Jerry Milo Johnson Genealogy
 
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 #   Notes   Linked to 
9101 Ken Gunn, Kenn Gunn Genealogy (http://www.kengunn.com/genealogy/), MEDI: Website
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S354)
 
9102 Kenneth Conklin, Kenneth Conklin research, MEDI: Personal
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S355)
 
9103 Kent of Maine Kent, John (I16015)
 
9104 kentucky
1910 census for son herman wyatt

abt 1828 indiana
- 1850 census 
Pike, John Brown (I3331)
 
9105 Kentucky Birth Index, 1911-1999, MEDI: Vital
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S357)
 
9106 Kentucky? Cutright, John (I2314)
 
9107 Ken´uª0 tucky
´uª0 Ohio´/uª 
Perkins, Elizabeth (Betsy) (I7971)
 
9108 Kerry G Robinson, Email from Kerry G Robinson 2011-04-16, MEDI: Email
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S222)
 
9109 Kerry G Robinson, Neil Family Tree 3, MEDI: Gedcom
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S397)
 
9110 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Mellum, A.R. (I24333)
 
9111 Kidnapped by indians in 1695 at age 12, never heard of again. Toothaker, Margaret (I22335)
 
9112 kids and inlaws and census details Pike, Elias Jenison (I23022)
 
9113 Killed during the War of the Roses at the 2nd Battle of St. Alban's. Grey, John (I22463)
 
9114 Killed In An Electric Plant Explosion Mulford, Vera (I2514)
 
9115 Killed In Mexico Mulford, Charles (I2448)
 
9116 Killed In Texas Where His Family Still Lives Odom, Edger Eugene " Gene" (I3027)
 
9117 Killed in the "Swamp War" against the Narraganset Tribe Seeley, Nathaniel (I20034)
 
9118 Killed In Wwii (No Known Children ) Neighbors, Carl H (I1182)
 
9119 Killingworth (now Clinton), CT Hicks, Margaret (I15999)
 
9120 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F4526
 
9121 Kimberly Lynann Hornback, Facebook profile of Kimberly Lynann Hornback, MEDI: Website
_ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S270)
 
9122 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. K. (I13690)
 
9123 King William or New Kent County Woodward, Martha (I23917)
 
9124 Kingston Church Records Schryver, Christina (I14148)
 
9125 Kirkville, Iowa Pike, Eva Eliza (I3333)
 
9126 Knight of the Garter. Lord Ferrers of Groby 1483, Earl of Huntington 14 Aug 1471. The Complete Peerage vol.V,p362, is definite that 20 Sep is not the death date & vol.V,p.654. Commanded the forces assisting the Emperor Maximilian against the French.

14th g-grandfather of Prince Charles.
14th g-grandfather of Diana Spencer.
12th g-grandfather of Winston Churchill.

Thomas was Elizabeth's son by her first marriage, to Sir John Grey. He was created Marquess of Dorset on April 18 1475 and summoned to Parliament on November 15 1482. In January 1482/3 on the death of his grandmother Elizabeth, he became Lord Ferrers of Groby. He joined the Duke of Buckingham's 1483 rebellion against Richard III. When the rebellion failed he fled to Brittany to join Henry Tudor, the future Henry VII.

Thomas first married Anne Holland, only daughter of Anne of York, dowager Duchess of Exeter and sister of Edward IV. After she died young without issue he married Cecily Bonville, Baroness Harington and Bonville, a niece of Richard Neville Earl of Warwick and stepdaughter of William Hastings, Edward IV's close associate. By the latter marriage Lady Jane Grey was his great-grand-daughter.

He fought for Edward at Tewkesbury in 1471, becoming Marquess of Dorset in 1475. On the death of Edward in 1483 he took sanctuary but later took up arms in Yorkshire and a reward was offered for his capture. He participated in Buckingham's rising and, when it failed, joined the Earl of Richmond in Brittany. He took no part in the latter's invasion of England, but after Bosworth he was recalled to England and all his honours were restored. In 1487, during the Lambert Simnel insurrection, he fell under suspicion and was imprisoned in the Tower of London. After the battle of Stoke in the same year he was released. In 1492 he took part in the expedition to assist the Emperor Maximilian against the French. In 1497 he held a command in the royal forces sent to suppress the Cornish rebellion. 
Grey, Thomas (I22445)
 
9127 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. LaLonde, S.J. (I5072)
 
9128 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. LaLonde, T.L. (I5082)
 
9129 Known as `Longshanks` because of his 6`2` frame and the `Hammer of the Scots` (his tombstone, in Latin, read, Hic est Edwardvs Primus Scottorum Malleus, `Here lies Edward I, Hammer of the Scots`), Achieved fame as the monarch who conquered Wales and who kept Scotland under Inglish domination. He reigned from 1272 to 1307, ascending the throne of England on 21 November 1272 after the death of his father, King Henry III of England. His mother was Queen Consort Eleanor of Provence.
Edward was born at the Palace of Westminster. He married twice; his first marriage was to Eleanor of Castile and her death in 1290 affected Edward deeply. He displayed his grief by erecting the Eleanor crossed, one at each place where her funeral cortege stopped for the night (Lincoln, Grantham, Stamford, Geddington, Hardingstone, Stony Stratford, Woburn, Dunstable, St. Albans, Waltham, Westcheap and Charing).
Edward`s character greatly contrasted that of his father, who reigned in England throughout Edward`s childhood and consistently tended to favor compromise with his opponents. Edward had already shown himself as an ambitious and impatient man, displaying considerable military prowess in defeating Simon de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. He gained a reputation for treating rebels and other foes with great savagery. He relentlessly pursued the surviving members of the de Montfort family, his cousins. In 1270 he traveled to Tunis, intending to fight in the Eighth Crusade alongside Louis IX of France, who died before Edward arrived; Edward instead travelled to Acre, in the Ninth Crusade. While in the Holy Land his father died; Edward arrived back in England in 1274.
One of Edward`s early achievements was the conquest of Wales. Under the 1267 Treaty of Montgomery, Llewelyn ap Gruffydd (meaning `Like a Lion) had extended Welsh territories southwards into what had been the lands of the English Marcher lords, and gained the title of Prince of Wales although he still owed homage to the English monarch as overlord. Edward refused to recognize the Treaty which had been concluded by his father. In 1275, pirates in Edward`s pay intercepted a ship carrying Eleanor de Montfort, Simon de Montfort`s only daughter, from France (where her family had lived in exile) to Wales, where she expected to marry Llywelyn the Last, then ruler of the principality. The parties` families had arranged the marriage previously, when an alliance with Simon de Montfort still counted politically. However, Llywelyn wanted the marriage largely to antagonize his long-standing enemy, Edward. With the hijacking of the ship, Edward gained possession of Eleanor and imprisoned her at Windsor. After Llywelyn repeatedly refused to pay homage to Edward in 1274-75, Edward raised an army and launched his first campaign against the Welsh prince in 1276-77. After this campaign, Llywelyn was forced to pay homage to Edward and was stripped of all but a rump of territory in Gwynedd. But Edward allowed Llywelyn to retain the title of Prince of Wales, and the marriage with Eleanor de Montfort went ahead.
However, Llywelyn`s younger brother, Dafydd (who had briefly been an ally of the English) started another rebellion in 1282. Llywelyn died shortly afterwards in a skirmish. Subsequently, Edward destroyed the remnants of resistance, capturing, brutally torturing and executing Dafydd in the following year. To consolidate his conquest, he commenced the construction of a string of massive stone castles encircling the principality, of which Caernarfon Castle provides a notable surviving example. Wales became incorporated into England under the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284 and in 1301 Edward created his eldest son Edward Prince of Wales, since which time the eldest son of each English monarch has borne the same title. To help finance his war to conquer Wales, Edward I taxed the Jewish moneylenders. However, the cost of Edward`s ambitions soon drained the moneylenders dry. When the Jews could no longer pay, the state accused them of disloyalty. Already restricted to a limited number of occupations, Edward furthermore abolished their right to lend money at interest, and eventually restricted their extra-curricular movements and activities. Edward decreed that all Jews wear a yellow patch in the shape of a star attached to their outer clothing to identify them in public.
In the course of King Edward`s persecution of the Jews, he arrested all the heads of Jewish households. The authorities took over 300 of them to the Tower of London and executed them, while killing others in their homes. Finally, in 1290, the King banished all Jews from the country.
Edward then turned his attentions to Scotland and on 10 May 1291 Scottish nobles recognised the authority of Edward I. He had planned to marry off his son to the child queen, Margaret of Scotland (called `The Maid of Norway) but when Margaret died, the Scottish nobles agreed to have Edward select her successor from the various claimants to the throne, and he chose John Balliol over other candidates. Edward was anxious to impose his overlordship on Scotland and hoped that John Balliol would prove the most biddable candidate. Indeed, Edward summoned John Balliol to do homage to him in Westminster in 1293 and made it clear he expected John`s military and financial support against France. but this was too much for Balliol, who concluded a pact with France and prepared an army to invade England.
Edward gathered his largest army yet and razed Berwick, massacring its inhabitants, proceeding to Dunbar and Edinburgh. The Stone of Destiny was removed from Scone Palace and taken to Westminster Abbey. Until 1996, it formed the seat on King Edward`s Chair, on which all English monarchs since 1308 have Been crowned, with the exception of Mary I. In 1996, the stone was returned to Scotland, to return only during royal coronations. Balliol renounced the crown and was imprisoned in the Tower of London for three years before withdrawing to his estates in France. All freeholders in Scotland were required to swear and oath of homage to Edward, and he ruled Scotland like a province through English Viceroys.
Opposition sprang up, and Edward executed the focus of discontent, William Wallace, on 23 August 1305, having earlier defeated him at the Battle of Falkirk in 1298. His plan to unite the two countries never came to fruition during his lifetime, however, and he died in 1307 at Burgh-by-Sands, Cumberland on the Scottish border, while on his way to wage another campaign against the Scots under the leadership of Robert the Bruce. Against his wishes, Edward was buried in Westminster Abbey.
King Edward is villainously depicted in the film Braveheart.

http://lawgenealogy.tribalpages.com/tribe/browse?userid=lawgenealogy&view=0&pid=7509&rand=596289822 
Edward I (I14761)
 
9130 Knoxville, Iowa Hornback, Walter Frederick (I22870)
 
9131 KOREAN WAR SERVICE RECORD:
Name: PRATT MERRITT L Age 23 Home LANGLADE, Wisconsin
Service Number: 16070975 Rank E7 Branch U.S. Army Service Component: Reserve Casualty Type: Killed in Action Death Record: 501102
Race: Caucasian Citizenship: U.S. Citizen

IDF
Name: Pratt, Merritt L. Inducted From: Wisconsin
Rank: Master Sergeant Combat Organization: 8th Engineers Combat Battalion 1st Cavalry
Death Date: Nov 02 1950 Monument: Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Status: Missing U.S. Awards: Purple Heart Medal, Silver Star Medal Foreign Awards: 
Pratt, Merritt Leroy (I11448)
 
9132 l

INFORMATION CAME FROM MIRIAM "MIRRIE" LINDA ATKINS CORGAN, MY
MOTHER'S TWIN SISTER.

He was a very handsome, slightly olive cast to his complexion, wavy
dark brown hair and a deep voice. He was the youngest of three children.
the family story goes that Glen didn't care much for school. All three
graduated the same year from high school. Nellie was a good student. she
was held back a little, specifically how was never part of the story.
James Albert caught up with Nelle and all three march across a stage.
Another story, a woman complains to grandpa about Glen and Albert. He
listen patiently then says Madame, You look out for your daughters and
I'll look out for my sons.
According to my dad because he was energetic he was given more
chores than Glen. He ended up having to milk the cow. (Glen never got as
much milk out of her) Says he was told by grandpa to paint the 2 story
outside stairs to grandpa's office, then pull weeds around the property
and other jobs but the reward was he was permitted to observe and later
assist grandpa in attending to patients. He was attracted to the practice
of medicine and working with the sick. Being able to achieve a result of
healing etc. Dad said grandpa believed he could make it and so he did.
Masters degree at the university of Missouri and graduated from Harvard
School of Medicine. The called or nicknamed him "grandpa" because he had
three children before graduating from Harvard.
He applied and was accepted to intern 2 years at a brand New
hospital in Detroit, Michigan. It had the absolute latest technology. The
Physical facility was designed to accomadate in the best way possible
patient flow (traffic) . Top men in their respective fields were hired to
head the different departments of the intern program and residencies all
paid for by Henry Ford. The Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit.
This was followed by a move to Lamar, Missouri where he bought out
the practice of Doc Mynatt, who was bed fast after a stroke. He became a
very much loved doctor by residents of Barton County.
There were a set of books called "Missouri and famous Missourians;
in print for ten years or less. Dad was recognized for his private
practice and reputation in the Medical Society of Missouri as being a
very good diagnostician. He was among the recognized and honored.
Then there was WW II. He was 6 feet and about 230 lbs. He had high
blood pressure. He wanted to join the United States Army Medical Corp. He
was turned down twice because of his high blood pressure. The third try (
Always at different places) he was accepted.
He went in as a captain and came out with a silver Oak Leaf ( Lt.
Colonel )
The Family joined dad during the time he was at Fort Francis E. Warren
Chyenne, Wyoming. He was the head of the Army Hospital Labority. Connie
and I rode a bus each day from the Fort to Jr High in Cheyennee.
After his discharge we returned to Lamar. He got back into a huge
private practice. He had some aneurisms and we moved briefly to
Pittsburg, Kansas, where he thought he would be and assistant to a long
time friend Dr Byrd, but changed his mind and accepted a position with
the Veterans Hospital in Muskogee, Oklahoma as Acting Chief of Pathology.
I graduated from Muskogee, Central. Connie stayed in Pittsburg with some
friends, The Woods twins, and graduated the summer after her Jr. year of
high school. After 2 years in Muskogee Dad chose to go back into private
practice in Columbia, Missouri. Again he had a huge practice. He taught
a lab course at the medical School , active in Rotary ( had been a
district governor of Rotery prior to WW II )
James Albert Atkins died of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 49. 
Atkins, James Albert Sr. (I1914)
 
9133 L M Garver, "Garver Genealogy," database, lmgarver@gte.net, \i Garver Genealogy\i0 † ((http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~lmgarver/fam00359.html)), _ITALIC: Y
_PAREN: Y
Source (S288)
 
9134 L'Assomption Family F7845
 
9135 L'Assomption Masseault, Marie-Madeleine (I22138)
 
9136 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F7878
 
9137 L'Assomption, Quebec, Canada
St Sulpice 
Family F7905
 
9138 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F7925
 
9139 L3, C4, Manning, Jacob (I7681)
 
9140 La Colel Quebec Canada Jackson Cemetary, Elvidge's Corners, Manning 08 Lawrence, Sarah (I13915)
 
9141 La Rochelle, Aunis, France
Notre Dame de Cogne 
Rivet, Maurice (I22037)
 
9142 Lake Huron Shores book, Robert Came to the U.S 1848 at age 15 yrs

"The following was told to me by Robert's son William in 1902,
as we were working together planting potatoes.
When Robert was 12 he and a pal were playing with a gun, when
the gun accidentaly discharged and his friend fell down. Robert thought
he had killed his pal and threw the gun and ran. He ran to Liverpool and
seeing a boat about ready to leave, he got on as a stow-away. The boat
was bound for the new world, and the second day out he was hungry and
showed himself. The Captain knew he was a run-away and thought to take
him back on the return trip, and to pay his way, made him a cabin boy.
When they got to Canada Robert slipped off without being seen and because
he might be wanted for murder, he kept silent.
In Canada he met Jane Mary Storey who was the daughter of
William Storey, Mother unknown, who was born in North Ireland of Scot
parents who had immigrated to Ireland a generation before Jane Mary was
born. They left Scotland because of religious pressures and crossed the
approximately 14 miles between Scotland and Ireland at that point. Jane
Mary had a sister too who came to Canada and the sister came to Michigan
when Jane Mary did, but only stayed a year and went back to Canada.

From records in Alnona Co., Mich.: of Jane Mary Johnson's death:
Date of death - 1904 yr. - 1st Mo. - 17th day .
at age 73 yrs. 10th Mo. 6 days.
Subtracting 1830 yr. 3rd Mo. 11 days
Date of birth - March 11, 1830
She was living with her daughter Anna at the time so Anna
probably gave the figures above. Anna said that Robert and Jane Mary were
probably married in St. Mary's, Ontario in 1851. A copy of the
application for license to marry and/or the marriage record might give
the name of the town or city where the parties lived or rather, were
born, so the genealogy could go farther back, so these dates could be
documented fully.

(possible connection to Mrs. Steven Slack, Harrisville, Michigan of Jane Mary and her sister). Robert's daughter Anna thought that Robert and Jane Mary were married in St. Mary's, Ontario, Canada, in 1851. (from St. Mary's in 1971, came this report: "I am sorry that we do not have any information in regard to your inquiry as records whicih are available in this office date back only as far as the year 1880. Yours truly, Clifton Brown, Clerk-Treasurer".)
Source: Susans List

Soon after marriage, they applied for a Homestead in an area
that the Dominion wished settled, Robert being a farmer . They
Homesteaded a piece of land, cleared it, built a home and farm buildings
and had horses and cattle.They had 13 children, 11 of them born in
Canada.
The French and Indian War of American History took place under
the reign of King George II of England, but the treaty of peace wasn't
signed until three years after his death under King George III in 1763.
It was then that Canada became a British Possession, and for loyalty to
the King and for sending his serfs to take part in the war, the King made
a Grant of land to some Nobleman. This Grant was in S.W. Ontario, across
from Port Huron, Michigan, in what is now Perth and Huron Counties. (part of Huron Counties? Susans List)
The Nobleman came and looked over the Grant and all he saw was
a forest full of Indians. He said he wasn't interested and went home. But
about the time Robert and Jane Mary were married [1851], Canada thinking
the Grant wasn't going to be claimed, offered it for Homestead, and they
took a parcel of it as homestead, near Seaforth in Huron Co. or near St.
Marys in Perth Co.
About 1865-1866 the Nobleman or one of his heirs came back and
liked what he saw, cleared fields, farm buildings, cattle and horses and
good black earth. He started suit in the courts to dispossess the
Homesteaders on the grounds that Canada had no right to dispose of
private property that way.
The Homesteaders defended their claim with all they had, but
lost the suit. All Robert had left was a big black horse which he sold
and bought winter supplies. And fares for all his family and Jane Mary's
sister on a sailing vessel that was going to Alcona, Michigan, a booming
lumber and mill town in N.E. Mich., for a load of lumber. That was in the
summer of 1866, a few months after his son Samuel was born. Alcona Co.
wasn't organized until 1869.

(In November, 1970, Milo N. met a John Frechette, an acquaintance from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. When asked what he was doing to occupy his time, Milo answered that he was working on a geneology of his family but slowing up in Ontario. Frechette mentioned a land grant in Ontario that was made by King George III to a Scot named Frasier. Frasier was an ancestor of his (Frechette) mother's family - Susans List)

Robert soon declared his intention to become a citizen [First
Papers] I haven't found out in what court but it was probably in Alpena,
Cheboygan or Iosco, the nearest. The Second Papers could be had in two
years. Then all his minor children would take his citizenship.

Robert carried all those supplies to a section of State land
[no roads] about seven miles from Alcona and got ready for winter, got
jobs, and built a log house. There is a record in the Register of Deeds
Office recorded May 13, 1881 at 11 A.M. that Robert Johnson, Acona Co.,
on the 9th day of April, 1870, purchased for $1.00 per acre, the N. 1/2
of the N.E. 1/4 of section 17, T. 27 N., R 9 E. - 80 acres. Recorded by
B. P. Cowley, Register of Deeds.

His son William got the West 40 above and Samuel got the east
40, and when Samuel went west to Idaho or Tekoa, Washington he deeded the
west half of his 40 to William. Rebecca bought the other half and it is
owned by her daughter Blanche.

Incidently, the 4th marriage recorded in the new county was for
William E. Towner [21] from Westskill, Greene Co., N.Y. and Frances
Johnson [16] born in McAlpin Township, Canada West. They married June 28,
1869 by Rev. W. J. Johnston, no relation.
They had three children in Michigan before moving west.
Robert, who died August 31, 1872 at 4 mo. of whooping cough, Rachel and
Jennie.
Taken from the record of Robert's death in Alcona County,
Michigan. Date of death - 1891 yr. - 6th mo. - 10th day; at age
58 yrs. - 8 mos. - 6 days; Subtracting 1832 yr. - 10th mo. -
4th day; Date of birth - October 4, 1832
Jane Mary was living at that time and probably gave this
information. Headstone in Mt. Joy Cementary, Haynes Twp. shows 1832.
Genealogy of Robert Johnson Family compiled by his grandson,
Milo N. Johnson in 1970 as best he could."

Milo N. Johnson

(Not quite the same as susans list version.)

From Thomas' note:
His son Robert ran away from home and came, as a stow-away on a sailing ship leaving Liverpool bound for the new world, Canada at age 12 or about 1844 (was born Oct 4 1832 according to the record of death recorded in Alcona Co Mich)
milo source docs 
Johnson, Robert (I19)
 
9143 Lamberton, N. J. Pike, Zebulon Montgomery (I3302)
 
9144 Lanark County 1874 Marriage Database:
5716-74 David BARBER, 24, farmer, White Lake, same, s/o Eustache BARBER & Isabella HENDRY (sp), married Jane MOORE, 23, Pakenham, same, d/o William MOORE & Jemima ROBINSON, witn: James & Rosilla TURNER of Ramsay, 15 Jan 1874 at Ramsay 
Family F3726
 
9145 Lanark County 1878 Marriage Index:
5267-78 Eustache BARBER, 24, farmer, Canada, Ramsay, s/o E. BARBER & J. McKETRICK (sp), married Margaret WARK, 24, Canada, Darling, d/o James WARK & Agnes PRETTY, witn: Mary BENNETT of Almonte, 19 June 1878 at Almonte.

Article:
"Haynes News".....Mr and Mrs Eustache Barber celebrated their Golden Wedding June 15. A delicious dinner was served at their home on U.S. 23, after which their relatives and friends and out-of-town guests were entertained at a dancing party at I.O.O.F. Hall, Lincoln. The guests report a very nice time and took occasion to congratulate Mr. and Mrs. Barber and to wish them continued happiness and prosperity. (Alcona Review, July 1928) 
Family F3730
 
9146 Lanark County 1879 Marriage Index:
5204-79 (Lanark Co) William BARBER, 26, farmer, McNab, Pakenham, s/o Eustache & Isabella BARBER, married Isabella HEADRICK, 19, McNab, same, d/o William & Agnes HEADRICK, witn: William YUIL of McNab & Isabella BARBER of Pakenham, 16 Jan 1879 at Pakenham 
Family F3728
 
9147 Lanark County 1880 Marriage Index:
005382-80 David BAIN, 37, farmer, Ramsay, same, s/o Daniel and Mary BAIN, married Isabella ELLIS, 25, Pakenham, Lanark, d/o Henry and Mary ELLIS, witn: Duncan TAYLOR and Isabella BARBER of Ramsay, 14 January 1880 at Ramsay 
Family F3875
 
9148 Lanark County 1890 Marriage Database:
6568-90 (Lanark Co): Henry LEGRIS, 27, farmer, Bagot, McNab, s/o Joseph C. LEGRIS & Elizabeth SMITH, married Amelia Ann McMANUS, 24, McNab, same, d/o Patrick McMANUS & Sarah BARBER, witn: John BYRNE Jr. & Mary Jane McMANUS of McNab, 28 April 1890 at Pakenham (Rom Cath) 
Family F5860
 
9149 Lanark County 1895 Marriage Database:
6657-95 (Lanark Co): Aaron BIGGS, 48, widower, merchant, Richebucto NB, Pembroke, s/o Samuel BIGGS & Ann SWITZER, married Isabella BARKER, 26, White Lake, Alice twp., d/o Peter BARKER & Catherine NEIL, witn: Peter BARKER of Alice & Mrs. A. PATERSON of Pakenham, 5 June 1895 at Pakenham 
Family F3863
 
9150 Lanark Era, 23 May 1917 - DIED: "Killed in action April 29th, Pte. James H. Deachman. Born on the old Deachman homestead near Lanark on Oct 12th, 1874, the son of the late John Deachman. He left here 14 years ago for Fort William. A year later he married Mary Kennedy, also of Lanark. They had 2 children. Survived also by his mother, on the homestead. A brother, Issac of Tisdale Sask.; a sister, Mrs. John Kerr of Crystal City, Man.; 3 half brothers: John H. Deachman of Lanark; Robert & Thomas of Carleton Place & 3 half sisters: Mrs. Donald Bain of Union Hall; Mrs. Thomas James of Almonte & Mrs. James Henderson of Winnipeg. He was 42 years old." Deachman, James Henry (I10406)
 

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