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351 BIO:
This daughter of James and Mary (McKEE) KEELEY/KEELY is listed as a survivor
on her father's obituary and in his probate file. She had married before the 1860 census, so was not found in her father's household.
Until compiler's contact with Michelle Taunton, there had been no
documentation found concerning her birth or complete name. Ms. Taunton did not cite the source of her data, but it is assumed she obtained it through records from Shelby Co., IN.
Thomas McAnally died in 1883 and apparently Nancy relocated to Kansas or Missouri. The notice in the Rochester paper 15 Oct. 1900 states that Nancy's
brother, Samuel KEELEY/KEELY, had received notice of the death of his sister "in Kansas City"--the notice does not specify which K.C. The place of burial has not been discovered as of Oct., 1995.
The CASTENS' data gives 21 APRIL 1856 as the date of Nancy's marriage.
The Fulton County Marriage Index cited below gives "April 24 1856." (The earlier date may be the date of application for the marriage license.)

REF:
1. Michelle TAUNTON, 1805 Crystal Drive #903, Arlington, vA 22202.
2. Probate File: James and Mary (McKEE) KEELEY/KEELY, Office of the County Clerk,
Rochester, IN (Copy of file owned by compiler.)
3. Copy of "A Pictorial History of the U.S., Fulton County, IN Edition"
p 93, "Samuel KEELEY/KEELY", p 93. (Photocopy of page owned by compiler.)
4. "Fulton County Marriages, A-K," p 535, Fulton Co. Pub. Lib., Rochester
INDIANA. (Copy of page owned by compiler.)
5. M/M Victor CASTENS, 525 E. Washington, Pittsburg, KS 66726-5344 
Keeley\Keely, Nancy McKee (I4797)
 
352 BIO:
Thomas McANALLY's father was one of the pioneer settlers of Fulton Co..
The family settled on "The BUMBARGER farm" a few miles northwest of Rochester, IN.
Thomas was among the first in the county to enlist for the Civil War."...While in the army he contracted diseases that finally culminated in his death. He has been
an invalid ever since....residence with Mr. (James) KEELEY/KEELY...while consumption did its
deadly work..."
Notes from Wilma (MOW) FOLTZ state that the obituary printed in the
"Rochester Sentinel" appeared during the week of 20-27 OCT. 1883. Exact date of death is not known. (Taken from "Newspaper Excerpts", p 138; Fulton County Pub.
Lib.; Rochester, IN):
"Rochester Chronicle"- Thursday, March 17, 1864:
"Sargeant THOMAS McANNALLY, of Co. F, 20th Indiana
Volunteers, is now at home on furlough, and wishes to
secure a number of recruits for this gallant regiment...."


REF:
1. Photocopy: "Fulton County Marriages"; (Index); p. 535 "KEELEY/KEELY...Nancy....(Marriage
Book) A-249" Fulton Co. Lib., Rochester, IN. (via W. FOLTZ)
2. Photocopy: "Newspaper Excerpts"; p. 168; "The Rochester Sentinel--1883".
Obit: Thomas McANALLY; Fulton Co. Lib., Rochester, IN (via W. FOLTZ)
3. M/M Victor CASTENS, 525 E. Washington, Pittsburg, KS 66726-5344 
McAnally, Thomas Jefferson (I4799)
 
353 BIO:
Death Notice states that both Geo. and Mamie had suffered ill
health ...For the past few years they were residents of Chicago, but Mrs. ZACHMAN's rapidly failing health induced her to return to Rochester to the residence of her grandmother, Mrs. James KEELEY/KEELY, where she received the best attention of her mother, the relatives and personal friends...funeral....at Grace Church..." (23 yrs. old at time of death).
Per Alice Mendes' data, George and Mamie had no children.

REF:
1. Photocopy: "Newspaper Excerpts"; p. 50; "The Rochester Sentinel" July, 1892;
Death Notice for "Mrs. George D. ZACHMAN" Fulton Co. Pub Lib, Rochester, IN
(via W. FOLTZ)
2. "Descendants of Thomas Jefferson McAnally" compiled by Alice Mendes. 
McAnally, Mary Elizabeth (I5869)
 
354 BIOGRAPHY: My father (your grandfather Brown) was born on the old (since1836) family truck farm, which for years now has been inside the built-up area of greater Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He has told me about his father's love for the chattering little red squirrels, of the root cellars where they stored apples, onions, potatoes, cider, vinegar, even the four and corn meal they had ground. The house was large - ten bedrooms - but of course had no bathrooms, running water, gas, or electricity. We have a photograph of it, which we can't date. Dad remembers helping to set drainage tiles six or eight feet deep, and also loading wagons of produceto sell in Milwaukee.

BIOGRAPHY: When Dad was about eleven, the homestead was sold, and his father bought 360 acres of wheat farming land in southern Kansas, nea rthe small town of Genda Springs. This was because Dad's mother had been told that she must have a drier climate (two sisters had died as young adults from "lung trouble"). The Kansas farm is the one my sisters and brother and I used to visit every summer; this was after Dad's sister Priscilla and her husband Harry Leland had the farm; we also visited three or four miles away with Dad's sister Helen and her husband "Joe"(Arthur Jacob) Miller. There is still a working farm in my family in the area; my first cousin Mildred Leland Woods and her husband farm just outside Oxford, Kansas. Her brother Harold (and his wife Doris) Leland live in nearby Arkansas City, and her sister Marjorie has a daughter, Joyce (a twin, and one of three) who turned up most of the information on page 7, during a trip to England.

BIOGRAPHY: My father (your grandfather Brown) apparently met my mother on one of his visits to his sister Alice Jennings in Caney; my mother was teaching school in Caney at that time. When he finished high school (as I have heard the story at various times from him) he spent part of a year in a college in Winfield, Kansas, then rented a farm; he farmed about a year, living alone, and then decided to try his luck on the west coast .He sold chinaware and other household items in the Los Angeles area (apparently not very successfully) and then moved north. The chronologyis sketchy, but he went to work for Western Electric in Washington, and ultimately ran a crew out of Bellingham keeping the telephone lines over the Cascades in service; quite a job in the winter! In 1912 or 1913, somehow, he was running a line crew that brought telephones to the oil boomtown of Drumright, Oklahoma. He had apparently been looking for a chance to settle down in Kansas or Oklahoma (possibly he had already met my mother) and, on finding no electrical shop in this town (population was never more - permanently- than 4000, but the mail address at that time of 50,000, due to the boom) he resigned his job by mail and started one. He has told me that his first contract was to wire a gasoline plant for Harry Sinclair. 
Brown, Leonard Leroy Jr. (I7449)
 
355 BIOGRAPHY: My mother, Anna Dye Brown, was the oldest in a familystruggling to make ends meet. Her father, F. G. Dye, at this distancesounds like the most lovable possible man, and a complete failure as aprovider. There seem to have been many efforts made to see that she, asthe oldest, had good schools. Several different years she lived with theGoddens and went to school in Caney; at least one year it seems she livedwith her great uncle and aunt, Jimmy and Hattie Burns, and went to schoolin Kansas City.

BIOGRAPHY: She apparently spent more time away from the farm in Missourithan she spent there. I don't, of course, know how old she was when thefarm was bought. 
Dye, Anna Elizabeth (I4942)
 
356 Birth date calculated from death date on gravestone. She was 21 years, 10 months, 16 days old when she died. Brown, Sarah (I957)
 
357 birth place: My master FGS says b. Rehoboth (Attleboro?), Bristol Co., Mass.; then crossed out and New Bedford inserted; also "of Brockton, Mass."

Editors note in Barney Family history corrects Mr. Preston's birthdate
for Ezra of 1838

"Jacob Barney, 1634," by Mary E. Wesbrook, p 157;
New Bedford Vital Records
Rhode Island Vital Records (1853-1900)

He died at the age of 66 yrs 3 mos & 16 dys. (suicide, according to Wesbrook) 
Barney, Ezra Bradford (I2004)
 
358 Birth year surmised from high school graduation year. Day of year from Hildred Wilson's date book. Wilson, Darle Dwight (I649)
 
359 birth: 1763 from WFT #2:2108

"The History of Woodstock, Connecticut," by Clarence Winthrop Bowen

Name: Spelled "Shortt" in the Woodstock History; spelled "Short" in the GBFA

"Jacob Barney, 1634" p 125 by Mary E. Wesbrook, 1982.

WCB: Apparently we don't know exactly who the Polly Barney was who md. Shubael Short. She was probably either #328 Polly -- but Mr. Preston wasn't positive that there was a daughter Polly in this family -- or she was #348 Mary Barney, dau. of Benaiah and Anna (Goff) Barney (p.58 of GBFA). So, lacking other evidence, I am linking Shubael Short with #348 Mary Barney.

death date/place: died 29 May 1842 in Calais,Washington Co.,Vt., according to LDS PRF #6, Bruce A. & Katherine J. Hamlin, 512 Quarter St., Rochester, MI 48307, Date 10 Oct 1999 [Re. LDS Ancestral File, I think]. 
Short, Shubael (I3668)
 
360 Birth: Jun. 24, 1927
Death: Sep. 20, 2007

Ralph E. Allar, 80, died on Thursday, Sept. 20, 2007, following a hard-fought 28-year struggle with Parkinson's disease.


He was born on June 24, 1927, in Springbrook to Ralph and Irene (Trepania) Allar. He graduated from Spooner High School with the class of 1945. After high school, he served his country as a U.S. Marine. Once discharged from the service, he was employed for 13 years as a supervisor and salesman for Madison Silo. Ralph also worked as a manager for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and in maintenance at Riverside Medical Center before he joined the staff of the Waupaca Foundry in 1966.


Ralph made his career at the Waupaca Foundry as a quality assurance manager, retiring in 1988.


On February 3, 1951, Ralph married Elaine Schmidt at St. John's Lutheran Church in Shiocton, where he was baptized and confirmed on April 22, 1951. He and Elaine had been married for 56 years at the time of his passing.


Ralph was a man of great spirit, a spirit that not even Parkinson's could defeat. He faced the disease on his own terms. He was a man of honor, integrity, and quiet strength. He challenged those who shared his road to be better people.


Ralph is survived by his loving wife, Elaine, of Waupaca; children, Barbara Allar of Waupaca, Gene (Rebecca) Allar of Farmerville, La., and Lisa (Rod) Minton of Waupaca and their sons, Derrick, Dylan, and Devin Minton; brothers, Duane (Shirley) of Eatonville, Wash., and Allan (Kathleen) of Beardstown, Ill.; sisters, Loretta Peterson of Springbrook and Betty Allar of Stevens Point; brother-in-law, Robert Schmidt, of Greenville; many nieces and nephews; other relatives; and many friends.


He was preceded in death by his parents; father- and mother-in-law, Walter and Theresa Schmidt; and sister-in-law, Joyce Schmidt. 
Allar, Ralph Jr. (I2725)
 
361 birth: WFT #2:2108 has 28 Nov 1762; WFT #3:2188 has 28 Nov 1762

children: WFT #2:2108 lists only two: Nancy and Shubel P.; so does WFT #3:2188

The descendants in WFT #2:2108 and #3:2188 appear to be identical; probably from the same WFT submitter.

"The History of Woodstock, Connecticut," by Clarence Winthrop Bowen

GBFA p.58: "untraced; but could she have been the "Polly" who md. Shubael Short in 1782?"

WCB: Apparently we don't know exactly who the Polly Barney was who md. Shubael Short. She was probably either #328 Polly -- but Mr. Preston wasn't positive that there was a daughter Polly in this family -- or she was #348 Mary Barney, dau. of Benaiah and Anna (Goff) Barney (p.58 of GBFA). So, lacking other evidence, I am linking Shubael Short with #348 Mary Barney. But we don't even know that he married "Miss" Polly Barney -- she may have been Mrs. Polly (_____) Barney.

Descendants on "World Family Tree" 2:2108; gives her birth as 28 Nov 1762. Still doesn't solve the problem as to who her parents were.

LDS PRF #6, Bruce A. & Katherine J. Hamlin, 512 Quarter St., Rochester, MI 48307, Date 10 Oct 1999 has her as the daughter of Daniel and Rachel (Bowen) Barney, b. 1764 in Swansea, Bristol Co., Mass.

Children: I had Cyrenus, Nancy, & Shubel; the rest from LDS PRF #6, Bruce & Katherine Hamlin; birth places, Calais Township,Washington Co.,Vt., according to the Hamlins. 
Barney, Mary "Polly" (I2059)
 
362 Birthname: Ila Marie Gardner

Father: Burdette Lyon Gardner
Mother: Marie Elizabeth (Johnson) Gardner

Siblings: Mervin Lyon, Alfred Lynn and Norma Carol Gardner

Husband: Milford Christian Gimberline (DOB: 11-10-1915) married Oct. 6, 1939 at the Little Brown Church, IA. He was the son of Louis O. and Martha (Meschke) Gimberline of Wells, MN.

Children: Dennis Lee, Dale Carl, and Donald Dean Gimberline

Ila M. Gimberline was born Dec. 15, 1914 in Hardin Co., IA. She was the second of four children born to Burdette L. and Marie E. (Johnson) Gardner. The family moved shortly after her birth to Freeborn, Freeborn Co., MN.

On Oct. 6, 1939 she married Milford Gimberline. The couple had three children and resided in Wells, MN. She passed away Oct. 1, 1993.

She is survived by sons, Dennis Gimberline, Dale Gimberline of CO and Donald Gimberline of IA, and brother, Alfred Gardner of Freeborn, MN.

She was preceded in death by husband, Milford Gimberline in 1960, father, Burdette Gardner in 1967, mother, Marie Gardner in 1990, brother, Mervin Gardner in 1969 and sister, Norma Rabe.?

The Gimberlein name was Americanized by most of the family to Gimberlin and Gimberline. 
Gardner, Ila Marie (I4311)
 
363 Birthplace address: 1610 4Th Ave Wilson, Ruth Genevieve (I1470)
 
364 Birthplace address: 1610 4Th Ave. Wilson, Eleanor Mae (I1471)
 
365 Block E lot 47 Holliday, James Alberto (I3199)
 
366 Block O lot 40 Holliday, Seward William (I3814)
 
367 Block P lot 4 Holliday, Charles Seward (I3235)
 
368 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4414)
 
369 Blue Stewart, Margaret Rose (I4408)
 
370 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4410)
 
371 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4414)
 
372 Bonnie Sue Miller, 58, of Bloomington, Minn., died of cancer Oct. 27 at her home. Memorial services were Tuyesday morning at Skinner Funeral Home in Turtle Lake with the Rev. Nancy Allen officiating and private interment at Crystal Lake Cemetery in Comstock.

Mrs. Miller was born Sept. 4, 1947 in Cumberland to Myron "Mike" and Ethel (Hicok) Scribner. She was a 1966 graduate of Turtle Lake High School. Mrs. Miller lived in Wisconsin most of her life and also enjoyed living in Mesa, Ariz., for several years before moving to Bloomington.

She is survived by a daughter, Teresa Anderson of Holmen; a son, Steven Hoeft of La Crosse; four grandchildren; a brother, Allen of Milltown; and a sister, JoAnn Schoenborn of Bloomington. 
Scribner, Bonnie Sue (I11942)
 
373 Born 10 JUL 1829 in Burke, Caledonia Co., VT. Came at the age of about 12 by way of the Erie Canal and overland to Vermilion Co., IL with his brother HARVEY CRANE and other members of his family. There he spent his youth and then moved to Vermillion Co., IN where he married MARIAM E. CRANE on 14 AUG 1851 Vermillion Co., IN and raised 8 children. When his wife died in 1885, he never remarried.

After the death of his wife, he sold his land in Indiana and moved to Kansas. He returned to Indiana until his son HARVEY decided to move to Texas in 1908. There he resided until his death.

He was a very active member of the Center Methodist Episcopal Church in Indiana. He taught Sunday School for many years and was a chorister. He felt it was his calling to serve the Lord, reading from the Bible daily.

Survivors
Daughter - LUCY OLIVE MORRISON - Ashland, Clark, KS
Son - HENRY ALVA CRANE - Augusta, Butler, KS|
Daughter - HANNAH ABBA HELT - Helt, Vermillion, IN
Daughter - EMILY SABRINA (TOTT) BALES - Helt, Vermillion, IN
Son - HARVEY DANIEL CRANE - Tulia, Swisher Co., TX

Preceded in death by
Daughter - LAURA A. MYERS - Died 1887
Son - SYLVANUS BURT CRANE - Died 1925
Son - BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CRANE - Died 1903
Wife - MARIAM E. CRANE - 1885
Sister - ROXY CRANE - 1841
Brother - HARVEY DANIEL CRANE - 1910
Sister - ROSALINE CRANE - 1832
Brother - HORACE CRANE - 1865
Sister - EMILY GAHAN - 1914
Brother - CHARLES H. CRANE - 1844

Appeared in Tulia Herald, 4 NOV 1927

Brother Harvey Dan Crane Burial:Maple Grove Cemetery
Wichita Sedgwick County Kansas, USA

Sister Emily Thankful Crane Ross Gahan Burial: Mount Vernon Cemetery Catlin Vermilion County Illinois, USA 
Crane, Stephen (I8141)
 
374 Born at 13452 North Dakota Ave. Wilson, Howard Vernon (I1469)
 
375 Born At 24 Bourne St., Providence, RI Cotter, William Henry (I98)
 
376 Born At 24 Bourne St., Providence, RI; Recorded Book No. 14, Page 72 Cotter, William Henry (I98)
 
377 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4417)
 
378 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I7592)
 
379 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I7598)
 
380 Born on his father's farm near the village of Passumpsic Jan. 2, 1804; m. Mar. 21, 1833 Hannah Mariah Little (b. near Morristown Nov. 24, 1814 d. Clarion, Ill. May 21, 1868). Jerreb and "Maria" met when she was a school teacher and he the school director and farmer near Eden, Vt. Enticed by "stories told of the rich prairie country of Illinois without mountains or stones", Jerreb and Maria were already preparing to leave when their son, was born in 1837. The area Jerreb and his brothers selected had become available to whites after the Black Hawk war of 1832. He purchased land in Perkins Grove, east of LaMoille, Ill. in 1835, built a cabin and returned to Vermont for Maria and Wallace. Jerreb d. of Malaria Aug. 17, 1839. Kendall, Jerreb (I12318)
 
381 Born: December 11, 1921 in Loretta NE
Died: February 7, 2013 in St. Paul
Age: 91 years old
Agnes Francis, 91, of St. Paul died Thursday, February 07, 2013 at Heritage Living Center in St. Paul, Nebraska.
Agnes's wishes were to be cremated.
A memorial service will be held at 11:00 a.m., Thursday, February 14, 2013 at St. Mark's Lutheran Church in St. Paul. The Reverend Carolyn Hellerich will officiate. A time for family to greet friends will be held from 9:00 – 11:00 a.m., Thursday at the church.
Jacobsen-Greenway Funeral Home in St. Paul is in charge of the arrangements.
Memorials are suggested to St. Mark's Lutheran Church or to the Family's Choice.
Agnes was born December 11, 1921 to Harry and Elva (Lamb) Russell at Loretta, Nebraska.
Upon completion of her education from Albion High School, she attended beauty school in Omaha, Nebraska.
She was united in marriage to Doyle I. Francis on December 26, 1941 at Oakland, Nebraska.
The couple made their home on a farm south of Fullerton, Nebraska. They moved to a farm near Fayette, MO in 1944. The family returned in 1952 to Nebraska to farm near Fullerton. Later the family moved to Howard County near Farwell and then near Elba. While her husband farmed Agnes took care of the home and the children.
She was involved in 4-H activities as her family grew up and later in the Howard County Extension Group. She was a member of the St. Peder's Lutheran Church in Nysted and very active in church activities. She later joined St. Mark's Lutheran Church in St. Paul.
Agnes is survived by three daughters & son-in-law, Joyce Beauchamp of Crossville, TN; Barbara & Steve Stefanowicz of Farwell, NE and Evea Addis of Greensboro, NC; four sons & daughters-in-law, Bruce Francis of Danville, NH; Norman Francis of Broad Brooke, CT; Keith & Jeannie Francis of Milton, FL and Dan & Barbara Jo Francis of Derby, KS; 19 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren.
She is preceded in death by her parents, her husband Doyle Francis on November 6, 2000, an infant daughter JoAnne, a sister Ruth and two sons-in-law, Roy and Al and one daughter-in-law, Paula. 
Russell, Agnes Irene (I14817)
 
382 Brown Nuttall, Everett Frank (I4407)
 
383 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I4417)
 
384 Burial: from "Barney Family" manuscript sent by Lynda Schonover of St. Petersburg, Fla. Barney, Alice (I2061)
 
385 Burial: from "Barney Family" manuscript sent by Lynda Schonover of St. Petersburg, Fla. Barney, Anne (I2063)
 
386 Buried in small, private cemetery a few miles north of Stephentown. Hall, Oliver (I3131)
 
387 Buried in unmarked grave next to parents, Charles and Eleanor. Davison, Asa Emerson (I8629)
 
388 Buried Next To His Brother, Clarence, Dakota, Minnesota, Cemetery. Wilson, William Wallace (I138)
 
389 Buried on his father's farm at Hope Hill. Rathbone, Charles Edwin (I7276)
 
390 Buried with her first husband, John F. Brown Gregor, Florence May (I1610)
 
391 Buriend in unmarked grave next to Charles and Eleanor Davison Bemus, Hazel M. (I8630)
 
392 Bus Driver, Greyhound Evenson, Harold Delano (I645)
 
393 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I825)
 
394 Came from Dover, County Kent, England Swoffer, Alfred (I3195)
 
395 Came from Schleswig-Holstein in Denmark. Renounced allegiance to the King of Denmark Staack, Mathias (I57)
 
396 Came to U.S. when he was twelve. Came through Galveston. Boat sank in ocean. Other ship rescued it. Sand was under boat. Came to U.S. because of taxes to King. Couldn't make enough to eat. Vitovsky, Joseph Jr. (I270)
 
397 Came To Winona County, New Hartford Twnshp From Clinton County, New York Wilson, James Gardner (I22)
 
398 Cape Cod Times (Hyannis, MA) - November 17, 2005
Deceased Name: Eleanor H. Phinney
84 Oil, watercolor artist; avid traveler; tennis player

YARMOUTHPORT - Eleanor H. (Sanburn) Phinney, 84, of Yarmouthport and Randolph, N.H., died Monday on Cape Cod.

She was the wife of Frederick W. Phinney for 58 years.

Mrs. Phinney was born in Springfield and attended the MacDuffie School in Springfield, Emma Willard School in Troy, N.Y., and Wellesley College. She also did post-graduate studies at the Harvard School of Design, Cambridge.

She was accomplished in oil painting and watercolor sketches.

During World War II she worked at the Radiation Laboratory at MIT. After the war she married and raised a family.

She summered in Randolph and wintered in Yarmouthport. She was a previous resident of Waterbury, Conn., Brookline, Beverly, Lake Forest, Ill., East Africa and Rome, Italy.

An avid traveler, she visited Africa, Asia, the Middle East, England and Europe with her husband. She was also an accomplished tennis player since childhood.

She loved the mountains, the sea and nature, and was a supporter of environmental efforts including the Mount Washington Observatory and Randolph Mountain Club.

Besides her husband, survivors include three sons, Benjamin S. of Milton, Frederick W. Jr. of Yarmouthport and John F. of Basking Ridge, N.J.; three daughters, Joanna H. of Washington, D.C., Martha H. of Randolph, N.H., and Harriet M. of Seattle; a brother, Willis H. Sanburn II of Honolulu, Hawaii; 10 grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.

A graveside service will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Woodside Cemetery, Summer Street, Yarmouthport.
additional information courtesy of Randall Jensen #47426837 
Sanburn, Eleanor Hale (I12470)
 
399 Capt. Charles Carr (205) was born in Jamestown, RI, about 1715, married Hannah Hopkins, daughter of Joseph Hopkins of East Greenwich, RI, Nov. 18, 1735, by John Jenkins, justice. He was deeded land by his father at Carr pond. He was a deacon in the Baptist church for thirty years and once a member of the Assembly. He was also sheriff of Kent county at the time that thirteen pirates were hung from the yardarm of the ships lying in the bay of East Greenwich. Carr, Capt. Charles (I3710)
 
400 Captain, U.S. Army Brown, Thomas Mitchell (I1440)
 

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