College of Agriculture in 1908 and who worked in his laboratory until a few days before his death, gave more than sixty years to study, research, and teaching in the dairy industry.
Born on a farm in Iowa and with a B. S. degree from Iowa State, Dr. Guthrie came to Cornell as a graduate student and instructor in buttermaking. He taught this and other courses in dairy processing to several generations of Cornellians both in the "winter course" and in the regular college program. His contributions were many and lasting. His interest in teaching and research led him to help organize what is now the American Dairy Science Association, and he served in its highest offices. As one of the last two surviving founders of that Association, he was most highly honored by it. It is probable that he did not miss more than two meetings from the date the society was founded. He helped organize the first student chapters of the ADSA and the first national dairy products judging contest. For many years he was coach of the highly successful dairy products judging teams of the University. His Book of Butter was long the standard text in his field, and he was recognized as America's foremost authority on cultured cream. He published several scores of papers on various phases of the dairy industry.
Professor Guthrie was probably best known in Ithaca for his many community activities. He served the Forest Home Chapel long and faithfully as treasurer, trustee, steward, and for 26 years, church school superintendent. Since 1932 he had been a member of the board of directors of the Reconstruction Home in Ithaca and for 15 years conducted Sunday morning Protestant services there.
Dr. Guthrie never retired in the sense that he gave up any of his work. He maintained his office and his laboratory after his retirement in 1948, and spent a part of almost every day at his beloved research. He often appeared in the dairy barn before the early morning milking in order to gather samples of milk from particular animals or samples taken under particular conditions.
Until his death he took an active interest in students and alumni. Former student visitors were sure to inquire first about Dr. Guthrie, and he was sure to recognize and remember those alumni he chanced to encounter on the campus or in his travels. So great was his interest that he took the time in his later years to collect the scattered records of former students and publish accurate and useful lists of their whereabouts and doings. The alumni
responded at the time of his retirement by commissioning a portrait of him which now hangs in Stocking Hall. No student or colleague called him "Ed." Yet all knew the warmth, consideration, and humor of the man. Always dignified but never pompous, he was readily approached at any time with any problem.
In his long career in the dairy industry, countless people came to know and love Dr. Edward Sewall Guthrie. He has carved a deep niche in the history of the dairy industry, his community, and the University. He richly deserves to be remembered as a Christian gentleman, a fine teacher, and a friend.
Robert F. Holland, Harold E. Ross, James C. White
Cornell University Faculty Memorial Statement http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/handle/1813/17813.
Edward Sewall Guthrie
The eleventh of December, 1964, marked the passing of one of Cornell's most distinguished professors and one of the true pioneers of America's great dairy processing industry. Edward Sewall Guthrie, who joined the staff of the College of Agriculture in 1908 and who worked in his laboratory until a few days before his death, gave more than sixty years to study, research, and teaching in the dairy industry.
Born on a farm in Iowa and with a B. S. degree from Iowa State, Dr. Guthrie came to Cornell as a graduate student and instructor in buttermaking. He taught this and other courses in dairy processing to several generations of Cornellians both in the "winter course" and in the regular college program. His contributions were many and lasting. His interest in teaching and research led him to help organize what is now the American Dairy Science Association, and he served in its highest offices. As one of the last two surviving founders of that Association, he was most highly honored by it. It is probable that he did not miss more than two meetings from the date the society was founded. He helped organize the first student chapters of the ADSA and the first national dairy products judging contest. For many years he was coach of the highly successful dairy products judging teams of the University. His Book of Butter was long the standard text in his field, and he was recognized as America's foremost authority on cultured cream. He published several scores of papers on various phases of the dairy industry.
Professor Guthrie was probably best known in Ithaca for his many community activities. He served the Forest Home Chapel long and faithfully as treasurer, trustee, steward, and for 26 years, church school superintendent. Since 1932 he had been a member of the board of directors of the Reconstruction Home in Ithaca and for 15 years conducted Sunday morning Protestant services there.
Dr. Guthrie never retired in the sense that he gave up any of his work. He maintained his office and his laboratory after his retirement in 1948, and spent a part of almost every day at his beloved research. He often appeared in the dairy barn before the early morning milking in order to gather samples of milk from particular animals or samples taken under particular conditions.
Until his death he took an active interest in students and alumni. Former student visitors were sure to inquire first about Dr. Guthrie, and he was sure to recognize and remember those alumni he chanced to encounter on the campus or in his travels. So great was his interest that he took the time in his later years to collect the scattered records of former students and publish accurate and useful lists of their whereabouts and doings. The alumni
responded at the time of his retirement by commissioning a portrait of him which now hangs in Stocking Hall. No student or colleague called him "Ed." Yet all knew the warmth, consideration, and humor of the man. Always dignified but never pompous, he was readily approached at any time with any problem.
In his long career in the dairy industry, countless people came to know and love Dr. Edward Sewall Guthrie. He has carved a deep niche in the history of the dairy industry, his community, and the University. He richly deserves to be remembered as a Christian gentleman, a fine teacher, and a friend.
Robert F. Holland, Harold E. Ross, James C. White
Cornell University Faculty Memorial Statement http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/handle/1813/17813.
Citations
- [S208] 1900 US Census, Lincoln, Page, Iowa.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Iowa, Delayed Birth Records, 1856-1940.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 79459913."
George C. Guthrie1
M, #20970, b. circa 1853
George C. Guthrie was born circa 1853 in Ohio.2 He was the son of George N. Guthrie and Sarah Abbott McFarland.1
George N. Guthrie1
M, #20967, b. May 1811, d. June 1891
George N. Guthrie was born in May 1811.2 He married Sarah Abbott McFarland, daughter of Rev. Asa McFarland and Elizabeth Kneeland, on 19 September 1839 in Zanesville, Ohio.1 George N. Guthrie died in June 1891 at the age of 80.2
Children of George N. Guthrie and Sarah Abbott McFarland
- William Edward Guthrie1 b. 5 Sep 1842, d. 20 Jul 1921
- Clara Dwight Guthrie3 b. 27 May 1850, d. 7 Dec 1931
- George C. Guthrie3 b. c 1853
Citations
- [S533] C.M. Little, History of the Clan Macfarlane, p. 97.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 6170286."
- [S533] C.M. Little, History of the Clan Macfarlane, p. 98.
Gilbert T. Guthrie1
M, #25202, b. 16 August 1885, d. 27 December 1975
Gilbert T. Guthrie was born on 16 August 1885 in Iowa.1,2 He was the son of William Adam Guthrie and Isabella Sewall.1 Gilbert T. Guthrie died on 27 December 1975 in Oakland, Missouri, at the age of 90
Funeral services for Gilbert T. Guthrie, founder of the Aro Dairy Co., will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Hoffmeister undertaking establishment, 6464 Chippewa Street. Burial will be private.
Mr. Guthrie, 90 years old, died Saturday of infirmities at the Bethesda Dilworth Memorial Home, Oakland. He founded the dairy 50 years ago. The plant merged into Aro Dressel Foods Corp. and then Prairie Farms, Inc.
Surviving are two sons William M. and David B., both of St. Louis County; a brother Caleb, of Independence, Ia; seven grandchildren, and two great grandchildren.2,3
Mr. Guthrie, 90 years old, died Saturday of infirmities at the Bethesda Dilworth Memorial Home, Oakland. He founded the dairy 50 years ago. The plant merged into Aro Dressel Foods Corp. and then Prairie Farms, Inc.
Surviving are two sons William M. and David B., both of St. Louis County; a brother Caleb, of Independence, Ia; seven grandchildren, and two great grandchildren.2,3
James Cale Guthrie1
M, #25200, b. 19 March 1882, d. 11 July 1979
James Cale Guthrie was born on 19 March 1882 in Illinois.1,2 He was the son of William Adam Guthrie and Isabella Sewall.1 James Cale Guthrie died on 11 July 1979 in Independence, Buchanan, Iowa, at the age of 97.2,3
William Adam Guthrie
M, #25198, b. 9 March 1843, d. 7 May 1921
William Adam Guthrie was born on 9 March 1843 in New York.1,2 He married Isabella Sewall, daughter of Rev. Caleb Marsh Sewall and Catharine Sumner Turner, on 10 December 1879. William Adam Guthrie died on 7 May 1921 in Modesto, California, at the age of 78.
Children of William Adam Guthrie and Isabella Sewall
- Edward Sewall Guthrie1 b. 27 Dec 1880, d. 11 Dec 1964
- James Cale Guthrie1 b. 19 Mar 1882, d. 11 Jul 1979
- Cuthbert Burrell Guthrie1 b. 23 Aug 1883, d. 7 Dec 1924
- Gilbert T. Guthrie1 b. 16 Aug 1885, d. 27 Dec 1975
- William Dixon Guthrie1 b. 14 Jul 1887, d. 18 Dec 1971
Citations
- [S208] 1900 US Census, Lincoln, Page, Iowa.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 57529607."
William Dixon Guthrie1
M, #25203, b. 14 July 1887, d. 18 December 1971
William Dixon Guthrie was born on 14 July 1887 in Coin, Page County, Iowa.1,2,3 He was the son of William Adam Guthrie and Isabella Sewall.1 William Dixon Guthrie died on 18 December 1971 in Orange County, California, at the age of 84.2,3
Citations
- [S208] 1900 US Census, Lincoln, Page, Iowa.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 58968171."
- [S232] Ancestry.com, California, Death Index, 1940-1997.
William Edward Guthrie1
M, #20968, b. 5 September 1842, d. 20 July 1921
William Edward Guthrie was born on 5 September 1842 in Putnam, Muskingum County, Ohio.2,3 He was the son of George N. Guthrie and Sarah Abbott McFarland.1 William Edward Guthrie died on 20 July 1921 in Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio, at the age of 783 and is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, Zanesville, Muskingum County, Ohio.4
Citations
- [S533] C.M. Little, History of the Clan Macfarlane, p. 97.
- [S154] 1860 US Census, Putnam Springfield Township, Muskingum, Ohio.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 6171029."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 6171029, William Edward Guthrie, includes gravestone photograph."
Alfred John Guzzetti1
M, #25363, b. 11 November 1909, d. 24 October 2011
Alfred John Guzzetti was born on 11 November 1909 in Manhattan, New York.1 He married secondly Lida Denton Sewall, daughter of Joseph Osgood Sewall and Grace Denton Parker, after 1970.1 Alfred John Guzzetti died on 24 October 2011 in New Jersey at the age of 101.1,2
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, https://obits.nj.com/obituaries/starledger/obituary.aspx
- [S210] Social Security Death Index.
Einion ap Gwilim ap Gruffydd1
M, #21100
Child of Einion ap Gwilim ap Gruffydd
Citations
- [S145] John Edwards Griffith, Pedigrees, p. 286.
Maj. Gen. Hamond Weston Gwyn1
M, #24767, b. 20 November 1824, d. 18 January 1898
Maj. Gen. Hamond Weston Gwyn was born on 20 November 1824 in Tasburgh, Norfolk.2 He was the son of William Gwyn. Maj. Gen. Hamond Weston Gwyn married Catherine Augusta Bockett, daughter of Daniel Smith Bockett and Theresa Aubrina Symonds, on 1 November 1882 in St. Mary's, Reading, Berkshire.1 Maj. Gen. Hamond Weston Gwyn died on 18 January 1898 in Folkestone, Norfolk, at the age of 73.2
Harriet Gwyn1
F, #19891
Child of Harriet Gwyn and Henry Whately
- Frances Marion Whately1 b. 30 May 1867, d. b 1938
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1857-1924. Wentworth 1899.
William Gwyn
M, #24768
Child of William Gwyn
- Maj. Gen. Hamond Weston Gwyn b. 20 Nov 1824, d. 18 Jan 1898
Eliza Jane Gwynne1
F, #8268, b. circa 1843
Eliza Jane Gwynne was born circa 1843 in Ontario.2 She was the daughter of Dr. William Charles Gwynne and Anne Murray Powell.1
William Gwynne1
M, #8267, b. 1840
William Gwynne was born in 1840.1 He was the son of Dr. William Charles Gwynne and Anne Murray Powell.1 William Gwynne died in infancy.1
Citations
- [S82] John Bernard Burke, Colonial Gentry, p. 635.
Dr. William Charles Gwynne1
M, #8266, b. April 1806, d. 1 September 1875
Dr. William Charles Gwynne was born in April 1806 in Castleknock, Ireland.2 He married Anne Murray Powell, daughter of William Dummer Powell and Sarah Stevenson, on 4 May 1835 in Toronto. Dr. William Charles Gwynne died on 1 September 1875 at the age of 69 on board the Miramichi while travelling to New Brunswick, for his health. Three sons had died in infancy; only an unmarried daughter and his shrewish wife survived him.2
Children of Dr. William Charles Gwynne and Anne Murray Powell
- William Gwynne1 b. 1840
- Eliza Jane Gwynne1 b. c 1843
Silvestra Elizabeth Gybbon-Monypenny
F, #3449, b. circa 1821, d. 5 August 1848
Silvestra Elizabeth Gybbon-Monypenny was born circa 1821.1 She was the daughter of Thomas Gybbon-Monypenny and Silvestra Rose Monypenny. Before 18 April 1843 Silvestra Elizabeth Gybbon-Monypenny was living in High House, Rolvenden. She married Francis Thomas Le Touzel, son of Joshua John Le Pauzel, on 18 April 1843 in Parish Church, Rolvenden.2 Silvestra Elizabeth Gybbon-Monypenny died on 5 August 1848 in Hole House, Rolvenden, Kent.1
Citations
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 43886103."
- [S205] Newspaper, The Gentleman's Magazine, May 1854 pp. 533-4.
Thomas Gybbon-Monypenny
M, #3450, b. 7 November 1796, d. 15 January 1854
Thomas Gybbon-Monypenny was born on 7 November 1796.1 He married Silvestra Rose Monypenny, daughter of Robert Monypenny and Elizabeth Dunn, on 8 January 1818.2 Thomas Gybbon-Monypenny died on 15 January 1854 in Notting Hill, London, at the age of 57.3
Child of Thomas Gybbon-Monypenny and Silvestra Rose Monypenny
- Silvestra Elizabeth Gybbon-Monypenny b. c 1821, d. 5 Aug 1848
Morgund Mac Gylocher, Earl of Mar
M, #13482, d. before 30 March 1183
Morgund Mac Gylocher, Earl of Mar married Agnes Countess of Mar. Morgund Mac Gylocher, Earl of Mar died before 30 March 1183.
Child of Morgund Mac Gylocher, Earl of Mar and Agnes Countess of Mar
- Duncan de Mar, Earl of Mar+ d. b 7 Feb 1244
Ann Gertrude Hackett1
F, #25496, b. 15 October 1801
Ann Gertrude Hackett was born on 15 October 1801 in New York City, New York.1 She was the daughter of Thomas G. Hackett and Ann Keteltas.1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, New York, Church Records, 1660-1954.
James Henry Hackett1
M, #25495, b. 15 March 1800
James Henry Hackett was born on 15 March 1800 in New York City, New York.1 He was the son of Thomas G. Hackett and Ann Keteltas.1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, New York, Church Records, 1660-1954.
Thomas G. Hackett1
M, #22411
Thomas G. Hackett married Ann Keteltas, daughter of Rev. Abraham Keteltas and Sarah Smith, on 19 May 1799 in First and Second Church, New York.2
Children of Thomas G. Hackett and Ann Keteltas
- James Henry Hackett3 b. 15 Mar 1800
- Ann Gertrude Hackett3 b. 15 Oct 1801
Sarah Jane Haddock1
F, #16614, b. 23 November 1847, d. 4 April 1893
Sarah Jane Haddock was born on 23 November 1847 in New York City.2,3 She married Edward Lewis Worcester, son of David Worcester and Ellen Shaw Sewall, in April 1872 in Marshalltown, Iowa, (The Find a Grave biography gives a date of 17 Feb 1873 for the marriage.)1,3 Sarah Jane Haddock died on 4 April 1893 in Albion, Marshall, Iowa, at the age of 45.1,3
Children of Sarah Jane Haddock and Edward Lewis Worcester
- Maud May Worcester2 b. 19 Jan 1873
- Eleanor Sewall Worcester4 b. 18 Apr 1880, d. 14 Sep 1942
- Marcia May Worcester4 b. 12 Aug 1883
Citations
- [S278] John P. Worcester, The Worcester family, p. 186.
- [S107] 1880 US Census, Ida Grove, Ida, Iowa.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "#105883537."
- [S278] John P. Worcester, The Worcester family, p. 187.
Eliza Ann Hadley
F, #17380
Child of Eliza Ann Hadley and Elijah Smith Wait
- Judge William Cushing Wait+1 b. 18 Dec 1860, d. 28 Jan 1935
Citations
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records.