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| Ephraim Bondurant 2 Mar 1842 Deed- Campbell DB24 P132
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| Ernst Kern Grave Marker
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Place: Evergreen Cemetery, Manitowoc, Manitowoc, Wisconsin, USA
44.1050301, -87.6784106
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| Eugenia Vanette Arthur Cemetery Record
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| Europe 800 CE
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| Europe in 814, Charlemagne, Krum, Nicephorus I
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| Extract from from The Boaz Family
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| Ezekial Arthur and Clarissa Moore Marriage
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| Fairbanks House The Fairbanks House in Dedham, Massachusetts, in the 1890s and 2021. Built around 1641 and subsequently expanded over the years, it is the oldest known wood-frame house in North America. It was originally the home of Jonathan and Grace Fairbanks, and it would remain in their family for many generations, until the turn of the 20th century.
The house was nearly demolished in the 1890s, but it was ultimately preserved. It is now owned by the Fairbanks Family in America, and it is open to the public as a museum.
Historic image courtesy of the Library of Congress.
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| Finney vs Edwards Suit
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| Floss, Bavaria - protestant church
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Place: Floss, Bavaria, Germany
49.7267237, 12.277857900000072
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| Frances Allerton
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| Frank Mack - US Patent 2981282 April 25, 1961 Valve Device
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| Frank Mack - US Patent 4211123 July 8, 1980 Motion Conversion Mechanism
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| Frank Mack - US Patent 4418924 Dec 6, 1983 Bi-Surface Sealing Mechanism
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| Frank Mack - US Patent 4686870 Aug 18,1987 Position Incrementer
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| Frank Mack - US Patent 4742614 May 10, 1988 Turret Incrementer
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| Frantz Bloch
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| Frederik and Ingeborg Magnus
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| Frederik Hannibalsen Stockfleth b 1701
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| Frederik Stockfleth Von Krogh Magnus 1820-1886
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| Frigate USS Essex-1799 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Essex_%281799%29
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Valpara%C3%ADso
VALPARAISO, Chile (NNS) -- Sailors from the George Washington Carrier Strike Group (GWCSG) held a memorial service and wreath-laying May 16 for shipmates who died and were laid to rest in Valaparaiso in the 1800s while in service of the U.S. Navy. The ceremony, held at the Cementerio de Disidentes on Panteón Hill, honored 58 Sailors from USS Essex, two Sailors from USS Baltimore and one Sailor from USS Pensacola. During the War of 1812, the British ships HMS Phoebe and Cherub defeated and captured the American frigate Essex just north of Valparaiso. Essex casualties included 58 dead and 31 missing (of a crew of 154).
In 1881, a memorial to remember these Sailors was placed in this Protestant cemetery by the Daughters of the War of 1812. The memorial was the result of a subscription campaign begun in 1876 by USS Richmond Assistant Surgeon Dr. Howard Aimes and continued by the Rev. David Trumbull, pastor of the Union Protestant Church in Valparaiso. "In any navy, a shipmate is a shipmate for all time," said Rear Adm. Philip Hart Cullom, Commander, GWCSG, who spoke during the service. "Today, we lay these wreaths in remembrance of these Sailors who are our shipmates, now and forever. They share with us a special kinship created from the bond of sacrifice -- sacrifice of family separation, sacrifice of physical hardship of man versus sea, and sacrifice of serving a cause greater than ourselves."
About 50 Sailors attended the ceremony from USS George Washington (CVN 73) and USS Kauffman (FFG 59), both on a scheduled port visit.
"Today was a very special opportunity to pay tribute to the Sailors who came before us," said Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class (SW) David Murray, a crew member from USS George Washington (GW). "To me, this was an honor because it's not every day we come to a foreign country and get a chance to honor fellow Sailors who have made the ultimate sacrifice. I wouldn't miss this for the world."
Before the ceremony, GWCSG Sailors found a way to memorialize their fallen shipmates. Those arriving early spent about an hour making charcoal rubbings of the names on the marker stones for entry into the official Navy Log, part of the U.S. Naval Institute's historical preservation efforts.
"We made charcoal rubbings of the names on the markers honoring the Sailors," Murray said. "This gave us a chance to give back to those Sailors and to give others the opportunity to see the names of these Sailors who gave the ultimate sacrifice."
Many Sailors said the opportunity brought many emotions, thinking about fallen shipmates and having a chance to remember them.
"I think this shows these Sailors that they have not been forgotten," said Air Traffic Controller 3rd Class Juan M. Rosario, also from GW. "There are people out there who do care and remember their sacrifice they have made for their country."
Rosario compared this opportunity to immortalize shipmates from long ago with another memorial of the recent past.
Rosario said his grandfather had a friend he served with in Vietnam whose name is inscribed on the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial. He was able to go to there and see the friend's name with him and make a charcoal rubbing.
"It brought back a lot of memories," he said. "That's why I wanted to do this. It reminded of seeing my grandfather's emotion when he was able to see his friend's name and was able to keep it. I am sure if some family member would see this, their emotions would be the same - somebody still remembers."
Capt. K. Brent Canady, commanding officer of the current USS Essex (LHD 2) also contributed to the ceremony with a letter when he learned of the ceremony for the men of the first USS Essex.
"I can think of no better way to honor and remember the fallen Essex Sailors than by the crew of USS George Washington, a ship named after our first President and the father of our great country," he wrote.
"The men buried in these two cemeteries did not want to die, but they did. It is now up to us to give meaning to their lives," Cullom said in closing. "We must guard their legacy of democracy with the same vigilance they did. And we must be willing to give nothing less than they did, if necessary. The eternal flame of freedom must burn brightly within all of us, never to be extinguished, as long as we have breath to take. That is the legacy we owe these shipmates."
For more news from USS George Washington, visit www.navy.mil/local/cvn73/.
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| Garnett Andrews Pr Edw DB13 p93 262a
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| Garnett Andrews Pr Edw DB13 p104
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| GDCBM_Page_10.jpg
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| GDCBM_Page_12.jpg
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| GDCBM_Page_16.jpg
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| GDCBM_Page_6.jpg
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| GDCBM_Page_7.jpg
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| GDCBM_Page_8.jpg
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| Genealogical guide to the early settlers of America
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| Genealogical History of Maine
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| Genealogical Memoirs of Worcester County Massachusetts
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| Geneevieve Appolline Lefrancois Birth Record
Quebec Vital and Church Records Drouin
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| Georg Frederik von Krogh (1653-1721)
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| Georg Frederik von Krogh (1653-1721)
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Owner of original: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AGeorg_Friederich_von_Krogh_(1653_-_1721)_(2747144938).jpg
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| Georg Frederik Von Krogh b 1777
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| George Beer declaration of intent
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| George Beer Grave Marker
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Place: Evergreen Cemetery, Manitowoc, Manitowoc, Wisconsin, USA
44.1050301, -87.6784106
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| George Beer Vaccination Certificate 1821 Schutz-Impfungs-Schein (immunization paper) Das im koniglich Baierischen Gerichtsnezirk Neustadt a.d. Waldnaab zu Floss der Pfarrei Floss Ev.Rel. (Church of Floss, Protestant Religion). It took place 25 Mar 1821. His name was Georg Erhard Baer from Wurzelbrunn, age 4 months and 20 days. Smallpox - on the eighth day he was checked over and it was found the immunization had taken. This was done on 1 June 1821 and signed by Dr Steiner.
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| George Daniel Barth
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Owner of original: http://portrettarkiv.ra.no/fotoweb/cmdrequest/HomePage.fwx
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| George Ehrhard Beer 1821-1864 This framed miniature portrait of George Beer was kept by his wife, Julia, after his death. With frame it measures about 4.5" by 4". This type of remembrance disappeared with the growth of photography. Perhaps the lack of a photo of George is why she had one made of her daughters at the death of her husband. http://jemgen.com/TNGV7/showmedia.php?mediaID=337
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| George Leslie Moore Headstone
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Place: Chatham Burial Park, Chatham, Pittsylvania, Virginia, USA
36.8193747, -79.39916970000002
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| George Norman Ornes
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| George Norman Ornes - 1891
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| George Ornes WWWI draft card
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| Gerhard Munthe b 1726
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Owner of original: http://portrettarkiv.ra.no/fotoweb/cmdrequest/HomePage.fwx
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| Give Them Cold Steel Boys! By Don Troiani Pickett's Charge was a bloodbath. While the Union suffered 1,500 casualties, the Confederates had over 6,000. Over 50% of the men sent across the fields were killed or wounded. Pickett's division alone, out of about 5,500 men, lost 224 killed, 1,140 wounded, and 1,499 missing/captured. Pickett's three brigade commanders and all thirteen of his regimental commanders were casualties. Kemper was wounded, Garnett killed, and Armistead mortally wounded.
Abram Fackler was at Gettysburg with Company I of the 53rd Virginia Infantry Regiment, "The Chatham Greys" of General Lou Armistead's Brigade of Pickett's Division. The sergeant of Company I was Sgt. Robert Tyler Jones, the grandson of former president James Tyler. Seventy-five yards from the stone wall at Gettysburg General Louis Armistead screamed over the sounds of battle to Colonel Rawley W. Martin and said "colonel, we can not stay here" Colonel "Billy Martin screamed back "then sir, we must go foreward. The Don Troiani painting of the battle of Gettysburg is an accurate depiction showing General Armistead leading his men to the stone wall with his hat on the tip of his sword, look close and behind him you will see the fluttering battle flags of the 53rd and 57th Virginia. For a few brief seconds in history, The "Chatham Greys" held the stone wall... and Sgt Robert Tyler Jones fell, Colonel Whitehead fell, Colonel R.W. "Billy" Martin fell with a shattered leg, General Louis Armistead was mortally wounded by the cannon.... and our boys grudgingly retreated.
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| Goto Predestinatia – "Божие Предвидение", "Гото Предестинация" Flagship of vice-admiral Cornelius Cruys during Russo-Turkish War (1710–1711), sold to Turkey 1711.
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| Grave of Rollo of Normandy, duke of Normandy, at the cathedral of Rouen, Seine-Maritime.
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| Grave of Rollo of Normandy, duke of Normandy, at the cathedral of Rouen, Seine-Maritime.
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