Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

Notes


Tree:  

Matches 251 to 300 of 7,287

      «Prev «1 ... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 146» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
251 BIOGRAPHY:
1. New Family Search accessed 3 Aug 2009 shows a son named Christopher christened 11 Jan 1795 at Whitley By Hexham, Northumberland with father Christopher Winter.

CHRISTENING:
1. Note that Isaac lived in the Newbiggin/Riddlehamhope area which was centered near Shotley, Hunstantworth, and Hexham parishes all of which he had children christened. Christening records for Hunstanworth Parish, Durham from a parish trancription book which I reviewed Jun 2009 at the Durham Records Office in Durham City provide the following three children of Isaac, which actual records I have reviewed on FHL film 1068651:
27 Jul 1747 Kathrine Burnhope, d. of Isaac. [Note the entry immediately afterwards is the marriage of William Burnhope and Jane Short even though it is dated 3 May1747; the surname is spelled the same.]
2 Mar 1748/1749 Isaac Burnhope, s. of Isaac of Ridlehope [sic].
10 Mar 1750/1751 John Burnhope, s. of Isaac of Newbigginhope.

2. LDS IGI also shows Kathrine, d. of Isaac Burnhope, chr.27 Jul 1747 at Hunstanworth; however, it does not show any of her siblings.

3. By following the various christening records of his children, we can ascertain Isaac's residence and and the name of his wife Jane. Isaac lived in the Newbiggin/Riddlehamhope area which was centered near Shotley, Hunstantworth, and Hexham parishes all of which he had children christened. Newbiggin/Riddlehamhope do not show on most maps since they are not villages as much as a just a location. Using older maps, I was able to locate them. On modern maps such as Google, locate Hunstanworth in County Durham. Just slightly above Hunstanworth across the field is the River Derwent going from west to east. Slightly to the west of Hunstanworth, the river turns upward northwesternly while a serpentine forested hill turns southwesterly. At this first bow on the north side is Newbiggin Fell. Continue to follow the river as it then immediately turns back west and then you are at Riddlehamhope on the north side of the river. Slightly to the west of that is Riddlehamhope Fell. Note that this river is the boundary between counties Durham on the south and Northumberland on the north thereby making the Burnhopes residents of Northumberland. The meaning of the old English word Fell is from the Old Norse meaning an upland stretch of open country; a moor; or a barren or stony hill. We know that Isaac was a miller because he eventually ends up at Woodhall Mill very near Haydon's Bridge where he dies in 1781. The location of Newbiggin/Riddlehamhope on a river may have been due to work as a miller even though his early profession is not given in the christening records.
The record of his child William must appear in two separate registers (a local and bishop's trancript?) because my transcription shows the entry below whereas the LDS IGI shows the same entry without the father but with a mother Jane Burnhope listed. This establishes Jane as the wife of Isaac.
Note that in a separate transcription book for Hexham baptisms (1752-1851) which I reviewed at the Northumberland Records Office at Woodhorn Jun 2009, there were some minor differences as noted above in [brackets].
The various parish records showing the christening of Isaac's children in chronological order show:
Shotley, Northumberland:
William Burnhope, son of Isaac of Newggin(sic) hope chr. 21 Jul 1745.
Hunstanworth, Durham:
Kath. Burnhope, d. of Isaac, chr. 27 Jul 1747.
Isaac Burnhope, s. of Isaac of Ridlehope [sic], chr. 2 Mar 1748/1749 (bur in 1762 in Hexham).
John Burnhope, s. of Isaac of Newbigginhope, chr. 10 Mar 1750/1751
Hexham, Northumberland:
Mary Burnep, dau. of Isaac Burnep chr. 14 Oct 1753. [Mary Burnip, d. of Isaac of Leafield House. I have tried to find a Leafield House using Google and what I can find thus far is in Birtley, a suburb in County Durham of Newcastle-Upon-Tyne just north of Chester-le-Street. This is off the path considering Newbiggin and Whitley Mill are in close proximity to each other south of Hexham and makes one wonder if there is a closer Leafield House.]
Joseph Burnip, son of Isaac Burnip chr. 7 Mar 1756. [Isaac of Whitley Mill.]
Ann Burnip, dau. of Isaac Burnip chr. 9 Apr 1758. [Isaac of Whitley Mill.]
Hannah Burnip, dau. of Isaac Burnip chr. 23 Mar 1760. [Mary Burnip, d. of Isaac - not sure why one transcription would say Hannah and the other Mary.]

MARRIAGE:
1. The following entries are from a transcription book of the church records for Whitley Chapel, which is part of the Hexham Parish, which I copied at the Society of Genealogists during my visit of Jun 2009. I also saw a similar transcription book at Northumberland Records Office at Woodhorn which had an additional entry below which I note with an (*). The records begin in 1764 and the following transcription is for all Burnhopes for bapt., mar., and burials until 1851. Note that with Whitley only being a subservient chapel, as was the new law at about that time, the marriages ceased from Jul 1781 until Nov 1844 at which time they were in Hexham. Note that there were no Burnhopes in the burial registers for this time period. Whitley is halfway from Newbiggin where the Isaac Burnhope lived to Hexham where some of Isaac's children were christened. "The Newcastle Diocesan Gazetteer, A Guide to the Anglican Churches in Newcastle Upon Tyne and Northumberland" states: "St. Helen's Church, Whitley Chapel, Consecrated in 1764. The church building is of uncertain date. Prior to 1764, it was a Chapel of ease served by Hexham Abbey, but in that year it became a Parish Church of the district known as Hexhamshire, lying between Hexham and Blanchland. It is thought to have been consecrated in 1764 by the Archbishop of York. The church is a simple building of stone, without aisles, with a a later vestry built on to the west end..."
We can be reasonably certain that these entries deal with the children of Isaac even though it is not specifically proven except by circumstantial evidence such as the marriable ages of Isaac's children, the consistent spelling of Burnhope rather than Burnop/Burnip, the fact that William and John follow the Burnhope family trade of millers and that they are at Whitley Mill where we can place their father Isaac in the Hexham confirmation records for Isaac's children Joseph and Ann, the proximity of the location of Whitley Chapel to Newbiggin, and that the surrounding churches do not have probable entries which I determined from my "encircling" research. The following are the entries and my comments are in [brackets]:
*Bapt. 22 Jan 1769, Isaac Burnhope, son of William, Whitley Mill. [Same mill as where Isaac was in 1756 and 1758.]
Bapt. 21 Oct 1773, George Burnhope, son of John, Ordley. [The John in this entry, and the next two for Isaac and Elizabeth, is most likely the son of Isaac who apparently married before 1773 probably in different church - the church of his bride.]
Bapt. 14 Aug 1774, Isaac Burnhope, son of John, Mollerstead. [Moller is a term for mill. In the (*) transcription, it says 7Aug 1774 and Mollestead. Note that LDS IGI extracted records show this individual as John and it shows as well the other three baptisms noted herein including Isaac in 1769.]
Bapt. 1 Apr 1781, Elizabeth, d. of John, Whitley Mill. [Same mill as where Isaac was in 1756 and 1758.]
Marr. 7 Jul 1765, Chris Winter, batchelor, and Cath Burnhope, both of the church. Wit: Ralph Dixon and William Burnhope. [Cath is most likely Kathrine, d. of Isaac, and William is her older brother.]
Marr. 22 May 1768, William Burnhope and Jane Jameson, both of the church. Wit: John Burnhope and Chris Winter. [Chris Winter is most likely the husband to Kathrine Burnhope per the entry above and the brother-in-law to this William. John is most likely the younger brother to William, but he would only be 17 at the time. Isaac, the next brother under William was deceased in 1762 leaving John as the next brother in line.]
Marr. 17 May 1778, Thomas Surtees, batchelor, and Ann Burnhope, both of the church. Wit: John Surtees and Christ. Winters. [Chris Winters is most likely the brother-in-law to Ann who married her sister Kathrine per the entry above in 1765.]
It should also be noted that the nearby Slaley Church directly to the east, whose baptism records began 1703 (1722 for marriages and 1720 for burials), has no entries whatsoever for any Burnhopes until 1851 when I quit checking. The next parish to the west, Allendale does have several Burnhopes. 
Burnhope, Kathrine (I4628)
 
252 BIOGRAPHY:
1. New Family Search accessed 3 Aug 2009 shows a son named Christopher christened 11 Jan 1795 at Whitley By Hexham, Northumberland with father Christopher Winter.

MARRIAGE:
1. The following entries are from a transcription book of the church records for Whitley Chapel, which is part of the Hexham Parish, which I copied at the Society of Genealogists during my visit of Jun 2009. I also saw a similar transcription book at Northumberland Records Office at Woodhorn which had an additional entry below which I note with an (*). The records begin in 1764 and the following transcription is for all Burnhopes for bapt., mar., and burials until 1851. Note that with Whitley only being a subservient chapel, as was the new law at about that time, the marriages ceased from Jul 1781 until Nov 1844 at which time they were in Hexham. Note that there were no Burnhopes in the burial registers for this time period. Whitley is halfway from Newbiggin where the Isaac Burnhope lived to Hexham where some of Isaac's children were christened. "The Newcastle Diocesan Gazetteer, A Guide to the Anglican Churches in Newcastle Upon Tyne and Northumberland" states: "St. Helen's Church, Whitley Chapel, Consecrated in 1764. The church building is of uncertain date. Prior to 1764, it was a Chapel of ease served by Hexham Abbey, but in that year it became a Parish Church of the district known as Hexhamshire, lying between Hexham and Blanchland. It is thought to have been consecrated in 1764 by the Archbishop of York. The church is a simple building of stone, without aisles, with a a later vestry built on to the west end..."
We can be reasonably certain that these entries deal with the children of Isaac even though it is not specifically proven except by circumstantial evidence such as the marriable ages of Isaac's children, the consistent spelling of Burnhope rather than Burnop/Burnip, the fact that William and John follow the Burnhope family trade of millers and that they are at Whitley Mill where we can place their father Isaac in the Hexham confirmation records for Isaac's children Joseph and Ann, the proximity of the location of Whitley Chapel to Newbiggin, and that the surrounding churches do not have probable entries which I determined from my "encircling" research. The following are the entries and my comments are in [brackets]:
*Bapt. 22 Jan 1769, Isaac Burnhope, son of William, Whitley Mill. [Same mill as where Isaac was in 1756 and 1758.]
Bapt. 21 Oct 1773, George Burnhope, son of John, Ordley. [The John in this entry, and the next two for Isaac and Elizabeth, is most likely the son of Isaac who apparently married before 1773 probably in different church - the church of his bride.]
Bapt. 14 Aug 1774, Isaac Burnhope, son of John, Mollerstead. [Moller is a term for mill. In the (*) transcription, it says 7Aug 1774 and Mollestead.]
Bapt. 1 Apr 1781, Elizabeth, d. of John, Whitley Mill. [Same mill as where Isaac was in 1756 and 1758.]
Marr. 7 Jul 1765, Chris Winter, batchelor, and Cath Burnhope, both of the church. Wit: Ralph Dixon and William Burnhope. [Cath is most likely Kathrine, d. of Isaac, and William is her older brother.]
Marr. 22 May 1768, William Burnhope and Jane Jameson, both of the church. Wit: John Burnhope and Chris Winter. [Chris Winter is most likely the husband to Kathrine Burnhope per the entry above and the brother-in-law to this William. John is most likely the younger brother to William, but he would only be 17 at the time. Isaac, the next brother under William was deceased in 1762 leaving John as the next brother in line.]
Marr. 17 May 1778, Thomas Surtees, batchelor, and Ann Burnhope, both of the church. Wit: John Surtees and Christ. Winters. [Chris Winters is most likely the brother-in-law to Ann who married her sister Kathrine per the entry above in 1765.]
It should also be noted that the nearby Slaley Church directly to the east, whose baptism records began 1703 (1722 for marriages and 1720 for burials), has no entries whatsoever for any Burnhopes until 1851 when I quit checking. The next parish to the west, Allendale does have several Burnhopes. 
Winter, Christopher (I4630)
 
253 BIOGRAPHY:
1. No children of marriage with Christen Lauridsen per research notes of genealogist Bent Pilsgård. He also notes that in the estate of Dorthe Knudsdatter, we can see the following siblings: a sister Maren Knudsdatter married to Anders Hove of Bedsted; a sister Johanne Knudsdatter who had been married to Valentin Skraedder (Tailor) - he is dead and they did not know where she lived or whether she is dead; a brother Peder Knudsen who lived and died in Bedsted parish - the name of his place was Græntoft.

MARRIAGE:
1. Marriage #1:Viborg, Denmark Regional Archives; Bedsted Parish Records; Microfiche C119.1, plate 4, page ?; witnesses: Knud Svenningsen and Morten Laursen.
Marriage #2:Viborg, Denmark Regional Archives; Bedsted Parish Records; Microfiche C119.1, plate 3, page ?; witnesses: Peder Sadelmager and Peder Pallesen (brother to Niels Pallesen).

SOURCES_MISC:
1. Per gedcom from Wayne Westergard, 785 W. 1300 South, Woods Cross, Utah, 84087, (801)-295-2906 dated 6 Jan 1999.

2. Per records of Fred H. Westergard, 1940 Laird Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah 84108-1823, 801-583-4405, fwestergard@juno.com 
Knudsdatter, Dorthe (I2655)
 
254 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I999)
 
255 BIOGRAPHY:
1. No children. Also known as Genja. Lived in Riga. Poor. Per Marie Vavchenko.

2. Archival Research Paper about Herzenberg Family prepared for Kerry Petersen 28 Feb 2011 and is report no. Nr. 3-P-272, 2816, 1927 N, by Latvijas Valsts Vestures Arhivs (Latvian National Archives), Slokas iela 16, Riga, LV-1007. Complete transcript is in the notes of Edouard/Elias Ocipovitch Herzenberg and the following is but a partial transcript:
"The records of the archives fond "Latvian Interior Ministry, Administrative Department," i.e. - the file on the naturalization of Leonard Taube and his wife Eugenia, set up in 1924-1925, as well as the records of the archival funds "Collection of Passport of Riga Prefecture and Riga City House Registers" contain the following information:
Eugenia Taube, daughter of Eduard, née Herzenberg, was born on April 28 (Julian calendar, Gregorian calendar - March 9) of 1878 in Moscow (her Soviet passport Nr. 29285/27283 was issued on July 22 of 1924 in Moscow, see her photo from the Latvian passport issued in 1925). She was a daughter of a Hereditary honorary citizen Eduard Herzenberg and his wife Rebecka, née Herzenberg. According to her Latvian passport Eugenia was a German, and her religion - Evangelical Reformed.
Her husband Leonhard (Leonard) Taube was born on January 27 (Julian calendar) of 1869 in Mitau (now Jelgava) (date of circumcision - February 3) (see his photo from the Latvian foreign passport issued in 1930). He was a son of a Hereditary honorary citizen of Mitau, pharmacist, merchant Robert (Ruben, Rudolf) Taube and his wife Henrietta (Jetta), née Jacobsohn. Leonhard Taube was baptized in the Evangelical Reformed church in Vilno (now Vilnius) on February 8 of 1904. For a long time Robert Taube was a member of Mitau town Board. In 1903 Leonhard Taube left for Moscow. He knew German, Russian and Latvian languages. Leonhard Taube had at least five brothers.
The marriage of Leonhard Taube and Eugenia Herzenberg was registered in Moscow and blessed by deputy superintendant, pastor of the Evangelical Reformed church Michail Yastrzhembsky on February 8 of 1904 in Vilna.
In 1920 Leonard and Eugenia appealed to Latvian Optation commission in Moscow for Latvian citizenship, they became the Latvian citizens on May 19 of 1921. However due to changes of the law of optation they were not recognized as Latvian optants.
On August 20 of 1924 Leonard and Eugenia Taube returned to Latvia. They had no children. They lived in Riga at Brivibas Street 2, apt. 13. In 1925 Leonhard and Eugenia Taube became Latvian citizens.
Since July 14 of 1932 they lived in Riga at Stabu Street 45, apt. 26 (previous address - Brivibas Street 2, apt. 14).
There is a note in the house register dated November 6 of 1941 that Leonard Taube died (date of death is not stated). There is no information that Eugenia moved to any other place, there is a note about reregistration at the same address dated November 8 of 1943...
KP Note: Attachments included per my description...
3. Image of "the Latvian passport of Eugenia Taube, daughter of Eduard Herzenberg, issued in 1925."
4. Image and interpretation: "The house register of Stabu Street 45. Apartment 26. Since July 14 of 1932.
- Leonard Taube, born on Feb. 8, 1869 in Jelgava, occupation - agent, previous address - Brivibas Street 2, apt 14, died, date of struck off the house register Oct. 6, 1841.
- Eugenia Taube, née Herzenberg, born on March 9 of 1878 in Moscow, Russia, occupation - housewife, previous address - Brivibas Street 2, apt. 14."
5. Image and interpretation: "The birth registration entry Nr. 13 in the birth records of the Jewish community of Mitau for 1869:
Leonard Taube, born on Feb. 3 (Julian calendar, date of circumcision) of 1869 in Mitau.
Father: (Rudolf) Robert Taube, a merchant.
Mother: Jette, née Jacobsohn.
The note: Leonhard Taube was baptized in the Evangelical Reformed church of Vilno on Feb. 8, 1904 with the name "Lenhard"...
7. Photos:
- "Therese Herzenberg, dau. of Joseph Herzenberg, b. Nov. 10, 1846, Piltene (1925)."
- "Leonhard Taube, b. Jan 27 of 1869 in Mitau (1930)."
- "Eugenia Taube daughter of Eduard Herzenberg, b. March 9, 1878 in Moscow (1925)."

3. The following undated paper was written late 1969 in Nice, France by Catherine Werblovsky Olympieff (also known as Ekaterina Werblovskaya Olympieva) at the request of Patrick Landau through his aunt Alice Nikitina. Patrick's father, Vladimir Landau, even though he was Catherine's cousin, had less knowledge on the family then Catherine. Catherine was the granddaughter of Edouard and Rebecca Herzenberg. The letter was written a couple of years before Catherine's death after she entered into an assisted care facility in Nice. The paper was recently found among personal items previously gathered about 1969 by her daughter Irene Nadia de Lanskoy Petersen. Portions of the letter were written in three languages: English, French, and Russian. Irene, in transcribing the letter, notes that the letter was hard to follow and to make sense of. Irene's transcription dated 31 Jul 2007 with her notes added in [ ].
"What concerns the father and mother of our mother's: Mother's father: Edouard Ocipovitch Herzenberg [or Gerzenberg] Edward son of Joseph Herzenberg born: in Mitava [or Mittau] not far ___, Baltic Provinces - not far from Riga. He died at 76 years of age (had diabetes and malaria) from lung congestion after flu. His wife was his cousin.
Rebecca Herzenberg also married a first cousin. I am not sure of the name of her father; she died in Moscow when I was 6 years old (70 years ago). [Death would be approximately 1899?]
They were probably married in Mitawa and came to Moscow young, because all their children were born in Moscow. The eldest 1) Elizabeth 2) Sonja [or Sonia] (Sofia) mother of Manja or Mania who now lives in Moscow, who had a sister Nadja or Nadia who was born in Moscow. Sonia's husband was Adolf Schneider - son of Aaron Schneider - who had 3 more sons: Nicolas, Alexander, Serge and a daughter Elizabeth Schneider. She got married with Martin Behr (English nationality); they had two children and lived in Moscow. Mrs. Elizabeth Behr died in London (after the Russian Revolution she lived in France, later in England.) Her brother Adolf Schneider was a brother-in-law of our mother's of course.) [This is a repeat of the above.] The Behrs had 2 children. Elisabeth Behr died in London (probably her husband Martin Behr died before.) Mrs. Behr's daughter Olga died in London about a year ago [1968-69?], her brother George Behr still lives in London is married (has 1 daughter who is married too and has 2 boys, 8 and 7.
So my mother Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of Edward and Rebecca Herzenberg born in Moscow like her sister Sonia, the next sister Flora born in Moscow. Flora, married Joseph Offenbacher, had one son Lotar (my first cousin as well as yours). She, her husband, and son died in Germany during the war of Hitler (son Lothar). [Irene notes that another family account says that Lothar committed suicide on account of the war.] [His father] Joseph Offenbacher had an older brother Vasily [William or Wilhelm] Offenbacher who married a cousin of our mother's - Fanny, daughter of Abra[ha]m (whom all children of Edward Herzenberg used to call Uncle Abraham.) He was the husband of Grandfather Edward Herzenberg's sister Theresa. His family name was also like all: Herzenberg. Theresa Herzenberg had many children - daughter Fanny, sons Ludwig, Harry, and 2 other sons and another daughter Sophia married to another Herzenberg (all those marriages were between cousins) who had three children, Robby (Robert) who lives in Sweden and 2 daughters Clara and Roberta (died in Riga - Bolshevik Revolution). [I am not sure if Clara and Roberta are correct for this family grouping.] After Flora Herzenberg, the 4th daughter was my Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg-Landau]. Then there was another one Genga (Eugenie) married Harry Taube from Riga - were killed by Hitler's army. She was the 5th daughter of Edward Herzenberg. The 6th was Lilja [Lilia] (1st wife of Uncle Max Landau - died in Davos, Switzerland from TB.) Then was another daughter Milja, died very young (she was the 7th daughter). The youngest daughter Tonya [Tonia] died in Moscow. Then there were two brothers, the oldest Ivan (John) married a French young girl from Mussidan, Dordogne, France. She was daughter of the Mayor of that town. Died in the north of Russia where - she was sent sick and was sent with her to Mourmansk (north of Russia). Uncle Vanja's [Vania, Ivan, John all same name wife Lydia died there [note her maiden name was Lydie Buisson]. Uncle Vanja died too in Bolshevik Revolution. Their 3 children: Micha (Michel) died probably in Moscow; his brother Andrei (Andre) Herzenberg and Suzanne Hindzee (Herzenberg) - 1st husband (French) Volant. She has a daughter in Toronto married in Toronto (Alja [or Alice Nikitina] knew her) who has two children, boy and girl. The father's family name is A. [Albert?] Statter - wife Lydie (Suzanne's daughter) - son Albert. [Irene's note: last known address was 33 Stonegate Road, Toronto, Canada, M8Y-1V8; phone 416-251-6295.]
There was yet other families related to us through our mother's. It was a well known dentist. His name was Kovarsky. His wife was the cousin of our mother's. They had a lot of children - 3 brothers Misha (Michael), Leva (Leon), 2 daughters Choura (Alexandra). Chura who now is same age as Suzanne [Herzenberg Hindzee] - the only one alive. I forget the name of the eldest brother deceased. Manja (Mania) in Moscow knows more about that family. What was the name of the mother cousin of our mother's-probably it was yet another of the Herzenberg family. As Alja [Alice Nikitina] will be going to Moscow she will be able to find out more form Manja [Mania]. Then there was yet another family related to the wife of our grandfather through the husband or wife Idelson. There was a girl Lisa Idelson and her brother. I think that Manja must know something about them. They lived in Moscow. I used to go see them with my mother when I was about 8 or 10 years old.
Now George Behr has written from London thanking me for my sympathy condolences on account of the death of his sister Olga Behr. She must have been older than 78 years. he thought that his aunt on his father's side, Nina Karlovna died in Moscow, as well as his cousin Leija, but I think it is relatives on the side of his father Bahr, and the cousin is perhaps of the Schneider family (it is possible that the cousin is still living). All these people lived in Moscow.
Now what concerns the Packschwer family. The one that came to see you with the Vietnamese wife has passed away. His name was Julien Packschwer born in Vitebesk, Russia. He was 72. His younger brother Saveijn (Sahva) engineer in London named himself Packshaw, died in England 3 weeks before Julien, leaving a widow (2nd marriage) and 2 children. It was the death of his younger brother that caused reaction on Julien Packshwer. He died 3 weeks after him. He was found on a street in Nice, France with a cerebral hemorrhage-fell in the street. Police took him to the hospital St. Rock where he died at 19 hours in the evening and remained in a coma. His car 2 CV (small) stayed in the parking where he had left it. It was only his Vietnamese wife [Mado] returning from Saigon 1 month after his death that was able to retrieve that car from the parking. Yet another day or two, it would have been impounded. But as it was the widow herself then came. They did not charge her anything. But as the car was her husband's-she has to wait by inheritance law to be able to sell it and divide up in 4 parts to his children. The eldest son of another marriage Leon is an eye doctor in Paris, then 3 other children. Oldest Robert in Montreal, CA; another son in ___ was in the navy for 3 years. The oldest was in the Air force, married a girl from Morocco - they are going to have a child soon. The daughter Irene married, has a little boy, the husband is serving in the military; they live in Cayrons near Vence, France in the Packshwer house. The widow/mother Mado inherited ¼ of the sum, the children ¾ divided in 4 for each of the 4 children. Through a real estate in Vence, Julien's house of 1000 sq. meters is worth 18 million francs. If the children keep the house, they will in turn need to give on fourth of the cost to the widow who also has the right to half of his monthly pension of 30,000 francs. She came to see me day before yesterday and told me all these details. So here you have it-the relatives. The mother of the Packshwer father was 1st cousin of our mother's through the daughter of the sister of our grandfather Edward Herzenberg maiden name Theresa Herzenberg died in Nice, born I think in Mitawa [Mitau], Baltic Provinces. She was buried with her husband in Nice at the Caucade cemetery.
Now I add what George Behr wrote from London that his wife Janet has seen Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg] in Monte Carlo, then he wrote about his cousin in Moscow who he thinks has passed away (he is going to find out about it from Manja-he asked their address in Monaco). She was the daughter of the oldest sister Polina Aronovna of his mother. Here is what concerns that family... [Balance of letter missing]." 
Herzenberg, Eugenia or Genja (I3450)
 
256 BIOGRAPHY:
1. No estate probate records are found for this individual.

BIRTH:
1. Birth date is calculated from age given at time of death.

DEATH:
1. Viborg, Denmark Regional Archives; Skyum parish records; microfiche C116.1 plate 3 page ?; age at time of death is 65, date of burial is 10 ??? 1780. 
Thomasdatter, Anne (I2860)
 
257 BIOGRAPHY:
1. No further children besides Anna's birth found in Hørdum parish. 
Christensen Gadekiær, Laurs (I1718)
 
258 BIOGRAPHY:
1. No records found in Boddum, known only from 1787 census (see father's notes). 
Thomasdatter, Kirsten (I2883)
 
259 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Obituary mentions:
a. Mentioned in mother Annie Marie Christensen's obituary of 29 Jun 1925: "Surviving are her husband and three children: Mrs. Lamar W. Harris, Lucile and Donald Burnhope."
b. Mentioned in father Isaac Burnhope's obituary of 5 Sep 1953: "Survivors: widow, Bothwell; one son and two daughters, Donald Burnhope, Helper, Mrs. Frances W. (Margurite) Kirkham and Mrs. Lucille B. Swenson, Salt Lake City."
c. Mentioned in grandfather Thomas Burnhope's obituary of 4 Apr 1922: "Four granddaughters of the deceased acted as flower bearers, Miss Marguerite Burnhope, Miss Lucile Burnhope, Miss Helen Petersen and Miss Thelma Peterson."

2. Reviewed Rootsweb.com Worldconnect 8 Dec 2002.

3. Lucile wrote her several very detailed and descriptive biographies of several dozen pages from June 1969 through July 1988. I have copies on file of which some details of genealogical interest I here relate. She was born 1 Apr 1904 in Ogden, Utah. She was the third daughter born to Isaac and Anna Marie Christensen Burnhope; Marguerite was first, Florence Ethel was second but died a year and a half before Lucile was born. When Lucile was one month old, her father gave up his job with the railroad and moved to Bothwell, Utah. Bothwell was known first as Point Lookout, later as Roweville, then Bothwell. Isaac had worked for the railroad since he was 10 so to change to farming at 31 was a challenge. The farm size increased and eventually included a 640 dry farm. The peak on the east side of the dry farm looked just like a pyramid and eventually became known as "Ike's Peak" for Isaac. Seven years later Donald, her brother, was born. She attended boarding school at Sacred Heart Academy in Ogden, Utah. She studied music at the McCune School of Music in Salt Lake City; one of her teachers was Edward P. Kimball, tabernacle organist. In June 1925 her mother died at the age of 52; at this time Marguerite was married but Donald and Lucile were still at home. It was a difficult time for her father and he thought of moving; however, after a trip through Southern Utah, he became so homesick that they returned to the old farm where her father lived until he died at the age of 80. Lucile met Don E. Swenson in the Salt Lake City North 18th Ward. While she studied music on scholarship in Chicago, he went to Los Angeles to work. On 28 Jun 1929 they were married in the Salt Lake Temple by David O. McKay. They lived for a short time in Chicago and Los Angeles before making their home in Salt Lake City in the North 18th Ward. Four children were born to them: Don, Carole, Bernice, and Claron. Her husband, Don Edwin, died Sep. 5, 1946 in Salt Lake City and was buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery Sep. 9, 1946; the children at the time were ages five through fifteen. Her boys all served LDS missions and all were married in temples. By 1969, she had 14 grandchildren. Her complete name is Mary Lucile but appears to have always used only Lucile. The home in which she was born was on the same block as her grandparents Tomas and Mary Ann Burnhope who lived at 2264 Madison Ave. in Ogden. She was born at 2246 Madison Ave. She was baptized July 13, 1912 in the Bear River canal about one mile north of their home. She was confirmed the next day in the Bothwell ward.
She notes the family would take the train to Ogden for Christmas at her grandparents Thomas and Mary Ann Burnhope's home of which she relates: "Their home at 2264 Madison Avenue was a two story house with an open staircase leading to the upstairs. Grandma's parlor had beautiful English furniture and trinkets from England that were not to be touched, but we could look at them with our hands behind our back. Except for Christmas and very special occasions the parlor was closed. The house was heated with coal stoves, but they did have electric lights and a real bathroom which was a new experience for me. I liked to play on the stairs most of all. My cousins, the Petersens were always there too. They lived in Ogden not far from our grandparents. My Aunt Mary Ann Petersen was my father's only sister, and father was her only brother. They were very close at this time and we always had a wonderful time when we were all at Grandma's house. One event that I always looked forward to at my grandparent's house was on Christmas Eve. After our stockings were all hung up for Santa Claus we had stories, and then Grandma treated us to their English Christmas Eve traditional ceremony. Grandma and grandpa Burnhope were both born in England and lived there until they joined the LDS church and sailed for America in 1868. They met in Ogden and were married in the LDS Endowment House in Salt Lake City on Nov. 18, 1872. There were some English traditions that they continued to enjoy. Grandma would fill a plate with large seeded raisins and pour a small amount of brandy over the top of them. Then grandpa would strike a match and set fire to the raisins and brandy. The flames would go up about a foot. Then each person had to try to get a raisin or two out of the flames. We all succeeded because the fire didn't seem to be hot. The raisins were delicious. When we finished the raisins we had English Christmas cake and a very tiny (about one inch high) glass of what Grandma called her own English wine. I don't know how she made it but it was good. Then the children were sent to bed while the parents and grandparents played checkers and chess until the wee hours. These trips to Ogden were so special. After Grandma died in May 1919 we never again had our English Christmas Eve. Then Grandpa Burnhope came to live with us in Bothwell until he died in March 1922."
She notes in early Sept. 1917, her sister Marguerite at age 19 was called on an 18 month mission to the Northwestern States Mission with headquarters in Seattle, Washington. Their parents had not been married in the temple so they all went to the Salt Lake temple on 12 Sep 1917; the parents were endowed and then all were sealed together including the deceased daughter Florence.
She notes the following about her children: Don B. fulfilled an LDS mission to the Indian Mission in Arizona and New Mexico in 1951 for two years. Claron fulfilled a mission to the South African Mission in 1961 for two years. Don B., Carole, Bernice, and Claron all attended the Univ. of Utah. Carole married Lynn Williams in the Salt Lake Temple on Aug. 19, 1953. Don B. married Nola Rosell in the Salt Lake Temple June 24, 1954. Bernice married Klaus Guertler in the Logan Temple Sep. 6, 1962. Claron married Carol Gappmayer in the Salt Lake Temple Dec. 17, 1965. Carole and Lynn had four children (Bart was born 9 Jan 1955, Terese 28 Jul 1956, Bret, 20 May 1959, and Steven 2 Feb 1961.) Don B. and Nola had four Childen (Michael born 15 Jul 1956, Daren 31 Jan 1958, Douglas, 22 Sep 1960, and Kendall 28 Mar 1963). Bernice and Klaus had four children (Monika 6 Jul 1963, Hans 28 Oct 1964, Christian 29 Jul 1966, and Andreas 7 Jul 1968). Claron and Carol had three children (Scott 17 Jul 1967 - died 28 Nov 1967, David Claron 27 Oct 1968, Kelly Ann 12 Jul 1970).
She references the following biographies which I do not have:
a. A short sketch of Lars C. Christensen (her mother's father). He wrote it in Danish and then later dictated it in english to Lucile's mother when the mother was 18.
b. Sketches of the lives of Anders C. Christensen and his wife Sophie Marie Christensen (Lucile's mother's grandparents). It was written by Lucile's sister Marguerite.
c. Sketch of the life of Isaac Burnhope (Lucile's father). Isaac wrote the first 18 years of his life in 1942 and then Lucile completed the story in 1981.
d. Life story of Anna Marie Christensen Burnhope (Lucile's mother). First part was written by Marguerite and then completed by Lucile in 1981.
e. An additional sketch "My Father Isaac Burnhope" (Lucile's father). Written by Marguerite in 1940.
f. Short biography of Marguerite Burnhope Kirkham given by Carole Swenson Williams at Marguerite's memorial service June 15, 1981.
g. Tour of England, Wales, and Scotland by Carole Swenson Williams, 1984, where she visited the places of the Burnhopes and Osbornes.

4. Censuses:
1910 US: Rawlins, Box Elder, Utah, p. 10 or 16, 17 May 1910, #24:
Isaac Burnhope, 36, md. 13 years, UT Eng Eng, farmer.
Anna, wife, 37, md. 13 years, 3 total children with 2 living, UT Den Den.
Marguerite, dau., 12, UT UT UT.
Lucile, dau., 6, UT UT UT.

BIRTH:
1. See biographical sketch cited above.

2. FHL film 392640 LDS "Patriarchal Blessings Index": Mary Lucile Burnhope, b. 1 Apr 1904 at Ogden, Utah, parents Isaac Burnhope and Anna Christiana Christensen. Blessing date 23 Feb 1922. Lineage: Ephraim. Patriarch James P. Christensen. Vol. 704, p. 119.

MARRIAGE:
1. See biographical sketch cited above; On 28 Jun 1929 they were married in the Salt Lake Temple by David O. McKay.

DEATH:
1. 21 Apr 2003 email from Ken Burnhope: "This morning, 21 Apr 2003, Mary Lucile Burnhope Swenson died at the age of 99. She had been living with her daughter Carole until three days ago when they could no longer take care of her. Carole said that she died of an apparent heart attack, but nothing final."

OBITUARY:
1. Salt Lake Tribune on 4/23/2003: "Lucile Burnhope Swenson 4/1/1904 - 4/21/2003 Lucile Burnhope Swenson, noted pianist, teacher, and composer, devoted and beloved mother, grandmother, and friend, passed away on April 21, 2003, at the age of 99. She was born April 1, 1904, in Ogden, Utah, to Isaac and Anna Marie Christensen Burnhope. Married Don Edwin Swenson in the Salt Lake Temple on June 28, 1929. He died September 5, 1946. Lucile was a woman of uncommon optimism and gentleness, constantly inspiring and encouraging others by her positive outlook on life and her devotion to her family, church and music. She has touched, nurtured and blessed the lives of many. An accomplished musician, she served as pianist and choral director in LDS wards and stakes in Salt Lake City, Chicago, and Los Angeles. Graduated as a soloist and teacher of piano from Sacred Heart Academy and from McCune School of Music and Art, where she was on the piano faculty for many years. She attended the University of Utah as she furthered her degree in music. Her love for music and excellence in performance brought her scholarships with Edward P. Kimball, Rudolph Ganz, Troy Sanders, and Dr. Oscar Wagner of Juilliard School of Music in New York City. She was a member of the Tabernacle Choir, and played violin in concert orchestras. She composed and published the well-known teaching method "Discovering the Piano - The Multiple Key Approach." She served as chapter president of the Salt Lake Chapter of the Utah Music Teachers Assoc., served as state president of the Utah Music Teachers Assoc., and as a member of the Southwestern Division of the Music Teachers Nat'l Assoc. She was selected to go to Europe on the "People to People Goodwill Tour" of Belgium, Poland, Russia, Italy and France, a program created by President Eisenhower. She was a member of Mu Phi Epsilon International Professional Music Sorority, Alpha Dorian Fine Arts Club and the National Federation of Music Clubs. She was pianist for the Professional Chamber Music and Solo Performance Group of Salt Lake City. She traveled extensively, lecturing and presenting workshops dealing with piano teaching methods. She was a devoted teacher of music and a composer, writing for choir, ladies trio, piano and string ensemble, and was a successful businesswoman and editor of music publications. Lucile organized and performed with her children in the "Singing Violins." Survived by her four children: Don B. (Nola) Swenson, Carole (Lynn) Williams, Bernice (Klaus) Guertler, and Claron E. (Carol) Swenson; many grandchildren, great and great-great-grandchildren. Preceded in death by her husband, Don; a sister, Marguerite Kirkham; brother, Donald Burnhope; and two grandsons, Steven Williams and Scott Swenson. Funeral services will be held Fri., April 25, 2003, at 12:00 noon at Larkin Sunset Lawn Mortuary, 2350 E. 1300 So., Salt Lake City; where friends and relatives may visit on Thurs. 6-8 p.m. and on Friday, one hour prior to services. Interment will be in the Salt Lake City Cemetery."

SOURCES_MISC:
1. Per family group sheet prepared 7 Feb 2002 by Kenneth "D" Burnhope, 1048 East 5235 South, Salt Lake City, Utah, 801-266-4732, colb@networld.com. 
Burnhope, Mary Lucile (I202)
 
260 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Ordinance Index shows parents as Edward and Mary Adams.

2. Per "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus, comp. and ed. pages 380, 381 for Sarah Lockwood: "Sarah, b. 27 Feb 1651/52 (Colonial Records); possibly she was the first wife of Lt. Abraham Adams."
Same book, pp. 9, 10: "Abraham Adams, s. of Edward, b. at Fairfield, 9 Sep 1650. D. 9 Aug 1729 in 80th year; 'a worthy founder and liberal benefactor to Trinity Church' (gravestone). He was bapt. at Fairfield Church, 9 Dec. 1694... He married Martha ___, who m. (2) ___ Miller. It is not certain that she was mother of the children. (Mr. Clarence A. Torrey, of Dorchester, MA, rightly draws our attention to the fact that she must have been a second wife because in the agreement of heirs she was to receive two beds she 'brought with her'; and suggests from circumstantial evidence that the other of the Adams children 'may' have been Sarah Lockwood.) Agreement made 10 Sep. 1729 between widow Martha and Children... [6 children listed all of Fairfield] regarding Est. of their father Lt. Abraham Adams."

3. "Connecticut Ancestry," periodical published by the Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Dec. 2004, Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 119-130: "Robert Lockwood of Watertown, Stamford and Fairfield: English Ancestry, New England Connections and Children's Marriages," by Robert Charles Anderson. Note that the following is a partial transcript of the full transcript in the notes of Robert Lockwood; the full article is well written by one of the very best modern genealogists and should be consulted in conjunction with the following notes:
"Sarah Lockwood, b. Fairfield 27 February 1651[/2?].(70) She was living on 28 May 1661.(71) She may have married Abraham Adams.(72)
xi. Mary Lockwood, b. say 1654. She m. (1) by 1681 Jonathan3 Huestis (Angel2, Robert1).(73) She m. (2) by 1713 Joseph Knapp.(74)
Footnotes:
70. Welles, "Births Marriages and Deaths ... of Connecticut," p. 30.
71. Fairfield Probate Records 1:65, 67.
72. In a footnote to his account of Abraham Adams, son of Edward Adams of Fairfield, Jacobus reports that "Mr. Clarence A. Torrey of Dorchester, Mass., ... suggests from circumstantial evidence that the mother of the Adams children may have been Sarah Lockwood" (Jacobus, "Old Fairfield," 1:9-10). The "circumstantial evidence" was that Sarah Lockwood was available, that Abraham Adams used the names Deborah and Susannah for daughters, and that the children of Daniel Burr with his first wife (one of whom married a Lockwood) chose Adams as their attorney (letters from CAT to DLJ dated 18 and 19 December 1929, and letter of DLJ to CAT dated 20 December 1929, Folder #2, Correspondence of DLJ and CAT, Connecticut Historical Society."

4. "The Great Migration," by Robert Charles Anderson:
"Robert Lockwood...
Children...
x. Sarah Lockwood, b. Fairfield 27 February 1651[/2?] [CTVR 30]; she may have married Abraham Adams [Connecticut Ancestry 47:130; FOOF 1:9-10]..."

5. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 27, no. 1 (Sept. 1984), "The Lockwoods of Norwalk, Connecticut," by Harriet Woodbury Hodge, C.G., pp. 10-11:
"Nearly a century ago, in 1889, two misguided compilers, Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood produced "Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America." Modern genealogists realize that nineteenth century family histories often contain errors, and this genealogy is among the most confused; but it continues to be used as a reliable source. In his "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus put in order the early Lockwoods of that town. In 1978 this compiler undertook a similar task for Stamford Lockwoods with "Some Descendants of Edmund Lockwood (1594-1635) of Cambridge, Massachusetts and his son Edmund Lockwood (c.1625-1693) of Stamford." There remain the Lockwood founders of Norwalk and Greenwich with lines to be set straight...
ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, son of Edmund and Ales (Cowper) Lockwood of England, bp. Combs, co. Suffolk, 18 Jan. 1600/01; d. Fairfield, Connecticut 1658, [Banks, "The Winthrop Fleet"; Jacobus, "Families of Old Fairfield," hereinafter F.O.O.F., 1:380].
He m. prob. at Salem or Watertown, Massachusetts ca. 1633 SUSANNAH, prob. NORMAN, dau. of Richard Norman of Salem. She m. (2) Jeffrey Ferris.
Children (LOCKWOOD), first six b. Watertown, Massachusetts, [VR], others prob. all b. Connecticut:
i JONATHAN2 b. 10 Sep. 1634; d. Greenwich, CT 12 May 1688; m. MARY FERRIS; she m. (2) 1696 Thomas Merritt.
ii DEBORAH b. 12 Oct. 1636; m. (1) WILLIAM WARD; m. (2) JOHN TOPPING.
iii JOSEPH b. 6 Aug. 1638; d. Fairfield, CT 1717; m. (1) ISABEL? BEACHAM; m. (2) MARY (COLEY) (SIMPSON) STREAM. [His descendants are the only Lockwoods carried on in F.O.O.F., 1:385-387, 715-716 and 2:586-591].
iv DANIEL b. 21 March 1640; d. Fairfield, CT 1691; m. ABIGAIL SHERWOOD. [See F.O.O.F. 1:383, 387 for his only son, DANIEL, who had but two surviving daughters. The name Lockwood ends there on this line].
v EPHRAIM b. 1 Dec. 1641; d. Norwalk, CT 1685; m. MERCY ST. JOHN.
vi GERSHOM b. 6 Sep. 1643; d. Greenwich, CT 1718/9; his three? wives are all being questioned.
vii JOHN d. 1677 unmarried.
viii ABIGAIL m. bef. 1681 JOHN BARLOW.
ix SARAH d. CT 1 March 1650/1.
x SARAH b. 27 Feb. 1651/2; ?m. ABRAHAM ADAMS.
xi MARY m. (1) JONATHAN HUSTED; m. (2) JOSEPH KNAPP."

6. The book "The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson 1899-1986," by W. M. Bollenbach, Jr. (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2003), pp. 241-43:
"ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, baptized Combs, co. Suffolk, England 18 January 1600, died Fairfield CT by 11 September 1658, son of EdmundA and AliceA or RuthA (Cooper) Lockwood; married Watertown MA about 1633 (birth 1634) SUSANNA2 NORMAN, born England say 1615, died Greenwich CT 23 December 1660, daughter of Capt. RICHARD1 and (___1) NORMAN, married (2) Greenwich about 1659 (between 11 September 1658 and 23 December 1660) as his second wife Jeffrey1 Ferris, born England say 1614, died Stamford CT 1666, married (1) Watertown before 1634 Mary (___), married (3) Stamford about 1663 (birth 1664) Judith Feake (see Norman Chapter) (Torrey 470 and 263).
Robert1 came in the Winthrop Fleet in 1630 on the "Mary and John", and settled that year in Watertown, made freeman 9 March 1637, and removed to Fairfield in 1646, where he had owned land as early as 1641. On 20 May 1652, he was made freeman of the Connecticut Colony, and May 1657 the Connecticut Court confirmed him and Nehemiah Olmstead to be sergeants of the Fairfield Train Band under Capt. Nathaniel Seeley. He was executor of the estate of Edmund Lockwood, supposedly a brother, in 1635.
Children, surname LOCKWOOD:...
x. SARAH, born Fairfield CT 27 February 1652; married there about 1677 as his first wife Lt. Abraham Adams, born there 1650, died there 1729, probably son of Edward1 and Mary (___) Adams (Torrey 3)...
(Pope 289; Colket 195; "St. John and Harries", Ben Cash, 1973; Savage III:104; "NY Genealogical & Biographical Record" 43:191, 58:395; "Old Fairfield", I:380, D. L. Jacobus, 1930; TAG 31:222-24)"

BIRTH:
1. Ordinance Index has results of extraction from statewide indexes for Vermont and Connecticut as 9 Sep 1650 at Fairfield Twp and father as Edward Adams. 
Adams, Abraham (I1466)
 
261 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3247)
 
262 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I556)
 
263 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3885)
 
264 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3878)
 
265 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1029)
 
266 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Parents are Jared Cook (son of Jedediah Cook) and Ruth Hutchison.

BIRTH:
1. From LDS name extraction program from statewide indexes of Vermont and Connecticut: 11 Sep 1759, Preston Twp., New London, Conn.

SOURCES_MISC:
1. The book: "Genealogy of the Lockwood Family 1630-1888 - Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America from A.D. 1630," compiled by Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood, printed privately by the family, 1889, Philadelphia. 
Cook, Elijah (I1464)
 
267 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I234)
 
268 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Parents: Matthew Sention, Sr. or St. John and Sarah Hoyt.

2. "Connecticut Ancestry," periodical published by the Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Dec. 2004, Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 119-130: "Robert Lockwood of Watertown, Stamford and Fairfield: English Ancestry, New England Connections and Children's Marriages," by Robert Charles Anderson. Note that the following is a partial transcript of the full transcript in the notes of Robert Lockwood; the full article is well written by one of the very best modern genealogists and should be consulted in conjunction with the following notes:
"EPHRAIM Lockwood, b. Watertown 1 December 1641. He m. Norwalk 8 June 1665 Mercy St. John,(63) daughter of Mathias St. John.(64)
Footnotes:
63. Norwalk Deeds 1:49.
64. Jacobus, "Old Fairfield," 1:513."

3. "The Great Migration," by Robert Charles Anderson:
"Robert Lockwood...
Children...
v. EPHRAIM Lockwood, b. Watertown 1 December 1641 [NEHGR 7:281; WaVR 1:9]; m. Norwalk 8 June 1665 Mercy St. John [Norwalk LR 1:49], daughter of Mathias St. John [FOOF 1:513]..."

4. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 27, no. 1 (Sept. 1984), "The Lockwoods of Norwalk, Connecticut," by Harriet Woodbury Hodge, C.G., p. 11:
"EPHRAIM2 LOCKWOOD, son of Robert1 and Susannah (Norman) Lockwood, b. Watertown, MA 1 Dec. 1641, [VR]; d. Norwalk, CT in 1685.
He m. Norwalk 8 June 1665, [VR], MERCY ST. JOHN, dau. of Matthew St. John (or Matthias Sention, the early spelling of the name). She d. in 1694.
The will of Ephraim Lockwood of Norwalk, aged 43 yrs., was written 13 Jan. 1685, the inventory of the estate taken 20 July 1685. The will mentions: his wife; second son Daniel, a lot lying between Robert Steward and Samuel Sention "my brothers;" son Ephraim; eldest son John (to be executor with his mother); son Eliphalet; son Joseph; son James (who had estate by will of his uncle); dau. Sarah (to have her portion at age 18); Mark Sention and John Fitch, Overseers. Widow Mercy Lockwood made oath 2 Nov. 1685, [Jacobus, F.O.O.F., 1:384].
Letters of administration on the estate of Ephraim's son John Lockwood were granted 3 Nov. 1691 to (his mother) Mercey (sic) Lockwood and her son Daniel. The inventory was taken 2 March 1690/1 and filed 3 Nov. 1691, [Mead, Abstract of Probate Records at Fairfield, hereinafter Mead, FF PR, orig. record 4:105, 123].
On 12 March 1694/5, a court record of the estate of Ephraim Lockwood, late of Norwalk, states that "his widow Mercy Lockwood, son Ephraim Lockwood, Jr. (who died before coming of age) and son John Lockwood .are all deceased;" and the estate was ordered distributed to surviving children: Daniel, Eliphalet, Joseph, James and Sarah Lockwood, [Mead, FF PR, orig. 3:183,184; 4:123a].
Children (LOCKWOOD), all b. Norwalk, [VR]:
i JOHN3 b. 19 March 1665/6; d. 3 Jan. 1687/8 unmarried.
ii DANIEL b. 13 Aug. 1668; m. SARAH BENEDICT.
iii SARAH b. 3 Nov. 1670; m. May 1695 JOHN PLATT, Jr.
iv EPHRAIM b. 1 May 1673; living in 1685; d.s.p. bef. 1695.
v ELIPHALET b. 27 Feb. 1675/6; m. MARY GOLD.
vi JOSEPH b. 1 Apr. 1680; m. (1) MARY WEED; m. (2) HANNAH
vii JAMES b. 21 Apr. 1683; m. (1) LYDIA SMITH; m. (2) MERCY BUSHNELL."

5. The book "The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson 1899-1986," by W. M. Bollenbach, Jr. (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2003), pp. 241-43:
"ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, baptized Combs, co. Suffolk, England 18 January 1600, died Fairfield CT by 11 September 1658, son of EdmundA and AliceA or RuthA (Cooper) Lockwood; married Watertown MA about 1633 (birth 1634) SUSANNA2 NORMAN, born England say 1615, died Greenwich CT 23 December 1660, daughter of Capt. RICHARD1 and (___1) NORMAN, married (2) Greenwich about 1659 (between 11 September 1658 and 23 December 1660) as his second wife Jeffrey1 Ferris, born England say 1614, died Stamford CT 1666, married (1) Watertown before 1634 Mary (___), married (3) Stamford about 1663 (birth 1664) Judith Feake (see Norman Chapter) (Torrey 470 and 263).
Robert1 came in the Winthrop Fleet in 1630 on the "Mary and John", and settled that year in Watertown, made freeman 9 March 1637, and removed to Fairfield in 1646, where he had owned land as early as 1641. On 20 May 1652, he was made freeman of the Connecticut Colony, and May 1657 the Connecticut Court confirmed him and Nehemiah Olmstead to be sergeants of the Fairfield Train Band under Capt. Nathaniel Seeley. He was executor of the estate of Edmund Lockwood, supposedly a brother, in 1635.
Children, surname LOCKWOOD...
v. EPHRAIM, born Watertown MA 1 December 1641, died Norwalk CT 1685; married there 8 June 1665 Mercy2 St. John, born probably Windsor CT say 1643, died probably Norwalk January 1694, daughter of Matthias1 and Mary1 (Tinker) St. John. He removed to Fairfield CT with his father in 1646, but later located in Norwalk, where he became freeman in October 1677. His will was dated 13 January 1685, and probated that same year (Torrey 470)...
(Pope 289; Colket 195; "St. John and Harries", Ben Cash, 1973; Savage III:104; "NY Genealogical & Biographical Record" 43:191, 58:395; "Old Fairfield", I:380, D. L. Jacobus, 1930; TAG 31:222-24)" 
Saint John, Mercy (I3277)
 
269 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Parish records indicate this individual was stillborn; however, LDS church indicates that often the parish would note stillborn even if the baby was born alive and died shortly thereafter.

BIRTH:
1. Viborg, Denmark Regional Archives; Bedsted Parish Records; microfiche C119.1, plate 2, page ?; no christening took place.

DEATH:
1. Family Search's "Denmark Baptisms, 1618-1923," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XYLQ-DPY : 6 December 2014), FHL microfilm 53,026, accessed 3 Oct 2016:
Name: Enevoldsen
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 1736
Birthplace: Bested, Thisted, Denmark.
Death Date: 28 Oct 1736
Father's Name: Envold Pedersen
Mother's Name: Anne Jepsdr

SOURCES_MISC:
1. Per gedcom from Wayne Westergard, 785 W. 1300 South, Woods Cross, Utah, 84087, (801)-295-2906 dated 6 Jan 1999.Per records of Fred H. Westergard, 1940 Laird Dr., Salt Lake City, Utah 84108-1823, phone 801-583-4405.

2. Joyce Cupit's website 25 May 2002. Joyce lists this unnamed individual as male. 
Enevoldsen (I365)
 
270 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Participated as a sponsor at Anne Enevoldsdatter's, his niece, christening in 1735. He is noted as "of Hvidbjerg".

MARRIAGE:
1. Family Tree accessed 6 Jul 2013 indicates a wife by the name of Johanne Hansdatter. Additional research and confirmation needed.

SOURCES_MISC:
1. Per records of Fred H. Westergard, 1940 Laird Dr., Salt Lake City, Utah 84108-1823, phone 801-583-4405. 
Pedersen, Niels (I1728)
 
271 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3266)
 
272 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1579)
 
273 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus, comp. and ed. pages 257/8: "Thomas Hanford, Son of Rev. Thomas Hanford (and Mary Miles). B. at Norwalk, 18 Jul 1668; d. there 7 Jun 1743 in 75 yr. (gravestone). Married Hannah (Lockwood), widow of John Burwell, and dau. of Gershom Lockwood. She d. at Norwalk, 28 Dec 1745 age 78 yrs. 5 days. Will 9 May 1733, proved 22 Aug 1743...Will of Hannah, 21 Feb. 1744/5, proved 14 Jan 1745/6..."

2. Per the book: "Genealogy of the Lockwood Family 1630-1888 - Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America from A.D. 1630," compiled by Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood, printed privately by the family, 1889, Philadelphia: "m., 2d (abt. 1692), Thomas Hanford, (born 1668). He was schoolmaster in Greenwich, Feb. 21st, 1692, and received Đ1, 10s. per month for teaching. He was born born July 18th, 1668 (Hy. Norwalk, 187), and died 7 Jun, 1743, aged 75 years. Son Rev. Thomas and Mary Hanford, of Norwalk, CT. This may was the widow of Jonathan Ince, of New Haven, CT. (Book has no record of children from second marriage.)"

3. The book "The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson 1899-1986," by W. M. Bollenbach, Jr. (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2003), p. 243:
GERSHOM2 LOCKWOOD (Robert1), born Watertown MA 6 September 1643, died Greenwich CT 12 March 1719; married (1) Fairfield CT about 1659 Anne (?Millington) of Windsor CT, born probably England say 1639, died probably Greenwich before 1697, perhaps daughter of John1 and Sarah (Smith) Millington of Hartford CT; married (2) Oyster Bay LI 3 August 1697 Elizabeth Townsend, born say 1650, died after 1719, daughter of John and Elizabeth (Montgomery) Townsend, married (1) there about 1670 (birth 1671) Gideon Wright, born say 1648, died before 1697; married (3) 2 October 1716 Elizabeth (___). He was in Greenwich 1672 (Torrey 470 and 842).
Children surname LOCKWOOD:
By first wife Ann ?Millington:
i. GERSHOM, born Fairfield CT about 1659; married Mary (___ not Weed), born say 1661.
ii. HANNAH3, born probably Greenwich CT say 1666, died probably there 28 December 1745; married there about 1686 JOHN3 BURWELL, born Milford CT about 1653, died Greenwich 1 May 1690, son of JOHN2 (JOHN1) and Mary (___) BURWELL; married (2) there 1692 Thomas2 Hanford, born 18 July 1668, died 7 June 1743, son of Thomas1 and his second wife Mary2 (Miles) Hanford (see Burwell Chapter) (Torrey 125 and 341).
iiI. ABRAHAM, born probably Greenwich CT about 1669, died Warwick RI 1747; married Sarah Westcott, born say 1671.
(Pope 289; Colket 195; "St. John and Harries", Ben Cash, 1973; Savage III:104; "NY Genealogical & Biographical Record" 43:191, 58:395; "Old Fairfield", I:380, D. L. Jacobus, 1930; TAG 31:222-24)" 
Hanford, Thomas (I1461)
 
274 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus, comp. and ed. pages 272: "Benjamin Hickock, b. abt 1686, d. at Norwalk, in 1745; will 17 Jun 1745, proved 27 Nov. 1745; m. (1)_____; m. (2) 3 Feb 1713/4, Sarah (Lockwood) Selleck, widow of Nathaniel Selleck and dau. of Gershom Lockwood. She m. (3) 9 Mar 1755, Samuel Kellog." Parents: Samuel Hickock and Hannah Upson. 
Hickock, Benjamin (I976)
 
275 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus, comp. and ed. pages 358: "Samuel Kellogg, b. latter end of Feb. 1673 (1673/4), d. at Wilton, 13 Oct 1757; m. (1) 6 Sep 1704, Sarah Platt, dau. of Dea. John, who d. 10 Nov. 1750 age 72; m. (2) 9 mar 1755, Sarah (Lockwood), widow first of Nathaniel Selleck and second of Benjamin Hickock." Parents: Benjamin and Bridget Kellogg of Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut.

2. Ordinance index reports parents as Daniel Kellogg and Bridget Bouton. 
Kellogg, Samuel (I271)
 
276 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus, comp. and ed. pages 382/3: "Robert... Married (1)____ Beacham, dau. of Robert, who apparently d. before her father made his will (1689). As he was the only Fairfield Lockwood of suitable age for the marriage, we dar assert that he m. (2) after 1689, Mary (Coley), widow first of Peter Simpson and later of John Stream, Jr., all of Milford, where she was bapt. 23 Nov. 1651. She d. in 1705, and was Mary Lockwood of Fairfield when her estate was administered. (New Haven County Court Rec.)

2. According to Ordinance Index, parents are Samuel Coley and Ann Pruden.

3. "Connecticut Ancestry," periodical published by the Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Dec. 2004, Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 119-130: "Robert Lockwood of Watertown, Stamford and Fairfield: English Ancestry, New England Connections and Children's Marriages," by Robert Charles Anderson. Note that the following is a partial transcript of the full transcript in the notes of Robert Lockwood; the full article is well written by one of the very best modern genealogists and should be consulted in conjunction with the following notes:
"Joseph Lockwood, b. Watertown 6 August 1638. He m. (1) by an unknown date Beacham, daughter of Robert Beacham.(60) He possibly m. (2) after 1689 Mary (Coley) (Simpson) Stream, widow of Peter Simpson and John Stream.(61)
Footnotes:
60. In his will of 24 November 1689, "Rob[er]t Beacham of Maxemas Farms in Fairfeild" included bequests to "my grandchild Robert Lockwood," "my grandchild Susana Lockwood," "my other two grandchildren John and Sarah Lockwood," and made "my loving son-in-law Joseph Lockwood" sole executor [Fairfield Probate Records 4:36].
61. Jacobus, "Old Fairfield," 1:383."4. "The Great Migration," by Robert Charles Anderson:
"Robert Lockwood...
Children...
iii. Joseph Lockwood, b. Watertown 6 August 1638 [NEHGR 7:160; WaVR 1:5]; m. (1) by an unknown date ___ Beacham, daughter of Robert Beacham (in his will of 24 November 1689, "Rob[er]t Beacham of Maxemas Farms in Fairfeild" included bequests to "my grandchild Robert Lockwood," "my grandchild Susana Lockwood," "my other two grandchildren John and Sarah Lockwood," and made "my loving son-in-law Joseph Lockwood" sole executor [Fairfield PR 4:36]); possibly m. (2) after 1689 Mary (Coley) (Simpson) Stream, widow of Peter Simpson and John Stream [FOOF 1:383]...

4. Not found in the book "Families of Ancient New Haven," by Donald L. Jacobus (New Haven, 1981), 7 vols.

5. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 27, no. 1 (Sept. 1984), "The Lockwoods of Norwalk, Connecticut," by Harriet Woodbury Hodge, C.G., pp. 10-11:
"Nearly a century ago, in 1889, two misguided compilers, Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood produced "Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America." Modern genealogists realize that nineteenth century family histories often contain errors, and this genealogy is among the most confused; but it continues to be used as a reliable source. In his "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus put in order the early Lockwoods of that town. In 1978 this compiler undertook a similar task for Stamford Lockwoods with "Some Descendants of Edmund Lockwood (1594-1635) of Cambridge, Massachusetts and his son Edmund Lockwood (c.1625-1693) of Stamford." There remain the Lockwood founders of Norwalk and Greenwich with lines to be set straight...
ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, son of Edmund and Ales (Cowper) Lockwood of England, bp. Combs, co. Suffolk, 18 Jan. 1600/01; d. Fairfield, Connecticut 1658, [Banks, "The Winthrop Fleet"; Jacobus, "Families of Old Fairfield," hereinafter F.O.O.F., 1:380].
He m. prob. at Salem or Watertown, Massachusetts ca. 1633 SUSANNAH, prob. NORMAN, dau. of Richard Norman of Salem. She m. (2) Jeffrey Ferris.
Children (LOCKWOOD), first six b. Watertown, Massachusetts, [VR], others prob. all b. Connecticut:
i JONATHAN2 b. 10 Sep. 1634; d. Greenwich, CT 12 May 1688; m. MARY FERRIS; she m. (2) 1696 Thomas Merritt.
ii DEBORAH b. 12 Oct. 1636; m. (1) WILLIAM WARD; m. (2) JOHN TOPPING.
iii JOSEPH b. 6 Aug. 1638; d. Fairfield, CT 1717; m. (1) ISABEL? BEACHAM; m. (2) MARY (COLEY) (SIMPSON) STREAM. [His descendants are the only Lockwoods carried on in F.O.O.F., 1:385-387, 715-716 and 2:586-591].
iv DANIEL b. 21 March 1640; d. Fairfield, CT 1691; m. ABIGAIL SHERWOOD. [See F.O.O.F. 1:383, 387 for his only son, DANIEL, who had but two surviving daughters. The name Lockwood ends there on this line].
v EPHRAIM b. 1 Dec. 1641; d. Norwalk, CT 1685; m. MERCY ST. JOHN.
vi GERSHOM b. 6 Sep. 1643; d. Greenwich, CT 1718/9; his three? wives are all being questioned.
vii JOHN d. 1677 unmarried.
viii ABIGAIL m. bef. 1681 JOHN BARLOW.
ix SARAH d. CT 1 March 1650/1.
x SARAH b. 27 Feb. 1651/2; ?m. ABRAHAM ADAMS.
xi MARY m. (1) JONATHAN HUSTED; m. (2) JOSEPH KNAPP."

6. The book "The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson 1899-1986," by W. M. Bollenbach, Jr. (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2003), pp. 241-43:
"ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, baptized Combs, co. Suffolk, England 18 January 1600, died Fairfield CT by 11 September 1658, son of EdmundA and AliceA or RuthA (Cooper) Lockwood; married Watertown MA about 1633 (birth 1634) SUSANNA2 NORMAN, born England say 1615, died Greenwich CT 23 December 1660, daughter of Capt. RICHARD1 and (___1) NORMAN, married (2) Greenwich about 1659 (between 11 September 1658 and 23 December 1660) as his second wife Jeffrey1 Ferris, born England say 1614, died Stamford CT 1666, married (1) Watertown before 1634 Mary (___), married (3) Stamford about 1663 (birth 1664) Judith Feake (see Norman Chapter) (Torrey 470 and 263).
Robert1 came in the Winthrop Fleet in 1630 on the "Mary and John", and settled that year in Watertown, made freeman 9 March 1637, and removed to Fairfield in 1646, where he had owned land as early as 1641. On 20 May 1652, he was made freeman of the Connecticut Colony, and May 1657 the Connecticut Court confirmed him and Nehemiah Olmstead to be sergeants of the Fairfield Train Band under Capt. Nathaniel Seeley. He was executor of the estate of Edmund Lockwood, supposedly a brother, in 1635.
Children, surname LOCKWOOD...
iii. JOSEPH, born Watertown MA 6 August 1638, died Fairfield CT 1717; married (1) Stamford CT after 1666 (___2), the only child of Robert1 and Isabel1 (___) Beacham), born Ipswich MA say 1642, died 1689; married (2) after 1689 as her third husband Mary2 Coley, born Milford CT 1651, died 1705, daughter of Samuel1 and Ann2 (Prudden) Coley, married (1) there say 1671 Peter1 Simpson, born probably England say 1640, died Milford 1685, married (2) there after 1685 John2 Stream, born there 1657, died there 1689, son of John1 and Martha (Beard) Stream (Torrey 470, 675, 718 and 54)...

MARRIAGE:
1. Previously married to Peter Simpson and John Stream, Jr. 
Coley, Mary (I3272)
 
277 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I966)
 
278 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per book "New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial," comp. William Richard Cutter, Reprinted for Clearfield Co by Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994, P. 1671: "Dr. Isaac Hall, son of Francis Hall was born about 1629, in the county of Kent, England, and came to this country with his parents as a boy. He settled in Fairfield with his father, and became an eminent physician and surgeon. In the latter capacity he rendered service in the colonial militia during the Indian wars, for which he received a grant of land in Fairfield. Previously, in 1660,, he had received from his father a large estate in the same town. He took the oath of fidelity to the colonial government in 1659. He is supposed to have been a proprietor of Wallingford, CT, in 1670. He married 16 Jan 1666, Lydia, dau. of Nicholas Knapp, of Fairfield, who survived him. He died in Fairfield, in 1714. Children: Isaac, b. 8 Nov 1667; Sarah, 3 May 1668; Lydia, 20 sep 1670; Elizabeth, 11 Nov 1672; Samuel, 14 Sep 1674; Francis, 26 Sep 1676; John, 8 Feb 1677, died young; John, 3 Jan 1679; Mary, 7 Aug 1681; Abigail, 1 Apr 1683; Jonathan, 2 Dec 1684."

2. Per "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus, comp. and ed. pages 250, 251: "Isaac Hall, s. of Francis. Granted ₤30, Oct 1690, for service as 'Chirurgeon the the Army'. Granted 150 acres, May 1697, having served as surgeon and lost one son in service...Noncupative will of Dr. Hall, 13 May 1714; wife Lydia..."

3. "Nicholas Knapp Genealogy," compiled by Alfred Averill Knapp, M.D. "This Genealogy of the Descendants of Nicholas Knapp, first found mentioned at Watertown, Massachusetts in 1630, is the result of the work and research of many individuals. The four principal collectors of data were Charles Ruggles Knapp, Henry Eno Knapp, Ezra Fred Knapp and the author, Alfred Averill Knapp, but they were assisted through correspondence by a large number of individuals who furnished much valuable family and local information...":
"Lydia, b. 6-8-1647/48, Stamford, Conn. d. Dec. 1716. Her will made 12-1-1716. Probated 12-19-1716. She m. Dr. Isaac Hall, Stratford, Conn., son of Francis Hall, as his 2nd wife. Dr. Hall was a prominent physician in his day, b. in England in 1629. d. 5-17-1714, Stratford, Conn. He took the Oath of Fidelity at New Haven, Conn. 4-7-1657. Lydia and Dr. Hall had: (1) Dr. Isaac, b. 11-8-1667. (2) Sarah, b. 5-3-1668. (3) Lydia, b. 9-21-1670. (4) Elizabeth, b. 11-11-1672. (5) Samuel, b. 9-14-1674. (6) Francis, b. 9-16-1676. (7) John, b. 2-8-1678. (8) Mary, b. 8-7-1681. (9) Abigail, b. 4-1-1683. (10) John, b. 1-3-1679. (11) Jonathan, b. 12-2-1684. (12) Hannah. Francis Hall, the father of Dr. Isaac Hall, was in New Haven, Conn. in 1639 and in Stratford after 1648. He was made Freeman in the Conn. Jurisdiction in 1657. He left a large estate in Fairfield, Conn., dying in 1690 at Stratford. He brought his 1st wife, Elizabeth, from England. He m. 2nd 10-31-1665, Dorothy, widow of John Blakeman and dau. of Dr. Henry Smith. Dorothy m. 3rd Mark Sension, of Norwalk, Conn. who d. in 1693. She m. 4th Deacon Isaac Moore, of Farmington, Conn. Francis Hall had the following children, all by his 1st wife:-Isaac-Samuel-Mary-Elizabeth-Rebecca and Hannah who m. Joseph Blakeman."
"...Additional information concerning the children of B-9, Lydia and Dr. Isaac Hall:
1. Isaac, b. 11-8-1667. A physician, m. Jane Burgess, dau. of Richard Burgess.
2. Sarah, b. 3-3-1668/9. m. 1695 or 1700, Joseph Hall, b. ca. 1670/75.
3. Lydia, b. 9-21-1670.
4. Elizabeth, b. 11-11-1672. m. Samuel Lane, Rye, N.Y.
5. Samuel, b. 9-14-1674.
6. Francis, b. 9-16-1676. d. ca. 1758.
7. John, b. 2-8-1677/8. d. same day.
8. John, b. 1-3-1679/80. m. Abigail Summers.
9. Abigail, b. 4-1-1683, m. Thomas Jecox or Jacocks.
10. Jonathan, b. 12-2-1684. Res. Stratford, Conn.
11. Hannah, m. Ezekiel Baldwin.
12. Mary, b. 8-7-1681.
All above children b. at Stratford, Conn. Isaac-Francis-John and Abigail all baptized 4-28-1700 at Stratford.
There has been much confusion over the different Lydias. But Lydia, dau. of Nicholas, m. Dr. Isaac Hall, son of Francis Hall, 1-16-1666. (or 1-16-1661?) Recorded at Fairfield, Conn. Lydia, dau. of Moses and Abigail (Westcoast) Knapp, m. Thomas Pennoyer. Lydia, dau. of Roger Knapp of New Haven m. Richard Mills.
Dr. Isaac Hall, Sr. was granted 30 pounds, Oct. 1690 as "chirurgeon" to the Army. He was granted 150 acres of land, May, 1697, having served as Surgeon and lost one son."

4. "The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, Volumes I-III (Online database: NewEnglandAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2002), by Robert Charles Anderson, 1995. Note that the entry was later edited and republished in 2014 by the same author; see "The Winthrop Fleet; Massachusetts Bay Company Immigrants to New England 1629-1630" (NEHGS; Boston, 2014). The version below is the most current version:
"NICHOLAS KNAPP...
CHILDREN: ...
ix. LYDIA KNAPP, b. say 1647; m. Fairfield 16 Jan 1666/7 Isaac Hall [FOOF 1:250]..."

5. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 50, no. 4 (May 2008), " Ancestry of William Weed of Stamford and Darien, Connecticut (Continued), by Frederick C. Hart, Jr., CG, FASG, pp. 146-48:
"NICHOLAS1 KNAPP was in Watertown, Massachusetts by 1 March 1630/31...
Children of Nicholas and Eleanor (___) Knapp, first seven born and recorded at Watertown[17] and last two born probably at Stamford:
i. JONATHAN2 KNAPP, b. Nov 1631, bur. Watertown 27 Dec 1631 "aged 7 weeks."
ii. TIMOTHY KNAPP, b. 14 Dec 1632, m. BETHIA ___, said to have been the daughter of John Brundish or Brundage.[19] He moved to the town of Rye, (then in Connecticut but now in New York) about 1667 when he purchased a house and homelot there. He was active in community affairs and was constable of Rye in 1681 and 1682. He apparently moved to Greenwich by 1697.[20]
iii. JOSHUA KNAPP, b. 5 Jan 1634/35, m. at Stamford 9 Jun 1657 HANNAH CLOSE.[21]
iv. CALEB KNAPP, b. 20 Jan 1636/37, m. HANNAH SMITH.
v. SARAH KNAPP, b. 5 Jan 1638/39, m. at Stamford 6 Apr 1657 PETER DISBOROUGH / DISBROW.[22]
vi. RUTH KNAPP, b. 6 Jan 1640/41, m. (1) at Stamford 20 Nov 1657 JOSEPH FERRIS,[23] and (2) 19 Jan 1707/08 JOHN CLAPP.[24]
vii. HANNAH KNAPP, b. 6 Mar 1642/43,[25] living at the time of her father's will in 1670.[26]
viii. MOSES KNAPP, b. say 1645, perhaps at Stamford, m. by 1669 ABIGAIL WESTCOTT.
ix. LYDIA KNAPP, b. say 1647, probably at Stamford, m. at Fairfield 16 Jan 1666/67 ISAAC HALL.[27]
Footnotes...
17. Henry Bond, "Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, Including Waltham and Weston ..." (Boston: The New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1860), 327.
18. All data are as given in The Great Migration Begins (note 3), 2: 1136-7 except where noted. Lists of spouses given in the Knapp Genealogy (note 7) and other secondary sources are similar, but have additional marriages for many of the children that have not yet been verified. This list follows Anderson who discounted many of these additional marriages for lack of proof. Also note his discussion and rejection of the claims that William Knopp of Watertown was a close relative of Nicholas Knapp.
19. Although Bethia's identity is given as fact by Norman Davis in his "Westchester Patriarchs" (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, Inc., 1988), 36-7, 140, it is not confirmed by Anderson, or by Donald L. Jacobus in his, "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," 2 volumes in 3 (Fairfield: Eunice Dennie Bun Chapter, DAR, 1930-1932), 1: 108.
20. All from Charles W. Baird, "Chronicle of a Border Town: History of Rye Westchester County, New York 1660-1870" (Camden, ME: Picton Press [reprint], 1994), 416.
21. Stamford Town Records, 1: 20, transcription copy, 26.
22. Stamford Town Records 1: 19, 74, transcription copy, 74, 87. Some authors have claimed that she had an additional first marriage to John Disbrow, but this is unlikely since she was called Sarah Knapp in 1657.
23. Stamford Town Records, 1: 74, transcription copy, 87.
24. Stamford Town Records, 1: 128, transcription copy, 164. See also Ferris Genealogy (note 5), vol. 2, ID no. 12.
25. Mr. Bond gave the year as "1643-4" in his Watertown Genealogies (note 17) but Anderson gives it as 1642/43 based on the original (The Great Migration Begins [note 3], 2: 1137.)
26. Early Settlement (note 10), 174, lists a marriage for her to Zerubbabbel Hoyt in 1673, but there is no such marriage in the generally reliable David W. Hoyt, "A Genealogical History of the Hoyt, Haight, and Hight Families with Some Account of the Earlier Hyatt Families..." (Providence and Boston: the author, 1871, repr. Somersworth, NH: New England History Press, 1984), 311-2.
27. Old Fairfield (note 19), 1: 250. It is sometimes claimed that she married Richard Mills but Jacobus explained that this Mills marriage instead belonged to Lydia the daughter of Roger Knapp of New Haven and Fairfield (Old Fairfield [note 19], 1: 365, 411.)"

BIRTH:
1. Per Knapp Family website.

DEATH:
1. Per Knapp Family website.

SOURCES_MISC:
1. From "The Knapp Family" at website: "http://members.tripod.com/~Silvie/Knapp.html" 
Hall, Isaac (I377)
 
279 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per book "New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial," comp. William Richard Cutter, Reprinted for Clearfield Co by Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994, p. 1936: "Daniel, son of Henry and Elizabeth Smith, was born in 1648. He removed to Greenwich, CT, and died there, 3 Mar 1740. He married Hannah, dau. of Joshua and Hannah (Close) Knapp, b. 26 Mar 1660, died 29 Mar 1721. They had twelve children..."

2. Per the book "The Story of the Early Settlers of Stamford, Connecticut, 1641 - 1700" by Jeanne
Majdalany (including genealogies comp. with Edith M. Wicks), p191: "Daniel Smith - b1648, d1740, m1677 Hannah Knap (b1660, d1721, d/o Joshua). Greenwich." Daniel is brother of Hannah Smith who married John Caleb Knapp, uncle of Hannah Knapp. He was the son to Henry Smith who was with first group of settlers to Wethersfield in 1641.

3. "Abstracts of Stamford Probate Records - Book One," compiled by Spencer P. Mead: "Smith, Daniel, late of Stamford, inventory taken June 4, 1740, by Samuel Hait and John Holly, and filed with the account, Oct. 8, 1740, by Daniel Smith and Joseph Smith, administrators, and the estate ordered distributed to his children, viz: Daniel, Joseph, Jabez, Caleb, Nathan, Benjamin, Moses, Ezra, Hannah, Sarah, Ruth, and Mary, page 326. Smith, Daniel, late of Stamford, Oct. 8, 1740, part of his distribution bill to his children Benjamin, Ezra, Moses, Joseph, Daniel, Caleb, Nathan, Ruth, wife of James June, and to the children of Jabez, a deceased son. Smith, Daniel, late of Stamford,. Oct. 8, 1740, part of his distribution bill to the children born of Hannah, a daughter of deceased, to Daniel Lockwood, Jr., the part belonging to his wife, a daughter of deceased, and to the children of Sarah, a daughter of deceased."

4. "Nicholas Knapp Genealogy," compiled by Alfred Averill Knapp, M.D. "This Genealogy of the Descendants of Nicholas Knapp, first found mentioned at Watertown, Massachusetts in 1630, is the result of the work and research of many individuals. The four principal collectors of data were Charles Ruggles Knapp, Henry Eno Knapp, Ezra Fred Knapp and the author, Alfred Averill Knapp, but they were assisted through correspondence by a large number of individuals who furnished much valuable family and local information...":
"Hanna, b. 3-26-1660, Stamford, Conn. d. 3-29-1721, Greenwich, Conn. m Daniel Smith in 1679. He b. 1648. d. 3-3-1740, Greenwich, son of Henry Smith, bro. of Hannah, wife of Caleb Knapp. They had a son Ezra, b. 11-24-1705. m. 1st Mary Weed. 2nd Mary Bellamy. Hannah was 25 at the death of her father. Possibly she had 13 children."

5. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 45, no. 1 (Aug. 2002), "The Smith Families of Stamford, Connecticut," by Robert Louer, E-mail: vwrjl@att.net , pp. 7-8:
"Daniel2 Smith (Henry1), b. about 1648 probably at Stamford,[39] d. 3 Mar 1739/40 at Greenwich, aged 92 years.[40] He m. say 1679 Hannah Knapp,[41] daughter of Joshua and Hannah (Close) Knapp; b. 26 Mar 1660 at Stamford,[42] d. 29 Mar 1721 at Greenwich.[43] Daniel was residing in Greenwich by 19 Jan 1681.[44] His estate distributed 8 Oct 1740.[45]
Children of Daniel and Hannah (Knapp) Smith:
-[probably] Joshua3 Smith, b. say 1679[46]
-Daniel Smith, b. say 1680
-Sarah Smith, b. say 1683 probably at Greenwich, d. 12 Mar 1736/7 at Stamford.[47] She m1) 15 Dec 1705 at Stamford,[48] Jonas Hait, son of Benjamin and Hannah (Weed) Hait; b. say 1680, d. 3 Dec 1711 at Stamford.[49] She m2) 17 Feb 1714 at Stamford,[50] Thomas June, son of Peter and Sarah (___) June; b. 23 Jul 1690 at Stamford,[51] d. before 1 Dec 1767.[52] Thomas m2) say 1714 Tamar ___,[53] and had Tamar, William, and Rachel. Administration of Thomas' estate granted to his son Thomas on 1 Dec 1767.[54] Issue: Her first marriage Daniel, Sarah, Jemima, and Jonas. Her second marriage Hannah, Mary, Jemima, Thomas, Ezra, Abner, and Jacob.
-Joseph Smith, b. say 1686
-Jabez Smith, b. say 1689
-Caleb Smith, b. say 1691
-Nathan Smith, b. say 1693
-Benjamin Smith, b. say 1695
-Mary Smith, b. say 1697, d. 28 May 1741 at Stamford.[55] She m1) 23 May 1723 at Stamford,[56] Charles Webb, son of Samuel and Hannah (Jagger) Webb; b. 12 Mar 1696/7 at Stamford,[57] d. 19 Apr 1730 at Stamford.[58] She m2) 5 Apr 1734 at Stamford,[59] Daniel Lockwood Jr., son of Daniel and Charity (Clemence) Lockwood; b. 13 Dec 1703 at Stamford,[60] d. before 1 Oct 1776. Daniel m2) say 1775 probably at Stamford,[61] Sarah (Palmer) (Stockdill) Steward, daughter of David and Elizabeth (Hubbard) Palmer, widow of Robert Stockdill, and later James Steward; b. 3 Jul 1734.[62] Daniel's will dated 17 Aug 1775 was probated 1 Oct 1776.[63] Issue: Her first marriage Charles, Hannah, Mary, and Samuel. Her second marriage Daniel, Deborah, Sarah, and Isaac.
-Hannah Smith, b. say 1700 probably at Stamford, d. before 8 Oct 1740. Called deceased 8 Oct 1740 in distribution of her father's estate.[64] Her share distributed to her unnamed children.[65] She might be the Hannah who m. 1 Mar 1730/1 at Stamford,[66] Enos Bishop, son of John and Mary (Talmage) Bishop, b. 21 Apr 1707 at Stamford.[67]
-(Deacon) Moses Smith, b. 12 Jan 1702/3
-(Lt.) Ezra Smith, b. 24 Nov 1705
-Ruth Smith, b. say 1708, d. after Feb 1761 at Stamford.[68] She m. 22 May 1729,[69] James June, son of Peter and Sarah (___) June; b. 29 Jun 1687 at Stamford,[70] d. about Feb 1761 at Stamford.[71] He had by a previous marriage Ruth, Deborah, Mercy, James, and Zabud. His will dated 16 Feb 1761 was probated 3 Mar 1761.[72] Issue: Joshua, and Hannah.
-[possibly] Reuben Smith, b.[73]
39. Stamford LR, A:101.
40. Stamford VR, 1:41.
41. Marriage calculated from Hannah's birth date.
42. Stamford VR, 1:98.
43. Stamford VR, 1:138.
44. Stamford LR, A:101. As an original proprietor he may have been there as early as 1672.
45. Stamford Probate Record Miscellaneous Papers, 1:338, as cited in Spencer P. Mead, "Abstracts of Probate Records for the District of Stamford, Fairfield Co., State of CT, 1919-1924," hereafter Stamford PR Misc.
46. Stamford TM, 176. Many secondary sources give him a son Joshua who died 19 Dec 1706. While there is a record in Stamford recording a Joshua Smith dying in "Horseneck" on 19 Dec [ ], no year is given. It appears the year is assumed because the entry is found among the 1706 records. No evidence was found connecting him to this family, placement is assumed because it was the only Smith family in Greenwich at this time.
47. Stamford VR, 1:33.
48. Stamford VIZ, 1:128.
49. Stamford VR, 1:131.
50. Stamford VR, 1:106.
51. Stamford VR, 1:107.
52. Stamford Probate Record, 3:282, as cited in Spencer P. Mead, "Abstracts of Probate Records for the District of Stamford, Fairfield Co., State of CT, 1919-1924," hereafter Stamford PR.
53. Stamford PR, 3:299.
54. Stamford PR, 3:282.
55. Stamford VR, 1:47.
56. Stamford VR, 1:0.
57. Stamford VR, 1:13.
58. Stamford VR, 1:15; Stamford PR, 1:4.
59. Stamford VR, 1:25. (Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood, "Colonial and Revolutionary History of The Lockwood Family in America From A. D. 1630," (Philadelphia: 1889), 83, hereafter Lockwood Genealogy. Erroneously states that Daniel married Mary Webb, daughter of Joseph and Mary (Hait) Webb).
60. Stamford VR, 1:127.
61. Stamford PR, 5:429; Edith M. Wicks and Virginia H. Olson, "Stamford's Soldiers - Genealogical Biographies of Revolutionary War Patriots from Stamford Connecticut" (Stamford, 1976), 274, hereafter Stamford's Soldiers.
62. Stamford's Soldiers, 274.
63. Stamford PR, 5:429.
64. Stamford PR Misc., 1:338.
65. A number of secondary sources erroneously claim she married Isaac Weed (See #124). If in fact she did marry a Weed perhaps she was the unknown first wife of Samuel Weed, of Norwalk. His will dated 31 Oct 1748 was probated 9 Feb 1756 mentions a first wife.
66. Stamford VR, 1:18.
67. Stamford VR, 1:144.
68. Ruth is mentioned in her husband's will.
69. Stamford PR Misc, 1:338. She is called wife of James June in distribution of her father's estate. No marriage record found, date is taken from Spencer P. Mead, "Ye Historie of the Town of Greenwich County of Fairfield and state of Connecticut" (Cambden, ME: Picton Press, 1992), 657, hereafter Ye Historie.
70. Stamford VR, 1:107.
71. Stamford PR, 5:112.
72. Stamford PR, 5:114. An inventory was taken on 28 Apr 1761 by her brother Caleb Smith and James Nichols.
73. Isaac Hunting, "History of Little Nine Partners of North East Precinct, and Pine Plains, New York, Dutchess County" (Amenia, NY: Charles Walsh & Company, 1897), 380, hereafter Pine Plains. Claims without evidence that Daniel had a son Reuben. This account of the family contains a number of errors."

6. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 45, no. 1 (Aug. 2002), "The Smith Families of Stamford, Connecticut," by Robert Louer, E-mail: vwrjl@att.net , pp. 3-6
"Part 1
Since the founding of Stamford, Connecticut, the Smith name has long been associated with its history. This history begins in 1641 when a small company of settlers set out from the new settlement at Wethersfield, in the Connecticut Colony, for the region known as Rippowam, located in the southwest corner of the New Haven Colony. Rippowam took its name from a small river that flowed through the area. In the previous year twenty-eight individuals who were tired of the division that plagued their little community purchased the right to settle at Rippowam from Nathaniel Turner, agent for the New Haven Colony.[1] Among them was a young man by the name of Henry Smith.[2] He received and settled on three acres of land located east of the river.[3] The following year the new settlement was given the name of Stamford, named after the English town in Lincolnshire. Soon it was apparent that the settlement would be a success as new families began to move into the area in ever increasing numbers.
Over the years numerous accounts have been published on the various Smith families of Stamford. These accounts have generally had three things in common, they are undocumented, they are full of errors, and they have been surprisingly incomplete. The hope of this five-part series is to try to resolve some of these problems and to give those researching these families a starting place for further research. Because the Henry Smith family has had the longest and largest presence in the area, the first four parts of this article will deal with this particular family. The fifth part will cover some of the other early Smith families. Not covered are those families that merely moved through the area, or individuals who purchased land but never resided in Stamford.
Note: All locations mentioned in this article are in Connecticut unless otherwise indicated.
Henry Smith Family
Over the years researchers have made unsubstantiated claims as to Henry's origins, and to his possible ancestry. Further complicating the situation has been the confusion of information regarding Henry Smith, of Stamford, and that of the Reverend Henry Smith, of Wethersfield. Early accounts of Henry have suggested that he was a son of Lt. Samuel and Elizabeth (Smith) Smith, of Wethersfield.[4] Recent research has now ruled out any possibility of this being the case. It is now known that Samuel and Elizabeth did not marry until 6 Oct 1624, five years after Henry's supposed birth date.[5] More recent accounts have suggested he is the son of Thomas Smith, of St. Mary Aldermanbury, London, England.[6] Unfortunately no evidence is given to support these claims. Presumably the basis for them is the mention in Thomas Smith's will of a son Henry:
"Thomas Smith the elder of Aldermanbury, London, Esq. 24 February 1665, proved 13 June 1666. My two younger sons, Henry and Thomas Smith. My eldest son John Smith, with my consent, did many Mary, one of the daughters of Sir Edmond Wright, knight, late Alderman of the City of London deceased. My daughter Jane was married unto William Gore Esq.; My daughter Martha was married unto Archdale Palmer Esq.; Elizabeth, Margaret and Anne Smyth, three of the daughters of my said son John Smith, not yet married. My grandchild Jane Bennett and her father, Sir Humphrey Bennett, knight. My brother in Law John Robinson Esq., and my brother William Robinson. The poor of St. Margaret Moyses parish in Friday Street, where I was born and christened. To Mr. Edmond Callamy, late minister of Aldermanbury Church, and to Dr. Walker, now minister &c. My three sons to be executors."[7]
By the year 1665 when Thomas wrote his will, Henry (of Stamford) had a number of minor children, yet Thomas makes no mention of them, as he had with his son John. In addition Henry had been residing outside of England for over twenty-five years, but no mention of this fact was made either. For the same reason it would seem doubtful that Thomas would have named Henry (of Stamford) to be executor of his estate. These facts would seem to rule out the possibility of Thomas as Henry's father, however, further research is required before such a conclusion can be definitively drawn. A great-grandson of Thomas did arrive in the colonies in the late 1600's. Thomas Palmer, a grandson of the Archdale and Martha Palmer mentioned in the will, he married Abigail Hutchinson and resided in Boston, Massachusetts.[8]
It has also been suggested that Henry (of Stamford) was the twenty-two year old Henry Smith listed among the passengers who sailed from London to Virginia on the Primrose on 27 Jul 1635. Once again, no facts are provided to support this conclusion, so one must assume it was due to his age, and the timing of the ships arrival being approximately correct. The presence on board the Primrose of eighteen year old Thomas Smith, and twenty-one year old Margaret Clark may also have contributed to this conclusion. It is claimed that they settled at Watertown, Massachusetts.[9] Since there is no record of a Henry Smith in Watertown, perhaps this led some to the conclusion that he removed to the new settlement of Wethersfield, which was being established at this time. Then, with the appearance of Henry Smith (of Stamford) at about the same time the outcome was obvious -- the two men were assumed to be identical.
So it would appear that the assumption of Henry Smith, of Stamford, as the passenger on the Primrose, is based on the claim that Thomas Smith and Margaret Clark had also settled at Watertown, Massachusetts. Thomas and Margaret's appearance places the Primrose at the right place at the right time. So did the Thomas Smith and Margaret Clark listed on the passenger manifest settle at Watertown? There is plenty of evidence to indicate that they did not.
As previously mentioned the age of the Thomas Smith who sailed from London on the Primrose in 1635 was recorded on the passenger list as eighteen years old, this would make his birth date about 1617. However, the Thomas Smith who resided at Watertown, Massachusetts, died at the age of ninety-two, on the tenth of March 1692 [1692/3], which would mean he was born around 1601.[10] With a discrepancy of seventeen years in their ages there is little possibility that the two men are the same individuals.
Regarding Margaret Clark, it is alleged that she was the wife of twenty-seven year old William Clark, who had sailed from England on 15 May 1635 on the Plain Joan.[11] In fact there were two William Clarks who resided in Watertown, Massachusetts. The first arrived around 1630, but soon after removed to Ipswich, Massachusetts. He would sail back to England around 1635.[12] The second William is first mentioned around 1639, and it is this William who was married to a woman named Margaret.[13] They removed to Woburn, Massachusetts, where he died on 1 Mar 1682, and she died on 11 Oct 1694.[14] It is now known that Margaret, the wife of William Clark, was in fact the widow of John Tomson.[15] John Tomson, of Watertown, died on 28 Dec 1638, at the age of thirty.[16] Thus, Margaret must have married William Clark around 1639, and therefore could not have been the Margaret Clark listed on the 1635 passenger manifest.
A cursory review of some of the other passengers on the Primrose could find no indication that any of them had resided in Watertown, or for that matter in Massachusetts. Therefore, there is no evidence that the Primrose disembarked its passengers at Watertown. Perhaps a more thorough investigation of the dozens of other passengers listed may yet confirm that the Primrose did in fact disembark its passengers in New England, but until that fact is established, there is no reason to assume that Henry (of Stamford) was on board the ship.
So when all is said and done, nothing is known of Henry prior to his arrival in Stamford. There is the possibility he may have been in Wethersfield as early as 1635, when he fought in the Pequot War. Perhaps he traveled there with the original party, however, to date no evidence has been found. For his service in the war the General Assembly of Connecticut granted him eighty acres of land on 11 May 1671.[17]
First Generation
Henry1 Smith, b. say 1619 in England, d. probably 5 Jul 1687 at Stamford.[18] He m1) ___,[19] b. say 1621 probably in England, d. before 21 Jan 1664 probably at Stamford. He m2) about 1664,[20] Ann (___) Andrews, widow of Francis Andrews, of Fairfield, d. 2nd week Jun 1685 at Stamford.[21] Henry's will dated 4 Jul 1687 was probated 6 Nov 1687.[22] An inventory of his estate was taken 5 Jul 1687 and was filed 6 Nov 1687.[23] Ann Andrews had ten children by her first marriage, Hannah, Elizabeth, John, Thomas, Mary, Esther, Rebecca, Jeremiah, Abraham, and Ruth.[24]
Children of Henry Smith and his Unknown first wife:
-Hannah2 Smith, b. say 1640 possibly at Stamford,[25] d. possibly before 1691 at Stamford.[26] She married say 1660 probably at Stamford, Caleb Knapp, son of Nicholas and Elinor (___) Knapp; b. 20 Jan 1637 at Watertown, MA,[27] d. before 9 Mar 1674/5 at Stamford. Caleb's will dated 11 Oct 1674 was probated 9 Mar 1674/5.[28] She m2) before 4 Jul 1687,[29] Thomas Lawrence, son of Thomas and Martha (___) Lawrence; bp. 3 Dec 1648 at Milford,[30] d. 16 Aug 1691 at Stamford.[31] Thomas' will dated 26 Jul 1691 was probated 3 Nov 1691.[32] Issue: Her first marriage Caleb, John, Moses, Samuel, Sarah, and Hannah.
-Samuel Smith, b. say 1646 probably at Stamford, d. 16 Aug 1658 at Stamford.[33]
-Daniel Smith, b. about 1648
-Rebecca Smith, b. say 1650 probably at Stamford,[34] d. probably at Milford. She m. 2 Jul 1672 at Milford,[35] Edward Wilkinson, of Milford, b. say 1648. Issue: Elizabeth, Rebecca, Edward, Ruth, Hannah, Abigail, Samuel, John, and Thankful.
-John Smith Sr., b. say 1652
-Abigail Smith, b. after 1656 probably at Stamford.[36]
-Mary Smith, b. 3 Oct 1658 at Stamford.[37]
-"Daughter" Smith, b. 9 Aug 1661 at Stamford.[38]
Footnotes:
1. Sherman W. Adams and Henry R. Stiles, "The History of Ancient Wethersfield, Connecticut...," 2 Vols., (New York: The Grafton Press, 1904), 142, hereafter Ancient Wethersfield.
2. Stamford Town Meetings 1640-1806, Book 1, Transcribed, 4-5, (Connecticut Ancestry microfilm copy used, hereafter Stamford TM).
3. Stamford TM, 7. Today this area is located south of Tresser Boulevard, near Washington Boulevard and Guernsey Street.
4. Ancient Wethersfield, 144.
5. "The American Genealogist," 32:202, hereafter TAG.
6. Edith M. Wicks and Jeanne Majdalany, "The Early Settlement of Stamford Connecticut 1641-1700" (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1991), 191, hereafter Early Settlement.
7. Henry F. Waters, "Genealogical Gleanings in England," 2 Vols. (Boston: Rockwell and Churchill Press, 1901), 305-307, hereafter Genealogical Gleanings.
8. Genealogical Gleanings, 306.
9. "The New England Historical and Genealogical Register," 5:248, hereafter Register.
10. Watertown Historical Society, "Watertown Record...," 4 Vols. (Watertown, MA: Press of Fred G. Barker, 1894), 66, (Volume one is broken into three sections. Reference found in third section titled The First Book and Supplement of Births Deaths and Marriages), here after Watertown Record.
11. Register, 5:248.
12. Robert Charles Anderson, "The Great Migration Begins...," 3 Vols. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995), 1:381-382, hereafter Great Migration.
13. Great Migration, 1:382.
14. Charles Henry Pope, "The Pioneers of Massachusetts, a descriptive List, Drawn from the Records of the Colonies, Towns and Churches, and other Contemporaneous Documents" (Boston: J. J. Aralcelyan, 1900), 104, hereafter Pioneers.
15. Great Migration, 1:382.
16. Pioneers, 451.
17. Hammond Trumbull, The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut From 1665 to 1777... , (Hartford: 1852), 149. Although the Henry Smith mentioned in the grant was not specifically identified, the author believes he was Henry, of Stamford. The only other candidate would appear to be the Rev. Henry Smith, of Wethersfield, but he did not come to the Colonies until after the war, around 1636-1637, and he died around 1648.
18. Fairfield Probate Record, 3:239, hereafter Fairfield PR.
19. The name of his first wife is unknown. It is sometimes given in secondary sources as Hannah (see Early Settlement, 191), but no evidence has been found to confirm this fact. "Hannah" is most likely speculation based on the name of his first daughter.
20. Stamford TM, 101. Henry and Ann signed a prenuptial agreement 21 Jan 1664.
21. Stamford Vital Record, 1:108, as cited in Barbour Collection of Vital Records, Connecticut State Library, hereafter Stamford VR.
22. Fairfield PR, 3:239,
23. Fairfield PR, 3:239.
24. Fairfield PR, 1:79.
25. Based on birth dates of her husband and children.
26. She is not mentioned in her husband's estate.
27. Watertown Record, 4. Date recorded as 20d 11m 1636.
28. Fairfield PR, 3:36.
29. Fairfield PR, 3:239. She was called Hannah Lawrence in her father's will.
30. Milford First Congregational Church Record, as cited in Barbour Church Records.
31. Fairfield PR, 4:48.
32. Fairfield PR, 4:48.
33. Stamford VR, 1:20.
34. Stamford Land Record A:79, hereafter Stamford LR.
35. Milford Vital Record, 1:13, as cited in Barbour Collection of Vital Records, Conn. State Library.
36. Fairfield PR, 3:36. Mentioned in Caleb Knapp's will of 1674 as "my minor sister-in-law." She may be the unnamed daughter recorded born on 9 Aug 1661.
37. Stamford VR, 1:74. (Donald L. Jacobus, "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," 3 Vols. (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1991), 1:575, hereafter Old Fairfield. William A.D. Eardeley, Manuscript, Notes on Connecticut and Long Island Families (Long Island Historical Society), Microfilm copy, hereafter Eardeley MSS. Jacobus claims she died 3 Dec 1658. Eardeley erroneously suggests she married Joseph Brown. The first name of Joseph's wife is known to have been Mary. Presumably the basis for Eardeley's claim is that Thomas Lawrence in his will called him his brother-in-law. Because Thomas also states in his will that his sister Mary had married a Slawson, Eardeley apparently assumed the relationship mentioned must have been through Thomas' marriage to Hannah Smith. However, the reason Thomas called him his brother-in-law was that Joseph was his stepbrother. Thomas' mother Martha had married Francis Brown, father of Joseph Brown.)
38. Stamford VR, 1:98."

BIRTH:
1. Not found in the book "Stamford Town Records, Vol. 1, 1641-1723," transcribed and annotated by Paul R. Finch, NEHGS (Boston, 2011). Stamford was started in 1641 and there were not many vital records kept in it first years. The death of his wife is found in this record and shows her as the wife to Daniel Smith Sr. (see her notes). 
Smith, Daniel (I400)
 
280 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per book below: "Daniel Lockwood was one of the executors of his father's estate; born 1725, in Greenwich, Conn.; died Aug. 30th, 1788, aged 63 (gravestone); ...M. 1st Ester Jarvis, sister of Rt. Rev. Abram Jarvis, second Bishop of Conn.; m. 2d. Thankful Peck, of Greewich, Conn., sister of Jonathan Peck...Children: First wife's: Esther Jarvis Lockwood, m. Nathaniel Webb, of Stamford; Second wife's: John Lockwood, b. Nov 9th, 1757, m. Letitia Lockwood. Charles Lockwood, b. Jan 14th, 1760. Note: Daniel Lockwood was a man of wealth and importance, he owned 1000 acres of land in his native town, his possessions extending from river to river. He left the bulk of his property to his elder son John. It sounds strangely to say 100 years after Daniel Lockwood's death that he owned slaves in Connecticut, but such was the case; it is stated in family tradition, that one of his slaves tried to get him into a lonely place at night in order that he might kill him. Greenwich: Daniel Lockwood was a stanch churchman, and as such obeyed the teachings of his mother, the Church, which interpreted literally the words 'Fear God, honor the King,' so when the Revolutionary War broke out he remained loyal to King George, although he took no active part in suppressing what from his point of view was rebellion. His Presbyterian neighbors, however, were not so liberal-minded, and drove away his cattle, carried off his handsome looking-glasses with other household furniture, and even inflicted personal injury upon him, one of them, Capt. Sam. Lockwood, breaking his teeth. Charles Lockwood, second son of Daniel, than a lad of 18, resented these indignities, and, arming himself with a stout stick, at once repaired to the house of Captain Sam. for satisfaction, and finding him, said, 'I have come to get a receipt for your knocking my fathers's teeth down his throat,' and raised his club; at which the Capt. retired behind a chair which he elevated. The descending club broke the chair into fragments. Then the Captain shouted at the top of his voice 'murder', which soon brought in Whig neighbors to the rescue. The young avenger of his father's wrongs, knowing that they were about to take him prisoner, reteated to a corner of the room and said, 'Gentlemen, I have no wish to harm a hair of your heads, but by the living God the first man that lays his hand on me is a dead man'; at which the men, five of six in number, separated on either side and allowed him to pass through their midst out of the house unharmed. He soon after thought it prudent to go to Long Island, where he remained until the close of the war.
Daniel Lockwood's will, Aug. 12, 1788/ Probated Sept. 26 1788: Wife Thankful to Esther Webb wife of Nathaniel Webb Jr., Charles Lockwood Đ300. John Lockwood 'all residue and remainder'. John Lockwood Exec'r amt Đ1465, Os. Od."

DEATH:
1. Ancestry.com's "Connecticut, Hale Collection of Cemetery Inscriptions and Newspaper Notices, 1629-1934," Connectiucut Headstone Inscriptions, Vol. 17, p. 313, "Old Sound Beach Cemetery"[now Tomac Cemetery]:
- "Lockwood, Daniel, died Aug. 30, 1788 age 62 yrs.
- "Lockwood, Thankful, wife of Daniel, died Spet. 3, 1798 age 63 yrs."

SOURCES_MISC:
1. The book: "Genealogy of the Lockwood Family 1630-1888 - Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America from A.D. 1630," compiled by Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood, printed privately by the family, 1889, Philadelphia. 
Lockwood, Daniel (I1486)
 
281 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per email of 24 Dec 2001 from KeithShupe@aol.com: In referring to a conversation with Warner Hansen, Lawrence's son, Keith says: "He said that my telling him that his dad had gone to prison was a complete surprise. He thought mom divorced him about a year after he was born because he has a photo of his dad holding him as a baby. He said they were both 22 years old when they got married, but never knew where they were married but it wasn't Ogden. He said he has a photo of him in a military uniform and thought it was taken sometime during WW2. He said a cousin of his wife, Norma, was a Mormon and tried to track him down using the LDS library resources. All he could find was that he was adopted from a I believe a Denver orphanage. The [birth] father had a history of alcoholism and that he got a very young woman from a very wealthy family pregnant and when the baby was born he was given to the orphanage. He said that they used the same last name for all the orphans, and he thought it was Brown. He said that after he had grown up with the wealth that Mr. and Mrs. Hansen had and then lost in the stock market crash of '29, that he heard he went kinda berzerk and became not so nice of a guy. His new adoptive parents were Lawrence (Lars) and Caroline Hansen. Her maiden name was Caroline Jensen and she had a brother Simeon Jensen. Both her and her brother are buried in a graveyard in Huntsville, Utah. Dates of birth or death I don't know. The adoptive parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hansen were one of the most wealthy families in Ogden, living in a mansion that still exists in Ogden. Most of their fortune went south when the stockmarket crashed in 1929. Not long after that the two of them were hit by a train while in their car and Mr. Hansen died, but Mrs. Hansen was hurled from the car about 50 yards, knocking her shoes off her, but survived, but it did damage her hearing and had to wear a hearing aid afterwards. She died in a little cabin in my father's trailer park when I was in college and working in the summer for the forest service near Priest Lake, Idaho and couldn't come to the funeral. She was a very kind woman and was like a grandmather to Carole and me and we always called her grandma Hansen. I know she felt close to my mother because of the way her son, Lawrence had treated her. What little money she had when she died she passed on to my mother. Where he was imprisoned or for what my mother never told Warner, myself, or Carole. Strange as it seems she kept a box of letters in a shoe box he wrote to her from prison. Carole told me that and found that out when she moved from her apartment to the Gardens Nursing Home in Odgen. Whatever he did to my mom effected her for the rest of her life and she kept that bit of her history to herself as far as her children and my father were concerned. See, I told you this was going to be harder to trace than the one armed man from the 'Fugitive'."

2. Censuses:
1910 US: Ogden Ward 5, Weber, Utah, 21 Apr 1910, 2650 Madison Ave., 146/150:
Lars Hansen, 45, md. 20 yrs., Den Den Den, imm. 1866, naturalized, stock man.
Caroline, 40, md. 20 yrs., 1 child total and living, UT Den Den.
Lawrence, 1y 2m, UT Den Den.

MARRIAGE:
1. Familysearch's Utah Marriages: Lawrence L. Hansen and Thelma Peterson, m. Box Elder co., Utah 11 Apr 1928.

2. Alternate date also showing for marriage of Lawrence Hansen and Thelma Petersen is in Box Elder County, Utah records is 8 Apr 1928. 
Hansen, Lawrence L. (I119)
 
282 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per email of 7 Jan 2002 from Grant Smith . Grant is a great grandson of Rufus and Bonita: "Bonita's father and mother were both from Prussia and immigrated to the US. Bonita was the youngest in her family and never learned to speak German like her older siblings. The family name was originally Schuetz, but it was changed when Bonita's father (Henry Phillip Schuetz) came to America [to Sheetz]. She was a wonderful person to know, and I'm happy that she lived such a long life that I had the chance to know her as an adult. We called her 'Granny Motto' because she remarried after Rufus' death to Victor Motto, of Bloomfield. Vick was the only great-grandfather I knew growing up. I wish I'd gotten to know Rufus (Papa Adair)."

2. Parents: Henry Phillip Schuetz and Catharina Thuring per Ancestral File v4.19.

3. Carolyn Smith lists last name as "Seitzinger" which was her married name from her first husband prior to marriage to Rufus.

4. Per email of 7 Jan 2002 from digger_grant@hotmail.com: "I had the privilege of knowing Bonita 'Nita' as many people called her, and she was a wonderful person. She was never baptized into the LDS church although I've heard her support the church on many occasions. Apparently she was the only mom that most of Rufus and Nellie's children knew."

5. Biography provided by Don Smith, 2003:
"Granny.
Bonita Sheetz was born on the 17 January, 1899 in Colorado City, Colorado. She was the seventh child of Henry Phillip Sheetz and Katherine Marie Tierring, who were Immigrants from Prussia.
Henry and Katherine were married in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where he was employed as a glass blower. Later they moved to Colorado City, Colorado where Bonita was born.
Granny, as we called her, remembered as a little girl that her father worked as a gardener on an estate owned by a man named General Palmer. Once in a while her father would take Granny with him when he went to work. General Palmer had many Colored People working for him and Bonita enjoyed playing with the little colored girls who lived on the estate.
While living in Colorado City, they lived in a two story house about two miles out of town. It was here that her father had a greenhouse which was a hobby of his. It also provided a partial income for the family. Grandpa Sheetz loved working in the greenhouse raising flowers and vegetables which he would sell. He not only raised flowers, but he was also a florist of sorts, he arranged the flowers in bouquets to sell.
During this time in Bonita's life, her father would make bouquets of sweet peas and then put Bonita on a street car that would take her into a tourist town called Manitou. The town was close by and there she would sell her little bouquets of sweet peas to the tourists.
Grandpa Sheetz also traded vegetables that he raised to a grocery store owner in return for groceries.
When Bonita was small, her father used to take her with him in the evenings when he went to the Schmitz Bar. While he enjoyed a couple of mugs of beer, Bonita would sit at a small table with him and eat pretzels. When it was time to go home Grandpa would get a little pail of beer to carry home with him. This was something grandma Sheets didn't approve of.
Around 1910, a real estate agency by the name of Jackson and Rice enticed Grandpa Sheetz to come to Bloomfield, New Mexico and look at some property they had for sale. Grandpa Sheetz and his daughter Matilda and husband combined resources and purchased twenty acres where Denny Knudsen now lives.
Bonita's father and her brother Carl came to Bloomfield first and built a little one room house for them to live in. About a week before the rest of the family moved to Bloomfield, Charles Miller, Matilda's husband, loaded their furniture and a team of horses into a box car of a train and brought every thing they owned to he new home.
A week later Grandma Sheetz, Bonita and her sister boarded a train called the 'Red Apple Flyer' and started on their journey to their new home.
On the 17 March 1911 they arrived in Aztec, New Mexico, where they were met by Grandpa Sheetz and Charles Miller. They had come with a team and wagon to take them home.
It had snowed during the night and was still snowing and it took all day to travel the eleven miles from Aztec to Bloomfield.
The first school that Bonita attended was in one room of the old Swire House which was located where the new baseball park is now. Bonita later went to school in one room of the old Giacomalli Home, where she continued her schooling until a small stone school was built in the approximate location of where Farmer's Market now stands.
Granny said her dad believed every one should work, if the children ran out of anything else to do, they were required to go to the fields and beak up clods with little wooden mallets their father had made for such occasions. Grandpa Sheetz was president of the ditch company in Bloomfield when construction of the Citizen's Ditch started. Granny word as a freighter and hauled much of the cement and timbers used in the ditch construction. She was always a hard worker and was very ambitious.
By this time Bonita was a young woman with blue eyes, brown hair and stood 5 feet 4 and a half inches tall. She always had a very good sense of humor. This was one of her qualities that we all enjoyed and admired about her.
Grandpa Sheetz was a very strict father, and as fathers and mothers go, were always fighting the ever-changing fashions as parent do today.
Granny told a story about when she was in her teens the girls used to wear long dresses with splits up the side, which met with much disapproval from her parents. They always made sure before she went to dances, that her skirt or dress was sewn up completely, but when she got to the dance she would take the basting out and dance all night, but before returning home she would baste the dress back up with needle and thread she had taken to the dance with her.
On the 11th of May 1917 in Aztec, New Mexico, she was married to James Tate Seitzinger. When they were first married they lived in a tent on the Bill Sheetz place, which is the old gray house located next to the Bloomfield Arroyo.
During deer hunting season Granny and Grandad would take a team and wagon and travel to the Jemez Mountains east of Cuba, where they would pitch a tent and hunt deer for a few days. Granny said that it was sometime so cold that hen she washed diapers and hung them out to dry they would freeze before she could get them all hung out.
While they lived in Bloomfield, grandad farmed. Here two daughters were born to them. Louise Marie and Helen Malen. Later they moved to Alhambra, California, where grandad worked in the carpentry trade. It was here that their two sons were born, James Tate Jr. And Gordon Leonard.
Very happy times where enjoyed by the family while they lived in California, but due to the depression and no work, the family was forced to move back to Bloomfield, where he helped grandad Leonard Delong Seitzinger farm his place.
Granny and grandad were later divorced and in 1936. Bonita married Rufus Adair. B then they had acquired the Sheetz farm for taxes. Granny worked very hard helping Papa Adair on the farm and helped him raise some of his children who were still at home.
One time when Granny was helping papa put up the hay, she picked up some hay with her pitch fork and she saw what she thought was a kitten, so she nudged it with her pitch fork to make it move, it was then that she discovered that it wasn't a kitten at all, but a skunk. It sprayed her right in the race, on her hair and in her mouth. She said her clothes looked like she had spilled clorox on them, as it took all the color out of them. Of course she had to burn her cloths after this little episode.
It was during those years while married to Rufus that she went to work for the Bloomfield schools as cook. Her first job was at the old Rio Vista School, where she cooked and served meals in the old 'cook shack,' still standing on Don and Carolyn's place. After 23 years of marriage, in Apr 1959, Rufus passed away.
Later Granny married Victor Motto who had been her very first sweetheart. Several years after she married Vic she retired from her job, where she had worked for twenty years. This ended her working career that had started as a small child selling sweet peas to tourists.
Granny and Vic spent their retirement years living in Bloomfield, raising roses and many other beautiful flowers. Their yard was always a show place with terraced benches ablaze with color for all to enjoy. Vic passed away in November of 1985. This ended a happy marriage of more than 25 years.
Granny Motto as she was called has lived a long and colorful life with many stories to tell for those who would listen. She was one fo the oldest living pioneers of the Bloomfield area and had witnessed many changes in her life time. She know both joy and sorrow, but through it all she endured to be 97 years old. To the end she was an example to all of us with her eternal optimism and zest for life. These two most important assets never diminished throughout the years. We feel truly blessed to have known her. Granny passed form this life on April 21, 1996.
She was preceded in death by husband Vic Motto, one daughter, Louise Sategna and three grandchildren. Left to mourn her passing are tow sons James Seitzinger Jr. And wife Lou of Bloomfield, Gordon Seitzinger and wife Jessie of Farmington. One daughter Helen Adair of Bloomfield, 12 grandchildren, 32 great-grandchildren and 8 great-great grandchildren and numerous friends and relatives."

BIRTH:
1. Per email of 7 Jan 2002 from Grant Smith . Her granddaughter Carolyn Smith's email of 10 Nov 2002 indicates she was born in Colorado City, CO on 17 Jan 1899. Colorado City no longer exists and it is now Colorado Springs, El Paso, CO.

MARRIAGE:
1. Per email of 11 Jan 2002 from Carolyn Smith .

DEATH:
1. Per email of 7 Jan 2002 from Grant Smith .

BURIAL:
1. Per email of 7 Jan 2002 from Grant Smith
Schuetz or Sheetz, Bonita Katherine Christine (I599)
 
283 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per Peter Herzenberg, Karen is an architect. Also National Track Championship 2 Aug 1996, Ontario Team 10th 500m 42.425.

2. Architect in Anchorage, Alaska as of 2007.

SOURCES_MISC:
1. Website of Peter Bruce Herzenberg of London, England (since relocated to South Africa). Website is no longer functioning as of 7 Aug 2007. Copies of much of his data from the website in my possession. 
Herzenberg, Karen (I4354)
 
284 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per the book "The Story of the Early Settlers of Stamford, Connecticut, 1641 - 1700," by Jeanne Majdalany (including genealogies comp. with Edith M. Wicks, page 194: contains bio of father Andrew Ward: "born in Homersfield, Norfalk, England...m. in Dedham, Essex. He came to America in 1630...He was in Watertown until 1635 when he moved to Hartord where he was a magistrate of the court. he was one of the orinal group of settlers in Stamford in 1641 and was one of the first men chosen for townsmen; later he was magistrate; In 1647 or 1648 he moved to Fairfield, CT. He was also in Hempstead, L.I. for awhile. Descendants: William-m. Deborah Lockwood,..."

2. Citation Information: "The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633," Volumes I-III: "for Andrew Ward, father of William Ward as noted below:
"Andrew Ward
Origin: Unknown
Migration: 1633
First Residence: Watertown
Removes: Wethersfield 1635, Stamford 1641, Fairfield 1648
Church Membership: Membership in Watertown church prior to 14 May 1634 implied by freemanship.
Freeman: 14 May 1634 [MBCR 1:369]. Education: He signed his will and his wife made her mark to hers. His inventory included "books and honey" valued at £1. The inventory of his widow included "books" valued at 15s. and "a Great Bible" valued at 15s. Offices: Commissioner for Massachusetts Bay to govern new settlements on the Connecticut, 3 March 1635/6 [MBCR 1:171]. Connecticut Assistant, April 1636, September 1636, March 1637, May 1637 [CT Civil List 58]. Deputy for Wethersfield to Connecticut Court, November 1637, March 1638, April 1638, August 1639, September 1639, January 1640 [CT Civil List 58]. Deputy for Stamford to New Haven Court, April 1644 [CT Civil List 58]. New Haven Assistant, October 1646 [CT Civil List 58]. Deputy for Fairfield to Connecticut Court, May 1648, May 1649, September 1649, May 1650, September 1650, May 1651, May 1652, May 1653, September 1653, May 1654, September 1654, May 1655, May 1656, October 1658 [CT Civil List 58]. Estate: Andrew Ward was granted a ten-acre homestall in Watertown, probably in 1633 [WaBOP 99]. In the Inventory of Grants and the Composite Inventory, this homestall belonged to Nicholas Busby, who also held many parcels granted to Edmond Sherman, father-in-law or brother-in-law of Andrew Ward [WaBOP 50, 99, 135]. Apparently Edmond Sherman acquired the homestall from Ward upon his removal to Wethersfield, and based on the proprietary rights accompanying the homestall received further grants in Watertown, which he then sold to Busby. In the Wethersfield land inventory on 24 March 1640/1 Andrew Ward held eight parcels of land: homelot of four acres; fourteen acres and two roods in the great meadow; four acres and three roods of great meadow and swamp; two acres and three roods in the back lots; eight acres of dry swamp; six acres of wet swamp; fifty-four acres in the West Field; and two hundred sixty-four acres on the east side of Connecticut River [WetLR 1:250]. In his will, dated 8 June 1659 and proved 2 November 1659, Andrew Ward of Fairfield bequeathed to "Ester my beloved wife" £40 and one third part of all my lands & housing in Fairfeild during her widowhood"; to "my son John" £50 at age twenty-one; to "my daughter Sarah" £40 "within one year after her marriage"; to "my daughter Abigall" £40 at age eighteen; (the next clause is partly lost to fire, but apparently gives land jointly to sons Andrew and Samuel at age twenty-one); residue of moveables to be divided equally between sons Andrew and Samuel; "and for the rest of my children they have received their full portions already except my son Edmond who if he come to this place my will is that out of my two younger sons Andrew and Samuell's portions there may be paid twenty pounds" [Fairfield PR 1:58-59]. The inventory of the estate of Andrew Ward was taken 18 October 1659 and totalled £242 10s., including £80 in "house and lands" [Fairfield PR 1:59-60]. In her will, dated 27 December 1665 and proved 28 February 1665/6, Hester Ward bequeathed to "my son William Ward" £5; to "my daughter Mary Burr" 40s.; to "my sons Andrew and Samuell" £8 apiece; to "my daughter Abigaill" £10; to "the children of my daughter Anna Nicholls nine pounds to be equally divided among them"; to "my grandchild Hester Ward" £9; to "my son John's children in being" £9; to "my grandchildren Sarah Burr and Nathaniell Burr the children of my daughter Sarah nine pounds to be equally divided among them"; wearing apparel divided among daughters Ann, Mary, Sarah and Abigail; sons William Ward and Andrew Ward to be executors and residuary legatees; to "Daniell Bur and Hester Burr ten shillings apiece"; to "my son William ... my great Bible and if Andrew outlive him then Andrew shall have it" [Fairfield PR 2:11]. The inventory of th e estate of "Mrs. Hester Ward deceased" was taken 30 January 1665/6 and totalled £139, with no real estate included [Fairfield PR 2:12]. Birth: By about 1603 based on estimated date of marriage. Death: After 8 June 1659 (date of will) and before 18 October 1659 (date of inventory). Marriage: By about 1628 Hester Sherman, daughter of Edmund Sherman; she died between 27 December 1665 (date of will) and 30 January 1665/6 (date of inventory). Children:
i EDMUND, b. say 1628; named in father's will of 8 June 1659 (apparently not residing in New England), but not named in mother's will of 27 December 1665.
ii ANN, b. about 1630; m. by 1650 Caleb Nichols (eldest child b. Stratford 1 December 1650 [FOOF 1:435-36]).
iii William, born say 1632; m. by about 1664 Deborah Lockwood, daughter of Robert Lockwood (Jeffrey Ferris, who married the widow of Robert Lockwood, made payments to the children of Robert Lockwood, deceased, and one of the payments was to William Ward [Fairfield PR 1:42, 66, 67; FOOF 1:380-81].
iv HESTER, born say 1634; probably m. (1) Joseph Boosey, and if so m. (2) Jehu Burr, son of JEHU BURR [FOOF 1:118-20].
v Mary, born say 1636; m. (poss.) John Burr, son of JEHU BURR [FOOF 1:119-21].
vi John, born say 1638; m. Middletown 18 April 1664 Mary Harris, daughter of William Harris [MidVR Barbour 468, citing Middletown LR 1:12].
vii Sarah, born say 1640; m. by about 1662 Nathaniel Burr, son of JEHU BURR [NYGBR 51:164].
viii Abigail, born say 1642; m. (1) by 1672 Moses Dimon [FOOF 1:184-85]; m. (2) by contract dated 2 June 1685 Edward Howard [FOOF 1:293].
ix Andrew, born say 1644; m. by about 1669 Trial Meigs, daughter of John Meigs (in his will of 28 August 1671 John Meigs made bequests of land to "my daughter Tryall Ward," which were to go at her death to "her son Andrew, or if he die and have no children then to return to his next brother John and his seed" [Henry B. Meigs, Record of the Descendants of Vincent Meigs ... (np 1901), p. 176, citing Killingworth LR 2:62]). x Samuel, born say 1646; m. (1) by about 1671 ____ Ogden, daughter of Richard Ogden [FOOF 1:448]; m. (2) Hannah (Howkins) Nichols, daughter of Anthony Howkins and widow of Jonathan Nichols [FOOF 1:438-39].
Associations: Early accounts of the origin of Andrew Ward claimed that the family was from Homersfield, Suffolk, but no evidence of the family has been found there. Jacobus suggested searching in the area of Dedham, Essex, since that was the home of Ward's wife [FOOF 1:643-44]. Jacobus also noted a clue pointing to a Ward family of Faxton, Northamptonshire [NYGBR 44:119-21]. Comments: On 2 July 1640 Samuel Smith sued "Andrew Waird," but we do not learn the cause or outcome [RPCC 12]."

3. "Connecticut Ancestry," periodical published by the Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Dec. 2004, Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 119-130: "Robert Lockwood of Watertown, Stamford and Fairfield: English Ancestry, New England Connections and Children's Marriages," by Robert Charles Anderson. Note that the following is a partial transcript of the full transcript in the notes of Robert Lockwood; the full article is well written by one of the very best modern genealogists and should be consulted in conjunction with the following notes:
"DEBORAH Lockwood, b. Watertown 12 October 1636. She m. (1) by 20 October 1658 William Ward, son of Andrew Ward.(58) She m. (2) by 1678 John Topping.(59)
Footnotes:
58. Fairfield Probate Records 1:43; Anderson, Great Migration Begins 3:1918-21 (which misstates the estimated date of marriage).
59. Jacobus, "Old Fairfield," 1:645 (citing "Marriage agreement between Ebenezer Hawley and Hester Ward, dau. of Mrs. Deborah Topping of Southampton, 19 Apr. 1678")."

4. "The Great Migration," by Robert Charles Anderson:
"Robert Lockwood...
Estate: ...On 1 December 1681, "Jonathan Hewsteed of Greenwich having marrying Mary Lockwood the daughter of Robert and Susanna Lockwood" acknowledged having received his wife's portion of her parents' estates from "Daniell Lockwood, Joseph Lockwood and Will[ia]m Ward administrators upon the estate of their father and mother" [Fairfield PR 3:314]. On 28 December 1681, "John Barlowe of Fairfeild," noting that "there was a portion due out of the estate of my father-in-law Robert Lockwood deceased and of the estate of my mother -in-law Susanna Ferris deceased unto she that is now my wife Abigal their daughter, and whereas that my brother-in-law Will[ia]m Ward in his lifetime and my brother-in-laws Joseph and Daniel Lockwood were appointed by the court to administer on the abovesaid estate," acknowledged having received his wife's portion [Fairfield PR 3:313]...
Children...
DEBORAH Lockwood, b. Watertown 12 October 1636 [NEHGR 7:159; WaVR 1:4]; m. (1) by 20 October 1658 William Ward, son of Andrew WARD {1633, Watertown} [GMB 3:1918-21 (which misstates the estimated date of marriage)]; m. (2) by 1678 John Topping [FOOF 1:265, 645 (citing "Marriage agreement between Ebenezer Hawley and Hester Ward, daughter of Mrs. Deborah Topping of Southampton, 19 Apr. 1678")]..."

5. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 27, no. 1 (Sept. 1984), "The Lockwoods of Norwalk, Connecticut," by Harriet Woodbury Hodge, C.G., pp. 10-11:
"Nearly a century ago, in 1889, two misguided compilers, Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood produced "Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America." Modern genealogists realize that nineteenth century family histories often contain errors, and this genealogy is among the most confused; but it continues to be used as a reliable source. In his "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus put in order the early Lockwoods of that town. In 1978 this compiler undertook a similar task for Stamford Lockwoods with "Some Descendants of Edmund Lockwood (1594-1635) of Cambridge, Massachusetts and his son Edmund Lockwood (c.1625-1693) of Stamford." There remain the Lockwood founders of Norwalk and Greenwich with lines to be set straight...
ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, son of Edmund and Ales (Cowper) Lockwood of England, bp. Combs, co. Suffolk, 18 Jan. 1600/01; d. Fairfield, Connecticut 1658, [Banks, "The Winthrop Fleet"; Jacobus, "Families of Old Fairfield," hereinafter F.O.O.F., 1:380].
He m. prob. at Salem or Watertown, Massachusetts ca. 1633 SUSANNAH, prob. NORMAN, dau. of Richard Norman of Salem. She m. (2) Jeffrey Ferris.
Children (LOCKWOOD), first six b. Watertown, Massachusetts, [VR], others prob. all b. Connecticut:
i JONATHAN2 b. 10 Sep. 1634; d. Greenwich, CT 12 May 1688; m. MARY FERRIS; she m. (2) 1696 Thomas Merritt.
ii DEBORAH b. 12 Oct. 1636; m. (1) WILLIAM WARD; m. (2) JOHN TOPPING.
iii JOSEPH b. 6 Aug. 1638; d. Fairfield, CT 1717; m. (1) ISABEL? BEACHAM; m. (2) MARY (COLEY) (SIMPSON) STREAM. [His descendants are the only Lockwoods carried on in F.O.O.F., 1:385-387, 715-716 and 2:586-591].
iv DANIEL b. 21 March 1640; d. Fairfield, CT 1691; m. ABIGAIL SHERWOOD. [See F.O.O.F. 1:383, 387 for his only son, DANIEL, who had but two surviving daughters. The name Lockwood ends there on this line].
v EPHRAIM b. 1 Dec. 1641; d. Norwalk, CT 1685; m. MERCY ST. JOHN.
vi GERSHOM b. 6 Sep. 1643; d. Greenwich, CT 1718/9; his three? wives are all being questioned.
vii JOHN d. 1677 unmarried.
viii ABIGAIL m. bef. 1681 JOHN BARLOW.
ix SARAH d. CT 1 March 1650/1.
x SARAH b. 27 Feb. 1651/2; ?m. ABRAHAM ADAMS.
xi MARY m. (1) JONATHAN HUSTED; m. (2) JOSEPH KNAPP."

6. The book "The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson 1899-1986," by W. M. Bollenbach, Jr. (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2003), pp. 241-43:
"ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, baptized Combs, co. Suffolk, England 18 January 1600, died Fairfield CT by 11 September 1658, son of EdmundA and AliceA or RuthA (Cooper) Lockwood; married Watertown MA about 1633 (birth 1634) SUSANNA2 NORMAN, born England say 1615, died Greenwich CT 23 December 1660, daughter of Capt. RICHARD1 and (___1) NORMAN, married (2) Greenwich about 1659 (between 11 September 1658 and 23 December 1660) as his second wife Jeffrey1 Ferris, born England say 1614, died Stamford CT 1666, married (1) Watertown before 1634 Mary (___), married (3) Stamford about 1663 (birth 1664) Judith Feake (see Norman Chapter) (Torrey 470 and 263).
Robert1 came in the Winthrop Fleet in 1630 on the "Mary and John", and settled that year in Watertown, made freeman 9 March 1637, and removed to Fairfield in 1646, where he had owned land as early as 1641. On 20 May 1652, he was made freeman of the Connecticut Colony, and May 1657 the Connecticut Court confirmed him and Nehemiah Olmstead to be sergeants of the Fairfield Train Band under Capt. Nathaniel Seeley. He was executor of the estate of Edmund Lockwood, supposedly a brother, in 1635.
Children, surname LOCKWOOD...
ii. DEBORAH, born Watertown MA 12 October 1636, died after 1677; married (1) Fairfield CT about 1656 Ensign William2 Ward, born probably England 1631, died 1676, son of Andrew1 and Hester1 (Sherman) Ward; married (2) Southampton LI about 1677 as his second wife John1 Topping of there, born probably England 1636, died Southampton 1686 (Torrey 779 and 727)...
(Pope 289; Colket 195; "St. John and Harries", Ben Cash, 1973; Savage III:104; "NY Genealogical & Biographical Record" 43:191, 58:395; "Old Fairfield", I:380, D. L. Jacobus, 1930; TAG 31:222-24)" 
Ward, William (I3268)
 
285 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Per the book: "Genealogy of the Lockwood Family 1630-1888 - Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America from A.D. 1630," compiled by Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood, printed privately by the family, 1889, Philadelphia: "Hannah Lockwood, b. 1667, in Greenwich, CT, and died Dec. 28th, 1745, 78 years old...m., 1st (abt. 1686), John Burwell, soon after his arrival in America, from the parish of Bovington, Hemel Hempstead, England. He settled in Greenwich, CT. He died May 1st, 1690..." 
Burwell, John (I513)
 
286 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Possibly killed in NAZI extermination camps.

2. The following undated paper was written late 1969 in Nice, France by Catherine Werblovsky Olympieff (also known as Ekaterina Werblovskaya Olympieva) at the request of Patrick Landau through his aunt Alice Nikitina. Patrick's father, Vladimir Landau, even though he was Catherine's cousin, had less knowledge on the family then Catherine. Catherine was the granddaughter of Edouard and Rebecca Herzenberg. The letter was written a couple of years before Catherine's death after she entered into an assisted care facility in Nice. The paper was recently found among personal items previously gathered about 1969 by her daughter Irene Nadia de Lanskoy Petersen. Portions of the letter were written in three languages: English, French, and Russian. Irene, in transcribing the letter, notes that the letter was hard to follow and to make sense of. Irene's transcription dated 31 Jul 2007 with her notes added in [ ].
"What concerns the father and mother of our mother's: Mother's father: Edouard Ocipovitch Herzenberg [or Gerzenberg] Edward son of Joseph Herzenberg born: in Mitava [or Mittau] not far ___, Baltic Provinces - not far from Riga. He died at 76 years of age (had diabetes and malaria) from lung congestion after flu. His wife was his cousin.
Rebecca Herzenberg also married a first cousin. I am not sure of the name of her father; she died in Moscow when I was 6 years old (70 years ago). [Death would be approximately 1899?]
They were probably married in Mitawa and came to Moscow young, because all their children were born in Moscow. The eldest 1) Elizabeth 2) Sonja [or Sonia] (Sofia) mother of Manja or Mania who now lives in Moscow, who had a sister Nadja or Nadia who was born in Moscow. Sonia's husband was Adolf Schneider - son of Aaron Schneider - who had 3 more sons: Nicolas, Alexander, Serge and a daughter Elizabeth Schneider. She got married with Martin Behr (English nationality); they had two children and lived in Moscow. Mrs. Elizabeth Behr died in London (after the Russian Revolution she lived in France, later in England.) Her brother Adolf Schneider was a brother-in-law of our mother's of course.) [This is a repeat of the above.] The Behrs had 2 children. Elisabeth Behr died in London (probably her husband Martin Behr died before.) Mrs. Behr's daughter Olga died in London about a year ago [1968-69?], her brother George Behr still lives in London is married (has 1 daughter who is married too and has 2 boys, 8 and 7.
So my mother Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of Edward and Rebecca Herzenberg born in Moscow like her sister Sonia, the next sister Flora born in Moscow. Flora, married Joseph Offenbacher, had one son Lotar (my first cousin as well as yours). She, her husband, and son died in Germany during the war of Hitler (son Lothar). [Irene notes that another family account says that Lothar committed suicide on account of the war.] [His father] Joseph Offenbacher had an older brother Vasily [William or Wilhelm] Offenbacher who married a cousin of our mother's - Fanny, daughter of Abra[ha]m (whom all children of Edward Herzenberg used to call Uncle Abraham.) He was the husband of Grandfather Edward Herzenberg's sister Theresa. His family name was also like all: Herzenberg. Theresa Herzenberg had many children - daughter Fanny, sons Ludwig, Harry, and 2 other sons and another daughter Sophia married to another Herzenberg (all those marriages were between cousins) who had three children, Robby (Robert) who lives in Sweden and 2 daughters Clara and Roberta (died in Riga - Bolshevik Revolution). [I am not sure if Clara and Roberta are correct for this family grouping.] After Flora Herzenberg, the 4th daughter was my Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg-Landau]. Then there was another one Genga (Eugenie) married Harry Taube from Riga - were killed by Hitler's army. She was the 5th daughter of Edward Herzenberg. The 6th was Lilja [Lilia] (1st wife of Uncle Max Landau - died in Davos, Switzerland from TB.) Then was another daughter Milja, died very young (she was the 7th daughter). The youngest daughter Tonya [Tonia] died in Moscow. Then there were two brothers, the oldest Ivan (John) married a French young girl from Mussidan, Dordogne, France. She was daughter of the Mayor of that town. Died in the north of Russia where - she was sent sick and was sent with her to Mourmansk (north of Russia). Uncle Vanja's [Vania, Ivan, John all same name wife Lydia died there [note her maiden name was Lydie Buisson]. Uncle Vanja died too in Bolshevik Revolution. Their 3 children: Micha (Michel) died probably in Moscow; his brother Andrei (Andre) Herzenberg and Suzanne Hindzee (Herzenberg) - 1st husband (French) Volant. She has a daughter in Toronto married in Toronto (Alja [or Alice Nikitina] knew her) who has two children, boy and girl. The father's family name is A. [Albert?] Statter - wife Lydie (Suzanne's daughter) - son Albert. [Irene's note: last known address was 33 Stonegate Road, Toronto, Canada, M8Y-1V8; phone 416-251-6295.]
There was yet other families related to us through our mother's. It was a well known dentist. His name was Kovarsky. His wife was the cousin of our mother's. They had a lot of children - 3 brothers Misha (Michael), Leva (Leon), 2 daughters Choura (Alexandra). Chura who now is same age as Suzanne [Herzenberg Hindzee] - the only one alive. I forget the name of the eldest brother deceased. Manja (Mania) in Moscow knows more about that family. What was the name of the mother cousin of our mother's-probably it was yet another of the Herzenberg family. As Alja [Alice Nikitina] will be going to Moscow she will be able to find out more form Manja [Mania]. Then there was yet another family related to the wife of our grandfather through the husband or wife Idelson. There was a girl Lisa Idelson and her brother. I think that Manja must know something about them. They lived in Moscow. I used to go see them with my mother when I was about 8 or 10 years old.
Now George Behr has written from London thanking me for my sympathy condolences on account of the death of his sister Olga Behr. She must have been older than 78 years. he thought that his aunt on his father's side, Nina Karlovna died in Moscow, as well as his cousin Leija, but I think it is relatives on the side of his father Bahr, and the cousin is perhaps of the Schneider family (it is possible that the cousin is still living). All these people lived in Moscow.
Now what concerns the Packschwer family. The one that came to see you with the Vietnamese wife has passed away. His name was Julien Packschwer born in Vitebesk, Russia. He was 72. His younger brother Saveijn (Sahva) engineer in London named himself Packshaw, died in England 3 weeks before Julien, leaving a widow (2nd marriage) and 2 children. It was the death of his younger brother that caused reaction on Julien Packshwer. He died 3 weeks after him. He was found on a street in Nice, France with a cerebral hemorrhage-fell in the street. Police took him to the hospital St. Rock where he died at 19 hours in the evening and remained in a coma. His car 2 CV (small) stayed in the parking where he had left it. It was only his Vietnamese wife [Mado] returning from Saigon 1 month after his death that was able to retrieve that car from the parking. Yet another day or two, it would have been impounded. But as it was the widow herself then came. They did not charge her anything. But as the car was her husband's-she has to wait by inheritance law to be able to sell it and divide up in 4 parts to his children. The eldest son of another marriage Leon is an eye doctor in Paris, then 3 other children. Oldest Robert in Montreal, CA; another son in ___ was in the navy for 3 years. The oldest was in the Air force, married a girl from Morocco - they are going to have a child soon. The daughter Irene married, has a little boy, the husband is serving in the military; they live in Cayrons near Vence, France in the Packshwer house. The widow/mother Mado inherited ¼ of the sum, the children ¾ divided in 4 for each of the 4 children. Through a real estate in Vence, Julien's house of 1000 sq. meters is worth 18 million francs. If the children keep the house, they will in turn need to give on fourth of the cost to the widow who also has the right to half of his monthly pension of 30,000 francs. She came to see me day before yesterday and told me all these details. So here you have it-the relatives. The mother of the Packshwer father was 1st cousin of our mother's through the daughter of the sister of our grandfather Edward Herzenberg maiden name Theresa Herzenberg died in Nice, born I think in Mitawa [Mitau], Baltic Provinces. She was buried with her husband in Nice at the Caucade cemetery.
Now I add what George Behr wrote from London that his wife Janet has seen Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg] in Monte Carlo, then he wrote about his cousin in Moscow who he thinks has passed away (he is going to find out about it from Manja-he asked their address in Monaco). She was the daughter of the oldest sister Polina Aronovna of his mother. Here is what concerns that family... [Balance of letter missing]."

ACTION:
1. Look for in NAZI concentration camp records. 
Offenbacher, Lothar or Lotharie (I3871)
 
287 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Possibly of Lyngs. Father is Jens Hoyholm. 
Jensdatter, Ane (I1711)
 
288 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Rather crazy - "poor in mind"? Name variants: Tonja and Tonia.

2. The following undated paper was written late 1969 in Nice, France by Catherine Werblovsky Olympieff (also known as Ekaterina Werblovskaya Olympieva) at the request of Patrick Landau through his aunt Alice Nikitina. Patrick's father, Vladimir Landau, even though he was Catherine's cousin, had less knowledge on the family then Catherine. Catherine was the granddaughter of Edouard and Rebecca Herzenberg. The letter was written a couple of years before Catherine's death after she entered into an assisted care facility in Nice. The paper was recently found among personal items previously gathered about 1969 by her daughter Irene Nadia de Lanskoy Petersen. Portions of the letter were written in three languages: English, French, and Russian. Irene, in transcribing the letter, notes that the letter was hard to follow and to make sense of. Irene's transcription dated 31 Jul 2007 with her notes added in [ ].
"What concerns the father and mother of our mother's: Mother's father: Edouard Ocipovitch Herzenberg [or Gerzenberg] Edward son of Joseph Herzenberg born: in Mitava [or Mittau] not far ___, Baltic Provinces - not far from Riga. He died at 76 years of age (had diabetes and malaria) from lung congestion after flu. His wife was his cousin.
Rebecca Herzenberg also married a first cousin. I am not sure of the name of her father; she died in Moscow when I was 6 years old (70 years ago). [Death would be approximately 1899?]
They were probably married in Mitawa and came to Moscow young, because all their children were born in Moscow. The eldest 1) Elizabeth 2) Sonja [or Sonia] (Sofia) mother of Manja or Mania who now lives in Moscow, who had a sister Nadja or Nadia who was born in Moscow. Sonia's husband was Adolf Schneider - son of Aaron Schneider - who had 3 more sons: Nicolas, Alexander, Serge and a daughter Elizabeth Schneider. She got married with Martin Behr (English nationality); they had two children and lived in Moscow. Mrs. Elizabeth Behr died in London (after the Russian Revolution she lived in France, later in England.) Her brother Adolf Schneider was a brother-in-law of our mother's of course.) [This is a repeat of the above.] The Behrs had 2 children. Elisabeth Behr died in London (probably her husband Martin Behr died before.) Mrs. Behr's daughter Olga died in London about a year ago [1968-69?], her brother George Behr still lives in London is married (has 1 daughter who is married too and has 2 boys, 8 and 7.
So my mother Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of Edward and Rebecca Herzenberg born in Moscow like her sister Sonia, the next sister Flora born in Moscow. Flora, married Joseph Offenbacher, had one son Lotar (my first cousin as well as yours). She, her husband, and son died in Germany during the war of Hitler (son Lothar). [Irene notes that another family account says that Lothar committed suicide on account of the war.] [His father] Joseph Offenbacher had an older brother Vasily [William or Wilhelm] Offenbacher who married a cousin of our mother's - Fanny, daughter of Abra[ha]m (whom all children of Edward Herzenberg used to call Uncle Abraham.) He was the husband of Grandfather Edward Herzenberg's sister Theresa. His family name was also like all: Herzenberg. Theresa Herzenberg had many children - daughter Fanny, sons Ludwig, Harry, and 2 other sons and another daughter Sophia married to another Herzenberg (all those marriages were between cousins) who had three children, Robby (Robert) who lives in Sweden and 2 daughters Clara and Roberta (died in Riga - Bolshevik Revolution). [I am not sure if Clara and Roberta are correct for this family grouping.] After Flora Herzenberg, the 4th daughter was my Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg-Landau]. Then there was another one Genga (Eugenie) married Harry Taube from Riga - were killed by Hitler's army. She was the 5th daughter of Edward Herzenberg. The 6th was Lilja [Lilia] (1st wife of Uncle Max Landau - died in Davos, Switzerland from TB.) Then was another daughter Milja, died very young (she was the 7th daughter). The youngest daughter Tonya [Tonia] died in Moscow. Then there were two brothers, the oldest Ivan (John) married a French young girl from Mussidan, Dordogne, France. She was daughter of the Mayor of that town. Died in the north of Russia where - she was sent sick and was sent with her to Mourmansk (north of Russia). Uncle Vanja's [Vania, Ivan, John all same name wife Lydia died there [note her maiden name was Lydie Buisson]. Uncle Vanja died too in Bolshevik Revolution. Their 3 children: Micha (Michel) died probably in Moscow; his brother Andrei (Andre) Herzenberg and Suzanne Hindzee (Herzenberg) - 1st husband (French) Volant. She has a daughter in Toronto married in Toronto (Alja [or Alice Nikitina] knew her) who has two children, boy and girl. The father's family name is A. [Albert?] Statter - wife Lydie (Suzanne's daughter) - son Albert. [Irene's note: last known address was 33 Stonegate Road, Toronto, Canada, M8Y-1V8; phone 416-251-6295.]
There was yet other families related to us through our mother's. It was a well known dentist. His name was Kovarsky. His wife was the cousin of our mother's. They had a lot of children - 3 brothers Misha (Michael), Leva (Leon), 2 daughters Choura (Alexandra). Chura who now is same age as Suzanne [Herzenberg Hindzee] - the only one alive. I forget the name of the eldest brother deceased. Manja (Mania) in Moscow knows more about that family. What was the name of the mother cousin of our mother's-probably it was yet another of the Herzenberg family. As Alja [Alice Nikitina] will be going to Moscow she will be able to find out more form Manja [Mania]. Then there was yet another family related to the wife of our grandfather through the husband or wife Idelson. There was a girl Lisa Idelson and her brother. I think that Manja must know something about them. They lived in Moscow. I used to go see them with my mother when I was about 8 or 10 years old.
Now George Behr has written from London thanking me for my sympathy condolences on account of the death of his sister Olga Behr. She must have been older than 78 years. he thought that his aunt on his father's side, Nina Karlovna died in Moscow, as well as his cousin Leija, but I think it is relatives on the side of his father Bahr, and the cousin is perhaps of the Schneider family (it is possible that the cousin is still living). All these people lived in Moscow.
Now what concerns the Packschwer family. The one that came to see you with the Vietnamese wife has passed away. His name was Julien Packschwer born in Vitebesk, Russia. He was 72. His younger brother Saveijn (Sahva) engineer in London named himself Packshaw, died in England 3 weeks before Julien, leaving a widow (2nd marriage) and 2 children. It was the death of his younger brother that caused reaction on Julien Packshwer. He died 3 weeks after him. He was found on a street in Nice, France with a cerebral hemorrhage-fell in the street. Police took him to the hospital St. Rock where he died at 19 hours in the evening and remained in a coma. His car 2 CV (small) stayed in the parking where he had left it. It was only his Vietnamese wife [Mado] returning from Saigon 1 month after his death that was able to retrieve that car from the parking. Yet another day or two, it would have been impounded. But as it was the widow herself then came. They did not charge her anything. But as the car was her husband's-she has to wait by inheritance law to be able to sell it and divide up in 4 parts to his children. The eldest son of another marriage Leon is an eye doctor in Paris, then 3 other children. Oldest Robert in Montreal, CA; another son in ___ was in the navy for 3 years. The oldest was in the Air force, married a girl from Morocco - they are going to have a child soon. The daughter Irene married, has a little boy, the husband is serving in the military; they live in Cayrons near Vence, France in the Packshwer house. The widow/mother Mado inherited ¼ of the sum, the children ¾ divided in 4 for each of the 4 children. Through a real estate in Vence, Julien's house of 1000 sq. meters is worth 18 million francs. If the children keep the house, they will in turn need to give on fourth of the cost to the widow who also has the right to half of his monthly pension of 30,000 francs. She came to see me day before yesterday and told me all these details. So here you have it-the relatives. The mother of the Packshwer father was 1st cousin of our mother's through the daughter of the sister of our grandfather Edward Herzenberg maiden name Theresa Herzenberg died in Nice, born I think in Mitawa [Mitau], Baltic Provinces. She was buried with her husband in Nice at the Caucade cemetery.
Now I add what George Behr wrote from London that his wife Janet has seen Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg] in Monte Carlo, then he wrote about his cousin in Moscow who he thinks has passed away (he is going to find out about it from Manja-he asked their address in Monaco). She was the daughter of the oldest sister Polina Aronovna of his mother. Here is what concerns that family... [Balance of letter missing]." 
Herzenberg, Antonia or Tonja (I3437)
 
289 BIOGRAPHY:
1. Records in Bedsted parish began in 1707. It is surmised that Anne is of Bedsted since the priest wrote no village which is a very good indication she is of the parish. There is no estate since Revs district starts in 1794 and for the manor of Tandrup after 1728. A search for her father's death in Bedsted parish provides no success.

MARRIAGE:
1. Noted age at wedding as 42.

BURIAL:
1. Viborg, Denmark Regional Archives; Bedsted Parish Records; microfiche C119.5 plate 2 page 20.

2. Per Joyce Cupit: "Bedsted kirkebog 1786: Dato? begravet Enevold Pedersens enke [widow], gl. 96 år."

SOURCES_MISC:
1. Per gedcom dated 6 Jan 1999 of Wayne Westergard, 785 W 1300 South, Woods Cross, Utah 84087 (801) 295-2906.

2. Per records of Fred H. Westergard, 1940 Laird Dr., Salt Lake City, Utah 84108-1823, phone 801-583-4405.

3. Joyce Cupit's website 25 May 2002. 
Jepsdatter, Anne (I1586)
 
290 BIOGRAPHY:
1. See notes on wife wherein John Topping is noted "of Southampton, Long Island, (New York) in the book "Families of Old Fairfield".

2. Ordinance index reports parents: Thomas Topping and Emma Aldridge.

3. "Connecticut Ancestry," periodical published by the Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc., Dec. 2004, Vol. 47, No. 2, pp. 119-130: "Robert Lockwood of Watertown, Stamford and Fairfield: English Ancestry, New England Connections and Children's Marriages," by Robert Charles Anderson. Note that the following is a partial transcript of the full transcript in the notes of Robert Lockwood; the full article is well written by one of the very best modern genealogists and should be consulted in conjunction with the following notes:
"DEBORAH Lockwood, b. Watertown 12 October 1636. She m. (1) by 20 October 1658 William Ward, son of Andrew Ward.(58) She m. (2) by 1678 John Topping.(59)
Footnotes:
58. Fairfield Probate Records 1:43; Anderson, Great Migration Begins 3:1918-21 (which misstates the estimated date of marriage).
59. Jacobus, "Old Fairfield," 1:645 (citing "Marriage agreement between Ebenezer Hawley and Hester Ward, dau. of Mrs. Deborah Topping of Southampton, 19 Apr. 1678")."

4. "The Great Migration," by Robert Charles Anderson:
"Robert Lockwood...
Children...
ii. DEBORAH Lockwood, b. Watertown 12 October 1636 [NEHGR 7:159; WaVR 1:4]; m. (1) by 20 October 1658 William Ward, son of Andrew WARD {1633, Watertown} [GMB 3:1918-21 (which misstates the estimated date of marriage)]; m. (2) by 1678 John Topping [FOOF 1:265, 645 (citing "Marriage agreement between Ebenezer Hawley and Hester Ward, daughter of Mrs. Deborah Topping of Southampton, 19 Apr. 1678")]..."

5. The periodical "Connecticut Ancestry," vol. 27, no. 1 (Sept. 1984), "The Lockwoods of Norwalk, Connecticut," by Harriet Woodbury Hodge, C.G., pp. 10-11:
"Nearly a century ago, in 1889, two misguided compilers, Frederic A. Holden and E. Dunbar Lockwood produced "Descendants of Robert Lockwood, Colonial and Revolutionary History of the Lockwood Family in America." Modern genealogists realize that nineteenth century family histories often contain errors, and this genealogy is among the most confused; but it continues to be used as a reliable source. In his "History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield," Donald Lines Jacobus put in order the early Lockwoods of that town. In 1978 this compiler undertook a similar task for Stamford Lockwoods with "Some Descendants of Edmund Lockwood (1594-1635) of Cambridge, Massachusetts and his son Edmund Lockwood (c.1625-1693) of Stamford." There remain the Lockwood founders of Norwalk and Greenwich with lines to be set straight...
ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, son of Edmund and Ales (Cowper) Lockwood of England, bp. Combs, co. Suffolk, 18 Jan. 1600/01; d. Fairfield, Connecticut 1658, [Banks, "The Winthrop Fleet"; Jacobus, "Families of Old Fairfield," hereinafter F.O.O.F., 1:380].
He m. prob. at Salem or Watertown, Massachusetts ca. 1633 SUSANNAH, prob. NORMAN, dau. of Richard Norman of Salem. She m. (2) Jeffrey Ferris.
Children (LOCKWOOD), first six b. Watertown, Massachusetts, [VR], others prob. all b. Connecticut:
i JONATHAN2 b. 10 Sep. 1634; d. Greenwich, CT 12 May 1688; m. MARY FERRIS; she m. (2) 1696 Thomas Merritt.
ii DEBORAH b. 12 Oct. 1636; m. (1) WILLIAM WARD; m. (2) JOHN TOPPING.
iii JOSEPH b. 6 Aug. 1638; d. Fairfield, CT 1717; m. (1) ISABEL? BEACHAM; m. (2) MARY (COLEY) (SIMPSON) STREAM. [His descendants are the only Lockwoods carried on in F.O.O.F., 1:385-387, 715-716 and 2:586-591].
iv DANIEL b. 21 March 1640; d. Fairfield, CT 1691; m. ABIGAIL SHERWOOD. [See F.O.O.F. 1:383, 387 for his only son, DANIEL, who had but two surviving daughters. The name Lockwood ends there on this line].
v EPHRAIM b. 1 Dec. 1641; d. Norwalk, CT 1685; m. MERCY ST. JOHN.
vi GERSHOM b. 6 Sep. 1643; d. Greenwich, CT 1718/9; his three? wives are all being questioned.
vii JOHN d. 1677 unmarried.
viii ABIGAIL m. bef. 1681 JOHN BARLOW.
ix SARAH d. CT 1 March 1650/1.
x SARAH b. 27 Feb. 1651/2; ?m. ABRAHAM ADAMS.
xi MARY m. (1) JONATHAN HUSTED; m. (2) JOSEPH KNAPP."

6. The book "The New England Ancestry of Alice Everett Johnson 1899-1986," by W. M. Bollenbach, Jr. (Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2003), pp. 241-43:
"ROBERT1 LOCKWOOD, baptized Combs, co. Suffolk, England 18 January 1600, died Fairfield CT by 11 September 1658, son of EdmundA and AliceA or RuthA (Cooper) Lockwood; married Watertown MA about 1633 (birth 1634) SUSANNA2 NORMAN, born England say 1615, died Greenwich CT 23 December 1660, daughter of Capt. RICHARD1 and (___1) NORMAN, married (2) Greenwich about 1659 (between 11 September 1658 and 23 December 1660) as his second wife Jeffrey1 Ferris, born England say 1614, died Stamford CT 1666, married (1) Watertown before 1634 Mary (___), married (3) Stamford about 1663 (birth 1664) Judith Feake (see Norman Chapter) (Torrey 470 and 263).
Robert1 came in the Winthrop Fleet in 1630 on the "Mary and John", and settled that year in Watertown, made freeman 9 March 1637, and removed to Fairfield in 1646, where he had owned land as early as 1641. On 20 May 1652, he was made freeman of the Connecticut Colony, and May 1657 the Connecticut Court confirmed him and Nehemiah Olmstead to be sergeants of the Fairfield Train Band under Capt. Nathaniel Seeley. He was executor of the estate of Edmund Lockwood, supposedly a brother, in 1635.
Children, surname LOCKWOOD...
ii. DEBORAH, born Watertown MA 12 October 1636, died after 1677; married (1) Fairfield CT about 1656 Ensign William2 Ward, born probably England 1631, died 1676, son of Andrew1 and Hester1 (Sherman) Ward; married (2) Southampton LI about 1677 as his second wife John1 Topping of there, born probably England 1636, died Southampton 1686 (Torrey 779 and 727)...
(Pope 289; Colket 195; "St. John and Harries", Ben Cash, 1973; Savage III:104; "NY Genealogical & Biographical Record" 43:191, 58:395; "Old Fairfield", I:380, D. L. Jacobus, 1930; TAG 31:222-24)"

BIRTH:
1. Per Ordinance Index. 
Topping, John (I376)
 
291 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3269)
 
292 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1582)
 
293 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3264)
 
294 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1446)
 
295 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3226)
 
296 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I86)
 
297 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3225)
 
298 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I85)
 
299 BIOGRAPHY:
1. She left Russia in 1916/1917 with Butzkoy. He was attache in several places including, Tokyo, Washington DC, and London. See his history in his notes in this database for an extensive recounting of their travels. Photos of her passport on file with Kerry Petersen. The following article, dated 9 Dec 1917 from a Washington DC newspaper, is also on file with Kerry and contains a photo of Catherine with the following:
"[Photo subtext:] Newcomer in Foreign Colony. Mme. Victor P. Butzkoy, Wife of the Capt. Butzkoy of the Russian embassy." Another photo caption: "Mme. Butskoy, wife of Capt. Victor P. Butskoy, of the Russian Army, who is in Washington on war work."
[Article:] Russians Likely To Be Popular Social Additions.
I met a lonely little couple the other day, strangers in a strange land, but I prophesy that they won't be lonely long, after society once discovers them, for they are both charming and awfully good looking. They are Captain and Mme. Butzskoi, of Russia. He is here in association with some special work for the embassy. Both are young, both very good looking, speak English perfectly, and are quite sociable. He has been decorated twice "for valor," has been wounded several times,and has done a lot of interesting things. I am told his hobby is riding; that he is a marvelous horseman. They have an apartment at the Marlborough just now, but will move next week to the Sheridan. They expect to be in Washington all winter. [The article continues describing another couple.]"
The following is more about the above article from a research librarian (serref@loc.gov) at the Library of Congress per an email dated 7 Apr 2011 addressed to Chris Petesen:
"Since the images are identified as being created by Harris & Ewing, they were likely published in one of the Washington, D.C. newspapers - for example, the Washington Post, the Evening Star, the National Tribune, the Washington Times, etc. In the time I had available, I searched a few different resources, including Chronicling America and our subscriptions to ProQuest Historical Newspapers and America's Historical Newspapers. I was able to find the second image, "Wife of Russian Attache," in the December 9, 1917 issue of the Washington Post. I can send you this article in a separate email. I was not able to find the other image or text in this issue of the Washington Post, which leads me to believe that these clippings may have come from multiple newspapers. In my search of Chronicling America [The Washington Times, December 10, 1917, FINAL EDITION, Page 10, Image 10], I was able to find this article about Mme. Buitzkoy, although it is different from any of the information you have (this link has been shortened): < http://bit.ly/hFHBJb > It looks like the text "Russians Likely to Be Popular Social Additions" may have come from the social section of the Washington Times [The Washington Times, September 30, 1917, FINAL EDITION, Page 14, Image 14], since they use similar fonts/text arrangements. I was able to find this text here (this link has been shortened): < http://bit.ly/eO4JsU > The first image was likely published in the social section as well, though it may have come from a different paper than the Post or Times. Something I might mention is that while it is likely that all three items were published around the same time, they may have been published earlier or later, so you may need to search items from 1917 and include 1918 to find the items. I went to the Prints and Photographs Reading Room, where the Harris and Ewing Collection is held, to look at their subject list(s). I was not able to find the name "Butzkoy" or "Buitzkoy" (or other variations) in the list, or in the biographic files in the Reading Room. I don't think that this will be a useful resource to search for the remaining image, as the image will not be accessible without indexing. I might recommend that you continue to browse additional Washington, D.C. newspapers through Chronicling America, or see if you are able to request microfilm copies of other newspapers via interlibrary loan at your local library. I would recommend searching the second half of 1917/first half of 1918, as this is most likely the time period the second photo was published. You can search for additional Washington D.C. newspapers by using the directory on Chronicling America. Just click on the "Find" feature on the homepage: < http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/ > Megan Halsband, Reference Librarian, Newspaper & Current Periodical Reading Room, Serial and Government Publication Division, Library of Congress."

2. Lived at 5 Rue Place Vieille, Vence, France, circa 1959 when the author of this database, Kerry Petersen, was age five.

3. Last name Verblovski (russian) or Werblovsky/Werbowsky (french). Catherine also spelt as Cathaerine.

4. Posted photos of letters, passport, and other information can be seen on the Internet. See Irene's notes for private site.

5. The following undated paper was written late 1969 in Nice, France by Catherine Werblovsky Olympieff (also known as Ekaterina Werblovskaya Olympieva) at the request of Patrick Landau through his aunt Alice Nikitina. Patrick's father, Vladimir Landau, even though he was Catherine's cousin, had less knowledge on the family then Catherine. Catherine was the granddaughter of Edouard and Rebecca Herzenberg. The letter was written a couple of years before Catherine's death after she entered into an assisted care facility in Nice. The paper was recently found among personal items previously gathered about 1969 by her daughter Irene Nadia de Lanskoy Petersen. Portions of the letter were written in three languages: English, French, and Russian. Irene, in transcribing the letter, notes that the letter was hard to follow and to make sense of. Irene's transcription dated 31 Jul 2007 with her notes added in [ ]:
"What concerns the father and mother of our mother's: Mother's father: Edouard Ocipovitch Herzenberg [or Gerzenberg] Edward son of Joseph Herzenberg born: in Mitava [or Mittau] not far ___, Baltic Provinces - not far from Riga. He died at 76 years of age (had diabetes and malaria) from lung congestion after flu. His wife was his cousin.
Rebecca Herzenberg also married a first cousin. I am not sure of the name of her father; she died in Moscow when I was 6 years old (70 years ago). [Death would be approximately 1899?]
They were probably married in Mitawa and came to Moscow young, because all their children were born in Moscow. The eldest 1) Elizabeth 2) Sonja [or Sonia] (Sofia) mother of Manja or Mania who now lives in Moscow, who had a sister Nadja or Nadia who was born in Moscow. Sonia's husband was Adolf Schneider - son of Aaron Schneider - who had 3 more sons: Nicolas, Alexander, Serge and a daughter Elizabeth Schneider. She got married with Martin Behr (English nationality); they had two children and lived in Moscow. Mrs. Elizabeth Behr died in London (after the Russian Revolution she lived in France, later in England.) Her brother Adolf Schneider was a brother-in-law of our mother's of course.) [This is a repeat of the above.] The Behrs had 2 children. Elisabeth Behr died in London (probably her husband Martin Behr died before.) Mrs. Behr's daughter Olga died in London about a year ago [1968-69?], her brother George Behr still lives in London is married (has 1 daughter who is married too and has 2 boys, 8 and 7.
So my mother Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of Edward and Rebecca Herzenberg born in Moscow like her sister Sonia, the next sister Flora born in Moscow. Flora, married Joseph Offenbacher, had one son Lotar (my first cousin as well as yours). She, her husband, and son died in Germany during the war of Hitler (son Lothar). [Irene notes that another family account says that Lothar committed suicide on account of the war.] [His father] Joseph Offenbacher had an older brother Vasily [William or Wilhelm] Offenbacher who married a cousin of our mother's - Fanny, daughter of Abra[ha]m (whom all children of Edward Herzenberg used to call Uncle Abraham.) He was the husband of Grandfather Edward Herzenberg's sister Theresa. His family name was also like all: Herzenberg. Theresa Herzenberg had many children - daughter Fanny, sons Ludwig, Harry, and 2 other sons and another daughter Sophia married to another Herzenberg (all those marriages were between cousins) who had three children, Robby (Robert) who lives in Sweden and 2 daughters Clara and Roberta (died in Riga - Bolshevik Revolution). [I am not sure if Clara and Roberta are correct for this family grouping.] After Flora Herzenberg, the 4th daughter was my Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg-Landau]. Then there was another one Genga (Eugenie) married Harry Taube from Riga - were killed by Hitler's army. She was the 5th daughter of Edward Herzenberg. The 6th was Lilja [Lilia] (1st wife of Uncle Max Landau - died in Davos, Switzerland from TB.) Then was another daughter Milja, died very young (she was the 7th daughter). The youngest daughter Tonya [Tonia] died in Moscow. Then there were two brothers, the oldest Ivan (John) married a French young girl from Mussidan, Dordogne, France. She was daughter of the Mayor of that town. Died in the north of Russia where - she was sent sick and was sent with her to Mourmansk (north of Russia). Uncle Vanja's [Vania, Ivan, John all same name wife Lydia died there [note her maiden name was Lydie Buisson]. Uncle Vanja died too in Bolshevik Revolution. Their 3 children: Micha (Michel) died probably in Moscow; his brother Andrei (Andre) Herzenberg and Suzanne Hindzee (Herzenberg) - 1st husband (French) Volant. She has a daughter in Toronto married in Toronto (Alja [or Alice Nikitina] knew her) who has two children, boy and girl. The father's family name is A. [Albert?] Statter - wife Lydie (Suzanne's daughter) - son Albert. [Irene's note: last known address was 33 Stonegate Road, Toronto, Canada, M8Y-1V8; phone 416-251-6295.]
There was yet other families related to us through our mother's. It was a well known dentist. His name was Kovarsky. His wife was the cousin of our mother's. They had a lot of children - 3 brothers Misha (Michael), Leva (Leon), 2 daughters Choura (Alexandra). Chura who now is same age as Suzanne [Herzenberg Hindzee] - the only one alive. I forget the name of the eldest brother deceased. Manja (Mania) in Moscow knows more about that family. What was the name of the mother cousin of our mother's-probably it was yet another of the Herzenberg family. As Alja [Alice Nikitina] will be going to Moscow she will be able to find out more form Manja [Mania]. Then there was yet another family related to the wife of our grandfather through the husband or wife Idelson. There was a girl Lisa Idelson and her brother. I think that Manja must know something about them. They lived in Moscow. I used to go see them with my mother when I was about 8 or 10 years old.
Now George Behr has written from London thanking me for my sympathy condolences on account of the death of his sister Olga Behr. She must have been older than 78 years. he thought that his aunt on his father's side, Nina Karlovna died in Moscow, as well as his cousin Leija, but I think it is relatives on the side of his father Bahr, and the cousin is perhaps of the Schneider family (it is possible that the cousin is still living). All these people lived in Moscow.
Now what concerns the Packschwer family. The one that came to see you with the Vietnamese wife has passed away. His name was Julien Packschwer born in Vitebesk, Russia. He was 72. His younger brother Saveijn (Sahva) engineer in London named himself Packshaw, died in England 3 weeks before Julien, leaving a widow (2nd marriage) and 2 children. It was the death of his younger brother that caused reaction on Julien Packshwer. He died 3 weeks after him. He was found on a street in Nice, France with a cerebral hemorrhage-fell in the street. Police took him to the hospital St. Rock where he died at 19 hours in the evening and remained in a coma. His car 2 CV (small) stayed in the parking where he had left it. It was only his Vietnamese wife [Mado] returning from Saigon 1 month after his death that was able to retrieve that car from the parking. Yet another day or two, it would have been impounded. But as it was the widow herself then came. They did not charge her anything. But as the car was her husband's-she has to wait by inheritance law to be able to sell it and divide up in 4 parts to his children. The eldest son of another marriage Leon is an eye doctor in Paris, then 3 other children. Oldest Robert in Montreal, CA; another son in ___ was in the navy for 3 years. The oldest was in the Air force, married a girl from Morocco - they are going to have a child soon. The daughter Irene married, has a little boy, the husband is serving in the military; they live in Cayrons near Vence, France in the Packshwer house. The widow/mother Mado inherited ¼ of the sum, the children ¾ divided in 4 for each of the 4 children. Through a real estate in Vence, Julien's house of 1000 sq. meters is worth 18 million francs. If the children keep the house, they will in turn need to give on fourth of the cost to the widow who also has the right to half of his monthly pension of 30,000 francs. She came to see me day before yesterday and told me all these details. So here you have it-the relatives. The mother of the Packshwer father was 1st cousin of our mother's through the daughter of the sister of our grandfather Edward Herzenberg maiden name Theresa Herzenberg died in Nice, born I think in Mitawa [Mitau], Baltic Provinces. She was buried with her husband in Nice at the Caucade cemetery.
Now I add what George Behr wrote from London that his wife Janet has seen Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg] in Monte Carlo, then he wrote about his cousin in Moscow who he thinks has passed away (he is going to find out about it from Manja-he asked their address in Monaco). She was the daughter of the oldest sister Polina Aronovna of his mother. Here is what concerns that family... [Balance of letter missing]."

6. Random memories of Irene Petersen:
A. As a young girl recalls many arguments between Catherine and her mother Elizabeth. The arguments were frequent and always in German so the Irene could not understand them.
B. Catherine became pregnant at one point out of wedlock and had an abortion, which her mother convinced her to do. She always deeply regretted for the rest of her life having the abortion.
C. Arik was always upset with his mother Catherine for having left him in the care of nannies and Catherine's parents as a six-month infant as his parents left on their diplomatic travels that took the young couple across the Russia to Japan, then Canada and Washington DC. Irene felt that it was in retrospect a good thing because of all the Revolutionary uprisings in Russia. Arik apparently left with his grandparents through Finland to Germany.
D. Irene remembers talk that her grandfather Werblovsky had a mistress.

7. See notes of Irene de Lanskoy for her autobiography of growing up with her mother Catherine in France.

8. Ancestry.com's "Border Crossing: From Canada to U.S., 1895-1956" which lists both Victor and Catherine. The "Empress of Japan" sailed from Hong Kong Jan. 10, Shanghai Jan. 13, Kobe Jan. 17, and Yokohama Jan. 19 for a destination of Vancouver, Canada. It was most likely in Japan from where they took passage:
A. Arrival 15 Jan 1917 at Vancouver, British Columbia, departing Hong Kong 10 Jul 1917 on the "Empress of Japan": Victor Boudzkoy, 30, Catherine, 24, married, both b. in Russia, Russian, both read and write, diplomat and diplomat's wife, last permanent address was Moscow, nearest relative is father/father-in-law P. Boudzkoy, no. 9 Mochovaja St. Petrograd, religion for both is "Orthodox."
B. Victor Boudzkoy; arrival date: 31 Jan 1917; port of arrival: St. Albans, Vermont, United States; ship name: Empress of Japan; Port of Departure: Hong Kong, China; age 30; birth date: abt 1887; birth country: Russia; race/nationality: Russian."


PHOTOS:
1. The following Picasa website is the portal as of 13 Jan 2009 to view the documents and photos relating to Irene's family and especially Catherine: http://picasaweb.google.com/irenenadia/CatherineWerblovskyDeButzkoyOlympieffRussianPasseportAndOtherDocuments?authkey=r_btitQ4vmw&feat=email#

2. One photo attached to Family Search and in the possession of Irene Petersen is a postcard addressed from Catherine to her father Adolphe Werblowsky in Russian. The following is the translation:
In English:
"To A.Z. Verblovski
Petrograd, Chernyshev per. 16
Dear Dad!
We ask you please to come here tomorrow, on Saturday, since we leave for X. on Tuesday. If we depart later on, it will be hotter, and we won't be there for long time. Nikolai Ivanovich also says that you should come ащк that business now, it is more convenient. Big trouble with train tickets as well. We look forward to seeing you the day after tomorrow. Maybe I should have a … power of attorney? Please inquire and arrange for it if necessary.
In the meantime I kiss you warmly,
Your loving daughter Katyusha
May 15th 1915"
In Russian:
"А.З. Вербловскому
Петроград, Чернышев пер. д. 16
Дорогой папа!
Мы очень просим тебя приехать сюда завтра в субботу, так как во вторник мы уедем в Х. Если уехать позже, будет жарче, поедем наверное не на очень долгий срок. Николай Иванович говорит, чтобы ты для дела приехал теперь же — это тоже удобнее. Большое затруднение с билетами. Ждём тебя послезавтра. М.б. мне лучше иметь доверенность … узнай пожалуйста и если надо устрой.
Пока целую крепко,
любящая дочь Катюша.
15 мая 1915 г."

BIRTH:
1. Transcription of birth record made by Irene Petersen from government records in Nice France: "André Olimpieff. The 26 December 1926 at 21 hours [7 p.m.] was born 4 Place Duffy, André, of masculine sex, of Nicolas Olimpieff, hotel employee, born at Oust. Medveditzkaia (Russia) the 21 of May 1897 and of Catherine Werblovsky, his wife, hotel employee, born in Petrograd, Russia, the 8 October 1893 residing 33 Promenade des Anglais, Nice, France. Document of 29 December 1926 at 9 o'clock upon declaration of Victorine Sanrat, 34 years old, midwife residing in Nice."

2. City of Nice civil registration.

3. Per Irene Petersen, both Catherine and her son Arik (Artemy) were born at this address in St. Petersburg, Russia, which can be found and looked at on Google street view: Ulitsa Lomonosova 18. It appears to be a classy and important address in its day.

MARRIAGE:
1. Butzkoy: Divorced Victor de Butzkoy 27 Jul 1922. A paper in the possession of Catherine's daughter Irene Petersen from "Administration Diocesaine Des Engls. Orhodoxes Russ. En. Europe" (French for Diocese Adminisration of the Russian Orthodox Church in Europe) dated 9 Oct 1922 with no address says in Russian that Catherine and Victor Butskoy were married at the Mironocitkoy Church [Russian orthodox] in Kharkov, Ukraine, on September 24, 1915 with divorce July 27, 1922, at the fault of the husband.

2. Olimpieff:
A. Stamped copy dated 14 May 1976 of the official marriage extract from the Ville de Saint-Cloud, Hauts-de-Seine, France, on the southwest outskirts of Paris, translated by Kerry Petersen:
No. 98, Olimpieff/Werblovky. "9 Oct 1923, 11 a.m., before us, Nicolas Olimpieff, without profession, living at 86 Rue de Mayence, at Wiesbaden, 26 years old, born at Oust. Medvéditzkaia (Arormie?[Province] du Don, Russia) 8 (21 May) 1897, son of Victor Olimpieff and Alexandra Chiraieff, his wife, without profession, living at Oust. Medvéditzkaia, and Catherine Werblovsky, without profession, living at Avenue Magenta in this town, and before at Wiesbaden, 73 Boulevard de l'Empereur Frederic, 30 years old, born at Petrograd, Russia, 25 Sep (8 Oct) 1893, daughter of Adolphe Werblovsky, banker, and Elisabeth Herzenberg, his wife, without profession, living at 73 Boulevard du l'Empereur Frederic at Wiesbaden; divorced from Victory Boutzkoy 7 Sep 1922...[standard marriage language]." Both sign: Catherine Werblovsky and Nicolas Olimpieff.
B. Olimpieff: According to Irene Petersen, Catherine never divorced Nicolas. Later Nicolas disappears and they lose track of him. Supposedly he made off with some money from his employer and was hiding.

DEATH:
1. Death Certificate from Nice, Alpes-Maritime, France Vital Statistics, Nice City Hall: Catherine Werblovsky, d. 8 Jan 1972; Lists Adolphe Werblovsky and Elizabeth Herzenberg as parents, and she as widow of Nicolas Olimpieff. Died at 13:30. at 87 Route de Levens. Her residence was listed as 5 Rue Place Vieille in Vence (Alpes Maritimes). Her brith was 8 Oct 1893 in Petrograd, Russia.

BURIAL:
1. Cemetery in Nice (behind old medical psychiatric hospital on road to St. Andre). Photo on file. Marker has since been removed. Inexpensive wood cross marker from photo reads in french: "124, Ici repose [Here rests] Olympieff, Catherine Epouse [Spouse] Nerblovsky nee [born] 1895 DCD (decede) [died] 1972." 
Werblowsky or Verblovski, Catherine (I1785)
 
300 BIOGRAPHY:
1. She was a famous Russian ballet dancer. Her ballet and singing stage name was Alice Nikitina; Created Flora in Zephyr and Flora (1925) (p. 331, Dance Encyclopedia, BYU Call #:GU1585.c5 1949). I met her while on my mission to France in 1974.

2. The following undated paper was written late 1969 in Nice, France by Catherine Werblovsky Olympieff (also known as Ekaterina Werblovskaya Olympieva) at the request of Patrick Landau through his aunt Alice Nikitina. Patrick's father, Vladimir Landau, even though he was Catherine's cousin, had less knowledge on the family then Catherine. Catherine was the granddaughter of Edouard and Rebecca Herzenberg. The letter was written a couple of years before Catherine's death after she entered into an assisted care facility in Nice. The paper was recently found among personal items previously gathered about 1969 by her daughter Irene Nadia de Lanskoy Petersen. Portions of the letter were written in three languages: English, French, and Russian. Irene, in transcribing the letter, notes that the letter was hard to follow and to make sense of. Irene's transcription dated 31 Jul 2007 with her notes added in [ ].
"What concerns the father and mother of our mother's: Mother's father: Edouard Ocipovitch Herzenberg [or Gerzenberg] Edward son of Joseph Herzenberg born: in Mitava [or Mittau] not far ___, Baltic Provinces - not far from Riga. He died at 76 years of age (had diabetes and malaria) from lung congestion after flu. His wife was his cousin.
Rebecca Herzenberg also married a first cousin. I am not sure of the name of her father; she died in Moscow when I was 6 years old (70 years ago). [Death would be approximately 1899?]
They were probably married in Mitawa and came to Moscow young, because all their children were born in Moscow. The eldest 1) Elizabeth 2) Sonja [or Sonia] (Sofia) mother of Manja or Mania who now lives in Moscow, who had a sister Nadja or Nadia who was born in Moscow. Sonia's husband was Adolf Schneider - son of Aaron Schneider - who had 3 more sons: Nicolas, Alexander, Serge and a daughter Elizabeth Schneider. She got married with Martin Behr (English nationality); they had two children and lived in Moscow. Mrs. Elizabeth Behr died in London (after the Russian Revolution she lived in France, later in England.) Her brother Adolf Schneider was a brother-in-law of our mother's of course.) [This is a repeat of the above.] The Behrs had 2 children. Elisabeth Behr died in London (probably her husband Martin Behr died before.) Mrs. Behr's daughter Olga died in London about a year ago [1968-69?], her brother George Behr still lives in London is married (has 1 daughter who is married too and has 2 boys, 8 and 7.
So my mother Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of Edward and Rebecca Herzenberg born in Moscow like her sister Sonia, the next sister Flora born in Moscow. Flora, married Joseph Offenbacher, had one son Lotar (my first cousin as well as yours). She, her husband, and son died in Germany during the war of Hitler (son Lothar). [Irene notes that another family account says that Lothar committed suicide on account of the war.] [His father] Joseph Offenbacher had an older brother Vasily [William or Wilhelm] Offenbacher who married a cousin of our mother's - Fanny, daughter of Abra[ha]m (whom all children of Edward Herzenberg used to call Uncle Abraham.) He was the husband of Grandfather Edward Herzenberg's sister Theresa. His family name was also like all: Herzenberg. Theresa Herzenberg had many children - daughter Fanny, sons Ludwig, Harry, and 2 other sons and another daughter Sophia married to another Herzenberg (all those marriages were between cousins) who had three children, Robby (Robert) who lives in Sweden and 2 daughters Clara and Roberta (died in Riga - Bolshevik Revolution). [I am not sure if Clara and Roberta are correct for this family grouping.] After Flora Herzenberg, the 4th daughter was my Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg-Landau]. Then there was another one Genga (Eugenie) married Harry Taube from Riga - were killed by Hitler's army. She was the 5th daughter of Edward Herzenberg. The 6th was Lilja [Lilia] (1st wife of Uncle Max Landau - died in Davos, Switzerland from TB.) Then was another daughter Milja, died very young (she was the 7th daughter). The youngest daughter Tonya [Tonia] died in Moscow. Then there were two brothers, the oldest Ivan (John) married a French young girl from Mussidan, Dordogne, France. She was daughter of the Mayor of that town. Died in the north of Russia where - she was sent sick and was sent with her to Mourmansk (north of Russia). Uncle Vanja's [Vania, Ivan, John all same name wife Lydia died there [note her maiden name was Lydie Buisson]. Uncle Vanja died too in Bolshevik Revolution. Their 3 children: Micha (Michel) died probably in Moscow; his brother Andrei (Andre) Herzenberg and Suzanne Hindzee (Herzenberg) - 1st husband (French) Volant. She has a daughter in Toronto married in Toronto (Alja [or Alice Nikitina] knew her) who has two children, boy and girl. The father's family name is A. [Albert?] Statter - wife Lydie (Suzanne's daughter) - son Albert. [Irene's note: last known address was 33 Stonegate Road, Toronto, Canada, M8Y-1V8; phone 416-251-6295.]
There was yet other families related to us through our mother's. It was a well known dentist. His name was Kovarsky. His wife was the cousin of our mother's. They had a lot of children - 3 brothers Misha (Michael), Leva (Leon), 2 daughters Choura (Alexandra). Chura who now is same age as Suzanne [Herzenberg Hindzee] - the only one alive. I forget the name of the eldest brother deceased. Manja (Mania) in Moscow knows more about that family. What was the name of the mother cousin of our mother's-probably it was yet another of the Herzenberg family. As Alja [Alice Nikitina] will be going to Moscow she will be able to find out more form Manja [Mania]. Then there was yet another family related to the wife of our grandfather through the husband or wife Idelson. There was a girl Lisa Idelson and her brother. I think that Manja must know something about them. They lived in Moscow. I used to go see them with my mother when I was about 8 or 10 years old.
Now George Behr has written from London thanking me for my sympathy condolences on account of the death of his sister Olga Behr. She must have been older than 78 years. he thought that his aunt on his father's side, Nina Karlovna died in Moscow, as well as his cousin Leija, but I think it is relatives on the side of his father Bahr, and the cousin is perhaps of the Schneider family (it is possible that the cousin is still living). All these people lived in Moscow.
Now what concerns the Packschwer family. The one that came to see you with the Vietnamese wife has passed away. His name was Julien Packschwer born in Vitebesk, Russia. He was 72. His younger brother Saveijn (Sahva) engineer in London named himself Packshaw, died in England 3 weeks before Julien, leaving a widow (2nd marriage) and 2 children. It was the death of his younger brother that caused reaction on Julien Packshwer. He died 3 weeks after him. He was found on a street in Nice, France with a cerebral hemorrhage-fell in the street. Police took him to the hospital St. Rock where he died at 19 hours in the evening and remained in a coma. His car 2 CV (small) stayed in the parking where he had left it. It was only his Vietnamese wife [Mado] returning from Saigon 1 month after his death that was able to retrieve that car from the parking. Yet another day or two, it would have been impounded. But as it was the widow herself then came. They did not charge her anything. But as the car was her husband's-she has to wait by inheritance law to be able to sell it and divide up in 4 parts to his children. The eldest son of another marriage Leon is an eye doctor in Paris, then 3 other children. Oldest Robert in Montreal, CA; another son in ___ was in the navy for 3 years. The oldest was in the Air force, married a girl from Morocco - they are going to have a child soon. The daughter Irene married, has a little boy, the husband is serving in the military; they live in Cayrons near Vence, France in the Packshwer house. The widow/mother Mado inherited ¼ of the sum, the children ¾ divided in 4 for each of the 4 children. Through a real estate in Vence, Julien's house of 1000 sq. meters is worth 18 million francs. If the children keep the house, they will in turn need to give on fourth of the cost to the widow who also has the right to half of his monthly pension of 30,000 francs. She came to see me day before yesterday and told me all these details. So here you have it-the relatives. The mother of the Packshwer father was 1st cousin of our mother's through the daughter of the sister of our grandfather Edward Herzenberg maiden name Theresa Herzenberg died in Nice, born I think in Mitawa [Mitau], Baltic Provinces. She was buried with her husband in Nice at the Caucade cemetery.
Now I add what George Behr wrote from London that his wife Janet has seen Aunt Anjuta [Anna Herzenberg] in Monte Carlo, then he wrote about his cousin in Moscow who he thinks has passed away (he is going to find out about it from Manja-he asked their address in Monaco). She was the daughter of the oldest sister Polina Aronovna of his mother. Here is what concerns that family... [Balance of letter missing]."

BURIAL:
1. Burial crypt in Monaco city cemetery viewed 15 May 2010:
-Anne Landau, nee a Moscou 1877. Decedee a Monaco 1962.
-Vladimir Landau, St. Petersbourg 29-3-1902, Hanovre 24-9-1971, Champion de Tennis de Monaco.
-Alice Landau - Nikitina, Petrograd 21-2-1900, Monaco 8-6-1978, Danseuse Etoile des Ballets Russes de Diaghilev.
-Patrick Landau, 5-9-1945, 3-10-2007, Champion de Tennis de Monaco. 
Landau, Alice Regine "Nikitina" (I3877)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... 146» Next»